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1972-06-28 - Orange Coast Pilot
. • J"rio ·-Flee Pursuing Thugs· I ,· • . -l John and Martha 7• ' --' Irvine City Aides '" •Murh in Love~ Hap Newport Talk ... pa_.ty Hostess In Airport How ... ••• • DAILY PILOT IXOD nnounces * * * 1oc * * * I .. . . WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 28; 1972 VOL. '5, NO. 1W, 4 SECTIONS, 1t PAOIS • roo-I rawa Bullets Hit Girls' Car In Pursuit A candy-apple red sidan and lls oc- cupants who reportedly pursued a trio of Garden Grove giru from Newport Beach through several cities, firing into their car, are sought by police today. Costa Mesa police are in charge of the bizarre case, in which QDe swpect allegedly bared his behind.it tile terrified victims,. while a fellow ~er peppered their car, wi!h pellets. . The -gs -involving lhe most oerious potential criminal char(~. assault with a deadly weapon -6egan at Newport and Harbor boulevards, the girls said. .. , Investigators were told Charlotte Houk, Sharon Dodson and Barbara PraU, all 20, were first aP!l'OOched by tile tllree young men in McFadden Square, near Newport Pi.er. , ~ '!be. incident occun-ed about midnight Monday and alterward was immediately reported lo Garden Grove police, who refeITed the girls to Costa Mesa's jurisdiction. ' Senator Speaks Filibuster Long-But to No Avail AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Mike McKool, a 5-foot-! stale aenalor' known as "Little Hercules," talked for 42 hours and 33 minutes trying to convince the Texas Senate to spend more money for mental health services, then sat down at his de.sk today, endlng the world's "longest filibuster." ' McKool, 53, three days of whiskers on his face, took a long drink of milk from a soda pop bottle and said,"l think the chances weren't that good when I started." Jt took the Senate Jess than !Ive minutes to ignore McKool's filibuster. They passed a ll(Hlew-Ulxes slate budget bill that did not include the $11 million for mental health serviies he wanted added. · McKool, whose normal high-pitch~d voice was . made even more squeaky by almost two days of talking, kepi up hu strength by munching only on oranges, lemons, "energy tablets" and' cough drops. He began his filibuster before noon Monday and sat down at 5:33 a.m. PDT loilay. Hostess Denies Mitchells Feuded at Party in CdM By L PETER Kl\IEG Of tflt Dlllf llllClt Sllff "I can't imagine anyone saying that, it simply wasn't true. They seemed very much in love, there wasn't one cross word. JI Volunteers Only to Go To Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on announced today plans for a two. month withdrawal of 10,000 U.S. troops from South Vietnam end directed. that only draftees who volunteer for service in Vietnam be sent there in the future. Nixon's action would reduce the authorized troop level lo 39,000 by Sep~ 1. The average monthly withdrawal rate of 5,000 for tiie summer months would be half the level of the May-June rate of 10,000. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who made Nixon's announcement, said the President also ordered that no draftees will be sent to South Vietnam unless they volunteer for service there. However, Ziegler said, if they are already in the war zone or under orders to go there they will slay or be sent. He estimated there are some 4,000 draftees in the Army in South Vietnam. The press spokesman said the Sept. 1 troop target lewl of 39,CMXI would represent a 93 percent reduction from !be authorl<ed celling of 149,500 in effect when Nixon look office in 11169. Miffed Irvirte ·_Co-ancil · Miss Houk and Miss Dodson came lo Costa. Mesa alter work" Tuesd~y1 lo pro- vide descriptions and compl<le their report. -. ' -John and Martha Mitchell "seemed very much in Jove" and had a wonderful lime at the Sunday night party thrown for them by Mrs. Donald K. Washburn or C.Orona del Mar, the widow of the Seven- Up magnate said today. Mrs. Washburn said reports the party had been the scene of a vicious argument between the former attorney general and his talkative wife were "totally false." "They seemed so happy, they even went out in the kitchen and thanked the help. No one was drunk but they started singing with the help, 'Someone's in the kitchen with Martha,' " Mrs. Washburn related. Asked U the 39,000 would represent a ••residual force," Ziegler said he regard .. (See CUTS, Page I) ~Ks Joint Airport· Pinn ·Detectives prqbing tile c ... said lhelr car showed evidence of being hit with projectiles -probably fnlln a pellet gun -including a broken windshield. . The two girls said 1iJe high-speed ohase resulted alter Ibey declined lo be picked · .::...... up on !he street in McFadden Square; By GEOllGl';-.... wAL Despite the .unanlJnOUJ vole t 0 refusing tile 1rio's offer.of beer and wbal * * * Mitcliells Sneak Mrs. Washburn said that among the party guests were the President's two brothers, Donald and Ed Nixon, 0. W. "Dick" Richard, the John Waynes, the Herbert Kalmbachs and Sy Fluor. "I know none of them would say there Orange Weather Of .... Dllh' Plllt Sltff I blish "-j . t I . es a = om p armmg group, some -•red lo be marijuana. )!!ro!tling their anger~ver "graluitoUs lrvlne .councilmen openly d e p I o r e d Breaking away after one insulting tn1Wts"1•attribu.ted to Jjich ~evel sources staf.em~ts of a "biih-level spokesman" suspect grabbed a victim's ann, the girlS A.way From Club was anything wrong, every'Dody had !Uch a fun time," Mrs. Washburn said. 11Everything was so pleasant, there were no arguments,'' she said. Night and rnomillg low cloud& are expected along the Orange Coast on Thursday, clearing to hazy sunshine in the afternoons; Highs in tbe low 70's at the beaches, rising lo 00 inland. Lowa , 15-M. IA:Jlf-1 Beach,_! r v I •·e city coun· · for Newport Beach -·-''•• the Irvine said they fled lo lhelt ear and were RYE, N.Y. (UPI) -Former Att0rney cllllien Tueoday 1113Dl W.nt ahead wi\h • •0-~.. chased up Newport Boulevard into eosta General John N. Mitchell and his wile, -original offer to -k With \hat city council'• competency lo reslsl McDonnell Mesa. • · Martha, left the Westchester Country JU plaimlng ar .. s sumund!ng Orange Douglas Coli>. plans lo develop Ila SO.acre 'f!>ey told police tl>ey sped onto the Club by llmouslne for an undisclosed ty Airport. parcel across Compus Drive from lhe Newpcrl Freeway after the youths pulled location today, ducking out a back door lnl-eooocllmtn '*1ied-a1-t1iree~Collins-prOperly·-. --------al0ngside-in-1iltir-1166-etievrolerlm~-,oavo1d newsmen: -x aecuri gua Iler committee lo meet wl\h a "McDonnell Douglas will come in and -ooe txJJOS"1$ )lis bultocks -•bool!J\I confinned that the <'OUple Was in the ..,,ilar panel Jrom Newport. Beach. to roll over 11>a1 lillle council." the unlden-pelle\s and trying lo force them of! the limousine that sped away from lhe back illlOlu pending developments of parcels " Ufied Newport official said Monday, ad-roadway. entrance to the club.·' 'l'"f. )he airport !ncl~g the Collins ding that the Irvine councilmen "are • '!We were !rlgh!Olled for our lives,• He said Mitchell had joined his wile at l!fd'O Company's $185 million develop-1grecn." aaid Miss Houk. ' the club Monday and the two bad not left meat. Henry Quigley said lhe statement She end Miss Dodaon said an unld<llU-the room stnce then. aloe planned cOmmunlty zoning for that •bowed a "complete Jack,of decorum'' as lied py,r truck driver saw what was hap-. A furor developed, when Mrs. Mitchell Jllll'Ctl will ..be beard by the Newport a response to Irvine'• neighborly orttr lo pening and pulled in between the spood· telephoned UPI White House Cor· ir.:h council on JulY. ll!, lrvine_coun-JolnUy plan lhe airport properties. Ing, swerving cars trying to head"o!Uhe ~espondcnt Helen Thomas !rem tile coun· clb!m1 were told. "Unless their City CouncU repudiates pursuing sedan. 1ry club Sunday and tarl!er from Before lh_~•t <fo'!Dcl~ John Burton, the statements in the press, I have every 'Ille v!c:t1ms aaid the three youths Newport Beech and told her she was an Irvine jllOlllllJI( collllnlssloner and 1 reason to bellove Ibey came from a would drop back but renewed tile leaving her husband unlll he quit his post oliY olllf..-, WilJ meet with N"'!Jl'>l'I of· member of Ille Newport Beach Cjty freeway chase when lhe low truck pulled Is chairman ol the 0>mmlttee to r...iect ~, (See ANGEil, Pap I) (See CHASE, P1ge I) Presldmt NiJon. ' Mrs. Washburn said she received five days notI;e to have the party and she said "there were certain people lhey wanted to see. " -w.as....ooLSlLQP.eO·inVitatio!...P!!_t)'..L'-' -1--.LL'W she said. Big Eucol11Plu.s trees behi•d Mrs. Wasbbum said she had no idea Newport Har bor lligh School what started the furor from Mrs. Mitclr h • ,, ell later in the week when She made a apparently or e i11 t e pat,. o, pr~ress. Set alO'"''• Page 10. telephone call lo a Washington reporter ·• · • and then later claimed she was being '"""' u-v M._ • ~ 1 th L.M.. ltv• 1 MtYlfl .. held a j'political prisoner" at e c:.u...-..i• 1 MtJtu•t """"' • Newporter lnn In Newport Baech. . c...i1i.t1 •Ma Meli•-' _.. 4 C1tn1U U OrMltt Cw"" ll "What happened. after they left here I cros:~ tt S•lvl• ,.,,... • do ' kn All" I h d''"" -~II Mtt!Cft 11 ·~ _...,. n l ow. peop e ave ~groo-•1111tHi.1 ,,.,. ' sttc11 M_... IMt~ ments," she aaid. "11 probably has been •1t:trt•!11mtfll' ~ t..-v ..... , flllllnC!I 17·1f n.ten ~town way out of proportion. ' "*" "" • ...-. 11 w .. tM:r ''I don't know what was going on in her Ml,,_,. ai w.-n•• ,.... -Allri LAMtr1 SI W.ttll fMW* (See PARTY, Pqe I) l ,IAD.Y ,llOT State Chiefs Reach Accord on School Reform llACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronlld llapD llld Dtmoc:rallc ltaden o! lhe A-y hive rucbod tentaUve ..,... -Oii I IChool finance ttform o! lltll'o ly fl billion a year, putlt1 to the bl~ ll<(ollatlons 11y, Thf. eompromJse la to be preunted to 1tate KMtors of both parties In an u""'1111 cloltckloor background briefing late today. Ntllhtr Reapn nor Aasembly Speaker Bob Mott!tl WU lmmtdlattly •••liable for C0111111t11t, but dttalla o! the com- promllo ..,.._.nt were pieced lolether fnlnl tllltr pertlclpants in the more than two lllOlllhl o! bfpartl"" ntfotlatlom 011 ll>t tu bill. Tbt compromba would 1nvo1 .. 1 one- cent Uic:ruee 1n ~ at.ale aale1 tax and use a bl& clwnk ol tho estimated !300 million IUIJllua in the 1tate budget to meet the Ible Supreme Court's ruUoc th.It Callfornla's 11y11ttm of school thw>cu i1 UDOon1tituUonaJ, .aour~s said. That would result ln the rtate taking over a bigger share of the cost ot local schools -perhaps about $500 million of the $3 billion ralltd by property tues for achools -plus more atate money to im .. prove the f!duc1Uon of children with aptdal l<amln& problem1. Stnate Pre11Jd11nt pro tern Jamea Mllla, Democratic leader or the upper house, announced to atnators Tuesday thlt repruentltives ol the governor and the Democratic leader of the Assembly re- quested a priv1te hearing btfore the Stnai.. Mlll1 said the purpose ol the meetJnc, a so-called "caucus of the whole," would be lO htar detalll of a llCbool finance and tu reform mea.rure wbJcb Miiii said "apparently had been worked out" betwetn Reagan and Moretti, Mills said ~torettl and a representative of the govemor wouJd appear together to present the plan, but gave no further detaUs in h1J Ooor announcernenl. Prlnclj)ll J>W'PO'" of tht compromise art to rtduct property ta1e1 and find a ochool oupport 1y1t•m that metll the court'• objection that the rell.ance on local property tuts maku lht quality of a child's education dependent on the wealth or his neighbors. Here are deta lls which other Environment Threat Told France Resumes Nuclear T . /D . esti11g-espite Warni11gs 1'ARIS (UPI) -Fr11¥>0 hll rwumed nudeAr atmolphorlc lt1Ung In the South Padllc In apltt of vigorous prott1ll by -..a1 nations that the blasta may ..,. d._ thtlr tnvlronmenll, the Frtnch Dql agtncy Al..,.. France Prou aald I ,NOITN PAClftC OCl4N -t-HAW~~! tod1y. The agency aid in a report from T~hlti that the first nuclear warhead· ttpe device was detonated Sunday morn- ing in the vicinity or Mururoa Atoll, 800 mlles southwest of Tahiti. '1i·M4111W IS. I I ",iC:HitlST::M4S::l:·_,r--:::::=':':-::':'-:::::~:::::~!.1i -··· ~ -:z I NUCLIAI ,,., AllA . .,I ,._. •• • •tt '' ···1v.··: .. ··: ··1· ~ J~ •u! is. . • ~'I.ti~'" I& • • • .,.;;... _ • • •. \.......5i 1-.• ...:-·-• .. . . .. : t· ·,,·.f.TI ' •TAHITI ", •. :. 20• ~ '°"'"· -- --.~ 0 PACtflC OCUN. MUIUROA"() If~ I MANOAllVA ... . j 1~0· . 111 lit IJD " r U"t JMwtm• PllNCH ILASTS-France, Ignoring worldwide protests, bas started a Hrlea of nuclear tests In vlclnlty of Tahltl In South Pacific. Gov- ernment oources 1ald the lint bomb was detonated June 25, and another i1 e.pected thla week. FNlllPflfel CUTS .•. San Francisco Babysitter Held In Tot's Death Tbe French Derense Ministry declined comment on the report as did the nuclear experimentation center here y,·hich coordinates atomic testing in the Pacific. The ministry ind icated Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on tho tests until the series wu com- pleted, preiiumably sometime later this summer. There was no word about the safety ol the protest yacht Greenpeace lJI which last was reported heading into the test area. Another yacht manned by members of the French Nuclear Test Protest Com· mittee was preparing to set sail Thurs· day afternoon for the test area from Tauranga, New Zealand, 100 miles south or Wellington. Jn Wellington, New 1.ealand Prime Mlnisler John "farshall said tonight he would seek confirmation that the tests had begun but would not send a protest note to France. "There's no point in wasting more paper and time in telegrams," he said. 'Ibe reported blast came after a lo.day effort by New 1.ealand, Australia and Peru to force a cancellation of the new series of test explosions. The three countries. joined later by others, jn.itially issued formal complaints against the plaMll<f tests at the reopen· Ing of the Disarmament Conference in Geneva this month. A series of anti-nuclear demonstrations and bomb aUempts against French prop- erty followed in A u s tr I i a and New Zealand. Australia 's Prime Minister, William McMahon, sent a pet'°'181 message to President Georges Pompldou to ask for an end to the tests. The French government anawertd charges that tests were harmful to the environments of PacWc coast nations by saying the blasts wue low-yltld and suf- ficiently removed from p o p u 1 a t i o n ctnters. France is the only major Western power not to have signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. France and China are the only nations carrying out nuclear tests in the atmosphere. • pl~pants in ll>t -1JaUclal, 'llho uktd not lO be lde!tllltd, laid ll>t ...... promllt con1aln1 : llEW TAXES -'l1on la "111ballntlll apment" bttwetn Rapn llld Moretti on whlch tues to ra1.ae to pay for the new school support, with .the new tu l'tructure putting be1viett reliance on sales taxes. That woold be closer to the proposed ta1 structure Jn Reacan's it.2 blllion rtlonn plan, 11D•ellod Jut month, thJn to l\loretil'r la• nlor111 propooaJ, which la- cluded bil 1tite lncOme tax hikes. PRQPERTY T~ RELIEF -Mortl- tl'I propoaals to Increase tht P<'....,I homeOwnt.r'I property tax e1emptioo from '760 to $2.COO -a taJ QUt of about 1140 pu homeowner -!.< "'substanllall7 From Pqe J . trimmed" and moot of the pnperty tu relltl will be In the form ol lower school tu f!lla in the llale'• ~ districts. SCHOOL MONEY -. 1'J'htr< are still l)llnp to be worked oul oo the, school llnance aide, but tbe dllf-aren't lllllW'DIOUlltable. Tbey'U be prntntlng the Senate 90 percent ol lhe ball game." URBAN FACTOR -The SC>CJUed ••urban factor" i5 part of the com- promiJe. That's a plan by Allemblyman WUije Brown (!).San Frandl<o), to glvt 1110n mootY to IChools wllh high mlnori· ty populatlC'1S and Ja111e numbers of children from welfare families. EARL y CllJWHOOD -The com· promlle wtU contain SIG mlllloo to $80 million a year to start on the plan of Stale Supt. of Public Jnstructloa Wilson Rlltl .... Aaemb!Jman Keantlh ~ (~anlen Grove), to l'tltrUCture1.~ flrlt lour yean of public school and ...,.. chllctr.o in school ft •&• 3 years t months. But the lull It billion, flv .. ytll' plan propootd by Rile• is not financed In the compr..ornise. ~'TATEWJDE PROPERTY TAX ~ There 13 no statewide property tu in Ulf' comptOmise, although that has fre- quently been ment.i~ as a means IJf meeting the court's school ~ decisioo. But the compromiae does in- clude a modified version of Republicln Assemblyman Dixon Arnett'• plan ).o shift half of the surplus fundl or Callfotnla's richer district• to poory:r schools. Refuses Comment ANGER. • • Council or the city manager," Henry Quigley said. FBI Hunt,s Last 2 of 5 He emphasized that although McDon- nell Douglas presently enjoys com· mercial, rather than industrial, zoning, Irvine can still control development. Indicted in Niguel ] ob "Nothing happens on the McDoMell Douglas property wit.bout a condiUonal use permit being approved by the city of Jrvlne," Quigley said. "It appears to me that the Newport Beach City Council is looking for a scapegoat to explain away the rapidly expanding development of the airport area that is sure lo cause an increase in tht air traffic," Henry Quigley oald. Newport Beach recently approved a massive developement of the Emkay properties 11ear the airport and in ~t weeks has rushed approval of the C.Ollins Properties, despite that community 's, lengthy and vocal opposition (91 further expansion of the airport. Quigley's scapegoat reference, observers note, means Irvine is being labelled as the prime cause of added demands on the airport by Werence, while Newport Beach will reap the added tax benefits of the devek>pmenta in their city. t Mayor \Villiam Fischbach sustained Henry Quigley's rlght to pursue t~ "in· flamatory" discu.ssioM to which Coun- cilman Ray Quigley objected . Henry Quigley then added he wu "a~ palled by the eJ:tremely inflammatory statements" of the UMamed Newport Beach official. Ray Quigley countered with an attempt to cool Henry Quigley'& fervor on the issue saylng, "I hate to aee this Irvine council making highly inflarhmatory statements. It is not logical to attribute those statements to any one member of the Newport council," be said. By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of 1111 Callw ,llDI Stiff Federal Bureau of Investigation ageflts today continued an intensive natioowide search for two ol five men ind icted t::hi!'I week in coMedion with the $3 million theft at the Laguna Niguel United California Bank in late March. Agents, anned with the federal grand jW'y indictment&, are tracking two brothers, Ronald Let Barber, 29, oI South Gate and Harry James Barber, 31, of Youngtown, Ohio. Now in custody as suspects in the case are : -Charles A. Mulligan, 38, also of Youngstown, arrested June 2 out.side a TuaUn bar by FBI agents al1<l Orange County shtrilfs' dtprtlt1. He la being held at IA5 Angeles County jaU In lieu or ll!O,OllO bail. · -i>iiUJp Bnict Oristopher, 29. of Oeveland, Ohio, arreated June 22 on a federal parole violation and indicted late Monday In connecllon with tht robbery. He ls being bttd at CUyehoga County Jail in Cleveland on a $7l0,0llO bond. -Amil Allred Dtaio, 36, of Youngstown, arrested eorly Tuesday morning In Boardman, Ohlo, by the FBI. He also !.< being held at Cuyahoga CoWlty Jail in lieu of $750,CKXI bail. ln keeping with their traditional slance, FBI agents refused to comment on any of the arrests beyond the fact that the trio are mspects in the burglary in From Pagel CHASE ••. I Henry Quigley rotumed, "It la most naive to assume the .iat~nts did not come from the council or city m~ger. II any low level staff member In Nelfporl olf at IJ\.oer &od, ytlllng uct harasaing Beach said those tblngJ about us -il them. anyone on our staff made tuch remarks They nportedly Jett the freeway trying about a neighboring city councU," to ditch the punuers and -falling - Quigley said, "I'd want a full-scale hear· took an ~ramp and then switched to the ing leading to the firing of that person." Garden Grove Freeway, headlne for At this point, Mayor Fischbach joioed home. Henry Quigley, saying, "These gratuitous Investigators were told they abandoned insults •how extremely Incredible bad tht chase whlc:h Jell ll>t 1retw1y onto which thieves blasted their way into tt>e bank and 1e!t with $2 million in securities: aJKt more than $1 mHlioo in cash, jemels and other effects. It was revealed that Christ.Opher, when arrested on the parole violation, had $27,000 in his passcssion, believed to be part of $430,000 stolen dW'ing a burglary o1 tht Lordstown, Ohio, branch ol the Second National Bank of Warren May ~ U.S. Attorney John Walters, speakin~ from his Los Angeles office late yester- day, noted "the investigation is QOt. closed ," hinting that more indi~ may be forthcoming in a few days. - He added that once hearinls be.fore a U.S. Magistrat In Cleveland art cai>i plettd, Dinslo and Cllrlrtophtr wW be transported to California. '111ey will join Mulligan In Los Angeles County Jill whtle awaiting trial. "The entire group will be trit\I tof;ether/' Walters said. ~ Little has betn releaood about the bi!ckground of the three men arresttd'. Ohio officials claimed Mulligan, ail • unemployed barber, has an arrest record dating back to 1962 when he pltaded • RUJJty to charges that he burglarhet! several midwestern strip mining opera- tion offices. In 1964, he was sent to Olio State· Penitentiary alter being convicted ot · receiving $.1,000 in stolen goods followina: theft at a YoW1gstown drug store. Nixon Plnns News Session . . WASHINGTON (AP) -Presl-' dent Nixon will hold a news con- ference to be nationally broadcast over radio and television from the White House East Rocm 11'urlday · night, a spokesman announced to- day. " ed. thlt term ., 1110IMWhat of a misnomer." However, be aa1d the United Statu "lhlll keep the mlnlmum needed to achieve our objecUvee, u and that, in any cue, IOIDe American forcet would 1 remain until war prilcmen 1 n d thcR mlaa:ing tn action have been returned or accounted for. Zlerlte did not reply directly w b • n uked whelhtr all of ll>t 10,0llO being withdrawn from Vietnam between July I and Stpt. I will be aent home. But he pointed out lhllt a IJ'Ht·dt1J deptndl on the Intentions of the North VletnameM wlltther addlUODll U.S. 1t1 a D d air power will be l'!Qulnd. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A 21-year• old bobyaittet' hu betn arrttltd In the duth ol 111 Infant boy found stufltd Into a hole In a basenent, police said. judgement. That kind of idiocy cannot surface roadl again at Brookhurst Street PUC Joins Firm promote the relations that are desirable and Stanford Avenue in Garden Grove. between neighboring cities." One suspect was cleancut and ef· IL will be Nlxoc's first session • with newsmen to be broadcast llve in more than a year. He noted that an Internationally supervised ct-fire t h r o u g b o u t I ndochlna would end the need for U.S. 1lr aQd naval power. 'n>e Un1ted States hu 1bout 53,000 men 111lgntd to buts In Tballllld llld there bave bffn an additk>nal 25,000 air men and naval peraonnel in areas adjecent to Vletnem 1lnce the 1t1rt of the ofiellllve. But Ziegler viewed this l.ncrtue u ••mJniJcule" "hen compared with the number of Americ&n11 withdrawn from Vietnam 1Inct lle9. He llld that cmly a mall number hid bttn as.signed to othtr countries. " DAILY PILOT ftt ONfillt C... DAil 'i Pit.OT, Wfltil 'llMdt .................... ...._ .. .....,....., ... Onftft °"" "*""""' ClrlwlMr ..... ,......,...,.,.......,#.MN., ..... ,,...,., ,., Cett9 Mtt1, HttllllWt •etcll. "-""'* hkh/lltu!tt.in Vtllty, ~ l"9dl. l'*'lsddlMdl W 11111 C""*'l•I l.n JlllM ~,,.,.., A llfltlt ntltMI elltltft ... , ....... 11 ..... .,... hfidtn. TM ,,__, ~-~ " •t J3I w"' .. 1 '""'· ~ Mm. Dillflrflll. nm lt1Mrt N. W1H P,...,idtftt_."*IWIW J••k .. c.r1 • ., Via ,.,..._ Ml 01Mr11 M....., n ••• k11wil ..... 1\•• A. M11r,.l111 ~blttr Cli1tl• H. lNt l lct.ar4 '· Nin MIWMt --· If:•• -Qlfll .... I -= S1l'lft _.....,.,.···::::.~~ l::i!. .... -=-·,.;,;;o--"" '"""""' -.... ., C.llllM ..... ,,,. ,, 1 •• m•• '4Mn1 'C' WW Mad •1 '4Nt11 ,,. c....,,_ ... ., ......... --,,.. ... .,_....., cc-_.rtoo• _,Ill Booked on investlg1Uon of murdu was Anna Marte Moran who pollct said had bttn blred as a bobyoltter fer JU1tln R. Want, 21 months, on Saturday. Offlctn llld the child'• -· c.rolyn A. Pedtnen, 32; left him In the care ol Mis& Moran and returned early Monday to find no trace ol the boy, bis ckJthing or Miss Moran. Four ofncers searched with flashlights In a ba9tment at the G<ary Street apart. mtnt before finding the boy'• body wrapped in 1 blanket and stuffed in a hole ntor the kitchtl floor, poJJce said. An autopoy wu lK'heduled today to detennlnt the cause of death. Miss Moran was arrested at her mother's OOme in Novato, origPlally on a dill<kteal~ dlaJie, but later changed to tht mirder count. However, the mayor suggested he did femlnate, another had a aetormed Opposing Rulina not believe the slul'll wer• reflected 1n the mouth, w1t11 • .ueme1y rec1 uJl'. and tht ._, resolutioo adopted Monda.Y night by tlllrd bad a frizzy, natural balrstyle, the The precise time for the newt conference has not been set, press secrtlary Ronald L. Ziegler llld. Newport councilmen. victim& said. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Claiming 1-~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiif~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~ ••judJcial error," the state Public UUUtJes Commission has joined Pacilic Telephone ~ Co. in efforts to retain $212 million in GEM TALK ~ rate increases cancelled hr. the state .. Supreme Court. The PUC Tuesday peUliontd for a rehearing of the court's June 9, decision, arguing that its previous action approving the rate inctta.se was not subject to review by the cow1. The court had ruled the rate Increases were based on a pi-ohlbited tax ac- counting method and ordered the com· pany to refund more than '115 mlllion to customers. TODAY by 1. C. HUMJIHllU 1 • • • ' • ' Social Worker Murdered DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS Recovery of lost or stolen 111 .. monds has alwaya been a problem because there wa1 no means of In Chinatown Street War SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A young Chlnea IOcial worker has become the l•test victim In 1 siring of gangland style murders Jn CJtlnatown. Barry Fong-Torres, 29, executive dlrtc· tor of the Youth StrvlC<S and Coordinating Center In Chinatown, wu shot In the 1bdomen and tht head when ht llllWered the doorbell of bis apirt- ment late Moodly nilh4 authorltlt1 said. Beneath the body of Fong·Torrea, who 1<Ct11Uy told a friend that he feared death at the bandJ of Chinatown ltrett gang1. WU a bJoodttalned mluptUtd not• ,.,dlnf, "Pig lnlormtea Die Yonc." --t'Ollct 11ld11ii ln addl!IM to lliO Fiini· Toms alayinf, Ibey were tnvtstlgotlng the dtathl d nine aun.s. by other Chintlt •Ince MMdr lt'IO and 17 a111ults of the same nature alnct the beginning of tilt year. The flrlt nine 'murder tlctltna were iooltly connt<led with atmt ganga o! youni loblt11 and uneducated Chlnm immflr•nll, _pollca 1ald. ''"-)'ounisten ere all bl<>aled up wllb I IOrt ol orlmln1l •ltKm llld ffCh of .. ..,.11 factions "ants to run ChlnatoQ," "omlckll lnlpector John McKanna .. 1d. •ir1 something Uh Chicago in the r•cket days, maybe on a smAller scale." Fong-Torres, on leave from the Contra Costa County probation office, "was dealing with youna:sters capable or treacherous acts, and he knew he was walking a tlglrtrope becauat of bis con- tacts with probation offlcer..a and police," said Roy Webb, an official or the pro- bation office and a c{OH friend of the dead man. 11Barry told me about a month ago he wu a:ettiog very cloH to aome of these gang members. who thoulbt ht miglrt know too much," Webb 1akf. "He a.Id he had bttn threatened and that ho ftartd for hi• Ult." FromPqel PARTY ... mind. Wby aho made a liatement like that/' Mn. Wa•hburn 111d. Sha dllclosed that during dinner )able, convenallon around the swimmln( pDol J\ll'I. Mltcbell hid ~ to oomo back In Stptembtr "for a luncheon" to llelp raise funds for the lltpubllcan Party. Mn. Washburn Is active In Republican womtn'I clrclea. identifying such gems. II lost, there was no real way to prove ownership when found . II stolen, identifica\lon, particularly of the larger more valuable stones, was complicated by the fact that the thieves usually cut the !Mgor gems into smaller sizes, thus mak· ing ldenlification a vlrttial lmpossl· blllly. A new service, called •1tdentJ. gem,•• has recently been announc.d by the London firm of Diamond Grading Laboratories. The pbote>- Whft JOU sin her 1111 Omega ahe'll aay •you lholi!da'I have," blll lbe woG'l mean IL When 1he .... th1 Omega n1m1 on her watch 1ti.in know hOw rnuch extra thOught you put Into htr Chrittm ... She~mar not rt'11ln thlt Omtg1w1lches111 UM4 on an Apol"° moon niohtt and In UM OlympleL Sh•'tl toYt "Jw~ fof It• blluty. Liter on. 1ht'D '°"" rts tnchlflno depend1bntty. And tr •h• -.y1, "You-ld!l'u.a.t,• J"'t you t.y to ta1ct tt baotc. ·1 graphlc process pictures the baalc Q characterisUcs of the p o 11 • h e d stone, recording forever the tiny OMEGA marking which-make eaclLtllae.....--~--:-----r.;,,......,,,.,..,...,,_....,.,------- mond dlffertnt from any other. ,. -..;., ~ 11e•1M Cf'rl\11 •• 1•· ,_,,f ........... ~ ...... ···••» Just as flngerprinu ClllDOt be chaneed, the• tlll1 marldnJI i-.. mala ldeotl!labl• ttCardleu of 1111 ncutun1 of the atooe. Not only doa lhll meea tbAt your diamond 11 In lclu•l feet dU· • te~t than uy other In the world ••• II also means th1t we can now change the pbrHe, "Diamonds are FOrever Yoursl 1 ' ' I J.C. .J/.ump~riej Jeweferj 1823 NEWPORT 8LVD., COSTA MESA CONYl'NllHT lllMI IANICAMUICAIO-MASTU CHAIGf 21 YEAU IN IAMI LOCATION ' ,HONE Ml·J-4D I ' c )a In "Ile "·so La A to wti in'g m 8 refi I<> sta dpig amon LSD I Poli art co 85,0llO narcot and hi The In ca LSD CONTENDERS ASSEMBLE -One of these young ).adies will become Miss Laguna Niguel Sunday dur· Ing judging set for 3 p.m. at the Monarch Bay 1leach Club. Clockwise from left are Sharon Pear· ··son, 18; Cheryl Smollen, 16; De Ann Hurst, 16; Patty DiLucci, 17; Vicki Doughtery, 17; Desiree Flannagan, 17; Karen Flannagan, 15; Monica Fri· gone, 15; Col. Albert C. Pommerenc, judge; and · Bertha Ann Sparks, 15. Laguna Resident Handed Sentence On Drug Charge Niguel Pretties Nine Girls Vie for 1972 Crown It Laguna Beach man linked on arrest to what was described as the fast grow .. irt"g manufacture and sale of hashish oil, a refinement of marijuana, has been sent to state prison for his conviction on other clp&g charges, A group or shapely and suntanned. Laguna Niguel girls will be vying for the title of Miss Laguna Niguel Sunday. The annual contest will be held at 3 p.m. at the Monarch Bay Beach Club, wit.Jr this year's beauty queen Marci Mitchell presenting the crown to MW Laguna Niguel of 1972. In addition to the c;:own, the winrting beauty will receive a scholarship from the Mary Webb Davis School in Newport Beach and numeroU! prizes totalling ,1,000. . The contestants this year are Sharon Pearson, 18; Cheryl Smollen, 16; De Ann Hurst, 16; Patti DiLucci, 17; Vicki Dougherty. 17; Desiree Flannagan, 17; Karen Flannagan, 15; Bertha Ann Sparks, 15, and Monica Frigone, 15. Judges for the contest are Col. Albert C. Pommerenc of El Toro Marine Corps Air station; Don Duffer, president or Laguna Niguel Homeowners ; Raymond Peloso, assistant vice president of Avco Community Developen and general maneger of Laguna Niguel; Scott Ray· mood. a Monarch Bay resident, and Don- na Landry of the Mary Webb Davis School. '.Orange Counly Superior Court Judge ~ K. McMillan ordered a prison tenn of two to 10 years for Dooald Alex- ander Hambarian, 21, of 1183 Miramar st.· alter rejecting a Jong, impassioned pin. for leniency by defense attorney deirge Chula o( Costa '!desa. Judge McMillan appeared more recep- tiye to the argument oi prosecutor Pat Brian who asked the jurist to send the Lagunan to prison "to let others know dope is oot tolerated In Orange County." Four Held in San Diego Brian success.fuUy prosecuted Ham- barian in a_ jury trial that produced the defendant's conviction on three felony and two misdemeanor narcotics charges, among them the charge of posse86ing LSD for sale. Bombings, Sniper Fire Police who arrested Hambarian in the art colony last Dec. 15 said they found 85,000 doses of ~ish oil, LSD and other narcotics in ttie )>OSSession of Hamberian and his companions. They said they also confiscated $10,000 In cash found °" the premises and 4-0,000 LSD tablets. ilurlal_Site • SAN DIEGO (AP) -Raids following a theater bombing and sniper ahooting have resulted in four arrests and the con- fiscation of decals inscribed with the names of two conservative groups, police have reported. Police Chief Ray Hoobler said decals bearing the names of the Secret Army Organization and Minutemen were found when officers armed with search war· ~A bulldozer operator at sprawling Camp Pendleton made the Initial dllcovery of what b believed to be an Indian adult buried 1,500 to ~ 8,500 yeara ago jn the Las Flores area • .Two gkeletons, ap~arently -;; mature males, now have been unqovered along with a human s lower "Jaw, an arrowhead and two stone fire hearths. From left are Dr. Paul ~ tzel!, anthropologist; Marine S/Sgt. Travis Rollins and geologist Paul rants seized a large q1iantity of black powder, numel'll! rifles and band.guns and several thousand rounds of am· munition In raids hen! Monday night. Hoobler said an investigation was launched after Paula Tharp was wounded Jan. 8 by · a .sniper bullet fll'ed . into the San Diego residence of Petfir Bohmer, a self-described radical professor at Cal State San Diego. A local movie house with about a dozen persons Inside w a s bombed J u n e 19 destroying a comer of the ,stage. No oqe was injured by the bomb which police said was pushed through a bole under the stage. Hoobler aid a leaflet circulated at the time Miss· .Tharp was .!hot 'carried a .detailed desctiption of Bahmer's routine. The leaflets OOre the name of the Secret Army Organization, a group which ad· vocates arming agalnst a Communist conspiracy, he said. Arrested were: -George Mitchell Hoover, 36, a Santee, handyman, for investigation into the shooting, assault with intent to commit murder, possession of uplosives and an lllegal billy club; -William Francis Yakopec, 30, an unemployed El Cajon carpenter, for ifl. vesUgation into the theater bombing. -Richard Jolin Fleury, 48, an unemployed El Cajon electrician, and his 39--year~ld wife, Genevieve, for in- vestigation of possession of explosives. ()ff icers Arrest Girl, 11, Mom In Tot's Death TWENTYNINE PALMS (UPI) -An 11-year<>ld girl baa been booked on in- voluntary manslaughler charges, and her i>nlthers and molher jailed on other cbarg" In tbe shooting death ol an Infant cousin. Tbe girl, Jell alooe with the 1-Y<ar-old boy, sbOt him In the chest with a .:zz. caliber revolver that her brothers, 10 and 11, bad stolen from a cabin the week before, San Bemardlno County sberilf's eputterAld'l'lleS<li • - Tbe girl, who was not ldentilled, was apparently pJaying wllh the revolver at the family home, a trailer in the desert, and londed one chamber, wben ll fired, killing Mark R. DeGodwin, deputies aaid. Tbe girl and ber brotben were held In custody at juvenile liall. The girl's mother, Mrs. Charles Mcwhorter, who deputies said left the yourig girl In charge of the infant and went to Los Angeles for two days , was arrested on her return on charges ol 1"/fO'n!Sday, June 28, 1972 s DAJLV PILOT Schmitz Wins Recount· County Workers Stand By, Await Word County workers today wlll gel the word on when they can begin to count by hand the 18,220 39th Congnsslonal District votes that added up last June 2 to a defeat for Rep. John G. SChmitz in the Republican primary, Registrar of Voters David Hitcbcock got the green light Tuesday from coun- ty supervisors who slressed that the John Birch Society member will have to pay for the manual count that is expected to confirm his defeat at the hands o( Cowity Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw. It will coat Schmitz at least $1,600 and is u:pected to cost more than $2,000 for the county workers who will work in shifts until their audit of the com- puterized taUy of the Coleman Voting System is complete. Hinshaw racked up 40,214 vootes In the June 2 election, 2,352 more than Schmitz. Schmlll will be asked lo hand hi$ ,1 ,600 check to Hitchcock before the county registrar orders his four vote counters to begin the hand count. If Schmitz asks for six vote checkers, the number permitted by state law covering recounts, he will have to sign a check for $2.400. The lame duck congressman \vlll get a refund, however, If the hand count proves his theory that the Coleman c o u n t e r goofed when it tallied the 39lh Distr ict vote. County supervisors offered the same ap- proval lmder the same working and financial conditions Tuesday to Dr. William Brashears of FullertOn, and wrlto-ln candidate In the S fl 1' 1 Congressional Dlstrlcl R e p u b I l •a f\A primary. ~11 Dr. Brashears drew 6,454 write-bl votel 1r June 2, well below the 11,719 votes r1cted ~ up by the Coleman s y s t e m for Johll Ratterree who is expected to take on b> cumbent Congressman Richard Hanna Da ll the November election. • 1• ·U Brashears unsuccessfully sought , COIP't '' action 10 put his n a m e on the ballot after arguing thi1t he was not f I v e'a minutes past the 5 p.m. deadline for m~ ll ing nomination papers. · 4 His 6.4~ supporetrs had to enter tbtlr 11 randidate's name on the ballota by ban<h. •J ·~ Schmitz made it clear in his request that he was not concerned with costs in- curred by the rarely used hand count. "I owe it to the many loyal and dedicated workers in my campaign and to my many other long-time supporters to make su re that the vote tota ls we have are accurate and not the result of human or mechanical error," he said. San Juan Hot Spri ngs Brush to Face T·orch Schmitz also pointed out that the Coleman syste m had been subject to fre- quent errors and malfunctions in a once checkered career and could conceivably have been wrong again when it declared Hinshaw the winner. Courses Dealing In Automotive Technology Set Five courses in automotive technology head the · summer offerings o( the Regional Occupational Program ad· ministered jointly by the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified School Districts. Applications for the courses may be obtained at the Laguna Beach Unified School District office, 550 Blumont St., Laguna Beach or the ROP office, 26126 Victoria Blvd., Capistrano Be a ch. Courses are open to high school juniors and seniors and adults. Firemen \Vho wl!I be-accompanied by anned Orange County sheriff's officers are preparing today lo bun1 off n1uch of the brush-covered acrea ge surrounding the San Juan •lot Springs near San Juan Capistrano. They got approval Tuesday fron1 a county board or supervisors v.·hich urutrd behind Fifth DisU"ict Supervisor RonaJd Caspers' deinand for a cleanup in an i1rea he described as a haven for drug users and a worsening health hazard. Caspers said his office asked two months ago for permission by the prop- erty owners that v.·oulcl 11llow county workers lo move in on the Hot Springs area, bum fire breaks throughout the property and control what he said is in- creasing pollution of the water. A change of tjtle in the ownership of the Starr Ranch. the property owners at the time, has delayed that permjssion to the point that immediate board action is necessary, Caspers said. "We had a drowning death oul there Junior Go11r11iets last .Jw1e 18." Ca.11pers sa id . ''And the use of drugs by motorc)·c.·le l:angs and unsupervised youths has become a . regular thing in the area .'' ' Caspers got board backing for his sug.l gestio n that the county heal th officer should immediately take over control of I he hot springs water and fill in the area if control proves to be impossible. Also approved was his suggestion that a regul ar she riff's patrol be assigned tci the •lot Springs station "to eliminate ~ current drug use and iUicit activity at the site.'' "The number ol youtho who band around the area always increases durtn( the summer months," Caspers said. "W- must act now if we are to control tb!s situation." Sheriff's officers cooliuned Tuesdi that the former health resort, a popul spa for some 50 years from'tbe late 1 and just l3 n1.nes from San Ju Capistrano. requires I n c r e a 1 l n surveillance and is widely known in t area as a haven for drug users. Summer offerings include: -Volkswagen Maintenance and Repair beginning July 5. The course will include 150 hours of pre-employment instruction. The class will meet Monday through Fri- day from 8 a.m. to noon. -Rotary Engine Repair. A 30-hour pre-- employment program starting July 7. It will meet Fridays from 3 p.m. to 7 Cook Club in the Makings 1 For Laguna's Boys Ouh · p.m. . -Motorcycle Maintenance and Repair, A 90-hour pre-employment course, begin- ning July 5. It "Y(ill ,meet Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 2 p.m. to 8 p.m. -Installation. and ·Maintenance of Automotive-SffiOl .Control Devices. A JO. hour program preparing for the Btate's Class A smog device licensing ex~ amination. 11le class will begin July 6 and will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays from 7 to 9 p.m. -Installation and Maintenance of Automotive Air Conditioning. A 48-hour pre-employment training p r o g r a m , starting July 5. The class will meet Tues- day through Saturday from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. -Cable Television Maintenance a n d Installation. A 120-hour pre-employment program, starting July 5. Graham Kerr, look out. A batch ()f Junior gourmet! may be" galloping your way from the Laguna Beach Boys' Club. A Cook Club for Boys' Club members seven to 18 years or age is in the works as part of the summer Edutwt,lon Program. "We wanted to offer a variety of things besides just basket boll," Susan Dalrym- ple, Boys' Clll'b librarian said. A1so included in the summer program are Book CJub, French Club, German Club activities. Once the classes are started, they'll go through Augusl, Miss Dalrymple, a UC Irvine graduate student said. Exact starting dates will depend upon the mem- bers' interest, she said. There is no charge !or any of the classes. At the cooking cluses, the young cook! wiU be instructed in the intricacies of CELEBRATING OUR THIRD STORE · baking banana · br<tdi )'OIUtl frult lalld, and some rict 1 maln 4blttl, Miu Dalrymple aakl. • • · "Cooking ts like cbemlllly. Boys de - like it, I think;'" she 11id. ••1t gives a greal deal o( aa~ecllon ill do .i.mllh!n1 like lhal," she lilded. . - Noling that most great ehleft are men, she said. "l might be making• star." ' As for the other clubs, the Book Club f would meet from 1 to 2 p.m. Mondays for reading aloud and discussion of selected _. books. ' German and French Cuubs will discus» • customs and dress of those countries u • weU as some beginning language com. ~ plemented by fieJd trips and mwdc. The French group would meet from t to 2 p.m. Wednesday and tbe German : Club from 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesdsy1 and Thursdays. \ U !COM NNO AND REGISTER FOR $ THOU$AND$ OF DOLLAR$ WORTH OF FREE Gins 2371 N. Orango Moll 100 Yd• North of tho Bro1dw1y MALL OF ORANGE ALL STOllS SALi PRICIS GOOD IN THIU JULY I T eble ff4 4 CINtfn Reg. $195. SEIYING CA.IT R19. $50. LOUNc;,1 CHAI• Reg. $-40. OTTOMAN R19. $20. IOCKEI Re9. $-45. 5101 TA.ILi Re9. $JO . CHAISE LOUNGI le9. $70. LOYISEAT R19. $60. $169'S s42•s s32•s $1695 s37ts s24•s s59•s s49•s SUNSET 11 By SAMSONITE Htr•'• 011tdoor f11r11ih1re th1t m•~•1 111y p1tio po1h. It's the 11101t dur1bl1, t h111k1 to S1m1on-G1rd, 1 new polv·•ln~I co1tin9, Comfort'1 built from th1 bottom 1,1p with fle11ible 1l1t1 In • v1riety of color combin1· tion1. T1bl1 topl of h1ndcr1ft1d "M1rb1lle.H ON IAlE NOW-SAVE 400/o LEILANI By TROPITONE Thi lelsuro h'"llllro -lash .. ' '°5h ClfHf lestt.--iY•ty-pfH ... i...-M,, • .J_.,.. __ _:;.c tied in an attractive closely-woven basketweave pattern. You c•n choose from a dozen different seating piMet and a wide selection of matchlnt tebles, ell in a variety of col.,..,, Rust free aluminum fr1Mn, co1tM in "Tenico•t", the reYolutionary 11ew co•ting th•t outlasts jHint, - r Campo. felony cblld neglecL 11.::;;::;;::;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= ~ ,._, 4 DAILY PILOT Agnews Reveal Wedding Pl.ans WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vi« Pmid"11111d Mrs. Spiro T. Agnew ..-meed tDda)I the qarement ol ll1elr dauahltr Suian Scott to car- rol( W. Stein, a. Maryland state .,,,. ploye from Baltimore. The Apws said tn a brief state- ment llllt "a winter weddinf II plllll1<d." Mlaa Agntw, 241 and llteln, 311, I Towoon, Md., St.,. College gradll· ate, have known eac1> other for ellht y ..... Agnew Tours Area.s Hit By Flooding WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew set out today on a tour of fiood.tom artat of Maryland and Vlrgtnla on behalf ol Prealdent Nixon. Aanew made the lfnt leg of the trip, to Eincott City, Md., just west of Bllilimo", by helicopter from the hellpad al the PeotqlWI, for a walking lour •nd a meettng with local o!DclalJ. He arranged to fly by small plan< In earty afternoon to Richmond , far a heliccpter ftleht over ar .. s hit bani by troplctl storm Aanes fn and around the Vlrgtnla capital. A meeting also w .. scheduled there. On Tburlday, the vice president will go to New York, another of the five 1tatea batltred worst by the storm's heavy wlnda and rain, with a atop in Elmlra. Acoompanylng Agnew was George Lin- coln, director of the Offlce of Emergency Priparedntss, who ii c o o r d i n a t i n c federal efforts to aasiJt the ltricken ....... Nixon aaked Congress Tuesday for an• additlonai •too miHlon tn disaster relief fundl to be channeled into POMl)livanla, New York, Maryland , Virginia and Florida. Congre~ and federal agencies also took more action to speed up and in· crease help. -The Senate approved a $200 million approprlallon " to fatten the federal diaast'!I' reUef flmd. 'lb,e 1wlft acllon came on 1 voice vote ova: the objections of some' senators who Complained the measure lhoutd be given more con· tlideratlon to ·prevent the misuse of the fundl. It appeared however, It might he several weeks before the bUl goes to Nix· on because Congress starts a long receu tbiJ weekend. -HOUie Banking Committee Chairman Wright Patman (Jl.T ... ), aald he would attempl to get upanimous conaent of the H..,. tocllr. !pr · COlllld~ation on the floor of a ,,.....,.. to 1Ubstantially reduce the Interest rate on federal dialller Joant: An ·objection by Rep. Durward G. Hall (R·Mo.), prevented con· alderatlon Of the bill Tuesday. Article Claims 5 Toothpastes 'Contain Lead' CHICAGO (UPI) -Five nalionally mneted toollJpooW, including Q-eet, may contain dangerous JevU ol lead because of leal:age frun tobel and ..,.tings, an article In, tbe July edition of Ardlives ol Env~ Health .. Y•· Dr. Eleanor Berman, Cook County lloopltal toxlcolo&ilt, and reoeardlet' Karen McKlel, said alt« stydlng II toothpute< tile rtllUllt showed Crest, Freeh Breath, MlcLellD'1, Craig Martin and Worthm<c'e CXlOll!postes were at the "dangel'OWl lead ltvel& (above 5 percent) " . "·it Is possible illat 1lie toolbpllle beanda ·er.ot, · ~ Brealh, and Wonllmore are polOnllally hazardo111 to children who cileW on tile tube repeated- ly," the study aaid. A spokeomon for Procter and Gamble said the firm llld lalbWn for mBDy years ol tile lead.~l but llnce tllero bad been only ·..,.11 rumber of ,.,.s ,...ted Mm'< porsoos bad been af· f"*'1 the coiitalner waa not changed. McGovern's Aides Fight 'Challenge' WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. G<orge McGovern'• 1upporters are mountina: a massive effort to beat back a California credentials challenge wruch could be the laat major threat to his nomlnaUon. McGovern forces succeeded on another front Tuesday when Democratic party plaUorm-writers produced a document echoing the senator'& key positions, but in terms that h1s two main rivals also could embrace. The platform draft will be offered for a vote at the Miami Beach convention where debate seems certain on a number of planks opposed by Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and his supporters. The Platfonn Committee v o t e d overwhelmingly to authorize a minority rePort by the Wallace forces on such Issues as taxes, ~ economy, welfare, bu.sing of school children, prayer in schools, and crime. McGovern continUfid hls tour of the South where he found a friendly recep- tion and indications of possible later ballot suppcirt from Arkansas delegates. In a significant gestUtt to party regulars, he indicated that, if he wins the nomination, he will keep Lawrence F. O'Brien aa national party chairman . With the proposed platform r .. dy to be mailed to delegates, attention i n W"'1llngton turned to the Crede'lllials Committee which, in it! first decisons Tuesday, tossed out challenges to tht Alabama, South Carolina and Florida delegations. A half-Oozen key McGovern advisers met Tuesday night with the senator's supporters on the committee .. to map plans for the showdown Thursday on the California challenge led by all ies of Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey. The McGovern forces won the first round when hearing eu.miner Burke Marshall refused to support the attempt to split California's 271 votes, won by McGovern in the June 6 winner-take-all primary, and award them on a pro- portional basis. That could take lSl votes away from McGovern, who claims to be within 20 votes of the nomination. 'Ille lastest tally by The Associated Press gives him 1.358.9 votes -15°'~1 votes short of the 1,509 needed. The seriousness with which the McGovern camp regards the California caae was evident in the comments of key strategists before Tuesday n i g h t ' s session . Despite Marshall's finding, Sandy Bel:ger to.Id reporters, "I doo't think it's over yet." Ell Segal, mastermind of the McGovern credentials effort, aid he ex- pects many votes to be "a lot more political lll8n legal" but added "I thiJlk we're okay. Both aaJd aome credential• panel mem· hers who favor other candidate! would vote with the McGovern forces on the Callfornia case. But 10 of McGovern's ISO suppcirters on the Credentials committee are from California and woo't be Obie to vote on the cballenge. ~. Connally Moves On SINGAPROE (UPI) -Former U.S. Treasury Secretary John B. Connally, a special envoy of President Nixon, arrived In Singapore tonight on a two-day private visit. Connally flew here from Pbnom Penh wltere he made a ail-hour l'isit earlier in the day and conferred with Cambodian President Lon Nol and U.S. Ambassador Emory C. Swank. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvery of tht Dally Piiot 15 guaranteed MOnchly•fl'rklly: II yov di NI' MV. your P'Pfl" by &::io p,rn., cell elld yovt •Y wit! bt btOulliht to VOU. Cll• •rt tllMI U1'11ll 1:IO p,m. kturcl1y Incl SundlYI ff )"Oii de Mt rttel~ yovr CllPY b't' f '·""· S1tuntay, ., I 1.m. Suncl1y, c•ll and • *' Wiii bt brOulllll ti YIU, C•ll• •r• tall.tr! unHI 10 ··"" Telepttones Molt OrtllOI County A..... --., .. ~ Norltl-t HilllllnQton IHdl 11'111 Westmliut1r .................. ,..1,. a.n CllfM!llt, c1plltr1110 e~1 _. Sin JNl'I taplllreno, DI,.. ~ $ovlt! LIOUl'll, Uf\11111 Nltlutl .... ..,,..... UPITtl...._ Over Ba,.,lade•la -India, Pakistan Patch Wounds J SIMJ.A, India (UPI) -Prime Mlnllter Indira Gandhi met today with Pa~ President ZUlllkar All Bhutto tn IWDDlil talka designed to paid! up war wound.I ~ ·- their batUe over the countrY now known a• Bangl,desb. "· _ Bhutto arrived by helicopter 30 minutes laft1 but be and Mrs. Gandhi smlleCI., '· shook bands and cbatlell u they went through a reception Une. ·., Mra. Gandhi IUTlved Tuesday for the talks af this remote Himalayan moun~ .. : station 240 miles north of New Delhi. . .. : ? The taJka between the Paltistanl and Indian leadera will affect the livea of the . 700 miUion persons living in their countries and Bangladesh, formerly East P~<.; eThieuPmeer SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu today signed into law hastily passed legislation giving him almost unlimited power for six months. Tbe legislation was passed by a bare quorum of progovemment senators in e semi· secret meeting late Tuesday night. . . ~ Jrtland to demand all-out military actlolf," againlt IRA strongholds. ; ! '-. British troops quickly broke up ~ rock·tltrowlng clashet In BellllSI Tuesday , night but similar battles in Lurgan, !II .:· miles south of the capital, eruptl!l-1 .~ sporadically into the early hours today •• :_..;1 e Guerrilla. Molle O.t ' · . ' Not Identical Now No opponents were present for the balloting on the bill, which was approved unanimously by the 2& pro · Thieu senators. BEIRUT (AP) -Beirut new1pa]>ft$1' • reported today that Palestinian guerliJ.li organ!zaliom have agreed to wlthdra'( : from south Lebanese towns and vWIPi:' ~: in the area near the Israeli border. ,,·.,·J Summer school students Jeannie and Vivian Palmer, 7·year-old twins, presented a real identification problem until their 5-year-old brother accidentally knocked out Vivian's two front teeth. You can easily identify each of them now -as long as they keep smiling. Senate Speaker Nguyen Van Huyen later denounced the measure as "illegal and valueless." Report. Tuesday had said the guai' '" rillas agreed to suspend their activitld::: but insisted on maintaining their bases lil'; ~ south Lebanon facing Israel. '~:1 e Pound Phnage Mari11es Ho1ne LONDON (AP) -The pound drilled lower on Europe's confused money markets today. 'Ille U.S. dollar generally held steady at recently depressed levels, staving off the threat cf a major monetary crisis. Analysts of Arab affairs said the S,00Q1'; to 4,000 commandos based in the lsrafll · · frontier region probably would mov~ ... closer to Lebanon's border with Syria Cl!','• to camps in Syria itself. Yasir Aratai;_. head of Al Falah, the larjesl guerrilJ.a· ., group, met in Damascus Sunday with:· Syrian President Hafez Assad, and they ., may have agreed on bases in Syria. WWII Leathernecks Laid to Rest At midday1 lhe pound in London would buy slightly under $2.49, down from Tuesday's figure of 2.SI50. WASIUNGTON (UPI) -For more than 29 years five young World War 11 Marines lay in shallow unmarked graves near the northern coast of Guadalcanal. They gave their lives in the dank and malarious jungle to help tum the tide of battle in the Pacific. Today they came home. Home to Ari· ington National Cemetery and burial with fuU military honors. Home to lie among other leathernecks who fell in that war - and in Korea, and in Vietnam. After so many years, nothing remained o( the five men but skeletons. 11iese were placed in two caskets for burial in a com- man grave at Arlington. . Marine officials said they could not. recall another funeral held under sbnilar c1Xcumstance1. It might bever have been held at all except fbr the effor~ of a forester's wife in the Solomon lslands and researchers at the Smithsonian Jnstitution in Washington. Records of 'tht 1st Marine Division, to which all five men belongedi show that Pvt. Paul E. Gagnon, 21 , of Augusta . Maine; PFC Godfrey E. Hunter ,. 20, or w-. N.C.; .WC David w. Johns, 19, of JohnstOin, Pa.; PFC Eugene Johrmon~ 18, of Littleton, N.C., and Cpl. John F. Suggs,~U, of Richmond, N.C., all died Oct: 9, 1942. In 1949 a ·special military review board ruled the five buried today were unrecoverable because oo trace of them had ~n found in the dense , war.tom jungle. The case iemhlned closed for the next 21 years. It was reopened bt 1970 after retired Marine Capt. E. C. Clarke, executive secretary of the 1st Marine Division ·wow. The perfect crime!' ' Association, received a letter from the wife of a forestry official in the Solomon Islands. Mrs. Y. Timothy Kwaimani wrote to say that a skeleton with Marine dog tags around its neck had been found on Guadalcanal. The name on the metal tags was G. E. Hunter. "That started a chain of events which led to the Australian government and Solomon Islands officials conducting a new search for grave ' silts o n Guadalcanal ," a Marine official said. "Four more skeletons were found in late 1971." The remains were sent to Washington, where SmiUisonian lnstitution officials worked nearly five months to establish positive identification through dental search and other records, officials said. "Apparently these Marines were buried by the Japanese after they were killed," one official said. "Then the jungle closed over the graves. That, plus the way the land was torn up from the shelling kept them from being found sooner,'' This meant an effective devaluation or roughly 4 pereent since Britaii1's decision Friday to Jet sterling float on in· ternational exchanges. Floating means that Britain abandoned international agreements to keep the pound sterling within fixed limits com· pared to other currencies. Now the pciund is bought and sold for the best price available under the laws of supply and demand. e Fragile «:ease-fire BELFAST (UPI) -Rock-throwing clashes between Protestants and Roman Catholics endangered Northern Ireland's fragile one-day-old peace. A British army spokesman warned against complacency and a pcili.ce spokesman said "a spark could blow it all up." Underscoring the threats to the peace ushered in by the Irish Republican Army's (IRA ) cease-fire, m i I it an\ Protestants headed for a meeting with Britain's secretary of state for Northern e 'Die-in' Arrests WASHINGTON (AP! -Nearly .U ol: 115 persons arrested in a symbolic ~ tiwar "die-in" near the U.S. senate,) chambers Tuesday had been released qp $50 bail late Tuesday night. 1 , • Those arrested included baby doctor , Benjamin Spock; actress Candi c fi. Bergen, actor John Voight, columnist Milton Viorst, newspaper reporter Mike McGovern, author Grace Paley, Joseph Papp. director of the Public Theater if New York, and Marge Tabanldn, presa. dent of the National Student Associatio~ Author George Plimpton addressed tht group but left before police loaded tbt demonstrators into police vans anf tran,,ported them to the central cell bkq at pcilice headquarters. · ~ police official said they were charg~ with obstructing a COrTidor in the Capit<i building. The charge provides a mo. imum sentence o( six months and a $sq> fine. ! ' ' THE WORLD"S OLDESTWHISKEY PRESENTS THE WORW'S OLDEST MAIL j SUMMER AGAlllJ, EH? l'LL NEVER FORGET THE SUMMER OF '92 WHEN CHRlS COLUMBUS THOUGHT HE'D MO.LL OFF THE .EDGE OF THE EARTH ! BUT NOTHING BEATS THE SUMMER OF 1600 I THAT'S.WHEN THEY INVENTED BUSHMIU.S. TALK ABOUT SMOOTH! THAT FIRST TASTE CONVINCED ME ,,...------------~WHISKEYWAS HERE TD STAY! YOU PEOPLE ARE LUCKY. A GLASS FULL OF ICE CUBES, A COUPLE OF FINGERS OF LIGHT. SMOOTH BUSHMll.LS, A SPLASH!.:-----------. OF COOL WATER.: ... ITS THE BEST SUMMER REFRESHMENT SINCE THE ICE AGE. )t)U SHOULD TRY A BUSHMILLS AT YOUR LOCAL INN. OR DO You CALL THEM COCKTAIL LOUNGES THESE DAYS? ' ' ' . Winds, Rain Pelt Midwest l I - Fair, Dry Weather Covered West, Northeast Areas . WIWIMftfOIOCAll. .. lltlfllkltt NH ,_..,.. Tiii .. Md Oltl111tm1 Qty, Olilt .. Mel 111 1re1 JO Ml• l9littl ol lt. L.wtt. lttldentt 9' hrwl1Pll OAll'I. I(,., '9POl1lct Mii """'' """'°'*' '" tM City. Hltfl Wlndl ff'"'lld NrM 1111! 1 tV!Mttllll'll 11'1 tlvtM!lvflle, A'91,. el'MI 1n 01UtlMlrT111, Arl(anM•• Mlt9""rl, Nortl'I O.koll Incl Sou111 Clrolln. •1141 fUMtl clouds formed In ,_, IOIJ\Ull •ncl fl'lort~. T"""9retul"H bllore oewn r•flOICI lron'I •7 If E\Otntton. Wyo., to fl 11 NMdl"' C:aHfefltla · Dnlrt arH• In $cMMr'll C11ftoml1 Wiii !IHI \IP to llloM of 111.t ID 115 ~ grH1 fl'lrtvCl)I TlllKMll'l'" fDNc:ltltrs .. y •. Sttl" wm·i. IUMY OMt momrng low clolild• 11111 fof M*r fll4I cout lMl!'1I oft tllll NlllOMil WMtMr StrvlCI •tld. TM llltfl Ill l8' Anotl11 Wiii rHCl) of '2t lht ........ c. ~~~7f---~lhllOOY-1't'""!'t 11!11 OV*mlotll low C:oaatal 'Weather H11:t #lilftlll'llllt toOly, Lltl'll v1rl1bMI 'lflnclt ~ """ '"°'lllno llwr• ~ hit .,,.,, lo -111wtt11r1v t lo II ttMlt IJI enwn.ont *1tY 111'111 T1Wt1111y. Hlgtl tod1y, 10W 1'k. co.1111 11,...r1wr.t r•not from 5' 11 tL 11\1~ i.mpw1111r .. r-. frem '° to U. Wtltt ftfnptrtlllrt M. Sun, i?foon. Tides Vl'IDMllDAY SICOlldfllllf\ ............ 10:c•P•"" •.t-$etond low ........ ,. .. •df Ji.m. SJ THUUDAY ,lrst flftlt ........ 1 ..... 1t;4Jt.m. I.I """' to.r .............. s:••·'"' .... . StcOl!lll Mlfl ............. 11 :11 p,f!'I .. .. """" '°* ... , ........ &111 f .f'll, ,,, Sun .... Jt .. ••"'-llft f lit fl."" Moon 11:1Mt •i't p,fl'I. "'9 1:N '·"" ( I .... 1001' IRllll Wlllll!IU: M HOOf. IOmb Ill IJ(Wlt. Tllf JDI. tMlltAU eG.. IUWMC, I.'·-'' 'BUSHMIDS · \ ( D Lbs Crlnsto Crans! day, al • fllafi pimp, Pl~ho SeQ°etl haljuc The "pfiy "flash '!:bey to ~har drag pl:ked mariju "Rob' 1enator him an .!so. w8l Da arijcle Magazi grand j in .New poisess after t prlso coPulat' er duCtioli opera to theiPar fa.Sbion bUsines Cran Superio pea ring not ap hi!'-arr Joye bunny·t a gias urious 22. Cranston Son Faces Drug Rap Lbs ANGELES (UPI) -&bin Cr'nston, 24-year-old son of Sen. Alan Cranston (ll-O!!U.), was indicted Tues- day. a.Ion~ with a man once ldenUfied by a JDagazUle as a prominent New York pimp, on charges of drugging a fonner Pl~boy Club bunny with grape juice s~etly dosed with an e x o t i c haljuclnogen. The girl charged she s u f r e r f. d •1p1tychological aberrations" and still gets .. flashbacks" of drug distortions. the younger Cranston pleaded innocent to rtharges of administering a dangerous d~ and felonious assault. He was pl3Ced on probation for three years for a marijuana smuggling conviction in 1968. "Robin told me he was innocent," the aenator said in a statement. ''I believe him and stand behind him." .\lso indicted by the cnunty grand jury wiy David Marcus, 27, referred to ln an article In the Aug. 9 issue of New York Magazine, entered as evidence before the grand jury, as "the second greatest pimp in .New York." Marcus was charged with ~esslng a reslricted drug, acces.wry after the fact to the drugging, false im- prisonment, battery and attempted oral cq)ulation. eray.ston works for a television pr1>- duCtion company and Marcus is the opei'ator of a Beverly Hills discotheque, the 1Paradise Ballroom, which was once a faihionable and exclusive club for show business figures known as The Factory. Cranston surrendered, with former Superior Court Judge Ralph Nutter ap- pearing as his attorney, but Marcus did not appear and a warrant was issued for his-arrest. Joyce Marie Williams, 23, Playboy bUnny-tumed-actress, said she was given a glass of grape juice ,at Marcus' lux- urious Coldwater canyon home on March 22. To Presidenry Alvia Barfield of Los Angeles acceded to the top position of the Association of Classroom Teachers of the National Edu· cation Association, during the NEA convention in Atlanta City, N.J. Sinatra Agrees To Be Witness Before House HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Frank Sinatra, who has been popping up and vanishing again around Europe while congressional rackets probers waited to question him, has agreed to testify voluntarily. Sinatra's lawyer, Milton Rudin, said Tuesday that the singer will appear on his own before Ute House Select Com- mittee on Crime July 18. A spokesman for the committee said that under the agreement with Rudin Sinatra will not be served with the subpoenas that have been awaiting him at every U.S. port of entry. The committee wants to ask Sinatra aboi.it a SSS,000 investment he made in 1962 in the Berkshire Downs, Mass., horse racing track, which allegedly had underworld connections. Marijuana Initiative On Ballot SACRAMENTO (AP) -Callloml1 voters will decide in November whether to legalize the private use of marijuana by adult... The order Tue!day putUn1 the t..suO on the ballot sparked predictions from backers of the marijuana measure that they will tum out hundreds of thousandJ of young voters and shake up the state's entire political power structure. Secretary ol State Edmulld G. Brown Jr. said Utat a voter initiative to legalize the private use of marijuana by persons 18 and older qualified with more than the 325,504 voter signatures required to place it on the Nov. 7 general election ballot. . Brown said an WlOfflcial canvass of returns from California's 58 counties found the petitions for legalization or marijuana have tht signatur~ of 338,187 voters. He told county clerks they could stop counting signatures on the marijuana petitions and concentrate on petitions for five other voter initiatives that are still seeking a place on th.e ballot. San Francisco attorney Bob A.shford, who headed the petition drive to put the marijuana measure on the ballot, said his campaign crew -which he claimed numbers over 10,000 volunteers -will now launch a campaign to register young voters. Ashford predicted bis campaign wilt ha ve a big impact on other elections in the state, from the presidential race down through congressional and state legislative contests. "There are 2.6 million unregistered persons between ages 18 and 24. We can sign up a significant number of them." California now has 9.1 mi I Ii on registered voters, with Democrats out- numbering Republicans by 1.7 million, a 3-2 ratio. Among young voters th.at ratio is 4-1 Democratic. The Biggar Summer Sale of '72 there's a whole "' lot • going .... for you! STARTS JUNE 29 THE SIGNIFICANT QUALITI': • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Upholstery THE SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS: Save 10 to 30% and more off DINING ROOM BEDROOM LIVING ROOM GARDEN/PATIO CARPETING ••. on the largest summer sole selection of the Bigg or thing• of quality ever offered. Entire collection• to individual pieces -all token from our regular stock. •. for every home furnishing occoslon, including upholstery, bedding, and carpeting. Truly, the expected quoll!v at unexpected savings. THiii +MANY MOH HENIEDON SANllll -Cofll•~Ol"ory &edroom ALVARADO · Mediterronean Bedroom, Dinittg ""°"' &. (lving Room CAPRI · Italian Clo11ic Dining RooM NEAPOLITAN -llollan Clo11lc l iving Room • . HERITAGE MADRIGAL -Medlterraflean Bedroom, o;,,irtg Room, Living Room &oricifli • \talion hdroom, Difllng Room -living Room CAMEO • l!oHon Clo11ic Dining RooM • lktirlg ROom GRAND TOUR· C1a11ic Bedroom &. li¥iflg Room COURIER • Contemporory Bedroom, Dining Room &. Uving Room MIUENNIA. Contemporary Li'dng Room BRENTANO · lloliOfl Clo11ic Dining Room DllXll MAICHISA • Con1inentol Bedroo'", Dining Room & lNing WEllJNGTON PARK • Cont.mparory Bedroom &. Dining Roam PAR.FAIT • French Youth BedfOOfn NEW GENERATION -Contemporary Voulh Bedroom ESPERANTO&. VERLERO Bedroom, Dinl"V Room & livirlg Room ct.'(.oiloble on tpe· ,ciol order al tole prlcet. STANLEY OLE -~iterroneon VoYJh bedroom llo1ic-witz PORTS O'CALL -Noutk:ol loolr: youth ~d,..om IROYRI JOIDAIC • Oi.ltdoor fvrnlf\t'- CAl'IT •Lorge 1efk.tiort from famout moken 11orlingot 6.9j; per 1quore yord IECLIMllS STIATOlOUMGU ·Many model• at reduced price• • t------ltKL•EtS·STl4TOLOUllGi'l ... Mcu1y·rnod4ll•ot.reduced.ptic..•••~~~=-=~~==~~·=~--MATTllSS AlllLOOM. K•n'"1gb¥ qnd 0o,em0f'lt 1intt • Sole Prictd StMMONS • 0..:ar de la R'enlC1 ----a &ocklhltld u .... Sole priced Wtdn!$day, June 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 6 '"Action Doomed' No-fault Forces Vow to Push Bill SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backers of th<l last surviving major no-fault auto in- surance bill this year say they will try arain to ram the bill lhrou1b the Officer Talks Gunman Do,vn SAN JOSE (AP} - A softspaken poli ce · sergeant with a knack for "dealing with people" talked a gunman into giving himself up after switching places \Yith the man's beaten estranged wife to become a hostage. "I was the closest one, so I was it.'' Sgt. Merle Johns, 43, said Tuesday of his oiler to become' a hostage so that Leilani Fink, 28, would be set free . Johns was dispatched to the home after .neighbors reported hearing screams. When he arrived, he found Miss Fink beaten and her former husband Joseph Lettrich, 27, pointing a .32-caliber automatic at her head. Lettrich agreed to release his form er wife, but only if he got an unarmed hostage in return, Johns said. Another officer, patrolman Roger Sides, was disarmed by Lettrich, who kept Sides' .38-caliber police revolver and forced him to leave. For the next three hours, Johns tried to talk the man into giving him the weapons, talking to him about his three children and "how this wou ld be a ter- rible thing, someone being shot." Finally, John said, "Joe, I'm going lo put my band out, and J'd like you to give me the gun." Letlrich surrendered without incident and was taken to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for psychiatric observa· Uon. Legislature -overcoming its rejection by a key Senate committee. But even if they are successful In reversing the \!ommittee action the bill Is probably still doomed, says the cbairtnan of another Senate committee that \l.'lll also review the measure. TI1e Senate Judiciary Committee killed Assemblyman Jack Fenton's no-fault bill on a 6-5 vote Tuesday, one short of the seven votes nttded to send it out of the 13-member committee . Rejection came despite last·1ninute support of lh.e measure by the Reagan Administration. Supporters tmmediately said they would try for reconsideration in the com- mittee at an unspecified later date. Only one committee member, 0 a k I an d · Democrat Nicholas Petris. was absent during the hearing. Sen. George Deukme- jian (R-Long Beach} abstained. If backers do get the n1easure through the Judiciary Com1nittee on another try, the bill would face a hearing before the Senate Finance Con1mit1£>C. \l.'hich has not allowed a no-fault bill to reach Uie floor this year. Finir1ce Coinmittee i:hairman Randolph Collier (D-Yreka) doesn't think F'cn· ton 's bill would clear his con1miftee either. "I'm just reflecting back on th.e votes that were taken on previous bills and I suspect it would be similar,'' he said in an interview. I doubt \\·helher the voles would change.'' Fenton, however, was still optin1ist1c alter the Judiciary Con1111illee vote that at least temporarily si delined his bill. "It doesn't mean anything yet unless reconsideration fails," he said. "Pd say there's still a prett y fair chance." Under a no-fault system, each in- surance con1pany pays damages for its own customer no matter who wa s at fault in an accident. Assembly In Budget Overrure SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tiie AM<mbiy has taken the first step toward an Over- ride of GoY. Ronald Reagan's V'eto of $7S million u'Drth ot new state money for local schools. Al the S.'lme time. the Senate prepared its U\\'n at tempt to override another or the B.epubllcan governor's budget vetoes. Opponents attacked I he propased extra sc:hool appropriation as a piecemeal solu- tion that \\'Ill only perpetuate present school problt•n1s. e f111nffh1g quashed SACHA!\IENTO (AP) -The Senate Judicia ry Committee quashed a measure 'fuesday thnt \vould have lowered the drinking ngc to 18 in CsliforniR. The pro1>0sed amendm ent to the state Constitution by ~mblyman John Knox-, a Richmond Democrat. fell two \'Oles short or the number needed to pass it out of the co1n mittee. e U.S. Aills l'alle!I SACRAf..IENTO (AP) -President Nix- on h..1s declared a Portion ol sout heastern Sacra1ncnto County a disaster area after floods hit the area when a levee broke last \\'eek. The dl'cl;1rntion Tu esday permits thee use of fl'dcral funds to help in relief and rcCO\'t'ry efforts. e H'nllnce Delegate•? LOS ANCiELES CAP ) -Supporters of Gov. George \\'allace say they plan to draft a slate of alternate canrornia delegates to the Miami Democratic Na- tional Convention. Wallace and three other losers in the California Democratic primary electlDn object to the ''winner take all " provislln by \\•hich Sen. George McGovern got 111 271 Callfornin delegates. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ OPEN DAILY 10°10;.SUNDAY 10°7 j . COTION . ·SHORTS 47 MEN'SCOTION · KNIT SHIRTS l•t-2.f7 or 2.57 • ALLrTEMSSUBJECT.TOPRIORSALE Boyi' "cut off " 1ty\e available in BIGGAR'S OWN BUDGET ACCOUNT· BankA.merlcM'd..Ma•t....char1e -COmplete iolidi and fancies. Keep cool In Worm weather comfort available in o fa•hion group of th• latest look$ in men's $hort·sl1ev1d1 combed cotton kn if$, Choose from many styles, includi ng crew neck, Interior 0.•11n Service A• Uauet 10Jid$, fancies. S·M-l-Xl. Terrific value! • • • i • ~~~~=-=--===-=------:-~~-:-,.,,,,,.,.,.-,.,.,.,,.,.--,=c;,;=-----L-l---~'.k• 1ummer weother.8-18. Al10 --------_,-.:;., SANTA ANA• 1110 N. Moin St. 5.C7·1 621 tjr. bo7s' .. -1-r-Ghorg.-it ~~~~~~~~~~~ PASADENA• 680 E. Colorado Blvd. 792·6136 POMONA • 160 £.Holt Av•. 629-3026 ,- 1 IUIMA PAii ............... •1--. .......... u . .,..c .... .._.,.,....,.._< __ .1o .. ._... COSTA MISA .... ..-.. -~-SAM flltlANOO _ .... ._._ .... -- AST LOS ANGlllS _.,.. .. _ ... -·--SANTA A•A --,::··:.___,..__..,.~~-~--~=~ .... ~"·=-~~ DAO.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Federa l Aid I-l angup The determination of at least two Saddleback College trustees to spurn federal financial aid at any cost ap· parenUy dies hard. Their 11nobte" refusal last November to seek federal funds to help build the new science-math center ls com· Ing home to roost on the shoulders of the taxpayers as part of a probable 32-cent boost in the district tax rate under the new budget. On that occasion, the votes of Trustees Michael Collins John Lund and Patrick Backus dumped Hans Vogel's motion l-0 seek the federal funds. Only trustee Alyn Brannon supported Vogel's contention that 1'lhings have changed .. , there was a time when the people w! o elected me didn't want us to seek federal aid, but that's changed ... " Since Vogel has been known as one of the board's more conservative members, his comments could hardly be taken as an indication that he had turned into a flam· . log liberal overnight. Rejection of the federal aid at that time set off a chain of events that even Jed to a recall threat a~ai~st the trustees when they proposed a 34-cent perm1ss ~e tax to raise money to match state funds that were avad· able I<> help with the building project. Financing of the scienc<!-math building still looms heavy and apparently will account for haU the tax rate increase called for in the new budget. my shoulder," intoned Lund. It would take quite a cre\v indeed to look over the shoulders of all the thousands of schools and colleges now accepting federal aid to help meet the growing cost of education. Continued rejection of this available Cinancial aid is a disservice to the district and the taxpayers who have to dig that much deeper into their pockets to keep the •cbool ~oing. lrupressive Public Support When San Clemente's public safety employes .and their families set out early last week to . se~ c1t1zen supPort for increases in wages and benefits, 1t was a proiect filled with doubt. How many tax~onscious residents would sign a form which pledged support for raises -an endorsement for tax increases to pay the bill? The answer came quickly. Thus far, 1,300 citizens have said they \Vould not be averse to tax hikes if the funds went to help the safety workers. City councilmen were visibly impressed when they received those hundreds of messages. But whether they are impress~ enough ~o authorize the major increases needed to brrng the city up from the bottom of the county list remains to be seen. Councilmen have promised an answer Thursday morning at a special budget session. ' . I Did all this inspire a "second look" at the federal fund picture by the inflexible trustees? Apparently n:t as far as Lund and Collins were concerned. In a 3-2 split vote last week, the board approved acce~tance of $36,500 ln federal Cunds for vocational education programs - Lund and Collins dissenting. •11 don't want someone in Washington looking over A major segment of the community has made its sentimepts abundantly clear -"support your local police." Now let us see if councilmen will do the same. s '' ... TALK A~OUT WAT£~ POLLUTION/'' Important Answer to Important Quest i on Nixon: 'Hanoi Is Losing' w ASHINGTON -President. NI.ton, who bis not bt1d a new1 <:OOfertoce Jn three months, has given an important answer 14 an lmportanl question In a magazine artlcle published last week. The President said !hit both militarily and po!IUcally, Hanoi la losing the "despente 1ambl1" of Ill Invasion ol South Vietnam. "EI even weeks have now pused since that North Vietnamese inva- sion," he said. "The fighting (.'(JOtinUet, but the South Viet· namese have held. Not onty hove t h e y held mill· tarll,y, but the way In w h I ch the pt op le of South Vietnam have rallied to their 111tl<tn'1 defeme should persuade even the most committed apologists for the enemy that Saigon, not Hanoi, sptak1 for the South Vietnamese people." The President made this .state- ment in a long article entitled "The Real Road to Peace" in the news magazine, U.S. Newa ind W..-ld Rtport. HE STATED THAT despite Hanoi's failure, the United States ii nonethelei.s prepared 14 aeWe the conflict on the basis of an lnternationaDy supervised cuse-fire, return of prisoners of war and , after the foregoing, a complete withdrawal of all American forces within four monUi... The President's statement ls notable for .several rea110na. The first, of course, Is that he now judges Hanol to have fall~ ed and his countermeasures of mining and bombing to have succeeded in mak· ing it possible for the South Vietnamese (rucHARD WILSO~ to "hack It." A secondary point bears strongly on the present efiort, with apparent Russian help, to reopen negoUaUoos in a way that will lead to a settlement. The Saigon government, he aaid, representa the will of the South Vletnames~ people. South Vietnamese refugees in invaded areas have fled from their "liberators." They are not collaborating wit& Hanoi. HOWEVER, IN Tins connection it is an established condition that the North Vietnamese Army has occupied and is in control of Quang Tri, the northernmost province ol South Vietnam. Under this condition how does an in- ternationally supervised cease I l re operate? Does it mean that the North Vietnamese Anny remains in position in Quang Tri Province while under in- ternational supervision and awaiting some future political settlement? Or does It mean a withdrawal of the North Viet- namese Army to its position north of lbe demilitarized zone? These quesUons suggest themselves for two reasons. At the beginning of the so- called East.er offensive there was a disposition in high officlal quarters, noted hereln earlier 1 to accept the idea the North Vietnamese would occupy one and possibly two of the northernmost pn>- vlnces of South Vietnam where a pro- visional Viet Cong government might be established. THE SECOND REASON is that 110me line of d.lscusslon not yet disclosed by the President must have been pursued by him and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev In their Jong and blunt boat ride and talk sesslOn on Vietnam while Ni.ton was in MosC{)w. It was nearly a evident then & ii is now that the North Vietnamese offensive was off schedule. Soviet President Podgomy's vi!:lt to Hanoi followed and he has ended It by saying the Paris Peace Talks iwould be resumed soon and Russia would work to insure their success. It is reasonable 'to speculate, therefore, that 50mewbere in this area -the mean- ing of a ceasefire In all of Indochina - lies the flexibility which could be the key opening the door to a settlement. Even if that apeculation is wrong, there is evidently som, fttltl factor in the discussions Nixon and Dr. Henry A. K1ss- inger have been having with the Rus sians and Chinese. NIXON'S EMPHASIS In saying that even the "most corwnltted apologists for the enemy" must realize that Saigon represents the will of the South Vlet- nainese people gives no hint that be has decided to dump President Thieu. But Wlder the present m 111 t a r y circumstances, he might find it desirable to make specific concessions going beyond lbe broad terms of hi! latest peace plan. . The safest conclusion Is probably the simplest: Now that the Hanoi govern- ment has fallen substantially short of Hs main aims, the President i.s trying out several diffeient approaches which "would not require SWTender and humiliation on the part of anybody'' - presumably including W a shin gt on , Saigon, Hanoi, Moscow and Peking. That, of course, is just as hard as it sounds. High Court on Club Guests Rectntly, the United States Supreme Court banded down a decision In one pbaJe, end one only, of the questlon of racial llmJt1Uon in private clubs. It Is an exceedingly complex question, touching not only Jeg:aJ righll, but eo- cial tradition in the human relation. It i~ filled with emotion and prejudice. If you speak on it. no me!· ter what view you adopt, a segment o( the people may agree with you, but another segment will certalnly disagree with you vehemently, in part and p~ ably In whole. T1le case involves a fratemnl lodge 1n Pennsylvania, where 1 white member OllANGI COAST DA ILY PILOT ( ROYCE BRIER J took 1 friend to lunch u 1 guest, a Negro legislator. He waa refuaed service at the bar. Jt was the contention of appellant's counsel that since the bar served liquor by authority of 1 state license, the guest't constitutional righll were violated. The Court held 8 to 3 they were not, and in ef· feet that the public Interest was not ger· maine. Justices Douglas, Brennan and Marshall dissented. YOU PERCEIVE the case rests on a narrow base. It did not involve mem- bership In the lodge, but only a guest's use of one f1clllty of the lodge on In· vilation or a member. So the Court was not co mpelled to come to grips with the full question, though to everyone's knowledge the full question hBs been debated in the nation for 1 decide. years circumvented 1n voting and other areas, and has only come into force in our time. MANY BLACKS snd those concerned wllb their civil rfihll have argued recenily that this should apply to membership Jn private orgsnizations. But the Fourteenth as It stands cannot be ao construed. It ls doubtful If any amend- ment or pursuant law could impair a right of citizens to enter private, volun- tary associations with other citizem of their choice, and to devise rules for ex· eluding those not of their choice, without ltseU violating the right. of members o! such associations. Yet tradition i.s a hidden but Important part of law, and by common consent guest statll! ta ln another dimension. lt would perhaps be more sensible, and cer4 lainly more aml11ble, to exempt club guests on good faith of a member, from normal and rational restrictions. The Court ruled otherwise. Woman , Man Notice Age Early, Late School Board Is Set to Destroy ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ Tboagbt1 At Large : A woman begins to notice she is no longer young IO years before she has any real need to worry about it: a man begins to notice he is no longer young 10 years after everyone else has tacitly accepted it. • • • It iJ not merely that those who live by the sword die 1>y-ttie sword -It It that, in most cases, they die by the s ame sword. (In that their own weapon is sim~ Jy turned and used against them.) • • • People who leave large swns to chari- ties when they are dead, and would part with little when they were alive. are displaying more selfishness th a n benevolence. • • • Technology is going to have to hurry a Jc: faster than it is to keep up with the riling expectations of the young er generation, for soon nobody will be around who wants to do the dirty work, while there is still plenty of dirty work to be done . • • • The worst crime that chronic poverty commits is the steady erosion of con- science among those who have no hope, and who substitute the act of retaliation for the sense of remorse. • • • There is nothing more fatal conversation than agreement. • • • to good When ~fark Twain returned from traveling around the globe. the primary illusion he left abroad was this one: "There are many humorous things in the world, among them the white man's no- tion that he is less savage than the other savages." • • • One reuon that farmers seem more contented than city folk ls that farmers concentrate all their worries on the weather and the crops, and don 't have too much anxiety left over for personal prob- lew. • • • About the only time the average American rtmembers tba.t he la a 11good dtlzen" Is when he lz stopped by a lrafnc cop and thinks he ougllt to be given a P'l" because he bu never held up a fill· ing·stallon. To the Editor : After the recent Laguna Beach School Board meeting it should be clear to everyone in this community that the present board majority intends to destroy our excellent school system . Linke, Gillette and Thomas have made policies to pave the way for the hiring of a ne1v superintendent and "-'ilh that, the dismantling of the present educational program. They are not merely concerned \Yilh school costs, a factor in their elec· lion. In fact, economic issues appear to be a subterfuge. The trio has been able to examine the budget for five months and as yet has not been able to find fault with the "bare bones " proposal. Consequently, they found it necessary to hire an "in· vestigative accountant" at up to $1,500 to do the job for them. What interesi. the board majority more is ridding the com· munity of Dr. Ullom. for tb!.s is where they have directed all their energies. WHY HAS TiiE replacement of Dr. Ullom become an obsession? No one knows. \\'e can only speculate. ls it because Dr. Ullom has the suppcrt and admiration of the district's teachers? ls It because Laguna students enjoy thei r learning experience? Is it because mo.st Laguna parents praise the efforts of the current superintendent?.Is it because our schools are nationally admired? Yes -au of these factors anger the board trio. ft galls them to hear that students enjoy school -to them it was and ought to be a painful process. It ir- ritates them lo think that our schools are national models -there's something sinister in that. And , it aMoys them that parents and teachers twn out in record numbers at board meetings -they should shut up or stay home. ONE MIGHT SPECULATE, however, that Linke, Gillette and Thomas have a bigger gripe with Dr. Ullom. He is oo r.tax Rafferty. tnlom does not spcut slogans. He does not take an ideological approach to education with dramatic p~ nouncements and flabby administration. He's not a big talker, he's a doer, and he gets good results, as Laguna test scores show. We all know about Rafferty's miserable record . The present school board majority Is more Interested in extremist rhetoric than in concrete achievements and would favor right-wing ideology over a practical attitude. Linke, GIUette and Thomas don't like Ullom because he's no-Max Raflerty. It Is tragic that our community is ao poorly served by these lhree officials wbo constitute 1 "little group of wtll!Ul men." LOIS JEFFREY No Place for I t To the Editor: • • • It la very difficult for us 111verag1" Whal those who don't like us oay about Laeunans 14 understand why, In the us may he false to the facts, but are beautiful setting of Village Loguna, we often truer 14 the sp~il of our per•onallly should have • public library copied after than we care to admit. the sl<l lodges In Mammoth, Aspen, a(ld ( MAILB OX ) Letters jrom readers are welc~. Normally writers should conve y their messages i"n SOO words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. AU let-- tcrs must inc lude signaiures and mail-int address, but t1e1mes may be with- lte d 011 request if sufficient rta.!<m is pparent. PoetTJJ will not be pub- lished. Federation <CIF), Southern California section, according to a DAILY PlLOT repcrt on Tuesday, June 20, left ~e wondering if there is much sense 1n trying to understand the "laws of our society" today. When compaffi'I to the endless parade of hair-raising accounts in lhe press of brutal, senseless murders, armed rob- beries, drug abuse, tales of existing poverty, extortion, fraud , racial prej- udice, plracy in the skies, unrest. amo~g nations and atrocious acts comm1Ued In \var zoaes throughout" the world , it seems incongruous our local athletic lead'ers should receive a "slap on the wrist" - behind closed doors -all for trying. to build strong men out or young bof1 in $he healthy arena of sports! PERMITI'ING SEASONED high scttol athletes to mingle, talk to and encour4:e those who hope to follow in t&ir footste~ hardly seems reason for any911e to doubt motives. Or has the competi6on among high schools joined the rank:f1 of the vicious competition of the bu.sinesS and political world where each move. by anyone is questioned, suspicioned and, if possible throul[h political or by any o~ mean.! available, censured? wmtOUT TllE coaches' help, I shad· dcr to even contemplate the re!ults wtW=h would be evident within the next genera· lion. Haven't we evidenced enough lack Of concern 1temming from the last few years? The b~ tor 14day's problems, I'm tonVinc;ed, does nol rest. upon the shoulders ot our athletic leaders, nor should ihey bave to hear the brunt of the discourap,ement and irritation of .censure for their beslthy effort... If anything ... f say t~e.v de~e a good pat on the back. VERA ¥0011MAN HOUDYSHELL Y oung BoJ'• Cruelty To the Editor: Last week"14 whlle attending the Orsnge County Flir, I became very disturbed by an Incident I Observed. ln the llvestoct nhlbtt, a young boy from the +H Club was reeding the swine. 1bey, like other animals dependent upon man for their food, became rather .,cited about the meal. l ' ,. " .. ' ' J!obcrl N. Weed, Publiiher T"9!na Kcn!l,M;tor A.Jb"1 W. Botti The majority opinion was that the II· quor facWty Wll In no dlffrrtot category from other !lite-connected faclllUes, suclus electrlctcy, water aod-poliet and- fire prolecilon. Hence, the plalntilf could • • • Bend. . To rear a child who Is free from cnvy--Hill'fid Briggs ffipped? 'l1if 1lanttil HOWEVER; the bo7 0mu.i have felt Ibis Improper behavior ror 1 pig. He jwnpcd In the.pen.and bei111.Jdcl<lng thei!Wine-in--- the laee. Th<ro wore aevcral people stand· ' Edltorlol PDl/t Editor 'l1>e <dltcrlll -or tho DollY Pilot eeeb to Inform •nd ,a;Umu-la.te ~ ey pn!'l4.'ntlng lhlt hewsp1,per"1 opl.nSons and corn- meontuy on tapJm ot fntemt and ~. by Pl'O'lk!lnr a forum frw ~ ~ of our rttidcn' ·-...i tw ~unc the -Yiowpolaio ot tntonned ob-~ and '"'""''"" llft tOllkt ol lhoday. Wednud1y, June 28, 11172 I I not appeal to the Fourteenth Amendment 14 Ibo C.naUtuUon of the United StateJ lor relief. The Fourteenth Jz ooe of the most Jn. terutJng of the Amendments for Ill hl!tory alont. It was draftod In 1836 tn the angry 'lftermath or war, and "as declared adopted July 24, 1163. It wu an effort to grant fllll cltl,.nshlp rtghll lo blacks who had emerged lrom llavery. Ill key passage reada: "No state lhlll make or enfom any law which llball •bridge the prtvtiq._ and lmmunitla of clthens ol the United Slltea ••• " As we know, \he Amendment wu for many Gus If Laguna Beach paint. fts fire truck$ baby blue, what11 next? Lavender or pink uniforms? How cute! -B. W. J. 'nh lutwe rtf'llClt ,..,., ....... "' ......., .... -........... ... .,.. ......... " • ...., .... ...,,. Hit. r"'---- 11 per!lal" tho best (and certainly the slcyUght Is really a beautU\d spot for lfibt !DOit lifelong) Inheritance 8 porenl can In high mounl•i•• but here It reminda 111 b<slow of the new atrocity at Aliso Beach. There · , , , Is no pl•ce for this In L&guna. Wbat bas A good society, under any form o! 1ovemment, Js impossible until there are at least as many penons willing lo equalize down as there are willing to equsllze qj>. (Unlil -then, all revolutions will merely reshufne lbe power and d<al the best hands to dlllerent winners.) • • • 'lbere are nnty mi alternoUva : U jOll don't 1et bolter u )'VU get mw1tr, you 'ct """"· ha~pcned to the beautiful old srcbltoctliro of Southern Callromla? MR. AND MRS. BURTON S. DAKE Pral•e for c .. ._ To the Editor: "Prcoelytina of clghth graden" -1 violailon charge which has pltctd Laguno -Hilb SChool "' prollaUon f..-tho Il?J.73 acliool year by a tJ.man execullv1 council of the C&lllornta lntencholatJc Ing there watching snd I gueu the boY rel& the crowd nttclcd more of an ex- hlblUon , so he then took the pig by the JaU and pulled 11 al'Otlnd 1 fe,. lim" ~bile ll squealed In pain. rr IS ALWAYS disgust1n1 to see I penon be eruol or •lclous to sn anlm.11 lhlt -defend Hiett. But worse WU Ibo fact lb·t thil cblld wu representing an orpnballon that, I thought, ,.., t .. cldri« )'OUl1!j -la the r1rhl WllJI to ralsa and ~ f..-· var1ous animals. Does the 4-H Club -this typo ~ bebavlcr! B&VEIU. Y BERRYlllLL • . • ' ~ • ' • . • ' ' . L. ltl. Boyd Why Footballers Mal{e ~'lore Cash < ll's a rare wife who'll adlnit lo pollsters sh< 1N5 I µickup on her first date with. lier h4Sband. Bui numerous wives readily confess they mit their husbands qu~te by accident in some convivial pu~llc pla,ce. Noting this, an observer or amorous matters sa~s it's all in bow you de-~ribe it. Love at first sight, ~e avers, la ~erel,y a fast fhrtRtlru• tha t renewed its option. That's cyn1cat. STATISTICALLY, odds run five to one the murderer \Viii be a male. three to one tbe murdered, too. ANO'fllER unexplained peculiarity of women ~s they . tend to wrije far more postscripts on · · their letters than do men. MAY 1 this year was a Monday. So Christmas will be a Monday, too. \'"".. , Always works that way. ~ ~ QUERI~. 1• In pro sports, how • ~ do you acc~t for the fa ct the lowest ~ , salary for e football . players is about ~12,000 whi e the Jowest ary for rookie baseball playC'rs Is only $10,000 a year?" , A. The baseball boys start ~ounger, much younger. ' Q. "DIDN'T David Hartmlll\ oj "!be Bold Ones' play basketball in college?" ' A. Played baseball al Duke. He's 6-IQO!·S. ' Q. ''WHAT'S the combined weight at birth , average, of !Ivins?" r A. About 10 pounds. Record conlbintd weight was 1814 pounds. \ SCIENCE-~lartin Ragaway or Beverly lfills, is said to be th e nation's premier Good News·Bad Ne \vs reporter. And he reports on the biological scienList who announced: "I have good news and I have bad news. In the test tube I have all the male c]1romosomes, <and in this jar I have all the female chromosomes. When J pour the test tube into the jar, I will create life. Now for thJ bad news: We can't conduct this remarkable experimeDit tonight because the jar has a headache." \VAS REPORTED the ideal temperature-of water for a swimming race is 76 degrees F. Am asked why. C-Older water stiffens a swimmer's musci, it's said. \Varmer water over-relaxes them. DID I TELL you more than 1,000 Union soldiers after the Civil War qu alified for disability pensions solely be- cause they got ki cked by mules? \ SLOW LEARNER, that bird c~lled the California con-- dor . T;ikes a whole year from the day it hatches until it flies. 1 Address 1nait to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Boz 1815, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Men in Service ' Ainnan Blaine C. Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Qix of 177ffl Santa Fe Circle, Foun- tain Valley, has deployed to Thailand with the U.S. Air -!'rank Volgarino of 6811 Sowell Ave., Westminster. Army Private Leon D. · Force's 49tb Tactical Fighter Wing. AirmaD' Cox is an aircraft maintenance specialist with the wing, which m o v e d from Holloman AFB, N.M., to Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base. Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. ' Leon E. Turner, 9062 Reading '-Ave., Westminster, 11 assigned to Ft. Ord, where he is ·training W1der the modern volunteer army field ex- oeriment. His wife, Elizabeth, is the . daughler of Mr. and Mrs. ~ Pvt. Turner began h i .! training with Company H, 5th Battalion, 1st Brigade . ANllV .... THE! FAMILY .,o.~ / ASSORTMENT K.-p lndtptno.no. 0111 • hdlllontl ftllllly •tftlr fight 1t holM. Thlft'• • whot• ...nlflf of co!Or •nd d1W. In lhlt ,,.. p11rtot1c #Ml lhrllllng, "'' 11!d llM dltPllf ol FREEDOM FIREWORKS, Soll!llhlllf tor .,.,,._1 , WHISTLE MISSILE Thi gr1M 11111\Ci! A•1H11*J onlY w!ll'I tM f'AMILY ASSORTMENT 1nd ptelllged lftM In IH boa. y ~---+--~ ·-llDO• STARS & ITR1PES AM!RICAN EAGLE Auo"mtnt -m1ttt F X R l!l W 0 R K 8 • ' 1--s=4=9=-5 -+--,$:-=:S::-:: 95 ;--j ~ 11 ~.!1 !111' DELUXE JUBILEE ~EltHIBmoH EXHIBITION $1095 $1495• MAMMOTH EXHllllTION $1995 llOCI< PARTY $2995 "'°"""'°" TAOJAN FIAIWORIC8 CO. --tbl«lffl,._.. ... _, .... -NO llUOl!I., • ................. Wtdntsd~, June 28, 1972 DAil V PILOT T • aves4 on a gallon of our finest interior and exterior latex paints. Your choice, · · ~ For 1 llmltod time only! 499 Reg. 8.99. One Coat Plus Exterior Latex with 8 year guarantee. Covers any color in just one application. Finish defies blistering and peeling caused by moisture because it "'breathes". Mildew resistant, too. One coat plus exterior latex tint base. Reg. 8.99 now 4.99 a gal. Reg. 8.99. Par Excellance Interior Latex with 10 year guarantee. Covers ·any color in just one application. Dries to a tough finish that's fade · and stain resistant. Doesn't thin out when brushing, rolling or shaking. I ye•r gUlrMtl". When th~ Penncralt '!. Paint Is applied to a previously painted •nd properly prepared surlace, we guarantee it !or 8 years as listed below. One galto_n gives 1·coat coverage for up to 400 sq. ft. on non-porous aurlaces, 250 sq. ft. on porous surfaces. • Sllin l"lllitlnl •Fade re1i1llint • Non ytllowlng • Chlillr: re1l1ttnt If the paint falls to perlorm as guaranteed, let us know about II. we will provide new paint or a lull refund 10 year gu•r•ntee. When this Penncreft• Pa11111s 11pphell to a prevloualy painted and properly prepared surface, w111 guarantee •I for 10 years as litted below. One gallon gives 1 ·coat coverage lor up 10 <100 sq:lt. on non-porous surtace&, ~150 sq. 11. on porous surfaces. • W••h•ble • Stailn ,.altllint • Dur•bl• • Colorfa1t II the paint tails to perlorm as guaranteed. le! us know about ii. we will provide new paint or a full refl1nd Big savings on compressors, too. avess Reg. 149.99, Salt 99.99. Penncrane V. HP compreaor. Overload protected motor. 12 gallon tank capaclty, 15' ft. air hose with %"connections. Includes Spray rgun. o< HP compressor. Reg. 189.99 .................. Silt149.99 And save on step ladders. 5' aluminum step ladder. Reg. 11.49 NOW9.99 6' aluminum step ladder. Reg. 13.99 NOW11.99 . 2.99 9" 4-pc. palni roller HL Set includes: tray, roller with handle and extension handle. JCPenney Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: Available .+: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach. U1e Penney1 time payment pion. • ' , Fair Total Estimated At 148,439 Nearly 150,000 persons at · tended the 1972 Ora'1ie County Fair wblch ended !ts llklay ruo at the 165-acro CO.ta Mesa lalrgroundJ Sunday. But even though the 148,439 turmttle count set a record for- the at-year-old fair' it was slgn!Dcantly below the 225,000 expected by Fair Manager ""Jlilt Poiter!teld . - "We think we've made some money on it," Porterfield said today. "We believe we'll show a profit once we 've gone over the boob." Last year the fair, held over a sls-day period, showed gate receipta of $68,91.2 and this year, $117,799, nearly double that. "We were hoping to get 8.000 people during each weekday but the rains Tuesday knocked us way down," s al d Porterfield. On June 20 when a freak downpour pelted fair visitors, only 4,000 attended. "We were praying for a real good weekend and the fair ~id finally pull itself together dur- ing the last three days. We got 41,000 over the weekend," be added. W1aoa, Nellie: DAILY l"ILOT It'" 1"""9 Porterfield is satisfied wjth the expanded tlklay fair and said next year's fair will also run for 10 days but may. be switched back to July to avoid interference from the weather. A young surfer's swift ride on a skim board comes to a sudden halt as wave power proves stron~er then will power near the Huntington Beach Pier. He ended this ride with a nice one-point landing on his rear. "Of course we wlll try to do something different next year. We had a lot of good shows and plenty ol happenings Ibis year, but I think we'll em· phasize country and western music a little more. We had Prizes Awarded two shows this yea r, the Ever- ly Brothers and Tex Williams, and they really drew the crowds," he said. Throughout its JO-day run, To Coast Entries the fair ran smoothly and without di sturbance, according to Porterfield. "We had a fiasco on opening night though_ w h e n Gary Puckett and the Union Gap did Although the 1972 Orange County Fair L!i history, result& containing the names o f Orange Coast resJdent.s ~ tinue to pour in from the many contests staged during the la.day event. Flights Set To Havusa LAKE HAVASU CITY (AP) -Hughes Alrwest will add this Colorado River com· munlty to its Los Angeles • Las Vegas, Nev., route Saturday. Airwest will fly five round trips weekly in ~passenger turboprop planes. Eastbound lights w i l l operate dally except Wed· nesday and Thuroday, wesl· boond daily except Tuesday and Wednesday. --- In the home economics not perform. But they were diviaion, the beat in weaving back the second night and award was given to Ann from then on everything went Daisy, Huntington Beach, for like clockwork,'' he said. her mohair stole. Receipts from the carinval First place winner in baked rides amou.nted to abollt goods sweepstakes contest $40,000, computed by a flat was Loretta Fujaros, Costa guarantee of 39 cents of every Mesa. fair ticket sold. Porterfield Sweepstakes winner I n estimates the carnival netted preserves and canning was owners about $50,000. Mrs. Glenn Van Aken, Costa "They didn't bring all the Mesa, who won first prizes for attraction.! we specified in our entries in Jams and jellies. contract. We asked for a cou- Hazel Courreges, wife of pie more spectacular ride s former Fountain Valley City and fewer sideshows, but we Councilman Jose O>urregas, didn~t get them," said placed second with en(ries· of Portertleld. "We put our canned peaches and plum carnival out under a high bid jelly. policy and we will certainly Patricia Ann Ogdon, also of take those facts into con· Fountain Valley, won a first ,,,;•;;;ide;;;;;r•;;;t;;io;;n,;nex;;:;l~yea;;;;;_r;.·"==""'I for her entry of a stretch-and· sew pants suit Top winners at the lair's Daisy Clipper Pony Show were Susan Crean, South Laguna and Karen Potter, HunUngton Beach. STARS Sydney Om&IT is one of the W'>rld's great astrolo- gers. Hb column Is one of the DAILY PILOT'S great features. non SENSATIONAL VALUE! 18'' Color Dktto .. t PSc:t•N 526995 Hurry! Limited Quantities Includes: • 1 Year Carry-In Service e 1 Year Parts Warranty • Our 5 Y oor Picture Tube Wtrr•nty 1 Ii-• Porloblo, Tool ..... ' Sale news in brief~ 200"6 off our entires. ock of Gaymode' panties. Sale 3 tor 240 Reg. 3 tor.$3 Opaque ny l~n 'tis~ue tricot' panties. elastic leg. Sizes 32 to 40 1n white and colors. 42 to 46, reg. 3 tor 3.50, Now 3 tor 2.80. Sale 3 .for 120 Reg. 3for1.50 Elastic leg briefs of Tricocel!! acetate tricot. In white and colors. Sizes 32 to 40. 42 lo 46, Reg. 3tor1.75, Now 3 tor 1.40. Sale 3tor160 Reg. 3 tor $2 Cotton band leg brief with ribbed leg cuff. In white and colors. 32 to 40 42 to 46, reg. 3 for 2.50, Now 3 for $2. Sale 3 tor 24Q Reg. 3 tor $3 Full flare panty or rayon with band front wa ist, elastic back waist. Wh ite, pink . Sizes 34 to 40. 42 to 50, r•g. 3 tor 3.50, Now 3 tor 2.80. Sale55¢ Reg. 69$ Fancy brief assortment. all of acetate, in while and pastels. Sizes 32 to 40. Sale80¢ Reg. $1 The prettiest printed bikinis. all in nylon. Lots of colors':tnd patferns. S,M,l . Sale 3for160 Reg. 3 for $2 Cotton/stretch nylon brier in white and assorted colors. S,M,L Sale prices effective thru S1turd1y. J ....... "'.~c~.~··~· ~~~~~~~~~=-G·nn The values are here every day. enc e SONY e DNIYH eNUAID e PAltAIOlllC e AIWA SERVING THE HARBOR N\£4 SINCE 1157 275 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA -642-9742 FASHION ISLAND, Newport Buch. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Hunlln~ton ltoch. •HARBOR CENTER, Cosio MtH ('Cloatd Sun41yl. • f .. - • ~· \ - I 4th of July Family Sportswear Specials. eelebrate at Penneys. l • I ' t • 12s loy'1 polyff11r/co1ton rib lmlt lank lops. Solid body Wllh 1olid contraat trim. In S:M·L. 199 199 loy'1 lhortl In gr11t looking summery solids or patterns. They're Penn-Prest cotton/ polyester. Size• 6-18, 11lm end regulars. Men'• coHon lank lope In luge group or stripes and aolld1 for sizes S·M·L. 299 Mlft'I c:otton/ill0"1-nlt ahofta In pcpular 1tylw. O- rich looklng oolld9 or patt.ma In sizes 30-42. Your Choice 2so F11hlonlf-itelar-l1Ubbed polyHter link topo.ln all tfle ouper summer colors. siz. M-L·XL. Wom111'1 lhortl In 1t11tch double linlt nylon. Choo11 lrom lun1lca or lhort shorll. Aalorted oolld colorl, llml •20. Big and little girl's summer short sets. 144 SIHnlnl lopo Of cool COiion knit, link or crew nick 1tyllng. In a relnbow of summer aolld11nd 1trlpa1. Slzt1 7·18. Sizes 3 to ex. 1.22 1sa Comfortable cotton lhort -In a bright array of 10lld1 and patt1m1. Front zipper, smart pock11.-1a111ng. SI-7·14, Sizes 4-6X with barid front, alutlc back.1.44 Irvine's Second Bus Run Slated Irvine11 Pint BUI lll'Viet of. lering i,... rides lrom north Irvine to Faahk>n Island and the beach will be nearly doubl· eel with the addition ol 1 sec· ond bus. Brian CJark, city recreation coordinator, llld tbe •d· dltlonll runs "'""' to begin to- day to accommodate heavy demands for the bua rides by nsldents who have paid the 13 recreatton program 1 ... Buses will leave the Rarquet Club at t and 10:30 1.m. and at noon, i and S:30 p.m., daily. Return bu9es will leave Corona deI Mar State Beach at 10 :30 a.m. and 1t noon, 2, 3:30 and 5 p.m. dally. A revised achedu1e reflect- ing the eflect of the added service on lntmnedlate stops in Irvine communitlea i! available from city hall. Generally, howeve.r, those new schedules are set one and one half houra later than the existing schedule! for the 9 a.m., noon and S:30 p.m. buses. TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ••• Every Seturdey DAILY PILOT • UCI Position Goes To Mrs. Anderson Mn. Allee L. Anderson, ol 1140 Vista Dorado, Newport Beach, bu been appointed director, conUnulng education tn educaUnn and liberal arta !or UC Irvine, Extension. Serving UCI •ince I~. Mn. Anderson, an educati on 1pec1allst with the ertension, - has coordinated lecture pro- grams on family life, fmlgn relations, community pro~ Jerru:, personal relatioustupe, biological sciences and educa- tion. She established U C I ' 1 W o m e n ' s O p portunltit.s Center, originally run by volunteers to give counseling to adult women in the com- munity. She was a I s o ~ chairman of tbe Chancellor's 19_,o>ll.;k,,...,.• 1:i;.;s.;u·~ Advisory Commiitee on lbe EXTENSION POST Status of Women. Mrs. Anderson received a Mn. G. L. Anderson bachelor's degree in art history from the University of Michigan plus a master's Continuing Education. degree in political science She la a UC Faculty Club from UC Los Angeles. board member and a director She is working for her Ph.D. of the Orange County Task In educational philosophy and Fon:e on Minority Education. higher education at USC. li.1rs. Anderson Is a member She resides in Newport with or Pi Sigma Alpha, national her hu sband , Glenn L. political science honor society. Anderson, also on the UCI Ex· Me,mbershlp in professional tensk>n staff. She has a soc!Etles includes the Adult Education A B so c i a t i o n , daughter who i.s an attorney in American Political Science Loa: Angele-s and a son at. Association and tht South tending Humboldt S t a t e Coast Regional Commi ttee on College, SHOP. ALL STORES TH URSDAY, I 0 A.M . to 9:30 P.M. ~ooling no-~ap • wigs new from helene eurtls J oin the Cool:H_ead rev9jutioo! A four-star glorious wig collection with fabulou s "no-cap" des ign in e honeyco mb pattern of spandex and nylon. Super-light, super-comfortable, feels almost es if you waren 1t wearing a wig at ell. Receive a bonus wiglette free wi th purchase of any wig. Shown: Answer, short 'n sassy, pop ii on and you're ready to go, 20.00. Not shown : Cassandra, 26.00, Starfire, 20.00, •nd Chiffon, 25.00. Helene Curtis stylists will be in our Huntington Beach store to ass ist you on June 28, 29 ond 30, Cosmetics , 17 ' • JCPenney The alues are here eve"ryday. ANAHllM NEWPORT HUNrlN&TON llAOI V • 444 N. E•dl4 47 F.•hi" i.1.,4 1711 14i•t•• A'"'" it's at the hroadway 171 4) 111-llJI 17141 •44·1212 17141 l•l·lJJI Charge these v1lue1 •!your local Penney store. oiv.N&~ MALL oF OltAN&E c1u1Tos 2JOO Ne. l111th1 Str••t 17141 ttl0 IJI I 500 Les Ctrrito, Mill l21JJ 1""°41t FASHION ISLANll, Nowpori 811ch: HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beach. •HARBOR CENTER, eon. M111 (•CJos1<1 Sundty) IHO• All nous TODAY, WEDNESDAY, "'' A.M .•• "" P.M. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • I I I ' ·- l DAJLY PILOT ~ , , DAil. Y ,.ILOT Stiff l'IMtt :BEHIND. THE HUSTLE• HARBOR HIGH'S QUIET Newport Councilmen F .. r Loss of Old Euc1lyptu1 I Deetslqn Due :Line Needs Felling Of Eucalyptuses By WILLIAM SCHREIBER the bay," he said. °' t111 D11t1 P11t1 11•H 'lbe gully runs from 15th A dense thicket of large Street acroos the back of the trees and wild underbrush school to Dover Drive and behind Newport Harbor High part of It will eventually be the site of a natural area for School will soon feel the bite of classroom and laboratory use civilization as the Orange by district students. ~ County Flood Control District In Jts current start~ the prepam to install a 51-lnch gully consists of heavy un- atorm drain thl'(ijlgh it. dergrowt.h and tiees 1 thick enough to block the sun in The project must first gel some places. stagnant ~la of llie·aancllon·of.Newport Beach water, partly hlaa·en lJ'y city councilmen, who Monday floating leaves, dot the entire night expressed concern that length of the wild area. plans calls for removal of at least a dozen big trees _ Some trash, including a half doren old school desks, tires, mostly eucalyptus. ·cans and lumber, litters the "I walked through that area gully, but student plans call over the weekend for funsies," for cleanup and restoration of said· Mayor Donald Mcinnis. the area for use in studies . .. You'd think you were out jn The storm drain will cost the middle of the Irvine Ranch $150,000 to construct and will someplace." be under grounded through the Councilman Milan Dostal gully and then covered with mirrored Mclnnis' feelings. enough dirt to permit planting, 0 1 don't.care i! they cut the Devlln said. trees as long a.s there is an "The trench will be restored Improvement," he said. "I am as much as J)OS5ible to its concerned With replacement of original condition," Devlin n?n.nnd cover and trees." 'd e·~-sa1 . "This is an unusual area of ''That means they are going the city and I don't want to to grade it off," Dostal chided. see it spoiled." Dostal said. When asked how big the Public Works Director trees were that would have to Joseph Devlin defended the be removed, Devlin replied flood . control project and "enormous.'' assured councilmen t h a t "There aren't many of those everything possible is being left," Dostal said. done to preserve the area. Devlin said ·the council "We're going to save as needs to give the go-ahead for many trees as we can but the project before the pipe can there will be some disru~ be laid. tions," Devlin said . "The "The Flood Control District county is curving the drain to needs to get· going to get the avoid as many trees as construction done this sum: possible." mer." Devlin said. Mcinnis. a PP are n t I Y "Yeah, while the kids aren't unsatisfied with the county's there," said Vice Mayor efforts , p r e d i c t e d that Howard Rogers. something might happen to The new storm drain will prevent the tree removal proj-continue along 15th street and ect. end at Irvine Avenue, Newport "I have no intention of clim~ Beach would also have to kick lng up in the trees but don't in another $10,000 for small bet the kids won't," he said. connector drains. .. . * . flDIP® 4th of JUiy b)]p®Cl9TISI\Ilb1 shop all stores thursday~ 10:00 .a.m. to 9:30 p.m. best buy g.e. air conditioners All models plug into eny edequetely wired 115 yoJt outlet. Features: ultra-quiet compressors, easy-mount side panels, ~hermostat controls, unique air-wash filtering system, G .E. spine-fin coils for the utmost in comfort. 4,000 BTU Only 43 lbs., so light you cen cerry ii elmosl anywhere, 7 emps. micro-m'ini compressor, Lexon® molded case will not rust or corrode. 9995. 5,000 BTU Only 7.5 emps, 2 speeds including slumber speed, Le xe n® molded cese. 139.95. 10,000 BTU Cools lerge room s, 12 emps, rotery compressor ·] speeds, on· elud ing ultre-quiet slumber speed, 219.95. 11,500 BTU Super-thrust action for cool ing large areas, ·12 amps. confer· metic control, steel cose, 259.95. 14,000 BTU Air thrust selector, cools one room or set to high to jet air into distont rooms, 12 omps. 299.95. Major Appliances -Convenient terms •••~1ble 259.95 I I referring to a group of Councihneh de 18 ye d 'ap-· '. -Newport.Hari>or High· students---pr-0Yal ··Of. ··the--Pro;ect.-.until ·---·--.. ..,...·-·+·----·-- \\'ho went aloft to save several their July 10 meeting to allow ' old trees on the campus last time for more study of the en· semester. vironmental impact on the Devlin said the project may area. They asked the staff to actually be an ecological im-explore means of replacing provemenL trees to restore some of the "This is now an open e:han-untouched character of the net and dead leaves end up in ,gully. MORRIS F. SKINNER, M.D. DIPLOMAT!, AMEIUCAN toA.11:0 OF Olt.THOPEb!C SUllGlll:Y ANNOUNCES THE ,O,ENING OF HIS .of.FICES . . FOR THE PRACTICE OF ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY BONE DISEASES AND FRACTURES •• I fl Sl•RA SAN CUMENTE, CALIFORNIA DAY Oil Mlaj'IT 4'1·1161 t · S DAILY I · 12 SAT. .. .. 299.95 it's at the broadway NEWl'OkT , HUNTl"&TOH IEA<;H ' CfUlTOS 47 f•tllloit l&l1nlll (714) '"4·1212 7777 f:41ntor A••1t11• t714) lt2·llll SOO LM C9'titot Mtll C21J) 160·0"11 ORANGE. MALL Of OAAIMI 2100 N. T111tl11 Stro.. l114J ft1·1lll shop all stores, wednes.day, 8:30 _a_._m_. __ to __ 9_:3_0--=p=-·__J._·_· __ • -/-- - W-. Junt 78. 197' DAILY PILOT JJ. r 'Grew llp He r e' Re tiring Official IJDil°® 4th of luJy ~IJD®®fianil~ 'Delivers' 36 Y~sshop all s tores th11rsday ~ IO:oo· a.m. to 9:3-o p .m. By JOUN ZALLER 01 "'' 0111r llll•t 111ff Shortly after Pete DlF1bio came lo wOrk in the Hunt· lnglon Beach post office In 1936, he learned by role the names and addresses of just about everybody In town. "I grew up here, so of course. I knew all the street names ," he recalls. "And I went to school with kids from most of the families in town, and that gave me a head start, too. "In tll06e days, it was a rare pjece of mail we couldn't f;leliver. All it took was a name or an address, or even just a wrong address." NC!edless to say, D1Fab1o, now about to retire as Hunt· ington B e a c h postmaster, can't still provide this kind of service. He's lucky, in fact , if he can recognize all of the 300 people who work for him. I OAILY l"ILOT Stiff l"llltt 'HAVE 124 ROUTES' Booch's Difabio "\Vhe n I came here, there chance,'' he recltlls. "We took were one rural route and three t the test in the ~d city council cily routes. The men who chambers ahd they were pret· "-'Orked them kept them until ty full, And aboUt hall the peer the time they retired. , pie were older, unempfoyed "Now, we have IU routes ~ businessmen !rom the town." and handle 400,000 pieces of ~l Perhaps ~Y because he mail a day. And at one polnt, · was a college lid, DiFabio did our turnover was 20 percent. well enollgh '()n the test to Plus, with union rules now, fhiish second -but it wasn't many postmen are always liigb enough for a job. changing their routes, trying "There was very little to .. ge.t a better one. turnover in those days. I had . 1!.s not the same post of. to wait 2\2 years before a se- f1ce. ~ond openinF came up." Despit~ r~fl~ions Ii k e ' But when it fmally did, these'. D1Fab10 1s not a man DiFabio~· • mped. at it. He clutching to the past. He hadn't able to find any speak~ e ~ g e r 1 y a~ut job at all, d besides, the pay machines still on . the draw~ng on this one was good _ 65 board , m ~ch 1 n es like cents an hour for a work day automatl~ zip code scanne~s that began at s a.m. and and mail sorters that wtll ended t 8.30 revolutionize the po s ta I a · p.m.. . service. Promolion came in lime as "The American people are Difabio was appc;>inted a.ssis- going ,o sec great i~ • tant port~~ m 1948 and provements in their postal .: postmaster m 1964. system in the next few years. Jn ID, DiFabio took a wife , There have already been some the former Mary Denni, and changes. but the greatest ones they se ttled four blocks from are yet to come." I the Hootington Beach post of. Difabio entered tbe postal fice to raise a son and a service during the Depression. daughter. He took the civil service en-In the same pericxl., Hunt-- trance examination in 1933, ingtoo Beach was growing when attending Santa Ana from about 5,000 residents in J unior College. 1935 to 11,000 in 1960 to 136,000 "I didn't think I had 1 at present. Another Exclusive-July:J . ~ An Insidef s Tips On Fishing Fish wardens aqross the country agree, roughly 20 percent of the nation's fishermen catch 80 per- cent of the fish. Luck? No. say the experts. "Fish are no great shakes on brains. Yet they outwit some otherwise brainy anglers. The reason's simple. fish do things logically. Anglers often don't." In this week's cover 'feature, James Joseph shares five expert·tested tips for improvi ng you r t echnica l know-how and irlcreasingyour percent of the catch. · ·With-·practice;-patience, and familiaritation, any- one can join tj\e one·in·five group Who reel in' four of every five fish caught in our lakes, streams, and surf. e WHERE'S P@RRY COMO? -Peet J. tlppen· heimer find1 him in Tlorida, where be went to drop out oh1jgh~ after giving up his series, and "Profiles" hlm for his fans. e RE ACTION TO LIBBERS -What kind of im- print has th~ Women 's Lib movement made on America? Professional psychiatrists have their say on feminism and the feminists and their in- nuence on the average family. All Coming Sunday With the - I DAILY PILOT l • , 1 • ' wall dressing with a das h of s avings • • • fanciful flowers Imported from Bel glum 6.00-18.00 D~date bloo ms that w;ll stay beautiful forever ... collected from all over the world, carefully dired placed u n d er gloss and grace fully fremed .•. all for you. They 're grouping sized, let you r decorating instincts runwild! save 49% ••• gilded console and mirror 12.99 Re gularly 25.00. In the traCl itio nol manner ••. graceful oval mirror with matching golden console teble beneath. Mirror I 8"x29", Console 9"x21". The set will add a striking accent. Well Decor, 31 it's at the broa way ANAHEIM 4+. N, Eu~IW (Jl4J JJ5.1121 NEWl'OlT 47 Fa1hie11 Id•"' (71 41 M4·1 212 HUNTINGTON IEACH CERRITOS 1111 EOl11t•r A"enue 171 4) ltt.JlJI 500 l11 Certlfot Mt11 (ti)) 160.0411 OU.NG~ MALL Of ORAN&I 2100 N. T1ttH1t Stt••t (714) Hl·l>I • s hop all stores, wednesday, 8:30 a .m. to 9:30 p.m. - , ( Yorba Park to Get Second Look Chang's Objects D' .. .. Record Deatla Notices . llALTZ BERGERON fUNERAL HOME rontr 4,el Mar 113-9450 la rtte~a 148-!4%4 ' • BELL BROAUWAY , MORTUARY • 110 Broadway, Costa &-.. • IJ &-Un • •• \. McCORMl.::K LAGUNA ~ BEACH1AORTUARY 17tl$ Laguna Canyon Rd. 194-9415 ' PACIF~ VIEi\ MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery MortaUJ Chapel 3609 Pacific Vlew Drive NtYlport Beach. Califorula 644-2700 • • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL BO&lE "881 Bolsa Ave. Westminster U3-352S i • SMITHS' MORTUARY 6'Z1 Main St. lluntlngton Beach ' 53~9 'KIDS LOVE lJNCLE LEN Saturdays in Th e DAILY PILOT ORANGE COUNTY Real 'Gem' Of A Sho'v In Anaheim ANAHEIM -The Im Na- tional Gem and Mineral Show is scheduled to open 10 a.m., Thursday at the Anaheim Con- vention Center. Features include precious and semi-precious gem-rock collections, a head of Christ carved from a ruby, valued at $750,000 and, a Star of tile World Tiara containing 100 diamonds, 48 emeralds and 13 stars in varying shades or blue. Other articles will be a mooo rock brought back by the ~polio II crew and also demonstrations or gem and rock cutting, casting, faceting, carving, sphere making and gold and silver jewel")' craft- ing. IT By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 rtw D1llr l'lltt Jltlf Avenue, which currently ends at tmperlal JJiehway 1 Redding added. He also 110inted oot that tile flood dangtt to the property Is "severe" and there are no public utilities in the area. But the city of Anaheim has zoned the property high densi- ty residential (R2·5000). This move, Redding said, led to the opening of three private land deals for property upland of the proposed park. ~rows that average $20,000 an acre were opened on these three parcels. but were canceled. ''Here we have a case of private money being willing to pay $20,000 an acre for prop- erty at a higher elevation, not nearly as subject to flood, with aU the access and utilities problema solved. Then we have the county willing to pay up to $24,000 an acre for property more subject to flood and we have to solve the ac- coss and utilities problems. "WE'RE SA YING we're willing to pay $24,000 for land 2 'Graduate At Scripps BE SAID the property could not be developed for residen- tial use until flood control work is completed. "Right now, we don 't even have a set of plans for that area," he said. '"nle work can be done but because the prop- erty ls subject to danger ttom an 80-year flood, the work has become a question of economics." Caspers noted that "it's ap- parent the City of Anaheim and the County of Orange are not in agreement on the prop-· erty. Otherwise the city would not be r.oning it for development. The highest and bell use of this land i! the ttU% of the matter." Board members v o t e d CONTEST STARTS THURSDAY HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER $ Regular • 130. to 165. Sports Coats Regular 59. 15. to 90. Itali an Knit Shirts Regular 20. 25. to 45, 011ble Knit Slacks Regular 19. 27.50 to lS. Dress Shirts Regular 14. 20. to 24. mens haberdasl1ery 201 marine 673-8782 ave., balboa island ljlln • thrv sat 10·9, sun. 10-6 Arte Orientales S,.clo!l1l•t 1• Ancl•nt Pol'C..1l1in1 Pl'ecious Stone Car\llng' Snuff Bottle• 3355 Via Lido, Suitt "C" ;'.~ :,""c•ood M,., 675·6711 Lawn And Garden Discounts Lh•lto4G••••itiH·N•••l•t•t•DHl•n rATIO ITEMS NOT AVAllABLE IN EAST l.A. SALE ONE GALLON PLANTS JOAYS ONIY '"~ Choo11 from Arbol'\litae, tams, phitzen. D1corat1 your yard at this price. Use your Kmart charge. VIGORO ALL PURPOSE FERTILIZER JDATS ONIY 297 All purpose fertilizer for everything yo11 grow. Flowtrs, shrubs, trtes, vegetobl11 and lawns. ..... - HEAVYWEIGHT FERTlllm sorouNos J DAYS ONLY 247 'For quick green-ups, la1ting feeding OC· tlon. Specially formulated for area . .50- lba.* 10·6·4 ....... STEP STONES J DAYS ONLY 28~. 12·1nch step stones. Add beauty to yo11r gardfn or lawn. Charge it. REDWOOD CQMPOST MULCH 197 , 1 DAYS ONIY $ cubic foot bag for bedding and patio areas. To preserve moisture and to •n· rich tell. --:. ------- ' 4-INCH COLOR PLANTS J DAYS ONtY 3 ... $100 Selection include1, Col•us, Dwarf Mari· gold, Dwarf Dohlio1, bright color1. Visit our Patio Shop today and 1ove! VIGORO SULPHATE OF AMMONIA 67.~ Amnt0nia sulphate -improves nutrient ovoilability for q11ick green growth. Visit our p~io dept. today, and save! II• Azalea & Camellia Food 63c· This produd provides the proper nutrients In the right balance required for growing oil otld loving plants. 14" REDWOOD TUB J OATS ONLY 227 Ideal redwood plain planter for house or patio. Get several at this low, low price. '"pomNG SOIL I OATS ONLY 1 "38 Exctllent growing medium for house plants, flow.r b•ds, potted plants, win- dow box••· etc. A rich block soil high in organic content. I c11. ft. . -- I ' - ' - $ PILOT-ADVERTISER Wod~. JUM 28, 19n -. ,_. .. DAILY PILbT J:I' Eventifor UCI 'QO!!NIE 8y_ Phil lnter land l No Set Rul-es on In July Listed tubes -which lead to the uterus. If In doubt he may aJao want to do special X·ny tests o! the utmis and tuba -after ln- jectlog a dye -to dllcover where the obltruclfol\ II. U neither gu nor dye ln- Jectloo opens up the tubes, then 11Ur8erJI may be ..,,_ sldered. But tbJJ restores chance of ferllllly by ODlY 15 to IS percent. I'm abead of myself. All you may require is the gas test If neither you nor your hasband .shows any abnormality, then all you have to do ls be patient and wait it out. Not easy, I know. But after all, you bave been married for only two years. < • • DEL AMO OPENING SHELVING SPECTACULAR! Elegant% inch, solid core, walnut finished shelving. Create your own shelving system at !hese omozingly low prices. ~-;-,y ,1f, ., _ ....... ,a.a. .. ...-••••. ,' . " cr'r"•·· ... ••• 8''x24''* 8''xU"'"' T-'CllOICI SHELY~$ 8"x36"•''10"x36''* 1•• INU flNISHED BRACKETS-YOUI CHOICE 3n.ALUMINUM BIONU flNISHED 59c STANDAIDS WITH SCIEWS..... •• • • • • • • • • • eo; .. . WISTIRll ~ WROUGHT IRON RAILING Available in 4' and 6' sections. Black fin ish. Give your home that California decor. 4' SECTION 2'' HG. 4.99-SAYE 2.00 6' SECTION 4 99 llG. 7.ff-SAYI 3.00 NEWELL POST 149 WITH FLANGE 110. 1.95-SA.YI 46c Choose either a heavy galvanized metal or heavy plastic trash con. Both have tight fitting lids. YOUR CHOICE 299 One-of the most popular and well-balanced dog foods you can buy. 4i88 8Ul.DIRI Best PAClft!,lllR 20'' BREEZE 80.Jl FAN 2-SPllD Dual speed swi!ch. Easily re-positioned fo r intake or exhaust. Detachable safely grille. Retractable carrying handle. Monufacture.d for Builders Emporium tb our rig id specifications .. 14~· Sil OUI COM,lttl UNl"OF PACIFIC AIR ;ANS #255-S BAS Kn TOP CARRIER All steel construction. Formed steel frame with four steel slots, 4 auction cups, 4 gutter hooks and 1tra~s. Hard bond, gray baked enamel finish. Fits most sedans, hardtops and :------;..._ station wagons. 729 lllTRODUClllGI BUILDERS Be8t SUPREME ACRYLIC LATEX HOUSE PAINT • A modern exterior coating for both mason,Y and wood. Provides protection and beauty to stucco, brick, concrete, asbestos shingles and siding, cement block, wood siding, shake shingles and metal. Eosy to apply with brush, roller or sproy. 6 99 •AL. RIAYYDUTY DILUXE *l'E 24 ounce fiberglass axe with plastic covered handle ond drop forged, polished heod. Comes with handy protective sa ck for head. Great for ~1! campers and outdoor b.uffs. I" GASBAR·B-0 8R'*Zl.RSll Builders Emporium buys oUI complete Big Boy fact0<y stockll Gas BBQ broziet1 at Unheard of price1l Your choice of gas.fired Big Boy barbecues. Don't be disappointed. Shop eorly._ Use our lay-owoy or charge pion. YOUR CHOICE 24•• ....... TWO·MAN• 80AT .. Rugged PVC material is not a/fec19d by salt water, .. sun, oil or chlorine. This boat offers the ultimate in comfort for two adults and ii Ideal as a dinghy for ship to shore use. Perfect for fishing, comping, hunting, or skin 1499 Your choice of durable, IK>n<orrosive brass surface heod or plastic pop.-up head with bro11 inaert. Full, half or quarter circl• pottems. BiDDIH· PLAllTS • .ZINNIAS & &a•IGK• Two of .the moll colorful and popular summer blooming bedding plants. Mony colors of the rainbow. Excellent as border planti and (l!t flowen. ' ··tt:\ti•*• Ainerica's Greatest Hardvvare Stores .. 'IVS!* 1111 .... -.. WUT .... SI•• 6flt WDI ::I AVL -... L.•l•IAft. ,,.... It. ....... .IUIJ( ... •aunvnn. ILTHe .. , ...... ,, ............ ,, ....... ...... t•LU LAllUU m.1 W.&AIAll&Kft. ,, ___ AfllMllaft. 111&1 L GUMM Aft. --.... , .... .. uan• ATSTATIC-..llWL cena•a• n-•• •YAN NU'IS•llVUSIOf •COVIHA •IA ClfSCENTI. •THOUSAND Ol.ICS•SIMI • IAN CASUI •CHATSWOl'ltl •Tl.IUHA e UP\ANO e 51.UOUS e'GOLffl. •VISl.llA •VICTOIVIU! • OltAW.DA HllLS e SAN IERHAIDIHO • CM\Allll O • 11.KflSflllD e HACIENDA HEIGHTS •SANTI. CV.U. e COltOW. e ESCONDIDO e SPlttNG Y.W.EY • IADUA HEIGHTS • IESEDI. •WT L0$1.H0lllf " ~. Jj DAILY PILOT Wtdntsdoy, Jone 28, 1972 District Controls Parks SA.t~'f A ANA -Conlrol or the cow1ty's J,800 acres or parks and proposed parks will be wumed by the Harbors, 'Beaches and Park District fol· 1owing action this week by Jhe i board of supervisors. The 4-0 vote (Supervisor RaJpb Clatk is vacationing in Hawaii) culminated a furee... month study of the proposal which was originally made by the supervisors. Under terms of the proposal the dev elopment and n1ain- tenance of the 10 parks will be assumed by the district. The county currently has three complete regional p a r k s - Fealherly, Irv Jn e and O'Neill-\Vhich have a total of 672 acres. Also slated to con1e under the dlslrlcl 's control will be ao additionaJ 1,934 acres, which are under in1plementatlon as Ca'rbon C a n y o n Dam. f'ullerton Dam, L a g u n a Niguel.~lileSquare, University, Villa and Yorba parkB. Kenneth Sampson, county directors of Harbors. Beaches and Parks estimated the total cost of implementation at $28,584,000, of which the coun· ty's share will he 16 million. About 25 to 30 percent can bt funded through federal and st ale grants, and the balance will be paid by the OL---:::::: ·o o · r!+O 0 -~~~RESS 0 0 district, he said. budgeting unit and hnrroved <'f'.\~,A..P-. ~" '':.~ Sampson explained that the ope.ration and n1aintenancc ; 0~ b.1) c D: di strict's portion of develo~ facilities. 1,i,.. r" &,.:: I' :1 ment and maintenance costs J-le also noted the 1nergcr 11 oC the parks can be handled by u d LJ. 1'. '-1 f a district tu: rate which will · c ould open .P ''. -' f 'fo\J Pr•.. .!1 not exceed 20 cents. dltibnal methods of financing l. fl L.. T " He told supervisors that the land acquisition and devel0p-;-... ~ .· p.. Sr \ ·. ' ;· combination of the counJy ment costs. ',lJ' c_ oS"f'l~l.1Ty _!_'i parks department with the .\o-1' v- Harbors, Beaches and Parks '--rH fl. T· , · District has been recom· Beer Break i' :,r,·oo· ,. I'' 'f · mended by the counly Grand !.·!,!' p..l<fS if ·p , ; J~;.pson said a merger of DEAL, ENGLAND (API -~: ~1':4\J.:s n1t.~ t:6i:\_fl.Y the two agencies to create a Chris Saville, 25, was credited v total county regional recrea· with downing a pint of beer in tion program would provide a 1.8 seconds, breaking the s i m p I ified administrative speed record at a pub here. organization, better coordlna-The previous mark was 2.34 Uon of development, a unified seconds set in 1968. 0 fl/.MZ, 0 BATON TWIRLERS PRACTICE FOR FALL AFTER SUMMER SCHOOL Sctnt of Extr1currlcul•r Act Jvlty i1 Newport Htrbor High 0 0 0 0 0 0 INSTANT LOAD l'..IMlfA For 8,900, It's School As Usual This Summer 0 0 0 ~mo By JAN EDWARDS Of tfle DIHr Plttt INN A record s.eee students are giving up several houri each weekday to sit 11 classrooms and absorb kno~ge instead of raya of 1un at the beach. Summer school c J a s s e s began l\londay at 23 places in the Newport-Mesa u. n If I e d School Dlatrict and students say th ey are there for a dozen ol. different re3!011S. 0 It's hard to get a job in this ""'"· so I thought I might u well do aometbing con· strucUve," admitted one South Pasadena girl who tummers with bor family on the Balboa Peninsula. Her companion, sitting on the Newport Harbor High School lawn after classes, agreed. uHerc we have J>iology class for aeven weeks 8nd we get a break, but in Pasadena we woWd get eight weeks and the four hoUl'l ·wtthout-a break," she said. They are so hwig up at home making up lost time - if we stop for 15 minutes, we would have to stay 15 minutes longer." These girlJ and several othtr ltudents said they are motivated to attend summer school because it e85e!I the load for the regular school year. One Harbor High student admitted she beard the re. quired biology class was dlf. ficult ao is now taking it to avoid taking both biology and chemJstry simultaneously next year. "I just wanted to get it over with and I didn't want to make a plant collection or a bug col- lection -you have to capture bugs, pin and label them," she said with grimace. She said she still swims each afternoon and isn't bothered by •pending summer time in school. "I hope to graduate a year early and travel," she added. Sitting on the bench around the flagpole, one youth aaid he would be traveling w I t h friend& to Canada aller achoo! is out -ana· -11 taklftg. driver's education l50 he can legally share the steering wheel duties. He also showed enthusium for his ecology clul wbJcb ex- plores the mountain en.- vironment and will be cllmu· ed by a five-day bacpack trip in the Sierra. "Summer school skips a lot of stuff - a lot of extra stuff that is not really needed," he theorized. He attended mathematics classes at Estancia High School last summer "to make my parents happy" and also took ceramics. "To make the day more fun," he confessed. To his surprise, he claimed, he found the summer math course helped jn regular school. "This made me realize I could do the math end made me try harder in all my courses. lf I applied myself, it was easy." Summer school enrollment ihis year surp8ssed 1971 by more than 1,000 students , district officials estimated. 0 Enrollment seems to be satisfactory, based on our prelimin<ID' count," s aid Richard -C. Watts, summer school coordinator. He said 9,000 to 10,000 students were expected this year. Summer school registration remains open until July 7, for latecomers. 0 0 ...-.:\~ .. 131 {fl • e 0 0 0 0 01J!y Coast~ SoutJierri Qffers TheOrtho O ~t!,~!1!! 0 comfort and support at an Ortho mattnisat Bullt to meet qu11ity construction 1t1ndlrdl, Ortho o mcttreues begin with a te:mpel'9d steel lnnersprlng unit which is · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings MAIH0"1CE: 9th & Hiit, Los Arceffl!. 623-1351 Othw Oflices topped by layere of fiber lock sisal and cotton padding or l10f'H.llergenic ·O foam snd cowred with a beautiful ecfOll-qullted design. As It. nation'• Jarve•t chain Of matt,.• speclallsta. Ol'tho gives· you a tretr\endout o selecHon at each of their neatly 50 st0f'8s ••• all alzes. Kings. Queens_ Twins and Full, Convertible Sofas. 0 COmer Groups , • , all at prices to sull: your budget! COmplate bed sets are yours at fantastic savings at With~verY 0 King o Queen 0 \@" L..i~ 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Mlnlmum. 5.75%-5.92% WIUHlll:E mt GRAMMDte\' PU.CE! 3933 Wllshltt BJVd., LI..• 388-1265 LA. CIVIC CfNTlR: 0 Atl Llnkf1tt1r The lnsid_ers Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every. thing you n .. d from the finest closed-doo r show- ., rooms at substantia l sav· lngs -appliances, furni .. ture, stereo equiPment, sporting goods, draperies and mLich, much more. - You can eve n buy. airs at the '"fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial Sit{· l~p. The lnilders Club One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certlflaites $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport .. · ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or. ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en- titlina them to all outilde referral services. Ask about Joinlna at any Coast office. r 211d & BroadWay• 626-1102 . HUNTINGTON IEACH: 91 Hun!lnaton Center• (714J 897..J.047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wiishire BIVd •• 393-0745 SAN PRRO: 10th & Pacific • 831·2341 WEST COVINA: Eastland Shoppln1 Ctr.• 331-2201 PANORAMA CITY: 8616 Van Nuy:s Blvd.• 892•1171 TARI.I.NA: 18751 Venlura BIVd. • J.45-8614 LONG IUCH: 3n:I & locust • C37·7481 WT LOI ANQEUS: Ith l Solo • 266-4510 DIAMOND llA"= 321 Dl11f'l)Ooel' Bar Bl'vd. • (7l.4) 6'5-7525 Dl"1 Hours-t AM to4 PM °""' S.blnieys -tAMIOll'M (~Pl Civic Cent_., Beautiful bedding acceuot1n lnclude: ~ no-Iron King or Queen sin top llhaet. • Atldcl"llC no-Iron Kfng or Qt/Mn alz• titted botlClm ltlett . • 2 Kina or Queen.size bol1ttr pltlowl • 2 pftkNf' can .. King or Qufffl •lie rnattr.11 P9CI •~klnO « Queen alza metal frame onHS)'-f"Olllng cutera The Double Bonus l("'9 or Queen: Headbolrd plot qullttd btdtpNld 0 O camera otter ••• S 0 3 o~" o oNl.'t . 0 L:-__-_--::::: l'HE NATION'S WIUT !:HAIN OF umus SPECIAUSTS • TWfft Of Ritl: Headboard and metal rrame on ... y.rol11ng cntara • ROuncl a.cl: FuU·fashlOned »p and fitted bbt«lm sheet SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM FOUNTAIN VALLEY ltlLWeaLLlncoln Avonue 16131 Hubor Blvd letwe111 Euclilf eM l 1ookhur1t Aven1tt1 fcorner of hfln91rl N1trt te ZMy'• Jutf e1tf or Fed Mert Pllo11e1 IJf--4570 PhonoJ 776·15t0 $118 --c...=::....___J DaoontiYI', YerHtlla, ba1utlful, this great comer group can turn your de!\ or lamlly room lnlo an exb'a bedroom. Nine piece set includes 2 Orthe> matttUSM, 2 box •Prl~s. 2 bolsters and 2 quilled coverlets, plus art attractive comer table! ible Sofa Belair Thilc MncS.ome convertible aofa has everything. • Clean mOO.m llnetl A aola by day! A lul\.slza bed at nlghU EnJ.o Tilt·to-Clean backl.,.. •variety ol fabrics. A!aocomes irt &iperOueen Size a Love Seat. Maleh Ing Chair available, ORANGE 720 No. Tustin An. 0111 llock s.uth •• Colll11s fntrl fo Mlch111'1 M1rhfl Pho1111 613~5102 ~~~/"f .<?~~ IZ'"t7~ S'.WU. FREE DELIVERY LAKEWOOD 4433 C•ndlewood Avenue Condltwood Shops Pho11e1 6J4.41J4 (ocrot• frotn Leli1woolf O..,t•tT 8 PILOT ·AOVERTISER Wedlltsday, June 28, 1972 ,. """"""''· Junt Z8, 1'172 ·/ D.\ILV PILOT _11 COSt.l MISA-tlM Ml,_, •K H Wll'" Sf, ttUNTINOTON ,;u;z ltKll aM ,,_.. ANIMAL "0Ut1TAIN VAU.IY -'*" M .... Sf, .. T•IMrt r=::::-'~!'<T:;;;!.::=, JOUHTAIN YALLIY -1'141 ........ INC. •M llllftfH' ttUHTftrtOTON llAC14 -!1111 ltedl llM, ti Atll11I• SANTA ANA -1411 W, fflllttr •M lrhlll SI, WESTMINSTl'.R -"21 W•ttmltt$t.r ti liollltli Wtsl COSTI. MUA -tu I , trtll St. ..UHTIN•TOH ll:ACH -WHW ... Jtwt Gfttr MUN TINOTOH IEACH -flMI AQm1 .t ll'Mlch11rsl I .., •• •••• -11 T~l~ ... ~~~;es Celebrate Grand Opening -of Our New Store, 3325 Bristol, at Mac.+rthur Blvd., Santa Ana ~~\ 'ilt.''5 SfUDV'ING IQ BE A ~0$f SC. HOL.A.~, .. San1pling Reveals Approval The Fountain Valley School District has received high marks in an annual survey of the parents in its community. Better than 8 out or 10 parents respanding said they felt the education their child is receiving is average or above average. Only 10 percent felt it was unsatisfactory. The is the major finding of a 28-guestion parent s u r v e y completed by 70 percent, or 7,84-0 parents, over the past month. Thi s represents a signficant i n c r e a s e in participation over t"'o years ago when 45 percent of the parents responded. The district got highest marks in individual areas for Its drug abuse and math pro- grams, with about 40 percent of parents calling them above average. "I'm very pleased with overall results .'' said Superintendent Mike Brick, "It shows that the community has confidence in the district and its programs, and that's very gratifying." Brick said the questionnaire also showed up weak nesses of the districts. notably some parent dissatisfaction with their children's study habits, which wil l require more at- tention in the future. Lowest marks were in English a n d handwriting where above average ratings were given by only 16 and 19 percent of parents. However . in each case, the levels of "unsatisfactory" ratings "'ere Jess than 10 percent. The highest single mark the district got was in the area of teacher-parent com- munications. Ninety-fi ve per- cent of parents 21greed that teachers did a competent Job of keeping them informed of their child's progress. Another high mark came in answe;o to the statement, "In general, my child is develop- ing a desire for learning now and in the future." Eighty- three percent of respondees agreed, 11 percent disa1?reed, and six percent had no opinion. Film Team On Tour Of Europe A four-man filmin g team from the Telecommunications Center of the coast Com- munity College District are spending ~ir summer tn the mid-East d Euroll:' filming an anthropo ogy senes. The filming expedition is the start or a two-year schedule that will produce 42 half·hour educational television P~ grams which will combine into a one semester college level course on cu Jtural an- thropology. Heading the film team is Dr. Dwayne r.1erry, professor of anthropology from Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The production team comes from the Telecommunications Center at Golden West Col1ege In Huntington Beach. '!'bey are Bill N e 11 J , producer-director, W a r r e n Wright, cinematographer, and Terry Nelson, script writer. The crew will be filming In Egypt, Greece, Iraq, France and England on this trip -the lint or ,.veral planned In the future. The .. rles It !Wlded by • $114,000 grant !rom the N1· Uonal Endowment for the · HllllllDIUes. The completed aerle1 will be p.....,,ted on KOCE-TV, nnel IO, which will be optl'llt by the oom- munlty colleg. dlstr1ct when it eoeo on the a oome Ume nut fall. In addition to lit Initial presentation Uy, the aerl .. •ill be ollered other lduea- Uonal television a I a ti o n 1 throughout the naUon, ae- <Ordl~ to William ""111a, director of t b o toJecom. municaUons center. •• ,. $J44 & $J79 Boys' & Toddlers Boxer Jeans minii.----.$1 91 Value! 11--spa... w=~~h• Mini Spa . •••ckt Bath Oil or Knit Shirts Your 99c Choice 99• Lanolin Plus • Balsam Plus Protein y.,.c•oi .. Adjusts to 14 Posfflons $595 Value! AnlnMetal Ironing Board / hpulor1ii'• fl"mh co111 liM"' . pack.d bi handy lo!'l_t.timo cli1p-t119 peclloi• perfect for treth, letJ\'el, g,.n,. .,..,. og1. KMp )'ftr fnlth mllf 10nitary I .,Jor ho. -=-~•aae• 'I" Whitt Telloif 2 Qt. Sauce Pan or 10" Fry Pan Cheery Poppy, "'""'"'"•• 99 •r Avoc:odo ~ill-C ithod alv111ln11111- li11•d 'lrith n-. "· white D11Po111 T•flo11. •r-=--·~--·-··~·· 12' Value! Fruit of the Lum ~!Z::'~· Sofa Piiiows 99 SMOrtf)' ttyWd .. ,.. '" rfch f•bfkt & 1 ... Hair Conditioner 7 7 c • Herbal Shampoo 16 Oz. •Y A1111rlcan Snetlngs H•,•r ii•f•r• low prlc•I e righ11., ~-r un1H fi9urJMs.cet11e J .. -rt 9ift pockciget. 6 ~ l. . .orl.,.._ , ef 1dC9 thlnp to !'lice ....,,1 .. $9V.1 .. 1 Designe.r Parsons Tables ·~:~' s599 4·!$J1f VolHI Mallory Batteries 4 i 64 c 10 ~~~~'29' 'J" Va uel 12 Qt. Poly Ice Chests 64' Reg. 18" Ylnyl Sult lags "Cerry ••" with ••""'" ..... 111 $567 "1lp'P •• •••• , ... ....... 'J" Value! 27x7'l' Vinyl· Air Mattress 66c •c" or "rl" Vocatlo1 SpMlel '--• Gotho111 27x72" Sia• 111114 I Servo 5k M 21c Sa.lnp llglit.,lgh1 yet $t11rtfy Piii .. Styl• ------------------· ---~lllllllli"""""• '7" True TH1p1r Reg. 23.:.. 5 Year Light Bulbs 6:87c • 60 • 75 • 100 W•tt 0,.1 for hard t. roach pfoc ... lvr 6 •nd -Jlc. Tlieragran• tll1• ,.l•IKJ •l .. MI• '"""'1' .... •11""1'$438 lottl• •f 100 .. ,~ ., •• lettl• •f. '" All1n1t httl• of 24 l1M1t1 Glll1H1 Super Stalnl111 ll•des 99' ·11gllt Guard · 4 0.AC• ........ 64' $1600 Value! Rivlon Eterna 27 Cream Stott .,. ..,,"' b¥to11'1 _,...,.. s 1 ooo •vln9 ·~ ... ,.., .. ,., ' ... Spin Cast Reel P111th t.•tl•n c•11trol, Wide .. " •pool. line -rtwtml $299 C1l1man l•llen Edge Shave Creall ::~i:::., ...... , 79c Dtp Styling Gel ::":::: •. , ..... 84 c D111rt Flower 99' lrrtts. of R'I. f2.69 Tr•Ytl Spl .. 1 Your Choice 99c Tobi• !cHb••u• leotu,.• full 13" round fir e bowl, 3 petition grill odj111,,.,1nt. Metcil co1uol '<Ible hcu .19" diameter table tap wilh colorfv1 de1ig~. tripod leg•. 79' Charcoal Brlquets 10 POUND BAG sac 31c 1Rtr9l11 BIQ Uttr Que rt 21c Dry Roasted Planters Nuts • 1101. PHftvtl :~:::~i!~"r: ... 79c Y"'CMk• Canada Dry Soft Drinks Regular or Diet 10,.. 95c a..r...i- 111. •I""::" 150 Pap.,,., .... 9-loch a3·c 1"rth 9f J,., ,. "" .,.clelll Fifth s277 Galf 011 $1388 Men's Sport Watch .With Popular Cal1ntlar Feature Hot tropical wrltt 6 1lrop, a lopt•d s 9 ti•• .u.1.1.1111- ~Mil'lfi&tt11• i..ri. Water P-' to 5 ATMS, °"•r• · lll'llffdl ' • • . l i ' ' • • • • • . . • • • • • • ' • • • • I • • l • l • l • • • • l l • l l • • 'J f DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, June 28, 1972 Career Chances In Meteorology Ca reer Co rner mathematics to the study of a portion of our physical en-vironment. Meteolrology t r l e • to describe, understand, predict and where poss.Ible, to control, the atmosphere. This includes the atmosphere's composition -water, vapor, cloud, dust and smog: its swift Ind violent changes as seen in tornadoes, hurricanes, blizzardJ and cold waves, and Its long, regular changes i=::;;.,.;~ betwe<n drought and flooding rains. Modem concern!, such as air pollution and nuclear testing, also ch a 11 en g e•lllt ..... ·-meteorologl.lts. And from jet aircraft pilots to w b e a t farmers, most of us want to know about the weather. But hold it-' 1-.a NOT AU. METEOROL(). GIBTS are Weather forecast- ers, u many people think. """-• lr-""'lf Only about one-third of an .,. timated a,500-9,000 meteorolo-' --gtsts (government llaUsUc.s) are in weather forecasting. A growing corps of research meteorologists, using n e w tool!: of thil electronic-nuclear· space age, are unlocking the m:vsteriea of the atmospheres. other meteorologisU a r e educators, consultants, ad- m in is t ra tors, writers, businessmen. About 2 percent of civilian meteorologists are lP".- women. METEOROLOGISTS m a y broadly be cla!sed a s teachers : research meteorologists; operation and service meteorologists ; and e n g inetring meteorologl~ts (those concerned with design ) of instruments, and how at- mosphere affects structures and materials). There's no hard line between these career functioM , P..nd the s a m e person -may be engaged in more than one function. MEDIAN SALARY ln 1970 for all civilian meteprologists was -.15,200; 10 percent earned".,...._ over $22,300. Meteorologists "·ork as civilians for Federal agencies . (primarily the Na· t ional Oceanic and Atmospheric Admlnistration, and th< Armed Forces)· private industry such as com: mercial airlines and shipping companies, private weather consulting firms , m e t eorological instrument ~mpanies, aerospace firms, insurance companies, utilities, radio and TV stations. Others teach, or serve as tnJisted men or officers in the Armed 1111 .... , Forces. 1• KIDS LOVE UNCI.E LEN Saturday• hi The DAILY PILOT FamH11 Circu• b11 Bii Keane Big Pho·to Contest ~earing •• DAILY PILOT THE HELPFUL GUIDE FOR TODAY 'S HOMEMAKERS DAllY PILOT -. Your Mo•iev'• Wortla If You're Rich, McGove1n 'Probably lsn 't Your Man' By SYLVIA PORTER If Senator George McGovern were to become President of the U .S. ancl il he could theo put into ertect programs he is supporting a11 of thls date, what might it mean to you? You, as a wealthy American with subatantial earnings or in ve.st men ts carefully 11rheltered" from tues or both? Anawtr : A wallop in the pocl<etboolr. In !l()t, to the cijche, "you canJt take it with you," McGovern in January WU suggesting a veralon of "you can't leave It be- hind you, either." Jn late May, though. he modilted this startling concept. POITI• And Utat recent modiUcation of one of hiJ key tax proposals underliJ1es the importance of the' three basic points. (I) McGovern ls backtracking ()D many ()( his more radical economic positi()IUI. (2) Even if he w ere standing pat, it is inc()nctlvable that the next Congress would pass S()me of hl1 program s. (3) The South Dakota Senator has shown no stomach for contining to pro- mote programs that be is hetllf! warned could !righten business and the stock market into a disastrol.18 slump. I. Yet, although McGovern has done much of his toning down in the reelm of tax reform and although he bu been almost embarrassingly candid about his expectations lhal Congress would refuse to approve Ideas it doesn't consider reasonable and sound, the fact is that McGoverq has repeatedly pro- pot<d specific tu changes. The fact is. too, that the Senator is co-sponsor of a revolutionary tax refonn bill tha\ bas a.ctually been i,.. troduced into the Senate. His fundamen_taJ views in this area must be taken seriously. • If McGovern w e r e President, he would fight for a Hmlnimum income t ax" that would be "truly erfeclive" and almost certainly would boost your taxes. "One possible formula" would apply to all o f you with total income in ex- cess of $50.000 _,_ and would subject all your income, regardless ()£ its sources, to "payment ol taxes at a rate of 75 per cent Of the current nominal rat.s at the rate that (you) would have to pay if there were. no loopholes." Following. says the Research Institute of America. is how t h i s minimum tax might work out for you -a rrlarried executive earning f75 ,000 a ye a r, receiving $13,000 in tax~x empt intef'est d uring the year and wiUt exem ptions, various deduction.5 and credits on your tax return totaling $11,000. On your $64,000 taxable ln· come, )'(>ur regular tax would be $24,420. B ut under the possible minimum tax fonnula of McGovern's-including the - ta1-exempt interest and e.x· ctudiog the deductlonl -your mlnimum tax would b e '28,485. Your ta1es would go up $4,065. • Gift and inheritance taxes on your wealth would be shifted from a tax on your estate or on you "to a lifetime cumulative tax on the reci· plent'' of your wealth. Back ln January, McGovern proposed that there he a 100 percent tax to the recipients on gifts and inherttances above $500,000. You couldn't receive more than $500,000. Last month he changed the 100 percent to the current Tl per· cent rate. Following, according to the RIA, is how this cumulative r ecjplent taz might work using the Tl percent rate ()Ver $500,000 and excluding the first $60;000 from consideration. Y04 leave $1,000,000 to your son. Under present law, your est~te would pay a '325,700 estate tax, leaving your son with $674.300 net after estate tu:. Under McGovern's pro- posal, the recipient tax would ·come to $530, 700, leaving your son with $469,300 net a fter tax. (This assumes no increase in present estate tax rates up to $500,000). Or you and your !pJUSe give y our son gifts over the years totaling $1,000,000, and at his grandfathef''s d eath , he in- herits another $1,000,000. The recipient tax ()n the kltal of $2,000.000 would be $1,300.700 -leaving your S()R With an after-tax total of $699,300. (This too Is based on present eslate tax r ates). \ FINANCE Brentwood Bank Sets Open House Brentwood Savings and Loan, bas opened its tenUt branch of 156S Adams Avenue in the City of Costa Mesa. In celebration ()f the opening of the temporary facility, located across from the post ()ffice near the intersection of Harbor Boulevard and Adams , open house wlll be held during the month ()[ July, with free gifts a n d refreshments. Custom~r services offered at the new ()ffice include free travelers checks, rree money ()rders and free note col· Jections. Constructi·on on the permanent facil ity, located one block west ()f the present office, will begin in August with a planned opening in December of thls year, and will feature drive-up teller service and free safe deposit boxes in addili()a to regular customer services. Heading the staff ~f the new branch is Roger P helps. Doon are open from 9 a.m. until 4 p.tn. Monday through , Thurs- day and from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. on Friday. Wtdntsday, June 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 17 Bank Aide LEGAL N<YrlCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE r1CTITIOUS tUllNllS r•CTITIOUI •Us1111a11 nHI NAMS nATl'Ml•T NAMI STATIMaNT NOTICI o• INTINTION The flllOWll\9 IN•Mlll l1 Wint bloll\IP Tl! lol-lflt pt!'toll II Ooll\t bullMli TO C•IATI Sl(UltlTY INTE••ST ··= L •1: '*"' •11141t1 1.1.C.C.J T!O'S AUTO otT,llt,. SEll:\llCI, !\IA.Iii'$ l'Olt:tON CAii llf.,.AlltS, NOTK( l1 lltttlW 1lwn tll TM IU Liii COY.... CM't, ,_I.it. tott ~tOOt Jlvd,. COlll ~~ "'621 Ct9Clitio1'1 tf STl:,.HIN It SIMMONS aM V•lllY, C•ll"°"n!1. C C r1 Andltl tvi" ·AllOtttoll. aotf H1rbot ,.INKY N, $1MMCIHS. Deofln, wflMI T9d ~rfll-. 10CDI ln IW.... OU ' llvd Cllll WM -llnHI ... , ..... 1SO (•ti 11111 SlrMl• "" ·-• .... •lfl,.:-:!~lrl •. ~H~ttd flll' I n Tiii• ·~lll'lt" II llell'll ctMucf'9d IW ltl CMll lrMloN, C-IY ill °' • ., .. , Sl~'• of I .._. Ill INllYld\llt. C•llforllla. !Ml I MltWlrr lo!Mt ... f I• lndl~~ H Liii; ANDEi$ l\IAN ANDEll:'°" tbOul hi lit c"•lfd lrl' OM!Of' IN! Forecas t Optimistic lh't 11_,~ tlltCI wllll tM CouMY llllt st1!9m9lll fli.d wllll m. C:~ trflltwl II "lr1! Ullllid Tl!tlll .. LMl'1 c..., c.k tf OrWllt County 1111 JllM S. lt11 (!«II 1.>I OrtMI C_.,,., Otll Jut1t lf, ltl1. keul'M '•r11M, wt!.-IMltlflbl tdd": La t <-· ind' t Ir/' kvtrlt' J ~ DHuly C~n!Y I Y 111 .... rly' J. Macldolc. OttutY COllnlY 11 ..00 SUf\MI llYll,. Holtywald, (tyl'lly tet pro~lJODS ICI e Citric. . ' Cllrl. LH A-i... $11" of C11!!or11l1. i. • • ,.1n 11 l'IU11 Tiii pr...,-1v In wllldl It'll Stc11rft1 a br1ghtenJng economic scene l'IJllllll'lld Or1t111 c .. u 0111y Piiot, Pua11""° Or•-'°"'' D•ll• PllOf, ,.,,..,111 w111 IM c:rNltCI 1,, lR ..-.1. Ail In Cal"omta and _._ naUOD J"'"" 1 14. 11 21. 1m 1•11·7t June n. 2t, •fld Julv J, It ltn 1,1 .. n ll1tur11 11\d -lPlfllnl, turnlturt ·~ u um ' • turnlJ11ll!ll1 ol OrO•or t0\1..,1,.. IH'804"'" for ti.-l<.. ... J .. ..-of the year and LEG" uOTICE LEGAL Nat'ICE t10w 1oc11..i 11 2JO E••' Utt'I '1'111• Cott•• 1ic UCI ..,. ... ~ -l'" Mff~, county tf Or•ll9t· S•••• thro ho t 1973 'th 'n-•---:==:=:-::;:;::;;,,.----1---~~~~===---I C•Utotn!• _,.,, 11111~ lu'lo<*n " og U ' WI I i· l'ICTITIOUS IUSINtSS ,ICTITIOVI IUS1NllS "HILLGR°EN'SQUAllf' LtQUOll:" creased consumer spending NI.Ml STATIMINT NAMI ITAT•"'•NT TM •loftMl4 tle\lr""' ::1~ :l pointing lhfl way towards II~~ followlng OtnOrl II liolllO b<lll .... 1 tl~h• lollowl1111 --It dol"" IMl1INH 1:,' Jc:~~~·~~IO:'Oo ~ . .:. ti flltlll ~7~~ [ the t 9 7 0 u HI" E II: s IT y fllAD lOTMfltAPV FISHTFST LAIS ' sn l•I• Av• .• Tllr UI a. Loa" Co ' IMlll 5uriM . recovery rom ASSOCIATES. 101 (:tty Otl'll Soutll, Coton• U l Mtr, C11!ll. Hollv~OOd, ~=n\! :21$rcurltv '•d'I' r ecession" a Securltu PacUlc or-,, c111+ort1l•. K•nr All•n 1t11n111, 517 ''" Av•.. So ·~ '' ~ addr-uald b; ' ,, M•lvor V1rmuftd, MD.. IJlO lllld Coroni del Mer 111 bus llHS t11rnt1 I I It N5t National Bank senior r esearch ,.o1111 w1v, Coron• c1t1 M.,. c1111orn11. Tnis t1u•lrw11 I• IMln• tDN11Kltd bw '" 1111 _Dfll•cw for me ltl•tt YNtt • • Thlt bu•h111• 11 bfllfll cONl\IC!td lrl' l fl lncll11!d111t trt H- analysl told Orange County lnd1111M1, KENT 1tl..t.NOA D•tfll Ju"' n. 1;n. Htlvor \lff'!tlund Th!1 11111m1nt 11\td with In~ C01Jn!w Se<u•t<I P• " C realton Tuesday Thll 11111rMnt fll.O wllll m. County Clerk 01 O••not couMw ..., Ju"' 1• itn f lrlil Unl!t<I Tnr1t1 a. Lo:n o • • ' I J u 1•n • • I J OOo O.o r c "' 11¥' MldtY s .......... Alt!. M••· Spe ki t t•• Sa ta Ana Clff"lt of Ofi'IM °"" y on lll'lt ' ' y t'llr y • Me •. 11 ' ou ' Pll.ST UNtTEO TMl.IP.T & LOAN CO. 8 Dg 8 In:" D • bY lll'llfl'f J, to\ldclOll, 0.P!.11'1' (ounlY Cl•~k 1 ~ Tustin B d [ Cltrk l'llSll ..-S1111wt •euttvfrd ~aoge-~ 0 a r 0 • p 11>'1 "ubhlJ"H'd 0r5119f Coa" Ot \y P IOI Nollywlt!Mll, C1 tll t00H Rea1t()rs' br ast meeting in ,.11bl•'1IH Of•nN coast Dillw ,.not, Jun• 11, 21. ••Id Jul• s. 11. 1,n 1'" n P111>1!11Wd O•fr.v• C11<11r D••1• 1:;.0~ Orange, N man K, Jay from J-u. 21, a. •ncl J111v s. it12 ls..t·n LEGAL 1':011CE Ju.,. H. Hn -------- the bank's research depart· f.EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOT!CE ment in Angeles offered :itl.oc an ecooonuc f()recut for the '1CTITIOUS •uSIMlfSS flCTITIOUI •UUHISI NOTICE Of TIUSTIS'S SAL• NAMI ITATIMINT '' l •• •t• N 10 .. next 18 month!. He also oullin· Thi tollowl!'lt Hrt11n1 ••• dclllll NAMI STATIMl Hn "''· 121·11........ •. • ed · tr nd h" d ' ""•'-"" ,,. Th• touowln1 IH"Ot'l' 1r1 clo,.,. On Wtc1"etd1v, Julw '6. n11 •I 11 IX' m.)Or e S I. au I.nee ..,. -~ · .... ' ,,, ,, ,.,_, , m. on 1111 oubllt 1!01W1lk r" CVS TOM tNSULATIOM CO., 2•1• C ""1 ;ltENTWOOO AS SOC.IA TES. 'O O ,.;;:;-ot 1111 ""'•Anc• 10 !he ttulldlnt In '"' Should Watch (Or in the l•Jnllk~lvA~ C~•,!'J':'c ~·2~ ·Anl IJICi DIW WIY, Pl1(entl1, C1lltcrnl1 f2il0 C•IY cl An1h1,m, C1lllcrnlt , II 1117 Soulll homebuilding industry during A •< c 1 "M •r• ' •n 1 J1c1t M lrvlno, 1no1 J-5t>orc Pl1ct, 8roollllu•11 H•tt•. 1tr111v tnccn1or11ec1. · "1" Ol 1 ffl l ol An•~ltl C1lliornl1 toocf t1.>'1>0•1llon, fl l rul!ff Ufldl r 1111 Qltd o' 1972-73, F•1nk S(h1tt, 14U C S1nt1 Ant Avt.. Slevtn G fllrrt Jll En<tltnltd l•uit rn•Of' '1> Ol•>ala Tnom11 Bull ~Ill'" He noted that latest Depart· i~:;•bM,i:u Ii bfllnt tonduclf'd br 1 Wey, P1tllk:. P111"0;,. C11u. 90711 N1.>l1 J. Bvl!. hu1~nd tnd wll•. •nd . ,. rl I ~1 G9rtld II. W1l1Pn. 72111 C111 Avenu,, FKOtClld """""" IJ, 1969 In flook .. ., ment of Ccmmerce estimates • "' ~ ... ~·IC A. O\IElllAlL wcoc1111111 HUh, c1111orn11 tll!M P•M s1s 01 ou1c •• 1 R1<01d1 ol Or•nat indicate the JlatiOl\81 eCOOOffiiC Thlt 118i.tn1nl illod with 1111 (cuMy \lurvl l(!IUtll Ind Vyron Kl11nn, I COUl"ll~, C1ll•orni,, 9lven to 1ec:ur1 Ill In ,.., . Clerk cf OrlnM (Ol,lnty Oii: June U, 1'71. p1t1n1ri111lo, -IOO llOIOIW Wlr, Plft!n!11, d~ltclMll In f6YO• of f hl Colwtll C1.>m recovery COntinUeS tO galn By Btverly J. M..aaa., Ot1>11tv Cou~tr C1llfornl1 t?:t70 o~nY. fl tO•l'~•a!,nn. now owriea ~nd llelo t J It 'buted Cltrt Tlll1 b111ln1u Is !Mint CCl'l'CluC!t<I bv A by Tiii l,i!,.rlfl<t Sa .. n11 B•nk, bV , .. lOll mornen um. ay a r1 · ,11,., G•nff"•I "•rlMrtnlp. 01 111e b•~•«" ct c.,1~1n 001111110111 portions ()f this acceleration to ,.ubltthed Or•r.v• c061t 0•11• Piiot. Sttv•n G. Barrt •Kvr.o 1111rpti., /\Ot•t• " wtilcn w•1 · -·• d 't [ J~"' 21 21 •11111 July J n 1tn \tll·n T11i1 1!11tm1n1 111.a wHll tht Counlv rtcordfd .\\arcl'I !1, 11'1 Ill Sook ~ tncrea~ ellpen I ures o r ' • ' ' c11r1< of or1r>01 '°""'" on Ju"• s. i•n, Pa11 )t4 ot 1a10 0tnc11t "kGf"d1. w111 set! residential construction com-LEG" "'OTICE br B1v1r1.., J. MaddOlf, °'""'v counrw "' pUb!lc ~\/Ct•o·• 1~ •n-h10ih1•t t1tda1r to• .' • ru.,, ,, Cieri c1!11, 01w1bl1 In 1 .. wtul monev ol 1n1 plemented by Sharp rJSe5 lD l'·llllt Unll9d Sll!H at mf llMI OI s~lt, w1IJIOUI er $pend j n g PublllhHI Or111111 CN1I DlllV Piiot, wltrllllY 11 IO !1!!1, "°'11111on or 'ft C 0 0 S U m 1 "ICTITIOUI IUSINl.SS Junt I, 14, 21, J1, nn 1'1(1..1) <Umbrl11tt• Ille lnttrtll cotivtyf!d !O Incl "particularly for household NAMI! STATIMl.NT -htld b• Mid Tru1111 undet Slld I AA..l-TM totlowlllO Pf•IOl'll •rt do<l'lll LEGAL NOTICE otld ol fruit In 1nd IO llM lol1ow1"' related durab e g~ such as bv1!~u ••: ao.crllltd 0,0.:.r1w: L•' it ot Trld Ht. furniture and appliances, AUDIO DISCOVNTEllS, 1~ C1rnt11t Ull, In the Cllv 01 CP•ll Mew, County 00 Ave .• Cotlt Miii "''' 111'1 I S Orin ... Stitt al Calllornl•. 11 ~ Otl I "Steady increases in con· Slt1Mr IClllllnd. 2Jf0 C1r1119lt ,,.,, ' ,ICTITIOUS llUUN s af'd . -d -3i. Co•la MIMI NAMI tTATEMlfNt mtll rtc0r 111 ' cf Ori n ... sumer spending thus far this eaw1•d J1v s.oJd1n, 2s..1 GrHt1t1111r. T"P. to11ow1,,. person 11 001rt11 boslr>tss mt~•ll•~: /']'os. 11<"'01 ., I . d " Coart Mes• 11. C1Untv. 11 o "• • 1 In 1., year, he exp ame ' em-Th is buslneu 11 bfllllO CIHWIUC!fd Ir/' • COLOWElL IANICElt £SCllOW. S!O ,,"-,"' ·~MrtlJ, ,'"', ,_,w, ... m,_ ·-.. •--· th I bli ' • ' .• , · N t 9 _.. rH'f, 0• ~ •1~ •' ~ ' -"' pua.:itze e genera pu C S I r "'°'"" p. N""'"°'' C11'111r Drive, tWl>OI" t.u•, ou rpOM cf pivln'lll oblltlllOl'll wc:ur9d b1 , ed nlld , ST EINAR ICJ ETL.ANO C1IUornl1 t?:W!I. Id Oel!d I T 1 lnc;h,.Olllll 111,._ renew C0 ence ffi Ollr Da· Tn l1 11&19"1ttll 111.0 wllh lhr (CYlll'I' L1ndm1rk f KroW Sfrvlces, lt1t (1 Wiii 'l'\CI Cil>lt'I;:; ~I IM Tru,.tt• Id• tionaJ economic recovery. This Clt rk of 0tl"9f Count¥ on: Junt 11, 117,1. Ctllfornlt CDl"POrtllon j, IJ1t! Vlctorv ~.= ~ &n~. undtr !Ill tetl7ll cf IAld d d -1--' lh Btvtrly J, M•ddo~. Otou!Y Covl'llJ lloult111rd, \lltl MllYI. C•IH. tUOI. °'" of T•ull. ln1tr•1I lhlrton Ind tren , stea Y ga.sm; m con-Cttrk. Tt111 bu11111ss 11 cMC11Krt<1 bv • cor· '" m,. 111 lll\Plld prlntlHI of tr.. no1• Su-·r -•dm' g ·"ould con '11111 w1uon ' ,.· ..... Id o..o of Tnut w1111 '""' 11'°"' "'t<~• ' .:Ill • PvtiUllhtd 0'11191 Cati! Otlt'I' PllOI, l.1>1dm11"1l EK•CW Srv!t~, l('C. MO.If v• M bl!" j l 71 ti tinue through 1973 June 21 , 21, and Jul~ s. 11, 1tn IMl2 12 Chtrlt f R, Hilton, Prteldent J~'!!~c11t1.!':':n!i':i 1!:'~;:wld9d: ' particularlv as employment LEGAL NOTICE Thll l!llllmtnt WIS tl19d Wl!h !ht (OUfl· O•lod Juntt 12. 1972. ,, tv Clt•lt of Or1n1• Cou()ty on Jy111 U. ltt<y 1ncoroor1t9d. T•u1ttt expands ani;l OUr unempJoy-i.n. fly ltlchard F. 1tv1n t t d I, · o CNAltLlS Ill. IHlTOH rettrv men ra e ec 1nes. STATEMINT 01' W1THOl.AWAL ,.OM l)UJ Vlctcirw 811111 NC 22UJ . ,.All:TNlfllSIO" 0"11tATINO UN Dllt V N c 111 9itet 'ICTITIOUS IUSIMllS NAMI fll uvi, 1 ' P11bllshtd Or•fl91 Coa1I Otlly ~!l()f. Th• follcwln1 per1on h•• wUllClrewn 11 Ttlt-4!ct1i Uni IM·lCllS F IMll Jimt 2' ind July ;, 12, "" l.i.l'"-11 • 11Mr1I P•rltllir fnm Ill• 01rtner1lllP PubllMild Or•no• COis! Dilly Pllol, Ojltflllnt Ul'llllr lllt llctl!IOUS bu1llllH JUflf' 21 Ind July 5 12 1' 191? 1611-1? ntm1 of AllT CIAFT OECO ll..t.TOltS 11 ' ' ' LEGAL NOTICE 11153 Mt. 111ldy Clrclt, Fount1lt1 V1ltt1, LEG 'L NOTICE C1llfornl1 tt1ot. ,... •a• "*' Tiii rlctlUou1 bu1111111 n1m1 1tlltm1nt NOTICIE OF SALE D' ltlAL JlltO,.Elt- for !ht ptrtnerltl!p w11111.0 on No11•mbt1 NOTl(I' Of TltUSHl!'S SI.LI. TY At "lttVATI SALi u. 1t11 It! '"' County ol Of•no;•. N•. PC Mt A·1'711 Full Ntm• ind Addriis of lhl P1r1on On Jul• !. 1tn, •I 10 o'cl0<k A.M., •1 su,.E•io• cou•T 0, nt• Wllhdt1wl111; th• m•ln '""'nc' ol l•rWlmal"ll Ett .. 1112 llOllO EOWAltD lltOWM, 1nn Old Norlh M11ln St., City of S1nl1 Ant. STA.Tl 01' CALlfOltNIA l'Olt F1tNon W1y, Gardon Gr0\11, Ctlllornlt. Ctlllornl11, LANOMA ltlC ES C II 0 W TH• COl.IHTY 0, O•AHOl ltOLLO EOWAll:D •llOWN 5Elt\llCE5, 11 Tru111e utldtr lh• dttd of In 1111 M11tlr• of 1111 E1l1!1 ol ALllEllT ,,..,1 trusl mtd• b~ Wtnff• Coro. Ind recorded OLIVElt llEOMON, 1bo k-11 ,.llbllllhld Orlr>OI C0ttt Dtl1Y Pllol, M1rC11 IL ltll, lti llooll 15't, Plff di, ot AlllEAT 0 REDMON , Oec•••l'd JVM 21 •nd July J, 11, If, 1tn ,,:)O.n Ottltl•I At<ord1 or Or111111 Counl'Y , Nollet 11 MrtbY 01111<1 It'll! '"' u~ C1lllornl1, ~•VII> tci Hnire In In· dtn.ltnt<I will .-n ~I prl111te 1•11, Clfl or 1-----::LCECGC"CC.,-N'°"OTl=cccE----I dtb1tan~1 1n !1vor of Glfdys 1. Av1rd, 1 itltr '"' Jnl dt' o1 Jvly. 1t12, 11 ll>t ol· tu,o widow flOW OWMd •nd lleld b,Y Gl1dr• I, lk1 ol A-rl W. BrllW .. U0 EAsl Ctl•O· l----=-~.,,.,--=~---1 A~•rd, I widow by retion of tht br1Acll m111 A.,..nvt, $11111 A. Of•ft9•, C1Htornlt NOTICE 01' GOVt!ll:NING ol cuta;n ob1i91rlon1 11tvred thereby, '2666, Countv ol O•lnft, lo lti• nltl\l't •OAltD MIMl•lt ILlfCTION nollct or wti1<n .,.,.,., recorded Febru1rw Ind bet! blcktlr, 1rllli lllbltci !o ton· NOTICE IS HEAEllY GIVEN lh<ll Oii 21. ltn, In Book llXl11, P11ie lll, ol uld !lr1Ntlon b'f 11ld 511Dtt'lor Cour!, 111 ttlf TvtsdlY, Auoutl t, ltrJ, tn election will Olllcl1! Rfcerds, lANOMARK ESCllOW rltlll, llllt 1NI l"ltrlSI of Wld D•< .. Mll be .lield In 1111 N•WPOtl·Mt•• Utilrl9d SEltVlCES w111 ltll ,, p1.1bllt IUCllcn to It !ti• time ol cli'lltl •nd •II ll\l •IOhl, !Ilk $c;:hool Ol1trld, Courtly of OJ.,.,.; Sllll !ti. tll11M1t bidder fOI" c11h, PIYlbll lfl 1nd Lt1t1rHI lh•I !tie tlflll cf .. Id of C1Plorn11, tor lllf our-. ol •!t<fl!'lt tnful mon1Y of th• U"l!.-cl St1t11 •I tN dK11Hd II•• 1e111ulrecl bw cprrlllon of' llW two mombel't lo IHI fllf ¥K1f1Clt1 I" time of 1111, wllhol.I! w1rr1ntv 11 M tit!•, .,. othll"wl!1e, 111111r lllln or I" lddlllon r. Tn.1tl" "''''' Nt. I •nd No. ' on thl 1101lft11o<! or encvmbr•nc•s, !tit lnt1rut t111t said drculel'J, •I ltlf time ol' d .. 11!, OO'ti!rnlM )loard of ••Id K~I dl.trtct, cvn1111'td ro 1nd now 11110 bV s11jd Tr\lffH lit and to 111 fl'lt urt1ln r11l pr(Ni,fr11 111d rnombflrJ to ""'' <h.lrl1111 th• u-ulldtr t&JCI 0111<1 ot Trusr, In tnd '" !hi 1ltu1ltd In th• County of OrAnff, Sl111 Of m1lndt& of"'-11rmJ In whldl !ht ¥1C411'1-lctllowlnt de..;rib9a 11roo•rrv. !<1-wlt: C1llfornlt. otrtk:ul1rty dHCrlbed 1.1 cl•• ll1v1 occurrtd. lol 5', Trad OJ.I 11 Pe• m10 tftllrd· ot1ow1, fo.wll: 0•t9d ltll1 twtnt\'·IKond dlY of M1y, eel !n Book 70.tl. b11e 31 end 31 of An undlvldld OM hl tf !nrtrest In lfl'I• ltn. MtPI, In Ill• offlct of "'• Couti!Y ~ , ••• IW'Wlf"'Y •llu•ltd f l 14Ul, It. 0. HIUm1n, Df""1Y 1t1eord1r of tlld Orllntt CounlY. 14UJ 11nd 141l7 Loc:ult Slrt~l In ll'le Cnv OrlnQt C:ou"IY Mere commonly known •• I'll D1111-of W..1rmlnst1r, Coo•nlY al Dr•no•, St1f9 Sl,ffllritilll'ldtnl of 5CllOOll 1tf111, COlll "'1fll, C1llklrn/1 of C1!Hornl1, d•IC•IMd A : Publ!llllCI' Or•-C0t1I Diiiy PUG! JUM tot 1111 Purl!C"I• "' l!eY·"~ ol:!ll\r•tlonl tM 5ovlll Ill lee! ot fl'lf Norlll 150 '"' 2t •ncl JulY S. 12, 1tn 1601-n MCVl"ld by t•ld Offd lnc111e11n1 IH., of Lot :io of rn• Town ol Wn tm!n1ter ff Clllrln 111111 UPtllHI OI 1111 TtUSllO tNI s mep rttctOecl In look 1, PIP Sl• LEGAL NOTICE of 1111. Sl7 ol MlKtllanfOi.u Mio. I~ ""' Oiled: June'· It». Of ct of 1'111 C011nty llt«trd•r ol LOI 1---~-~~-~----·1 Landm1rlt EKrow A1111elr1 NOTIC• O' ,.UILIC N•AAINO S.rvlces, In<., Trusler EXCEPTING fHEltEFltOM 1111 W11t NOTICE IS HEltEIY filVl!N !IMI I •v P1lrlcla llin~tl 150 Itel trotrirol. ,.ubllc He1r1"" wlll tot llt ld Miiin .,... Cl-1 nut AlSO "''' portion o1 locuu s1.-..1 l'J Covncll of IN City of lrvl11t, Oii Tw1· ,.l.lbllltltcl 011~ coasr 01Jly Pllof, "111111 E111erly of """ tdl•ctnt to lhP div. Juty IL lt12 et 7:• ,. ...... In ..... City June u. 2.1. 21. 1m ISU.72 Sou!!I 70 , ... cf ,,,. NOr11'1 uo .... " Ceundl Cl'ltm.,, "201 Clt!'!Pu1 Drive, Lot 70 ol !ht Tow" ol W11tm!n11er, 11 lrvlM, Clltlforn!I. to contldfl' !tie ""'1!111· Pf!" m•P t1ccrdld In eook 2. "''" si• '"' of !I'll trt• Wlllllrt-A11nt••llon No. I LEGAL NOTICE ttld 511 al Ml1cel11neout lttitord1 In 1111 IFrtslt!" A,.,...,,•llonl lo 1111 CJIY of 1rvlM, Offl<t of tllf Cov"rr fllrcord., 01 Los frwn Of•M<t Cllllftty ZonJ,,. Cll11lllc1llon • tUf7 A"""' c ountv 15 •bel'IOOMd bY fhl A·1 (Gontr1t A11"levttur11) tnd M--1 Cl lRhl HOTICI TO Cll:IOITO•I flolrd cf SuP1rvl10t1 ol Ill• County Ill M11111tldurl111J 10 CllY of lr¥1<M Zonlno Su"g°'IOlt COUll:T o .. TMI OrtnSH": Ind rH;orded MAY ll, ltJJ Ii. C1thlflc&llon A·l !~r•I A1rlr;vttvr11l ITATf Of' CALl,OltlOA •011: ll"oolc )OU, ottf o100 of Ofllcl1I lte<o~. trd M·1 CLloht MltilrlKturl .... J Dlrtrlch, TN! COUNTY O" OltAHOI Ttrma of wle c1tn !n l•wlul mon1r of k/loWll 11 "''""''"' C111 No. n.1. .... A·nl'U lht U"llod St1111 on conUrm1llon of .-11. II/ Cll'OI J, "IYM l!tlato of RUTH E. llEAll:O, OK1a._a:, or 11trl c11h Ind Dallnce t vkltnced bW' Dlfi'll'V City Cltrt tf IM NOTICE IS MEltE•Y GIVEN to !tit 1101o 11wrtc1 bY Mor19-"or Tr1,11t Ottf Ctl"I' of 1,...1,,. • ' crooltora al lt!I •bGW ti•cnM clfu6ttll on 1111 prQf>trlY '° 10ld. T•n HtCtllt of Publlsflf!d Orlftlf COttt DIHl' Piiot. lh•t •II "''°'" l'lllv fflt cl111'ns •••IMI "'' lll'IOUnf bid to bt dtoo'lllld wnn bid. J1,1111 2t. 1972 1"'-"12 11kl dtitocl&nt 1r1 r•QVIT-.! to 1111 !Mm, &ldt or olf1r1 lo bt It! wrlllno ll'ICI "'1ft wlltl Int M(111•rv VOUCtlt(•· In 1111 office IM 1Kll¥td •I 1111 •lor•Mld Giiie• •t'•rrr of 11'1• d•rk 111 ltl• •bove •",ffll9d court, or time tft1r 1111 t1r11 puDllctllon hlrlof 'llld to Prn~nl tt'ltrrl, wllll tt'I• "K1111ry btfcn d1tt of 11lf. Th• r1t hl It r11•r>ttf LEGAL NOTICE NOTICa TO CltlDITOltS YOllCl\ers, lo lhl Ul'ldlnltMd ti .U0 to relltl onr or 111 bldt. Ht. A 72117 N""'port Ctnlv Drive, $UU1 tiOO, Newport o.ted JYn• 1,, 1'72 11.!PIRIO• COl.lltT O, THI l!f6Ch, Cltllornlt HUO. Attn: lruc1 f , Kt!M~tf> C. Rf'dmon STATI Of' CA\.lf'OltNIA POlt N•rrll\t)Otl, EICI., Wl'llcll II lllo PllCI OI' Admlnl51tllrlx TH• COUNTY 0" OtU.llll bu1l""1 of lllo ulllll1r1to~ In tll mlllffl o1 Iha E11At1 of 1ald QfceiJld • .'. Nrl•lntno le tno t1l•I• ot u ld cite...,,, IOlllT w. 1•1001 rlllf 111 .. RA I CO 1NIGUl!!Z 1111 Wllftln lour monrh1 11ttr 111t llrlt llUDllt.1-ut 1 . Cllli>mlll .lwtl!Vt, SMl!t A kMwn , .. fltANCllCO INIGUEZ tie LUii, tloft of ltllt nollct. Ortfllt, Celllor"I• n.u OKilHCI. D•Nd JUM Z:Z, 1t72 Ttl. &JJ-J1N ,.:11~~ ~.:,·1d;.!nf":::" 41~ CAll:Ol'f'N ltVTH STAll:l Attlnlt'I' '°'" A•111lnltlr1trl1 ,..,_1 ft.lvlno clllmt -'• .. 01141 l•oc111rtx °' "" E1i111 cf ,...,1111111ec1 0•1r1111 c .. 11 0111~ PUol, lllo .oov. rlM'IOd d«fdfnl 1 ,, doKldtnt •r• '"ulrld lo rll• 111-. wlll'I kltMl.Kll. DIMlrc1, KM" a J"'"" :n, 2J, :II, lt12 ..... IM "*"""' \IOllChtrt, In ltio otflc• ot QI"',.....,. LEGAL NOTICE in. c1m ot in. 1bllw er.1111" coutt, or 1,. ""'"'' c1111., or .. 14111,,.. to prnt11t """' Wlltl fllf -llry NIWHrt &Nell, Ctflfwllll ,,.... 116uc'hlr1 hi !hi ul'IC!ersltllfd 1t Ille o1nc1 Attn• •rM• a . Ntrtl1t11M, t:11. -----_ ol McCUTCHf:N, ILACK, Vl!!,.L€0t!I Att.r""" fw lltelltrbl NOTICI OP CONI EltVATOl 'I ~ltl\IAtl llld SHEA, s.m Wllllllr• •IW .. »11'1 "Wlllthld Or•111t '°''' O•llY "!let, SAL• OJI 1taAL ,. .. O,.El.TV Floor, lot ....,. ..... C.lltonilt t'D01e Wtllctl JllM 211 llld July J 12 ., ltn ISM-72 "''· A•JNJI It 1111 pl1<1 of butl .. il tf lllo Ullltlflltntd ' ' ' It! 111 metltr"I Mrlllnlnll .. ttw t tll .. tf Ill 1111 St,..-lor Ceur1 tf lllt SI•" If Jlld dtcldtllt, wll!llR fovr "'°""'' lltll" LEGAL NorICE c1ntorRI•, ..,. 1111 CitU"" '' 0r1..,. 11'11 tint ll'lbllc•llol'I " ltll• 110nt1. IR .... MlllV •' "'• (IRHl"W•IWst!IJI tf DttM JUM S, ltn Of',ICI Ofl TNl. INlllFF JAHaT •O•l.ltA "l MM I HG• EDUARDO ,.EU.El •llO k-... COUNTY 01' OlllANGE NOTICI rs c=~~ GIVEN tntt EOUAltOO "Al.A!Z AVENDANO NOTICI Of' SAL• UNOlll: OICll:l l "HILi" M. H!MMING, 11 cooiervllor o1 Ex.CUtor of 1111 WIU 0 ' 'Oll:ICLDSl.lllllE ttwi t1!1!e ot J"NET "OB Ell:TA HIM-of ••Id dtcoderrl. DOH ICINNl!!Y. t ic. Pl•lnlllf 111. MtCwltlllfl. llttk, VOrl .. ff tt!ll ltlh 105EGlEN CONSTRUCTION CO .• tlll MING, conMrvtl"', wlll Wll •I llfl¥1t4 1Q1 Wllllillrt IM,."'"' Plttr Otfl!'ldffll Ho. 4'JU wtt, ro th• hlt~11t •~d 11111 D1dd1r, u!ldtl' ltt Anl...._ Cllfflrn!i M1t J, tilt U't'ldorllllf!Od, JAMES A. MUSICK, 1t1e "rm1 Ind conc:UllOM hlr1ln11!1r ~. Attlr'M'l'a. fw l1111111tr Sh•rl!f.Cor_,. eoi..nrr ef ofenot SI 1 Honed tnd 111bl1cl lo conllrm1llon by m P•4MV. of Cilllornl• ~ tllf""' tlrl!tv 1~ 1 'O: S111>t•lor Court, on Julw 10. 1tn 11 ,,,. •• I 0 I ' -J-· I 8 llG\lr of 10 o'CIO<l A.M .• or lhtrt1rt1r, u I ~ ''"" c .... 1 Oalll' l"llol. Yr "' "' •rlf '""' Tr •I bW Court, wl!hln 1111 111111 1llOWtd bv lew, 11 !hi Mo JUM 7, 1~. 21 ••• 1m ••n Dffrtt ol llOl"fl:IOIUft I t'll! S•I• In Ill• llc11 ol WITTMAN a. SCHMIOT. ··- 1-----::-=:-:-,-,,-,--,,,----1Mun1c:loll Court of Ille Ctnlr•I OrlnM tornt•I ltr wld conttrv1tor, ti liW Slit LEGAL NOTICE Counrv Jlldkltl Dlalrlct, Covtity of Mloutl Drl,,. Sullt * Newpo.1 llftdl., You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two year certificates. The first year your $5,000 certifioatewilleam $309.15, and more for ~ch consecutive year that interest is added to the account You can cam $59J7 on $1,cxXl mioimum'oneyearcertificates, and as much as $51.26 on a regular passbook Savings account of $1,!XX)._ 1------,.-,cc------I°'•""· Stilt elf (1llftH'"il• •nttted °" c111torn11. nUo. 111 of ill. rlllht, 1111• tlld I tllM Odoblr' J, 1'7!, In IM lboltlt i nlflfl,d IC• lnllf'ftl Ill !hi "11!1 et fllt UICI tmt-1 JN TNI! ll.ll'l•IOlt COY•t Of' fton, Whlrtl" Dorl ktflMY cloll'lt llvtlllOlt llrYl lM In •rid tll tM r.tl ,,.....ty THI ST.I.Tl Of' CALIPOllNIA fl l••ctl Orioerv hrvlc:I Ille tba\tO .,_ lltullf lti 111o City of C11tt Miii. CM\tv' f'Oll: TH• COVHTY Of OltANO• H "1'1"11"• oblillltd ' ludomtl'll llMI of Ort!llf. Sltlf of C11!forfllt. dnttl1141C'i HI. A 1' lM lltcrn of lorKJ .. 11rt 111111 WJI H "lltl II follfwl• NOTICI Of' NIARIMCI 0, l'•TITION TO :.cr;:-1:;. ~""=' ~-i:un:.nd-e: Lof F°'1r (41, Tr•ct 20Dt, 1s ott fOI• CONVIT R•A&. ,ltOf"lltTY ..,....,,:. I rt<:ttdtd It! look ,I, p... ,.... l1ltl1 Ill Cl.AAA I!" HUllA•O .. ..., .... td ...... nty t rd U/ OO Ul,,1'..lSJ MllCfll.,_,. M konll of Or-' • Dolllr" l1wlvl fl'IClflt't' fl 1M Unl!W -D«Mlld :tf•lts, Ir.Cl' by vlr!UI tf • writ of .,... C-1¥' · NOiie• \1 htrolly t l\'Oll 111111 • hlltlflf " fli!"C"""'I In Mid Ki1M lllUOd .... J;,lrlt TM WIM tnd c:enc11nw °' ""-,.... !'!!.1Hllllofl et JVHE C. WILtoN. ti l!!X· 1), lt11, 1 im tcn\l'nendtd I• 1111 IU 11'1• 1rt: C•lll tftd ll'#IVI tntlNY tf 1111 Unl!llf ~trl• of fllt flllll of Cl.ARA E. HI.II· ,,-.....,., In !flt (Ollft!Y If °'"""' lllto of 51119'. of Afnfritl, Of" Oll'1 Clllfl ..... Alff •..t.fllO. dotc111ed. "°' 4111 "cllr M com-c1111orn11, dtKJ\blld •• 1'11110wS1 aldll, !ht ..,,... tf *Kii cr«lll ,.. "" -" Mo.re io.teiest than banks ... mo.re certain than stocks Plusfr:eeservi.ces ... sUedepositboxes,notary Plus personal service ... e:xperienced and ~ uav.elen cheque~, trust deed and note competent savings -counselors :in each office opllecq,Qns1,andmany¥10refree Services areawil· to .assist you :in planning your savings program. -' ~~.b.ayeth~~uiinimnm You will fui.d a warm, friendly attitude on . bli!ance ~your account at THE BIG M. the part of everyone at Mutual Savings. I .. • ~ .. - . , .MUTUAL SMNGS .,._.._ 4lttclll • • .... Coion&Pl.M.u:sl67Euteo.1Dlla~/l7s-soxo • Other o!iccs i,. eovw; West Arcadil,.Pwdclll, C!cnc!olellld ea..... Pazk·Cbwwcn& pltlt • ctrt•l" CWlffttl fw fM Hit of l cb ts. M. 102. 103 tftd IN w 'tr6Ct ceptlllHf i. lllt COllll"'''" •rid !I'll c.,,1. Clr111~ , ••• •11•1t ~ ..... ltllO IDY llM ,,.. •• "' ""' recf"CfN In ... m ., Al IHtl ""' (JI ptl'Clftl of lht _. ~ CltetOtftl lft hlr llto!W, •!Id WAYNE l. PIOlt 2t llll"Ol.l9! U lflcflll•tvt 11 l<con\Hll'f' lllit llffor tfW tno btillrlc:-f .. YOfl.K a!ld lAMONA L, YOltk. tit l'ltd ti Mltolll...,. MIM. 1tecofcll'"t1 OrfNi lit Nld lltfor"t fllt tr_.., 1111"' to .. ~ 111t Cwrt Ill""' of 0.-rtl'rllftt I elf "" Coi;nty, C-lfwllle. I'll! ""'"'1¥-TIJltt •nd llf"Mllumi M 1.w ~!or Court ff It'll &!tit ol C1lllonll1, T-fttw wltrt tit tfld tlMUler ..... lllr111C1 IOCffltbt• 19 lht ~ Ill Ind fOt the C:Mlt!IY tf Or ....... CIT'!' Cit t.i-11, llft'fdiltmorih 11\f .. ll'o.llcl tit ..,..,IN at tt 1!1t dllt of s.m. AM, Oii 1111 7111 Uy ., Jury.. ltl1 •I 11Ur1a!ICOI lhlrturlto MlonllMI ot lt'I lrll'lllff ., llllt. ll:KOl"dlftll ol COllvty"""' t :a o'clodc A.M. ~M •""1•lnl""' lr•MI• I••"' I/Id •n'I' tltlt I~ llld r•1I J11"'0P41'1'1 '9 h ~ It ,.UIL1C NOTICll tS HElE•Y Gl\IEN llOllcY ltl•ll bt 11 fhl n-tf tM aJf111 l9d lti 1111 C111111Y of Or111N, Sl1lt of Ttitt Oft Tllvrtdly, J\11¥ t7. 1'71. 11 10:1111 '911rtf. l!tef"tllr a.,... Wll llt 1MrM ¥9- C.lllomlt •rid II dtlulbtll II r.l!owt. lo t'c:lcQ , A.M,, of lhll dll' 11 Mtl" Lotllw, hllf bY !ht •ltor IM an.flt)! lly ~ wit: Collrtllo\llf, 1IO CMc: Cll'llff Dr!w Whl llVl'dlllll", Lot J ., lrtc"t na. •• -.., .. City "' $1nlf Alll ' Wll1 Mll '"" •boYt All Dldrmu•r"' tn"Tlmlfll llill "tiliM"ti; rtt.Onlld Ill ·-ICM, ...., 2>2~ of Gttct!Md ""'"'"'· llflOtf Mid "'11 111111 1111 ottlt-ll .. WllfrMfl a khn!llOI. :,.~ Ml1c11l•MW1 Mil,.. In lllt tfllc• of ll!o doter"•, or to l'IWCll tn.l""tof at "'~¥ bl hlrllt•t 1'llr .. 10 nin!18r\11tor, '' JM W eounty fKMOef' of Mid COUl'llY. •k• lo.II lltCOlllfl'Y ,. wllstY Mid ludltmffll "'"' MltUll Dr1 ..... SMl!t.ao. Htw,on ~ ilot'llWOOd, ll M1br1, CtHf9rnla. lhm"tJl1 tlld ewt .. fO ..... n .... tU DICIOer, Ctll ..... l11o ~ II 1111 llmt 1ri.t 11)9 ltttorel'l(t '• lllt*t mtdl to IM tNlll> lor c1t11 111 lllwflll ,.,.,..., of !tit Un lttd llr11 PUllllt•llo" ot lltl1 rlofkt and ....,.. fht-,_.tn '9r fllttW Sl1ti.t, thf mKl1t11 cf 1tfd 1111. 5'1f ~...,. Hrllcul1r1. Ott.ti ft Stnlt .1.111,·Ctlltllntll, Jvnt 11. ,_.,.. 11'11 rltltt to 'lf«:t llW ... DA1EO: JUM 11. lt72 lt72. ~'~' t~tl Olltf"I ' WILLIAM .... IT JOMH JAMIEf l . MUSICK. Oltld· Ju.,. H, lf7' (lllftl'r (ltrl; W lllit!'ltt<-... PIO\.I" M. HIMMI ... • "J Cltf"k et ulf hMt!w Ct11r1 (Wfll'f tf 0r.,.... Ctllflrtil• C011111'111tw of !tit nl1to elf I WllL ANO,•ITI IYL.Htr1 J<Wltl '-''• Hemn.11111 "' '1'tltllltflll c.,.,.,..... °"""" ,....,..,.,.. ,. •1• A•H•lt M. , •• n •• l(llTM OINSMOM WlfTJitA)I a SCNMIOT I 100 latl ftM~ '"""" S9I •• 11ti. II"" AlltrWYI fir Call..,...... I WM"Jtr, Cllu.nlt "'411 Cot11 Mffl. C.nt.. Mt kt MIMI OJ""9, S.lte -.. ~ Attor_,. fir "''"...... , 11 ,.....,,...., ......... N ...... 141Ktl, Ctl ...... ,_ ' "'10!1111111 Orlnff C0ttl 01l1Y •tlol1 ,.lltlt!tMll Orlfllll Cotti 0111¥ l'lltt. "\111111...0 °'""' c .. ,, O.'n' lllalf( Jllf'll n, ,,,, 1102.n Jll!M a. 11111 lvlY s. 12. 1m 1iJl.n J-J7, a. •nd Jllh' ,. nn lfD.Ji? OAll Y PILOT s OVE R THE COUNTER FINANCE A leading Wall St re et tecbnleal analyst undencorcd the likelihood or the Dow JoMs lnduslrlal Aver a a e penetrating the 1000 level this year In a report just lasued. Supporting a predicted ob- jective of 1060 for the Dow Jones Industrial A v e r a g e , Jack Salomon, technical analyst for Thomson & McKJn- oon Auchiocloss Inc., used two IIospital Finn Acquires Unit NASHVILLE, Tenn. Hospital Corporation of America, the coWltry's largest corporate group of investor- owned hospitals, has com- pleted Its acquisition of Rio l!ondo Memorial HospitaJ in suburban Los Angeles. HCA, which has 40 racllltles In 12 •tat,., exchanged 234,400 shares of its common stock for the facility, official• said. LEAVING TOWN? DON'T \.t:AVI YOUlt HOMI UN,lllOTICTEO RENT AN ULTIAfOIUC BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEM 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 7'30, 620 Newport Center Drive Bateman .Eichler. Hill Richards INCORPORATED M•mb1rt Ntw Yortl, Am1!1cltt, Ptelrlc Cot11 I MIOwetl Stoct bctlWIOH FOR INFORMATION, PHONE (714) 040-Heo ORDER Beautiful ' Stick-on YOURS LABELS TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourstll or 1 Friend· M1y bt uied on envelopes '' r1tutn tddre11 1•.bals. Also very htndy ts identification labels for marking persontl items such as books, records, photos, etc, Labels. stick on 9 lass •nd may be 1.11ed for mtr~ing home ct nntd foc-d items. All libels ere printed with stylfsh Vogue typ• on fint qu1lity whit .. gummed ptptr. MUTUAL FUNDS • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' p ' p ' p ' ' I Tuesday'~ Oosing .. Prices-U;n;ie.J~te ~ew ;York Stock Exchange List Stock Investors · Wait on Sidelines fHt CiYD \"' NtlHom . 1d NIU 1~u1t N.tll'ICIPI ,.0 Nit lplll 1'4 NPrt1 1.1~ Niii St'-' ,If ~· 5111\d .71 N1!Sl1r .6"11 N1!Sl~I J'-1 N1t Ttl ..ICI NtUnEI ASd N 1lotn19 .U NfCllPnt 'G Nty Pw 1.30 N-i,.or .1:111 NEntEI 1.12 NltT T 1.~ N-hlll ,)0 Nwmnl l.o.t Nwmnl>I' ,,,. NV.,O~n ,IOd NVSEG 1.0I "11~.,Mo •.H'I foll1Mpl l '° Nl1M1f ,,S N11MDf '10 ""f Sh .~old NL ndull I NLT Ci .>Od N«lolltWl. .S NorllnC .Xld NCW"rJtl 1.U NA CQlll .60 NA Ml l.j(ld N Am Phlf I NoA Ak 1.60 NII.I.II: pr '" ~Ol'll \Jf ,!' oC'll(i1 .OIJ 0HI01 1,91 N llG1nor 1.90 N In PS l,:tl t-lcNIGl 1.611 NoNr.pf 1.4 No~tPw 1.n N~Ppf 3.60 N~~PDI ~.10 No5Ppl l .11 Nt!.~IPw pf , NG$Ppl I.Ill Nofl"91lt E NorthrotlC 1 N!hr11f ,_., N'n!Alrl ... s ., .... 11111 1 • .0 Nw1t In .7'd N""'t Ind w1 Nwst In Pl N""llpl l.M NW1tlnlfC 5 NwMu l.lhl Now1t~t1 .71 NOl'tnC1 1V. N«I Sim .2.t N,.tSI of 1.H NVI" Co 1'1 .kJM .... , 1972 • OAJl.Y PU.OT • Finance Briefs e Food Earnl ... s LOS ANGELES -Collini .; .. Foods International I n c • , ., owner and operator of lit -; Kentucky Fried Chicken Ud " Slnler Family steak llouoe restauranll, has announced record eamin,s of $2,0M,• "" ror the fiscal yw-endlll( ~ April 30. ~ Earnings for tl>e prftlGul ' n1eal year were ,1,717 ,000 • 4 115 cenll a share. With a par • ahare figure adjus-tor , the 3-for-Z stock. 11>Ut tn April. i per share eenunp !or fllcal t 1972 were 74 etnt. a ahare, ; company insidcnt James ColUna aal4 Monday. l es111.,..r .. I SAN DIEGO--, Oalnpbaa, lnduslrllt said It bu ..,... · • In principle to acquire tllo i shipyard opentloae of Ille Diego Marine ColltlnldJGa ea. 'j No details wtre .........._ • Both flnns hlfe ""111 i.,. lu~:~ris-OWM I lbtp-! bulldln& and repair Jll'd II Ibo " root or Ith ,,_ lo .... : Di.go. San 0 1'10 Morlnt lo , located at the loot of·. Sampson. Wtelntsday, Junt 26, 1CJ72 12 01. BOTTUS ~'PEPSI'' Diet ' Regular PAK or 6 Plus Deposit -"Stars · & Stripes" GLASSWARE by LIBBEY Three cheers for the red, 'l'l'hite & bl u~ ..• in a poP11lar "now" rootil. 16 or. Cooler 11 Dl. Ben rate . 4 ~ 99c YOUR CHOICE I iNrANTs' Walker/Jumper • PUERSON -Sjlfing act ion •.. 3" wheels fOI safety, Comfy headrest, plastic tray. Chromed tubular steel stand fold s tlal. 5 99 Ref. 6.95 • AUTOMATIC -; INFANT Swing POERSON -Easy wind ... lasts for 12 minutes. Sale non-toxic paint. Mushroom :.:r~291 10. 88 COUNT VASYA ~~r~~!f 7.49 Yi GA( 6, 59 OLD BARSTOW ~1~ool Re1 7 89 y, GAL. 7. 39 Ma cKINNON'S SCOTCH 8 49 ' 80 Proof Reg. 9.8B y, CAL. • . . ...... ... . ...... _,, ' ' CANADIAN RESERV E , WHISKY 8 "88 80 Proof Reg. 9.95 Yi GAL , FbSTER CREEK BOURBON 6Yr.01d 7 89 86 Proot Rei. !.59 Yi GAL. • GRENADA BAY RUM light or Dark 7 09 80 Proo t R•I· 7.79 Yi GAL o OLD DOMAIN! 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Stay cool arms color CO· ordinated. • DELUXE Chair · · Sllllng frame ~I aluminum tubing with na11-tilt legs. 5 29 Denser web~ing for extra comfort Gr.ea color. • , ''Bon Bon" Chaise 36-Pusilion "Magic Lo"ger .Fingertip Cllntrol, 11 98 st eel frame. Snap·on removable padded pillow. • '" Beach Chair · . .: · . Comfortable f~lding chair, I" polished high strength · 3· 39 alltfllinum tubing frame; plastic webbing. . • FOLDING Carnp Cot · Heavy duly vinyl cover. folds·compaclly. One inch 8 88 aluminum tubular frame. 24>:72" size. Solid colors. • ALBERTO vos Ha irdressinr & Conditi one r Jn just seconds ••• natural, gleaming and 79c heal thy hair. HI oz. Tube. Rec. lie UNGUENTINE Fast Pain Relief Antiseptic ••• for cuts, scrapes, hurn s, sunburn, insect bites, etc. 5 oz. Aeron l. 1.29 AO PRICES PREVlfL, Tbursda y, )!ioe 2'tl tllr• S1uay, lily 211 DIUGSTOHS OPIN 9AMto10 PM 7DAYSAWHK flllWf'OaT t •ACM -1M 1rwie. w..t111 fltlu Mutrf•_(fl'ON tlACH -AUIM t ' •l'llllldltiM f11U91T"'9f'H l•ACtt -~ t ......., •L TC*O -um .. ,,.,.... .... "'(--- I Wednflday, June 28, 19n PILOT-AOVERTISER 6 Jxs Ft . Jxs Ft. 2 SW s, •• its,,, S11e 4 '1Pe . . 98 12xla" ~ • Sort cotton lab lAG edtes, on w~d1c, finished J.'0 staff. Jc Film-Special by ~ VACATION SAVER I UY: 6 OR MORE AOU5 OF COLOR Flt.MAT OUR REGULAR LOW PRICE. lllCllYE I) PROTECTO PAC FOfl VOUR FILM. fR(l: 21 f'O STAGE P,,.~ Fil i.I '-'"!LEAS. YdUr l+lm w•l1 D• .,.a,i.ng lie•• rt•df whtn yo~ ft\ufn.. 3! FILI.I PROTECTION POLICY. We will 1>11)' bae~ •nw !ilm ~ou GOl'l'I ut• Ol'I yo1111rlp. PANTYHOSE Miracle Stretch Snug fill ing brief panly style { for today's fashions. Run guard \'. top & toe. Assorted shades for ladies 2 , 1 00 5'to5'7". ~ Rer. &9c 1 • Extra Width CHARMEEN· ••. Designed and proportioned tor the fuller figure. Sized to hip meas· ~-~ urements. Popalar shades. Rec, 1.49 212.50 Nude T2 oz. SIZE Windex GLASS CLEANER • With Ammonia·O ' 34 01. SIZE Vanish DISINFECTANT Bawl Cleaner Prinl1 & A~~or\td Colors -"Hot Char " CHARCOAL BRIQUETS fa st starting, even t1urning, burns longer •.. with H tc~.ory. Rei. · 1 0 LB. 66c 73c BAG f I _. _ _. .~~~::!~R! Flashlight I. Triple plated chrome _ finish. Stur~y salety-66C glow lens nng. : Reg. 89c Batteries fQf Fias~hihlS: Pi~ol 2 ......... . BAUER & BLACK Swim Supporters FOR THE ATHLETE _Delu~e sty le in fast drying nylon. Economy styl e in cotton . S-M l. Delu xe Ec:Doomy C ' ,. 98 R11. 2.39 , . R11. 1.38 99 ""'-'--""-~ .FAuLnns Folding Syringe 1 "CONTESSA" . . . Exclusive milti,fol d de sign. Full 3 quart capacity. Entire unit lolds into water repellen t ~~~~~e 3· 29 Reg. 4.69 • · 101/ 2" Open Fry Pan REGAL -Cast aluminum • . . durable waterless cookware 2 49 Reg. 3.18 • ' ( i 5 Qt. Dutch Oven Nap~ins SPICE TONE p " J ,, '"' J•I "' '" "' on Pl s in re In Br pe Ki ho thi pl st ba to off Ca pin fiv the Mc int J for ca1 lo C.11 •• M< •• J . •• Lo f ,11) full the ' pla Clu " 311,' the alv cl ·' • Wt<1,,.Mf11, Juot 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT tl Typical Vegas Night f.or .fluarrys--Short, Sad I Tripl e Pla y For Halos; Twin s Bow ST. PAUJ,,MINNEAPOWS (AP) - Pitcher Nolap Ryan employed a rast ball and a heavy bat Tuesday night to lead the California Angels to a 3-1 victcry over tbe f.finnesota Twins. CaU!omia also pulled of£ what Twins President calvln Grlf!ltb called "a millloo-to-ooe triple play" to stop a Twins rally In the fourth Inning. The teams were tied 1-1 in the seventh inning when Ryan tripled and rode home A_ttgela Sl•te •11 01-"' KMfl>C cn11 June 21!1 .t.no-11 11 Mfrv1C110l1 ' June :tt A11111l1 11 T1x11 JuM 30 Al'l{j1l1 11 Tiii.ii July I A1111el1 VI. OBl•l'ld July 2 Alllrll VI. 01kl1nd J1tlV I AIMtll YI. 01lll1nd Ju!Y .. Al!Hls VS! MJIWlukM Jutv .S Angels v1. Mlh11•1ukM 11 :10 1.m. S:2.S 1.m, 5:15 11.m. 7:55 1.m. S:SS p.m. 7:S5 1.m 5:Sl p.m, ''" p.11'1. on Sindy Alomar 's two-out single. VaC!a Pinson doubled in the eighth and then scored on Jim Spencer's single to add the inSW'ance run. ''5 - Jerry Humbled by Ali; Mik e, Friends Fal~ J1oo LAS VEGAS (AP) -Muhammad All wants Joe Fnu.ier and Bob Foeter wants a bout wiUi Ali arter a short and sad night of boxing for the Quarry brothers. After the Quarryi were stopped in their fights Tuesday night, 1 Quarry relative wowid up in jail after a melee in the $100 seats after the All·Je<ry Quarry bout in Las Vegu COnventk>n Center. 1be 30-year-old All, 216~1. clowned 'vil h 27-year-old Jerry, Hl8. early in their beavywe.lght bout. He stood in tt1e co111cr and gestured as if to say, "Come on. Give me your besl punch." Ali, making Quarry his sixth victin1 in sis: bouts since loslng to hea\'Y"'eight champion Frazier la.st year. started hit- ting Jerry at will in the fi rth round and ponlshed hint with innumerable blo\\'S in the sixth. "[ was sharp end ready," Ali s<iid later. "l proved ii tonight. I told the referee to stop the fight because the man was out on h.ls feet.·• All landed about a dozen blo>vs before the fight wa.s stopped 19 seconds into the seventh round. vesligation ol battery and held on $250 ball. No Oiiier amsts wm1 reported. Despite their troubles, there were cash rewards for the Quarrys -'200,000 for Jerry and $45,000 for Mlke. All earned $500,000 and Foster sao,ooo as the crowd of 6,$-19 in the 7,500-seat •ena paid $.1~9.800 -a Nevada record eate. Promoters anticip.ile more lhan SI million re\·enue from international closed circuit tele\•isioo. ~leanwhile, Ali, who previously ha! ln- dica!ed he \\'ould fight FosU>r , said, ''l'tn batk. I'm ready for Frazier. He's got to ccme out. He's been fig hting nobodr." A retnatch is possible later th is year or next in Las Angeles or llouston. Jerry Quarry, who lost to Ali on a cu l near an c,\ e in their earller meeting in 1970 at Atlanta. said this was the last tilne he and his brother would fight on the sa1ne card. , .. \Vhen I watched hlike; that did it,'' Je1Ty said. ·~1 wasn't in the mood for the fi ght after seeing Mike get beat. I wasn't defending myself. I really didn 't give a damn." Bonehead base running by the Twins resulted in the tMple play. JERRY QUARRY kUNGES UNSUCCESSFULLY' AT MUHAMMAD A~l l IN THEl MATCH WON BY ALI. • I Foster, S3, handled f\t ike Quarry, '.?I. with calculated caln1ness to defend !he light heavyweight championship for the 10th time-a record. A left book knocked the young~'t-ever challenger in the division on his back for three minut es. Foster said later he set up the knockout with a right to the body and a right u~ to the jaw. Previously unbeatel1-~l'lke went do\Yn for the firs t time in 37 fights. Said Ali, who boosted his record to 37-1 as ?he No. I heavyweight challenger, ·'J thoo ght !hall would make him fight harder. If tha would 've happened to my trother, I would have fought harder." Hannon Killebrew singled to open the Inning. then reached third on Steve Braun's double. Jim Nettles hit what ap- peared to be a sacrifice fly to left field. After Spencer caught the b a 11 , Killebrew bluffed up the line toward home for 25. feet. Seeing ttlls, Braun heoded for third base.· But Killebrew pulled up and Braun was nailed retreating to second. Killebrew said later he was "just bluf· fing" to go home because third base coach Ralph Rowe told him to stay at third . But the Twins slugger offered no ex- planation why, after Braun was out, he stood a foot or two off the base. Second baseman Sandy Alomar whipped the ball to shortstop Leo C&rdenas, a former Twin. who tagged Killebrew out. "I just got picked olf, .. said Killebrew, offering no further explanation. "He didn't say anything to me," 1aid Cardenas when asked if be had an e:s:- planaUon. Ryan 8-5, struck out seven, walked (ive and allowed six hits in claiming his second victory over the Twins in his first American League ~ea.son after being traded by the New York ~1ets. Former Laker Contende1· For Suns Job PHOENIX, Arii. -The Phoenix sun! of the ,National Basketball AASOCiatiOQ: were to name a sue<:essor to coach Cot- ton Fitzsimmons today. Bill van Breda Kolff appeared to be the strongest con- tender. UNO -Baltimore Colts quarterback John Unilas was married here 45 minutes after a divorce from hi! wile of 18 years, the football star's attorney said. Loser Jim Perry, &-7, WM relieved by Tom Norlm In the elgllth. The Twins scored first when Danny Thompson walked, took second '"1 a wild pitch and seored on Rod carew'1 •Bingle in the first inning. . . 'l'he Angels" eveoed the count at 1·1 m the top of the second when Ken McMullen slammed a 370-foot home run into the stands in left field. Louis Wiener, a Las Vegas lawyer, said Unitas married Sandra ~,. Lemon, 28, of Miami Monday at Washoe County Courthouse. The couple met '~1hlle she worked as 'a Washington, D.C. secretary a year ago, Wiener said. 'Ibe 39-year~ld Unitas and his first wife, Dorothy were married in Ohio in 1954, Wiener said. The attorney added they had been separated for two years. Jim Kaat, ~2. was scheduled to pitch for t.be Twins this afternoon against CalilcmiB's Clyde Wright, 8-3. C.ln.m .. fll MlllMMfi (0 1111r11r1t1 •r llrW AIOmlr, 2b llierrv. cl' PlnMl!I, rl R.Ollv.r, lb Splf'ICtlr, It Stinton, rl McMulllr!. lb St@hallO!!. c C1rdu1as, • N ,Ry~n, Tolalt 1•21Tov•r,rl •••• ' I 2 • ThOfl'IPIOn. 11 J l l 0 s 11oear1w,7b •121 4 O l O Kllllbrtw,llt 11 1 0 :t lllllrMlll,lf •t 2 1 tOIOJ.H•ttla,cf 3000 ' 1 2 1 Socl•rholm. 3b :t 0 0 0 •010J1oof,c 2011 4 O o O M.llriysl, ph I o 0 0 •1100tmPM)',C OOO• J.P•rrv, p 2 o o o Nortol'I, p o o 0 I R-e.ph 000 0 LaR~,p 0100 31 ll1 J Tol.,IJ 21 1 I l • 010 000 110 -J 100 000 000 -I OP -C11lfoml1 1 TP -C.lllwlllt 1. LOI - (a11f0mlt t , MlllMSOll 5. II -l•rrv, lr•un 2. •. Ollw!", C•f'l'll', PlntOft. aa -N. ltytn. HR - McMuls.n !•l. S -ll•rrv. IPMlt•l.11 10 ' ' 1 1 J 1 7 tlJl3 I 2 0 0 I I 1110 00 WP -N. 1tv ... 2. Tims -2:2'. AtMndllltt -•.• u. Littler B~gins Comeback Try After Surgery LA JOLLA (AP) -Gene Littler hasn' fully recovered rrom cancer surgery but the gol!lng hug In him won 't be denied. Last w,.k he said he felt ready to Swing a club again but dldn' think he would for al least another month. By Swiday he'd changed biJ , mind and played nine holea at the Lt Jolla Country ""' A 'I'HENS -Britain's Jim Douglas set a British record for the 1,500 meter race Tuesday night in 3:38.0 while Andy Jenkins achieved another British record in the men's 400 meter dash -45.3 seconds -in a three-nation track meet. .. BALTIMORE -Owner £ a r r o 11 -looirl <i the Baltimore Coll!! said Tuesday the proposed 1wapping of bis franchise for that of the Los AD1eleo Rams appears imminent. Rosenbloom said the deal almost went through a C()uple of weeks ago and .that: he was IJ!IW hopeful "that it will happen within the next day or two." ~ In aq'y event, Rosel'lbloom told N. P • Clark of the Baltimore News ~erican, "it will have to happen before either of these tearrts go into training ol it won't lmppen.at all. Anytj!ing else would be out of the question." ' ,,. KEY BISCAYNE Fla. -""11ce were summoned to Marine Staillm Tuesday night to calm an unruly aw;! of 3,lOO that booed and hooted when a cl~t television 'ocreen went black In the middle of the Bob Foster- Mike ~ boxing matcll. Patr<>ps paid 16 and $1 , to aee the scheduled twii>-bill broadcast from Las .. Vegas. Heavyweights Muhammad :Ali and Jerry, Quarry were featured in the, secood event. Some fans reportedly hurled beer cins and minor damage was caused to the box office when someone hurled a trash can through· a window, witnesses said. A spokesman for the Da-de County Sheriff's office said no arrests, were made and most of the disturbance was conlinkl to yellmg and booing. The CIUIO of the · blaclrout WIS not deCorfnlnod; but promolen said ' fans ooa1d ..,i their money back' by sending In tbelr ttcketa. ' I Ul"IT ........... BATTERED JERRY QUARRY ABSORBS ANOTHER PUNCH. Go,11zatez Eliminated Evert Advances With . ~ictpry at Wimbledori WJMBLEOON, England (AP) -Chris _ Mffl't Sitii'*5, ""' ._.. l lr1 Hret>ec_, CtkllollOvllllll !IHI GUIMf'rma \lilal, Evert or Fort Lauderdale Fla came Atotft11~. 1~. 7-5, 1.s. 'ba • •. • ' • F Mlnwl Or•rilrI 59<11n, lle•I ~~ Govtn, ck fl'fWI a .ntfV~s.start and defeated '#;:;1f4'~~. 1;..1 •• &e~· P•ot 0,rktt1. ei$t Valarie iiegeo!U$1 of San Diego !Oday to ~ N-.111, ClllWI .• J.7, 1-l, .. 2. :w, "J. . v third --..1 1~1.. . the All ' •'",~·.P~v ... Fr.nc.e OHi Sergei L!kl\lc!lrt, gam a • svuuu U1:11.u m A \llS •· -~ • .... Engl -i ~-•s ~--· hi ,,.111•n Mdlonfld. Awlr•lll, RINI J•lme P'ln10 ar1vo. 800 .t.QIUI ~Jpi0DS ps. ., ..... U , 1-l, Mf, -A ' .I! .I! .. .I!.. ..•,1rl Ms!Uw, Wssl Gtrmlft)', bell EOIJOll, Mln-J.11';:' ~ was rv U"'<l "'"' r no, Br1111, M. "I. 6-1. A ked. d ' • . Erlll Vin OU~. sen M11eo be•! Jlltrweod pac crow of 9,000 on the No. 1 S'-rt· l•'rtown, "'···· 1.J, u. "" court saw the Florida m~ fight her way ... Jsn Kloll.•I, O:td'loslovlfUI, 1111111 Mtonuel Vucwrz. ~·• t rventr1111, u , 1-t, M , ...., w. out of trouble in an abeorbing duel. M ..... '"".., By the end or the final set Chris was s11n 1~1t11, ,.11.:::.;' .. ::':,. Irvine. R11oc1ti11, her usual cool self hitting accurately .... '"[ w. Ir ·-~--)' nd' ell . the 1· .. tin Mkll~r1 AUJtrllll, bNI A1•1( Olmfdoo, Encll'IO, om uu-IJt1X 1ne a ppmg 1nes. . .. '"· ~. _ The winning point was a beautiful 1 ~~1::nc;~~.";!\'. l.~·1•· •1 "11•1c:• 00'"" backhand k>b l\'hidl sailed over l\1iss ~rtMtm lunt1r1, Yi.111 o.rrn1nv. ee.1 Jollft ' CflOpSI", Austr111 .. 5-7, +.4.-H. 6-2. .. ,. Ziegenfuss' head and landed in the back .._"'' ,_... Pint '-llM corner of the court. .._1Krrv Mt1w111 •• •1111r•ll•, bHt v1c1ty Btrncr. Sovll'I I. ~bl . ,._1r1~1. w. 1;2, Co 1n Lil Av, a yourm; Australian with a son, 11 P1elif•t Awtr1•, bHt S111t1.., Mtppln, er;. th d "1' l'-'-·ted t I• n, .. ,, :M, 7~. un erous Serve, e u1WJiJ ve cran to1m 1..-111rdm Lot •no-lt1, t1t11 corlnN Pahcho Gonzalez ") ., • • . th Mol.s-m, llrlttln, -f.t ... 1. .,. , -, ....,, .lJ1 e sec· Mn. ,.snn ovn1.,, s.n Anttlo. T•11 .. '-'' v111r11 ond round Llnc•tt.l'il A111tr1U1 W, 6o1. ~-f• OjbJ f Jtlllll rwtltrrv, L.; JOU .. •t Mt'I. l(tlll IE• ~s or ey mingled with a -111=..,.· ~· w.~ fectionate ~ause fer the old favorite •SIO-:J..~~. :.'..~ st. ' i..t Mlchtll Gu1'111•1• who saved foUr match ints before bow· .. ~~ Cl'llrlff, 1r11e1r1. llMt N•ttlle ,11t111. l'r11K1, tog out. po .. r :i. s11r11. NMMr1t1nc11. 11111 Luci. ""'· u11v. The knockout came just as the bell sounded to end round four so, with the count, the end came pt 3:10 ol lhe round. Meanwhile the Qulirry clan argued with other fans after Jerry was defeated. Mother Ara\vanda and sister Diane were involved, along with Robert Colbaugh, 2.1, ol Norwalk, a brother-in-law of l\1ike and Jerry. As secur·ity guards restrained Mike, Clark County Sheriff's deputies arrested Colbaugh, who was booked for i~ Laver Upset In St. Louis Net Opener ST. LOUlS (AP) - Rod Laver, the on· ly millionaire in the sport of tefutls, was a three-set victim of Australian Tony Roche in Jhe first round of.'the $50,000 ' Holton Classic Tuesday night. The No. I seeded Laver missed ·scoring ·the match-winning point on £our oc- casions as unseeded Roche won 1-4, 4·6. 7-5 before a stunned capacity cro\vd which stormed to its feet in cheering Roche, who had been 1idelined (or almost a year because or a tennls-elbo'W. Roche underwent an operation last October and said alter his Up.1et of Laver that the elbow didn't bother him. However, his elbow wu: packed in ice alter the match. Laver was critical of the line calls and he -said, "I couldn't capitaJize when I was 40-15." Laver, 31, foilr-time Wimbledon Cham· pion, earned $290,091 In 1971 and pa11ed the million dollar mark with $92,050 this season. Roche earned 123,475 In 1971 and has picked up $11 ,450 in tournaments this season. Laver will get $500 as a first-round loser Jii the St. Louis tournament. In an earlier evening match betwun Australians, John Newcombe defeated n ay Ruff els 8-2, 7-6. In afternoon action, Mark Cox, number one player in England the last three years. breez.ed through his opening-round match. Cox, 23. and seeded Uth, downed unseeded Roy Barth of San Diego 8-1 and &-3, in one of four afternoon singlea matches. Ninth-!eeded Charles Pasarell o f Puerto Rico advanced by beating seeded Brian Fairlie of New Zealand, 8-3, 6-4. Fred Stolle, 33, was upset by 26-year· old Allan Stone 1-1, 1.fJ, e.o in an all· Australian match. In another. PhU Dent beat Terry Addison, 8-4, 7,.S, None of the Au!trallans was seeded. In the only doubles match Wiyed Tom Okker of The Netherlaodo and Marty Riessen ol Evanston, m., defeated Jeff Borowiak of Berkeley, and ltaroon Rahim of Pakistan, 1-3, 64. The St. Louis tournament will end Sun- day. 11 11 the nm of 11 oclleduled !or 1972 by the World Cbamp!Olll of Tennil. Club. ~ "I hli the ball IHSODlbly well -shot I 39/' the veteran pro sakl Tuesday. "lt's the f'Inl soore I've posted linco tbO Deni Open. I didn't have too much control of my loft side. But jbal woufd kfe been the case even witKout my trouble. After all, l haven't ptaytd for three rftonths." Filu1 Beveals4 Low Blow Did • ID Seot Littler, champion oLthe 1961 U.S. Open and fifth all-lime golfing rnooey wlnner1 bad 1 malignant cancer tumor mnovea from Ibo lympb glanda under bl& !ell arm March 15 and then underwent surgery lllin pr 4 to bave all the 11and· beatir1fl Ila¥ Wider II< ann rtmoved. N'o further trice of cancer wu found. '1'116 ~-<lid goUer aald he Is .... loUI lo Mlll1I to the tour and win a cbam~JI becaust .. I think It W1Nld giv, • l6I' of people In my ume clraumtabces aome bopl:." NEW YORK (AP) -Ken Buchanan, !till fwning over the controversial Joss oC his world lighlweldJt bolling cham· plonship to Roberto Duran, feels the referee should bave ruled the bout "oo contest." Duran, Ille Zl·Year-<ild former 11rttt f!ihter from Panama, won the crown wben ~Y nl&ht'• ochedulcd 15- rounder wu .balt.ed after Buchanan was lleored flam aa apparent low blow after the bell .... IOWxlcd ndlng the 13th niund. • "Bo( ...... JobMy Lo8ianc0) stopped the filbl -t WIS hit with a low blow at the end of a round. He should have called.it .0 contest, that'• wbat he should have •1 11 Buchanan said Tues. cloy. 'J'be I WO fJihlers continued fUDChlng alter the bell, Duran forced Bilcbanan ig1hwt the._ and then tlie 27·year-old Scot fell to the can vas, wrilhibg In agony and cluic~ Iii groin. '!Juran lQl!ed a hard blow to the 110lar plexus areL ii Wu • fajr blow," I.oBian· co aald after the bout. Film& ol lhe fight, however, revealed Bucbanall • .., llrUCt with • l'OUlldbouae rlPt !hot landed ...U below the bell line. • • ( "I caMOt Iooe my title on a low punch. following the fight he ftDted to cantlnue II doesn't disqualify him, but It doean't but LoBianco ruled opinll blm. make bitn a winner. tither/' Buchanan "I don't ~w what Uppeoed," aSS<rtcd, · . Buchanan said. All I !ell wu 1 terrific . pain bet"""" my-ltp." Undor New Y.PJ'.k ~late Athletic Com· The Scot aald 1.o'"-could bave mlss10n rule1,.a bo•e . cannot looe.a-1lghl_gnmted blm .-chlnce 11 recuperate on a !?"I unless It 11 a flagr~nt disregard Under commission ruJea the refer~ of boxing ethics, ouch as kicking. doeo have the authority t;l 11ve 1 loul4d Lollianco ,.Id he stopped the fig'ht fighter several minutes noptte belort lhe because Buchanan bad ah$orbed a bout resumea, 'J'ben, lf the lnjurtil boKer beating and WIS not fit to continue. cannot continue, the oljlal: ftahltr wino. Buchanan was dragged to hl1 corner by "l wu In pain but I felt I could con- trainer Gil Clancy and Dr. ·Edwin llnue," Buchanan cootluued. "Be Campbell, athletic commission ph111ldao, (LoBlanco) didn't Ilk 1 doCtor'a -· The former cbarnplon told reporters How badlJ did lie -1 wu burl!~~--- Foster called :a.me the best challenger tie's faced and sa.fi; he tagged him with the same punch combination he used to KO Dick Tiger for the title in 1968. "I'd like to try that left hook on Ali," said Loo Viscus!, m1:t11ager of the Albu· querque, N.M., deputy shertfr whose Jast heavyweight endeavor wu a lcnocfttlt kl6s to Frazier. · Viscus!, asked ol the chance for an Al~ Foster fight, responded, "Is there 1 chance Ali will fig11t Foster·~ I'd be very interested." Foster, who upped his record to 43-5 with 41 knockouts. said , "I'd like to fight a guy like Muhammed AU. Him and I are the same type of fighters. I'll take him any time. "He can't hit harder than me -I kno1• that. He may outweigh me but he Cani out.punch me. A fight with him is where the money is." Young Mike, of the punch that slapped him, said , "J didn't see it. feel it or see the results ol it. I just made a mistake." Foster waa visibly. alanned as he •urveyed the prone QU&ITJ'. "Yea, I was scared/' he sa1d, "because he was just lying there and wasn't m-0\•- ing, I don't want to Injure anyone in the ring." t Error-pl8t,CYUed Dodgers Bring Up Infielder LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The Los Angeles Dodgers didn't make too much out of their announcement that young Lee Lacy, an infielder with their El Paso afrillate, was being promoted. But manager Walt :Alston dJd. 1'Can he catch?" Alston wondered out loud after his Dodger Infield committed Dodger• S late An e-. tt1 IC,.I ( ... f ' JUllf 11 Dodt•rt vt. Houtlfln 1;.SS 111.m. June 2t Oodcl ... 1 v1. Hou11on 1:111 11.m. JUM )I) Doclters 1t Sin l"r1nt!Ko 7:JS 11 m, JulV I Doff.rt 11 Sin FrlnclKO 12:JS 1.m. JulV 2 Dodltr1 1r· S.n Fr•nc:lsco 12:U 11.m. five errors, the most all season, in a 5-4 Ion to Cincinnati Tuesday night at Dodger stadium. The 108s, the Dodgers' fourth in their last five starts, dropped them fiv e game3 behind the fr ont-running Reds in the Na- tiorial ~gue's western divisions. Don sutton, 8-3, pitches against Hollilton In tonight's game for Los Angeles; against the Astros' Jerry Reus!, 5-f. A businessmen's special will be the order of Ple day Thursday when the Dodger!' host the Houston Astro! with game Ume set for 3:30. "We manage lo get our errors together, but not our hits," Alston observed wryly after the Reds ICOred three unearned runs In the sixth to take a 5-1 lead. The Dodgers managed onty ooe run - Steve Garvey's second inning homer his fUth -off of lefthander Don Gullett 'who was making his first 1tart since May I. But Los Angeles jumped on reliever 'l'bm Hall for three runs, lwo oo Wes Parker's bases-loaded double, bJa first RBis since May 27, and Garvey drove In the third nm with an Infield oul But Clay Corroll balled out Hall with bis 15th save CIMMlll CSI Lal ........ 141 ... , .,.. .. ,,,.. ltOM, If • I I 1 Vtltfllln•, a • 1 1 t Mwf111, II> J t I 1 Ctt'IWflnl, lfl I t t t Tollin, d 4 o 2 1 w.o.vtsJ tf 1 t 1 • lendl,c s tttMott,.-'''I T.~ 1111. • 1 I I .... oMMan, rt ) I 1 FlllfW, rt • t 2 • W.Plfkw, lb J t I J .Mlrilcit, • 3 1 1 t o.,....,., • J 1 I 2 ~-11ttC-IJNr9.C 41tt Gullett, , 3 1 1 0 lt11 ... 11. .. , • • • UhWIMldt<, pll l I • 0 alldlMr, pfto l -t 1 Hiii, , 0 t • 0 OownlnO. • 1 I I I Ctf,tll, • • • • • R:lctl.,t, , •• 0 • • ~"" , ... ~.kb!Hll, , • 0 ,, • ........ , rt, 1111 I .• I t Tot1!1 J' S t 1 ltt~b 11 4 6 ' Cll'IClfllllltl 020 "1 000 -.4 l,ot AllMI... tlf 000 ta -~ E! -W. Pt tlftr, GI,..., 2, RV.Mii, V11111\IW. O• -Clntl!!ntll I, I.Gt -""''" t. LOI -ClndM!th 11, LC. ... ,... ... 6. ~I -W. ll'M•. Mil -Gwvff It). sa -ConctfK:lon, '' -Toltn. -""" ...... .. Ckll\tlt IW.WJ 7 • l 1 J f Miii 1,,,,,,, (lr™I l·~/I t t t I 1 Cil'lwtllnt IV'l I I I t I 1 ltk hlrt 1 1 •• 1 ,, MlntlMl'I I I t I I I """ -c.rron ns1. HIP' -.., ~ tf'• llf'), ~ tw• fiMOlll. 'Timi -I :»'. A,....._ -w- I U DAIL V 'ILOT In Laguna Cage MV, ·r ·riwns Still ... .. -. Vnbeat,en in Loop •.• . •.. .. . Mlsaioll Vltjo and San c ._Clemente malnlllned their · 11nbltmi1hed records in the '· ,Loguna Btach High Summer Bowen was the No. t scorer of the n1ght'8 four lssues. can· nlng 26 points with 11 good ones from C)lltside and four free throw1. ,buketbaU league M o n d a y nJtht with triumph& over Dana Jeff Giese was University's ma;or scoring thrut, scoring 2.1 points In a losing cause. Laguna Beach 's top point pro- ducers were Danny Col len (181 and Stephan Garner (Ill. ... Hill& and the host Artists. .-: Coaich Pat Robert.s' MJsaion .. . ..... ~... .... tl/llllMI' """"' ........ ... At.IN.!Mi Vt•19 No. t 1•11 Cltl'lllfllt l..t lJ\lnt tffdl Ho. 1 OttfNldt Ul'llYt••llV Mlulo!I VIile No. , D•rit Hiii' l..Hu111 l 11ell N1. t w ' • ' t ' ' 0 • L 01 • 0 ' ' ' ' I ' Ml1.i•11 Vltle He. 1 ltl) 1 ~ tt ~ ~ 1 lolOl'mt•Mht ' J J II ,,,,,,u..,,, 1 ' J 1• • ._,,, 11 ~ ) 11 3 Wllli;t11~ A 11 1• 3 •lld!1ttl J 1 f , -----------'''"<" l ) J • Viejo cager• had little trouble ro'•'• lt 1J 2.1 •1 in dealing inexperienced Dana o1111 Hmt •,~11 ., ,, '' HilJs a 91-51 drubbing ~hlle g:~!~" ~ ~ ; : San Clemente kept pace with a e:111-rm ' r , ' Tl-M verdict ·over Lagun1. ~::~., ; ~ ! ! ~-Tflnne.rt ar, now S.O. PM;k 1 e s , i -,..i. .J'--• · .1 I I 1u11111t c , 1 1 1: UI \,JWfta" Cll'CUI p ay t was St•l!•tlfl1n J 1 I ' Jltaaiolt Viejo'• ~o. 2 crew on sw"_, 1 e 1 1 t9P To( the' No. J i.auna T~:!.iMI ; ~ ~ ! "1fote.t. 89-35, and Oceanside To1111 11 • 10 '' Suri ., 0111rt1r1 !f'U an 83·54 victor over MIMIOfl v11re Ne. 1 ,, u ,. 21>--•' QftiVefaity, ' ' Otnl Hlll1 11 ll 1' lS-J! ..::.'°" Viejo~s biJ awui:, Gil ,,,. c1111•1t11tt ,~n> '' ,, ,, nclit, ft.ob Ferguson. H••ntM•t ,, 1 , , Mike Bowen and P a t ~:;,, ~ ~ ~ ~: Wilkemon. accounted fOr 73 si.v>'O 1 o o 1 In di Ing f h ICllelt I 1 4 11 !pOI C ~C Hel'"'f"" J ) 1 11 y ·Stillson'& youthful Nau ' 1 s 10 ~--R I I 0 I ...-,i lf:I. D••t•it 1 o l 2 ' To!l!I .1111 I! U 71 Lt11111t INd1 IMJ ft O t t ., ~A~f?.~ ~ CHECK THE GRASS ON SIDEHILL PUTTS The characteristics of the grass on tht green largely determine the amount of sidehill ·roll a pull will take. For instance, sldthill putts on greens that hsve long th ick grass will break less to the side than will putts on areens with short sparse grass (·W- lustra t•on #1). The thicker texture of the gru's d lkt 1i,":' ,.r.~ .... ~''·~·:~,. ~""·~-~~~,,~ .. ~. I ,,,,·'~11'!11'1' · -i ,t,.ll\/~·f1/J ll~ifll -I ·~(ii 1,oi,,111 V.J• I f'i. ' "-l. ~'I-'~...:. •:,,t•,..,.1.• ~ fl,.i/ •••. ,1 "" ..... ' '·~1't1 "'• •"1 I .. , ~.,.4 '"I(.,.; ' ~' ..... ,,. • . .. ~~jltJ , "'•""•1 .• • I f\,,·f\...,. •;'".'.!\!~.''' 't1,ffl, ,~' res ists the ball's roll to the side. Also, on greens that are thick and long, you will strike the ball r:iuite hard. It will travel fast for a large distance and th en slow down rapidly. Because it is travei.. ing fa st for a long distance, it is leis susceptible to sidehlil ro ll. l .. ' on downhill putts and putts on dry greens wherein the ball rolls slow for a greater portion of the putt. Sim ply remember to play ior less break'on putts you must Strike firmly;· play ior more break on putts that require a gentle stroke. j ~ Area Fives ~~,~r ..... ,, ~ ~ ; i ·:: LIUt•l!'G'l'I i 2 J In ~. ---------------------' Akl"I 110~ Mtrk1 20 2• s B. $fr••"• 1 ' ~ ! '· core 1g M:;-:::r,us Sctrt •r OUt~;,,~1~ 2' '6 ''" (!•"''"'' ll 11 22 ll-11 Lttu~t 811c" 11 '1 11 1'-" Af ' V th•n MIMlfll Vltit No. I "'' ~ :! _.l' oo . 1 ~:~ .. 11 :It l" r ~ ~ · 0.st are1 ,bl1ket-!S• i i i ,! bat}·~ ·Newport fflfbor f"tr1u1J. l O o ' ~ ~ M .. breezed to Tot•tnu .... .:_ 11\u:' '' tiltY ~ Monday nii:bt N• •• 1t '' '' ia :U. FoothUI IWDmet league. 11.,_ .1 ; ~ ~ ~~ 'Coecll OM H • , t y • I C .. fl'O(fOll : : ; ; ?!I~ 1qud ltonned ptlt =~t~nu• \ o o 1 o ~1~~;~tb lb&.t~r!,:~i~~t~1 I 9' -:t.,} ,i 1i Bob ~. -Crew • MIM!eft V!tle No. 2 J11t u 20-6t iandJed r .-A-l .. n11 • , + Lttunt ere 1J 6 ' t-l,! , ~ .,_...._ , Uni r1lty fMJ 'Brian O'Ftlherty ·a · Jick fl 'tt "' ,, Altman ~ the ·fi::""'110 : ~ : 2; offnlivt11 machine .tn the Dal Glvt!' t 2 1 ' qtJAittr to -9t, Ne"POrt ou cf ~=u.,, ! : ; ! daoaer. !Jile. w,inner1 ltd ~' \ f . ~ ! ~ only· four 1,i the ·thtrd.quarte su~1: o o , o tlc ·took It.I toll . Tot•I• 1-. ., •rters ~ ~~ before • fut-break tac-~•1t1n , •, , '• ,~ • Altmaft ud. O'Flaherty,cbl_ ~ ".,"'N·.·~. 11'1• II l~J' ped In with is points apiect.' "' '' n " " ,,_., Phil SaJaar. a 6-0 forward. hit conaistent!y from out.Id• lo' pace the Me• attack with :iz poipll Cil 11 f1eld 1oals. And Ne~ transfer Mike Beiry (6.4) ;'lutnell-1n • good Job al'tbe Jlll'ot ,.ub 11 point• wldle mate Jim Swain kept tbe Loi Amlgoc defenM honest at hi& l'!'!rd pool with 14 coun(m. G\yc F~~ Nab~ W~ '. WH11TIER -Gold""' West College'• .Rustlers e,v e·n e d their Rio Hondo Coll~gt sum· mer league baskelbfll M!e<ml at 1-1 Monday nigh! willl 1 103- 89 triumph over Cypi-ess. Leading cqa~h Dick Stricklin's ca.gen was Mark Dekker at the pivot willl 37 point& wJtile a -Estancia fla sh Guy Orgill worked In 29 COUQters. Former ('Jewport Harbor standout Taras Young , still on the mend from lmtt surgery. turned ·in an 18-point effort. The .Rustlers return to IC· tiori t on i ght with a 7 o'clock encount!r wltb the host 'ttoadruMers. ' Long Beach Bowler Leads Eliminations With action nearing the halfway mark in the 1972 West Coast Match Game Efimina· tions . bowlers will take a week off before returning to Kona Lanes July IO. And when they return another new leader will be trying to hold on to the elusive top rung . Long Beach's Doug Johnson. a southpaw, took over the lead l\1onday when he spun a nifty 871 (four-game block) to give him a total pintail advantage ()f 13 ()Ver George Shore of Pico Rivera. A trio of Costa Mesans are in solid contention for the pri z· td crown with placements of ninth. lllll and 17th. Fred Dougherty's pinfall of 4.88 1 puts him in the top 10 after 24 games \\'hile Charlie Sihillilli is 10 pins back in 11th place. Brian Mcti.1ahon has a 200 average wilh 4.,81)4 tota ls. Sihilling a n d Dougherty were one -two In the prestigious event three weeks ago. The field will be cut to 60 follo~·ing the July 10 meeting. . ' Sttvfl'\IM {W;m!.,..111:~1 ,.,. ~· OWtVJ'll Hlelll Mlf'" •ltl ~L . lob ~roboet'I I U!\ !"" tMC.11 ,_, 6. 11. torn Llllt fWftlll'I l'i"\ 4 1, 7il G1rv Coulllr fMIJ•lon tl• '· , M. G ,.. F lltr M nt •••ch' ,,J:r. tt. ~l(ll sift.~10 c°''' M111I ,_., ''· Cl!jk WlllO!'I fFou11t1 n Vtlfeyl 4.uJ. 1 . Ttrrv S111nnen IHu.,. tln1ton llH(lll •,J.U, 107, !'' lil1v Mc1Ct111 rl.f1111ll11t1!ll'I lktdll '· 61 1 ". Jt~ Fl•l!l)Urr> ll'tu"ltlll Vt!l..,.j '·"'· Pro Stars Perform . Former Corona dtl Mar High and Orange C o a. 1 t Colle!e pasketball fla sb John Valley is currently in action at Cal State (Los Angeles) JS a member of the Rcckets en- try in the patent Southern California P r o Basketball league. He and other Houston Rockets standouts are . one o( six contingents, including the UCLA Alumni . ; Vallely's former UCL A mates include Si9ntY Wicks, Curtis RoWe , Stevi Patterson. Lucius Allen and Henry Bibby. The circuit is in action every Tuesda y. Friday and Sunday evenings through July 21 (el· cept July 4 l with gc!tnes slated at 7 and 8:30. The balance of the league consists of the USC Alumni. Direction Sports. Athletes for Better America and the ABA Stars. There is an 8dm ission charge of Sl.50 for adults and Sl for children under 16 years or age . Bliseball Stnndings DEAN L~IS . NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburg!! New York Olicago St. Louia Montreal Plliladelphia £a1t Dlvl1lon W L Pct. GB 39 23 .!29 39 25 .609 1 30 27 .571 31! 31 33 .434 t 28 36 .138 12 23 10 .36.1 '161! AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Biltimore Cleveland Bo!Wn New York Milwaukee Ea&t DivJ11ion W \, Pct. GB 35 25 .574 33 21 .541 2 27 32 .4S8 7 26 33 .441 8 26 33 .441 8 23 37 .383 II U, 1972 ·TOYOTA CARINA BIG ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!! Weal Dlvlolon 1 West Division FULL PRICE OR '72 TOYOTA COROLLA $1966 $264 ·$48.86 <lncinnoti Hous!m> !Jod&en AUanta San Francl<co San Diego 10 25 IO :IS 35 30 29 34 28 lS 21 13 .115 .611$ I! .S31 I .460 10 .U6 17 .328 181! Oakll!ld Oilca,. Minnuota Kanaas City An1el1 . Te1a1 42 20 36 26 33 27 29 32 30 35 26 37 ,_ •• , •• lt.-\llb 'O.lr.l•llf '· ,.,,.; J Mllw•uktt 6, 11111"'°'' ' ••toll •. (l.Wll"'ll f 1Ct111t• Cltv 6, Cfllc.toa • Otlrtll J, Ntw Yor\ t Ctlffornl• 3, Mlll"'t~• 1 ......... _ .677 .S81 6 .5!0 8 .475 12 '> .llZ 13'1 .413 16 '2 0..ffl_,, llk91-4ri\ .i Cl!lufo ILl!Mt'lll~ 0-11 Ct11fw111.1wci.I.\ W) ti Milt~• \IC••!"" (lt-iflfi;i WJl(Qi! .. , tl'ld i'lfl'f)W '°' •I M ll""'IJ~lt tt.O!'lbor'I J.l 1N l!t!Ol'I l.6J l)tt~t j(Olt1'Pltfl f·I) ti '°'"" tS!elMtl'l 1·'1 ... t~• ((_~! ~)' t• Htw Yo'11. IPt"r-.. t ) QllfY fl"*l ~llltid, • • ' 1966 HARIOR llYD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Slnilff ind l'•rtt fer All lmpom.I Ctra Mtolern lledy Shop fer A\1 Cara . . , ' OrUlfe COUntf• Lll,..t ud Moat M9dtr11 Toyota and Volvo Dealer --""I DUIVaT '*IAl.l&TI • DOWN PIR MONTH '72 VOLVO • PoOR HD~!i, :.~~-S35So OR $295 $92.86 DOWN HI MONTH Def..,... ,_., ... "' prlu S4JIJ.n . 1 ... cllf41 .. fa tt k. a ,...,.. fir 41 '"""'· ....... ,..,.... ........ 12.66%. •I 4tU441111t? ATTENTlON VOLVO OWNERS AnnivorHry Spocltll All CONDITIONIN• $425 fOI ONLY INSTALLIDll • Tars , CM Earn Polti · l Open League Play Pele Plays SCC, Zubies Top Final LA Victories , . ' .Basketball Rivals TiltJuly 11 Ccsla Me.11 Ind Newport Harbor tallied 1t11nqln& vic- tories in the opening toubd of the high school 1ummer 'w,atrr polo league 'Monday at Oranse Coesl College. 'Mesan l\1ike Hollister led his leam '1 scoring lo~ an ll·l defeat of neighboring Estancia in the first vars ity di~islon y;llJle Keith Wall did the «ame for Newpart Harbor. giving the S.ilort a 10-2 victor over FoolllUI. ~th pi three (oals. • In the same d i vision . Downey defeated Anaheim 9·6 and Garden Grove also posted a 9-6 victory over Lakewood ... SouUiern C.li!ornia C.Ollese and Zubin got off to winning · a tarts ' Monday in the Costa Mesa open baskelbill league at Or111ge Coast College. Southern ca1. spurred by the crisp shooting of J a c k Causty's 17 counter&. clipped Orang'e Coast College , 7M3. wblle Zubies derailed L?FE, 10$-85 . Pat Quinn ( 13 f and Mark Campanaro (12) were also in double fi'gures for the sec C'rtw While Orange Coast'• e(· forts were a balanced affair. .Casey . Jones. Corona de! Mar Higil's All.CIF AAAA standout, led the Zubies con· ti11gent with 20 counters ~·hlle High scorer of the evening~ was Pat Moorhouse. who made four goals to lead' Ediaon 10 • 1-1 wiv •'-r El Saxon Honored Dorado in v1r11ky diVialon l(I. ;- ln other third divis1on vars!'-LOS ANGELES -North ty action at Costa Mesa,· Torrance High's Dennis Lil· Miss.ion Viejo· d(opped a close tltjoh.h ·was narr.ed the ~ der.ision to 'Kennedy I. Southern Callfornia H i g h Valencia ousted Bolsi Grande1 School Athlete of the Year ~ 7·5, 8nd Troy rnld.sed Los • day by the United Savings Alamitos 7~. ~ . Helms Athletic Foundation. We stmlnster~s sh·soph · The NO. T()rrance graduate players shared the al·mak· . starred for three years ior the ing chores at Estaftc a High StxoM in football. baseball School to send Edison to a 7-2 and wrestling, earning All-CIF defeat. recognitiow in all three sports. mattt Dennis Filzpatrlt:k and Allen Young checked in with 19 1plece. Joneg' prep coacb, Tandy Gillis. added 5.ix points in a supporting role. Former Colta Mesa High and Or1nge Coast College star Craig Falconer paced LIFE in the second half ~·Ith UI of his 20 ooinls. it11ll'ltl'11 C•llltrftlf r,tlr• fl~l ' ,, " "' '" ,., Oi.11~" J J I lJ ••e.hul'IOk I o • .•, J. CllllfV I ! , Httr"' 1 0 1, f~~h ~~1. ~tmD•Pll•O 4 ' 0 1! .(IUHV 121, 1..,,,,.t 1 0 0 ' I·"·~"· I 0 0 , T~1~" ri 1~ 1~ 16 Or•Mt CNt' 10 1 ,, " .. '" b,h1r Zl!i """ ' I l · ,.ftll 1 1J · ~r.-i:,, i' I 1 • Ml'N\1"""'... 2 • • , 'I 11 1• .u Mfl f"'': ICC lJ, OC 10. %11111'•• (101) . " • • t • pl '" l " 1 n Pele. the superstar ol JOCCer who is constdered to be the world 's richest 1thlete, will make his final Jppearanct in Los Angeles. Tuesday ntihl. July 11, when hi! Santos cf Bt8zil team facts CI u b America ot Mei icn. Pele ha s aMounced his retirement from soccer at the conclusion of his te1m's cur- rent world tour. Santos has faced all·star aggregatio"-' from Tokyo, Wong Kon1. Thailand . Indonesia a n d Austrtlia on their tour and will return to Brazil following the ir match al the Coliseum. The Brazilian N1tional team .. won the World Cup of Soccer in 1970. Three players from that team. Pele, Edu and Clodoatdo, will play in the Coliseum. Club Avierica is the current champion of Me1 ico and has five players that 3lar• red for the Mexican squad in the World Cup. l i, ·I ~ 1t Club.AmericB, currentJY &et· ling all soccer attendance records in Mexico averaging ~ over 90,000 faru per match, 1 has never faced S a n t o 1 21 although the latter holds 1i C:Oliseum victories over three J other Mexican teams in 1968, • • " l tll'I llJ> ,, ' ' 'I ! i " ' '! J •m " " f ! : I o I > M 11 2! luDltl !4, LIFf, " 70 &nd 71. OPIN DAILT 10 TO 10 SUN. 10 TO 7 \ .s:u::_":f-c:::..-.~r ~ :. '· ..... . \ • I . Auto) ·Air ( mt MOST• CHA~GE IT1 • , . •~-PITS 'MO'Sn .. I I . I ' I t . t 1AMERICAN • ' # 1' \ '?fiARGE IT FOREIGN CARS \CllARG£m -' 18985 18985 ' I BUEIA PARI : BUEllA PARI COSTA IESA IAITA All WESTllllTD --·i.·-.-·,..,-............. .1-· -···-· , .... _11.11. 1111--\ .... -... -~-.......... -~·"'! ,, UJ.J040 fU.MOO Mfl.JOIZ 146-7U2 en.- .. . ... I ' • • • • c ,. • • '" • L G T v • L p ' L E • L p A L ' x • G " c c p J A 0 • • ' ' c • • c J • T • • l c • 0 u T A " " • G • • ' T ' • 0 ( " c , . • L J c c T • : .: WtdnHdq, J..,. 28, l9n · DAJLY PILOT U Alamitos Racing Entries Huntingwn, Newport, CdM Deep Sea All-star Game Still Alive Fish RepQrt 'lbe 1DD11t1 Oran&• County utoe•t.11er by the NCAA (the o1 ""....,. 11cte11 yet 11ao pro. ...r.:.,, ~-"'· 1 all-star baaketboll c11111<, bold N1tiontl Collegiate Athletle Ylded his own explenation o! Post .Baseball Triumphs ~~ • w r'~ ':.:. each June for the put aeven Auocl1tlon, sanctionJng power that lituatJon. .-. ... 1 ~. ,S.~'::it ~ years at Orange Co a 1 t for postatuoo prep all-star "It'• a ba time · of year lluntlngton Harbour u. a-.ttot ,.,"* ,... w....,.,. blgbllgbted Monday night's 1 .. llllM • " ..... -IMtlhll. Harber Art.a boys baseball ff. ci.w :'.~~.'~:"'!:;~ ,..... tivity by taking the measure ss •••ct•• • •• ... mi '"* of F.dison with a 5-2 verdict at •1ltT ••c• -• v•rd1. 3 .,..,. Hunfl....+...n Beach Hlgh. .idl. Cl1lrnl1111, P'11rM 11100. Cl1lml119 --a- ,,1c. mot. In 1 doubleheader at Costa ~~'b:·c~'1ii.t1:11 ::~ Mesa Park. O>rooa del Mar 111 Trvct11t c1tn1111 111 triumphed over Cotta Mesa in ._ .. ,.., =r•·~· l ~.l•.1." I ~· • I K~,11 J ''"""· °" I ! a~·.. ' I =-':, ' ~I~:· 1 I Mf=~· II ,: t 11~ :•::.;11~ .:,.'~ ·~ College, b no& ht jeopardy ot gamt1). · (when the came 11 held) ,.....,.,~ d J, :, t f NlllWI. becoming a p l e c e of "We have to file a pelifioo because of graduatk>n," he LO.. llACM I......... LI• bill -""'"" lo"-of ••-11 t ·~~ ~t•= 1 IMf'rtclJtt~ memora a, a ........ _.'6 uJIC each year to the NCAA for our sakt, "and most u~ aa!ts " J i ~ ~!r.'i~":',.f;'.: "9lr J;4 .5Ji cOntest'1 mos& recent dlrector. ea me. But they're concerned are on U'le. nigbt of the game 11t•llldt u• :a.J':i: 1 1~"~~. " _.. MU. • R. Keith Dlnsmoor, a Costa basically with a percentage at the box office, even t.boUgh e~' i i I i ~~ ... ~. ~~~·:t:~. ::e ··~~~~ i1: ;;:'1a~~ :!. lnno~m:~c!.::~r !,~ =~~ar~~·~~~ :~"=:~ '''"'"· n-ct "• ,• : • u 1 '°'· June 17 for the costa Mesa itself. schools •"""'""hoot the q,unty MtL•rt11.'" I <n. .. n . ._ • : 22 Id ••-DAILY """"" arr-~ ... '. 1' I, I iibtt!W1', Kiwanis,. to UllC "So while the. crowd didn't on a pre-sale basil." s~AL •~M-n """"°'l •-·ri:.11 PILOT, "our official crowd livt1 up to u:pectat!,<>ns, we did As a remedy,· Oins:moor - t "' i I ' ' i I • • i i ~i,: ';f j f I j ~="'.It .f.JmE ~ 1;': count !or the tm game wu manage a profit on the game said, ""e'll probably h"'e to eteta ,,.,.9t1J • 1'111 ~i.. • 6 I , 'r/ ._.,., -. ce !J'll-t 1,100. and that's what the NCAA is move the date of lhe game to ~::·211• ': 1 l' I ~.0St'ft f J ~ J...·J11itc~J":.. so "While thia Is below our a · primarily concerned with." July 1, which in itself should IClcepij R.o.t (P'qe) 117 he nl•"'•• ,.,., c•lbblr 1w1rc11 111 t 6U-P. W, after Tl'\lly Martt llC"l9MJ 117 Newport Harbor bad copped ~~~~:!1~~)111nl ~:~ the first haU of the twin bill by Run Moon R11n (,Mair) 111 a '2 count OVer P~---•· MIM ltl l er (Rlcherd1I 111 .r ~MW!.'~ R•W .~':l.~!'r' Three extra-base blows did ~· :.s, i ; f!W't.-!t......... f~::!ito.1«1:u~~~ ... =~i=: pectation, it dotan't warnnt Dbmnoor expressed d.isa~ change a few aspects of the lb l • ,• • _ _!~:!'~:"~·=----~Ill:_' 11!!..:.t::l:!...!l ..!l:......_;!':.::!:!:•~0~:...' :!=~":.•~'":::*:::~::..· __ ... _._,....,., __ ·:..c=ancell==alio=n:.-.:.of_:_the _ _;l::..ame __ .:_polntmen ___ t _•_t _the_l_ow_;pr_ .. _,._t_e _;g:._a_m_e_. ·_· ______ .,.· .. • Skoilt1 (TfffMI ... ) ::! the trick in tbt amh inning for ..,,cf l • •' ,,.M.U-O '!! ~:~c!:,.."'t:Js.1,1 :~ Huntington Harbol.U', which 11c0Mo u.c• -:uo v•r• 2 ~ en.std a 2-1 Ecilsoa advantage 4lldl. c111m1111. •11~ s1eoo. C1tlfll1111 with ~·runs in the top baU i::Zh~tt l , I ,: tlctwtll. rf • l ''""· rt 1 l ,• Toft!• J7 " ~lct1=:-wr111111 117 of that frame. Scwe "' IJlllNI MMIMI Mo\IM tW•rGI 117 In the .i...tl. H1t..tl....+.n , ~.,..,,. def Mer * lOO ::J I f Roblfllr IMllrl ne ........ "'., . ...."'"'6 ..... n s °'1' ~ oi;:,,:, 11,1 .• "' F.,,,11'1' Afl'tlr (ICnltihtl 120 Craig Kermedy socked a home ... 0u11 o.v11 1 llknkll 111 run with mate"-•• ., __ 11110. MMsod11. •• " t 2 • •1~ ~ MIMI: 1Lrjllflam1 111 UV'4lj Jnai.v 11!'""''"'",,'d" ! I ! •, Uftd• Ho111 1v--..1 117 aboard while Steve Deettr'a KlllftlCf,, Ml .. R11orbedf (Rld11rd1I 117 1,... doub =••· ' l 1 I (•ti Mt Gelle (P'lll'ntrl 111 ensuu'6 le and Douj r;J:m'l .... " J :' ! Ml~ ""'' IT~•wr•I "' Moll's tlree-bagger produced "''' 1• 3 • • Alie •H•!Mt th fi 1mor, • 1 o o o Dul*lffdoo (L~.,,,) 111 e inaJ tally of the bming. !1111•· • 1 e , o • Aroo V•I TwJ1t ITrH1ur1I 111 M••••llno scored from • ...._ 'T'm'll • ,l I : : SIHper't Dr1"'1 ICr~vt lU ........, ........ -I~ 1 1 C•nd'I ''' 01111 t.t.c1•1r1 111 ond base 00 a wild pitch for a 11"' , 1t ni TMIRD RA~E -M ,.,.. ' , • .,. sev~•Jnning "'" a It • ,· ::~i. '!. 1· ! 1' l old1 & up. Atlow1na. P'llrM tlf'DO. •;111ur-~ ..,, SUMI Grounll (IC11i.tll) 11t ringing up a first-inning bingo ~c: J: ~~~= :1..!; ~e::;.~, · :i~ following a single, stolen base ~. l : t I C•tv cox <"•""I 122 and Moll's s•••••. Albl, • " • 1 • ' '' "'&"' Wirf •':':'i' ''" A Clll 11r Tr111Ut1 lit w:rnbir..,., 15 1r"11 Acc-1 1L1•1m1 11t Edison's two runs in the MIC'I' c I ~1!~ ~ \~'C1 :g fll'St were accomplished on '\-ml;· lb is 1 } 1 POUll;TM UCI -W vim. 2 .,.., Gerry Lopez's rbi base hit and s-9w' 111111- oldl. CltlmlM, l"vfM ··-'"'-an inf1eJd hit by t-.o ..... pitcher Hunt11111t1n H.,.._. IClll ODJ ,__,. ' • 11111 prlc. llOClll. ....,...'6 Edi-200 000 1-2 S 2 km•nlll• P'•rr IH•rtl 111 Mite :Alba which pushed Lopez LIO'• ""• cic.n111 111 across ~Ull'll It'!' (TrM_,,..I 117 ' Grlf'll DKk Two Chrlllf'I 117 Paul Du~ and Brian Tlllrd COllY ID,..,.rl 117 &'"'..,. Vftld• Und• IW•rtll 117 Slagle shared. mound chores ~~ ~"'l:.:=r"' ~~~ for the winDen with tbt latter Pe<ild Note (Li.Mnll 111 picking up the Victory. ·~otoqoss F1111 <•~1.· ...._ 111 Oxona'1 c·g.q u est Qf Mamnw '" c,.,_1 111 previous}~ mMten M e a a Alllf'• s.Mfor (Her1) .. 114 ( Llto t.:tnN 1A111-1. 111 DOW So<l was spiced. by a • E•1i.t'1. Cut. llf c-....J 117 four.nut third. At El .Toro PtP'TM RACI -• Y•rdl. I 't'ltr In that stanza, Matt Keougb ekl .. AlklW•-· """" tT• Mffrv a" !Hert» 11<1 "knocked in a pair Of· nllll with ;~~.~'c'L~"r1' :l! a aafety whlle KeOugh lcored San ctemente'a J'oblnna ,.,, c .. Qvfft 1croMw> 111 from itoond on an error. Stenenoa re•-lo El -.t.ccelf'r1te 1aon.1 ns Bob n...1...:-'"---L-.1 _,.... ....,,.,. •.v l lk1 A l"N"*' (Smllll) 117 ~ ~ _.,.... •-1..w la lrtlfl Neita IKnltflO 11<1 Afail Jahns with I aing1' in the Speedway ~ Ill at-~!"::.~~'{_.., ~~ first after Jahm hacl been hi& ~to continue.her domtfia.. X•nllhl (Tr•:.:111._. 11s by a pitcb while Bob Meyers. tbi of the ·p111 irdacnm dl- Ooll Glllrf'9,t,1m1r1 111 scored.a CdM in ta.e thitd on vilkm --,--r~ --- c-Miit (P'"11tf) · 117 a ,rild pltcb after =ling • 1r1i.t11,,. (M•lrl • 111 , ,. .... _,.....___. ..__ • ' '"'-Action '-'""'• :11 o 'eloc:I< Go ''"""" o. CMWl 111 II.Alm -•wv m YC ........-, SIXTM uca -• .,.,,._ J n"•r ~ aeventh on focir~~ wlik. -and 25 races are p. elcb • .,. CltJtnlnt. l"llf'M U«ID. . ' c111ml111 ~ ..... Costa Mesa got its runs In addition• to younc Mm ~;:!Z.~rvc'.~~l1111 ~~ in the 1hird, with two ~ Stenersoo other top area Yo Qllll"o tY.uehn) 111 seorirw CID I 'mufffd pickoff hopefuls • ~ude ICboolboy i~r!= (~~ ;~; •itempt with tbt bues full . . c1c1t.., ,,., ..,. t~rl "' and Chuck Glaspy romping riders Brad Dutoit and Jeff · Bold Mwntun IHertJ 117 born Jolm n-• · I W"-· ot· El T . ~~ ''' Fe~budal "' e on DJvWD s smg e. ~' Oii, ua11: For ;..,.d ,.,.~':,~...,_ 11t ThreeandfreeCurtpuges, tw~ er-i Woods of Costa Mm. Jelt FOllv Nwer; IWllnDnl 117 rors H~ rb Ward of Mission Vlejo and COPPtr' Kllal ISmllll) 1:12 ti1urJe _, Ne......+ i'ls •~ ",,.Ind~ IKllltflt) 117 _,'B ·-"r"A" LUllC'l:I M kw ol w tmiDlter· s1wNTM u.c• -a v1rc11. , ""' runs in the fll'st against ar eaver ea • elds & ..-. AUow-. fl'vr .. paoo. Estancia' to back up Ernie and 1un1on John V • 11 cauoty ,,...,.. 1.-.1rJ 11t t . r "'"'" 1A11tto11J 111 , Hooke'& tbree-hi& JllOW1d job. B r e u k· l • n • f Me 1 a , ~!~~L~,.. ::: I~· ~ .. !!1,.lles m theh_ . Westminster's . Dave H 111 , Ria'• OON <Merli 111 • Bu.Yi m~""" on· a 1t • 'l!I ...... ~, MI t 0u.1 e11Nu11 1Srn11Pt1 11• 1>a•--',an error a fielder's Huntlnei9D ~a e 8u1'1' Wlllo'IW CWlltonl lit """1 ... 1• • • w ·1 nd ... _.:._. VI .• L•o It• 1aon.1 11t choke, a sacrifice and John • ll e a ~J t)O I ~1~ i':.~ 1"''""1 ::: Wolinlkl'I single. Gary Tamletti. !IOMTM·••ce -Sit Y•rd1, 3 .,.., l k11 & ... Allewl!ICI. P'11rse $3000. Donis a. Good 111•'*•1 117 MldW• Dencl'f (Hirt) 122 Mt""*'t Miki l-'491rl 115 unc .. W• IWlf'dl . 111 TOP f'Tlllt (CrosbV) 1'7 Moon't Co1Hn CP'-rl llS A1arn1• J11 !Trffllll'll 1\J ""'~Min (Dt..,trl 11' M• P~Lllll\lm) 117 NJ IU.CI -:l5I 'I'll' .. 3 'l'Nr eld• ... C•lll.W .... Cltlll'lln1. l"llrM SllDO, Cltll'nlnt Pfla,lUOQ, G"rE"" (lllnkll 117 Niki ILlphtmJ 117 ao111 111 Rode (Kerll l17 Tom's CCIP'/ lAd•trl 11 Trlsoll Oll'lllf (TrMwnl no s.uon CMtM 1M1budll 111 llod!:W HllM (Om.rt' 117 D•ndf Ber le fPNil tit Miu S.11*1 9"" (P'lfllll") 111 Cr1tl' ICtY ilCnlltill ,,. ,..Ill Alamitos / . Resulis' , T....,..., J•• 11, "n. c ......... , flllST UC• -.ilOI .,.,._ I ,...,. olds a •P· Ct.lmlM. Fnnu Mii ~ C11111ft D•rf CAN!rl J. .... IA I'm !)tllvflted (Helt) 1M 4'I Rul'IMll MlltJc C¥9Wl'lfl) IM TIM -.20 •M. • ~ -ti!w• TMI, coi., ll't Gi!ITllllt. ' , Sl 1Uct1. 1 -CWW• DWt & I I'm Dttllfl .............. Sl!COHD ua --Ywdl. 2 Y"ff olda. ci.1m1M. Purw 11100. SllHll: AttKtl; lltMWfl) Lilt t.•, ut Ludrt Sftlloft (Vlll9MI UI 1..0 PrtftY lndl•n CLJ"'*'11 • <f,N Time -.111/10. Stratc:hld -tltlt./MO MOo, C.it Mt Gent, Trim OllCle, ~lllhl Parr. TtO•D ltACI -,. ,,_. _,. I. -., Clo1m1nt. P111"N l2200. ' M1ltllOlla l!HMI CMM(J &.• UI MD Sn1111i;y TtllkY tHtr!I 1.iO <IJ:'O Steve Tiie Vtt (PtrM(l 1.00 Tln')I -.11 l!tt'. : flOU~TM uc• -390 v•nta.. t .,.., l'ld1, lilloWtllCI. PurM SltOll, ~ f'oc:kt .. tLlllM!l'll S.llO l.11 IA • Fl111 -~!n tor.wrl I ... .t.IO ~ lold·Jl-n !Knlef'il) ut Tlft'jl -.111111. S<tfktied -For ,,,,. Dnl'I', Pr1llftU Z1rtl•, TW. Ct!. Miii Strtw Ptrr, Fl•TH ltACI -110 Ytl'dl. J ""t aldt &o ttt. Cl.e""IN' IVw 11• GYP fl• (Wrliltl!I f.at IA U0 1N!1W 'iUll\efl M'.nl) 1M 7,.IO JIUIHtl ll/pf!MIJ I 1.1t n--.• ., .. SCfttCMd -#1. c-. fN CWt. Gl,_, s.tn. j•'I hft. SIXTM llMI -Ut ,.,._ I ,_. t1IOI. C.tll,..,._ CIMmlilf. .,.... ..._ The Jkk Htwn. SI*'* Hotkt IMtlrl TJM SA SA 0.1•..a.nm thrnttl I.• &.ICI Rodl:lft' UdY (ltkfwdl L41 Tlntt -.ti "11. kfltdltd -WI• c.,., "-" UM1 Lou, lk. Ferrll. Cl .... . ISlxacttl-.......... ,_ ... _ ... .... ,...,..'"" uc• __.,.. .,.,., , ,,_ ..... ~ ... "'""IMt· ""' .... J11111\!t1 ~ tYevttllll Wll!ow Gold li"lrnl1') C""'-Oft 0-* lltnbl Tfnlit -.21 1/11, . No,ec:r~ 7• ta, .. ,..... 1 • .0 .... II.TM RACe -a.,.,.,. J '°"" tkll & lit• CIUl!tllrf lltlWIM.. fl'VfM -· 'T# T«N I"""" ._.. ut J.!11 atl'W ..... ._....., ,.. 1AI Vl .... 11 CM*I IA 'TllM -•• ,, ... ~-:::. -.... ,.., ..... 9lcla & _,, ( ....... l'Wll SlM .,....,,.. ,.,,,... CWrflMI 11.• 11.» 4.11 S"'9ly-'--!'V.--1 t1AI WM M I,. U.tlihirrl) MO lJllM -·'' JIM. ......,,.. -Olldll ';1dt _. ·-........ _..,..,. ..... _ Jlt'MQ ~ ,.._ lll»M ' / ' '1 f o.rsport or sportsman. • The 17-jewel 'Sea pearl'. 1988 Blick .akintlwef et rap JCPenney tWle jewelry Sllop l••r -te I P.M. t11 IM 1111 ... -A•oiloblo 11: FASHION ISLAND. Now,..t ......_ HUNTIN4iTON ClflTU, !i•nli~g!Oft INch- Uko ;t • -• choro• II •--- • Calling all cars! Big savings on fiber glass belts. . Every popular size. 1e17a1 plus 1. 78 fed. tax and ofd tire. A78-13 (S00-13) blackwalt tubeless. Reg. 20.95 El Tlgre 278 polyester cord, fiber glass belled tire. Great tractton on all road surfaces. ·--.....-.. Tlrt- 1;:78-13 (7oo-13) F7S-14 1ns-14i • G78-14 (825-14) 678-15 (825-15) H78-15 {855-1~) Plue Fed. tax. Rog. 24 .95 30.95 32.95 33.95 35.95 WhllowoRI only 2-55 more per lire. Wllllowlltubole11 C78-14 (895-14) 29.95 E78-14(735-14) 31.95 H78-14 (855-14) 37.95 J7S-1•(885-14) 39.95 F78-15 (775-15) 34.95 900-15 40.95 Plue Fed. llz. Wllhout trlde-ln, odd $2 _.per tire. F.E.T. 1.90 2.52 2.69 2.78 3.01 2.1 0 2.34 2.93 3.04 2.58 2.90 S.le 21.21 21.31 28.01 21.H 30.56 25.46 27.11 32.28 33.911 29.71 34.11 le .2716 J>'us2.51 fed. tax and old tire. E7~14' whitewall tube•. Reg.31 .95 El Tigre 270. Fiber glass belled polyester cord tires in the wide profile 70 series. Whitewall tubeless. Tira tlxo Reg. F70-14 33.95 G70-14 35.95 F70-l5 34.95 G70-15 36.95 H70-15 38.95 PlueFed.bz. Wllllout troi19-ln, edd $2 more per Ura. F.E.T. 2.64 2.84 2.68 2.87 3.12 s.le 21,M 30.51 21.71 31.4t 33.11 le -1·6 96 plllo 1.37 foci. iax lhd old tire. • 14S-,3(!520-13)1118ckwlllTubelOISReg.19.95 El Tigre Spon fiber glass be hod tire. The new long mileage tire for·eompacts, sports and minis. Blackwall.tubele5s. Tlrallzo Rog. F.E.T. 145'-13 (52o-13) 19.95 1.37 155-13 (560-13) 19.95 1.51 165-13 (600-13) 19.95 1.70 ,155-15 (560-15) 23.95 1.70 165-15,(600-1.SL) 23.95 1.77 PluoFocl.toz. Whllewalle only $3 more per lire . Without trede-ln. odd $2 more per tire. 1288 -12.A 12•otl blillnery for the economy mindedmocorill. Lowest cost, bUt plenty of power for moournen engine cars. Aquillty pertonner you eorul1111nd on. Rel'9nt 12-six volt bllll<y ....... _,l __ .... Salo 11.11 11.11 11.11 20.31 20.31 • • 9*rlcl tirf FOletnolt Reliant baltery fail (not merely discharge! ....., 80 dllyl from t!IO date of purchaoe, re tum It to Penneys lndHWfft ba replaced fJw of charge. After90 days but priof to llloe•pftatlon date of the guarantee. J.C.PenneyCo. will replace the battery charging only for Iha period of owner1hlp, based on h .urt'91\l pr!Fe 1t the time of return, pro rated over the stated "*"ntee montflS. Cool 'n Clean 24 auto air conditioner. Packs 14,000; BTU's of cooling power. Ha(ldlom•IY Slyi<d. The louvert: are fully adjustable to direct air now. • JC Penney i Sh~p Sunday noon ·to 5 P .M. at the following Auto Cent~rs: • • • • • FASHION ISLAND, Newpcrt Beech. HUNTINGTON CENTER. Huntington B.ech. U1e Penneys time .,.yment pl.... • 11 DAILY PILOT Wtdnndat, Junt 28, 19n Gene:ral Due Parole QUEENIE Sy Phil lnterlandi Rock Faces ·'Facelift'· ' Board Approves Sept. 18 Release Fnm Wire Serma then loosened h!J tie. A3 he conllnued speaking, he took tbe tie off; then removed his sboM and shirt. St.ate ro Paint Out Scqrred Area Retired Maj. Gen. Carl C. y.r-, oervln8 tine yearo In jrllon fe< IOllcltlng flrefnnl from the Chicago P o II c • DopmWent and keeping them lot his own .,. while the Anny's No. 1 policeman. was IJ'll1lled J>Orol•. ~TUmer, at the Federal ,. ' .: ; PEOPlLl camp at Allenwood, , will be paroled Sept. 18, Ult U.S. Parole Board said. • , But the board denied a ~ to Heidi Ami Flelcller, the :IZ-year~d daugbler of .ror-Dlltrict GI Columbia Deputy . Mayor Tho m 1 s -~· ' Siie -~ to nine "'"" ID prilon under the ·"edlnl Yculb C«roctlons Act ~belnc.....ictedo!flrlt ---·-robbery ua c.11tnc' • c1an1 ...... "'=::.. coanoctlon with • W D.C. bank robbery .J41!11.11'11. A poUoeinaa,... : killO\I durtlll lbe boldup. '. '* ; Iowa U. Gov. a.iier Jepoea ;;:.rite a lpluh when be Ille communlly'• ·' . .. ' " • • ,1 Ul'I Tl ......... FACES DEATH -Mar- ilyn Dobrelenski, 19- year-old mother who confessed to slaying two policemen, · was sentenced to death in electric chair by panel of three judges at Media , Pa. ' I new swimming Postville. Jepo/in slarled pool It speaking, The lieutenant governor completed his remarks by disrobing down to a pair of swimming trunks and f ving Into the pool. * Rlcbard Wellsberg, 22, who charged a New York un- dercover policeman $25 for a $5.50 ticket to a Roiling Stones cone«t. bu gone to jail for scalping. As!t. Dist. Atty. Lawrence HemnaM said the one-month jail term imposed was the first given a ticket scalper in New York City. He also was lined $250. * ·&;a-7.'2!> ¢>~F-~a 1mw.i.i~...,_.... 'Ibe weaUler forecart receiv-~:'::"...;;~~--:-"":"":::-~~..;.;,;;.;,;;;;;;.;;;;;_;;;.J ed 8 personal tot,icb in Los ''lf you're some female-lib checking up on male Angeles. Appended ip.it was• cbauvinillm in business, you're barll:ing up tbe wrong message from weatherman window 1 '' David Bart, wbjch read: '"I'hls forecast i.s my last of- ficial act as a forecaster in Los Angeles. 1 am now retir- ing after 38 years, the lasl 18 years in Loo Angeles. I have tried to keep my forecaat on time, timely and to the point. '1At times, like today, it has been easy. At other times it has been diUicull and con- fusing.'' ., ' Epilepsy Unit Meets' The Orange County Epilep',y Society will host an evening of music a n d entertainment, starring Joe Flynn, Marlin McKeever of the Los Angeles Rams, · Don Dubbin!, Peter Adams and other local artists Tbursday In-Santa Ana. A $2 membership f e e , available at the door, admits a family to the 8 'p.m. event at the Mooee Lodge, 717 So. Lyon. ---· c......._ • 11-·.. .. __ ,, __ er_~-c: a a • a.- MOUNT SHASTA (AP) - Statt hlgl!way officials are going to attempt oosmetlcs on a massive scale -by painting out a scar on Black Butte, a fi ,006-foot cinder cone. Several tons of volcanic gravel were quarried out of Black Butte.....: the area's most prominent geological feature outside ol Mount Shasta Itself I ECOLOGY during construction of Interstate 5 between Mount Shasta and Weed. Herbert Miles, d i s t r l c t engineer for the State Division of Highways, said the quarried area will be treated with a special stain to make the ex- posed rock about the same color as the darker volcanic rock around ,it. e Lacks Power SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A Superior Court judge has ruled the California Air Resources Board does not have power to regulate the amount of lead in gasoline sold in California. Judge Ira Brown ruled against the Environmental Defense Fwxl in a suit which contended the board bad such OPIN DAil.Y '!l to 10; SUN:~o to 7 ~·· ,. ' • ,; ;, •; ,, • ·i. FISK . ·CUSTOM 360 4 PLY NYLON CORD 12/32".TllEAQ Oll'nf tltliiiiWALt.StUI Wtii'l.lwall Plu Ffd. Pric9 Ea. To: ....nff $1.75 1.15 1.IO FIS , ·· PREIER 4 PLY POLYESTER CORD 12/3rTREAD DEPTlf , WIDE 78 SERIES TREAD WHITtWALl.S 18.15 : Plus fed. 'Ex.T .. EKhTin $1.75 1.96 regulating powers and should ~xereise them. Deputy Alty. Gen. Roderiek Walston argued lor the board tllat the Legislature bad not deletialed SU<h power to the board, and added: "We (the board), can only regulate the output, not the Input." e Lake Projeet LAKEPORT ( A P ) Environmental experf.J and legislators suggested Several possible means to improve water quality in algae-choked Clear Lake, the state's largest freshwater lake. Echoing the thinking of many attending the all-day workshop, Rep. RObert Leg- gett voiced support for a pro- posal to kill algae by aeration, calling the process the least e x p e n s i b e algae-control method for the 250-square-mlle lake. 1 Some $100,llllll In lederal funds have been obtained for testing ~ aeration process, which involves laying a pipeline on the• lake bottom and' injecting ,air into the water. e OU Ban Out LOS ANGELES (AP) Despite pleu from some city residents and oonsenationlat groupo, Maye< Sam Yorty bu vetoed a proposed oid!nanct to ban coastal oil dtllllng. lo killing the measure, Yor- ty said, "To clabnl bat this ordinance ii necessary to pre- vent drilling on our beaches is nothing but a cynical hoax." City councilmen passed Iba ordinance by a 10-S vote. Twelve votes are needed to override Yorty's veto. 'l'1le ordinance would ban drilling lrom the median high tide to one-quarter mile inJand from the closest public street beyond the beaches, except in industrial zones and the Los Angeles barbor. II also would ben drililng in residential and agricultural sections of the ci- ty. I e Agency Formed LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mayor Sam Yorty has ap. proved an ordinance to set up a city department of Environ- mental Quallty. It wa.s created to develop goals, policies and ingrama for protection a n d im- provement of the city's en-- vironmental quaUty. Yorty 's signature came on an ordinance amended after he vetoed the original version. l'Mt'llWALLI 23.lti WhitlwWI Plus Fido Prlot &-. Tu: ' • EllchTiN ' 1.to 2.10 2.34 15.95 17.95 l50-tJ8*kwtll' TuW.: Plus FlliL ElC. TllC of:(L.'15. - £78-14(7351 F78-t4m&I F78-1Sln5J 678-14(825 G78-15(825 21.96 23.95 :i.39 2.43 2.11 .... C'71-13(100) 911 I Tultlllm Plut PM. EJ!. Ta: _o!J!:.901 25.95 27.95 26.95 28.95 . ,, ' • i .. • ·. " .- . ' •• ~ , CHAROI ITI 16.95 18.95 17.95 19.95 .AH ~ '*'' Fed. Ex. Tix FREE TIRE MOUN11N~f~ ROTA- TTON WITH TIRE PURaiASE, · FISK DELUXE SHOCK ABSORBERS ............... Fl ..., .......... 52J.M40 2 887 INSTALLATION AVAILAl\:E ' Tiii UST SllOCI TOU'U EYfl IUT JOI TOUI .. ESPIT CAii iJsl HEAVY 2/ 12•7 DUTY INSTALt:AnON ·AlfAtlMLE • IUEllPA• • .......... ,..., .. ••Lila ....... 12' llOO • H78-14(861 H78-15(15& 24.95 All Jriml pin ,.._ Ex..Tax FRE!'.'TIU MOUNTINCI AND ROTA,_ Tit'IN mTH TIRE PURCHA.IE. COSTA MESA H.WllwoL91W... • uoo .......... 141DZ SOSSO I JACI S!! IT1 SANTA Ill ..... St. 111 lrllfll ,.. ....... , 546-71JZ ' WESTMINSTER • 11440IHdlllN. .... llN.lllMcPs••• ..... ·~ " I ... • •• ~· ,.., • " • C~t Gnard to Install 5 New Radio Facilities \Joen ol VHF-FM marine radio equJpment will welcome the .. ,., that the coast Guard plans to have live high-altitude remotely controlled. radio sites operatlollal by Sept. I. '!'he propoltd sites would ex- tend Coast Guard VHF-FM coverage to meet the rapid shift to such equipment by pleasure craft. VHF-FM is a llne-of-1lgbt communlcatian. \Jnder a new Federal Com· munlcatlons Commlssioft reg- uJat.ioo, all pleasure cnft ap.. Jlb>iilg 10< a new license alter \O•_ ' CONTRACTING ,'. ~UB-CONTRAC TlfvG TRAINING "' • ,ii •. ,,, 1·1,,i''" ~"' ft•'•· Fold1•1 I Jan. I ol this .,.. .. must be equipped 10< VHF-FM opera- tion. Licenses in effect prior to Jap. 1 may c011tinue to be renewei:I until 19T1, llt. R.D. Manning, com- munications officer for the 11th Coast Guard District said the Coast Guard is an- ticipating a gradual incre ... in the use ol VHF-FM until Jan. i. 1977 when the Jaw goea into ellect. In order to accommodate the increased use of VHF-FM, the Coast Guard has em- barked on a nationwide pro- gram to provide coverage capable of receiving one-watt signala to 20 miles offshore along the coastline, a n d farther out in areas where vessel traffic indlcatea a VllF- FM requirement. In Southern California the Coast Guard has started the ill!tallaUon of three n!mote sites and the modernization and renovation of two uisUng remote sites. R-egatta Slated Sunday ... The COiumbla-ZI S a I II n g AMOClaUon wW hold I t s Southern Calllomla l'tllional championship regatta at Loog Beach Sunday. The regional event wlll be •followed by the national cham- piomhips at Morina de! Rey Aug. ~. acoording to Mark SchJeff, asaociation aecretary. The Looi Bea\lh regionals will start al II a.m. July I with Seal Beach Yacht Club u the host organization. --• ANTHONY SCHOOLS WI~ the curtailment ol dou- ble sideband licenses for the 2· 4 megaHertz band, and an- ticipating some problems dur- ing the transition period, Man- ning said, he and his staff will be available to speak to in- terested groups a n d in- dividuals seeking additional information. He can· be con- tacted at (213) 590-2233. ~ Wbtn the program "'is com- pleted, the Coast Guard will have high-altitude remotely controlled sites at Point Loma, San Clemente Island, San Pedro Hill, Laguna Peak near Point Magu, and at Tran. quillon Mountain on Van- denberg Air Force Base. Santa Monica Yacht Club Fleet No. I will be host to the nationals in the two day• ol racing off Marina de! Rey. • • • "' ••• '· . MAllOI CINTll l>M H•,...r c ... t.r (Hit M ... , C•Hf9rnl• Pll. l7141 t7t4JIJ 1nr t; &'911111111'11 It. A!Mlllllft, Cit, ntlol ... 17141 77MIM WE MOVED TO 108 FAIR DRIVE Acl'Hf frl'll'll c.M. P911C• Sl•llM Falrvrounds Goff R1nge '"'"""'"' c.,11IM"" Gttf 111n .. SI 1uc1rr OP IAW IOc Wint Ac1 Otftf' .... Ulltll ....-n Tbe1 C.Oast Guard it pro- viding information on this pro- gram through the use of a recorded message which may -be heard by calling (213) 69G- 2300. Ol'DI DAILY 10 .A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUN. 10 TO 1 ·CHROME AIR QEANER _ . rm OM '1Z:' ';::.-.." FOAM SEAT COVEi 3'! 'i •~~~~lft ,_·~~- aaov l40V m * • Information cn eitlier the regionals or nationals ma'y be obtained lrom Mark Schiel!, 3fl6 Manning No. 1608. Los Angeles, C81Jf. 11111114 or by calling (213) 278-l!H or 178- 0086. ,....._,. * ...... ~···- • REGATTAS PLANNED -The Columbla-22 Sa!Ung Asrociatlon has announced dates for its regional and national regattas in July and August. c:::11• •• .................... • WYNN'S FRICTION ~ PROOFINji· ;. .. -rs. ·.• J IUENA PAii llENA PARK COSTA IESA SANTA ANA WESTMINnEI •ult llff. • L81tw1A• 5301 llt1Ch llft. 523-3040 • • ...... ., """ View 5115 Lllcoll """ 126-5800 • • ~-Wlloa 2200 HlaLar llYd. e 541.2082 1•191r St. at lristol 1400 ldlf1991' 546-7832 • 15440 ...... ..... IHch ..... flt Md' .. .. 892-20ll ; • . D.lll V I'll.OT JL. Ca~1i·na Regatta Drew 24 Vessels • • • A fleet ol 14 boats competed in the !Int Newport Belcll-to- Cltalina aalling ngatta con- ducted by the new National Aquarius Salling AaoociaUon. The trallerable sallboats were bmUghl into the area from u far away as Las Vegas, according to Gerald L. Patrick, Chairman cf the Jl'OUP· . In two separate races rrom Newport Beach to Avalcn Harbor, Don Killingsworth of Montebello, sailing F o u r Winds woo first place in the 23 ft Aquarius category. and Bob Fulton sklppering his 21 ft Aquarius "Margie C." copped first in his category., Fulton resides in Fullerton. The new salling group was formed March 1. and already has over 60 boats in !"1!gistra- tion. "The success or our first regatta Is indicative of the spirit generated by t h e memben of the group. We are llll'tlrtsed and elated at t~ tum-out for thls fint evait, ' Patrtck 1ald. The re1atta wu kicke<kll on Friday alternoon as tllt boats were launched I n Newport Harbor. The gr< JI then toured the manufacturing facilities of Coastal Rtcru· tion, inc., Colla Me I a I'.- builders of the new lwinr·keti ~ boats. Members learned about :· proper maintenance of their · sails during a visit lbrouatt'• Odyssey Salla, suppller !or the Aquarius boat!. Ttaphies for the race to Catalina were distributed dur- ing the Awards Ceremony hel~ at the Catalina Yacht Cluli Saturday evening. In additlori to the winners of the two classes, second place trophie!! went to Ruu Rcberts saliln1'. "After All" in the 23' cl a• and to Ed Putnam in °Wln- dinghy" ,.,. the 21'•. Roberto rtsldes in Santa Barbara, alil! Putnam in Santa Ynez. V.S. Dragon Class Standings Updated SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Officials have updated the standings in the \J.S. Dragon Class Olympic sailing . trials after ruling a second dis- qualification l n Saturday's race. h Fourth place I~ R0t.t Moabacher cf HOulton was disqualified for a starUng line violation. Earlier, a econ d place finisher Buddy Friedriclul of New Orleans was dl!QUalilied because he Il- legally sanded th• bottom ol his boat after repairing a hole in the bull incurred in a col- Jlslon. The winner Saturday was · Gary Weisman of Sant a Barbara, and he now is second to Don COhao ol Philadelphia in Ille competition !or the Olympic trip as the U.S. Dragon representative. The skippeno had Monday of£, and the last 2 races in the series will be today and Thursday an San Francisco ~y. Hant ~ of 'l'ibumt, was moved up to second place in Saturday's race, and BUI Henry ol S.attle third place. Lunal,ilo 1st Across !AJNlllo, lkippered b y George caner ol South Shore Soiling Club was lint to finish in cata11na 1a1anc1 Yacht Club'• 21-miie Long Beach to Long Point race ~Y· Tbere nre 33 entries in the annual even~ wb1dt ls open to Pacific Handtcap RadJlf Flee! yachts. Handlcap .raulll: (1) TNT, Bl<IO!<e Roberti, LSF; (ll Cibola, Eric-· Bll'CC ; (3) Lunalllo;.(ll Santa.Marla, Robert Wbeelor, HHYC; (I) EZ Ryder, Al Michael, LSF. 'l1>e current leaden In tb. standings: Clprice, Donald Co b a n , Philadelphia, no points; Ga) Lady, Gary Weilmlll, Sa1' Barbara; Williwaw, Buddi Frtedricbl, New OrltaM, IU; Jinx, BUI Henry, Seottle, IU, and '111aedra, Halt ~' Tiburon , 19. 200 Boats Poised To Start More than 200 Uilinl yaclltl are 1et to start Friday in tbr Ith aonuai Marina de! Rey to San Diego race sporuiored jolnUyby Windjammer~ Yacht Club and Southweatern Y~cht Club .. Alnoni the starters will bt aome GI · t11e Soulllland'• 1op yachll ai -no 1111 .., -Ibo llo4oat Rid-. the 114-foot Ortmt, tbe -RacUme. .. ....,. llltch from Corl1 Cz"Ms rza., the 1'-loot ac'-r ....... tbr 16-loat ICbooner. lalplt. and ao lmiw-fve fleet ol Ericlon- • lloopo. Gala Parlia ar. acbadu1ed al both enda with WYC ... Wlaininl sidppen and cmn on Tburaday nicht belon the 11ar1 and SWYC playlnc boat to the fleet at San Diego. Bill Hartge Wins Title BW llUlp t/. ll>l!U!dl Har!Jour Yacbl 00 -tlie~_q. ~bur~~tl Fnncls Yacht Club, Ban rn. dlco. It waa the lblrilltrallJtl ,.. Ra«:e Captured · Ilona! title !or llari(e and lie • , ·, retired tbe tropl\y. B Sch • . Tbue ...,.. D entriu in tbe y . we1~r rep!ta. 11UnoOr-11p wu Frant . , · . Dietrich ol SI. Francia YC and Hoyle Sch~ ol Paclllc third WU Bob Crane, Anacapa Pallsadea WOii the Wbidlurfer YC. Alaodation r • 1 •ti a at;;;;;========; Alamttoa Bay SUnday. Final ...Wll: (I) Hoyle Schweltser, Pactlic Palisades, a· pta.; (I) · Mathew Schwoltaer, ·pac111c Paltaades, lfll; (I) ·~ Beek, Newport BeoclJ; R; • (4) ti• between Frank wa111e, . Newport BOacb and Allan Parducct, Pacille Pillaacleo, 21. • meet For Weekender 'Advertising Phone 6424321 PANTERA ' . ' · DAii. Y l'ILOT ;. Ericson-39 Sloops w Sail ; In '73 Congressional Race .... •• '.'· TbeJm~eup lllOldl nee -wtJI be •·1111ed In ~ ....... In- ,.,.-of the frocllllonal CIMOI. , 1'bt announcement w a • h...JDlde thil -by Robert nm:e, com-of tbe .. IPOlllOrin( Lorii Bacli Yacht' Club. Piette, alone with Clark ·••-1 Of Newport Beacb w11 • ._ the IOWIClerw ol the .. lamed match rac~ aeries that In JO yearw bu grown to ln- ternaUDllll proportlonl. 'l'hll will ba· the second time In the blllory of \be aeries In which the. aalllng craft has beoii changed. Two year1 ago the Congrwional Cup w11 Ailed In Colwnbla-i!Os, but the ·following year revtrled to caJ. 4111. The Eri-la ..... and ' Statlditlfls Slawltled ' :~· . Graybeard Encounters ••• .... Light · Winds, Falters , RllllllNp pocltlonl In the .-..... ., ..,., J.mtle Loo An(eles to ,11bltl race ch1n1ed ; drutlcall1 'l\Jeoday . .. the -le4MI boota ran Into lilbt.r ain _f)>llnllddng the equator. G""'*"1, Iba amtcb boat, ;l:whlcb ltad -... ldlng,ooto ;:'l>olh elapaed and corrected .. tim.. dropped lo ii.th place :';fl a ran lnlo iolt aln IOO • .!!!11'9 nortll ol the • equalor. -111e 7J.lool<r Wll aiao uillng ~ c-wklerably west of tbe other •• 11x boatl In the raca. .,. Graybunl WU ltlll the 'Olapoad time -with 1,171 miles to ... Joe Pollock'• Min Selle was oo!J'. JOO miles . behind "and Pen Dulek m wu ~ 117 .-aalern ol Graybeard. ,.. ' Pen Dulek was again the -cor1ected time leader alter _bavinl mlaaed J'QJJ"clD for two days. ,... Tiie two COlumbla.171 "ere sUU llchtl-. 1 ..,.Mor-boat "'LiitUo with lrvinl Loube'1 •-Cooeerto aome IS mllea ahead ., of 1jilll Wanl'1 Ari•. Con- eer!O ... J9J m11.. behind ,rGnybeard and Ariel WU 303 ~ ........ -. . .~ . Abo movinl Ill> waa BUI ~·· lllele wllldl ... odly l\oMJ ml1oo bock ol Ille leadm. :-lollfaD -to ....-i , .. Ille -. third straight day. Brian Carter , com- munications man a b o a rd Concerto, laid all b u t Graybenrd were nper\enclng J$-ll knot. winds w b I c b sprlnltled the sea with white C8JJ1, Mter !13 hours of >ailing, gear waa beginning to carry away on aome of the boata. Sev_efal are makinr it a point to send men aloft at leut evtry other day to Inspect and repair gear. Graybeard aperlenced the 1Joweat day 'l'llelclay with only 117 miles Jogged In • :U.bour period. , ~ otben w e r e aYerBglng more than 200 mllel • day in flronger wind&;. Following are position reportl Ip · ordei' .of hindicap st8ndinp wltb mlle1 to go to Tahiti: I. Pen ·Dulek III, 07:28N-135:28W, J,716. 2. Concerto, 08 :28N 135:23\V, 1,170. 3. ~. 01:49N -135:4.!W, 1,782. 4. Min Sette, 07 :00N - 35:57W, 1,679. 5. Sleie1 07:57N -J32:5!W, t,ao.~ · I. Graybeard, 05 :33N 131:41W, 1,171. 7. lnlafall, no report _~Boot Firm in Mes.a .. 9'1 ' .:· ~evea'ls Expansion . ' -~· Fonnatirn Of 1 new president 11In addition, we'll ~ mf1 Development be able to quickJY apply ,1.'DtpliiliDi,,t hu l>eOn an-teclmlques which p r o v e :~ bt ~Jehltn Marine of themseJvesl 1UC<?essfu1 in one .. Coitf~M111,. manufacturen of division of the confpaby to the fiberglau aaD and power others." boW:. The Jensen divisiom in- "Tbe MW dOpartment will elude: Cal Boats, builder of a formallao many ol the ,.,,. wide range ol liberglw cedm •, wa have lllOd Ill the aallboau designed by c . put," aa1d Charlie Thomas, William Lapworth :· 'Ranger •<it. • Y I t h t I ~ whk1J .build! "~ ;c.u1uilder~ Sign Up · nbergl... sa111>oau ~e.1gned by Gary Mull; Luhrs Boat Co., manufacturer ~ of pow-er yachts; Balboa Motor Homes, ' and the r<Cently llll!OUllCed DeFever Trawlers. ( 0 To be competlUve t ft For Show wday'1 tniirket, 1 company 1 tnust abortea, the development M-• of !be -·'"· ••"I ""•' cycl•, alic!. ¥IJ is ~ne of our "!G'-~~ ~en-:,lo..!ltbe.--probJem,.!t~ buUder1 In the country are 'l'h!>lllJll 141d. ,"We'll be able lo among the early slgnfts for bring a ..,... product to the the fth annual 1-' Beach market laster and cheaper Sall..,.t Show Oct I0-29 at the than In the past. This means a · lowtr price and belier product Long Beach Marina. to the consumer In the long 'Jbe lbmf 21 apoalOl'ed by run. I I the southern C a I If o r n I a Roy Ca r la o n , prevloualy 1.1.rlne Aaooclatlon In the bead of Cal production, has ultra-. waterfront Long been appointed director of the »---• •-· I t·• f Jensen Research I< DevelOJ> .uc.a~l nigwi, oca icu a ew ment. Clrllon's department hundred yards from the Queen will be responsible for evalua- Mary. tion of materlab and com- Harbors Of Refuge Proposed A proposal tor several harbors of refuge at Soutbem C&lifamla offshore islandl has been announced by the State Department of NavlgaUon and Ocean Development. Jolm E. Bennett, dopart· ment director, said 1 mvty of the Islands is Pflrl ol ID up. dBi& of ..,.ting needs and to provide funds, to meet them. No specific island! were mentioned In the report but it was . pointed out that the islands, from San Cl~ to Anacapa, have experienced in- oreaalng smatt -traffic from Santa Barbara, Ventura, Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego countltJ. A coestal Wiier 11!e ljudy. shows that Calllomlans $pent 9.100,000 user daJ• o{ I Southern-Call!ornla coaatal waters alone in 1970. ~ jectlons lncllcste there will be an increase to 14,500,000 user days by lillll. These islands are a natura~ destlnaUcil l"'lnl for bOating people In' Southern California, and yet the Islands currently have no ru1 111tural llarbor.. AmoOI the companies who ponenu used In the manulac- have already -.nuested, sftAJ'>e turing process by Jensen. are Bristol, "'c at a 11 ~, They will aid In directing the C b a 11 e n g er , O>lumbia, riew product flow of effort Coronado, Ericson, Hobie Cat, from concept to production, Islander, Jensen, Morgan , ThornaJ explained. Rang Sall ft W D The new R&D Center at er, era er, . . Scbod: and Yankee. Jensen wlll be housed In a The aaD..,.t show wlll bulldlng d •a I g n • d by opotlJlbl not only the leading Buclanlnaler Fuller who altci llnes•ol aaUnC craft. but alao , deolsned tbe·geodeslc dome. A harbor of refuge would provide a haven for ..,.u caught ·In 1 llldden storm, as well u enhance the u,. of the islands for rec re at lo n a I purpose. Bennett added that !be departinent bu Inc I ad• d $40,000 In next year's bucJltt for a laaalblllty anal)'lla of posilble sllel. The ltudy will include an estimate of the eo1t of construction of mlnlmal facilities and th e en- vlronmenlal Impact ,of coa- slructlon II the moo! IUitable sflea. , 90 bootbl ol llDboat hardware anc1..........ies. Boat Asked For Catalina LOS ANG&LES (AP) - County lklpervilor B u r Io a Cl>ICt recommends lilat .....tr buy .... '11,llOll ,..., boat to patrol the -.,,. ef catallna JJland wbm 1" persona have drowned In Ille put II mtnths'. . De1plle~ from the Cout ... ......, llleguardl -I w-:z-... ..... ·-.... ,"' nolm_lt,_., ............ -~a. ...... ... ~--·M>• ... aWe lo -Illa miles ol beodl and ...... II bollas deploytd, • 700-IS E7•14 GJ ... 15 G7 ... 1S 11 H7 ... 15 • J7'"'1S 071-15 G71-15 F70-15 ISS.14 ffS.14 125-14 • • I UC Irvine Sailor • Winds Up Second·:: By ALMON LOCKABEY 01 .. .,..,,. ,, ....... "'lbere Is just no way I could have beaten Gary. He just had too much ..,.I speed. II That quote from runner-up Jeff Mcllermald of UC Irvine , pretty much tells tbe story o! Gary Jobson'• overwhelming victory In the Int.rcolleglale Yacht Recing Aaaoclatton of North Amftics single-banded dinghy racing clwnplonsbip at Mission Bay Tuesday. Horder, a tall , 176-pound ,,.. senior from the New York State Maritime Academy, won seven out of the 14 races in the Glen Foster Trophy event aa~ed In !4-fuoler Loser (lass dinghies .. His point score, 46. was so· good he need not have u.iled the fm&l race. Hordtt's .ability to keep his boat upright and oailing last in the 1$-20 knot winds both days on Mission Bay uplainS his phenomenal boot speed in the light, fiberglass dinghy that is gaining widespread popularity among single-handers. On Monday there were at lean a dozen ca~s but only one on Tuesday. Job!On new home Tue$day to be oo hand IOf"tbe start of the Olympic trials In the Finn Cius lVflich starts neit Sun- day. The I'll three finishers In the collegiate event qualified 10< the Olympic single-band event, but .Job!lon is the e>nly one who will compete. ' 1be top four finishers are also eUglbl~ l<r • the O'Day TrOphy competition in Finns repre-lng the No r t h American single-handed sail- ing charnpiori~ps. All four expect to entl!tf the event at San Francisco later this l!lm· ' mer. · It remained for d'c I freshman McDermald ~·,to uphold the J>rt!Stlge of , the Pacific Coast in the li{jile- handed competition. USC ski~ pers had won it the laat jwo years, but the Trojans' llpug Raste.llo was able to finish no higher than 10th at .Mls!ion Bay. McDermaid turned out to be the top skipper in the dinJhY racing cbampk>oships ··a t Mlssioo Bay last week. :· Here ~ the top, 10 fmJ4'ers and their SCOttS: . ' (I) Gary Joblon, lt.Y . 'Maritime, 43. (%) Jeff McDefmaid, UCJ, 65. (J) Art Olson, University of Washlngton, 76. '• (4) Jon Ford, Stevens Institute, 86. Boat to Aid Indians (5) Phil Leitch, Un iver!lity of British Columbia, 94. (6) Bruce Nelson, Unlv~ty of ~flchlgan, 94. • T1" lD1sai"'° Pdoo Cushion lelt•2W·l•TL $21 ... Clllhlon ... t .. 2w-a1-TL $22.50 $U7 Cu.ttlon hlt-2W-8S-TL $2635 $%.II Cushion a.lt-11.-1 ... TL $D.25 $%.II Cvthlon lelf.2W·l•TL ...u $J,OI Cu1hMn 19'fi.2W·ll-TL $U.2S P,11 CPC·PCMCW-... a-TL-8M $15.ZS $2.71 -P ... P•2W·l ... TL 81-SHJ• $2.71 Sl'W•WT .. i..~L $2SM $2.61 CPC·VY•la..-TL $2f.SI $2M Cl'C·VY4W·TL $24.IS· ·$1.M -W. ..... VY:WS-TL $)0.0I $1.JI • (7) Tom Jlasker, Citadel, 103. (I) Allen Hlghes, Goos! Guard Academy, 106. "' (9) Fritz Hanselmon, llliio Wesleyan, 110. (10) Doug Rastello, use. 128 • M.t.llNE I HOLDING TANKS ' H•W SVST•MI O• US• •XllTIMO HUD THI HOLDING COMPANY '217 ... "'"· ... '*1'11 • Bargain Days . mean savings for you ... Saye on ••• ·Blellls - Changeovers- Odds A Ends - O..e-of-a·Kind- Discontinued Tread"Desisns A Used Tires. Hurry, Bargain Days end Saturday :nJgh !. IPECIAl SPECIAL e-Power c ... 1 .. R.t.Ll.Y -· hly9lao~ $19so $2.4so .. Siu.. F71·11 t1.1bala51 Siii 670·15 tubala11 whittwtll plus whit• strip• pl111 t2.5 2 F1cll ,Ex. T•• . \ $UO Fed. ~ .... 1•• ND TRADE NE'(DED ND TRADE NEEDED ' . SPECIAL SPEM . •11i1y-· Rollj &T... C-....... C11tl• '"'"' ... ... $)995 $)150 . Sir.'L60~11 tvbal111 whit• litters phii $3.41 FM. &. Te• Sbe H71 ·14 hllMl111 whlf1w1ll "" ' $2.75 FM. E•. ft• ASK~OUTOUR EASY PAY PLAN ; • . • • J ., --------------------------~ YOUNG Cl LANE TIRE CO~·~· COSTA MESA 1596 NEWPORT ILYD. ·;-148-9lil· . ;I LAGUNA BE~CH 482 OCEAN A VL · 494 6~66 ': ------------------------~-~ I ' I 1 •. • ' . . '• •. wtc1 .. 11101. J, .. za. 1'72 DAILY 'tLor ll Boat Sewage Discharge Raising Ruckus ~~";~;:~~: .. ~ .. ~~;~~~~ .. ~ ' \~ I ~ I . I llOVAL "'"" •..... , .. T09AC';CO c, . "' ~l!•l IST.+.l'l. 114' Or•llH 1\ t lfOI''. 11tt H, Tllttlfl, Ot•llN'*7 ........ (..,,. M8.ll, lam. WASHINGTON (UPI) -ylll't after the initial five-was "pursuing the matter absolute bans on discharge. the EPA standards. saying h.is Pankowski alao crlticlud c!~=·.~·1.·-=nnt. 1••1 ";:.~::,.~"· '"' ·-~r\ NtW' aov•nment rules detlp· year period end!. further with a poss.ibiUty of Only t~ states now have aucb «ganlzaticn would ha v e the ott~repe1ted clalm from Oot111e ,, 01111111, 1t1t 1u ''·· Llll'l'llt• 'r1'111 w.i,.. •• 11t1,.. c~ br "' ~ •• -·t do ·~ I )) h•" I th • f~ I Tl!l1 t!Jtlllffl I• MIMI ~ l ft I IMlvkflMJ, ._. w ..... wn -~ ll bolt Owntrl do DOt ICt eg.a Y C ~ellg 1\1 e Stan-Jaws. ·pre er'"'°' stronger ru es. aome. boat Ownetl who NY the [llvtny•fll,, Clotl'M"t c .. Do'fl• Ultimately end -ae...,e wjUlin the Ont fivt v.ar1, dard1." • Th• EPA ori-1naUy '"""-And Ted Pankowski of lhe ...,.,,,.,. '"· DfMHtlM T.,.• •1•l""tt11 filW wlt11 ff'lt .. <"'111"' "•••··at from ~·ts .,...... ,,.. e .. • r•v-amount , Of dilcharge from Tl!!t •••t.,.,..111 fllM wf"-l!MiCtlil"IY (ltrll ef Oft,_. C'.clllfll'I' ti'!: J!IM 11. 1"1. ~ ~ -~ ~ will b1va to install ; While the EPA did 0 throw PoStd ln ~1ay, 1971, to rM1ul"' Izaak Wllton League added . C1trk "Or•.,.. c...,...., eit: Jv"" 1. 1m. av ..... .,tr J. MHftlil °""""' eoumv ~th al!~tl~ ~Om forces on lflin& tanb ·Which Must be, UI I,• bone" by _ _-_]qwi_ng tn0rt-~re£1.ned t r e_a t.m t D t-lbll Me _bjg Rf9blem 'l"ilh lht boat.I JI mtROf anyway, COM· ~r.,:.rtwr 1·, ICttMf', Dffiv1y ("111h Cltrl. P IN9t w -•"'tr~ iuue, pumped into dot.bide 11rillary~ mOClltications for e 1 is ting devices that would have whole Issue was that -the pared to the o_verall pro-- - -•·1•,... 'vbllalltd °''"" cotu 0.1"' "'""· &at owner·croupa feel they · facUJtles when full. And all boata, Schwartz aaJd, ''in the returned largely pure waste to EPA's rules cover only U. S. blem.. Ccngressional hearin.a:a. ,:,:.111~~ .:~:-.; s~~.'\,,~1"" ,!,11~ Ju,. 1" u. tt. •r J1.1tr ~ :' 1 ' tW·n •1Nt btl111 made to mett new boat.a built alter the ~irst end they are .imposing much the water; but the agency navigable water -rivers, he aald, showed "the problem · LBGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ' ' 'C:ltanup 1tandard1 that are t"YO yun of the five-year tighte.i: standards on boat decided against that because. streams and lakes where a ls nt* miniscule at all. You are PtcTtT..Us 1_..1.ass· , ' ,ip.llfler than thole lmpoed on' ~kid wi.11 have to c•""' owners than on municipalitiea if said, it was technoJogk:ally vessel can travel from one talking a•· .. t ~-ntratio' -of '1cT1T1ou1 •ut•N••• NAAt• aT•T•1it11•N,. • ·~ ..... poll •-hJl l.1:--'.! ,.._,J uuu ,,.,.,._." ,.. . NAMa ITATIMINT "flit ftllow'IM' Mr'toll b •h"t1 tMtM.. r__,,. U.a-1, w e 10me w.in1 tanka. or industry.'' doubtful for small boat!, it state to..another. private vessels in b&Jlborl in ,,.. '"'"1"" ..,._, 11 e ei .... b\111,...., 111 · .. t~rul Uan ~UPI feel the fiichard Schwartz, eiecutlve He also said the standards ~ould coSt perhap~ three Large Jand·locked lakes or close proximity to swimming ••: ••v •1.v•111111NTt lls. 11• w •• , ~,~1~!~l!,r!0=:~·C:~Nor-~~1•14 -.i 11 art wW and full of direetor of the Boat Owners will discourage the makers of . times _as much and it would other bodies of water e.ntirely and beachu. I think the , ... , ttlthw1r, "tw!«' aw e,.. c1111. H,,,,., .._,,....., ''P"-11•t •lf"fl•ltl ... 1 ~ lea... ' Auoci1tion of the United cbJorinator devices fr om not gam that much more . within a single st ale would not boating industry and boat ~ M. Tr.om• ..... 1 ...... U0(1111, ~~i~ :~~!"':, :~ =·.,;,.. , ,. la the middJe is l he .Sti~. told UPI be was "quite trying to make their product Ord Alexander, representing be covered unless the state io· owners do nQ jUJtice to the oncol'DOl'tt..i 111 c 111fft,111•1 ,,XI w •• , t11C11"td....i. ' . :,~v~tal Protection diaappolnted" wjth the reguta-more efftttive, and may en· conservation group c a J J e d volved had rules of its own on solution of this problem by de-~ Hlt'l .... v. "...,"'1 •••c"· '1111· 11111 ~!o~:ne:':,.:,~". "" CllllfllY .~~ (EPA) which put··out tiona and aald hla or1ao1¥tlon ,j courage more states to pass "Trout Unlimited/' criticized discht1irge. nying that it exists.'' TM• ~•IM•• 11 ~n1 condvc:t.o 1w • c1,,~ 01 o''"'' ci11ut1ho Ml'""' 1t, 1trt • . ,•M ..., _ _. ........ lul w··• -~-;;;;:;;;:;;;;;:::;:;:;;;::;;;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;~;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 '"11«'''-•v ••~••Ir J, MHdoll, o..utv CturltY ~ •wi~~ _., ,_...... llollt,t M. Th0m1" Cltr~. IDOrt than a year of atudy. .. .... 1t1 ... 1 • 1*' SALE Sp,E,.IALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY ONLYI TP!lt 111'-"'"'' flltd wu~ l"e Covn!~ P~1>111"1111 Ortntt CNt.I Ot lt'I' "11111• , Tiie EPA llancfordl, OOVtr• , ~ ' o S. ..... -t '""' "o,.~, Cw•"~ ""' "· "" ""' U, '" H •"'I "'YI"" ll'l-'2 (!pa 5$G,000 plea.sure boa.ta and , l'I , • .,..,,., J , Mactdo~. D•itulY Cov"tvi------'------- , /all other v .... IJ with llllilary WESTMINSTER SANTA ANA FULLERTON '"" ,.,.,,. LEGAL NOTICE facilities operatlnt1 · in U.S. 15121 ,BEACH I LVD. e P.H'ONE 893-8544 120 E. F IRST ST. AT CYPRESS 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. e PHONE 110.0700 ,;,::•;,-:-;: .~·,~: ,'.:;.",.,'!''" ,:,;:~ ., wattro, are designed to end au • PHONE 547.74n _ l'l(TITIOUS •USINQI NAMI STATIMINT iU.1charge within five years MONDAY THRU FRIDAY ••••••• 1:00 A.M •• ' P.M. MONDAY THl.IJ FRIDAY •• ••••• 1:00 A.M .• 91 P.M.' after the Coast Gu1'rd SATURDAY ••••••••••••••••••• t :OOA .. M.·•P.M. SATUltOA:t .................... l :OOA.M.-•·P.M. publiahel exact rules next fall. SUNDAY ••••••••••••••••••••• t :OO A.M •• 4 ,,M. SUNDAY •• : •••••••••••••••••• t :QO.A.M. -.. P.M. 1 ~·;But Utere are exceptions. If owners of existing boaU in- aWI devices which grind up I nd chlorinate waste withi n the first thr!e years of the five-year ptriod, they may eqntinut tll use such devices - and dllcharge the waate -in- -efinitely, IO Jong II the devlee operat.1 properly. ; 1·1r they·wa1t rOr tbt rtnat two yaaro of the flv .. year time ' 1p1n . belote making t h e e.hlnJt, then they miy UH the <llvtc.. fir only three more ' . ..l.A>ng Delay I Hollls :t;p ~ ~ 'Toilet :Law --.-; ,. . P'trtt It WU the !lnvJron- mtntal Protection Aaency it· •11. ~then the llatM.. ' . ? Thin the EPJ.;t1aln. 'i Nexl th• .Of~ce of M11111e-'!!tnt and Budget. ,j.N.., it IJ reportedly the Qpmmerc• Departilj'"t that'• lillldinC up the long.<fel1ytd ~ertl slilldatds on boat ~llets. · ' ;.~ lf"'1 Waahington AY" 'lhll~ Commerce 11 o)). lfet!iic-to the: proposed stan· ~ ·~· thi',.groundJ that ~Y'rt 1oo atrin'lent. · A ·metlin«i •:between Com· ~.An'd EPA officials was ~Uled for late in May. · ptdltl:i of ·the outcome, te., decision wUI 'fromiE.P:\ administrator ""~· D. Rtlckelohaus. . ' ~~legislation waa !~..:.._.~re .. than two years ~o.' The lllandal'ds , whon f!pally P'Olllllllated, will go ito'<lfed IJ"o ye~ from the : tt of promu1gati0n foi@:.1neW-_, ti and fi ve yean: fro m tbt te for • mat~ craft, Any of 'chleving JI•· · nwlde uDifWmlty~ api!elr , slnct m!tY 'atatu hri-~ dy ~' theiriT t;,. f!nu..., to . .-mmptloill . • , , JOINS llllCSON l ·~(f~ ~·~.:ud ?Iatmaud· f!oills _.Firm }\~. ·M~riager ~ V. ~ Marmaud ha! lllt1cblll YICbtil jj nt· llilitll ..i .............. ~oc. Jo Del Wa lton, dont. armallll wu with Morgan , • Fhrld1, II aales !of liie pall Ill and prior to that be aalelmlllllp' lor Mechtt.---~new sales uocutlve at· San Dl•to S t a t.e ~efe u .~ ltw ""1fent d\r· 'Iii wldcb !lino 1te eilled In San Di<Ce and Million Bay. Since '&°.: hiJ raclnl and cruising :< l*lfln<e llet ....... •!Oltc die ,_.......,. . Hl·RISE I •E --·---........... _...,.., .. _.._.....,....._.. __ ~ .... c-.............. 1HI INC\'CU IVIRYOHI WAHrS MONDAY THllU FRIDAY ••••••• 1:00 A.M. • t ,.M. S:'<TURDAY , • , •• , , ••••• , •• , ,, , 1100 A.M •• 4 P.M. SUNDAY • , • , .••••••••• ~·, •••• t :OO A.lo!; •• 4 P.M. :88 .......... "'"·" ...... 7.7516.70 x 15 All CIJPl'lll TW•lf type llackwall ' u mm MIMTII' ..--4-PLY NYLON CORD ,, .. , .. <1.JJ/7.00 •• 14) Gl ... lf 1t.1•P.lt• II) I I 6.50x 13 'rUllLUS . -...CKWAll •l'ln'M.Tn •fll.71 M:M•r... I Pb.D la -=:t -front """M. I••· T• to! lt.M IOl.\ol 30 MONTH GUARANTEE* •"'0 •·1• ~ • Illa, u of l>e~t 111111. The loll&wod throo yaars u a U.B, Marino Corpt of. """'" • . I LEGAL NOTJCE "":~~:11~1111"" H•~• •r1 llMlll _c---1 MOTOll DOCTOllS, )(II Nt'I" ,ICTITIOUS IUllNlll T-na•nd. S111t1 ""'' C1llfornlt t210S. NAMI ITA TIMINT Wl ... 1611 H. W111. 1'310 Sll1ilt llfMI, TM> 1911owl"' H rl011t ''' delnt 1'111111ttln 'llelltv. Ct llfornl11o '21CI. ""''"'"' 11: Ju111!t• L. Wttt. 1'3JO '"'*'' s1,...1, 01!1.'5 l'IGU"E"T"TES, lOOI l .,,..., l'ov11111,, '11111..,, C•llllN'fllt tt1el LIM, 111111 A"t, ttl'0:5, Thl1 '4.!1l11U1 II bllnt ('OllCllJtftoli llv I Aetlt. Moot•, 2002 LI•...,. ltnt, 5tMI Gllflt r•I ttt'IM,IMt. An1, '1105. Wl11tlet1 H. W•'I P1ul M. MllOll (S11<111M\. :Km Ltrn1, Thl1 11•1-l lltff wllh """ Cov11lv LtlM, $Int• An•, t 11Gl [l~r-et Or1nt1 CO!Jnty en Jvne J, lt?l, "TMt lt\t1l,..11 11 llol!nt coroctuctlld llv bv 8tvtrlr J , M•.UOJ<, ~IY Ceu11tv P1rtn.r1hl11 of Ht1$llo1n• I. WI" onlv. I Cltrk. l'tul A. MllOlt l'·lltl• Adt!f MflClll Publ!IM<:I o··~ COii! 0•11'1' P\Jot. This 1ltlemllflt fllH wllto '"-Ctun1v June 1, U, i1 , 21, lfn 141!·'2 Cieri!. !>I Ori n" Covntv on: Jun1 l6. 191? tr ••v..-1r J . M•He•, D•l'U•V Covnry cierk. LEGAL NOTICE I' ltll1 NOT!CI IN'lllTIN• •tOS PuDll1hM Ort"4• Co111 01lly ,.Uet, "0llCE I HERllY Gl'lllN tll•I 1M! JUN 2t "'' Julv J. u . If. ltll '"1·n llOl,d •I Trut!tll •• ""' Fov11t1111 Vtll•v LEGAL NOTICJ! 5chfl04 Olurkt el Or111tt (l!/Cltv, Ctlll~n!t, ... 111 r1e1rv1 1111'6 l>lclt uti 10 1108 P .M. °" tht '111 dty tf J"l\I' ltn 1t NOTIC INVITINO •IDS 1111 office ol 11!d Khoel dt1trlcl purc.tt1s. Nolle:• 11 Mr•tt tl"'" th1t lllt l o1rd ol 11141 d1111rt"''"' 11 ""lcll 11,.... wlll tlld1 TtUllHI of ~ FOl.lnl•ln V•lltll' SCPIOOI win bt .. ntd Ind 1'91d for 1N!TAU.A· Dlllrlct ol Orin .. Ceunlv, C1lll0tftll, .,.;u TIOH ANO M.f.T(lllALl llll!OUIHO rttt lvf 1t•IH lie!• uP 10 t :OO 11'.M . .., 1n1 FOii DRISSLAWN 5Pll!Nl(l.l!•S. 6tn dlY or J111r. 1''1 •I ttlf olllc• of 11ld To l>t 1 l1rrnlll'IH In •«•"'•!''"' "Ith 1cllllOI dl,1r1c1 l'ufC111111141 0101flmt11! ,, 11NCll!c1!1on1 new °" lilt In nit .urdl11· wnlcn tlm• 11!d lid• will bt -Mt! 1roct 1,.. d•H•tmtnt ol 1111 l'ov1111rn V•H•.,, rtlOd lar lllt LIASING OP ONI RILO. Sci'lool 0 1.irlcl, N11mbl' Ont 1.191111\ouN CATA.II.I •ulLDING. l.t(ll, t"orner ol T•lbtrt •nll N1wlt...S To i.. lurnllftfd 111 1cc&rd•ll(t with S~, ,_111n ,Vllllr. C1 U1er11l1 "7CI. 1t1Klllc•rlen1 ,_ on 1111 '" "'' l'urch••· • 'y o•o l!!ll OF THI.. 11141 0.01rlf,11nl llof 1111 FOllfl!lln Vtllt v I OA.llD 01' Tllt UST(IS, kMol Oltlrkl, Numbft ont Llltl!ll'le!IM 1'0UNTA.IN V,\LLEY LtM, c.itfltr tf Tl l .. rt •"4 ~ .... fld SCHOOi. OISTRICT $1rfft, l'"0Unl•l11 \lt lltv, CtltfOtnl• t11ilt. M1rv Hlr, • IY ~01• 0,. >!l"HI Ct.rk ol '"" 1111rd aOA.110 01' T•USTl.JI,. 1'11bllll\9d O~tMt COlll Ot ll)' ll'l'l.t • FOUNTAIN VA.LlfY J1,111<1 21, !ti, lt72 16M.7! lCHOOL OISTlllCT Ml•'I' Hlr , LEGAL NOTICE Clerk al 11\t •01rd l'llllll1n..e Or•ncr• ce111 01llr l'llot, JuN 21, "· 1tn U)J.12 LEGAL NOTICE "' -•• Fun and Gi• .... ••:r Sunda y is "Funday" when your avorite newspaper brlnqs you. .the enterta ininq selection of fun and qa mes in Junior WhlrL Here's a brand new, qrand new feature pa c It 9 d with deliqhtful brain teasers for the whole family .(kids a nd adults) to enjoy. · r; · J1111lor Whirl features "HOCUS. · FOCUS'' (How qood are your' pow. ers of observation?): ".SP~ . • _ERi" (How many additional words , • ~~rojl__fonit.irl!m'~ sinqle word?); Q' .• ~ l!O.AAJ;\' (Clever quips ~l!flg ._qul;, qµBjt" ffiS); plus mqny . ?tii•.r )un f~rft. . ' 'i Pon:t' ~ · '.'.". ·.;J•;-91or · • ... ' I ',, ~Wlllrl' !• ··~·l•d•y '" the CtiW ~lei sfft!On' ' OA!LY PILOT Q DAI LY PILOT WtdntsdJy, Junt 29, 1'172 TONIGIIT'S ' 1 TV IIlGlillGIITS ;. KCET 119 6:30 p.m. "Debut Commonwealth." :This 13-psrt American heritage series begins with .. a tour or the William Penn Memorial Museum . An· ..,Uques, artifacts and architecture or colonia l Penn· ; sylvania are examined. KNXT II 7:30 p.m. "Treasure Hunters." Two 'vers lnvesUgate a Spanish treasure galleon that nl<' in 1732: JCTLA D 7:30 p.m. A Tour of Busch Garden s. ABC D 8 p.m. The Super. J~ loses his job as uilding superintendent, .and things look bleak - tu the tenants rebel. KNBC D 8:30 p.m. Colombo. A mystery writer Jans a perfect crime with his ex-partner as the fget. Jack Cassidy, Martin Mil ner and Rosemary :J1orsytb guest. • a lhat his wtkt bt held In th• lmrfll Wednesday w11t11 h• spent so many enjoy1bl1 ~ days ind nl&hh. xi ' h,ening m .,., lrWfr11 Show ::':~ fl!) [D Tlll1 Wffl Bill Moyers ~t JI.IHI 21 t:OO II (I) Wet! C:.11ttr (R) Id• tu- iili/ • D ._.,mm Nm plllO ind htr r11l·lil1 husb1nd. How-~ I I a •r• Duff, •• II l)tltnh who ltt ~1 Tilrl Iii ¥tit; 1t od4 wi\h 61nnon ov•f heart f ( ,WIN wiw WMt 1ur1tty fot tlltlr d1u1httr. ~ J • "" fltltdo• 81"' tClllflJll!tM ~i· Cll Dtnltl '""' D CIJ (JJ m Mar tr F.1ld1111• ; ID z.t! Cfflldr~t .. _.... Orson Welles, ~ ID MN,.,.. Ltclat Spikt if111, i.,ctOlrd Sltultz 1nd : ft...,..,,, ltf1I Thtlme SIOll i\lnt.. i . CJi) Tt It ""'"" !!! :::.~ .... " boo"' '-'\ fl11nl....,.. m fto D _, <Cl (IO) "ltd T~dl' fl! IHI~-P~~·· tuturn f• , {wtl) '6S-Ntritlt Brtnd, fletll • ptlf°"'net by ttlt New Yortl fire Mutlct, tnstmblt 1PK11!11ln1 ~ Brown, Do111 McClurt, Jlrntl Q.rury, In flttdlmi tnd Rintl•tllCt music. ;;. (l)CIS-·. --·~ ;-I a.aJ ....,. sttttlft 111tw IW:I ,,...... :;' GITht """' Jii• 1:?5'9~ Ill""""*' ~: 1 QI! CMI DltobedltM:t "Aid ot Hln-t:30 8 li)'(i lMk' ~~ dr1nct to Juslkaf' ~~Ko~'~Ed ~1n"°':! ~· ._ fJ!l Dtltrt CoMMOftWNltft This 13· :: : ~rt AmHiclrt Nrffllf: urles ber!ns 111td•ho,st. Otti~ 1uesb tr• ~HI ~· · with host Gtottt MlchHI tourlni .1Drd1n, GltOfl• Kirby, fr1nk Gorsh1n, ~,,,. tht Wllll•m Penn Memorlll Museum Rich Little, Mtrilyn Michttls, Clltr11t to tie1ln his ex1mln1tlon of th• II\-C.l11s tlld Jot Baker. tiqUIS, 1rtlfltts tlld ttthlttcturt 0 0 ti) NIWI Hulfl Willltmt ,,,. colonl1I f'tl'll'll)'IY1nl1, ! :~n:.~ro11 H..i..__. Ptrt ~ fD TruMrt ~ .,.,, • ...., -:. 9 CllH Aull 10:00 IJ (I) M1nlli1 (R) Jotnn1 Pettet tm~ * 11 C.Unl ~ 1uesb 11 t s!n1er kidnapped br · (I)-.""".,,,. "' hoodtum1 .,,. oillM-"" ,,_ ~ 11J Held .. EJl!ot Mintz where 1 fottunt It hidden. 1:00e rn am""" 011Bcw1 ••• w ..,i.111s11 ; g "'" tlll f.llrll Actor .lmph CtmP1nell1 Cl) T• ., c....-cn llosl1 doc&irnent1ry ttitt 1x1mlnes • ()) Dftf!Mt the stow!111 birth rtte M Affllri(:I. I ··-• Wlllt'• MJ Une? -ColltlCll Dtbatt • 11.Mlucy -; I -ti -~ Ill Ill Nit'! ..... ~ (R) Buddy ; Ill LI Q'll VtJtdl'I ti [lplflll Osen •fld' Donni Do1Jt1tr IP!lflf · ft) HltHytst • In· tl!Jlster roleL II) U1tt Pltprt.i 11 91 c.JN (I) DOVT C.11111111 Pn P~ ~ ft C..dlt1 "9 fotltHlll (2!hht) Fonner GrNn 811 P1c•1r 7:JO 8 StMval "Tr1isur1 Hunters" Unem1n Jtrrr Kr1mer r1ports on • Two dlwrt lnwstir•I• 1 Spinlsh • 11mt bltwten tilt C1l11ry Sltm· : tre1sur. tttleon th1t unk In J732. ptdtf11 lflf the Cfl AH·Stlt'I •I " -e ni. ...... _,..,, A-IPOOf-ot ~~~iir tltt lfltt OvtdOofa. Guest-host Ir 1B1 Dom Otlulst. fJ!) MastlrJltct Thtlltrt-Tllt Ptlo ·~ 8 A Ttur tf 1.-. llfdeM ::;:. ~;buklln 'IOl : (j) ft Tiii tt1e Trvtll W.:!I • : Cf) I 11'1111 of 1t1nnlt Gm Tt It A11lltllM.tll . ' 'M·an of La Mancha' Shines In Its Second Time Around TO DIRECT PLAY C1rol F1ul1tlck Faulstick To Direct 'The Pooh' By JACK GAl'ER NEW YORK (UPll -"Man or La Mancha '' was one ·or the great musicals in 1965 when It was new , and it was just ns pleasing in its revival al the Vivian Beaumont Theater in ., Lincoln Center. Four of the top members of tile original cast are in the re vival, and it may be the fir st time anything like this has happened. It is a pleasure to welcom e back Richard Kiley, Joan Diener, Irvi ng Jacobson and Robert Rounseville. A slight correction here , as to the first night. Jacobson, servant Sancho Panza to Kiley's Cervante-Don Q~ote, met with a slight mishap and could not go on at the premiere. But he will be th ere soon, and you know from past experience how good he is in Carol Faulstick has been the role. selected by the board of direc-"Man of La Mancha" is one tors of the Huntington Beach of the finest blending of Playhouse to direct the Slim· creative talents the musical mer Children's Theater pro-theater has known . There is duction of "Winnie-the-Pooh." the libretto by D a I e tie Bird\ Little Bird." ·Also. the admirable direc:· lion of Albert Marre, the set· tings by oward Bay, thf! eos- tumes by Bay and Patton Cam p bell and t he choreography by Jack Cole .• One thing that strikes me in this revival that, I think, did not make as much or an im· pression on me in the original production , probably because there were so many other splendid things to admire, is the amount of humor. There is mu~h of !his in the script itself. and the players' skill in handling it doubles the pleasure. What can one say about Rich- ard Kil ey after the many fine performances he has given in various dramas and musicals'.' His Cervantes-Don Quixote is a gem now as it was in the beginning. Simply a <Juperb ac· tor who sings and a fine singer who can act. Miss Diener w•s and still is captivating In the role or Aldoni.a. the inn servant and slut who ls regarded DY the ec-- centri Quixote as his dream woman, Dulcinea, the perfect female of the story books. I still marvel at her rape scene with the mul vteers, which is choreographed to the ntli degree but is still o n e dangero us piece of stage business. I'll never understand how she survives. Rounsevi lle ii back as the Padre, lending hjs admirable vo ice to some of the best songs. Albert W, Selden , one of the original producing team Hal James is dead, is presenting this revival. If you see only one show in New York this summer, 15ee "Man of La Mancha ." Even if you have seen it before. Sal Hurok Cheered · By Ballet Success Miss Faulstick, Or a n g e Wasserman that is not a County actress and director, dramatization of Cervantes' recently has c Io s e d a "Don Quixote" novel Dul. a triuinphant six-week run at marriage of the tale of that WASHINGTON (APJ Russia, where he was born &4 the Long Beach Community benigtited would-be kn i g h t ''Ballet was d ea d , • ' im4 years ago. Playhouse as the dramatic after the age of chivalry had pressario Sol Hurok said. ''So He said in an interview that lead, Regina, in the Lillian passed and a phase of the he gi"'5 President Nixon great Hellman drama, "Little Fox· author's life. 1 went to Paris and 1 went to credit for the summit meeti ng es." It is a clever device that London and I brought ba llet to in Moscow, but he is a bit Prior to that, she performed finds Cervantes in prison the American public and now chagrined that so little was ., in Noel Coward 's "Blithe awaiting a hearing beiore the it is the most popular form of done -so far as anyone now Spirit" at Costa Mesa, and Inquisition and acting out part entertainment there is. I'm knows -to encourage ad- "Once More With Feeling" at of ~~e story of the novel he is ditional cultural exchanges. the Hu n tin g to n Beach w~1t1ng to placate fellow very happy about it and very Hu rok has been through the Playhouse, p~tsoners who are tormenting grateful." mill before. She studied theater for four ' him. · Hurok was in a euphoric "J was instrumental in years under the direction of T~n the~e is l~e bellutiful mood, having brought the breaking through the ice in the the Mary Eastman. m.us1c of M1~ch Le igh adorned Pavel Virsky Ukranian Dance Eisenhower ~dminlstration." "Wi ie-th p h" .11 wi th the Jyr1 cs of Joe DariC1n, Company to this country for a he said in an interview, "and nn e-00 WI open resulting in such slngs as 1(}.week tour of Washington, he helped a lof." July 7 for a three-week run, ''The Quest (The Im passible Philadelphia, San Francisco, 1----'--~--- and will ~ performed on Fri· Drea m),'' "To Each His Los Angeles, St. Louis, New !l"'~~· day evenings at 7:30 p.m., and Dulcinea," ••what Does He York City. on Saturdays end Sundays at 2 Want of Me?." "Dulcinea," . The colorful and energetic p.m. ''It's All the Same" and "I.ii-troupe opened the tour El.SAlllE LIONFSS WAS BORN FREE.. NOW HER CUB.S ' AREUVINGFREE!. An Open Road/ Highroad Production Continuous Daily From 2 P.M. PrlcAtt Ufttll 4 P.M. Adttlh crttd JrL 1.10 Clllldrtt1 75c r ece Rt I y at the Wolf Trap Farm Park for the Perform- ing Arts in Virginia , about 16 miles from the capital, with Soviet Ambassador and Mrs. Anatoly Dobrynin In the au- dience. The Dobrynins also at· tended a post-performance party for the 125-member cast, which Hurok hosted. Hurok may ha ve done as much as eny man Ji ving to strengthen the cultural ties between this country and : ' CJ Ml ... I """' (!I~ "C~P'• !!) ll L"""'' " ..,_ ~.ti Wmtl" (drt) '4G-Htnl'J' fondt, lO:JO (l)Tllt UHiatrt Ro1er Miller Sl.COND FIATUll · Dorris Bowden, John Ctmdine. fJ•sts, WALT DISNEY'S H•rbor & Ad•m• Cott• MeM 546 1102 Mon.·lfri. 7-t p.m. Sat. 1.J..S-7-f-11 p.m. Sun. 1!}-S-7·t p.m. ·• ....... ·-II Ttlk·I"* "BEDKNOBS AND BROO· .. ~STICKS" m CIJ Dnpn oo Sports """'• "' llJ) Tiii City C1t1t U Tiiis I• Yo11r Ult Surprlstd 1u1st I'~~~~~~~~~ : m Tiit ffltldl Cllef ~'Mtde1tl118S ls Jtckl• Coo1111. I: · • and GellOlse'' @II LI Sltl11icl ~; 8' Tt It A111t1nt9' OJ f\IM: "'ff the Sheftl tf Trlpoll" ·: G!J"""'"" """ mu"• . · &J McMt: (lhr) "nt M111 l!) CollclMd• cutpebll "'"' "'" 1•ro1 '4Z--G"!1• u:ao a Damm m "'"' , • Ar11ss, B1tt1 D1vlL <IJ ()) IJi Nm lllll 0 ........ .,. •• G ·THE MELBA MOORE· 00 "'""" Dtlt.n • 1f CLIFTON DAVIS SHOW 0 M•<!t: <Cl l!I~ """"~th• '· fJ Cf) TM Melbl ~lrtll s,ltllll" (1cl¥) '64-TIM'lJ Russel, • Divis Show Cloris lt1Chm1n puts. M•rl• Pmchy ... O OJ m Adt•ll ''ClllHns A11~ GI TnM er ct.1111enw .-(R) Malloy 1nd Ret4 1rrut 1 p1l1 llJI a.ctioll 72 ol phony-money 111sstrs. ff> Held., (R) 0 I IPICi.1.( I rrtlliert Nl111t tf 11:15 G) fntlwtl fll111ico: "Honor1ble1 Jtsu1 Christ Supelltlr Prt·show fes· SllMl'penm" tivilies ind Interviews •itl1 st1rt 11:30 U (I) CIS I.lie MOYie: (C) i re s~n. The production ltHlf wlH "Ctotk• ind Corontb" (com) '69- not be seen. Sem lilddlt hosts. Tellr S.v1l1s. Dlmt Edith lvtnL 0 Cl)@ (D TJte Silp" Rlcflttd 0 @) a;) .lohnnr Ctrst11 Sch•d· Castellano st1r1 11 superinfende111 uled 11.111b inc.ludt Burns •nd ol 1 tenem1nl-lype •Plrtment build· Schreiber, i nd tuthor Mk.hie! ln1 In New Yotk. ''Tht Automate Crichton (''T1rmin1I Min"), Robert SuPtr'' .lot loses his Job as buildln1 Mitchum 1nd Johnny M1thls 1lso super, 1nd thlnp look bleak-until 1u1sl. ' fht ten.lints rebel. n Movl•: .,.,.. .. rt t( "°"" m Tiit Molhtn·ln·LI• Oidl" (mys) '49--Gltnn L1n11n. _ m ""' "'"" D 00 CIJ l!fl tMc> c....t """ ;. fl) Lo Mejor 11 [sp1Rof Lindsay, MIYOf of New Yori! Cit)', :· Ell) [ll £ltdio11 72 "GOP: Off 1nd ls schedliled fUtst . Runn in(' m Te TeH .. Trvti '.: II) Lucht Ubtt WreS11in1 l2:00 ID Mowlt: "Hlrhl)' Dtnl'mt• fiE &lldtn Central (tdY) '51-D•nt Cllrl, M1r11 ret 1:30 0 ®l m NBC MJsltry Thntrt-Lodwood. Co11tt1bo "Murder by th• Book~ 12:30 Q) Ct••bJ Mualt TIMt (R) A mysttry wnter pl1ns 1 "per· feet crime" with his 1x-p1rtner 1s J:OO (I) 0 U Cll tf§l Ntn th• t111el. J1ck C1ssldy, Martin t :JO 1J M•: "'1llt Sit u," (dr•) '41 MllMr 100 Rosem1ry fortylh tutsl:. -Robtrt Ryan, Audtl)' Totte1, D CJ) Cl) m Tiit Comr S.r G•b· m AJf..Nlfltt Show: ''ln ¥•1•• rltl Dtll at1rs •• b1rtendtr Harry stNJ," .......,..,, l11tttHr,• Gr1nl "f11nn111n'1 Wike.'' th• list "Tilltdtck" .• request of ont of H1ny"s customers, 3:00 8 """: (C) , "Thi Htllf'• to.)'Mr-okl Chtrlit fl1n n111n, ••s Molt•" (COlll) '53-Altc G11lnnus. ·• Th di (t) "TIM Snl1D1st Shlw H ursday ~ .. (com) ·s1-em TflwtrL l:lO U "Thtf Wtr1 St T1111(' (drt) '55 OXYflME MOVIES -Raymond Burr, Scott' 8ttdy. 1:00 !J) (C) "ltldl 1•11" (mus) '65 *..... -ti -Mir Edd '"""· CMs ... I. (dr1) '34-l«tttt Yount GIOl'lt II (C) '1JM l•n4 W1p11" Co~ Ania. • (mua) '53-fred Mt1lrt, Cyd Cht· t:JO 8 -Tiit tlJ*/ ltl" (mm) '4 ri•. •• tf u. S••e by Mllltl'ld, raulltte 8:"''d, 4:00 8 "SI--9t Siiier" (tdv) '47- Ml:ot CJ) "'ltltl• flf 1111• tcoml '51 Oou1l11 Ftirbenks Jr., MIU(ffft -~Ofllli R ..... OIW bfltl, O'Htrt ll:lll8-............ l•dv) . . '51-'ruton r.ttf, '1rtiflll Gr11. 4.JO ())SIMt" JMM llltl111 l:OO O "llllJ -(Iii) ,._.oiort S:lll ll\Cl -· lcom) '61 -lilt' ,.,_.. Jfto·PM _.., ltu S.btrt. Read the l> AILY PILOT • And £zdo NEWPORT BEACH -at !hp entrance lo the labulou~ Lodo l~le OR J SJSO .-; .......................... -......... ~ .. . EXCLUSIVE COUNTY RUN FILMED PARTLY AT UCI ALSO SELECTED SHORTS CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M. thl1 time, he'1 not alone! 1PG!e;;;~;1 11----..l.CHILLHI• CO•Hl-----1 "TALES FROM THE CRYPT" l "BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER' .. •. "Tiil YEAR'S FiRST REALLY llTllfYIQ, 111 C8111HCl1l AIHICll fl.I. OllE Of TllE IDlt HUTll AID •mn CllRDllClEI Of llHICAl l•l HH DUUED lllTllHI TH£ LlllTS DF POPULAR EITtftTAIHUIT." -Vincent ~'!.l>J.LNew York Times . "'THE IGOFATllEll'.11 A ll'RTACUUI Im£, M If Tll£ FHIEST IAlllTH 18111 lftft IUOfl" Shellt. NBC-TV 1172 19T2 llTIOl!L GEM i MllER!L SBOi ' SP£CIAL Eximn's FROM MAHY J1F TIE WORLD'S f1NEST COUECTIONI COllTUIUOU$ DEllOilSTlll TIOlll • IOI IUTT1llll GISTMI FA._ WVllll IMRE llAOlll IGUI. II.mt .IEWBAT 'lllAnlltl *** . l,tUllDllEO$ llf' UllTll ICllllCE, JEWEUl'I MllEllAL a FOSIL llllPUH 1 ' Mirf ~n iran~i II h~in~ Jam1i ~aan SHOWS DAILY AT: 12:3Q -3:30 7:00 & 10 P.M. EXCLUSIVE ORANG! COUNTY ENGAGEMENT HOLIDAY MATINEES SAT.-SUN. & TU!S HELD OVER .. llLAT li:\i3'll 6TH SA~" GREAT '"UtlLYAlllN ; ·; WErK ....... w, ..... ..._....,...~·-"' _ ... , .......... _ .. '-:'"'_,,,_ -u... .... _,_,.w.,___ • PG T.aw.icolor" ' ~ 2n4 TOP ATTRACTION' ' RUTH G'OOR:ON ' ~ BUD CORT IN '~tr . ~' '~ .i ~-.... ,, ...... . . 2ND GREAT COMIDY IO&HOPl ~ JACKIE GlfASOHI "MOW TO COMMIT MAlRtAtl , IPG) ·' ·' .. •: ' '" • :.-. · .. ' ., . i l ' • • " • ! • • • • • • • l • ! . I! I • s ; .. 11; • •• ' '-.. IOI G • ~: r·" f-Tlleater Note• ~ Corned to Make ' • !"Southland Run ' • • • l • ·- By TOM TITUS 01 IM oa11y •n.. ll•ff Soon -very 500n -Or1n1e. ~unty comtnunlty thuters llf• (oiftl to be Inundated wtth ~uctlons of the ju1t·relea1-~ comedy "Forty Car1ts." 1~u11 be able to catch ll In Costa Mesa, Laiun1 Beach or ~Jlerton, t .. But If YOU Juat cani Wilt, GI' want to tet 1..Mad atart on the pther pl-por1. ti.. Lona }Jeach Community Playhouse ~ unveiliftl its vtn.ion of J1y Alltn 'A M1y·Dtcember special RUs weekend with two PASI ,&ners of the DAILY PlLOT J>btin1uished Pufonnance f'.ward heading the cast . ; Ralph R ic hmond and Barbara Crooker. who earned Eir DPs for ''Th~ Lion in nter" 11nd "Catrh ~1e If Ynu an" at LAgun1 and Lido Isle, i_:upectivtly. are te1med in tfli Long Beach comed v under th.t direction of John Wllll1ms. The show opens Friday night fOr !!Ix weekends. : Others in the "C1r1t1" cast We Harold Cannon, Gilhl'rt1 Causey. Mar11ret Ot1n. Mike l)tson, Donni Griffith. Jirnmy )J:art. Alvetta K1y 1 n d K1thleen Manoy. Perform1nce1 wlll be t:iven l'rid1v11 and Sa turdavs 1t •::ro tllrouR:h Aug. 5 at the Com· rounity Pl11 yhoust, 5021 E. N1ahe im St.. Lone Be1ch. f\eservations: (213 1 431.0538. * , Two more weekends remain for the stylized musical "Dear Ernest" at the Laguna r.joulto n Playhou9e w he re performances have been cut hick to Frid1ys and Saturdays oii.Jy throuJ{h July 8; : Frances Rafferty Baker and rlcris Shields are teamed in ' ditectorl1I 1lots 1 for t h e Laguna production. w h i c h featuru Jim Sl1u1hter. KM Kornw•ibel . Cheryl Boyd llld NIJ1CY Bond. Character roles are pJayed by Joe Wilson, Olive Riches, Paul Teschke and Miss Shields , who replaoes Blanche.Mickelson. CuNln time ii I : II wetk"l'f! al !lit playhouse, IOI Locu!o• Canyoo Road. Laguna Beach. llltservatiON 494--0743. * Coming to a close th is weekend is the second pro- ductlnn of the Fu11erton Civ ic Llfht Opera Companv. "Man of LI Mancha." with final performances scheduled for Friday and Saturdav evenings. Directed bv Grif Duncan. the "Impossible Dream'' mu_!ical features John Wood . Jtn Dunca n and D 1 v e M11cKain in the three major roles . Cost.a Mesa's Don Rhoades portrays lhe inn· keeper. Performances are gi ven at 8:30 in Fullerton High School's Plummer Auditorium, Cha~ man ind Lemon 1treets, Fullerton. Reserva tions 87~ 1732. * Alao closing this weekend Is the Garden Grove C i v i c Theate r production of Edward Albee 's .1962 drama "\Vho'~ Afraid of Virginia W()Olf?" under the direction of 'Arvid Malnaa . Performances are given Friday and Saturday al 3,30. John Craig, Linda Kruop. Jim Williams and Dolores Gitz comprise the ca~! of the show at the Lyceum Theater C of Pacifica High Schoo 1 • Lampson .11.nd Knott avenues. Garden Grove. Reservations &33-67Jt. By VERNON SCOTT octan if I C111 find it." she • ·• aaid . "Until 1 do I'll be :JIOLL YWOOD (UPI\ !laying at a hotel on the 'ntat little teenBger on the tild beach." "Ponna Reed Show" is rwiw 28 "I don't know what I'll do yt&r1 old. beautiful and' about when 1 come back t 0 tq-:·coatar in 1 new t~levlsion Callfornia. Look for another •ties. house or an apartment, I _?fer name Is She 11 e Y guess. ~bare•. If the name sounds It's not impossible tJaat Shel· familiar it's bec1u1e her aunt ley would choose to ~emain in !W• Nanette . Fthray, wbo H ·· 0o· ~-h 1wa11. " 1n1 a iea t ere ~ed her ny'lt for proles-is sort of a vacation ~d work al nuens ·long )*ore-combined . The aetenity i.5 S"lley tumtd -actlnl. 1amething I've nevet ~wn in e'Viewera ·witched Shelley Hollywood." pow from age 4 to 1, on the Anothu facet ~f I i Ce dlfunct Donna Rttd family unknown to Shelley i.s'Children. t,Ju1tion aer111. Never hiving been I mother, ~ an aduJt ahe will pl1y 1 or spent much tim• 1mona Mvlct pediatrician in "The children. Shtlley wlll be aur- Lfttle People" which stirs rounded by smallfry in "The Btian Keith who alsn plays a Little People." ... ' Archie Bunker-Red, White, Blue Author .• ENTERTAINMENT By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD (AP I -What do Chairman Mao and Archie Bunker have ln common ? Each has his own lhtle book o! sayings. Mao's book ta Red red. Archie's is a patriotic red. wbite and blue. Mao's thoughts are revolu- tionary. Archie's are no less Inflammatory but much fun. nler. "The Wit and Wisdom of Archie Bunker!' new I y but here are a rew &hort ex. kept El eanor. Instead he let he wantl to unpollute. eome- publlshed In 1 paperback by amplea : her run around loose tilt one thln1. let ~"• unpollutt the Popular Libra ry. is a eom· -"Wages ind pricts. It 's day sbe discovered the CO(. movies. All them nudia." pllslioo of Archie's outr11eous what you c1ll you r spiral ored. We never k:ntw they Wit -"It's mom~ li ke thil remarks from CBS' "All ln the stalrc11e." there . She told them they w11 wflt:re lhe onlt thing that Family." -''If you 're gonna have getlin' the short end of the hold• 1 mllril .. logether is The man who gave currency your change of llfr, ha ve Jl 11Uck and we been havUt' trou-the husbaod btln' big enough to "stlne," "dln&bat'' and right now! You got ex1ctly 30 ble ever since." to t lep blqt Ulll lft where hill ... nd h '" -"When I wanna team wile it w-." "meathead" speaq out on seco s ... c anRe. , ---~.,_,·,.....,.__,.-----= sex. race, politics, womens lib -"Well, I'll tell you one about pollution, It won t be.I and many other subjects. th ing about Richard Nixon. lie from no milllontire ac tor wbo't 111uch of the book records keeps Pat hom e. \Vhirh wu got noth ln' to do but sit on hls exchanges between Archie and __ w_h_er_•_R_ooo_s_ev_e_1t_sho_u_ld_h•_v_e_d_u_r_r _• __ nc1_d_r_ea_n_1_u_p_ca_u_s_es_._If other members of the cast, Rose Bowl To Sizzle THE REVOLT OF THE APES I The newest and biggest yeti FOREVER" The world 's largest show of fiftworks takes place July 4 in the Rose Bowl, ~·hen pageant produ cer To m m y Walker pre.sents the "6th An- nual Fireworks Spectacular. · Walker has become in- ternationally famous as a pro- ducer of pre·gan1e and half· time shows at football games including The Super Bowl and Pro Bowl. He has staged enterta inment speclltculars for other famous events such as Ontar io California 500; grand opening of London Bridge at Lake Havasu and most recently Trans po 72 in Washington, D.C., and was former director 0 r en-- tertainmen~ for Disneyland. ---CtNIOOMI ?O " .... -.,···-."I'" L..:. • ""'-"-ZA SUITE" l!lclnlw• Of'•n,• CMnty llle11"°" S.at 1'111 .. lrMlll lrllfnlMIH fir I AcM1my Aw1rtt1 "flD,DlElt ON THli 111001'" ----";~\ Sr4DtUM ·? . .. ~;-"Tf"Y--~-~ ---:-. SrA01uM 0.1 I '."1' a ,· ·- - "•OX CAR IERTHA" Clli wltll ,,,_,,, H1rt111y , .. ''lOlf CONVICTS & A WOMAN" !II) "SHAl'TS llG Seo••" • "GIT CA.llTlll" "DUCI(, YOU SUCl(IJll" • "CHATO'S LANO" THE1 -GRADUATE fllMID llY!HI COlLIGI 2o ,, __ _ NATIONAL GfN1RAr THf4TRES .,.HI, OTHll" ,,.., ontheRPo on the screen 15th SMASH WEEK! Uno rad Art1sltl "TH• LAST ,.ICTUll:• SHOW'" 1111 ___ ..... "I N•V•ll So\H• 'Oii MY 'ATH•ll" 1111 l (ll$01 !Ill ll~ .. 1 £~ •ll(I~' 10• Ofll(I OFINllOO ·f00 1 ~ "40N !LJ(I llf!Jl:l .100 ,.,.,.10 ll0.1 0¢J "' fRIOl1 1,lOIAI l ~~ roo 41! ''° ,.l lN'' Sean Cannery ... "FIST FULL OF DOLLARS" Cll11t Emtw-4 loth !GI Iott. c.ior "DUCK • • YOU SUCKER Un1tellll A1'111t1 wltfri Jo1M1 C1b11r• 011111 loll Stel,et' Slrlowtlmff 7:00 c11ul 11 :01 -Al•- "Chato's Land" ., .. CllorlM ,,. ..... Jack Pela11ca t :21 Co•tlllt1M1 -11111. Mat. J:OI .. , ulAHI (Hllrr DtlYl·lll "GCIDFATNER" (R) ·frl.& Set.l oll & 11••'.M. ptiiatriclan 11 well 11 her "The kids I'll ht working "•Cit>o~c-.. _,_,...,_.,L_ __,,.,,._ ~ f~er. with are marve lous." she said. ,,..--~·~"'!iiii""'ii';,.,;.j~.i'ii',.ii"ii'" ;;· -iiiiiii•i"lliii-~-~·!....,~'~";;;;;;I l'i:1~~~;J~~;Jq~qC~C~?CQ.~~~~~l!~~'.jl-'.~~~~~ ~ rar 11 Shelley is con-.. And m1ybe it's just 11 well . CO·HIT I that i don't know too much CO.Mlfl co:HI TI ~Del\ ·Ille fringe benefits of about ·'il"··n •·cause I'll •-"lllltll CUCKOO" .I "HAMMllSMITH tJti series tlmOlt outwel1h Ul w~ uo: L>'C t-:1:.~~~~·• "ME, uTALIE" (PG) ISOUT" tl(l lhow ittrelr -thty are U!e -~·~ped-i•_11_1c_1_•n_-_1_·u..,ll_llar_u_·ng.Jl.J~~"~l·~"'~~,~~~~~~·~·~·~~~-~· ~·~-~·~"""~,~~ fdna•• on the pelrft trees in ' out. J:iWill where tht NIC 1trif!:' • .au be filmod tntlrely on loc•· I t.i&n. r Berore t accepted the role I ti.ad to consider spending sir $nths of t.ht year in Oahu." 5'1d Sbell•y. "Then I '"nt out tt Utt i1J1nds to make the pilot film and my mind w1s ~d• up. •'The buuty of the place. tie water 1nd the 1Un1tts did It; ~-'If you're 101111 to be tied to 1 aeries. I c1n 't think better place to work." elley i1 unmarried and I ahious to sltrt work -Ind p~y in Hawail. She 11 sellinl htr home in Beverly HUia and .;JI abop around for an 1p1rt- ft$int 111 tht isl111d1. ~·1 want a place r!fhl on the .. tickets ' ~• ~~~~ ~. !or Clllldy'• llnt ..,. ance at the Holly"'°" t WU lllllOUllCtlf by the M1 .. 1tm•nt Ccrp\r•· ti Colldy11 p1r1011I 111nt1U~ta. l2-yior-okl1 rocordin( and sty ol ABC ~ton "Tho Pa rt r I d1e Fimlly" wUI make hla only Solltbtrn C•lllornla ap-' pearance lhlt year at tbe !owl •l ;l :IO p.m. oo Jl'rlday, A111. 4· •• fhe you~perlonnv, who 111, llvo p ~ Utd six pld 11J!tle1 ~ 6-odl~ 1r!JI budllno tllt -allow !hot won hlm rave ' reviews In a oo!Hut M1dlltln S q u t r 1 Clnlen c:<JllWI In New York earlier Ulil year. bl II • MGM -. :srwrs 113 scmr · s-. RO-INID IO.NlrlEE · c..s..;.,, MJ5ES G.W ~ br ENST TIJ'llMN · s..i U>m 0-'c.-! br EJlt>.t5T TIMMN l\ocl.ooj b; t1000 LEWIS ..d ENST Tll'lWIN · ll.ttod br GQlli(:N AARICS '-'£TROCOOI AANAVISO-io • " 41 ... CALL THIA 11111 PO•Ce-IHT A••OUCY I . r , ......... ·-··-ISl·fOIJ ttllll,'11 &U.COlfffAMY ..... .., ... or nv1111"' 111 + "'WtlD COllTll'" I I • • . • • Wtd,,.14'7. June 28, 1'72 . 2 DOOR HARDTOP , I sfiield, power $'rff disc br•kes, •ir condi- tioning. I lJSIH 1617221' •.-,:SAVI -elff "Whlow Sticker ""' Tex & Llc•nH BRAND NEW 1972 'TllJNDERBIRD 2 DOOR HARDTOP Air ccand., vinyl roof,_ 'MiCheJin _steel belted r•di•I W,SW, power side ~ind. Power 6 w1y 1eet, tinted 9l•ss, duel speakers f2J87N· 107567 ) .SAYE Off WIMew Sticker "us Tax & License $1627 '69 '69 FORD Chev. Y2 .Ton GALA.XIE 500 Formet t door PICKUP S '"k •"'II h1rdtoo, •• ,, •• , ,,,.,.· •• 1••• · 1... ~ .. , rildlo, "' -. t>Nltr, I fl. bid. L.ow mil• 1 :r l!r, radio, hteltr. IWAZ· •II•· (22'901!) • •1377 s1· --- '67 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN. V.f, 1ura. lrlltlS., rldlo .. llttlltl'". ITYT· ''" sa77 '64 CHRYSLER '65 MUSTANG Vt, Auto. Tr•R$~ Rtdlo. HNI- If, (SCV '"l s795 '71 VEGA Auto. Trtnl., Rtdlo, Heiler, Low Mllt1111, Nkt Ai Ntw. (lOf CXVl s19.95 2 DOOR SPORTSROOF " 351 dlO 2 V V-8, cruis.-o, vinyl roof, wide ovel belted whitew•Ns, Jower steering & front di1c br~es, •ir con ., redio, dhc belts, Mech I sport interior option, tinted 9lus. I 2FOSH20299 I SAYE Off Window Sticker Plu1 T•x & License TODAY'S SPECIAL BRAND NEW 1972 ·.TORINO ., 2' D• ;(,R HARDTOP· ' . . ' Cruiseom•tic, power sf•eri.ng, radio, tinted 9l•ss, belted tires, l2A25l24042l $PECIAL Plus Tu & LlcenN '71 '71 CAPRI DATSUN PICKUP 111d CAMPER ' 111ted, radio, hHttr. t» ' SpHd, ~lo, HHltf, Spot. OBUI ttu, Loi:tl t OWM!". (nP 8ZVI , ~f77 T2~2J5 '69 '69 AMBASSADOR SST · CHEV. Fac:totr Air Conclillonl119, F~ll IMPALA. Cus1'0m CPt.. VI, .._, l -Mlltt, llkt N ... I ilUIOIMllc tr-., flckH''f t lr, , • p0wer 11etrlng. rfflo, -'sj.595 ·52195· '67 '66 PONTIAC FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE STAT IOI-I. Vt, H !Qm&llc lr1n1ml11lon, Radio, Hffter, Po~r SIHr· ll!Q, Air (ond,, (TFC 117) LEMANS CP.t. AlltOm&lk Tr•nt., Poww Slftrlng, R.c!lo. HMltr, !WFW ;IOf) s995 • ' ' . .,.BRAND NEW 1972 TODAY'S SPECIAL BRAND NEW 1972 3fa. TON SPTS. CUSTOM. • CAMPER SPECIAL Air Conditi~ning .~:,.~~~;"~h."J.:::'.'';, $. 3 7 9·9 Str., T/gl•u. HD tll'ff · I F25YRN42212) + hi & llcenie · TODAY'S SPECIAL ' BRAND ·NEW 1912 3A TON1 4 WHEEL DRIVE HARD TO FIND · sports<ustom $4299 fully loadtd (F26YRE05371 ) - + t•x & llcenH . j , ' -. !&& t:.ODAY',S SPECIAL BRAND NEW 1972 FOJID Y2 TON PICKUP H'""Y duty front & rear springs, · whllewaU 11,.,. lF10~RN80164J SPECIAL TODAY'S SPECIAL BRAND NEW 1972 FORD 3A TON PICKUP 360 V-8, optional ratio rear ail•, . •'""Y duty 11r., f FZSYRP24258 J SPECIAL • I ' '67 M'AYERJCK FORD W BUG: l"TERNAf IOHAL 1') TOH P ICICVP, Rtdio •nd heal«. (L.cllS..I s477 '64 BUICK 2 Dr. w.i. t-u'°""'_llc lrtns., 'i jjj5 IT'1TIOH WAGON , (SIP 49) s '65 ' lTD .. Rtdlo, Hteltf', t..tw Mltts.'IWAF "1J . ' SCOUT PICI( Q ... COIOOMJ' ~695 . '64 CHEV. ~ .. :--•• . . . .. • .•. •••• .. ... •• jl • ...... . .. ' ·:;:. :~-. •• :.. • r· -.- ' ' I Dr. s..i.11. VI, llllOINllC , trtnt., rfdlO, Mlllf. flXO. J.: lit) ' 1 '• . . • / I • .. • operat peek are th But rives, tried howev me Sm ordina ess, b effort. di ti and l.t ing fis Any be us • I I . -t t ' • . . -t ' ' r \'-t / I • • I + + 1 ' • 1 \ \ • -+ / operationS , in your 1 kitchen except to peek and taste -all he's Interested in are the tasty results. But when outdoor-grill"°°king time ar-. ' nves, he's up and i;eady. H he hasn't • tried smoke cooking on Ute grill, however, hfus ready for an exciting new method. ; I . Smoke · . 1s ttifterent from, ., ordinary gr Cookiii . It la.a 'slower proc-"' ess, but the results ere worth the added effort. Cooking with smoke adds ad- ditional flavor and an alluring aroma, and lt is especially ippropriate for cook· ing fish and shellfish. Any outdoor barbecue with fj hood may I/' used. With the ~ the beat Is above u well u below foOd > It ' should bl lept moderate :to w, del!0'1ifutl on the ' food and the teclllil'. Wei bardwoOd chip1 , over the l)eated cet\unic tiles (electric<[ l(al grill>) or ovf!r' the glowing charcoll lower the temperature and produce the smoke. (Use an oven t'hermometer with a charcoaf grill.) I ' ' FISH-VEGETABLE MEDLEY. 2 pounds fish fjllets, fresh« frozen 2 teaspoons "'\~ , · l/c tea~n ~ ·• ' ~ 2 cans (Ill ounces each) devlled ham l can l"""'EE"), e poqtou, drained l can ~pound) leonlolll, drafoed 1 box ii tro&en mixed garden veg es 1 can !0% s) ton<len!ecf <!Dn\ato sou • < -~ / I + • ~ \" \~ . I + 1 1 I ' . ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor WtdM ... J, .IUM .. 1J11 PIH JI Desse·rt I) Thl.s year our country celebrates Its · !!16th birthday with a four-day weekend for most , provifilng a Iellure time for plc- nics and barbecues so appropriate to a happy Fourth of July. For one such picnic we've created, for you to dyplicate, a majestic cake in the shape of the AIJ\ericall ~le )o star at any party you may IJe,planriing. EAGLE CAKE . 2 packages (181Ai ounces each) yellow . ca.ke mix. 4 eggs 21Ai cups water 2/S cup well drained cranberry-orange relish 2 tablespoons rum flavoring 2 cans (16 'k ounctS each) vanilla frosting l can (8 ounces) jellied cranberry sauce Combine cake mixes, eggs and water and beat unlll smooth. Fol~ in reliah and rum na,•oring. Spread batter evenly into 2 greased and floured. 13" by 9'' baking pans. Bake in a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees) 'forAO !o.45 minutes. Remove cake from p&ns and ·cool on a rack. Place % catei on-a ,boircJ:,side by side with 9 incb·sides togep>er .. Make a paper pattern of an eagle.. with spread wings and place it on cate! CUt around pattern using a llillrp·Jmlle . Use cake trimmings to cut pieces for tail. Frost top and sides of eagle with 1 frosting. Unmold cranberry sauce and \ cut into ~-inch thick lengthwise slices. Using a cookie cutter cut cranberry stars aod place,on wings of eagle. Using a sharp knife cut cranberry arrows and place over tail of eagle. Chill until ready to serve. Serves 1% tp 14. _ • • PICNIC BARBECUED CHICKEN LEGS 1 can (8 ounces) cranberry sar.ice 14 cup soy sauce 1i2 teaspoon garlic powder Juice of 1 lemon 12 chicken drumsticks Saft and pepper 12 slices bacon bifle cranberry saw::e, soy sauce, p powder and Jemon juice in a Sa an on top of grill and simmer 5 l1ll es or until smooth. Sprinkle chicken with salt and pepper and wrap each drumstick. with a slice of ba"", fastening ends with a toothpick. Brusli with cranberry mixt~. Place on grill a incl\es above gray coals ·and llroil' ... slowly. Brush frequently with marinade. ' Tum drumsticks often to permit even , browning. Keep a sprinkler b!>tUe of water bandy for putting out small.· flares when fat from bacon dripo on coalJ. Serves 6. ' 2 tabl f JIJ!c9 'lbaw · • cut Into ae.-.ihg-1ire poilJ?"'i CUI plocea hea-q-duttV' .1 , r · a[nrnin.... loll, ~· by U incheo , Gruse JlPtll<, l'!I'<• U.h. on each of foll . wfllj salt•-..i peppor Sprea Mviled.~-... .., ,~.·-· '-~ piece . lfsb. plvlde rem ln-IJOillen a8y ,.,.,ng the ages <I. !lib, us tile r;lasl. Br tbe loll up .,... the and I the by making double Ida In loll to confine )he ;Julces. 5 ~Oil the grill !Jr .. the ... o..t Ii• en degrtfl F., for II mlnu~ pa ~ ges by cutting 1 crlac II 1'!fle lciPlii each package •It! !aid the ~umie cooking for 10 to IJ los r or until the llsll flakes ea U# Wbori sled with a fork, and Ille · lacndlellb bare 1 smoke Davor. M.-1••• SMOKI COOUllk AH IXCITING NEW MITHOD • ' • " • Star-spang e~ •• Home News and View s Ads Color Taste By DOROTHY WENCK ' Or11111 (91,1•tJ Him• AdYl11r "What is there to drink?" Are ypu plagued by this question from your thirs- ty children·all summer long? And what Is your answer? Do you send them to the water faucet? Orcdo you pro- vide a , variety of C?Jored sugar·~ate:t dtinks-:car bonatt!<I • and non-carboltated.? Or do You try . to give your ctilldt'e~ • •something to drink that has more nutri- tional value than sugar? -Let's look at these choices .. "First ol all, there's water. It can be a real thirst quencher, especially when served cold or iced. Yet we've been so brainwashed by TV and other advertising that we tend to think that only soft drinks will answe1-.oilr peed· ' You will do ~ children a real service II you help' tllem learn not to expecl a colored, fl8.vored drink every ~e they're thirsty. . ' One woman found her presthooler was perlectly happy with water if she added a little foOd coloring. It was the idea o! colored drink, not the taste, that appealed tq him. Colored ice cube!! are another way to ser;v,e water that~appe~s to kjds. 1 . Most o( the woolen I-talk to know that soft drinks are nothing but high-priced ; fizzy, sugu water. So inatead they buy the canned, frozen or powdered 0 fruit drink" producls for thirsty children. A more nutritious choice !or our thirsty children would be true unswee tened frult juices (not "juice-drinks" which are onlt. about 35 percent juice or "blends'' whk!&. are 70 percent Juice). ...,; Best in !ood value are c i t r flt: julce~range and grapefruit-foll by • tomato jufce and pinea~le ju Lemonade is high in sugar but does. h.,.. slikhtly more nutr iti ve value than tht ''drink" products . Other favorites-apple juice. grape juice and cranberry juice-drink-havt very Uttle food value outside o( tht natural sugar they contain even thougli they may ~ 100 percent juice. ~fathers think Jt is costly to se rve 100 percent juices such as orange or grapefruit to their children. ijut when yo1.t te$1y g~t down to comparihg jl'ices and· see/how little actual Juice tou get in tho seemingly low cost drinks )'OU Can see that the straigllt juices give you a mu~ better value. ~: And if you want a drln,k: product, yotf can make your own !or1a1,l~ lesa money ... For example, mix t{,g~r 3 cups of' orange juice (or other Juice) with 3 cupi of water, Ve to % cup sugar or syrUP; from canned fruit and 1 tablespopn l1mon iiliG<. . . ·Or make one or 'the 1 unswee:~ned Ji<>wder<cf pacuge drink mf>ea for color and flavor and use half orange juice and half water for the liquid. Add just enoUil! sugar kl sweeten. " I QUESTIONS WE ARE A•tn , Thtly .seem to think these offer better nutrHJon than '°n drinks because there may be "°""' fruit juice in them . Words on the label such rui 11vltamln c added" also tive them the Idea that the produc\ js worthwhile nutritionally. . However, anyone who reads the latle\s on these "drink" product1 soon realizes that they are buying (liated on the label in order of importance): (1) water, (2) sugar in canned drinks: and ( 1) sugar, (l) water In iro.en drinks; and (I) supr, (2) fl avorings In powdered producls (unless you add your own sugar), Q. My children donl drink much ml~ . at mealtime so I try to flfve them milt- ' drinb for snacks instead of soft drinl!s ~ fruit drinks. But they're getUng tired fl plain milk and really tunied olf by ltj; Accordift to FoOd and Drug regula· tions, these "drink" products need not have any !ruit juice in them at all! SOme do have Julee, as lfsted on the label, but usually iL makes up Jesa than 10 percent of the total product. The "vitamin C added" on the label II Just a gimmick. The amount 11 small-and lt'• 1 blgh !l'lced vlay to gtt vitamin C. We'•• been lold by a manufactUttr that the can oosts more than the colored sugar water ingredients m tbe canned 11drink" products. • Any suggestions? • A. You're wise not to overdo the plaltl milk for snackJ because, u you say, kl can get'"turned off" i( you push too hard. For some variety you might try makfn&.. "milk punch" using a package oi, powdered flavored drink mil:, supr to l~!nsti~~ed ~:ia1~~11k0[, ,~':!J . pensive Ind lower lo lat and <aloriH) • Kids enjoy "strawben7 m ti k , '~ ••raspberry mJJk/' ••Ume milk," "black cow" (rootbeer mil k). Peanut but· ter milk (2 tabl!llpoona smooth pc· butter, I tablespoon sugar per. '"" of milk) Is a VtrT nutrWoua snack milk. S. is molaaos milk with a tablespoon or two of molusea iD I &Jass of milk. • . . \ .>l'.f DAllY PILOT Thursd:iy, Ju11t ~. llJ 12 'Priority of r "male Studies BJ CAJ\OL MOORE month seminar '•Crisis : OI' .. Dtllf' """ lltH Lucklly 'Lt!cllle K u e h n believe11Dcon1 true t l v e change. >.. aulstaot to the vice chancellor for st.udeQt affairs at UCI, she knows of .. the dtarth of role modtll for women atudents," wblch ahe al!rtbutto to dl.lcrlmJ .. uao in employment, pro mot Ion , lfOduate llcllool admlJsion re- qulremen!J, financl1l aid, CUI" rlculum llld !eel< ol ~ c.n. "Granted, funding alwa ys is crilical in educa tion. Bui It's a matter of prloritit~. fl.tore than half our students are women," she said. ''It's a disservice not to allocate rUQ.urces for an absolute academic integrity." Women In JJJgher F.ducation" sponsored by the U.S. Office of EducaUon last year and was chosen to direct one of three regional conferences. 11 lt's not that department chairmen and administrative ofrlcets are not men of good will. They are creaturu or habit, long dominated by th!J male value system. privileged. under-represented, under-funded minority jnd we have all the rllaructeris- tics. "We should seek educatlon that is rel evant for our Jlfe ex- perience. That's why the ex· tended university concept is !O great for the mature woman with an incomplete BA or a change in career direction." "Uolvtraltlu are dealped alter I 12th ctnllUy Euro)1Wl petttm for monast.lc mates," alle 111d. Siio tried lo fill the (Ip by tuclling two inltrdJJclpllnary COUl'lel, Women in Culture l1ld womt11 in IJt•oture fer free but p ve that up when funding was refused for a 1ec. md year. MRS. GOLGART WGH POPULARITY ''My claa,es were oversubscribed b'y both men arid women and received the bightst possible co u r a e evalW1tion from participating studtntl." Courses in female 11tudles hlYe IJ'OWl1 from 20 to 600 na- Uonwfde in the lut two )'tart and sOme colleges (Sarah Lawrence, C&mbridge -God- dard, San Francisco State and Douglas Unlvtrl!ty) of le r degroes in that mojor. To effect more changes, Mrs. Kuehn attended a one- MRS. JORGENSEN Preferring to be positive. Mra. Kuehn chose ''Challenge : Women in Education" as lhe theme (or the Ses!ions this week at UCJ which have at- tracted 46 educational ad· mlnlstratorr from across the country. CET RESULTS Sbt bop<s lh<ae de<islon- maker1 will revamp where l1eees!al'Y to make campuses more relevant and inspiring for women. "Since Oberlin in the late ls:M>s, colleges have admitted women -but to male-oriented courses in work-world subject matters taught by men," Mrs. Kuehn aaid. MRS. POLLOCK "Jn recent years, students or both sexes have demanded more relevance in educaUon. Unfortunately, most women are not aggressive enough In their protesting." She explained with aome frustration the federal priority given to AHinnative Action ( non· d1acrlminatlon) for women in higher education. CUT SHORT "We were supposed to have seven institutes reaching 315 educators but our budget was cut so drasUcally we're only having three seminars for 120 and practically bootlegging that. "Wome11 are the most under- MRS. J. R. HALL She cred its Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. for being almost unique in the Universi- ty of California system for establishing an adviso ry com- mittee on the Status or Women and appointing a woman as assistant chanceUor for ad· ministration. MORE IMPETUS "His attitude and attempts at implementation are very advanced," she said. "It's a matter or pulling the rest of administration along with him. MRS. GOLDSBERRY Brides Continue Wedding Procession GOLGART· HENDERSON St. Joacllim'1 C 1 I ho 11 c Qwrcb, Colla Mesa WBJ the •!ting for the wed d Ing ceremony 1lnklng Cheryl L,... Hencleraon l1ld DaMy Lee Golglrl. '!be Rev. Donald Kribs dlrtcled the vow exchange for the daU(hter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce Htndmon of' Newporl Beach and the -of Mr. l1ld Mn. Berl R. Goliarl of Huntington BeaCb. Attending the bride \ffl'e Miss Kathleen Schaaf as maid Of honor and the Misses Linda Henderson and Beverly Braun, bridesmaids. Kim Junkins was the flower girl and Nicky Henderson, ring bearer. Dennis Henderson served as best man and ushers were Cary Rende and TtlTY Cicero. The newlywedJ , who will reside in C.O.ta Mesa , are graduates of Newport Harbor Jllgh School and ati<nded Orange Coast College. JORGENSEN· ltRUTSCHE Following • Lake Tahoe honeymoon, Huntington Beach will be home for William Kim Jorgeneen and his bride, the former Linda Diane Brutsche who were married in Christ Lutheran Church, Costa Mesa. Their parenu att Mr. and Mrs. Marcel Brutacbe and Dr. and _ Mrs. Jack Jorgensen of Hunllllgton Beech. Matroo of honor was Mrs. Jerry :Srutsche , and brldesmaldl were the Mmes. Jt1TY Hicbes, Don a Id Brutsche and John Jorgensen and the Miap Susan 5um- men, Jodie Jorgensen and Lexie a,.l Cay Schmldl. John Jorgensen was the best man, and ushers were Jerry and Donald Brutsche, Steve Roberson and Roger Van Hook. Flower girls were Karen Brut.sche and Jeanette Jorgensen, and R o n a I d Brutsche served as r i n g bearer. Both the newlyweds"" are graduates of California State University, Long Beach. She majored in sociology and he in psfcbology. They will reside in Huntington Beach. POLLOCK- BICKELHAUPT Gina Bickelhaupt became the bride of Tyler C. Pollock of Newport Beach during ceremonies conducted by the Rev. Or. Charles Dierenfield in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. The bride, daughter or Mr. and Mn. Jess L. Bickelhaupt Jr., was attended by Miss Erin Fontana and Miss Jill Paulin. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Pollock of Huntington Beach, a s k e d Ronald Bertram to be his best man. Ushers were David Bickelhaupt Jr., Donald Stich and Jerry Roche. The bride is a graduate of Ed ison High School, Hunt- ington Beach and attended Orange Coast College, where her husband graduated. He is a student at California State University, Long Beach. HALL-BUTIERWICK First United Me I hod i st Church, Costa Mesa was the setting for the double ring ceremony linking D e b r a Jolaine Butterwick and Jack Randall Hall. The Rev. Richard J. Dun1ap directed the vow exchange for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Butterwick and the son of Mr. and f\frs. Jack D. Hall, all of Costa Mesa. Bridal attendants were Miss f\tary Prochaska, maid of honor and bridesmaids were the Misses Jean Chambers, Susan Fuller and Kristin Lin- coln. James Lincoln was the best man : Mark Pickrel, hfat- thew Waidelich and Jay But- terwick were ushers, and Wesley Butterwick was the riilg bearer. The newlyweds, who will reside in Santa Ana, are graduates of Costa Mesa High School and studied at Orange Coast College. She Is a graduate of a dental assisting school. GOLDSBERRY-RENFRO First Christian Church of Fountain Valley was the set· ting for the vow exchange of Melody Renfro and Edward L. Goldsberry. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and hfrs . Roy L. Ren- fro of Huntington Beach and htr. and ~!rs. H. E. Goldsber- ry of Pueblo, Colo. Officiant was the Rev. Arthur Reese. Honor attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Larry D. GoldsbelTJ'. Bridesmaids were the Misses Marta McClung, Catherine Byrne, S h a n n o n Palmer and Lisa Schwarzkoof. Julie Schwarzkopf was the flower girl and ushers were Wayne Christianson and Michael Howard. The newlyweds v;ill reside in Clovis, N.M. SIAMAS-FULLER Grandview Presbyterian Church, Glendale was the set· ling for the marriage linking Sandra Lou Fuller and John Stephen Siama.s, both of Berkeley. ' Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Fuller of Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs. John Siamas of Hidden Hills. The Rev. Dr. Melville -i Willard, brother-in-law of the bride, of£iciated . Mrs. Margaret Wooster was the matron or honor and bridesmaids were ~f a r i I y n Andersen, Katherine O'Reilly, Ann Harmsen. Anita Siamas, Vicky Siamas and K e 11 y Nessen. Kristen Willard was the flower girl. Brock Gowdy served as best man and ushers \Vere Tom Sa nford. Dave Pearse, Paul Hoff. Nick Bre:-eton, Jeff Siam.as and Carl Stoney. Following a Hawaiian honeymoon the bridal couple will reside in San Francisco. The bride earned a degree in · history at the University ()f California, Berkeley. Her hUs.. band is a UCLA and UC al- umnus. lie ;, a practicing tl- torney. . - Need~ Boosting' We shouldn 't need outside bll stick.I or enforcement for tn. ner convictions." atron1 ldvocate for ftmlnlnity : appolnlte to Orllli• County'• "Women ahould be women, Grand Jury, Juvtnlle Jusllct not modeled after men. 1be Co!TllllUsion and ht e n t • l differences are precbls and Health Advisory B o a rd • beau!Uul but no baala for minority community lla119n Sometimes legal action i1 rt· quired such as a clus acUon suit filed by the League of Academic \Vomen 1n Berk.ftey. • While seeking 0:nly pro- cedural change, rather than punitive damage! or back pay, the group has filed affidavlt.t documenting discrlminAtlon In emplo y ment for both academic and non-academic faculties, in recrulttng, pro- motions and salaries. discriminatory treatment. and pro1ram coordinator (or BOTH HAPPY Unlverslly Exltn11\>"- .1Let'a wipe out the old myth • Naturally, she con.alders lt of choosing between 1 job or vltol for women to be 1tn domesUcity. The sum 11 politics In order to, 1•t IOCjjll greater than the parts when refonn and a 11 o c a t e d both the man and woman are reJOUrtea. , fulfilled.'' "lt'1 been hall • centUQ' "Women must mak e themselves as bJgbly quallfled as men ," h1rs. Kuehn em- phasized. "l'm a very demand- ing teacher who wants top performance. Women have no excuse for doing a lesser job and that goes for 30 or 31 days of the month." fi.Irs. Kuehn Uva her since women made wavu philosophy of co n t I nu o u 1 blatorlcally lo get the right to growth by lifelong ltiamlng -vote. Unless we speak up, we bacbelon degree in polifica1 woo't get the political and science from University of legal changes to guarantee Minnesota in 1941, JD11ler qu1llty of opportunity. degree ln 1969 from UCI 11I've never been a Llbber. where she is a doctoral can-Bu t the more facts I find out. didate in American history. the more ihlutant I become. In between abe -staff member of the Antl-Defama-There's ao much evidence of At the same time she is a tion League, charter president discrimination that I've learn· of League of Women Voters, ed to speak out." Ann Landers Old Column Stands When She's Floored DEAR ANN LANDERS : Do you ever wonder if your arUcles do any good? It might give you a lift to know that you .saved my life. I was completely shattered when 1 picked up the downstairs phone \nd heard my husband make plans to meet my best fr iend. \Vhen he kWed me good- bye and said, "Don't wait up for me. 1t will be a late meeting," I thought my heart would break. I collapsed in a chair and reached for a book, any book to take my mind off my mi sery. Several of your old columns fell out. I had clipped them from the Akron Beacon Journal . The first column I read was· dated h1arch 24, 1971. It WIS signed, 'Ter- ritorial Imperative." The woman wrote, ''Every man ii vulnerable at .ome Ume during his life, no matter how faithful, I etrong and honorable. The mO!t won- derful husband in the world can have feet or clay .... " I read that column over and over and ov.:r. It was as if someone had pulled the curtains and Jet the sunshi ne in. I told myself I could wait. I prayed for strength and patience. I know for certain he will come back to me one day and when he does I will welcome him with open anns. There must be thousands of women in your reading audience who will be faced \.,..ith this problem sooner or later. Not all of them would choose this alternative. Some will shout, "Why put up with it? J'm going to throw the bwn out!" To those women I say, "Each of us must do what she feels if best for her and her family . I'm dolng what is best for me and mine." Thanks for our wisdom, Ann. You've been a life-saver. -I'LL hfAKE IT NOW DEAR FRIEND: Tbukl for letliq me bow. Write a1ata wltea yoa Uve some good news. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My boyfriend and his parents are planning a cros~ country trip in a traller. He invited me to go along. There would be his parent.I, hit sister, Josh and me. Josh and I are both 17. I asked my folks and they said It would be OK. Now Josh tells me his folks have changed their mlndl. I am v~ry upset. My folks wonder what their reuon was. Should they call' Josh's folks and ask? - DISAPPOINTED DEAJl DIS: No. Jotb'1 folkl ollould Uve cal.led yoar folb and l11ued ~ lD- vttaUoa. Since Ibey Md not, you wert not 1dually Invited. DEAR ANN LANDERS : y..,J<rd1y I was making some P.Jddini for dessert. I ran out of milk. 1h piark_et is about three blocks away. I ~ on a coat and dash<d out to the market. It ,-u about 5 p.m. llld * long !inti -most folks had Iola of (locerits. , I got behind tw6 women who bd J enormous load!. I wailed patlenUy 1111W the nm lady got chocked out and t1i1t1 I topped the .... nc1 ll!dy on the 1houtW ati<l said, "I just hav1 this one tttin1 - wO:Wc.1 you mind letting me through?" She looked at me with fierce: anger in her eyer def shouted, ~l 8in sick of you pushy Jews. Wait lille everybody elle!'• ""' It SO happens that I am not Jewish but ''.'\ that Is'b.slde !ht point. I felt H If I had ~ been 11.,,ped In the face . PltH• com· ment -STILL UNNERVED DEAR STILL: I led IOITJ' flf that woman, U4 otber1 like ber. lftat a torblnd -..... to lie ,. loll of ute. si. mut saffer a grett deal. Don't Dunk your chemistry test. Love Is more than one set of glands calling to another. U you have trouble making a d.latinction you need Ann's booklet, "Love or Su and How to TtD tbe Dilfermee." Send a long, 1tlf-1ddreased, lllmped envelop< with your request and IS ctnle in coin to the DAILY PILOT. • • Summer Book Fun Cataloged . . " It's magic with Chuck Jones Juniors Set Tempo for Clubs Fourth of July festivities whlle others focwi on con· take the spotlight for some tinu.ing projects. Orange Coast organizations, llu."inital, Proceeds will su~ por[ the club's philanthropic fund. will honor one youth or the Harbor Area for outstanding commwl.ity senrice. Passports for s u m m e r adventure stUI are being issued at the Mesa Verde Library, CoslJ M.,a, and the final desUnaUon will be a par- ty Satunfay, Aug. U, Utled Around the World in IO Minutes. Fllma, read-lns and story hours are being featured dur- ing the pusport program. Read-Ins for childnn 1-11 take place Mondays at 3:30, conducted by Miu Lort\ta F1dey. Pll'ticlpanu a r e reading ''lncldent at Hawk's Hill," by Allen W. Eckert. Pm<bool atory boura tek• place Wednesdays at 11 a.m. and Thurad1y1 at 10 Ind JI. Fllms wlll be shown for the lntermedilte rroup 1Satun11y1 at l and S p.m., beglnnln( Juq l l1ld conclucllng AllJ. 5. TV's f1mou1 magic m•n Wh1r•7 Huntington C1nt•r Mill When 1 Thurs-Fri-Sit Jun• 29th-30th.July I 2-1-4-7 pm Thurs-Fri 1-2-3-4 pm s.1. CHARGE? N0-11'1 frH Huntington Center 1t 811ch and Ed inger San Diego Fr11w1y ~~ 2717 E .Co11t Hl9hw1y Coron• Gil Mir-Ph. 67 1-1950 e l•llklnMrlc•rd e Mc11!1r Cll•f'I• :M Y .. " I" SI~ LK1tlfl" SC Juniors South Coast Junior Woman"s Club will be operating a fireworks booth until Wednes· day, July 41 on the parking lots of the Fountain Valley the Store with "Labels of Distinction" 2Sl5 E. Cont Hltllway at MocArt""' lllwd. c.,... do! Mor 67J0 2HO Mid Summer Clearance .DRESSES surrs COATS BLOUSES PANTSUITS PANTS GPWNS LONG DRESSES 1/3 to 1/2 OFF Irvine Jun iors Beginning July l and con- tinuing each Saturday during the month, Irvine J uniors will man a recycling cente r on the vacant lot at Jeffrey Road and Moulton Parkway. C.Ollection will be for old newspapers, aluminum cans . and glass. 'The center will be closed until October, s o members are making a special plea al this time. NB Juniors BSP A patriotic block party and famlly barbecue are pllllllled by Mu Upsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Tuesday, July 4, at the home of Mrs. John Venard, Santa Ana. The barbecue will begin at C p.m.1 followed by a fireworks display . Newport Shores To keep resldenu close tO home, Newport Shores com- munity wiU sponsor several Junior Ebells: of Newport acUvitles of ln\erest 1over the Beach are sponaoring a pro)-Fourth of July. eel. Spotlight an Youth wblcb Starting the holiday will be a will star1 Saturday, July I, parade of decorated blcycl .. , and continue t h r o u g h . led by a Dlxlellnd Banet. In February. the evening famllita will Mrs. James Mears, youth gather at the clubhouse for 1 committee c b a i r m • n , an-picnlc and a three-day ttnnls llOUllCed ••ch month the group tournament will be launched. ....... ....... ··-.. , ....... , 8tPkl9!'y --.. -- , tOSED for 4th of JULY Mon.· Tues. July 3rd and 4th One Of The """'"' Dt11 OptnlfloM In Southtr11 Callfornill RAVIOLI DINNER INCLUDIS SALAD AND GARLIC llRIAD s1· 25 · "'~~"' e TAU OUT ... $1-'1 --7/I U11111tl ,•r~ NOMI MADI BOLOGNA .... "' ANGILA MARIA 9 G8f TOMATOl'ASTI 1w 77- PICI U' 'Am l'UT!lll IHlllf,117 d11l911.4 111411 , ........ ,, ,..1 ..... ~ · Home Mid• HAMBURGliR or HOT DOG BUNS IPL 39¢ , He. 4tt IACH ... Llloll -'/I !l2WNllS , ... 69' I ~:c:.:. f ITALIAN DILl-RllTAURANT-IAKlll'r "ll M11M et Me .. lla Hunllnpn ....... ,. .... .......... ,.... '·' , .. ,. N b f fi p T r e I 0 r I c p 0 q d v ' l • Wtdllf$d.i1, Junt 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 33 Lit~r?ture Reflects Sex Act As a Battle By LAURIE KASPER °' "-°"" ,, .. , llllf ''1u 1·1 t · · 1. J era ure ls ao accurate :1eOeclion of.IUe, lite male and , lomale are enemies and sex is 'lftrlormed on a balllefield. ~1 Practically all w•r It in gs 1.rellect this .!eeling,' according lto Dr. Valerie Levy, as.o;istant ''i>riifessor of English at Pitzer ~liege who lectured with an '"'l!ssociate, Michael ReMer during the UCJ Extension clas~ \:eh A History of Sexual ~1ores '•'Wllb . a talk tiUe of Women's •» ... • View of a Man's View of a Woman's View of Sex, the pair' read selections showing lbe two opposing sides of sex In English and American literature. Literature. Dr. Levy ex· plained, shows the three dtf· ferent parts or sex: image, dominance and contracts and other games. The kinds of images in~ volved in meeting and com- municating with the opposite sex and what kind of roles the person is expected to play are !'¥our Horoscope Tomorrow lllustrattd by t be writ· ten word. FEAR Of ACT Reading part& of James Boswell'• Journal Hl762-6S" and James Joyce'• "Ulysses" the instructors explained bow male and female characters in these novels enjoyed their sex· ual encounters but had a fear of th& act itself, displaying it In tbtir actions and d.iaJosue. In one of the few attempts to talk of sexuality in "Sons and Lovers" by D. H . Lawrenct, one or the women complains that Paul, the primary character. is only in- terested In se:< and oevtr give> anything himself. In lite end of the passage, however, "11he submitted and was silent" Although ii is changing, Dr. Levy said there is a double standard applied to love. To a man. a love affair is an adven· lure. But, she said, "what to a inan may be an adventure may be a sin to a woman." It is, said Renner, like the college coed who asks her and thelr roles are romlng boyfriend, "ls it me you want closer and closer together. or just my body." The boy's there are still fewer female tnswer ls "Wby, it's you of writers than male writers. course." But, said Renner, "The woman Is rulfill~ "that's a lie." biologically," Or. Levy said. For a man It Is a social Renner explained that the status proving his dominance woman does s o m e t hi n g over the female. creative and perinanent in her FEMALE sonN~ intimacy with a no t b e r organism for nine months. A man, Renner said, might !eel that he Is being engulfed SOCIAL CLIMATE by the woman's softness. "A The social climate might nlan's strength and lulrdness also affect a woman seeing is a sometime thlng. A herself as an artist. Dr. Levy woman's softness is always!' pointed out th:it George Eliot Shakespeare. for example, was a woman who may have "focuses on what he feels is felt it would be easier to sell the most important part of a with a man's name. woman -the ability to have "Art is an aggressive thing children." and women are trained not to "' . , Virgo: Maintain Steady Pace Yet, the man still dominates be that way,'' Rennet> said. because he is the one wit-h the Another reason why many money. The woman, however, be that way," BRennersaid . might be tempted to dominate Another reason why many in sex because it can be sold. problems or sex are not dealt r.1,, THURSDA JUNE 29 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Marth 21·April 19): agreements. Mate, partner may be very much involved. Some restrictions are for your benefit. Know it, respond ace ingly, LEO uly 23-Aug. 22): Lie bear fruit. You are rewarded for overtime assignment, ad· ded responsibility. A pp I i e s both to profesisonal a n d personal areas. A c t i v i t y centers around home base. role. Avoid becoming tied Both the man and thl' with in literature, Dr. Levy down with details. Take woman, as the hunter and the said, is that many writers are overall view : see project as a hunted, are acC<lmplished in homosexuals. whole. ' the games people play, Dr. ''Cultural imposition on the IF TODAY IS y o u R Levy said. They illustrated novelist is also very im· BffiTHDAY you are sensitive, this with a section from portant." Renner said. During intuitive, capable of perceiving Pinter's "Homecoming'' in the 19th century, for example, important trends. August is in-which Ruth meets her brother· women were placed on a dicated as an outstanding in-law, who was described as a pedestal and the endings were malh11~ SUMMER SAVINGS FALLS c~~~os $15 OFF! .... it•.ts ft> "'·'' NOW $9.95 to $34.95 AL L DYNEL & KANEKALON WIGS S!Wig .. GyPS11$. Dl;lctt &on, Alro.-FrttOom WI~. ht· SJ4.tl ft> $41.00 Loug. '"°''• Curly, C•1~! , .• , REDUCED!! NOW $4;95 to $29.95 100°/o HUMAN HAIR PIECES Marked Down ! Wiglets 12 01.I -Reg . $11.95 _NOW $1.95 C•scade 13 01.) -Re9 . $17.95 NOW $12.95 Giant Cascade 14 01. )-Reg . S2 I .95 NOW $17.95 AS K ABOUT OUR NEW -COOL - FOR SUMM ER CAP LESS WIGS IN ELU RA FIBER! WIG •nd BEAU TY SALON 250-D East 17th St.· Hillgren Squ.tr• Costa Mesa 541-3446 New friends enter picture Social contacts can be mean: lngful. Bring forth creative re~urces. Tak~ steps which brmg hopes anti wishes into f~s. Stress Original, con- f1den~ approach. Leo figures prommently. low. Let others show their hands. You are subject of fiat· tery. Be discriminating. Perceive motives. Avoid rushing to judgment. Ge mini, Virgo individuals are involved. Change you seek will occur. Don't force it. SAGITfARfUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Fintsh rather than begin ; perceive potential, Ac· cent is on ideal{. which can be developed into viable concepts. Aries individual plays prom· inent role. Your efforts gain wider recognition. Do some month for you this year. You "pimp," late at night. utopia. are not easy to de~ive. but Although the funct ions or Today, however, a Imo st you often do a good job of fool· ~m'_'.e~n~a~n~d~w~o~m~e~n_ia~re~ch~a~n~gi~ng~~"~an~y~t~hi~ng~g~oe~s~.'~' :__:~~~!~=~~=~~~=~~=~~~=~~=~~ ing yourself. You are com·I· pleting a cycle and are on brink of exciting adventure. I TAURUS (April :W-May 20 1: Take direetio~ which Fpells respons.ibiUty. Avoid seeking easy ways. Rise above the pet· ty, Trust hunch. One in com. mand is willing to give benefit of doubt. Know it and make room for Yourself at top. GEMINI (May 21-June 20\: Good lunar aspect now coin· ci.des with personal phiio~phy, travel. the opening of Imes or communication. You move and learn. Your questions can be answered Give full play to intellectuai curiosity. CANCER (June 21-July 221 : Be . thorough in checking details connected with in· vestments, contracts, special VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis is on home, family luxury items. You can bring harmony now where there was fr iction. Taurus and Libra are in picture. Wha t troubled y~ c.ould be erased. Stick to prac- bcal course; maintain steady pace. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You get facts about one who affects you emotion a I Jy. Recognize truth 'vhen you en· counter it. Be creative and selective. Means don't sell yourself short. One w h o !'erates you should be politely 1gnored. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): What was planned now can adW!rtising. \ CAPRI CORN (!Jee. 22-Jan. 19 ): Push ahead with new proj· ect. Money will be forthcom- ing .. Time you r moves. Beat competition to punch. Be con- fident. Original a p p r o a c h To find °"' who's !utkY tor Wiii In l'Jl(llle'f •nd ~Vt, ordtr Sydney Om•rr•s boal!.lel, "Setrtl Hlnll for Min •nd Women:• Stnd b1rTl>d1lf 1nd &S «nls to Omeir As!rol09y $t'reh. the OAIL y PIL01', !lo• n«J, Grind Cen!r•I $1•· !Ion, N.w York. N.Y. 1(11)17, results in profit. Collect and!---------- earn. Don't fall fo r sob story. AQUARIUS (Jan. :W-Feb. 18): Obtain valid hint from Capricorn message. Cycle con- tinues high ; set your own pace. Cancer individaal can help show you the way. Wear bright colors. Be ready for s(>otlight. special appearances. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): Participate in special celebra· tion . Cooperate with efforts group, organization. charitable project. Saglttarian plays key ut E. 1111'1 Siu Hlllgren Sq. '42-54)' Co1f1 MIY VIBGINIA'S SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE 3314 Ea st Coast Hwy. • Corona del Mar Phone 673-8050 KNITS Com• to Vir9ini•'1 for fht 1ndl111 loolu you'll w1nt for sum• m••· Jtr••Y ind poly11t•r knih tnd wov•n1 you could p•ck •t l•sf minul• into • suit c••• fo, • wetk•nd hip or w1•k1 of ""•ctlion in Europ1. S•1 our cl•n pl•it._ in 1••'1uck1r, ch1ck1 i nd 11tip11, 'f'OU ,.n work into outlih' right for •nv occ•• 1ion . Anniversa.ry Cruise St• You Soon! JACKIE \ Mr. and MJ'S. John T. Boyd of Newport Beach cele- brated their 31st wedding anniversary by cruising to Acapulco, Mazatlan and Puerto Vallarta. e IANKAMERICARD e MASTll CHA.RGI " Peering Around ., NEW OFFICERS ol lhe Uni- \lersity of Southern califomia Faculty Wives Club were en· tertained by the incoming pres· ent, Mil. Jack F,. Conley, in Gletkfale oo.he. Among w boatd merfi¥rs r Is Mrs. ed L. Meister of Fountain alley, co1Tespoqcting secre- RECEIVING a I ISO cash ard as a s.Peciai tribute for clllenct in 11ll'Sing skills s Bar~ti Grant or flmrt· on Beach. Presentation s malle during gl1lduaUon te.s a \·California Hospital 1 Nuning and was de the school's alumnae • • 'Jt'"' "71~ /It, , , S~ "P wiJJ,. tk Nell) .eoo1, BE YOUR OWN INTERIOR DECORATOR AND SAVE MONEY ~ Ten Hour B~sic Design instruction includes Maggi Cobb's Key to Interio r RESENTING' lbe • • . Chapter 01 Kappa Design f•t and supplies. Introductory price only $30.00, ta al the &0rorUy'1 / and Convention in rtsm uth, Nin. was Miss ~Garver of Newport ach, 1 student at the o1.v ty of • Southern 0 a. I G speake1 was Mrs. "\i&sJ.rbstfP Franklift, s p • t I 1 J ., I to President Nixon. . ' RT Beach r~dent Id I>. Loc~er .... Ava)table in the Workshop -the latest exclusive decotaior fabria, fu rnlsfl. in,sls and finishing touches. I Store Hours: 9 to 5 -Monday thru Frld.y Moming a'!d Afternoon Sessions Tuesday thru Friday 9:30 to 11:30 a.m • -and 1 :30 to 3:30 p.m. Evening Instruction by special appolnhnent. --1- ' 1 ·i ! ·-. \ • 1 \;. g leaders ol ~~~men Energy who at· 8 ristenlng ctremonles the ew fJ, .. 'r"I 15-1 mil· lpat~ wing 1 t ~lllon" lf4ispltal Medical (Area Code CALL TODAY 673-1722 714) ·f;~· fr~ ~J;:!Zttf_:j~1-~·! ' . - 420 31st Street, New'port Be1ch (on lido Peninsula) ICtl>I«. ~ ... I I • • :Jif DAILV PILOT WHAT ARE PEOPLE ? People are • • • A grade % stµdeot from W o o d I a !\,ii School, Costa Mesa, w~ wrote this letter alter his tour of the Lido Marllet With his: Class: "Dear Mr. Richards, I like the money room. and I like the freezer too. I like you best of all. I like the food so fresh and clean. Have a ruce time being a human been." People ai:e . '. . a phone call from a fllaD who lives in tbe periphery. area Or ttie Harbor View store: "I have 'to tell you ... you've got a good thing!going in your new market. A bunch of us were talklng the other night, and I had to pass Jt on. Keep up what you're doing. Every thinlh is great . . • the meat.S', the produce, the delicatesset1 . . . and all 1your cook~ foods and bakery stuff ... you make us feel important. We're all passing the good word around.'' People are . • . a Jetter with a credit canl that ex- . pired Jn January 1968 .•. from Silver Spring , Maryland. "Would you please help us celebrate my mother's birthday. Please deliver 2 hall bottles of sparkling bufgundy. one fresh artichoke and the balance or the money (a check was enclosed) in small, thick New York steaks. If there's some change, put in a rose blossom. When we lived in Newport Beach we surety enjoyed your market. Too bad there isn't the likes or it PURE INDESCRIB!,BLE SELF INDULGANCE Yes. both Richard's Lido and •!arbor View Will be closed the Fourth so our peo- ple can enjoy the hol~y, but you can shop all these luscious speciaJs, beginning tomorrow., through Suilday and Monday. Stmday, a most family day to explore a mar- ket with something else . , . Visit Richard's Lido and take in the beach. Visit Richard 's Harbor View and take in the breathtaking vie,v. Harbor View hard to find? How's t his for trys. Simple. Get on MacArthur Boulevard. Arrive at San Joaquin Road. (not San Joa- quin ffiLl.S Road which is fairly close to Palisades). San Joaquin HILLS Road bas a signal, and it is the entrance to Fashion Island. Only you don't go into Fashion Island. You turn in the direction of the ceme- tery. About half a block along. you'll come to a Shell Gas Station, which is on the corner of the Harbor Vif'w Shoopini:t Center. Richard's is in th e opposite comer. What seems lo confuse everybody, our Harbor View address is 1660 MacA rthur Boulevard . . . but it's really the NEW MacArthur Boulevard . Once you Eind that Shell Service Station, you've got it made. BIG HOLIDAY WANT YOURS to be here when you get here . , . A strawberry al- mond torte from the ba"kery or 3 dozen onion hamburger buns , .. 6 pounds of barbe- cued ribs or 5 pounds of potato salad from the deli . • • A fresh 15 pound turkey or 10 pounds of ground beef pattied 4 to the pound .•. 24 ears of corn with the husks (we sell 'cm unhusked so you can see). • . . Please call . . . Lido 673~. . Harbor View 873-2155 . , , We'll wrap it up specially for you and put your name on It. Peopl e, you're wonderful , . . Thanks for reading. Thanks for corning. Thanks for making Richard 's, the People Stores, N e w p o r t Beacb. Bave 1 h a pp y Fourth of July. WtdM!<Uy, Juno 28, 1972 • ·. RICHARD'S H"RBOR VIEW and RICHARD'S LIDO MARKET WILL BE CLOSED JULY .fTH. PACK UP THE KIDS, THE CAR AND THE FOOD AND HEAD OFF FOR A GREAT JULY 4th. (or invite the gang over for a buffet and fireworks.} Ground Beef I J1-1ly ,4th Jamilyfun I ' • INDEPENDENCE MENU Deviled Eggs Honey Orange Ham \ Potato Salad I , Tossed Salad with Artichoke ~arts f Savory French Bread I Olives Pickles Angel Food Cake Coffee 79~ Bar·M Wieners , LB. 7 c We pride ourselves on superior ground beef -try it, you'll•••· Steck up• great ham-Juicy •If me•t wieners to grill over the c11mpfire. A~;;ican Cheese 79c Hot Dog Buns · - 12 oz. Kraft sliced singles for •II the che11bur9er fans. s~"a''' Yuban Coffee 1 lb. 83' Yuban Coffee 2 lb. 1.65 Yuban Coffee 3 lb. 2.39 Arden M Butter • u . 83c Nabisco Wheat Thins .v. oz. 45c Kem' s Strawberry Preserves 20 oz. 49c Coca Cola , ,._12"'.... 79' Ripe Olives ~:~:,~Lt· 3 ,., s1 100 Paper Plates ~~,: 59' Briquets K1.,., •• d 10 ~. 79' Fiddle Faddle Snacks • oz. 29c Dill Pickles 0,1 Mo"• h.1 ... K••h .... "'" "o.. 39c Kraft Squeeze Mustard • oz. 19c Wishbone Italian Dressing • oz. 3 for $1 Kikkoman Teriyaki Sauce 1• oz 49c Heinz Relish Ho• 0·•· H·•b"''" '""'· '"'" • • ... 4 for $1 Chris & Pitts Sweet & Sour Sauce " oz. 29c · Spencer Stuffed Queen Olives 1'h oz. 59c White Zee Napkins •• c1 lOc Wonder Plastic Foam Hot Cups 1 oz. 11 ci. 39c Swedish Tanning Secret Loli•• .. oa • oz 1.69 J'J~-Nectarines Risa. '•••1. l•rv~ 3 LBs. Sl Cherry Tomatoes Plump, Risa BSKT. 29c Red Onions '•r H•mburo•rs LB. lOc Potato Sal1d Speei•I .. , White Rose Potatoes 5 LBS. 29c ~"'""'IJm Sour Cream K"""""· H•mp•h'" PINT 55c Ritzy Dips ci ••• ''''" .. bi .. • .. 3 for $1 German Butter Kaese Cheese u. 1.29 Marjorie Kane Kosher Dills 11 oz. 49c ;31·~ Richard's b11kes th••• fresh daily •nd they t111t• like homemacltl I Tavern Hams !:~ 1.59 lb. Boneless, fully cooked and the best t•stinq ham you've ever had! Hen Turkeys Fr ... 49'~ T urlcey is pl9ntiful •nd • 9re11t buy! 1.69 lb. Half Tavern Hams Bar·M . . . Spareribs IT .... unaH These ate fhe best-Z11clcy Fresh Californi•. 1.69 lb. Bar·M La Mesa Ham ~ or % . . . . . . Gla:r:e with Chris & Pitts Sweet •nd Sour. 98'rb. Chicken ·Breasts :89' ~1 · I I Tiny Astoria Shrimp Cooked & Peeled Fresh Fillet of Sol e . . . . . . Stuffed Roasting Chickens . . D•l•clibl• with Ollt ow~ h•rb •t11ffin9. . I 2.59 lb. ' I. 79 lb. I 59c lb. HONEY.ORANGE GLAZE : Combine •;, G, honey, I C. Brown Su9ar, 1/1 C. Oran9• juice. Garnish h1rn with Oran9e Slices. ' SAVORY FRENCH BREAD: Slice lon9 lo•' French brHd Spread ~lices with butter flavored with curly or butter fla : vo red with celery seeds. Wr•p in foil and .,heat in oven. Try SENDAI WHISKY fifth . 673-6360 HOME DELIVERY IN OUR AREA. " I .. 5.39 . . I \, ' PRICE EFFECTIVE JUNE 29, 30, JULY 1.3 Fresh C•liforni..._,ib' c•9• removecl. ', Chicken Legs w~. \69' •. i No b•ck bone attached, \ • .. I t .• . 98c ~· Marinated Duckling . . . • \ . Add • litfl• C•iritr••u or Tri,I• Se_c -111,.rt.! ~;m~~l/I French Fries ,. .L ,S ,., ~ 1 Just the thi?9 with h•mbur9er1-from Sprin~fi•Jd Chun King Eg'g Rolls • •1''' • oz. • 59c Gorton' s Fish ' & Chips • "· · 1 69c . . I Deluxe Tiny, render Peas Spdo9f;old IO oz. 6 for ' Mushrooms in Butter Sauce '"'" '""' •oz. 43 Dole Pineapple Chunks " dz. 31 for $ I Sunkist Juice Bars ' "'"" • •• :i 39 · Rich's Bavarian Cream Puffs • ·1• oz. · \ 39 1 STOUFFER'S SALE , ~ Macaroni and Beef 11 ~ oz. 59cl' Creamed Chicken ' ~e~ Stew ui~n a~d Noodles ·., ~ Plain or Seeded Rye Bread Angel Food Cake not iced 9" Lemon Meringue Pie . • ,.,,oz. 111 59~ 10 oz. II \ 69q , I J'/, OZ. Ii \ 69~ I I • • •1 49c • • • 1.39 • • • 1.79 ~~. Having a little .. Party? Flowers· make it more f esti¥e ! . ' ,, ~ HARBOR VIEW 16li0 Mac Artliur, Newport Beach 673·2155 OPEN DAILY 9 -8, SUN. 9 -6 , • LI DO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 -6 · I • ·. ' • • . .. ' 1 .i ;I .. .. '·: ' ' '1: " '" "' ·r ! . ; . I I • • . Rollu I. Tltd USDA Choict Bttf Chuck farmer John or Luer'1 Cut From Meo!y Eastern Parkers Shank Portion DISCOUNT PRICE! lb. Hams S l•t F ""'""-39' p 1 rye rs ,, ''""''° "''"" ,.,~ Comish Game Hens 'I!::" 79' Fried Chicken .:.&":.. 2 ·~;,$)59 JUICY & FLAVORFUL . ROUND STEAKS Full cut-Bone-lb.$'1 09 In-USDA Choice Graded Beef • CHIFFO" Towns Quick Absorbi"9 \ -c ,.!!~'!:!~~ World Enc2 90 edia the f•ll Hf, toke c v.1 ... 1 fer"' •••••••••. PoperTow,i 1•11 29 Finn & Golden lb. Country Pure Jams •:: 67' Breakfast Apricots 3 ~ $J Artichoke Hearts = 3 ~ $J ASSORTED ASSORTED MARGUERITE BOUQUITS , ROSES DAISIES (hoa of 1.MI.-Colort: "$ht1 LM This Ontr hd. Wllift MCI !lut '"'' 49c '"" "99c .... ~· 59c USDA Choice Grode Beef Ideal For Out- door Borbecue Blade Cut DISCOUNT PRICEI lb. 0-Bone $teak u~~~ B I St k ,,, '~"' """" one ess ea ,,.., "'~~ Top Sirloin Steak ,:..,. .. 89' 11.$)'2• ,.,$)91 USDA lnsptclt4 For Wholtsomtn111I ldeol For 'Burgers, M"°t Loaves, Etc. DISCOUNT PRICE! lb. lamb Chops l l b R.b Chop '"""""' $1•• am I S1sa111 l•I• t•.,1 1~. $1Jll l'L Fresh Pork Steaks '"\:'-",'!':::,,. ,.89' F h P ...1.. Ch R;bfodC~ 89' res Ora. ops Eo~ltrll Por" LL C d Ha "'""' 5 .,. 5411 R . bo T ut """'""' 1111c anne m a"''" ,,; BONELESS GOURMET 318 W rD smm,s;,. a.~ Dubuque llam ':O" 8 -1}, 5759 HAMS Sliced·Bologna~·~::a:.:"""'77' Cooked Ham ·~~~~.·t ~:;:59• 1 11• Beef Cross RibS'l~'~~::,.79' Wieners ~~,.~~ :·/!85' : ~~';, ' SJ 39 Fresh Ground Turkey .. 69' Wilson Franks ~,:: ~i::69' "1 .. •• 1•11f 11. 0-Bone Roast=~· ,..89' USDA Grade 'A' To1111 Premium Qual ity Plump Tender & Meoty-Select Birds Under 20 lbs. DISCOUNT PRICE! lb. SLICED BACON Dubuque Miss Iowa Savory Smoked Flavor 1-11.69c Pk1. fllS1 UU~ll1'1 SLICED BACON Safeway-Ch.oiceof l -1'. 75c Regular or Thtek Pk&- PORK SAUSAGE Safeway-Whole Hog 1-lb. asc Medium or Hot Seasoned Rall Pkg. of60 HOLIDAY BUYS AT DISCOUNT PRICES! LUCERNE SALADS I LARGE I AA' EGGS CroaMO'ThtCrap 41 Roncl>-l·DIL c Frnh flovorl Cll. HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS PREMIUM WHITI ARRID EXTRA-DRY •••AD ;;-l""'.,.npirwt 1-0t.aac · Htlpl Ptotect Against · 3 $100 ... PerspiruntOdors C11 Ii S'"'t .. E'"'E.,~ ~4:s • Bright Side ShalllpOO 'l: $)17 -'Aa .... 1 Foocl Cake ""'-''1:39• -""'P Not lctd _Frestl Schecken ~=~·~:39• 1 .an.cu. Buns ~"" ~45' Miss Breck Hair Spray ':!" 69' 8 Breck Creme Riase \! 88' I Vaseline loti1111 ~t'.:"· .· • TWIN POPS l1kl.,.Frw1 .. 2s· 6-Pack............ C ~ ·~-~ LEMONADE I .. I-Air I-IL 12c ,,..,, .. e .. 111y c .. I Bel-Air Peas 1~· Hash Browns = I Stuffed Potatoes ~ I French Beans -'::;;- L0~1ANG1ELES •::-25• ·::23- ·::u- ~35• & ORANGE COUNTY (UCIPT Cl T lUIAl • e 11J09. laysill °"9 llewpart Beach e 211 l 17' St, CISta Mm e 24 Monn Bay Plaza, So. taiuna e 636 N. Cast Hwy., lapna 8acb e 801 l El C3mino Real, San Clemente e Santa Ana Freeway at La Paz, Mission Yrejo e e Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa I .. - 38 DAILY PILOT Wtdnttday, Junt 28, l9n Spaniards Discovered Pot Roasting Tab two ideu borrowed and 1ht pepptr: use to ooat pipe, Cook ror 35 minutes. Let 6 to ti servings. cbeeae from Spalo. add a SOth Ctn.. meat. prttsure drop Of its own ac-To cook in I>.ltch oven, sim-Saute onions in oil uotil blry cookinJ: method and com -Heat +quart pre ss u r t cord, about IS minute!. mer covered for S hours. tender, but not browned. Stir bine with .a lower cost cut of cooker. Add oil; then brown Remove pot roast to serving JlOTATO CW:ESE WEDGES in potatoes and cheese. meat. The result lJ Pot Roa.at, meat thoroughly in oil. Stir in platter. Add chocolate to drip-l cup chopped onions Presa evenly in bottom of Aragon Style ... an answer to onions, parsley, v In e g ar , pings; stir unU1 m e It ed . v, cup Span.I.sh olive oil pan and CXJOk, uocovered, over lnrlJted hou9thold budgt't catsup, 1 teaspoon salt, and Thicken, if desired. using l package ( 18 oonce) frozen very low heat until a crispy problems. the water. about 2 tablespoons flour hash brown potato e s, layer forms on the bottom or ThJs recipe calls for 1 rump Cloae cover securely. Place mixed wit h ~• cup water. thawed the potatoes, about 45 minutes. ofbeef,butanyoftheleu o:-,!P~ttss::'.'.'~~e~re~g~ul~al~or~o'.'_nv~e~nt:__:~~N~•~l!l'~•:vy~o~ver'."....'.m=e~al~.'.'.'.:Mak~e:_s.....:;.~:__:c~u~p~g~r•=l~:_~Cht==dd=a~r__:C=ul~i=n=6~w=~~g~~~·~~~~~~~~~~_:.~~~~..:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pensive cull may be used.1- keep the weight tbe same, however. 1be Spanish Influence stems lrom adding aome chocolate t. the uavy juat before ..,..1ng and cooking In olive oil, which has a unique flavor that develops and blend> aD other Davon during Cooking. A pmsutt cooker 11 """' t. lpOOd cooking time. IMlead ol llne hours ol limmering on top of the atove, this pot roast ts finished In 35 mlnulel!. .. a bonus for summer cooking (actually conveNent any time ol lhe )'OM'). POT ROAST AllAGON STYLE 2 tablesJ>OON flour I tables_, ••It I leupoonrpper 1 rump o beef, about 4 pound>-, v. cup olive oil 4 onioDI, allced I tablespoon minced parsley I tablespoon vinegar I tablespoon cataup I I le"'P9l!1l 118!t 2 cups water Jh s q u a r e unsweete.ned chocolate Or UAe rwnp of veal, bottom round Of beef, or chuck roast. Mix nour, 1 tablespoon satt Meat-za Mimics Pizza Mrs. Stephen Antosy, a creative San Marino hoq_sewlfe, topped a field or more than 200 coolu: com- peting In the eighth annual Lawry'a Cook Oil. Mrs. Aotosy won a unanimous accolade from the panel ol 1ix upen judges with her lmaglnatlve main dish recipe entitled "Meat-za Pie". Because her family like.! both plzia and spaghetti, Mr1. Antosy has combined featutt1 of both, using the meat u 1 pizza crust. The unique contest, tliliJ year based on the creative use o! spaghetti sauce mlx, gives Southern catlfornla members or charity, church, socia.1 and service groups an opportunity lo win cub !or their organlza. tions own worthy causes u wen as prizes for themselves . A well-received feature of the Cook Oii lhll year was the addition of a 17-year-old boy to the panel ol judges which also Included Jeading food editors, home economists and the asalstant Italian Trade Com- missJoner for Los Angeles. The young judge was Steve Longo, who is entering the Air Force when he I s graduated this month. He doesn't plan to get married for several years and hates the jdea of having to go to restaurants everytime h e wants a good meal. So, he ls learning to cook in a home economics C1lurse. MEAT·ZA PIE I II pound! lean ground peef 1 cup evaporated milk \4 cup fine dry bread crumbs 1 in teupoons garlic salt I package (I II ounee1) spaghetti sauce mix 1 can (6 ounces) tomato paste % can (3 ounces) water 1 can (t ounces ) sliced mushrooms, drained or ~~ pound fresh mushroom.!, •llced and saul~ I II cups grated sharp Cled· dar cheese 1h teaspoon oregano 3 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese In a IO-inch pie plate com- bine meat, milk, b r e a d crumbs, and garlic aalt. Press misture evenly across bottom and sides of pie plate. In saucepan com b i ne spa&betti sauce mix. tomato paste and water. Bring lo a boil, s t i r r I n g occasionally. Pour spahetti sauce over meat mlJture. Top with mustrooms, then <l>eddar cheete. Sprinkle with oregano and Pannesan cheese. Bake in 37S degrees oven for 3$ to 40 minutel. Drain excen lat before ,.rvlng. Mak., I t. I 1trvlngs. Baby Bibbed Ao di)', lneJpenalve way t. t eep clean at mealtimes : cut I bole in ID old baUI IGftl and mab a jumbo bl) that wW covor baby !tun Did< t. .... * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * PRICES EFFECTIVE WED., JUNE 28 THRU . TUES., JULY 4, 1972 tiOOD II ALL MARKET BASKET STORES * NEW STORE HOURS MON.-SAT., 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUNDAY ..... 10 A.M. to 7 P.M • ·* * * * SINCE CONVERSIOI .OFFICIAL UJJ1JJ U.S.D.A. NOW ALL MARKET. BASKE FOOD STAMP REDEMPTION STORE Southern Callfomla' s ama1in1 response to the M.B. Discount Low, Low Price program In some WILSON'S TENDER MADE . CANNED HAM HILLCREST SODA POP EA. CLIFFCHAR CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 20-LB. BAG I WHOLE OR CUT-UP MIXED PARTS ,FRYERS MIXED FRYER PARTS <nfTAJN: 3-HINDOtJARTERS WITH BACKS. 3-FOAEOUARTERS WITH BACKS. 3-WINGS, 3-GISLETS LB. FRESH HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE MARKET BASKET HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG BUNS ' 8-CT. PKG. ' • AlTADIU, 2270 I . Loki A,., • (AIOU PAU, 6751 FalllMMk Art. • FOUllTAI• YALUY, hlltottr' lreekhurst o UMllADA, UOU S. v.a., View • lllAUIU, 21lS9 Pacific Coa1t Hwy. *• AllAMIM, 1221 S. Anaheim II••· • UT-AL CITY, 6UOl 111thwoy 111 • IOUllTAIR YALUY, ti It GortleW o UICASTll, lllJ W. A•-"I" • MONTlllY PAIK, 2201 S. Atlantk ll•d •• • AUMIM. 261 S. lwc114 • (OllPTOR, 1100 N. Lant ... ch II••· • IULUITOll, •20 W. c..,..O..,.lth o U•OX 1011' Mowthorotllh4. • NIWPOIT llACH, 1150 lrrlntArt. • • A•AlllM, 1011 •·Stott Coff ... llr•. • (OITA lllSA, 2'75 Hartoor llr4. • UIDll gOYI, 12601 1 .. 11 Art. o ICNK tiACN, 1010 I . ltllflowor ll•d. • NIWPOIT llACH, l 1001-llrd. · ~ • ·AITUIA, 11700 I. lllrl S1. • COYllA, '121. lodUlo Art. • UIDlll AOYI, 12'61 (...,_.Art. o LOIK IHCR, l2IO I. A--• NOITH HOLLYWOOD, 12US Von Owto St. , 0 llWLOWll, ltlll S. l olnowtr llr•. • COYllA, Ht W. Su..__... • UClllOA lllGllJS, 2U1 Si· .. cltfttla llrd. o LOIK IHCN, 1000 Stoel-tr Id. • IOIWALK, 1402' S. "'""' 11,1, • 0 IRIA .. 6'1 I . Ykt"'I llld, • CUI.WU CITY, lll7 Cwlnr c ... ., • HUNTllCTOl llACI, 7741" o11.,.. • !OS AIClllS;OIO Nootl .. ton Dr. • OllTAllO, 1040 N. Mountain AWi. •. *. CAllAllUO, Ut ..... ... • IL SKlO, 121 w* *IA 1111•......... *. LOS ·;s· 252~ *cloli llrd* PA.lM ·.; 73601 *II • I • Wtdntscf1y, June 28, l 9n DAILY ~JLOT :J'l'.' -'G I orp_ May Translate as 'Good, Organic, Rich, Protein' B7 PHYLLIS HANES Ctll'tftfH Sci~ Mtnilor Stnlq In Cl:se you've been won- t derlng, all U1ose straoge grains and seeds you see in the natural-foods stores label· ed alfalfa, millet, bulgar, and heaven knows what else can · be cooked and served just as if * * Uiey were the old famiUat Javorites and so is ma1naliga. white rlce, farina, or cream of although you may know Jt bet- wheat. ter aJi cornmeal mush," says Only di!£erence is that t11' EleanOr Leavitt in her book. new cereals and grains have 1 ''The Wonderful World of kept their natural qualities Natural·Food Cookery' ' and haven't been bleached and (Hearthslde Press, New York, refined. '·What is new is using the "Oatmeal, rice, and wheat whole grain," she says. ''But cereals for breakfast are old if you have the heart of an \. adventurer. you'll try nax- seed. mUlct, bulgar, aHaHa , aod barley, too. "I think it's too bad that of aJI these natural cereals only brown rice makes the average dinner table," Mrs. Leavitt writes. "My baked polenta, millet (souffle or creole style), gnocchi or barley w i t h * * * * * * * ·RA · LOW DISCOUNT PRICING! mu.sbroorns are so good Umt they should appear often at dinner as an acoompanlment to meat and vegetables. "Since nmt of these dishes are pale or neutral ln color. I try to serve them in colorful dishes, appropriately garnish- ed wilh either fruit or nuts or mushrooms, strips of red and green iweet peppers, and a sprinkle of wheat genn." Atrs. Leavitt i n c l u d e s r<cipes 10< both cooked and raw cereals and grains in her book. She al.so has several r.clp<s !or what bu become known as Swiss-style breakfast cereal. "Nice things to add to these ----......: cereals/' &he suggests, uare whoat germ, sesame seeds, dates, 1unflower a e e d 1 • pwnpkin seedJ, routed soy beans or brewer's yea.st . "U,. a tjblespoon or so or each/' she recommends1 .. in any combination that suits you. Some people make It a day or so ahead and keep It a AL L * /"' MAim BASKET "\ * STOHS WILL BE i( 1 OPEN \ • TUESDAY * \ JULY 4th~/ ~ IOA.M.to7P.M. ~ *---•---* * * * ORES ARE M.B •. DISCOUNT * .,. .. lieen so outstanding that 11ow we hav e adllell Jl1 of our st.,., te thi1 progra m! . QT. JAR HEAD LET I UCE WILSON'S CERTIFIED ALL MEAT FRANKS CANNED COCA-COLA MARKET BASKET .SUGAR 5·LB. BAC MAlllT BASllT SUGAR 5-LB.IAG lMT ~ ~ '!."..12...-~"" 21'1'.'Z!.'f' .... .J;::·,;1;:: . ~E ST~Tt NC UICM. SALO '1£', * * * * * * * ' Cew da.r• in the reCrtgerat«." SWlss.sTYLE CEREAL I medium apple, unpeeled and unsprayed II cup ,pple JuJce 1 tabletpoon hooey 1 tabl_,, dry 1ktm"111lk powder I> cup rolled oats 2 tablespoons chopped, unblanched almond! or walnut& 2 tablespoons chopped, pit· ted prunes or raisin,, G!'ate apple and combine with apple juice. Add milk, oats, nuts, and prunes. Mix: with honey. Chill for at least 10 minutes. Serve as cereal. ~1akes one large serving. Here's another of fl.trs. Leavitt's cereal dishes. Tbi.5 ooo, she says, is for the cre- ative chef. It's an easy·t&-make breakfast dish, cereal, &naek -call Jt what you will . GRANOLA-TYPE CEREAL ~• cup safflower oil \' cup honey 2 cups rolled oats 4 tablespoons sunflower seed meal S tablespoons rai&ins 4 tablespoons wheat germ 3 tablespoons raw slivered almonds or any other nuts 4 tables?>ons sesame seeds 2 lablespoons sun! I OW c r seeds 1 cup shredded coconut Combine all Ingredients in •• large mixing boy.•1. Add mo1 e nuts and raisins (even dry raisins will plump up) if yo11 wi!h. Bake in a shallow pan for 10 to 12 minutes in oven set at 350 degrees F. Toast to bt-o\vn top if you like by set· ting pan low under the broiler. Store in a jar and use as need· ed. Serve with milk, fresh diced fruit -whatever you like. • ~1rs. Gay Kocmich o r Hillsborough, CallC., says her family calls their dried-fruit nut·seed mixture "gorp." "I don't know where the name came from. but the mix- ture evidently originated as a simple mixture of raisins and nuts to provide an eall'y- to-handle snack for mountain climbers, backpackers, skiers, and cyclists," she explains. "And it has be e n dlsoovered recently in the cookie jars or many mothers of munchers. "Anything can go i n t o gorp," Mra. Kocmlch says. "as Jong as it can be packed into llllllll plastic bags and lucked into pocbt1 aod ••• joyed by tbe blteflll.'' Here's lier recipe lot bulc gorp with a cotiple-ol varia-tions. BABIC GORP lcupwhtteNlsino 1 cup dark &eedless raisins 1 cup 11lled peanuts GOURMET GORP 1 cup dark·seedJw raisim 1 cup white raisins 1 cup almond&, unblanched 1 cup dried pears, cul up 1 cup dried apricots, cut up 1 cup M & M candies 1 cup macadamia nuts 1 cup walnuts, broken in half Mb: all ingredleots in a large bowl. Divide into Por· tlOOI of aboot a cup!ul and aeal ln lndlvldual plastic bags. For children, portions oC a half cupful are recommended by bol.b lld1ng molbers and luncb- boz .,.ckeri. Gorp ts greol lof ,.... ... eking. Two teen-age girls who are cycling enthusiasts have coo- <lOCled what they call nutty ,,,.,,, NUTTY GORP 1 cup pine nuts 1 cup hillled sunflower seeds 1 cup lllll'OUled cashew nuts l cup unroaated peanuts \'c cup butter 1 cup dried apricots, cut up 1 cup white ralslns ~ cup dark ~ss raisim Pr<l1eol oven to :ioo degrees F. Divide butter between four llat bU!ng pans aod melt. Place nuts and, sunflower oeed.o lb ·the lndlvidual pans and loll to coat with biltter. Being ol dJUereot size aod density, t1ch ol the kernelli wl11 talte 1 different length of "llme to tum 1 light golden col-or, but aboot 10 to 15 minute. should roast them ,well Sllr the bnlelJ oooe or twice while Ibey ere routing. Spread on paper towelJ to cool. Salt lightly ii dellted. cut apricots Into ralsin..t.ed pieces and toss with nut milt· lure and raisins. Divide Into <lelirod portions aod packqo. To gauge the amount ol 111t· meats, allow about ooe-llalf pollld of nutmeats from enc pound ol DUI.I in tbe llhlll. One pollld of shelled nuts will Jlald -S I/I cups ,to 3 cupa of nutmeats depeo&ng en Ille Ille of tbe Jierneis. Ono pound ol drttd •prioots will yield 3 · 1JL_11 I 1 P.Olllld o( raillnl. • Dark Secret U yOll're proparinc 1 nclpe U..t caU. !or UMWeetened. choeolale and ,ou'n out, Mlbltllllta I tab-._ of bul- tar and thne table5pot1111 ol eocoelortacbl-ounco111uaro of chocolate. ' ' ' • ' ' • ' . • • • • • • • • • " • ) • l • • ! • I . '. ... '. , Ji ' .. :::: ~ TACO IY ANY OTH.ER NAME STILL DELIC IOUS , , . ~. ~ If .Taco ·Has French T ra ~~,,. .. lat.i·on :· · ;: · If you .lllck atrlcUy to tile iceberg lettuce supporting a :_.'. translatloo ol "tacos" as a tender, . pink slice of ham, S9f't pl sandwich, then this en-wr~pped gently around a :. ticing Frecch venion fills the cluster of ruby red julienne • bill.. · 1 • beels and long, slim ·green Roquefort cheese. You can call them ·tacos or just plain delicious eatink, but, as the old saying goes, be sure to call them early for Iwicb! ' : And, 'In a tree translation, bea~, topped with a French • · he.ri'1 what you have: a cool, dressing wit)l" .a touch of the HAM ROLL :; crisp bed of shredded westei;n south of France -crtimbly BEAN SALAD ·• 11 poond can (about% cups) •~:: • · vertical pack whole green · dearu:, drained '• L f • ' o k 1 buffet size can (about l il oa In, g . a y ~~~~e.iulienne b. e 1,. :• Cooked ham slices, trimmed •• :: To add variety to m1a.wmter v. cup' melted butter of fat and cut into squares ... approx. 4'' x 4" :: meill, try Uiis appe:tJzipg 1. teaspoon salwt h" French dressing '4. saijn(n loaf caaserole, ,topped 1 teaspoon orcesters rre ~.· •fth a lemon and mU!hroom sauce ' y, cup crumbled 1\0Quefort · cheese . ~ uuce. Not only is it simple to Drain and flake fish. Com-: ~ but th.is recipe ls also bine nmaining ingredients; ·2 green onions, cboppe4 • easy on the household food add f.ish and mix well. Pat into l head western icebera: ·let- : budget. . a ·91/..,l5~x2~·inch loaf pan or tuce, cored, rinsed and : Pricti~lly·a meal in itself,, a-l'k-quartcasserol~. Bake in drained tboorou bly • :: all Y.O'I need to serve with thJs a moderate ov,.en (375 degrees) · (Refrigerate in lettuce •• tut)',. n:utrJUoos caµero'le is for 35 to . 40 glinutes or unti\ crisper or plastic bag Until ;: cnmchy Fiene~ bread 81111 a firm. ~ggested gar n I• b : ready to serve) :: crla) gttOh stdad: · : parsley~ri~s and sliced bani-Place three whole beans :: !fjmesaVt!rs such · as 'bott1~ , bolled eg~. Serve with Lemon diagonally on ham st\uare; :! · JemO,_' juice .and c a n n e 'd MushrQom 8a1J,ce. sprinkle with julienne beets; !! .. mUsbrO:O~·tQUf• til~~much"of ·Makes I tQ 8 servinp. fold co{ners of ha~ a~ :: · 8:,~qr~ .out o tnea,J prepara. : ·LEMoN•MUSHROOM S~UCE bean-beet•mlxture . .-~ •! · · l can condensed cream .of Shred enough lettuce to :: · SALMON LOAF mushroom soup . · make a cu!blony bed "1for :: 2 l·poWRI cans salmon . 3 tablespoons bottled lemon salads either on IhcAvid~ :± . 2·cups.so!t bread cniinbs juice plates or on a shallow servmg :; Ii cup'chopped celery y, cup water bowl. Place ham bundles oo ;: in cup chopped oniOn ~ teaspoon Worcestershire lettuce. ~ 113 cup •CbOjiped panley . sauce Stir cheese into French •, 2 eggs, all8bily· bel\len Ii teaspoon dried dill dres.slng, and pour over salad; Ii cup evaPor•ted l,l\lllc Combine all ingredients and sprinkle wlth chopped green :':-11i cup bottlecl lemon "'""', · beat onioos. ' ~·~~-'-"'-'-"--'1...~--'.,.,....C.L-"--'~~~~~~~..,-~~~~~~~~~~~-1 ·~~·· : .. ::~ ~·· -t·: .-• . • • • ' I • .. • • -• -• • . • . , • • •• •. S·s TfNDfl-lf! AHi QUA&DY FUUf COOICED C U: . FULL .SHANI HAU' ~~HAMS..................... LL • ~ ·P"Ol'f"I' 0. IM:RSlDf G~ 'A' CAllM>llNIA. GIOWH 4 3 C ~ ~ HEN TURKEYS ,~~~·."... u . . 48 ' • • • • Ol' VllGfNIA, · . TfNDEt' 12-0Z. C . ~ ~ FRANKS . '!'!'.' ........ !'l~·. {fi}6, • .AJO r.1il::\ THOM!'SON SEEDllSS . txTaA. 3 9 c ~ ~ GRAP~S .......... ; ... !~~!! La. s~s1 " ~ ,., ... All f\AVOltS 21-0L NO ' tnulH IK>TILES .-~DA POP ........ :. ' .. • • • • Histor y : • M·enu By GµJRI nCKIJNG Ne>tleil In the rolllilg hills or M'llSlon Viejo, II cleDghlful Mlssloo Viejo IM,"' nostalgic blend or early California and old Mexico geared to ac- commodate the tastes ol to- day. Overlooklgg the sprawling golf coune amid sycamore and oak trees peppered ,.,Jtb yellow dotted daisies a'.nd pot· ted geraniums, the Inn com- prises a cozy bar, a spacious dining room and a tasteful banquet room. A·lavish, Imaginative brunch ls served on Sundays -finnan haddie, crepes Peron le a , poached aalmon with Hollan- daise. The mood is all warmth and friendliness with polished oak, wrought i r o n chandeliers, beamed ceilings, and Spanish gateleg dividers com· plemented by gold carpeting and soft lighting. Here is some of Southern Call!orrtia's truly outstanding ~1exican cuisine with a touch of originality -Came de Gomez, a tangy sauce4. stew rich with beef, carrots, and fresh corn on the cob. , Chili rellenos pu[fed high with whlp- ped eggs .. Huevos burritos are lightly scrambled in flour tortillas aJ¥1 laced with a cbeese-<:hfil. bacon sauce. There is a good : ~ ~ .• ' \, • li..J • .1,l ~ ' . ,\ . oltaing ot 'Amerlcan·!•-.orftes • ·sery. ...;ith chill reuenoi, -steab, c:hoPs and -food.' -burritos, bamburgen. AJ!d Ille rew CofttlneiiW • 'Eoou .. !or f to I oervll!P. dishes llOl;Ved on occillon.~, .., · orlglnals'ol the lnn'a new' r,hef, • am.I RE!l:ENO Rudolph "i· Riehm, once Oil for frying personal chef to tnduatrlallat 1 caiined chili peJ>per Ho~ard Hughe._ 1 thick-reclangle J a c k Dinners include a choice of cbee,. (to fit chill) .. freshly made soup or salad, Mez:lcan f Io u r (coarsely potato or refritos-a.rnkice, ground com nour ) warm tortillas or crusty garlic 1 egg, separated ' bread. !.1argaritas may be Split chili lengthwise and I stuff with cheese. Beat egg [~'rl~~JY!.. ~ white tinUI sti!! and fold in lJIJj}/jlJlJl.§.§Jlj yolk ~refully. Pour oil in frying pan to depth or I\ .. and ~------~~ heat. ordered by tile pttcber and the wine list is outstanding. General Manager Thomas Mitcl!ell gracioUsly p u 11 e d these recipes from the Inn's guarded file and scaled them down to indivldua1 portions. CHil' REI.LENO SAUCE 1 No. 2'h can of tomatoes ~ medium onion 1 teaspoon salt 1,-1; teaspoon oregano 14 teaspoon garlic powder If• teaspoon ground black pepper With spatula lift a mound or egg mixture shaped to size or chiie and lower Into hot oil. When set, dip stuffed chill Into fi(JJ.l' and place on top of cooked egg. . Lilt another mound of egg mixture and lower Into hot oil until almost set. Quickly Jilt/ this and turn upside down on top or chili. Turn and fry until puffed nicely. ~ ... HUEVOS BURRITOS s eggs, looaely scrambled 1 tabl.,poon chopped ooioo I tablespooo chopped chili peppecs I lablespoon crisp diced bacon 1 nour torlllla Sflarp cheddar c b e e s e • grated Combine first f o u r In- gredients and scramble lighUy in butlered fryin( pan. \Vrap in heated nour tortilla, place in buttered casserole and cover wJth relleno sauce. Top with ch..,. and place In 350 degree oven 5 to 11 minutes until chee,. bubbles. RUDY'S GERMAN CllE~CAKE 1 poond .,1ia0 cheese 3 eggs, .epar~ I ounces sugaj II ctlp mllk 4 ounces ralsi t -ounce vanill p.iddmg mtt (not' lnslant) 1! t lemon rind, ¥rated -.., • Pinch of sail : l unbaked pie crust in 9" tr (buttercrust) 1 medium size chili pepper, canned (diced) Crush tomatoes coarsely, add juice and remaining in- gredients . Pour into saucepan, bring to boil and let simmer .about 30 minutes, tmW juices reduce. Drain on paper towels to remove excess oil. These should he made In quantity and refrigerated until ready to serve. Then, place repeno on individual oven proof; serving Beat egg whites with sugar plate,. top with rellem sauce, W1til stUf peaks form. Mix re- surrounded with I refritos mainhlg ingred;ents. Fold very topped with cheese, Spanish carefully into egg whites until rice and place aH in 350 degree .. blended. Pour into 9'' ple cl'Q:St oven~ minute. until bot, pu!-and bake at f%5 d-for\10 '-'. < ' ·-' ' ' ' led 8"" bubbly. mlnuteJ. • BREADS : I ~ ' "' .. r ....... ·"' ~- • • • .. ' • • ~ ._..-' I ' , • ' .. I" • • • I - • . ··' 197~1 I . . .• . ' ' • • • ' 1 J I • • • • • l ' ' . ' i: .. " i: !. . . : r I 1-(: '· t.1 l" f '. r .. I • •• •• • . • I -' • • • • • ' t , . • • ·, • WednndaJ, June 28, 1972 about Trimming Beef ... !N PLAIN TA_LK.-wha t you DON'T know about trim can cos t you money. Actually, the way meat is trimmed IS even more important than the price per pound. An d few people realize that what's left IN a cu t can be just as important as what's removed ..• For example, round stea k has a section called th e "eye'.' Th is is th e' most tender, succulent portion of th e cut. Yet oftentimes. this entire section is removed and packaged under another name and sold at a higher price. When this happens, th e very best part of you r round steak ends up on someone else's table! ' This same thing applies to other meat cdts as well. Most of the m -chuck roasts. for instance -have som e parts that are leaner, and have less waste than o th ers. Here again. these leaner, ta stier parts are often removed and sold separately, leaving the remaining roast w jth less good-ea ting meat and more waste th an it should have. But unles s you are an expert, it's almost impossible to know this by looking at the packaged cuts .•. EXCEPT AT LUCKY. ' I • \ '. I • . Lucky's Truth in M eat-Labeling gua rantees that ALL the good parts, the best-ea ting meat in every cut, will reac h YOUR table, where it belongs. · How about th e excess waste that SHOULD be trim med off? Did you know that in an ordinary standing rib roa st, the chine bone', gri stle and excess fat actually account for up to 14% of its weigh\? -Or that the tough tail end and excess fat in an average size T-bone steak ca n easi ly add a quarter of a pound of excess weight? This is shee r waste. Waste that Lucky carefully trims away B~FO RE the cuts are packaged i nd sold. f • ' ' ' Remember -there's more than one w ay to trim beef! LUC KY puts ·rnore good-eating meet on Y,OUr t able -and LUCKY everyday low discount mea t prlcea leave more money In y,our family pocketbook! CANNED FDODS llRYEST llY lllS .!_!:!;,~~~~~ .. 't:i 83 ' UMIUIOll ~ flt(lllC l'(IJ( ~ R£Glll.foll IOTIOIOl~gA M,J.B. COFFEE~2.43 · tmuinPIG M.J .B. INSTANT 1.29 . (OffU 10Gl JM TASTERS CHOICE ..:.~r.~:1.8S I o"INSTANT TEA •..• ".'l"o."l!.:IS' IOD'$ TOI' • 41 • o" HUNT'S TOMATOES,.., ... 29 ' V"A PAIT ·.;.;..·:."c.01.:1s. o"HUNT~s JUICE ..... ':"~31 1 '. ' •. ' ;,;,:!:,'i • .,.4,lADY HE JUICE •• ~'f;~33 '\ PET MlllC ••.•.•• ""'"'' 10 ......,,., , I.ADY lH BUTIER . !".2::1&: 81 ' ti"' EAIS · · • • 1 • • • ·""""·SS ICE CREAM .•.• ?'."'!".~: 79 ' PET FOODS .... FRISICIES •••.• ":'!"l'/.~:l;i 14' .,..vm DOG FOOD • : • '!'ill 9. DOG FOOD ••.. ~~~21 ' IONl·IN ROUID STUK ·•~slo' PLAYO• LI """"· 98 LAllOI" END UNCONOITJON ... LLY c •DNOIED FOil Q\,f"LITY ANO LI PLAYOlt WMOLl•ODY 3 CNICKINS c USDAOllADIA 110-ILI S UNco::,:;:~::ALLY 1 LB DAILY PILOT 39 ' Pll ICIS Alll OISW\JNTl.O EXCiPT 01 F,\llt·TIAOID ANOOOV•INMIHT CONTllOLLIED ITl!MS ' " CHUCK ROAST •LAOl!.CUT UNCONDITIONALLY •ONDIOl'Oll QUALITY AND f'U.VOll 67~ 1WIMPAC~ IAUIASCVDOl5gc IMUllCIPIC .... PINEAPPLE •..• ' =or.1·25 • .... JQICE DRINI ..J:.",;f,=i 31' o"G.APE DRINKS ".''?\;.fJ:l;i ;J3,' CHUNK TUNA .••• .:;:,J.,'"1!.'l 42' HORMEL CHILI •••• .":l",~42' LADY LEE flAlll 69• WILSOll FRAllKS • AlllAU.T {l201 PIGSk) •• 1-llKG catllD,M.L U •••••••••••••• 1-llNG7J I • • • tt"'CATSUP ••••••• 'll~l 32 ' !1!1~,!.!!~o~~D .. LO 5141 ALEX ll.11.T. SALADS roriro.39• ROGUE COLD CllEfSf -MACllONI I COll ILIW IJ OZ CUP.,.,,,,,, MllD CHIDDAI • ..,,_, JACI , .2-LI PIGS J fl -, • • COOllES .,...,.,.,., 69 ' .,-.MUSTARD " •.•• -~28 ' YITA'CERiAL ·.;.o,~!:, SS ' .,-.MUSTARD •. ~':"!1:"!';;i:23 • COCOA PUFFS •. ~~.~.'"~: 41 • ti"' DRESSING • ~~·-M~:.l:':;1 3S ' P"'!!r!!~~~oNoe.o ......... ~~; $ J 45 POTATO SALAD • SLICED COOKED HAM • AUXXJ Jl,T, ••••••••• , • , • , , ·, .t.ll a.69 UDY Ul, IMPOITIO ••·••••••••••1-0IPI0,2 AllERICAll CHEESE ~~~: • CREAM CHEESE . Z '· ·' · "'"'' DRESSING ""m""'°'47 ' ~ .... ICRAn DINNER •. ~":: 20' ' · • • • • ;..,;~~ , ~ ""MINUTE RICE ""79 ' .,...PRESERVES • ,.......,,,.,, .. J 2 .,. ...... "'' CAMPBELL'S SOUP "'"',."'""17 ' $HELL MACARONI .~~ 26' -"'IL~PICKLES ,..;,;;!';',~~':,;SS ' ~J!~o~!!.!,~o~!~~-~ ..... LI $1 45 llDl,....Aurwu-111<11 : .. 1J.01P1073 """"""" ................. u1 P1G39' l,l~C!~~,,!l,~~ ............... '6" !.t~,C~!fJn~~ .............. '5" ' ~ ' . • • ' . • 1 • ' ' • ' -'POTATOES ...,...,.,.,. 36 ' .,. ·u • "'"-'"""' .,. . • _,,. .. .,.,. BEVERA0 GE "'""'"'"'"' 11 ' ROYAL DESSERT ...... ':.'.:.': 17 ' · · · '· • • • '"'"" McDONALD.CANDY .'?,',~ 29 ' HOUSEHOLD ITEMS PAPER PLATES .•.• -1oori'::: 6S ' ~TISSUE ...... 1n 1 ::::,~~~ 25 ' ...___,# llRYEST DIY IUTS ZEE NAPKINS ..•• :-:·-:~·;::, 13 : .im · :}yc o"TERI TOWELS ••. ~ ... :.=39' :.':.= ~SCO'ntlES •.. ·~~::19 ' 111i:r.1,13:[.19 :111Jztw 1 BIZ PRl!-SOAK ...•• .,.,, 1.07 ~ , """""'"' ' DOWNY SOFTENER .. ~.~~ l .4S o"PI E Ol .. • • ·.;.o.S::.:::: 61 : r "OU• '"" ... ,,er, .. "'ICY GO•"""' cAMAY·soAP ........ -::: 11 · .,,.cl AllSER ............. 14 !. ™"' '""' 10 " E111CTIYE ·FROM WIDNEIOAY. -<PU. REX ""''"''°' 48 ' GRANT STAKES •• :"'.= 1.10 JJNE :a, llltO\JGtt MONDAY JUlY S, 1972''. 'rt" • • • • • •" 0 •GAl.lfl C!lrfOIAA I_ BRIQUE~ •.••.••• ,,.,,.. 69 ' ' . ' " Ever yday 01scounl Prices Un Hea lth And Beauty Aids · · ILL LOW SUDS 20 $465 DETERGEflT PO.g~o I • ' • • • • • LUI 111H ~OAP .. .,. llSD llEll I 5 OUN~l 8Ai I 49 Ollt!CI IOX 1Jc • ' . ' ANAtlllM • 110 St. St1t1 Cela.fl ..... ANAMUM • 120 W. l• P1i.... Awe, AJ llSA • 2'1ltl. GMl•fM9 StfMI I AlDwtM NU • 13'40 l1M1111 lh•. CANOGA P¥1 • 7224 M.t011 ,t,,,, W, COVINA • 1•111114 sai.,, .. , Clft, ODWfHY • I f-rll't lltllf If, •• CAIOtlil GllOYI • 13075 l11e"1 St, GllNDAlE • llSS W. Glt1111k1 11 ..... GllNDAll • lpol So. C11!1r1I "''' MIGMlANO ,A,11 • lJJ W, lv11W1 45 NUNTINQTON WIACM • 9051 AllMtl ,, .. lACiUN.l fllU.S· $111 Di.to fty, 1t l1 Pn I.A MllAD A • lt,_ MW.M Sh1,,1'1t Ct11, Ulllttt:OOD • tM;..,,11M1 111oppiftt (!1, lAWMO All • 14411 S• M1w1l111111 lhi UNNOI • IOIOl'f,f f 'rit ""· ltJtWOOD • 107 Atlt11tlc A••· lONQ llACM • JS f. S.*1 M. f. lOS ANGILU • MOS l lfttkly11 A11, MONIOYIA • 4Jl W. th11rti111t11 Dti•t MOMTlllltO • IU Nt, Wilc11 N<MWAUt • 11019 Altn4r1 l lYt OIANGI • 2620 I, Cht,_. l11. PAU.DINl • 411 L Yl t Jtr11t SAN lllNllDINO • U14f0lf11ln1 51, I. SAN Gllllll ·9U I, lit l•M• 11¥4. ~:,:1:: .. i~·~ ,.:~~ .... SO\ITM GATI • Jilt flr1tt1111 II••· llOONOO lll(N ·o.lllS Artetlt l h •• TOllAMCli • 11Jf ~dtit, (Mt' M•y, TOllAMI • KlO s,,111 .. 41 th4, 'fuJVNGA • 62t0 ff91M*I lht. 'fVSTIN • 1Jl10 •• .,.,. .. ,,, II ht St, WISfCNIStll • 110\ llftctl!! 11v4, WUTMINSTll • IJO~ S,tlti1•I• St, WMllTlll • 1SH$ S 11 11 Awt, •• ,, ... t llff. WWttkit ..... Wl&MlllTOll • llbtl!_t. __ tt~• , ll'OllAl10 RIUJ • P"' Ylct"f .... ...... -..... ....,......,._....,... " . .. , '' ~ . FROZEN FOODS ' SHRIMP ..... ur'..;'2=9S ' ORE-IDA POTATOES ~.'t.:'l 25 ' MUSHROOMS ."""''":t.'r.(.":.::: 56' ONION RINGS ... .,. ,o,::;: 31' JOHNSTON PIES .•• , • ,"~ 76 ' Al'l'U Ofl CllSTAllD BEVERAGES • DEER CHABLIS WINI !":".".~'::: 1,13 LUQY Y.ODU ... I:'::::! 7.11 COORS IHR ••••• "" ~ 1.69 ~e'tUMU AT S"*I WITM UOUOI WT. ., ~Von de Komps \JI All OUTSTAJIDING-VUllTY OF~ IAllRY GOODS COOL WHIP •••• ~~~i'g;5?' VEGETABLES •• •:~.ll!~l";:33• ftA & PlJJll ONIOMS, PlAS Willi }'Ol4TOH .?f.t.M tllA¥~1•b1• •t °"' llOf•l ..,.ilh Van de ll:amp'•lIJ ~ua. l'(iS Wiii! auM SMKl OI u.non WITH r· 1H% CllQllTI 1111 11 BAIAIAS &ILIEl 11· f llPE .,.CHES Ll ' I J.. U.S. 11.1 IRIDE RISSF' "'""c"""oFF'E"'E'c K SAUin•iNGs 6s c ••• the few Items 11.tted on this tf4 A E •••• ioozl'lG poge constitute Just a small llGHT AlMOlll, MAN UUllOI '* awauv sampling of the thousands of low l~MONADE ,• •' ••.•• :1'1~8~ 21 ' discount prices in store for y.ou. • POTATOES 1oc L. l'iwut«IJj OISCOUNT CE NTERS ARE DIFFE RENT! A .. must" for beoch , partlts, plcnlct, etc. Insulated. . ,. Bigger thon o Supermarket! More than a Var iety store! On·lhe·spot 1hopping for a pan or o pantsuit! . , A lug or o rake I .• A blanket or a bike! And much, much more •• at money :i;a11lng low dl1count prices! CORll ~~ PIPER PLATE HOLDER Dishwasher-tole plastic 33c holsler wllh wells for · cup, 1alod. Colors. HOLDER SET · 'Iii~ ;r<-IROIWEIYE 19c ., -~, PAllTI HOSE ~ 1 Smooth·fitt ing c 12 QUIRT :.W-. long-wearing. 7 6 E"llEL CIRI POT CORI IDISTlll 111 Cl!lp-<•lllanl enamel s 1 •• Pkg ••• 10: olumlftum foll. poi for-"'· •r.w1. PITITD RDISTlll Ill olc. fla.ot-r lid. Pkg. of 12: Alumln""' lfil • IEl'S WILK SllORTS ·s341 long-wearing cotton/ polyester blends: Perma· Press: mochlne· wa1h-and-dryoble. New &0lid11 poltema, 1in1 29-40. ..Of AVAl\.Ak• Af U.l•H M0Nlt:A OfJlY l'llOT Meaty Ideas Grow . By tht ttl)'s many Americana will be .. ting "ham" made from MJY pro. teln, bonelea 0 chicten" from cot-prolela ond "ham. burgen" from peanut protein, U)'I Dr. Herbert Slooe, direc- tor or Stanford Research Institute'1 (SR) Food Sciences Deportment. In an article in SRl's quarterly, "Investments in Tomorrow,"' Stone &aid : 1'A IN ,...,. ago, bigb protein lilell lllll>alltuta made from low-ooat plant "'"""'" ,.talned an afterwte or the •original plant Oavor, but now their lute, II Well II their tenure, can be made virtually in- dlalingulahable. lrOm that of meat." Stone .adds that m e a t aubstltulel are IWl expeaaive, but teclmologlcil rdlitementa and volume productloa will make them chuper than ineal Tbe moat common plant "'"""' !or protein la the IO)'-beali, which grows abundanlly In the United stata-and bu a nulriUonal value approaching that or meat. llaJI)' other planla can be med a1. well, IUCb as peanula, afflower sunflower, cottolllffds and even fungwi. One fungus, Stone says, the muahroom, hall a higher ratio or protein to lat than does meat-10 to 1 compared with 1 to 1 for meat. Petrolewn yeast la another possible aoufce or protein. Orlgin81ly a problem to oil companies because it degrad- ed gaa and oil during 1torage, II baa now been f o u n d edlhl ..... t least for animals. Some day, Stone predicta ti may find a place on the dinner table. Stone forecasll that the con- _1111nptloi: of protein _con- ... trates In the United Stat .. will grow from about 500 mUlloa pounds today to five billion powiilJ by 1115. Already, be says, hJib-protain concentrates are entering the ansct and cereal markets and manufacturers will uae them IAcreuing!y . in .soups. .and oilier specially inpared looda. : Growth potential for fabricated foOds ii even hJaber in developing countries wboae government. 1 ct ~·vet y en- courage attempll lo lncruse protein eo!llUmptlon. .W 1.t h careful consideration to prod- uct aelectlon and martellng, U.S. food maoofacturm could be mere llUCCel!fuJ tn opening up martell abroad than they have been in the put; Stone believes. Sesame Opened A spanking-new recipe that Is superb. W ALNVT SESAME BRITI'LE 2 cups coarsely chopped walnuts l/c cup sesame seeds 1 cup sua:at 1 cup light eortt syrup .l/c cup water 2 tabl.,poons butter 1 taaapoon baklng llOda Spread walnuts in a shallow pan and toast in a pttheated 300 degree oven, stirring once or twice, for about 10 to 15 minutes. Toast sesame seeds in a separate shallow pan in same- temperature oven, stirring of- ten, until very Lightly browned -12 to 15 minutes. Into a 2-quart saucepan tum the sugar com . syrup water and butter; stir over moderate heat unUI sugar is dissolved. Place candy thermometer in syrup and coolt wilhout stir- ring to 300 degrees -mixture will be a light golden browr and a few drops will become very brittle when dropped into cold water. Remove from heat and quickly stir in 90da, then walnuts and 1esame seeds. p..., ooto oiled ahanow pan (a 10 by 5 l!Y 11nch Jully ... u pan ts One) and spread thillly. With a lllarp heavy knife mart Into lllJllll'U ; let ll•od until cold, then break into oqoare>. Or do not mark and when cold, break lnlo il' regular placel. Makes about 2~ pounda. . Butter Better . ' To give cakes the delldous llavor of butler IDlidt Ind out, we bullet ID the recipe, ol ........ Illa ... bllflr Ille cab -bolore d>lllllll Uiem With flolll'. g._ the aut will bt butter fta.....S. 1, • Wtdnt5diiy, June 28, 1972 . ·' ALPHA ri'S MAN 1N BWE SllYS · · I bAVE l!OOK/l . '.Sto<e Manager · I. 18901 ,Coli...0 Rd. Ro.ilOftd Heiglrts '' .. ' . ' .. . . ' '. .:.STORE ·HOURS::: ·. MOl'jOAY TI:IROUGH FRIDAY. ' '10AM:10 9:00 P.M.' SATURDAY & SUNDAY'· 10 A.M .. TO 7 ;OO PcM. SWEET Mll..D .,... ma* <t> • • lllCOlll'I' "'" RED ONIONS I . . , fANIASllC OISCOUNIS £iERi OU .. ' IANIASllC OISCOUNIS Ei[RY DAY FANl.SllC DISCOUNTS EHR! UY .. ·' .... ~ f2 ., ' '1 ' I . ,'; .• iOL'&'t. . fllll' . ' I I J ; '-. ... mY-BlUE DOT . rusll,CUIES • 99' 19-0... ....... C. --~ ...... u._ .. ~ .. ~--~ " l::::.:=J.. . .. . • l I ,, - • ,., .. , ....• I . , . . . • ~ ' ., ' " ' ' . . .... --.. -v . ' , ••• . : . :J." .. t 1 " ' . . . ...-...... '-. , 'Ull•IE· · ..... fllAll. . . j •CWllll 1'71 - .• 1•0-C..Cll• ....... • SWDISll . umt·Sl'CIO ·: : 79' -·-... . · . .._..... I --------- ..... 79' •• • 1 ·-. fl'Nli\Sl!C Ul"LU,_'"1 1~ EVERY DAI ·L-.. . flEE9EIQ oum ~·GI• SU&Sll TAllKIQ' llTIOll I ' I 59' ··l 79' '· ._ • • .f '· f~" : " ' 'lliC 1u1-1r) , ,r ;iy GAY • • • 1 • ' • t \ ' I • .,_ ~ I 11. a""'' ::·:· . ' .. ' '.. . .1., ~,· . .. • I • •• "::.= . ... ·i . • -·- fA NlA l\TI '' IJl)CCLl Nf S fVE~r C~T "''* $~ 111111 Im ..... l - :37' 394 11! Tr . w FA'<TAST IC DISC OUNTS EVEHY UAY • • ,. # " I • . 'I • • ... r ANT~~llL {ltcLIJUNlS l Vf HY [.~r 13c 27' (8\ 21-<>wrlce """ 'jiiii'FOlllCA c ~~~ 13 ~ ........... , ........ ,_. . '=1 IUllJS SllACKS 1JI ~-Miiii • ....... \=1 CllSP+TATEIS- . c t8\lmili'iiii°'" 21 'jiiii' POTATO tws ••• (OITA MIU. -241 8, 11'11 St. COITA MllA -.. Ktrwt ....... "U~l-TOM •IACM -"" AMlllt =~== =..~:. ':t'.k ... ,::..::. ,...,. •• VAU.1'!' -IM W.,_. (AMiM Mil.LI -bMI t• N " Ulll MWMI -_,. Qll\__!!i Ullfftrltt¥ ,_.,. flOVYll ueuu. --I. c.9' ....... , • w~ . .liont28,tm IUlOll'S ,_ -rs ···-= ... ' GROUND ·ilEEF PAmES ,_ FllNT.O. .rrc OJ>COU NTS fV[RY DAY ' 13c. vM'CiaP's,.,• . 23' • . ' ... ~ ....... .,.. '16' • . \=1bldi Strlt,.. ..... • IS.Qr. C.. •-.ct l\191 '-lk soc ... 594 61' 97c l,JT 37' 37c 24c _ 34c 10' 46C UC • • OAILY 'LU Bland Diets Aren't Dear Nu: TbaU yoo fer • gre1t colum.11 -I ...w. .. miss Jt for u)'Wq:. r lllave some IQlluUMI to make. la the last few )'W'I I Mve ued oregaao lmtead ot ace l8 poultry dressings. I W It much tastier la r!'ee pilaf .... I only dJscovutd sweet ...a whUe l w11 01 re.Uy r•P diets. I ue It ia lhnNt everytbiac. a dasll llere er there for soups. r • 1 1t1 • pressure cooker recipes, usa. and meat luves. CenUe Huber, Lot An1ele1. llerbs can do wonders for making aJI sorts of diets palatable, just so you don'• overdo them. Oregano is ereat in salad dressings, spaghetti LETS ASK THE COOK ~ tun Wier sauce, all kinds of tomatoi.. juices and recipes, many vegetables, fish salads and other tea.foods. Recently a Kansas Cit• reader asked uWhy don't the}- list the uses for spices and herbs rl~ht on lbe botUe, "' you would know whit to dct with them ? I am sure they would sell much better." A nice Idell, but tbe label• on thoae little contab>ers don't aUow tor much space. Too. buyers would want to know "but how much of which for what?" Usually the ratio is y,, teaspoon dried herbs or t tablespooo fresh herbs In any di::ih for four . I suggest a spice and herb chart hung in the kitchen a!I a memory jo~ger when yoa fall into the rut or the same old thing. They are available at gift shoJ>I. specialty food shops and through some mail order concerns. Dear Nan: My ltalbllld 1111 Just found oat lte U. • aleer. Tbedoel« ... lllm•1- tllet. Rt ..... It eat .. I ,,.., .... 1111' .... ti -.. prepare ,... lllm. Do ,.. -aay me• lllQeltlml'!' Are tbere-...a.Mefor ul«r people! Mn. Dloald SCbultz, Lyom1 N. Y. One I have in my library is "For Gourmets With UJcers,. by Toni Marsh 0Bruyort and Sidney Jean Robey. II helps you prepare delectab&e meal!I with the allowed foods. Check your library or book shops for othen. I can never be surt of what ii still in print or isn't. Hospital dietitians can be ol gre1t belp. &!rely his doctor has given him a list of the foods · causing the 1 e a s t distress. Let me make il clear once more. I do not try to give menus or recipet for any dietary problem -ulcer. diabetic or what have you. Alt patients do not react to 111 foods in the same way, and all doctors do not agree on what la allowed. ~1:.iking wines and other beverages as an economical home project is a fast-growing hobby. II you would like lo gel in on the fun. send for Nan Wiley's booklet • ' E a s y Homemade Wines and Li- queurs." Just send 25 cent" and a aeU-addressec!, stamped. long envelope to ber in care of lbe O.U, Pilot. Plea,. allow three -for delivery • Carrot Cooled Cam>t and Minted Pineap. pie Mold ii an eleganl aalad. CARROT AND MINTED PINEAPPLE MOUi I No. 2 e1n (2\0 cupsl minlecl pineapple cbunb I 3-oonce poctqe len- Oavorecl ,.1atin I· cup hot water \0 cup mayonnaioe I $ ounce jar pimiento -sprue! I cup grated carrots Drain pineapple, .....,,Inc % cup syrup . Dlsaolve ,.11tin lh hot water. Add ..._,.i• and pimiento cheele . .Beat ""' Ill smooth with ble!Mler w rotary bealor. Stir in ,....r"'1 pU.pple juice. Chill in re!rlgorator UJ>. Ill partially IOI. Fold in ca"' rots and minted pineaPJllo chunks. Pour into a one-quart moll! or individual molda. Clllll..., firm. Camlah wtlh ! ....... lue<, mini or carrot airta. Serves I. .. •. I 0 Dilill.Y PUT w-,, -28, 1972 , . ' ' -. -11;Tr, •; • FROZEN FOOD LEMONADE CAL FAME, 6-0I. CANS 2 $ FOR FRIED CHICKEN $149 BANQUET 2-LB ..................................... .. ~J-!J~~~!oz........ . 10iS1 GINO'S P.IZZA ::~::;,.,.,°", age 16-0l. otfESEl11, 19-0Z. SAUSAGE n. " C0 .. 1.IY PllDJ· LARGE ·AA EGGS $ Dl~UXI Mlfe'ltl~ .• OOK .,,.,,-,u,.cuG£$1'1 SYLVANIA FLAIHCUBEI ,,, ........ 19' • KOD'~OOLOR 121 ----..,.,..-·-· ii c.,;ai. "'°" 19' , , ~A!gT~~ ... ~!.-~~.~S. ..................... 69~. EASTERN PORK S.PARERIBS · LEAN, M~DIUM St.XE llAYFAllSUfOODI ~"~-... -ll.$1.19 DO ftl SOU $ • P•fSll """ -·-LI. 1.29 tbiLm AlAS<AN ·--LI. $1.39 SLICEDUCO. &9c WiM!i Cotn Col.lnfrf •· el;,~~~-~ 15c ~~J ........ ~.St.09 !!tJY!!:!!.!!~.~1.49 I HAVE A GOOD BREAKFAST .n111miM PUii PORK SAUSAGE -REGULAR HI. 89'"''·$175 OR l+OT ROLL ROl..L ~~.~~~~c~~EF .~~~~.!. ............. s119 lt'..~lf.l~~~~~~ ~~--5.! __ LL $129 FRE$H FROZEN LAMB LEGS ...... ·--"· 7k BONELESS STEWING BEEF ......... _ u. St.11 BONELESS CHUCK STEAKS ...... _ u. $1.29 BONELESS FAMILY STEAKS -.--"· $1.31 REALMcCOYBEEFLINKIES1ot -~5c Rµ~ McCOY BEEF UCON 12ot -7h I ~ • • i DELICATESSEN ~L BEEF FRANKS WI N'S 12-0Z. PKG. ~ '· . ;--..-r;, : SPI RITS FOR THE 4 T!f VORlllOfF IEIWICKS . . VODKA OR GIN IOPIOOF s I 9 I HAl.FGAL. ;1;:;:~c;fil~~ .. .. ·... .. .. ... _gr CARA MIA RUM $1119 IMPOITEO, DARK OR LIGHT, IOPROOF, FIFTH....................... V I ~~~~~.~~l!~~!. "llFTH s351 "" !?'?Pf!iE .. ~.'!!~!. _ "™ s399 . VELVETGLOWBEER $Mt PUltc;Qf,24/12.QLCANS •..•.... ~········· .............................. 1,.-- HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS ll'llCIALl-J-INUIJ 2 811r Claw ' . -4gc Colet CU.1 .. llf,11c,1111.nc Sandwich or · 33c Wiener Buns .. 11,. ,, ~ 111.41~ Chocolate $139 Pecan C1~e .... 11 or.11tr.1i.u ' - ' - ' . \ . . .. ' ' . • .. . . . . .. • Wed......,, J..,. 28, 1912 DAlLY l'ILOT • To~ Ma~Y ·~:e o o ks ·Spoil t~e Stew? Don't Make Book on · • • BJ EVSL\'11' IWICLIFFE KliNll 11eQD lo write do~ food!; lo -· chijdron could subotitute I°' white flour bad a 1ood samplin&-ol-f bad lo prepare all tbe abead ' what you wW 111 111o 1'Hlae It to lletp It up lo - - --IOlllt'af·tbe .....ulld,reclpes to 'tzy new tastes and unUJual and '"881'): and to.'en<OUrago authenUc Chinese food. redpes and then translate chlldretl do, and which cblld II Sbe Is aavinl hlr Too 11111Q' -opall. tbe and !tad the cblldnin draw pie-M<t ethnic loodl, and al tbe childrtn lo team aomething "Tiie only trouble with In-them into tbe proper amoonta lo doll But It's well W<>rth the !nm K for co11f10 neJ1 ,atew, tbt •Jlnc goes, but t-. Wheiubellaally<l,cid-same time lo learn about nel1'andusdul 'ead>timetbey cludinglOfrieolouroldlamily andmeasurementa." ellort" Karen re,plLe~. wbldi could he at -Kann Cr.ti doesn't .11ree. ed lo put tbe wbOle ,thfna info other · cultures : lo teach prepared a recipe: recipes wu that tbey had We asked ber 11 It doesn't ~iJll owr . tbt· tUchen eley, "' Slulord. / £ooking wlttl five or sii bel~ a book, tJtt , main Gl>lecfives children u much. a! possible An emphasis on culture never been written dcwn,.. take a lot of patience to work counter to pu1 Ole • aeume ''The ~ rw on around lier In the kitchen were:, , about food in their natural bridging came naturally lo Karen said. with a kitchen-lull of little cookies and candled gln(er. Cookbook" can be , led lo a auccouful ventute In To encoor41e' ch t Id • n suitt. Karen hecaUJe lier molher is a "M.r grandmotber's re<ipes children. Karen admi.ls lllit did not dlrtetly from ~ Q'1111 the pubU.hlng lleld for this everywhere lo participate .is (She use( whole wheat flour thlr\l-gene1'11llon Ch In e • e · merely called !or 'a UtUe bit "No, but it does lake a lot enjoy the wrlilnl port ol tbe $1 al 741 Mlplewood )llgb llCbool aenior. And the lully u poosibl~ In ,pre)ar!ng and !loner· whenever they Apwican, ao the family has ol Uils' arid 'a handful of that' more time. You have to plan book, but llhe doeo plan to Pale AJ!o, Calli. 9!381. ' he!pera were all under five .----'---'--'--"---'-------"'--'---------------------------'---------'------'----'--- • yeora old! ' Klren 'has written °The > Good FW' Me Cookbook" slanted apeelflcally to lo-lo IS- year-olds. It contalna simple, hearty recipes that can he cooked by children, with a minimum of aupentslon\ by adulta. Tiie 71 pagea confaln ltitchen-t .. ted recipeo lrom Peanut Butter cake to Mom's Meat Loa!. • While she was a jwtlor at Cubberly Hlgb School in Palo Alto, Karen compQ.ed the re<ipeo and hand-lettered the book. She used amusing drawings by 4-and l>year-<lds to illllSlrate It. Tben she found her owni publ.laber and the book went into production. That was only last October, and the book is already in use by such organizations as Head Start in San Frp.nclsco and Follow Througb In New York, making Kartn Croft an et· cellent example of today's youth who are turning their hands to constructiv~ projects and spending their leisurt time in service to others. "J tried to use as many natural foods as I could," Karen told us recently over a plat~ of Chinese sweets in the ltitcbeh of ber home. Then, pushing her long black hair behind her ears she related how !he unusual book had come a J;;out. She was taking part in her high school's Exploratory Ex- perience Program, an ar- rangem!Tlt that gives credit for work outside the class- room. In Karen's case this meant working in the nearby Greenmeadq-.f Nursery School, a cooperative of which her mother ls director.- When Karen'• Work became centered on cooking she was appalled to find that some of the children didn't even know that peas came in a pod. "They didn't know that their old favorite, peanut butter. came from the little oblong thing with the shell on it." she said. ~Y were more familiar with opening cans and unwrapping frozen foods, ,._ so I blgan to Introduce them . '-to more n&tural •foods." ' Kann bfou&!it in ln:sh vegetables and 'pointed out the • , diffirences in textures, color&, ~ anti;odon to the children. She let them peel, feel, smell, end .slice the vegetables, which then went into the making of their own vegetable soup. • The children hod so mnch • fun with vegetables, Karen's nezt project was to bring flour and let them trickle it between lbelr IJngm. Tben. It was squishing meatloaf together by • hand. At one ....ion tl)ey' had a great time watching the whipping cream, which they had put in an antique chum · !ram; tbe .Ozarka, t u r n magjcaDy ii;o butter. P.udding Rroved The top award in the junior · baking and preserves com- petition at the Orange County Fair went to 17-year old Karen • Wililon, daughter of Mr. and , Mrs. Ray I. Wilaon of La Habra. i, She received the blue ribbon · · and generously agreed to ~-share her recipe for: l;, DEPl\ESSION PUDDING ·' CAKE " ,: f: 2 cupa white raisins 2 cnpa liquid lrom raisins 2 cups sugar \!o cup shorttning , 4 cupa Ooilr 4 teaspoons cinnamon .. 1 teaspoon allspice " f 2 teupoons vanilla " 2 teaspoon> soda J te8!Jl0Clll-' baking powder lte~ult ' z -cbopped nnts '• , I Cup cbapped llW'llchlno • eherTlea Cowr lllo raJalDa with water and .... -II minutes. Thea 1w•11 tr. barnlr and • ' I " ' cool -)obwarm. Dnln Ii- ' quid --and ... , wale to "IP.a J cupa liquid. , Sill ~ lloar, dn-, ; 'narnon, ~k-. 1111<\'11 ' · powder, .... In a_.::::::"-'-"""' combine 1 ~. ·~, 11111 JJqmd • '4 •• I .. . . ,· . . at . on$ or xtra av1ngs 1n oo . "· . • FRESH, JUICY, FUVORFUL • • \ ~atL.T , ' -: . .... . ·Wieners "-_ i ' 7-llONE OR CENTER CUT CHUCK .,,, ROMT . u. ~~JOHN BONaESS TAVEU ·$J39 HAM~°' u. ' ARMOlm MIRACURE SllGD .69' ·aaCOi ~ I -R1Cll fl.A VOR • . . • .. -.Heim Ketihu '' ·-·---....... -- • .., Ell -._W .......... ..~ !!!!!~ .. ·-·-" "" •· ' y_,. 5111"1 ..... .,.... .. vo.s "* s,n,--·-· "' •Aau.K-" Mortllo1M·•1111t1 'l:'Jt' Paper Plltes '::' 100 • .--W PIHttl Ollni -.-=.-U' Cucmlltr CWpa ..::=... 39' Yn1Ml .. 18t1 =7" • • Mur•11•iw1 .:'\:. 21' lnllt... ••• -..: U' ·Isl= lrlm "-.:.tii=r 2t' ..... , .. 11Clfl 'U,'Jt' VONS ASST'I. 1111116 Beverages lr1lllFiWOh'• =:., 11• I 1B 1M·•m1• ':.:-19' ... ,.,,..Frilf's::"r::'41' • " " .. 1 ; ,. 1 1 -nlibit, Mo! dry In-~ ~ lo liquid mlsturt a al I time, blend! .. wtll eOcb addition. Fold ID :=: .... cbmlel, and Poor .... iroaled anti ::i=. ::::;=;i:...: JONA IQ CllST 1•AP11PlA1I :r:c" • =~--, ... ...... _. .... ,..._ 1na~r .-e · · m1mteo1o1i.;:.;'opw11ha 11111 Mm A .... at~ 111111111111 Ila g::· ~ "'gar lclni 34111 1111111· Pan Drift, C3plsb'• Ila I 5922 Ednlwr Ave., at $tlrillltale, Huntingt1n Baell Laguna HiHs Plaza, El Toro 21 D82 lllCll -llllliltll lllCll 17950 Mapola, F.mi '*J ··' . DAlLY PILOT WtdnrsdlJ, Junt 28, 1972 MO"fllELl l"RIDE ~ ALL~EAT 4ftc WIENERS ----12.oz. ;,· MORfllELL ALL MEAT Ofll All IEEF 5ni: SLICED BOLOGNA ii.oz. ~ ALLMEAT p BULK eftt BAR-M WIENERS ---·"·u;, 1 OSCAR MAYER R'ND.01' SOUAfllE ftfte VARIETY PACK ---· 1>-oz. n· OSCAR MAYER• 1·L8. 8ftc AU BEEF WIENERS .. _._ ;,· OSCAPI MAYER• l ·LB. 8'7c ' All MEAT WIENERS .... I ITATU•ROI. .MOllllY •ACK GUUAllTD ·Oii ctUAUTY MIATI Wednndu. Junt 28, l9n S PILOT-ADVERTISER JO 1295 SO. STAB ST., HEMO CHUCK ARMOUR ROAST TURKEY STATER IROS. QITIRED llEF • II.AD£ CUT 59~ UTTU IOTIS$11111 • SILF- IAS TINGS-TO 7°LI. AVG. c LI. • SUCED GROUND BACON BEEF MEALTIME I -POUND PACKAGE FRESH• LIAN • D£UOOUS GROUND IN OUll STOlllS c L IVllYNCIOfMIATts \N:OfemOMALL Y GUAIANTllO TO PUAll YOU •• , 01t YOUI MOfimY WU•a.RNU.Y l9UNDID CUT.UP FRYERS ............ l•. 34' 59~ . LB . ltA'MllOS.Clll.... 6ftc C..,Cll lftU ................... u . 7 -........ _._ •109 R• IRAKI ..................... u . ........ s419 CANNED HAM ........ 5 LIS. ~-11YOKJl•1 ..... -.0IMl,'MOC 6ftc SLICED BACON .~.. .. u . · 7 - IWIWITHl8FANDllAI" sftc BURRITOS;:~~~ 1S.S-OZ. . .. - STABI llOS. SLIQD LUNCHEON MEATS .AUMIATOIALLIHFIOLOGNA COTTO SALAMI• -SALAMI JllCKLE fo PIMIENTO •OLIVE LOAF SANDWICH LOAF• SPIQOLUNCHEON I VARIETIES 49.C FULL . HALF POUND . u.. ---... 00 •-ftc ITATlll •llOI. ,~1.\\\~~fih · DILL PICKLES •m " ~'.;'!~ 4 7 WILL.. , .. ~~ 'II//;/.•: ' ... ,_._,,,, ... _, DllNK • OPEN~FIO·~~ fUllNYFACE,.,x .... .. .. 5 ..... I :~101.M; ~ STATWllOS.--79' STATRlllOS.C:.TI .... _ • 129 ROU .ND BONE ROAST ,,,,,,,,, ll. SIRLOIN TIP STEAK . .. . ll. IONIUll_SHOUl_ 'I 07 WIU-ID·UAN~-'139 ROLLED ROAST rn LI. ITEMS C.UIOICUH •••••••••••••••••• ll . "'"'"'°"anwm-99c ...,. __ ...... -SI 57 RUMP ROAST IONE-IN ...... ll. I-BONI ITIAKS ········ LI. i'LfH-STWt ... Ll.$1.17 'I 07 NOTAU•GU..._ '163 . OUND STEAK ION•·IN ll. PORTIRHll. STEAK ............ ll. 1-STTHIUS-tM• ••• L0.11.1• 98' . STA'IRllOS.Clll--'1 •1 RIB ROAST 6.TH•7-THlll ... ll. ' TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ........... LI. ~ii:!lw) SCHlllMERSPOTATOORMAGlRONI ,. SALADS ....................... .. ll·OZ. 45c PKG. , R•SIDI SANDWICH CltEMES · 4 7 .'COOKIES ................... 21-0Z. c 5FiE5H PACKSTIAWllaY . ••-. f 97 i '· JULY ~0 7 p .. «::; >-LI. FOUln'll~' ·""~: 1 .. !!!_KA coFnE ......... CAN I c ~Rit ~~!1/n\~~. IUPER SCRUNCH .. ,_,.K 43 ~ ,,;. 20-0Z. 49c PRESERVES CHAllCOAL rJ>'ll ' ITAnlm ~ ' ......................... JAR 35-0Z. PKG. GULflllAND _,, ___ 29' 'MAYONNAISE .~2~~~ iGNGUTYNaOllLES ·-~~~: 1 sc : GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~:Jf;, __ n-o•4Jt ' BEEFSTEW DIHTY•00••---~'1.09 ROAST BEEF HASH ~~!,. --,...,, 59' ROAST BEEF ~~::.-:.c:i~·--···-····-··· " Ol 7 f VfTACIUNCH ASST. 1-LI. .t-.&. ~ 1• ~ OfttU AND IMllAGI JOHNS PIZZA ... . ...... . OUHT ...... 39' M4lf. GM."'-:4 69' ( (~ ~ ©'" .~~ FACIAL nSIUE5 LADY SCOTT UNDSAYGIMPITTID 3 s I RIPE OLIVES.................. c:s PEANUT BUTTER 2;~:·93c 4 C~NT $ IOLDD£AL PACKAGE ' . s 1 • 9 , AlLl/Alln.UllCWTlfffANDHAM 37 MORTON DINNERS ... .............. c ,. 'A LOuGS.PES .. DETERGENT __ ~~i . ROYAL PUDDINGS .. '. ...... 2LAAo<31' HOT DOG SAUCE GHH.-on .,. , ... , 25" ' Olll LO• SHllLDD[O 25c 811105 (Yt ')'JC HASH BROWNS -·-·--"" PEASWIONIONS -----,..,,ohJ· ""~·•DA Aet wn 11 f'OTAloes • CllEMI SAU ct '>'>c DINNER FRIES _·----''·"'IV BIROS EYE PEAS ---·--' ... "'1 ()llE·IOA 3"" 111106 EYE 'J')C ONION RINGS -----'" 1· GLAZED CARROT$·--"""'1 "'"5 ~1110 ... YS l llUOrO s1s3 ,...S flllD-''l'S l ll[ADLO s211 ROUND SHRIMP ----"" GOURMET SHRIMP --" : iGi .. iiiLLs .. .......................... .. .~-l : 6~· Mf\lllE!I GllU:N 5c.c Wtlr.lll. 45c CHILI BURRITOS .. -""°' ., GRAPE JUICE UOL -'lSSORTlO H.AYO!IS 2Ct, WllH ClllAM SA.l)Cfi '}')c HAWAIIAN PUNCH . ,., '1 BIRDSEYEPEAS ___ ..... ohJ M~C.P:lEMoNADE ~· 110L 2ac OvRANGE0JUiCE __ .o, 26c t f .. ~~&g'M~~~ t.F :If& SUDDEN ICHIGl . BIAUft MllCTOU :I @!~~~ H411$1'1Af H.IJtWl.t.f ,..UJP\.t.TlfllUM A!iT.1 J.OUNCI ~ -~;; 76c ll(i.6, 74c •10s )~: .. H.T.H. K< 16.QZ.• .. , 'ULTaA•AN PAllTY PIPIODDIT DIODOaANJ HOU TOOTllSllUIH 99" l •• , 69" 41• --·-·-t..01. -... vnAUI GILU• G•nOL UCIU• Ll4U• TAllUT M UOU1D ...... '1.39 U~L 'l .39 ll·Ol.UQla •2•• ... ,~ ,. ••CK•AllC ITAY .. a TOOTl•IUIH lllA900 lllllPADI ::3-'I ~i69'..!I'' K• 36• .... LARGESWEETVINERIPE ' ORTEGAACAPULCOHOTS IC.OZ 4, HUNTS KETCHUP _ ........... 2'·DL 41' MARGARINE ;~'/f.~&tii~·~-·--. -..... 45' HUNTS TOMATOES WHObE --210L 33' GOOBER JELLY ~~~:r'."o'. --1a.oz &6' ROAST BEEF ~~l'~~~ .. Ji~------12 0Z 79' BEEFOOHml ~~:F._ .• ,. __ ,,.oz 31' VIENNA SAUSAGE ~~~~~ ........... •·•z 29' PIZZA MIX ~~':.~%~c~ll .. _ 2a.0L 9t LUNCHEON MEAT ~~~~: ---"·•L 51' 7 .up ···~1:-s ·~ NUISCO INACll 46c ' .. .., CllACK•1..,,. -·-•.oi. MOm FRUIT TREATS --20.bL 35' MARGARINE ~~~~----_ , .. 3t ' PRUNE JUIC!:~:.•WEH . .. --32·DL 53' BISCUITS b:t'i'Jr'?:r.:i&"~~---3 a.OL 29' CUTBEA~,':'rv~;~:.':·----... 303 23' POTIED MEAT ::-.·.~~~"'-2s.ol.33' CAKE MIX ANGELo•,c,~;,-;i• ......... '"o.6Jt LO.CAL DRINKS NtO:.~r._. • ....,_ 41' ' LARGE I FANCY , GOLDEN RIPE CREAM CHEESE PHOLAOELPHIA ... •·OZ 41' CARNATION SLENDER __ ,,_ ...... .,. ( ' CHUN KING SOY SAUCE ·---•oz 23' GHIRARDELLI CHIPS ~~t.~'i'loz 4S' CHUN KING NOOP.~.ES ---· •oL 35' HOT COCOA MIX i~~::~~~"·---&7' ' FRIEDfil~§,!IX ~•o ··----·-...... ,41' HORMELSPAMSPRUD --•·••29' TUNA CHUNK LT.H ·Oll7•-·-·-~ CAN41' LADY ICOTT 4 • , KLEENEX TISSUES ---·---·--'"'s 31' •ATH ns... ___ 2m\ SARGE .... OCHEESE ASSO•TEDVAAIETIES • ' WA!oltlNGTONOIODfUCIOUS 41•t APPLES -·---·---- OlllGlllALtrAUA~ swm 3129· •ED 011101111 ... - LaRGE sWUT EXTRA FANCY 29c NECTARINES ....... LB. LONG TINDER CRISP GREIN 5 C CUCUMBERS ................... EA. rtl •••c<oAS MAA"'"·· BORDENSMAllQARINE ......... ll.42' COWIR BRIQllRI 10.LI. Jftc IAG 7 'PRICES EFFEC. THURS. lhru WED .. JUN. ~ULY 5 1MHtS..•uu" 11.t...,.W•1l 1$a 17tJW•N .... .-tStNet.C...._ *2 ............................. .. liiti .... s. ....... 1 ........ ... ,_aqamA.-,._...._ llH ...,.., .... ,,~ s.t. ... , .... --°'-..,. .... 5 % ............. MMW....._.A~A...._ 2611...,_A __ .._ 111tMd fP Aw.S....MI ...... ......., ... , . :::: =-.:t"-----. --l41n ... ,.A __ 1a11_A __ ' • J PILO r ·ADVERTISER See the Barbecue Give-away in our Store! A deluxe Big Boy Barbecue ..• plUs all the fixin's. Everything you'll need -for a complete cook - out for a family of four! B Rancho IDRI .... s-~~J'.~~l'. ... Tender and juicy, with all the' flavor you'd 'expect from hams that have been cured for El Rancho-and you! Whole Ham .............. 69~. Butt Portion .......... 69~1b Center Cut Ham Slices ............. ~ 1 ~b~ So lean ... and you can have i hem thick, for a wonderfui cook-out ... or thfn, for a delicious breakfast treat~ Sliced Bacon ............ 69fi. Pork Sausage .......... 69fb El Rancho's own ... ranch style slices! Our own recipe ... old fashioned flavor! Menu Makers ... for every day of the, long week-end! I --. -. .. • Wrdnttd<ty, J1nt 28. 11J72 DAILY PILOT Specials in effect through July 3 ... clos ed Tu es day, July 41 Register for our Free Barbecue for a family of four ... today ! No purchase necessary ... winner in each store will be not ified! Watermelons Thumping ripe ... and the .red meat is ~o deliciously sweet! Chilled slices will make a ,,·underful finale to the cook out~ Seedless Grapes . 491~ Ripe Tomatoes .. 251f. Plump, .. and bursting with flavor! Snlid, fo r slit inµ: ... ripe, for pleasure! l.ar~e Size Super Groc ery Specials! .Ice Cream ~.0.v.A_L.~~~r_,_69e Half .gallon of emooth creamy catering quality ice crea1n. in yc1ur favored navon;'. Topping . . . . . 3 "~ s 1 Whip Top ping ....... 39c Smucker's ... 12 oz. size ... all fl av1i rs! ~ew! f ro1n Pf'l ... in the 14 oz. aitbFrozen Potato Chips T;IN PACK ••... :.59' Crisp! ... because they're fresh fro~ Granny Goose! Why settle for lesser quality? Snve 14c per package. '. Having a cook-out? Nothing can please the folks better than a hearty steak -Thick, juicy, tender U.S.D.!-. Choice 0 beef? Compere El Rancho for quality ••• and value! F~esh Turkeys El Rancho's Plump Hens! 4 9!. Re 0·1·· :· JUMBOSIZE 3 s1 · 1pe 1ves ....... ~1.~r.E.~...... . ,.r . Anytime is turkey tim; ... especially if you can enjoy El Rancho's pfump hens in the !re&Jiest quality! Lindsay-a name you know for it's fine qua~ity ... olives that are so big and so last~·~ No. 300 size cans. Split Broilers IW.LY F1£Sff1 King.sized ... to afford more good eating! 49e Boneless Ham wiuo" nNou M110 s1~b9 Average 4 to 6 lbs. (Hormel Cure 81 ... $1.69 lb.) B riquel SKINGSFORD ... 101b.ba1 •••••••••••• 7 9c They bum hot-clean-evenly:--start eaaiLy, too! (20 lb. bag ... l .49) Save on either size hag. · , Chuck Steaks ........ . U.S.D.A. Choice. :.at a budget price! 69~. Boneless Beef Roast ..... $1~~ English cut, boned. rolled. USDA Choice! Fire Starter . . . . . . 39e Wizard ... safe, odorless! Quart can! Seven-up .......... . Carton of six 12 oz. cans! Enjoy un '. Oven-Baked Beans 3/Sl Snack Crackers .. Nabisco favorites, regular 51 ' pkgs . Mixed Nuts ..... . Planter's holiday treat! l :l oz. can S&W New England style! 28 oz . csn• Mixed Bean Salad .. S&W ... just open and serve! No. 303 Darigold Butter . . 83fb. Paper Plates ....... . Mountain Trout FRESH •••••• s1 29 hini cold waters make the flesh so firm and flavorful! Average wei ght ¥4 to 1 lb. each. Fillet of Sole . . . . s 1 ~ Red Snapper 99£ Gr.11de AA quality'. .. l lb. carton! Bond ware ... package of l 00-9· inch! • • • • Fresh ~ngli1.h Sole for more flavor! Fresh ••• for a flavorful flBh dinner! Barbecue Sauce . 3 '" s1 Re-fried Beans ..... Chris & Pitta ... all flavors ... 14 oz. Rosarita, in the big 28 ounce can~ King Crab Meat..,. .. s2'~ . Firm ten'der Alaskan crabs! Cocktail Shrimp .. s2~~ Fully cooked ... and .0 tender . Yuban Coffee . . . . . . . 83~ Baked Potatoes .... 4 ,.,s1 The rich one ... l lh. (3 lb. can .. · 2.4:1) Frozen in their own jackets! Magic Chef ... Delicatessen Specials! Liquor Dep 't Values! C d H · FARMLAND •• $. 279 . anne am ... 3 lb can. El Rancho Rum ~~o~~ 582' Iowa born ••. ahankleu and bon~leu .•. very very lean, minimum of waste! Big half-gallon at a speciai price (Bartender Mai Tai Mix. .. 79' pkg.I Knudsen Salads. 39c Sauerkraut HOllEMIDE Potato, Macaroni, Cole Slaw; Carrot! Pint · Wienen a..nd kraut tonight? 22 oz . El Rancho Scotch s5 79 El Rancho Beer . . 79c Bottled in Scotland! 5th (Quart ... 6.89) Carton of six 12 oz. cans Kosher Pickles · . . 49c Marjorie K•n• ... old time fi•vorl 32 oi,. Kosher Meats .. s1;09 Wilno Knocu~Franka-Salamil U oi Pen & Quill Dips 3/Sl Ready to serve-aix flavora! 8oz. Tanqueray Gin .. s14•5 Mateus Wine . . s2 99 Save 1.04 on the half-gallon ! Delicious Portuguese Ro8e! 5th , Chili Con ·Carne .. -&gc From B1tddig'1-try It, you'lflike it! lib. ' El Rancho Vodka s459 ExtraDryVermouths1~9 Smooth mixer ... Quart. (II gal. .. 8.88) Weibel-for great martinia! Qt. Wilson's Franks • 79~ BonBelFrenchCtiEe7'1 • Priet1 in effect Th ur. throu§h Mon. Lord Calvert ... s4s9 Seagram's7.Crowns539 All MIM at All Beef ... l lb. pq, Delightful 1ummeranaekl 8 os. pq. June 28 . Ju ly 3. No •ales to dealers. We will be clo"d Tu esday. July 4rh . Save 50' on Canadian Whi1key! 5th Blended whiskey ... fifth . (Quut .. , 6.58f ARCADIA ,, r ,·, H .: , · ' i.'J PASADENA :. ·1 . 1 .f SOUTH PASAD ENA : nw; HUNTINGTON BEACH : )W1i; NEWPORT BEACH : 1111 Ne•Dort sivn ,,,rt : <;r· ,,, i'nter 310 We11 coro;aoJ B '" f'e:non! and Huntrnglon Dr ·•': Warne r and Algonquin 1Boardwalk Center 11•· 1555 [astblufl Or lastb lufl Vrllage Center l \ ) I I . • M DAILY PILOT w .. nc.i.y, Junt 2s. 1972 W __ .. _""-""'..::·_J_11nt.:...2:cs;_. lc;.'fl..:2 ___ ..:.s __ P1_LO_T-_A_DVE_R_n_m_~4 Skye Has No Limit to Curry Condiments 87 JOHNA BLINN lalked to my girl lrlend and I whole onion, quartered In la'l!e aaucepan, plact coverecl. for 10 minuta (or BrinC to 1 boll over higb null,bacon bi!J (crllplJ cook· NEW YORK-Skyt Aubrey cut the lleak and led it to the 1 whole clove chicken, chlcken broth, oolon , jull until navors are blended). beat. Stlr once or twic<. Lowor ed. welkirained), currantJ (or · I·• In lo • wllh ••· ·~ of 111ima11. • I cup celery alices clove, celery, carrots, bull, 6t1r in duck sauce, beat and bell to simmer. Cover, coolt nlslns plumped In brandy), • v Wiii -"I know lt IOUnds cruy, but 1 cup carrot slices thyme and rosemary. 11rrve over bot cooked rice in 4 about 14 min!. lf rice ls not chopped IC&llions, candled atudylal In Enallnd to lie an wllat're you suppolled to do I teaspoon bull Bring to 1 boll , cover , to f portioM. quite tender, cook U mlns. p:tservod glngtt, waleroml, -· at lier la!her'1 dlMer wltb a chateaubriand you've I> teaspoon tbyme reduee beat and simmer untJI longer. Do not stir during Obopped cucumber 1ll•·•1 '·bl Pw Ille rice: k wl -• lb Y e. msrlnated all that time. I had I> teGspoon rosemary vegetables are tender and tho coo Ing. mixed th yogurt ... cod wl She triad 1 yur of dnma at a put time and the dogs and y, teaspoon freshly ground chicken done (1bout = l cup uncooked regular After rlee Is cooked, nomove Tabasco and/cir chllles. • the American Academy in cat had the best meal they 'd black pepper mins. ). Cool ; then refrigerate milled white rice lid. Add butter, m I n c e d Others are sieved-hard.COOk- New Yort, but •t ia pulled up bad In • year. They couldn't V4 teupooo ground ginger overnight. 2 cups coJd water parsley: toss rice with a fork, ed egg, shredded f re 1 h litll• t.ad tied to London to believe their luck!" 1 teaspoon salt Remove skin and bone• l t.easpoon salt and turn Into serving dish. coconut, sliced banana, bom- ltudy 11 the lloyll Academy I tablespoon curry powder lrom chicken. Dice chicken I tablespoon buller The '' accoutrements": bay duck or sooklle, available lllCI ltlmulta'*'1lly blcoint a SKYE'S CHICKEN I tablesp0oo ground chill meat and return to broth. 2 tablespoona m I n c e d Serve any or all of the follow-in Indian foodshops, or finely i.rtflc -Ind curry CURRY WITH RICE powder Bring to boU. parsley ing as side dlxhel to glorify the cbopped fresh apple moistened cool! a chlcken breasts, splll Duh Tablaco ....,. stir In ult, pepper, ginger, Combine Ingredients In 3-curry: mango or pea c b lightly with lime (or lemon) Tbe lolpintaml dinner wu I can (IJ% ounces) chlcken 1 cup boliled cluck aauce curry powder, chill powder quart saacepan !bat bas a chutney, &livered almonds, juice mixed wltb finely _, lllo ,.11 If. "Somoonett _ _::bro:::lh~-----__:H::at:...::coolt=ed:.:ri:::""':_ ___ _:and::;:_:T::•=ba=oco::..:aau=ce.:...=Slmmer=::.·:....:llihl-=.:::fil::.U::ng:..:lid;::.' ·:::..: ____ ma:::..:c::.•da::.mla='-<1::.sb:::.:..ew_:cor_p:_lue-'---cbop=ped--lr..ti"'-'-' m_m::.· I::.. _____ SK_Y_E_AU_l_R_E_Y __ t~ ll>oat !be 1\oyal Aerd ''1 and k renained in the lloct ot 1111 mind," the uld. "Alter &Irb' bolNlal -. where 11-all educa- tion, I -llOlhlng 11 collep would lntereot me, except theater and art.'" F1lher, Incidentally, Is Jamea Aulny, DOW prealdent ol MGM. lier mother ls ac- tress PhyllJa -'lhul«. In Enpnc!, Slcyo ·found lwo rooms In on old 1*ue oc- cupied =by lndtans. "Tbe e wbo -the house mode CWTT lllle you wouldn1 believe-the real In- dllll curry -k'I .. bot, but fonlalllc. I clon1 rully bave a nclpe. You really jull kind of throw ... ,um,, tog«her, depe••Hnt1 '"' -kind you want to mate: chicken « ll;'lmp" 'Sltye'1 YWl1on ea11t r .. cblckm ..._, coobd wllh "wonderfW ftlellbles · and marveloul berbl." H?tfy CUIT)"'I abnolt llte • llew, nol quldr: or ...-,,, but •ery pon Ille! 1Imple, I ... , stand le eat a lol ol junk.• ~ (fuhloned fntm her maternal granclmotber'1 111111e of achuyler) WU a vecetartan for nine meallis, In an tflorl In '-w<ight -lhe lool:ed trim In while Olllllel llackl, pole blue blouse and sleevelt11 l'l!Yle popper ol aolt muted blue. Aller I four.day fut, she -11teralI7 "tumeck>ff" • -t -...-eel wilb I blr portion <JI .... n>ut --''To laD I piece of meat and put It .. a plate lll:o tbs! ls almost cannlballlllc. It just -me Ill IO I ltoppod e1tlng meat and didn't 10 boclt to ii untJI I went to Mex- ico to lpllld Christmas wltb .., father. :"!be ..... blol .,. not ..,. -don tb1r1. Bitlldlo, 111Y docktn uld I bad to biic:atMO I 11111 111 ulcer. I lllll don' oat Imp IJllOUllta of -~ thouctr-.. Her greatat pletaura are b11J>e at -(the .....Uy ~ a houoe "with -· and • 1anlm"), ptlntlng, wrttl"I poetry' mterlllnlng Vfl'f cklle triendl1 e v e n Ulmal frtenda. B.-nprlee In Callfomla OC· cured ._.oy ....... dinner -hid to -at tho Jut --"I llld lloallil tbll btlutlful chat11ubrland . I had marllllted lt .-early mom- lnl In wonderlul tartyUI Auct, flavond with WTagon, thyme. and -of 11rl)c:, It WU bOlutlfull "Since the barbecue WIS l1ttady hot, I thmr the meat on. It! up tile plate and ate 1 couple of ~ myself. "'nien I ut down on ~ ldtcben floor and witb lmlft, ~~~ ~l:~~b:o~: Northern Chi/fer SCANj>INA V1,tN Fl811 SALAD J/I cup commerclsl IOUI' creom 1/3 ~ ma)'Ollllllse I ~ pre pa r ed mulllrd 1 teaspoon IUfar U cup finely chopped -I cup finely diced dill pickles I P!l'llJd flound.-or almllar Bib fl1lelo (po1ched, -. chilled end cut In- to fori:-pi«ee) I pacloofe (10 ounces) fn>zen """' -. cooked and cooled I can (1',0llllCtl) lllcod red -. drained snd ~ Iii 1-popper In a llrre m1Jin1 bowl mix lncetlw tbt llir cream, ma,...,.., lllUllu<I 1 n d -; add ,_.. l.D- andfada llld ... lllhtlY. Cowl' """ ddll lor ..a ltouro. Mllra IS...,..,.., ..... :.89 -Cllutk 88 BONELESS ROASJS ... I "1HI 11-r Boot 1 09 ROUND S1EAK .. I -().-·-,ii£ SWISS STEAK ...,.;.. "1ntll-IHI SHOULDER CLOD· .._ 112& -Tlftcl-Wllor.orlllc«I lit .18 FILE'r MIGNON 1a. &o , ' UQUOR DEPARTMENT =s.99 1Z...nceC1na-Sn•40cP11'CIH 2 B9 Amber Brau Beer ca11oll4 • tn'P0AM'J Jlll!OUC'fD PIUCI PLUS!llUY · .... _..-.,~ ··---11111'11- SAVlllCll HEAt:TH & BEAUJ'Y AIDS SUtlTAN LOTION = .88 BABY OIL = .99 For-· Sob'caine Spray 4: 1.87 M:diCated Powder '1;;: .88 --l'llL-w/FIHR-plcg.102 INJECTOR BLADES · o11 • . ~'RtN'SE9'"" =1.81 N--Umo,ll1nlllol,......, tMs. 90 SHAVE CREAM ... "' SDNTAN LOTION ·= ~78 -4119 l!lll 4.69 .FROZEN FOOD CO&:'~ "';::: .65 -·1 CHEESEWZAS c•w~ VEGETABLES Mrt. __ _ ONIONRINGS .Johna-Pepperoni, CMeM Of SAUSAGE PIZZAS Frnhl'lct--STRAWBER' ... RIES- M-IHIH!orC-. ENCHILADAS OltSoutll--· FRurr COBBLERS •• ";:;: 183 -·-pl<g.1£0 ";;.95 ~.76 ~165 ~·· ::.a t aren't ripe '.e .•• '" come to where prices are low. Ralphs wfitermelons are red, ripe and delicious. How do we know-becaU8e we check them every day. Ralphs great Sllleo- tion of' fine produce is inspected for freshness· daily. That's why Ralphaguarantees!reshness.AndatRalpbs,qualityandfresh- ness don't cost you more. Ralphs will be OPEN MONDAY, JULY 3 Al 8tnl Clolad Tmsday, JIQ 4UI We proudly announce the lrlllll Op•• or Ralphs In 11lousand Oalrs 1332 Moorpark Road at Janss Road DELJCATESSEN DEPARTMENT --AU. MEAT FRANKS , ... 186 Celle----·-· -Ralphs Polatc> Salad -1--4"ar SUCEOHAM ___ ,_,_ SOFT MARGARINE Kndl- $WISS CHEESE • A1t1 I iiUI SOFIMARGARIE _,....,. Ralphs SOlr Qwu --ORANGE JUICE t-11. 89 tnJ I i;:.69 , ... 139 :;.65 ,.,.&o .Al -.189 10-lb.blg .49 PANTRY FILLERS Clllll•Pllo BARBECUE SAUCE = .18 11•11-0nll BAKED BEANS -:141 ' REDR'AoisHES -..10 -florllltJ, Frnll GREEN ONIONS -.11 OELiaOUSAPPu:s ': 111 ~:!!!<7~~ ,.. 11 VALENCIA ORANGES ..... ---ln-QUAUTY CANDY ':.1. 1111.•TwlnPICk ... Pollto .. .... '"" .49 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS 1111, • .,.. .. &lzei BAR SOAP Ralplia-1' Sia PAPER PIATES KlngManl' -111 W::188 ~·-Charcoal Briquels YlnJf-Lnth1ra.a. f.. PHOTO ALBUMS -• l<8DACOL'O"RF1.11 -1A1 f?;OO'WRAP BAGS 7:: ~71 ' fllnllh-.0111: llblr DE1ERGENT ·-67 .... I Cal1:tM-A11111ted Ollllni PAPER NAPKINS ' """'10' ..... 49 EYBRYDAY LOW PRICES fflOl£N FOOD ... _ ":att . llAIYPOOO -=-WIOIWJI! -l:itM ._~ ...... •..:.a COllN OH 1111! COii WHMTc:IMAL ttNlG'£DRINI o:.n • 'tr ··---'::M -....... -=-BOUIU.alCI I ~-DflTI:H APl'laPB °" ............ •.:.11 COOIOD -"::M POTATOES --:.-;m,m -=-OllAMm.IUICI --·-·-· .. -..... ----· C1110Utm 002 ca lm"IUIID lal'OCID ~ .. IZIDllNCIL i & l'ANT1IY llLLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS l!im!COAL 9RICIUE'll ':ta to\1ii'"-n ... :a r:r.rco: a a --: .......... ...... -.:..-.... -.. ~,, .... -••7 llA1IDUS -·-... lllSlllllfCQJJ. "::t• -- .,.,, ••w 0:.11 TOl&f!Ji--."I:.» ..._ °""' ... 0:.-r-TOWIU · .... e;f.oo ;ASAL-ilm -.:a "';_.U PAPE11niWi'U -=- \HOUSEHOLD VALuES ·--FOAMICECHESIS ·-·· ... ,.. Clll loolt --~..., .. ,,-"""'-·· ....... d-• ,. Htltlbaacct1hl• BlltJecues -'-! More than .. low . ioRSANDAU'-·''':. .a lceMelh ~ pnces Ti.'iu;.e~· -1.• ~ ~ ="= IAlPllS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: •1 ADAMS BLVD., HllTIGTON BEACH; 15471 S. lllDlll$T1 WESmlSTfJ -STUIE Im: 1-11 1 11AlY, S.I S'JUY \ ~ 1: 11111 • 1 -· 172&1 17~ ST., TUSTll :m l 191, - l I ( I i either cooked cabbage or raw Jettuce. · 11 .... _._ Try this flavorful variation: LETI'UCE S~SAME I medium·head of 1ettuce 1 teaspoon chicken boulllon Y.z cup boiling ~ter 1 small Olllon, inced 2 tablespoqns raw carrot 1 teaspoon sugar (optional) 2 teaspoons ,dried parsley nakes I tablespoon toasted sesame seeds I ·~ . . . Wtdn"d'1. June 28, 1972 O,llLY PILGT if1 '. BARGAIN BASKET WILL 1BE OPEN TUES. JULY 4th 10 A.M. TO 7 P~. ' • ORANGES VALENCIA ~:EET 5 ~ 49¢ JUICY S . NECTARINES 2 .9¢LB. GR~PES SWEET THOMPSON '"'33¢ SEEDLESS : LB., POTATOES U.S. NO. 1 WHITE ROSE BAR M HICKORY SMOKED ~ZEE $ TOWELS YOUR CHOICE OF COLORS OR PRINTS-llG ROlLS ZEE T.OILET TISSUE PACKAGE OF 4 ROLLS GOLDEN- SOFT MARGARINE s t12 IOLU POI SI.I 1 LI. IOWL c MAXWELL HOUSE ~;~· $2 l9 COFFEE \ "· c•::::.•_79_:•-------:-----:::: FOLGERS $449 INSTANT COFFEE •u1~: ~!i:!':.T11 I ~~,~~~f Pco!~~~~.A~~CKERS 3ac OR 1unu 5lSAMI HG .• ,. 7 ':.. PERFORM PINK RINSE 1 GAL llG. ttc FRESH DRESSED 10 TO 12 LBS. 4 TURKEYS c lb I BRIGHT AND EARLY 4/'1 IMITATION ORANGE JUICE ~.~z. VAN DE CAMPS NORTHllN FRllD HALIBUT a OI. BANQUET FRIED CHICKEN ' ' 2 LI. US. 11 ·~? . ' HEALTH ~ BL\UTY blDI ((\\"""' 2~ !!.~! ~~ II•. $1 .01 AT ~-~ OTHI• noau 6~ ' . ..'.' ... ' ' .. ·TWICE AS NICE 1 FL OZ. IOnLI SHAMPOO WITH CONDITIONR 79f', fOI DIY HAii I U•. Sl .11 AT OTHll STORD .. POnER'S CROWN . s4-· CANADIAN WHIS~~11 ;:., . · ·~ .... 16.1 PIOOF -..,, ANDERSON CLUB KENTUCKY STRAIGHT . BOURBON · $429 ft l'IOOf..-6 YlS. OLD CHAICOAL f!ILTUID flfTH SCOTS LION SCOTCH "OISTllLID s319 ANO ILINOIO IN SCOfLANO" FlnH -----------.' . . Prices Effedlve: Thunclay thru Sunday . JUNE 29, 30, JULY ·1, 2 ...... •loct to ............ WI GLADLY .ACCIPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS . I . ' . . ' ' I I WE GIVE ILUE CHIP STAMPS COSTA MESA PLACEHTIA WI Gift ILUI CHIP STAMPS 19th and Placn' 710 w. ChapmaD • --~~-· I • I \ -' \ WtdModq, June 28, 1972 OAILV PILOT 4 8 ' 'Affluent Malnutrition' • Rieh May Get Richer B'ut · Eat Poorer WASHINGTON (UPI) -AJ. otberl have noted lbat Uemtnls have adopted normaly b I g b cholesterol be poulble lo control •'afllucnt lluence may be aod probobty weslern cllets, the legacy of westeru diets, Inc I• d I n 1 ·ff\lels, gall blsdder troubles, ma!Dutrltklll" to -extent la bazanlous to your bealtb. affluence, have changed the gr ea I I y incrused coo-obesity, 1cne, aod tooth decay. by JUbatjtuUng soybeon a!'\1 Jn flt~ Dr. Aaron M. eating babita of not partlcu1ar-sumptlon ol sugar. Wltb the Esklmoa, the 4let otbu vegel.lble P!)>leim for Altscbul, an JnternaUonaUy 1Y affluent aocleUes, such u Scbaeler suggelll t b t 1 changes bava betn abrupt bigh fat lllimll protelm. known nut r It Ion I at ·at the Eskimos. rather abrupt cbonge In diet wllereaa 1m6ng the 1ffiucnt "Englneerod" loo4s derlv.d Georgetown Unlverslt,y, baa Dr. Otto Schaefer, a phys~ si-the mid 1950s may be western aocleltea the cha-from soy or other' vegetable i;~lij~~;~-:; Ulied a cllsease wblcb be clan w h o hu pracUced responsible a m o n g Ibo have been gradual and \htlr sources, be says, ~d pro-~ 1 "allluent maJnutrillon." medicine Jn the Arctic for Ml EUiJnol. for I n c.r e a 1 e d tlfecll on health slower lo Vlde est.betl6olly icceptabla Ju peoples improve their ln-decades, reported t b a I prevalOnce of such a8mentJ u recognlu. altemaUvOI ,ad ~ be far come•, they improve their E!klmos living near white se~ <llabeles, 1therosclemils, 11> Dr. Allschul thlnU it may lw threatenlllg to !Je'lth: diets -0< so they m,a~·tbink.liiO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;• o;• ;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;O:.;;;;;;;;;;;;j ActuaUy,.r a,c cord Ing to Alllchul, Ibey run afoul of diet deficiencies. This disease has t w o primary causes -the affluent eat too much and they don't get a proper balance oI vital nutrlenU. Increased use or processed foods may result in loss o( trace nutrients which, though their bulk nlay be small, are extremely ialpartant to well being. Says Altscl),ul: ''As .people's Income rises, they eaf more calori~ .ahd more foods of animal Origin. Thus animal protein, a n d consequently saturated fat, increases in the diet." ~L/lf Jd~:.J.~ c ~ ~ y-cxx;:; o~ -:~.-·-. ,. ). . I •. :... • c..-_,,.,,-·--· 601 EAST BALBOA BLVD., BALBOA '"""='~· :"" . REFRIGERATEO DELIVERY SERVICE: PHONE 673-1310 SNCIAU THUISDAY, FllDAY, SATUIDAY, JUHi H, JO, JULY 1 BREAKFAST SPECIAL GOLDEN RIPE New ~ Frito,.~ • CANTALOUPE BANANAS NACHO'S ChHi. Flavored , PURE FRUIT FLAVOR COMES THROUGH • Affluence ls also charac- terized by larger intakes of carbohydra,tes, and this raises the incidence of tooth decay. Juicy-Sweet-Good Great on Cereal TortRla Chips Wonderfully Del{cious Gel Molds Desse·rts Gas Checked Make sure the stove 's burners are off -completely off -when not in use. This goes for broUers and ovens, too. Get into the ,habit of check- 5 F 0 R $100 1 c c A / lb Bagi ing before you leave the WI tlSllYI THI •••Ht TO UMIT 9UAH'ftTllS -~~~~~~~~~_".'ki~tc~he~n~o~r~house~~· ~~~~""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"~""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"~""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"""'!"~ More and more of today's Presa against bottom andl- mothen are mrtrlUon cons-sides of pan. Chill. cious, want to make use ol foods that are pure aod b!gh Jn nourishment. 'Ibat's why, for most homemaken, unflavored gelatine Is a cupboard stand- by. Unlike prepared desoerta that include artificial flavoring and artificial c~l-o-r-1-n-g, unflavored gelatlne Is a pro- tein food , , • to which you add the ·other .Ingredients • • • so you tmw. Beginning with unflavored gelatine. you add only what you wi,oh ... aod you lmow ex· actiy what goes Into a dish you oner the chlldml. And beta ... gelallne hu no Oavor of its OWD1 it combines beautifully with a variety of other nutritious foodJ. With fruita • . • flab, f1'0USI, O< canned ... gelatine turns up I n wonderfully nourishing deaerts that reslly delight Y<JUlll one8. . Frult Ch!Uon Pie will appeal to just about any youngsters • • • and mothers like it, too, because it's 1 snap to make. ~ crust combines com nu.., butter and sugar and requ1rea only five minutes baking time aod then it chills l!Jllll the crumbs cling. '"1e delectable f!Uing Is based on fro"" punch con· centrate and you can add the fruit your children enjoy most • . . strawberries, peaches, raspberries, or what you will. The pie will set in about on hour's chililng time. Desserts made with un- flavored gelatine may be as simple or complicated as you please .•. gelatine fits any oc- casion. It goes Into a spectacular mousse for a company meal ... or into a three-ingrefilent nourishing dessert t h a t ' s perfect for the family meal. Orange Juice to Eat combines the gel with on1y orange juice and sugar, goes into dessert dsihes so there's no un- molding. FRUIT CHIFFON PIE Cora Flake Crumb Crust: l cup corn Oake crumbs II cuf. butter 2 tab espoora sugar Measure corn flake crumbs, butter and sugar in a 9-incb pan. Place in a 3!0 degree oven 5 minutes. Remove from oven and mix thoroughly, Raspberry Lemon Fllllng: 2 envelopes unf I a vor ed gelatine ~cup sugar ;ft teaspoon salt l 1i1 cupa cold water 1 can (IS ounces) ,frozen raspberry lemon punch concentrate, kept frozen 1 teaspoon almond extract 1 cup icy-cold evaporated milk (See below), Sliced, well drained, fresh, frozen, or canned fruit (strawber- ries, peaches, raspberries, biue!Jerries, etc.) Mix together gelatine, lfllgar aod salt Jn a 211-q u a r t saucepan. Stir in water. Place over moderate heat, llirring constantly, u n t 11 gelatine and sugar are dissolv- ed, about 3 minutes. Remove from heat; stir In undiluted frozen concentrate and almond ex1ract. Chill until mixture Is the consistency of unbeatew egg white. Whip chilled evaporated milk in small bowl of electric mixer unt il soft peaks form, about 2 minutes. Fold into gelatine mixture. -Tum into crumb crust; chill until firm. Chill at least one hour. Garnish with sliced fruit . To chill evaporated milk, pour into ice cube tray and freeze until soft ice crystals form arowtd edges, 10-15 minutes. ORANGE JUICE TO EAT 1 envelope unflavored gelatine Io/, cups cold orange juice, divided ) v, cup sugar Sprinkle gelatine over Jh cup orange juice in saucepan. Place over low heat: stir co~ stantly until gelatine dissolves, 3 or 4 minutes. Remove from heat: stir in sugar and re- maining 1 y, cups of orange juice. Pour into • dessert dishes. Chill until firm . Garnish with whipped cream and whole maraschino cherries. Make.s 4 servings. Water Saved Keep a bottle of drinking water n the refrigerator, in· stead of letting the tap run un- til water gets cold. It's a watel"COnservation tip. Deliney .Bros; Seafoods ·,-~--::::--::-:--:"""".'7'~~.....;.. ....... 4111 of July Menu CRAB or SHRIMP LOUIE BREAD and WINE On • Mel ef l1ttwc1 pl•c• 1/.o I ... thril'l'lp ot ctelt. OK1r1t1 with 11!c..ll h1rd boiled •991, coli ltp111• 9111 .,..,., 4'111 ,iclrle, to1'111to w.d911, c1l1ry a r•-'i•h '"''" Top It 111 with 01la111ya Lo"i' Dr111. hit. f$1rw1 f.I · SM't with DI Cerio lrea4 Stlcl-1 et Fl1htr'll'llllt ~trf '•rhMlfl lr1M. c.,npl1t1 the i.111111 wilh 1 chill ... MHl1 of W..+t lfos. c;,,., •i1tli119. Shrimp -. : • : s2.10 •112 lb. Kl"9 C '' , • • lJ.10 '1!z lb. .-..~ .. ' Ldtff Dreul119 • • 40~ 1/2 pt. We'I loo -"" of Jtllr .............. JIOO j..af1pH• -Newpo/t huh 6JJ441t., Nl.nlJ.. .... N .......... : t •l :JI S..! • • mixes • I • r ·····-~~ r··---~.,~ r·····--~ DOUlll CHOCOLATE PEANUT IUT1U • CHOCOUlll CHIP • ( NUGGE1$ '-•••••-..( COOKIES '••••• ... ( COOKIU '••••• ... I (MokHobouUlo5donn2J!lnch-kioi) 11 (Mokff•to5doJOft2J!lnchcookln) 11 (Mokffo;,ou .. 3l!donn2l!lnchc:ooklff) \ I I lpock~oDunconHlnfflloYll'sl'<>od,Swl11 I lpockogeDuncilnHI,,... ·' O.luQCakoi.o;x 1 11 lpockogt>DunconHlnosWhlloorVollqwO.tux.Coko x I orONp Chocolate Detux• Cake Mix 11 1 cuppeonut butter }icvpcooklng oil ~ I I l!cupcooklng oa I )!cupcooklngo;I I 2toblospo0n.woter 29901 I 2tabiespoonswoter I 29901 , + I I Lcup(6ouncopockogo)Mml·1-cl1ocolotopiece1 I I 29901 I I cup(6ounc:epock )Mm........,ci-lotoplocn I pecan hal-.11 desired P,.oheof ovon to 350". eo..w.I. oft lt\gr-lt·ond m;x ...ii. 1 , )!·cupchoppod nuts I Preheat oven to 350°. 'Blend cake mix. oll and eggL Stir In 11 Drop from a t.d1poon ~-. ungreoMd cookie ahMt. Preu I Pr.heat own to 350°. 81.nd coke "lfx. oil, wot.,, arid .-.I I chocolate pieces. Drop from o t.ospoon onto On ungr90ted I 'I a cri1s-cro1• on .ach ~ with.. fork prongs thot you haw t I SUr In chocolate P!KM ond nuts. Dr6p from a t.aspoon onto. cookie lhfft, If dnlr.cl, top .och cookie with o pecoft ho/f. dipped "1 woter. loke ot 3m0 for 10.12 minutes until go1dM.. I on U(tgreGMCl cookie sheet. lake ot 35o0 for 10-12 Minutes.I I lokoat350° lotl0-12 mlnutet. '"'"'cookie tfffsdonowUh o 11 Coolancookl.,1-lotctl!!IUl'l mlnuto. thon-••-1 (TopltlcookinwHI iool< polo.ICooloncookle"-lw-.,1 I taothpkk.Cooloncooklo,._oboutlmlnute,thonr....,.. 11 tofl01shcoollng. ' I I lmlnutolhon,......tantektoflnlshaoilllg. I to rocks to flnllh cooling. I II 11 I I 11 . 11 I I 11 , 1111 I '···············""-"' '·--·------------"' '···--·-····--"!' ... -"' ' ' f ' • • ~ciouslydiffetentRecipeeaires · I, r.......... · r··-··--·.. r--,-·, · · UMONSUNIMI •.o: llOlm.I .. _, • , & ,, ( POllNDCAKP .......... ( UPSIDIDOWNCAl(CI '···-·-( ~ CAICI •••• .. ... c1.1ok .. 121a16....tngsl I <Mol\Oat2io1~'"""""'1 • I < "-1•20.-....,, I I lpockogoDunconHlne1l.....,Supr..,.o.IuxoC..koMx I I )!cup(lstlck)buttor.......,_ I I tpkf.eho-•ffOlofln lplcg.--Fudgo I I pockoaelemonltWmllpuddlngmlx(4 HrYlnglf,.) I cupb<own1-1 ('....tnglbo) -Cob Mix I J!cupCrlmO!I' • -tcltpwoter •m1 1 I lcan(tl~"Oz.)p.ln0oppf.,tlcet.cln!!ntd 1 I Topp1og:hn..io,,.w1J1ppodtoppil)gmlx(2·2l!-.rtofdl. I I p,..heof....,to3SO".BlondolllngrwdlontllnolorVobow!: I I Moroschtnocherryhal-, I lplcg .... 11lo!nllllnlflUlldlng('HrYlng1l,.),IJlcvpor:!llslmlllc.: beotot mecfiuoupeed for 2 mlnutff. loke kl o groosed ond ~"l!"DunoonHl-l'IMc!PPI.S..,,.-DoluxeCukt"¥.X I ttoo-"'!nlllo 1 t I I floured 10-lnch Mt. pan ot 350° lo< obout '5·55 -11 fll*ICreom • j J. DIMofvogololltokl!(cupballlngwottr.Add)!cupoold:a I ""tllc.,fer1prtng1bockwhontouchodllghtl~Coolr191dlkl. I I P-CNtnta350•.--lno13x9"2~ocllpon.StriNde I oe1Ulldo.,.-1_'""'•·MbcandboM..,..., upforobout 25 ,,,;nu1n, thon romo¥t from pon. i..o-1ugor-.ly tn pon. -tbllll!l ttl ........ -• In o 13xfx2.lndl pon. Cool -~2~ -,... de"f! f GlAII• lllond 1 cup conlodlono<I ,_.with ti!blc 2 fob!. I I ond --~nocfw,y 1-on ii..._ -Mix "°""I I .......,,..,.,_... .... (lflll ln,,...)wfttt-"""or~ lp00nlmltkor2toblffp00nllomanjulc..llflnlo-coke. Oldl-.d on1Ni'f6tiol -OS --and 2-. Olt pldl:_holts_'!'<l'-'·-ocup.alowly-1 W!iEN8AKJNGATHIGHAL!JJ\/0£S:Stlrllcupllourlnto-I I nolsubotltuto""Z,...""--.. ..--•• -lnloholio.llofoliOiottcafoewlllw.JlhllOrinllotoplng. I Mix°' dl•ected usiog I pockogt> 1oman i!lll2l!! pudding ,,,;x, 11 bott«-INlt. at350"fot-.50-untll-. • Ts 1' ••ln o cbiW deoploOwf. ltlondond whip ....... m1.r.a ll <>~.Crl!CO oa: lM""" -..-. and • oev1. lokll ot 375• l '""'dono with 0 ,..,.,..._ i......, 5 _.., ~ ,..;,.,, pudding. mlsl """' ...i -llo ...,11 lltff (U Min.~• forobout~5m11"1Vl•1. I toblalntotet. l'hM'**.,.....,..~ ..... ,...._.,, , ·1mm1••tJ frott coM. Cok• mu.-tbe lfCnd In ref1.,..:1if I ,.,. ,. r~01"--a1•--o1•-~ I .-w.,,_ __ _,,,w11h"""'''1-. I _,_cN11tc1........i.tcub....,i..i-.1ot1..._ I ''" UMv-.,_ -~moy-~I YMlflAKINGAlll!llllillJilm•Uot-l'or"""""I .. ._.T · . I co1<01o1a11.. . I I tt..oa1otanc1thii.lilillW~ ................. I I I .. •••••••••••••••• ,,, ,::::=--·-···--·-··" ,.......... ________ ,,, Clip loryour recipe collection. More recipes on all Dmican·HiDes packages. r I ' ' NEWPORT VIEW 3 gpacii>us , bedroomt, large living ft>Om an4 famUy. room with nr.pia-Only 8'7,850. Pl .... call 546-2313. . "THE BEST IN THE WES1"' For only $29,500 you can enjoy Uving in a 4 bed· room, 2 bath double car garage home with a heavy cedar shake roof. It's close to the new H.B. park with all th'e little lakes. Call toll free 842-2535. LARGE FAMILY'10NLY • 5 Bedrooms . , ~ · • 3 Baths • Formal Dining • Atrium • 2 Patios • 3 Cilr'Garage • Only $46,500 • Perfect home for large family • Call 847-6010 Today! LUXURY Pi.US! Don't wait -see this truly fine home in Dover Shores that has everything to make living worth while. 3 large bedrooms, 2% baths., quality ex• tras throu~ut w/w carpets + custom drapes. washer and' refrigerator. Beautifully decorated outstanding all electric built in kitchen. Dish· with extensive wall papers. ~king $UO,OOO. Call 673-8550 Now! .·I ONLY $1,450 DOWN '"NO DOWN T9 GJ. LoY.)r <Orne!' lo~ 3 la<p be<lrodml, built~ll!, 1eparate utility room, tlreplace tn buae llyinr 1room, 1ahab ,root, lots of brlclt wofk and a , 1..,e1y countcy ·•tmolg!lett. Qnli 129.000. .cau 8'7'1\0l~f..; "?ore Information. ' .. HAY· DAU!" 3 ·CAR GARAGE SVerybodY wanta one,. here .. one for-l)'OU. 4 bed- room, 3 baths, 14 x 20 family room' with fire.. place. Very large lot near Mlle Sqµare-'tPark. All this for only W.,500., ALL terms. Call toll , tree 842-2535. . j ( "SCHOOL AND PARK ACROSS THE STREET" U you have children and you need a play yard, this ts it. School and perk C4J1 ,~· YoUJ'I with this 3 BR, 2 ~ home that'1-ln excellent condi- tion.•Oftlr $29;750. Call toll ·tree 847~10. ' THE. 'UVIN' IS EASY No riloWing .-. No painting .. Safe for your chiI· dren with schools nearby. Log .sized fireplace in a step-down living room. Formal dining area ol:. kitchen nook. Wall or closets iri muter bed· room plus twin bedrooms and aiconvertlble den! Two and a half baths. It'• all here at $42,450. Call~646-7171 now for eaq•.,U.vln'.. DOUBLE DUTY Double Beauty; Thi's luxurious family home has the comfort and stimulation of design that will unite every member of the family -and still it segregates the children for their ,pool side ac- tivities. '1..ocated in beautiful Glen Mar, only '37,900. ~ 546-2313 for ~intment. • • VACANT LOT 60x300 . LAST OF THE BIG ONES, ZOned R-2. Aakinc $24,500 in·Costa Mesa. See it, call 646-71n. ' 'SUPER OLDER -LARGE tOT Unusual older, 2 bedrOQJU. "' bath home on huge lot. Could build 'nother house on rear. Pri<!ed· at onJy $33,500. ~tio~ pro~rty .ad- joi.Nng available also. 1st time advertised. Call 646-7171 to see. ,, WANlED!!! · TENDER '1.0,VING CARE. From a family wtib iJesires~ live in-'a. eood. nelghborhOQd. e~t ·schOOJ.s, convenkmt to • marketi anC:l b-eeWi.ys, cul~e-sac street ~e to Mesa Verde Countl:v Club. 3 bedrooms plus fam- ily room, 2 ba.#ii, covered patio. Priced at '39,999. call 546·2313. I CREATIVENESS -VERSATll.llY SEN.$1TIVITY • All or these are paramount in tJits spacious family home. Custom\drapes and beautJ.ful s_~ag carpeting throueh-!>ut. . Jmmaculate ~ With sprinklers front .Md.1 ,rrif. Vefy gbol ·bUY. at $49,495. can rtght now to-see.~ 1 IS THIS YOUR Nm HOME? Charming. ~Indal style in immaculate f::OndJ. tton throlighout. Features 3 -BR, family .l'OOm, 2 baths. country kitchen-with used brick flreplace, fonnal dining room. Close to the beach, ,achoolt: and ahe>pping. Priced at $39,900. Fdr ad«nttonal info~tion and appointment pleue call 54&- 2313. UYE·IT·UPPrTY .. POOL & PLEA;SUIE ·. Here:1 where tbe ~ iite beJfu1 decOn.ted with careful precision and thodlhtful <let.ails. 3 bedrooms, 2 ha.tbs and a famll7 -area for.oJ)ly '33,950. Call 847~10 Nowl ' " .. PARKSIDE PEl~CT . Choice .corntt 'next to park ln lrvtnt. li-fanJ custom detail& ln this fine famil1 homt with 4 bedrooms and tamily room. Pric:edi to HJI fUt at '$34.750 lntludlng tbe land! COIL646-7171. .~ •' •• OAILY PILOT ;: NO ONE OFfEIS , MOIE!·~· TATBRS "•·' .... 1 I•-----"'"--... tralMll ~M,11pll.Ja' tlflC.. h ,_...._ ... I• ~1111,,....:..,p1 ... c-... ...., .., . SEPARATE ;MASl!t •toOM Thia lovely tri-Se\ltl home in·• prestlce aft& has the muter bedroom suite.on the JoWer level with direct aocess to the pool aize yard 4 bedrocma. ~II bath~ ,fonnal living room and bu b<en frt.sh)y painted. May ~ bouibt on VA tenna. Call toU1tree 842-2535 today! • . TRUE POOL LOVERS ALMOST OLYMPIC SIZE Large private lot. Private low malnte~land· scaping. 3 spacious bedrooms. aeparate family room and dining room walk to schools ana· perk. It'• country living at $41,950. You must see this home to believe it. call 842.2535 for appoint· ment, Now! PARK YOUR BOAT!! Along \\'ith a wide boat pte and cement pad, you will enjoy a spacious patio and a great den for dad. This is the home for thole summer par- ties and also has the convenience ot a 1paclou1 living area and 3 roomy bedroom1. Less than $1300 down will have you settled by summer. Call 546·2313 for a preview. MAKE OFFER 3 Bedrooms • 2 Baths • $28,500 -!5% Down • FHA/VA Terms· Call 847-6010 .. "ENJOY YOUR HUSIAND" ts he mowing the grass, pulllng ...-eeds, watering or cleaning the pool when be should be with YOU or the KIDS, then take the time to 1ee this fan- tastic 4 bedroom condo. It will surprise you with its large rooms and living area. Call and see 842-2535. FOR THE WHOU ,FAMILY "BONUS ROOM" For family living 2300 sq. ft. you muat see this before you buy 3 bedrooms, 2 ·baths, formal din- ing room and a fantastic bonus room for only $34,950. lt's below market. can toll free 842.2535, SEJ-ARATE FAMILY LROOM $27,500 3 large bedrooms, 2lbathi, btautiful kitchen and dlnJng area.. Located on • quiet cul-d~saC'"street. Just right-for the kids, .5% down. FHA' or VA terms. Call toll -842·2535. ' OWNER W.ANTS .. OUT $3000 REDUCTION Beautiful two story, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, family area home. in a prestiee neighborhood. Bargain b1if ~;~~50, ALL. terms with •. !5% down. HUNTINGTON HARBOR See this beautiful home, located j(lst otr the water, on Davenport Island. 4 BR, 3 BA\. tam.Uy home. MB Suite. completely coven 2nd floor with view of ocean A-channel. Priced at only $60,500, call toll free 847-6010. THINK.ING? "Think Huntington Beaclr. We're ~sy. Very Busy. We need 2 hon- •st eager salesmen. Let's talk 1bout it. W o offer personoliz~ l•aining; •pleasant and ·profitabU , office; lots of •holp ond ,-los aids -plus an opportunity fl! grow. •Call mo todoy ot 842·2535." Torry MCC.rclle. • AmNTION .ioGGING ENrHUSIASTS This home tt so large )'OU can do • )'OUr dally jonfn1 without leavl.ng the house. TbM large bedroOnu, 2 bath faml.ly room with ·flnplacd downstaln and upgtalrs, 1300 oq. ft. of llnlded bonua room. If you have a big family, you must see: It could · have 6 or 7 bedrooml. Call Now ••• 842-2535. ,..,. , USED BRICK AND P,INE TREES Talk about a planter box!! Thia front yard has lots ot~ uted brick and many large pine trees. This newly painted 4 BR. home Is located on • quiet cu14<1e-sae whlch1 Is just right ror the fam- ily with small children. HUrry this one \vo o't last. can toll tree 847-6010 • ASSUME 63/4°/o VA LOAN • ImmacuJate 4 bedroom home • North Costa J.1esa • $215/mo PITI • $3.000 will assume • Call today 546-2313. SEE AND SELL YOURSELF This neat 4 unit income property is a sleeper. Has 4 • 2 BR homes with separate garages - private.patios -yards -carpets + drapes. Choice Coda Mesa location, near schools and shopping. Never' a ·vacancy. Asking $62,750 -Cill 673~ Now! DOUGLAS TRANSFERS Do you want a 3 BR, 2 BA. home within \Wllk- ing distance to Douglas? Lush carpets, beautiful drapes., lots of brick wor k a"ld a lo\v mainte- nance yard. Thia one iJ super sharp. Call now toll free 847.ool.O. .·BY THE BEAUTIFUL SEA Located just minutes from the beach in much deslied Frf,nciscan Fountains By The Sea. This ape.clous 2200 sq. ft. ls made for livi ng, profes- s1onal· lilndscaplng and beautifully decorated all for $47,950. Hurry and call 546-2313. LET THE KIDDIES ROAM Through tflls 4 bedroom beauty. For Mom and Dad there's a separate and private master bed- room and bath. For the little ones a 14 x 22 added on rumpus r oom." Call 546-2313 to see this great home. $37,500 VA· Appraised. NO DOWN TO G.I. 3 Bedrooms, buUt-ins, •fireplace, shake roof on a corner Jot. Priced at $28,950. call 847-6010. MODEL HOME WITH POOL Fonner model home with lovely h~ated &: fil· tered pool added. Owner transferred and it ma. tivated. Now is the time to buy A: get early possession of thil 4 bedroom, pool home so that the kids can swim by the· time school ls out. Call 847-6010 for more information. HUNTINGTON H•RBOR ISLAND LIVING AT ITS BEST Truly delightful 4 bedroom, 3 bath home on Davenport lsland. Bright, sunny kitchen family area. Must see master bedroom suite which completely·Coven second floor. Ocean view from balcony. Priced at only $60,500. For further tn- tormation, 'call 847-6010. WHAT'S YOUR PLEASURE? Stop.-book ·exterior, blue ribbon landscaping, Im. maculate cozy famJly floor plan or 1parkUng jewel pool r Vf.P.Y not. have them all ettortleuly With all tel'ml in ·a prestige neighborhood u an added bon111. Price only $33,950. Call 847-6010, Now! . , ''DESIGNED FOR UVING" Beautiful Barcelona model, with everything )'Oll need for' comfortable living, 4 BR. fornull dining, separate family room, 18xl8, and naturally, a comunJty pool I: clubhouse for your enjbyment. Bring the family to see this o,ne. You'µ Be Glad You Qld. cail 8~,7~10, , ' IMMACULATE MODEL HOME! Exqulaite upgrading and interior decorating. this fan~tic 4 bedroom, fain.Uy room, formal dining room bU ew.cything including deep shag ce.rpeting. ImpoalbJe to lmprqve on this home. Priced right al $48,000. cail .MG-2313 NOW I . I" ......... tM H•l"Nr Atta ....... ,_1t1..,_ TM1 k wt.re"TM Action 1 .. • .~ . . • BACK BAY VIEW Plus ·vie"' of Fashion Island &: Eastbluff. Juat as beau tiful at night as In the day. A beautUul home with 3 spaclous bedrooms & a channine fan1ily roo1n tor only $64.500. Call 64~ 717L OWNEll WANTS ACTION ! Action be \\1lnts, but he had to drop his pricn. Formerly on the mar)c;t't al $59,950 and reduCfii to $53,000, and hr"ll carry a sCCQnd at that pricf'! BUT HE CAN'T W AIT. H E SAYS "BRING A NY OFFER~" lf you \\"ant a Ne1vport address, a pool, 4 l>Pdroon1s, ('I C. and )'OU have a desire fo1· ''DICKERING," then call us at 64~7171. SPENDABLE Mar. Rustic. beautifUI front home, 3 baths. ust'd On this choice large 4 BR -duplex in Corona del brick fireplace, heavy shake roof, bullt-in kltch· en. Plus a nice 1 BR -unit in the rear. 2 car garage, well landscaped. Only $65,500. Easy terms. Call 673·&550 . BA~OA ISLAND WATER FR lft nramatlc. tlaJr llas this """ designed .• -oom + den, home with cbann and penonalit.y. MaD1: distinctive feat~s , •• 2 pe.lJc;ie, U8'd brick ~ place, quality thick shag ~ting, au elic:bicr built-in kitchen, pilvate dOck. Everythhtr fol' Happy Living. Asking $98,800. E·Z terms. Call 673-8550. NEWPORT HEIGHTS 5 BEDROOM • • • $58,000 "n'l~level home, great for ent.ertahitng, wet.~ large sun deck, very large lot, rear yatdJaUJ for tennis court and pool. Many trees wJth rear access for boat or trailer. Call 646-7171. .• • • 4 BED.ROO'M BARGAIN Check· this ~ bedroom. 21,l be.th townhouse fn carefree University Park. lt's ioomy, vacant and avallabel on eaJY terms at only $31,50. Call 673-8550. UVIN' THE GOOD UFE Here where Ille good lite begins de&ignl!d aM decol'llted with every detaU. Entire borne l\as been upgraded and customized. Expensive ~!>1 yellow wall to wa.11 .carpetg throughout. Cu•tOnt drapet. Air conditioner. Lovely electric b&Iltia kitchen, dishwasher. Two bedrooms and 2 betha. Two car garage, cho1ce. green built~ln the Bluftl. Only $38,000. Call 673-8550. • ... ... .... i.·· " THB REAL E STATl:RS ~·. ·~~ ...... . .,. ... . • 0,. '11 t • • • • .. 'NEWPORT BEAGH 1700 Newport Blvd. 6'46-7 171 COSTA MESA 279 0 Herbor Blvd: 546-231 3 HUNTINGTON BEACH 179 31 Beech Blvd. 60 14 Werner Ave. 842-253 5 147-601 0 CORONA DEL MAR 332 Marguerite 673-855 0 ·INVESTMENTS 2790 Harbor Blvd. Suite 2011 Cost• Mesa 540-1600 l \ I\ • I • / TUMILEWEEDS i ( HOLP 'nll! l'l!ISSI!~ l'I!~ I ', CUS'Tt>Ml!!ll 1WANTS . ': 1l> Pl.A~ '. AH AP. • ' • .. .-" ~ •• .. • ii'" .... I ( MUTI AND JEFF NANCY l ' ' •• " N \.:! ~ ~ ll • l7 ll " ~ ,, .. .. . tr t N " ~ OOWH 1 or tilt U.S.A.: '""'· l Trlbt ol luHI ) Ion! ll!d ltll•~ IQfffl!ll'nl 4 l~b(l'f!S S Bt -..id t apart & (~11y -..or~ or M 1chtl1n~tlo 7 Rl111lr111 or: Su Iii• I ll1kts brown • "' 11 .. .. 1 ' •• "' " • " 'Z« .. " ~" " 'Naval off!c~ 10 Buslntss syndicatrs 11 Rotirrt --: 2 111ords 12 Clo!t In SPltf ll Wll ll1111s Md Kr!lntdy 11 Show plrasurt 22 Raisr in a11thor1t1: 2 words 24 Calibtr 26 Ont wl!(I plays I Plft. 27 Oor who ltilrS Sl)lllflhlng: 511f11t 28 "f'tlrll~ JO 'lotion JI Symbol of !ht USA 32 Flavor I '~IQ " ' " " " .. " " . " • " •• -, ., -~ •• " " • tr JJ Mernbtr1 111 siclfn\ Garlic tribe 3(:. S11r of LO!'d Byroo'1 l11li111 villi 3~ Lariat: V1r. 40 l !vtd In !MIS 43 Btidgtd 45 Typlcal 41Eatly1rlt 1sr of pr1sonrr 4~ Ft#lklurt's ••trrlronl 52 Rhymtd tOtllpos1ti011 53 Othrrwisr 54 Sttludtd spot 55 Eqyivaltnt 511 Al••rs SB £11Circltd s' s°" of R~tcc• t.O Mr. Arna1 bl G11ln splkt n 12 .. I 1> ,. JI JI )l " ~ • .. . Nearly Everyone Liste08 to Landers PEANUTS • ly CtiesNr Gould ""°"' '1'WI! L.DOICS OF"flll OAESSlll: TtlP, IT MUST HAVE. eaN $MOE BOX PAVDFr DAV, EH 7 ly Tom K. Ryan \&'~ ~M~1~~M~~ SK INNY SIPE ..• PROl"l.Y RUN qs f'OO\JPS •.• By Al Smith SEE, 1'HERE'S ONE OF 'EM NOW/ By Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller Things I've Learned After It Was Too Late .,,, JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ' I I • PERKINS •I I I GASOUNI! ALLEY SALLY IANANAS H<.F"4&. HM.<t ~.F,,.,£? GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS AW, G'lllA.11 ! By Charles M. Sehulr hargoe with tllecat next door.Hes alqsright By Harold Le Dom: ly John Miles • 11 lllllil Ill 11 Ill U I I -By Dick Moores This week l cflclded not tD be ~ponqed~ By Charles Bal'lllftl By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson "TllAT's 711• J!JCllST 'TtUS IS coNT1;ti\CT THIS COMPA'l<'i ""'-18Lf' llVElt H,AD,AND Now '5"" • IT'S «oN• ourrH• WINPoW! ( .. By Roger Bollen 0 D • THE GIRLS 11011 dear. 1 waiter Iii • lo•edo IJ••Y• 1eare1 me 'oat of u omelet." DINNIS THE Ml!NACE • J PlLOT-AOVEUIS!R Wrd .. ""7. -28. 1972 DAILY PILOT If} Everyone Hes So mething Th at Some one El11 Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, • Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad ·rt:te Biggest MarkE!tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642 -5678 for Fast Results ' General oflnJa J IJ/, PRESTIGE WATERFRO NT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 57 Lindo Isle Drive Custom 4 BR., 3i,.; ba. home on Lagoon. Mstr. BR. has sitting area· & frJ?l c. Waterfront fam- ily rm. w /conversation pit around the frplc.; lovely garden, lge. slip ............ $189,500. For Compl ete lnform1tlon On All Hom11 & Lots, Pl1111 C1ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67>6161 Gener•I General IRVINE TERRACE CHARMER Bright, cheerful patio off large lam. rm., 3 BR., 2 ba., formal d in. Loads of built-in storage. Choice loc ., near be ach. $59,750. M.C.Bule TERRIFIC LAGUNA OCEANFRONT Lovely, newer Rockl edge home. 5 BR., 5 ha .• tam. rm., pool , den, din. rm. 4 Car gar. Cust. const. plu s a sensational ocean/ island view. $195,000. George Grupe. JUST LISTED A great find . 4 Bdrm. view home in Har- bor View Hills. So clean & nice, it won't last at $65,000. Call me now! Jim Muller DOVER SHORES 5 bdrms., family rm., wet bar , pool. $125,- 000. 3 Bdrm., enormous family rm., excel· lent view $93,000. E ileen Hudson. EMERALD BAY -HEAR THE SURF From anywhere in this 3 BR., 3 ha., C.D. home in gated , priv. community. Luxury appt's. Low ma int. $110,000. Bob Yorke. HARBOR VIEW HOME Just listed. Montego ~!., largest single ~ty. 4 BR ., on corne r. ic k frplc. in li v. rm., formal din ., plus ill view. $49,950. Howard Wells DESIGNED FOR CtjlLDl!EN Efficient &. charming 5 Bdrm. home .. Up- stairs family rm:, dm1ng rm. For t.he fa- mily that wants an investment in happi· ness. Balboa Penin. Bill Bents OCEAN VIEW -$86,500 Charm galore in old Corona, on 93' lot- 3 BR., 2 ba., office: farm style kitch. !- House off Ocean Blvd. Immac. cond .. mo ve right in. Triana Bergin SEEN EVERYTHING? NOW -see t.his impressive 3 lg. BR., huge, beautiful fam. rm., choice town - hou se in care-free Univ. Park. $55,000. "Chu ck'" Le wis EXCITING LUXURY Big Canyon beauty. P rivacy -grac~ for a most di scriminating taste. 3 Frplcs., wet bar, sep. D.R .. lam. room. Call for app't. & details. Paul Quick VACANT LOT -LIDO ISLE Build the hoo se of your dreams on this choice 40' corner lot, across from beach club, tennis & priv. beaches. $53,000 . Char- lene Whyte • THIS IS ITI Truly the spot. Large & gracious , on quiet N.B. street. Big upstairs suite. den & wet b'll'. Encl. ya rd with trees. Call Bill Com-stock 833-0700 -- 644-2430 Coldwell, Banker ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11. General --- General General NICE THINGS HAPPEN -IN TUR TLE ROCK - Let us show you this en•:hanting homt. Atrium entry, spacious living roo m with fire- place. 3 Large bedrooms, 2 bat.hs, LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to store your trail- er or boat. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... $62 ,500. "MAK E SOMEON E HAPPY" WITH A VIEW AND POOL Cameo Highlands. Architect designed-I\Tew carpets & drapes. 4 Bedrooms, convertibl~ den, 3 baths, cathedral ceilings and 2 used brick fireplaces, family room , built-in kitch-·. en & B-8-Q, PLUS MANY XTRAS. E ntertain around your ow n POOL . . . . . . . . $76,500. HAPPINESS IS A TH ING -CALLED HOME - Enchanting TWO STORY S bedroom 3 bath, 2 fireplaces, FAMILY ROOM. form al din- . ing room. NE\V carpe ts and dra pes, is land kitchen, SOMERSET model on FEE land in HARBOR VI EW HOMES .... $72,500. "SPLISH • SPLASH " ON THE WATERFRONT Waterfront and pool with P I ER and SLIP a vailable too. New carpets and drapes, 21h baths, WET BAR, m arble fireplace. Over- look THE WATER from your patio and en- joy .. .. .. . .. ----.. .. . $85,000. START SMART READY AND WAIT ING . . . . . . for you is t.his MONTEGO model on FEE LAND. 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, formal din- ing room with FAM ILY ROOM adjacent to the built-in island kitchen. See this HARBOR VIEW HOME and buy .. _ . . .. _ . _ $54 ,950. //"4tt1e-S#dd ~ ... -- REALTORS 644-7270 1818 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. G1neral 20' x 22' Bonus Room \VITH t'ONVERSATION PIT surrounding Swedish fire- place plus large modern kit· chen, dining room, huge liv· ing room. 3 big bcdroom11 and 2 baths. Beaut. grounds complete with putting green. Besl 1t1esa Verde Jocation and priced $3.1.750. with S<;I. down paymt. call 546-5880 IOpcn cve11.) -• -HERITAGE . • REALTORS Cute Cottage· $19,000! Eastside location on nice street. 1 lrg BR + Den. XJnt condition w I n e w carpets l drape11. I-las large covered lanai room I: many bearlna fruit trees. Won't la.st long at this price~ • Ge~erol • SUPERB FINANCING TerTilic 4 bedroom home with added family room. ldea1 C.o11ta l\fesa location close to school and Mopping. A!l.!lume existing S~ o/c VA $211. per mo. pays 11.ll. Hur- ry, new listing. $32.950. COATS " WALLACE REALTORS Op1 n Even ings • 962-4454 • LOW DOWN AND ASSUl\fE VA LOAN • Nice 3 bedrqom Easlside home with brick fireplace, HUGE y 11. rd , cul-de-sac location. Detached double garage with alley entrance. Priced only $26,000. Call RQ\V for further delai!s. 546-5880 (Open eves.) ~,, HERITAGE . . REALTORS -"' .. _"' .. General ** ** ** TAYLOR CO. EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$155,000 New bar.front home -years ahead in desi~n . High cetlings, open spacious feeling for taking advant.age of water view . Just add yo ur pier & slip. 4 Bedroon1s , family room, DR . and playroom. Submit exchange. "Our 27th Y1ar" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 211 1 Sin Jo1q uln Hill1 ROid '10 v1rlooklng Big C1nyon Country Club" NEWPORT CE NTE R, N.B. 644-491 0 General Gener•1 4 U.-.il ()Uf ~f ON TH E EASTBLUF F -with a view that won't stop. 4-bedroom single story unique floor plan wit h added game room . Living room, famil y room , kitchen and unique game room all have views from the bay to Balboa and beyond. Just listed at $62,000. PHONE UN19UE HOMES, COl ONA DEL MAl 675·6000 REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Daily Pilot Ciassifiecl ORANGE COAST'S BEST SALESMAN •• G1neral Gen1ral MACNAB IRVINE RNER HOMES HOT I Enjoy POOL comfort for only $43.500. In- teresting, immaculate 3 BR. + FR. w I stepdown wet bar & all the trimmings. MUST SEE -644-6200 . NEW BAYFRONT Owner's fl oo r contain s living, din- ing, kitchen & master suite ; guest noor 3 BR's & Jiving area. Pier & slip privilege. Sweepin g Bay VIEW. In the hea rt of Newport Harbor. $236,350 fee. WHAT MAKES MAMA RUN ? Th e price $39. 750! 3 BR., lovely convenient ki tchen w/attached big restful FR. over- looking lush parklike gardens in the ultra new Green Tree Hornes. Lois Miller 642-- 8235. MIRAMAR DR. -BALBOA Charming 3 BR beach home nicely furn- is hed-including linens. Low maintenance - immaculate! Perfect vacation home or ready for summer rentals. Asking $62 ,500. BIG CANYON LOT Your private drive descends to the drama of this ex pansive fajrway lot. Your view from 133' or frontage encomp11 sses the 17th fairway & the 18th tee . $14,500 sq. ft. E x- cellent value at $52,500. ... -------- [Irvine I ~-~1~ .. "°"11yec..peny I IOI Dover Drive '-2•1231 tl4( llecArt""' 9"•1200 Newport ... ch, eanfom11 tnn G1n1rel LIDO ISLE Cozy single story home in chotf'f' Lido locA lion "·1th 3 ~rooms including m11..st"r suite ,11th 2 ~Hu; 1Lv1ng rootn has \1:h11ro brick fl replace Jots ol books~lves & opt"ns onto priv1HP brick patio foJ!flal dining room .,,.ant &. ready for lmmt'diatr OC'cupanry 1>3.500 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 -----2-STORY $2750 ·Assumes That's right! $2i50 huy~ lhll' 2·story bt>auly. A!l..~Umf! the $29, 750 CJ lot1n 111 7'"',. Jn-1 !ere.st. $265 per mn. PIT!. 4 ki ng.size b('{!nit)ms. La11tf' family room. Hea \'y shake roof. CioM" to l'<'hnol~. ~hop~. everylhing. llurry . call 645--0303. I OIU.\ I I Ol \O\ "'EA, '()N.' G1n1r1I Gtn1r1I ,. ... . ·--· .... T REASURE MAP•"> • CHUCK CAROTH ERS REAL ESTATH ·TREASURES· SOMEWHERE IN THE CRUMBLI NG RUI NS : OF THE OLD HAITI 'S CASTLE ARE STILL : 50 CHESTS OF GOL O. BUT ALR EADY : FOUND, RIGHT HER E IN OUR OL ' SEA': FARIN' TOWN , ARE TH ESE I MONEY MA KERS I 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 RARE FINDI 8 HOUSES ON A LOT In Eastside Costa 1\1esa -pampered 2 bed· rooms. $135.000. O"'ner moving out. Has hap- py tenants -"'ill finance. . 1831 WESTCLIFF DR., N.B •. • CAL L ME 646·5152ANDSEE .. ·' .. ... ... Privacy Please Almosl a 1hird of an acrr General with large trf'f'!I and pl<'nly Gentrtl of room beh11l'f'n nl'1i:;hhors. Prestige N('\.\'Pfll"I Brar·h 1n- i:ation. Three v••ry IA.rg<' hNi· rooms, 21,t balhii, l1vin.1t room wilh niassi\'f' 10tonr fireplace anrl OPf'n hram ceil.ings, formal rl1n1n~ room . ~Dramatic tcrrazo cnrry. plenty of patio det•k1n,1t Jul!! outside the fan1ily room and a real 1wimn1in.it-Si7.r healed pool. Scpara!P lrn1•Nl play yard for lhe rh1ldr<'n. I A real value at S66,950, EASY WALK TO BEACH •' ... from this 4 bclrm. home located within .s tone's th ro'"' of Ocean Blvd. Also. could be used as 2 bdrm. home plus 2 bdrm. guest-, apt over 2 car garage. Fee lot • not leasehold. ; ' Xlnt value 11 f7P,500. I' C. F. Colesworfhy & Co. Realtors Eastbluff Office • '40-0020 Bayshore Office 675.-4930 CLOSE TO SCHOOLS Within a very (ew minutes to Orange Coast College, Costa M"'-HI and ,rade schools. Very Cl~ 3 Bed- room, 2 Bath whh Family Room. Fireplace. Larae Comer Home with Boat Ac· cess. $32,500. CaJI ~. Eveni~s 548-4569. "U" FIXIT $200 BUYS! Must gee thla 2-STORY BAR· ' • I• OCEAN BLVD., CdM . i~ Beauitfully apPoi nted home. Custom bit. wfthi:· many delu xe fea tures incl. Hond uras ma.hog.~· beam ceil's ... PLUS 2 bdrm. guest apt. over : 4 car gar. The harbor vl e\Y is breathtiking,' ; · both the apt. & home. Price just reduced I· $8,000 -now asking '128,000 Submit reason-. able offer. Convenient parking-t>asy to ~ 675-3Mn a "DROP-IN'' at Bay & Beach Rea1ty ""' % BAY & BE A CW !!Ii\ LI" """"• ., "'" ..... '~ .. General G1n1ral POTENTIAL GOLF GAIN today. Perfect for ;;:;;;;;=;;;;;;;;= young or old couple. FHA OK! Needs TLC. ONLY $17,750. Call now. &&5-0303. COURSE VIEW? ,' WESTCUFF There I• a "'""" poosibtU~ I 01!1 \I I 01 ~O\ Al4f'"1_.< E~clualve lilrting-4 bedroom thlt Excellent Home ft11W with pool. See thi1 lcvely 3 have just 1uch a view, ti& .Yftl' old home, de11ignt"d by th.11 one 'lefore It h8ppens Richard Leitch and built by a nd the Price Goes Up!•! Sturtevant. !Two large now 3 Bedroom, 1% 88th11, DlnlJlr for orig;lnal owner. A Room. Fireplace, Latte gracious home the entire Area for Boal Slorage, SUPER SIZE BEDROOMS family will enjoy, on quiet Double Garage. $.10,500. CAii in this immaculate 4 l..lncoln Lane. $81,500. 646-055.5, Evenlngl'I 548--t569, :="';~.;,.1 .. ;,~1~ :00": PETE BARREIT l'l~iil bright p&tio kitchen and -REALTOR-~t. ca~:Ca:ing~;: "'!~'!'!'!'· 64~2-'l'S~100~~~!1! I \!? 5- ,,..,. part " the """"'· only *BUILD INCOME* FO SJ.1.500. SEYMOU!l wtU RECLOSURE . , • N'pt Beach, 50Xl60 R-2 Jot, p ndl ! BR 2 ha Co take )'Our present home In e ng. · . Mier room to build. 2 BR. home, ,... M v n1 Sc d trade on this beauty. can ""'• eu. e e. m ' , 2 car gar., rented al $210 J>Atio f ~-1 now for 11 p po Int me n t . • nn. or .,.,.. ~ OWtlU SETh10UR RE A LT y month. Onl,y $26.900. needs otrer. $32.500. 847-1221 . CAYWOOD REALTY BALBOA BAY PROP. * 541-1290 * * 641-7491 * . General Gen1ralG ;;;,-e-ne~r-a.-1 ---=---'--I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WALKER & LEE REALTORS rLU 'l<Jr\ GOU' ANYONl7 FabulOUJ Meadowlark Goll Cbuf'lt.. bomt. 4 deli&htful bedroomJ. modem kitchen fadllllel. brand new urpeta and =tom drapes, f1'lh!y paJnt..i. preat1JloU1 Huntln&ton Stach atta. Call to vtew -$39.~. IAY FRONT-$175,000 Exceptionally well done exttUtive m11nsion with 4,000 IQ. ft. of comfort a.nd luxury. Double large dock. 4 bedrooms + den and 5 baths. App't only. DOVU SHORlS-$1 07,000 Over J,200 sq. ft. of comfort. luxury, and presUge ln a m1rnilicent New· port Beach 1ettlng with an unforgettable VIEW. four ape.clous bedrooms. i bllthi. large family room and FORMAL DINING ROOM. Shown by ap- polntment only. IAY 0 1 O CU.N-$S9,500 Ta.ke your pick for this elegantly done beach mansion with approximately 2000 iq, ft. of comfort and luxury. Thrf'f' huge bedrooms. 2 baths. 15x20 FORMAL DINING ROOM phu :2 flrtplaces, one in ma1ttr suite! On land you OWN~ By appointment only. ~Wfll KER 6 lf[ real I ors lllDH THI GINEIATION GAP Own 3 custom doll houae1 on a lot. Prime eut Costa Meu. area. A three bedroom for pattntl. A two btdroom ror son A wtre. A one bedroom tor ar&ndma. Price la $52,500 wtth 109li down. txclu1lvt with GIANT TWO STORY "FIR H NTALS" On kine 1l1e lot. ln North Calta Meu. 4 bedroonu upstairs and a 20x24 r1nl1hed separate family room downstaln. 3 btth1, country kJtchen and dlnlna: &rea, pluah carpett A drapea 1n every room. At $39,500 -better aee It now! New on market. l23S month. 4 bedroom.. 2 baths, 2 car aarqe, block wall. Ftnt and Jul plUI ~ 968.3371 EXEC UTIVE GOLFERS Beautiful 5 bedroom, 2.800 IQ. ft. executlve home juat a putt away (4 block•) from the country club. How's thll for a buy at SS2.~'!' Call tod.ay for appolnt.mient to •~., I - NIAi UPPll NIWPOIT IA Y-$25,250 3 bedrooma. pol~hed hardwood It ahas carpet. double praae. hup lot. with lo'YfMna 1hi.de lrffS. A11ume the VA loan and $1'7 "per month J>l'1 all or no down to miw VA lotn. Flrit di)' on the market. Costa Mesa Office Fountain Valley Office 17213 l rookhu rst Open Evenlnts Newport Beach Offiee %043 Wntcllff Dr. It lrwloe 646-7711 0,.. .... 1 ... 17'0 Harbor Blvd., Open Evenlnt• 545·9491 545-0465 ,, --~~,~ r _.... I~ I. -1"-J~ I ---·I~ I _.... l~J -"' .. l!Mo;;;;o;o;V;e;nle;;;;;;;;:!;~l~M~lob~llie~H~omii"ii~liiiil For Sele 12.S lrvlne General Costa Mesa rel "''' fllll .. - Income p,_rty 1" ,......., te LNn ---------'OPEN HOUSE --------FORMAL DINE "" OWNER. LIJ<O ...... I END UNIT CONTEMPG. BR. 2 BA, lam rm .. lrplc.I 519,950 MESA VERDE Pool· $33,500 R<Mly 10 movt In' 129,!oOfl. 3 BR. 2 BA. A R<al 11 .. uty. All°" ooe n.or 3 bdrm .. 2 ba. GREEN RIVER 1st TD Loans 6'!4 % INTEREST SUmm"r hcnt ~ater! New Low <10~'11. 5-19--0266 or AU t'lectric kllchen, 2 car townhou.&t. Near ttereation, Ddlghttul 11du.lt occupied Great F1tmlly -J>a.rk paJnt ln A out. t..uah lh8.I 494-~. J•r&&t'. dtn. rm., ltllC'ed .ehoob 11.lld ahopa. S4l,500 home leaturing S 1pacious MONTHLY SPACE RENTAL carpeting. Gourmet kltcltfm, CORNER 101 c:ul-ilt·PC st. 3 yard Good IOC•UOn. $2000. incl, land. be(iroomi. ' lure muter TR.OM $6&.50l EASTSIDE $24,500. Sat. I. Sun. 12 to 5 p.m. TRJPL!lXES. Modtls at 171h St. in lluntinflon Beach, wolk ,. beach. Call 9fil.1311. 2nd TD loans Ddroom borne oa c.\lJ-de-Nc lltrfft w/•parate &artae Ir alley tntn.rlcf:, Vacant 1.nd 1ftey to 1ee anytime. 95~ loan available. Formal dinln1. 4 quffi1 ~l:.e SR. 2 BA. rrpl &: bonus rm. d.n. $189. total monlbly. (i d h 11 •uUe with d.reuina room. A KJ't&t tam.Uy eommunlty b('dr00m1. Pl~ • sparkllni.t S3S.500. M&-?793 Drive by 9651 Sailfish, tben ' , re •• fully c ar Pete d lncludilli Jlllh comfort A IUXW')' for 32' pool! A steal 111 only I El T , call, kitchen, ~Nice porch 11nd evtt)'OM. L«altd 10 min. $3.1.500. low dowo. C&ll r,,1 ___ o_r_o______ family room. Laree covf'ftd eut ot Anaheim on new 645-0>ll -If REALTY lS' x 32' patio and many Rlvtnlde !'wy. Take Crttn -. I • . ; I JI I· • ........ BY Owntr, duplex', Capistrano Beach. p),000 or lradt> for Jol. l Yr old. ......,.., Lowt11t ntes Oraqe Co. , "WE BUY TO'S" S.ttltr Mt9. Ce. "2·2171 S4U611 Serving Harbor Ina 21 yra. • • 3 BR., 2 BA., cpta, drps, l_ge more t'Xtras. 11.ll !or $31,950. Riva otr·ramp adjacent to pe.1kl. IJte. pool·siie Jot 531-5101 ( :'..tJ 531-5111 Univ, Park Center, Irvine Call 540-ll51 to see our new Green River Golf Courae. r. Newport at Ftirview 6'46-1111 (1nytlmel I lllll \I I Ol \O\ •' '°' ' •' h I f'llCIO*"d by block "'ail, I :::::=z:=:=:==z Call Anylimt, 813-0820 Jbting. 4901 Green Rivi!?' Dr. clolif! to )j,lnt •ch o o I a'!' -.o,,1t,,1..-.,.1>o~w!i!!~"8"'"A"M"'"t•,,8.,.P"M"I Call ~USt (Open e-ves.) Corona ** 714m7-7374 mllt"kcl!, new m <1 I I. LIVE ALONE? " Rca.'!Onable. 8 3 7 ·I 7 5 3, . lagunt Beach S'x~' Mobile home w/10'x20' Mountain, Desert, NEEP CASH! ·$1,000. or 1ll' Res.rt 174 to $3,000. $10.000 and more. ---------· See Avco Thrill for a f«oal JUST LlsrED -Larse Jakt Est.ate Loan. Upqn ap. front home. N@f!d1 T.L.C. proval, use the mo~ s~.000. ho\vever you like. Al.90 ask INVESTMENT _,Tax sheller about our u nae cure d -Triple< lplua) on eol! Pl'!I'llOnal lotn11. AV C 0 ('l)UrM' • Near ski tlOpe THIUfi. 620 N@v.1>0rl ctt. 494-Zll6 all 5;30 & v.·k·ends. \\'ell, LOVE It? Try on this Cabana, carpeted, skirtln,f, * EASTS I OE * Fountain Vall•" 2 t>Mroom 2 b.llth ~uper A WALK I: atorq;e shed. $1800. After I-Jere's a bargain for somf'· 1-------·---11h11.rp Tiburon IO\\nhnusr. IN SPACE 5, MB-4052. one. Nice 3 BR., li!ll ha's.; Q\\'Nl:R anJJ:ioUJ assume Just reductd to Sl!l.500. '61 Ar&us deluxe mobile on pool1h;e lot. \Valk 10 5~'"/~ F'HA Joan no\v on pro-$5,00J. down. Payments of That "'ill be your 1st im· • homt. 10x55, N.B. location, VAC IK!hoo!s, Ne\v tarp. ln ll\'. I ~·rty. Sparkles like a je\11cl. $208. tncludt taxPs. pretsion of thlt 4 BDRM. & Mfaaion Vltio across street from beach. : ANT•4 BR rm. & h1i1J. CoppPr plumh· J bedrooms, load11 of exlra e larwin realty e DEN home. Of'!ailtd .rustic 4 Br, 1&m rm, din rm, crpts, $3,750. Park mnge. 64&--99216, $49.500. Diie.'. hSulPhte o~!O!~-Newport ?-.tANY CABINS from $81,000 ac • · .,,,.....nw. ~EDIATE POSSESSION· in.it. Quick poit.'lf'M. & only cabinets le: shelves i n 968-«tlS <irchllecture w/exlerior o! trplc patio cust drps. $3995 2 BR 1 L 1 d .:f~tastlc cornf.'J' lncat l()n $77,250, k111·hcn and b e d r o o n1 , WOOD PLANK 0 L DE $41 OOo A! 6 30 830-8011 ' n ° F;plt11tyofroom!orboat MORGAN REALTY \.ourntct buillln ktt<'hen. BIG BROWN BARN, ROOJ.~L!NE' OF ' . t : ' • \Vaterf~t Park. Temu or &: up. Morta••· Alplnt Realty, Box 1796, Big Trust DMCf1 • I\ tra.il~r. Only 5 )'l'I old, 673-6642 675-6459 Lovf'ly \vallpaf)t'r, cuS'tnm I "'hitc "'OO<! trim. 2 of 5 \\'EATHERED· CE. 0 AR Newport Bt•ch rent opbon. 6~3-38l7. •·•-,'," fmch•1mud~"". poo 0 nv 0 enL· C ARIB.. ISLAND- 1 <ll'apes. Beautiful t'Overcd bffiroom,.: can be uM'd for Sl-IAKES, Locat<'d in the • •••. • • ••• -·~ 1 Br 8xl5, cllaice corner lot. "1fl\; e<1 patio with brick flrcplare. I rrafl~. pll.ln!lng or "'1!11.v!ng! ht'an of Laguna's Rlvierri Attention Sp rent $46.15 mo ln bst pk. '1.A,.BLE alze family room 2 A(·re Caribbean l!!lanrl Of< Double garage. Brk. $26,000, 1\etHt kitchen hes view, ga11 C 0 AST LIN E \V I A N 321 W. \Vilson No. 29, C.M. 1 s den. FrHhly painted, wetttr·front arrrage on hlg 962-8865. eopprr builtini1 + breakfast OlffSTANDING VIEW OF Small Families! · f condition. 135,95fl. ;,Jnnrl • Honrl"""· Cnll OWNER "'"'' ,.11. Lov•ly nook. Eoclo'"d pocch and THE OCEAN. Un;que Hv· II'• h•ve lwo fine newly ll"•d l•l ;."' §\1545-8424 (()pen eves.) FAR EL WALKER homl'! dc!liJ:rn"d for happy r;-iinhlinK rrar Joi. S35.000. rm. w 'hiJ:h vaultM <'eiling homrs for you in the Pop-ft~n~~~tt•. , Realtor 646-7414 f:Hnily livlng & entertaining. 5',;., do\\'n. BKR. 962-5.jll. !APPROX. 16 F'T. AT ular Park Lido to.,.,1\houses.1L ______ j Balboa Island 2 baths, elegant firepla1·c PEAK, w/w CARPETS & The h~·o bedroom, t11.'0 balh, J•••••••••• lend~ Added cha.rn1 to $700.-MOVE IN CUSTOM DR Apr: R l Es model h&.s bten freshly I• XLN 'T LOCATION gr11it•iclUJ1 living room. 4 THRUOUT. Charming ram. painted, is a pool side Jora· Business Property 154 Cl · 1 1 d 1 2 8 &-He r =ys all o!her costs! d 2n 1. · A .. • d 1 1 a.ss1c s An ion1e, r + ht>drooms. Gourmet's pride . ··~ r.n or d tv. r., ha.~ '''OOd tion a,,.., 111 rea y or m· . Cul de Sac Charm '"!kl!DUCED $1,550 I "Apple pie cond." Uirge ! lnd!lcpdr lo!, 1prlnklere<I, ao t-· enjoy the pool . The ' eoaae is J'lew tbruout. ju!if b k .. _ $202. r'>Pr nio i n c , un 11vu.se. Distinl·live r x· huilt1n kitchen, t>ven a ,..~ block f!oof'!!, USED BRICK meditlle occupancy. The ler, F\.iany unique fealure~. rllMwasher. Plan vour sun1· "''t>rything. 3 BR 2 BA FIREPLACE FROM three bedroom model Is in OPPORTUNITY Qu · ~ fr alur<'S bllin f'lec R/O, al1ly constru1·1Jon. Patio, nier activities in the lov<'lY FLOOR TO CE I LI N G , perfect condition, has a This fine commercial build· S dk I 2 V.'/\1' crpts & drp.~. used .. _ un , rrot car gor .. lst co,·ercd patlo. Many extras, BI.LT. ·IN \VET BAR, F.TC. '.•uee rar garage. and a mo· ing hu loads of style and is P bl. ff · f h brirk fpl, f"A ht, patio. t _, II IV h I I d u I<' o ering o this on1c. ankle rlcep sh;1g carp('ting Shd1ng ii;l11ss "·all Oµ<'ns 10 1va1t.-u se er. 1t e. e an , a .,.....at ]"""lion for ""-n• UNUSUAL B 0 ~ ,2 va<"ant, xlnt Joe. ood N I d •" --~· Y \.\'Iler· $71,500. o•.l·,, 41. Expcrlly landscapc<d -pool Jgr. masonry derk t'nclosPd g . ewporl ocat1on an in any creative type of i;ized ii;rounds. Brk, S29,9j(}. I' \v/bleck iron rail.'!. Spacious prices from $26.~. These "'Orie. The floor plan is flex· Coron• dtl M•r 1 1n!O this 3 bdrm. chumer. Priced to .ell at ll42,ll50. Charming Spanish Style R42-256J. kitrhen "''at!. breakfesl are your best buys m to"-n! ible and the properly comes OWNER leavlng. 2 yn. new, 162-4471 ( :'.::'. J 546·1103 area, lfAS BU IL T ·I N Call 675-72'15. with a gul\l'anteed rental of Spanish design beeuly \\'ith ran ll:" & 0 VEN . $905. a month. The duplex 3 spacious he<lmoms, 2 O\\'NER despcra1e, c 0 0 1 DISH\VSJIR., DTSP., ETC., in back of the apartment up-: ~,CORBIN- , "MARTIN .. ~iALTORS 644-7662 ( Newpol\t Heights ;Tac:ant • $26, 9 50 ! Abandoned Colonial! GUEST llFACILITY. Sunken fan1\ly room w/beam ceilings. All tile' kitchtn w/stove A re. trigerator Included. New Pint + 11hag lhru-out. New dripe1, 40' covered patio. Stotqe l'()Om, HUlT,Y • call -64.'>G30~ r:- 1 I Olli ' I I Ol \O\ t • I ' I ~· ~ ASSUME VA LOAN 4 1BIG bedrooms. covered patio. Vel')' sharpt Excellent I location in beautiful Laguna Hlllt. Full price $31,995. \ ~L I I.. COATS . " ' WALLACE ' '><, · 'REALTORS '-. -546-4141- ,, (Opon Evenings) lft cul-de-sac a t r e e t , 1 pattidA f Bedroom, 2 bath; ~~utiful 1-slory home ; {~ing clean. Close to t~ls. Shitke root Prof. Ydlcpd. Only S.14.500. • ·CALL ANYTIME .3921 or Eve. 548-9416 ' - :.J.AST OF THE ·""' CHEAPIES f~droom 2 bath, bulltins, ~Jl,ble garage wllh stora1e .. efld patio. Condo, lllking , S2til,'950. Vacant-move In fqukk. OIU 54G-l101 (Open Evesl. •. HERITAGE REALTORS Predomln11tPs ll)rou~hout this home, Oftcl' you cnf('r thf' double wrought iron gates to the inner couriyard, and then through the n1ass1ve double front dootll, you'll know you have found the home for you! The four bed· room wing is' most unique, 11.nd the beautiful wooJ ceil- ings arc out.~!anding. Call 675-7225. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS C'OC~TION T'ween bay.tide & ocr.an! 2 R·2 Loll!, Old!'r duplrx. Build up! Tear do11•n'!' $69,500 • J-"irn1 Call r-.·lrs. Jlop1»<'r 1n sec University Realty 3001 E. Cst. l/"·yk. 6i3-fi510 CAMEO JIJGfJLANDS • PY OWNER. HARD ·ro J<'JND 5 BR, 3~i BA horn!'! \V/fam rm, see thn.s fpl. Newly painted 8.t. decorat~ + oti'an vicu'. Open house, daily 1·5. $69,950. 673--16.18. Costa M11a - FABULOUS POUR LookiRg for a clean, nt'al. spaciow; 4 Bdrm in a beauti- ful area? Call on this one'. This gracious hom't' has nearly 2.000 sq. fl . ol Hvin.i:i; area. Tip-Top COl'ldition in l'\'<'ry \\'ay . including main· irurC'rl Ja1v11s. Offertd at onl,v $34,500, Ph : 979·1050. s=r21 POOL TABLE '''ill fit "'ith room to spare in 15' x 30' den. 3 Bedrm 2 bath, fJrepJecc. bllins. Xlnl in & out. pultn111n b11ths, e I e J.t 11 n t 0<·ean brttze in the Jo\·ely nit \VITI! OCEAN VTE\V. stairs \vould make an eco- flreplace, deluxe bulltin pa I i o, po o t sized 1-lujte MSTR. B DR ~1 · nornical home for the new kitchen, c'liiihwasher. Pride ~rounds-n<"atly 111.ndscaped SUITE \1-ith \\'a I k · l n owner. Call 675-7225. o( ownership inside & out. & nianicu.reQ. 5 bedrooms. CLOSET & PR IV AT E1--~--~---- Excellent neighborhOod -Thi-level home "'it h BATlf. This brtter qunlity Near upper short jog to beach. J-luge l!E'parate baths, dream horn(' is in A·I condHion. N B COLWELL grounds-15 fl. on sicle fnr I buillin appliances lnclude Owner ha.~ alrE<arly moved ewport ay • hoat or trailer. Brk. $35,450, dishwasher, tamJ\y room North & it's priced for im· $25,250 PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS 962-1373. boasts fireplaCf'. Uiuncl'"" mC'tl, s11lr at. L....a 'J 3 1...:urooms, polishedl~--------- 1 YEAR new 5 BR GJ't'('n· area. \Valk tn all ~hools. $42,500 FULL PRICE hard\\"'OOd & shag carpet, Cemetery hrook reMlr. Spacemakt>r I Brk, $34,!\00, 962-5566. SEE TODAY! double garagl', huge lot with Lott/Crypts 15t model. sw;m club. Ava;J REPOSSESSIONS GONE TOMORROW ' f • h d f MISSION REALTY o"·tr1ng s a e re es. 2 CHOICE "--ts al immcd. 3-15,995. Tr a n f. A••ume the VA I"•· a-• ~·" owntr. 968·07.lll. For information and location 985 So. Coast Jl"•y., L;:i 2una 11•7 th ""ll' "" J\.1emorial Park. N.B. Con. of these FHA & VA homes. Ph 1714) 49'0731 ., per mon pay a or. no tact Nils Goedhart, Attny. 121.000 Condominium, below one ""' down to ne\v VA loan. Fint i.::oi=' contact -~ JIJ" FHA. 3 Bil, 1» BA, frplc. KASABIAN FAMILY CHARM d"Y on the market. 1-------- • 714: 494-2859 * Commercial Real Estate 847·9604 3 Bdrms., 2 baths, nestled in Property Huntington Beach g<'ntly rolling hilh11. Completr $23,500 with 1vhite picket fence & Laguna Beach 151 . FOUR BEDROOM Rflnchhnu~e. <"Urved driV<'\\•ay, ovcrsb:NJ <lbl ~ar, shake root, ldscpd, Jrg kil/fan1 rm con1bo, big liv r1n w/fpl, upgrRded \\'/1v crpts & drps, bl!in RIO. dshwshr, t.'OVd patio, sprinklers front & rear, Price reduc<'d to $26,950. for quick &alf.'. I' 1llJge ReJI EstJte '62..4471 ( ::::.) 546·11 Ol YEEUUKlll Unnl<'ntionably dirty 4 bed· roou1 2 ha1h, fan1ily room, on large Jot, Divorce pres· sure . sacrifice. Locaterf in pride-of-owm>r!hip neighbor· hood. Near new shag carpel· ing, builtin."I, >.:Ira large patio 'vlth \Valerfall anrl sprinklers 100. Try Gl "No, no," Make an offer. larwin realty !)AA.4405 (24 hrs.) 592-3211 Gl or FHA TER~1S. 3 Bt>d· rm, fcncf'd yard, attached garagt'. Clean in and out. GJ's no do"·n. * S47·8~11 * ' the Re.a l E state M1rt OWNER transfcrrtd. Ex· cellenf hnn1e for a young fan1ily "'Ith '.i bedrooms, 2 scpa.ratc balhs, like ne1'' \\'311 to -wall C"arpeting, dral1('s . Relax in lhc palio aflcr a hard days \vork! P i cluresque landsc11ping. Prime lociition. Br k, $25,950, 842-Qi91. \VALK to Reh, 3 Br, 3 Ba, pat io , frplc, full y land !'I caped, $37,950. 968-4749. 9TI1 Clearbrook D•. GOV'T. OWNED Repossessl'd homes. Low down, Government pays closing cosls, Call 968·4441. * Crest Realty Jots of privacy. $35,500. Realtors 54.5-9491 50 X 113 C·2 ZONE Open Eves One ot Jut downtown parcels AO/an 1--cN=£W"==p~o~R~T~-1 tor development. "EAL EST' ATE HEIGHTS E. 17th St., Coste Mesa It "" AAA. Tenant. SU5,00J Dn. 1190 G!enneyre St. 5 BEDROOMS Cash spendable return 494-947.1 549-0316 $58,000 Realonomlcs, Bkr. 675-6700 HARD TO FINO Tri·levcl home, great for EXCLUSTVE C·l ~i ACI't', C\OS('·in, remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 ente11aining, "·et bar, large level, 1247 Brookhurst, shop- bath cottage on lge. R·2 Lot. sun deck, very large lot. ping C!'nter, An ah e Im. Room to add units. $45,000, rear yard Ideal for tennis 545-4389. ---------* 499-1800 • court & pool. ?tfany trees. Condominiums Lido Isle * REDUCED * A Nord strata Corner Custom bit., 3 BR, 2 ba. S74.000 LIDO REALTY Rear access for boat or for sale 160 trailer. Call ~7171. .1-...... --------~ CONOO !or Sal~. 3 BR. 2~~ Ba., 2 car garage. w/pool priv!. Near Hoag Hosp. 673-9183. -oTHEREAL ~ES'fATER,S . 3 BR, :Z BA, bltins, patio. dbl 4 BR, 3 Ba. 3 yi's old, spec. garage, pool & club. $21,950. tacular view. Best quallty, 557-2876/549-0932. beautifully lndscpcl, co vi,----=---,----,.,.,. patio, cathedral <"eiling, Income ProPertv 1(..6 TRIPLEX formal din rm, S74,500. 2 BR. frplc, fncd yd. patio, 3377 Via Lido, N.B. BBQ, xlnt cond, $24,950. 3 T\VO BR. each in PRIME * 613·7300 * BR, bltns, trplc, paneling rental area, C.M. $49,950. -SALESMAN patio, fncd yrl . Assume Open dally 1·5 702 James St. \Ve have an opening for a $.).~'ill Gl loan, $2'7,850. CALL •'-" ,,,.J,J4 high calibre, creative sales· Thomsen R.eRlly 492-95."lO ,, \:I' O\VNER sacrificl'!. No down .• _. ·~~ per .. n. capabl• of deaUng NEWPORT HTS. ._ - O\VNER.-JRR, 1 ~ ha, frplc, Toto.I d"'n $2600. mo pymts-$163. $25,900. 847-51£9. G.I. terrr1&-4· bedrooms, 2 in higher priced properties. I EAL TY b11th~. large farnily room Irvine HURRY to see this tastefully Near Newport Pe1t Oftltt \vilh Inspirational fireplace, ----bocuaR& laUJeoD Jta. decorated home, 3 Bdnns .. TRIPLEX, ea. 2 BR, aJl eleclric kitchen, NEW LISTING 11eolComo 2 Ba., frpl., lge. patio plus w/patios.Nr.stores.$45,900. dishwasher-a real 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 alley acct:ss. Only $44,:JOU. 675-0144 Agent 646-7414 \vile-saver! 2 J>lllios, full 2500 Sq. ft., charming 2.sty.1 ----------CALL I'!\, 646.2414 . dining room. 2000 sq ft home, just steps to major TIME FOR 91\:1 ~ home on huge grounds-grf'enbclt. 4 Bdrms., incl. 4,,41.. Income Property trailer or boar g 11 t e, huge mstr. suite w/lrplc.: REA TY Gnrgrous shag carpeting-! sep, dining rm., family mi. QUICK CASH Nt•r NewportLPost orrtct SIX UNITS niuch rnoft'! Brk, $37,000, Let us make an 11pp't, for B Del N rth Co t M ~46--0604. you to sC'e this home no1v. BACK AY VIEW ~e, 0 5 a eM 166 $32,950 Roy McCardle Rea ltor 548-7729 . -studio apts, 2 BR, 11,i bath BRING PAINT AND INCLUDING TJ-IE LAND, THROUGH A .Plus view of F11shion Island each, \Vith garages&: an I LA\VNMO \VER. Anrl turn $54,900. & Eutb!uff, Jus~ .as beaut!· alley, Present income $930. 1 l hi~ neglected 3 bedrootn 2 ful at night as in the day. r;~e h~~J:a l~~h a~:;~~ DAILY PILOT. ~pa~au'!tifu~~s w~h : patjo, \Vhat a buy at charming fan1 \ly room !or ---SY OWNER. $25.500! No down'lo vets. only $64,500. Call G46·il71, 1810 !\'.ewport. Blvd., C.i\t per mo. FULL PRICE $67,500 ,..-.2 TRl·PLEXES B•lbo1 Peninsula Mtaa Ve rde SF.Yl\IOUR REALTY' "SINCE )ll"t!" WANT AD Newport 3 B R47-1221. ~ R, lam rm.. 2 frplc'~. ).c;:t \Vestrm Bank Bldg. t '-O' THE REAL 1"\J. ESTATCRS Bear Lake. CaliJ. ITI4J 8fi6...751 l. INVESTMENT · TRIPLEX Plus . with f'ireplace• NEED MONEY'! Or do you have a TD to aell? CALL Lloyd, Bkr, al 64Z-21TI. -·---------on Gou CouNe &. lll'!ar Ski Arta. $49,500 Also 1 Section • 640 Acres S~:JO. an ACNl. Godwin's AlpiM Rf'lll Estate _,__ I~ P.O. Box 17116. B;g Bear HOUMS,furnlohell , ~ Lake, CaJif. (TI41 ~7511 -....t..~ • LOT In famous Lake Havuu, B•lboa P1nln1ui. . . home of the world famous BALBOA Pe n i n , Chan- London Bridge. Located nel-Summer or y r I y. cloae to all achools .l cit.y. Bayfront. 5 BR, 4 Ba, Ip S9000 or will trAde /or Costa float le: pier, crpt'd. lat Mesa or iq'e,wport Beach in· class.~ 6]3-2039. rome prop. 644-4687. I ·H,.-u-n"tl"'n~97to-n-,8"e-a-c7h-- 2 Lots, secludtd $2,450 Moonridae cabin $15,750 FURN. bachelor co~. Lakeside cabin $35.000 Walk to beach. Ref. req. Call 866-4641 or write; 536-1617 alt 5: ~pm. Spencer Real Estate, P. O. Lido .Jale Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Calif, Real Estate Exchange 11'1 Action Le11.st·B&ck NNN 4 Br. 2 Ba. July nsG/wk. SllXXl/mo; \Vinter or :Y1'!1 lse start'g St'pt. 956-1300. Newport 11 .. ch Owner \\>ill Exchange a $175 • Bal. Island • Lrr 1 Br. $75,000 ~ity plus $50.IXXI over gar. Privacy&: Charmj cash lor Income or Land $185 • l br, 11.•aterfront iii from Compton lo Sa.n Diego. dplx .. lrg. patio. Agent P.O. Box 5541, Buena $300 • 3 mos only • Lldo Park, 90622, 828-1627, (7 am Ptnn. 1 BR apt., util pt!. ti! 12 pml. NU-VIEW RENTALS Real E1tat1 Wanted 114 673-4030 or 494-3UI $92.~ Util Pd., C.M. WANTED to buy, 5 br home S8~ Unit; Util pd., N.B. in Miu!on Viejo with low S90 Walk to bch .. H.B. down or ltase with option CAii tor dettils, A rt . , C&ll 586-7737. Principles on-9794430 ly. Houses Unfurn. -BLUFFS 3 or 4 BR . * 673-7357 * Gen•r•I PVT. ply wants .1 or 4 Br home. Harry 833-1129 wkdyl I·S; 642-2312, 1.5 "'·lends. Busints• Opportunity AVAILABLE NOW 200 Large Corporation desires reponsible person to distribute T E N C O r a Division o( Coca-Cola! COF· FEE PRODUCTS. Can stMrt full or part time (f>.10 hm. per wk.) Com· pany establishes bu.sineu for distributors. NO SELL.ING! Go fi1hing or spend more 'lime "'ith your favor ite hob- by and let the machine age; earn you money. CASH RE- Qu!REO $24$1. Secured. LIMITED OPPORTUNITY Write no\v for information, include phone number. RED I-BREW COl.\PORATION 1001 Howard Avenue San Mateo, CA. 94401 IMPORT COMPANY with exclu1iye Giftwllre, Sl11.- tioneey, Grteting Une11 seek& 'active.· Investor with Na• tional SI.lee txper. nau Forl:>t! Rd fat~ Valley Pkwy) Laguoa Ni&>Jel. Tel. tor appt. wiqi Mr. Nolan or Mr. Orel, 831-1050. , Ll9UOR STORIS 5 to Chou from ------1 HouH•* Apto. * 145·0111 * $85. PRlVATE· Bachelor w/ all utils pd. Conv. l.oc. Av&.iL oow. .. ll>l. UNBELIEVABLE. 2 Br, !um. Utlls pd. SJnalea 0.1(. .. $125, OCEAN Breeze. 2 Br. blt·ins, Avail. now. Kldi~ pets, tine. .. SlG. CUTE l Br. Coft<, gar. stove, refrii, Child 0.1(. .. $180. SINGLES or Family. S Br, 1~ Ba, •hag cpts, Pet 0.K. LANDLORDS I Do you have a vacancy? We ean fill It. Many deslrablt tenants on our waiting Uat. Ab&olutely NO CHARGE. BEACON RENTALS * 64.S.0111 * LANDLORDS! We Specialize ln Newpcn1 Beach • Col'Ona del Mar e a Laaw>a. Our Rental Ser- vice ta FREE to You! 1'1)1: Nu-Vfew! NU·VIEW RENTALS 673-40.10 or 494-3241 SHARP 4 BEDROOM. ALL BUILTIN KITCH, QUIET CUL-DE-SAC. $270. PRONE AGENT 540-llSI JACK. RENTING-LEASIJ'G Hom" only. 5 yr'a exp. Agen( 24 bra. ~· Xtnt 'vlnter/summer rentals. u!ach unit has 3-2 & l ·BR's. 1 "~p. patio or sundeck \V/ea. .11Blt. Etl•y to set, call IOl'lny! , ~: 613-3663 642-6963 Eves. l.l'lvely hon1e. TrPe shndM. lnvt'Stors Assume 6% G.I. Univrrsily Park, Irvine 642 56 8 • Nice back ynrd \\·/bird I 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 aar. bltns. cpls. D•ys 552•7000 Nights • 1 F•frvltw ~;~· cu~~~~ay3 ~~:~ :;~::;.';:;~::::· ;;:292;;;:.::.;;~;;·s~so=n=-=5838;::~~~~~~~~!!::.'..;;:;;::;:;;:::;;;;:;;;;=-:;;:;:;;:;;:;;::;;I NEAR CLIFF DR. ·646-881 t HOLLAND 645-4171 3 BR. 2 B!. !am rm , l21l5 Jiii' mo. 905 Uard. 979-74Uor (1) 511$.3686. c!t'ni & .Jr. bi. 5 nl ln, San 3 Bdrms., 2 ba's., blt·ins. ( . ti ) Nc\v dishwihr. Freshly 1ny mt Die1to J.~rwy. Fin<'. er- 1716' Oranae Ave., C.M • H~&Jth food stor!'. S.lboo lolond ... d I~··-""~= S@\\~lv\ °'f.trs· painted in 'out. Near ~ range . ~.1,1u . .;.i.)7-619(1. • - NO DOWN TO VETS w:Ji.'~'; R11lty 67S-5200 • 3 BR .. 2 ba. Qulel •·orn°•. The Puzzle with the Buiff./n Chuckle 3336 v;a Lido. N'pl. ll<ach THESE ARE 2 yr lease. In gooct shopping ttntrr. Beautiful store doing aOOd bus~ness. 558-0242. NEED ambiU0011 couple as I A 2 BR. July $12$ wit. Aaa $150 wk. AvaU wil'ftr by mo. 220 Agate. "2-56.33. Botil spa<."E', Nrt1r frec11·ay & FIXERUPPERS •hopping 129 ~ II•••, • 0 li!eorra,,g• ltlltrt of the ...,_'-,,..--,,,..-.... business aaeociatea. No t~ Co(ene del Mar ,.yfront Condo · ,,11.~•. · Y · lour acramb!ed word• b.-,. ~~ii;::!~~~~ ~~-~~-;.-~.-i,~!~:-:-·=-~-;:~~1 iow !; i°'f ';;·~'·~~ -,. dsl. 1cUJate 3 Br -+ fem nn. ShR!i! cpt. drpr, bltins, p\1 · · · · • • · an &Id• of hW)'. Vi('W, patio, 2 Ctlr ~ar, l 1tnry I I i ...,_ 6f~I • f149.000 tO\\'nhouse on corner lot. V U E A S ~ Teil Hubert I. Assoc. py ti 1 1 ~n Via WM · 615·8500 ~~ ln~F~~."f21~~ At~~~~ I I 1 J ,.. i J_ i * 4-PLE X*--pm, 557-24'1. I j Xlnt COl!d. i.... """"'· F.A. MF.SA VEllDE I F A y E L I E. ......._. ~~t, bltnt. dllbwahr, Low 4 br, huge lam nn, form tltn · --~ payment! nn, Bea.ut lndl<'pd. Cul de I 1 I I I d • b sac. 145,500. 19'0 Kllld•er Dlvorco: A eciSfon y on t .:Jiomu on a lot. Bnng Cir, Sho\\'11 by 8 pp t . ..--:-,.,.-,.,..,....,...,._.,umpire who didn't -the-. :iii~~·lo::v•.642-IOOO I ;3;-54&-;;8:<~R;;;4~,,-'.-. "'t1o"'w"'n""1own-,-n.-w I• I G YI HI} II RI I •. Compl11a tht chucllt4.;~d I HOU"!l'~ on lot * Cf'l)t & ... int. Mu~t aet !his b-, filllnt fn tl-ie l!llMing words -r-you dMlop frorn altp No. 3 below. C<Jdde C.M. P1ml>ffld 2 •nt at 127.900. C.2 Joe 186 Ill. t135,000, Owntr movlni, Wtlls PIACe. 0 w n e r , ">Olli miance. 14!-098!. QIUCI( CAJIOTj!ERS COl.LEC& Pad<. 4 5r .. I bl. . RIAL ESTATI run rm. Many ""11 ""°'· PRINT NUMIERED lfTTflS IN THESE SQUAR!S UNSCRAMetE lETIEtS fOt ANSWElt PANORAMIC VIEW Btaut. maintained home 2 Bedrooms I: ll\l'l'e family rm. Pool. SG4.r.oo. Georg• Wiii iamson Realtor fl4a.6570 64.S.1564 Sln-Juori Capistrano VAU.E V\111. ~lomf.s, VA & l"Onv flnanclnR. rrom SZl.650. 3 A ' Br, :Z Ba. Alpine 'Rlty 49~21.12 ..... l!lfl.$59.1. but produce xlnt income & tax ghelte.r. 5-2 BR & i..1 BR homes on a double lot, $875. monthly income. $10,000 down. Asking $79,500. Ph: 642·1m .• 9:rr21 ----------e NOW SEIJ.ll'!G e vestment ~!al'}'. Call iaoo • 2 Br, all bit-in• Stull~ bl\Vfl 5 & i PM, 4ts-45M.' . .., "':'T CATERING co. fttahlishe<I T IH. Obi. carport, ™dii Pool. 14 yrs, La CAnada. Sell or $;165 • Exce.ptioNJ. 2 Br., I tnde. in beach a re a . Ba, huge !iv rm., 2 trptes; 2131~« Mn. Hohm. ~I blt1111. l bl~ beach! 2 WEEK conn• on mail NU·VllW RINTALS order Ir: importing. CAii 6r.J..40.10 or tl 4!M-3J68 846-9673 for lnformatio". *'fl' DUPLEX BR AND Investment Nt:w. Huge. dbr owner'• Oppartvnlty 220 unit. 3 BR., 3 8 ~, NEEQ lO In"'"'" with Us. !.'r;pl:~.bl!:"vie~~I~ l'IO.(O) •ach. Rtlurn.Jl.20')1. ocoan, t. hlllL Walk en bell •ellli.Blllf' P'' annum pl"' potential f, sbopplng. 1 yr. 1 ... $315. I --Jr=l INCOME HOMES lutuM! stock options. n.ts.....,ulred.813-09!0. . ~ 6-NEW DUPLEXES $48,!llO Secured by rrowlng °'"""P CLEAN 3 Br 2 sty tit< 1 'iiiiiiimmmmm;;m~l'-Nl:WTJUPLEXES 111,l!JO COOnlj< Mfl. OI. with PR> ldtch. 2 1rp1C: aund~k, Ni II tka111. new 2 • 3 BR unl!A. !'!'1!'!!.produda since l915. cpt. s. ~ Hwy. 531~ aft Mebl1'1 Homes ·~~ F •·I 125 J$t E. Bii)' SI .. c...ta Me ... j .,-,--"-.,..---~ -~c:'c."'=.,·=----~.,.-= __ •_r_ .. _._____ Complet , I. MOMy 'JO Loon JAii 2 B• 1230 mo, $ blocks lrolll 1J72 ~CCR • 24 x 64, N}ct * 1ri -By '-'Iler. 2 Br, MONEY a\•an tor .J.Jt le 2nd bt1Ch. \'rly rent. - adult pule, 2 BR. 2 BA. lee larg ya.rd1, • r 11e1. loans aiao purcbut TDs. Na rt Io J d . 6 7 3 ..5417; . TltWURIS SJi950. Prtnc!pal1 only. 391 _-•Ill, 1111 -J» Prlnootnn Dr. :14t>-176.!. tam nn, clotted tn porch l().XI dn ,500/offer. '-fuvln ~fcClul'f: Jt, a.1 _4'1-::.;.._m!;;.;,.·~..,..,=-=='°"· SCRAM-LITS ANSWERS IN CLASSIPICATION IOO 1 ~·~· :...:U.~n.!ew~lh~e<t-, _tni1_1 1 .!22l.\!!:!l~11u:...'"_'_"_°'_· _c._M. E1t•11· 0 11)'• ~ ,_, U111 "' -~ OUr ...... ...,., ------------. SIC, -!SI-MIO. ~. ,_1*r-"' to 11r,...1 ·-------------I ,\ • W""1t>llr. Jun1 28. l 9n Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Gultor 3. Baby Crib • 4. El.ctrJt S1w 5. Camera 6. W11h•r 7. Outboard Motor I. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11 . Rafrlger1tor 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewlrtg Machine 14. Surfboard 15. Machine Tools 16. Dls"washer 17. Puppy 18. C1bln Cruiser 19. Golf Cort 20. B1rom1ttr 21. Stomp Collection 22. Dinette Sot 23. Ploy Pen 24. Bowl ing B•ll . , 25. W1t1r Skis ,, 26. FrMJ1r • 27. Sultt11• 21. Clcick • Will Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. T:yp1wrlt1r 31 . Bar Stools 32. Encyclopedlo 33. Vacuum Cl11n1r 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm'I 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs' 38. Sterling Si'lv1r 39. Victoritn Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Projector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool Table 44. Tires 45. Piano 46. Fur Coat 47. Drapes 48. Linens 49. Horst SO. Airpl1n1 Sl. Organ 52. Exercycl• 53. Rue looks 5( Slcl B.ooll • 55. High C~lir 56. Coins 57. Electric Troln 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. CoffH T1ble 61 . Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Sot 65. Workbench 66. Diamond Witch 61. G<>-Kort 68. Ironer 69. Camping Triller 70, Antique Furniture 71 . Tape Recorder 72. Sa il boat 73. Sports Car 7 4. Mattress Box Spgs 75. lnboord S(>ffdbo1t 76. Shotgun n. Saddle 78. Da rt G1m1 79. Punching Bag BO. Baby C1rri1g1 81 . Drums 12. Rifle 13. Desk 84. SCUBA Gou These or any other extra things around· the house can be turned Into cash with a D·AILY PILOT WANT-AD so • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT _,.._ .Hou~.:.;.. .. ;.;;;.'.;.u;.;n.;.f.::.u•.;.n.::.. __ :JGS...;.1H..; .. , unrum. Coron• del Mar Irvine l~1.__-_,.,_-__ I~ [ ~ .. -,.,-1~ l ... ,,-~ ...... .-J ltll ""'-·,.,-l'-=-/,, APt•. Fum. SA _:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;; 305Got ·---,.-,.-,-----Apt. Unfum. l65 I.fit. Unlllm. Gener•I "·ilk to heh. 2 Br hon\e w/ t .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;=;;, •bsolutf"I)' t'\'erythi!IJ:, 4 BR., 2'1 ht. ,,, ,, , $365/375 Rent-A-House 979-1430 3 BR .. 21-. baths •••••••• $350 A lold New Concept VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. 2 BEDROOM, I Bt\lh, fln-pl1tt'f" S22S. •67~+ 2 BR., 2 baths ••••••••·. $215 4 BR., 2 btl.ths •·•••••••• $3.10 3 Bit, 2 baths •••••••••• $340 FURNITURE RENTAL Furnished & Unfurnished Adult Living Co1t11 Mes• e 11£AR 1'111S! 1 Br, furn, tnr.rl yd lor kids, prls. $1 35. ALA Rentals e 645-:WOO (ired hill REALTY ii Monlb to Month * 100% Purchase Option * Wkle ~l«Uon. Sty It-Color. * 24 llour ~l ivery Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • Plush shag carpet. mirrored wardrobe door~ Indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • . huge private fenced patio • plu sh landscar. Ing • brick Bar-be-Ques • large heated poo 1 & lanai. Air conditionlni. •. •.RENTER'S DREA!\t! 2 8~, Call Anytune 833-0820 Ii( SJi f1~ area, ktdic, i>els 01\. Orfi('e hours g AM to 8 PM lt£'f ~ m__J Unh·. Park C1'nlf'l' Irvine • 3101 So. Bristol St., Santo An• 5574200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. • $\:ill. --- MANAGING AGENT ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Laguna Be•ch ir•• ·~.. Apt. Unfurn. -~ -- 365 e FAMILY nttdM . 2 Br. ----------517 W. l!kh, CM .._.,,.,o~ (n(,'(j yd, inC'l gar. Kid!'i, p€'l11. $125 · UTIL pd. &ch nr Hj. 02'156!!!!!!!iN!!.!!'!!'!!'!i;"i!J!!!Si!JA!!!!!!!"!!!'!!--OJ!i!!il4 General $1 45. !l>C'hl, full kit., oet"an \'if'\\'. !! ALA Rentals e '45-3900 1165 • BACII. No. rod. »ull Balboa Poninsulo ON JH[ BEACH! k1ll'h., bait" l'arport, 2 people e LOTSA roon1~ 4 Br, 2 ba, ok. huge fnerl yd. Kids. JK'!~. $110 . 1 Blk bt>ach, 2 Br., i1~ $Zll. Hn. Rl!n11. Nice vi~. ALA Rental1 • 645-3900 $2!",0 • 2. Br. 2 Ba, DeluxP BRAND NEW-HOME-Vil'\\' Apt, Htd pool, All 3329 Ata.l:>an11t Cir<"ll' fralurt'~. l{uge 3 Br 2 <llx ba sunkf'n NU-VIEW RENTALS lub. walls 'or gl;1ss, l.'111h<'drnl 673-40::0 or 494.:l24il cell.. shaJi\" c·11rs. J\1od1•rn. Vacant. $3."iO!nio. ('ai·prl S'.?10 · 1 Blk beach. 2 Br., 11tt ]l'lyrr \l'i!I 11/ioii·. ~56·2~. Bn. Bl1ns. Nice vit'\\'. -----$2"~1 -2 Br. 2 Ba Deluxr 3 RF:DR~~1 2 .. BAT II VIP\\' Apl, Htd Poo1. All 1-IO~fE \\"1th hu11!1n11 1111<! frnhin·~ <l1Jublr garagr. ~\·RilAhif· NU-ViEw RENTALS July 61h to fan11ly onl.1-. G'1·40::o or 494_3248 $215. pt'r monlh. Call Rf.:1•n!1---------- 546-otl4l . L Ho' I ls ,________ 1gun1 ] BR. 2 BA ~onti<'rllo ron-1 ------------ do., ne\\' c~pl'J:', N'f'N"al1on 3 BOR:\1 .. '1 BA, bltm. shag &: ~ avail. $lXI mo. l'rpt & drps lhruout. Pool 546-6077. fa ct!. i\l .1int. incl. Adultll. [MMED Oc •-1 C f Pt'n ok. $265 mo. Call col-'. cup., uo·RU · nn-lrcl, f213l 831-1162. do. E-!ridr, lg. 2 RR, pool.1--------- etc. $210. Doylr co . L 'd I I 5-tS-116.S; C'VC'S: 8.~341 I 0 Se 1--------QUAL. horn(' on ror. lot. :1 3 BR, l ·~ Ba., bl tins, yrly BR. 2 BA, frplc., fam rm., Jrase, $.'50. $26:'>/mo. 905 Li a r d , 17141 673-8404 979-7412. l.gf' 2 Br $1.15, gar val'. Kirls/ Newport S.1c1'1 Pets. SHl5 • 1 BR Dplx w/gar. Rent-A-House 979-8304 S1ovf'. l'f'frig. sml front 2 BR, 1~&. lge. Jiv. rn1., &w yard, f'l(crpt. nice! shag cpt~. romp. fn('d yd. $11\0 · UT IL. pd. 2 Br apt. $175. No J'.1('1~. 673-29\R. Bltns, crpls, drps, gar, pool. LARG ~ 2 .1 $200 • trrlL Pd. Lrg 2 Br -c. br, .,.,_.,.,.,. C'PI!!., u1i I I 11· Bal dbl f _, d $200 sm rm or o ice. . rm, gar. rnt·-.,, y . Pt>nn mo. 646-82'16. $325 : 3 BR, 2 Ba. dplx * J BR, "'/w cptg & drps. \\•/frplc. bltns, gar It deck. $210 $'.riO • NE\V 3 BR, 21,t Ba 642·28i7; 54G-22SO studio dplx. frplc, bhru. 3 BR, 2 BA, .... ·fv.• crpt11:. $375 ~ 4 -fam rm. 2'~ ba drps. refri11: & range. Cflrllf'r slu<ho 111. frplc, pool, 2 lot. $nl/n10. Ag1 : 646-32!>5. patios, child/i>el. Ba~ k 2 BDR.VJ rear house $t~i0. $.~~Harbor Vu Hms -Lri• 4 NNll' M'hooli;, large fl"nCf'cl 8 2, n-f I " ..... ....f 531--07--r., :! ca., rp c, gar, ., ....... • iJJ. ynl .. patio. children/pets. Huntington Be•ch NU-VIEW RENTALS SEA FOOD MENU G7'.l-40:JO 0f <94--3l48 l Br seashel~ ····· ...•.... $% Spectacul1r View 2 Br mf'~naid · · · •• ·• •.. Sl35· Custom Elegance 3 hr. Sailboat Vu .••••••• $160 S • & G • 5 Br Cliff dwt>llers •...•. $250 pac1ous r•c1ou.s WE HAVE LOTS OF Prime E~rly Bluffs, cho1t-e DELTGJITFUL TREATS! waler view. Very large ]. HELP-U e e 530-6381 BR. l Tuge living rm., formal ,.;.==~~~c=~~~I din. rm .: 2 baths plus l.CMXI 3 BDRM., 2 BATII, elect. sq. fl. view deck, at $500 bltln R/0. f.a. h t • • per mo, to qualified tenant. 1h:eplace. crpls & drp.~. oil. 60''100' focd Jot. dbl .... ii~i';,. $229. per nio. Call today. c-_ ~ .. ~ n / .. If' ~~~-,., ... 71 ., (ji.St ~,j -.t.:1!'Jl •WE have a large selection t~''\ really of 3 and ' bearoom homes V 2414 Vista del Oro Newport Beach 644-1133 ANYTIME that can be mo\'ed lnto almost lromedlatel)' on our Rent·Op tlon plan. SHERWOOD R E ALTY ,1--------- 540-BSSS 4 Broroom!I, family room. e BELIEVE~ 2 Br, strps lo bch . Kids. Util inel. $120. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 carpets. drapes. Only 3 )Irani Old &: in Harbor Vi~ flon1P11. It has community park & pools. $430 pr month e $45 \\IK ' UP • On °"""" l.llv1•ly Barh. I Br,. Roonu; 1 RH . Furn .t-: t'nf11rn. !\laid S.-rvil'". Pool. Ulll Pd. FROM ONLY $19S e C11ll 6Th-~740 e O{'l•:i\N Ql'J.:E~ l·BR., ulli. pd, Nf'I\' ('Rrp., I llCO E Ckr11n I tvrl. $.160 nlO. yearly. SinglP <11' l..on.i: RrR.-h C?111 -(Q.~45 couple ,o\'f'r 3.S. Slrp.~ lo t.tn.i(~I hy \\'tll i11 n1 \\'nl!C'I'S Co, shoppinR & U!ll. 675-1641.11~1. Balboa Island Co1tia Mesa WEEKLY Executive Suites 2080 Newport Blvd. Costa Me1a 642-2611 STUDIOS & I BR'S e FREE Unens e FREE Ulillli~11 e rull K1h·hpn • 1-lea!ed Pool • Laundry F11cililiP!I • TV I. n1aid !lf'rv av11il • Phone Servic·e * $30 WEEKA UP* • Studio &. l Rft Ap1s e TV & f.1aid St-1'\'ll'f' A\'ail • Phone &_.1,·lef'-lilll Pool I.CE l hr. run1 01· unfurn. \\'ood 1n1 Ht'.'1111 l'P1l1ni;t. $11(1 ,11'1,1. \'Iii~ p;!. ti73-::.430. ---Balboa Peninsul• -·----2 HB , Jl :ha., p111io, balron)'. :U."1 F:. Bay. S'l."iO 1nonlhly on ~rly lrll~f". lnq11 1rr at ,\pt. ~--6i3-1 ,~2~()r_ 548-'ii11. I 2 AR, 1tf'n, 2 RA, flr1\'RI~ gar<IPU, lfflsP S3i.i. nin. • Call 6:3-6062 • Corona dtl Mar ON 1"1'-:N ACRl!:S • Children & Pet st>C'lion 2J76 Ne\\·port Blvd. CM 548--.9755 or 645-3967 Apl11. furn./unfum. ~a.tte This Ad Worth $5 on Rf'nl FlrppJ11ces I priv. pA.lio."i. Pool.~ Trnni!'I Con lnt'I Bkf11I. 1 BR. Furn. 2 lrg-. clo!V'l~.1 900 .'>t'a \.R.nt' Cdfi.i 644-261 l q.ueen size bed, prlv dre!l!i· Mfll'Ar!hur 11~ Const lhl'~o\ Ing rm. xtra lrg room!'i, enrl · gar "·/sloragP. Adults only, no pet~. s1:,011no. 2035 Fullerton, C.M. SPACIOUS 2 Br., t·lo~ to OC'C & shop~. Attr. funi. Spanki~ clean. $139.SO. SeP 110W. Call 536-5114. * $115 • Studio Apia., 1 Br. $125. Older adults. No pt"ts Zll'i Eldf'n, Mgr. ApL Ii. l BR , drluxe w/ri;itio. Quirt adulllf only. $150/mo. i\\ 1. 7 1, ~~-~ evN, 557·6176 d8ys. Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br'1 Hpocielly nice. 2110 Newport Blvd., CM. SEMI furn. 1 BR. Apt, No Al.I. llf'\V 2 AR, SIOVf', 1Trrii:: .. pri. patio. \'Pry 11iN" & 1111K111t", 0J)<'n Sat k Sun only, or by Appl , i071~ llf'liolmpt', ell~· f'ntrance only. Phorw I 1 I 413-0069. 1 BllS~ N'r/mg, frPpl . $\S:-i. I~. or $2'l5 monthly {;11 r11g1•. No pt>l/rh1l<l 4J1 Iris,~. lh\')" 641~:tt11 2 Hrl, bllin~. pool _ \Veli("I(, bfo11 rh. $200-11p. 0 range Coa~I Rf'al J-:111alf', 64-4-4848. 2 BR. Com Lido. Apt. Adu\11', pnol, oo J>t'I~. 4250 E. C.oast IJwy. :~924. * GREAT VIEW -2 BR.• Frpk, bHM, eundeclaJ, PQOJ $210 Up. 64+-6..144, 675-35.15 chlldttn or pet.A. $125/mo. 2 HIL 11 pt. w/lofl. D11.nil1h Call 837-9517 art 5 pin. rrpli". dlx kit, wa11hf'r/dryer. l BR, large, 11to~. retrlg., $27!i. il:l4-.J635: 675-2324, c:ptll, drps, TV. $.l:M>. No -1'-9'--1-_:_x:..·1'--,:__.:_1 '--N pel1, or ch\ldrtn. !§57-2360. r., urn. n ot:, r Khop'g. ({11r1 11;e. 002 lJKE new garden •pt. La.rtt llrliolropr. fffift. 831-IJOO. 1 Br., pool, rec room, •·t U fu 365 645-5530. 710 W. 181h St. "f" • n '"· SPAC. Pri. upper rum. 2 Br., 11dull, no J)('ls. Avail 7/1. $140/mo. To M't', call 49.1-4955 Huntington S..ch L1QUINTA HERMOSA Spanbh Country Estate IJv. ing A Spacloul Apts. Ter. rae@d pool: "1Jlken ps BBQ. Unbelievable Llvtnc - Only 1 BR· FURN. $175 ALL UTILITIES PAID HARBOR GREEHS Furnished & Unfurnished From $120 to $215 mo B•ch1lor1 • 1 Bdrm• 2 Bdrml e l Bdrm1 11/J or 2 Full Both• e XTRA NICE! 2 Br, stove, on yeal'fil lease. Phone (4 blk1 S. of San Diep Frwy refrig, crpts, drps, bl·h 640-0020 or 6~ a.gent. on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt Master al:ze bedrooms w / high beam ceillng11, large Jiving room w/gu or wood burning firepla~. Convenl~nt la..,ndry area off kltchton. Eticlosed pa- tios. 2 swimming pools, sauna. recreation facJIJ. ties. Security iuard. S1 70. to 162l1 Parblde Lane.) ALA Rentals e 64S-3900 \VESTCLIFF, Exec u t Ive Ctt4) 147--5441 :..::::..:..=::.::.:::.:_;::__c___ -home. 4 BR. 3 Ba. Beaut. 12 BEDROOM. elect. hltin ntriun1 . Yt>arly. Call: $145 _ $165 R/O, Crpll'I & drp~. 60' x \\'"INTON, Realtor 675-33.11 Bachelor &: l BR. patio!, 100' lenced lot, rlhl garage. lrplc'!!, prlv. g 1 rag~ s . $200 per nio, C:i.ll today. Sng\11 or cpls. Vac 2 Br, ""·alk Divided bath ,\ Jot11 of AG'I'. 962-4471 or 516-8103. to wal~r. Kids. clo!!el!I. Rec hall, pool It- NICE roomy home, big yanl. Rent-A·House 979-U30 pool tablPs. u.una bath!!. 19'3ll Bt'ach Blvd.. nr ~ for yourself! 11301 Adams. $170. 4 9 9 -1 9 0 I , Newport Heights Keel80n Ln. (l blk W. of 496-3949. 28 Beach, l blk N. of Slater). 91ARP 3 BR, A, trplc, 8'12-7148 Snglt11 or families, nr bch, 2 Fl"l'lef'd yrd, No doil:· Lease, 1 ~===.;..,....::.;..,. __ ~ Models Open 'Iii f pm. 2700 Peter"'" Way, CM nr Hubor Blvd & Ad1m1 Br $135. Kida/pets, 1295 mo. •ft 6/~. HUNTINGTON G a r d e n ' 1 Rerit-A-Houh 979-1430 1..:==-'--'-----'--'-'--'-:.;..,.-Aptt:. lleit at BolM Chk:t.. I~"!""!"!""! 3 BR, Almost new. $280 mo. Duplexes IJnfurn. 350 ~132.1. Compfln> • See I ~ Near the heh. crpt11, drapes. what you're' miMi ng. Fr. SPAC 2 A .S Br apt SI• up. bltinr, frplc. 962.785!1. Costa Mes• $1:k>-$240. Pool, cpt/drp, bltns, kkllt ok. 3 BR, 2 BA. duplex. $210. BEAUT. 2800 8Q. It. dupl~. 2 AP'T. Poolliiclr -SpackJtis 1996 1'.1apl:e No. 1 . , . 642·l!ll 17522 Geraldine Ln., Apt. B. Ml' gar.; lg. kitch, bllnt1, Bungalow. Pvt. pallo, 1150. 2206 Coll~e No. 5 •.. 642·j~ 494 ''391 t BBQ J I 2 I B 111. mo. to rlghl adult11, .... o 8Cf'. ; rp ·: g. r.. ..,, 2 RR. fttrlg 4 raJ'llf!• Nr S23f>-3 Br., 2 Ba .. 2 •ar, ha .. C.ood Joe. nr. Alpha 8'16-IJZ'I. s"'•--$125 Ga• "'i Adooll• B<-ta Mkt., 11th St. 548-6140 e LR(:. 2 BR, Bungalow • .....,,., " ,~' Apt. Unfurn. ~ Co1ta Mei• I: r, AND THE 0 N THE«'f ' WERE NONE!":" -'· .h ·r11a1's thf' sti1ry Pllrh timP .• \1e ha\'c 11n apartmer\t 11.vailable, \\'oosh • Som@--,I d one "an1 ~ 111 nio\'f'·Jn and ' slart f'llJo;.111~ life here ·! !i s~1;11·i<lus ;; ht••h'O<llll units. , , livtng-roo111 \11lh f1rr11la C'e, pl'i\'llle rnt10. your own I:. l 11. u n cl r y ·1101·kshor 11.nd g i:.:arRgt>. All ""' in I\ ~11r!'len I. \1'ilh bi~ trr•'• 11nri ~ y A luxur1ou~ ;i 11 111!1111 ~ L. ronmenl. Oon't \\I11I' • FAIRWA Y VILL~ ~ APARTMENTS ·, 20122 Santa Ana A1·r. 546-li2lS I, • DELUXE APARTMENTS - Air Cond · rrplr's . 3 S\\il'U· I ming Pool.~ • Hr11\th Spe;· • ) Tennis Courts . G11me and ' Billiard nnon1 . 1 BEOHOOM · 1 ' 1'~R0!\1 $165 S MEDITERRANEAN ; ~ VILLAGE I" UOO Hllrbor Blvrl., C.M. , i° !TI4) 557·M20 ~,;1 . RENT AL OFFICE ~ · I : OPEN 10 AM lo li pr,r • , HACIENDA ·9 HARBOR 241 AVOCA!)() STREET Adult~ only • No Pets 2 Brs. 11v111I. f"urn 'unf, DeluxP I A 2 BR. Pool ' . . ' . :. G11 rqe. Di,.hwhr. P11tlrf utlJ. FROM SlfA!. tr 646-.1204 V Cold\\·ell . Rankrr A: Co. ~ !\1ana~HI~ AJtf'nl -~N~.-w-VlllaP1ul1 41 ' 2 Br., 2 Full &. ~ 1 • Fam1lie1 Welcome ; Shar cpt/drpi, pe.I~ • • Mam «ii., ll.l'IP'-I t From $180 .:;.w ; ~ 622 Hamilton, C.M'. See Mar~ Mr, • Mn, Hob&J'I 1!4!·- Pork-Like Surrouncllntl ~ QUIET • DELtnCE !~1 I ~ 2.lSBRAPrS ~,r • Alto Furn, llachelori ; 'i 1 : . 1 Prv. patiol * Hid ~ll Nr 11hor'11: * Adults 0'*1 : 1 Martinique AD"-: / l'm Santa Ana Ave.: C . .\l. Mgr. Apt. 113 646-5542 * * $110 * * '• 3 Br, l 1,-ii Ba, newly painted 1 \ Bltins. crpl/drps, en<'I ~ 1 1 Nr achls A shop'r;. Chi~' 1 ok, no ~111. 830 Ctnter &., 1 1 CM. 642-8340 or 548-2682. '" I VACANT. ZBR, 111 ij, , ( Laund rm, hllin ttoV!• , refrig, crpt!, drape!. patib. , 3001 F'ilmore Way. $160 m6. 646-2056. .. SPACIOUS It: CLEAN, 2 w/w cpts, 1'w dl'pllf . blt·ln1, prt patio. frwy1. No pel11. 54$-4893 MESA VERDE areil • Br. r;Ar, frplc. ~ut. Uke private home, Adutta $265. 546-4016. --* * BEA trrTFU L 1 le 2"'BR. Contemporary Garden Apt1. Palios, frplc., pool. $15S- Sl70. Call a46--5163. , , ' DELUXE 2 Br., l~ 1bL Sludio, crpt/drps, riod"t, bllru, pyt patios. $150. • l Child ~ no pell!. 646-(K9Q f!lO ' UP, n\cely furn t 2 Jr 1 ... Ktn. Adult.. No '1JI l!'J WI'""'· c 645-45.1!. • DELUXE 11. 2 BR. ".ft.!" Blln11, dAhwahr, car., nt: So. Oield Pla:ui.. e 545-2321. XTRA lrg 2 Br, 1 Mi ~ •.U pAint, ct1.tpot1, nr. OCC. Jifo prl11. $100. M&-8594 aft 5,' ~ cpt/drp., AJ<JJ{, nu paint, A 4 G 6 1 o~r 3.'k !"4-2407 or W>-4636. ovrn, ~292 Sissen 846·5R38. _•_v_••-·-------pt. fl~M. poo 11· All'O 1 Rr fum or unfum-2 * Spat•. 2 BR apt, ~ 2 BR. shag <'rpt~. blH!l(I;, Huntlnt:tton Beach ~lllu:,:;..,!'.0~1~~c~i.,..-BA/pool. $1~. Utll. pd. drape14,'j Older Jlftt. pool, tennis, Pvt. patio, gar.1 .,..--;....--~---LARGE Ba~hl. Walk to LOVF.LY 1 Br., bUk¥, dtp1, lt\-8 1 ' $2(,()/mo. 96.1·3Zi.I!. San Ju1n C•pistrano Mop!I. Sgl adult only. Rf'f I: q>l.11. pelio, pnol.1110. AvaW. A'~ .-e:W ~ lrvlne $l~mo. 2 BR Kllcht'n w/all Cleanlf'lll depo11it, $100 p(lll ~~· Kenwood Pl. Noe!hlkhn.~ 1 -;;;;;==;;.;;,;;;;;;;;=:I blln11, shag w/w drp'd. util. 892-8089. ....._ • Patio. 2 car gar. Adults I BR I _. h I Cl.F.AN 2 BR. ttudio, df1ICI. ! BR, 2 Bii apt, ~ ,.- 3 BR 2 "-1h l ""r. , pntio, pOO, ... 11 W1I ir, I bl! dull IS15 ,.___ H-• oo. I •""-' Prrf'd. Summer r t n ta I d' oil pd ·~'ii Sltlit'. C(! ~. NI, pragt, a 11, --'!: ::::: ~· ~ J BR 2 Ba t •m 111P• u · ""'" 11• ""· 11""" "~· -v•.,..,..,,,.,.. • " am. rm. · · .. ~Hiblf'. 962-8197. Av11.il 7/15, 17676 Camt'ron, / ~"°c-'"'~"~· .;,,-•-··--~""''-''·--4 BR., 21~ ha., fam. nn. $1'101--'-=='--'-"--'-------842_5192. SPAC 2 Br., 2 hi. crpu, LRC, & BR, 18' 4 BR., 2!~ ba., fam. nn. $.175 Newport Be•ch drp!I. all blln1. MarrH-dt ~ OiKdrtft Oft Hr • .-1 WE HAVE OTllF.RS /-;--;;;;-"":;'";;-:;-:;T.::-:;:::' ~l~1~g~u::n!l_!Bo~1~ch~---ly. child o1<. $17i!. ~. lhop'r. Sl'JO/mo. ~· J BR. 2 BA, y,,•/,w, d~. * 1 BR. <'~ lo bf'ach ' CLF.A'"' 2 BR d 1'9111[1111 "I l11 l1'.l 1"11i1 ---·1 ll'11 1!11 r blllna:, d.sh"~hr., rplr. 710 1 , n~ i~ • rpt, cpts, 2 BR, J BA, "'4-v~ 64 S 'IOP I · No. End. ~&n bit S135 N J8t -·.., Jo'rrn, $250. n~'. 2--8520. y•-C II 94 .,,.,.... ••, no Ptlll, . r h pnj('t', adult.II. QUICK CASH l'l'"W. 1 4. -~v1:1. & PlaCf'nliA. !W3-6357. 557-6458 2 BR, N. end, blk to hP1u~h . avail, July .It Aug., ali.o for "·inlt'r . .f94-7669. "SINCE l!MG" 1st \\1tt:h•rn Bnnk OldJt. THROUGH A Unlvor>Hy Puo·k, Jovln• F.ISl<l< 2 BR, 1\1 Ba., 1dull, NewDOrt Beach lownhoullf!. Encl. pat 1 en Days 552·7000 Nights NEW 3 BR. 2•; &. Comm D'AIL Y PILOT YRLY 2 BR, t1vt't &Al'Alf', 1 bik oce..n. QuM:t rrlltrrlM rplt", no pet1. Rf'f. $1~ mo. 611;-.49'.4. $1~ $4~ •"1 6\ • ' -----"--'-'---'--"I LRG 2 Br, l sty m.~ Bachtlor 1pl Min crpt1/drp1, RIO, lndry ~ I pool A: rte. ctnl('r, $:tl.i, Lea~. Sl.l-0.iXI 011,yt11, 11.~ for Ja~k . S62-,qz.zf) E\'rll. Llke k> tnd~! Our Tnldf'r'1 Pandi&e column It for )'OU! !I llnet, S d&ya for S bucks. WANT AD 642-5678 e \VINTER RENTALS e J,2,3.4 BR. Relk":rw Now!! ABBF.Y REALTY 642-38.iO EXTRA !« 2 Br, 2 & on Ot-eantnmt. dew hl 1tqll .I. pierUXlwk.~. only. 13.l W.· Willlon, C.M. pr, fncd, chKd ok. SW 64H.m W-31" •-• 1 Br. Adults. no pets. BAY MEADOWS AP'TS.. !17 W. Bay St. CM 6'6-0ll3 WALi( to Bffch 2 Bi'., cpta, drpt, dstt~• us • JOI 16th. au.ar ~ .,,, 11 I I • ff .. ,, I .~w '" b.,ll. ! :,.i:;-rr I .. ,. . .,. ,,. ' . 3'11• • . s.trz ttinw . • -"'"' .'.) ~ " ·-' ' 'ir>• ' h.oZ : li!Is;t Jl.\t' ~tt 'pl>\ 'Sr .,. " . ?,IV . ~J&-r ,!trv.. .. "' ' '. ' R!l{ . ~~(,\ ·--l b:trlTI> ; JI t \" :bilG j t t' ,-;q,.·H' • .ta~= fttltf,,l - I ~!)n.:'J< : 1' 1 ! r , eorri ·--1 ~if»·, ' ' ..... . . -, .. . . . .. ' ... ~ • • ' . • " .. ~ '. . . ' .. . . ' . . . . '. . .. .. , .. Ill .... c Q l - ~ ..... ·• ·n .E • ' ,, ,. I " ... t • > ,, cc " • • >. . .t •• , . • ' . . . • " . ' 't I . ' ' • ~ ' ~ . ' . ' . ' '. G' " . ' '. . . ' J I f ' ' [ " :1GT .... • • t-.... ' ' ... [ ·'· .,.,,,,, " J.(}\l, ,..,.,, I ' • FIRST ~Advertise the sale in the DAILY PILOT. Dial the dire$t Une to results, 642-5678, and let a frie,n~lly1 DAILY , ·PILOT-Ad-visor help you. . .. ~ ---· - \ . N.EXT -Clip out the almost-instant GARAGE SALE sign above and paste it or staple it on a ,piece :Qf ~..ard.bocird · for display where people will see' it. (The DAILY PILOT has some ready-mode cardboard •iOns y,ou eOI) .· • .. 'pick up at the office if you place your ad in per~n. They're free.) .,_ . ' . ~~ f •· I ·: , · , ' : the DAIL'( PIL°Ol . is aurt to I <I . I • • ·-t j tj . . -~ l' ... ·' ~' • r ' . . tAST -: -Certainly not leqst, re.lax and wait for the C\lstomers to come. Your ad in . . " . . . . ~ . ' "· _ _. bring results. . · 1 . .. •• • • • • ' . ... • I ' . . . . Phone 642-5678~/~r Classified Want Ad Results • I ~ • • 1 r , - . (· I I i . . ~ ~. . \ . ' .. • •• ...... , . .. .. ... --· . ... " ..... __.... 7 PILOT·AD~RTIS£R Wldott!day, Junt 2S, 1972 Wodntsdal. Juoe 28, 1'72 DAILY l'ILOT . Buy 0 Border to ·~ ...... Border· Barga(h f ., .. Every classified wont 1d In the: Oil.IL Y PILOT 1pptiro in •vtrf edition, ·,very day. That means your ad wil N:.!f1tn in papers delivered to homt1 .,...,Id from newsrocb from border to border all along tht Orange Coast .•• al the way from .. ~ ~· t ... Seal Beach : to San Clemente Ye r· Get It All ••• .. .. Buntlngto.n Beaeh Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach .lrVlne Saddlehiek . San Clemente ~~~l~~~~I ~nw:'· ... ~Y 1--·-Jftll ..__ .. _t ...... _ ...... ~I~ ~I --~l~.:i'----· ~I Apt. Untum. :165 Apt. Unfurn. 165 Ap!o., Vocation Ronlolo 425 i'U11nHa -el 445 All111Uftao~•· • ,...,.. tfrM °"'' H_,unt,,__lntl_on_lloMlt ____ Newport Beech Fum. or Unful'llo J7t * CATALlllA * OmCE, 1iore ..., N'pt FOR MEN ONLY Dane Potnt BtautifUI wiew bomt. 5 BR. Post ore. 4 ~ I can teach )'OU to dllnCC 'ON BEACH' PARK NEWPORT Byweekormon~S'IS-0148. Depol ,531 It. lllO: ~Ft. quickly 6 tully. Call I • APARTMENTS 2 BR, 1\1 BA, tn>m sm mo. Rlftt1l1 le ShaN 431 fl2i l\lonlh.. ... 6\6-S(l4. Ardelle (2Ul C>-1921 1·10 , No pets. Near shopping. OFJ'1CE space Glf\ eqm.m1 Plh wkd,y. !'BR, 2 BA Uni. Fr. $217 on th• bay 499-J596. NEEObtwn (.!~) ~.~-~ ·-ava!I •. A-. !00, "'I· . BLACK. "1>11< leroale • BR.AD"':::·TS ONLFrY. $388 '·--· a-~ent •••·· -· Huntl-8eedl ~ w ~ -• ll«H llNcll m"'-Jl,JI, I -~ __ , ~--....... .-,,.,_, ·•·--apt. -·-~ • · ,,,I haired .. 1, ...,. thin. --••·-A·-"·ble erltWr1 .... the water. -~. ~-=--·. ' "AUJ• Call M7..a531 ....... li•1t • v •~ ~~~-R ·-···-· v-11S0'000~bea1th 1 ;;;r' NEW SANDPIPER ~ ..... . ;c •• ty ·-·-0 • C a r p et&-drapes-dlshwasber . ' spa, in-• 2 500 aq. tl shop, ok. Ample I ';;;;;;;;;iii~~ near Slt.n Diea'o Fwy • heated PoOl-saunaa-tennlr ntll'1g pools, 1 lighted ten-Early bird apedalt--1 BR :chHou..., pool, ttmnil,; parkine. 23.tJ Newport[I 54~2164. rec room.ocean views nls courts, plus m11ea ot from $125, 2 BR from $'155 1~-:.... y!"· man H B Blvd.. C.M. 14 8 -2 54 4. • Auto tr•n1port.tlon 515 ro=UN=o,.--pu_pp_y_,b-•"'t_w_•_•_nl potloe-ampl• parldna bicycle llalls, puttlllJ!, .Jtuf. FUrn/IJllfum. cool eolor Jn. w ·-· with ame, · · !143-8333. F.......,.,. Ii OOC. c..,. Seourity Guards. Deboard, croquet Junior 1•1 terion, pool, Jacum, more. 963-3258. p --·It 5w · HU.....,NGTON lrom$174.50monlhly; alsol 8081 Holland Drive Hunt· *GIRL, 23, tollnd .-.. 119~=-"'l~i.o;· e·---Meta. Owntr ld cnt!ly. • n11 and Z.bedroom plans and lngton Beach. 847-9595, apt In Ht& Bch with 'f11Un9. * ~ •· ,eta •FUl.LY LICENSED• --=--· -----1 PACIFIC .Z.~tory tDWJL ~·· Ele<> 2 DD FROM $139 WRITE: 312~ Olamood, Renowned Hindu Spiritualist. YNG. Female, less thtn yr, ru OCEAN AVE., R.B, , 'tric kitcb~ pnva~e patlol !I"?' Balboa. Island Calif, • S'l'ORE & ottlce for rent: Spiritual Readinp gtven part husky doe-vie Bfttut le (7l4) 536-l48T or balconles"c~ting, dra· . MOVE IN TODAY I SHARE 3 ~ ~me, H.B. Bola. Ollca at HeU. ILB. dally. 10 AM-lOPM. Advice Fa Irv i e w • Halecreat .. ore GPtn 1D'am.g pm DaUy perles, Subterrapean park. Kids-a: pets OK. Pool. All E t ht incl 35 846--1323. ctven on all rnatten. I can 549-1994. WlLLJAM WALTERS co.' in&.with e!evalqn.~Optkmal ~· 3 Br, $199. 17392-A ~/:~.~&ft 5 pm lnd.ustrl•I R1nt•I 450 he3Ulp youN •• El Camino n-at =ro"'UN=o~Basse,.--t-H"ound-.,.....vl<.,-.1 ' .!!!!~~~~!!!!!~~!ma.id lel'Vlce.·J~t ,north ot Keetaon Lane. 968-7510 or n'I' Stater Bros. ~farket on 19th , * FRESH AIR. Fll!hlon lolaJ><I at Jamboree 84j-3669. all day wkndo, FOR le.,. by OW1ltl', Jn. San Oemtnte St., C.M 8.30 w. Utb St., I W lk 3 Blks t Be ch' and San Joaquht·Jiills Road. FURN or unturn. 3BR $175, $87.50 2 BR. 2 Ba, frplc. dustrial bl<fa.10.~ Ml· 1315 <C92-9136 or 492-9034 C.M. after 5 pm. a 0 a . I Telepb<lm en~ 6'4-1900 ' Child/pet ok. 2 BR $150. Profeuiona]..t:ype qot over Bctchanlt nr EdiJlcer Ir; WF. v.•otdd lift lo rent your =---~--- Lge 2 br apts, newly d~. ' fqr rental fnfoniatfon Adults & ,...ts coMidered. 1 35. Straight only, m.6589. Grand, Santa Ana.~. lovety, beautiful house with GER..'1AN Shepherd found W /w crpts ..i....... bttna: ,... near Stop and Go l\larktt, • u.o....,, • .. ex-WESJCLIFF blk to stores. Manager 7731 NEED other girl or girl• tD COSTA MESA slip & dock in Newport Area Balboa Blvd & Pacific coast =~ re:;t!150S..:1~··No CAPRI -El&. No, D. S.U.-1831. share apt. by tall. Age 1440 & 2880 Sq rt. tor August. Best of Hwy. 842-SlSO .. ' • • . 1100 :WestclW Dr: NewPort Bl•ch 21)..23. 642--6496. CABINET MAKERS-references. Call W a 1 ta h !;ARCE 2 .BR, $1 3 5'. Adult Llvilig~No ~ta l or 2 girls wanted to share FIBERGLASS Clark, &U-0'.122. ~ H 1 L D REN/PET OK. Deluxe 2 Br, Pooi. 2204 W. Oceanfront, lg 1 BR, house with other girt. Move Nr. Nwpt Frwy le S.D. Frwy SINGLES 28-40. Code Cam· CALL: 842-8.168. Carport. ~. or Unf. summer le winter rentals, in July l . ~1668. 2931 Grace Ln. . pi~ Group r 0 rm 1 n g. DUPLEX for rent, $135. 642-6274 avail July 1, 644-5307. G .US (So, of Baker, E, of Fairview Wttkend Camping \V r l t e 2 Br. cpts & drps * 1-BDRM. API'. * •r•g•s for Rlftf • 11' Mi) Representative there Olassitied Ad No. 426. Daily Call Manager, 536--0430 1 In Eaatblutr. $185 ~ 12x27 with 10' wide &: ll'-3" 9 am·l2 noon. Pilot, Box 1!160, Cm1ta Mesa, ... y rd Rtn,. I & high doors for motor homes, <n4) 979-4434 M 819-4nt Ca 92626. ""'.'~ . 1 e --4 • t, ''U0gl 0 ,. boo.ts, etc. $40. 642-.5013. __ F_l_N_D_Y_O_U_R_SELF __ oit~ 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. .,;,. · GARAGE for ear or"°"""· COSTA MESA· IN SOMEONE· ELSE. ~~~,~~~up. ~:: "l'."-''Z-•ta..& Rooms 400 2>5 Lincoln Aw., H.B. $20. 6'10 sq ft, llG-220 power·$95. DISCOVER ;, ,· ace , ' OCEANFJ.lONT~ New,port's per month. 536--mt. mo/1280 sq ft, pvt ofc. 10' dr, DISCOVERY ~~ . 'Finest, 2,000, sq. tt. ·t · BR, ROOMS .$15 wk up .w/kit. $30 110.220,power-$161. mo. C. R. 714/835-688S 213/387-3393 2 B,R-~um apt. Mesa V~e rlrg. pvt. sundeck. Sharp wk up Apts, 2376 Newport H ~GLE c: ~· NATTRESS, C.M. 642·1485. FOUND female orange. & black dog by Mesa Bowling Alley, Costa 1'tesa. ~1738. FOUND 2 skunks, vicinity Balearic Drive, Costa "1.tesa. 51k19.\. FOUND Wednflday, 6-21. Black puppy, male. Jlwr tineton Bftch. S36--M49. FND. German Shepherd pup, approx: 2'ii ffiOI. fem . O.C Ft.lrlmds. Sun. 893-282:%. area;\crpts, drapes..Jli~. single prefld. $400 mo/yrJy. mvd, CM 548-9755. untington ac area. PROBLEM Pregnancy. C.On- $15Q....., 9G2-9894 _., 'lGJIJ $ro mo. •Call 646-S87 tident, i;ympathetlc pregm. I l[S] .~~·i1· · . If'.,... ,, . . STUDENT or Working girl, 576 to 6,000 Sq ft cy eounaeling. Abortion & LMt 91M1 fOl.lld NewpOrt Beech 1 NEAR Ocean, yearly, Lrg 2 Pvt. be.th & kit priv. Nr. ~~~.!!_.-~ 4001 Birch, N.B. 541-5032 Adoption ft:f. APCARE. '-· ------' RICHARD'S LIDO AREA _ Br. -only m . OCC, $75 mo. 546--%5?3 OFC. studio space. All or NEW DELUXE M-1 Units. 3 642-4436. New 1rg Sharp 2 BR. 2 Btt, ~2967 Room for Rent part of 1,296 sq, ft-Send re--ph. power. 1733 Monrov ALCO __ H_O_Ll~CS--A-noeymo--.,-. Led 555 CID. dshwhr SIC 011en, Npw:P.Ort Hefghts Kitchen privileges quirementll & references to 54J...314S: 836--9798 eves. Phooe SU-7217 or write ,,,.,,,.,,.,,,,,..--.,,...--,., trpl, gar, $250 mo yrly. NEW rea-1 .. 1o 548--0516 aft 5 pm P.O. Box 176, Newport Renti1ls Wi1nfld 4'G P.O. Box 1m. O>lta Mesa. SNOOPY. wr 2-yr o 1 d 673--0844. , • VoJ .r occupancy, FURN nn. Newport Beach Beach, Oati!., 92600. Attn: Beaaie 1ott approx "5 ~ ~~~-~~--1 ll!)i: Clay St., unL llOO sq. Working adult ~ mo. D. wright. THERE 11 only 0 n e Brookhurst A Ad am a ~ 2.BR ... I be.., frpl. New carp.· ft. 2 Br,,2 Ba, dressuig rm., """ NEEDED "Wright" way to get a (t paint Encl. gar. w/autn; ·frP.1·• dshwshr.,. forced air. 67~2168 FOR Rent, 600 aq. ft. Cl~. Ra=;$PONSl8LE massage. Try it, YoU'll like ~· ~~· :ev~:· 4oor. Mature adutts, no h~ Yfl w !'Pt• drps, bltn GU.st Homo 415 Oc:eon " bill v!ewt, carpet WORKING COUPLE ill 833-2100. 213/!ie&-9343. Pets. $190. 645-4443. range, ~ slid'g d,r. from · & drapes. , S3(i) 1 mo. Call need on• or two .bedroom Socl•I Clubs m· ---::::::--:,.--.-- 2 BR dplx. Nice, spac. Walk fam/din 'rm. to pri. deck. *PRIVATE ROOM* Nine. l:J>.-4:00 pm 49S--ZK1 house with large fenced $100 Rtward it> bay, ocean, shops, no Lt1dry . area-coin op. $245 ~aro~a~:n· ~ or 831-2452 or 496-5763. yard (for two VERY 'VELL FULL membersh~Newport Sml lt Golden sham· dog. pets. AdultJ. 675-4172. mo. incl. gar &: , ~ h( tngs • nice surroun • DESK space avalla~le ~ TRAINED dogs) 1150 most. Te n n i s c I u b • r.t ov-Tag rt'Rds L. Palmer, San LIDO ISLE-3 BR, 2 BATif. cook'~. & bot wtr. MS-2967 * Call 548-4?53 * mo. Wfil proride flirnttun Vic: between 19th I: Victoria ing-Mo~ed! Must s e 11 , Diego. Vic San Joaquin Hilla Adults. Lease. 714: 753--0719 ~ appt. at SS mo. Answering/"1'\'lee -(near W. Bay St.) COSTA ~.,. Rd I: Marguerite, CDM. Appl. to .... . • Santo Ana Heights Summer Rentol1 420 =~':, ~ ·~· MESA. ~'1881/alt 6 p.m. Tr•vel 540 ::,211~> ~ (1) :m, ~fl1S ~--• ~~ . $us.2 ~~-OrcOillhldren.d o_ K. BALBOA Island (Little), 325 DESK space, .an.Bable ''50 WE would.like to ft:nt your COUPLE and 300, 16, wish MALE Doxie, brown/lft'Y '!~ ~· E. ~nt. Lrg. 3-Br., 3 mo. Wm pnMde fmnlture. _lovely beauti!ul-boUH with neat couple for partnership lace, 13 yrs old. AM -tq ~AGT. 673-8563. Santa Ana H~ts Ba. Avail June $400, July at SS mo. Answer~ aervlc. llllp A dock tn Newport area kl boat and sailing cruise ot "Willie''. Red collar I: $450, Aug &: &opt, $5(1() per available. 17875 Beach Blvd. for August Belt of Refer. South Pac If i c. Ap-black Dea collar. Uc. VlC TIME FOR Niwport Hiiahts wk. Also winter lease avail HuntiflRlon Beach. 642-4321 eneer. eall Waltah Clark, pro x t mat f!I y $20,000 N w p t/Jrvlne Desperate. $Ta0 per mo. 673-8249. ARCHITECT, engineer, etc. 6#-0022. available. Rudy Gildehaua. 546--0989, 615--0341. : QUICK CASH Apts., BAY VIEW 2 bedroont. Ofc't. "' Old Newport LOCAL buslneM man neede 2218 Golden Am>w, Lu SILVER <;learttte llghter,- FUr'n. orUnfurn. 370 sleeps 4 completely fumigb. Blvd. See to appreciate. Ex· turnilhed. 1 bdnn apt., yrfy. Vegas, Nevada, 891!)9. morqram wlltttrr M. at THROUGH A . I COl!a·MI••·. . ed.'AvailJunetoSept.$750 ter. entrance 195. 548-5.'lOO P,.ferupperPenin•ulaSHIPMATES WANTED Oomlnicl, H.B. srnm. pr month. , Adults only Open. ' area. Call Chuck Yeaser Windjammer • South Paclfic Sentimental value. <::en. DAILY PILOT., , ' jumm1r.: Rentals , ·.,...,,.. 675-4930. OFFICE 10 r secretarial 673-1374; . Share work " ..,,.,,,.., Re\\'IU'd • SST·llH<. · • * ~Olf'· to SepL 15. Uni. 2 bookk .. plni ..,.,.;,,, ltftL' 3 BR Jhe, .or Ilg. apt unturn 213J311.1%19 SILVER IJ'IY mole poodle WANT AD ' ,PALM MESA·,APTS, BR •pl. C.M. 1175 mo. Hu Nr. 11th SI. S!lpg. C.M. lot rent.O.an. Vnth . Jan. Vicinity Sunllowe,r " ' ' MINITrES T0 NP!'; BCH. frig.,, bltns 557~ 5'3-m8 642°5678 ·FURN. OR \JNF!mN. ,.Gr.en vailoy Lake omCE. $60 montl>, -• :.::~':t~~or I i.t•-j[S) ~~.:iii: ' ' 11,!ibelievably la\ge · apts,. -,-, 5'S-6529 -,,--------J1toge pool, 1Jacuizf elect Qlbjn. Wk!yonly, 545-<358 luJ:n. util pd. ln.sh\>PPlni OWElll•cplt. "°"'t•.,,rent · ~: • •. ,, 111;:ins, shag crpts, ~fp., FURN 2 Br, ;f~ 6, 111 00. center -333 E. 17tb ~i,. sm1. lioe hi CdM. Fum. OcL 1.0=ST;--:dor--: -=-=-,,--.. -m-'' ~ ,~ ~ D!l<>I etc. Adglts, oo.pets. Pr;v patio, frplc. 1 b!k heh. C.M. 67U140. l·April J.. ·W/pou. option to Found (frM Idol 5511 MAC. Tri-colored. VI c. :~ IWJC;J\ . S!!IGLES ... .-.... From $135 613-$00 or 64S-4828. BAY VIEW OFFICE~ bey. '.P.O. Box;36S,' CjlM . • ---, Meta Verde School Dlat. ,,_ ______ _, 1 !IEDRM· ......... Froo4140 Oeluxo. alr.<:ondltloned , FAMILY n<edJ pool home. IUIODESIAN Ridge Back Sun. Tar No. I 5 412: 2 (IED)tM ••••••• From $160 FOR rent, Mo~tain Cabin, Redecorated. lJdo area , Sehl!, shopping, Reta. Can do(. Owner eall 714: 546-6257. I 1~ farS. II 1'!i l you're right, they're un-planned activities for Realonomict, Bkr, '15-6'100 Bill Paricer, Agent 956-2500. .fM..349' and ldentlfy. "BL'°'VE=-:P:-arak-,-eet-,.-wlth"""-.,.-~.,1 , '• . der-prlced 1561 Mesa Dr. children. Lake Fun. 557-11}37 1 BR unfum apt. Reas, rent. CAT, )'OW1I temaie, reddlah speckled head 4 wing1, Vlc· Cleisi~ic•ti~ I 00-124 (S blks fro:t:rt Blvd.) BA YFRONT, avail Ju n e IDEAL Joe. Avail Aug 1. 1 child in nursery lchl an ~ I: white, Thalia & PaularinotFairvJew, C l\t . I~ ~Se t l5 ~-•-TV -Blvd., CM. Good day, 673-3006, Wilacm, Lar·Bch. 497-1091. 5&-2139. \MIWI., ~ p . . """"r , nu tra1fic 1000 c..-Ft. -~.,.....-,---....,-=-1-:;:--Homts Jill t & 2 BR furn or unfurn crpts, $100 Week. 675-5666. expose, .,... Vacancies oott money!' Rent 8 WK. Puppy, vie. Rochester· O.C. Fair. AU8trallan Shep, -~~---'· Pool. $140 Up. Oilldren's 835-3437 dys. . YDlll' boule opt , _.., 6 Santa Ana, C.M. ldentif,y ltml. While neck & cheil. Cl.1ssiJication 125-149 section. ELM GARDENS 1 BR. betwn Bay & Beach, MEDICAL Suite, ready . to bldg., etc. thiu·.a of.'ny1Pilot fn ~· 615--1082 aft 6. Blk lftY, brown. Whlte " ' ~ APl'S. 177 E. 22nd s• C.M. Newport, alps 5, ll50 wk, go. Heil at llOOa O\ica', Ouallled Ad;SeJI W. ltaml FOUND "°" 10 opted bike eyes. 516-2437. I . • '"t'!:!tt.. ] .8 642-3645. call 558-1821 ask for Pat. H.B. $275/mo. 846-U23. -Ji,w! call ~ Now! ~R = andPet1=:e. call LOST in Eutblutt. , _ . HaU rrown fem. tart.I Cl•uificalion 150-184 USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! FOVNDtanCockapoovlclnl· llhel!kltttp.644-2239 ~~inanpar.,,_·__.l[i] Clas1ific1:ticin 200·260 I ~"'-l~ Classificetion 300-3~5 ~"'-. ltl Cl11sific1tion 360-370 ty Sooth Coast P 1 a z a ---'~----·.I 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINEs . 6/21t12. 84U&9. REWARD iloot LOST FOUND 6-vie. Tultln 4 colored -y vicinity • 4• , • ., ... • , • TUID - $4.50 $5.80 $6.10 • 7 TJMU TtMa -· - $7.40 $11.70 $9.GI $14.50 $10.7, $17.30 ' 11 .,. .. ,. - •11.70 $2UO $27.30 ,..., Harbor HI School 5'H1lll ClibrHJo, C.M. White, amal1 dor. 646-6536. * LOST Toy White Poodfe SMAIL cray & white kitten. Vlc. of Avalon A Wilaon. Vic Baktr I< Faltvlew. llll513-8~~884~. ~~~~~~' u ... .,....W-340I. r .TIME . F.01 ; ~I _ ....... _ .. ~I ~iiimf: . :t 1' Ca ---~· ~ ~ ~;·'! !";"!:¥':., ',, , .. .,, J. Ron~ I~ .; , ~l1ssific1tion 400...4~5 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 l ' SEND BILL 0 TO P•UHCOiT r11t .,,., •" •• ,. 111 •••• 1p•c• •It•"~· l11chld• v•vr .,,,,,. ., ,..... '""''"'~ Th• coif ef V•11r ... h ef ""9 •ftci' ef th• 111111 ell which tfi• l11t weM .,f .,.,.,... •cl' 11 .,It • tt11. Adel' SJ.00 pl111 l 1111•• 11•tr• If yo11 4•11111 "'' .r DAILY ruor ••• 1en1 .. wit' 111•lloci' t•pllot • QUICK CASH School• a JqROUGH A lnsfn/Cl'- 1 D41iY PILQJ '.~~k, <I I''' . , ~ , ~ '.JJW ···\,· (Plus the daffy newsrack .. ~itfoir) For Qll.~ . f,_ri~~ . . . , ' . I r"l l ·~ . · ' With A · 7 " . ~' .. ' . YOU CAii cum IT; 111 IF: ~.~q~ )[¥1 · Cl11sific1tion 500·5 IO . 1 -~· ]. Cl1sSific1tion 525-530 I &MtaadF-![SJ Cl•ssific•tion 550 .fiSS I· .._ .. I~ • Cl•11ific1tiow676..S80 1....:.-.... 1~ Cl1&1ific1tion 600·699 I · ~-·lfll1 c1 ... ificotioJ) 700-710 • OR USE' YOUR CHARG'E C'.A'.RD • Pu•ll1h f•r ••••••• ••• .,,.,,, lt•tlllllillt t • • • • t •'•I It• O t • t II II'• II• t t ' Cl1ulflc1ti•a •• ~ •••• ••••••••••••••••••.•••••• "'' • ••••••••••• •••••• H•~• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ,,,.,. ························································ ' ' cii., ,I •• , t • tt o" o to•• t t • • t t 1 • o O• •t" 1" rtl.llt o •• o • o o • o I•• o •• •tt0: tt Io• I nhw ...... N•_.., •••••••••••••••••••• bpi,..._~.'••••••• M. a.,.. No..., ••••• ,. , ••• , , ••••••• ..,,,.. .. o.tt .•••.•• , ____ _;;;;;.. ____ CUT HlH -PASTI OH YOUR nrtnOl'I ---------- I IUSlHESS REPlY MAil fW'f-,,_..._...,~.._c11t • Oran11 C.ut DAILY PILOT r. o. lex 1UO C.. M_, C11lf. 92626 .. I ' \ WANT •1 c.=!~~I II 325 Old No. Nwpt Bl., NB ••• U'f. E. t. la-n U'tt;"tlVI • R. E. Edocallon Since 1961 ' ·. * * * . Trader's Paradise ' ' 'lines · 160 Acres In °"""'· for TD'1. unillt bomtt, etc.11+ ..,...., .. Fallbrook want uni... °'-Co. 1:ulllt Kennedy, Ei<clmgr. 96.WOlO HAVE»' ·' UILllOAT MOL\. •• valuoa It $1)1). WW trado IJr -fllllllll* ...... mmm.aa. Uh .. lr'llle! Ollr Trodtr'1 --fllor;you! t lino * • dart lortbudtl. * * times dollars **'*'** * 10 <andy machlnM, lDi: type. Value $2,500, Wiiii TV'r, land, ear, or t Daw .. 8411-1041 :Jll' SPORT 111111111 lloa~ )'r old. ,.,.. " -· Twla -linl .... m.om. Tro4e tor 1'0'., -prop« T BKR Ml-. S\JPEI\ ....... QDf -l"lnolt ...... _..., ' I BR t BA, -Tndt 111>,000 ~ ,,. ... - -BKRlilU.. * * • • . ' . . . . . . . .. ' - • OAll.Y PILOT PliOT·ADVERTISER J8 ~----;;!~~~ [ _.,._ ,15J 1-... -1r;s1 .____ _L•,._,,,••_l[JJJ I L4il1: 1 1[111 [ r ,.,,_ J!D.J !!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. ,.!!!!!!!!!,,.!!!!!!!!! [j]) I Go .... I.. Stwing/Allor•I-1 Holp Wlnlod. M & I' 7ll Hol, Wontod, M & I' 710 ··-----~ii.:i Hol' Wantod, M & I' 710 .,.,..,,... _______ m;..;. JIM'S ~nlna. <0moleto -riMNG:DESi"'GNillc Holp Wonlool, M' "710 ;:;:i:;;=====;; Help W1ntod, M .. F 710 iolp W1ntod, M' "710 ][{ [ lliijlluj11•lt Hollnptor Tr•I-• lawn• yard • .,., cl<'anupe. M ••·Womm Reuonabl• ASSEMILERS /JIJ • t KEYPUNCH =====:.1------tn on 1viaUon11 fa1teJt 545--3682 aft s pm. rattt. 1'ttt doU&r mintm\Ull. LlertL~a GARDENER or cardtN'I' Rec:eptlonl1t ~ lltld: * LANDSCAPING* Etthnatei. Call 31$-74!0. To '2.'IS -II< trU1ff Xln OPERATOR NOTE TELLER Tolophono Opsr1lor G.I. 1111 P1y1 90% Niw la-. Spr!nkJ<n. dedcl. Altor1tlon1 -'42.sMS Mln. of 6 ..,., aaper. oo PC GOOd fllUn aptitude tnd be~ 7 ,.t g "";:· oDl7, . Poly Optic•, Inc .. manllfao. tralhinc T.A.A. cleanup. State llc'd. $1m Neat, &ca1rate. 2> JtUI up. bo&rda. .:nne typinc heJptUl. lJtt, tn~) 49f.6m. Experienced turers of the tm lnattn& '" V;~ ~SClf.OOL" EXP. u-wa1•--c-~-r Sign• P.P.S./NO FEES ... !dent DI health IMnn1:e ft--•1 Ole HJO To -for ...... finonclal d e co r a Ii v. 11 g h ... •-•~ ~ -~·--~ fared, ...., .. orpniu.tion In Newport ''PO L Y-O P T ICALS", -• -Complete &ardenlna aarvloo 3-D Mall'fll<: Signs Pacific II"' but Ml~-Easee to leamf \JM ,.,... Beach. Doy llb1ft. Minimum -UNITED -located In Irvine Industrial J511 E. SJ>rinr St., KamalanJ, 64&-4671. $$.95 ff.Ch Ar up. PerlOftMI S.rvice1 INTERVIEWING &mile to land th1I tun IPOt 6 months exp er le n c •. Callfornle 811nk Complt'x has ~ trn.r-dlate Lona: Bcaeh A~ J.,A.WN SERVICE Call 9$'-<1950 an)'1:lrM 1U No. Towtr !-fon-Frl 9-U:30 p.m. in triendb' ofOce, Call Mar-FamUlar with O'J9 & 058 requirement tor a P..ectp. Cut·Ed«•Tr'lm Dependable Teltvition R--lr Union Bank SQ.u.aR k>n Mann. 833-2700, Demrll and/91' data record t ns 6 Monarch S., Plu& tlonlJt Telephone Operator. Eves aft 6. ~ 5&7""58S -,..-On.nee, Calif. ON A DennlJ Ptrtemnd Aamcy, equipment. South Laiuna The pt.non selected tot the Jones Lawn Service * BL41NE'S 'IV * 547-6446 SITE OF OUR -Mkvbellon Or., trvtn.. For ~In~: Call poaltion will handle a buty Mow, edge, vacuum. Small, Servicinl All Brandl .Uk tor Rachel May N:F;W BUILDING GENERAL OUlce fuU or PT. AVCO FINANCIAL 496-l2TJ receptlonbt desk with h~uvy 1 .. -e clean-u" 54>2943. Authorized Mqnavox. -A/P AfR ~ 1 telephone responsibilities. LA-;;. 'Malnt-;~nthly Serv. Known for honelty 5'1M31! ASSEMBLERS' PACIFIC MUTUAL ...,;... ,.,.p. ~ s~~v~s Equal Oppor. Employor typ;og skills must be ... m. Abo, cleanup. Frff est. Tile FASHION ISLAND Yacht ottlot1 on B13' -f\'URS cellent. allSO a good un. 919.(174~ (Comer Santa Cruz A ~ Equal OpportunJty Employer ES Aide~Apply hl derstanding o1 general ot- "' CERAMIC tile T S2 80 ="""~------person, Park Lido Conv. 1' d b · ti General S.rvlcet f'llM & o . PerJlr Niwport:CtnterDdve) GENER.AL office ex-LEGAL SEC'Y Hosp, 1445 Superior Ave, tcean usmeuprae eta. ttjo~~I1~er .... ".!~'lo!! Small ~~~ .. ~aveA~tlo· in toil perlence. St:a.rtin& salary NB. APPLY AT TOTAL SERVICES CO. in .. .,-.. -• ._,..ll'UM .......... ,.. r...,ca n$ for * FR.EE daily but tran. $1.75 rt' hr. 5tl)-.Xl95 for tn-ER r!ttina _ .f, or 5 yr Plumbs Install'•. Carpentry. CERA?tfiC Tile, Kitchen•, tra.1neH accepted. portaUon b' work 1n Loa ttrvh. Leading youna: attomey needJ Nurses Aides & Orderlies POLY OPTICS, INC. -· Belch tripe. Reta. $3) Elec ,.pain, cement work. Bath' Enlry1. Cu 11 om P.P.$./NO FEES Angtles unW move to GEL t. ,I< aec'y fa.mlliar w/Callf. Law. Experi<oced only. 1815 E. CARNIEGE: AVE. I ~ &J6.L!ll9. work. Reu. Glen, 548-726.1. _558-8444 Newport, Sept '12 Slut ""' n molders. He otten xJn't working en· 642-3505 SANTA ANA * ~ui:z * T . lmmed. Apply vironment, rapid inc~asea NURSES Aides, all 1hl1ts, RECE-P.~T"'l"O~N~l"S=T~-I THINGS By Mooae: Fence, utorlnt 1._. E Edin•-SA * CHn.D CARE. Coilep Me~, 138 W. 11th st, • -.1 '---.:u 111-,.turn. F/t' H B. Co u-Will ba"""- 1 t at'--•-' ..... ~.. I u.JU • •ci · ,.,., in Irvine __ ..... _.... ,.,....... • 6.....,,,. ~•n::u une. · nv. ·-r· Love peo"ie? Local oo. seeks I .,~ -v sen. apt"~· app tftliln, SPANISH TUTORING , . •" afta -~ M.... lor h-~ --~-. ISSU Fl-~' St. H ' ·-·•-tn my~ ~ 1 b w ""'<t ........ AT"fEND •-s -·1-.... &.--·---child ..,. a.n.1 w\11·,. · .... -.... a • .B. happy ....... u;,.,.. ,_ .. ,..1 .. ua1 to : -v"e'"; •• -· •""'""' ~ec., p um ' e, ~. All ..... 67'2380 """' • ....... "" ...... , iv1-.,_. .. ,.... • GIRL FRIDAY p S ,,.. .. --o UJUIYKI • -H II ~ full t. part, day I< nito. 55:1-7333. 8 .P •• /NO FEES OPERATORS Needed train for their front desk. •u ng e.1.-. + --t:!AA ....... Uly propniy mllml'fTnent S Lot f bl' t t Call pABYSIMER bu openinp ..---.7 ............. U'W'P"V•"W CREW MANAGER co. Answtr phones, •-1n1, Pacific ports\\'~ mfgr. Steady s o pu ic con ac. · J:: birth to• M •-TREE • •-plant -mo al CdM. W _, 2 vv p I S • work · to" pay. Pd vac. Ask Angie 1-larris., 833·2700, Den-")'rl. )' """"' • .... ... v • e n......, men over U that fillna. Ability to com·poet •rtonne trv1ce1 .. wn.;e yard. CM 548--8494. Yard & truh clean-up. I J(IIJ Auto Mechenic CM handle a smaU iroup of letters. Shorthand prefer-112 No. Tow-er for Jan, 6-12-3472. nls & Dennis Penoonel R ESP 0 NS r BL E expel'. Rutotilling, movin&, 2 trucks lt....,.11wt 11 BMW Experience, Should boys Pttin&' new cultornen red. Salary to $550 ctepe~ Unk>n Bank Square PERSONN~L SEC'Y ~~:~?· 2082 l\Iichelson Dr., l~tttr, )'OUl' home. Jerr + 5 ton !lat dump. 7 day, 24 · f' have Clau A License, Good for Southern Orange Coun-ding on exper •. SubmJt Orange, Ca.ill. tiller 6'15-4!152. hr. Call MI< T 642-1400. Worklnl cooditloos, See 1)"1favorite-pcr. Men "'"""' to P. 0. Box 1810, 547•6446 Do Y"" have lyr clerical ex- .,,,.. Sorvlco DISPOSE OF TIIAT UGLY Job W1ntod, Miio 700 Mr. Heinz at CM eam $200.00 to l400.00 Newport.Beach 92663. Ask for Rach•I May per, enjoy people, have 8 RESEARCH TRASH AND D Ell RI S. CREVIER P"' week depending"" num-GIRL.~nl '"""'•"· poa1. Li'ril'o Color ----··, pleasant personality? R•ady SECRET ARY iOHN'SCUi>et•\Jpbolatory FREE ESTIMATE . 17 yr old blrh achool grad. MOTORS b<'t of boys you CM c:any. lion with none techai<al m------· f ~':.,er 1 • Ex tr a REASONABLE 543-W8. looldnr for appttntlcellilp In Thia 11 a dtrnJlled .-er lormatloo ,....~ exp. journeyman. W a g e or a chan<e 10 prove your-lnloresling job •~rk;og for auto m-..a..·-1 • -W 1 t St •·-•-· ---~•·-bl·' N llUUI lrl'Y:ce open &: negotiable. (nl) sell to an emplo_ye_r_ v,.·ho 'vill PHD's In geolo~. Too ~· .. poo frtt Scotch. YARD A Gara.&"1! Oeanup ..._ ... ..,,er. '9 Yfl ex--• s ·· ~ta n.iw ....... u ............ .., 6" wages. o 1or architttt No •ellina in-~ard t t If •J """ , l'.*fd fSotl Retardant•). Free eat. 7 day.. ea.ti per, ln H.S. 494.e179. 13>3171 experience it neceua.ry but vclved no' typing ,;5%1::;;--0tm;::::::·~~----1 call Rl~~ a~~~~;es? ~. !alary & benefits. · [Pesttum " all color all)'llme, 54H>031. J b . AUTO SALESMAN mwt be able to set alont1 pm..,.;, eap. nee. IP M ~~ LIVE-in bousek<eper. ranch p p S /NO F e"""' " 1D minute YARD cl • W1ntoc1, Fom1lo 702 Experienced lmporied Car with boys. u itl-ed Md person ml w. 3rd St. Los styl• atmollpbere. Must be • • • EES ' tor wh!tr carpeta. Jtemo'vt'":::.~ di~~ Go0o TYPIST SalesmantorBMW Agency. =m~.;;""w:°2':.::U ~In, Calif. ~i:~ofal:~~:tean~~ Perso:n:;1~:rvicas lme e!:' ~:. ':tvh'c a kl p Jo ad er. backhoe. WJll do your typing at Group Insurance, demo. COCK TA 1 L A: Food CmLS 5'10'' or avtt, to No small children. 639-6420. 112 No. Tower P•clfic lt\11Qc ri~h... -: 841-)668. htr home Will rickvp plan. See Bob Crevier at w i partlcipate in Soclolo:Y ex.-U 1 Bank Personnel S1rvic11 NO FEES!/P.P.S. ')ill m~··Arty ..... ~ nu.so, PICKUP acrt.p meotal, and deflv;r loc• H.B., CREVll!R MOTORS a trcr11e1-Apply in Jlfr.-inltfttWht. Upto$30. LYN . non Square ll2 No. Tower :couch no. Ch&tr $5. 15 yn. wuhen, etc. Refri" nu~ F.V., West, 75c per Pl· 201 "'!· 11t St. ~:;;.:,n 2m 11 Bria:~: :~: ~ Eve. 84U64l aft 6:30 * 549-3061 * Orange, Calif. Union Bank Square •«tp. ts whal counts not nine or not. Nwpt. 675-5258, or will work by hour S.nto Ana Santa Ana. · MACHINE Operators, 'l'Urret 547-6446 Orsnge, Calif. ·~. 1 do work m¥1e11. 646-3250 Clll 1474095 135-3171 GIRL wanted for pet lllop Latbe-llanliog, Clasa A. Ap-Ask for Raohel May 547-6446 1 ~~~Cle·--, LOCALtud 1 M':"!'·tru~ CC1llege NEED hi!lp at• home? \Ve A'!~! ~s_.:.ou tob ~=~~!1~ :~c= ;:;d:~obup~ call~ ply 1741 Placentia, C.M. PHONE solicitor rem, \\'ork A~k for Rachel J\fay "'·-...... ....,. ........ ' en. ...... ...... Reu. have Aides • Nunes • ouu~ eQ.1.-•w1g -.;.-.ua. ca.s APPly m person only. Lido lU ..,.___ .... _" CM MANAGEMENT TRAINEE: 2~'s hrs per eves. from your Restaurant _JJl'Of. at lowe1t prices. p 533·79i6 collect. How:ekprt • Companlo"• • •lllnr our netting COi-~ Yard 900 IJdo Parle Dnllll.I .. ....,, • • Natiofally known C:O. offers h>me. Salary & comm. aft Manager Trne ••~- ft. -95· --'"' metic faabiom for summer, ' HAVE · ._ unlimited opportunity to ad-_6°""pm=54~>-:.,7:;.663:::._~~-..-, .*I• __., · _,.... HounclHnfng Homemaker 1-Upjohn Dr, N.B. opening iw. snatutt ; · Fee Paid. Also Fee Jobs. Get 547 ,,,_ ''l'l? For a pencmaJ appt. woman ID ,,._ office. w.nce to administrative PRACTICAL nurst' tor 12 hr · ••· i '•rpente.r MINO_.. Cl . r.-. -voa.1.. Call 540-1041. COOK Duties CCllllist ';f6...._"'1 ..... M• positk> Co furn . 111 on "'~ ground floor w/ ~ ---i:..Ol'i eanmg. -...I'"" .. , IDGH Sehl j · il Con al t hol Ital •rest ..,-y .. ,., .au-n. · • car. nigbt shift -I am-8pril. 5/6 tut paced chain movina: [fltLARGIORSMALL window., floors etc. child care~:~~--~. BABYSJl'IER, needed 8-fi m:~~:.e U:w... . ing,l0..1~?addinam1.chine, Profit~. Start$7,800. dayg'2.35 hr.548-5927. westward. Pro fit shartng, t ""-1 Wori<: cut doors, Reatd/com'L 5 5 7 •IT f 2, •~WU("}\ pm WHk-'··-Nr Whan ..,. &nl'ft .... phones de. Must call Jt!'&n Brown. 5«)....6005, 1 ,.,,.,.. 54Ml.ll. Rell. Vic Bolu Chi.ca & eo .. bool •• ;:;:;;. Call all ,,, 6f2-3S05 bt able to work ,1 .:i .... _ Oiestal Agency, 2 7 9 0 PROFES.SJONAL pa~ vacation, holidays, • ', 1, ttmOdeJ, f 1ni1 h, · 'C'.u .. -ou.1.1111: .,.. V9'1"'nnv v 71 ~ "" H RESl'AURANT, & HOTEL rapid advancement. Call fl!''llli~ .• repairs etc. Japanea Lady ;.;:;;,~ -n::;; rm./bd, pm. · ExperiencedC:!:vaietcat A ~~-itlet ~r Blvd., at Adams, EMPLOYMENT AGENCY John Goss, 833-2700. Dennil U81. wUl : ~e*anlnc. ~.in exchanae fD1' hsJtp or BABYSnTER for tummer, rtt1dential care fadlltiea. Exoellent c:om:b;;fitJ Man•g•ment Triinee Managers ...... Salary Open & Dennis Personnel Agency, ! frOM woodv.-ork panel. MOm•s helper fn Cdi'\1 or my platt, own tranl. Mon 142-35(15 includinc paid vacation, Xlnt oppor. wllrg Corp. , 2082 Michelso n Or., Irvine. 'Jac,.Cabinett.Gen'lrtpain:. DAYWORK .• G ~ner al nearOCC.544-4136. ~fl T!iora 6 ...,.; •• '6 day Mon. DATA RECORDIR paidtnlllranceArttftment ~n~:3:1 ::tc:managers ..... $~mo. R.N. -0.R. 'Ph. Duke D a Durk a , CI ea n t n g. Re I I able. EXCELLENT cl ~ • '"""°J.'"· J)l'Olram. eo.ta Mesa area. • •• ••••••••. ....:;shift Excellent fringe benefits. _.1'»8. Tr ant:portation. 543---7000 houte eaning. Bank OPERATOR Write: 01sdfted ad No. 10 Call Mrs. Schmidt Broiler Man.•••••••••• .Open Contact Pef'90nnel QfOt>e I ifiiOR hOme repairs. Plum· 541-9330 , ex P erie:nced, ~lerences. Teller Trne to $450 PART-TIME Dady Pilot P.O. Box 15ro WESTCLIFF Fry Cook .............. Open 1'.ion thru Thurs S-4 PM ~1...-HOUSE 0 842-2485. y '11 SUbmit quallficationl tr. Colla. Meta. Ca.Ht. Pef'90nne:l Agency \Vaitresses Over 21 FOUNTAIN VALLEY ' ~ ~ carpentry -pa1ntinc F CLEAN ou really see green in R•-• 14...,,.. .,_ ···~ · · 92626' 204.1 Westcllff Or., NB F'~ I< ~-ktail !l 65 hr ._ ~•--Call --~ •'-•--., ...... v•o ~~ uuu '""""' •••• · • COMl\lliNITY HOSPITAL <' ~._. 541J.651ifi, •~·Ol1'1J,wtndowsA JobtW1nlocl,M&F104 •-·~-~~Ofpeopletoo. PO """ HEALTH FOOD SALES· 645-lnO Hostess ex~r $250hr ' ~~lllngl wa111. 5 yrs. att!L ~ New local branch will train. n~.·-.. ~ -· New;m:• I For the saJ -11 1 .. · • ~ •···· · · · 17100 Euclid at Warner -HOUSESI1TING -Call Tra Martin 83.1-2700, uo: u• if-.J MASJ£R MECHANIC Hostm/Cuhier ...... $2 hr 97'--1211 i ~·i'·c.i1i.;p"b~ ~ .. ,~cb~torta1-Joiwor.-.,.;,•:::;!; t>en111a:'t>ean1ai>.........r nr11ES. TATE ::.-~~food ~.h,;;o;k: ... H·, .. tse11:'f'3hrhr.· SAL_E_S-REP 1 Jlt&ebine applied. Free e• Restd/Comm'l.1 M&-t~tc. coupl~. both teachers, nO Agency, Z>82°Michelllon Or., llUIL f!Jlf/lft.• lM'le' : = ,.. FEE " ~-· Cuar. 6.f.4.7183. Dedicated Cle•ning = f::.fs;,re:nces Jrvitie. CAREER .~ Co. paid in. JAGUAR ROYAL SERVICE A~ENCY Immed. placement for in- , CencNte * WE 00 EVERYTlfiNG * · · BARMAID Wl.llted. Good .....ce. $32). Cd Linda W ed · .3848 Campus Drive div1dual in the aales dept of •. s hUo', poo1' *-i.. " Rell. Free flt. 1146-2839 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 l~Knotyttya :~. Apply Let belJ> Roy, 5IMll55. co ••t •I e ne I Jaguar &lit.119, !"•wport Beach a 56 yr old oqanliation. Poa-LAD ..-·~ 212 5 us you pt ltlrttd ~. 2790 Harbor BL •t mast mechanic for our 557-2800 itlve opportunities ror h.Jab )lod<. Fret flt. -for y :"""" hotJaecleanintI A--A~--. Harbor mvd., C.M. it> blrh -with.... """""" C.M. . 0 -111 E tat Sal i ric Exp'd. Own .::w~-... "' ... ~ --1-S · D Th ~ 1 e es eam ngs w/ll~raJ ,.,.._ ·-~or all. 5. wo ' tnnlp. FAME & FORTUNE n~ .. -~-·-·. ,_,_ .....-. FU1L SERVICE Hou-orv:ce ept. o man PROFESS be ··•· , 8173637 ~uu u.,. •• w. --organliatlon i:-Umt ~= IONAL e neft~. Gen'l oxpcr. In, ... -.cusroM CEMENT WORK · · Independent producer & tant ._ &bampoo girl. UC. p>rtunJtiei ~-.op-Beaut. OiM home, 2 &dUlti. S we' are looking for must vices, sales l:/or credit de- ;: ~ Waiki, patloi, JAPANESE cleanlnt1 Jody, casti111 service ,..ks """ <riy. FUil/pt. Hair W•st. * · cloy wk. Good ploln cook. b f I CAREER s;rable. Salary + liberal , -• decks. Don, 642-B514 Cotta Me.., Newport, CdM faces for GP -ted films •. ~ "-. L1BERAL UCENSING Muoi haw-·. r~ -•·-·. e tops in h is ie d. Best N h' • lo · · • ~ ... "' Vhl""l...v PROGRAM ,,,_ ~ -.-..,, ow 1r1ng r expa~ commissions .. car expense. .... _...v .. (W\,,9 .... ....... • v~ EPER * Free eomprehemive In • wor rng con 1 ion~. op 1 ep1rtment1. P " persona ter-~"-s. --·~. dri·-. 1~-u ..... Own tranL 5G-l029. 'IV COMERCIALS F-BOOKKE ' --k' d 't' • t Ion-All D For a pt • I In ' ''"' lawns, saw, break, Excellent Houaecleanlnc Interview, Call ( 21 l l .WORK IN IRVINE ~ cxmtinoal tralninc HOUSEKEEPER needed pay. All Co. benefits. Somo Po1ilion1 Selery view Call 642-7960 betwn .~· 54S-a&68 !or est. by cky. Own tnnl. .f64..3121. For an intere•ting co. in a * Re11dential Reule put time, xint pay, varied plus Commissions, oth~ S: 30 am It 5 pm, Mr. Meyers C ntrect1r * 836-.()648 * . Accountant new I: crowtna field. Plenty * Residmtt.al Incom. ~ Call for iotervitw 6 See Art Vaught, •rs Guaranteed Drew. SALE.S Clerk, female. Large .,. ... ., " .. ""¥" Prof. Corpot Clunlng Jr •Accountanl to J12K of o_.iun!ty for the gal * Trsd .. 111 plan "'9 pm, _.,O, BAUER BWCK High "lo Bonus, Peid party & .. ,,.,. goods ....... j ~lo CK. Tau I a ne--R.el*ir Also windows i: Ooor care Pa,yroU to $800 who wants a well paid * Full service otnce HOUSEKEEPER... lJvt' in. Vacation, Medici I & PJ;'VKlus ~s exp. re-~ .. addlt ~ )'l'lt exp. Call Dutch 537·1508, 24 U.: R pV Cl.erk to $650 career~ Start $650. Co. Pay1 CALL JACK BACK Under 50; a.ta Met&. Life Insurance. If you quired. Full time. Apply in MC d. My Way Co. 114 -0036. Pilntlng 1 ~-~" to S'50 Fee. Alla Fee Jobs. Call <ntJ 833-1266 -·~ .. • PM 2925 Harbor Blvd. person 9 am-4 • -~., ..... ,, to $675 All v want • Professiorwtl 'Bak ' rm. ouJ Drlvowiys P1porh1nglng Reception!at S450 Nancy May,-· Coastal COLWRL HOVSEKE!;PER wanted to Phone 979-2500 CerHr-not fu11 1 Job er Sl, C.M. Mr. Harper. QUAUJ'Y teal co 1 t1 n I'. Sec'y <L.A.) S700 ~_ncy, 2790 Harbor Bl. at live, In. pvt room, bath le -and •r• wllllng· to SALEsµDY for permanent. .We•lhtrt '."• oil reslstant. QUALITY INTER.JOR Genera.I Office $520 Adams, CM. PROPERTIES INC TV. MUlt drive. 49+-'7258. MATURE maJd aver 35, full make • Su«111 Com. ~time: job at Art Gallery SU,. btacJ<. Ha wt ey • s PAINTING NEWPORT l!kkpr FC lo $1000 I • INSURANCE -or Co. charge. Lif• I< hosp. Ina. mllment, I w1nt lo l1lk •-~autUuJ lliopping center, $45-6195. Vtty Rea1<mable rates. Personnel AgencY · Wonderful boa leeka steady bacJCarouDd; General Office ~teady-yr. r o u n d . to YOU 1 C 11 Joh S. ~.ta Ana. Must be at- IKtrictl * 646-7051 * 833 Dover Dr N B Jndlv. to ·join bl• team in !~~~diary of Clerk. Age 21-ro. Vaned -movr n6-~31. n Y" ~~!'!':e~Starty a&I * PAINTING • PAPERING • 642.3170' . ' plwih ofc, 7~S Hr day. Xln't ell Co.) dutieL Policy typing 80me MECHANIC-Serv. St.a. CdM ~'" rue.Ai.. "'WoRK .•• All Interior Exterior benefits. Call Sharon Wall, DENTAL RecepltorUt., Of. bkkJ>I. Salary open, 6n.3833 """·•Top pay. To $100) & SEYMO $ 2 .25 per hour. 13-15 houri ,lifodl. Bia or small Llc'd it Lie. 1"""':"1 Goarsnteed ACCOUNTING c LE R K , 833-2700. Dennis & Dennis fice Manaser, exper. Salary tor appt. up. Mun know alignment " UR per week. 54W036. !QI. Frea eal :;o;.oru, Call Hanis 64i-45:i8 Growing oo. needs stiarp pl Peroonnel Alfncy, 20!2 open. So'"" eves t. Sal11. IN ES otr cood. Ph. 613-8818. REAL TY & SALESWOMAN. exp. - ' l!l LECTRICIAN, lice-No Wutl"' -accountine & lite book· Mlchel••>n Or., Irvine, 64&-9672. V T IN Mod AHi to $6000 INVESTMENT " ................ Ov.,. 35. hooded. Small jobs, malnl + WALLPAl'IR * PING EXPER. G,..t op-$ BOYS WANTED $ DENTAL ustllaot for pro-YOUR FUTURE Wooderful doctor deatres that REAL ESTATE Slendy Part time. ~-* repain. 5t8-6203. ·When 1U'J c:aU "Mac" keeping eXpe'l'. Great ~ Ate• U.lS feaional commUM, Hvirc Full or p/tbne. sped.al warm und~ng SEAMsrRESS, no exp nee., OOtdonl~ 1143-1444 lfl.lm J>Ortunlty. Stsrt l\'>00. Call MUST BE' togelhor Md -· Or. 81 YOUR OWN BOSSI P<'flD" to train In lovelyolc. PROFESSIONAL but helpM. For dept. ~ "• PROFESSIONAL p.-Linda Ray, 5 4 0 - 6 0 5 5, 1. Neat and honnt Rolfe, 49f-.4685. MM\ er Women Can Lynn Todd, 833-2700, Salesmen 4 brokers! The mobile manufachtring onlt. ,, QUALITY Honest work, reu. Uc/IN. COl.utal ~ey, 2 7 90 2. Able to work from approx. DENTAL udltant. t'Xpet'., Dennis ·A-Dennil·Penonnel opportunity u here! You a.re Bue pay while tn.lnin&. ,. GARDENING lnt/EJt, Free est. Ref.I, Harbor Bl at Adams, C.M. 3 PM tot PM and 3 houri South Legwia ottlce, Mon.. L••H A Yilt.w Agency, 2082 MJchelson Dr., needt'ct immediatdy ,or our ~;ti~«.>? eves 8c Sat. For i.-Yn exper, in area. R• ~2759. Accts R1celv•ble Clk on Saturday, Fri. Ma,yl, Stnd 1"tlUJne to T•xf C•lt 1 _lrvin=-o-,':.· ------rapidly expanding Re a J a.,.. ... c. • mter 1851 Kaiaer, tin&. haul away, .... nerat .-.. ......... H.... ..,,__ needed tor busy Atttg. Dept. 3. Enjoys pizza putlts and P.O. Box 722, Dana Pt. MIDDLE ·-woman to care Estate division, Positive O"'"l~io5o,ii--0882;iiiii''-iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiol .~ ~,..i . ......, .... '!§, .c~ est. n. 2 Dilmeyl-~ --I ' . pe maintenance. Re 1 •t-'d G r..:Q: yrs, exper. In like '""'"" DENTAL A I can -_.....,t for 1tnU-1nvalid lady . portunt;v for advancement. eo .......... _. nee estimates. co:;· ~ ~·~·;,® :~ ::!= bylOtou~ ...... ~~lngso 4. :u~I:: tnlke $15 to orthodonUe ~no~ 548--13~1"1 u...-_k.1n, ... ~Uvee ~-e _~ Phone. ~~itiAR YE•." l:!\;S.,rn;-:71;;;7°o3 ~or;;-'4;;i-6 ,;;'°;;;":;;,,. i ,,:,642-85n~;::;,;-:-==== I v•·~ ly. Call AM only. 80-'IT/5. •~ -·~ ~--.en ~ .... wpm (eectric.) Pormanent ST.h!917. "HEAR YE,1" . ~-~··UP TIME? PAINTING • PAPERING, ,..,Jdent only. Call for In-Thia job is getting ll<W cua-DISHWASHER &,BUSBOY "* lor llennln • • NEEDED removal, pruning, lawn 19 )Tl tn Harl>or llttl. Lie .t: t, r v I e 1 tm t tomcn for Southem Orange M\lfft be clean & neat _a.-1 •• -'iiiii;;iiiii;i;;.iiiiiiiii.;;;;;; I -~ .,_ la f~'I"~ bonded w appo n en • •-"t't'V'I' Two Office Girls -'i<:::=i=i""'===:::::== I Prestige-firm moving to New-..... .,... ~. wns .,.u u.,...., . Rtf't tum. 64.2-2356. 492-1153, Mn. Goniales. County's favorite J:1ewapaper. "'' pel'IOn «>Ny, Surf A: 1l',lp dren. mow, & edge, $15. PAINTING _ Honest, clean, No collecting, no delivering.' Sirloin,' 5930 W. Cout Hwy, ~lfMNE PER5Q>,NEJ. ~sealed $20. aue,ranteed •wk. J.Joerwed ACCOUNTS Payable, TranspoJ'latioll II furnished Newport Beach. AArrt..v-.u , HJ.4191 646-!5836 general once c I erk. fr<lm your house. If intemt.' Escrow Ofer Tme . -:nlUIOl.._ I 1,_ AL'S GARDENING & Insured. 675-Sl40. Kno"'·ledge ot 10 Key & fyt> ed call bet\\'ttfl 9 A.M. and Bright quick to team indl Mecbanlc/Joumeyman $751 fop p.rdfnina: Ii I m a 11 Thel.allboangman. Up to % oft ingnl te<(d· Apply in person 2 P.1'.f, da.lfY. , desired tor co. W'll'._. !'.,: Operate lathe, mUJ, drtD ' landlcapt .... servieet, •• 11 r JI buy mat. C11ll o y. Lido Ship Yard, 900 ff7 l'lO ...,. w .-.. abl b :uo.&98 ":.e,. Servin~, Mobile store. 547-M46 Lido Park Dr. N.B. • • train, Must be ambltiowl A ::.i~.= v..! .. 1~_,..1d lue-BOYS w.,,t ..,..., oppor. To lf'IS. ~-~ •·~ ._, • maritlt Newport, CdM, Costa Mesa. WALLPAPER HUNG Account• Payable Cl<rk, A 1•1• 1 d ,_ Call 4'11n Todd 133--qine overhaul. l,lavtr Shom. w .. lclUL Carl Rebko 1146-2449 Musi Type :' n: 0..,! ~7s!'~ 'llt!nnis "6 0enn1s'p-~ lmmOlll"9 Qponlna1 ~ Landlellplna. Tree PROF. palnUns, &loo rools, G7J.l450 or 549-l93l menle .,..._ . A,.ncy, -Mlchllaoa·Dr., ~c•tne/loc,.lorlll • Yaro -~-accous. ceil., Inter/mer. Ask for Margattt DAIL y PILOT lrviliO. .. lorlcal/Geii. Ole • 'l'nlh haullng, lot ckanup. Ucn ... r.... est. 64~. ATTRACl1VE Gal• to lean> M 2 ·-~~ · 418 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM e-.•-~ I • ·• ,., ~ -vu•~ s.-tuY -•-t-u-IJh1nk en. 6'13-1156. FOR cl .. • , -at ·'-ting ~ teau1 profeulonal cos-C -.......... · , · •1 • • · • ~,-.. • ·~ P~· 1folorl•lv-r A··-•••· M • 1 t "°" .,... -• JAPANESE Gardener. interior or exterior Ii: rtu.'. metks. vtVIANE Woodard, _,...... OJmptete Yaroworic A rat.._ Dick, 9GMOGS. ~49. ror appt. 5 Hr day 644-1991 top typlnp-- ----••• ->== --= ~---APT M CASHIER. Ml -Prr. lkilla. Some booklu!eplqi:.,.. ~ .. up. Free Eatlmatea, Plistor Patch R 1 . gr. 46 units Costa ~ _,._.. Full llrn -• 9'W102. • , ,.,. r A-lesa. Exp. couple or man. Ptl'IOrtMI Dept. ff o a g .......... • · e: _.tlon. M " I 1 HD8pital, N--Belch. ~ary. •M~ ~ cd· ~FES'SIONAL tree wwk. * PA'IOI PLASTERING AUi enance. bdrm apt. "'"Y"'•• ~ ... .-., VM"lo>,u.I. P .. r u. n J n C' t r J m m In I • All typeii, Free e1tlma.te1 garage. SftJary o p e n • CLERK wlordering exper. EXPER blc:ycl ~. • p r ·J n k I e: rs. Call 540o"82S 644-6297. in ddJ. frozen. croca')' I: & repairman. 1-I I APARTMENT line food• de-Xln't fltJI time. MlMloo Sdlwltm i P llf, c • & n • P , Plumbing MANAGERS °"1tAd Huold j;' ~• Bicycle Sllop, Lo I• a 1 ll4orp -Adul~pl.. 24 Unlu l/Hme ~. ..~ilU: Nlptl GS-ml. - 1 PROFESSIONAL Save on homt "'l>aln 639--60) ·~· : --Gln1ellhW Service r... ell, plumbinf, paln4 ASSEMILERS ~ 1:J" ~ ~· ebo,r1oldtur.;: ::;;ti; J .C. NMNIYCO'. 2.4 , ........... ..,.. .... ,.., .... h ltholtlne HOME DICOllATOR CONSULTANTS 1l'lt Ell. * 8IG--0619 lnstallatlona 839--0372 Spirits, 411i>E.1711l S4 C.JL am to I pm. S <1111 wk. c.IJ T J-Gvtloltcr PLUMBING REPAIR To $3 Per Hr --. "1-4m dQI. .... this .... * 16-1191 * , f'lo !Ob too !IOlall Requ ires some -r. In QUICK 'CASH Flt Blll:pr. Do7I lull tlmo. l'nll tlmo ---CM « N:B t.l'M * IQ..3J.2I * cabellng le hi.m1srt111. Pre-. PldMi811 ])lpt.. Hoa1 havt rtct11t ~ ""' COLI PLUMBING _,, oxper. w/PC botlnh THROUGH A lloopltal. N.B. Jilr. tn aellltta ~ tlhi> M hr. -' 16Jlll helpful. G1i1 l'rililY p -A -i.s. Drains ondoQt4 -SI.ii) P.P.S./NO FIES Nw po1llloo In ""'""' -....-6 .., -llllO•ll0'-$1$. P1Clflc DAILY PILOT m••c-doptcd--· Ollbttlltdloa ..,,._ * !Mt4llOI * Por-1 S.rvlco1 ftml. -J>liond. lie-ftta. ~~,,.-~~~~11 Ill No. Towv •• NT Al -_.,.., 1'o "H ... Rooflnt Union 8"* ,.._ l" Dn1m Joli.• """'1 _,. Apply In """°" °"""'' Calli. Ml-5171, -Ntwport lldl -lQn't 10 AM-4 PM 54J-6446 "· AIJlpll ~-. I J:qul 0ppoo-. Em.,._ IOllMI ~. Siii W. Wll' M/F A.a for Rachol M117 ...,....,....,....,....,....,..,...1 _.::-~· ;~;:1t:;_:llt,::!,.;U:;::,.....,...,.,J~lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!..J llust be l5 tnd able to drtve -APPLY- IIC E. 16th St., C.M. NEW ACCOUNTS CLERK Ex~ Mini.mum 1 )'IV ....m.tdalboNdiw. CENTI NELLA IANK RHI E1t•te C•r'ffr port Beacit has requested New or experienced join tbe Aames to staff their new Company that's ~-u plush oUicea. )'Otl do not hive • license. AU fttt paid by employer c:beck on our $49 •EXEC SEC'Y $100 To V.P. Controller. Type, lh, attmctive, retiJl()nsible • Rul lslllo eLEGAL SEC'Y .$800 Full L1cen1~our1e Heavy corp exp, Type, ah, _ noS:. ~ will tu~rviae other Jep.1 porl\JJllU... Aak lor v': -.Mes. Aulst V.P. J tor tnl corp. counsel. .:i: ormatlon at eLEGAL SEC'Y $62S TarbeR Realtors ~~1~%.Typc, "'- RIXl'Pr, -low ofc. eLBGAL,SEC'Y $650 -Llltm Biik, Tn7. Good 1'811 -Type, lh, Equsl OpJdtcmi!1•Employtt =i. _.iii.. !2131 =td. ct,pabt., well Restonal Ol!l<e (7141 646-7121 • Nonna Ffl'IUl(m ~~ ~G: ,R1•pll01tltt $471 '* 776-8128 * To Call LOCAIJ.Y eo oew c;_, SfOl lor \'!Pt CllL Good --~ ll'J>llir --• •t-, AAMES allts • cMc: lnlo. GOOd po)' lntdtve 'PIW'MC.. Fun P/tJmo. lltllll· ..... banY· aroup. Nico ~ °" ,.. -· or -·-·--~~. tmb. fee. • 'l"• v.-. -v· Alla Fee ""'1-~ .. t .\aency 5IT-alllS. Call" Barban Kl'1I 54IJ.08lS tlllO No. E1tclld, Analiebn TIME Fol NIWl'ORT Alla Free" F,. Jobs PIRSONNIL AGENCY s E c II ET AR Y-hmtuor Ou.cl CA·H 38M c.mpus Dr .. NB "I working w I clballlod • • REC!:Pl'IONm' 1'YJJlns. mat.rial. Tll:o dlct.&Uoo, to THRO.aH A lllitc, po'I cllrlc1l ""'1<. p~ "'I· In backrron1d . Expoo-. prel'cl. WHI .Onild;r a11er dt11nl>J1, but not _.... hn. (213) S!l-225$. DAIL Y PILOT =.., ~ ~ ~~"r,,. tn;lll>O ... WA IT AD llJXlEPl'IOJm'I I Aul. book· Rtctpe""-..ni,. f>OO .,,,,._ --· ll Doy, WI wit. N.B. o.a Ell!', JO to ll .,. ...... ...,.....,.....,.....,.....,...,...:.1111 6 _., RIQ'. -_.;;.lli.;;,..;::<IDl.;.;;.. ..... ...,.....,.....,..,.I I T I I N I I f a I F ' T ' .. . . . ~. ... .. • 19 PILOT·AIM:RTISER Wodntsdlll'. Junt 28, 197'2. DAILY PILOT $ ' ,___[ _r-._••l__,]li}](.........,, _Iii••_: 1__,][11] l I ;ti;::.,. ][fl] ..__[ iiiiiiiiiliiitjilsjiiiiiiii: 1 t ~J[Il]~J 1 [ •du I 1 ]~ [ •' •• ~I.___•,..,._ You )[i [,.,, IOd ..... ]~ [ -""t=- 1 !'!11!"!1!~~~1!11. .... W F 7 -' 111 S Linn, ::t Tima. $2.00 Dosi• 154 Help Wanted, M A F 71 0 Htlp WM!ted, M a, fl 1ll .Halp anted, M A 11 Htlp w-, MA P 711 l'urnltu,. I ll Mlonll<l_. Bo.ts, Soll ... SECRnAlllES IHIPl'I NG WOMEN-aJSl'.\ MESA RATr.\N talllo, I cbrs, 1115. WESl'INGROUSE QPrllht AFGllAN-£oa. 9""p dotJ IRIS!! i°"~ papo,f AKC. 4 SHEARWATER caiAmar ... ~retary .;;·,-Run tntlre opmlUon far a TELEPHONE SOUCJTORS. tee dHk. SSS. Buttau $25. 3 vacuum $15. 'J'QI ft'e01'der Oou, 9 mos. r . Germ. mos. m t, 1 em: Ex· 16\i 1 e et kine, 7't" ' Eem You Pey The Ktlly Girl Woy One Time, Put Time Or All The Time II F .. Plld_Aloo T .. Jobi. ~ -· Some 56-mll or 540-1838 Slnale bedt. $l8 "· 1 Kl1'( SS. Boat dolly $25; Je~~lr-y Slx,,o>t*Hlllky ero.. 9 «pUonol. 846-6985. b,.m, 235 oq It toll, In coo6 • Estab, ao. det1rH brfclit ~ ahi.pplna ,exp. req, Cre:it WORKING ManaaeM)Nple. $99. t Pc $»art. Br suite, for tun 10c to S2: 3 nesting mot, &ll lhota, F. lf2..&i13. Hor••• 15' cond. Incl. t?'Alltt. divldual tor l)tfftlge ipot In ,...,!or the dun cut man 52 Unlta. CM. Prollt Ah"" 1291). C.N..s tw <Otttt tbl, """'bt lrvn tabl .. 19: Cop. * FREE KmENs. Dart-* APPAl..OOSA * :'~ ~bouaht i.....,. pluah turr0undiQp. Gre&t who wa.nta to get Into in& A: ta1a.ry a: ~t. $65. Antique trunk, $45. U1S cne:~ 7. ~= ~. fluffy, hou~broktti kit· Just S.. J<e/f'J yrf Then Piek The lloun, Days, Length Or Empluyment That F1tJ Your NffdA You'll Work :ror Us On Our Payroll Jn Our Cu11tomers' Offices. We'll Plan A Work Schedule To SUit You , One That Is Talloffit To Your Ability Your Time Your TransPortatlon Call Or Visit bos11 A xln't benefits, Call ma.nqemettl Start $(i~. ~ Highland, NJl. MJ..41S9. table or desk, bench le ties. 5't8-2847 alt 6. p.m. 3 yur old .,.tetln~ Sharon Wlll, mm, Den· Call Don JacklOn, ~. W 0 0 2 _. Br ..U. l IW>a me rt11i1te...i, $475. nl• A DeM\& ~Mel Coastal Aaency. 2 7 9 0 ' 0 DW RICERS COl>\P, $100. 1 4 pc dbl bed motd>lni bed lrame 125: rnEE happy healtl>y kltt.na. CALL ANYTIME Ag 2082 MJch I.on Dr Harbor Blvd., at Adams, S250. Naup n:diner, avoca· Kq aire mattreu S2S; 2 \Veaned It. trained. Phone Irv~~· ' " CM. our cllents 1111ently need do '"" ISO. Coucb • lov< box 1pr! ... 125: AsoortE<I 548-<615. 540 • 3803 SHOE Sa1u. Chi Id re n' 1 quallfted Ult'mbJ.)' wood· seat ~. End tbla $10 ea. llnent 2$c to $2; Schw.inn OlCKEJi Mix, medium 11l2t', ESCONDIDO LIVESTOCK =~Ycruin ~~hu:! Bootery, Fuhk>n ls. Exp. "-'Orlcer1. U YoU have factory 557-1%15. ~ $1~~1 ... Cua.mh :cad, 9 mofl. lemale. Friendly, AUCTION'S 4th Annu:il · ~· ' titter. Full or ....... time. type v.'OOdwo..a.i .... exper. at •-ware. uw,..,, an likes children, ~7096. ~giste~all Breed~ curate! t.•plng & mt.th. Ex· _.. • .... _.. DINING room St>t, Cina tools ....... •-· ............ -.._..,,-;;:;;-7.':=-'"-i'-';c7--,.. v Pleasant store, xtnt oond. any level call ThfMED-• ~'"""'•.,, .. ,,.,••ca ..... 1. IG Ho"t' Auction J tne 30 perience preferred. Good cabinet, 44 inch table wiU1 25c to SS; t hold toaater $4; B black male labrador 8 30• A 1: ' n" k opportunity & t r l n 1 e Mr. MarowitJ: 548-8684. IATELY. three 12 inch leaves, mar Papuback Ir: · hard eover nr<'d.1 a IOOd home, room to : pm. uc. tonttn> ic benetlts. C.U for ·~Sunday only. Delivery or P.P.S./NO FEES proof top, lix chairs . booki 2Sc lo $1· f.track run. l..o\>es kids 962-0087. Bt-JTy & Eddie ltog('rs. 1 • N. FN>e-...·ay 78. Escondl1o polntment 892--3361. newspapers to carriers and 558-8444 Cantemporary w a In u t. tapes $1; Shoes 8\i to 9. 2 yr old. ltf, AKC Reagle, Calif. • 145-C>i!tl SECRETARY: Vice Pres. 01 tupervislob of deliveries. Re--Beautiful condition $500. clothet, acceuorles 50c to very high splri!N:I, To . . ~wlnr co. In the dynamic quires vaUd California driv-l230 E. Edinger, S.A. 549-0283. $2; Electric clocks n to $4; special honle. 5.'11-7711. SHO\V qunhty yttarhng Filly, housing fie ld. Be au t If u I er'• license and good driver YOUNG man for early morn-DINE'M'E set, tonnlca top, Handbags Sl to $2; F~ FREE t.'tlt food \\'lth each 1 ~~ qunrter, '/1 ~. thoro1b1red. modem office by ocean record and a van or itation ing new1paper dellver,y, U chrome legs. 2 chain:, m. tasUc rta>rd albums 50c; kitten! To good home only <'ood,,..!ttTJut r \\ ."·11d11." ):?;!: Family atmoaphere. $650. wagon. Please contact a.m. $300 mo. 673-7413. Oub chair $10. Queen Bite Bing Crosby 78s $3 ; Carpet HELP. 557-8191. . g -:00 e: tllp. ~......,. Call Helen Hayes, 540-6035. Benton \Vllliama XLNT Qppor. Nat'! Concern bed. Maple headboard $45. 8\\'t'epf!:r $5; Religious pie-s4z~SM:i or 96J.-t706. Coastal Agency, 2 7 9() Circulation Department Has openings fUr route ?ifaple desk $25. N~ tures on l\'OOd $2; New 5 HOM~SS walf handson1t> EXP'D riders, ]3 yr old Harbor Bl at Adams. Clt. DAILY P ILOT salesmen in CM. 962-0416. $12. 642-3643. gallon aquarium, 64:°>-3166. ~~ kitten needs honui. Celcllng, 1111 .'l.hots &- SECURITY GUARDS 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa BEAN BAG COUOI • Ex· 5707 Seashore Dr., N.B. .r•~ shots. 67~7511. \\'Onn<'<l. ll01ne tnck. Sl25- 2061 Bwiness Center Dr. Long term asalgnment for SUPERVISOR. ~ starting, [ ~ cellent conditk>n, UJ<:e, ne'W. "'S'fEREos KITIENS 536-7704 dys. Irvine. 833--1441 full or part time, So. Orange to operate product.Ion boat ~ j ~ Dark Blue Fur. Approx:. 1972 Cam.rd, sy1ttmi%ed, PART SLA.\1ESE BOARDING SI'ABL.ES l!!"'J!"'!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!• i Co. area. UN I FORMS line. Experienct" re q' d V 6'x4'. $50. Cam on I y, fully automatic cbangg,•, ~763 Beaut. llf'\\'. 20Z71 Acacia S.c'y·Buye r Trn• F'URNJSKED. 11Ai tar over-Islander Yaclits, m \V. 11th 962-7ti89. AMIFM/MPX radio, &eal· 4 MO. oJd Gerinan Shepherd Santa Ana H~. 557-8414. to S600 time. Free group life ins. St, C.M. Ant iqutl 800 FORCED to sell, velvet sofa ed a1r 1u1pension speakers ft-male. Hou It' broke n . BOX i;tall~ \\'/shavings. All No sh, Key spot for advance-Sterling Security Service Switchboard Opr. & love l!ftt. large lamps, plu1 tape deck. Still brand Lovable. 645-4038. faclltlirs. Reasonable rates. ment in dynamic growing 326 s. Lemon St., Anaheim SCR·AM-L·ET-S cocktail, aqua.re hexagon r:r7 !cl::e:~t~at!u~ DARLING kittenll, 6 \\k~ o!d. 962-8679. Irvine area electronics firm. SERVICE Station Attendant, K•lly Glrl commode tables, map I e .ced t $300 N All colon;. Ne"·port Heights. GR"'AcoY7_oc\Vo-h-c,,.-part--,Ar8-,b";•-n Will tnlin to buy aott item1. full time ' -·ea • w•-~. ~, Pvt p..+.. i:."M." ~=== pr1 a over , ow 548-3583 Id ' 9 Id . d B .,. "' 1UJU11 ANSWERS 11U1 , •v· ~·· $1(15. Cash or small . ge tng. yrs o . Splrtte. ll~~~~~gl:l~~t i?.--bennnee-J Must be exper., neat &: Needs you fur short term . DINING Rm-9 pieces Coun-payments. Credit De Pt. HIJi.1ALA YAN Persian kit· $250. 59S-67i0. ....... clean cut. Hourly waae + temporary assignments. try French. Excel cond an-7141893--0501. tens. 8 "'kif. Agency, 230 W. \Vnrner. incentive bonus. Don's Gulf Must have exper, Xln't Fetish -Suave -Leafy -l hi /drk ood fly 5-i6-(i 40 Suite 209, S.A. Service, 590 So. Coast Hwy., working conds, Top cam· Crimly _SEE the GAME 1 que~: t~ ~08 SI'ANoARn AM/FM/Stereo/ 1 I I~ Sec-retary Laguna Beach. ings. Week1y paycheck. Ab-Divorce: A decision by an irpec op. • • MPX $179.95. Harman-Kar-. FUZZY KITTENS ...,!:'~t \{ WORK AT SERVICE Station/attendant. aolutely no fee. umpire who didn't SEE the Furnlture-Moving! don H·K 20, apeaken $159.95. hllebroken, 6 "'ks, 5'18·1382 '::· iiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiij~-- FASHION ISLAND full time, eve. ahift. Expu Ktlly G irl GAME. Ready to go! Mahg. din set, BSR McDonald profeq!onai -FRE E KITTENS • Be tif 1 f only. 't...htmeehan ie al 2)61 Business Ctr, Dr. Maple hutch, New Hotpoint table, 310X complete \Vith housebroken 644.4207 Gen•r•I au u o c ot a large co. Imo 1-N . Irvine 833-l'4J OLD Sllvertone crank retrig, Much M<lft!S48-t1.S2 base, dustcover and SHURE . _ •••• ., .... located near this exciting w. eat m appean.nce., ph:>l"l0if'8ph, stand up M?S cartridge SSO .OO . **SWEET CRAY KITTEN I' Dinghy ,v/lJAihp OB $12."i. aboppingilrea.Windowahop Apply mom.inp only. 2590 TELEPHONE Sale&. Top model. 40 records. $70. D~Gc!'u~=:oo~~'. Complete system, all new, need1ahome!!Ifinterested io· Dinghy w/7% hp OB ~noot Gr;at benefits. Start Newp:>rt Blvd., C.M. rommlaionl a.nd bontll'. Ap. 642-1604. etc 557-9477 now $28:9.50 U.S.A. SteJ'('()I :~call~~~~-~·~~~~~ 1 $325, new. 327 W. Wilaon No. F .J :· CayallsNFee. OJher SERV TCEU Station: Graveyd ply tn person ~ween 9.00 DUNCAN Phyfe lty!e drum G • S ,· 112 Equip \VarehoUR, 179 E. 29, C.M. ee o 8, ancy May, shift, f/ me. Murt be ex-and U:OO noon at "381 Bcilsa table, 1930, lthr top & gold •r•1• I • 17th St, Colta Me' a• --------- 5'0-ll055, Coa.stal Ageney, ~r ~r -"e tud t Avenu• M•~ .. cr1y I Jl ~I •n 15' Newport Skip. 9~i hp .,;::.:_ ...-19th • ..,er._\.vuN ge 1 CM.en • ' ..... .....,. • leaf. Xlnt Cond. i 12 5 • SKINNY • ?tilni Frigidaire ~2442. ht• and Supptlaa Johnson. \Vell --uip. $875. 2790 Harbor Bl at Adanu, ~""• ~ ewport, T EL E pH O N E Operator, 557-4540. _ . ~ ... CM. • SINGLE ___ ,. ~~ eyard lhllt _ F , ,,.,.,,,------~~-~ 1 washer I: dryer, ooppertone. G.E. refrig., $71. Coldspot.I ~------~~;I 547-964.5/e'"s 67>-4808. •-=we ..,...,.aw•"• grav · "° ores., OAK pump organ, fine cond. 1 yr old: Hoover portable $35. Kenmore sewing mach.1 1 f:'ut results are just a phone exper. on dresse1 A Laguna Beach. $300; smoked glau Swedish washer, $25: Datsun seat &: Many mi« ltemt. 841i-34n. Pett, Genero1I 850 4 HORSE Evinl'\lde 1910, xlnt call aivay . ~. sports'A'eaJ'. ~. TELLER vase <signed) $30. 494-040'1. steering whf!el, new, S25: Mltc•llaMOUI cond. r75962.2667 e Beautttur modern bank local· Appliancu 802 tool box for pick up truck. Wanted 120 The Tropic Zone •••••••••••••••••••• ed In Orange County. Lots s;: awlvel roclqer, 13, _ l084 S. Main e Open Now Boall/Merlne of public relations. Great ONE dryer, runs good, looks kit.chen table, S3; ~ cup USED CARBENSfANGEL Santa Ana'1 newest & largest Equip. 900 20' Viking .U boat. New sails, fuU covtrs. Just hauled & refinlahed. Mutt sell. Ov.•ner. 6t5$50, ~All.BOAT 14 1 ~' O'Oay racing 91oop,. Compa.rable ta Lido 14'. ~Titlll ~ Jib, $299. ('.ood ~ di tion. fij3....5.l6S Oino. COLU:\lBIA 26' ~1ark I ln- brd, fu!ly eqpt w/Newpo nlOOring. Xlnf con d, 962-'2667. SAlLBOAT 12' tF\eety Cla~) Fiberglass over wood. Nf!'.\' sail. Imn1ac. cond S190.00. 63!>2388. STAR Class Rlllboot. trleT. Cover, gd sails, only $950. 54~. 20' Norweg1a.n tail boaL Dua1 Axle trailer. $300. 846-0491 KITE • Good condition, l'lf'W sail, dol.ly & full COV'C't'S. 156(). 6~33.i UDO 14, !'LIP AVAIL. $.)75. Eves, 968-4793 14' CATAJ\l.ARAN, ta1t , rtable, xlnt cond. W/trlr. $800. 673-3004. Bo.is, Sllp1/Dock1 U O 11' Schlada SK with 110 Mere OB. Canva1 covt'r. Sharp! $1750. ~ DOCK space tor 18-3'.Y bOa.t. Peninsula ea&t of Pavillion. m.rno. MOORING WANTllr,. 12' boat. t144-4GIO aft. 8 - SAIL BOAT SLIPS< ' NJ!. ISO. & Up. 5411-225! Boot&, SPffd • Ski tn FASTEST. glamorowl lllil boat on the coast! Call 131• 5744 Sat, Sun il E've11. * 13' \VHALER. ' 10. JOHNSON !iO. $1,100 rnlM. MARK 54H091. A CONVENIENT SHOPf>ING ANO SEWING GUIDl fOfl THE benetlta. Start $425, Call OK, needs heating element. electric coffee pot, $5; work Must h ave right-handed Tropical Fish afore. 5 gal. '°N"oR""w=ES"ro=N-l°"o•..,.!lbe_rg_,I-••'• Jean Brown, 540-6055, Coast· Barga.in t.o the right person bench, SlO: •mall garden menatift with power di~ tank w/hood $3.99, JO gal. dinghy, J% hp motor, OEln, al Agency, ~ Harbor Bl. $7. 557-6945. tools; misc household ite11'1!'i. poleclc. Would accept early tank w/hood $6.99. Eureka t"lc. About 25 hrs an all. at Adami, CM:· SERVEL Refrig • $35, Good ~ Junk. 293 Bowling model with battery operated air pump Sl.49. Black Aro-16• Ruoobnut. 110 hp, TRAVEL Agent Min 2 yrs working Con. Whlte. 312 Green Dr. 540-7570 or ptd d lebottom . Write: wana $2.49, Elephant Nose $12'5. ~98l1. out. Al!kingSltnl. 1n a <W. ON THE CO. exp. tor fut g r ,o ,vi n g Snug Harbor Rd, Newport 642-8528. Casal.tied ad No. 174, DAI· Sl.99, D~icial plants . 49c PE.'"TTERS dal, 2~-i KW, air 54g...s7Gl Newport Beh area~cy. 8 h J•w•lry ll5 LY PILOT, P.O. Box l.SfiO, ea., 1atom filter $20.99. cooled gen. Just o·hauJed. ________ _., For 1n iMI In Wom•n'1 World Ci ll Mery Bath 642-5671, ext 330 Benefit!. Send ~ to c • Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Call 979-Fish.· Asking $495. 542-8287 ~~~~~~~~~~! 1\IAYTAG tt""'lrman h.u DIAMONDS-n .... Dlttet Bo t p -Atlas Travel Service • 3821 ,... * WHOLESALE-PRICES * Mu1Jcal ln1trvm•nt1122 GROOMING • 1• ow•r ._ til · • Long Beach Blvd. Long washen: $35. to SlOO. Can All Breeds. Orange Co.'s ~--:CO'.'""::-----,.,.. ......... , 1-' My Pet Turtle Eight Variations Beach, Calif. 90807 or call deliver w/1 yr. iuam. Dana Diamonds 496-3090 SPINET piano, good cond finest, 10 yrs. exp. Complete 1960 • 25' Trojan Cabin .. / .: 714-846-3361 ~l778. Machln•ry 116 and good tone. Best otter. medical bath, clip nails, ex· Cruiser, eng. recently &Ont 'immiiiiiiiiiii.::•[ OVER 2XI washers, dryt:rs, 646o-149> press Anal gland, clean & thni. Ford Interceptor, all I ' ; rebigeraton from $39.95. ALLEN SYNCROORAPH 2 Yr old Selmer Alt.o Sax medicate ean, hand drying. new eng, acctt1, al.lo Campers, Sale/llWW : TYPISTS ' 545--07*>. MODEL E 1415 HD JTF make best oti.r • Anlmala R Us -( .. nerator, watar punip, C ~.. • GOOD automatic •....... _ nrsrnIBUTOR MAOUNE-. * = 0.;.. * RACOON 11 ) N' etc.). Daft tank, IWlm' mp, Amrs ~ f Tempor•ry ...,,la' 5'12-173' eves • weeke'nds. V'Pr.WW ame . ice pet. 11wim trtairl, full ClDVU Timf. Brand """ lt1l r alJ.. 1, darkblue$40.~75650nly BOAT Planer Powennatic Office Furnrtur•/ Saert f lee $40. call ($1800), new galley, heed, OVtt Ha~ camf8' u.:1 '• Muat be poised, well eroom· ed. Low ,.... .... jobs. Start immediately. XI ti t op. portunity for housewives ~ entering the job market or in between jobl. between 4 il 7 pm. Make ofter. ' ' Equip. 124 eve....sJ6..4825. sleeps 5, compau, depth aleept 4. Inc1udlal ltDw, ke ; REFRIGERATOR, very ~'1693 WOODEN delk with •ttached C•t1 152 finder, fish tinder, 90tlal', 2 box. AU fh1I on top (J.:;~. ,! clean. inside A out. $60. '1130 ..... ......__, table, boo'-aae, PERSIAN Kittens. CFA anehon, fUl1 life jackets, brand new GMC" ten P.U! • Weatmlnlter Ave. w-. Ml"elloMCHll Ill ,. __ v •• t:eak deck, twJy crptd. Ill that 11 flllly fllc:torY eqalj> REFRIGERATOR, I tile, $215. 613-9385., regiatered, blacks, also -1 ........ 45 gal water. Rea.a.· -'. •-~·• .,0·• TCSl~ c ea n , . • Persian stud ffl:rviee from .... ..... IA¥ r-ox-•... '"' - auto, de!rost, 5 yn: old. \ NEEDED P11not/Organ1 826 proven black afuoke atud. to KO to Catalina! Great Z513399. S3,79S.OO. Call Or Visit * S9:J.9000 * RESPONSIBLE ALLEN.(X)NN·WURUTZER B92-2970 (:;~":."c.,.";::.~~ .. s: Bill BARRY SERVEL Re!rigerator, runt WORKING COUP.LE Organs. Pianos, Harpakbordl Dosi& 154 $0000. Call 1145-2440 All< !or KELL 'I' GIRL 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. well, $30. NEED one or two bedroom NEW-USED-RENTALS Art. 54Ul4l houJe w I t h large 1.....i GOULD MUSIC CO. WANTED: Good home tor 1J' Imp '68. 200 hp 110 lull Rent W01hers/Dryers yard (for two VERY WELL Our 6"t year ' trained friendly combo ha' ~-·-280• hr Sbeph..-..a""' .. --,..,. w!ld""-canvu, it """"• ., 12. WI<. Full main~ TRAINEI>' dotJo) SJ!!() -'· l04S N. Main. S.A. ~--~ ~ ~ Tandem VaMOn trlr 1-* 639-~ * Vle: between 19tb Ir Vie· 547-oost owner movins 673-3752 pr 613-949S ' ·~· * tori& -(near W. Bay St.) WE BUY PIANOS-ORGANS 3l2IEX 5-4l6.i. --,;;;:·===.,,,--- Regloter for FurniluN 110 COSTA MESA. ••• -'aft '111 Sklpjack '4, ~·~u · PENNY OWSLEY-Stanton WANTED lik• new. priw.O! party. 1 tem:,~a;>' job QUEEM aota bed $ 5 0 . 6 p.m. 11352 Beach Blvd. 192-3314 Good home tor 2 Keesbounds:. Xtru. 963-1045, 525--0262 lntervws: 9-12 L/room .et (black vinyl * AUCTION T Daily 1~9 SatSUn 'Iii 6 Purebred. Dog Obedience. 9• Bolton Whaler type lrvlno 133-1441 * TYPISTS OMC·PONTIAC·l'IAT. ·: Clsl St. at S.A. Frwy.) •I 2000 E. lit St.. S&nta Ana • 558-1000 I -..-,--~,-::,.--:-"TB'J For Import Trucks ' Havasu Ii: Kina..O.the-RoM . j caboven, New A med ,.. aluminum. tlbfrrlaa Wive*. Me1a Camper Sales. • :i ; Harbor, CM l4l-4002 "', We Need All 90fa bed, Cbrame il glass: 'Jlf HAMMOND Piper \Au to 11 mo. 968-S22?. d~hy. $295. 4 HP Evinnlde Office SkillJ coflee & end tables) $250. ~lpFurnipllance 111re 1 Chord, 1 yr old, S900 tit best. NEEDS homt, 'male, tan new, S3l5. '45-0904 eves. 'G2 ai.ev 1 Too Sllep v_.. Equal Oppor. Employer Itallari deak $175. B/room otr. 586-2824. Shfpherd, rood with k:IM, lr Deep V, Gia.ti bol.L ll5 Motot b o m4ii con•Q• Mdle le Female set, iiic. nite stand (no bed· Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. needs room to run. $5. hp Evbrude. Sttll tmde:r *1mott tlnSlbed. •tts•. w •• 1 .... Olrl Inc. ding) 1115, Pecan rolfee .. & Windy 's Auction Barn Sporting Goods l30 Jl42.<l3n. 750 ~. '661 MacArthur Blvd. end ta&let $295. Redwood ~5% .Newport, CM 646-8686 s CU BA CE A R n e w DALMATIAN Pups, 6 wk1. .~warr,...,,,,. =$1=.,.· =c54M731=-_,.,,.· .,--I -""'-'i,67,2i-;:F;;;O;:;R"D"'251=---~.' "•' • New~aeb =n~t ~is.~ion: Behind Toeyt1 Bldg Mat'J 1 hark1 k1 n wei suit AKC Champ lines. Summer U~~m:o:.w~= w/81Ai ft. Eldarado Can:Jper. -end tabte"$19. Small bkcase 3 SOLID wood door 1. Scuba.pro Mk VI reg., ac.: tun for kids. Pri ply, 645-4781 afta-6 pm. $1550. 544-341?. VIV1ANE Woodard ls eon· $10. V!lnify cbalr .. $U. Cube 2w/Full gian c enter 1 . cessorier. All ~) price. 5'18-70lT. B R I/Ch .-PILGRIM % cab cam.pet-, ductint Dlatr. Aead., tirg. tabl:e1 $7 each. Mlle garden Me.ke offer.. Elec hot '4'1tel' 494-lm aft 6:30. Sil.KIE Terrier Puppies, oats, '" •rt'r ""' many extras. Make otret. Co._ during July. Tor Info. tool•, lawn mower $65. bearer, 30 gal. 1 ,.. old. SCUBA Geer, compl. outfit AKC, 7 wla:. Shedless. ador-27' AUX. SLOOP S<U256. call ~. Subtl:tiarY of Misc. hoUiehOJd J t em 1, MUe offer. 6'13--!i990 aft 5 12 tank re&·Seavltw bk able. Reduced! 962-8377. '61 Intemational He.rvect 9030 General Food• Corp. 557-3UJ.. after 6. o r pm k 1' -·'t -· ".,; BEAGLES AKC 2 maJ Puled for wetkend cruj,.. • P · we •w ....... ..~. • , e1, 7 to C&t&Una Fully equipped reblt eng., atove, oven, lh}k. Tho bolt ol lll -'81 gilb S.lB WA?l'ERS. Wattre.... & weekends. BEAN BAG COUPJ • Ex-S75-Ml7. wlm old. Show quol!Jy. SS radio RoF aleepa ...: Ice box.1685. ll!IZ-8096. _a bouncy pet turtle. lO~·ll~ Buaboys tor main dining MUSI' retoTn to pen n. ccllent ('(lndition. Like! new. Champk>n stock. ~5916. S'2" he~droo~.. complete He'r hugpble, cute and an room. MUii: have f!Jq>el'. Ap-DWter. Late> model color ~ Blue Fur. Approx TV, Redlo, HIFI, -... BEAtrrIFUL female mini galley, Club ratet. Lots at enc:balltlng lift for small L. -fff'. • 11f..,if ply In-· Hotel Laguna, TV RCA 1125 8' oota. very 8 •5. $50. Cub on I y. SterH ..,. all..,. poodle, 1 yr old. Good parldng, Call for Info. chfktttn. Crochet ~ "'f '''"""" • . ~ 425 So. Cout Rwy, Lq. ~ con4 1$15. Kit.ch stove ~7689. 1972 ZENmr ' RCA 1Vs. w/eh.Hdren p). fl68..5335. s.57·9046 aft. 8:30. moti!J ot "Ii )WR. QUick, Bch. Betwn 10am A 12 noon excel oond. Kenmore $6.i, RA TT A N H e y wood Drastic price cut on all •72 DARLING COCKAPOOS eeay <o make bwoc> or Eight~ ,,_ b<JI~ • bttwn 2pm "4pm. Port TV 125, SmJ antique wa1oteeld <1rop1..i tl>I., • models to make room for g WEEKS OLD SID EA. Bo.ts, Soll 909 plllow. Pat. 7080: about colle.r and belt idNI crate WAIT1lESS. exp'd too d , Grandmqthtr rocker, 1 at a chn $35. l513 Orarwe, C.M. ''l3s. Prlced leu than the M2-4813 or 534-3885 BRAND NEW RAC I NG G"blgh, z. x 15". exd"'-< 1--po.-lundi A dimer oplk llhlft. kind, $25. Ship wood otove W>!i81J6 llEVl:NTr·ITVE CENTS for ti>< ,..,.., bttatllUt bUli: Apply'Whlt. H-IM, 319!5 $100, 200 Broadway, C.M., FOUR .'75 ,. 5 g I dlocotmtu•· ·1-_:~3_ "• .~:u" *Block Lob PupplH* SABOT Soll No. 7042. Call •--1 •-·" -~ -"-Blvd N aft• •· x ~. • URI ~. >T ~-~,.,,.. Pure'-' •~. ~lllll ri;.-1or each pattern -add 25 )'OU rvvo:: _..,. -a111;1 ,~._ .. _. " ewport =~·~"""'~-·~-..,-,.-,=-· 1 Otvy PU tird A rlma. $150 Terms or cuh 90 plan. Alli-,,="'~'",,.·=-.-,.,,.._,,-.,.... ==~,...,...,,,.-~--~ centa 1or each pattern I« on! Bch. BDRM furn tor girl. Fan-or belt otter. 6 Place cun Zenith 23" coJar from $425 ADORABLE white tiny toy IOTE Sailboat, wry &ood Alr Mlll IJld Special Ha1> ~O~ 11:,"; WAI'rnESS tostk:. Bed, vanily ......ir. cabinet 14~ ~alt 5. to 14911. 25" cotor 1499 to pood\es. Shots. · rot>:l., mut I< boat oowr. * '66 V\V Camper, Rtbullt ef1Clne. 67S-697() ar 49t-C8U aftl"t 6. '70 VW POP..UP CAMPER, 15,IXXI ml, eicctUent c<>a4:· 13.0llO. $2217. • '51 roru> truck \I Ton """ camper $800 for both 0( -$250. 64&-9561. CyclH , Blku, ,_,. ns. ,· dltrw; otherwise third-du• 13 NEW Hali $tw ~· Expel A &ttl'aet f o o d ror. desk, & chest ot REFRIG lTs 2 dr, Excel $598. ls" Chiwnooolor $379. &U.481&or534-38SS , Mull: tacrlf. $560. 675d257. delivery will tal<• -ll* ll\I l6\I 18\1 ' waltresa. Clll Yvonne, Bob drawen. $250. 64&-1124. OOnd. ISO. ,68 Evtnrude out· RCA 23" from 1425 to 1469. m" Bernard pu]JL 7 -· :bt 11' Mont-ery D In r h y , :Im HONDA ~ SL, -~ or more. Send to ' ' ' 0 Bursll Rataunnt. 644 lO!O. EXCEPTIONAL 2 8" aoid board g hp RUNI fair but 25•• 1449 to 1619. ABC Ollor pap obotl, No papen..cd la-ko bull, $3!1), C.U 1acrtll<:e. Call after I -· • Alice Brook-. the DAILY llEl'ENTr·l'IVE CEN'l'll WANTED: Secrotor!es' 11 to quilted oolu, $151) botb. Pr need.s'work.'$il0. SJ8-745!1. TV. 9021 Allanta, !tun. .rock. $60. 53<H508. 83S-1411. -· Pllm, lll5, Needlecraft for l!ach patten • ·add 25 25. Tlrad ol that mundano blue quilted chn, iSo both. tinrton Beach, 968-3329. l==;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;::==:;.:..;;;=======:.!.;::::;;;:;;;;;:;;:;:::::::;:::::;:::::;;;;=f Dopt., Box 163, Old Chet,.. ceni. for e•ch pattm> lor job• ~ somethtJlr new! 4M--6392 Larun& Bell. DlNETl'E ,.t, lormlea 117. mo Zenith 19,, Black A S!Atlno, New York, N.Y. Alr lo\&il and Specla1 """ f!Wm. .Redwood pl<nle tabl• 4 I IOOIL Print ~ Addreo~ dllng; otlle...U. tbJ1od.daa GLASS fop deal< • -· '8. benches $15. 1513 0raJWt ::· ~llen185t .~!cturo. ,~.~N .. IM:r, dellmy will --W~USE-&blpplnr • D~treued m&IJlo hatch Ave.CM.~ • e .~J.195: LECRAlT '121 Cn> -kt ... m<ft, Send lo ,_,._. -· 12 $145. Old -12 0 • VA C UU•M $15 Rec• ~LOllROO Padlard Beil ..... knit, etc. ,..... dJroe. -· ... ~. !be DAILY ~-~· -lor ... Encydopedlu 125. -~ 1-•) -~-. . -, , __ , ~·-W/vw-.tor.(Wbt V·~• ..,, Call ~40 Uons, !iOe. Pll.O'l', 442, Pattern J)ept, ' * MOVING North. Hootef\JI Upbolll chr $10. 138 E. 18 =---~-~-- J ... t Maerame ... I m J/ftf 18th St., NeW or furn. Xlnt CODd. All must CM 518-f.US. 1i7 SttU"I color n'. eood Buie, fancy knots, pl~ York, N.Y. lOOIL 'Print WELDERS \ go. 644-li!IU. • • • • Ai; LEN SYNCROGRAPH cona. $100. -· $1.00. NAME, 4DDllEll8 with ~ ••-"· 2 SECl'IONAL Do•~, "ODEL E l""I HD -tl4W529 IEuJ Alt " Hairpin (lro. ZIP, -•nd l!n'U: ..... ~ ~. • -·-~~........ M ~ ... dael • aw:r 26 dealp.I to NVMIDL Must be able to Mid to dole ~';!t•-..::'111~"· . Ph: DlSTRIBtrrOR MAQUNE, make. Sl. ~ MORE Q u t c: k tolerances, thin wall • n--..-or " · SU-1734 Eve11 .l weektndl. I • JI I 1 JMut OrocW Book -Fuhlo,. ancl daooM oot per. with txotic materials. 5 Pc. Virtue Pin •L 2 Pd Gp0l) •utoma.tic Washer, ,,.. ft You Lum bJ p\ctllr&&t Par pattm free from our · Uv. ebalnl, All "'7 Joel dult bliit. !40. 64&-7565 oniyl'--------' -· n Sprtng~r caw.,. All NO FEES!/P.P~. cone!. ~7431. botWffn • • 1 pm. 3 LIM&,2Tl-,$2.00 Cloalpltlo INW!t 0111 -.U.1 Only !iJc, * * GREEN 1eov~ ta1>le • CAl\PET FOR SALE -.,,... than 100 &1111 • INS!ANT SEWING SOOK Poclflc . chair, ltmp, $33 Ill. Good by 6iroet Layu. Call FREE k\tteno, male pill'! $L ' -t:odoy, _. lomonow: Personnel S.rvk:ea C011(11t)o.,, 167-3137. e $48.6745 • • 541).3116 Sl:l,,,_/Pen!ao. 4 Ow•cl • AfPU Boot • $1. ' 112 No. ToWer 6' COUOI. * Mtmbtntllp in a .leading 548-6279 betwn 12-4 pm $L INSTANT I'.\ SH I 0 N Union -Squaro $:15. r,.,. oondllioO NJI ...._ --·•·• p•~~ w!ii 9 w1i1 old I 11 M-•--• IOe. BOOK • H.-of ..-...... tt -dub for .,.... t< ma o .. ......, -. OraJwe:, CaUr. 173-l<m i ..ie. 66-3500. kitten, weaned A boa :::"' lf,JJ J'rtao Arc-__ ,L 547°6446 8' SOFA •-MO!; oriwr ROCKEY kowt ... New. trained. 86-1648. _. ileol< 1 -1' pattml. CLASSIPllD AD. S Mk for Rodlel .Mil' ttsed, bOtl. '1l9. lJolrllw Made by~. Sz 10\l. $30. FREEi Btautllul bound doc !IDo. macll $25. fvl. PIJ'1(18. 71lll. ooU , .. , -6.1Mll:IS. puppl<a to COOd bome. •x:L (llllt -• • FOi ACTION. , • WOllEN. Eam.~ tJl9Cl<7· ANT!Qll£Chlppendah FQR Kie-! •'OOdcn olli<:e --...,..=·===;;;-,,...- • Piton& IQ!lcltllts from >'OUr bruklront. xlnt -!loft c1<o1i. btby tqUjp. !11 gal ... * TR.EE KITrENS * _,. .. __,.,Uvlol· CALL '42-5671 -.tbrtpor-.Solaey $125. 53&-TllL QltOrium ,w/equlp. 61U054. !week> - U_lllll,._60c. ·-·-•l:lllfpm. 5LEEPING COtlcbol, p..m. ••J'orSoJa:BeaulJlulhand FRliE 1<111 • .., ma!<! A ••••••• loll DJo old 11111. tho eta! din "" ttbl< • cbllnt, -led .,..la:. . i..n.Je.J 'lrb, bol traloed ---~~~~~=====~:!':=~~~~-.JJ ========-=it=•o.:•=•o.:•=•i...::-=alltlf.=---'~-'-etc. -• $43-1214 * "-!!"'· Sl»JOS. • ' " ' ' w.....,, ..... 28, 1972 Wtdl\Hday, Juet 28, 1972 . --------~-:-l ~~~I~~~ J§J 1.__-_ ... _ .. _,J§jlr.__ __ ... _ .. _,!~ [ '70 I ~A~utoo:~.~1:u:....,:1:.s:-~n:ol:A~utoo,=~1:""'::on:::.s:-~,:10 , Autos, Import.cl _, .... 1.___11' _,,, -~lil r --JfiJ I _., .. 1§1 l.___~_ ... _ .. _.l§l! CC!lu" ActiDll ~Cy~...,._ns_ *Mania Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentols 558-3222 U322 S...:b Blvd. Hunt. Belch. 968-m tm HIUqVamU • 1"61oclc GI W.R. 400 CR·MX llN-Endwo 2IO CR-HX U2l S. VIiiage Way, $.A. ONLY $8500, ~ below cott, cuat:ont_ air dond. home In 00' .....,. lrJs -by 175 Cummins• ctiatl. l194 AlllUl!aSt.,C.M. ·n Shula 11' rntr 1m1 tor ~nt. SlPI 8, ll!U coot, air. PYt pty, 497-2384. t6I Autos, lmportod '70 Autos, Imported REWARD m PAY OYER Kelley Blue Boak For late model, clean, low mll•ate dome .. tlc1, import.-, trucks or camper1. Call and uk tor BQ)ter DAVE ROSS HONDAS GALORE! TEST DRIVE THE NEW HONDA COUPE! HONDA SEDANS MERCEDES IENZ , '67 MERCEDES 250S SEDAN . D;quWte aand beige Wlth. full leather interior, factoey a1r conditioning, auto. tranl., power steering, power dtsc brakea, AM/FM radio, radial white aide wall tire1, TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA COROLLA $1966 (+T.&L.) or $39.30 MO. local beauty that show1 Im· . peccable cll"e inside and FlJlJ: cash price $2,096.30 lll· out. (TWJ9'18>. clud1na tax It Hcense. Down $3555 payment b four bundnd dollars, $39.30 total monthly Kawueltls Sale all models TraJl1r1. Travel PONTIAC Nabers Cadillac $ 9 INCL .. II.HT 163 AND DP Ll l H IP. 2600 HARBOR BL., DKW -· e ARISTOCRATS J 4IO Ha•bor Blvd. PULL PAct. 19UIPPID COSTA MESA Primo Mo-..te Repalr e NEWPORTS . ::;C.:.o•:.:lia;;iMoc"'i .. i'i;;;-;~5 .. 46i"I0""-17_1 t--..,;;;,..;;;;.,;,.-----._..._...., __ , ~91DO Open Sunday payment including inte~t. tax & license, 35 pa,y plus balloon payment at $800. Total de:fered pay price $2,575.50. A.P.R, 11 %, On pre-arTanged credit. (300785), SJ>ecWlm .. Enalilh • • Atrro-MATES WE PAY TOP MG ~~~~:~~(n;ii'! CASH -UNIVERSITY , t\a>.~ lfAN ' NJ!. PRIMO WElUCS. -·~ -• OLDSMOBILE-OMC TRUCKS.HONDA 25' Av<», 1 yr, old fibe,.lu" lor uecl.,.,. a -.U, lust 2850 HARBOR, COSTA MESA -540-9640 < PO late model dirt ~-·-.. oond. & ~ 'nb:en.elJ f\J&lld. Knobby a.tr aind., tapes. lhowtt Cll1 111 b !Ne ettimatel. "'Wa In Hnw SotfdiM Uattl '" .,.. .. wtt11 bath.. Fully .. u """ GROTH CHEVROLET 'talned, Sleeps~ 4~. ' t!re~_-5 ... ·-$100. ' 5*-J.lftv after 4PM. SANTA Fe trailer, 71', Alli far !alet Manqer Autm, Imported 970Autos, Import.cl * "72 Yamaha lOO Enduro 18' Tand. SIC. 6' gas/elec 1821J Beach Blvd. 970 LT1 Brand new. Nevtr rid-refrig. Used once. $2850. Huntlncton Beach den. WHh helmet. Pvt ~-==,,· =c:o--::;-=::-; 14'1.a'J KI N.\11 Citroen Spa rt• Maserati ; owner must lfll. Best ofier. '68 NIMROD Capri. aleeps 4, IMPORTS WANTED Orange County headquarters Bef t:~ AM, 6'JS.5687. 3 bumer butane stow Oran&e Counties tor local I: European ' VECocrrn: ~ 1961 ~~~ used o n c e ! TOP I BUYER dellvery. ' vtntqe, bettn than new~ -,=-.,...,-.,---,-=-;;-:::-:: 8n..t. MAXEY TOYOTA Jim Sl1mon1 Imports ISde and out, $1005. RudJ * '67 Aristocrat, lf'. S!ps 6. 18881 Beach Blvd. zm So. Main, Santa Ana N'8dJ:Wald, 5J&..Ori. Oven, elect brb. 557-0466 R. Beach. Pl\. 847-3555 557-5242 Open Sun. CITROEN FIAT '69 Flat 850 Coupe.Lo mile, nt>W tirel, R/H etc , pri/pty. 9684580 aft 5. MAZDA ROTARY'S '58 MG Conv. Compl•i.ly -l~TOYOTA restored. Must sell. 642-9034 ask !Gr Fawn. -'--P~E~U~G=E""O""T,_--1l!l66 Harbo~ C.M, 640-9303 --===--1 SAT.-SUN .• SPECIAL * PEUGEOT * TOYOT~6~oRONA As low as $2,299. CNo. 5545) FRJr. WARREN'S Sport Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY 'S LARGEST no E. 1st St, S.A. 541-4764 PORSCHE 4 door, \Ybite finish, 4 speed (ZKZ425), • $1099 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA . 1'IOoc Kawaald G-~ 6pm, • COOPER '70 Porsche 911T Immediate Delivery Stereo Mags Private Party 11U1 Buch llvd. VOLKSWAGEN '65 VW BUG SUnraof, radio, heater, 4 speed, wper clean! (PCT· 5851 $595. Barwick Datsun 998 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach 546-40511949-9711 '66 V\V BU,g, good cond. New tirel, good brakes, new rlnp I: valve job, xlnt interior. $750. or best otter. Also '61 Bug, wrecked front end, no en&ine, good trans. Good for buggy, 175. 548-5380. 156 VW plus ex t r a pam. Good for Dune buggy or trau ear $250 also West- phalia luggage rack will fit any VW van $30. 5404416, "10 vw sunroof, AM/FM stereo, Oirome w he e l 1 , Radials. Dealer reblt eng. Take o/pymt.8. Trade ror trans car. Eve1. 646-59&4. XLNT BUY I '68 VW Squareback, must sell. Xlnt running, radials, ~. or of1er. 673-5469. '68 Squarcback, New paint, eng, FM radio. Xtra dean. 113'0. ~: 645-4521, '68 vw bug. Xlnt cond. Auto stick. $975. &1~;642-ml '69 VW Sed. Auto trans. New litts, 646.aJ'l.4 after 6 P?tt '66 VW Squarebftek Wagon, good condi tion , radio-heater, goosi. ti.rel $825 or best oUer. 962·3822. Bright yellow '67 VW fatbt. AM/FM. Exe cond. Very dean. 673.1892 '66 VW Squareback Wagon, good rendition, radio-heater- good bres -$825 0t best cf· fer. Call 926-3822. * '63 VW BUS. NE\V PAINT. TRIM. 1500 ENG. GD TIRES & BRISK. 54s.ro.o2. '10 VW Conv. Xlnt cond. Going to AustraUa. Must Sell! Make otfer! 2205 Cliff Dr .. N.B. 64fH!l05. *'69 VW* Custom bug Sunroof • extras! ~ VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today at Be1t Rates $18.74 Per Mo. ~~~:~ =·-~ TENT TRAILER $200 *W• buy older can * ' or -uUCT. ~ ..,....,.. 19661 Lexington Ln, HB $25 • $50 e $100 l\fINI Cooper 64, xtnt cond., 6 pm. Auto Strvlet, Parts 949 for most can ruMifli 111S cc. new eng, trans, HUNTJNGJ'ON BEACH ~~~.000, ~ 5 _: Huntington IHch. 147~ 1971 914 Porsche. Low ml, " ll lf\G\$ "1 I "1 VW •n super Beetle', still on o .A.C. AM/FM, Auto, trans., waJTaDty, xlnt oond., Sl, 750. disc brakes. 36 mo. • 1910 iiOftdl "350" 1treet bike. call 89:l-5017 mag whll, fi44..69'J9. --'I • • --Clean. all accessories.. $3400. • m""'•-Call 846-65<7. For Leasing or buylnt WW trade tor dlrt bike" TIRE CITY l'.'!'!"7"..-.~=.""'7.':;:o::I DATSUN dur>e bull)' of equal value Steel Radials 235xl5 $4Q.95 + WE bu)' &II makes or clean 5"-3C17. FET. Poly Steel Goodyear ued sport. can. pald for ___ T_S_U_N_P-IC"'K"'U"'P'"' '72 Yll!Wla 3tJO Enduro 21" $36.9S. HI Jackers $34.50 pr. or not Pleue drive In for '68 DA F6Qx15-Belted Whitt letters, tree Appraia&l. , !1!.:"'hl.~~t cond. 1300 ml. $2'1'.50 + FET. u. s. Magi 1 ..... Ir Ullll! over payment&. $15.95 up, ROdger Ward 60'1 • ~. SUper Low Prices. . 1968 Honda '50 Street bOle, in Free Balance with this Ad. , xlnt oond. $400, 1950 Newport Blvd., C.M. NEWPORT IMPORTS 979-3327 66355f. 12345 E. Canon, •1t111 W "·--ff ff 11 G d -• \,NIUI' wy., 197(1 Norton 'lSO Commando aw a a n a-r en• Newport Beach Needs a little fix en', low miles, low priced for the handyman (21462CJ . $895 • · Barwick Datsun 998 So~ ~oast Hwy. Laguna Beach ~494-9711 ml. '975. 213-8Q)-0345, 642·9405 MS-nl5 ~JIURST==-.,4-sp11-.,-l>hllter=-. -::125;;;:: TOP 00T T .._u ·n Dat9Un 240-Z. Stick 11.000 front A rear seats, $00 for WE PAY rug mi. Neer new. Call 644-8436 '66 Mustang. 5.tS-1015 FOR TOP USED att6pm. Dealer. Will take 16-7175 between 1 am &:: 5:3> p.m. U your car 11 otra clean, trade. lee UI ftl'lt. .::.:c:.hani:c.., -Del~.gh-t ---al Harley D av t d 1 o.n VW en&' reblt, ezch. imt., &: BAUER BUlCK Mee cs 1 -a re Sporbter, Low mt. Muat cuat· $215 up V ~ n c e 2925 Harbor Blvd. fix "er" upper. 1967 Datsun leD. Sl.100. 5f8..8909 aft. s. AutomotlVe 1366 "K" J..ocan, Coda Mesa 979-2500 Wagon. $325. Call 548-8404 HONDA 1Bl Scnnnbler C.M. S4!MJ177. .. ~' B. paid tor al"1' 1 P.M. =';.:;_"""-""'==:-:::-:-= "~ 10' your car ·n ~ ·-· Sil ., 1 Xlnt oond. $2X). '61 or new' Ford 3S>2 or """' or not Call Ralph Gordon Ui:l,tsu.n .-J z. ver, au · ~ engine & >UlO· tra1111. In'"' 6'13-0900 -445E.CoutHwy. trens., w/aJr cond. ll,000 ===:=--:==:-::::::I out of car. Reuona.bly Newport Beach. miles. $4695. Dlr, 530-1592. ZUKI 50cc, dirt bike, l'\lm ....u...A 54• - ..,od. 196-53&-mt ~er 4 .. --· ~-Autoo. lm~rtod 970 p.m. 4-15" US mq11 4 Urel, 6 lug 69 Kaw 175 cc, street lt'p], pa.ttem, '200. 968-5066 io hp, xlnt oond. ~. ili 5 ~~~~~~~~~ pm,6G-3912. .. BOYS SCHW1NN LEMON ~ PEELER, GO O D CON-L _...... I~ ALFA ROMEO Alfa Romeo '72- 2000 DmON. $50. &n-95lll. L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;· :;;; · , AMARA 125 SCJ!AMBLER • oond. $D1 or .... oUer. -· NOW IN STOCK ... ~-Duno B•-IH •-~·~" -•• For lmmedlalo n ' BMW liOO ' 0:. Ex· '69 vw Dune Bugay, MVP.fl Oel lv•ry . ceptionally dean. A ateal at Manz Crqa.n:, roll bar, loa lnit•nt Credit ,$1.195. 644-008. of chrome. Must 'ull. BANK FINANCING '10 SUZUKI 90cc. 4,000 mt. 645-filSO, COAST : ~ cond. $250. 516--9606 ~ 962 ~ Trucks '&J Triumph 650 cc '71 CHEV. EL CAMINO IMPORTS FIAT e FIAT e • 128'1, 12411, 850'• DEMO SALE $1644 Plus Tax & l icense & Daalor Prep. '12 128 2-DOOR •769157 e VOLUME e e $AVING$ e 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH l~M"'''"'"''" Pt " 842 • 6666 551--0411, 1'-5 pm, 17821 Sky "' •• Parle Cir. Irvine. Toyota & Jaguar Dealer '62 Por&Che, trans work Authorized Sales & Service --------1 needed. $1200 or best ofier. 900 S. Coast Higbway Call 642-1045. Laguna Beach MG-3100 '67 MERCEDES 230 Sedan. Automatic, power 11teering,· power brakes, tac· tory air conditiohing, push button radio, heater, radial tires, leather interior. Thls beautiful automobile shows excellent .care by pnviow owners. (TUP526) . $2999 ·~Nabers Cadilloc RENAULT 2600 HARBOR BL., l000.l200 W Paclfic est. Hwy. "f.L VW c am p e r. .Po~ C'OSfA ME~..\ • top.-Excel Cond. 551-4845, or 54().9100 Open SUnday Newport Beach (Il4) 642-0406 541-1222. Renault Sales & Service -.~v~A~C,..AT=1"'o~N~T=IME=,..*-I for over a decade in· Orange l970 V\V Pop Top Camper County Very Clean. $2,595 968-1815 '68 vw 7 Pass Bus. Sunroof, Serv. Dept. Open tll I p.m. '68 vw Bug Jug. rack. Xlnt cond. $1650 Monday . Jipt SJemons Renault U> miles. StCf'eO speakers. or make otfer. 536-3507. 2lO\ So. Mab!. Santa Ano "$975~=_,~-"~-~~ '68 vw Sundial Camper, 1 b1k. north of Warner '65 VW Bus, gd oond Many rebuilt engine. SIB or of. Service Department StS--4114 xtras. Must see! Best ofr. fer. Call 536--0288 evet. Sales Department $7-5242 6:16-5996 aft 6 pm. · 1,,=n~vw=-cam-..,-. -pop-c.,,.-p-, xln-,-1 SUNBEAM '66 VW-Xln't cond con!, fully equippe d . --------S650 644-1571 548-<1741. 1967 Sunbeam "Alpine" ton-Sell the old stuU. Buy the Fer that item under $50, try vertible, wire wheels, disc new stuff. the Penny Pincher. 990 BUICK '71 BUICK RIVIERA Luxurious hardklp coupe with Iaclory air cond., full power Jncluding door locks, vinyl top, Wt wheel, 1tereo multi- plex, strato seats, sport wheels, de., etc. Very low, low m1Je1. (707CPM). $4999 -A Nabers U Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sund81 6D> miles. :xlnt cond. lOOQ. • 64>1135 eves. IRL'S Schwjnn Stinlo'aY -:. bike. 3 speed. Blue. Like new! $42.SO. i1!>-0388. spar1c11~u!!2Mm•••llk 1000-1200 w. Paclflc cs1. Hwy. • Bill Jones power brakes. 17 ° 0 · A~,~~,~-.,~,,., •. -"'9"70~ Autos, Imported 5#-J417• U 01, '!'po IN 910 Auto., lm~rtod' 970 Motor Hoi:nes 940 "BllJ.. WHITI.JDGES" SUNSET MOTORS ' ORANGE COUNTY • ' LOCATION ~ ELDORADO • , ?1-finl • ' MOTOR HOME $6448 fULLY SELF CONTAINED { A IT'S BRANO NE'\V! > Ser, # 213207 i Phone 645-6677 ;i 970 Harbor Blvd. ) Costa Mt•• -.c--0'7-~ tor Home Renta ls ~vailable for dally, weekly '.,or monthly bells. 21', 23', ;.and 25' 1elf contained Mo- Stor Home1, all equlpt with •:generator, roof air, and bnany other extras. All fcoaches are 1972 modrls. . We have the all 11teel Amigo ~alJo. Please can 839-9560. ' ~ l . I Ront l Motor Homa for.,..... Vocatl°" : * AMiii * NEW 2S' • Z ' luxury . ff, Mr, JMdedt Bal rates 1ble. Pvt pty B-1391. WINNEBAGO Jr, 1leepg finish w/matching fUll vinyl Newport Beach (n4) 642-0406 interior. vs, 3 speed trans., Alfa Romeo SPORTCAR CENTER push button radio, heater, 2833 Harbor 540-4491 wsw tires, tinted glua, d!x. * COSTA ME SA * wheel cavel'9, etc. A perfect CX)MPLET SERVICE, work A: play automobile. PARTS & BODY SHOP 32860H. Factory Trained Mechanics $2666 , • Nabers Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BL.. 16 Staib 7:30 am to 5:30 pm Mon., Tues., Wed. &-Fri. NOW ON DISPLAY Thurs. to 9 pm Sales Service The fastest draw in the West. Pa.111 Body Shop • • .a Daily Pilot Oassitied QUICK CASH THROUG H A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 COAST IMPORTS Ad. 612-r.678. 1000-1200 W. Coast Hwy. A.,:..:uto_:.1 _1"m"'po'-r1-ed~-9~7~0' 1Autos, Imported Newport Beach 642.(l406 ' COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday '57 Ford '12 Ton ALFA ROMEO-Q Bertone 970 Pickup . Sprtn~ absolutely mint. 2 Tmmaculate, Must Sell. d1r ~ 1.tOO m on d t a I 897-0224. normal &: a twin Weber * NEW GMC Jimmy, 4 whl. _V:,.:•::loce:.:_11:::;000.:.':..· .:.642-::..::7580=. -· 11 drive. 12,000 ml. $4,500. 54"'3612: 516--9542. '66 GMC TRUCK Radio, heater, <•V58139). $775. l lr. 8J6.6535. '70 Dodge 3/4 Ton V-8, Auto Trans, with service Body, Must sell, dlt 897.(1224 AUSTIN HEALEY '62 Austin He&ley 3000. Excel cond. Kept· ht .torqe, lo mileage, Must tell. $MM> ClJ' belt ofter. 545-18?9. IMW '63 Chevy l/4 Ton Vlalt °"' new home! Immaculate, Muat Sell. d1r & 897-0224. '69 FORD E«ll» Vsn. 6 eyl, '72 ' BRAND$ NEW TOYOTA '70 TOYOTA WAGON $1495 SANTA ANA TOYOTA Service Dept. cpen 7:30 am 'til 9 pm Mon-Fr!. ~= 417 w. Warner, Santa Ana . Vacancies COEit money! Rent your lolsE!, apt.. store bldg., elr. thru a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Autos, Imported TOYOTA ' COROLLA 110 c.r. 1 apd. Partial pane1. ROY CARVER, Inc. 11,:m. -alt ~ ,.:..61=0iec.:;V,:;..:..truc:;.;,.k,=:..ll~lto-n-. 234 E. l'llh SL ~ Costa ?.fen 546-Hf4 S!al« -· U' ....i -· Air C11dltleo"" 1/2 Price Wltti Tloa ...,. .... of• New 72 M-* II °' C..... 5etlao , 548--1000 Mr Neufield, IMMEDIATE 1953 Foril PU, Woc1 DELIVERY Big 6 erv .. 4lb, $460. ·-· s3930 · ONLY PER MONTH & Auto Le811nt ~ a!r/oond. Dlhlx. Jltlerve Tr, our lease f:IPtl'tl tor ~ -· ' Sallinp • Satllf>c:tloo • Sfl' ~-a>R'l'EZ -In '!!, ~WsE ALL POPVLAR r8•000 ml. Xlllt «llld. Soe lO 1912 MAKES AT COMPJm. ~ $11111. -ms, TM: RATES. ~ .... ,.. --Clll MaJoolm Reid lor SEE US AIJOUT Over•••• D1llv1ry CREVllR MOTORS D W. lit St.. Santti Ana 1354111 TIMI FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT .WANT AD F.111 c11• price $20'6.H l1elodla9 111 & llcease. om poy.-t Is her •1114...i •ellan. $H.H toll! "'oothly ,..,,.ut loci ..... hltt...,, Ill &ll cnse.Hp1ypl11•1lleoap1yW1Hllf$100, h11l•lf•m•p•f price $U7J.SO. A.P .t. 11 %. Oa ,,.....,..,,.,, ..... It. ('4107'S) DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGEST TOYOTA DEALER .a.u.....i., -e1r, ..,. ,, ruu.er <1e1tn .. Ro -TH EODORE TllMINDOUS SIUCTION AT TUMINDOUS SAYlN•S 614%-5678 1966 H RBOR BlVD. COSTA SA 646-9308 • .-. .. -111r R081115 f QIUI. ........ ' 4/t, hl•n, .-Ml• L lllD """"' Blvd. llCf, 8rud -.111 W' °"'" -llUOlO ·-~~~~~~- '&I CADIUAC StdM o. YN•. fl11rl ~ Air, Viti~ tl:ool', W• Ml. !SIL OA I $249' 71 MALllU I b'. H.T .. »All cint owr... Miiie.~ ar of~ mllll WlfrtnJ't, Alfltt. Tr9111 .. P.a.. ... I .. Air OllllL, ......, ._, Lat ..._ caa. cao • . . I l l'ILOT ·AOVUTISU Wtdntid11, Junt 28. an .. f · ··**.. J§J I -·-1§1 [ -·-1§1 [. ---l§J I ~........ l§J I -·- 990 Autot, Used COUGAR _tto Autos, Uiod 990 Autos , UMd • 1 -""~~_.,_UoM _____ "°~ Autos, Used 990 Autos, UIM l~CK CA~L.LAC CADILLAC CHEVROLET ·.~':'!:"~~~~1 ~~~~~~ I ... WX' lMdl 1 pus Sta YOUR ONLY CADILLAC · '70 COUG AR low mlltt.at, '67 Chovollo Spt. Cpo. P/B. PIS. au,., air ....S .. Radio, he1ter. automatic, a ~Tl. .. ···-1---------'72 COUPE Wp.. lo ml. Xlnt -· FA. Cl'ORY • ..... 1111 rTlll'. caah. Pr! '71 EL DORADO CONVERTIBLE De VILLE ,.al 11oau'$,:,,2'001. 1---D=O~D~G=E--• 111'--ak!pm. AUTHOJUZED • Tr'llY the tinetf or the anat BeautifUI. finl&h with vinyl top a: leather A tapestry inter- ior, tu.U power equipped, climate control factory air conditlonin1, AM·Fl\t radk), g way seat, wsw ti~s:. tilt & telescopic 1tffring, bumper import stripe, etc., etc. <• 1108561. J CADILLAC . CADILLAC lino or outomobll.,, Luxury ~ Dr.ALER t1 everywhert:. Only 10,211 t.ow Down Low Tmm PHONE 64>-571MI '66 WAGON I '67 COUPE . """'"' .. 1t<t!On ot Cldll· local mu ... Fact. alr cond .. . D VILLE lact In Orance County. • full power till & tdoocopk MrRACLE l\WDA Dod.&e l\fOl\ICO, 9 pusencu, 21a Harbor Blvd. Automatic, faetcry air oondi· I a SalH-1:.euin~. Look for our stttrina. cfuor locks, Al\f.nf FaciDry air condlu,Nni. tuU full page ads every \Ved. stereo w/multlplex ta,pe, poww, vinyl top, beautiful I: Friday for our fpecl&ll. trunk 'lock. a sentinel that Costa Mesa UonUig, !>O"·er 1tffl"lnl. -,,~7~0..::;N;::;O,,:V~A7-'"S"'S-I radio, hoator. <1tuC33n. SIOOO. dlr. lf36.6535. Coupe. 350 V!. Vinyl top. 'fi6 Dod&e v w paint , bro'vn wlbef&e vinyl bucket ma .... ,,. 1111.. ne • seats Automatic cnoor !hilt) p, '"" trn:. $1593. clotll • ltathtio interior, tilt •. Nabers turns your lights on le ott A tele1COplc ttffritlJ, AM/ for you, Pim a bolt of fea· 1'11 rodlo, heat"· auto. Cadillac turH to brinJ the thrill ot $6600 . ·~9 • console. factory euaaes.,1"'=-~,.-~----.ll p()\\'tr disc brks exterior 1969 Dod&e Charter eood chrome. TOP SHAPE! $16.5 condition. $1295. or trade for Below Book. Must Sell! Will conve'!'tihle sm&U e & r . tnn&., nw ttn1, etc. <VOL-2600 HARBOR BL.. motorma back to you, (1)71. !Ill. COSTA ME~A CXW). Nabers Cadillac $2111 5(().9100 Open Sunday $7444 .-, Nall1rs • Cadlllcic -IWt!IOlt BL!! COSJ:A MESA, 50-9100 Open Sunday n CodW.C Eldorodo Conv Immac. cond. .. Near new ~· •• Nabers Voeue•. AM/FM '""" ~ Cad1'llac tape. 16,00) miles. Call 11«-M36 alt 6pm. l600 HARBOR BL., Dealer Will take trade. COST A l\IESA White Elephant OJ.me.A·Line 5'0-9100 Open Sunday :ml HAIU!Olt BL., COSTA MESA MD-9100 Open Sunday '70 EL DORADO 80 quick. Call !131-121~ 5$-0!00 • '66 Nova Wagon FIREllRD 6 cylinder. automatic. radio, '68 PONTIAC nJ\EBIRD heater, economy v1c1Uon 350·Auto, black vinyl top, special lXEV118) $895 dlr. AJ\1/F?il rad)O, tape deck. 8,16.6535, ne"' ~s. $1895. 531-491'9. AuNI. lmpo....., 970 Autos, lmpomd 970 Autos, lmj>ortad 970 Looks I: run1 like the day (fipt 10ld! f'ull power. fac· tlry air cond .. ttle.tilt 1tttr- lna;, door locks, crui~ con- trol, vinyl top, full leather inter. New wsw fuel. (01~ AGC). '70 Monte Carlo FORD • .. ' STATION WAGON ' DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE SALE (145 Station Wagon-Autantalic) Air CMdlr!Oftin9 1/2 Price With Tho Purchase of a Now f 140 Sorin Volvo h4Gn $5222 ~ Nabers U Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday '69 Cad El Dorado Cou~. Black on black. Loaded. incl cruise &: AAf /FM stert"I. $.3850. Will take trade. 6«-S436 aft 6 e Dealer '69 EL DORADO for u.le by orl1 owner. Lo mile!. Ex~I cond, All Xtras. 67>4818 aft .f pm or -...•kencls. CAD '70, .f dr, air. $4200. 35,000 mi. Xlnt cond. Prvt ply. ~fn. Reed 546-3730. CH MLLE '68 CHEVELLE w a g o n , VS, automatic, factory a1r .1 ---------11 power .1teering, radio. heat· '71 Ford Wagon er, • \1lnyl roof <'TMAVA) Aufof1latic, f11.1."tOry air IXln· $269<> d.lr 836-6535, ditioning, radio (382CTQ). '70 Chcevelle Malibu, ex. $2795 dlr. 836-6535. b'ef!!ely clean, . p/s, alr, '67 GabL 500 2-dr hd tp, 390 r1d10. w/s/w tires, new En& R&H PIS P/B brakes. $2600. or ~st offer. 44.00o mtles,' top co~. $950'. 646-0867 aft 5: 30 pm &: wnds. Pvt pty 6-tZ-35n. '66 El C\.mino Pk:kup. Auto '61 Ford Van exl."t'!..lent cond.. Trans, Pov.'t'r Steenne, 283 $i50. or best off Pt. Pis . CAll .f BBLR Ex~Uent Corid, altPr 7:00 pm 847~5. SW-1592. . '12 Chevy Vto&a. 6000 m1. Alag wheels. $n50. \\"i ll take trade. 646-8436 aft 6 pm. Dealer. •n Caprice. 13.000 m i. All xtras. Xlnt cond. Vinyl top. I.MOO. Pvt pty. 83.1-9L14.' ·n Pinto Runabout. Bronze. auto, R/H. Xlnt cond 50001 mi. J\1/seU nov." 644-1734. '66 Ford Club \\'a.gon Van. 539 FullerlDn Ave, NB Sl'e to appttciate S850. 543-1250. IMPERIAL '&8 CUSTO~f Impala 2 d'Xlr, -------- P/S, P/B. R&H, xl"t coc.d. '69 IMPERIAL Must .. u. IU50. S<S-54l7. LeBARON CHRYSLER Luxurious 2 dr. hardtop with $3212 ONLY Per Month po-...•er steering air & radio. -------- fa ctory air conditioning:, '62 Oi'.RYS New Yorker. vinyl top, tapestry interior, Good shape. $250. 846-8242 full power, cruise control. aft 6 \\'kdys; any t l me tilt wheel. door locks, most Best oU~r 962-4no. CHEVROLET wkends. every dlx. xtra. <xwxn4). , fill c1ah price $4093.IO htclulllln1 t1x .& license. Down 111ym1nt la four h1wllli:1lll lll1ll1rs. $12.72 t1t1I monthly 111rm111t lnclulllin1 lnttrtat, taa I. lletnst. 35 Plf plo1 ... llHn ,.,tunt of $1700. Total doferrod poy price $4995. A.P.R. 11%. On pre-arran9ed crodit (1456361901) Domo. '66 caprice Wag, new "''"· --------1 $2777 •hocks. bra1< ... ao00 cond.. CONTINENTAL orig ownr. 1m. 968-9659. .,. Nabers '61 Chev. Camptor Van. 1969 r.1ark Ill-Low miles. . C , Need~ trans. v.'Ork, $2j(J. Dir. ~d "''/black Landau acl1llaC •• 842-4215 alter 6 p.m. I top. Black ltoather. tilt 2600 HARBOR BL.. , 1,·heel, full pov.·er. air & COSTA MESA 66 EL CA.1\fTNO stereo. $4250. \\IR. 788 .,.,. "100 O S d XI.NT COND. 846-7368 J'9U"J pen un ay Call Dav•, S<IH788 alt 3P'1 ,66 C · 1 1 c '70 Imperial DEAN LEWIS VOLVO Tllli!ENDOUS SELECTION AT TREMENDOUS SAVINGS , ont nent• pe. 68 Impala Immaculate. Loadod. Mull LeBaron Orange County's Biggest Volvo Dealer Immaculate. Sacrifice, Must Sell, dlr. 897-0224. Imma.cu11te Condition, Sacri· sell dlt, 897-022.f. * "67 Continental 4 dr. Ml fi~. Mu1t Sell, dlr. A rood want ad is a good in-pv.T, nu trans, 1xlnt oond. 1966 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 6oi6-9308 MERCURY vestment. $1595. 6-44-87.fS. 980 Auto1, New 980 Autos, Now 980 STATION WAGON iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '67 Colony Park, pwr every-thina:. apd control, ownr, LEASE OR ·auY ~;~:.~~rk MUSTANG '61 Fard HAIDTOP '65 Opel ITATION WA•ON . ' • a....i Tr1n1m1Mlon, Jltdle. ~· (Vll7"1 '67 Flat- .. flllAllTD ... llut Wltll lltdl '""'" ......... llldll, ........ UW Mllltll. tUOI! •I ' .,· . . BR·AND NEW 1972 GRAND PRIX 111626 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN END LEASE l Y••t l••1•. S 116.26 mo. plu1 +•-.: S23J.52 e•1~ r•quir•cl 11lu1 lie. Morrolricl• buek•t •••+1, e111t. e•rpet1, eloek, <400 Vt, du•I ••., turbo hvdr•111•fie, P-1fteri119-dbe brt k11, •ir eond., eotclow1 top, r1dlo LH r1111 of• mirror, eu1t. 111t b1lt11 1ok r•y 91111 111, unclereo1t. :2K57T2A I ~0045. { I 072 l BRAND NEW 1972 LE MANS 197 11 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN END LEASE ] Y••t I••••• $97.11 mo. pl1J1 t1.:. $11 4.36 etih requir•d plu1 lit. Mo rro~icl1 l11t., eu1t. c1rp•h, JSO Vt, turbo hydr1m1tic, fib•r9l111 tir11. LH t•rr111t• mlrfor, cu1t. lt1t belh , cu1t. 1te1r. wk •e!, r1lly fl wh•1l1, W. opt "in9 mouldl~9. pow1r 1l11 ri119 & clllc 9rtkt1, ••ft t•Y wi11cl1lti•lcl, 1ir eond., II:. eomp. eurl. l1'"P· :20J7M2ZI 12945 I l 365) '67 Th111derblrd '68 Chevrolet '68 Chevrolet '6B Pontiac - NOYA COUPI f~IC-ll 'cyuno1r, J $P'l'd Trtrisml1•10n. 11:11111•, MNltr. !XUD •I '68 Pontiac CATALINA H.T. CPI. lt't, l'ow9f SIHrfnQ, AlllMnl!IC, ._.., HMltr, Air c..Mft!Mo "'9, 'i..w MllNef. (VVI IJll · $1399 . '67 PCllltlac IONNmLU IMPALA H.T. CPI. "-'t $tffrin9, A.utom1llc, F1etary Air, lt1dlo, HMltr. (112 CFM ) '70 Maverick J DOCa llldlo, MNi.r, Sl1'1d1•d l tlM· m1111on, Ltw MU..... (IOJ. IT,T/ .I $1399 '71 Ford . PINTO OPIN MON • .JAT. 11)0 ••M• r. 10;00 ,,111. • SUNDAT 10:00 •• ,.., .. t 100 '''"' ........ 146-1017 t '65 MUSTANG Immaculate. Sacrifice, Mu1t aell, dlr, 897-0224. OLDSMOBILE 1965 FIS Olds $200 19661 L<Xington Ln. HB PINTO 1972 Pinto • 2XXJ cc f'nline w/air. 12,000 ml. $2395. Xlnt cond. New tire&. 9~. PLYMOUTH '69 ROADRUNNER. 383, Good cond. Extras. Best oUer. 646-4665 PONTIAC '69 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE WAGON 9 pu1., 3 seat. Fact. alr, luc· gaa;e rack, auto trans .. pQ\''er steer. & brakes, el~t. rear window, R & H. \VSW tires. Even a stereo tape in this exceptional low mlle- q:e family wagon. (394ETB) $3111 · · · · Nabers ' Cadillac l600 HARBOR BL.. COSTA MESA Jl40.9100 'Open sun.i.,, '72 LE MANS BranCI new 197'2 ~88.c Le Mans 2 Dr., fully fattory equipped $2.895. Serial No. 2027D2P179847. BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT Cllt St. at S.A. Yrwy.) 2000 E. !Jt St., Santa Ana 558-1000 FOR We -1966 Mr Bon. neville. Lo mil~. Excel int.. new tim, air. dual .......... IJmoll Jlft'foct. m.nn. · 1966 PontW: Ventun, 4 Dr., V-8, AT, PS, PB. Air Cond., Low-low ml1e1, Clean 1na1de A out, Must SacrUlct. 8'7·309!. '16 PO~C GTO, 4 opted, bl<clctll, Vinyl root saio • -RAMBLER '63 Rombltt Wq. Auto. Trani., Powtr Steeri.n&· Cood ~lfon Cor. !KIH 4231 $395. DI r. 547-61:16. 1 • Wld-, Juot 28, 1972 DAILY l'ILOT Sf. ------l~f~ij UHd 990 Autot, UHd "' -'-• UMCI ----........ Step Up To Luxury • • i Excellent selection of previously Mark Ill's and Continentals. owned ( , 1971 MARI{ III Beautiful Automobile Brazilian Moondust with tobacco leather interior and black landau roof. Luxury equipped including full powe.r1 climate con· trol air. individual adjusting power front seats, tilt wheel, 8 track stereo. pov.1er door locks . And much . much more. (416 CF'P) " ' ' SALE! ) Outstanding Group Of Choice Cars! , 1970 Cadillac IL DORADO Imma~ulate. Emera.Id m11t metallic/ black Landau & matchln& Leather in- terior. Luxury equipped. f ull pov.·er lncl. 6 way seat, tilt-telf! wheel. Ai\f. FM stereo, power door lockJ &: much more. C081AKJ) $4975 1969 Plymouth FURY Ill 4 door h&rdtop. Azttt Gold with Ian· d,au top, equipped with VS. automa- uc, radio, heater, powtor atffrin& Ii: brakes, factory air oondJtlontne. re· fleets t!Xcelltnt care. 'n4 EDAl $157.5 . 1969 Lincoln CONTININTAL 4 DR. \VhJte exterior with black lel.ther and vinyl top. Full pow•r, air cond. and vacuum locldna aroup. Near wholel&le. CXYZ458 l. Fuµ price $2975 1971 Cadillac ILOORADO CONVl'9:TllLI ; Attractive Ebony 'Black with Whlte · leather &: matchin& top. Luxury thru-out, full pow~r. climate control 11 r cond., tUt-t!!.le whet.1, AM/FM, PD"'er door lockl, 6 way 1e1.t. ('°4.· 001 ) $6775 ' • I -"• 1971 Mark III OUTSTANDING & CLIAN • , Gor1eous Emenld Turquoise fintth wlth matchin& leather interior, white • landau root. luxury equipped. twl ~ pow~r. 6 ,..,ay indJvidual seat&; tllt • wheel, a uto. crulN control, power _ door lotks. AM/FM stereo, and mucb mot'e. Ask to drive. (~ BQE) $5775 1971 Merc;edes 2IOll 4 DOOR 11,000 mUta. Deaert beJ&e with brown l.A.J\dau and saddle tone interior. Luxury equipped incl. Automa.tk:, Al\f-F'M radio, air cond., power 1teer-. ing & braku. power windows. Set a.nd drive. (41fELUl $7175 ALWAYS A GREAT SELECTION OF TOP QUALITY CARS ..• ' t "Orono• County'• Fom ll¥ o/ P'I•• Cert" ohnson&son 2028 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 114011Dt Home Of The New Cu • , , "Golde11 roue1a•• j • I· • • • • :· ., =·· •• ,.:,-. •• .. • ·~ •• . , .;.-• . • • :· • ·: ' . . • . . • . . I DAILY PILOT ~71 PINTO ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WtdMtdiY. June 28, l 9n $J99DOWN$36A MONTH FOR JI MONTHS ' II" ........ W"'. l jJ ........... fl""lOl!d. ID<.k.,i. a.allc"'""" ....... _.u .. 1 lor 34 ..... Oo!•roli,,... ,..Co 1!107 old. II• & 11- c-..l~"l.'llCIHA!.l(;E•AI! I JJ.6:1; 'Speed 1ton1 .. ro- dio. hearer. bucket 1eott. full vin~! 1n11- rior. 326 ELF. 1688 • W«!llHd«r, Ju"' 28, im '71 VEGA 2300 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PILOT -ADVERTISER 22 $199 DOWN $36 A MONTH FOR JI MONTHS ' .,..... lro1•11~ .-., ' htal.-. h>-Mk butbl 11111. ••I. (llro1111 · _1,iftg, W~ill Wiii tir11, w~e•I cav1r1. 11GtlM . $199 DOWN $53 A MONT.H ~~l~s · \olakM1oc k, ck•o"'' •httl ""''' •adoo • hto!1r, vinyl but~tl wots. lull vonyl 111!•~ or o.accv $J 188••ll PRICE S 1'1111 11 10101 dn. oyml. 5J6 i1 10101 me> pymr. "'4:1 to•. hcenM & oll co11y1nlj thar~H Oii "l'I''· u1d11 lo• 36 mo1. Otferred PY""'-prott $] (93 •ntl. to~ & loc .. 11. ANNUAi. PE•CEHIAGE IATI 11.70% '72DODGE BIOOVAN '72 COLT 2·DOOR HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • BRAND NEW • OR~E:D~~URS '72 DODGE TRUCK loodtcl with ~irlyl berc:h MOIS, ~. f71•14 rir11. windshield wtnMrt. ddctiotl lignah. lill •irrrl int¥ nuh 111UCh 1110rt. Ordtr-Your1 Toda't'. __ _ FACTORY COlOI OF YOUI CHOICll $3188 $199 DOWN $60 A MONTH FOR J6 MONTHS FULLPRICI D1lu•1 model. rodio, hlo! .... ' spied lu.k.t $199 DOWN S199 is total 6n. \l'fl!ll.SIG4 iJ IOloll'l'IO. ""'· '""· ... '"'""' '" ""''"' chlirQ" Oii appr. u tdif for 36 l'l'IOL o .. $104MOWTH FOR36 ........... ~ ...... , ..... " '11 lilllllliM.ON.T1H1s ... ~.;;.·~.t:.'1'"·'·'·"·"1"1'."1'1''·'·' .. ll0!1. whit• wGll tirtt. $ J 888 dt!Ull whff CDYIH. ltd ... 111 ll«k .. 1 ... "· "" """· "" brond n•w S 199 i1 to to I dn. pymt. S60 ii lolol ...a. pymT. ind.,,,~ IK..,i.e ' oil =1)'1119 ~J Oii """· u1d1t for 36 mDI. Ddtrrtd pymtpritt $2359 i11cL IO• & · lic.,,i.. ANNUAL P(R([NT.l.G[ lATfll.JS"' $-1-99DOWN $73AMONTH l !"~ ....... ,""1.llJdlD ... -.... ,,....""" .... l~M$11 & oH '""''"II '"°'11" °" --,,oc1~ lo< M ..... o.a.r.1,,.,. ... ~•12171 ;.d. ... '·---- BRAND NEW '72DART DEMON loodtd with •in dshi1ld woshers, high bock butktl $HIS, htottr, 't'inyl hlodlirier, outside mirror, G9S•14 ' tir11 + m11<h m11oh mor1."0rd1r """"""· $2088~~ PtKl $199 i1 lolll ... PJl'll-S6' i1 total"'°·,.,,..,. ind 1o._ , lie. ond oll torry~ chqe1 Oii DllP'· crtdil i. 36 ll'IOI.. Dtl.,,.i PrJ!I!. p!"ict S2S7S ind, tex ' litffilt. AH- MJAl PERCENTAGE RATE 9.93 % WAGON TIME '68 YW STATION WAGON · 4 speed Irons., radio, heater, $688 full vinyl inlerior. carpeting, wheel covers. XDT992 FULL Pt ICE s299 DOWN s19 A MONTH ~0o~~~s S '.N9 1l IO?ol 6" pyml S Jq 11 totall me P•"'' •ncl !D •, l<Ct n;e & oll cor'l'"'I cl>11rge1 "" llPPf, u1d1I IOI 36f"OI. Otl1rrtd PY""·P"U Sq8J .r•<I. to< & l.c:tnl,. AN NU Al PltC!NIAG I RAJ[ l•.30~ '69 FORD SQUIRE WAGON v.a.outo. lron1 .. rod10, heoler, pawe< ~leer. $1288 ing & brakes, a1r cond., luggage ra,k . ZOW491. fUll PllCl s299 DOWN 536 A MONTH ~~·"~~s S7t' 11 !&to! dn. pymr Sl6 <1o !o!ol mo pymT ..cl to<. ltCtrilt & oO Cll'ffY+llQ chcirgtl Olt GPCN'. utd1! IOI 36 ""L Otlt<ttd pym1. pttCt S 1~95 ire I. 111~ & ltCll!lt. ANM/.l.l Plll(f.N. 1AGIRATl17l6•. '71 COLT Wagon FULL PllCI .. , .. " ... ;,, , ...... ""''' $16'8 8 ~l.ft11, full .,i11yl intt rior. 1326· $199 DN. $53 A MONTH ~~:~. ''" 11 IOt81 dn. llY"''· m 11 I0141 mo. rflnl. Incl It• & lie. a. ell u•rvtne tl'Wilrtlft on ~ppr. ~·ecin IOr J6 ITIOI. Def. oyrnl. prlc1 12101 1iw.:1. t111 a. llc.ens1. ANNUAL. PERCENTAGE llAtE 11 .U'lit . . I WE APPRECIAT[: YOUR BUSINESS I . .61f2lll:ZSIOl945 fACTOIY COLOI Of YOUI CMOICI FOR 36 MONTHS V-8, oulO. Irons., radio, heoler, $1 0 8 8 power steering, factory air coral .. PK4ll00224061. FUil PRICE '68 PONTIAC Tempest Coupe, Radio, healer, wheel covers. Plu s mu ch much more . WTFS84. $588 FUil PRICE '69 PL YM. Roadrunner ~ 1pod, JI) VI. 't'inyl interior. "'e9 wh1el1, rtdio, h11tor. IZXX •27) $988 FUil PRICE '70 DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Sedan 4 speed, bucket seats, radio, heat- er. 472ELT. $688 '-""JAi. 'llCINIAC.f. lill 1~.116 B:~D '72 CHARGER Loodtd *''" •i11yl ~tM~ 11111, hto!tr, 178•!4 lirtL witMlll'litld woih111, d11tcr.011 1i911ol1. lull 'ir!yl 11111rior. 1mi1'>011 conlfM lyltlfll. .....:h .....:h "*'· Wl.?1C2Al666S2 $ ltf ii IOlol ., P""'· S73 1110ttil """ JYfM in<I. t11x.hc1n11 & 11U c0<•J•~9 chorgtl 11~ tppt ""'1 IOI 36 "'°'· Otlffrtd PY''" prl(t S?l21in:L111•·& lictn1.t. ,U.j"'lJjl P!RCLN. TAGf.-AI{ 1006 ... '70 FORD Custom 4 Door V-8, outo. (rons., power steering, healer, much much more. 83SBEM. $988 FUil PRICE '65 MUST ANG 2 Plus 2 Fstbk. VB, 1utom11tic, r1dio, h1al1r, Dut ~•I 11111, ton1ol1, power 1to1rin9, me9 wh11l1. !VHR705) $388 FUil PRICE '70 Pl Y. Duster V-8. rodio, heater, mog wheels, $1 wide oval tires, dual broke sys- tem . Much, much more . Vl29G08333989 188 FUil PRICE '65 DODGE Station Wagon VI, 1utometic, power 1te1rin9, wood 1im.L-p1_yli1t9, di•, wfil. C_O¥· 1r1, w1•, r1dio, ho1t1r, IPEN56'41 \ l288 '69 MUSTANG 2 Door Hardtop Red, bucket seats, rodio, heater, whi- tewall tires, deluxe wheel covers. 9T01Tl45060. Aulo. Irons •• rad io, heater, wheel covers. Deluxe chrome mold ings. 517ARI, • VI , eufom1tic, redio, h11t1t pow1r 1f11rin9, who1~-r1, whit• 1ict• will tir11. ICR.12661 l . $788 PRI I ' • • . .. ;; • ? •• ""-~ •• '~~ •• •• ·~ i~ ... •• -:· .. •• • •• •• -~ '• .;: .. ,• • '• ;· :: •• .. .. ,. • llAND NEW '72 MAVERICK s· · oo ~ r~-51 +Tll ~ ·r p O • ., Dealer Cost 1¥1. prep, 91t r11dy, hold b1c~. fre ight . ./ w1111 .... 1,,.i •1111 llAND NEW '72 L~T.D. 2 DR. s51~Tll ? Over Dealer Cost ........--1nd, pr1p, 911 r11dy, ho ld b1e~. freight. Well l"ulppff #041 BRAND NEW '72 Gran Torino Sport $ 00 ~ 51 +T&l o .. r DNior Cost '"'· ..... ... . .. ;,. ho ld b•c:k, froi9ht. ' W•ll l1t•l1tl'ff #1044 HARO TO FINO '69 SHELBY GTSOO 4 1p•1d, good rnil o1, r1dlo, ht•ftr. I 170ASGI '69 V W. W•gon 4.~~. r.J'1'0, h••ter, oir /znditiolfin9, good milts. ZCKl76l •· ' '71 FORD Galuie SOO H.T. v .1, •uto., P.S .. R&H, •ir cond., ... inyl roof, good rnilo1. I074IUOJ '69 DODGE Chuger VI, •uto., ltlH, pow•r tft•ring, •ir c:ondltiot1i11g, vinyl roof, ,low ,,.a,,. lllOAVIJ 171 FORD Cu1tom liOO 4 dr., VI, a.lH, •ulo., P.S .. vinyl roof. l 115092 1 C itr of Co1!1 M•t• Lt••• lttlur11 '69 PLYM. Bolvedere 4 dr. VI, lt&H, •ulo., P.S .. •it c.ond, low milts. fYQL117l • MAKE OFFER PRIZES! FU,N! SUPER SAVINGS! COME IN AND HELP US CELEIRATE 51 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE GREATER HARIOR AREA UNDER THE SAME OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT. WE PROMISE YOU • • • MANY HAPPY IETURNS OF THE DAY I Br11nd New · '72 MUSTANG . SAMPLE ANNIVERSARY DISCOUNT! lOLl'S COST INCLUDU flllGHT, PltlP, GIT IU.DY AND FACT. HOLDIACl 6 st\.ic."'o~ ,, \\t1't~"'t'-~ 00 OVER DEALER COST + T&L ANNIVERSARY LEASE SAVINGS! OVER 300 CARS ANO TRUCKS READY FO~ IMMEDIATE LEASE DELIVERY. CALL 642-0010 J.~:~:·~r~id 1. You llffd 011ly • volld drlvett llce11.w lo IM 1ll•lbl1 for tlll1 11ch"I" Tti.odor1 lobh11 prln dl'Cllwl119, Yeu llHd 11ot be prnant te win! J. J111t co-ht, fll1 out your p•ire 1lcket 011d drop It ht 011r d r1wh19 bo1. NothJ119 ti b11y. H1tfll119 '"'"' t• do. ], If yov wh1 011r Ph1t1 9ro~ prhe, a11d you h.v. purchesed o MW 1f72 Pl11to fro111 ThMi· doN loblM P:ord 111 er efter Ju111 I, 1972, you l'l'llDJ' tfte .,011r l'tlie or, ot your opllo11, Theodore ltobh11 l'o~ wlll r•l1t1b11rM1 you for th• fill 1u1rc"9M 1Hk• ef tfte Phoo yo11 lt•Clfht, ,...,. ... of ...-1 or equlpmet1t. Cwl1111ef ••~ftct to tnfl nd IK.!iw 11 •ltlrltr •Miit), GRAND PRIZE NEW '72 PINTO LOADED WITH GROCERIES! 50 RUNNER-UP PRIZESI YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN All Pri1es Will Be Drawn For By Sit., Aug. S, 1972 REGISTER TODAY ! ,o., i~t.\.'I \ s'f\Of ov.••• ~~:~\~, .,,.o•'~~•"•'~"' - New '72 F-100 PICKUP STYLE SIDE FULL FA~T. EQUIP. 1Tt291 COURIER PICKUP WITH GEM TOP CAMPER SHELL • o-' -..,., ..... ..,111 ••o·' ·"''"' ..,.,, ... $ SPECIAL PURCHASE! '72 LTD-GAL.AXll-WA•ONs,..;flNTOS An wltlt olr contlltl .. l"f, wornnitfn ... 11.~1 •• Gffll mll11. I to-.. from. EXAMPLE: 72 LTD SQUIRE WAGON I 0 p•110119or, roof r•ck, •ir c.onditioning, r•dio, lto•l•r, powor 1toorin9, (I 16EJM ) '61 CHEV. Comuo 2 dr. H.T., fully •11u ipf1•d, R&H, 1tick 1hift, good milo1, 1poil 1r. !VPl(75l l '67 MERCURY Hordtop Mo11tclolr. 2 dr., a.&H, •ufo., P.5 .. •ir c:o11d ., food mil11 . CUOG116l • 51251 s1051 '68 CHEVROLET 2 Dr. H,T s1451 a. I H, 1uto .. flow•• stooring, VI, •ir c:onditionl119. Good 1t1il•1. !VTH7141 OVER DEALER . COST $2451 ' • ' (1)9tl .. Gn THI THltl,,llST PllCI ON THI THll:IPTY LITTLI WOllHOUll PINIO SALE 15 TO CHOOSI ROM '71 & '72 MODELS WITH ANO WITHOUT AIR , 4 SPEEDS & AUTO. MATICS, SOME WITH 'IJNYL ROOFS , DOOR GUARDS, WSW, OLX. MU8 CAPS , PLAID IN. TERIOR. EXAMPLE: '71 PINTO Fully factory equipped, radio, hNt1r1 4 speed, Interior & exterior decor, wh11I coven, wsw, tOocl· mlle1. I COM772 J $1551 oron1 4 doflr. Autom1tic:, reJio, h•tler, good mil•1. (121675) '68 DODGE Polan . s1051 2 dr. H.T. RIM, outo., pewor 1t••ring, •ir c:onJillo11in9 , VI , Good mil•1. I UCVI t•I • ' Fu lly •~ulppod, tr•n1porl1lion 1poc:i1I. Good rnllos. IKIH•701 '61 V.W. BUG 4 ., •• J. 9ocwl rnilo1, rod. IXOA.7171 '70 CALIF. Dune Bu91y 1Mm•c.ul1to thtu·oul, undw 10,000 mll••· Spoc.. wlt•tf1, ro ll b1r, ,..jnyl fop, V,W, co"'ponontt, !6261ND I ' '67 MUSTANG Hudtop Ftctory ot(llippod. a.&H, good rnil1 1. ITYXJS6l '63 FORD G1lnie H•rdtop, ••dio, Ht•lor, Auto. Tr•111 ., Powor Stoorin9, v.1, Good Milot. IFTU!lll • '65 MIRCURY 4 Or. H.T. Monttroy. Ori9 in•I tltru·oul, lt&H, t ulo., P.S .. •ir c:ond., good rn il•1. ( PJF7t1 I s451 • • • \ ti -· . . . . . --. . I DAll.Y PILOT Wodoefdor, Jo• 28, 1972 PILOT·ADVERTIStR 2.f • msnAI .... hl'lt. GCllll ti ...... C«. (ftf144) '690PEL _,.,. -• ..,.., ... --cwP?l ... IUf ---.No.111'1406 '66 v.w. IUS 4 IPeed. radio. heatw. llJ*. air ICtOJIS.ZDT18' '68 MUST. HT. -$988 :~.!.~!.~!~!Y $98 . :~~~~::~~ $98 :~!~~~~~.m $&8 $1288 :~~==$1288 z~~~ .... ~ $1388 ~.~~~:.~-.-~ $1·38 :'11 -:::c=HE::-::V~. v:EG_A~~--.--$-=-=1=-=5::8-=tB~· 70' s SA ;:=.~!~. $158 ~r;~r=~~ $158 ~!,gg~.~ .. .,.... $ : ... ~.~g~~~7:M.,,,.... ;~~~~=-~· $168 '70 MAVERICK DRIDTI- .,.vu.,...004,,_ ______ .,._.,,....;~~;;;;.. Hlalw ..... blut.099AYH Heat•, bright yellow. 16SAHT ;~,!~~~--·$1688 :!_~.~~~~~~.~0 $ 8 :?.~~~~~~r~E.~.0 :~~~~x~(~~, $1688 _, _... Gull Aqua. 405CGO PICllP 1/21°'2'2 .... -~-w.1 , • ....,._,...,,. FULL PRICE BRAND NEW '72 '70 GALAXIE 500 '70 GA AXIE 500 ..... -.""': .. ~vull1) 2DNrM.,.._ Y-8, Crvff>.l'/st..-.. foci. or. landau top, R& Heiattr, bl'own mtlollic. 117DTA '70 GALAXIE 5 2Dfff'H•rn., Y·I, Crulro-P/st11r-foct oir. LOftdou top, II:& Heottr.c~gol4.# 123153 '70 FORD 'LTD' , ......... . V..04e P/S.. lltt ................ . wlit9.0ISAXT 2 °"' "•"NJ \1-8. Cn1iso·l'/st11r-foct oir, londov top, R& Heattr, bnr¥m rnetollic. 126AEU '70 GAL AXIE 500 2DMrH•Nt9J V-1, cr11iu1-P/st11r-foct air, landau top, R& Heater, brown mttollic. # 119975 '70 FORD 'LT D' 1--V-I. CM.r/stMr·foct oir, kMdov top, R& Heater. blue llltfallic. 56SICM FULLY RECONDITIONED LOW MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES Eac• 111allflH fer ••lio••I 0111 ye•r insured w•rra11ty, COYtrin1 fvll •••tr train, wit~ u ll•ll 11 odln11. . · sleftlg. LitlMI rtOSCIAI '72TORINO BRAND NEW '72 4 Speed Tran smi ssion, 1600cc Eng ine, Bucket seals, Emission Control. ORDER YOURS NOW $]788~~~1 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY !J 111111111111H1111111111111111111 11111111111111111111111111111 ~ :; Newlftll•M•hrlffH '" ~· : ;: Brand new 1972 · RENT·A·CAR ;: = cou•••• PICKUP = = 1"°"""''.....,"'""-· WEEKEND RENTAL SPEC.= = $6230 mo. RENT A 1972 FORD PINTO = = 24 MONTH OPEN ENO LEASE From 2P.M.Fridoy to lOA.M. = : , Monday Complete Weekend -ASKFDR Only$15.95•5cperm;Je - ;: Bill SPERLING DR -fint 100 Milos nu : ~11111111r1tlh~tnrrinn 111111 1111111111111111111111111111 urc I ' I FULL PRICE ' • • Fu ll y Synchronixtd Trans., 170 (10 Economy . Engine, Emission Control, . Se lf ·Adjustin i: Brakes, The Simple Moch in e. ', Order your choice of cOIOf; \ today. • , $1988~·. t la of fu p m p • da pu Be for No Uo o· cd m .. . pr ,. Sait (;le111enie Capisirano • VOL 65, NO. 180, 6 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • Teday's F-l•al ' WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, '1912 TEN CENTS • Clemente Employe Raises to Hike Tax Rate? By JOHN VAL TERZA Of .. °"'1 r11tt Sl•tf San Clemente Qty Manager Ken Carr l~te Tuesday hinted that city tu: rates mlgbt rise 25 cents or mort if new raises are granted to city emp!oyes. Tbe predictlon came during unveiling of an expanded city budget using reserve funds and new revenue to cover several Ptiln• projects. Tl\• new document. roughly $80,000 more than the original $3. 7 million in the preliminary budget, contains $45,000 for a &t'1't tn· planning of a north area fire ' Ocean substation, about f13,500 for a new pier entrance, 112,000 for lights at the ¢Y tennis courts and fl,000 for minor raises in drill allotments to v o I u n t e e r firefighters. Councilmen will meet In a special morning session 'lbunday to consider formal adoption of the budget -a docu· ment which can be changed by minute order at any later time il new itetnJ need to he added. The roughly $82,000 In additional money will come, he said, from better projection of San Clemente's aa!es tu Access revenue for the next fiscal year, plUI carryovers from this year's expiring budget. Although Carr would oot go Into detail on salary increases (negotiations are rontlnuing) he did say be would be 0 surprised" if wage increases would cost less than 25 cents in new levies to the city's property tu rate. That sum would raise about Sl!0,000 to apply toward better wages and benefits. Carr acknowledged the large support given by the public In recent weeks to Urged public safety workers' requests for raises in paiy and benefits. "I must assume that tbose 1,200 to 1,300 persons signing petitions also ap- prove ol. raising the tu. rate for the general employes of the city as well," be said. 1be 25-cent projected levy -although not approved by the council would mean that the owner Of a house valued at $32,000 on the market by tax assessors, would pay about $20 more a year to cover the raises. Discussing the city's projected com- mitment to a north-area fire department substation -proposed to be a small · facility using portable buildings and an attack pumper -Carr said the $~,000 would he a healthy start. "Those funds would be split into $20,000 for the truck and the rest set aside for land and facilities," he explained . Because it takes a· year to get delivery on a small attack pumper, that would be lead lime for the city to "begin seeking the additional f75,000 estimated !or ere ' County Plnnners Back Permits for 2 Homes County planning commissioners Tu .... day vowed to look into the problem or public access to the ocean at Capistrano Beach after narrowly approving two use pef1!1its for the construction o f heacbltoot homes there. . C4tiunissiOOl!r' -Woodrow Butterfield State Coastal ~ill Sparks Ar~Remw~ By BARBARA KREIBICR . Of .. Deir ,. St.ff The news that a tough lnittstive mea!ure designed to ,protect t h • California coasWne apparently quallftes for presentation to the voters on the November ballot sparked mixed reac· tioM along the Orange COast today. City officials and conservationists varied from strong support to strong op- position In their comments on the pro- poaed measure. The coastline protection measure •ponsored by the caI!lornia Coastal Alliance was reported, in an unofficial count, to have reoelved almort 350,000 signatures on petitions c I r c u I a t e d throughout the state. It would qualify for tho ballot If 325,504 sign,atures were ftled with -Oie 1ecretary of slate by the '11luraday deadline. San Clemente City Councilman Thomas O.~eefe, a strong aupporta-of coa;'!!!n• cdn!!ol!, said today he felt the lniturnve measure .. is not properly ~tout." "Its too all-<nco-•s!Dti In ICOpe to priperly meet the needs of the citizens and'lo properly reflect the rights of aome property owners, particularly j n developed areas," said O'Keefe. The bill in his Opinion, said the coun- ciliriui, would be "unworkable'' becall!e, u 111 Initiative measure lt could not be amended or modified without another wte of the peoplo. O'Keef said he felt a bill aut!lored by sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) "would be a very BOOd method ol allorellne control with wblch I think should pass." · lie expres!ed the opinion thot the in- IUatlve measure could subject tile state to claim !Or damages becaUle· It'• 11JOtatorium provisions could be con· ajdered "inverse condemnation." Nixon to Arrive :f riday Morning: . ' :j>,esldent Nixon Is ldJeduled to arrive hi San Clemente late Friday morntne lot a tlfte.week stay, the White House "°"" llimed tl>day. ~ ;\Ir Force Ono Is to touch clow:n at El T'1l'o Marine Corpe Air StaUo!I at 11 .1.m. Frlilay. As In the put, the aat.a of the bue wUJ he cl<M«I to the public and the Pr•ldent and Mr1. Nixon will be ~led onlY by military pereonnel and tlielr flnille1. jle will lflen leaVI! Immediately via ~ !« LI C..O Paclllca In Salt °"""""'· his 11ra1 111111 to 111e w-.n Wltltt H...., -January. He Is n· -lo nmalll In San 0..-far his "~ vocati«I" t11rousJ1 the Danocnillc Natlonal Conmrtloo. voiced the ~ coocern over the access question, saying tne comml..uion would he "derelict In Its duty" II U didn't gain public access to the mile and me hall beach. He noted that the public has been excluded by armed guards -tr-0m: the beach since the private community of Capistrano Bay first waa built'$ year ago. The )l!operty lies between Coast Highway and tile ocean just aouth of Dohelly State Beach·Parf. '!be stretch of homes ak\Og Ille beach are froDled' by Beadt llb8d, -lo poHiite dli -SI oontrolled by a guaroed gate. Ted ftlitqln, attorney for t h • .. Daylight Market Robbers Netted $4,509 in Cash The two bandits who pulled a daring daflight job at a San Cleme~te Alpha Beta Market Monday escaped with $4,50& In cash alter binding five emP!oyes with tape and leaving them In a rear stoferoom, it was learned ~y. The two band.its, one a dapper dresser carrying a briefcase, waited in the 1tore Monday morning Willi there were no customers and u Manager Leon RUey walked past a publlc phone In the llore one robber pressed a revolver to the manager's back and tbeD the pair gathered up four other employ.S. Aller biDdlng lour of the -kers, the bandits ordered Riley to open the safe, where all the -weekend receipts were kept. The 10bherl avoided checks, police said, and took only cash. Lncal lnvesligaton said .l)ley had few ·1eads as ol yet, other lhiiil accurately rendered compoeite drawiop ol the two IU5pects -portraits made by Police Ar!1a1 Sandy MartJn from details sup- plied by the market emplo)'OI. Both 'boldup men were rtported to he . six·feet tall, welcbh>I I'll pounds. One wore a --a droopy--and the other -. lq, lhlaY. brown hair and 1111181 ...... He -• a brown suit. Dana Winery Hit By Connoisseur Of Those Things A burglar with an eye for wtne, 1 taste fer expenoive champqne and an ap- parenl yen for an adding machine lltlslted bis needs Tuesday nigh\ at a Dana Point Winery, Orange County Sherill's olllcen aald. , Deputies aald the Intruder al the premises o1 Brooblde Winery Inc., 14106 s. Cloast Highway, carried nff nvo caaea or wine, a we ol ~gne and M » ding machine that .,.uid he used today to ring up a loss Ill 1311'1 II the winery atill bad It. • "He hid excellent tlite,"' an in- vesllgator •Id, "He picked out two cuea of Ab1!Y Dertbout Blanc, two cuet of AbbJ Cllablls and I COM ol Allumptlon Abey, then topped 11 off with a cue ol Ille belt pllil< Ohanlpocne." -aald tho tfllef broke • -al the rnr ol tho wtnory to gain mtrf then ""1ed out bis barrels via the !nnt door. • . \ Capistrano Bay Oommunity Servtcea District, told the commission that the public can gain access to the beach through Doheny Slate Beach Park. Speaking for \be use ponnit request ftled by John Ta!lanl for coostructlon of -(See-BEA<Jl,:l'age-1}--- France Begins Nuclear Tests Ins. Pacffi; ., -' I ) , ' • DAl&.Y.ltt&.01" It.ff ....... PARIS (UPI}· -France has resumed nuclear etmospberfc t..ttog In the South Pacific in spite of vigorous. protests by several nations that the blasts may err danger thefr f!IViromnenW, the French news agency Agence France Press said today. Preuy Fiesta· C0nteJtfmts The agency aald In a report from TahiU that the flrll nuclear warhead· type device was detonated Sunday morn- ing in the vicinity of Mururoa Atoll, 800 miles southwest or Tahiti. nie French Defense Ministry declined comment on the report u did the nuclear experimentation center here Which coordinates atomic testing in the Pacific. Five !Ovely contenders fot-the--qu~n tille during San Clemente's Fiesta La Christianita. are from left to right Sabdi Schleger, Sue Kahal, Karen McLeroy, Lois Balli~t and Janet Jensen. The comotll· lion is sponsored by the San Clemente Jaycees during the weeklong celebrations. The fiesta will: begin July 14 at the 'Old 1'1aza Parle. The ministry Indicated Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on the tests until the series was com· pleted, presumably sometime later th.L! summer. There was no word about the safety of the protest yacht Greenpeace ID which last was reported heading Into the test area. FBI Tracking 2 Brothers Eyed in Big Bank Heist Another yacht manned by members of the French Nuclear T .. t Protest Com· (See NUCLEAR, Pa1e Zl CYCLE A.D HAULS CALLS 'Ibis tittle mol:Mcycle dellvered "tons'' ol payload. Check this three-line ad: e 1971 HONDA TRAIL 70. Only 117 miles. 119.1. XU·XlXX The Newport Beach Jhlln who placed the ad ·reported it ..id !he IJ101orcycle "on tl>e first call, but we had. tons ol calls thereaft~." U that's the kind ot hauling power you're looking for le! a DAILY P!UYI' ctasaifted ad deliver •I load of customer• for you. Dial IHU678, the di· rect line to results. By FREDERICK SCROEMEBL Of tlM 0.11'1' ,!_alt Sllff Federal Bureau of Investigation agents today continued an ·lnten!ive nationwide search for two of five men indicted this week In connection with 'the 13 million theft at the Laguna Niguel United California Bank In late Mareh. Agents, armeli with the federal grl!Dd jury indictments, are tracking two brothers, Ronald Lee Barber, 29, of Soulh Gate and Harry• James Barber, 31, of YollllgtoWli, Ohio. . 1 Now' In custody as suspects In the cas1! · are: -Oharles A. Mulligan, 31, also of Youngstown, aJTeSted Ju.ne 2 outside a Tustin bar by FBI agents and OrMge County sheriffs' deputies. He Is being hjold at Loe Angeles County jail In lieu of !250,000 ball. -Pbllip Broce Qrlstopher, 29, ol ·Senator Speaks Filibust.er Long-But to No Avail AUSTIN, Tu. (UPI) -Mike McKool, a WooH lltale senator known u "UU!e Hercule4," tallted for u hours and 13 minutes trying to convince the Teaas Senate to apend more money for mental beallb services, then aat dewn 11 his desk ~. ending the world'• "longest l!Ubualer." ·McKool. 13, three days of whiliers oo hi• face, took a long drink of milk from a aoda pop bottle and sald,"l lblnk the chances weren't .that Cood wbeil I started." It took the Senate Jw than five mlnute1 to Ignore McKool's (llibu..-.... They puaed • --taus state bu<lget blll thaL did not .include the 117 mllllon for menial health aerlllcts he wanted added. • McXool, wboae normal high'pltched voice was made even more oqueaky by -two uyi ol talklna, kepi up hb strength by munchlnc only m ........, lemons, "en<rll' tabl<tl" and COU(lh dropa. Ile began bis llllbuster belor. ...., Mondliy and aal doll!I at 5:33 1.m. Pm'-.Y. . ! C!eveland, Ohio, ~ June Z2 on 1 federal parole vlolallon and Indicted late Monday In connection with the robbery. He II being held at CU,ahoga County Jail In Cleveland on a 1750,000 bond. -Am.U Alfred DJ.sio, 36, of. Youngstown, arrested . early Tuesday morning in Boardman, Ohl'2 by the FBI. He al!O is hetnr held at u1yaho1a County Jail In lieu ol !750,000 hall. · In keeping ~th their• traditional stance, FBI agents refused to comment on any of tile ~eats heyot)d'the facl that the trio are 1111peCta Jn the burglary In which thieves blasted' liielr way Into the bank and lell'wllll 12 Diillloo Jn aeourltlel and more than II million In cash, jemels and otller effects. · . 11 was revealed t11arO>riat.phe<, wllen arrested on the parOle violation, had 127.000 In his pooaesalon, believed to be · ·part of. !430,0liO'atolen during a burglary of Ille Lordstown, Ohio, branch ol 1l1o Second Natlont.! Bank of Warren Moy +, U.S. AUoruef John •Wallen, speaking from his Loi Anpleo office Jalo yellet- day, noted "the lnveotlption Is not c!._i," hinting that more lndlclment.s may be forthcOmlng In a few days. He added that once bearlni!• before a U.S. Magbtrat In Cleveland are com- pletod, Dlnsio and Chrlltopher ~ill be transported to Calllornta. Thoy will Join Mulli&an In Los AnlJeles County Jail w1Ule awaiting trial. "The entire group will be 'tried LoG:ether/' Walters a.akl. Utile has been released obout the background of the three men arrested. Ohio o!flelal1 claimed MulllJan, an unemployed barber, bas an arr~t record dating back to 111112 when he pleaded gullty to charge. that he burgl•rlsed several mldwestern atrlp mining opera- tion of(Jces. Jn 11164, he was aent to Olio State Penltenllary after being .,,,.vlcted of receiving 13,000 In stolen goods lollowlnc thell at a Youngstown «ui store. salarie!I lo pay enough men to staff the substation on a 2+hour·a.<fay basis. He said that rach fireman hired for substation duty would cost the city $12,000 a year. That station. whJch has been the source of many appeals by residents and busi~s interests in the north art!e, won a top-priority label by the council earlier this year. Problems with finding a de q u a t e revenue for the new budget, however, nearly killed the proposal. ' Volunteers Only to Go To Vietnam WASlilNGTON (AP} -President NJx. en announced today plans for a ~ month withdrawal or 10,CKX> U.S. troops from South Vietnam and directed that oo1y draftees wbo volunteer for aervice In Vietnam he amt there in the future. Nixon's action would reduce the authorized troop level to 39,000 by Sfpl. J. The aver1p ·maothJy wlthdr•wal rat1 cf 5,000 for tho 1IUllUlltl' -'""'1cl be hall tho· level ol ~ May-I .. nto ol 10',000. , " P-Secretary I;tonald I. ZleClt!'1 who maile Nixon's ~ .., tbt Pmldenfateo oidend tliat ,;. *""""' will he aent to Soulb Vietnam .unless Ibey volunteer 1 ... aervlct Ibero.. However, Z1ecJer lllld, II they art already In Ille war aone or under orders to go there lhoy will stay er be st.~ He elllmatod there are aome 4,Gllll clrafteea Jn tho Army Jn South Vietnam. The preaa apokesman aald the Sept. I troop larcet level of 31,000 would represent a 93-percent reduction from the autho~ ceiling of 549,500 In eUect when Nixon took office In 1161. Asked U the 311,000 would repr6ent a "residual force," Ziegler said he regard- ed that term u "somewhat of. a misnomer." However, he saki the Un.ltM States "shall keep the minimum needed to achleve our objectives," and.U.t, ill any case, tome American force1 would remain uDtll war prilooen a n d thole miaalng In action have been nturned or accounted for. Ziegler did not reply dlrectly w h • a aaked whether all of tho 10,000 bebw. withdrawn from Vietnam between Jdly 1 and Sfpl. I will he aent home. But he pointed out thet a sreat deal depends on the lntantlona of the North Vietoame11 whether additional U.S. aea and air power will be required. He noted that an lnternatlona!IJ supervised ceue.fire th ro u g b o u I Indochina would end the need for U.S. air and naval power. '!be United stat.a has about 13,000 men assigned to wes In Thalland and there have been an addlt.k>oal 15,000 air men and naval peraonnel In areaa adjacent to Vietnam lince tho atart of the olleualve. But Ziegler 'rifted this 1ncnue 11 "mint.scuie" when compared wllb t b e number of Americans wlthdmm from Vietnam lince 1•. He llAld that only a 1mali IM1lber had been assigned lo other countries. ........ ....... Nlgbl and morninC low clouda are upecled along the Orange Coast on Thuraday, clurtnc to huy lllll8blne Jn the afternoons. Highs In the low 79'1 at the beaches, rlstnc to IO Inland. Lows SMS. INSmE_ TODJ\ Y Big E""°fUJ>lut Inca kAhld Newpon HaTbor High School apporently .,., in th• path of prognss. St• 1tory, Paa• JO. • • • I J DAILY PILDl SC AssesSing Discussed In· Privaw Wnlilndq, "'* 29, 1912 I .NOUN PAClflC OCEAN -+HAW~~ ~·MA•$11A1 rs. I BY TOM BARLEY oi ... DtllY l'lllH lltff I •, CHltST,...SI. -· .. ·'4 ~ :''--+j----.,.1 :·,: •. · ·-HUCLEAI TIST AllA .. ,.;;,,. -. ·: 1 · A closed-door conrttence was ordered 'l'Uotday by county supervisors alttr they dtadlocked over County Assessor Andrew J . !Unlhow'1 demand for prlvai. coull.!d ln1 an upcom"°' landmark trial in Superior Court. • :! J.· ... • . • • rv .. ..;': ~ ._ "flJ~ IS.. 4 IW •• '!ltJ I. .. ,.__ .. 1-·~~ .. o .. . . .•. . . .. . • • .. . .,0 -. - MUlUlOA'"() -TAHITI • . I TAHITI • ~ $0UTtt #f AClllC OCIA~ . ;1 I · 110 ISO 120 MAHGAREVA~• uo• ' 60 )llolhaw, Who mentioned the poalblllty that the "pel'IOnDfJ 5e$1ion" m 1 g b t violate the ltlte code governing meeting o/ pubUc •aencie., huddled with the board late Tuesday to try to resolve the lmpa.11e: ctt.ated when he asked for a lawyer who ml&ht coat the county fJO,llllO. Hln.shaw wanta lAI Angeles attorney John D. Cahill with him on the mound July II when the aiwity takfJ °" the c.Jilomla Angel> In their corporate unllonns of the Golden West Baseball Company In a court batue sparked by his assessment ot AnabeJm Stadlum. i,. UP'I N1W1m11 FRENCH BLASTS-France, lgnorjng worldwide protests. has started a series of nuclear tests in vicinity of Tahiti in South Pacific. Gov· emment sources said the first bomb was detonated June 25 and another is expected this: week. ' The city of Anahelnt and the Angels' argue that they were over assessed by nearly fl million In the lint two years of opmllon. Suboeq-i lrwlu!ts covering An1el Stodhn -atloaa up to !all year have been filed ln Superior Court but the caae to be ooolel1td July II ls regarded as the one that wlll teWe a controversy that hu raged elooe the Angels moved to the Oran1e County location. Fire Warden Cites Danger Of Discharging Flrewo1·ks II Is alleged by the club and the city that the Ang•!• .,,, unfairly ... ......i for loog period> whtn they do oot ust tbe stadlUlll and Wilen the f1ctllty ls actually uniler !be contr..I of other buslneSJ en- titles. State Forest Ranger and County Fire Warden Carl Af. Downs today urged all Orange Coast residents to use extreme care when discharging firework s while visiting mountain or open brush areas. Forty fires were caused by fireworks In unincorporated areas of Orange County last year and five persons suf· fered bums, according to Chief Downs. Downs reminds area residents that no fireworks, including the so.called Sare and Sane. can be used in any grass, grain. brush or forcsl-<'Overed lands. This month. 21 grass and brush fires have already blackened 32 acres. One or every two grass fires were started by children carelessly playing \\•ith matches. Citing the Health and Safety Code, Downs said parents are responsible for thejr children and can be held liable for costs of quenching fires started by their children . lilnlhaw reminded the board Tuesday th1l the trl1l "wW be a landmark acUon that II belnr eeaerly watched by every other county in Calilomla. Notlng the lack of rainfall this winter, From Pagel The code also states that possession, sale or the dis charge of dangerous fire works, which include firecrackers, cher· ry bombs and skyrockets, are illegal. "Il we lose thJs po&SeUory interest tssue then we can look forward to losing other lawsulb on the same point cf tu law to auch enterprises as Dana Point Harbor and Oranre County Airport," the volatile uaessor warned the supervisors. · lllmblw found Supervlaors Robert Bal· tin and Rooald caspen on his side In hi• demand for 1•expe.rt outalde help.'' Bui 51ij>et"fllcn WWiam Phllllpc and David Blkir reolli.d the ..,.,..,.., move with Buer pointing to hll "complete confidence In the abWty or the COlllJly -· olllce lo_dd _ _jn. terut .ill th1I action." c.unty COUnoel Adrian ,Kuyper, ap- porently neuJed by !Unlhaw'1 •uu•sllon that the flO,llllO needed be taken from the counly ~·· ~ nlhl!r 1llan the .. _., coffers, IJllltllred lo agree with rejecllon ol the lllnshaw propoaal. Public dlscuulon ended at that point. 'Ibo county bolnl and illlllh1w agreed to dl&CUll tile !Jsue late Tuesday in a prlY~ ae .. ton. 1 • ....., • Burke Hits Veto . Override Effort As 'No Solution' Effort.9 to ove?Tide Gov. Reagan's veto of 1 f15 million appropriation for Callfornle 1ebool1 were described by Assemblyman Robert H. Burke a.a 1 .. piecemeal aolullon" today. '!be Huntington Belch RepubUcan said the measure whlch ll<jU<aked by the llrJI legl.slatlve committee on Thursday would only "prevent a real 10lutlon thia yw." (See atory paae I.) Bw;.ke Joined other opponents of the 0Ye1Tlcle · In d~ltrlng that freeing the·. money would only ·perpetuate current school finance problema. Backers, however, argued in Sacramento Thursday that it i 1 desperately needed to bail school districts -particularly the Los Angeles City School District -out of a crisis. The veto by Reagan intended to cut f13 million from the. $263 million in new state funds for schools wblch tht legislature added to his budget. OlllN•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT ntl Or• .... C..I DAILY ,.ILOT, Wflll 1iltl~ le ftfnl>lnH lilt "'"'"''''"'· ,, flllflll"*' ,,., tilt Of'•119• Cot11 ,,,,,H•hlllt (111\IMnr., ,.,.. r•I• Mlllon1 1r1 llUOll1 ..... Mtnlilt'I' lhrwofl ,rWay, IOf' C1tt1 Mu•, Ntwptrf lttc"- Hunllnt1!on ll11cn/F9\lf!t1ln VIiie\' llOllM '""'· lntlnt/s.Hl1kdt •nd ·11111 i::llnwl'tlt/ SM J11t" C1p11!rt1W11. A tlngle r'9ton.I 1911rtllln Is e>Ybll1ntd Stlv,.fty1 •nd llll'ld•~ TM ,.,lrl<:lpal Jnillltl'll"I pl~t Ii ti 'JO Wttl 81'f SltMI, Costt MtH, Ct1110tn!., PUH. k1li1rt N, W11d ,,...,. •hd l"vellllltl' J 1cli: R. C11rl1y Vkt 'rullltflt Ind OflM!'tl MM!tter The"''' IC11~il Ellllof" n. • .,.,, A. M11rithi"e ~,..,Int Edit• Chtrle1 H. L1e1 -Jch1r4 p, Nall At.tlllent ~'"' lt111W1 s.. c 1 • ....._ OHke 301 H•rfft fl C•111i11e k11I, '2&71 . °""' .._ C-lt Mut: 1• Wftl ••r $1tffl Ht..,.,.. IPOI: Im ,...,..., --~ H11111"'""' lttcll1 1t*'J 1.-ctrl llvlnirf L..-. lttdl1 211 '""' A""- ftl.,.._ 1n41 '4> .. 111 Ct.ilfW Uwtrts .. 1 '41-S•Jt BEACH ••. a duplex, Martin urged the commission not to lmpooe • 10.foot pubUc acc..,, eaaement on the property. He said that even if the eutment were Imposed, no parking b available on Coast Highway and Beach Road II privs1'. "The public would not bave any userul access to it anyway," Martin said. Although the area ls private, there are several access easements, set aside l>etWffn the building lots, which bSve never be«I acquired by the public. "If we get a lfttle tougher," Butterfield told Martin, "we may find .a way to get to your beach without a c.n foot ...... ment." ... "EVtry time,. we approve one of. tht:!e projects," he added, "we are putting one mon buildloc block in the way of the public." , n.,-on Tallant'• request was ap- proved S.I, with Butterfield dlsaentinr. A similar nqllelt from Patricia Wout In the same area wu alJo approved S-1. Safe and Sane fireworks are permissi- ble in most areas of the county, but res· idents are urged to check local regula- tions. Legal fireworks may be purchased at local fireworks stands and can be e&!lily identified by the State Fire Marshal's Seal of Approval. Fireworks can only be sold and used between noon, June 28-July 6, within the State of California. Capistrano Unit To Meet Tonight On Gazebo Iss ue Bulterfleld aald boll! actloos would be appealed to the county Board of Superviaors. The eommisslon a Is o ordered the county staff to look into the problem of public access to Ille beach. County Widow Sues California Over Prisoners Members of the Capistrano Beach Association have scheduled a public meeting tonight to discuss the latest rounds in a mounting battle over destroct-to~ . of a ga~ebo on bfufftop land or1g1nally set aside as a public park . The meeting, set for 8 p.m. at the Board of Realty offices along Camino de r Estrella, is open to all interested residents. A woman whose husband or just ~ days was shot through the heart as she handed the contenls of her purse to a gunman and his female cOmpanion sued the State of Calilornia for more than $1 million Monday. Mrs. Karen Rae Mitchell, 24, ot Orange, names the state and Departmen t of Corrections Director Raymond Pro- cunier as defendants in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that blames the director for issuing 72-hour passes to t~o men held in the Don Lll(O RehabUitation Center. Both men we.re free on passes last Jan. 21 when teacher Gerald F. Mitchell , 23, was shot outside the couple's apartment. Mitchell had already complied with the gunman's demand that he hand over his wallet. Jerry Michael Wade, 25, of Phoenix, has been sentenced to life Imprisonment lo rthat slaying. His companion in the sl-alk holdup, s...,, Louise Sutclilfe 23, of Pomona , drew an Identical term for her role in the murder. Miss Sutcliffe and a female companion later escaped !rom the Frontera Prison for Women. They are still at large. Also involved In the Mitchell killing was William Neil Clrtwright, 31. of Phoenix. the getaway man In the Mitch- ell holdup. He ls servln& a state prison tenn of five yeari to life after be.Ing con- victed of aecond degree murder. Cartwrlpt admitted be was at the wheel of the car which carried the trio to Newport Beach aflfr the Mitchell slayin,. Tbe (Un they hurled Into oe<an "'*'er near the Stuf't Shlrt restaurant in Newport Btach wu later recovered by dlven. Mn. Mltchell wants a total of $1,005,llllO for what ahe claims Is the state's negligence In allowing dangerous priJoneNl to obtain temporary freedom from the Don Lui• facWty In Chino . A claim filed with the state last April ll wu denied lut May 16. ~e issue -which might result in a swt waged by the County Counsel's office -centers over a half.wrecked gazebo on a point next to Pl:llisades Drive where private interests claiming o~nership have tried to remove the structure to make room lor private development Hun~eds of residents petitioned county supervisors to help fight for public preservation of the land and stn1cture built in the 1920s by the Doheny in- terests which developed the Palisadfs. . Association President Ron Butter labeled the current actions as "just the start of our fight to open beaches ·and parks to the residents Of this area." Ex-empwyer, LeMay Agree Out of Court By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tllt 01Hy ,llet Sf1H .General Curtis F, Le~1ay, retired U.S. Air Force chief of staff who now lives in Newport Beach. agreed Tuesday in Los A.ngeles to an out of court settlement of lus $5.3 million lawsuit against his former empl oyer. LeMay, of 1046 Pescador Drive in the exclusive Westclilf area of th~ city charged in his 1969 suit that Network~ Elect~ic Corporation "'ronglv fired hlm as chairman of the board in 1968 because he ran as Alabnma Gov. George \V allace·s vice presidential candidate. He claims he took a Jeave of absence. from his $50,000 n year position in order to run on the American Ind ependent Par- ty ticket. The company subseque:ntJy filed a $$.I million countersuit stating LeMay failed to abide by hls contract, never had a leave of abstrn:e and uS<d hi.I position In the company as a p<>llUcal sprln&board . The countersult was dismissed when LeMay accepted the ·&ettlement for an undisclosed amount or cash. Reached at his home today. L<May declined to comment on the amount of the suit's seottlement but did say be was satisfied with It. • • . South Viet ltefornt Plan UniiS Hit Accord Reached ' -- Quang Tri On School Funds SAIGON (UPI) -Sout.h Vietnamese puralroopers, marines and armored col· umns drove Ove miles into Quang Tri Provine~ today under cover ol record U.S. air and naval bombardments. The original forte of 10.llllO swelled during the day with arrival or "many more" government units. Quang Ttl, which fell to the Com· murllsts on May 1, was tbe onJy province captured by Ule North Vietnamese in their spring offemive. South Vietnamese n·ere under orders from President Nguyen Van Thieu to recapture ~t. The dispatches said one f o r c e penetrated four miles and another five n1iles into Quang Tri along 1 IJ.rnlle front. The South Vietnamese advance was near the coast so that the big guna of 17 U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers and guided missile cruisers could hammer the Com- munist positions. Brilliant sunny weather set in and U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine planes aided the effort. The South Vietnam~e drive surged across the My Chanh River defense line 20 miles north of Hue in south Vietnam's northeast corner despite initial heavy Nort h Vietnamese resistance, including deadly artillery attacks by artillery zeroed in on pontoon bridges. By late afternoon "many more'' government units joined the push, but censorship hid !he nwnber of troops in- volved. They were reported moving against about 10,000 North Vietnamese troops, elements or four divisions which have been badly mauled by the record B52 strikes. SACRAMENTO (API -Gov. Ronald f\eagan and DemocraUc leaders of the Assembly have reached tentative agree· tnent on a achooJ flnance reform of near· ly $1 bUUon ,a year, parties to the bipartisan negotiations say. The compromise is to be presented to state senators ol both parties in an unusual close<kloor hackgrouod briefing late today. Neither Reagan nor Aa!lembly Speaker 8-0b Moretti was immediately available for comment, but details or the com· prombe agreement were pieced together rrom other participants in the more than two month.! of bipartisan negotiations on the tax bill. The compromise would involve a one- cent increase in th'e state sales tax and use a hl& ·chunk of the eetimaled l300 million surplus in the slate budget to meet Uie sh1te Supreme Court's ruling that California's system of school finances is unconstitutional, sources said. That would resu1t in the state taking over a bigger share of the cost o( local school> -perhaps about 1001J million of the "1 billion raised by property taxes for schools -plus more state money to bn· prove the education of children with special learning problems. Sehate President pro tern James MiUs, Democratic leader of the upper house. announced to senators Tuesday thal representatives o( the governor and the Democratic leader of the Assembly re- QUested a private hearing before the Senate. FromPflflel NUCLEAR ... The air \Vas over North Vietnam also intensified as U.S. warplanes flew through heavily overcast skies Tuesday to bomb the country's major airport and truck repair yard two miles from the nUttee was preparing to set sail Thurs- center of Hanoi for the second con-day afternoon for the test area from secutive day, the U.S. Command said to-Tauranga, New Zealand, 100 miles south day. of Wellington. . Waves of Air Force F4 Phantom jet In WcJJington, New Zealand Prime fighter-bombers also bit a gasoline and Minister John Marshall said tonight he oil storagt: area just eight miles above would 11eek confmnation that the tests the Demilitarized Zone separating the had begun but would not send a protest two Vietnams, spokesmen said. note to France. Their bombs blew up.si.J tanks capab!C "There 's no point in wasting more The_ air war oYer...North Vietnam also paper and_time in telegcaJT\l," b_e 1_ai&. cut a rue! pipeline and caused a "three The reparted blast came after a IO-day acre oil-fed fire with flames reaching to effort by New Zealand, Australia and 300 !eet and smoke biUowing up to 7 ,000 Peru to force a canceUation of the new feet,'' spokesmen said. series of test explosions. The storage .area presumably was The three countries, joined later by feeding gasoline and oil to tanks and others, initially Wued formal complaints trucks being used by Communist troops against the planned tests at the reopen-- north of Hue. ing of the Disarmament ConfereRce in Communist gunners, meanwhile fired Geneva this month. Tuesday at {ou/. of th~ ships ' lying J. series or _anti-nuclear detµo,~trations off shore. spo~...,lin .. d. aod hit tlfp ¢; , alld boi,n~ ,att~ aaainst Fr'1<fu 'l>(Op- lhem -the crutser Newport News and erty foJlowld fn Ad a: tr J la and -New the destroyer Dennis J. Buckley. The Ze.~· Australia's Prime Minister, damage to the ships wu described a.. William McMahon, sent a personal "minor" to their e:iterio.rs and message to President Georges Pompidou spokesmen said there Were no casucilties. to ask for an end to the tests. On Tuesday, Communist troops. The French government answered frustrated in their attempts to break charges that tests were harmful to the through government defense lines north envirorunents of Paclfic coast n8tions by of the old imperial capital of Hue, 400 saying the blasts were Iow·yie1d and suf· miles north of Saigon, switched their at-. ficiently removed from p o p u I a t i o n tacks to the west of the city. centers. They charged three outposts in three France is the only major Western battalion-size attacks of an estirr.ated 500 power. not to have signed tbe Nuclear n1en each after opening up with. 2,000 Non-ProlifetaUon Treaty. France and rounds of mortar, artillery and rocket China are the only nations carrying out fire on 13 government posiUoM. nuclear tWJ In ~ a~ospbere: GEM TALK TODAY by ' Z ::x::::tFl 1 1 C"' DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS Recovery of Jost or stolen die· monds has always been a problem because there wa·s no means of identifying such gems. Mills said the purpose of the meeting, a so-called "caucus of the whole ." would be to bear detaU11 or a school flnlflce and tax reform measure which Mills said "apparently hnd been worked out" between Reagan and Moretti. Mills said Moretti and a representative of the governor would appear together to present the plan, but gave no further detiils jn his Ooor aMOUllCement. Principal purposes of the compromise are lo reduce property ta1es and find a school support system that meets the court'1 objection that the reliance on local property taxes makes the quality of a chlld's education dependent on the wealth of his neighbors. Here are details which o t h e r participants In the negotiations, who asked not to be identified, said the com- promise contains: NEW TAXES -There is "substantial agreement" between Reagan and Moretti on which taxes to raise to pay for the new school support, with the new tax structure pulling heaviest reliance on sales taxes. ' That would be closer to the pro~d tat structure in Reagan 's $1.2 billion reform plan, wveiled last month, than to MoretU 's tax re!orm propoM} which in- cluded big stale Income tax hikes. PROPERTY TAX RELIEF -Moret· ti's proposals to increase the present homeowner's property tax exemption from f750 to $2,000 -a tax cut of about $140 per homeowner -is "substantiall)" trimmed" and most of the property ta& relief will be in the font) of lower scboot lax rates in the state's poorer districts. SCHOOL MONEY -"There are sllU things to be worked out on the schOor finance side, but the differences aren't insurmountable. They'll be presenting tllC:. Senate 90 percent of the ball game." URBAN FACTOR -The so-called ••urban factor" is part of the com- promise. That's a plan by Assemblyman · \Villie Brown (0-San Francisco), to give more money to schools with high minori· t}" populatioruJ and large numbers of children from welfare familles . EARLY CHIWHOOD -Tbe com· promise will contain $30 million to $$'.) million a year to start on the plan of · State Supt. of Public Instruction Wihon Riles and Assemblyman Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove), to restructure the first four years of public sohool and start children in sc~ at age 3 years t months. But the full $1 billion, five-year plan pro-posed by RUel Ls not financed in the compromise. STATEWIDE PROPERTY TAX - There is no statewide property tax in the compromllt:, although that has ~ quently been mentioned 1s a means of meeUng · the court's acbool finance decision. ,But the compromise does in· elude a modified verslon of Republican Assemblyman Dixon Amett's plan to · shill hall of the surplus funds of California's richer districts to poorer schools. 2nd Dies in Blast SAN DIEGO (AP) -A second man, Gernardo Amaya, 40, died Tuesday of burns suffered in an explosion that took the life of GW!tave Robinson , 42, Monday. If lost, there was no real way to prove ownership when found. H stolen , identification, particularly of the larger more valuable sto~es, was complicated by the fact tha~ the thieves usually cut the larger gems into smaller sizes, thus mak- ing identlflcatlon a Virtual impossl· bility. • I • When JOU etfe betu Omep 1be'D aq "you shi>uldn'I have;" but ahe won'I me111 IL A new service, called "ldentl- gem .1' has r'ecentlv been announced by the London firm of Diamond Grading Laboratories. The photo- graphic process pictures the basic characteristics of \he p o I I s h e d stone. recordlng forever the tiny markings which make each dJ8. mond different from any other. Just as .fingerprints cannol be changed, these tiny markings re- mrun Identifiable regardlesa of any recuttlng of the stone. • • When •hi .... lht oineo1 ".,,,.on hlrwateh 1hlil know hOw much 1xtri thought you put Into htr Chrfilmu. Sttt mtY·no\ ~aliz1 tbtl Omega w1tehl1 are utect en 1n ApoUo moon fUclh• and In 'tflt Qfymplc., Sht'ff io...1t Jutt fOf lb bttuty. laltr on, 1hl'll tovt ltl ondiltlnil depondablllt)'. And II tho M)'I. "YOO lhQul<to'\ftM," )uotyou tlyto t&U k- 0 ·OMEGA .; S.. C'--Al D••11z•1i Ttf0Jls1e 4flo44Jt ~I, Im, °"""' C:-1 ...,..,._ --... '· Ht .,.... •llllltt lthrttrtlilM,. llN!ttr It .......... '"""'"" ... ~ ...... , ........ -"'*" .... ~ "" .... .. """7'lelllt ""'*'· ..... c: ............ ,,, .... c ... --. Ctll~. Mllo"'9ftll 1W cwtflr' OM .....,, ... -ii 111.11 "*"'llt'I ,,.,..,, .............. ~. Bush Fire Stemmed LAFAYE't11: (AP) -Several ICDr< ot firemen from seven Contra Colla Cowity c:Ommunltleo ha•e 1uccea!uliy stemmed a t8'1ng hllillllo llrt before It could dtltroy many upensive bomta. "IJ I hadn't beto satisfied with the set-· llement I wouldn't have made II in the first place, 11 Le.Ma)' a.napped. "I don~ really care to -dlscusl the lawsuit at all." he added, Wiay's lawyen 111so would not com- ment oo the nature ol the setUement or the amount of monty Involved. Not only does lhls means that }'OUT diamond ft In actual facl dif- ferent thl)ll any olber In !be world ••• It also means that we can now change the phrase, "Diamonds are "'Forever Yours1•• J.C. JJumpkrieJ JewelerJ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINlll>fl TltOU •IAN!CAMUIC.UO-MASTU CNAO&I ll YEARS IN Miii LOC,i.ftON PHOIOI '4f.J<tt / l I I I I SC • OVER THE COUNTER flNANCE Technical Analyst Eyes 1000 on Dow NASD Llotlntt "" Tuotd1y, June 27, 1m A leading Wall Street technical analyst underscored the likelihood or the Dow Jones Industrial A v e r a g e penetrating the 1000 level this year in a report just issued. aj>proaches. First, he amlned the chart of popular stock market dicator itself and made Supporting a predicted ob- jective of 1()6() for the Dow J ones Industrial A v e r a g e , Jack Solomon, technical analyst for Thomson & McKin- non Auchincloss lnc., used two Hospital Firm Acquires Unit NASHVILLE, Tenn. JJospital Corporation of America, the country's largest corporate group Of investor· owned hospitals, has com- pleted Its acquisition of Rio Hondo Memorial Hospital in &uburban Los Angeles. HCA, which has 40 facilities Jn 12 states, exchanged 234.400 shares of its common stock for the facility, officials said. LEAVING TOWN? DEVCO Files DON'T lEAVI YOUR HOME UN .. ROTECTID RENT AN lllTllAIONIC BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEM Ne IMlell•li.tli (hi .... CAll l'Olt INl'OltMATION SE.A COAST ALARM SYSTEMS DIYblllt Of IN CMtl IMl"I, SllPlll'f 1U1 P'11centla-Cost1 MeN '424490 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 730, 620 Newport Center Drive Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards INCORPORATED Mtrrlbets New Vol'i., Mltlk1n, Pacific Coat l MIWffl 8toek ~ FOR INFORMATION, PHONE (714) 040-1400 Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ordtr For Yourself or a Friend Mey be u11d on tnvt1opts 11 tt+urn eddr.11 labels. Also very handy 11 identificetion labels for markin9 personal items such es books, tecords, photos, etc. labels stick on glass end may be used for m1rkin9 home canned foc:d items. All labels •r• printed with stylish Vogue type on fjne qu•lity whltr gu'!'rn•d paper .. • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST • Your Mo1aey's Worth H Rich, McGovern 'Prohahlr lsn 't Your Man' lly SYLVIA PORTER w-.,. Junt 28, itn DAIL V PILOT J f llailli ~fle-!-~:LEGAL;:;;;';;;;;;~NOTl:;;;;;CE;;;;-~-!.~~LEG,u.~-.~N~OTl-="'CE=--~l~~-LE~G-AL-=N70T~tCE~~- "'c'1't0u1 llKIMlll ,,CTITIOUI IUllMIJS ,,,.. Forecast Optimistic. NA.IM STA.TIMll•T U.MI STATIMINT NOTICI O' ... TINTIOM 'rlle fDl•lal W Mll 11 ....... IMlllMU Tll fcl lDwlllt peoon It dollll bull-TO ("IA.Tl SICUll'fY \fllllTElllT M : M : ' ,..._ •11141'7 U.C,CJ TEO'I ~UTO DETAIL SEllVICt. IVAN'S FOll!IGN CAil llE,.AlllS. NOTl(E II ~·tw •I-IO ..... I00'9 LM Ctfflh C-1, Fot.lnlahi 10tf Hen. l!ll\IG,. Cotila Mtu t»21 Ct H lton ot STEl'HEH R. SIMMOf.IS 01111 V•llt'f', Collforlll•. ,t,ndart 1¥0fl .,..., ..... -Haf'll« PINKY N. SIN.MONS. o.Dlott. wllO'll T .. ""'111• ,._ Loe CWtfft c.wt, ahHtl C•I• MtM D<.ltllltit tddrdl h U1 E .. t lJttl $1,_f, ,.Ollfl .. !ft vo1...,, caa..-1110. n 11 ·~-11 llOIM C91'1111Kted iw an Cot•• M .... counl'r o1 cwantt. si.tt of Ttil, MltlnoM II IMI• ~ IW .,. ltldl'rlduol CaUIWftla lllOI o MC11rlt'I' lllltf'ttt It lftlll~ AN<iflll IVAN ANOElllSON ObOVI 10° bf <•O•ltd 11¥ OtDIOf '"'" , T .. HVl"lllek 'nlll itof*'ntrlt flltd wllll JM CDll\W tr•t1ltf l'I Flrtl U11lltt ™1n & LMll Go • 'nl11 .,~ flied whti ffle CGUllt'I' Cltrli. "' °'"'" c~ Oii; J1111t If, 1m hcvi'tcl Pottlff. ............ ,MU lddr1u Cltrtl ef OfOflM c..w.ty, OJI J-S. lf1!, 1 kftrlr J Mac10o11 OHv1Y CCM,lflt'I' t 6* """"" llYCI Hollywood. CounlV of Latest projectioos ind~te ~-:-v·tr J, Mlieloll. O.JUty c..wv ci.rti.. • ' ~IHI A.nt•ln, Sl•t• ·:., C•lllOl'""I•. • . P.11211 l'IUll Thi prOPfrlV I" .,..,ld'I llle StcUtllV 'I bri@:btenJng econom}C sctne P~l.n.d Or nait C.01! Doil'I' ~lot 1'11blltl'ltcl O••Me COOi! Dell¥ Pl\ol, l11T.r1t1T will bl cr111,d II. In ""'rll,;.:: Vet, altbou,h McGovern has tax-exe~ interttl and ex· in Calllomla and the nalion J-1 14 21 ,.,• ,,,, 1471.,; J11111 21. :n, •nd J111Y i. 12. 1tn 1'1+n na1111•• 1no IQUlpn>tnt, •11111ttvr• ..... cl di d_, t' ' ' t1,11nltfll11•'11 ol Dttl!Dr cowrlM ''°""' ,., done much o h1I to ning down u ng ~uc !Oil.I -your f the bal f i..a and LEGAL NCY11CE now iocottd •t no E111 11111 5tre.•, ca.11 JI Senator George McGovern in the realm or lax reform and minimum lax v.·ould be or ance 0 tui:; year LEGAL NOTICE ,,....... cov"'' o1 o~•nu•· s1•1• o1 w••e to "A~me President of although "A h been almost $28 485 FINANCE throughout 1973, with in-ciutorn1•· •ftd ~1-~uo~"' •• .... un.v lie: as I ' -11'1CTITlOUI IUltfll•IS l'ICTITIOUI IUllNlll "HILLliREN ~UA•E LI ·. wltt the U.S. and if he could then embamWlngly ca ndld about Your taxes v.·ould go up crtued t0nsumer s pending NAMI sTATIMlfllt NAM• STATllMINT bfThf ''°'"'~ ':;11~".1~~~~;. ,,., w•t lnto effect program s he is his ex-tatk>ns that Congress $4 065 polnllng lhe way toward• ~ lolloWllW ..,_ I• *""' 11w1-~..,. fol1ciw1.,. ,.,_ 11 6o!nt bll1lt'lfu oi Jc~;,~;;·., io:ao A.M.. '' F1r11 u11nM ~ ~ Id ' ' OJ, OI, Tllrlll I. Loan Co MOO S11nMI lll~t! • .u~rting as of t"'-dale, would rtfuae to approve eas • Cift and inheritance Wts recoverv from the 1 9 7 o u N 1vE11: s 1 T v 1tAOIOTHE1t.t.,.v FtsHTEST I.A ts.. !lt 1rl1 Av• .• i-+onvllL'OOt!. ,,111 .... ni~ tQDll. •~ •~ ·t d 't Id ab} "I AHOCIATEI, Ml Cit¥ Ori~ SOI/II. eor-dtl Mu, Calif. t41 tne SKwllV P•rlv, Whal might It m ean to vou •. I oesn cons er rtason e on y our wealth would be B d receuioo" a security Paclflc Or•""· c111fonl11. K•"' ••i.n lllal'lll•. sn 1r11 Av1.. So •••, •• kn:;' ...., Mid•••"' 11* " ~ and sound the fact II that aL.!f'•' f ( rentwoo ' H11¥oi'" V«mund, M.I)., lf\t SOM COl'"ona ftl ,,,.., I ll blll lllY ,.. 1 1 111 You' .. a Wealthy Am-~--McGo•em' 'has re-"-"y nN\. ~111 }CU rom a ax on your National Dank senior research Point w1y, corono de1 M•r. c1nfDrnl•. T1111 1111111\us 11 ti.in• conc111e1ec1 1r.., '" t11e: o.t1ror tor 111a 111'" .,. .. ,. tw ' ' ~"'-' .., ,....,KW ...... estate or on you "to a lifetime T1111 bulll'llN I•"'"' coi..suct.d b'I' •n 1no1vk111•t •••: "'-· · b •-t'al Inga or --' pecl•lc tax c~nges analyst told Orance County 1no1v1d1111, i.:ENT 1uANOA D1i1t11: J11"' 20. "n. wit su~tan 1 earn y.mcu 3 v lM · cumulative lax on the reci-B n.k S H11.,or Vltl!Wnd Tiit• 1101.,..,,11, 1111e1 wl111 111e counrv s.a1r1111 Partv ~ c Inv es l men t s carefully The fact is, too, that the pient" ot your w ealth. a els reallors Tuesday. Tiii• 1t1!1mtnl flltcl w!lfl 11W COUftly Clerk ol Ol'1nn Count¥ on: Ju"" "· ,,,,, :~~1:i:.:~~ s~°':~1~,~ A;:i.n M:.: "shtttered" from taJt:es Qr Senator is ro-sponJOr or a Back in January, McGovern Speaking at the Santa Ana· ~·,~:.,~; .. T =:i.1111c!:;~ 12c!'~ ~r.,:.1".,1' J , Ml<ldoJ;, DtPVrv couni.., '111:sr u-HiT1••.'"',1"" a LOAN co. · I l' t I b 'll __ , Iha the be 00 Ora --Un B d f c~ l'iun ,.,... $41 ow .,., both ? revo u 1onary ax re orm I propoac:u t re a 1 O H nge-.wi oar o ,. ,.,.. Publ!thed Ori"" '°'"'' 0111.., PllOI, HlllfVwOOd, can•. tOO:H that bil 8CtUaJly been in-percent taX to the rttipJents pen ouse fteaJtors' bJ'takfast meeting in Pllbll9Md Ofan .. Co-11 DlllY Plklf, J11M n . 21, Ind J11ly l, 12, lt 72 1'33·72 P11blllhtt! Or•l'lll• Coait Di ilV l:~~ll Answer: A wallop in the tfOduced into. the Senate. His on gifts and inheritances Orange, Norman K. Jay from JllM 1,, 21. •·'"'°Jui., s. '''' 1u.-n LEGAL NOTICE 1:,.:_'M_,._._,._n ________ _ pock.et,book. fundamental views in this area above $500,000. You couldn't ., the bank's research depart· I PGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE · bet-• loual Brentwood Savin°• and Oi:t ln bet. to the cllche, "you must cu.en set y. receive more than $500,000. -ment in Los Angeles offered!---=~~==,.---1-----;;;;;;----;---1 ________ _,,.,.,,-- can't take it with you,'' • If ' McGovern were Last month he changed the 100 Loan, has opened its tenth an economic forecast for the fl'ICTITIOUI l!IUllN•IS PICTITIO~~~USIN•ll NOTICE 01' TRUITl!E'S SALi Presl.dent, he would fight for a I to th I 77 branch of 1565 Adams Avenue 18 ths H _,__ Uin NAMI ITATIEMl!NT ITATIMENT lM• Na. IU·JHj.»11 fl'lle No. , ..... McGovern in percen e curren per· the c· f "·-M next moo . e ~ ou • The ~HowlM "''°"' ••• ..i111 NA.Ml Pft'sons •r• Mint On Wl'lltWtt!1v. Jul¥ ,., 1t12 at 11·00 "minimum income tax" that cent rate. in ity 0 ~ta esa. ed major trends his audience bll1lntn 11: tN~tt ':'11~1111 o'c lOdt •·"'· on tn. PUbllc 110-01-11'1 January WU ...... fl! be "truly effective" and Follo I d ' ·-the In celebration of the opening hould tcb f • the CUSTOM i-.suLATION co .• 2•1• c l!lllENTWOOO ASSOCIATES. '0 a Iron! ol me e111r1n.r;e lo lh• bultt!lno '" ttie ".-r-YI ng, accor 1ng W f i}jly S WI . Or In l1nl1 Ano A!H., Coltt Mela '2A21 ROIP•W W1~ PllUl'ltla C1 IJIQrnl1 '1•10 CU~ ol A11tll•lm C•lltorroJa, •f 1711 Soulll suggesting • almost certainly would boost RIA, ls how this cumulative of the temporary ac • homebuilding industry during J•ck AllYn OV•r111. 2ii'U c sont• ""' Jtili H 1,.;11111 13202 'JQnniloro Pl•c• Brookt.urst s''"' Rr•tlY il'ltDl'W•ted, " I of lb! local_, aero•• from the post Aw .• Cott• Mtw · • ' 11 T' '"ltnd•r 111e o..i 01 ver1 on your taxes. "One poss e recipient tu might work UJlng t:\I .-tm..73 Fr•nk Uholf 2t1• c s1nt• AM A¥•. u. Allftlet. ca111 .... 111. '°°" co•por• on. •1 '111 8 " "you can't d 1 II f office near the intersect ion o( · Ctt.i• fMw ' ' st'"'" G. B1rr1, ru E11t111n1ed Tru11 made 11., Don.Id Tllom•• 11 """ formula" woul app Y to a o the TT percent rate over Harbo•, Boulevard and Adams, He noted that latest Depart· n ii tNsJl!eU 11 Ml"' cnuc:tld b., , W•Y, PKllk fl•llWdff, c.111. t02n Nol• J. 11.111, h111111nc1 •ncl w11e. ,•Iii;: leave ft be-yOU mjth total '•come 1'n ex $500 QOO and -clud1'ng the fi••st • . Po""'~r·""lo Ger11d R W1llC'.lf'I, tHU C111 Aven111, recorded Marc.h ll, ltllt 1n Book "· .... • • . ..... .. ment of Commerce estimates '"'" jAc'IC A OVEIULL Wood1o11c1 H1111. C•Utornt• t1»-1 ''" 512 01 Dftl<l•I Records of °''""1 hind you, cesa of-$50,000 .:..... and would $60,000 from consideration. open house will be held during indicate lhe national economic Thi• 111,,,,,,.nf flllcl wllll 1111 c .... nt¥ v1.1rv• ic11, .. 11 1ni1 vrro" K10111n, , c-iv. c.i11Drfli1. gl.,•n 10 wc1.1re •n 1 ... either." 1n subject all your income, y le II 000 000 to the month of July, with free . • Clerk" Or•l'I .. COlnll\' Oii= JunLJ•.1m. 11art111rlh lo, olCIO ll-W Wt¥. Pi.cenll1, ddllednlil 111 t1vor of The CotWlll Com· · OU ave • t your f d f h t recovery COntinUeS to gam 9v· l!lt!Hrly J. MMkloll, D..tuf;¥CPUnt'I' Collfor11la '2670 pan,, ii ccr111:1ra!I011, now QWl'\R •net held late ·May, regatdlese of it! .900rces, to aon. Under present law, your gi l! an re res men s. momentum Jay attributed Cl•rti.. Th11 tN11n111 l! tieJng conc1uc11'11 b'>' A by Ttie L•wr1nc1 se~1111' B1n1r., bY re•!IGn though, ht "payment o( taxes at a rate of estete uld $325 700 Customer services offered at · ,.1..., Gontr•l P1r1nor'11lp. o1 t11e brH<ll 01 ur111n obn ... 11on• modllf .• , thls he wo pay a ' the new office include free portions of this acceleration to 'ut1111Md 0r.,... co.tt oa11r l"llot, s11w11 G. l!l•rr• sec11rtc1 1110rtby, notice o1 w111c1t w•, ~ PO•Tr• 75 per cent Of t current 'wesittbateWlta 4 x 0300 , leneavtinagfl«yourestsoat"• i·ncr-"--' expend'itures for J11111 21, ,,, • ...., J1.1lt .i:. 1i. 19n. 1&11.72 T1111 11••-nt 111td 1111111 111e c ounty rec:Drdell M••cll ,,, 1tn0 " ,'"' ,,',"",, I ha tr J he ks ( '""'~ Cl•r-of Oro111e CountY on June J, 1tn, P1111 39• Qr sa!d Ofllcl1I ICOt' 1, w ,, startling concept . nomina ratea at the rate t l ave ers c c • ree money residential construction com· LEGAL NOTICE bv 8,.,,rlY J. Mlddo•. O.!>lllY coun1., 111 Pllbllc 111et1on 10 lhe n11n"'' blde11r icr And that -ent modlf1'catlon (•.ob) w-··d have to pay if tax u·•er McGovern's ~ orders and free note col· ,• . Cltrlr.. catfl, ~Y•bl• In lawful ,,,_., ol the • ..-. ,. \l\ll • '"f r·" plemented by sharp rises lll ..-.1n1• u1111ed stotes at 1t1e tlmt of 1a1e, w1111ou1 of one.of hlJ key tax prorvw•ls thele were no l00pboles ." Posa.I, ,the recipient tax would lecCU 0 on 0 s- 5 1 r u ct 1• 0 n on the c 0 n 5 um er 5 p e 0 ding • FICTITtcus IUllNlll 1'11b11thed or111111 coe11 0011"1 Pno1. w1rr•11h ,, to ut11, oonni.lon DI' ';;'~ ,........ FQ I l•o. w Ing , says the come to $530,700, leaving your " -"' .1 I f ho hold NAM• ITATEMaNT Jut'lf 1, 1•, 11. 21. 1t12 100-n cumbr•nces, "'' 111t1rn1 con¥eved to "1 under1t-A~ the importance or f . t f ·1·t I IA"' pa. ~1cu ar y or use ,., 1o11-~1A~ ~r~· ••• do!"' """" Mkl b¥ sold Tr11.r« uncM• •1" mJQ Research I n s l i t u t e o son with $469,300 net after tax. permanen act 1 Y. oca cu 1 _. d bl oods h " ... ~ ,,. .... -~ LEGAL NOTICE Ol!'d of t r1111. 111 OOc1 kl 111e 1o11-1no th three 'ba · · 1 (I) ,_ ho h 1 -" bl k ~ f th 1 re at ... ,.. ura e g S\lC as tNtlntH ·~: dnc:•lbtd PraoettY: Lot 1, 111 Tract tio. e sic po1n s. America, • w t s (1nis assumes no increue in one oc V.'l;l>• o e presen furniture and appliances. Auo10 01scouNTE1tS,"" C.r11t1te 11_1 1311, ln , .... CllY ..,, cost• M•u. ct):Jntv o1 McGovern is backtracking on minimum tu might work out present estate tax rates up to C?ffice, will begin in August A~•·· c,.,, MIU mu " o siar. "" c1111 .... 111• •• .riow11 on • h pla a.I , . "Steady lncrea••s m· con· Sl1l111r IC[ellalld, U9CI C•metle AIH.. .-1CTITIOU S IUllNl!SS ''""' '" 1 book '~1 pape lS many of his more radical for you"':"' e married exeQJtive $500 000) wit a nneu operung lll "" c .. 1. Me511 NAMll sTATEMINT maP recc• n • ' economic positions. (2) Even earning $75,000 l!I ye a T, o; you. and your spouse give December of this year, and sumer spending thus far this c!'f:~.;•Y Sold•"• "'41 G,...nbrl•r, ,;ht tonow1"' Pf'lllf'I 11 dolnt bll11ness ~!':i~~~:Dr~!:'' rK"Of'd• °' Or111111 tf be were standing pat, it if receiving $13,"° in tax-ex:~ your son gifts over the years will feat11tt drive-up teller year!" beth exp1alned1 • b"1~",1·, ~11 ~~ 11 bflno COllductM br • · COi.DWELL IAN1KEA.NEs;!.,":· :' 11;:~"'.s,.~::!.i c~1orn':~~111~ inconceivable that the next empt Interest dllring the year totaling $1.000,000, and at his service and free safe deposit phasize e .genera. pu ics •Mr STEINAll ICJ!TLAND ~:r;:1.';,':;", Dr.,., -" '11Ur111:111 of ,,.y1n11 ottn&1r:on~uc1~11'911'"~., Congress would pass some of and with exemptions, various grandfather's death, he in-boxes in addition to regular renewed confidence in our na· Thi• 111ttrMnt 1r11e1 w1tt. '"' cou11tv 1.anomonr. E1trow SffVlc••· ti!(. <• sold o-nc1 Qt T'""1~ 1~ T::;:," .;. bl., ~rams. (3) T"-South d-'ucUons a~redits on your her1'ts another 'l,000,000. The customer servi""'"· tiooal economic recovery This Cl.rk ot °''"'" COllnlY °": J u"' "· 1971. Cit11orni. ,eorPOt•lloni, 137.tS VlctorY ™''" 1~ 1n~·:, TM 1.rm1 o1 '11110 r·-o I~ eu • .. .,.. d d . . · 8¥ B•Yffl'f" J. Maddolt. DIPlllY COlllllV l ou...,•rd, Vin N11n. C11ll, •1.6Crl . -;::ci"·01 Tru~t, lni.rnt "'ereon •nll Dakota Senator }las shown no tax return tota · g $11,000. recipient t a x on the total of Heading the staff of the new tren ' stea Y gains Jn con-c11n. Thi• bu•lroes1 11 cont!11e•et! b'>' 1 car· ,1, m 19 in 11npa111 p•lroelP•I 01 111e noi. stomach for confining to pro-On your $64.000 taxable in· $2,000 ,000 would be $1,300,700 branch is Roger Phelps. Doors s~mer spenhrodinhg, sh1ou9713d con-P11bUt11fd oro11te coast O•tty ..-J~:,'i~ ..,..111°"L1no:1mirt. Escrow 5,.,i,~. 1.nc. :~Trdn.!':~1~,!~,,~..,:r~:';, ~~r1 1;; mole programs that he ls ,Come, your regular tax would -leaving your son with an are open lrom 9 a.m . until 4 l1nue I ug Ju111 21• 21• •"" J111v 5• 12• 1972 1602 12 Ch••'" A. Hu1on. Pr•t1c1en1 111 .. ill !\OH anc1 b., 11w prov1dtd. be. -~ Id f · h••• be ""~ B t nd th alter-t a x total of "99,300. M nd th h Th particularly as employment Thi• 11"l'm0nt wa• •Hl'll wun lh~ C(llln-Oalfll Ju111 72. 1t12. 1ng W811ft:\.I <;ou rig _..,. . ..~ .. ,uu. u u er e .,.. p .m . o ay roug urs· LEGAL NOTICE "' c111rt or Or1nt• countv on June "· Rennv lrn:o•POtllttd, Tr111te• 001iness and the s tock market possible minimum tax formula (This too is based on present day and rrom 10 a.m . until 6 expands and our unemploy· ''12· B'>' Alc.h•rd F Ry1n le d I, " CMAllLES R. NIL.TON ' Into a .disastrous slump. . o.t McGovern's-includfng the estate tax rates). p .m . on Friday. ment ra ec 1nes. STA TIME NT Oii' wlTMOllAWAL l'llOM 1J14> v1c1...., 11>111. wic•11•·~2212, l'ICTITIOUI aUSINllS NAME Tilellfl.M° (llJ) 'ttNtlJ P111!U1htO Oran;e C011t 011 V 1 o · -l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiimmmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiO•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil"I PAltTNEltlHIP Ol"EllATINO UNOlll Viti N11t•• '"11 t140l ., ,., ' Tiii followlnt ptr.on ~11 wlllldra""'" 01 fl' lMll Jun• 28 11111 July 5. 11, lf72 16"86·12 (Earn $61.80 on each S!,000) You can earn this high interest on $51000 minimum tWo year certificates. The first year your $5,000 certificate will eam $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to the account You can. earn $59.17 on $1,000 minimum one year certificates, and as much as $5126 on a regular passbook savings account of.$~000. More interest than banlaa ... more certain than stoelaa ;plus free services ... safe deposit boxes,notary ·service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail· able when yauhavetherequiredminimnm balance in your account at THE BIG .M. • MUTUAL Plus personal seiv.ice ... experienced and competent savings to;unselors in each office to assist you in planning your &avings program. You will find a warm, friendly attitude on the part of everyone at Mutual Savings. • . ... ............. Corona del Mu: "'"Eat Cout Bl&hway/ '1.s·.soro Olher o.llkca Iii Covilll, Weit Artadio, Pwdcna, Clmd1lo 111d ClllllP hrk·Cbfllw!lllll ' ' • MMfll part111r lron'I t11a Nrtna!''111P flublltMcl Or11191 Coait Dilly Piiot, OP«•llM undifr tht flctlltOlll bllllnot11 J11nt :n and Jlllr s 12. lt 1m 1 .. 1.72 llOITM of AllT CRAFT DECOllATOllS 11 ' ' LEGAL NOTICE 1m2 Mt. 1!11l~lrc1t, F011nl1ln Voll..,-, LEGAL ·NOTICE C1lllor11!a t21 eAR 4GOI Tht flC1tllout SllltU 1111'111 11...,,,tnl NOTICE OF SAL£ 01' ltlAL PROP'lll· for lht ~ttlltnhlp w•t flied on Novlmblr NOTICI 01' TllUSTW:l'I SALE TY AT l'lllVAT.-IALl 24, 1971 In· IN Count¥ ot 0rt1'9t. N•. fl'C ltt A·7'7'1 Futl N1mt allll Adcl,.1, of tllt P1rwn On JlllY S. lf7'.I, 11 lO o'Clock A.M., •t SUPElllOll COURT OF THE W!1Mr1wl1111: tho rn1l11 rnlrll'ltf of Lanclma rk E1c., ?ll? Rot;LO EDWARO 81l0WN, llln Ott! Nori" Moln St.. CJIV of Slnl• All•. STATE 01' CAlll'"OllNIA FOil F.iithlon Way, GarWll Grov1. C•llfQ(llla, C1lltor11l•, LAN OMA RIC ES C R 0 W THE COUNTY 01'" OllANGE ROLLO EOWARO BR<rtil! SERVICES, OS Trv1ltt und..-1!11 de_l'd of 111 -MJ!llllr ~1 !~ Eitatt ol ~LBERl ~ fl'l44t7 II mMle bV-WtMC111 Cdl'o, aiiCI ffi:~llM OL IVER ltE OMON, 1f111 lil>O'fl'n Ii PllbllMH O•illlll Coall Dilly Piiot M1rch 12. 1'?1, In Book t5',, Piil' ~2'. Cf ALS l::RT 0. REflMON, Dec:~•t~. Jvna,. •ncl July s 12 lt ltn 1a1-r.i Ofllcl1I R1teort!1 01 Or1111Qe Countv. NoUcir 11 h1r1bY given Tn11 Ille \I~ • ' ' COlllDrlllo, 91¥111 lo MCllft I A 111· oer1l9Mt1 wtll .,.11 al orlv•I• 1ale, on Qr LEGAL NOTICE debtldtles1 ln la¥Gt ot Gl1dv1 I. A•1rt!. 1 all•r ltlt >rel t!•v of July, n72. al "" ol· wtoow "°" ~ and htld by GlaclVI I. Ile• of Roberl W. 8rl1111s. SSO E•st Cn10· J-------------·JAv1rd, a widow b¥ rt11on ot ttlt br••ctl man Avenut, Sulle A, Or'""· Ca!lfornl1 NOT1ca o,-GOVEltNINO of certain obll1allo111 Ml'Cllrot! lherettv, 926", Counh al O••'IUe. 10 11\f lll""st IOAllD MIMIEll •LaCTION notlc1 of whlcll w•1 r11Cort!M Febr11arv 1nd b11t bkkltr. ond 111bl1CI lo CD.,. NOTICE IS HEllEl!IY GIVEN tt11t en a, 19n, ln 9ook 10017, PtM la, of 1ald llrmallon b¥ salt! S<J-lor CQllrl. 111 IM Tuud1y, AuMt I, ltn, an electltn win Official Recorck, LANDMARK ESCROW rllllll. title and Int erest of sold D1e1011d bt held 111 ft'IO NllWP«l-Mnll Ullillocl Sl!llVICES Wiii 1111 al publlc 011ellon 10 at tt.1 time DI ~illh Incl 111 th• ri9hl, lftlt Sdlool Dlllrlc!, COlll'lty ol O••ll(le• Sl•I• ttM hlgl\011 bl~r lor ca'11, ,,.,.•bl• In ond lnf1re11 1h1t !ht e1t1te of .. 10 of C1llr01""nla, IOI'" "" pUtPOM of •llcllnt lrWfvl ~ Of tlll Ut1l11'11 st1l•1 11 1'111 decl1"8 ht1 acoutred bY Opf'l'illlon ot l11w 1--.btr1 to 1111 11'11! ¥tcanda 1" tlma ot 1011, wlll\olll warra"fV .. to 1111•, or o!Mrwt~. other than or In ad<lllfon to Tnll1H ArlOI No. S Ind Mo. 6 on tho ~Ion or tnc:11mbr•llUI. JM lnl••"f that ~!t! t!ecnsta. 11 llWI 1lma of dleth, 90'fffllh'lt board of Niii Ktloal •lllrlcf, ~to and now held br ••Id Trvll" In incl ta •ti the n rtaln re•I pr°"""l' sold mambfr1 IQ ..,..., d1.1•ln1 fhO ,.. lllldll' 1111! o.ad of Trull. In ind !o the sllueted In !he County of Or1nge, S!a!e ol l'lllltlder of !ht''""' 111.wlllcb tllt VKt~ follow ing cle91;rlbf<I or0111rtv, 1o-wll : Calllornl1. oart1<11l•rlv t!n crlbld IJ ~ ,,...,. oc:currad. Loi 5'. TraC1 .tlS4 •s Pf• l'llilP r1te0ft!· foll°""' 10-wtt: D•led thl1 lwant'l'·teeoncl t!O'>' et MOY, tel In Book :IW6, PON i2 and ll ol All 11ncllWllJed OM iwll lnlt~I 111 Im· 1tn. M101. 111 !hf of'flt• ol 1111. CQll111Y prO'lld '''' prOPtrfV •ltu11M 11 1'111, It. D. Htllmat1, ~ Rec:Oft!Or ot 111cl Or1ne1 Co11111Y. 1'135 1nt! 1'1 J7 Locust Slr1~1 i11 !lie Cl!v 0rtl'l9t C011nry Mor• cornmonlt kroown 01 1451 Dl•11-of W••tmlns!fr. Counl¥ al Or11191, St111 S11p1rl111•"'°"11 of Sc:llool1 vlll1, Coll• ~w. Calllocnlo of Calllor11ta, !Mtcrlbed ~,; Pi.tblllhacl Or•-Goeat 0.11'( Piiot Jll"' IW '"' 11\i•llOS! ol OIYlnt obU01lion1 Tiit Soulll 70 IHI of Ille North 151 ff.91 21 olld Jul\' s, 12. lfr.t 1Ml1 ·7' secured toy 11lcl Deed lnc:l11clfllf Ifft, ol Lot 70 ot !hf' TQwn ot W'srmlnittt •• cllaro,. Ind e~POlllel of ffle TrvllH •nd Pll' mlp tlCOl'"t!M lll Sook 1, Pitt: S16 LEGAL NOTICE of 1111. •ncl JIJ ol MIKtllllnfOUI Miiot In ltit Oall'd: J unt 6, 1972. Otflc1 Qf IN C111.1n1¥ Rf(O<'Cllr of Lot Llnd"'ork £Kr-AllQ!le•. NOTICE 01' l"UlLIC HIA•ING 5i r¥1ces, Inc., Tr11!IH EXCEPTING THEREfltOM th• Wtd NOTICE IS HEJtEl!IV G1VEN l'hat I By Pillrlcla Rtnk•I UO 1 .. t lhtt.ot. P11bllc Ht1rlrt1 wlll ~ hllll btloro 1111 Cl· a t214' ALM> thll porllon ot LO(ult Sir~ IY _CauncJI cf the City d lrvl11t, on T-Pllbllthfd Or.no• Coltr Otily Pilot. FYll'll E1~terlY of and acll•c•nl lo IM c1 ..... J1,1ty 11, Im It 1:» P·"'·· Ill lllt ClfV J-.,, 21, 1', Im 152 .. 72 Soult. 70 IHI of ,~. Nortll lSO lee! of Caunc:JI Cll1m~r1, {l'Ol C1mP11s 0r1 .... , Loi ?O of tt.1 Tow11 01 We11mln11er, IJ Irvine, Catrforn!a. lo con1!1Nr tht pr1ion· LEGAL NOTICE pa r ""'P recorded 111 Book 2, 01gn Sl6 Int of lh• or•• wllllln AMtllllon Na. 1 and 517 of MIK•tf•MOUI RKOl"t!I In '"' (Fra1l9f' An,,...•11onJ to !I'll Cl1¥ of lrvl,.., Otllu ot Ille CQllnfV RICOl't!ff of Los frorn Or111119 Counh %onl11t Clos1Jflcollon e tlHJ . A1111111 Counf'f 1s ab#lncloMd bv tr.t A·l IG-•I AtrlculTU!'lll encl M-1 lLl<lf'll ~OTIC'I! TO CltlDlTORS Bolrcl of SUp1r¥ll(lr1 or Ille Counl'I' of Mllllll'ldurlnll lo City of lrvlne %onlnt SUPER IOll COUllT 01'"• TM~ O••nP •llcl recorded M11v 13, 195J 111 Ct111lttcal1on A·l (01n1r•t Aorlcullur11l ITATE 01" CALIFOltNV. FOil Book :J06d, P•ll' Alj) ol Ofllclal A.KDr1's. llld M-1 (L1"1f M1nu!Kturl11t1l OlstrfC'h, THE COUNTY .OF Oll.\NOI Term1 ol stll" c!Hl'I 111 lewt11I monl'>' of lr.1111""'" •• Pr11onlnt CON Ht. 12--1. f+I. A·1171S , 1111 Unltl'd Sl1ln on conllrm1llOl'I of 111lt, /I/ COt'Of J, FIYM Es!alf of RUTH E. l!IEAltO, OKeawd. or part t15h •nd !Ni.nee t vlderlt9d by Dtouly Cit¥ Clorti. of 1111 NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN° fQ tht !\Gt• MC11rtd bV Morl9ilV• or Tr111I Dffd Cltv pf lrvlM crHUor1 of ti'lo •llovo n1me11 oecl'dlnt on lhl Pl'OIMrly 50 told. Tin parclfll Cl fl\lbRth~ Or1nite COllf Diii¥ "lloll, 11111 au WMlll ht\'l!IO ct1lm1 atalnst tht omou11I blcl to bf ~stll'll with bid. .111119 a. 1m 16M-72 ukl doc~ent are rlfllli•lld 10 flll 1111r11, 1!11cl1 or-otl1r1 IO be In wrllll'lfl ind *In J----:c=::-:-:-'7'.:==:----1 wllll tht l'IOCftMrv ¥OllCP1fn, 111 ffle ottlct ba rKtlvl'd ff lhl 1lorewlt! olflct 11 ony LEGAL NOTICE ol 111• clerk ol lllt •bo¥1 enlllllcl covrl. or tlmt •lier Th• flr1t p11bllc1tlon htreol l lld 1---==:-:-===----1'° prfftflt tMm, wUh tht llKOSlarv btfOl'"e 11•1• pf Mlf. Tiit rlllht 11 rHll'\'Ot! NOTICI TO CRIDITOltl \"llUd'lll'.. to 1111 ullllll"lltlnld ., 550 to rtlKI •l'rY Of on blc:lt. ..... A m11 Nowiiort Centfl' Drlw, S1.11hi ... New,orl o.tl'd JUlll 16, 1'72 IU,llltOll COU•T 0, THI lllld!, Colltorllla "'60, Att": lrvc:t E. ICalhlHn C. Redmo11 OP < L • Htrrlneton. EK., wtolct. I• tht' 1111c1 pf Admlnlslr1lrl• ITATI A I Oltfll!A l'OR bv1lnt1JS of ttM undtrlltlltd tn 1111 mllltrl DI 1111 Estalt of sold 0Kt1std TMI COUNTY Cl' OllANOIE "'1alnln1 to TIM ffl•to ol .111111 cltcadenl. llOl!IEllT W. 81tl001 E1lal• pf FllANCIS(O INIG\,IEZ OIM within lour monll'l1 allfr 1111 flrtl P11blic.1· SHE. C~i:mllll AYer.ve, Suitt A k-u fl'JtANCllCO 1NIOU2Z H LUIS. tlon of 1ttl1 1111llc1. Or•nH, C1Uforllla tJU4 DK11sl'd. O•tM Jllllt n, ,,,., T1I. W-flft Notlco II Pler1bV glvtn to crlclllwt ol CAROLYN llUTM STAltll •i~-for All"'lt11tlr1tr1• Tiii abo¥1 t1a"'l'd dKl'dt"I 11111 111 E IJI 1 of Iha E o1 " ,.,,..., ~ n.vrnt clalmi •tllnst tht ••Id ••c~ 11111 PllbllWd o rang• Coo•! DoHy Piiot, dKNfnt ire ,..c111lrtcl to fill ll'll!n. With ~ --~..:cr-m Jvne :n, 2:J, 21. lf12 1""'11 IM nKIUll'Y ~ .. Ill 1111 offlct1 of C~llll~ LEGAL NOTICE tho CIOrll: of tho Ibo¥• 111t1ntd CO!Jrl, or 1St N ........ C...., Df"., 111110 tot to . proMfll ttlll'll wllll The MUINl'Y flltlWNl't ...., C1llfW'lll• nut \'OUcblrl lo tllt 1.1ndot9!9lllcl of IN otffct AH111• INa I N~ •M. et McCUTCNEN, 1!11.ACK, VERLIGalt A,..;,..,. fW iaoetm'lx ' NOTICI 01',CONllllVATOll'S PltlVATI •111111 SHEA. :M.lS Wllthlro •IYd., 30!11 PubUlhacl Or•llH COllsl D•!lr PllOI, IA&.E 01' ltlfA&. ,.Jt0,£1lTY Flo«. Loi Anllln. Corttor"'' 90010 wlllct. J11111 211 Ind JUI'( s, 12, If, 1972 lSU.72 .... A·79UI 11 JM pl1co 01 1111•111111 or JM 11ncr1n111!1d IR ttM S¥pwfor court If 111t 11111 • Ill Ill '"'"'" 111rt1lnl!IO .. '!fie .. ,.,, ot LEGAL NOTICE C•lllonliR, ..,. ""' COlll!fV " 0••111• 1ald llHHtnf, wtthlll loul' nlOflll'll .,.... IR"" Maltlt ,, !NI Ca11wnlforllll, .. ltio flrit pUbUutlen of lttlt llOllU. JANaT ROIERTA HIM MI N Q. 01'-'1 J11n• !, 1'72 Oflfl'ICI: 0111 THI SNll•IFI' CllllffVOIH IOUARDO P'EL.AEZ •Ito k-01 COUNTY (I,-O•ANOf: NOTICE IS HEit EBY GIVEN thltl EDUARDO "ALAEZ AVENDANO NOTIC• Of' •A&.I UfllDall DIECllSI PHii.if' M. HEMMIHG, •• conwrv•lor II Elfe\llof' of ttM Wiii 01' l'~ICLOSUllli ET OOEAT e of kl dtctdtnl OON KENNEY fl Piil 11ff UI tt.e tii.te of JAN R A H M· MCClllclwfl~· 81adl, VoriotW ... ... ltOSl!GLEN CONs'T11:uCT\ON ~ .. ttei MING. con11rvllM, Wiil NII •l Jfl¥tle MU Wlltll"'-llW., ltltl l'llw o.flfxl.nt No. 41n5 sole, ta Ille lll1hllt lfWI btlt blcldtr, 11ncllf LM ,l,llftMt, C•llf9nillo MlO I. IM vndlltftuod, JAMii A. MUSICIC, !ht llmll Incl conclltlont .,...llMttlt "'- """"'" .... ••MWl'lr hrlff.Ctronw, '°"""" " Ori11191, Slllt ;=~"::~'.'! ~~~:')w;' :: ::: ,.~ Of Collfor!'ll1, do Nrttw .c1rt11Y ttl•t &Y' flour ot 10 o'clock A.M., Dr 11ler1ott1r, f'llbtltllod OrtnH Cout !Miii, l'ltot, \'lrtve pf Jlld9Melll '""' Tri.I 11¥ COlll'I, wl.,.ln fll• tlmt atlowtd bV 11w, al !ht of. J\lllt '· 14, 21, •• 1m ,...,.,, o.c,.. of ,.,,tc:IOllll'I olld , ... 1n JM flCff dt WITTMAN &. SCHMIDT, ••• M11nklNI Court .tt tfll Ctntr .. Ortllft tof'llOYI tor Mid CORHl"lalor. ot 3U Sift LEGAL NOO'ICE CounlY Jllllld•I Olittlcl, County of Mlt11tl O!'IW, Sult• JOO, N.wport l!lffdl, ------~~------1°''""' Stlll ., C.Uf911\to. ontffed on C•llfOrnl•· '2"0, Ill ol"" rl91'11, 11111 •ncl • l11M Octtlblr 7, ltn, In Ill• •boll• en!llltcl at· ln!orosl In "" .. ,.,, o1 fflt sorct ron· IN THI SUl'llllOll: COUllT 0111 tloll, 'fltltrtln Oon ICllllllY llolfltl bu1l1ios1 51n•tH IJ\ ond to tllt r•ol PrOPttt'I' TMli ITATI Of' ULl,-CMtNIA '' ltl ch Dr•Pll'V Slt\'leo ftle ebo¥o ,._,.... Jlfuti. tn ttM Clt'I' ol Cosll Mui. COllfl!V ,Oil THa COUNTY 01' OllAH•I .. tlllntll'f, tlbl!ilnld ' luclemlnt Ind o1 Of1fltlf, Sltle 91 (1lllornlo, OOSCrlbld N A n 1M t!ec:l'H ol torKloti11r1 •11111 .... lfa1MI " lollowl• NOTICa Cl" 141.:-llNO o.-l'ITITIOfll TO lltOHlltn ConitrucllOl'I CamlNlll"I' dlr.tl> LOI F0ur (•!, Tr•U '°°'' It --~ m111 CONY•Y llaAL l'llOf'llTY dint. fer 1"' llolfl'I of One tllWNnd two rKOl""Ofd In aoolc ,,, p... ~ I! lot of a.AllA E HfillARD llllnG~ JOWtnlY Ind :WIOO . CSl,,Jl,7$1 Ml1a1tllt'IOO\ll MoPt. lttconls of Orlnte Die~ · • Do<llra. IOWlll1 fftONY flf ""° Unltod Cllln!Y .w1 I ..___ I tllol hNrt of llittl, Ol'MI, .., ¥1f1_,. of I !11 of .... TM i,;,.,, and cond!llOlll of Ille 1ala 'T"'''C'O I ,_,.J"T I""" 0 nt fiOrcln'lttlt 111 .U!f •Ctlol\ ftflM Ofl JUfll IJO' Cash Md IOllll'ILll rnoMV of Illa Unlt.i tM Nlltlon of UNI c, WILSON ... Ex· 1L 1t71, I "" «llTWl'IOl'ldlcl ,. Mii Ill ttM ''''" of AITW!'IC• ... Plrl colll and Nl'I -.cvtrtx ., tilt E•l•I• -CU.llA E, HU• ,,..,..,.., Ill tM COLllllY of or.-. Stti. of crodlt .. • • d --· .... •Al.D, ..,.,.._ IW "" .....,. ti -C.Utw111a. dolerlbld 11 4ol1oWI:' • rm ~·-· _.. '"" • mtoln anlrkt fW JM Mfo Of Loi• f5 ff. l& 111 lllMI lN flf TrllCf upleble to lhll. cm!Mf¥1tH tnd tllt nwt. cwttlll l'ffl "laj9 tftitftll lflto &y tM SN& ff ~ IMP l'ICOrdell 11'1 aootc 11) II Al hilll ""' IS) Pf"'(tnl of IM IR'IOlill'll bid 4'clldtrlt 111 .._. llllltlrl'lt, oflll WAYNI L, ...... 20 ttt""'ltl J.S. ll'ldutJ.,., to OCCOITIHn'( tho'""° ll'lf tllt llll•ft<I .. VOlllK and l.AMONA L. VOl.K. lit Mel., 'Mltcon•--MUS, RICWdl Of OrtnM " Mid lltf9i• tlll lrontltr If title to "Id tM CWr't ltllllft " OolPlrflntrtt ~ ti 1M COln!IY CaOfillf'lllO. nol ......,.,.,, TOkft tnd W9ll'fl\,llft1 ml..,_ h"'1or Cowt ef ltlO .Stilt Ill Clll*"'lo, T•friff wllll 11H Ind 1ihtullf 1M -•M• ocucltitbll to Ille llUrd\oMt' 11'1 ,,_. fat the CMtntv f1f Ol'Mlt, City ef 1t""""1tt. htl'odltemtnh Inf ,,._ "*'kl bl '1'0l'ottd t i el 1111 d0!1 If tll'lte Aii•r on Ille 1111 dov of July, 'Im 01 •1.1rl11\Ch lt!Ortvnto bllonf11'1t ., In t•111t(1r of title, llt<ordl111 ot C'Ol!Vll'tllft. f :• 1'clock A.M. tl'IYWIM ,..,ertolt l11t. tr1nlftr l1Jl'n, ffpd "'' !Ult lfllllrMCll sai. r~ '""'1Y ,, Ill conwwd ,, l'U8LIC HOTtCI IS H!l':!IV OIYl!h POiier W U Ill •I ttw MPfl'IM: ot !tit •llvollld ~!tit CWllfY ot OrOllM, Motl of Tl\ot ml Tllwtdly, JlllY 27, 1f1l, at IO:ot ... lof'. lKIGW dllrMI ll\011 lit borlW Cillll'o C.Uforlll• ~ II dl'lcrlblll ............ ci.rt. A.M, ot ftllf ctov ,j Melll loblWI N JI "' fllo ..... , •nll _.qtr w ... wit~ . C/JllffllOl,llO, 1'0 Cl•lc Colltlt' 'Of1W Wft fllrdlfflf', U4 I ., TrlCI ,,., .. -l'Nltl City et '-nl• AIMii I wlll Mtl "" *"' AU .. l!'IWll Ill Ill Wtltlno Ofld -· •• ,_.. Ill lollf 104. ~ u.M " wtcrllM ,,........., 1111ffr Mill wrll allll ""' •lkes " W!ltlllan a kllml«, ..._ MlllC'tll"*"" ~Ir\ 111f .me." WM ,_,.., ., M mvdl ~ •• !MY i.. torftln lot "Id c.onMrvotor, ot * .S.ft alll'llY ~ of Mk! CW111Y. ou 11n .....,... .... 11.,., Mid ~ .... .,. MlllWI 0r1w. 111rio a. "IWllOl'f .... 1I0111•00cl, la tt.rit1, Cotlfol'f!l1, !ntwtrh •'Id eotll, to tM 111-.1 llldcttr, Ca1l .... nl1, P:t.to. II lnY Uma tller t11o ~ I• ._. 11'11111 lo • Mt!. ,_. dll'I 111 lhrflll lftllllY of .. Ullltld flr1I lllA!k.lllon ol' ltl11 nollcf 9M ~ "'" .. "" ,..... ..,. M'lllf' llefll,. lllo mMlnt ., Nilll 1111. kid C!Ol\len ..... P"rt1a1Mrs. o.tH of SMl1 AM. CollfllrYlll, J11111 21. ,....,.,,.. N r)eht to "Ito ""' and • DATID: J-11, 1m lfn. 9tft •M ~rl! 1 WILLIAM R. ST Jot4M JAMii A, MUSICK, DIMCll1 Juno U. 1•'1. I CillUl!fY: C.lll'l Mid IMtltl.("....,_ PHILll' M. HIMMINO , ..... 6f ..w Swtrlw """" (.,..,-" °"""' C.llfWtllo c...,... .... of fflO "''" Of ' Wiil MD NM Ir L. Hori J1nt1 Ratawta Ho 1t1 m I 1111 ~ P'1of lsrit c.,er.n. 0,,-VIY (""""*'" l lr-t A .. 11 M, Plitt a . k11TH DlflllMoil WlnMAlf & KMMIOT J = ,.~ Sn.I •. ,_ ,,. ,.,.... AIJlrMt• "" c.......... I ~-c• .._, '*• M6JHMtailt~1111trt• lW' fll'lll....... P'lollltlH'I A,.,.,,.., N.....,, ltfdl, Cl'"'""° 9'* fJ\lllllllttll Or"* (Mlf OtllY ,!lot, 1""111:111.,,_. Ora"" COiltl OillY flt~. l'ilblllhtd Oti M CMtl C>o/i-•l"llotJ Jun. a. 1111 1102-n JvM • •rtdJutr 1. 1t, 1m 1•11 JllllO 21, •· •ftd J11tv '-1m 1mn I r I I I J ) , ' • N ~ ~ N ~! • ~ E N ~ E No NO ~II No ~: NO No N ~o ~ N N N ~ ~ "' "' 0 • °' 0• o" ,,,,, o .. ,,., .. .. Ow 0" ,, p .. ~~ " "' .. , ... '" .. •• .. '" ~" " PH ==· .. ' p ''" p p " " " " " ... " " •• •• p p ' "' ... ... '" "' '" '" ~" . Ill '" 111111 " f'llll ~~ " 01111 "' "1111 r.1. r.1, '" " •111 " 1111n ''" 'I' .. '" :~~ '"' •QH •o• '" "' •• ... ,, " ,, •u!> ·~c >~J' ·~!" '" . .. 'l' . ' "' •Sto; •us •s •o '• ·~ ·~ •1111 .,. '"' ~; N -· ,, N .... I ' • l~ 1Z " " •• ~o r; ~ . ' " ' " H ~~ li r1 Or! A T ~:l > • • Wednes3ay's Closing Prices-Complete New P1·ices .Affected By Slow Trading N•IDITll' .1$ NH>lvnt: ..i ~ .... uo -"tr ,l!ltl ~ntEI 1.6?• ..:11TT 2.)1 Nhall .JO ~wmnl l.IM "~imr;:i'.1~J SYS G 2.08 YI t l .IO ~I. l:J! l1Mof S.Ml 11.Y.i>I' 4.10 lofSll .Nd L ndull I '~· ""' Nor k'Ns S No l11C lOd ~orr!'I l.c.4 A Co.I .60 A Mt 1.10d NAmPllll 1 NoA lll:k 1 . ..0 NG.Alt llf 1\io NAAUf 1.15" Noett UI .H NoCnlG1 .to •• i'" 111:111 Noll GI 1.12 NllGl!Pr 1.!i N 1., "s 1. NoNtG1 l. NollPw 1.77 •. f'' l·" No pf .14 Nos "' 1.to Nort1'11111le E Norllw"OllC 1 Nw1!Alrl .~ Nw .. n 1.40 N~l In .2.kl Nw•1 lf1d WS Nws 1n pf S •~1101 1.20 Nws (/l511C S NW""" l.17d NortnCo IV. Nor!Slm .ts Nr!SI pl l .60 NV,_ Co 151 011<: _llld ,l, 01krtt Pr .IO o,,,,,., .1211 Occ.clPI pf I °"''!~ uo Occr' pl 2.1, 09clW>CP .60 ~n ~I l.17 Otilq_ Ed 1.Sol 0'11: "' 1.56 OhPw11! I .tu O,iPw~I 7.60 OklaGf l .21 Oil GE11I .10 Oli:.laNG l .J' OhnCorp .18 om.n Ind' Ot1ehlel .10 01>tl!k1 M I Or Jtc•! 1.20 0111 £1 Co 2 Ou\banl M 1 Oul!lf C .'5 °"~rTrn .60 Owe11CF .71 Owcnl!I 1 . .0 Ownll pl '~ Oxlrl lnd .60 New York llps ottd Downs -.. ~-----"·"·-------· '**"' ...... l.M a. ot. • . w_~~"""'-·..:.:...'J_..,.~2~~~1~9n~~~s~c;._~~~~D~_L_Y_P_IL_O_T_..J 9 York Stock Exchange List • -... ·------------. ~.,....._CltMClfo LOS ANGELES Qc. cltlental f'ttroleum COrp. says ii has reached tin agrttmtnt "'ith a group or U.S. and cana· dia n banks 10 increast it .o1 r(lvolvlng rredit Crom $215 n1illion to $300 1nillion. The financing urrangemenl involves 32 b.!1nks headed by the Bank of America and ex· tends UV'ough fo~ebruary 1974. thl' company said. S•lt-1 Htt fMa.) Mltl Lew CtMa ClltJ, Finance Briefs eLayaffs FREMONT -Conversion to the 1973 model run hi forcing a. layoff of 3,000 General J\1otors • aaaembly workers here, the· company uys. Some 2,000 Pl5Se118<1' ur· division employes were laid ; off and 1,000 truck division ·. W.rker1 will be idled June 30, '. penonnel director n.y Moner: announced. • He termed Ille layolfa: normal duriog changeover and ~ said employes with Jongevily: wlll get paid vacatlona. : •Bekins lff01le • LOS ANGELES -A Bekins ; Co. !Ubsidiary wlU acquf19 ·, Independent Buildlno Maino : tenance Co., lnt.1 of San Frao-: clsco, Daniel P. Bryant,; Bekins chairman, said. ; Bryant and Hanild M. • Rosenberg, president o I ; Independent Building Main-: tenance, said the firm will bt ; merged into Bekins Building ·• Maintenanct. : The San Francisco firm has ~ an annual sales volume of : about ll00,000, Bryant sakl. e Agrlc11lt11rt! • • FRESi'iO -Farm Income in { Fresno County, in the heart of : the agricllltunlly-rlcb San • Joaquin Vall•Yi.~P<d the na· Uon in 1971 at""'·' mlllloo Ill • gross receipts. ~ A compilation ol """"'' : agriculture com ml11ion . reports showed tbe total for eiMI vallty to1111tleo IOPf1ld lhe 12 billion level for tllo ililrd year in a row. Fresno County's tolol ft! "" 13.U million lrom tbe ync . . . • • • • • Zf D.\llY PILOT Wfdnttdly, June. 28, 1972 WedntSdal, Jul\f 28, 1972 PILOT·ADVERTISER f I 12 oz. BOTTLES ''PEPSI'' Diet & Regular PAK 0( & Plus Depo sit -"Stars & Stripes" GLASSWARE by LIBBEY Three cheers for the .red, white & blue ..• in a popular "oow" mo~f. 1111. C11ler l t_11. 8nerace. 4 ~ 99c TOUR CHOICE l INFANTS' W.alkerJJumper PETERSON-Spring action .•. 3" wheels for safety. Comfy headrest~ plastic tray. Chromed tubular·steel stand folds flat. 5 99 h(.1.15 • AUTOMATIC 1NFANr Swing PETUSON -Easy wind ••. lasts for 12 minutes. Safe non•toxic paint. Mushroom color. 10 88 Re(.12.91 • 10 oz . BONUS SIZE GILLITTE Soft & Ori ANTI- PERSPIRANT ggc Girls' Svit 7·14 Rer. 2.99 2.77 COUNT VASTA VODKA 6 59 80 Proof Ref. 7.49 Yz GAL. • OLO BARSTOW ~l~oof Ref. 7.89 y, GAL 7 • 39 . Moc KIN NO N'S SCOTCH 8 49 80 Proof Re1. 9.88 1' GAL • CANADIAN RESERVE WHISKY 8 88 80 Proof Reg. 9.95 Y2 GAL. • Sport Chair . · . Lightweight, sturdy construction. [asy to c;irry. 3 49 Aluminum tubing fram e. • FOSTER CREEK BOURBON &Yr. 01d 7 89 86 Proof Rer. 1.59 y, GAL. • D!LUXE Chaise Multicolor webbing with extruded aluminum arms. 7 98 Grea't for patio or poolside. • . . SAMU IL E. WEBSTER WHISKEY 6 89 80 Proof Re1. 7.69 Y, GAl. . • DuuxE Chaise U.S.A. Flag KITS p"'"" . , the l display FlAc. mer1can Jxs Ft. 2 OD s!~:s1.,s;,. s,,,12 .• Jo 4. 98' 'XIB'' F, , Soft coitou lAG ed•es •1 iabr1c ,. . , 6 , o11 IYOO" , i1n1sher1 3.'9 ' staff. C Film Special by @ VACATION SAVER tll'I: t OR MOR[ l'IOUS Of COi.OR fl.MAT OVA REGULAR LOW PRICE. l'llCll\lf I/ PFIOT[CTO PAC FOfl YOUR F!!cl_il. flilEb ti POSTAGE PAIO FllM MAllfAS. I You• t.111> .. ,11 Ile ... ,,"19 ...,, 1e1dy .. 1wn you 11u.rn. )I FILM PROT£Cfl0ff POI.ICY . W• will buy bKk 11•1 Niii rou c1o11i ~H Ofl 1"111" lfip. PANTYHOSE Miracle Stretch Snug fitting brief panly style ,.·· for today's fashions. Run guard ... top & toe. Assorted shades for ladies 2 , 1 00 5'to5'7'*. ~ Re1. 69c 1 • Extra Width Adjustable five ways. Dense webbing larger in siz~ 9 98 for greater comfort Sby cool arms color c.. /CHARMEEN •.. Designed and GRENADA BAY . ordinated. -• proportioned for tie luller RUM 1 09-eh • -----~-fiJui:e. Sized lo iJjp meas-... ~="""I' Liflt orDark -· -- -----afr-Po f -DELUXE urements. pu ar ~f Ref·. 7 l9 • ~ ,G,A.: A • .: , ., , SIJOng framoof aluminum tlibing witb non· tilt leg~ 5 29 shades. OLD DOMAINE Deoser webbi1r for extra, comfort.. ~rte11 1;01Dr. • · Ref.1 .49 ~~~:!~~~!~~1: 1.49 . ::.~~t~n !~g~1:un~~ ~!g!~ rontrot, 11· 98-2NUid2e • 50 CHATUU;CAPRICE CHAMPAGNES White, Pink or Cold Duck 1 49 Ref. 1.91 5th • Men's & Bors' Trunks Reg. 2.94 2.44 13 ot. SIZE 'steel frame. Snap-on renrovable padHed pillow. a Beach~1 Chair · Comfortabie folding chair, I" polished high strength 3 39i aluminum tubing frame. plastic webbing. , ALBERTO V0 5 UNGUENTINE Fast Pain Relief Antiseptic ••• for cuts, scrapes, hurn s, sunburn, insect bites, etc. 5 11. Aerosol. 1.29' AD.PRICES Pl!VAIL: 'Thrsuy, Jaae ltt• nr1 S11bJ,J1l121• 12 oz. SIZE Windex · GLASS CLEANER 34ez. SIZI . Prints & Assorted Colors "Hot Char" CHARCOAL BRIQUETS Fast starti11g, even ~111rning, /Jurns longer • , • with Hickory. Re1. 1 0 u . 55c 73c BAG I EVER ~~=;;v Flashl1'ght I "COMMANOER " Triple plated chrome linish-Sturdy salety·55c I glow lens ring. : Reg. 89c Batteries For f~sl'lhghls Pakof 2 ........ .. I BAUER & BLACK Swim Supporters l FOR THE ATHLETE 1 Deluxe style in last drying nylon. J Economy st~le in co!ton. S·M-L Deluxe Economy C ~ 198 99 i Rec. 2.39 • Reg. 1.38 PAK OF 6o·ZEE Napkins~ SPICETONE ~ 5~oz.SIZE Makes 2 Qurts Aqua Net HAIR SPRAY ... ITOllS °""l&MhltPM r1n'~ •-THACll-----MllJSJ...-rofll aaaat -,._ a • lP " Yanish ~ISINFICTANT Bowl Cleaner Funny .Face ALL SUGAR "'""....,.°" auat -1:: z:2r .!.. ......--&.-TOaO ---..... - ! • • .. { : I . . ·c I t I I I " .I.fl DAILY PILOT -* SC Wtd11<sdlY, Jun< 2l!, 1972 Career Chances fJ!J Bii Keane Big Photo Contest Nearing ; In Meteorology Career Corner mathematics to the study of a portion of our physical en- vironment. Meteolrology t r I e s to describe, understand, predict and where possible, to control, the atmosphere. This includes the atmosphere 's composition -water, vapor, cloud, dust and smog; Its swift and violent changes as seen in tornadoes, hurric"anes, blizzards and cold waves, and its long, regular changes between drought and flooding rains. Modern concerns, such as air pollUtkln and nuclear testing, a.ho challenge meteorologists. And from jet aircraft pilots to w h e a t farmers, most of us want to know about the weather. But, hold it- NOT ALL METEOROLO- GISTS are weather forecast~ ers, as many people think. Only about one-third of an es- timated 8,500-9,000 meteorolo- gists (govemm~t statistics) are .in weather forecasting. A growing corp.s of research meteorologists, using n e w tools of this electronic--nuclear- apace age, are unlocking the mysteries of the atmospheres. other meteorologists a r e educators, consultants, ad- m l n is t tat ors , writers, . businessmen. About 2 percent o.f civilian meteorologists are women. METEOROLOGISTS m a y _ broadly be clas.sed a s teachers ; research meteorologists: operation and service meteorologists ; and e n g lneering meteorologists (those concerned with design of instruments, and how at- mosphere affects structures . and materials). There's no ~ · hard line between these career ·· functions, f.nd the s a m e person may be engaged in m1lre than one function. MEDIAN SALARY In 1970 for all civilian meteorologists was $15,200; 10 percent earned over $22,300. Meteorologists work as civilians for Federal agencies (primarily the N8- , ti on a I Oceanic and Atmospheric Administratiofi, and the Armed Forces); private industry such as com· mercial airlines and shipping · companies, private , wealher • consulting firms, · m e t eorologlcal instrument ·companies, aerospace firms, ~insurance companies, uUlitles1 radio and TV stations. Others ' teach , or serve as enlisted : men or officers in the' Armed . Forces. IDGR SCHOOL COURSES llhould Include p h y i I c o , -cheml!try and · mathemotico . . College preparation varies but -the most direct approach is ii : get a bachelor's degree in '·meteorology, avaUable at · aboUt 38 colleges a n d -• universities. Another school of thought urges a physical . aclenceo • mathematics un- . dergraduate beclcground, re- : serving meteorolorlcal study : for graduate school; aboUt 61 • universitleo orrer advanced degrees. OIJ'IUlOK: About Ill per- -cent of, employed : rneteorolotlolo work directly or lndlrettly for Ille F4deral • government. Thia m t I D S employment.,.. up and down • with the polltleal ellmate and allocation of ptlwltlea-llrtlle - KIDS WVE UNCLE LEN Saturday• in The DAILY PILOT ---• DAILY PILOT ...____, THE HELPFUL GUIDE FOR TODAY 'S HOMEMAK ERS KODIL TRl·COLOR SHAG 100% KODEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH, DEEP, LUXURIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI· NOW / STYLE DECORAT~R _THREE COLOR SHAG T(! _SAbE---- ---SEbECT FROM. RESISTS DIRIANlf SOlL PRICED ': STAINS. • -----s450,ooo . "i~ REMNANffo•,:J I. I COMPARABLE RETAIL ·--·:··-----··-··-$8.99 SQ. YD. .SAVE $100 517·5·,ooo COMPARARLE RETAIL ··-·-·· .. ······-·'·$8.99 · IQ. TD. SAVE $3.00 . CARPET TILES-SAVI'$ Fttll Ill• Yllllt-ntwms tiler DO-IT-YOUISE11 ~·~~:~;;~;:bll. s::.E 29~ NOW SAU PIKED......................... . • llYLOll Hl·lOW 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. POPULAR NYLON HI-LOW THAT COMBINES BEAUTY ANO DURABILITY. MANY. COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED _______ _ .COMPARABLE RETAIL ..... ,."·-------·----·---$4.99 DUPONT TRl·COLOR SHAG t 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP. 399 RICH, DURABLE SHAG. BEAUTIFUL NEW THREE COLOR DESIGNS. ,. YO. • NOW SALE PRICED........ _ $:.~ COMPAIAllf RETAlt ..................... $6. 99 KITCHEii CARPETS NAME BRANDS. NEW DESIGNER 3 ·99 DESIGNS. HI-DENSITY FOAM BACK. SO GREAT FOR KITCHENS, POOL so. YD DECKS, PATIOS, ETC. sAYE • ' NOW SALE PRICED........ ' ' -KODEL 'PLUSH 100% KOOEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH, • 499 LUXURIOUSLY THICK PJLE • , • NEW • DECORATOR COLORS. -,. YD, , NOW SALE PRICED........ $4.~ COMPARABLE RETAIL ..... ·-··--------·---·-·-$8.99 ALLIED llYLOll PLUSH aqi+.~fk.,,· NEW, HEAVY, DEEP f Ila ntJA"',; SHAG. STYLED TO 6' 9 ADD BEAUTY TO ~ l,i\/HM I~,. ANY HOME. DE· ,. YD. . (..,.. CORATOR COLl)RS. $4.~ COMPARABLE RETAIL ............... o ........ $10.99 - EllCROll POLYESTER ·PILE OF 100% ENCRON POLYESTER. ,,ft DEEP, THICK, LUXURIOUS CARPET... 7 OPTIMUM PERFORMANCE. LONG YO WEAR AND RESILIENT. ,.VE' NOW SALE PRICED........ ff.to COMPARABLE RETAlt ........................ $15.99 PAnERll ' POLYISTIR o !ST QUALm NAME IRAllD CARPETS AT LOW DIS- COUNT PRICES o SELECT FROM THE LARCEST CARPET lllVEllTOllY IN THE WEST • o EVERY ROl.L Of CAIPET IS MARKED AllD PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING COllYEJllENCE • ALL LAIOR UNCONDITIONALLY CUARANlEED ' 1000'• Of RIMllArns- ~~.'1160 -%. ::11. · Ill% SAYINGS SAYllflS · UP'lO..... UP TO ..... UYlllG IOGM. DINl!lf ' HAllWAYJ, IATlfS, IOOM. llDIOOMS. CAIS, ETC. lllNe YOUI IOOM MIAIUllMINTS • 3'-11-• IA'IS NO lfltl!ST • telft!lllUIT CIHIT PUllS Ufl UlflltlllS AYAllAllE • CAl.l FOi Fill SllGl'-AT· ROME SUYICE • YISIT M CISTOM MAP!IY IEl'T. WEST LOS ANGELES CANOGA PARK WEST COVINA NO. HOLLYWOOD -·-·-ANAHEIM LONG IEACH . HOLLYWOOD 11141 Wil•hiro iml. 210)8 S'"'-• Way 252, I: W.BMOft Ave. 7007 &.rol Conyoo '49 N. lodlol St. ,. ....... ""'· 4n.ss21 San Diego fre eway to Wil· sllire tum off. 6 blocks mt on Wilshire. PASADENA_ -I. Coloro4o llv•. m-uoo L Colorado Blvd.. It San Glbrlel , W..nM Ventura Freeway to Canoe• Ave. North to Sherman Way then right. QRRANC 42H"""°'"ll•d. 5424'N I Block East of Hawtliom1 Blvd. Oft Artesi1. 966-4471 San Bernardino frwy. to Ci!M Sl 2 blocks No. on Citrus to Wortman. , EHJ11 2501 I, M.;. St. ~SOii 3 blocks West of f'NI Poin s on Main. IJyd, -f'1·2200 QS-1674 Hollywood freewaJ to Sher· Z blocks Nori~ of Slnll man Wal. East to laurel Ana frwy. oe Euclld Across CallJOn !Yd. .from Calif. fed. -A-MESA-.SAN CARLO 1714 Newport IMI. 93011Collloo ... I . '4.!4020 592.SUl N~wport BIYd. 11 17111 st -421- Stn D~~o freeway lo Bell· flower lvd. Tum off North on BellOqil.lr. · . llUN.V-A"' "'"7455 • 2 blocks North of Holly. wood Blvd. °" Ve"'°"!. ,u--+--MlllBRA•ll---1 WHITTI IS911 I. Whiltlor llW. NMl61 320 fl c .......... 492.2555 ·- •• • 8 PILOT.ADVERTISER Sampling Reveals Approval Film Team On Tour Of Europe A four-man filming team fron1 the Telecommunications Center of the Coast Com- munity College District are spending their summer in the mid-East and Europe fihning an anthropolog} series. The filming expedition is the start or a two-year schedule that will produce 42 ball-hour educ ational tclevi.sioo pro- grams which will combine into a one semester college levtl course on c ultura l an- thropology. Heading the film team is Dr. Dwayne Merry. professor of anthropology from Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The production team comes from the Teleco mmunications Center at Golden West COllege in Huntington Beach. They are Bill Neill, producer-director, \far re n Wright, cinematographer, and Terry Nelson, script l\:riter. The crew will be filming In Egypt, Greece, Iraq, Franct and England on this trip -the first o! several planned in the future. The series is !unded by a $124,000 grant from. the Na tlonal Endowment for the Humantt.ies. The completed seritw will be presented on KOCE-'IV, Channel IO, which will be operated b~ Ille oom- munlty ccllege dlJlrlcl when it f:ir Oii !he air aome time nHt In addition to Its Initial pre11D11Uon loc:illy, the oerles will be olfered to olber edua· lJollll • teJevllloo II O ti O ll I tb~l the nation, oc-cord!JC" to WUI~ Fumi.u, -dir..tor of t b e lelecom- munie1Uon1 oenter. WtdntSd11, June 28, )q7z W«lnesday, June 28, 1912 OAILY'PILOT IS ,OUNTAIH YALLIV-IJ'llM~ If, .. TllNrf 'OUHTAIH YALLeY-l•ltt Mt,.., IMf. Mil t•mttr l"L TOltO -II T-ti •tdd•lf ltHll WUNTINOTON IUCM -fllll lfiMfl 11\'f. It Attl11ft IANTA UA -I• W ......... ..t 1 ...... 111. Wf$TMINSTI• -"11 Wfllll'llll,ltr af o.iMlo Wtsl COSTA Ml'SA -UM Mtrttr I~ ti Wll-St. COSTA Ml.IA -tu I , tlttrl SI. MUJCTIHC)TOM llACM -''" ~ 111"'"1\llnl . . "l.INTINOTOH llACM -ltl<ll Ml l•llltfl' MUNTINOTON llACM -WI,._ nil ............ All Stores Celebrate Grand Opening -of Our New Store, 3325 Bristol, at MacArthur Blvd., Santa Ana I ' Reg. $J44 & $J7' if.: Boys' & I oddlers Boxer Jeans or Knit Shirts Cho le• We bought mfg rs. tntirt stock I 99c Lanolin Plus I Your 99c • Balsam Plus Pratein ,,., CHlco l•xer ""•• fHtu,. flo rt 1., dyti111 11 100% wt10 11. Wltll 1latticir1d bo111r bcu1d & rlwtl ,,. front pochb. K•lt Shirt wlectiff lnclud .. l iln, Slfipa, Solld1, JtfMYJ, c,.w H.cb. Twrtl" •1 & Mod: T~rtln. All fl.-.t q110lity. lit 1..u.1., 111 .. 2-4, "71''111 .. ,.,, H.air Conditioner •·Herbal Shampoo 16 Oz. •Y American lnetlngs AdJasls to I• Posfflont-- I 1 Pnck9 0135 Popolortk• tra1h cori lh11n pacbd I" llondy 10-t-ti- cli1penal"f pockogt ,.rf.a for troth, 1-1. Iii'°"• rtor• 091. ·ic .. p yo11r tra1h cetllt 1e111tt.ry & odor''"· ~-f'••· '1., Whitt Teflon' 2 Qt. Sauce Pan or 10" Fry Pan Cheery Poppy, ··~·" Yoll•· 99 •r A¥OU1do ~r,.. C l1htd ah,1111111111• 11,,.d with ,._ •· whilo D•P111t Ttfl111. 12' Value! Fruit of the LMnt [~~~Sofa Piiiows 99 $Mrtly lfyl-4 thop.t '" rich fobtkt & t11 • thokt ., cite-."'~ ailw..: $500 Value! 3·"8 Pictures · •• 101t • ""'' YovrCholc• plclllNI I" • ,.,,.., -* .... jetta. AIM I • tO .. prl11h I• 1m • IJW -.. ""' ... ,... H•••t b1for• low prfc tl lri1htfy 1.olo,..d 7" wroMic flg11rf ___ h1 _,,gift pocko9es. ' lt)'I• • 10yll)ft ,.f •k• thillfl to 11ic. pHPle. SOl[~I s599 AllD TOP 4·i $11 f Vo IHI Mallory Batteries 4i64c 10 PO<KIT29C PACKS Reg. 23.~. 5 Year ' s Light Bulbs 6:8Jc •60 •75 •100W•tt Gr.at for hard • r1Htth ploc111. 8111 ' and Wl'I .51c. Theragran•M Mltk _, .ito•hl fem•I• wlHI Ml•tnl1$438 ltttlt•f100 l•t• Pl•s ltttl1 tf 30 f•r Allenst · httl• •f 24 Ttltl1t1 aac lllleHe Super Stal11l11s Blades Pecll:ef 10 0.-Wtl .. t . . 99c Right luinl ...... --64' $J600-Yalut! Revlon Eterna 27 Cream .... l .. ---$1000 ___ ....... . 79' Charcoal Brlquets 10 POllND sac • BAG 38c lnergine BBQ Liter Quart 21c Dry Roasted Planters Nuts • 120LP••rit: • 10.. "'"'.. 79 c • 7 0%. Mh11d Nvt1 y_.a.1q Canada Dry Soh Drinks Regular or Diet 10 FOi 95c Cklc• ef flnen. l11i1t.f" 2 WctJ ...... S.lld $1911 •tat., 3"" •p .. k-•r, 2 oll'fer.no1. II• $1H"::°150 Paper Plates 9·1nch 93c fowrth ef J111)1 pie· riic 1peclold A1t1M,tlc '"" l•ttf• Reg. •a" Ylnyl Sult Bags Edge Shave (l'8Cllll ,,,.,., 79c .... ,., ........... Dtp Styling Gel 120nc:t 84 ·~"' -"11... c Desert Flewu _ ... ...,_ ·-· 99c lrnts. of 119. $~69 TrnwtlSyr .... , ......... .. ,_,..,He •eor..r-#1 ... ' ~~.,.. Jalta Vodka ~ ~ or Castle Gin Fifth s277 Goll on . $1388 Men's Sport Watch .With Popular Calendar Ftatvre Ha. frof!lcol w.111 6 tltep , •lt pt1d S 9 ti•• d l•l. l11111l- -..ha11cb & n11• bin. Woltr pfMf .. J ATMS. Gvctr-••"'"' ' . " :\ ' ' '' .. • 'i '• i • 'I " • t • c I • I ) • . -. -• ' :Lagu11a Beaeh EDI TION TNay's Fl••al N. Y. _St.eeks VOL 65, NO. 180, 6 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, '1972 TEN CENTS Legal •noghouse ~ of 32 Counts Loonis By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL Of ""9 Dllltr ,..., lllH C. Domlnlc Shelton, charged wilh 32 COUDll cl allowing an llllreStralned dog to l'llD on Three Arch Bay's beach, may be hoping the District Attorney's bark is worse than his bite. A conviction on each count - something that Shelton calls an im· pos1ibility -could bring a maximum of six ~tbs In /ail and-or a $500 lfine. Start m11ltip ying by 32 and it could mean a tot of years and-or a lot ot dollanl. Shelton, 52, of 22 La Send.a Drive, was scheduled to appear today before Judge Richard Hamilton in Diviaion 2 of South Orange County Municipal Cour!, but the case has been continued until Aug. 23. Shelton requested the continuance last Friday when he learned that the District Attorney's Office had added 31 counts to an original citatioo made April Zl. . . It was at 5 a.m. that day that Orange County Animal Shelter official.I "raided" Three Arch Bay Beach. Shelton was one ... of three dOg owners cited by officials. Shelton maintained that the beach at the private enclave is for residents of Three Arch Bay only and that the coonty hall no business sending animal control officers over private streets to the beach. The wealthy mining company owner also claimed lhat a few old arguments with the Three Arch Bay Community Association are again beginning to boil and that 's why he has been singled out with the 32 counts of allowing his dog to run on the beach. Deputy District Attorney Daniel Kelly said this morning that the counts are based on testimony from 15 witnesses who have cited dates and times between Sept. 1971 and now when Shelton alleged. ly was seen on the beach running bis dog. America and t have my passport to prove it. How could I be on the beach?'' Shelton asked. The apparent crackdown on Three Arch Bay, according to animal sheller olficlals, was made at the request of residents in the private community. When a complaint is made, a response must be made, said Robert Wohrman. chief of Animal Field Services for the coun\y. "The ordinance is quite specific and we're here to enforce ll," he uJd. Dogs are prohibited on all county beaches. '·A small minority is trying to run this com munity and I don't think the ttSL of us deserve that,'' commented Shelton. ··That's \Vhy I'm going to stand up. "If you don't take a stand, you deserve \Vha t you get ," the mining magnate con- cl uded . More Troop Cuts Due In U.S. Withdrawals November Vote 'Pros' Happy, 'Antis' Not, Over Coastline Initiative By llAllllAllA. KREIBICB Of ttM Dell! Pltol Sllff The news that a tough initiative measure designed to protect t he Caillomia coastline _apparenUy qualifies for pruc$ltation to the voters on the November ballot sparked mixed · reac- tions aJooc tho Orange Coast IDday, dity oincllll and ' comervaUonlsll varied from ltro11g support to strolig op. position in thetr comments en lhe pro- ~measure. tJle coastline protection !Dffsure gponsored by the calllon!la O>as!al Alllance wu reported, in an unofficial coun~ to have received alrnast 360,lllJO signatures Oft petitions c i r c u J a t e d throughout the state. · It would quallly for the ballot il 325,50! •i&J>atnres were flied with lhe aecreta!')' of stat. by the Thursday deadline. san Clement. Clty Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, a strong aupporter of coastline coqtrola, llald IDday be felt the initiative measure "ii oot properly thought out." "Ila too alkncompassing lo acope to properly meet the needs of the citizens an.I to properly reflect the rights of !Orne property owners, parllcularly i n developed areas, 11 said O'Keefe. The bill in his opinion, 1ald the coun- cil.fiian, would be "unworkable" because, as ·ao initiative measure it ·could not be amended or modlli<d without another Vote Of the peop~. O'Keef said he felt a bill aulbored by Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) "would be a very good method of shoreline control wllh which I lhink ahoald pass." · He expressed the opinloo tbat the in- !tifive measure could IUbject the state to • ~daim for damagea becall9e it'• mdratorium provillons COUid be coo. l idered 11inverse condemnatJon.." ' Although the propooed legfalatlon is similar to a stringent ooutline protection bill" authored by Asaemblyman Alan Sieroty (0.Loo Angeles) which suffered legislative defeat ta two successive yean, O'Keef llald It is In fad more strfn. gent than the Sleroty hill becauae of the difficulty of amending It should problems ariae. Laguna Beach Councllman Roy Holm, en the other hand, uld be would support the tnitiatlve measure. "I think It's unlortllnate that tho ....... .' Weatller . · Night and JllOmin( low clouds • ·are upected along the Orange : 'iit on 'lburaday1 cltar1ng to • IUlllhlne in the altemoons. • In the low 70'1 at the ·beacbel, rising to to Inland. Lows : •f6..t5. INSIDE TODAY . . Big E""1111Ptul tr1e1 behind N<WJ>011 Harbor High School · .. appartntl11 are in th« path of • progr"'· Set 1torJJ, P•Q< JO. ' M........ U.17 '°-M. ..,, , • c.llfwflll I ~-.... • Clftlta .. • OUS•11• " • -111....... It =·-. ·~··· .... .. """""' ,,.,. ,., .. ...,., tli .... I II U _,_ M • Legislature didn 't see fit to provide ap- propriate protection for the coastline through the legislative process," said Holm. "! wouldn't normally la .. r the In- itiative procedure as a way to do somelhlng as complicated u this, but in {8ee OOASTLINE, Pap I) Sµpf and S1A:nd. Hotel Purchased By Phoenix Man Laguna Beach hotel operator Merrill Johnson bas confirmed the sale of his Surf and Sand Hotel, 1555 S. Coast Highway, to J. W. Colachis, Phoenix, Ariz. developer. Johnson said be is remaining as managing director Of the hot.I and no major changes in its operaUon are an- ticipated. O:>lachiJ, owner of several apartment complexes and other developments in Arizona, bas purchased 100 percent of the SUrf and Sand stock u an investment. The hotel, largest in Laguna Beach, was buill by a corporation in which Johnson was the principal shareholder. The sale W8! arranged In January, he said, but could not be confirmed until all details of the stock tranaler had been completed. * * *. Sµ,rf and Sand H~iel To Be Press Center Preparatloos are under Way for transformation of Laguna's SUr! and sand Hotel Into the ·West C08lt WhHe House ~ ""1er during President Nlxoo's fllree.week vis!\ to C..98 Paclllca at san Clemente. Wilh aome 55 While House cor- respondents and IS or 211 White Bouse staff members due to arrive Friday, the populat Mal Tai Room Is once more being tranalonned from a night spot to a working press room complete with telephones, typewriter tables a n d mlaophones for dally press brldings by Press Secretary Ron Ziegler. White Bouse press staff members will have their own offices at the hotel and will be quartered there, along with the journalists, during the Presidential visit. ff*I manager Merrill JohnlOn, by now an old hand at hosting the prw, said he expects the delegation to number about 10 lo 75, the usual number unleu a maj<r event, IUcl1 as the JapaDtMI Prime Minister'• vlslt in January, ii on the Presideo!'1 schedule. In that lnstan<o, the press corps •umbered about 100. In or.ler to accommodate the press corps during his bu3y rummer seaoon, Johnaon said be aeta ulde a number of rooms for Jagt.mJnuta reservatlona 'iinly. ''We don 't turn people down entirely,• he explailled, "We Just don't take reterY1lions too far fn idvance. It'• not too much cl a problem becauae wt can alwayt fill tho IOOllll, whether they (Iha press ""llO) come or nol We have to IOrt ol VY &o outaum 'em. 1' ' Laguna House Sal.es Hum The real estate business in Laguna Beach is so good realtors are running oot of things to sell, Really Board president Robert Turner indicated this week. Reporting to the monthly meeting of directors of the Chamber of Commerce, Turner said multiple listing sales in May~ amounted to _$3.,745,000, with...the--average-.-house sale up to $52,000, compared with a previous figure cf $47 ,000. This year's sales to date add up to $16,656,lllJO, Turner said, whidI already amounts to 64 percent of total 1971 sales and compares with a 1u111w'a total a( fH million in IB70. Concluding his 1'poit, , Turner asked the directors; "Do any of you have anything you'd like to list for I aaJe?" France Starts Nuclear Te sts In S. Pacific PARIS (UPI) -France bas resumed nuclear atmospheric testing in the South Pacific in spite of vigorous protests by several nations that tbe blasts may en- danger their environments, the French news agency Agence France Press said today. The agency said in ~rt from Tah1U that the first nuclear warhead· type device was detonated Sunday morn· Ing in the vicinity of Mururoa Atoll, 800 miles southwest of Tahiti. The French Defense Ministry declined comment on the report as did. the nuclear experimentation center here which coordinates atomic testing in the Pacific. The ministry indicated Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on the tests until the series was com· pleted, presumably sometime lat'er this summer. There was no word about the safety of the protest yacht Greenpeace Ill which Jast was reported heM.ing into the test area. Another yacht manned by members of the French Nuclear Test Protest Conr rnittee was preparing to set sail Thurs- day afternoon fOr the test area from Tauranga, New Zealand, 100 miles south of Wellington. In Wellington, New Zealand. Prime Mtoister John Marshall said tonight he would seek confirmation that lhe tests had begun lxlt would not send a protest note to France. 11There's no point· in wasting more paper and time in telegrams," he &aid. The reported blast came alter a llklay eflort by New :Z.aland, Australia and Peru to force a cancellation of the new wlet of test explosions. The thret countries, joined later by olhert, initially issued formal complaint. against the planned testa at the ,...pen-tna of the Disarmament Conference in Geneva this monlh. A aeries or anti-nuclear demonstrations and' bomb attempta against French prop- erty followed in A u lt r I I a and New Zealand. Australia'• 1Prime Minister, Wllllam McMahon, aent a per!Onal message to President Oeori!es Pompldnu to ult for an end to the tests. The French aoveroment anawered charges that tests were harmful to the environments of Paclllc coast nat.lonl by aaylag the blaata were low·ylekl and suf· liclently ftmoved from p o p u I a t I o o centers. Volunteers Only to Go To Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) -!'resident Nii:· J>ll annoJUICOd today plam-1or_a - month withdrawal of 10,000 U.S. troops from South Vietnam· end directed that only draftees who volWlteer for service in Vietnam be lient there in the future. NiJ:m'a -acllon 'llOll!d r<dllCO th& ;~-troop love! to 39.11!1. by Sep~ The ..m11<·mmdlily10itliolt1wlf rate f for .the aummer mol!lhi 1'Cllld be level Cit the May.f..,., ~le of ' . ' LGflWUln. lnfured. Secretary Ronald L. Zjegler, who made NiJon'.t 1nnou11Ce1D1Dt, Mid the Preoldent also ordered lhal no draftees will he sent to Soulh Vlttoam unless Ibey volunteer for service there. However, Ziegler said, lf they are already in the war zone or under orders to go there 1hey will stay or be sent. He estimated there are some 4,000 draftees in lhe Army in Soulh Vietnam. The press 111pokesman said the Sept. 1 troop targel level of 39,lllJO would represent a 93 percent reduction from the authorli.ed ceiling of 549,500 in effect when Nixon took office in 1969. Mrs. Dolly Butter!, 65, 3,60 Upland Road, Ls Wisted to ambulance after Wednes.day,a.ccident at Laguna and Ramnn1 Avenues, near th• Post Office. Sbe WM' in sati!factory condition today at South Coast .Community Hospital with a PQSslble back fracture .. Pnlice said the car was driven by her · grandson struck another· car and Mrs. Butter'a head struck the windshield. Asked U· the 31,lllJO would represent a .. residual force,"·Ziegler aald be regard- ed that term as "somewhat of a misnomer." However, be said the United States Hshall keep the minimum needed to achieve our objectives, 11 and that, in any case, some American forces would remain until war prisoners a n d those missing in action have been retW'ned or accounted for. FBI Trac~g 2 Brothers Eyed in Big Bank Heist Ziegler did Jtot reply directly: w h e n asked whether all of the 10,000 being withdrawn from Vietnam between July l and Sept. l will he aent home. But he pointed out that a great deal depends on the j.ntentions of the North Vietnamese (See Clll'S, Page I) CYCLE A D HAULS CA LLS Thb tittle motorcycle delivered "tons'' of payload. Oieck this !hr..,. line ad : e 1171 HONDA TIWL 70. Only 117 miles. $195. nx-xnx The Newport Beach man who placed the ad reported it aold the motorcycle "on the first call, but we bad tons of calls thereafter." If that'• the kind Of baullng power you're looking for let a DAIL V PILOT classUied ad deliver a load of custOmer1 for you. Dial M2-5678, the di· reel line to .. suits. By · FRE!>ERICK SCBOEMEHL Of t11t OlllY Piiot Iliff rederal Bureau of InVestigat~n agents today continued· an lntenaive nationwide seatth for • two of five men indicted this week· in copnecuon with the $3 million thelt at the Laguna Niguel United California Bank in lat. March. Agenis, armed with the federal grand· jury indictments, are tracking two brothers, Ronald Lee Barber, 29, of South Gate and Harry James Barber, 31, of YoWlgtown, Ohio. Now in custody as suspects in the case are: -Charles A. Muillgan, 38, also of Youngs¥lwn, arr&Sled JLme 2 outside a TUstin bar by FBI agents and Orange County sheriffs' deputies. He is being held at Los Angeles County jail in Ueu of $250,llllO bail. -Philip Brue• Clrlstopher, 29, of Cleveland, Ohio, arrested June 22 on a federal parole violation.and Indicted late Monday in CONlectlon wllh the robbery. He is being•be1d at Cuyahoga County Jail in Cleveland on a $750,lllJO bond. -Amil Allred Dlsio, 311, of Young.stown, Senator Speaks Filib uster Long-But to No Avail ' AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Mlb McKool, a HooH ltale aenator known u "Little Hercules," talked for 42 hours and :IS 11\inutes. trying to ooovilloe the Tetu Senate to apend more money for lll<Dtal heallh aervlcea, then Nt down at hi• desk today, ending the world'• "longest llllbulter." l\lcKool, 53, three dayt of whisken oo his face, took a long drink of milk from a IOda pop hotUe and said,"! thlnlt the cllance1 weren't Iha\ &ood when I alarted." ' IL took the Senat. less than five minutes to 1800"' McKciol's filibuster. They palled a n<>new-taxes state bu<lget blll that did not include the $17 mllllnn for mental heallh servlcea he wanted added. · McKool, whote normal high-pitched volee was made even more 1queaky by al11lOI! two days of talking, kept up hla strenath by munchin( only on oranges. lemoN. "enerp tablell" and cough drops. He bef'I" his Jlllbusler before noon Monday and sat down at J::IS a.in. PDT today, arrested 'early Tu..<tay morning Ill Boardman,, Ohio, by the FBI. He also is being held at' CUyahoga County Jail in lieu of 1750,lllJO ball. In keeping with their traditional stance, FBI agents refuaed to comment on, any of Ille arrests beyond the fact that the trio 'are suspect, in the burglary in wlii<h thieves blasted their way into the bMi and lelt Wltl> $2 million in serorlties and more than $1 mllllon in cash, jemel• and other ellects. It waa revealed that Christopher, when arrested on the parole violation , had $27,lllJO in his pouesslon, believed to be part of $430,lllJO stolen during a burglary ot the Lordstown, Ob.lo, branch of the Second NaUonaJ llani of Warren May 4, U.S. AU<rney John Walt.n, 1peaking from his I.Os Angeles office late yester- day, noled · ''the ' investigation Is not cl~,". hlntihg, Iba! more indlctmenta may he lplthcomjng in a fevr .days. He added! that OQCe hearlnga be.fore a U.S. Magistrat in Cl!veland are "°"" plettd, llinJlo and Christopher will bo transported to Calllomla. They·wtll jolo Mulligan in Los Angeles Q)upty Jail while awaiting trial. "The entire group wlll be tried ~ether," Walters aaid. LiWe has been reluoed about !ht background of lhe thret men arrested. Ohio officials claimed Mulligan, an unemployed barber, has an arrest"""""' dating back to 19111 when be pleaded guilty to charges that he bur1)arbed several mldweatern llrlp mining aper• tion oUices. In 1964, he WA sent to Qllo state PenitenUary alter heJna ooovlcted at receiving $3.lllJO in stolen goods fallowille lhefl at a Youngstown drUg ~ College Chief Quits LOS ANGELES (AP) -Dr. D,lnald W. Click has re signed u superlht.ndent of the Loo Anlt•I .. Communlly Colleges ml boon named president ol santa Monica City Oollel•· • H• waa the ae<olld superintended te ftljgn from the dlatrict, the -· largtl~ in two yon. .»!LY PILOT • essing Discussed In Private By TOM BARI.EV of Ille Daltr Pli.t Slfff ~ closed-door conftr~e was ordered Tuesday by county supenisors after the)' deadlocked over <l:lunty Assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw'• demand for private couMel In ' an upcoming landmark trial in liuperior Court. • • ,NOllH 120 • Hinshaw, who mentioned the po1slblllty that tho "personnel session" m I g ht \'iolate the state code governing meeting Of public agencitt, huddled wilh the board lite Tuesday to try to re1c>lve the Impasse crtated when he asked for a lawyer who might coat the county f!0,000. Hinshaw want.a Loa Angeles attorney John D. Cfthlll with him on the mound July 18 when the county takes on the Cal!fc»inla Angels ln their corporate unllonna of tht Golden West Baseball Company In a court balUe sparked by hi• BSHQl1lelll ol Anaheim Stadium, U~I N•wtlM~ FRENCH BLASTS-France, Ignoring worldwide protests. has started a series of nuclear tests in vicinity of . Tahiti in South Pacific. Gov- ernment sources said the first bon1b ~·as detonated June 25, and ..a nother is expected this week. '!be city of Anaheim and the Ang•ls arcµe that they were over assessed by neatlY fl ml1JJoo In the Ont two y .. n of opentlcl!. Siiblequent Jaw1Ulil coverlnr An&d SlllClltm operatlml up to !all year hav' been mec1 In Superior Court bu! the cue to~ ooato1ted July II ii reearded as !he one that will .. w. a cont.rov.,.ay that has rared lince the Angds moved to the 0r...,, County locotlon. · II ii allqld by the club and the city th'\! Ibo Anfel1 are unlalrlf asscll<d for lont pertodt when theT, do not ... the stadium and wllen the ocllily 11 actually under the control of otbtr buslneu .,,. tllia . • Hlnlbaw r<mlnded the board tue.day that tile trial "will be 1 landmark ICl!on thal ii belnf ~"l/Z, watcl>ed by every otl>m' county In rnla. "U Wt lcoe tbil poueaory lnleresl Issue Ihm we can look forward to loalng other llwllllil on the wne point of tu law to l1ICb enterprlJel u Dina Point Harbor and Oranre County Airport," the volellle ._ warned the superv!Jors. Hinshaw found SUpervilors Robert Bal- lin and Rooald CUper1 on his aide In bJa demand lor "apert ouillde help." BUI SapervlJora Wllll1111 Pbllllpc and DavJd Biker retilted the auessor•s m<>VI with Baku pointing to his "com.1!"11~JoJl~_abillt1 of the ro.mty COlllllll'• ol!ICOIO clelaic! our m. lerest ID tlll.I action.'' County Counoel Adrion Kuyper, 11>' parently nolllld bf l!lnlhaw'1 1uuutlon that tile f!0,000 ne<ded be taken from the count1 ...-!'• budcel l'l1ber than the asSlllOl''I coffers, appeared to agree wltb r<jeclloo ol tlle lllnahaw propolll. "-' '1 • {'I. UJmmumty '-'Pest Directors Aid Flood Victims Dlrocton of the Laguna Beach Com- munity Chest have approved the alloca· tlon of $1,000 to aid South Dakota nood vlctiml, Ciest president W 1111 a m McCready announced today.n The gesture in behalf of the citizens of Laguna Beach wa.s undertaken, said McCready announced today, The &"'lure In behatt ol the ciliun1 ol La11= Beach was undertakeri1 aaki McCready, because "The urgency oi this disaster necwlaled our immediate action. We hope to do our share in alleviating the suffering that is now ocurring." The Lagwia Beach Chest chapter was one of tWo in the county responding to a Red Croa plea for immediate financial asalstance for vlclima of the Rapid City flood,,. Red Cross cbapler chairman Jim McMahon laid ln Santa Ana, "This Com- mwUty Chest disaster effort further cements a bea:inning relation1hlp between our two organizations, who hope soon to join together in local fund-raising artlYlties." LI DAILY PILOT Tlte °""" CoMt Oit.11.Y PILOT, with Wflkft 11 cornt.IMd tti. N....,,r-. 11 Jll,lblWIM 4'y "'-OrtftD• Cot•t l"vblll'!I,_. ~riy, S.,.. ,,,. ed llloftt •r• Pl!MlfllM, Me!Way tlltwth frldl)I, tor C.tl MIH, NtwpH'f 9MCll, HIA'lllnttwl leKllfJllovni.I,., V111t1. U111r11 lttd'I, ll'YIM/ll lkll .. ~ aM Sul Cltmtt\W SM J11tn C.pltlr1no. A 1ln;l1 rt1WI edl11oti It M ll1Md S.!!lnj1y1 • Scind1.,.. TJlt prl!Klpel Do!Jb11Jhlnt .,i.11t fl 11 llO Wftt 11)1 Jtrttl, C:0.11 M•I, C•lltomta, f'M.)t, ••b1rt N, W11.J P1nldtfll tl'ld F>ublft.l'ltr J1tlt •. Curl1y Vice '"""111 ... 1 Ind Gtrl4oftl #M"*'9f Thol'l'l11 IC11¥1/ i!cll!W Tit''"'' A • .Murpkirit MMt11tw lclltor Chadtt H. L.11 IUtk1r' '· Nill Mita.it M111111nt ICJ11or$ a..,...1Mc• Offic e 222 hr11t A•111111 Malh., Mtlr.••: r.o. ••• •••· •1•st °""_ C-it MIMlt "8 Wnt Bty S"-t N=tectii UlS Nl'<ll'pOl'r lovlirllt,., '4iftf ..... lfiecfl: 11111 ... fJI tolllevtrd JM -~ fl C.l'l'lltio lflMI ,.,,,.,., 1n4J f.4tAJzt CtwHIH ......... '42·1671 ..__,Ulioio-: Ttle1t111 ......... ~I. tm. ~ o.t ~*' .. ""' ~. ... MM> ....... fllwtnitltN, ""iwi.f l'NHW _. ~11H1Mn" ~ MY .. ........... Wlfflovt .,_Ill _. .. "'""'* ., ................. . ... r-. ,..,..._ ..., .. (-.I• ~ (»....,..... ~---C*ffllt ......, ,,......,., .. """ ............. , r.a1tarr .. ,.,.,..,. .... "*"""'· Miffed Irvine Council OKs Joint Airport Plan By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tll• O.ll'Y ..... , '''" Throttling their anger over "gratuitous 1nsults" attributed to high level sources in Newport Beach, I r v i n e city Coun· cJJmen Tuesday night went ahead with their original offer to work With that city in planning areas aurrounding Orange County Airport. Irvine councilmen named a tbree- member committee to me.et wilh a almJlar panel from Newport Beach to diacuss pending developments of parcels near the airport including the Collins Rad.Jo Company's $185 million develop- ment. The planned communJty zoning for that parcel will be heard by the Newport Beach council on July 10, Irvine coun- cilmen were told. Before then, Councilman John Burton, an Irvine planning commissioner and a city Ital!«, wlll meet with Newport of· flclal!. _ Qm!Jt.:_ the unanimous _vote t o _ atabllsh the Joint planning group, some lHllne councilmen openly 4 e p I o r e d 1tatements of a "blgh level spokesman" for Newport Beech reeardlng the Irvin• council'• compe1<ncy to realst McDonnell From Page l COASTLINE. •• view or the Jack of strong action on the part of the LegialatW"e, I wiU support the initiative." Holm noted that the proposed bill is much the same u the Sieroty bill which he has supported. His attempt to win of· !lclal Laguna Beach City Council support or the Sieroty measure was defeated In a 3 to 2 vote, with only Councilman Charlton Boyd voting with him. As for the Carpente r bill, Holm said, ''That is so too1hless a piece of legisla- tion I don 't think It's even worth sup- po11ing.'' In view of its two past dereats. the Laguna couocllman sald be felt there was lntle hope for passage of the Sieroty bill in Us third appearance this year. Holm said he was sure the initia ti ve measure would get strong support from all conservation organizations, but he ad. ded, "I'm afraid the money's on the other side. The large landholders, developer1 and some of tbe utilities have different Ideas about the use of the coast aild there's sure to be an awful lot o! publicity against the initiative." Huntington Beach Atayor Al Coen said, ''We in Huntington Beach feel we are the kind of local agency that doesn't need the impasltion of statewide controls. "However. "'e recognize that some bill probably will pass because of the general problem and lhe attitude ol the people, so \.ve've taken a position in support of Sen. Carpenter's bill as ooe that will allo\v the greatest local flexibility.'' Coen said he regards the Sieroty bill as "unreasonable and much too broad in scope." "Governor Reagan has taken a position that local agencies are best equipped to handle local problems," said the mayor. "and we feel that we have demonstrated that ability. We hope no bill will unduly restrict a municipality from exercising il.!i vested rights as empowered by the constitution for loca l control." A similar view was expressed by Ne-wport Beach Cily J\1anager Robert Wynn. Gru1iion Runnirig On Coast Sa1ids Grunion wnI be nmnlng on coastal bellchts hoglnning at 10:~ p.m. tonight and again at 12:40 a.m., asaurlng a n1n or lntrtpld grunion hunten under a full moon. The six-inch fish will wiggle onto the Mnd with high tide, remain ap- proxlmaloly five houri to Jay eggs and return to :s<a •taln before dayllghl Tho spawning awon 11 expected to continue through September, according to Newport lltach llferuards. ™fish wru also run 'l'hilrlday 1l ll:2t p,m, and !:St a.m.: on Frtday thoy wUI run •l lJ:U 1.m. a.od 2:0J 1.m.1 bul not Douglas Corp. plans to develop its SO.acre? parcel across Campus Drive from the Collins property. •·t.-1cDonnell Douglas will come in and roll over that little council," the uniden· lified Newport official said Monday, ad- ding that the Irvine councilmen "are green ." Henry Quigley said the statement showed a "complete lack of deeorum" as a response to Irvine's neighborly offer to jointly plan the airport properties. "Unless their City Council repudi ates the statements in the press, 1 have every reason to believe they came from a member o( the Newport Beach City Council or the city manager," Henry Quigley said. ~le emphasized that although McDon· ne\l Douglas presently enjoys com- mercial. rather than industrial. zoning, Irvine can still control development. "Nothing happens on the 1'-1cDonnell Douglas property without a conditional use permit being approved by the city of Irvine~' ~gley said. ''It appears to me that the Newport Beach City Council is looking for a scapegoat to explain away the rapidly expanding development of the airport area that Is sure to cause an increase in the air tralfic," Henry Quigley said. Newport Beach reeently approved a massive developement of the Emtay properties 11ear the airport and in recent weeks has rushed approval of the Coljlns ProperUes, despite that comm~nity's lengthy and vocal opposition to further expansion of the airport. Quigley's scapegoat reference. observers note, means Irvine is being labelled as the pri me cause of added demands on the airport by inference. while Newport Beach will reap the added tax benefits of the developments in their city. Mayor William Fischbach sustained Henry Quigley's right to pursue the "in- flamatory" discussions to which CoUtlo cilman Ray Quigley objected. Henry Quigley then added he was "ap- palled by the extremely inflammatory statements" of the UMamed Newport Beach official. Ray QuJgley countered with an attempt to cool Henry Quigley's fervor on the issue saying, "I hate to see this Irvine council making highly inflammatory statements. It Is not logical to attribute those statements to any one member of the Newport council," he said. Henry Quigley returned, "It is most naive to assume the statements did not come irom the council or clty manager. If any low level staff member in Newport Beach said those things about us -if anyone on our staff made such remarks about a nei ghboring city council," Qui gley said, 1'I'd want a !ull·scale hear· ing leading to the firing of thllt person." At this point , Mayor Fischbach joined l~enry Quigley, saying, "These gratuitous insults show extremely incredible bad judgement. That kind of idiocy caMot promote the relations that are desirable bet\vP.en neighboring cities." ~lowever, the mayor suggested he did not believe the slurs were reflected ln the resolution adopted ?tionday night by Newport councilmen. Laguna Sessions On City B,udget See11 Next Week Laguna Beach City Manager Lawrence Rose said today City Council study sessions on his propo""1 budgd probably will not get under way untn next week. The council Is scheduled to bold a Joint setslon with the Plannlni Commisaion at 7:30 p.m. Thursday to dllCUSI design plans for the Main Beach Park, Includ ing modlncalton of the con&roverslal !Ueguard facility. Rose aaid Mayor Richard Goldberg does not feel It would be appropriate to launch the budgtt study following what may be a lengthy .... ion on the BHch Park matter and the m11tln1 could not be scheduled as a Wednelday llUdY aesslon since CoQncllm•n P e I • r Oslrandtt will be out of !Qwn. • by 1ptclllc locaUon. Ntxt regualr City Council meetJnc II on We.doesday, July 5, aDd the council preawnably aho wW schodul• a budaet study In that week. Atlantic Lagana J.tbrary • TrySl.ated --Tower, Anyway By Paddler To Be-ehanged Orange County's long<l~tanc• pad- dleboard enthusiast, Larry Capune, is set tor another East Coast marathon paddle -with only one hangup, this time. The 211-year old fonner lifeguard from Newport Beach needs a female com- panion to drive his station wagon with supplies along the 2.110 mile route. So Car he has oo takers. He plans to ltave Nantasket Beach in Massachusetts Saturday, paddling 30 miles a day to arrive in Miami Beach on the 7otb day. "The main reason I'm doing this whole thing is to show kids they can have fun taking a different kind o( trip," he aaid. The surfboard he'll use is c u 1 a o m made. It is 18 fett long, weighs 82 pounds and has a-.&Wer to move the rudder for tileering. Capune used lbe s. a rn e surfboard in 1965 when he paddled from New York to South Carolina . lie said he was headed for Florida on that trip but was hit on the head with a bottle off the North . Carolina coast. He said he had lo get stitches a.nd the blow affeeled his balal)Ce .so be quit at the southern eqd of South.Carolina. He said he usually paddles 2 to 10 miles offshore. . He is looking for a girl to drive his sta- tion wagon and said he will paddle during daylight hours and meet the station wagon at night. .;A girl is more apt to take care or things, keep up with the schedule and make sure things go smoo1hly" he said explaining why he wanted a fe~le. ''The gal 1 'm looking for has to be over 18 so she can drive the station wagon. I don't want any kooks, and she can't smoke pot or have any of those drug hangups," he said. Capune said he dropped out of california St ate College at Fullerton when he was a junior. Rangers Slay Killer Bear, Tests Confirm YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK Wyo. (UPI) -A 4001lOOJ1d female gr;z'. zly tbat was shot and kHled by Yellowstone National Park rangers was the one that mauled to d•alli a c-r over .,, Weekell<t, ~' ~-· bave said. Officials said tests made on the animal by the Montana Game and Fiah Laboratory at Bozeman revealed traces of .human hair 'I' ' law 9f tho hw> 1 an1 n1aJ. · , ~...,--·~ Harry Walk.r, 25, or Anniston, Ala., '"'as attacked and killed by the bear in ·predawn darkness Sunday when he returned to his campalte near the Old Faithlul Geyser. A companion, Phillip Bradberry of Oxford, Ala., was able to run away. · Park rangers who trapped the grizzly the next day saJd they killed It because it had previously been found near tourist areas in the park. Officials said the bear was attracted the the campground by food left lying In the open. They said the grizzly probably was trying to protect lobd it found when it attacked the men. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C-NUMl'HlllS DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS Recovery of Jost or stolen dla· monds has always been a problem because there was no meam of identifying such gems. I! lost, there was no real way to prove ownership when found. U stolen, ldentlflcaUon, particularly of !he larger more valuable stones, was complicated by the fact that the thieves usually cut tho larger gems Into smaller sizes, thus mak- ing Identification a virtual lmpossl· hilily. A ~ew service, called "ldenU- gem," has recently been announced by tho London firm of Diamond Grading Laboratories. The photo- graphic process pictures Iha bulc characteristics of the p o 11 s h e d stone, recording for<ver the tiny markings which make each dia- tllond different from any other. Just as fingerprints Cl!"'OI be changed, these tiny marting• re- main ldentlllable regardless of any recuttlng of the 1l<lne, Not only does !hi! means that your diamond ii In actual fact dif· lerent than any other In the world • • , It al.0 means that we can now change the phrase, "Dlamoocil art Forever Yours!" lt's too late to make any modl0catio11$ 11\ the design of the new Laguna Beach library, but the conln>1:trslal llleguard lower already ii undergoing deSJgn changes, Chamber of Commerce di· rectors learned Tuesda y. . BeautificaUOllS chairman H a r r y La wrenct said there had been two meetings wllh library architect Fred Briggs, and representatives of the Board of Supervisors and the JiTiends of the Ex-employer, LeMay Agree Out of Court By WU.LIAM SCHREIBER ot t1111 D•llY P'llitt St•ff General CUrlis F. LeMay, retired U..S. Air Force chief of 8'ta.U who now lives in Newport Beach. agreed Tuesday in Los Angeles to an out of court .aettlement QC his $5.3 million lawsuit against hi.!i former employer. Leli1ay, of 1046 Pescador Drive, in the exclusive Westcllff area of the city. charged In hi& 1969 suit that -Networks Electronic Corporation wrongly fired him as chairman of the board in 1968 because he ran as Alabama Gov. George Wallace's vice presidential candidate.' He claims he took a leave of absence from his $50,000 a year position in order to nm on the Ame rican Independent Par- ty ticket. The company subsequen tly filed a $5.1 million countersuit stating LeMay failed to abide by his contract, never had a leave of absence and used his pos.ition in the company as a political springboard. The countersuit was dismissed when LeMay accepted the settlement for an undisclosed amount (If cash. Reached at his home today, LeMay declined to comment on the amount of the suit's settlement but did say he was satisfied with it. "If I hadn 't been satisfied with the set· tlement I wouldn't have made it in the first place," LeMay snapped. "I don't really care to discuss the lawsuit at all," he added. LeMay's lawyers al.so would not com- ment on the nature of the settlement or the amount of money involved. ' ',. From Pagel CUTS .•. wbether'adciit1~iu.s. !Ra' inll • power will tie! required. He noted that an internationall)' supervised cease-fire t h r o u g h o u t Indochina would end the need for U.S. air and naval power. The United States has about 53,000 men assigned to ba!el In Thailand and there have been an additional 25,000 air men and naval persoMel in areas adjaCi!nt to Vietnam since the !tart of the. offensive. But Ziegler viewed th1J incre.ue u ''m1niacule'1 when compared with t b e number of AmerJcans withdrawn from Vietnam since 1969. He said that only a small number had been asalgned to other countries. Library rtgardlng the library roof deslen, \Vhich residents claim ill spciliDg their views. "I'm sad to repoJ1 we're past t))e point of oo return on this," said Lawrence . "Everyone saw the model, but ap- parently no one coUld visualize it relative to the location. It does gpoil the view, but the architects fed it will be less con- spicuous when the 1haket are on.'' Meetings with archltlet Briggs on the lifeguard tower, originally a 3&-foot-high, 42-foot-wide structure located in the mid- dle or the beach, have been more fruitful, Lawrence said. The facility will be moved to a le,,s conspicuous position in a curve of the new beachfront walk between C>cun Avenue and Broadway and will be subs tanUaJly reduced in size, he told the directar5. Vice mayor Charlton Boyd told the Chamber groups the library situation i!i ··.in ex ample or !IOmething we-don't wanll to do again. When you find something y.•rong with a design. at the last minute, it's just.too little and too late.'' . The situation. said Boyd, emphasizes the need for the chamber and other organizations to get in early on the plan- ning (If important community projects and to have regular representation at Ci· ty Council and Plannint Co1nmisslon seMion. This approach to community planning, the vice tnayor said, may be facilitated under a new program of ;'talk.ing agen- das" which is being developed at city hall . A ''This ~·ould be an attempt to build agendas far ahead ror the benefit of all interested groups and persons. ,sq everyone would have plenty of adv~ notice when a subject is coming up for action, with time for study and com- ment," Boyd explained. The council baa complained about hav; Ing to make last-minute deei.sions on inr portant projects because ol impending deadlines and is anxious to push all pla~ ' ning far enough ahead so all will have aa opportunity to participate, he added. School English Oasses Slated In Dana Point ". Two new W'lel ol training cluses for volunteers interested In teaching Englitb' as a second Janruage will begin ln July Jn• Dana Point, under the sponsonhlp of the> South Coul Literacy Council. ,., The fust Hlllon of a 16-wetk evenJnc course 1riU he held from 7 p.m. lo 10 p.nt' on Monday1 July 10. '' A aeries of Thursday morning claall!!I will begin July 13, meeting from 9 a.m." · to noon . Both awions will meet at St. Edward's Catholic Church, Dona Point. ,'. More volunteers are needed to expanA" existing progralll5 to help lol'elll!I' laoruage-speaklng adult. and tttnageit improve lheir skills in reading, wri~ and speaking Engll!h, laid l\lrs. Dor , E, Jackaon of lllis31on Viejo, president the Literacy Council . Further Information may be obtllined by calling 41'1-ll31. • • .. • ' r ,_ ' . • • • • • When 'Jllll 8"8 lier an Omep lhe'll •J Myou ebiiuldn't bave," bul llbe won't meu It. ' • I ' WMn tht ... tM OfMOa name Oft htrwa1ch M kMw MW muoh ,.va·U>ouQltt )'OU put Into her Cm!..,,.._ She may not real!» that Omeot walehn ate\lltd on all ApOllomoon ftlghb and In tht Qlympiea. SM'll 5o'Yt:1tJutt tori~-~· tater on, ahe'll low Ill lndilrlt!O ~lbll!Y. Md I olMI -"You lltlqu~" )llit10jl uy IO tab l Met. . 0 : OMEGA . ,_, ...... " ........ ~ -r .............. fMltN;et)'&l .... ,111· • 1-MKMINllllllltt~--···lttl J.C. fiump~rie6 Jewefer6 • 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIOO TllMS 21 TIAIS IN IAMI LOCATION IANICAIUllCAID-MASTH CllAAOI rHONI S.M<Hil ' •• ' .. . . .... ,. Saddlehaek EDITION ·Teday's Flnal N.Y. Staeks __ ._ _ ____, voi:. 65, NO. 180, 6 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 'I 972 JEN CENTS Ire Ignored, Irvine Backs Airport Plans Offer By GEORGE LEIDAL ot ttM1 Diil/i' Plitt St•ff Throttling their anger over .. gratuitous Insults" attributed to high leveJ sources in Newport Beach, I r v i n e clty coun- cilmen TUesday night went ahead with their original offer to work with that city in planning areas surrounding Orange County Airport. Irvine councilmen named a three- member committee to meet with a 11imilar panel from Newport Beach to discuss pending developments of parcels near the airport lnoluding the Collins ·More Radio Company'• $185 million develop- ment. The planned community zoning for that parcel will be beard hy !be Newport Beach council on July 10, Irvine coun- cilmen wert told. Before then, Councilman John Burton, an Irvine planning commissioner and a city staffer, will meet with Newport of- ficla1s. Despite the unanimous vote t o establish the joint planning group, 90me Irvine councilmen openly d e p 1 o r e d 1tatements of a "high level spokesman'' Troop !or Newport Beach regarding lhe Irvine council's competency to-rtsl.ot McDonnell Douglas Corp, plans to develop !U SO:acre parcel across Oampus Drive from the C-OUins property. "McDonnell Douglas will ~me in and roll over that little councU," the uniden- tified Newport official sa!d Monday, ad· ding that the Irvine councilmen "are green." Henry Quigley said the statement showed a "complete lack of decorum" as a response to Irvine's neighborly offer to jointly plan the airport properties. Cuts "Unless the ir City Council repudiates the statements in the press, I have every reason to believe they came from a member of the Newport Beach City Council or the city manager," Henry Quigley aaid. He emphasized that although McDon- nell Douglas presently enjoys com- mercial, rather than industriaJ, zoning, Irvine can still control development. "Nothing happens on the McDonnell Douglas property without a conditional use pennit being approved by the city of Irvine," Quigley said. Due 11It appears to me that the Newport Beach City Council is looking for a scapegoat to explain awa) the rapidly expanding development of the airport area that is sure to cause an increase in the air traffic," Henry Quigley said. Newport Beach recently approved a massive developement o! the Emkay propenies Rear the airport and in recent weeks has rushed approval of the Collins Properties, despite that community's lengthy and vocal opposition to further expansion of the airport. Quigley's scapegoat r e r e r e n c e HOttH PACIFIC 0CtA.H observers note, means Irvlne ls belng labelled as the prime cause of added demands on the airport by inference, v.'hlle Nev.·port Beach will reap the added tax benefits of the deve\1Jpmenls in their city. r-.tayor William Fischbach sustalned Henry Quigley's right to pursue the "Ur flamatory" discussions to wllich Cowr cilman Ray Quigley objected. Henry Quigley then added he was "a~ palled by the extremely inflammatory statemenls" of lhe unnamed Newport Beach official. Only Volunteers to Vietnam Dut y -+HAW~!I •• •' .M/\ISKA.l IS. 1 "C.. I •• CH l lSTMASI. WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Nix· on announced today plaru: !or a two- monlh withdrawal o!. 10,000 U.S. troops from South Vietnam and directed that only draftees who volunteer for service in Vietnam be sent there in the future . Nixon's action would reduce the aulhorized troop level to 39,000 by Sept. l. The average monthly withdrawaJ rate of 5,000 !or the summer montm would be half the level of the May.June rate of 10,000. Irvine Council - OK's ZOnmg Law On Development ' Irvine councilmen '!llesday night ap- proved an amended plinned communit7 · :rooing law governing final Seclioos otlllo Irvine Company's develciJmi<nt o f University Park. Cooncilmen Ignored a late.hour pitch by O>uncilman Gabrielle Pryor lo awap increased open space in apartment areas Of, the plan for allowing the developers to build higher profile units -up to three stories, or 50 feet. Mrs. Pryor urged a site coveraga restriction of eo percent versus the 75 percent proposed. In exchange she favored allowq: slightly higher densities end the allowance for hlgiH'ise mulU- family units. Irvine • Company p I a n n 1 n g ad· niliustrator ..James Taylor said the economics of building three-story versus two-story apartment units would require rentals averaging ftOO more than it is fell the market will bear In Irvine. Heeled-up fll'SI Door construction, a· Ira heavy plumbing and other blgb-rist building code pro¥!siOna would mean the finished aparlm<Dts would necessarily rent for amounts aiml1ar to llloM! charg· ed by the Park Newport Apartments. ' Taylor suggealed Ille proximity to the beach and Upper Newport Bay made those higher rentall more feasible. Withnllt similar omenlli<s ltl Irvine, Taylor said the c:ompony did not expect the pniposed addllloDll University Park •Jlllrtmenls would be M ddirable al the higher rental. Vltlmately, llle city council approved the zoning, llmltlng aportm<nt site cav1rare to 86 percent. A motion by Remy Quigley and Mn. Pryor jo limit the site coverace to eo perceol failed on a z, to 3 vote. That means the a p ar tment developments will enjoy only a 10 per""1t .'\yisual open IS)aCe'' area, Mrs .. Pryor 'noted, since roods and eaaements ~e up 15. pereent ol the bldli!lni Ille. • Henry Quigley ..W ooo tllinr he d learned al the ,_ New Town. .,..,. ierenoe at UC Irvine was that other new town developments 11are setting b1gber returm (or open.l(>BCI than we're get.. ttpg .. • ,M;,.I ol the condltloM attached lo the IOlling Io 11 owed recommendatioM presented Tuesday nl¢1t tiy planning all- 'vllor Ed Haworth. '!be approved .,..,. ; (Ste \JNI PARK. Page 2) CYCLE AD '8 AUf,S CA LLS 'Thll Utile motorcycle delivbtd ''tons" cl payload. Check lhll threNlne ad: e 11'11 HONDA TRAIL 70. Only 117 mUet. $111$. XXJMIDS '!be ll•wport lltach man who placed Ille ad reported II aold the motci/cycle •1m the lint all, but we bad tom of calls lhottafter." U that's the kind ol. h>ulin1 power you're loOklnl for ltt a· DAILY PILOl' -dassilled ad deli"" a load ol ""'""°""for you, Dial 1C-.W11, the d~ rtct line to multi. Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who made Ni.Jon's announcement, said the President aJ90 ordered that no draftees will be se~t to South Vietnam unless they volunteer for service there. However, Ziegler said, if they are alrea dy in the war zone or under orders to go there they w.ill staY or be sent. He estimated there are some 4,000 draftees in the Army in South Vietnam. The press spokesrnon said the Sept. 1 troop target level of 39,000 woo!d represent a 93 percent reduction from the authorized ceiling or 549,500 in effect when Nixon took office in 1969. Asked if the 39 ,000 would represent a "residual force," Ziegler said he regard~ ed that term as "somewhat of a mlsnomer.'' However, be said the Unittd States "shaU keep the mlnlmum needed to achie ve our objectives," and that, in any case, some American forces would remain until war prisoners a n d those missing in action have been returned or accounted for. Senator · Speaks_ Filibuster Long-But to No Avail AUSTIN, Tes. (UPI) -Mllie McKool, a i'>-foot-4 state senator known as "~ Berculel1 '1 talked for 42 hours and 3S minutes tryingi to coovioce the• Tau.Senate to lpeod men money !or -tal,bealtJt ..,.....,,,_,aat ~ et bis desk'loday. ttldlbg'lhe -Id's "loogesffdibuster." ,,.,,..'. , McKool, 53, three days ol wblaken oo bis lace, took a long drink of mlllt froll} a IOda pop bottle and aatd,0 1 think the chlrv:q Weren't that good When ' I~." ' It took the SIJute i..s ilwt five rnlnul<J to Icnc1re lolcKoo1'1 filibuster. They_ passed a llCHICw-laua state budget bill that did DOI include tbe Sl7 mDliC!U for mentol health iort!cet he wanted added. ' McKool, woo.. norin'1 h.ill>pildled voice was mode even more squeaky by alm<ist two days of ~: kept up bla strength Dy munching only on oranges, lemons, ''energy tablet&'' and cough drops. He began bis flllbaster before noon Monday and sat down at 5:33 a.m. PDT today. Airport Panel Slates Heari'!'g ._pn Ordinance • By CANDACE PEAll80N Of "".Dtlh' .......... Orange County airport oommissioner. said Tuesday night Ibey will conduct a public' bearing ltl one month on a pro- Council Grants More Irvine Bus' Servi&' ;'. , . . . Authorbatlon <to dciulile tho daytime oervlce cl Ille Plllll 8ui'.ina to coollnue the -bu.ow night runs to University lllib Scbooi tem center tm!lhl and Fri· ~ -snntoclby 111e )"tnl ctty Cow>- cn TueldaJ nl&IS. City staff ~ aulhoriz<d to examine the resulta from toolght's and Friday's use of the·lree but ll<'Vice and determine whether or not to continue It unlll the council nest meets on July 13. Councilman Ray Quigley recommended the blanket outhor!Uttlon notlng city 1taff would on July II be expected to Justify with usage flgureo their decision to .,..,. Unue or abandon the night runs proposed . for Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Councilman Gabrielle Pryor wondmd aloud why the night bus did not continue on to Fashion Wand and the beach, u It -during the day. Paul Brady, aul!tant city manager, aald the ·city had no provisions to suporvl8e younpten using the evening • semce. Councilman Ray Quigley noted that pre-teens mlpt board the bus and "be lei\" at the beach late at nl1ht. Sharon Slr<ello, who beaded tbe ad hoc commlttoe the council earlier Tuetdar commended !or their work on the sum- mer .ttcruUon PfOll'&m, also spoke In favor ol eidendlllg the nl&bt runs. She 1111111..ied the dly lhould offer 1 (S.. BUSES, Pqe 1) [J06ed nrdinan<e prohibiting unauthorlud c<mmercial activity at the airport. Corrufdnkmers were reactJ.ng to a let- ter from Airport Direct<r Robert J. Bresnahan In which be aaid current resuJatlons are too diUicull to enforce. Present statute say1 that "no person ~hall engage in any business or com- mercial activity on the airport without appn>Val ol, and under tbe i.nns prescribed by the Board ol Supervisors." Airport staff m«nl>J. C. R. "Ron" <llandler told CODUl)lss'°l>Crs that this Jlinguage was too vague to determine what ls or lsn'l ODllllllOrcial activity. The ~ ordinance, w h l c h Cbandler called a good 8tarling point, Lo one drafted last January hy Assistant County Counsel Robed F. Nuttman. It details thai no one can operate any profit-cnaktng aircraft.related operaUon without a permit leese or license. It prohibits ail but established fixed· based operaton (FBO) from offering aerial charter, rental.sightseeing, pholograpljic, crop du3ting, advertlsldg, surveying or petroleum services. It would not, however, prohibit prlnte owners from malntalnlng their own airplane or from selling or leasing them. The ordinance, which C b an d I e r rtipeatedly cautioned ls "tentalive," would place regulaUot11 on the 25 lo 30 flying clubs operating oot of the airport. <lland!er said controlling the clube Is a bl( problem becauae "virtually no two operate the same." Clube are tecbnlcally .._.i to be non-profit, lhare the costs and equipment operaUons, he aa!d but In som~, members have no rtgbts to the amts. The~ ordinance would rtquir• the a JUd fiylnc clubs be non-prolit partnenhlps with at least four member1 or noi>profit corporations, !!lat all alrcraU would be owned communally by the club and that there would not be more tl1ln 10 members per one airplane. Oommlsalon Chairman Robert Clark l\IUetled the publ!c hearing on the ma~ !er In ooe month and said that copies ol the JnPOled ordinance 1hould be -lo -( ... OOMMEBCW. Page 1) Ziegler did not reply directly w h e n asked whether all of the 10,000 being withdrawn from Vietnam between July 1 and Sept. 1 will be sent borne. Bu t be pointed out that a great deal depends on the intentions of the North Vietname se whether additional U.S. sea and alr pow..-will be required. He noted 'that an internationally supervised cease-fire t h r o u g b o u t Indochina would end the need for U.S. air and naval power. Irvine Council . ------ Picks Possible LihFary Sites _Jo,~<1~ f"I' ~ange ~\ "°"' """"""" ·~ls ylfir "' a W!lilc library brilnc!b' ih lriine, ~en 'l'Uesday night aelected four possible locationsi the Irvine ·Cor:iipany bas agreed to donate. County library ll)'llem olficiab will mab the final cholco ol the sltel favored hy the Irvine coancilmon. · 'They are 1all one acre JW'(!el.s at the following locatillll5: Oilver Drive aod Barranca Avenue, 7.ee Street at CaQlpus Drive, Michelson Avenue and University Park ·E'emen- jacent to the UniversJty Park Eiemen-- tary School, preferably as close to University Drive as possible. , The 5,000 square foot library branch will be built with funds alloca14\d In the 1972-73 county budget and may be built on any of the four sites picked by the council. · ' Manhunt Continues PERU, Ind. (UPI ) -While FBI laboratory 'experts in Washington ex· amined ite.Dt! found on H o o s i e r farmlands, authorities maintained their manhunt . south of here today for an airline hijacker who may have !alien to his death from a jetliner Saturday morn- ing. "We will continue until all logical areas have been searched," said James F • Martin , special agent in charge of the FBI at Indianapolis. -···~· :~'.--11~~---'" I -... . :· . . .. . ·•.· • ::r ' • • • 1v'4it·: ~~ J ,,;,is. • /':#. 0111, 1'~ ~ •l ~ . I' • ~'o \t ';-•1 .l-·.or:"-i-o I TAHITI ' ;. $0UtH #f AClflt OCIAH . ;1 I • ltO 150 NUC LIAI TIST AllA ·:. . . . :: 1 · .... ,..,. -. ' . -. . .. • TAHITI • •• • .•• 20 --- MUIUIOA~ MANOAIEVA .. ·• 1~0· ' 120 '. U'I H.W.~ FRENCH BLASTS-France, i~noring worldwide protests, llas_•larted a series-or-nu clear tests in vicinity ol Tahiti ·in South Pacific. GOY.. ernment sources said the first bomb was detonated June 25, and another is expected this week. France Re.sames ·Nuclear • ·Test-Despit,e Prot,est,s PARIS (UPI) -France bas resumed nuck.ar atmospheric testing ill the South Pacific in spite of vigOTOUll protestl by several nations that the blasts · may ~ danger their environments, the French news agency Agence France Press l8Jd today. The agency said in a report from Tahiti that the first nu clear warhead· type device was detonated Sund~y morn- ing In the vicinity of Mururoa Atoll, !00 miles southwest of Tahiti. The French Defense Ministry declined comment on the report as did the nuclear experimentation center bei-e which coordinates atomic testing In the Pacific. The ministry llldlcaled Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on ttie tests until the series wu com· pleted, presumably sometime later this summer. There was no word about the safety of the protest yacht Greenpeace ID which last was reported heading into the test area. Another yacht manned by member• of the Frfncb Nuclear Test Protest Co~ mlttee wu preparing lo set sail Thu,.. day afte:rDOOI\ for the te!t area front Tauranga, New Zealand, JOO miles aoutb of Wel!lngton. In WclUngton, New Zealand Prime Minister John Marshall said tonight he would seek confirmation that the tests had begun but would not send a protest note to France~ · "There's no point Jn wasting more paper and time In telegrams," be ·said. The reported blast came after a l~y effort hy New Zealand, Austrafla and Peru to fette a canceUatlon of the new series of test uploslons. The three countries, joined later by others, lniUally issued formal complaints against the planned i.sts at the reopen- ing of the Dlaarmament Conference In Geneva this month. Gen. Curtis LeMay Agrees To Settlement In Lawsuit A aerie& of anti·nuclear demonstrations and bomb attempts against French prop- erty followed in A u s t r 11 a and New Zealand. Australia's. Prime Minister William McMahon, sent a personai message lo President Georges Pompldou to ask for an end to the tests. The F'tenclt """11tnOnt answered charges that testo were bannlut to the environmGa cl l'lcfflc cout nallons by saying the blasts were low-yield and lllf. ficlenUy removed from p o p u I a t I o q centers. SETTLES EMPLOYMENT SUIT Newport's General LoMay By WU.LIAM SCHREIBER 01 .... ~·If ,., .. , 11111 General Qirtis F. LeMay, retired U.S. Air Force chief of staff who now lives 1n Newport Beach, agreed Tuesday in Los Angeles to an out o! court settlement <I bis 15.S million lawsuit agalnll bla former employer. LeMay, of 11143 Pescador Drive, In the e:iclusive Westcllff area of the city, charged In his 1969 suit that Networks Electronic CorporaUon wrongly fired him u chairman of the board In 11168 because ho ran as Alabama Gov. George. Wallace's vice presidential candidate. He claims he took ·a leave of absence from his SS0,000 a year 'poslUon In order to run on the American Independent Par· ty ticket. The company subs<quonUy filed a IS.I million countenult •taling LeMay failed to abide by bla contract, never had a leave ol aboence and used hb position In the company as a political sprlngboanl. 'lbe r.ountersuit wu d..Lmtlssed when LeMay accepted the settlement for an undli!closed amount o! cash. lleaclled at hb home today, LeMay declined to comment on the amount of !lie 1Ult'a settlement but did ny he was aatls!led with It. • I ....... w .... er N!iht and mornln& low clooda are expected along th• Orange C-Oast on Thursday, clearing to hazy sunshine In the altemoons. Blgll> In the low 70's at the beaches, rising lo 90 Inland. Lows llHI. INSmE TODA 'f Bto EU<.'Olw11'1 ,,.., l><hfnd Newport Horbor Hfoh Scllo<>f oppcrB11lly arr In lhr path o/ progrtu. Set storv, PaQt JO. -... """ IW1 L.M; .. ni 1 C•lll9rlll1 I C!t..Slltll tMl ,_ . OtMMf'f • !':!(II 1Htlldl It __,., ,... . '"'"' ....... ,. ,..... 11-lt ........ ..,. 11 ""'WV II _.._ D • I DAlLY PILOT IS Rezone 8id A t El Toro (;e~ Delay Tile eoomty Planning Commb!lon Tu•g. day fave whal wu tantamount to a denla of an El Toro rezone reque11t arter the developer •lain uked for a delay In tho publlc bwlog. 11Th11 l1 u cloae to a denial u we can get without denying Jt," commissioner Woodrow Butterfield told some 12 angry El Toro homeowners who had for the K"C- Ol.t time trekked to Santa Ana for tht hearing. JU1 statement received a round of applause. The comml.aslon took the matter under rubmiukln for future act· Jon. 1be change of zone request had been filed by Covington Brothers company for 20 atter of agriculturally zoned land at Belgrten Place and Lendsvlew Avenue near Gates Elementary School. Ac- cordi111 to county planning officla11, the developer plans to construct 2 8 O townbouJes al a denalty of 14 unlls per ac;re -roughly five times the denslty allowed by the arta general plan. The El Toro General Plan would allow lhe land to be rer.oned for a maximum of only 70 unll.9. The request had been opposed by both the county planning 1taff and the S1d- dleback Area C.OOrdinatlng C o u n c i I because of the hlgh density Involved. The developer r<porl<dly r<QUe$1ed the delay of the public hearing early 1'ueaclay morning and did not notify the miclenlJ who live near the property and blM been invited lo appear at the hearing. The owner of the property, Raymond II. Prothez<>, also appeared at the hearing and told the commlsalob he was not in- formed ol the delay request either. Grunion Running 0 On Coast Sands Grunion wUI be running on coastal beaches beginning at 10:40 p.m. tonight and again at 12:40 a.m., assuring a run of Intrepid grunion hunlers under a full moon. The siJ:-lnch nsh will wiggle onto the sand with hlgh tide, r<main ap- proximately five ·hours lo lay eggs and return lo aea aaaln before d1yllght. '!be opawnlng "uon ii eljiected lo continua through September, according lo Newport Beach lifeguard!. _ The-flsbwlll al .. rnrn Tl!Ui'li!ay~al t1:!f p.m. and J:21 a.m.; on Friday they wiJI run at U:03 a.m. and 2:03 a.m., but not by speclllc location. 2nd Dies in Blast · SAN DIEGO (AP) - A second man/ Gernardo Amaya, 40, died TuesdlY o burna suffered In on expl0tlon that took tha life of Gustava Robinlon, U. Monday. ..... Trustees of San Joaquin Set. Selv.es 'Far Apart' By PATRICK BOYLE ot 1111 DlllY f'lltt Ir.If SADOLEBACK VALLEY parents who think the school board ~eet! in a cazy room conducive to conversation and comments from the audience prob- ably only go to school open house parties. . AtmO.!Jphere i,s very important to the tone of commun1callon, whether it be ln a carpeted school room or a large meeting haU, It ~an be dark and gloomy, bright and cheery, repre!!!Slve, frien dly or plain. It can also be sterile, which might be one word to des- cribe the new meeting arrangements of the San Joaquin Elementary School trustees. The board used to meet in an old Quonset hut, but at least you could make out the details of their faces from the audience and could hear them when they spoke. The floor was carpeted, the seating was in somewhat of :1 semi-circle and the board sat on a small stage. BUT TllEY 1'10VED recently to the multi·purpose room of La Paz Inter· mediate School, with its white stucco walls and soft nuorescent lighting. The at.age Is bi gg er too, and the mlcrophones are fancier. But the distance betv.•een parties is enormous. and sitting in the audience squinting to see the tru stees some 30 yards away, you feel like the ultimate {ate rather than the immediate future of 14.000 children is being decided. The board members must talk and breathe into pivoting microphones to be heard -or they can carry on little private conversations amone them- selves without being heard. THE SPEAKERS, set into the pure white ceiling some 20 feet above the audience, crackJe occasionally or sc~eech with feedback if one of the micro- phones is moved in the wrong direction . Tll E BOARD MEMBERS sit fer back on the high stage, which is sep- araied from the audience by an expansive \vhite tile floor. A person wishing to address the board stands at a microphone in the middle or this floor, and probably feels lonely enough out there to want lQ.,hurry up. U he doesn't hurry up, the rlve--minute timer goes off with a "dlng" and that is that. In contrast, many other school boa~ds meet In small room~, ·a~d even though the audience is packed in sometimes, the atmosphere is friendlier and you can usually make out the ""'hiskers on the trustees. The comments are Creer and more passionate in a smeller room , and there is more empathy. The San Joaquin district does have a facilities problem and hundreds of parents often tum out for board meetings, necessitating use of the big room. But the trustees table could easily be mov ed down to the floor on a ~evel with the audience and the chairs arranged in less of a marching fonnat1on. IT WOULD BRING everyone closer together and might even eliminate some of the animosity that has existed between different district facUons for so long. _'Pros' Happ y, 'Antis' Not, Over Coastline Initiative By BARBARA KREIBICll Of !111 D•ll'I' ,.llel St1tl The news that a tough Initiative measure designed to protect t h e CtllfornJa coastline apparently quallfies for presentation to t.he voters on \he Nov~mber ballot sparked mii:ed reac· tlonl along tbe Oronge Coast today. City officials and coruervaUonists varied from strong rupport to strong op- position in their comments on the pnr posed measure. Irvine Council Action The coastlhie protection measure sponsor<d by the California Coastal Alliance wu reported, in an unofficial count, to have received almost 350,000 signatures on petitions c I r c u I a t e d throughout tbe state. Here are the major act.Ions taken by the Irvine City Q>uncil Tuesday night: BIKE TRAILS -Approved planning commission's recommendations for a 3.1-mlle pilot blkeway project, authorizing $6,300 to paint trails in streets be- tween Unlverslty Park and UC Irvine. VNl PARK PLAN -Adopted the amended planned communlly zoning ordlnance covering final portions of development In University Park including changes in the pion agr<ed lo by the Jnine company. IJBRARY SlTE -Selected four possible sites for an Orange County LJ. brary System branch in Irvine -the clty'a first public library. BVQGET -Adopted the expense portions of tile city's 11.1 million 1972-73 budge!, reOectlng '300,000 of cul.9 from the P"'llmlnary !!pelldlng proposal. . OPEN ·SPACE -Authoriied the planning commbslon to forward the ir reaolutlon supporting the county open space general plan proposal to the board of supervisors. WINDOW TRACT BID -Told Larwln Company the second reading of a zoninf ordinance covering their north Irvine area property may never be given. PINK BUS SERVICE -Approved a doubling or daytime runs and experi· mental nighttime service to the Uni High teen center on Mondays, Wednes- days and Fridays at an el.slmated added cost or $2,00J. OU.N•I COAn IS DAILY PILOT fteOrllrlle C6nt CIAILV PILOT, wlltl 'lltlktl fl ~ t11e f"twt-Pr .... It DWlllNd 11W ,,. Or•• C•••I Pllbllthlnf C'"'91nr ....... rete •Ill•• •re Plolblltlltd, Mond•'r fl'w'oullt fl"r'llbJ, flf C"I• Mt11, Ntwl!Ort anth, Hvt1llnt'°" llr-.::11/!t'°""!lln 'l•llily, latf,1111 aetett. lr\'$rlr/Salkllrblc~ •rid S111 C"'"'911,., lt:fl JUM C1pl11r1no. A sf11tle r111ontl .SlllM! ii M 1illl«I Sah.IN1ys Mid tlll'llf•JL The ..,._., ll\ltllllflllll pi<lnt 11 11 U1 Wnf •• , SI,..,, Co"• Mn•. Cllifo"'I•, fl',.. lelitrt N. Weed p.,..ldefll •l'IO ,.'*il111tr J•clt R. C11rler Vlei ~lftrl~ end Gtntr1I Mll'llOtf 1h•m•1 K1e ... a Ell'ltor Th•M•t A. M~rphi11e M1n•1l119 Ell'lllH' Ch1rlet H. Le•• ltich1r4 P. Ntll AalatMt Mtnttlntl (lltlt• Ofllc .. Cltfl MIMI: D w..t l1y St""1 N....,.,. '-dll a»:! H....,_. h.lltnNI ..... llM a .. ctl r in,.., .. ,"""'"" tMl"'9* 1Hd11 t1l15 ltkll levlrler• s... c......-.1 as...,. &1 c-ir. -..1 r11.,-1n41 '41-4111 e&..lfW 44,., ...... 642·1671 S. C ........ Al hpartM&'Rbl Tat J t AT 4'2-4420 ~ 1m. ~ Cnal l"vlllltlll .. ~. ... .... ........ lllW!t•lllnl; ........ ---:it ................. ... ,.., .. ··~......,. ~,... ........ .,,,... ....... . 5£: ... f:'"'lawlieil .... .., ":.= ~ W •II . II ""'"flll'' f!'lllltn ........ Analieim Aides Get 4-1 Vote Of Co1i fid ence Both Anaheim City h-tanager Keith A. Murdoch and Public Works Director Thornton E. Piersall ""ere given a vote of confidence Tuesday night by t h e Anaheim City Council. The two key executives who allegedly profittd from land purctwca beeause of in.side Information not available to the publlc, received a .. 1 endorsement. Ralph C. Sneegas, the freahman coun- cilman who took his seat last April, cast the dissenting vote. Bolh Murdoch and Plena!l appeored at Tuesday night'• council session to pub1lc· ly call for a Grand Jury Investigation in· lo the aUegatlona. They denied that eny oI their actlon.s were Illegal, unethical and Immoral. In a 8tory publilh<d Jut Friday, the pair wu said lo have planned public works projects that Increased the value of the land tlley bought ID speculative transactions . In 1 prepared atatemenl, Murdoch llld, "'U there Is any way lo lns\Jt upon such an lnve,Upllon by the Grand Jury, we would lnslS\ upon tt. If the Grand Jury won '\ Investigate, then I l!k the councU to do It." It would qualify for the ballot if 315,504 signatures were filed with the secretary or state by the Thursday deadline. San Clemente City Councilman Thomas O'Keere, a strong supporter of coastline controJ.,, said today he felt the initiative measure "is not properly thought out." "Its too all·encompassing in scope to properly meet the needs of the citizens and to properly reflect the rights or some property owners. particularly i n developed areas," said O'Keere. The bill In his opinion, said the coun- cilman, would be "unworkable" ~uae. as an initiative measure it could not be amended or modified without another "'"" of the people. O'Keel said he felt a bill authored by Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach} "would be a very good method of shoreline control with whlch I think should pass." }fe expressed the opinion that the in- itiative measure cou1d subject the state to claim for damages because It's moratorium pro•ns could be con· side red "inverse condemnation." Allhough the proposed legislation Is similar to a stringent coastline protection bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (0-Los Angeles) which suffered legislative defeat in two successive years, O'Keel said ~ Is In fact more 11rJn. gent than the Sleroly bill becau.. of the difficulty of amending It should problems arise . Lag1U11 Beach Councilman Roy Holm, on the olhcr hand, llld be would support the Initiative musure. "I think It"• unfortunate that the Legialature didn't ... fit 'to provide ap- propriate protection for the coastline throuih the legtslaUve process," said Holm. _ "! wouldn't normally favor the in- itiative procedure u 1 way to do something •• complicated as thla, bu\ In view of tbe lack of -llronf 1ctton on the part of the Leglalat'll!, I Will support the lnJUative." Holm noted thlt tbe ptOl)Oled bill 1.9 much the aame u tho SlerotJ bill which he bu supported. 1111 attempt to win of· llc\11 Lquna Beach City OiuncU aupport of tbe Sleroty meU'.ll'I ..., datuted bi a 3 to I vote, w1t1i only Ooundlman Cheriton Boyd vollna with blm. IJ for the Cori>entar bW, Holm uld, "That LI ao toolhl• 1 piece "-lqiJla- Uon I don~ think ft'I IVID W«lll lllP-............ ..--.. ' In view of ti. two peat c1t1 .. 11, tllo Lag1U11 councilman aa1'j he felt there was little hope for passage of the Slerot.y bill In 1\.9 third IPJ>WlllC< thiJ yw, 32-count 'Doghouse' I ·Continued By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL Of 1M 1*1'1' •11t1 SNtt C. Dominic Shelton, charged with 32 counJ.s of allowJna an unrestrained doa lo run on Three Attb Bay'a beacb, may be hoping the District Atlorney'a bark ii wor1e lhan hla bite. A convictJon on each count - something that Shelton calls an im· poaslbllily -could bring a maximum of sil months In Jall and-or a !!00 fine. S\art multiplying by 32 and It could mean a lot of years and-or a lot of dollan. Shelton, 112, of 22 La Senda Drive, was scheduled lo appear today before Judge Richard Hamilton ln Division 2 of South Orange County Municipal Court, but the case has been continued unlll Aua. 23. Shellon requested the continuance t111 Friday when be learned thal the District Attorney's Ofrlce had added 31 count! to an original cUatlon made April 21. It was at I a.m. that day that Orange County Animal ~helter officla1s uralded" Three Arch Bay Beach. Shelton was one of three dog owners cited by officials. Shelton malfttalned thlt the beach al the private enclave is for residents or Three Arch Bay only and that the county has no business sending animal control officers over private streetl to the beach. The weahhy mining company owner also claimed that a few old argum.enta with the Three Arch Bay Community Association are again beginning to boU and that 's why he baa been sinaled out with the 32 counta of allowina: h1' dog to run on the beach. Deputy District Attorney Daniel Kelly said this morning that the counta are based on testimony from 16 witnesses who have cited datea and Umea between Sept. 1971 ond now when Shelton alleged- ly was seen on the beach running bis dog. America and l have my passport to prove it. How could 1 be on the beach?" Shelton asked. The apparent crackdown on Three Arch Bay, according to animal llhelter officials, was made at the request of tesident:s in the priYate community. When a complaint ii made, a reip()llle must be made, said Robert Wohrman, chief of Animal Field Services for the county. "The ordinance ii quite apecllic and we're here to enforce It.'' be aa!d. Dogs ate problbi.led on all county beaches. "A mnall mlnor'!y ii trylnJ lo nm this community and I don't think tbe rest of us deserve that," commented Shelton. "That's why I'm going to stand up. "U you don't take a stand, you deserve what you get," the mining magnate con· eluded . Bush Fire Stemmed LAFAYE'ITE (AP) -Several score of firemen from seven Contra Calta CoWlty communities have auccesafully atemmed a raging hillside flrt before it could destroy many expensive homes. GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRlll DIAMOND FJNaERPRINTS Recovery of lost or stolen clla- monds has alwaya been a problem because there was no means of Identifying such gems. II lost, there was ao real way to prove ownership when found. U stolen, ldentlflcaUon, particularly of the larger more valuable atones, was complicated by the fact that the thieves usually cut the larger gems into maller sites, thus mak· ing identlflcaUon a virtual lmpo11I· blllly. A new service, called "ldenU. gem," baa recently been announced. by the London firm of Diamond Gracllng Laboratories. Tbt photo- graphic pl'Olless pictures the blslc charactaruU~a of the p o 11 1 h e d alone, recording forever the Uny markings which malt• each clla- mond different from any other. Just as llnge?Jlrlnlt cannot lit changed, these tiny marking• ~ main Identifiable regarclleH of any recuttln1 of !ht 1to ... Not only does th!• means that your dlamoad It Ill 1ctiill feet clll· lennt lhlll •111 other Ill the world ••• It aJJo mu111 that we Clll now chanfe the phraae, "Dlamondl are Fonver Yours!" • Rdor1n Pi.tt Aecord Reached On School Fun-ds ' ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan and DemocraUc leaders of the As.sembly have reached tentative agree- ment on a school finance reform of near. ly II billion a year, potties lo the blpart\Jan negotlationa say. The compromise 1.9 lo he pre"nted lo state senators o( both parties ln an unusual closed-door background briefing late today. Neither Rea1an nor Assembly Speaker Bob MGretti was immediately avaJlable for comment, but details of the com· promise agreement were pie~ together from other partlclpant.s in the more than two months of bipartisan negotiations on the tax bill. The compromise would involve a one- cent increase in the state sales talt and use a hlg ci.mt: of the estimated !300 mlltion surplus in the state budget to meet the stale Supreme Court's ruling that Callfornla'1 system •of school finances b 1mCOn.stitutional, sources said. That would result in the state taking over a bigger share or the cost of local schools -perhap! about $500 million of the $3 bill.ion-raised by property taxes for achools -plus more 1tate money to Im- prove the educaUon of chlldren with special learning problems. Senate President pro tern James Mills, Democratic leader or the upper house. announced to senators Tuesday that representatives or the governor and the Democratic leader of the Assembly re- quested a private bearing before the Senate. Mills said the purpose of the meeting, a so-called ''caucus of the whole," would be to hear details of a school finance and tax reform measure which Mills aald "apparently had been worked out" between Reagan and Moretti. Mill!: satd Moretti and a repreaentatlve of the governor would appear tot;ether to present the plan, but gave no further details ln his floor announcement. Principal purposes of the comproOU.e are to reduce property taxes and find a school support system thlt meel.9 the court's objection that the reliance on From Pagel COMMERCIAL • • all clubo and pilol.9 associations. In bis letter, Bresnahan said that unautboriztd activities have .. increased slgnillcanUy" in Ille north tledown and heavy maintenance areas. He added "there U liU1e doubt" such acUvlties have "now reached proportions great eoough to affect Ille future finan- cial posture ol the legitimato '1ener1l aviation business convnwllty" at the alll'Ofl. There are elaht FBO operator.a at the airport t1'1fl, wbtch Bresnahan said offer a "more than adequate selection of flrmJ." Unautbor~1 often f r e e -1 a n c e operators wim low overhead costs usually charge lower rates than FBO's, he said, calling llJat "inoqultable com- petiUon." He listed problem areas as aircralt rent.al, Jeulng, leaseback ( a f t e r purchase), used aircraft iales. Olght in- structlon, maintenance, electronic npair, charter Oigbl.9. Jocal property taxes makes the quality or a child's education dependent on the wealth of his neighbors. llere are details which other partlclpanl.9 In the n•souations, who asked not lo he Identified , 1ald the com. promise ~talns: NE\V TAxES -There is ··substantial agreement" between Reagan and Moretti on which taxes to raise to pay ror the new school support, with the new ta'x structure putllnl: heaviest reliance on salea taxes . That \lould be cloaer to the proposed tax structure in Reagan's $1 .2 billion refonn plan, unveiled la.st month, than to 1'.1oretti11 tax, reform proposal which iD· eluded big state Income tax hikes. PROPERTY TAX RELIEF -Morel- tl1s proposals to increase the present homeowner's property tax exemption rrom $750 to $2,000 -a tu. cut of about $l40 per homeowner -is "substantially trlmmed" and most of the property ta."< relief will be in the form of lower school tax rates in the state's poorer distric't'· SCHOOL MONEY -"There are 1Wl things to be worked out on tbt school finance aide, but the diUere.nceJ aren't insurmountable. They'll be presentin; the Senate 90 percent of the ball game." From Page l UNI PARK ... dit.ions, including those added by coon--~ cilmen, are : -Requlremenl.9 for condlllonaJ ... ~ permits for the propostd hotel in either of two areas west or Culver Drive ad· jacent to Rancho San Joaquin G91f~ Course, and also a perm.lt for an ~ · fonnation center to be located in a multi- family area at the eastern end of the University Park devek>pnent. • -A requirement that salea literature and sales office displays forewarn pro-. spectlve home buyers of the nature of developments on adjacent properties. ' -Commercial street signing must be limited from the previous four signs to one sign per business. : -Area 13 eonstrucUon be delayed fot . six months pending delermination of park needs in the area surrounded by , already built singl~family b o m e • , northwest of University Drive near Uni · Park Elementary School. Fro11t Page J BUSES .•. "variety of opportunities" and ~ there are concerts at Fuhlon llland, tWc) · movie theater• arid evening beach f~ ~ that rniKht be attnctJ.ve to Irvin~ you~· er adult.I who would 1 appreciate an alternative to the teen center. • Mrs. Pryor'• suggestion to extend !Qi .. nighl runs wu dropped as the council . adopted the added bus service. .~ , Brady said today the city will not pay extra for the Pink Bus while it is parked at the teen center waiting for the 11 p.m. : final run. The bus driver has beta - employed by the city at $2.50 on hour to hel p aupervlse teen actlvllles, BradJ dlif. , ' . . , • • • • • • • . 0 OM·EGA • • • --..... -"' ..... -.. .. .... .... ll«lt flC.lff ..-i. ,,, .. . 1-141( ....... .,. ....... .. . • J.C. .J./.ump~ne6 Jewefer6 '1· 1823 NEWPORT BLVD~ COSTA MESA CONVINllljT TUMJ JI YIAll IN IAMI LOCATION IAHICAMIAICAAIJ-MAITU CHAlSI l'HONI M .. 1401 ' l \ I I I I • ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Fe deral Aid Ha ngup The determination of at least two Saddleback College trustees lo spurn federal linanclal aid at any cost ap- parenUy dies hard. Their "noble" refusal last November lo seek federal fundJ to help build the new science-math center 1.s com• Ing home to roost on the shoulders of the Iaxpayers as part of a probable 32-cent boost in the di.strict tax rate under the new budget. On that occasion, the votes of Trustees Michael Collins, John Lund and Patrick Backus dumped Hans Vogel's motion to seek the federal fund s. Only trustee Alyn Brannon supported Vogel's contention that "things have changed ... there was a time when the people who elected me didn't want us to seek federal aid, but that's changed ... " Since Vogel has been known as one of the board's more conservative members, his comments could hardly be taken as an indication that he had turned into a llam· Ing liberal overnight. Rejection of the federal aid at that lime set off a chain of events that even led to a recall threat against the trustees when they proposed a 34-cent permissive tax to raise money to match state funds that were avail· able to help with the building project. Financing of the science-math bullding still looms heavy and apparently will account lor half the tax rate increase ca1led for in the new budget. Did all this inspire a "second look'' at the federal fund picture by the Inflexible trustees? ApparenUy not ao far as Lund and Collins were concerned. In a 3-2 split vote last week, the board approved acceptance or $36,500 In federal funds for vocational education programs - Lund and Collins dissenting. "I don't want someone In Washington Jooking over my shoulder," intoned Lund. It would take quite a crew Indeed to look over the shoulders of all the thousands of schools and colleges now accepting federal aid to help meet the growing cost of e<iucat1on. Conlinued rejecUon of this avallable financial aid is a disservice to the district and the taxeayers who have to dig that much deeper into their poclleu lo keep the school going. Project Deserves Action Two lrvino citizen advisory committees have pre- sented conflicting recommendations regarding the pro- posed extension of Campus Drive. !-1embers of the environmental quality committee believe the city should require another environmental impact statement before further considering approval of the $800,000 project to be built largely wllh county fund s. The city's public highways and transportation com· mittee argues this link between UC Irvine and the Irvine Industrial Complex is needed Immediately. They believe further delays of the approval will raise the city's share of the highway construction cost, since the city's gas tax fund for road projects is getting latter each day and would be tapped lor up to 50 per· cent of the cost. The environmentalists, for. their part, offer little evidence to show the Campus Drive link would substan· tiaUy affect the UCI nature study area -the San Joaquin Marsh Reserve. UCI planners note the original Campus Drive align· ment will do more to protect the wildlife preserve than harm it by creating a barrier to vandals and unthinking residents. · The project deserves early consideration. SB l tnportant A nswer to Import ant Q11estion Woman , Man Notice Age Early, Late Nixon: 'Hanoi Is Losing' W ASH!NGTON -President Nixon, who ha1 not held a new1 confertnce in three months, has given an important answer t.o an important question in a magazine article published last week. The President said that both militarily and politically, Hanoi t. losing the "desperate gamble" of its lovaskm of Sou.th Vietnam. "Eleven weeks have now passed Aince that N o r t h Vietnamese inv8· sion," be asaid. "The fighting continues, but the South Viet· namese have held. Not only hlive t hey held mili· tarily, but the wfy In w h I c h the p e op I e of South Vietnam have rallied to tbelr nati(ID'I defense should persuade even the most committed apologists for the enemy that Saigon, not Hanoi, speaks for the South Vietnamese people." The President made this state. ment in a long article entitled 0 Tht Real Road to Peace" in the new1 magaiine, U.S. News and World Report. BE STATED m AT despite Hanoi's failure, the United States t. aonelheless prepared lo settle the confllct on the basis of an lntemation&Uy supervised cease-fire, return of priaonen of war and, alter the foregoing, a complete withdrawal of all American forces within four months. The President's statement Is notable for several realODI. 1be firat, of course, -\is that he now judges Hanoi. to have fail- ed and his oountarmessuree of mining and bombing lo have llllC<eeded In mak· ing it possible for the South VJetn1meso (rucHARD WILSO~ to "hack it." A secondary point bears strongly on the iresent effort, wilh apparent Russian help, to reopen negotiations in a way that wtll lead"" to a settlement. The sa!gon government, he said, represents the will of the South Vietnam... people, South Vietnamese refugees in Invaded areas have fled from their "liberators." They are not collaborating with Hanoi. IIOWEVER, IN THIS connection it is an establL!hed condition that the North Vietnamese Army bas occupied and 11 in conlrol of Quang Tri, the nor1hemmost province of South Vietnam. Under this condition how d-Oes an in- ternaUonally supervised c e a s e f i r e operate? Does it mean that the North Vietnalnese Anny remains in position in Quang Tri Province whlle under in- ternational supervision and awaiting some future political settlement? Or does it mean a withdrawal of the North Viet- namese Anny to its position north of the demilitarized zone? These questions suggest themselves for two reasona. At the beginning of the ao- called Easter offensive there was a disposition ln high official quarters, noted herein earlier, to accept the idea the N(l"th Vietnamese would occupy one and posslbly two of the northernmost .pro- vinces of SOuth Vietnam where a pro- visional Viet Cong government might be established. THE SECOND REASON ls !hat oome line of discusaloo not yet disclosed by the President mu.rt have been pursued by him and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev In their long and bhmt boat ride and talk session on Vietnam while Nilon was in Moscow. It was nearly 11 evident then as it b now that the North Vietnamese orrensive was off schedule. Soviet President Podgorny 's visit to Hanoi followed and he has ended tt by saying the PariJ Pe.ace Talli-would be resumed soon and Russia would work to insure their success. It ls reasonable to speculate, therefore, that 90fllewhere in this area -the mean- ing of a ceasefire in all or Indochina - lies the flexibility which could be the key opening the door to a settlement. Even if that speculation is wrong, there ls evidently some fresh factor in the diacusslons Nil:on and Dr :Henry A. Kiss· inger have been having with the Russians and Chinese. NIXON'S EMPHASIS in saying that even tbe "most committed apologi sts for the enemy" mu.st realize that SaJgon represents the will of the South Vie~ namese people gives no hint that be ha1 decided to dump President Thieu. But under the preaent m 11 It a r y clmunstances, he mlibl find It desirable to make specific conceJslons going beyund the broad terms or bis latest peace plan. The safest conclusion t. probably the simplest: Now t.hat the Hanoi govern- ment has fallen substantially abort of Its main aims. the President is trying out several different approaches which "would not require surrender anti humiliation on the part of anybody" - presumably including W a s h I n g ton , Saigon, Hanoi, Moscow and Peking. That, of course, 115 just as hard as it sounds. High Court on Club Guests Recently, the United Statea Supreme Court handed down a declslcm In one pbase, and one only, of the queatlcm of racial ilmltatlon In prlvale clube. It ia an exceedlngly complex question, touching nol only legal rlghta, but ... cial tradiUon in the human relaUon. It iJ filled with emotion and prejudice. U you speak on It, no mat- ter what view you adopt, a segment of the pe o p l e may agtee with you, but another segment will certainly disagree with you vehemently, Jn part and prob- ably in whole. The cHe ~volvu a lrslemal lodge In Pennsylvania wbtre • white me.mber OllAIMI COAST DA ILY PILOT lof>m N. Wood, Plll>U.her Tllom<11 X~nll, ldllor Albfrl W . .Botu ldiloriai Pao• Bllilor 'Ille --of the Dan,. Pilot lffkl to lntonn and 1Umu· 1a.. .....i... by .,.....nunc th(s ne"Ml~per'a opinions and com~ mentary on to11tcs of lnt~l'ftt and algnl!lc~. by i:rovlding a fonun IOt' th~ e.xpreuton. of ·oor rted• oolnlonl, and by .....,.unc the dlwne vlewpolnu: ot lntonned ob--eerwn and tp0kt1mtn on tOSlb o(lhodot. Wtdnesday, June 28, 1972 ( ROYCE BRIER ) look a friend to lunch 11 a 1U01t, a Negro legislator. He Wu refused aervlce at the bar. Jt was the contention of appellant'• counsel that since the bar aerved liquor by authority of a state license, the guest'• COllllliutlonal rights were vlolaled. The Court held 6 to 3 tmiy were not, and in ef· feet that the public interest was not ger· malne. Justices Douglas, Brennan and Marohall dissented. YOU PERCEIVE the case rests on a narrow base. It did not Involve mem- bership In the lodge, but only a guest's Ute or me faclllly or the lodge 00 Jn. vttatlon of a member. So the Court was not compell(!d to come to grips with the run question, though to everyone'• knowledge the run quest.Jon hu been debated in the nation for a decade. The mojorlty opinion was that the II· quor flctUty was In no dlrrerent category from olhtr atat.e-connected facilities, such 11 electricity, water and police and fire ()l'<ltactlon. Hence, the plaintiff could not apposl In the Fourteenth Amendment lo the ConstltuUon or the United States !or rellef. The Fourteenth ii ooe of the most fn. tutit1n1 of the Amtndments !or Ila ht.lory alone. It was drafted in 11166 In the angry aftermath or war, and 9fas declared adopted July 23, I!lt. It wu an effort to arant fllll clliltnshlp rtat>t. 1o blacU wbo bad emuged from slavtey. It. tey peaage readl: "No state aball 'make or enforce any law which lhan abrldi• the prl'11ec .. and tnununlUa or dUlllll of the United Stat .. , • , " Al we know, the Amendment was for many years clrromvented tn voting and other area•, and ha• only come into force in our time. MANY BLACKS and those COllCtmed with their civil rights hive ar!IUed recenlly that thta should apply to membershtp In private organlzallons. But lhe Fourteenth u It standl cannot be so construed. It t. doubtful If any amend· ment or pursuant law could impair a right or clliltns to enltt private, volun- tary aaoclaUons with other citizens of their choice, and to devise rulet for ex· eluding those not of their choice, without itself violating the rights of members of such associations. Yet tradition is a hidden but important part of law, and by common consent guett status 11 ln anotbe.r dimension. It would perhaps be more sensible, and cer- tainly more amiable, to cxrmpl club guest.$ on good faith of a member, from normal and ratlonnl restrlcUons. The Court ruled otherwise. Dear Gloomy Gus Will Newport police lnvestlgale the naUonalty publiciud mayhem In which a talkative Republican flg· ure was allegedly brutallzed at the Newporler Inn! -A.G. L. Tlh ... ,.,. mt.di ,....,.. ....... ""' __ , • .., .... ., ftte !flfWWNf'. ...... """ "' ""'" ... ...,.,,. .... DtllY '"""'· _(SYDNEY J.HARRI~ TbQuatits At Laree: A woman begins to nolice 1he ill no longer young 10 years before she has any real need to worry about it; a man begins to notice he is no longer young 10 years after everyone else has tacitly .accepted It. . ~ . It is not merely that those who live by the sword die by the sword -it is that, In most cases, they die by the 1ame sword. (In that their own weapon is aim~ ly turned and uoed agaiml them.) • • • People who leave large sums to chari- ties when they are dead, •nd w o u I d part wJth little when they were alive, are displaying more selfishness t h a o benevolence. • • • Technology ls going lo have lo hurry a le.~ faster than It is to keep up with the rising expectations of the younger generation, for IOOft nobody will be around who wants to do the dirty work , while there is still plenty or dirty work to be done. • • • The worst crime that chronic poverty commits is the steady erosion of con- science among those who have no hope, and who substitute the act of retaliation for the sense of remorse. • • • There is nothing more fatal to good conversation than agreement. • • • When ?.lark Twain returned from traveling around the globe, the primary illusion he left abroad was this one: "There are many humorous things in the world, among them the white man's no-- Uon that he is less aavage than the other savages." • • • One reason that farmers seem more contented than city folk Is that farmers concentrate all their worries on the weaUier and the crops, and don't have too much anxiety left over for personal prob- lems. • • • Alx>ut the only time the average American remembers that he I.a a "good citizen" Is when h• Is slopped by a tralflc cop and thinks he ought to be given a pass because he has never held up a fill· ing.station . • • • What tho&e who don't like us "'Y about us may be fal se to tht facts , but are often truer to the spirit ot our personality than we care to admit. • • • To rear a chlld who b free from envy Is perhaps the best (and certainly the IOO!t Ulelong ) Inheritance a parent can bestow. • • • A good society, under any Ionn or government, is lmpos1lble unW thert are al ltast as many ptnOnl willing to equalize down as there are willing to equalize up. (Until then, all revolutions will merely reshufne the power and deal the best hand> to different winners.) • • • There are only two alternatives: If you don't get better u you get smarter, you set y,·orse. '' ... TALK A~OUT WATE~ fOUUTIO N!q A 4-H Club Boy Was Cruel to Pig To the Editor : Last weekend while attending the Orange County Fair. I became \'ery disturbed by an incident 1 observed. In the livestock exhibit, a young boy from the 4-H Club was feedlng the swine. They, li,ke other animal s dependent upon man for their food, became rather excited abOUt the meal. HOWEVER, the boy must have 1111\ thi.! improper behavior for a pig. lie firllped in the pen and began kicking tile swine 1n the face. There ~'ere several peaple stand· ing there watching and I guess the boy fell Ute crowd needed more of an ex- hibition, so be then took the pig by the tail and pulled It around a few timel while it sque8Jed In pain. IT IS ALWAYS disgu•tlng to see a person be cruel or vicious to an animal that cannot defend ltaell. But wonre Wia the fact that this child wu rtpresentlng an organilau.n that, I though!, was teaching young people the right way to n.lse and care for various animals. Does the 4-H Club condone lbls type or behavior? BEYERL V BERRYHILL . Tim e for a Change'! To the Editor: I was recently dlvorted and have custody of my cblldren, ages 2 and .f years. U It had been my wife who recelv· ed custody I would be expected to pay child support Nhich I would gladly pay. Now as J have the children and have to work to keep them in baby sitters, why should she be able to eacape the financial responslblllty when ahe helped to bring them Into thls world. She works and can tarn u much as I. Isn't It time for a chanee? ALAN K. BROOKS (Englishman for Mena Ub.) Helpf ul White Utte To the Editor: As I wrote a few years ago to suggest that a white line be put at the right hand side of MacArthur Blvd., It is only fair that I express my thanks to whoever la responsible. It's a great help on dark or fogy nlgbto on the wlndinl road with on- coming cer llebls hall blinding the driver lo have the ream.ring white line to your right to 10 by. The Infrequent refiectort before were not nearly u effective. ThankJ again ! MRS. JAMES P. AYNES llnfa ir Action To the Editor: On June 24, the ptJbllahed date or regiltraUon for awnmer sessions of Park, Beachet and Recr•atlon pr08l"ams, those who came to reaister were Informed that a pre·reglltratlon had been held the previous evtnJng. 'I1t11 deprived thml or a chance at the Cius or their choice, since many claases wtre already [l]ltd. The reuon given f« lhl1 action wu that the evtning re11Jtr1Uon wu for ( MAILBOX ). Letttr1 /rom readers art 1oelcome. NormoUv writers 1/tould co11veL1 thtlr nussages-rn 300 word! or less. Tht: right to condtnae letters to fit ipa:c• or tlfmfnate libel is reserved. All lei.-1 ters must include !ignatures and n1aiC-" i11r1 addrea, bu{ names ma y be witJi .• l1eld on request if suffldl:nt rt410" is apparent.. Poetrv wiU not be pub- ii!hed. Newport Beaclt residents only, I am • ' Newport Beach relldent and t.a.Jpayer, but wu not made anre of lbe sudden chan1e of plans. OmWLS OF the Part, Beaches a~ RecreaUon Department stated to me th&t they felt the entire sltuaUon unfair aotl had recommended adhering to t~ origlnally published sche<lule. They wtr• ordered by the city councU to stage ttii: sneak preview. I llncerely hope that the city councll does not intend to continue in its lack of re"ard for clly residents in the CurthfJ' conduct or city affairs. PEGGY WENRIClt Basie Concert• To the Editor: Today's artlcie on the Irvine advti committees' recommendations on the tension of campus Drive aeemJ to the basic concern of all memben of ~ committee and a strong minority or !. Transportation Committee. \Ve are n against the road as 1uch. but are dee concerned that the unique C()ntributiol'lll ~ the San Joaquin marsh may be destroyfet if the lmpect of the road on this area f~ not fully dealt with. -THE MAMlt NOW serves as one or t~ belt lift S<:ience teaching faci lities iQ callforn11, if not the world. THt UCl ad· mlnl1tratlon appears interested primarily in the physical convtniencc promised by the road. However UCI facultv and student, who use the marsh. ini:luding leodtrabip of both unlverslty comm itt ee..1 with responslblJlties for the marsh, aro worried about the asefulnes.s or the manb 11 a teach.Ing facility ll Campw: Drive, and other proposed roads, are cm- structed. OUR COMMl'M'EE'S report 1 s available !or ptJbllc peh!Sal. 1 hope that those Interested enoua6 lo read the brief report also take the time to glance at the appeodlx to the report wblcb contaln.t ,,.. prt1.1lona of concern frorn many civtc and governmental organ izations with responslblllty for preserving our en- vironment. RICHARD A. ECKER'!' C.oordinator l!nvironm('!lta) Quality Advisory Committee B11 Geert1e -------- Dur George: Do yuu think It la alnlul to smote, drink, dance and run around with tvlld women? CONCERNED ABOUT MORALS Dear COnctrned: ll most C<rtalnly ta a sin, frying lo do all those Interesting things at once. The proper thins is to con- cenlr1t1! Smoke, drink, tlance OR run around 'l"ith wild womtn . Dear George: My boy friend Is so jealous he ) flies In to 11 rage if I even speak to my husband on the phone, What should 1 do about this! BABE Otar Babe : Just explain to your boy friend, that there is nothing eoiol on between you and your husband and that you have a perfect rliht lo , , , WAIT A MINtrrE! Look, you want to wrtte to Ann or somebodyt l fed loo bad today to face evtn ono more nut. \ Cranston Son Faces Drug .Rap LOS ANGE:LES (UPI) -. Robin Cranston, U-year-old son of Sen. Alan Cranston (~alil.J, was indicted Tues- day, along wllh a man once ldenlilied by a magazl.ne as a prominent New York pimp, on charges of drugging a former Playboy Club bunny with grape juice aecretly dosed with an e x o t i c ha Uocinogen. The girt charged she s u l ( e r e d ''pey'chological aberrations" and still gets .. flashbacks" of drug distortions. the younger Cranston pleaded iMOCent to charges of administering a dangerous dnM and felonious assault. He was placed oo probation for three years for a marijuana smuggling conviction in 1968. "Robin told me he was innocent," t~ senator said in a statement. "I believe birn and aland behind him." Also iltdicted by the county grand jury wall David Marcus, 27, referred to in an article in the Aug. 9 issue of New York Migazine, entered as evidence before the grand jury, as "the second greatest pimp 1n New York." Marcus was charged with po!Jsessing a restricted drug, accessory allitr the fact to lhe drugging, false im- prisonment , battery and attempted oral coJSUlation. _ 0-anston work! ror a television pri> d~on company and Marcus is the ope'rator of a Beverly Hills discotheque, t~ 'Paradise Ballroom, which was ooce a fafb.ionable and exclusive club for show buitness figures known as The Factory. Cranston .surrendered. with former Superior Court Judge Ralph Nutter air pearing as his attorney, but Marcus did not appear and a warrant was issued for his ,arrest. Joyce Marie Williams, 23, Playboy_ businy-turned-actftss, said she was given t r.ilass of grape juice at Marcus' lux- irious C:Oldwater Canyon home on March !2"> •• . • To Pre•ideney Alvia Barfield of Los Angeles acceded to the top position of the Association of Classroom Teachers of the National Edu- cation Association, during tbe NEA convention In Atlanta City, N.J. Sinatra Agrees To Be Witness Before House HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -!'rank Sinatra, who has been popping up and vanishing again around Europe while congressional rackets probers waited to question him, bas agreed to testify voluntarily. Sinatra's lawyer, Milton Rudin, said Tuesday that the singer will appear on his own before the House Select Com- mittee on Crime July 18. A spokesman for the committee said that under the agreement with Rudin Sinatra will not be served with the subpoenas that have been awaiting him at every U.S. port of entry. The committe~ wants to ask Sinatra about a $55,000 mvestment he made in 1962 in the Berkshire Downs, ~1ass., horse racing track, which allegedly had underworld connections. Marijuana Initiative OnBalwt SACRAMENTO (AP) -California voters will decide Jn November whether to legaliu the private use of marijuana by •dull3. The order Tuesday putUng the issue on the ballot sparked predictions from backer• of the marijuana measure that they will tum out hundreds of thousands of young voters and shake up the state's entire politicaJ ix>wer structure. Secretary of State Edmlllld G. Brown Jr. said that a voter initiative to legallz.e the privare use of marijuana by persons 18 and older qualified with more than the 325,504 voter signatures required to place it on the Nov. 7 general election ballot. Brown said an unofficial canvass of A eturns from California's 58 counties ound the petitions for legalization of marijuana have the signatures of 338,187 voters. He told county clerks they could stop counting signatures on the marijuana petitions and concentrate on petitions for five other voter initiatives that are still seeking a place on the ballot. San Francisco attorney Bob Ashford, who headed the petition drive to put the marijuana measure on the ballot, said his campaign crew -which he claimed numbers over 10,000 volunteers -will now ll!unch a campaign to register young voters. Ashford predicted his campaign will have a big impact on other elections in the state, from the presidential race down through congressional and state legislative contests. "There are 2.6 million unregistered persons betwee9 ages 18 and 24. We can sign up a significant number of them." California now has 9.1 mi 11 ion registered voters, with Democrats out- numbering Republicans by 1.7 million, a 3·2 ratio. Among young voters that ratio is +1 Democratic. The Biggar -Sunin1er Sale of '72 there's a whole Cl lot • going ... for you! STARTS JUNE 29 THE SIGNIFICANT QUALITY: • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Upholstery THE SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS: Save 10 to 30% and more off DINING ROOM BEDROOM LIVING ROOM GARDEN/PA TIO CARPETING ... on the lorgest summer sole sefectioo of the Bigg or things of quality ever offered. Entire collections to individual pieces. oil token from our regular stock., .for every home fumlshfng occo sion, including upholslery, bedding, ond corpeting . Truly, the e,i:pacted qua lity ot unellpected Solfings. THESE + MANY MORE HlNREDON SANIBEL· Conten"lporary Bedroom ALVARADO. Mediterraneon Bedroom, Dining Room&. living Room CAPRI · ltolion Classic Dining Room NEAPOLITAN · ltoliori Clo11ic Living Room • , HERITA Gf MADRIGAL· Mediterraneon Bedroom, Dining Room, living Room Borkini . Italian Bedroom, Dining Room • living Room CAMEO . l!olion Clo11ic Dining Room . liviflg ROom GRAND TOUR · Clossoc Bedroom & Li'ving Room COURIER • Contemporary Bedroom, Dining Room & Living Room MILLENNIA-Contemporary Living Room BRENTAN O· llolion Clo11ic Dining Room DREXEl MARCHESA . Continenlat B•droom. Dining Room & Living WELLINGTON PARK . Contemporary Bl'dtoom & Dining Room PARFAIT. French You1h Bedroom NEW GENERATION· Contemporary Youtfl Bfldroom ESPER'ANTO &. VER'lERO Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room ovo~oble on lpf· ~·ol otrlflr o l 1oleprke1. STANLEY OLE · Meditflrianeon yooth bedroom Bosic.witt PORTS O'CAll-Nouticol look youth bedroom llOWN JORDAN · Ou•door fvrniture CARPET · Lorge seltttoon from fomout mok•rs •tartingat 6.95 p•t sq11a11t yard llCllNEIS STRATOLOUNGfl . Many model• at r.cktctd prlc•• RECLINERS STRATDLOUNGER •Many mod•ls at redvctdprk•• MATTRESS AllElOOM . 11:,.,niingt<W qrw:I Claremont !inti· Sale Priced SIMMONS· Otcor de lo Renta Boclu hitld lin• Sole pricfld .. ~ ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE BIGGAR'$ OWN BUDGET ACCOUNT. BankAmerlo•rd·M••terChara• • Complete 4-~-llliilnterior Deslan ~rvice As U,1ual SANTA ANA• 1110 N. Moln St. l•7-162t PASADENA• 680 E. Colorodo Blvd. 792·6136 POMONA • 160 f . Hoh Alft. 629·3026 \, . Wtdntsday, June 28, 1972 · .• DAILY PILOT 5 'Action Doomed' No-fault Forces Assembly In Budget Vow to Push Bill Override SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backers of lhe last surviving major no-fault auto m. surance bill this year say they will try again to ram lhe bill through lhe Officer Talks Gunman Down SAN JOSE (AP) - A softspoken police sergeant with a knack for "dealing with people" talked a ... gunman into giving himself up after switchhJg places with the man's beat.en eslranged wife to become ' a hostage. "I was the closest one, so l was it," Sgt. Merle 'Johns, 43, said Tuesday of his offer to become a hostage so that Leilani Fink, 28, would be set free. Johns was disf>atched to the home after neighbors reported hearing screams. When he arrived, he found Miss Fink beaten and her fonner husband Joseph Lettrich, 27, Pointing a .32-caliber automatic at her head. Lettrich agreed to release his former wife, but only if he got an unanned hostage in return, Johns said. Another officer, patrolman Roger Sides, was disanned by Lettrich, who kept Sides' .33-caliber police revolver and forced him to leave. For the next three hours, Johns tried to talk the man into giving him the weapans, talking to him about his three children and "how t~ would be a ter- rible thing, someone being shot." Finally, John said, "Joe, I'm going to put my hand out, end I'd like you to give me the gun." Lettrich surrendered without incident and was taken to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for psychiatric observa- tion. Legislature -overcoming its rejection by a key Senate committee. But even if they are successful in reversing the l.'Omillittee action the bill is probably still doomed, says the chairman or another Senate committee that wUI also review the measure. The Senate Judiciary Committee killed Assemblyman Jack Fenton's no.fault bill on a 6-5 vote Tuesday, one short of the seven votes needed to send it out of the 13-member committee. Rejection came despite last-minute supPort of the measure by the Reagan Administration. Supporters lmmediately said they would try for reconsideration in the com- mittee at an unspecified larer date. Only one committee member, 0 a k I and Democrat Nicholas Petris, was absent during the hearing. Sen. George Deukme- jian (R·Long Beach) abstained. If backers do get the measure through the Judiciary Committee on another try, the bill would face a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, which has not allowed a no-fault bill to reach the floor this year. Finance Committee chainnan Randolph C'-Ollier (~Yreka} doesn't think Fen- ton's bill would clear his committee either. "I'm just reflecting back on the votes that were taken on previous bills and I suspect it would be similar," he said in an interview. 1 doubt whether thlVotes would change," Fenton, however, was still optimistic alter the Judiciary Committee vote that at least temporarily sidelined his bill . "It doesn't mean anything yet unless reconsideration fails," he said. "I'd say there's still a pretty fair chance." Under a no-fault system, each in- surance company pays damages for its own customer no matter who was at fault in an accident. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The As•embly has taken the first step toward an over- ride of Gov. Ronald Reagan's veto of S7S million worth of· new · state ·money for local schools. At the same time, the Senate prepared Its own attempt to override another of the Republican governor's budget vetoes. Opponents attacked the proposed extra school appropriation as a piecemeal solu· tion that will only perpetuate present schoOJ problems. e Quaffing Quashed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee quashed a measure Tuesday that would have lowered the drinking age to 18 in California. The proposed amendment to the state Constitution by Assembl~ John Knox, a Richmond Democi;at, fell two votes $hort of the number needed to pass it out of the committee. e V.S. Aids l'alle11 SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nix- on has declared a portion of southeastern Sacramento ColUlty a disaster area after floods hit the area when a levee broke last week. The declaration Tuesday perntits the USe of federal funds to help in relief and recovery efforts. e Wallaee Delegates:> LOS ANGELES (AP) -Supporters ol Gov. George Wallace say they plan to draft a slate of alternate. California delegates to the Miami Democratic Na· tional Convention. Wallace and three other losers in the California Democratic primary elec tion object to the "winner take all" provi.slln by whlch Sen. George McGovern got all 271 California delegates . *Jlll-JPA GLED!« ~*DIJCOU TJ~ J. COTION SHORTS 47 .... J.97 30qs Boys' "cut off" style ovoilobl• in 101id1 ond fonci11. Keep cool in the 1umro1r weother.8-18. Al10 ·In ·jr boYJ' 4·1. Charge it. ~ ' MEN'SCOTION KNIT SHIRTS· for , •.•. 2.97 or . 2.57 ... ~ Worm weoth1r comfort ovoiloble in a foshio~ grouP of the latest looks in men's short·1leeved, combed cotton ltnit1. Choose from many styles, includlng crew n1c1c:., solids, fanci.s. S-M-l~Xl. Terrific voluel ......... ..,. .... -"Mt...., ........ ,_, ..... ~ c..... ........ '-u ............ Oy.,_I ........ I I ? , ...... CW .. ......... "='~..,_-- AllOIO" . ............. _ -·-· I • ' • • I I I 7 • Hunt ington Be.aeh •• . Fountain Valley Today's l'lnal N.Y. Steeks VO~. 65, NO. '180. '6 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, '1972 TEN CENTS 7 Coastline Issue on Ballot; By BAl.\BARA KREIBICIJ CM IM Dlll"t P,61t Sltff The news that a tough initiative measure designed to protect t h e Calilornla coasUine apparently qualifies for presentation to the voters on the November ballot sparked m.J.xed reac· lions along lhe Orange c.oast today. City officials and conservationists VFied from strong support to strong op- position in their comments on the pro- posed measure. The coastline protection measure sponsored by the California Coastal Alliance was reported, in an unofficial count, to have received almost 350;000 signatures on petitions c i r c u 1 a te d throughout the state. It wouJd qualify for th" ballot if !15,504 signatures were filed with the secretary of state by the Thursday deadline. · San Clemente City Councilman Thomas O'Keele, a strong supporter of coastline controls, said today he felt the initiative measure ''is not properly thought out." "Its too all-encompassing In scope to properly meet the needs ol the citizens and to properly reflect the rights of some property owners, particularly i n developed areas," said O'Keele. , The bill In bis opinion, said the coun- cilman, would be "unworkable'' because, as an initiative measure it could not be amended or modilled without another vole of the people. O'Keef said he felt a bill authored by Sen. Dtnnts Carpenter (R·Newport Belch) "would be a very good method of shoreline control with which I think should pass ... He expressed the opinion that the In- itiative measure coutd subject tbe state to claim for damages becau.!e it's moratorium provisions could be con- sidered "inverse condemnation." Although the proposed Ieglslafion Is slmilar to a stringent coastline protection bill authored by Assemblyman Alan Toni Cat Search .Goes On 23-foot Catamaran Mfflsing in Pacific ·. Search widened today for the 23-foot catamaran Tom Cat missing with three persons aboard on a voyage from , Honolu1u to the.mainland. The Coast Guard said tod ay that the search is being continued with four fixed wing aircraft and a Coast Guard cutter out of Long Beach. The Coast Guard cutter Minnetonka was scheduled to relieve the Resolute which has been .searching since Sunday France Begins Nuclear Tests --~--- In S. Pacific . ... PARIS (UPI) -France has resumed nuclear atmospheflc testing In the South PJcific In spite of vlgoroUI protests by ijeloeral natiOlll that the blists may •D- dinger illelr envlronmont5, tbe French news ageocy Age.nee Frarp Press said today. The agency said in a report from Tahiti that the first nucleaJ'. warhead· type device was detonated Sunday morn- ing In the vlclnily of Muniroa Atoll; BOO miles southwest of Tahiti. Tbe Fr<nch Defe.,. Ministry declined comment1>n the repOrl as did the nuclear e;perimentatlon center here which coordinates atomic testing in the Pacific. ' The ministry lndicated·Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on ·the testa until the series was com· pJeted, presumably sometime later this §umnter. ... There was no word about the safety of Iba· protest yacbt Greenpeace m which last was reported heading Into the test area. :Another yacht flllbDe!f ~y members ol the French Nuclear Tlii!t . Protest Com· nilttee was preparin1 to set sail 'lburs. day afternoon for 1he test area from Tauranga, New Zealand, lOO'llllles south of Wellington. · In Wellington, New Zealand Prime . Mlnist.r John Marshall said tonight be WJ>Uld seek confirmation that the tests !)pd begun but would not send a protest note to France. 'f'J'here's no point In wuting ,more paper and time In telegrams," be said. The reported blast came after a lo.day eUort by New Zealond, Australia and Peru to force a cancellation of the new oeries of test .. ploslOll!I. Aide at Beach Not Involved ... 'With Issuan ce the area in which the boat was last reported. In addition, two Navy aircraft have joined the search along with a Coast Guard plane out of San Francisco and an Air Force aircraft from Hamilton Air Force base. Coast Guard officials at Long Beach said an area of 60,000 miles had been scoured by Tuesday at 5 p.m. An ad~ ditional 21,000 square miles is eipected to be covered today. I .!!OIJH PACIFIC OCEAN -+HAW~~ . •• .w.asHAl ''° · I The Tom Cal was t;i!portedly sighled by another sail!.oat, the Ad Astra, Saturday about 500 milea west of Los Angeles. On board were Fred Shropshire, 46, ol Honolulu ; Mike Fountain, 19, of Hun· tington Beach, and Richard Nims, 17, of Honolulu. The three left Honolulu Mey 9 bound for Marina del ~Y, The crew of the Astra said the trio aboard the Tom Cat had been without food and water for days and the sails had been tattered by strong winds. The Astra ~ I •, CHllSTMASI. c ··:::l::;;;;;ji;;. .. 1r--:::::::.r::::-::::":::-:.---·-· ·-.. -.c I ftillfii • ''llUCd"4111 ,,., AllA. I . .. . . :: . . . .. . ~ ~. _.... . .. ,,,~~ ; ; ··· 1 · -,~ .._-r. fiJJtS. • M.t.7':'111.' "•• ~~· •._. ·, '• -.~~.1!\ l...,;__ ·!'41"":' ·-~i-0~ . . .. . .' ·. :-. . I · 1Aif.n • _TAHITI _ • .:, _ 20". f > SOUTH --~ .•-:ACtflC OCEAN. MUlUIOA "() II ~ I MANOAIEVA ... . l 1~0· · • 110 ISO 120 • . • UPI N..,.,.... FRINCH BLASTS-France, Ignoring worldwide pro!est., bas started a series of nuclear tests in vicinity of Tahiti in South Pacific. Gov· ernment sources said Ute first bomb was detonated June 25, and another is expected this week. ' '· 'Poor Readers' Do Better, • Thanks to Remedial Class • Sixty percent ol the.. younger poor readera In the l!tmtinlton Beech City ·(eJemeotary) 5chool DI.trtct have now oought up rib their age leVel abilities. compared to their [ftVious Iagglhg skllls. • • A report lo lrusleel Tuesday night show.cl about llO among IOO children In a remedial rudlng program mastered a year or -. ln new materlal this year, despite much less achievement reconb In the past. · The program involved only children ol average c:r better _intelligence In the se- cond through fifth grades, who ex· perienced various reading roadblocks - for variDus reasons. "A big reason for our success was that we readied the children before thlr reo- ord of failure became too big to be overcome," explains Elisabeth Halsteen, coordinator of the reading program. "We gave them material they could succeed witli, 11 she added. ''This got them interested to reading. "lt0s !Jani for a child to be int.retied In . someuiffig at which be always does poor- ly." . · The majoi' COflt· of the program , Miss Haist..n aald, wu lor teacher utsrleJ to provide lull-time reading spec!allsta In each of the district's elementary schools. One teachor w«ked witb five sludents at 1 Ume. left the trio two gallons of water and food for a.ii days. The Astra was unable to take the catamaran in tow or otherwise render assistance because it also was a small eallboat. The Astra did, however, put out a radio call which was monitored by a merchant vessel 'fhich In turn relayed it to the Coast Guard. "All of our information has come third hand," said a Coast Guard spokesman. High School Emp_loY-es Get 4% Pay Raise A !ourJ!tl'~ pay raise -1'81lted to .,... 1114 olher ~led ..,.. In !be Bunltogton Belc!b Union ~ 8chaol Dllirtcl, despite • protest lodged bJ· 'i uiliOG official. Tho four-~ wlll lllllCUIJI to MOOO ln aalariet !or all omploJol, Tldl Ille coatlnuatlon ol i--t frlnp la 0 1 , with provialobs f<r lnllatlollary ....... ' Addltl.nally, claallled penonnel were given new lqevlty bellellts. Tbey pro- vide for a 2.5 percent poy raise alter IS years, a five percent lncn!ue alter 21 , ..... and • 7.5 percent lncreale aft.r 2S ,..... 'lbe matter ol fringe ~ts for the clusilied employea brought a protest, by cnu Bollen, • senior representative with the AFL<:IO State, County a n d Municipal Emplo,.. organisation. 'llollel!. whole group represents 48 out of 5tlO daalllled employet In the diatrict, hail earlier reque.ted the board to pool1"""' to 'July 2 adoption of the salary and rrtnge benefits schedule. · "We ilow concur with the fOUI' percent pay ralle, but we would like to meet on the fringe benefits, .. said Bollen. Bollen oqtllned his group's requests which Include: -Increased looievity raises over those proposed. -A change in insurance carriers that could lead to cheaper coverage. -A cam reimbursement Ior unu..ed sick pay. -An equal distribuUoo of tbe four per· cent pay raise among all classil!ed employes. The union leader said the district personnel commission had not met in good faith with bis group In considering these proposals. But representatives of other employe groups In the district disagreed with him. "It Is our feeling that valid meet-and· confer session.. were btld with the personnel . commission," said Betty Dabney, president of the Calllomia School Employes Association. which represents approlrimately 250 classified ·employes. Helen Miller, president of the District Educaton' Aaociation, echoed the teachers' satisfaction with ·the pay package. "We feel significant gains have been (See PAY, P1ge t) Sleroty (0.Los Angeles) which suffered legislative defeat In •two successive years, O'Keef said it is tn fact mpre str1n· gent than the Sieroty bill because of the dilficulty of amending it should problems arise. Laguna Beach Councilman Roy Holm, on the other hand , said be woul d suppart the initiative measure. "I think it 's unrortunate that the Legislature didn't see fit to provide ap- propriate protection for the coastline Mi x ed through the legislative process," said Holm. ''I \vouldn"t normally favor the in-- iliali\·e procedure ns a way to do something as complicated as this but in vieW of the lack: or strong action' on the part of the Legislature, I will support I.he initiative." Holm noted that the proposed bllt Is much the same as the Sieroly bill which he has supported. •lis· nllempt to win of· !Se• COASTLrnE. Page I) l' alle'fl's Super-Tube Workman peers to interior ot b~ge 'Vertical tube evaporator headed for·Water, Factory 21's desalting. unit at corner of Ellis and Warn.r Streets in Fountaln Valley. It's 21 by 110 feet and weighs 14-0 tons. Desaller. '!'ill be ready to make three million gallons of fresh water daily •l"!ut March of 1973. Policemen, Firemen Okay " . Three-year Pay Co ntracts Hunlington • S..ch police offlcen and . l Mio\ represents IOI city workers, firemen have agreed to• aign three-year Including ·d~ help, public worn .contracts calling for five percent psy personnel and people In \be parks and raises in each year, actording ot City recreation .department. Administrator David Rowlands . There are-liO policemen affected by The agreements are expected lo be ap. the new contract plus 118 firemen . proved by city councilmen when they Rowlands told councilmen last week me\e at 5:30 o'.clock, today. that he prefers the long-tenn agreements It approved, It wlll mean that all ciyt because they make It easier for Jong .. employe groups, except the Municipal range budget plahn!ng and rdeuee tlme Employes Auociatlon, wJll haves igned wasted each year on salary negotiations. similar three-year pacts, the !int long~ tenn salary contracts Jn -the city's history. · The councll approved three-year con- ti:acts for city lifeguards and deparln\ent beads Jut witli. ' Rowlands gaid the Municipal Employes Auociatlon was. 1eheduled ot poll lt.s members today >bout the three-year con· tract, but he wasn't 1Ute If any agree. ment woul~ be Teaebed today. Pruge We.titer On March 8, 1172, the Dally Pilot published a story referring to a .. ...,.,,. .forming Huntington Harbour home for which a building permit had been issued through an error in the Huntington Beach 'building department. The story contained Ibis paragraph : • "'lbe errant Inspector Is gone but city towicilmen admltled Monday night that Ille garall", already built, will have to May." ... •Tired' Bus Worth 51 ~001 Nlght and morning low clouds are expected along the Orange Coast on Thursday, clearing to hazy sunshine In the afternoons. lllgbs In the low 70's •• the beacheJ, rising to tIO Inland. Lows 5H6. · .One element of that statement ts In tr· ror. "The errant inspeclor" referred to 1tas not Involved ln the Issuance of the permit In quMtlon and, In fact, wu nOt on the city staff 11 the lime the permit was given. • ·--"'"The Dally 'Pilot rearetl IDY em· 'ban-wment that may have occurred because of this acooun~ Althoulh oo a • tributlon wu clled In the story, the hr lpec!or w11 ldtnlllled In Ibis manner by 1 cily ofOclal pment 1t the March I Bunllngton lloach City Council meetinf. 'READERS CAUGHT UP' Coordln1ter Holl!- School Distr ict Accepts Of.fer by Nazarene Cliu rch · By JORN ZALLER· nursed along lince 1918. ot "-°""' ''"' , .. " "She'1 ... • Ured old bus,'' 1ak1 Deputy 'l'he pinch ol the poclrelbook proved SuporlntoMent Charles Palmer. •lri!!!i~~co " ersonally, I tbough the MOO bid was "rlif..U.y night !or trustees of the Hun-0-too~hl'gb, .. he confessed. Uagton S..ch City (elementary) 5chool .. A tbouund doll••! That's· 1 good Dlatrlct. deal," llld Truslet Louil DaHa-b, Delpite tll<lr own opinion thal Old No. thooghtlully. "Can we ..U old No. Nine Nine isn't worth ft, truatees agreed to ac-for 10 much good faith!" cept J'IYlll«)t ol f~OOt for a it-passenger "'Ibey came out and lnlpecied It.• ocboOI i.. Ille district has owned and delmlod De!MY SUperlntendent Palmer. I 11'lbey know what they're. getting." .. Are you sure they saw the right bus?11 lnqltlred 71'11.!~ Orville Hanson. "Yes," replled Palmer. .. Well, I cues• It's thtir mooey," said DaHatb. "Aod with 1111 every lltUe bit belps." Trusleel tl>en qroe4 unanimoualy to ICCepl the oiler ol fl.001 frvm the Olun:b ol the N-ol Midway City. • INSmE TOD~ l' Big Eucallll'W. tree1 behind N0111porl I/arbor High School apparenUy ore In lh< path o/ progress. Set story, Pogr 10. , .. , • .,. u.n Mell 1111 5'nTtt 1 L.,,\ ,,.,, 1 MnM .. ,, C•!lflfllll f IMICfll ........ 1• c1n1:1;cc 11 .. 1 ,,..fl9NI Mc.. • CMl'u M ON111t ~ 11 (;,.._.rd Jt l?M• PwlW 11 OM'll IMlltn It S,.-tl 1141 Mltwltl ,.,,. • Slifft o\Uftl_.. '"'' • .....,.llll!Mllt •tt Tt:wllfillt • ' ,..._, ,,,,, ..,....,.. .... ............. 11 ~ • Meil M"" II w_.. .._ ,._. AMII ~ a WWW """ t I J DAILY PILOf " .. • , Senator Speaks Filibuster Lo1ig-But to No Avail Schools' Budget Ol('d . 2 Anaheifu Officials 'AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Mike McKool, o Wool.4 llAte .... tor k-N "Little "'rculu," talked for 42 houra and as mlnutet trying to .coavlnce tbe Texas Senate to spend more money for mental health ltrVlctl, then ut down al his desk loday. •ndlng lbe world 's "longest flllbqster ." No _!ax Hike in Beach District Spending Supported McKool ; 53, three days of \~1hlskers on his face, took a long drlnk Ot mUk from a soda PoP botUe and sald,"J think the chances weren't that good when I started.'' A nu mJJlion pre11m1nary bud1e1 rcn~lng no tncrease in the property tai ra~ was adopted Tuesday nigilt by trustees or the Huntington Beach Union High School Districl. million lncttate over the CWTent fiscal year. Among the llltllll'llooa oo which the new budget ls hued are: -An average daily attendance Jncrease of si:i percent, or 997 studenti. Jt took the Senate less than fiye minutes to jgnore McKool's fil ibuster. l'hey pa~ a no-new-taxes slate budget bill that did not include the •11 mllUon for menial health service• he wanted added. McKool, whose normal hJgh-pitched voice was made even more squea.k;y by almost two days of lalklng, kepl up his ruenglb by munching ooty on oranges. lemons, "energy tablets'' and cough drops. The new budget was $2. 7 million slim- rner. due to cut.! ordered by the trustees, keeping the district's tu rate at S2.9Z per flOO assessed valuaUoo. -An etgl>t Jler<ent increase of taxable weaJth 1n the diltrict. -No increase in state financial tup- porl. 'l1le 1972-73 budget, which Is due for final adoption on August 15, shows a S3.S --Olrttlnuatloo or federal pl'Of!Tams at He began hl.s filibuster before noon Monday and sat down at 5:33 a.m. PDT loday. Reforna Plata Accord Reached 'fientative Budget Lists 2. 75% School Pay_ Hike On School Funds A 2. 75 percent pay hike for teachlne: and non-teaching staff is contained In the tentative 1972·73 budget adopted Tuesday by trustees of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School District. Teachers have not yet accepted the pay increase, however, and no representative wu present Tuesday night to comment on the trustees' action. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reqld Ol1CI Democratk leaders of the Aiiembly bove reached tentative agr ... ment on 1 achool flnance reform of near- ly ' fl bWlon a year, partiea to the blpartlan negotiation. say. NEW TAXES -There ls 11tubstantlal agreement" betwem Reagan and Moretti on whJch tues 10 ralae to pay for the new ICboo1 tupport, with the new tax structure putting heaviest reliance on saleJ tuea. The oompromlae Is to be pmented to stale oenators of both parties In an WJillual cloaeckloor boekground brtefil!i !Ate lodoy. That would be closer to the proposed tu atructure Jn Reagan's •t.z billion reform plan, unveiled Jut month, than to Morettl'a tu reform proposal which in- cluded big state income tax hikes. Tbe $6.15 million tentative budget represents: a 12.8 perl!fnt increase over this year's budget and may require a three to four-cent property tax hike before it balances. according to Deputy Superintendent Charles Palmer. ·'' th~ new taxes are approved , they will bring the total district tax rate lo $3.04 per $100 of assessed valuation. Trustees will not make a final decision unlil after a public budget hearing in ear· Jy August. i;.Ilber Rea1ao nor Assembly Speaker Bal> Mcn!U wu Immediately available for comment, but details of the com-Pl'9mlae alJ'Hlllent were pieced to1ether 1"81 other parUclpanta In the more than twp monlhl of bipartisan negotiation. on tbe taJ: blll. J'he compromfae would involve I one- cel!t fncreue In the state sales tax and use a bl& chunk of the tstimated $300 mllUon eurplu1 In lbe state budget to "'!<! the state Supreme Court's ruling thlt Caillornla'1 1y1tem of acbool llnancu II wicon1Ututlonal1 aources said. PROPERTY TAX RELIEF -Moret- li's proposals to increase the present homeowner'• property tu exemption from f150 to '2,000 - a ta1: cut of about '140 per homeowner -ii "subatantlally trimmed" and moat of the property tax relief will be in the form of lower school tar rates in the state's poorer dJstricts. SCHOOL MONEY -"'.ll>ere are atilt thlnp to be worked out on the acbool finance aide, but the differences aren't Insurmountable. Tbey'U be presenting tbe Senate 90 percent of the ball game." The educational program provided by the budget -though beefed-up in 30me areas -is basically the same ·as last year, Palmer said. The salary increases will cost the district about '95,000 per yeai: -the equivalent of about sil cents on the prop- erty tax rate. However, Palmer stressed, teachers have . not yet accepted the raise, and negot1atons are continuing. That would result In the 1tate taklng o-a hlaer abort of lbe COit of loeal ICboola -perboPI about llOO million of the IS bllllon ralsed by property tasu for sobools -plua more state money to Im· Jll'OV' the educaUon of children with llPOcial IWnlng probletn.1. VllBAN FACl'OR -'.Ille so.called "The Z.75 percent is our offer to them ," Palmer ezplained, "so it seemed prudent to include It in the tentative budget. But teachers haven't agreed to it yet, and the board of trus1ees could still de<:ide to g!ve them more in the end." • ''urban factor" ia part of the com- promiJe. Thal'• a plan by Assemblyman Wlllle Brown (0.S.0 Franclaco). to give more money to acboola with hlth minori- ty populaUOlll and Iarce numbers of children from weUare famillea. The offer of a pay increase is in ad- dition to regular step and merit hikes contained in existing teacher contracts. It will also be granted to both non- Senate President pro tem Jamet Miiia, llemocrattc leader ol the upper bouat, announced to .... tori Tuuday lbot ;;mr~ zre~~ ~ quetfed a private hearlnc before the Senate. f EARLY Cl!ILDHOOD -The com- promlle will contain ISO million to l60 million a year to •tori on tbe plan of State Supt. of Public lilrlnlctlon Wilson Rllea and AJlemblyman Kenneth Cory (D-Gar~ Grove), to restructure the flnt four yean: of public school and start chlldren in school at age 3 years 9 months. Miiia uld the purpose of the meellng, a ><><ailed "caucus of tbe wbole," !fould be to·~ detolla of • ocbonl llnAnce aod ta: refonil _...... which Milli Aid .. .,,....... • .-beel· wor~ Olli" ba_t!"'tl llaQan ml Moretti. Miiia iald Moretti aod 1 repruentoUve of lbe 1ovemor would appear to1elber to -t the plan, but 11ve no further detall1 In his floor announcement. Principal purpoRI of lbe compromise ore to nduce property taxes and find a sobool lllpport l)'llem lbot moet.s the court'• objection lbat the reliance on local property ta"' mak" the quality of a child's education dependent on the · wealth of his neighbors. Here are details which o t h e r partJclpanU 1n the negotiations, who asked not to be Identified, sald the com. promise contains: Special Meeting Set For Routine Items Trftstees of the Ocean Vie\v School District will hold a specia l meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday to consider routine buslne51. The meeting will be held at district of· fices, at Beach &ulevard and Warner Avenue. A regular meeting had ti.en l!Cheduled Monday, but was canceJled due to lack of a quorum. •• DAILY PILOT The Of"lfltl' C'Mtl DA.ll Y PILOT wlifi wltic:h Is Ollfttltflfd ffle NRWS.·Prac, " DUbU.tltd by tllt Ot1np Co.it Publl511lnl Ctmpany. s..,.. Nfe edltloN •N ll\lbtl.,., Mondt)' tf'lrw;ft Ftill•Y• for (0$1• Mftl, Newiiort 8Hd!, tiuntlf'lllM et1d1/F-aunt•!~ V1lley, Utut11 8'Ndt, lr'\llnt/Stdlll•btdi: trHI· Stn CltlM!ITU 1111 Jutn C..pl11r1!'ICI. A 1111111• rt;lonel Hflioll " 11Vbtl111td Sttura1ys Ind SU!ldtys. tM ptll'oclptl JMlltfl l11111 Plll11 "b ti Jao Wttf 8tY $trtitt, Cotti Mnt, Cth'°"'ft, t2'Jf. R1b1rt N. W11<d Pt~lcl.nl Incl P11t1lltnrr Jtck R. c..,,i,1 Vlite•l'rllldtnr Mid ~r11 MlntOtr Thomti IC11•il Ecll!Of" 1'11m11 A. Murphi"1 ~119 EdllOI' aa1rln H. IA11 Ricli1rd r. Nill Aoltt.nl MtNU11'4 1!'.111,..._ Terry Co.,ill t w.t Or.tfllt Co..nry Editor ................. Offk. f 17171 l11ch loul1Y1rd M1flf11 A4'NUI P.O •••• 790, t2•4• --lf!IUM IMclt• l21 ll'wtll ..,....,.... CM• Mt-M1 Dt Wttl lty S1rtt1 "'...,.,.. Aucttf~ Ntwptrt IOUlt'llrlf .... CllMlnt.r as Horltl •1 C1mlllo ,.,., 111••••• C714J 64Jo4JJ1 C' 11W .U..1t ..... '41•1671 ,,..... ... or.... c .. , ~"' Mf.Ull ........ tWI, Or--C.1 l"llltlltt!lnl =::t6 ... ,..... ...... lll11tlt'•ll01-. l'refflP .. eJ COASTLINE. •• ficlal La(Wla Beach City Coundl support of the Sieroty meum was defeated in a 3 to 2 vote, with only Councilman Charlton Boyd voling with him. As for the Carpenter bill, Holm !aid, ••That is so toothless a ple<:e of legisJa. lion l don't think it's even worth sup. porting ... Jn view of Its two past defeats, the Laguna councilman said he felt there was little hope for passage of the Sleroty bill in its Uiird appearance this year. Holm said ~ was sure the initiative measure would get strong supPort from all conservation organizations, but he ad- ded , "I'm afraid the money's on the other side. The large landholders, developera and some of the utilities have different ideas about the use of the co.a.st and there 's sure to be an awful lot of publicity against the initiative." Huntington Beach Mayor Al Coen said, "We in HuntingtoO Beach feel we are the kind or local agency that doesn't need the impgsition or state••ide controls. "Howeve r. we recognize that some bill probably will pan because of the general problem and the attitude of the people, so we've taken a position ln support of Sen. Carpenter'a bill as one that will allow the greatest local flexibility." Coen said he regardSy.the Sieroty bill as 0 unreasonabJe and much too broad in scope." "Governor Reagan has taken a position that local agencies are best equipped to handle local problems." said the mayor, "and we feeJ that we have demoruitrated that ablllly. We hope no bill wlll unduly restrict a municipaJlty from exercising jts vested rights a11 empowered by the constituUon for local control:'' A similar view was e1pressed by Newpon Beach City Msnacer Robert WyM, "Ir the bill removes the power to make decisions from local city councils or boards of supervisors and places the right of decision in a state bonrd or com- mjssion. that would be very detrimen- tal." said Wynn. · "In other words, local boards and city councils, I believe. are much more rf'- ceptive to the clti7.ens, '' Wyrui added. Newport Beach conservationist Wesley Marx favored presenUni the coastline problem to the voters. "I'm sure the onJy way we can ensure lhe environmental Integrity of our coasUlne is to take it before the voten •• &aid Marx. ' The Carpenter bill, he said, 11la not meaningful , does not recognize the real need for coastllne maMgement and Is an fllusory bUt, giving people hope whera no plans or true regulation Items exist. --., ~htmlrllt ,,.,_ .,, • 1¥ f Cllt wltMtif ...... ..,. ....... ~ ...... . -~ .... tlf fQlf• MtM, C......... WI W Writr RM ..,...., ... U..11 llWltflilrl ""1111., •••iCS• tul """""'· "Any new bill should be meaninctuI. ·When you have ao many dcmandt made on tbe coaotllne, aeytblnf( lbat ll done by lbe legialature should be In tbe very best ecologica! Interest." SETILES EMPLOYMENT SUIT · Newport's General L1M1y Ex-employer, LeMay Agree Out of Court By WILLIAM SCHREIBER qt'1M D1llr Piltt 11111 _General durtis F. LeMay, retired U.S. AU' Force chief of staff who now Uves in Newport Beach, agreed Tuesday in Los Angeles to an out of court settlement ol his '5.3 milUon lawsuit against his former employer. LeMay, of 1046 Pescador Drive, 1n the exclusive Westclilf area of the cltY charged Jn hJs 1969 suit that Networb Electronic Corporation wronglv Ilred him as chairman of the board in 19M because he ran as Alabama Gov. George \Vallace's vice presidential candJdate. He claims he took a leave of absence rrom his $50,000 a year position in order to run on the American Independent Par· ty ticket. The company subsequenUy filed a '5,1 mlllloo counterauit 1tatlng LeMay failed to abide by his contract. never had a leave ol absence and used his poeltloo In lbe company as I polltical springboard. The counlmuil was dlmlWed when LeMay accepted the selUement for an undliclosed am«mt ol cub. Reached at his home today. LeMay decllntd to comment on the amount ol lbe sull's setllement but did 11y be was satlsflod wilb It. "If I hadn't been utlofled wllh the set- tlement I wouldn 't bove mada It In the first plaee," LeMay snapped.. • "I don't really care lo dlatua Ille lawsiiit ot all," he added. L<Mly's lawyen also would DOI - ment on the natu .. ~jf), aettlemtnl or the amount of mooey Involved. teaching worken and administrators ln accordance with district policy of grant~ ing all pay increases across the board to all the staff. Palmer said. The tentative budget adopted Tuesday contained several changes from the original document presented to trustees last month. They are: -Deletion ·of $10,ro:t from a ~ 1lbrary program in cooperation with the City of Huntington·Beach. -Elimination of two assistant principal positions at a $33,(l(X) district savings. -A lower estimate of the ta1: hike necessary to bring the budget into balance. Palmer said Jut month that nine cents would probably be needed. With several budget cut.s and some refiruring, however, he now estimates only three to four cents in so-called permissive overrides will be necessary to balance the budget as drawn up. "In figuring this budget we bove assumed a certain level of support from the state and an increase in the taxable wealth of our district," Palmer saJd. "But we won't have the exact figures un· tiJ August, so everythlng Is still subject to change." Trustees adopted the tent.at!Ve budget lvith very little discwion. "I don't see 'any point Jn belaboring this, since it all depends on the final figures ," said Trustee Louis Dallarb. "I sllll have reservations.'' agreed. Trustee Stephen Holden, "But we have to wait and see how much money we have." Acreage Bidding At Mile Square Mlle Square area acreage in Founbin Valley lbot bu bee9, devoted In recent years to th~ cro'!Y' of tj>watoea an<! cucumbers 11 • now ~ to ~klder1 0ran1e County supttVl.ion • lllDouncici Tuesday. · • · · · · Tha board toot th<!. decislop lo put the 2t! acres oo the blikllng ·marltet after granting permission' for :t om a t o - euownber growm Gt<mie ~ and Moto Mural to stay at lbe •lie long enough to borvest their 11penlng crops. The Murals promlud to pay lbe county $4,000 or an amount based on the per· acre bid by the suC<tUful candidate for the new agricultural lease. Tliey will pay the hllber amount. " Supervt.son agreed to s« the time limit of lbe new 1..,. from termtnotlon of !he Mural tenancy to J1111e 30 ol nut year. · GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMl'HRIU DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS Recovery of lost or stolen di• monds has alwaya been a problem because there was no means of Identifying such gems . If lost, there was no real way to prove ownerahlp when found. U stolen, Identification, particularly of the larger more valuable stones, was complicated by the fact that the thieves usually cut the Jarrer gems Into amilller &ize1, thus malt:· Ing tdentWcaUon a virtual impos1l· blllty. A new service, called "ldenU· gem," has recenUv been announced by the London firm of Diamond Grading Laboratories. Tile. photo- graphic p~ pictures the basic characterktlca of the p o 11 1 h e d stone, raconling torner the tiny markings whlclr malre eacll ell!·· mond dlHerenl frvm any other. Just as flngerprln!f C&Mo! be changed, these tiny marting• ~ main Identifiable regardlua.ot 8ey recultlng of the stone.- Not only dou thls means that your .diamond la In actual lllCI di!· lertnl than 1117 other In the world ••• It also !MIDI that we can now change !lie pbrue, "Diamonds are Forever YoursJ" the same level as 1'71·72. -Normal pay step' increase1 pill$ a four percent salary increW for district personnel. -A two percent late payment of taxe!' due I.he district The district administration originally JX'OPOled two alternative budgets to the lnlsteet, the lint designed to ti; ceru;n operating erpenses into a bond that would also finance a new high school. The second called for increasing the taz rate to '3. IS per $100 assessed valua· lion. Trustees felt botb budgets were too high and ordered lbol 12. 7 mllio~ be cut from txpenses, so the current ta1. rate of $2.92 could be maintained. Among the cuts in the ne\f budget were the elimination of: -About 2.1 new teaching positions. -One librarian, two counselors and ll media specialist. -Eight custodians and five supply clerks. -New buildings for the Community Servlcoo and Trainable Mentally Retard- ed · programa. -Additional maintenance irograms for the schools. other cuts include assorted supplies, books, health services and new equip- ment. Trustee Dennis Mangers warned that a more personalized approach to education in the future will require greater ex- penses on taxpayers. "The time wW come wheti people realiie there'• a cost and a h!gh cost. As a nation we 'l)elkl more money on pills. boqze and cosm«Jca than on textbooks," said Managers. A spokesm&n .from the audience, Robert Gray, ~essed his cogCf!fJ) over the increase In •llt>"ndllllres by the district. "I'm conctmed because upenditures are going up ao quickly. We felt that $2.08 would run the district but now I'm.not so sure," said Gray. "Where .,. we going to be next year If we continue to spend at thiS ·rate?" ques- tioned Gray. He "" assured by Board of Trusteu I'rtaldent Ralph Bauer ttiat the district Is aUempllng to S'[lead the sanie amount per student as it had Jut year. Due to Ur nation and lncreued enrollinent the ... penses ol the illstrict Will be more this year, Baue~ upliined. 1 .. 1 • I ... ., .• t t. , From Pflfle J PAr ·1 •••• ....... ~.-'~. I I ~ '1 ' I t mac!f thll y~ In n~tiol!I.'' abe ~. Boird of Trua~ P,i'elldent RaJph Bauar· a,ul«ried Dr. J;,lj l!etUe1 ~tc superintendent fW 9pei;atio111, lo oontlnlle meeting with l!Ollen'1 group. But folloWlnJ .the.trualeff' approval of lbe pay and . fringe benefits, BOUen crltlc1"'1 the board. "It seems to me that you are saying that we will m .. l and 'nothing will change. l must protest your action," be declared. · . Bauer, though, pointed oat lbot a subatantial number of dlltrlct ·employes had agreed 11>. the contract ml l'lhat cltangu ooulcf' be made later If ~ bOard felt It WU neceuary. . Both Anaheim City ~fanager Keith · A, Murdoch and Public Works Director Thornton E. Piersall were giveo a vote of confidence Tuesday night by t h e AnaheU1t City Council. •• '.Ill• two key exeoutlv., who •ll•gei(lj>: profiled fro1n land purchasts because et· inside information not available to t~ · public. rectivtcl a 4-l endorsemen~ Ralph C. Sneegas. the freshman co~~ cilman who t04?k hjs seat last April, ciSh the dissenting vote . · ,, .: Both Murdoch and Piersall appeared'~ Tuesday night's council ~ion to publl~ ly call for a Grand Jury investigation in· to the .allega.tions. They denied . Iba!•§ o! the.tr actions were illegal, unethi~ and immoral . In a story published last Priday. the pair was sald to have planned public works projects that incr easea the value of the land they bought in speculative transactions. In a prepared statement, ~Iurdoch said, ''If there is any way to insist 'upon such an investigation by the GraMd Jury, we would insist upon ii. U the Grand Jury won't investigate, then I ask the council to do It." Piersall, ln a brief statement, said fils actions in planning public works projec!tr had been done for the "general welfare" of the city of Anahehn" and withoat"' regard to per!Onal Interest. ·..., -.. .... -' Burke Hits Vet~::, •' .. ·• Override Ef f 01·t -~· As 'No Solution":'" Efforts to override Gov. Reaeao 's v~t~ of a $75 million appropriation to?" California schoob were described bf Assemblymao Robert H. Burke a\( !It "piecemeal aolutlon'' today. · S !: The HunUngton Beach Republfcan sli1d the measure which squeaked !Jy the fuJt legislaUve committee on 1'nl.rlda:t'woukt on1y ''}>revent a real solutfon thls ye!n•· (See story page s.) > • •..:.-' Burke joined other opponenta of t1i'1 override in declaring that treeing tfi') money wOuld only perpetuate" ctim!lit sbhool 'f!nance ptob1enis. ·; · • ,.., ' B8cktn/' howevet1 argued ·;~it, Sacramento"" 'Thursday that it t_~· desperately needed to • bait .achooCJ dillrtcU,. T. ffPllcularly thq ~· Anl!fts Citv, ~ J>iatrict....., out of ..... isls.o#f~ j:lli~,\<f!Oby Re1ga~ Intended lo cut.,_ riiltiio~ ffom the t2U million in new s~ iiliids lor schools which the l•ll•l•l.tfl; added t~ his bud1et. lt'11 Tough Outside ·:~-: ~t' SAN Ll/15 OBISPO (AP) -Saylntl,Jle wu .unllappy wltb life on lhe outside. •a • convict who walked away , !tom .. ~'" minimum 1ec:urlty prison two. weeks Yi• phoned prison officials today from J!lt·, bus !leP.it and u.ve himself "I!· • Autboi'iues oald Jesse Dale .Wells, ifj~~. Santa Barbara told them he coul~J ; make a Uvlng. . • ,, " ,, I' • • • " • • . • • l " • . " • • • • , l .. •? ., ' • Wlllll ,a. lift laer aJi 0.... lhe'll NT "Joa lhOuJdn'I han," bul Ille WOD'I m-11. When ft .. e. ornto• n1m1 on her w11dt thl'll Mew -l\llldl -111q111 1'!11 puf Jnto Ml. Clloim ... lht,,,., not raellu that OrMo• wstchte.,. ulld "" all Al>Oll!I-niohtund In the Ol'/mptcO. llMl'I -lt ju1Hor Ill baouty. Lator on. •he'll tow ill-...dlpondlbttKy.And hhe- .... .. ~.· Jliltyou try to tab U biclr. 0 OMEGA • J.C. .JJumpkri{Jj Jeweler~ 112J NEWPORT BL'ID., COSTA MESA CONYINtlHI lltlllS IANKAMIAICAJl!l-llWTU CHAA&l 21 YIAAS IN SAMI lOCATlON rHOfjl 14t·l401 I ! I • • Wednesday,""' 211. I972 ___ H ___ o•_r_Lv_m_rrT _ _,3'- • Nixon Orders 10,000 Out of Viet 1 Schmitz Wins ·Recount Volunteers Only to Go To Vietnam County Workers Stand By, Await Word County workers today will get the won! on when they can begin to count by hand lbe 18,220 39th c..,.msJonaJ Dillrlct votes that added up last June 2 to a de(Ut !or Rep. John G. Schmliz Jn the Republican primary. Registrar or Voten David Hitchcock &« tbe green llgbt Tueoday from COUll- ty supervisors who stresaed that the John Bjrch Society member will have to pay for the manual count that Is upected lo confirm hil defeat at the llandJ o! County MleUor Andrew J. Hinshaw. It will COit Sclun1U at least $1,IOO and Is upeclod to cost more than $2,000 !or the county workers who will work in abl!ll until their audit o! the COIJ)o put.rtz.d tally o! the Coleman Voting System ii complete. Sclun1U made it clear In his ftC)uest that be wu not concerned with costs in- <IU'l'td by the rarely usod band count. efoses Comment FBI Hunt,s Lmt 2 of 5 Indicted in Niguel Job By FJIEDERICX SCHOEMEJIL Of fM Deffy Plllt ltMf Federal B~u of Investlgatlon agents today conllnued an lnlemive natioowide sear<:b foe two of five men indicted this waelr: Jn connection with lbe $3 million theft at the Laguna Niguel United Calilornia Bank Jn late Mardi. Agents, armed with the !edenl grand jury indlctments, are tracking two brothers, Ilonald Lee Barber, 29, ol South Gate and Harry James Barber, 31, of Girls Fired Upon; Police Hunt Red Car . . . . A' cancly-ajlple red aedan and Ito oo- cuPants -repor;.dly pursued • bio of Gorden Grove giN !run Newport Beacb Uir!>ugll ...... 1 citi ... !Iring Into - Cl/,, are sousht by police today. Coota -polloe are In chlrJ• of llie bizarre case, in wllich -IUlpecl a8egedly bared hi! belllnd at the terrUled victims, while a fellow pursuer peppered tbelr car with pellel8. ,,,. -... -lnvolVinl Ille moot ....... polellllal ~~·· MU\111 Willi a d""'Jy -JIOll -a ' ~I Nwport and Harbor • lhil P1 said. Investigattn wm tnld OJar1otte Haut, Sharon Dodaon and Barbara Prall, all IO, were first approached by the tine young men in McFadden Square, near Newport Pier. 'Ille lnt!dont OCClln'ed about midnishl Monday and aflerward waa immediltely rtported to Garden Grove police, - 1*rred the ~ to Cl>sta Meaa'• j-. Miss Houk and Misa Docbon came "' <1ilta Meaa after -k Tueaday, to pio- vf<lo deocriplioos and compJdt their ~teclivu problnc the cue nld their cai· ll>owed evidence o! being hit with prijecWes -proba\i'Y !nm a pellet 11111 -Including • lnklll wlndallleld. 'Ille two glriJ ul4illle hllll1l>eed chase re$11ted alter Ille)'-~ IO be p!Cked up:on the m.et Jn' McFadden Square, ~ the tclo'1,olfer of beer and wllitl appeared to be majljuana. Breaking awaJ l after one ln.ruJting suipect grabbed a ~·· arm, lbe·glrla said they ~ed l!><lbeiP-cir-and were ~ up Newpor(Boulevard Into Colt& M'8a. 'llloy told police they aped onto the Newport Freeway lllter tile youths pulled ~Ide In their lt!6 Chevrolet Impala ..._ expooinr JU bullocU -lhoollnl ~ and lr)'lnc 'to force ttiem oil the l'Oldway. ·9we were frlghlened for our llv.., • said Misa Houk. She and Misa Dildaoii nld an taddealJ,. ~tow truck drl!!f uw what' was~ P!l!'lng and pullei\iln 'between the •-" lljl, nerving earl tryloJ la head ell tllo .................. : • • Y ouogtown, Ohio. Now In custody u suspects in the caa .... , --Owl'" A. Mulligan, 31, abo ol Yaunptown, arreoted June 2 outolde a Tuatln bar by FBI agents and Orange O>unly lliJerilf>' d..,.,U... He Is being bold at Loa Angelea County jail in lieu o! $2!0,!00 bail. -P!iillp Broce Qriatopher, 29, ol Cleveland, Ohio, arrested JW10 D on a federal parole vioi.t!OD and Indicted late Monday In oonnectlon with the robbery. lie b beJnc held at CUyahoga Coanty Jail In Cleveland m a fll0,!00 bood. -Amll Allred DUlo, 38, of Young!fown, amsted eorly 'i'ue9day morning in Boanlmlll, Oblo, by the FBI. Ho also is being bold at CUyabop County Jail in lieu ol l'll0,!00 ~· In keeping -their lraditlona1 stance, FBI -" refuled lo COIJllDOot Oii any of the amsts beyCllld the fact tbal the bio are •UIJ*la in the burglary in which tl!leveo blasted their way Into the blllk and left wllh $2 million Jn RCUrltles aod mcn than $1 miDloa In cash, jemels and other effects. II was m>'°led fllal Clirlstopher, when ~ on the porole violation, had $27,!00 In his -ion, believed to be part of $4.10,000 1tOJen during I burglary of the Lordstown, Ohio bnmch of the SecOnd National Bank OI Warren May 4, U.S. AU«ney J<>hn Walters, speaking from hill Loa AngtJea o!llce late yerl«· day, Mled ''the ln-pllon Is no! -.~ =.,tw """--lndlclmenl& ~J. iio ~·In ' few dlyl. lfe 8ddod tblt CllCO hearlnp before I U.S. MqJotrat In Cleveland are com. pleled, Dlnaio and Cbrlslopher wlll be lfanaported to Clllfomla. 'Ibey will join Mulligan Jn Loa Angeles OltlJ1ty Jail W!lHe awaiting trial. • .. ,,,. entire group will be tried ~r,11 Walt.err said. Liitle bas been releaaed about the boCkgrouncJ o! the 1lree men arrested. Ohio o!fldals claimed Mulligan, an unemployed barber, bas an arrest record dating l!ock to lltl2 when be pleaded gullty to -ii"' tbal be burglarized lltftl'al midwealm> atrlp mlnlJW opera- lion o!ficM. ill 1161, be WU aent to ,Q\lo 1 S\a~ PenllenUary after being coovlded · ci ........ $3,ooo In """" flOOd• lollowlng a.It al a Younpl<nln chg store. Nixon P"lans News Session W ASlllNGTON {AP) -Prt1i· dml Nlzon will hold a news con- 1......., to be natlClllally broadcast ._ radio and lelevlllon from the White ilcNle Eul Room 'llluroday night, I apokesman lllllOUDCtd to- day, It will be Nimc'1 first teSSion with new11w to be broadout live In more tllau 1 year. "1bo_ l>j;e!:!a 1lme for . Ille ..... ' ......... llu-not been let, -aemtary Ronald L. Ziqler aa!d. HJ owe lt to the many Joyal and dedicated wurkara In my campaign and to my many other Jong-time supporters to make sure that the vote totals we ha ve are accurate and not the result of human or mechanlcal error,'' be aaid. Schmill abo pointed out that the Coleman system had been subject to fre- quent errors and malfunctlOM iD a once checkered career and could coDcelvebly have been wrong again when it declared Hlnahaw the winner. Hinshaw racked up 40,214 vootes ln the June 2 election, 2,352 more than Schmitz. Scbmiiz will be asked to hand his 11,600 cbeclt to Hitchcock before the county registrar orders his four vote counters to begin the hand count. ll Scbmiiz asb !or six vote checkers, the number permitted by atate law covering recounts, be will have lo sign a cbeclt !or $2,400. The lame duck congressman will get a refund, however, if the hand count proves hiA theory that the Coleman c o u n t e r goofed wben II tallied the 39th Districl vote. County 1upervilors o!!ered the same ap- proval under the same working and llnanclal conditions Tuesday lo Dr. William Brashears of Fullerton, and write-.in candidate in the 3 4 t h Congressional District R e p u b l i c a n primary. Dr. Brashean drew 6,454 write-in votes June 2, well below the 17,Tlt votes racked up by the Coleman 1 y 1 t e m for John Ratterree who is expected to take on in- cumbent Congressman Richard Hanna in the November election. Bra!heara ~ccl!llS!ully soupt court action to put his n am e on the ballot after arguing that be wu not f i v e minutes past the s p.m. deadline !or Ill· ing nomination papers. His 9,454 supporetrs bad to enter their candidate's name on the ballots by band. V,1 TtllPllG!t Signs of St11n11aer's Seaso11 Designer Estevez offers his latest creati ons for the Summer's of '72 if you're a young lady and beaded for beach, bay or lake. ~1argareL White models two-piece suit and Rolande Bieber a ne\vly·styled bikini. Board Orders Closed Meet Over Angels Fi1·m Orange County location. By TOM BARLEY Of IM DlllJ ,llot Sltrt It is alleged by the club and the city C W!..) A closed-door conference was ordered that the Angels are unfairly assessed !or ounty mow Tuesday by county supervisors after they long periods when they do not use the deadlocked over County Assessor Andtew stadiwn and when the facility is actually J . Hinsbaw's demand for private counsel under the control or other business en· Sues California In an upcoming landmark tcial in tities . Superior O>urt. llin.!haw reminded tht> board Tuesday Hinshaw, who mentio~ed the. possibility that the trial ''will be a landmark. aclion Over Priso'fflrs that t11o "pcrsoone1 session" m i g b t that is being eagerly watched by every ., violate the state code governing meeting other county in Catifon1ia. • \ • t ~' ) 1 • -' t J ol public agencies, huddled with the • woman who" husband o! 1·ust 28 ••• ~ la "If we lose this possessory interest n U1HJ-u te Tuesday tQ try to resolve the · he r d lo I · days was shot through the heart as she im~ created Whe'b: he asked for a issue t n we can look. orwar os1ng handed the contentl of her purse to 8 lawjer who might cost the COWlty other lawsuits on the same point of tax aumnan ancJ bis female companion sued flO ooo law to such enterprises as Dana Point ' WASllTNGTON (AP ) -President Nlz. ' on announced today pla113 for a t'W()oo ! month \\'ithdrawal of 10,000 U.S. troopa : from South Vietnam end directed that only draftees woo volunteer for service ln Vieinnm be sent there in the future. Nixon 's action \lo'Ould reduce the authorized troop Je\'CJ to 39,000 by Sept. J. The average monthly withdrawal rate or 5,000 for the summer months would be half the le \'el of the !\1ay-June rate of 10.000. Press Secretary Ronald L. Zlttiler, 'tVho made Nixon's announcement, said the l'resident also ordered that no draftees u·ill be sent to South Vietnam unless they; volunteer for service there. ~IO\\'ever, Zi,gltr said, if they are already in the war zone or under orders to go there they will :slay or be sent. He estin1ated there are some 4,000 draftees in the Army in South Vietnam. 'rhe press spokesman said the Sept. 1 1 roop target level of 39,000 would represent a 93 percent reduction fro m the authorized ceiling of 549.500 in e,ffect \\'hen Nixon took office in 1969. Asked if the 39,000 wouJd represent a "'residual force," Ziegler said he regard .. ed that term as "somewhat of a misnomer." However, be aald the United ~ States "shall keep the minimum needed ' . to achieve our objectiv~." and that, in J any case. some American forces would ! remain until war prisoners and thol!Je missing In action have been returned er accounted for. Ziegler did not reply directly w h e n ' asked whether all of the 10,000 being withdrawn from Vietnam between July 1 and Sept. 1 will be sent home. But he pointed out that a great deal depends on the intentions of the North Vietnamese whether additional U.S. sea and air power will be required. ~le noted that an internationally S1.1pervi:sed cease-fire t hr ou gh out Indochina would end the need for U.S. air and naval power. Grunion Runn~ng On Coast Sands -. tho Slate of ,. •• ...,,. for tbb •t • ' · ~ Harbor and Orange County Airport," the lubllon MOncta77 \llpl'e 11 • ~" w'A_ta elef LattGaiY volatiJe assessor warned the supervisors. Grunion wW 1JI rurmlni on eoutat.• •. Mn. Karen Jiff MJtchtll, U, o! .tdlm . D. Cllhlll ''!'lfli' . '. 01\ ~ momid Hinshaw found Supervisors Robert Bat· beecher begJnnhw 1t 10:40 p.m. tonlpl • "---, .,..,.. ~-~-' and "--~-1 July 11 when Ille ~ ~~ _jhe tin and Ronald Caspers on his side In his d aJn 11 a M 1 m __ ......_ a -·· ~ ..... -=--"""' ..,.....~, Oalil«nla Angels iii '"tlielt'. rate an ag '" · .. -•• ·~ of C<nedi<ins Director Ra)'IDOlld Pro-uniforms of the Golden West Baseblll demand for "expert outside help ." or intrepid gninlon huntera wider a lulJ,1 cunlm' as defendants In an Orange County Company in a court batUe sparked by his But Supervisors William Phillips and moon. Superior Court lawsuit that blames the assessment of. Anaheim Stadium, David Baker resisted the assessor's The slx-inch fish will wiggle onto the director: for l!IUlng 72-hour passes to two 'Jbe city of Anaheim and the Angels move · with Baker. pointing to his sand with hJgh tide, remain SJ>" ~ men held 1n the Don Lugo Rehabilitation argue that they were over: assessed by "complete confidence ln the ability of the proxima tely five hours to lay eggs andl Center. · nearly $1 mllllon in thecfint two ye~ of county counsel's office to defend our in· return to sea again before daylight. Both men Were free on passes lut Jan. operation. . . , terest in this action." The spawning season is erpected to 21 when teacher Gerald F. Mitchell, 23, Subooquent JawSUits . covering Angel County Collll8el Adrian Kuyper, •i> continue throuih September, according was &bot outa.ide the couple 's apartment. stad.iwn operatims up to last year ha ve parently nettled by Hinshaw's suggesti on to Newport Beach lifeguards. Mitchell bad already complied with the beeit !iled Jn Superior Court but the case that the 110,000 needed be taken from the The fb b will also run Thursday al U:ll.I gunman's demand that 'be hand over bis to be contested July 18 is regarded u the county counsel's budget ratiher than the p.m. and 1:21 a.m.: on Friday they will . wallet. ooe that will settle--.& controversy ' that asses!l<ll'1S coffers, appeared to agree run at 12;03 a.m. and 2:03 a.m., but not Jorry Micbael wade, 25, o! Phoenix, 1 'mhaiisoira;;ii;gediiii•iiince;;;i;;the;;;;i;;;;Ang;;;i;elsiiiimoiiiiviiediiiitoii.theiiiiiiiiwiii·iithiiriiei;;jectlooiiii;;;;;;o!;;;thiiii• iiHiii. niishaiiiiw;iproposal;;;;;i;;;;;;;;.iiiiiiiib;i;y;;;s;i;peciiiil!icii" iilociiiiatiiloiinii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji bas been aentenced lo We Imprisonment II fo .f1bat allying, His COIJlpaJUOll in the 11deivalk holdup, Buaan·j.oWle Sutclllle 28, of PomoDe, mew an tdentieat term for bor role In lbe murder. Miss Sutcliffe and a female companion later escaped !rom the Frontera Prison for Women. They are sUll at large. Also Involved in the Mltcheli killing was William Neil Cartwright, 31, of Phoenix, the getaway man in the Mitch- ell holdup. He i9 serving a state prison term of five years lo We alter being con- victed o! secood degree murder. Cartwright admitted he was at the wheel o! lbe car which carried tbe trio to Newport Beach alter the Mitchell alaylng. '!'be gun they hurled Into ocean water near the Stull Shirt restaurant In Newport Beach waa later recovered by diven. Mra. Mltchell wants a total of $1,005,000 !or what ahe claims b lbe state's nqllcence in allowing dangerous prtaonm lo obtain temporary freedom from lbe Dm Lugo Jacillty Jn Chino. A claim IJled with the state last April U WU denied last May II. MALL OF O~NGE 2378 N. Orange Moll 100 Y d1 North of the Broadway T•le 9ltd 4 a.ll't Rtg. $195. Sll:YING CAlT R•IJ· $50. LOUN•I CHAii Rtg. $<40. OTIOMAN R•t· $20. 516995 s4295 SUNSET 11 By SAMSONITE H•1•'1 outdoor furnltur• th•t m1k1 t 1ny p1tio po1h . lt'1 the motf dur1ble, thinks to S1mtO l'l·G•rcl, • n1w poly.vinyl co•ti119. Comfort's l111!1t ftof!'I tlir• hoHom up with ilt~iblt 11th lrt • w1 dt ty of color comhh1•• tlo111. Tthlt top1 of h1"4cr•fttd "Mtrhtllt.'" ALL STORll IALI PRICES GOOD IN THllU JULY 5 lalftlolllMlard cOlltt4 tram.. .,.. warrantM apln•t c•rrotlon ,., 5 , .. ,..., ~ J • ~ :Doghouse Has 32 f;ounts IOClll Rtg. $'45. SIDI TA.Ill 53295 51695 s379s 524 95 R•t· $JO, ., Judge Continues Three Arch Bay Canine Case CHA.ISi LOUNGI •• ,. $70. LOYIUAT s599s s49ts By FREDEIUClt SCIIOEMBBL Of .. '*"' ...... ..., le. Dominic Sbeltoo, charged with :JI c$1unls ol ~ an unreotra1ned do( to .., on n... Arch Bly'• beach, ~ be Jffp1oc lbe DlllrJcl All«De1'1 berk Is ..... than his bile. ;'to conviction Clll eadl C01111t - that Shelton calll an bn- -could bring a mulmum ot Iha In Jill -• -fine. :~ mulUplylng by U and It could analotofJeanancHlralolol larl. • Shelton, 5l, of 12 1--Drift, -to appear todly W.... Jlldp Bamllton In Dlvlalon l of -Count1 Munlclpol Court, lut Ille been COlllJnued untJI AllC. II. e hq-.d lbe coatilnlnce lllt -be Jeamed lhol lbe Dlllrlct Olllce hod addld St counll to an orliinal cllaUon made April 21. It WU at i I .Ill. that day that Or..,. Counly Animal Shelter officiall "ralded" Tine Ard> Boy Beach. Shelton WU ClllO of tine doc-cited by officials. 8belton rulnlllned that tho beach 11 tllo [lri'rala IDcltlve II for realdeoll of Tine Arch 11"1 only and. that tllo -Y ... .. ,... •• IMlftdlng '!nliilal control -· °"' prlnte -II to the belch. ,,. -1lhJ mlnlnc comp1111 owner allo dalmecl lhol • few old lfl\lllltDll with tho Tine Atth Bay Communliy "-lallan ore again beginning to boll and tllol'• .,._,. he bu been 1ingled out wllll the D counll ol alJowlnc his doc lo run .., tllo lloac:b. llepltJ Dlltrlel Al1ome)' Daniel Kelly •Id lhll momla( that lbe counla are -• laatlmoQY I.ran II wi-wllt ..,. cited datel and Umta between Bop~ 1f7l and DOW wbal SbelfAID allqed- ly WU aem on the beach T\lllnlng his do1. America aod I have my passport to prove IL How ciould I be on lbe beach?" Shelton asked • '!'be apparint crackdown on Three Ardl Bay, accordlnl lo animal 1belter olllcials, was made at the requeat o! noldenls In lbe private communlly. When a complaint II made, a ""'Pon .. must be made, llid Robert Wohrman, chJof o! Animal Fiel~ Services for the county, ''The onllnance II _g\llte specific and ... .,., here to enforce It," be aald. Dop are prohibited on all county beaches. ""A small minOrlty Is !eying to run this COIDIDW1liy Ind I don't !funk the reit ol us cleaerve tho~" commented Shelton. "That'• wby I'm 10iJ11 to stand up. "ll you doo1 lake a stand, you deaerve what you 1et," Ille mlll1ng ll\l&lllle con- ltt9. $60. ON IAlE NOW--SAVE 400/o LEILANI By TROPITONE Tiie Lei..,• hnolhfo tW ...,. ...t lasts aid hnh. Every pitc• is hend. t ied in an ettr1ctlve closely.woven b11~etw1ave ptttern. You ctn choose from a dozen different setting pieces and a wide selection of matching i1bles, all in t v1ri1ty of colors. Rust free alu minu m fr1mes, coatecl in "T•nico1t"1 the revolutionary new coating th1t outlasts paint. SANTA ANA OR A NGE COSTA MESA I 72S No Mo1n • 5'13·8213 2378 N Oran9t> Moll• 9COl8 -1721 1706 Newport Blvd • 6~5 .:'0:00 1 ru .,.1o No rth o l 171hS1 100.,.,J, Notlt.Qfth,,Brouclwoy a1 17th St cluded. 11.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-. ....... -. ............... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .................................... .. ' ' ;I. DAILY PILOT Agnews Reveal W eddi1ig Pla1is WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Vi<t p...,jdem Ind Mrl. Spiro T. ~ aDnOlll1<:<d todoy 1lle enga_..,t ol lhelr da111htcr Susan SColl to Car- rol! W, Sltl!!, ~ Maryland statt em- ploye from 1Sa1tlmore. The ""'°"'' oatd tn • brl<! ata~ ment that "1 winter •eddin& is pianned." M1h Agnew, %f1 and stein, 30, 1 TowlO<l, Md., State Oo!Jege gradu-ate, . have !mown eodt other !or fll'l' )'llrl. Agnew Tours Areas Hit By Flooding WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Pttsi· dent Spiro T. Agnew set out today on a tour of flood-tom 1rea1 of Maryland and VJrginJ1 on behalf ol President Nixon. Agnew made the lint le' of the trip, to Ellicott City, Md., just west ol Baltimore, by helicopter from the hellpad at the ·Pentagon, for a walking toUl" and a meeting with local offldal1. He arranged to fly by amall plane tn .. rly afternoon to Ricbmond, !or a helJcopter !ltght over areas hit haM by tropical llorm Aines la and around the Vlrgtnla capital. A meeting al!o "" ICheduled there. On Tbunday, the vice president will go to New York, another ot the five states batt....r worst by the storm's heavy wiods and rain, with a stop in Elmira. Accompanying Agnew was George Lin- coln, director ol the omc. ol Emergency Preparedneu, who is c oo rd in at in r federal . effortl to aa.si.st the ltricken ........ Nliton .,ked Congrw Tueaday for an llddlttonal '100 million tn di-relief funds to be channeled Into Peonsylvania, New York, Maryland, Virginia and Fk>rlda. Congrea and federal agencies also took more ldk>n to speed up and in- creue ~Ip, : -The S...te approvod 1 $200 million approprlaUqn . to fatten the fedttal disaater reUef: (und. The aw!lt . adioo came m a Voice vpt~ <1ver the <1b}ecti<1M of IOrrie aenatcn who complained the measure abould~ be elven . more con- llderation to prevent the mlsme al the funds. lt appeared however, it might be several weeks before the bill goes to Nix- on because Congr"' starts a long recHs tbia weekend. -House Banking c:ommittee Chairman Wright Patman (0.Tex.), said be would attempt to aet unanimous CQDSent of the .House today for conaiderattoo; on the floo r oC a measure to subftantially reduce tllt 1nt.....i rate on federal diaaater Joana. An objection by R<!p. Durward G. Hall .CR-Mo.), pre•ented con- llderatton ol the bW Tuesday. Article, Oaims 5 Toothpastes 'Contain Lead' CIDCAGO (UPI) -Five notiOllally marketed tootllpasta, including Chst, may coolatn dangerous Ievell ci lead because ol leakage from tubes and coatings, an article In lhe July edition ol Arc!tives ci Envlronmeolol Healtll aays. Dr. Eleenoc Berman, Cook Oounty Hospital told~, and reseaicher Karen McKlel, oatd alter alyding 11 ~t.. t11t 1'11111llt. showed crest, FrMb Brealh, MacLean's, Craig Martin and W(ll'dnnore toothpastes were at the "dangerous lead levels (above 5 percent) .. ... "It is possible tllal tile toothpaste brands _ ere.~ Fr~ Breath, and W~• are pot,ntially hazardous to obildm! Who chew on the tube ._ud- Jy," the study said. ' A apoliesman for Procter and Gamble uid lhe firm bad known for many years , ol tJit; lead leeltage, bul sine< t1lfn bad been only . omaII lllrnber ol cues nported -. penoos had been af· feded lhe cootatner was oot chonged . Wtdnt~J, .klnt 28, 19n McGovern's Aides Fight · 'Challenge' WASIONG'l'ON (AP) -Sen. George McGovern'• 1upporten are mounting a ll\Ullve effort to beat back a California credentlall challenge whlch could be the last major threat to his nomination. McGovern lortea succeeded on another fn>ot Tuesday "hen Democrattc party plallorm-wrlter1 produced 1 document edlotng the aenator'1 k•y poolttons, but In tenns that Ilia two main r!vala allO <.·otdd embrace. The plallorm draft wlll be offered !or a vote at the MJami Beach convr:nlbl Where debate seems certain on a number ol planka opposed by Alabama Gov. George C. Wall'°" and hla auppor!ers. 1be Platronn Committee " o t e d overwhelmingly to authorl:.e a minority report by the Wallace forces on such Lssues as tu.es, the economy, welfare, busing ol school children, prayer in schooJs, and crime. McGovern continued his tour of the South where he found a friendly recep- tion and indJc!ations of posaJble later ballot support from Arkanaas delegates. In a significant gesture to party regulars, be tndicated that, if lie wina the nomination, he will keep Lawrehce F. O'Brien u national party chalnnan. With the proposed platform ready to be mailed to delegates, attention i n Washinglon turned to the Credel!tials C.ommJttee which, in Its rint deci5ons Tuesday, tos.sed out challenges to the Alabama , South Carolina and FJorida de leg at.ions. A haH-dozen key McGovem advisers met Tuesday night with the senator's supporters on the committee to map plans for the showdown Thursday on the California challenge led b:r allies of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. I The McGovern forces won the first round when hearing examiner Burke Marshall refused to support the attempt to split California'• 271 votes, won by McGovern in the June • winner-take-all primary, and award them on a prcr portional basis. That could take 151 votes away from ),jcGovern, who clalms to be within 20 votes of the nomlnaUon. The lastest tally by The Associated Press gives him 1.358.9 votes -150.1 votes short of the I ,509 needed. The seriousness with which the McGovern camp regards the Califemia case was evident in the comments of key strategists before Tuesday n I g h t ' s session. Despite Marshall's llnding, Sandy Berger Wei reporters, "I don't 1hink it's over yet." Ell Segal, mastermind ol the McGovern credentials efCort, said he ex· pect. rrumy votal to be "a lot moce polltical !ban legal" bu\ addod "I thlak we're okay. f . · Both said some credentials panel mem· hers who favor other candidates would vote with the McGovern forces on the callfomia case. But 10 of McGovern's 80 !Upporters on the CredenUals Committee are from California and won't be able to vote on the challenge. Connally Moves On SINGAPROE (UPI) -Former U.S. Treasury Secrelary John B. Connally, a special envoy of President Nixon, anived in Singapore tonight on a two-day JWivate Visit. Connally_ flew here from Phnom Petm where ~ made a six-hour visit earlier in the day and conferred with Clmbodlan President Lon Nol and U.S. Ambassador Emory C. Swank. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SE~VICE Dellwry of the Dilly Piiot Is vuarantttd ~y.f'rld1y: It yow lie not Ila,.. "°"" pipe!' llY S:IO 11.m., c1ll 1nc1 'IOU!' foO't wm 119 ~I to 'tOllo C.ll:t 1r• llktn Ulllll 1:JO "'"" Sll\mMy Incl lwdlY: ff y.1 ... Mt l"ICtlv. VOIK 'c:a,y by ' ,,m, S.~y, et I l .m. Sundt't, ull end • eooy wlll bt ""°"""' • 'f'Q\I, C.111 ,,.. talllll Ulllll II Ltll. Teltphonrs Motl ~ CountY ... ~ --···· 60..ml Nortttw.f Hun~lol! IMO •M W•tmllui. , ..................... 1111 S.11 Cltmen19, ta.i1tn1M IHCti, s.,. J1.1&11 C.pl1tr1no, 0.111 Point, ~ Ug-, UQollnl N ilutl .. , , 4'MQt UPITtlf!llMfe Over Batagladesh ~ • India, Pakistan . . •• • ,_, Patch -Wounds • •• • SIMLA, India (UPJ) -Prinie Ministt;r Indira GandbJ met today with Pakistani President Zullikar Ali Bhutto in sununit talks designed to patch up war wounda troni· their battle over the ~lO' now known as •Bangladesh. Bhutto arrived by helicopter 30 mtnulel late. but be and Mrt. Gandhi smiled, • shook bands and chatted as they went through a reception ltne. Mns. Gandhi arrived Tuesday for the talks at thJ.s remote Himalayan mountain. • station 240 miles north of New Delhi. ·•• ~ The talka between the Paldstant and Indian 1 .. der• will affect the ll•es of the 700 million persons living in their countries and Bangladesh, formerly East Pa.kiata.ii • eThie uPower SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Thieu today l!ligned into law hastily passed legislation giving him almost unlimited power for six months. The legislation was passed by a bare quorum of progovernment senators in e semi- secret meeting late Tuesday night. . : Ireland to demand all-out military actlcia< again!t IRA 1trongbolda. .: Brltlsb troops quickly broke up 1be rock-throwing clasha in Belfast Tu~ ' night but similar bettlea in Lurgan, 111r miles south of the capltAI, eruJ>lill • sporadically into the early hours today. , · Not Identical Now No opponenb were present for the balloting on the bill. which was approved unanimously by the 26 p r o • T h i e u senators. e Guerrilla Move 011t . -_ BEIRUT (AP) -Beirut newspapers reported today that PalesUniao guerrilla. organizations have agreed to withdraw . from south Lebanese towns and villagei . in the area near the Israeli border. Summer school students Jeannie and Vivian Palmer, 7·year-old twins, presented a real identification problem until their 5-year·old brother accidentally knocked out Vivian's two front teeth. You can easily identify each of them now -as long as they keep smiling. Senate Speaker Nguyen Van Huyen later denounced the measure as "illegal and valueless." RePorts Tuesday had said the guer· ~ rillas agreed to suspend their activitfes but insisted on maintaining their bases iD• south Lebanon facing Israel. · e round Plunge Marines Ho1ne LONDON (AP) -The pound drtlted Jower on Europe's confused money markets today. The U.S. dollar generally held steady at recently ~ levels, staving off the threat of a major monetary crisis. Analysts of Arab affairs said the 3,000 to 4,000 commandos based in the l!ratli frontier region probably would move closer to Lebanon'1 border with Syria 0?,. to camps in Syria itself. Yasir Arafat.,i· bead of Al Falah, the latgest guerrilla, • group, met in Darnaacus Sunday wttll . Syrian President Hafei Assad, and tbey • may have agreed on bases in Syria. · . WWII Leathernecks Laid w Rest At midday, the pound in London would buy sllghUy under $2.49, down from Tuesday's figure of 2.SlSO. WASHINGTON (UPI) -For more than 29 years five young World War 11 l\farines lay in shallow unmarked graves near the oorthern coast o! Guadalcanal. They gave their lives in the dank and malarious jungle to help tum the tide of battle in the Pacific. Today they came home. Home to Ari· ington National c.emetery and burial with full military honors. Home to Jie among other leathernecks who fell in that war - and in Korea, and in Vietnam . Alter so many years, nothlna remained or the five meh but skeletons. These were placed in two caskets for burial in a com- mon grave at Arlington. Marine officials aaid they could not recall another funeral held under similar circumstances. It miaht bever have beeiJ held at all except far the efforts of a forester's wife in the Solomon Islands and researchers at the S01ithsonian Institution in Washington. Records of the 1sl r.tarine ,Division, lo which all five men belonged, show that Pvi. Paul E. Gagnon, 21, ol AUIU!ta. Maine· PFC Godfrey E. Hunter. 20, of Winstofi.saiem, N.C.; PFc David W. Johns, 19, of lobnstown, Pa.; PFC Eugene Johnston; ti , of Littleton, N.C., and Cpl. John F. Suggs, 24, ol Richmond, N.C., all died Oct. 9, 1942. Jn 19't9 a special military review board ruled the five buried today were unrecoverab1e because no trace of them had been fot.md in the dense, war-tom jungle. '!be case remained closed fer the next 21 years. It was reopenod la 1970 alter retired Marine Capt. E. C. Clarke. executive secretary of the 1st Marine Division ·wow. The perfect crime!' A3sociaUon, received a letter from the wife of a forestry official in the Solomon Islands. Mrs. Y. Timothy Kwaimani wrote to say that a skeleton with Marine dog tags around it.. neck had been found on GuadaJcanal. The name on the metal tags was G. E. Hunter. "'Jbat started a chain of events which Jed to the Australian government and Solomon Islands officials conducting a new search for grave sites o n Guadalcanal/' a Marine official said. "Four more skeletons were found in late 1971." The remains were sent to Washington, where Smithsonian Institution officials worked nearly five montl;ls to establish positive identification through dental search and other records, officials said. "Apparently these Marines were buried by the Japanese after they were killed," one official said. "Then the jungle closed over the graves. That, plus the way the land was torn up from the shelling kept them from being found sooner." This meant an effective devaluation of roughly 4 percent since Britain's decision Friday to let sterling float on in- ternational exchanges. Floating means that Britain abandoned international agreements to keep the pound stcrllng within fixed limit. com- pared to other currencies. Now the pound is bought and sold !or tbe best ~ice .available under the laws of supply and demand. e Fragile Cease-fire BELFAST (UPI) -Rock-throwing dashes between Protestant. and Roman Catholics endangered Northern Ireland's fragile ODe<lay-old peace. A British army sl)Okesman warned against complacency and ..a JX1lice spokesman said "a spark could blow it all up. n Underscoring the threats to the peace ushe<ed in by the Irish Rtpubllcan Army's (IRA) cease-fire, militant Protestant.a headed for a meeting with Britain'• secretary of state f<r Northern .. e 'Dle·in' Arrests WASHINGTON (AP) -Nearly all QI· 115 persons arrested in a symbolic azi.. tiwar "die-in" near the U.S. Senati:· chambers Tuesday had been released oO $50 bail late Tuesday night. ' . Those arrested included baby doctor:. Benjamin Spock; actress. C • n d i e·e"' Bergen, actor John Voight, columnist Milton Viorst, newspaper reporter fi.tike McGovern, author Grace Paley, Joseph Papp, director ol the Publlc Theater ·19 New York, and Marge T1bankin1 pr!:Sf' dent of the r-{allonal Student A.s:soclatio~ Author George Plimpton addrased ~ group but left befor< pollce k>adod tlit demonstrators into poUce vans an8 transported them to the central cell blod: at police headq uarters. ! A pollce olficial said !hey were charg'I! with obstructing a corridor in the Clpi~ building. The charge provides a ~ imum sentence of si:J months and a ssdl fine. r THE WORlrt'S OlDESTWH18Kn PRISER IS THE: WOltLD'S OLDEST MAIL . • • SUMMER AGAIN, EH? l'U:. NEVER 'FORGET THE SUMMER OF '92 .WHEN CHRIS COLUMBUS THOUGHT HE'D FALL OFF THE EDGE OF THE EARTH ! BUT NOTHING BEAlS THE SUMMER OF 1608 I THAT'S WHEN TllEY INVENTED · IW•H~ILI So TALK ABOUT SMOOTH! TllAT FIRST. TASTE CONVINCED ME WHISKEY WAS HERE 10 STAY ! ' ....-------------~ YOU PEOPLE 'ARE LUCKY.· A GLASS FULL OF ICE CUBES, A COUPLE OF FINGERS OF LIGHT, SMOOTH BUSHMILLS, A SPLASH l:------------OF COOL WATER .; ... IT'S THE BEST SUMMER REFRESHMENT SINCE THE ICE AGE. )OU SHOULD TRY A BU9MMILL9 AT YOUR LOCAL INN. OR DO YOU CALL THEM COCKTAIL LOUNGES THESE DAYS? . • . .. >- I Winds, Rain Pelt Midw,est Fair, Dry Weather Covered Wes t, Northeast Areas . '"wt.GUfGIOCAA . '""'°""'• "'" ~ 'T\llN .... ~""""' City, Oltl1 .• ·~ "' .,.. • ml1'& """' " ''· l.llllf,. ....... .if lhwU111 Of-. ll:'f·•· ,.,,...,.. NII .,._, WI~ hi tN ttty, 11ltfl Wff181 ......... """" ttld I """""'"'" M ·~· Att.., IM 111 Olllltiom.I, ArUni.alo NII-I, NOl'lft Dtkol1 11'1d Solltti C"'*1nt •Ml "'""" c'°"°' torfMd •~ ltw•• KlflMt •l'ld Florlda. Ttn'IPtf"•lurn bllore ..__ ,.....,. f...,, •1 •I l!:Ylllf!Ofl. Wyo.. " fJ I I ·-Califoraio °"'" .,..., lfl SOUtlllrft c.llfOml• wm 11Ht _,, " lllthl of 1115 •• ns ct. '"" tlv'Dugb Triuncs..,, fOrK11t.n "'· S•lft Wiii 1* tul'lftY Ollft "*"''°" '" tloudsi ..... tot """ .... CMtl Wnl °"• tM N•tkinel W..ftllr ltnlce Mid. "" ,...,. kl a.. ...,..... wltl "*" ti TIMtn&IY .. ,.....,.. tt1 IWrfllOhl ... of .. 1"' ......... wrvlc.i Mid. C'o .. t•l 'Weathe r HllY IWllflfM trodly. Utlll 'llrlt~ ..... ftlthl Ml INfllfl'll """' '*-' 1111 ... to ~""" • to 11 lu'lllh 111 •"""-ttOl't •nd Thundrf, Hltlt 100.y, low 1IL '°''''' ..,,.,.,,,.,,... '"'" fl'tm " to a . lllltnd """"''™"" ''"" fr°"' '° " as. w11..-""'"'•"" ... Sun; Mn1811t, Tides WIDNISDAY ltttflcl hltl'I ............ 11:.0 """ .. . StcW .... .. . • . .... ·~ •:• .. """ u lMUllOAY ll!:lrtt l"9ft. . . . . , .•.. , lt:41 "'"" 11 ,.,,.., ... ... .. . .. •:• .. "" .... , llColld """ ••• • ... lhl'I """' SJ $.-..cl klw ......... 1:11,.11\. u --.... ·~ ··~ ... t:lf """ MOllll ..... t :• """ .... fl'lt ..... 1i amw~ lllMWlllMIP.allOClt, IOmDllllH\AM. MAIM!llMICO.. lllW~ .. ,.,,." -••U.8 · " DAH.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Questionable Policy lluntington Beach councilmen are now ~viewing a new police permit ordinance which could reqwre some 45 types of business operations to obtain police approval to open in this city. The ordinance, If not carefully woro- ed, could set a dangernus precedent in allowing pollco regulatio n of free enterprise business . By Its very nature, the ordinance tends lo prejudge certain operations -such as massage parl_ors, surf 1hops, pawn shops, adult theate~s, a.uto wreckmg yards -and place an onus on them indicating they must prove their innocence. ll certainly ts questionable policy lo allow the age~cy responsible for enforcing reguJatio~s to also prescr1b~ those regulations. In some case~. it appears the o~d1· nance is designed to keep a bu smess from ever go mg into operation at all. It is quite Justifiable for police to have the power to investigate an determine v.:hether. kn?~n .crlmm~ls are involved in a business , but 1s not JUstif1able to give the police what amount to harassment powers. . Laws already exist to guard against the ill~gal oper- ations police want controlled. The proper funct10~ of ~he police department is to e_nforce laws made by leg1slat1ve bodies -not make those Jaws. A Proud Tradition Tuesday will be one day on which the old Huntin~on Beach can be really proud of its reputation .for patr1~fism a day when residents will have something special to cheer about. . Tuesday is the Fourth of July, the 196th anruversary of our nation's Declaration of Independence from the crown of England. . . . Huntington Beach, in its own grand trad1t1on will be celebrating the birth of the United States with a hu~e arade and fireworks show. Just bow far back the ci ty s fradltion stretches is unclear. even among oldtimers. but it seems that the parade bas been held most years since 1904. The parade this year wlll be the biggest ever. In all , there will be 21 bands, 32 floats. anif nearly 4,000 participants. As many as 250,000 persons are expected as spectators. .. There will be marching bands, clowns, pretty girls, balloons and cotton candy -something for everyone. Besides, a little patriotism never hurt anyone. Eliminating Eyesores Fountain Valley city councilmen look another step toward eliminating eyesores in the city when they re- duced the size of tract directional signs from 200 square fe et to 32 square feet. The new sign ordinance al so {>rohibils a tra~t de~el oper from installing two signs facing the same d1rect1on, unless the total area of the signs is 32 square feet or less. Since the ordinance applies to developments ap-. proved by the city after June 1 of this year, ~evelopers \Viii not have to rush out and tear down their present signs. Rather, the signs will fade away as the tracts are sold. ' . • The city planning department has also noted that the size of future tracts in Fountain Valley will generally be smaller than those in the past. Thus the smaller signs will be on scale with the size of the development. Yet, no matter what the size of the tract, 200 square feet wasJ'ust too large a sign. Fountain Valley's efforts to upgra e its sign regulations and eqvironment in gen· eral deserves applause. . H -Important Answer to Important Question Woman, Man Nixon: 'Hanoi Is Losing' WASiUNGTON -President NixO!l, who has mt held a news conference m three months, has given an Ii:npoi:tant answer to an Important quesUan In a magazine article published last week .. The President said that both militarily and politically, Haml is losing the "despente gamble" of its lnvulon of South Vietnam. "EI even \\·eeks have now passed since that N or t h Vietnamese j11va· sion," he said. "Th• fighting cootinues, but the South Viet· namese have held. Not only have t he. y beJd mili· tarily. but the way In w h i ch the p e op 1 e of South Vietnam have rallied to their naUon's defense should persuade even the most conunitted apologists !or the enemy that 'Saigon, not Hanoi, speaks fur the South Vietnamese people." The President made Ibis state- ment in a long article entJUed "The Real Road to Peace" in the news maga:.lnt, U.S. New1 and World Report. HE STATED THAT despite Hanoi's failure, the United States is nonetheless prepared to aettle the conflict on the basis of an lntemationally 11upervised cease-fire, return of priaooers of war and alter Ille loregolng, a complete withdrawal of. all American forces within four months. The President's statement Is notable for several reasons. The first, of course, ts that he now judges Hanoi to have rap- ed and his countenneasures of mining and bombing to have 11ucctt.ded in mak- ing It possible fur the South Vlebtamese to "hack it." A secondary polnt bears strongly on the present effort, with apparent Russian help to reopen negotiatiorui in a way that will '1ead to a settlement. The Saigon government, he said, represents the will of the South Vietnamese people. South Vietnamese refugees in invaded areas have fled from their "llberaton." They are not collaborating with Hanoi. HOWEVER, IN THIS oonnection it is an established cmditlon that the North Vietnamese Army has occupied and is in control of Quang Tri, the northernmost province of South Vietnam. . Under this conWtk>n how does an 111- ternationally supervised c e a s e f i r e operate? Does it mean_ t~t the !"lor~ Vietnamese Army remains m position 1n Qu~ Tri Province while under .m. ternational supervisi on and awaiting some future poUUcal settlement? Or ~ it mean a withdrawal of the North Viet- namese Anny to U,, position north of the demilitarized zone? These questions 11uggest themselves for two reasons. At the beginning Of the so- called Easter offensive there was a disposition in high official quarte:s. noted herein earlier, to accept the 1dea the North Vietnamese would occupy one and possibly two of the northernmost pro- vinces of South Vietnam where a pro- visional Viet Cong government might be establlshed. THE SECOND REASON is that some line of discussion not yet disclosed by the President must have been pursued by him and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev In their long and blwit boat ride and talk session on Vietnam while Nixon was in MOSC()W. It was nearly as evident then as it is now that the North Vietnamese offensive was off schedule. Soviet President Podgomy's visit to Haooi followed and he h .. ended it by saying the Paris Peace Talks would be reswned soon and Russia would work to insure their success. It ls reasonable to speculate, therefore, that somewhere in this area -the mean- ing of a ceasefire in all of Indochina - lies the flexibility which could be the key opeaing the door to a settlement. Even ii Ulat specul,ation is wrong, there is evidenUy some lrelh factor In the discussions Nixon. and Dr. Henry A. Kiss-- inger have been having with the· Russia ns and Chinese. NIXON'S EMPHASIS In saybtg thal even the "most committed apologists for the enemy" must realize that Saigon represents the will of Ille South Viet- namese people gives no hint that be has decided 1o dump President 'nueu. But under the present m i I i t a r y circumstances, he might find It desirable to make specific concessions going beyond the lroad terms of his latest peace plan. · The safest conclusion is probably the simplest: Now that the Hanoi govern· ment has fallen substantially short of its main aims, the President is trying out .several different approaches which 0 would not require surrender and humiliation on the part of anybody" - presumably including W a s h i n g ton , Saigon, Hanoi, Moscow and Peking. That, ol course, is just as hard as it sounds. High Court on Club Guests OllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT ~ l'llbllll&<r 'l'1lomar ri..a, ldl1ot Alllnl W. &1<1 E4ilariaJ i'ag• 8tUlor The rdt!Mal -of tht Dalty PUot ~kl to lnfonn and 1tlmu- late l'l!9den by ptt:aentlnc this ~· opinions •nd c:om- DV!ntary on topkll o( lnterut and aip.lflef.Jltt, by providing • forum tor the ll¢ll"Ulon ot ·oor l'l!!ldeh' ooWono. and tJ,. _.Ung the ._Viewpoint. ot lntormfd ot>- ~ and aooknmtn on tQPk:a of thtclo1. " Wednesday, June 28, 1972 ROYCE BRIER ) YOU PERCEIVE the case rests on a narrow base. lt did not involve mem· bership bt the lodge, bul only a guest's use of one f1clllty of the lodge on In- vitation of a member. So the Court was not compelled to come 1o grips with the full question . lhoogh 1o everyone'• knowledge the lull question has been debated In the natloo tor a decade. The majority opinion wu that the ll· llOl"Ucllfty-,,..·ln no different calegoty lrom other atal......,..ted Iaclllties, such a electrlclty, water and police and fire protection. Hence, the plalnUII could not appeal to the Fourteenth Amendment 1o the Constitution of the United Stai.. for ...U.I. Tho Fourteenth is one of the most II> lerestlng of the Amendments lor Its history alone. tt was drafted in 18 in the angry aftmnath of war, and was deolareil adopted July 28, 11118. It w11 In e1rort 1o gnnt lull cltlzensbfp rlghta ••. blocb who had emerged from 1tavery. Its U7 pwoge reecta: "No •tale shaU mal:e or "''°"" 1111' law which •hall abr1dce the privileges llld lmmunlttea of dtiuns of !be United St.tlel ... " Al •e know, the Amendment was for many t years circumvented in vottna and other areas, and has only come into force in our time. MANY BLACKS and thole concerned wlth their civil rights bave argued recenUy that this should apply to membership In private organizations. But the Fourteenth as lt stands CIM()t be so construed. It is doubtful If any amend· ment or pursuant law could impair a rljht of citizens to enter private, volun· tary assoclatlorui with other citizens of their choice, and to devise rules for ex· eluding those not of their choice, without Itself violal.lng the rights of members of such associations. Yet tradition 1J a hidden bot Important part of law, and by common consent guest status is in another dimension. It would perhaps be more sensible, and cer- tainly more amiable, to exempt club guests on good faith of a member, from nonnal and rational restrictions. The Court ruled otherwise. Dear Gloomy Gus Tell S.O.L (Gus, June 21) that the Huntington Beach Jaycees have In· Iced invited John Wayne lo be grand marshal or the 4th or July l'arade for the lasl five yean. Seems be bu another commit· ~I that day, -J. R. T. TMt """" .....,.. ......,,.. ..... ... ~ .... tif ...... ,... • ..,... ,._. .... ...._ It • ......, •n. D11ft '*"· • Notice Age Early, Late ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Tboqbts At Large: A woman begins to notice she is no longer young 10 years before she has any real need to worry about it; a man begids to notice he is no longer young 10 years after everyone else has tacitly accepted it. • • • It is not merely that those who live by the sword die by the sword -it is that, in me&t cases, they die by the same sword. (In that their own weapon is simp- ly turned and used qainst them.) • • • People who leave large swns to chart· ties when they are dead, and wo u ld part with little when they were aUve, are displaying more selflshne11s t h a n ben~volence. • • • Technology i11 going to have to hurry a lot faster than It is to keep up with the r islng expecUrt.ioos of the younger generation, for soon nobody will be around who wants to do the dirty work, while there is still plenty of dirty work to be done. • • • The worst crime that chronic poverty commits is the steady erosion of ct1n- science among those who have no hope, and who substitute the act of retalia tion for the sense of remorse. • • • There is nothing more fatal to good conversation than agreement. • • • When Mark Twain returned from traveling around the globe, the primary illusion he left abroad was this one: "There are many humorous things In the world, among them the white man's no- tion that he is less savage than the other savages.'' • • • One reason that farmers seem more contented than city folk ls that farmers concentrate all their worries on the weather and the crops. and don't have too much anxiety left over for personal prob-lems. • • • About the only time tbe average American remembflrs that be ta a "good cllllen " Is when he I! stopped by a traffic cop and thinks he ough t to be given a pass because he ha.o nev,.. held up 1 IW· ing·Slalion. • • • What those who don't like us say about us may bt false to the facts . but are otten truer to the spirit of our personality than we care to admit. • • • To rear a child who b fret trom envy Is Jl'Thaps the best (and ctrtalnly the m>st lllelong ) Inheritance 1 parent can bestow. • • • A good society, under any form of government, ts Impossible until there are at least as many persons willing to equallze down as there are wllling to equallze up. (UnUI then. all re volutions wlll merely reshuflle the power and deal tbe best hands to dUl,..•nt winnm. l • • • Then: an: only two aUernaUves: il you don't get JieU.r as you gel smarter, you g<!l worse. • ...... , ... ~ 11 .. .TALK A~OUT WATE~ POLLUTION/'' A 4-H Club Boy Was Cruel to Pig To the Editor : Last weekend u•hile attending lhe Orange County Fair, t became very dl!turbed by an incident I observed. In the livestoc k exhibit, a young boy from the 4-H Club was feeding the swine. The)', like other animals dependent upon man for their food ,· became rather excited about the meal. HOWEVER, the boy must have felt thi! improper behavior for a plg. He jumped in the pen and began kicking the swine in the face. There were several people stand· Ing there watchlng and I guess the boy felt the crowd needed more of an ex- hiblUon, &O' he then took the pig by the tall and pulled Jt around a few times whUe Jt 11quealed in pain. IT IS ALWAY! disgusting 1o see I person be cruel or vtclous to an animal !bat cannot defend !Iseli. But worse wu the fact that this chlld wu representing an ... ganlzation that, I lhougbl, was teaching young people the right way to raise and care for various anhnals. Does the f.H Club coodone this type ol behavior? BEVERLY BERRYlllLL One-man BoycoU To the Editor: The Vnlted States Supreme Cow1, pressured on one side by the giant cor· porate lntereslll, and on the other by the needs of the people, usually screwa up everything lt gets Its hands on. The latest spasm of these nine men is their decision lo enjoin the American Pilots Union from parUcipating in the International Federation of Airline Pilots Association's atrlke against enemy coun- tries that welcome and provide asylum for skyjackers. NOW IF THAT bn't the crime of aiding, abetting and giving comfort to the enemy, it will have to do unUI a better one comes along . Such a cr1mt could bring the death penalty In Ume of war, ( MAILBOX ) Lctter1 jtom reade rs art wt/com~·: Normoll11 writers should cmivey th eJr messages in 300 word.s or less. TM: right to condtmt letters to Jit lfMCJ' or eUminote libel is reserved. All lt f.. t.ers mU$t include 1fgnaturt1 and mait. 1110 cddre1s, bur namea mav bt witlt- lltld on r C!!qiuat IJ 1ufficient rtaiOtl, is apparent. Pott'11 wilt not b1 pubo- liahecJ. r but we are at pt.ace, man and you better believe Jt -a 11peace" that aUows ram- pant treason to go unheeded, as If It were no more than a flea·bite. AND JU&T LA.ST weekend another American plane was hl jarlced to the t11t1e of half a million buckJ, plus a free les50n in Uy diving for the bandit. So I now declare a one-man boycott of the Supreme Court for akiing t ~ e permlasivenes.s which permits the hi· jacking to go on and on without any cooperation from the offending nations that coddle the bandits. MILT BASHAM Tlnae for a C'hangef To the Editor: I was recently divorced and custody of my children, ag" 2 •n<!f,I years. If It had been my wire who rec ' ,· ed custody I would be expected to chJld IUpport Nhlch I would gladly pa Now u 1 have the children and hav work to keep them in baby sitters, should she be able to escape the finan respon11ibillty when she helped to b them blto this world. She works and aan earn as much as I. : lsn'& it time for & change? f ALAN K. BROOKS (Englislun&ll for Mens Lill,) Innovative Railroads lndu.IU'lal New1 Review Cenulne price stabilization depends on many things -J)()Qe more Important than sh'"'f production and distribution d· ft clency. In the latter c a t e gory , transportation 11 the heart of the matter, and the natlon'a railroad!! with their uni· que capacJty for mau movement of goods at low coat keep the heart beating. Moreover, holding the cost line in an ln· flatJon-rldden er1 calls for constanl ~ novatlon. A dozen years ago, the railroad industry developed whal It called unit trains. A unit train ls an entire train dedicated to the haullna of a &Ingle com. modlty, moving: continuously between one fixed point and another. THE NET EFFECI' or unit train sorvlct Is Improved equipment utlllutlon -with corresponding reductions In ship. ping cotla. For more than a decade, the use of unll trains for low-coat transporta· lion of coal for uUllty oompantu .. ved the public en eotimated 1100 mllllon 1 year In electric r11tes. Today, more than 2,500 unJt train1 haul such varied procf. Uctl u Iron o~ pellet!!, P.f!.an and grape!rult juice, grain, and au1omobUeo. Unit trains he j> lo create new lndustr!eo and n"' jobs. A Florida cll.ruJ juice comr•ny 1 fer fnal.Ance, depencta upon a uni train for dellvery of fresh or1nge snd grapelrult juice 1o the New York market arta. The 6k:ar "Juice train ", a1 It ts called, hauls about a m111ion gallons -or I! m1111o6 tight. ounce gla.,.. -or juice •acll trip llld makes lwo trips a week during the peak of the cltru• ....... THE RAILROAD Industry Is •tudylng many other devt1opments of the unit train principle; and, as I.heir reK&rch carries them ahead, the public benefit.s from breakthroughs In transportation lechnology that tend 1o hold down CO'<ts and thus stablllie prices. This lt Just one of the reasons why encauraging a strong transport system should be an urgent concern of the preatnt Congress. Bt1 George --~ Dear George: My husband and f both lhink there ls such a thing u rtio- carnaUon. HoJ do you think we can arranae It so •e can both come bscl:. to eech other! SELMA AND JACK Dear Selma and Jacl:.: ) Jusl do the aame thing.you did this time. Dear George: How did Bullaio Bill gel bit name! Dear 1tudent: He was named after his mutrr, BiU. r.1s as aood a name as •QJ t'ar a buffalo. I Y~J know tbe trooble with thitt generation b that their '"'chm givt thtm "A" on annrers Uie thaLI -. Cranston ~_Son Faces Drug Rap .\.OS ANGELES (IJPI) -Robin O\iiston, 24-year-old aon of Sen. Alan ~ (~II.), waa indicted Tu ... dati along with a man one• ldonUfied by a Jllllulne aa a promtoent New York pllnp, on charges of drugging a !onntt Playboy Club bunny wllh grape juice secretly dosed with an e x o t J c halluc!nogon. The girl charged she 1 u f I e r e d ••psychological abef'TatJons" and still gets ••nashbacka" of drug distortiom. The younger Cranston pleaded innocent to c.ha.rges of administering a dangerous drilg and felonious ·assault. He was pl3t'td on probation !or three years !or a martjuana smuggling conviction in 1968. "ft-Obin told me he was lnnocent," the senator said in a statement. "I believe him and stand behind him." ,Aleo indicted by the county grand jury was' David Marcus, 'rl, referred to in an arfi~le in the Aug. 9 issue of New York Majfazine, entered as evidence before the grand jury, as "the second greatest pimp in.New York.'' Marous was charged with ~ing a restricted drug, accesaory •Iler the !act to the drugging, lalae Im· pr ent, battery and attempted oral alaUon. anston worka for a television pro- d ion company and Marcus is the oPt~tor of a Beverly Hilla discotheque, the Paradise Ballroom, which was once a fdhlonable and exclusive club for show bUSlness figures known as The Factory. Cranston surrendered, with former Superior Court Judge Ralph Nutter ap- pearing as his attorney, but Marcus did not appear and a warrant was issued for hi1· arrest . Joyce Marie Williams, 23, Playboy bt1nny-turned-actress, said she was given a tlass of grape juice at Marcus• lux· urioua Coldwater Canyon home on March :iv ' ' '~ To Pre•ldet1c11 Alvia Barfield of Los Angeles acceded to the top position of the Alsociation or Classroom Teachers of the National Edu· cation Association, during the NEA convention In Atlanta City, N.J. .Sinatra Agrees ' To Be Witness Before House HO!LYWOOD (IJPI) -Frank Sinatra, who bu been popping up and vanishing again around Europe while congressional rackets probers waited to question him, ·ball agreed to testify voluntarily. Sinatra's lawyer, Milton Rudin, said Tuesday that the singer will appear on hls own before the House Select Com· mittee on Crime July 18. A spokesman for the committee said that under the agreement with Rudin Sinatra will not be served with the subpoenas that have been awaiting him at every U.S. port or entry. 'The committee wants to ask Sinatra about a $55,000 investment he made in 1962 in the Berkshire Downs, Mass., horse racing track, which allegedly had underworld connections. Marijuana lnihative On Ballot SACRAMENTO (A Pl -C.lilomla voters wiU decide tn Novembtt whether to legalize the private use of marijuana by adulta. The order 1\tesday putting the issue on the ballot sparked predictions from backers of the marijuana measure that they wtll turn out hundreda of thouaands of young voten and shake up the state's entire political power structure. Secretary ri State Edmulld G. Brown Jr. said that a voter initiative to legalize the private use of marijuana by persons 18 and older qualified with more than the 325,504 voter signatures required to place it on the Nov. 7 general election ballot Brown said an unofficial canvass of returJis from California's 58 counties found the petitions for legalization of marijuana have the signatures of 338,187 voters. He told county clerks they could stop counting signatures on the marijuana petitions and concentrate on petitions for five other voter initiatives that are still seeking a place on the ballot. San Francisco attorney Bob Ashford, who headed the petition drive to put the marijuana measlD'e on tbe ballot, said his campaign crew -which he claimed numbers over 10,000 volunteers -will now launch a campaign to register young voters. Ashford predicted his campaign will have a big impact on other elections in the state, from the presidential race down through congressional and state legislative contests. "There are 2.6 million unregistered persons between ages 18 and 24. We can sign up a significant number of them." California now has 9.1 m i 11 i o n registered voters, with Democrats out~ numbering Republicans by I. 7 million , a 3--2 ratio. Among young voters that ratio is 4-1 Democratic. .. ' ' The .Biggar Summer Sale of '72 • there's a whole a lot • going ... for you! STARTS JUNE 29 THE SIGNIFICANT QUALITY: • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Upholstery 1HE SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS: Save 10 to 30% and more off DINING ROOM BEDROOM LIVING ROOM GARDEN/PATIO CARPETING ... on lhe largest summer sole sel•clion of 1he Biggar Things of quollty ever offered. Entire- coHections to individuol pieces· all token from our re-gulor stock. • .for every home furnishing occo,ion, including uphol1tery, bedding, and carpeting. Truly, the expected quality ot unexpected savings, THIS( + MANY MOii HENREDON SANllfl • Conterr.,orory Bedroom AlVARAOO. Medit.,raneon Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room CAPRI · ltolion Cki11ic Dining Room NEAPOLITAN -ltolkm Cki11ic living Room 0 MERITAGf MADRIGAL · Mediterranean Bedroom. Dining Room, lWing Room &oricini • ltolion Bedroom. Dining Room · Uvi~ Room CAMEO • Italian Clos1ic Dining Room • living ROom GRAND TOUR • Clo1•ic Bedroom & living Room COURIER • Contemporary Bedroom, Dining Room a, living Room MILLENNIA · Contemporary living Room BRENTANO . l!olion Clo11ic Dining Room DRfXEL MARCHfSA ·Continental SedrooM, Oln ing Room & living WELLINGTON PA.Ill(. Contemporary 8ed1oom & Dining Room PARFAIT • French Youth Bedroom NEW GENERATION • COl"ltemporory Youth Bedroom ESPERANTO & VERtERO Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room ovoiloble on sp• ciol order ot .ale prices. STANLEY OLE · M.diterroneon yovril bedroom Ba1i(:.wili PORTS O'CAll • Nouticol look yololfh bedroom llOWN JORDAN· Outdoor fvrniiure CARPET • Lorge 1eletti0t1 from fomov1ma ker•11ortingol 6.9S per tquore yard llCL1N£1S STIATOLOUNGll • Mony model• ot reduced price-1 llCLINllS STIATOlOUJfGll. Many m<Hlel1 ot redi.1Ced prices MATillSS AllllOOM . Ken1ingtcw qnd Cktremont lines . Sole Prlc:ed SIMMONS · Olcor de lo Rento 8ack1hield line Sole p1ic.cl At.t.ITEMSSUBJECTToPRIORSAt.E BIGGAR'S OWN BUDGET ACCOUNT. B•nkAmer1c•rd-Meatereher1e • Complete .... -~--'Interior Dealln Service As U1uel SANTAANA•1llON.MolnSt. 547-1621 PA$ADINA• 680 E. Colo•odo Blvd. 792-6136 ,OMONA • 160 E. Holt A"'"· 629-3026 r .. ~ Wrdnrsday, June 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 5 ~Action Dootned' ' Assembly No-fault Forces In Budget Vow to Push Bill Override SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backers of the last surviving major ~fault auto in· surance bill this year say they will try again to ram the bill through the Officer Talks Gunman Do,vn SAN JOSE (AP) -A soltapoken police sergeant with a knack for "dealing With people" talked a gtmman into giving himself up after switching places with the man's beaten estranged wife to become a hostage. "I was the closest one, so I was it," Sgt. Merle Johns, 43, said Tuesday of his offer to become a hostage so that Leilani Fink, 281 would be set free. Johns was dispatched to the home after neighbors reported hearing screams. When he arrived, he found Miss Fink beaten and her fof'D\er husband Joseph Lettrlch, 27, pointing a .32-callber automatic at her head. Lettrich agreed to release his former wife, but only if he got an unarmed hostage in return, Johns said. Another officer, patrolman Roger Sides, was disarmed by Lettrich, who kept Sides' .38<allber police revolver and forced him to leave. For the next three hours, Johns tried to talk the man into giving him the weapons, talking to him about his three children and "how this would be a ter- rible thing, someone being shotY\ Finally, John said, "Joe, l'm gOing to put my hand out, and I'd like you to give me the gun." Lettrich surrendered without incident and Was taken to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for psychiatric observa- tion. COTION SHORTS Legislature -overcoming its rejection by a key Senate committee. But even if they are successful in reversing the committee action the bill is probably still doomed, says the chairman of another Senate committee U:tat will also review the njeasure. The Senate Judfciary Committee killed Assemblyman Jack Fenton's no-fault bill on a 6-5 vote Tuesday, one short of the seven votes needed to send it out of the 13-member committee. Rejection came despite last~ute support of the measure by the Reagan Administration. Supporters immediately said they would try for reconsideration in the com· mittee at an wispecified later da\e. Only one committee member, 0 a k I a n d Democrat Nicholas Petris, was absent during the ~earing. Sen. George Deukme- jian (R-Long Beach) abstained. If backers do get the measure through the Judiciary Committee on another try, the bill would face a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, which has not allowed a no-fault bill to reach the floor this year. · Finance Committee chairman Randolph Collier (0.Yreka) doesn't think Fen- ton's bill would clear his committee either. "I'm just reflecting back on the votes that were taken on previous bills and I suspect it would be similar," he said in an interview. I doubt whether the votes would change." Fenton, however, wlis still optimistic after the Judiciary Committee vote that at least temporarily sidelined his bill. "It doesn't mean anything yet unles!I reconsideration fails," he said. "I'd say there's still a pretty fair chance." Under a no-fault system, each ffi.. surance company pays damages for its own customer no matter who was at fault in an accident. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly has taken the first step toward an over- ride of Gov. Ronald Reagan'a veto ot $73 million worth or new state money for local schools. At the same tlme, the Senate prepared ita own attempt to override another or the Republican governor's budget vetoes. Opponenta attacked the propooed eatra school appropriation as a piecemeal solu~ tion that will only perpetuate present school problems. e Quaffing Quashed SACRAlllENTO (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee Quashed a measure Tuesday tbat would bave lowered the drinking age to 18 in caruorma. The proposed amendment to the state Constitution by Assemblyman John Knox, a Richmond Democrat, fell two votes short of the number needed to pass It out of the committee. • v;s. Aids Valle11 SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nix- on bas declared a portion of southeastern Sacramento County a disaster area after. floods hit the area when a levee broke last week. The declaration Tuesday permits the use of federal funds to help in relief and recovery efforts. e Wallace Delegate•1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Supporters 0£ Gov. George Wallace say they plan to draft a slate of alternate calilornia delegates to the Miami Democratic Na· tional Convention. · Wallace and three other losers in the California Democratic primary election object to the "wiMer take all" provisltn by which Sen. George McGovern got Ill 271 California delegates. , ... • MEN'SCOTION KNIT SHIRTS ·47 .... 1.97 3 o.,. Bop' "cut off" style ovoiloble in solids and fonci.s. Keep cool lt1 the 1umm1r weother.8-18. Also · in jr. boys' J,.7, Chor'9e it •. for or 2.57 ea. Worm we~ther comfort available in a fothion group of th• latest loob in men's 1hort·sleeved, combed cotton knits. C"°ose from many styles, including crew neck, solids, fancies . S-M·l·Xl. Terrific volue1 ' ........ ..,.. ................ .,...., .... _, ... ~'-"' ..... s.. ... u ~""""'CJfr,Ml ......... s: I , ......... ~, • .......... --... -·--AllOICITT ........... .._ .. _ -·- ' ' ' • L. ) . _,. Grange Coast • • I EDITION -. '(or. ~s. NO. IBl>, 6 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE· 21, 1972_ N '" ·Coastline Issue ' on Ballot; Reactions Mixed By JWUIARA KllEIBICR I Of .. DaltY ,ltft Stiff '!'lie llews ll)at • tough lnitiaUve rneasurt .designed to protect t be · e&nlomia ~stllne apparently qualifies f~ presentation. to the voters on the J'(o.,rnber ballot sparked m!Ied rtac- !iolls alqn(. the Oran&• Coast today. City officials and conservationists Varied from strong support to strong op- position in their comments ·on the pro- pooed ~ ·- 'lbe coastline protection measure sponsored by the California Coastal Alliance was reported, in an unofficial count, to have received almost 350,000 signatures on petitions c i r c u J a t e d throughout the state. It would qualify for thr. baUot If :125,504 signatures were filed with the secretary ol ~le by the Thuraday deadline. San Clemente City Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, a strong .supporter of coastline controls, aaid loday he felt the initiative measure "Is not properly thought out.• "Its too all-encompassing in scope to properly meet the needs of the citizens and to properly reflect the rights of some property owners, particularly. i n developed area!!," said O'Kttre. The bill in his opinion, said the coun- cihnan, would be t'unworkable'' because, as an initiative measure it could not be amended or modified without another vote of the people. • O'Keel •aid he felt a bill authored by WIT ...... ~ ' ~1 "' •• ·-!f WHILE UNIDINTIFIEP GOLFEI ~111.S, JOHf'I AND MARTHA SLIPPED AWAY Mltchtlf1 Left WlllchtaHr Ceintry Clulrin Now York After 'Reconclllelion' ' ' --~ •• ·-J • °AJitclieUs Srwak 4 way Following • Hours of Talks -· )YE, N.Y •. (U)'I) -Martha and John MllCbell ducked oul the backdoor o1 a J)i"'1 counlly club loday and sped away ~ llmousine after 48 hours of apparent ~tory talks. l .!J'heir destination was unknown. Mrs. Mitchell, who threatened to leave ~husband tmlea he quit Ids poet as l"ijlll of the Committee to Re-Elect Presi- ~ !futon, wu joined at the club by the l"!lD.'er attorney general Monday and ""'1er left !belt/ room unW the abrupt tip~ exit. ·-~' heraelf a ••political Jl'isoner," ~. Mttchell earlier in Newport Beach hl!ll tosued Mllcheli an ultimatum to quit ~cs and shortly tllereafter he traveled lnJm Wubington to the Westchester C'4mtry Club to discuss willl her what a14tS said WU ua penonal matter." '!J'm IO!lvinl him unW he decidft to ~the campaign," Mrs. Mitchell aaid y. "I Jove my husbatid very ll1llCh, I'm not going to stand IM' all these dli!y things that gn on." Hostess Denies Mitcbells Feuded at Party in CdM Br L PP.'rER KIIJEG Of fll9 DlillY Plllt Stiff John and Martha Mitchell "seemed very much in love" and bad a wonderful time at the Sunday night party thrown for them hy Mrs. Donald K. Washburn of Cbl'D!ll de! Mar, the widow of the Seven- Up magnate sak1 toc1q; \In. Waabburn 1114 reports the party had been the scene of avlciowl· argument between the former attorney general and hil talbttfe wile were ''ialally false." ''I oan't imagine..,... saying that, It simply' 'waan't true. They seemed very much ln love, there wasn't one cross word. "They seemed ·10~ happy, they even -out in the kitchen and thanked the help. !ii> one WU dnuJt but Ibey started atnrlng with the help, "Somei>ae'• In the tltchen wttb Martha,•-" Mn. Washburn rollted. Mn. Wubbum aaid that mnong the IJlrly flUOlll were the Prosldent'a two brotherl, DuiJa1d enil FA Nixon, 0. W. "lltct" ~the John Waynes, the Herl>ert Xa1inbecbs and Sy Floor. "l.Imow -·of them would say there was anyt.blng wrong, everybody bad such a f111> time," lolra. Waahburn· aaid. "Everything was so pleasant, · there were no arguments," she said. Mrs. Washburn aaid she ..Celved nve days notice to have the party and she saJd "there were certain people they wanted to see. "It was not an open-invitation party,'' she said. Mrs. Washburn said she bad no Idea what started the furor from Mrs. Mitch- ell later in the week when she made a telephone caU to a Wuhlngton reporttt and then later claimed she was being held a "political priaoner" at the Newporter IM in Newport Baech. "What happened after Ibey left here I don't know. All people have disagree. men ts," she said. "It probably bu· been blown way out of proportion." "I don't knoW whit was going on in her mind. Why she made a statemei>t like that," Mrs. "WuhbUrn said. She disclosed· that during• dinner table conversation around tbe swimming pool Mrs. Mit<:hell bad agreed to come back in September' •1for· a' luncheon'" t6 help raise funds lot the liepubfil:an Party. Mrs. Wa!l!bum la<&ctive·in ·ilepubllcan women's circles. Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beech) "would be a very good method of shoreline control with which I lhlnt should pm." He .. pressed the opinioo that the Jn. iUative measure coutd subject the state to claim for damaga because it's moratorium provlslona could be con· sldered "Inverse condemnation." Although the proposed legislaUon Is similar to a stringent coastline irotection bill authored by Assemblyman Alan SltrOty (!).l<s Angeles) which suffered legl.slative defeat in two successive years, O'Keel said It is in lll<t mor• strin- gent than the Sieroty bill be<auae of the dilflculty of amendhig II should problems arise. Laguna Beach O>uncllman Roy Holm, on the other hand, aaid he would support the inltlatlve measure. "I think it's unfortunate tha t the Legislature didn't see fit to provide ap- propriate protectJon for the coastline .. tbrough the leglslstlva -. • llfd Holm. "I wouldn1 normally favor tha t... itlatlve procedure as a WllY to do something u compllcated u tbls, but In view of the lack of rtroog acticn m the part of the Legislature, I will aupporl Iha Initiative." Holm noted that the propoaed bill It much the same u the Sieroty bill wltkh he has supported. His attempt to wilt of· !See CIOAm.INE, l'qe I) Airport Bid Made Irvine Council Miffed but Will Proceed By GEORGE LEIDAL Of ttlt Detty Plttl Stiff 'l1trottllng thelr anger over "gratuitous Insults" attributed to high level sources lq.Newport Beach, Irv In e city coun- cilmen Tueaday night went ahead with their orf&lnal oiler to work With that city in planning areas surrounding Orange County Airport. Irvine councilmen named a thrff. Jnember committee to meet with a limiJar panel from Newport Beach to Official Warns Condemnation Option in Bay Bf 'WilUAM SCHREDIEa i ~ ._., "IJ!!!• ~ ''1 I.~ I Tbo Jrvfne °'"81!1 'l'llesdly?tCOlnd a thlnly~eil llftlt front 'tie '11'.S. lloportmmt o( ... lltterlor lo ·eilher c!ome to tenna Cit I price for ilttd in Up. : per N<wpwt BIJ, or i... •'-1;1••• actbL William M. ll!onroe, Sin · J'ranclaco field ropreaenloUve far Int et Io r Secm.tlry Rogers C. B. Morloll, 1'anted the !nine Canpony .!bat ll no ..- could he reached m the nlue of the land in question. c:ondennatiou would· lie the ooly """"""'· Moorve'e warning came in lite l«t11 ol an invitation to 1lte !nine Conipony to "join in an inveotiptlou and develop. meot o( 1lte recently COIDl>lei.d -meodatious • • • 111 the 1Jpper Newport Bay Task Force." Amob( -~. the rtcelllly-com-plet.d ireliminaiY government report t'eQlllllDeoda 1lte we of IOllle U-!lay land, including . three ilJanda owned by the Irvine Company t M a national wildlife preserve. . Negotlatlolll between the govemm"'t and compeny oOlcials are ,._-tedly deadlocked over the valualiott of the land in questka1. The Irvine Company valuation Is $27 million wltile the government values it at ooJy $189,000. Mooroe aaid Tuesday that the govern- meot will withhold any further comment on valuation of the -land because of the l<11al tangles · sumJU!l\flng ownership of the Upper Bay lands. ''There baa been past speculallon over the value of llle property, COmples l<11al and owner3hlp factors must be taken into account," Monroe said. 11Wben and if a deciskm ts made to ac-- quire the property, Ille portJ .. hope that full and frank negotlttlom will prod'!<" agreement on tbe property'• value," he aaid. "II It does not, customary con- demnation proceedings may be h>- (S<o UPPER BAY, Pa .. I) discuss pending developmeats of parctls near the airport Including the Collins Radio Company's $185 mtilion develop- ment. The 2'anned commwtlty ~ !or tltll pareeli will he beard by the Nriport Beach council on July 10, Irvine coun- cilmen were told. Before then, Councilman John Burton, an Irvine plaMing commissioner and a c~~1~er, will meet with Newport of~ fi ' . ' nm1s IMl'L:OYMINT' SUIT ' ~rt'1 0.-al LeMeY ' Ex-employer~ · ' LeMay Agree Out of Court , General Qn1ls F; Le!olay, retired U.S. Atr Force chlef·ol staff who now Uvea to Newport. Beach, agreed Tutatlay 'in , Loi Angeles to an oul of court aetllement of bis · $5.3 mn1ion JaW!!Ult agalnal bis fonner employer. . . . LeMay, of !Oii Pacadcr Drive, ·in the nclusl\oe Westclllf area of the city, cliarged in bis 19119 suit that Networks Elec:troolc Corporation wrongly flrocl him .. cha1rmatt of the board in 1111 bocatlle he rin as Alabam!t Gov. George Wallace'• vice preaiden\lal candidate. Be clalma he toot 1 leave of aheence from bis ~.ooo a year JIOllUott in ardor to run on the Amerlcln Independent Par- ty tlckeL Despiie Iha unantmo.. vote Io establish the joint plannin1 group, aome Irvine councllm~ . openly d e p l o r e d statements of a ''bllb level 1P9lelman1t I°' Newport Beecll "larclbtf !ht lntne -·· competency to .-MGDomoll Douglas Corp. plans to develop II:' ~ parcel l<l'Oll Campus Drive hnl !!ti Colllna property. "McDonnell IJoullu. will coma in end roll over that lltUe eounc:ll," tbt unklen- (S. .lNG!R, Pep I) U.S. Engineers Plan Hearing On Waterfront State Gets Grant SACRAMEN'l'O (AP) -California hu recdved a ... million ltclorll srtnl lo ~1·--The ·-b1 Gov • ._ ...... ~ 1114 -' of the -will .10 to .. of the _.,,. ........ TbonclpienlOilttllM ~ lltbmlltod .... to ftlltl ......... lbat,tbe -l>u -·•Id. ...... c ••• the .....iectlcn commfttte had assign- ed= a security agent to assist Mrs. l\lltche!L She iald &mday the man had :raiaked a thlepi-out of her hand in her r<im at the ~ Inn in Newport Btach, Thur9ilay nJgl>I when she waa talking to UPI reporter Belen Thomas. ·~ also aaid five guords threw Iler onto A .bed 11and ·stuck a needle in my behind.'' · ::'lt•1 horrible to ;q.," ahe aaid at the llple. "I baye been through so much. l ~1 like fl Martha l8n 1 going to stand f ~it." -. 1:..nmittte omcl81a iald Mitchell baa ll!t intmtlon of giving up leadership of the . rHlectlon drive daplte.his wife's unhap-· pljieu. The ccuple'1 departlD'e from here .lber ~ meant Mrs. Mitchell '!! ""1pered her demands. Trial Made Se~ret The company suboequenlly med a 15.l. million countersuit llltina LeMay failed to abide by bis contract, never lted • leave of 1-..0 and aaed bis posllloo in the compeny u a poUUcal springboard. el'CLE AD HAULS' CALLS ~ Utile motorcycle delivered "tons" d paylood. Check 1liil three-line '&d: • e lrll HONDA TRAIL 70. •• : Only U! miles. $195. XD•DXl n,. Newport Beach man who placed ll)o ail ~porltd It sold Ille motOl'C)'l?le ft,.. the flnt oaU, but we had tom of calls tliereofter," II lbat'l'llle tlad 111 haullnJ p0,oer JOU're looklnl lot let 1 DAILY raai: daliflod acf dollver • !old 111 ..-for yop. D!al ,MMm, the ell- -line 1o mutts. • Public Barred From Alleged Bart-ender Theft Case The oountersutt wu dl1111-when LeMay acceptad· the .. tUemenl 1 ... an undisclosed amount ol cult. Municipal ;)ud1e ·Everett Dickey today wrapped a cloak of .......,y around · the "trial ol a bartender aecused 111 tapping tbe· till at Sid Soffer'• Blue Beet bar In Newport Beach hy closing the trial to newsmen and the plibllc. Dickey, pmldtog judge of the Harbor Judlclal Dlsltlct, also ordered all wit· -in the jury trial barred from the courtroom until they are called to testily in what la eitpecled to be a three or four- day trill Dickey'• action in cloolng the Iris! to preu and public was helitfed to he ua- lll't<edmi.c! In the hiltoly o( the Jlorbpr ~ District coart. I Dlcltey 1ave no reason 1..-tloalng the trial He.pt to say "both aides requesi.d ft!' He waa miavalllble !or-comment-as I • the opening statements W.re-lalwi lrn- medta'tely. The OO!rlct Attorney'• Offl<e bu charged *7e&Hld Guy v .... CJ!aney with' three l'buttla of theft baaed m what Solf"l aUeged WU ·~ like till tnoclt• Ing" than till tapping. Soffer aaid uch count Involved t... tlwt .$il)O. Soffer and all other wilnesaes to the lrlal were sealed in corr)dors out.side Division 4 late this morning. Soifer, 411, hid been sealed in the c:ourt:wm with cartons or empty wblltey hotites tucked wtcler and around hla <hair. Nest to him 1'U his 22-year.qld o...,.. Mary Cltllderl of Costa Mesa. A witntis for the defense, ~ Bau;-1nillier former employe wu wted 1crosi" an aisle. Girl Gets Ring Off, in 2 Pieees Deputy Dlstricl Attorney llicbard Fulton, who relllaed to lpeU with • reporter prior to the trial, evea to al•• _ 1)11 l>pn flnt ~. 1"'0lptly ~,Soffer and Mlstt-Otllden not to dlacuaa 111e trial with the ume DAIL y PILOl reporttt Dotte M. Lewis gave the Newport when he noticed them in convet'lllion. IJuch Fire Department a ring Tuesday Qwiey, Who MJsa CblJden -utlier mot'J11itG. delC'ribed u a 11Lu Vegu bartender," They gave her one blct -in two aat next to bis Jawy..-, Doul)al C. Lani pieces. of Banta Ana. Mlsl Lewla, 13, of 311 E. Balboa Blvd., Lam-almilarty ref\taed to say anytltlng, Is 1111111 odol....,t ap wltln aU of a curtly bandinc a nporta Ids bullneu ..-, JOU lllrt .,....inl -end all ol • card. IUddm Ibo O)U!dn'! gel 'her ring oil Before Solfar wu told 'to lhut up, he anymore said 1 complaint wu rtled apllllt Flnmm trittmphed -. IQlpll!da ~ In January altar MIU Qilldera_l!!!LI!I JIU.Id.. -ty cnlpplaf ·o!Llltt -IS.. C10AI. leP IJ rtnc -1 metal cutter. ' • Z llAJL f PILC B • At Airport Face Probe 111 CANDACE PEARSON or ., OttJr """ '""' Orance County airport commi&<lol\<fl Hid 'JWoday night they will candud I public llelrioc la --Oii a pro- pooed anliamct Jnhil>illnc miaulhoriied «llllmmial acllvlty al the alrport. Ccmmissk>ners were reacting to a let· tu from Airport Direcior Robert J. -han In •hfeh he aald euninl r""1allou are too difficult lo enlorce. Pre1e11t ltatute 11y1 that "no perlOD sboll -· ill any buaineu or com-madal adlvily m the airport without ·-al ol, and under the tmnJ pnsaihed by the Board ol Supervi ....... 'Airport llalf -C. R. "Ron" CbaodJn lold _,,, ... ....,. that tlUJ language .... too • .,.. 1o d<t<nnine what is or Isn't commercial activity. The proposed ordinance, w h I c h Chruidler eoJled a good &tarllng polllt, II one clralled last January by AA11tanl Coollty ,CO..S.l Robert F. Nutlman. U detail• that ~ one can oper1te any prot'ft<natfng aircraft-related operation without a pennit, lease or license. It prohibits all but established fixed· holed opualon (FBO) from offering Mdal dmter, rental, 1Jght1ee1 n g, J)iiotA>graphlc, crop dtl!ting, advertlliJ!g, IUJ"Yeying or petroleum services. It would no~ however, prohibit private """°" from malnlolnlnc tbelr own airpm. or from Milin( or leasing !hem. Tiii ordinance, wbleb C h a n d 1 e r r~ cautioned I.I "\entaUve," -~ plee>! l'fllllalloos on the 25 lo 30 n11D1 chlbs operating out of the airport. • • 4 Supervisors ., Fail to Endorse Bay Resolution ' . Four Orloge County llUJ><rVisora reflls. ed Tue.dJy lo back the city of Newport Beach in a reoolutloo supporling lhe in- ten1enen wbo chaUenpd the Irvine Compeny's d<velapmml of U.e Upper Bay. • All fu board· members, w I t h S""1'Vl.lor Raljlh Cl1rk abomt, qreed lo reCefve and file a Newport '"'°Jullon supportlJ\fl the position of Back Bay reslden\S wbo are currently appealing an Or,ange County Superior Court ruling in fayor d. the lfvlne Company. A poup . bol4'1 b)' l<ql ,...~en! FrlaJkl Jlol!lnaon enl.r«f fhe 11••1!1 'u inl«venen aflel' the lrvlne Oo)npeny sued County Auditor Vic Helm lot pey-mlnt of dredgli>g bills -an action .... ~I the time u a court test ol the .. ,,. st-1lty of the company's plana for ""l'Verai-On of the sanctuary into a com· nierctal d<velopment. ~ board action wu taken without comment on the c«1troversy. .. ' .. Nixon to Arrive ' Friday Morning President Nixon Is scheduled lo arrive Friday. As In the put, the gates of tbe base will be cloeed lo tbe publlc and U.e President and Mrs. NllOll will be greeted only by mllllary personnel and tl>eir Air Force one Is to touch do\ln at El Toro Marine Corp< Air staUon at 11 a.m. He will then leave immediately via helicopter for La CUI Pacifica in San Clemente. his first visit to the Western White House slnce January. He Is ex- pected to remain in San Clemente for his •·working vacation" through th e a lhree-.week stay. the White House con- finncd today. OIANal COAST Jiii DAILY PILOT T1lit OnlNrt C.t DAll.V 'IUIT, Wlffl wNcfll la O!Mllltlll f'le N*-1",... It ,ublllllllt Irr 1f'le ~ CO.it Mlla11'"9 Cfltlpiny • ..,._ nle NUlon& •r11 "'1tllWMll, MoNMy ~ Fr_,., -C:.t. MeM, .. ....,.,. ludt, Hvnllntton Buch/FN11t1l1'1 V11i1y, Ue- INCll. lr¥1Mf~cldr1Mck n Sen ,...,_,,., S.n Ju.ii (1pbfr1M A 11111111 ftllloNil ffitlotl h P\IClll1Mll lel\ll'Oyi .,.. SW1111y,, rne prrnc-..1 ~•llMnt Jlanl 11 •• 3» w~t ltt Srr .. I, Coil• M..._ OUllomMI, '"'"" lto1'ort N. We.4 Ptttllonf .,.. hltl•rcr Jec:k R. Cvrley Vic• Pr .. lclent anti Genwel Mtntett lholl'I•• k'e•ril ••ltlt ' Senator Speaks Filibuster Long-But to No Avail A~IN, 1'11. (UPI) -MikrMcKDol; I ~le ..... bown U ''LIWI ~,, lllUd fer 0 """" * II 11M111 111i111 II tollvlnoe tile Teua S.Ote lo opal more ,,_, lor IDOlltal btallb .me.., dim 111 down 111 hll dta today. tDdlal tbe wotld'• "loal• ttl!twter!' McKool1 $Sl _th(ee ~ys .of whl.lkera on 1)11 face, look a long drink of mUk from a aodi """' bi>tlle a"4 111d,"I ihlnk the chances weren't that good when I 1tarted. II It look the senate less 1han five minutes lo l(DOre McK001'1 filibuster. Tiiey paued a .....,w.Jues state budget bill Iha! did not include the 117 million for mental health aervlcu he wanted added. McKDol, wi-normal hlgb-pUtbed voice wu made even more 1queaky b)' allllDI\ two day1 of talk.Ing, upl up hi.I stttn(lh by munching only on ara.oges, lemooa, "tner17 tablets" and eougb drops. He began his fllJbu.sttr before noon h-tonday and sat down at 5:33 a.m. PDT loday. Reform Pia.ta Accord Reached On School Funds SACRAMENTo (AP) -Gov. liooald Reagan and Democratlc: leaders of the Auem.bly hive reached tentative agree- .anent on a .school finance reform of near· Fron• Page l COASTLINE ... lictal Laguna Beach City Council support of the Sleroty mea.s-Jre was defeated in a 3 to 2 vote, with only Councilman Charlton Boyd voting with him . As for the Carpenter bill, Holm said, "T!lal II so loothlesa a piece of legisla- tion I don't think it's even worth sup- porting." . In view of Its two past defeats, 'the Laguna councilman said he felt there was little hope for passage of the Sleroty bill in its third appearance this year. Holm said he was sure the initiative measure would get strong support from au cooaervation organizaUona, but he ad- ded, 11I'm afraid the money'a on the other aide. The tarce landbolden, developers and IO!lle of the uwm .. have dlllerent ldeaa about the Ille ol lhe coul and there's sure lo be an awful lol of publlclty against the initiative." HunUngton Beach Mayor Al Coen lald, "We in HunUng!on Beach feef we are the kind of local agency that doun'I need the imposition of llalewlde control.I. "However. we recopiJe that IOIDe bill pn>Mbly Will -beca ... al U.1tnenf problem and the atlllude of lhe people, oo we'Ve taken a position In 1111pport d. Sen. Carpenter'• bill as one that will allow the (l'ea~t local flexibiflly." I "Coen sal41 t,. regarda tile Sl'1'01Y ~lll\IS ~ 'llld mucll too broa4 1Jn scbpe." "Governor Rtagan has taken a poslllon lhat local agencies are be!I equipped lo handle local problems," said the mayor, "and we feel that we have demonatratt.d that ability. We hope nn bill will unduly restrict a muillcipallty from uerclsing its ...ted rigbl.I as empovrered by the ' constitution for local control." A similar vlew was expreued by Newport Beach City Manager Robert \Vynn. "If the bill removes the pawer to make decisions from local city councils or boards of supervisors and places th& right of decision in a state board or com. mission, that would be very detrimen. tal," said Wynn. "In other word!, local board1 and city councils, I belleve, are much more re-- ceptive to the citiUns," Wynn added. Newpoct Beach conservationist Wesley Marx favored presenting the coastline problem to the voters. "I'm sure the only way we can ensure the envirorunentaJ integrity of our coastline is to take it before the voters, 11 uid Marx. The Carpenter bill, he said, "is not meaning ful , does not recognize the real need for coasUlne management aod is an illusory bill, giving people hope where no plans or true regulation Items exist. "Any new bill should be meaningful. When you have so many demands made on the coastline, anything that L! done by the feglslalure should be In 1he very best ecologica.J interest,. Jy· fl billion a year, parties to the bipartisan negoUatJons say. The compromiJe is to be presented to state senators of both parties in an unusual closed.door background briering late today . Neither Reagan nor A.!sembly Speaker Bob Moretti was immediately available for comment, but details of the com- .Promise agreement were pieced together from other participants in the more than two months of biparWan negotiations on the tu bill. The compromtae would involve ... , one- cent increue in the state saJes tax and use a big chunk of the eatimaled l300 mlllion aurpl111 in the stale budget to meet the atate Supreme Court's ruling that CalifornJa'a system of school finances is unconstitutional , sources said. That would result in the state taking over a bigger share of the cost of local schools -perhaps about $500 mUJlon of the 13 billion ral!ed by property tu<1 for schools -plll.5 more !late money to im· prove the educalion of children wilh special learning problems. Senate President pro tern James Mills, Democratic leader of the upper house. announced lo senators Tuesday that representaUvu of the governor and the Democratic leader of the Assembly re- quested a private hear.lni befcre the Senate. Mills said the purpose of the meeting, a so-called "caucus of the whole," would be lo hear delollJ of a school finance and tar: reform measure wbJch Milli 1aid "apparenUy haft been worked out" belw~ Re11an •...i•~l'flll. 'Mills "Id Moretti 1ncf a represtntative of the govmior would appear together lo present tile plan, but (ave no further details In his floor announcement. Principal purposes of the compromise are lo reduce property laJes and find a achoo! support syatem that meela the court's objection that the rel.lance on local property taxea makes the quality of a child's education dependent on the wealth of hl1 neighhon. Here are details which o t h e r partlctpanll In the negotiallcms, who asked not to be ldentWed, said the com. promise contains: NEW TAXES -Tbere ls "1Ubotantlal agreement" between Reagan and Moretti on w.blch tuea to raise lo pay for the new ICbooJ ·support, with the new tax structure JMtlng ·heaviest reliance on sales taxes. T!lat would be closer to \be propoaed la. slruciure In Reagan's IU blilion reform plan, unveiled tut month, than to Moretti's tax reform propasal which in- cluded big state income tax bites. PROPERTY TAX RELIEF -Morel· ti's proposals to increase the present homeowner's property tu e1emptlon from 17511 to ll,000 -a lax cut of ~bout SI~ per homeowner -I.I "suhltantlally !rimmed" and most of the property las relief will be in 1he form of lower 1ebool tu ratea in the alole'1 poorer dlstricti. SCHOOL MONEY -"There 1te alllJ lbings lo be worked out on the 1ebool finance aide, but the difierencu aren't inaurmountable. They'll be presenting the Senate 90 percent of lhe ball 1ame." Newport Gems Valued At $7,325 Pill ered A woman who was handed heirloom home in recent weeks hu fa iled lo turn rings by her dying mother, pllll two vie-up any trace of the treasured rinp, Mrs. tims whose apartments were burglarized, Fisher said. Th•"''' A. Mvrphl111 MIMlllll (111tw L Pefet krlot H...,.,, hldl City l:dlelr N...,..._.._ llll N•wpwt lowl,.,,,4 rted 1 f 17 "' rtb of School taacber Eveleen Winten, o1 777 repo oss 0 ,_ wo jtwelry Oomin(o Way, reported lou of 15 ltema to Newport Beach police Tuesday. of jewolry on the !Int day of IUlllmtr Meili11. AMmtt P.O. hr 1111, '1661 --c. .. Melli D w.t kt' 1ttttt u.ri--..ct!: 22J ~I AYOIMM tM!tlllftM lltcfl: 1117j IMdl '°"""",.. "-" ~: 111$ H°"'I E camW AM.I , .. _ 17141 '41'4121 ~ A'"'ftallit 6414671 ~""" ''"' °'""' C'lht ........ , .. ~. H• "'""" •twtn. niw1r9ttti.; .,..,,., """" .,. .... IN!Nnlt ...... IMt .. ,~ .. Wl"*'f ......... ..... • Cllttl"llN ..,...,. I ~~ """' .., .. c.... .... ___ ... ,,_ ..... ~ .... -.... -.. _ ... JUI llM lllllMlllY, One victim suggested two rings valued school, wbea IOmeone broke in wbUe ahe al $2,llSll may have been !oat during a wa any. period of grief tnd upset after 1he Nov. loveattcatOl'I 11ld Mlt. Wllltera had 14, 1971 loss of her mother. 1pre1d 1he -ied oroamenl.I out on her The other incldenta -lotaling $5,295 bed in un(lleklng alter .Juol relurnlnc worth Of a.-ltem1 '"' wore taken I• !tom a lllwillan v1ealloo. burglaries in which vlcllms' homes and Whoever pried the Iron! door -he aloo bedrooms were raM1cked .' broke lnlo another nearlly apartment but t::leanor Fisher, of IOI Shorecllf'1 took only 110 there -acoopec1 up the be1t Road, told offlcers that a gold 1nd jade jewelry and left cheaper lttms. ring Wlth two intertwined anakeo and 1 No known method of entry ,.., pfatlnum and diamond rinJ ware ,,,. dlscnvered in another burllary r~ed vol•ed In hcr lou. by Barbara J. Howard, of tlO Not. She explained she put them Into her tin(ham Drive, who loot '2,fll worth of ~.!I H .. , Memorl•I H01Pltal a! ber jewelry, ,,_..,-•, requat, then lorfOL,~~theirif.m..:w=-• ' Sha tdd, POU~ -"'--...,._um the ....,..-ctte11 •lli!t'tlnnei . tiy 1llo rw.Ciilllb:riJ;, \he moc1 A thorough scarat of the SboreelUfJ cootly • lt,000 hnc:elet. • • 2Anaheim Officials Supported Both Anaheim City Manager Keith A. A1urdoch and Public Works Director Thornton E. Piersall were given a vote or confidence Tuesday night by t h e Anaheim City Council. The two key execuUves who allegedly profited from land purchases because of Wide information not available to the public, received a 4·1 endorsement. Ralph C. Sneegu, the freshman coun· cilman who took his seat last April , cast the dlssenlin( vote. Both Murdoch and Piersall appeared at Tuesday nlgbt'a Cotmcil session to public· ly call for a Grand Jury investigation .in- to the allegationa. They denied that any of their actions were illegal, unethical and-immoral. In a story published last Friday, the pair was said to have planned public works pr()jects that increased the value of the land they bought in speculative transactions. In ,a prepared statement. Murdoch said, 0 H there ii any way to insist upon .such an investigation by the GraJKI Jury, we would insist upon it. If lbe Grand Jury won't investigate, then r ask the ~ flJ do it. II Piersall, la a brief statement, said his actions in planning public works project! had been done for the "genera] welfare of the cily of Anabeim" and wllboul regard to penonal interest. From Pagel ANGER •.. tilled Newport official said Monday, ad· ding that the Irvine councilmen "are green." Henry Quigley said the statement showed a "complete Jack of decorum" as a response to lrvlne's neighborly offer to jointly plan the airport properties. "UnJess their City Council repudiates the statements in the press, I have every reason to believe they came from a member of the Newport Beach City O>uncil or the city manager/' Henry Quigley said. He emphasized Iha! although McDon- nell Douglas presently enjoys com- mercial, rat.her than industrial, zoning, Irvine can still control development. 11Nothlng happem on the McDoMell Douglas property witboul a <Obdltlooal UJe permit being ap!l"'ved by the city of Irvine," Quigley said. From Page J CLOA~ •.. · observed "90methlng suspicious" in· volving Chaney last Christmas Eve. "I went to the police department after I gathered more facts," Soffer said, disclosing be had proceeded lo mark bot. ties and watch the cash drawer closely. Soffer's notoriety began shortly after he began opera~lng the Blue Beet in McFadden Square in Newport Beach nearly 12 years ago and bis years have been spiced wllh battle with City Hall over his entertainment license. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. NUMl'MRIH DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS Recovery of lost or stolen dia- monds has always been a problem because there was no means of identifying such gems. If Jost, there was no real way to prove ownership when found. If stolen, identification, particularly of the larger more valuable 1tonu, was complicated by the fact that the thieves usualfy cu! the larger gems into smaller sizes, thus mak~ inK identification a virtual impossl· hlll ly, A new service, called "ldenll- gem," has recently been announced by the London firm ol Diamond Grading Laboratories. The photo- graphic process pictures the basic characterlstlco of the p o 11 • b e d llone, recordlng forever the tiny markmp wh!Cli mike eacli dla· mond different from any other. JuJt as fingerprints cannot ba changed, these tiny markings re- main lden!Ulable regardle11 ol any rtcutting of the stone. Not only does this means that your diamond Lt In actual fact tllf. lerent than any other In the world •• , 11 allO means that we can now cblllge the-phrNe,-~DlamoodJ are Forever Your~)' I .NOllH PACIFIC OCIAH -=t~~~-"~;MAIStw IS. I • I • •. CH1t$1MAS I. r: . , I -··· ...... ----· ::.~ : ·: . . . •.• . ·' • •11····: .. I , . v~A< :~ -..'11.'''''s. + t.-1.0111l ... :___1-i /..:..,,_ ·'·~ ·-~-..·l) :,,t · I ·,;1.TI • . ; SOUtll #['""~"! · 110 ISO NUCLIAR TIST AllA .. .. I . ' . .. ••-91• ... ' .~ " " • • • • ' .. ' TAHITI • • • .• , -20-- MUIUIOA-() ' I MANGAIEVA.,• 140• • . uo U, I N""""" FRENCH BLASTS-France, ignoring worldwide protests, has slart<!d a series of nuclear tests in vicinity of TahitJ in South Pacific. Gov·· ernment sources said the first bomb was detonated June 25, and another is expected this week. ". France Resumes Nuclear Test-Despite Protests· PARIS (UPI) -France haa resumed nuclear atmospheric testing in the South Pacific in spite of vigorous protests by several nations that the blots may: en- danger their environments, the French news agency A8ence France Press said today. Tiie agency said in a report from' Tahlll !bat the firs! nuclear warbead- type device was detonated Sunday morn- ing in U.e vlcinlly of Mururoa Atoll, 800 miles southwest of Tahiti. The French Defense Ministry declined comment on the report as did the nuclear e1perimentation center here which . coordinates atomic testing in the Pacific. The ministry ilKUcated Tuesday that no official comment would be forthcoming on the tests until the series was com· pleted, presumably sometime later this summer. There was no word about the safety of the protest yacht Greenpeace lll which From Page I UPPER BAY ••• sUtuted ," Monroe added. The Irvine Company 1'1esday denied recelvlnc IDY Invitation lo be an a com- mittee dilcusslng use of the land. "We've not been contacted by anyone on this and we ·~ived no invjtation," said =II W. Ferguson, VJce-preslclenl for te c0mmunlealions for ljie Irvine ny. "We know of no one else on any level 9£ government who bas received an in- vitation," he said, '"Ibere isn't anything to comment on IDltil we hear something different." The conunittee suggested by Monroe appraently would consist of Irvine Com~ pany repr .. entaUves, Interior Depart· ment representatives and uperts from various other governmental agencies concerned with the problem . "The commlltee being organized will undertake it.. task in July and submit its completed report lo SecreUry Morion by Dec. 31," Mooroe said. fast wu reported beading lnlo the Jes'. area. Amt.her yacht manned by memben>()f U.e French N\lctear Test Protest Coa>- mltlee was preparing lo sel aali 'J'hun. day aftemooii for the test area from TelD"lnga, New Zealand, 100 milts ~h of Wellington. ' - In Wcllin(lon, New Zealand l'r!Uie Minister Jobn Marshall lald tonlgbt _M would seek confinnation that the tdu had begwi bul would nnt send a protht note to France. "The.re's no point In wasting tnm'J paper and tbne in telegrams," he saJd, t The reported blast came after a ICklaY effort by New Zealand, AustraJia and Peru to force a cancellaUo n of the net series of test explosions. . J Search Widened l For Top Cat, Lost in Pacific Search wideoed loday for the 23-iool eatamarm-Tom C.lcnnuin( with three per90ns aboard on a voyage fiuu Honolulu to the mainland. • The Coast Guard said loday that the tearclt Is being conllnued with four fim, wing airliaft ahd a C'.oart Guard cut'.tei-. eo .. t Guard officials at Long Be~~ said an area of 60,000 miles had betn scoured by Tuesday at 5 p.m. An a<r.: dllional 21,000 square miles Is expecttd to be covered today. out of Long Beach. The Cout Guard cutter Minnelotili "'·as scheduled to relieve the Resonrte which bu been tearching since Sunday the area in which the boat wu lUl reported. .,, ·- In addition ; two Navy aircraft hal'e' joined the S.arch along with a Cout Guard plane out of San Francisco· anct.~an Air Force aircraft from Hamilton -Aiz'. Force base. . ·. ,. ' • •• -.. " ., When you give her m.Omega •he'lf1ay "you 1houldn'I have," but 1he won't mem IL Wl'ltn 1he sees the Omeo• n•mt on htr wttch •M'A knew how much extra thought you put lrlto htr Christmas. Sht NY not reall:t that Omega watehet art Ultd on all Apollo moon flight.a and In tilt Otympk:I. She'll IOYI \ Jutt tor lta betu11. Lattt on, Sl'le'll lovo Ht tndu•lng dopendlOllhy. And H ahe qys. •'You a11qu1c1~· Jlllt you t1J to takt k blek. 0 ~OMEGA J.C. J/ump6rie~ Jewefe~ 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVINllNT llRMS JS TIAU IN SAM! IOCATICN IAN/IAMERICARO-M~nlR CHAU! PHONI '41·'401 • -' • , DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Wildlife Preserve? Leaking litlle blU here and lbere, the U.S. D.,. partment of the lnterior is giving every indication it does, indeed, intend to buy some of Upper Newport Bay for a nallonal wildlife preserve. Whether lbe federal agency Is trYing to be coy, or whether it is just sending up a trial balloon isn't eel' lain, but "high level" sources said last week and yesler· day lbere is a purthase planned. Some reports &aid the government wants only the three underwater islands. Others say the preserve would be bigger than that. None was very specific. Preserving those islands and nothing else seeming· ly would do lillle to accomplish the ecological goals of the Friends of Upper Newport Bay. On lbe other band, the ridiculously low value the government source put on the property it wants, (about $185,000) seems to indicate the Interior Department doesn't want very much. One independent appraisal several years ago valued the lbree islands at $28 million, assuming they can be fully developed. If nothing else, the reports, confusing as they are; do give hope that the federal government may soon take action that will help to resolve the future of one of California's most controversial waterways. Freeway Ro11te Change? It may have been no more than an irritated gesture, or it may have been a deadly serious warning. But California Highway Commissioners last week shook up both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa wilb lbeir inquiry as to whether Costa Mesa would like to have th• Newport Freeway switch back to iU original Newport Boulevard alignment. The action caught bolh ciUes by complete surprise. And ll's pretty clear from lhe react.Ion ao far eman· aling from lhe cities' officials In bolh commun!Uea lhat neither community knows what, If anything, ii should do about lhe matter. The Highway Commlssion11 action came as New- port Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis wa telling them in no uncertain terms that his city isn't ut to accept lhe Newport Freeway. The highway co missioners ap- parently reasoned that if freeway con truction has to terminate at the Newport Beach city II •ts, It might be better lo drain the traffic off lo the thre existing south· bound lanes of Newport Boulevard (Sta Highway 551 than to unload it onto the single south und lane of Superior Avenue. After first reacting with gleeful sur ·~ at Ne\\'· port's dilemma, Costa A1esa Councilman Alvi Pinkley, chairman of the city's freeway committee, ac owledged that such a change may not be acceptable to Costa Mesa because it could foul up the clly's downtown redevelop- ment plans. Costa Mesa city councilmen will study the Stale Highway Commission's latest move at their next meet4 ing. Newport Beach, meanwhile, is banking heavily on getting some new ideas it can contribute to the solution of the coastal traffic problems from !ls two-year, $80.· 000 traffic study due for completion late this year or early 1973. It is fairly clear that the lralfic from lhe Newport Freeway will have to reach Pacific Coast Highway some- how, somewhere. The question is not whether, but how and where. It appears the next key de<ision is in the hands of the Costa Mesa City Council. N Important Answer to I m port ant Question W oman, Man Notice 4ge Early, Late Ni x on: 'Hanoi Is Losing' WASHINGTON -President Nlzon, who bas not held a news conference ln three months, hu given an important answer to an Important question In a magazine article published last week. The President said that both militarily and poJIUcally, Hanoi Is losing the "desperate gamble" of its invasion o£ South Vietnam . "E leven weeks have now passed since that North Vietnamese inva· sion," he !!laid. H'fbe fighting continues, but the South Viel· namese have held. Not only have t b • y held mili· tarily, bul the way in w b I c b the p e o p I e of South Vietnam have rallied to lh<ir nation's defense should persuade even the most committed apologists for the enemy that Saigon, not Hanoi, speab for the South Vletnameoe people. n The President made this state- ment in a long article enUUed 11'Ibe Real Road to Peace" in the news magazine, U.S. Newa and Wcrlcl Report. HE STATED THAT despite Hanoi's failure, the United States is nonetheless prepared to aetUe lbe conlllct on the basis of an Internationally supervised cease-fire, return of priloners of war and, after the fonl<>ln(, a complete withdrawal ol all Ame<lcan fottea within four monU11. The President's statement II notable for several reuol'll. nae flnt, of OOW'H, is that be now judges Hanoi to have fall· ed and his counlenneaaurel ol mJning and boinbing to have IUCCOeded in malt· Ing It possible for the south Vietnamese (rucHARD WILSO~ to "hack it." . A secondary potnt bears strongly on the present effort, with apparent Russian help, to reopen negotiations in a way that will lead to a settlement. The Saigon government, be said, represents the will of the South Vlelnamese people. Soulh Vietnamese refugees In Invaded areas have fled from their "liber1ton." 'Ibey are not collaborallng with Hanoi. HOWEVER, IN THIS connection it is an eslabliahed condition that the North Vietnamese Army bas occupied an<! is In control or Quang Tri, the northernmost province of South Vietnam. Under this condition how does an Ur temaUonally supervised c e a s e r i r e operate? Does it mean that the Norill Vietnamese Anny remains in position in Quang Tri Province while under in- ternational supervision and awaiting 10me future political settlement? Or does it mean a withdrawal of the North VJet- namese Army to its position north o! the demilitarized ..... 1 These questions suggest themselves for two reasons. At the beginning of the '°" called Easter olfenaive there was a disposition In high official quarters, noted herein earlier, to accept the idea the Ncrtb Vietnamese would occupy one and -tbly two of th< northerruno.rt pro- vinces of South Vietnam where a pro- visional Viet Cong government might be established. THE SECOND REASON is that aome tine of dlscua1ton not yel disclosed by the President most have been pursued by bim and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev In their long and blunt host ride and talk session on Vietnam while Nixon was in Moscow. It was ntirly as evident then as it is now that lhe North Vietnamese offensive was off schedule. Soviet President Podgomy's visit to Hanoi followed and be bu ended it by saying the Paris Peace Talka would be resumed soon and Russia would work to instD'e their success. It Is reasonable to apeculate, therefore, that IOlllewhere In ttu. ares -the m•an- lng of a ceaaefire In all of Indodllna - lies the fleribtlity which could be the key opening the door to a settlement. Even if that opeculatlon II wrong, there Is evidently ·..,.. !red factor In the dllcusalona Nixon and Dr. Henry A. Kiss- inger have been having with the RUBsians and Chinese. NIXON'S EMPHASIS in saying that even the "11lOC5t committed apologists for the enemy" must reallie that Saigon represenls the will of the South Vlet- namea:e people gives no hint that he bu decided to dump President Thieu. Bot . under the preent m i JI t a r y ctr<wnatanCes, he might find tt d<Sirable to make spedfic conceulona going beyond the broad terms of biJ latest peace plan. The safest coocluslon Is probably the s.lnplest: Now that the Hanoi govern- ment bas fallen substanti&Uy short of ils main alms, the President is trying out several different approaches which 11would oot require surrender and bumlliaUon on the part of anybody" - presumably including W a 1 h l n g t on , Saigon. Hanoi, Moscow and Peking. That, of course, is just as hard as lt sounds. High Court on Club Guests . RecenUy, the United States Supremo Court banded down a decision In one phase, and one Clllly, of the qu<stlon of racial Umltailon ln private clubs. It Is an nceedlngly complex question, touchina not only legal rlghls, bul ao- cial trld!Uon In the human relatJon. It ts filled with emotion and prejudice. Ir you speak on it. no mat· ter what view you adopt, a segment of the people may agree with you, but another aegment will certainly dlsagr<c wilh you vehemenlty, In part and prob- ably in wholt. The case involves a fraternal lodge in Pennsylvania, where a white member OUN9•COMT DAI LY PILOT ~ N. W...S, Pabl!Wr Tllomal K...U, Idllof' Albor! W. Baf<I EclltoriGI Page Editor ,,,. ..Utor1al -ol tho -Pilot lffkl to tnrorm and 1Umu. .. late rftdm by pl'UtnUn.c thlt niewwn-l'lC""• OJ)inlona and com· mcnW')' on topk:a or lntttttt and s{in.lflcantt, by provtdbtg a forum for tho cxprdllton of 'our f'l!•dl!l'I' oolnlo.., ud by _,tlna the dlvaw """"""u ot W-ob-"'""" ancl apo)Cesma Oft topics "tlledq. Wedlluday, June 28, 1972 ( ROYCE BRIER J took a friend to lunch aa a guest, a Negro leglalator. He wu ..tuaed oervice at tho bar. It wu the contention of appellant's counsel that since ·the bar served liquor by authority of a stale license, tbe guest's consUluUooal rtgbls weN violated. The Court held I to S they were not, and In ef· feet lhat the public btterest wu not ger· malne. Justices Douglas, Brennan and Marshall dlsaented. YOU PERCEIVE thf: case rests on a narrow base. lt did not Involve mem. berahlp in the lodge, but only a guest's use or one facility of the lodge on in- vitation of a member. So the C'A>W't was not compelled to come to grips with the full queslion, though to everyone'• knowledge the full quesUon bu been debated In the nation for a decade. The majorlly opinion wu that Jhc ti· quor facility wu In no different category from other stalKonnected faclllll<a, such u electrlCJly, wat.r and police and fire prolecllon. H•nce, the plaintiff could not appeal to the Fourteenth Amendment to the ConsUlutlon of the United Slates for relief. Tbe Fourteenth Is one of the most in. terestlnf of the Amendments for ii.I history alone. lt was drafted In 1866 In the &n1ry aftermath Of war, and WU declared adopted July 28, 11168. II was an effort to vant full clll:enshlp rlghls to blac1tl who bad em<rgl<i from 1lavery. Ill key -g• readl: "No slate 1ball matt or uorct any law which lball abridga the prlvilqeo and lmmuQJU.1 or ctlhena of tbt Unlled Slaw ••. " As we know, the Amtndmtnt wu for many years clrtwnvented in voting and other areas, and has only come into force in our time. MANY BLACKS and u-concerned with their dvtl rtgbls !)ave argued recenUy that this abould apply to memberablp In private organlzaUons. But the Fourteenth as II stan<ls wmot be ao construed. It II doubtful If any amend- ment or pur1uanl law could Impair a right of citizens to enter private, wlun· tary associations with other citlzenl or their choiet-, and to devise rules for ex· eluding those not of their~ choice, without llaelf violaUng the rl1ht• of members of such assoclatlons. Yet tradJtion is a hidden but important part of law, and by common consent guest status ls in another dimension. Jt would perhaps be more stnJible, and cer· tainly more amiable, to exempt club guesll on good faith of a member, from nornuil and rational restricttons. The Court ruled otllerwi.s<. Dear Gloomy Gus l \Viii Newport police tnvr.sUgate the nallonally publlctied mayhem m v.·hlch a talkative Republican fig· ure wa~ nllcgcdly brutalized at the Newport.er Inn? -A.G.L. ""' ... """ f'lfllctf .......... ...... .... MUI""" ...... M "' ........... .... rM "' "'" ,. • ..._. ., .. c.ar , .... ' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Tboupts .At Large: A wcxnan begins to notice she is no longer young ~years before she has any real need to worry about it; a man begins to notice he is no tonger young 10 years after everyone else has tacitly accepted It. • • • It is not -ely tbal those who live by the fWOrd die by the sword -it is that, in most cuea, they die by the tame sword. (In that their own weapon is 1lmp- ly turned and uaed against them .) • • • People who leave large sums to chari· ties when they are dead, and would part with little when they were alive, are displaying more selfishness t h a n benevolence. • • • Technology is going to have to hurry a 1<: faster than it is to keep up Jl'lth the rising expectations of the younger generaUon, for soon llObody will be aroond who wants to do the dirty work, while there i!: still plenty of dirty work to be done. • • • The worst crime that chronic poverty commits is the steady erosion or co~ science among those who have noihope, and who substitute the act of retaliation for the sense of remorse. • • • There is nothing more fatal to good conversation than agreement. • • • When Mark Twain returned Crom traveling around the globe, the primary illusion he left abroad was this one: "There are many humorous things in the world, among them the white man'• no- tkm that he is less savage than the other savages." • • • One reason that farmers seem more contented than city folk 11 that fanner1 concentrate all their worrieJ on the weather and the crops, And don 't have too much aniiety left over for personal prob- lerm. • • • About the only time the average American rememb«s that he It a "good citizen" is when he la stopped by a traffic cop and thinks he ougilt to be given a pals btcause he bu never held up a fill· ing·station. • • • What those who don't like ua say abool UJ may be farse to the facts, but are often truer to the spirit of our personality than we care to admit. • • • To rear a child who ls free from envy Is perhaps the best (and certainly the most lifelong } inheritance a parent can beltow. • • • A good society, under any form of government, ts impossible WJtil tht~ art at leut as many perms wllltng to equallze down as there are willing to equailu up. (l!nlll then, all revoluUons will merely reshume the power and deal the best h•nds to dil!erent wlnn•n.) • • • The.rt are only two alternatives : if you don't get bet.tu as you get smarter, you get worte. ~ ... TALK A~OUT WATE~ roLLUTI ON!" A 4-H Club Boy 1 Was Cruel t o Pig 1 To lhe Editor: Last weekend while attending the Orange County Fair, I became very d!aturbed by an incident t observed. In the livestock exhibit, a young boy from the 4·H Club was feeding the swine. They. like other animals dependent upon man for their food, became rather u:cited about the meal. HOWEVER, the boy must have felt th is improper behavior for a pig. He jumped In the pen and began kicking the swine In the face. There were several people stand· ing there watching and I gu.., the boy felt the crowd needed more of an ex. hibition. so he then took the pig by the tall and pulled Jt around a few times while it squealed in pain. IT JS ALWAYS disgusting to S<e a person be cruel or vicious to an animal that csnnot defend IJaeU. But worse ,.., the fact that thla child was represenUng an organlullon that, I thought, was teaching young people the right way to raise and care for various animals. Does the 4-H Club OC111done this type of behavior? BEVERLY BERRYIDU. One-man Bo11eott To the EdHor: '!'he United Slates Supremo Court, pressured on one aide by the giant cor· porate Interests, and on the other by the needs of th• people, uaually acrew1 up everything II gels Ill hands on. The latest 1pa1111 or these nine men ll their decision to enjoin the American Pilots uriion from partlclpaUng In the International Federation of Airllne Pilots AstociaUon '1 strike agalnat enemy coun- tries that welcome and provide uylum for skyjackera. NOW IF THAT Isn't the crim• of aiding, abetting and giving comfort to the enemy, It will have to do untll a better one comes along. SUch a crime could bring the death penalty in Ume of .war, but we are at peace, man and you better believe it -a "peace" that allows ram· pant treason to iO unheeded, u If It were no more than a nea·bite. AND JUST LAST weekend another American plane was hijacked to the lune of ball a million bucks, plus 1 free le110n In sky diving for the bandit. So I now declare a one-man boycott of the Supreme Court for aiding t h e permissiveness whJch perm.111 the hi· jacking to go on and on without any cooperation from tilt offending nations that coddle the bandlls. MILT BASHAM Time tor a Cha1111e'! To the Editor ' J was recently divorced and have cultody of my children, ages I and 4 yean. Jf It had been my wife who rectlV· (, __ MA_IL_B_o_x __ )\ ' Letters from readers: ara welcotM. Nonn4llU wtiter1 1howld convt11 thtir me1sag11 m 300 word& or lesa:. TM right to condenie letters to fi t .tpaet or silmlnot• libd II rtserved. All In-· ttrs mwt includt rignoture1 and malt.. ing addrtu, b1't nmMI f'l1tlW be wftla,.. held on r1quc1c f.f 1ufjicfnt ''°'°" II apporenl Poclrt/ tDlll nol be P"l>- lilhed. ' ed cuatody I would be apocted to P11 chJjd 1Upport *hlch I WOl!d PdlY poy. Now u I have tbe dllldnn liilcl have te work to keep them In baby sitters, w!v. should Ibo be ablo to acapo the flDlncW respoaslblltly when 1be h•lped to bring them Into this world. She works and ~ earn u much as I. ' Isn't it time for a change ? ALAN K. BROOKS (Engllshman for Mens IJb~ Helpful White Line .~ To the Editor: A5 l wrote a few years ago to suaeit that a while line be put at the right hand side of MacArthur Blvd., It la only f that I eapress my thanks lo whoever responsible. It's a great help on dark 1 foggy n1'btl on the wlndJ!ll niod * coming car lights bal/ bltndllli lbe to have the rea.maing white llne to right to go by. The lnfr<qu<ni rell before were not nearly u effective. Thanks again! MRS. JAMES P. A Vntalr Aetion ' . .. .. To the Editor ' '. On June 24, the publlsbed date Jr reptratlon fer summer sessions of Pail, Beachet and Recreation progra1111, tholf who came to reglater were informed li.t a pre.reglalraUon bad been held t!Ki prevlou1 evenl,ng. 11tis deprived them o{ • cbaoce at thi clau of their choice, since many cl-~ already fltled. The rtaaon lfvtn for this action was that the evenlac regiatrallon wu for N•wport ~~ residon\I only. I am a Newport Beach mldent and taxpayer, but waa DOI ~de aW1re of the sudden change of phw. ' omCIALS OV the Park, Beaches and Recreallon Deparlll!J'nt ataled lo me that Uity felt the entire sJtuation unfair and bad recommended adberln1 to the or!Jlnally publl&hed acbedute. They were • ordered by lbe city councIJ to stage the sneak preview. l 1lncerely hope that lbe city council does not lnW!d to coollnue In Its lack or reaard for dty mldenll in the further cooduct of city affairs. PEGGY WENRICK ..--------B11 Geol'f1ee1 ---------....,., Dear Geor1e: Do you think 11IJ1lnful to smok<, drink, dance and run around wltk wlld women? CONCERNED ABOUT MORALS Dear Concerned: II most certainly Is a sin, tl)l\nl to do all those interesting tblnp al once. Tho proper thins ii to coo. cenlralel Smoke, drink, dooce OR run around with wild wamon, Dear George: My boy friend Is ao jealous ht filea Into 1 rtS• If I even opuk to my husband on the phone. Whal lbould I do about thisT BABE Dear Babe: Just eiplain to your boy frlml that there Is nothing going on between you Md your husband and that you have a perfect right to .•• WAIT A MINUTE! Look, you ,;ant to writ• to Ann or aomebod,yT I feel too bod todoy to fact evon oao more nuL (Sood )'Wr mioor problema lo G«<1e and have them coovorted to mltjor dllunmaa at DO utra charge.) • - 1 Cranston . . Son Faces Drug Rap ~ ..\NGELEs (UPI) -&bin ~.-14-year-<>ld aon of Sen. Alan a..., (l)CaJif.), WU !ndl<ted Tuel- dl)i/ aJoac wllh a man once Id<ntlfied by • ID!"!*P" .. u a prominent New York ... charges ol drugging a formet' y Club bunny wllh grape juice d-with an exottc balluclnosen. The girl charged she 1 u r fe r e d "~bologjcal aberrations" and still sets "D~baCks" or drug ·dJstortlOM. tile -ger Cranston pleaded innocent to ,l:barlt1 or administering a dangerous drQa and felonious assault. He> was ~ on probation for three years for a marijuana llllluggling conviction in 1968. 11Rob1n told me he wu innocent," the senator Aid In a statement. j'I believe him and stand bebind him ... *fndicted by the oounty grand jury vfd Mareus, ZI. referred lo in an in the Aug. t Issue of New York ¥Q~, entered as evidence before the jury,.u "the second grealelt pimp •k.'~ Marcua was charged with a rtltricted drug, acceuory Bl!tt the fact lo the drugging, falae Im· l ent, battvy and atlempted oral on. naton worka for a television pr .. company and Marcus i< the -tor of a Beverly Billi dlscolheque, the Pantdile Ballroom, which was once a faiJionable and eu:lusive club for show ~figures known 11 The Factory. Cranaton surrendered, wllh former !Uperlor Court Judge Ralph Nutter ap- pearing as his attorney, but Marcus did not apPear and a warrant was issued for hll'arrett .torce Marie Wllllams, 23, Playboy """1-llimed-aclrtlS, said she wu given • 'llul of grape Julee at Marcus' lux· ~ Coldwater Canyon bome on March !2f ··t • ,. To Presldene11 Alvia Barfield of Los Angeles acceded.to the top position of the Association of Classroom Teachers of tbe National Edu· cation Association, during the NEA convention In Atlanta . City; N.J. , Sinatra Agrees To Be Witness Before House HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Frank Sinatra, who has been popping up and vanishing again around Europe while congressional rackets probers wa ited to question him, bas agreed to testify voluntarily. Sinatra's lawyer, Milton Rudin, said Tuesday that the singer will appear on his own before the House Select Com- mittee on Crime July 18. A spokesman for the committee said that under the agreement with Rudin Sinatra will not be served with the subpoenas that have been awaiting him at every U.S. port of entry . The committee wants to ask Sinatra about a $55,000 inv~tment he made in 1962 in the Berkshire Downs, Mass., horse racing track, which allegedly had underworld connections. Marijuana ' . Initiative On Bal.lot SACRAMENTO (AP) -California voters will declde in November whether to legalize the private use ot marijuan1 by adults. The order Tuesday putting !he Issue on lbe ballot 1parked predictions from backers o( the marijuana mea!UJ'e that they will tum out hundreds of thousands of young voters and shake up the state's entire political power structure. Secretary of State Edmulld C. Brown Jr. said that a voter initiative to legalize the private use of marijuana by perSODJ 18 and older qualified with more than the 325,504 voter signatures required to place it on the Nov. 7 general election baUot. Brown said an unofficial canvass o( returns from California's 58 counties fowid the petitions for legalization of marijuana have the signatures of 338,187 voters. . He told county clerks they could stop counting signatures on the marijuana petitJons and concentrate on petitions for five other voter initiatives that are still seeking a place on the ballot. San Francisco attorney Bob Ashford, who headed the petition drjve to put the marij uana measure on the ballot, said his campaign crew -which he claimed numbers over 10,000 volunteers -will now launch a campaign to register young voters. Ashford predicted his campaign will have a big impact on other elections in the state, from the presidential race down through congressional and state legislative contests. "There are 2.6 million unregistered persons between ages 18 and 24. We can sign up a significant nwnber of them." California now has 9.1 m i 11 i o n registered voters, with Democrat-! out- numbering Republicans by 1.7 million, a 3-2 ratio. Among young voters that ratio is 4-1 Democratic. ' .. • The Biggar Summer Sale of '72 ' there's a whole a lot • going ... for you! STARTS JUNE 29 THE SIGNIFICANT QUALITY: • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Upholstery THE SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS: Save 10 to 30% . . and more off DINING ROOM BEDROOM LIVING ROOM GARDEN/PATIO CARPETING , •• on the large1t 1ummer 1ole 1electlon of the Biggar things of quality ever offered. Entire colt edion1 to indlviduol piece•· all taken from our ritgulor 1tock. • .for every home fumi1hing occasion, including upholstery, bedding, and carpeting. Tr uly, the expected quality ot uneitpected savings. THiii + MANY MOH HINIEDON SANllEl . Contemporary Bedroom AlVARAOO . Mttdit•rronean Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room CAPRI . ltolion Closllc Dining Room NEAPOUTAN -lto lion Clouic l iving Room HERITAGE MADRIGAL· Med lterroneon Bedroom, Dining Room, living Room 8oricirii • ltoliOl'I 9edroom, Dining Room · living Room CAMEO • Italian Clo11ic Dining Room • living ROom GRAND TOUR • Cla1slc Bedroom & living Room COURIER . Coni.rnporory Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room MILLENNIA · Contemporary living Room BRENTANO • Ito lion Clo11ic Dining Room DltXll MARCHlSA • COfltinentol Bedroom, Dining Room & living WElUNGTON PARK . Cont9MpOrorr Bedroom &. Dinil'li Room PARFAIT · French Youth B•droom NEW GENERATION • Cont•mpol"ory Youth &edroom ESPER'-'NTO & VERLEll:O Bedroom, Dining Room & liVlng Room ovoilobie on.., .. clol order ot tole price&. nANllY Oll • Med iterroneon youlti bedroom Boilc.witt PORTS o•CAtL. Naulicol look youth bedroom IROWN JORDAN · Outdoor furnilvre CAIPU .. lotge ttl.ction from fomout mok•l"l •lortlngat 6.95 !M' square yard IKl•H STIATOlOUICGll • Monymodel1 ot reduced prlc•t . IKlllllS STIATOlOUICGll ·Mony modell at reduced prlcM MAmUS AllnDOM • Ken1ingtcw qnd CloreinOllt,Hne•. Sole Priced SIMMONS· 01cor de lo Rento 8ock1hield KM Sale prietd ALL ITEMS SUBJECTTO PRIOR SALE SIGGAR'S OWN BUDG!ET ACCOUNT· ttankAmeJicatd·Ma1terCharge • Complete .... -~--.iilnteriof' Oe1lan !iervie• Al Usual SANTAA"A•1110N.Mo it1S1. 541°1621 PASADENA• 680 e,col.,.do BM!. 792-6136 POMONA • 160 E. Holt Ave. 629-3026 ~td111,!d•" Jun< 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 5 ........._ 'Action Dootned' Assembly ' No-fault Forces ' I In Budget I ' ! I -~ I Vow to Push Bill Override SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backen of tbe last surviving major no-fault auto in- surance bill this year say they will try again to ram the bill through the Legislature -overcoming its rejection by a key Senate committee. But even if they are successful in reversing the committee action the bill is probably still doomed, says the chainnan of another Senate committee that will also review the me88llJ'e. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly bas taken the first step toward an over--; ride of Gov. Ronald Reagan's veto of f1S ! million worth of new state money for Officer Talks Gunman Down local schools. !' At the same time, the Senate prepared The Senate JudiCiary Committee killed Assemblyman Jack Fenton's no-fault bill on a 6-5 vote Tuesday, one short of the seven votes needed to send it out of the 13-member committee. its own attempt to override another of I the Republican governor's budget vetoes. SAN JOSE (AP ) -A softspoken police sergeant with a knack for "dealing with people" talked a .gwunan into giving himself up after switching places with the man's beaten estranged wife to become a hostage. "I was the closest one, so I was It," Sgt. Merle Johns, 4l, said Tuesday of his offer to become a hostag~ so that Leilani Fink, 28, would be set free . Johns was dispatched to the home after neighbors reported hearing screams. When he arrived, he found Miss Fink beaten and her former husband Joseph Lettrich, 27, pointing a .32-callher automatic at her head. Lettricb agreed to release his former wife, but only if he got an unarmed hostage in return, Johns said. Another officer, patrolman Roger Sides, was dis8nned by Lettrich, who kept Sides' .38-caliber police revol ver and forced him to leave. For the next three hours, Johru! tried to talk the man into giving him the weapons, talking to him about his three children and "how this would be a ter. rib le thing, someone being shot.'' Finally, John said, "Joe, l'm going to put my hand out, and I'd like you to give me the gun." Lettrich surrendered without incident and was taken to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for psychiatric observa- tion, ,,_ Rejection came despite last-minute support or the measure by the Reagan Administration. Supporters lmmediately said they would try for reconsideration in the com· mittee at an unspecified later date. Only one committee member, O a k I a n d Democrat Nicholas Petris, was absent during the hearing. Sen. George Oeukme- jian (R·Long Beach) abstained. If backers do get the measure through the Judiciary Committee on another try, the bill would face a hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, which has not allowed a no-fault bill to reach the Door this year. Finance Committee l.!hairman Randolph Collier (0-Yreka) doesn't think Fen- ton 's bill would clear his committee either. "I'm just reflecting back on the votes that were taken on previous bills and I suspect it would be similar," he said in an interview. I doubt whether the votes would change." Fenton, however, was still optimistic after the Judiciary Committee vote that at least temporarily sidelined his bill. "It doesn 't mean anything yet unless reconsideration fails," he said. "I'd say there's still a pretty fair chance." Under a no-fault system, each in- surance. company pays damages for Us own customer no matter who was at fault in an accident. OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 10-7 ' Opponents attacked the proposed extra school appropriation as a piecemeal solu- tion that will only perpetuate present school problems. e Quaffing Quashed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee quashed a measure Tuesday that would have lowered the drinking age to 18 in California. The proposed amendment to the state Constitution by AsSemb)yman John Kno:x, a -Richmond Democrat, fell two votes short of the number needed to pa1s it out of the committee. e V .S. Aids V alle11 SACRAMENTO (AP) -Prtlident Nix- on has declared a portion of southeastern Sacramento County a disaster area after floods hit the area when a levee broke last week. The declaration Tuesday permits the use of !ederal funds to help in relief and recovery efforts. e Wallace Delegates? LOS ANGELES (AP) -Supporters or Gov. George Wallace say they plan to draft a slate of alternate California delegates to the Miami Democratic Na- tional C.onvention. Wallace and three other losers in the Ca1ifornia Democratic primary election object to the "winner J.ake all" pro~n ~ by which Seo. George McGovern got Iii 271 California delegates. · , • *JTIR-JPI GLEDS ~*DIJCOU TJ~ COTTON SHORTS 47 Boys' wcut off" 1tyle ovailoble in solids ond fancies. Keep copl in the 1ummer weather.8-18. Also in jr. boy.' ~-7. Chorg• it. ~· .. MEN'SCOTION KNIT SHIRTS • for .... 2.97 ,or 2.57 -Worm weotli.rcomfort available in a fa1hion group of the latest looks in men's short·sleeved, combed cotton knits. Choose from many 1tyles, including crew ,n~k, solids, fonciet-. S·M·l-Xl. Terrific valuel .. ' I I . ...-. -,,.. . -.- I T...,,,_ ...... ' tqL. . .S, NO. 180, 8 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, lm c . State Chiefs Reach Accord on School Ref·orm ' . : SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald ReqaJ! and Democratic leaden of the ~bly have ruChed tentaUve agree. gJeat. on a ICbool finance reform of near. Jy fl blUlon I year, parU.. to the ~ negotlatlons aay. · Tiii eompromlse II to be presented to ab -ion of both parUes In an ~ backgrauncl briefing y. '°:~~:; nor Aaembly Speaker )l waa fmm«Uately available OKs Pay Packet For County A paY,.ll and fringe benefit package f..-Orange County employees Iba! will cos! the county f5.f million was approved 3-1 3-1 Tuelday with SUpervisor Robert BAl\!n dissenting during board dlscussloo of l!'e agroeinent with the Orange County Bmploy.., "-laUon. llattln, whose eariler stand on the hr cfea...., lbat will go lnlo effect In the ll!f.73 payroll year Ide the OCEA to Jioot opponent William Wenke in the J'mie z First District SUpervisorial race, clsndemned the agreement as contalnl.ng .. gro.s, inequities. ~"'I have supported and recommended a more equitable way of distribution to tnake county employees' cost of living Jn. ~,',-Bittlil a id. "I have suggested tllitlhe Coonyt employees' be allowed to Vblt on this matter of great Importance ti thbl," be added. County Personnel Director William Hirt explained that the a~meol ¥ween the coomy and OCEA will mean m ·v~ JJaciot of U7 percent In pay ut .31 porcsl.ID friltle benollla to moal aiimty worl<en. ·s;m. pay ·ra!Rs will be higher; Harl llfld, bul only ·lwO and ODt-qUlller per- ... to! COlllll)' ~ are 1mt>loYed attn tllat are not eUgtlile fiir the ted,pay booot. .. officialt have rejected Battin ~ that cenetr Oil the IUilestloD 1llil coot of living lncreuel tboWd be ~ttatde with preference to the lower p119 C!Jllllly "'"ken. • Confrontations bet..... Battin and o{;EA offlclels endecl with the workers' . orPnJzatloD calllDg In Ila newRltter for lbO' 0111ter of the First District -~· sor. · · • · contained In the OCEA ~kaie Include lull pay for unused olck ~e ·on retirem'ent 1t 20 yan, the ms. Inc of Ibo death benefit lronr $450 to $750, n!iotrnlty llllurance beoefita for women ~,Ploy... and acroso-tbH>oard pay 1Aes on an avenge ol mor etban five j&<enL -· Farmer Locates .i>lrate's 'Jacket' j'ERU, Ind. (UPI) A lmoer today f90Pd a jacnt believed lo be thet ol a rntls1ng hijacker who balled out· of a Jidlner Saturday carrying ball I million &Uars ran90lll money. "The money wao found Mooday. The ~entlfied hijacker probably II dead, ~ to llltementa by the pi!Ot and ~llot ol tbe AmerlClll Airlines 'l'll lrom \ltilch he julilped. • ~le pollce uld tbe jacket .,,.. found fit a cornfield at tbe IOUlb end of Gr!llOID Alt Foroe Bue, a location northeast of ..,.. the money 1!1111 the hljacller'• 11\111 tffre found, Jiut· dlrectl7 In line with ,Ibale ol!OI. • lt'uthr Nlcbl and mornlns low, clouds , are expected alone the Orange • Coast Oil 'lbuncllly, 'clelrlns to• • -hazy ...,,,.,,,,. In the afternoon•. • Hlgbl In the low 70'1 at the ::beacbol, rlllnc to 90 lnlancl. Lowo ,.-. ;· I •. JNSmE -TODAY • for conrmenL but detallo of the com- promise agreement were pieced logether from other parllclpanto In the.more than two mon'ths of blparti!an negotiations on the tax bill. The compromlse wou1d imolve a one. cent Increase In the stole Illes tax and use a big chunk of the estimalecl $300 nrlDlon surplus In the state budget jo meet the slate supreme Court's ruling tllat California'• oystem of ICbool finances 11 uncoostltutloDal, -... oald. ' . • • • Fa,ire•t of .Apes· That would ....wt In the atate taking over a bigger share of the coat of local ocbools -perbapa about '500 million of the '3 bllllon rabed by property taxes for ocbools -pluo more state money lo Im· prove the educolion of cblldren with lpeCial teaming problems. Senale Preoident pro tern James MillJ, . Democratic leoder of the ujlper boUle, announced to oenstors Tuesday thet representatives of the go.....,. and the Democratic leader of Ibo Aaembly .... ' . ' Chosen as ~'the moet beautiful .ape in the world,'"actress Anne Gaybe, we~g an .ape mall, Is given ·• kiss by.trained cltimpamee !n,New York's Central Park Zoo.·Anne and the chimp,:were publicizing the new film, 'jConquest-ol the Planet of the·Ape$.' Panel Calls for Overhaul Of U.S. Criminal Justice WASHINGTON (UPI) -jleclaring that "American aoclety as we have known it cannot endure" if crime con-- tlm&eS to soar, a mjiecte\I ruearch panel propoeed today a c1r1:f11c overhaul ol the crlmlnol justice ~. ouUawlng ol hondguns, and leplDation of marl- jumr. and •ambllne· '!be teC01D1nendali0na ,..... contained In a reporl by the reoearch and policy committee of the Conimlttee f o r Economic Development. a private, noir porll!an study group of business leaders and educatoi'll. The pone! WU beaded by Emilio G. Collado, euc:uUve vlce·presideot of Stan- dard Oil Co. oJ New Jrnq, and Philip M. Klutmlck, cba1rm1n ol Urban Invest· ment and Development.Co; • To Improve criminal julloe, the panel reeommeoded .....uon ol tiD Independent foderal agency, tho "Federal Authority to Ensure Juotlce," and anlfled state Judicial oystemo lo o-all ouch operations except "police work and prtlrial detention. · The federal agency, essenUally·a high· level government policy making and planning autbodty,' wooid' com!bute ball of .ii state ml local cooto !or police , pro9ieoitioo, courts and ta1ec:tkiuaI agen- c!OI. The committee said the federal ahare would have been about $5 billion In 1'71, compared to the estlmalecl $11 ·billion an- nual cost of crimes against bUllness alone. "It would be bard to ·exaggerate t.he enormity of the national predicament," the committee said. "During the decade ol the 1980s, FBI Index crimes of violence known to· the police .rose 15' per- cent, offenseo agolnst property, la> per· cent. "If lhese'llll<l othel' crimes ar.e penol~ ted to doublt·Qf treble again In ~ 1970s, American .aodety u we .lu\ve known it cannot endure · • • • only the 1trorigest meuures . • • can avEri a wol'lt disaster than the-one we already see about us." quested a privale bearlnt befon the Sena le. Milli.said the purpooe of the meeting, a so-called "ca~ of the whole," would be to bear details of I ICbool finance and tu reform measure which MillJ uld ••apparently bad been worked out" betweeo Reagan and M0r<tU. Mills uld M..-.tU and I reprtsentaUve of the governor woold appear together to preoeot the plan, but gave .., further details In blJ noor announcement. Principal .,.,.._. of the eompromlse lll'O to reduce property \uel and find I ocbool support oystem that meeta the court's objection thet tho reliance on local property taxes malteo the quality of a cblld's education dependent on the wealtb ol blJ nefgbbon. Here are details which o t b e r plrtlcipanta In the negottatlom, who all:ed not to be Identified, aald the com. promloe cootalno : NEW TAXES -'lbere ls "substantial agreement" between Reagan ind MareUl oo which laxes to raise to pay for lbe new .school support. with the new tu atructure putting heaviest reliance oa sales taxes. • Tbet would be closer to the propoee4 ta1 structure in Reagan's fJJ blllloa ref..-m plan, ID!Velled lut mooth, than i. Moretti'• tu ref..-m propooal which i.o- cluded big stole Income tu hlkeo. PROPERTY TAX REIJEF -M..-.. (See llD'ORM, P11e I) France Tests Boinh Nations Protest.Effect on Ecowgy PARIS (UPI) -France bas ruumec1 nuclear atmospheric testing In the South Pacific In oplle of vigorous protests by several natlom that the bluta may en- danger their environments, the French news agency Agence France Pms uld today. The agency said In I report from TablU that the first nuclear warbead- type device wu detonated Sunday morn- ing In the vicinity of Muroroa AIOU, 100 miles !IOUtbwest of Tahiti. Tbe French Defense Ministry decllned comment on the reporl u dld the nuclear experimentation center bere wblcb coordinates atomic testing In the Paclllc. The ministry lndlcalecl Tu...tay thet no official comment would be lortbcomln& on the tests until the series wu conr plelecl, presumably aometlmelitu tblo ounrmer. There was no w...d about the aalety of. the protest yacht Greenpeace m which last WU reporlecl baadlng Into the teol area. Another yacht -by .,......... al Ibo French Nut,lw Test -0.. mltlet,.. pr114• .. ltt\111.""-~. aftenloan ""' ilia test ... ' -T'llUl'lllla., New 7,M!ancl, 11111 mllol 10U1b of WeDlngton. In Wollington, New 1..ealaiJd Prime !.!lniatar JollD ~ uld iClllPI be wuuld -CODllnilatlaii thet lllO tel\I bacl' beiJ111 but would net ..... ; ... tell note to Frlnce. I ''There's II> point, la WllilDC more paper and time lq tel ........ " lio aalcl. The reporlecl blaot came altlt a• IMay effort by New 7nland, Aultralla md , Peru to force a canceOatlon of the ,_ lerles Ill test explosions • The !brae counlrtel, Jolnod later by others, lnlU&lly Issued formal eomplalnta Mesa Offering Holiday Program Camping Special Tbe Colla Mesa Department of Le11Ure Servlceo ls planning a doy camp holiday special July 5-7 to coincide with Fourth of July Weekend. The doy camp program II beiDc of. fered MondaYo tbrouglt Frldoys at Villa Park. Hours on from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. A Western rounclup ~ bu been planned by camp coorcllnator Debbie Lamb for the twe><lay holiday opeclal. l!Elucled In the fun ta an OICll'sion to the Ponderoaa Stables and a Rodeo Dress-up Day, along with games, hikfll, swiJn. mini, arll and crafls and story telling. Reglslratlon iJ from I a.m. to 5 p.m. throu&h Friday In Room 305 at the Colla Meaa Civic Center. Fee for the bollclay opedal II $10 for one cbllcl, Fanrlly nteo are '25 for three cblldren and $30 for four. Both bo)'o and girls aged 511 to U may puticlpato. ..... " PAClf lC OCIAN 4 HAW~~ . '\·IAAISHAI 11. I • I ', CHttmMASI. -... ~ -:z'::i1:==-·i: 1 :·: •• : ·~ ' " •• •1(1.: ··: ~ 1 •1i1 i" • ~.o'"· .. 'l-.S1 /. . •. • ~·& • l -·."t':'r • TAHITI 0 ' SOU1H PACIHC OCI All NUCLIAI 11$1 AllA .. . . . ·· 1 · ... .,.;... -.. . .. '---. ... • • • _TAHITI _ • .... _ 2rf.. MUIUIOA I>() MANOAllYA•• 1409 • '~y • .. ~ ... ----'""~--· • IH Ut .. f ltENCH ·~~rwor•4ui-. iiu .-:t:I a sepei of nuclear teJts In 'lldill!J ot 'J'llllU Soutll l'ld(lc. 6- ftD mllll ~ i,ald Ille· flrat bcimb -J-.. 1114 another II txpectld thla wta. · . ·.'f"'et ·· ........ Ii l'noldlDt Goar ... POllljlidou lout for .... lo'tlil·tala. Tho ---.,........ chart• tllll -..... bannlW ~to u.; envlr-of. Paelllc cwt -by saying Iba bluta were low·ylold and IUf. flclantly r.mtd from po pvlatl oa centers. Social Worker Murdered In Chinatown Street War SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A young Cblnele ooc:ial -ter bu -the latest victim lo a llrlng of g1111land atyle mun!ero In a.tnalown. Barry Fq-Toml, :19, oecutlvo clJreo. tor of the Youth s.rvtc.o and Coordinating c<nter In a.Jaatowo, waa abol In the abdomen and the bead when be anawered the doorbell of blo apatt. ment lale Mooday night, autbor!liea said. Beneath the body of Foni·Torreo, who rec<nUy told I lrlencl Iha! he feared death at the ~of a.lnatowo - llJlP, -I llloodatalned mlllpeDecl note ruclint!, "Pie lnloiDdl Die'Yong." PoUce u1c1 that 1n -to the Fonc· T..-m llaylng, tbey -· IDftotlaallnC the 'deatho of nine Qdi Ill by Other Cblnele 11nce Marcll ll'lt m1 1r -its of the l&lllio111ture since the ~ " the year, Tho llnt nine murder victlmo were !oooely ClllU*tecl with street fanp of YOUDI loblea and uneducalecl Cblneoa immlgrlllla, pollce uld. '"lbeH l'OUDl!slers are all bloelecl up with a eon of criminal esteem and eacb of several factions wants to nin Chinatown." homicide Inspector Jobu McKenn1 aald. "lt11 something lib Chicago In the racket clays, maybe on a mnaller Kale." Foni·Torrea. cm leavo fJun ,the Com~ Colla CounlJ pnllatlon olllce, "wu cloalllic with· _.im Clpoble ol tnac;beroUI acll.' and be !mew lio WU Walklag I> tliblNpoJ JOC:IUIO of 1111 .... Iida. with jlrobation illicen and llOlloar 1111 lloy Webb, ari olllclal of tlie. Jl'O' blllon olllce and a -frlmcl .i tllt Enougb federal and state i:::1:""ps w0uld be crealecl to p<nnit edlote trial of all felony caaeo· ond tO eliminate cueload congestion ol the courts that en-cour-plea borgaintng, the group laid. Trial ·Made Seeret -..... . "Barry told me about a tnODth ~ wu 1ettlng very clooo lo 111111 of gang members, who lboulbt lio All jud(el and otote and local proo. ecuton would' be appointed on ll"OWl'h of merit rather than',polltlcs. CYCLE A.D ' . HA.ULS CALLS.- '""'tittle mOttreJ'de delivered Utoftllf Of paylood. Qleck lhll lhree-llDe ad: e 1171 HONDA TRAIL 70. Only 117 milei. 11-. m-mx The Newport Beach man who placed the ad reported It oold the mot..-cycle "on Ille first call, but we had tooo of call• thereafter." If tha1'1 lhe kind Of baullng power yo11're looking for let a DAILY PlLOr c:lulillecl ad deliver a ]Old of. cwtomers for )'Oii. Dla1 tc.W, the d~ rec! line to -ii.. Publ ic Barred From Alle ged Bar f.e nder Theft Case Municipal Judp Evmtt.Dickey todly "'1'PIJOCI a doak of -.arouncl the lr!al, of a barthider acculld Of tapping the llD at ''Slci Setler'• Blue Beet !>*' ii Neirpart Beoch ll1' clOlioi: the .trial to""""'""' and tlle'pallllc.--Dickey, presicllnl judp of the Harbor Jucllctil District, also 'ordered an wit- ,,... In the jury trial borred ' lrolll the courtroom unUl Ibey are coiled to teotlfy ,In wbat iJ tJpectecl to be a three or four· doy trial. . Dlctey'a action In cloolng the trial lo ,Ptelll and publlc wu bell~ved to be ,,,,. p-ted In the history ., Iba, Harbor Judicial Dlatrict court. Dlckq pve no reuon for cloolng the trial OJcept to say "both aldeo requeoted It." He wu unavaDable !or comment as • know too much," Webb a1cf. .. He aid bad been threatened and that lio ,_.. !er b1o life." . I ••• i DAJLV ~ILOT _c _____ w_<d_"""'-='.:.· """' 211, 1972 B•1llf11g Cover ' S. Viets Drive Into Quang · .Tr~ SAJGON (UPI) -South Vietnam.,. paratroopers, marines and armored ool~ umrw drove five )nil~ lnto Quang Tri Prot!ace lodoY under ~ver or record u.s. air and .... r 1>1mbordmen11. The original lor<e ol 10,000 swelled during the day with arrival of "many more" 1ovenu:oent unlta. Quanr Tri, which !ell to the Com- munlltJ on May 1, was the only province capluttd by the North Vletnameae In thelr 1pring oUenaive. South Vietnamese were under orden from PTeaideot NSUYm Van Thieu to recapture it. The dilpatcbao llld one I o r c e penetrated lour mn.. and another five mU.. Into Quine Tri aJonr a !%-mile front. The South Vletnamese advance was near the coast so that the big guns ol 17 • Official Warns Condemnation Option in Bay • BJ WiUJAM SCHREIBER Of ... Dllr , ... ,.... . 11ie Irvine Compony Tuuday received a lbinly-velled Unat from 1he U.S. Dlpertment ol Ille Interior to either coohe to tmru on • price !or laod In Up- per Newport Bay or face condemnation aclloo. Wllllam M. Monroe, San Franci!co field repreaentaUve for I n t e r 1 o r Seh.tary Rosen C. B. Morion, warned thi Irvine ComJ>lllY that H no agreement COllld be reached oo the valiie ol the land In quootlon, condemnation would be the ol1ly recourse. Monroe's warning came in the fcnn ol an ,Invitation 14 Ille Irvine Company 14 "jaiki in an investigation and develop- milil~o! lhe "fecailly ~Jeted recom- mendations •. _ or the Upper Newport Bay Tuk Force." Among other things, the recentiy-com· pleje<! P"ellminary aovermnent report ._....,.. the use ol &Ol!le Upper Bay land, Including three ialands owned by Ille Irvjoe Company, aa a national wlldllfepnoerve. Negotiations between the government and w.._ olficlais are .._-tedly delilocked over the •aluaUOO of Ille land In question. The Irvine Oompony valuauoo is 127 millloo while the government valuea it at ooly ,111,000. M:ooroe aald Tueoday that the govern- mtnl will withhold any further comment on valuation of the land becauae ol the lepl tancles aurroundlng ownerahip ol the IJl>Per Bay ltlnds. · •'There has been put speculation over the value or the P"OPOrty. Complex legal and ownership factors must be taken into a~unt," Monroe said. "When and i! a decision is made to ac- quire the property, die partle• hope that .fuJI and frank negotlallona will produce av.eemeot on the P"Operty's value," he said. "If it does nOt, customary con- demnafi!on proceedin1s may be Jn. .stituted," Monroe added . 'Ille Irvine Company Tuesday denied receiving any invltation to be on a com- mltue'iliaCullini! uae of the land. U.S. 7th Fleet destroyen and guided mlaalle cruiaen could hammer the Co11>- muni>t pooltlona. Brllllont sunny weather aet In and U.S. Air Foret, IUVJ and Marloa planes aided the ellort. The South Vlelnameae drive surged acron the My Chanh Rivor delenae line 20 miles north or Hue in South Vietnam'• northeast corner despite Initial heavy North Vietnamese r..,istance, Including deadly artUlery attackJ by artillery u roed In on pontoon bridges. By late afternoon ''many more •• govemmeot unllJ joined the puJh, but cemorshlp h1d the number of troops iD- volved. They were reported moving agalnat about 10,000 North Vietnamese troops, elements of. four dlvbions which have been badly mauled by the record B52 •trikes. 1'11e air was over North Vietnam also intensified as U.S. warplanes flew th.rough heavily overcast sides Tuesday to bomb the country 's major airport and truck repair yard two miles from the cen:ter of Hanoi for the second con-- 11ecuUve day, the U.S. COmmand said to- day. . Waves of Air Force F4 Phantom jet fighter-bombers also hit a gasoline and oil atoragt: area just eight miles above the Demilitarized 1.one separating the two Vletnams, .spoke!lllen said. Thelr-Oomhll: blew up slI tanks capable The air war over North Vietnam also cut a fuel pipeline and caused a "three acre oiJ.fed fltt with names reaching to 300 feet and 1rnoke billowing up to 7 ,000 feet," spokesmen said . The storage area presumably was feeding gasoline and oil to tanks and trucks being used by Communist troops north of Hue. Communist gunner1, meanwhile, £ired Tuesday at four of the ships lying offshore, spokesmen said, and htt two of them -the cruiser Newport News and the destroyer Denn.ii J. Buckley. The damage to the ships was described as ''minor" to their exte riors a n d spokesmen said there were no casual ties. On Tuesday, Communist t r o o p s , frustrated in their attempts to break through government defense lines north ol the old Imperial capital or Hue, tOO miles north of Saigon, switched their at- tacks to lb< west ol the city. They charged three outposts in three battalion-size attacks of an estirr.ated 500 men each after opening up with 2,000 rounds of mortar, artillery and rocket fire on J3 government positioru. * * * Weyand Given -, Viet Command W ASlllNGTON (AP) -J>r..idelll Nix- on elevai.d G<n. Frederick C. Weyand to commander ol U.S. forces In Vietnam to- day and 8IUlOlll1Ced a tmsolidatioo ol Anny end Air Force commands In the war zone. The While House, after making the an- nouncements, also disclosed that Nixon is dilpatc~g Maj. Gen. Alexander M. Haig. No. 2 man to Henry Kissinger on the National Security Council, 14 South Vietnam and Cambodia on Thursday for a six-day fact-linding mission. Weyand, a lour-otar general will, as predicted widely, succeed Gen. Creighton Abrams as commander of the h1Wtary Assistance Command In Vietnam and aa commander ol the U.S. Army In Viet- nam. He has been deputy commander of MACVN since Seplember, 1970, under Abrams, who was nominated by Nixon last week 14 be Army cl!lel ol staff. 2Anaheim Officials Supported Both Anaheim City Manager Jt:tltb A. Murdoch and Public WorkJ Director Thornton E. Pl,nall were given a vote or conlldence Tueoc11y nlgbl by t b • Anaheim Oly Councll. The two key esecuUves who allegedly P"Ofited from land purchuea because ol inside information not available to the piibllc, received o 4-f endoraement. Ralph C. Sneegu, the freshman coun- cilman who took hi.a seat lut April, cut the diasenllng vote. Both Murdoch and Pienall appeared at Tuesday night's council session to public- ly call for a Grand Jury lnvealigatlon in- to the allegations. Tbey deoled that aey of their actions were illegal, unethical aod immoral. In a story published last Friday, the pair was said to have planned public works projects that increased the value o1 the land they bought In speculative transactions. . In a prepared statement, Mu~b said, "U there is any way to insist upon such an inve!tigation by the Grand Jury, we would insist upon it. If the Grand Jury won't investigate, then I ask the council to do it." Piersa11, in a brief statement, said his action.Ii in planning public work.! projects had been done for the "general wellare of the city ol Anaheim" and without regard to personal lntereat. From Pagel REFORM •.• ti's proposals to increase the present homeowner's property tu: esemptlon from $'750 to $2,000 -a tu: cut or about $140 per homeowner -IJ "aubstantlally trimmed" and most of the property tax relief will be in the fonn of lowtr school I.as rate! in the state's poorer diltricts. SCHOOL MONEY -"There are aU11 things 14 be worked out on the scbool finance side, but the difference• aren't insurmountable. They'll be preaenllog the St:nate oo-percent of the ball game." From Pagel CLOAK ..• observed usomethlng: susplclous" in- volving Chaney last Christmas Eve. "I went to the police de~ent after I gatbe:ed mort facis,' Soffer Aid, diacloaill( be had pooeeded to mark bot· ties and watch the euh drawer cloaely. Sofler'a nol4rtely began lhortly afler he began operallog the Blue Beet in Mchdden Square In Newport Beach nearly 12 yeara ago and his yeara hive 1-1 spiced with blttle wffh City II.all over his entertainment HceMe. Wallace in Therapy SILVER SPRING. Md . (AP) - Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace bu gained siJ: poundJ since a bullet was removed from his spinal canal June l& and has stood between parallel bus in • continuing pbylical therapy program, ac- c<irdlng to his i>l\vlician. Dr. Stacy Rolllna, Wallace's Conner classmate and the DeW'OIUf'lton who removed the bullet following an aaassinaJion a t t e m p t agalnat the governor, aid Tuesday that Wallace has ahown steady progress. "We've not been contacted by anyone on this and we received no invitation,'' aajd Gilbert W. Ferguson, vice-president fat arporate communicatioos for the lrVlne Company. "We know of no one else on any level or government who has received an ~ vu.don," he said. "There isn 't anything to comment on until we hear something dllferent. '' Airport Panel .S"/ates OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT 'IMCW... Cout DAILY l'ILOT, wlltl Whkfl; 11 ~ ttw N~ It publl.,_ W the Orlf'l9I C.tt Publlll'IW. Comptfty • ..,.. ..... .. "'°"' .... """"'*'· ,...,,, ""°""' 'r!My, ""' COtt• M.,, HIWllOrt llkll, ~ ~ ll9d\IP'°""t1ln V1IMy, L...,.. 11.ctt. trv"*'kddr.llldf 1#1111 Sift ClllMr!i./ '''" J.,_,. C.ohtT1no. A •Ingle ,.,1one1 , •nlM a. •11•••• .5ft!ilrd•rs and Surwl•ys. TIM ,,lndjlll publ!Ui~ plfnl II 11 la Wftl .. , .Sl'9tt, C.11 Mes1, CllllOl'Tll1, tMM. lt11~1rt N. W1.4 ~"'*"" •NI ,UOlllhw "' J1ck It Curley V~ l"(ftkltnl 11'111 ~I Ml!llftl" Til0111t1 k11vil Ell I tor Tllo"''' A. M11tphi11• Mwwtlnl I.,.. Ch1rl•t H. L..•1 Jtich•rl '· Ntll ANltlttit N.liMeli'te ldlton c:.-. ... CHiia. JJO W•1t l1v Strttf 1~--1 .)iidiAt lwllh11u P.O. le• 1560, t1626 --.....,.,. "9dll UU N...,.,. ......,.~ i...... hldll "',. ... ,."....,. ~'"""" ...,., 11'7t hKtl ........ hit CltltWl!t: at Notltl II Clll'IN llNI t .,..., ••• (7141 '41'14121 GI I ...... A4Nf'4uta1 '4J·W71 =' 1m. ~ (lest tJWn111111'11 , ... ntWt ,..,._, lltwlral...._ INfW " -.a'l1Mil'Ml1t1 ~-,,... ... ,~ ""'*" ..-itl ,.,.. ....... -~, ............ ....... "-t• .. ., "' C.lt ..... Clime -. IUtllalttllift IPI' artltl' GM .....,, "' l'IMll .. ,, ,.,. "'"1twy .... ,""* 0 .65 ~h .... Hearing, on Ordinance By CANDACE PEARSON Of flMI O•ltr Plltt llfll Orange County airport commi5alonera said Tuesday night they will conduct a public bearing Jn one month on • pro- pooed ordinance P"Ohlblllog unauthoriud ccmmercial activity at the airport . Commissioners were reacUng to • let· ter from Airport Director Robert J. Bresnahan in which he said current re.gulatlons are too difficult to enforce. Present statute says that "no person shall engage in any business or com· mercial activity on the alrport without approval of, and under the terms pre scribed by the Board <A Supervisors." Airport stall member C. R. "Ron'' Chandler told commissioners that this language was too vague to determine what Is or lsn~ commertlal acUvtty. The propoged · ordinance, w h I ch Oiandler called a good starting point, is one drafted last January by A.ssiatanl County Coun5tl.Robert Fi Nutlman. It deWls that no one can operate any prof!Rn~ llrcr~relattl! ~nUoo without 1 permit le11e or Hcenae. It prohlbllJ ·ad but established fixed· based operatbrt (FBO) horn offering aerial ch1rter, ren111; 1lght1etIn1, photographic, crop duatlng, ldverlillltg, surveying nr petroleum services. It would no4 however, prohibit priv1te owners from marntalnlng thole own airplane or from ..Uing or leasing tbem. The ordinance which Ch an d I e r repettedly ca~ntd is "tentative," woold place reg!il1lloo1 oo the as to ao flying elubs operating oul cl IM airport . O\andler sald controllll1jl the clubs Is a big problem hecaU>e "virtually no two operate the 1ame." Clubs are technically supposed 14 be non-P"Oflt, aha,. the costs and equipment operations, he nid but In some, memben have no rights to the B!Sets. The propooed mfinlnce would require the aulllorized fiylng clubs be non-P"Ofil porlnerahlps wltb at least lour members or non-profit corporations, that all aircraft would be owned communally by the club and that there would not be more than IO members per one airplane. Commission Oialrman Robert Clark suggested the public hearing on lhe mat- ter in one month and said that copies or the propoaed ordinance 1hou1d be sent to all clubs and pllolJ associations. In his letter, Bresnahan said that unauthorized activities have "increased slgnllicailtiy" In the north tiedown and heavy maintenance areas. He added "there 11 little doubt" such acU•lti .. have "now reached proportions greet enough to afl<Gt !lie ftiture finan- dal poature cl the ~Umate gener!) avta!IOD builiiesl c:orm>untf)o" 1t the airport. There are eight FBO operalors II the airport now, which Bresnal>an said otter a "more t.han adequate telecUon or flnns." Unauthorized, ofttn f re e • I a n c e operators with low overhead colla usually charge lower rale1 than FB0'1, he aald, calling that "Inequitable com- pcUtion." Ht listed problem ll'UI as alrcrall renl1l, leasing, lewback ( 1 I \er )lllrehaae), used llrcraft .aa1 ... fiighl In- struction, malnttoance, tlectronic repair, cbaJUr fl!Hl>ll. ,· UPIT ....... WHILE UNIDENTIFIED GOLFER PUTTERS, JOHN AND MARTHA SLIPPED AWAY Mltchell1 Left Westchester Country Cl_. In New York After 'R1concili1tion' Mitchells Sneak Away Following Hours of Talks RYE, N.Y. (UPI) -Martha ind John Mitchell ducked out the backdoor of a posh counlry club Wday aod sped away in a limousine after 48 boun of apparent conciliatory talk!. Their destination wu unknown. Mrs. Mitchell, who threatened to leave her husband unlesa be quit his post aa head of the Committee to Re-Elect Presi· dent Nison, was joined at the club by the former attorney general Monday and neither lert their room until the abrupt backdoor exit. Calling herself a "political prisoner," Mrs. Mitchell earlier In Newport Be&ch had ~Yed MildielJ an ultimatum-to quit polltJcs and sbortiy lhe<eafler be traveled from Washington 14 the Weotcbe- Counlry Club 14 discuss with ber w!J.at aides said was "a penooaI matter." "I'm leaving him until he decides 14 leave the campai111," Mrs. Mitchell aald Sunday. 111 love my husband very much. but I'm not going to stand for all these dirty thll1(a that HO on.'' The ~ecllon commillee had uaian- ed a aecurtty 1gent 14 asalat Mra. Mitcbell. She aald Sunday the mao had yanked a telepbooe out ol her band In her room at the Newporter Inn a Newport Beach, Thursday night when she was talking to UPI reporter Helen Thomas. She also said five guards tbrtw her onto a bed Hancf stuck a needle in my behind." "It's hoJTJble to me," she said at the time. 111 have been ttrough 80 much. I don't 1ike it. Martha isn't going to stand (or it." Committee officials said Mitchell bad no intention of giving up leadership of the re-election drive despite bJs wife's mlha!>" piness. 'lbe couple's departure from here together apparently meant Mrs. lfitcbell had tempered her demands. GEM TALK TODAY by DIAMOND FINGERPRINTS RA!covery of lost or stolen dla· monds has always been a problem because there was no means of Identifying such gems. If lost, there was no real way to prove ownership when found. U stolen, identificatio.n, particularly of the larger more valuable stones.- was complicated by the fact that the thieves usually cut the larger gems into smaller sizes. thus mak· Ing ldentUication a virtual impossi- bility. A ne\V service, called 11Identi· gem ,'' has recently been announced by the London firm of Diamond Grading Laboratories. The photo- graphic process pictures the basic characteristics of the p o l l s b e d stone, recording forever the tiny marxlngs-whlch---mak•-•acb dJa... mond dif!erent from any other. Just as fingerprint. cannot be changed, these tiny markings re- main identifiable regardless of any reculting of the stone. Not only does this means that your diamond is In actual fact dll- ferent than any oilier in the world . .. ii also means that we can now ::hange the phrase, "Diamonds are Forever Yours!'' Hostess Denies Mitchell s Feuded at Party in CdM .. . By L PETER KRIEG Of tlll oatlJ Plitt Stiff John and Martba Mitchell "seemed very much in love" and had a wonderful Ume at the Sunday nlgbt party thrown for them by Mra. Donald K. Washburn of Corona del Mar, the widow of the Seven- Up magnate said today. Mrs. Washburn said reports the party had been the scene of a vicious argument between the former attorney general and his talkative wife were ''totally false." "~'t imagine anyone saylgg "1st, It simply wasn't true. They seemed very much in love, there wasn't one cross word. ''They seemed so happy, they even went out In the kitchen and thanked the help. No ooe was drunk but they started singing wt#l the help, 1Someone's in the l<itcben with Martha,' " Mra. Washburn related. I ell later In the week when she made •· telephone call to a Washington reporter and then later claimed !he was being held a 4'political prisoner" at the Newporter Inn in Newport Baech. ~~ t "What happened aller they left heri!-!' don 't knoW. All people have disagree. ments," she said . "It probably has bee• blown way out of proportion." : "I don 't know what was going on in her mind. Why she made a statement lik1; that," Mrs. Washburn aald. t I She disclosed that during diMer IJl>ll conversation aroui:id the swimming pool Mn. MJtchell bad agreed to come ~ in September "for a luncheon" to ¥P raise funds far the Republican Party. ~.; Mrs. Washburn is active in Repub~. women's circles. . -"' Nixon to Arrive .·, Frid~y Morning :_· Mra. Washburn said that 111\ll)Oi the party guesta were the Presh!eiit'1 two brothen, Donald and Ed NlXon, 0; W. 'President Nixon Is acheduled 14 arrt~ "Dick" Richard , the John Waynes •. the Friday. A• in the past, lhe ga~ ol ~ Herber! Kalmbacbs and Sy Fluor. base will be clooed to the public and fl!e' "f know none of them would aay there President and Mrs: Nixon will be greetec!.. waa anything wrong, everybody had such only by military persoonel and lllelr · a fun time," Mrs. Washburn aald. dependents. • • ,.Everything was so pleasant, there Air Force One is to touch down at a · were no arguments," she said. Toro MarlQe Corps Air StaUon It 11 a.m~ · Mrs. Wuhbum sa.Jd she r.ecelved five He will then leave immediately Via days notice to have the party and 11he helicopter for La Casa Paclfica in Sn said "there were certain people they CI~mente. his first vislt to the We:Jtm:n .. wanted to see. White House since January. He is ex•· "It was not an open-invitation party,'' pected to remain in San Clemente for bis she said. "working vacation" through t b·e Mrs. Washburn said she bad no idea a tbree-week stay, the White House~· what started the furor from Mrs. Mite!>-firmed Wday. • iiiiiiiiiiiil--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii When you slve h111: an Omega 1he'll uy "you shouldn't have," bul she won't mean JI, When ahe 1et1 the Omtga name on her watch ~•'II know how much extra thouon1 you put lnto ner Chri11m11. sne may not niallze that OmtgBI watcnes ara uled on afl Apo I Ip moon fllghta and In the Otympk:s. Sh1'll IOY1 'it Ju•t tor Ua bl1u1y. Later on, lhl'll lo'll Ila tndUrlng d1pend1blllty. And Ir she .. ye. "You ~.rdfl"Ulave," jusl you try to take U: back. 0 OMEGA A-t•K """-0t 1'1ow tofld IOld CltN. &tppl'llttt IHti.ci Cl)'Sl!J.,1136' 1-14K tolkl fOltl '"'!' waicft ... 11U' ' J.C. ..Jlu.mp~riej Jeweferj 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA • CONV£Nll"1 TllMS JS YIAU IN SAME LOCATION IANKAMfllCAlD -llASlll CHAR~! PHON! 141·'401 '• .. .. • , ' • . ' \ I ·' DAD.Y PO..OT EDITORIAL PAGE A Wi ldlife Preserve? Leaking little bits here and there, the U.S. De- partment of the Interior Is giving every indication it doeo, Indeed, intend to buy some of Upper Newport Bay for a national wUdllfe preserve. Whether the federal agency la trying to be coy, or whether it ls just sending up a trial balloon isn't cer- tain, but 11higb level" sources said last week and yeste.r· day there ls a purchase planned. Some reports sald the government wants only the three underwater islands. Others say the preserve would be bigger than that. None wss very specific. Preserving those islands and nothing else seeming· ly would do little to accomplish the ecological goals of lhe Friends of Upper Newport Bay. On the other hand, the ridiculously low vaiue the government source put on the property it wants, (about $11lS,000) seems to indicate the Interior Department doesn't want very much. One independent appraisal several years ago •alued the three islands at $28 million, assuming they can be fully developed. If nothing else, the reports, confusing as they are, do give hope that the federal government may soon take action lhal will help lo resolve the future of one of California's most controversial waterways. Freeway Route Change? It may have been no more than an irritated gesture, or it may have been a deadly serious warning. But California Highway Commissioners last week shook up both Newport Beach and Costa 1!'esa with their inquiry as lo whether Costa Mesa would hke to have Ibo Newport Freeway switch back to lls original Newport Boulevard allgnmenl The action caught both cities by complete surprise. And it's prelty cleac from lhe reaction so tac eman· atlng from the cities' off1clals in both commurutieJ that neither community knows what, If anything, it should do about the matter. The Highway Commission's action came as New· port Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis was telling them in no uncertain terms that bis city isn't about to accept the Newport Freeway. The highway commissioners al>" parently reasoned that if freeway construction bas to terminate at the Newport Beach city limits. ii might be belle~ w drain the traffic off to the three existing south· bound ianes of N~port Boulevard (Slate Highway 55) than to unload it onto the single southbound lane of Superior Avenue. After first reacting with gleeful surprise al New· port's dilemma, Costa Mesa Councilman Alvin Pinkley, chairman of the city's freeway committee. acknowled~ed that such a change may not be acceptable to Costa Mesa because it could foul up the city's downtown redevelop- ment plans. Costa Mesa city councilmen will study lhe Stale Hi~hway Commission's latest move at their next meet· ing. Newport Beach, meanwhile, Is banking heavily .on getting some new ideas it can contribute to the solution of the coastal traffic problems from its two-year. $80,· 000 traffic study due for completion late this year_or early 1973. It is fairly clear that the traffic from the Newport Freeway wHI have to re'ach Pacific Coast Highway S-O me- how, some\vhere. The question is not whether, but ho\V and where. It appears the next key decision is in the hands of the Costa Mesa City Council. c Important A nsw er t o Important q uestion W oman, Man No tice Age Early, Late Nixon: 'Hanoi Is Losing' W ASJDNG'l'QI(' -President Nixon, who bas not tield a news conference in three months , has given an important answer to an important queatioo in a magazine article publi!hed last week. The President said that both mllitarlly and po!IUcally, Hanoi is losing the "desperate 1amble" of its inva.sloo or South Vietnam. "Eleven weeks tiave DOW passed since that N o r t ti Vietnamese inva· 1ion," be said. "The fighting continues, but the South Viet· namese have held. Not only have l h • y beld mili- tarily, but the way In w h I ch the p e o p I e of South Vietnam have rallied to Ulflir nation'• defense should penuade even the most committed opologlsts for Ille enemy ·ll!at Saigon, ool Hanoi, speaks for the South Vietnamese people." The President made this state. ment in a Iona article entiOed ulbe Real Rood to Peace" Tri Ille ne,.. maglline, U.S. News and World Report. HE STATED THAT despite Hanoi 's failure, Ille United States is nonetheless prepared to setUe the conlllct on the buis of an 1DternaU0nally supervised cease-fire, return of pri!ooen of. war ond, after the foret!oing, a comple!A! withdrawal ~ all American forces within four months. 1be Presklent'a atat.ement ls notable for several reaaons. The fnt, or course, is that be now judges Hanoi to have fail- ed ond bis coontenneosures ~ mining and bombing to have IUCCteded in ma.k- ing II possible for the South Vletnameae (ruc:QARD WILSO~ to "hack it." A secondary potnt bears strongly on the present effort, with apparent Ruasian help, to reopen negotiations in a way that will lead to a settlement. The Saigon govmunent. be said, re,resents the will ol the South Vietnamese people. -South Vietnamese refugees in invaded areas have fled from their "liberators." They are not collaborating with Hanoi. HOWEVER, IN THIS connection it is an established condition that tbe North Vietnamese Army has occupied and is in control ol Quang Tri, the norlhemmo'! province of South Vietnam. Under this cOndiUon how ~ an in· ternationally supervised c e a s e f i r e operate? Does it mean that the North Vietnamese Army .remains in position in Quang Tri Province while under in- ternational supervision and awaiting some Mure political settlement? Or does it mean a withdrawal of the North Viet- namese Army to Jta position north of the demilitarized zone? These questions suggest themselves for two reasons. At the beginning of the so-- called Easter offensive there was a diJposltion In high official quarter!, noi.d herein 'earlier, to accept the idea the North Vietnamese wou1d occupy one and pooslbly two of the llf!rlhernmost pro- vinc .. of South Vietnam where a pro- visional Viet Cong government might be established. THE SECOND REASON is that oome line of discussion not yet disclosed by the President must have been pursued by him and Soviet General Secretary Breibnev ID their long and blunt boat ride and talk sesslon on Vietnam whlle Nixon was in Moscow. It was nearly·as evident then as it is now that the North Vietnamese Offensive was off schedule. Soviet President Podgomy·s visit -to Hanoi followed and he bu ended It by saying the Paris Peace Talks would be resumed soon and Rw:sia would work to insure their success. It is reasonable to speculate, therefore, that somewhere in thi5 area -the mean- ing or a ceasefire In all ~ Jndochlna - lies the flexibility which could be the key opening the door to a setUement. Even ii that speculation is wrong, there Is evidently some freilb factor in the discussions Nixon and rt. Henry A. K.111- inger tiave been blvtng 1wlth the Russians and Chinese. NIXON'S EMPBASJS in saying that even the "most committed apologists for the enemy" mu.st realize that Saigon represents the will ~ the Sou1h Viet- namese people gives no hint that be has decided to dump .President Thieu. But under the present m i l i t a r y circumstances, he might find ti desirable to make specific ocmcesa:ions going beyond the broad terms of his latest peace plan. The safest cooclusion is probably the simplest: Now that the Hanoi govern- ment bas fallen substantially abort or Its main airru, the President is trying out several different approaches which "would not require surrender and humiliati on on the part of anybody" - presumably including W a s h i n g t on , Saigon, Hanoi, Moscow and Peldng. That, of course, is just as hard as It sounds. High Court on Club Guests RecentlY. the United States Supreme Court handed down a d<clslon In one phaae, ond one only, of the question ri racial UmltaUoa in private clubs. It is an u:ceedingly complex question, touchliig not only legal rights, but ec> clal tradillon In the tiuman relation. lt Is fllled with emotion and prejudice. U you spe:ak on it, no met· ter what view you adopt, a aqment o! the people may agree with you, but anolher segment wlll certainly disagree with you vehemently, ID port ond ~ ably in whole. The cue Involves I (ratemal lodge in Pennsylvania, where a whJte member OUMICOMT DAILY PILOT .llobcrt N. Weed, PobUaMr . 2'llolnaaJ:cnll, l'4llor AlbmW.Bota .l'dlloriai l'oge Editor ,,,. edllo!W -ot the Dally PDot llttks to Inform and aUmu· late rftders b)' pttiatnUnr thlll """'P"oer'• opinions and -· mentary on toplcs ol lnt~t &nd dcnlficit.ncr, by 'P'OVkllnr a forum for tM ~ of ·oor rMden' -and by ........ tlnr tho dl .... Ylowpoln11 of lntormed ob-~a;' 1pokelmco on topics Wednesday, June 28, 1972 ( ROYCE BRIER ) toot a friend to lund! u a g\lell, a Negro legislator. He wu nfuJed oervice at the bar. lt was the conte?)Uon of appellant 's counsel that since the bar served liquor by authority of a state license, the gueJl'• constitutional rights were violated. The Court held 6 to 3 lhey were ml, and In ef. feet that the public ln!A!rest was not ger· malne. Justices Douglas, Brennan and Marshall dissented. YOU PERCEIVE the case rests on a narrow base. It did not involve mem· bershJp in the lodge, but only a guest's use or one facllity of the lodge on in- vitation of a member. So the Court was not compelled to come to &rill" with the full question, though to everyone's knowledge the full question hu been debated in the nation lor a decade. The najorlty opinion was that the li· quor facilltJ wa1 io no different cttegory from otlier lllte-connected !acilllies, u eleolrldty, wai.r and-police-and fire protection. He11ce, the p1a1n0tr could not appeal to the Fourleenth Ameodment to the Comtltullon of the United States for relief. The Fourteenth is ooe or the most in- len!slln( ~ the Amendments for !is history alone. IL was drafted In 1866 In the angry aftermath of war, and was declar<d adopted July 21, 1111. It was an effort to grant lull clllaenshlp rllhll to blacta wbo had <merged from slavery. 111 key passage reads: "No state 111ill malte or enforce any law which llllalf abridge the prlvill!f" ond lmmunllie1 of cillunl of the United States ••. " Al we know, the Ameodmeot wu for many years circumvented in voting and other areas, and haa only come into force in our time. MANY BLACKS and -concerned with their civil rights have argued rteenUy that thil should apply to memberabJp i11 private orP,.DiuUons. But the Four!A!enth u It stands cannot be ao c:onllrued. It ii doublful il any llilend· ment or pursuant law could impair a right of citizens to enter private, volun- tary auociatloftl with other cilium or their dM>Jce, and to devise rules ror ti· eluding those not of their choice, without !Iseli violating the rights of members of 1uch u.soclaUons. Vet tradiUoo iJ a hidden but important part of law, and by common consent ruest status ls In another dimension. It would perhaps be more sensible, and cer- lalnly more amiable, to exempt club guests on good faith of a member, from normal and rational reslrictlons. The Court ruled otherwise. Dear GToomy Gus Parents o! Elt4Dcla Hlih senlor1 who blocked other parmll' views of their children by taking pictures aod ju.rt 1tandln& there ow.• an apoiocY !or their dilcourttsy al ' commencement. And the achoo! should apol0&iu for Ila weak am- pll!len. -H. G. L. and D.S. T. I ~YDNE,Y J.HARRI~ Thoughts Al Large : A woman begins to notice lhe is no longer young IO years before she has any re&I. need to worry about it; a man begins to notice he is no longer YOUl'll 10 years after everyone else has tacitly accepted It. • • • It la not merely that those wbo live by the .nrord die by )he rwwd -It ts that, , in me1t casts, they die by the 1ame sword. (In that their own weapon ls aimi>- Jy turned and used against them.) • • • People wtio leave large sums to cbari· ties when they are dead, and would part with little when they were allve. are displaying more selfishness t h a n benevolence. • • • Technology is going to have to hurry a k;t faster than it is to keep up with the rising expectations of the younger generation, for IOOl1 nobody will be around who wants to do the dirty work, while there i.! still plenty of dirty work to be done. • • • The worst crime that chronic poverty commits is the !leady erosion of con- science among those who have no hope, and who substitute the act of retaliation f« the ien.se of remorse. • • • There is nothing more fatal to good conversation than agreement. • • • When Mark Twain returned from trav eling around the globe, the primary illusion he left abroad was this one : "There are many humorous things in the world, among them the white man's no- tion that he ls less savage than the other savages." • • • One reason that farmers seem mor.e contented than city folk is that Canners concentrate all their worries on the wuther and tht crop!, and don't have too much anxiety left over for personal prob- lemo. • • • About the only ~ the average American remembers that he la a "good ciUzen" is when he i1 stopped by a tra!flc oop and thinks he ought to be given a JMISS because he bas never held up a fill· Ing-station. • • • What those who doo"t like 111 say aboul us may be false to tht facts, but are often trutr to the sp~lt or our personality than we care to admit. . . ·- To rear a child who b free from envy 11 perhaJ11 the best (and certainly the most UfeJong) Inheritance • parent can bestow. • • • A good llOCiety, wider any form of government, la Impossible unUJ ther• are at least as many peraons willing to equalize down as there are willing to equalile up. (Unlll then, all revolutlons will merely ttshu!fie the f!OWOI' and deal the best hands to dillertnt wlnnera.) • • • Tbere 1tt only two alternatlvea: II you don 't get better as you get smarter, you &tt worae. ,. • "' - ~ .. .TALK A~UT WATEI\ POUUTIO N!'' ' ' • A 4-H Club Boy ·I Was Cruel to Pi ~ To the Editor : Last weekend "'hile attending the Orange County Fair, l became very disturbed by an Incident 1 observed. Jn the livestock exhibit, a young boy from the 4-H Club was feeding the swine. They, like other animals depend ent upon man for their food, became rather excited about the meal. HOWEVER, the boy must have felt this improper behavior for a pig. He jumped in the pen and began kicking the swine in the face. There were several people stand· Ing there watching aod I gueu the boy Celt the crowd needed more of an ex· hibiUon, ao he then took the pig by the tail and pulled It around a few limes while tt squealed In pain. IT JS ALWAYS disgusting to see a person be cruel or vicious to an animal that cannot defend It.sell. But worse was the fact that .this child wu representing an organization that, I thought, wu i.acblng young people the right way to raise and care for various anlmaJi. Does the f.H Club coodone this type of behavior? BEVERLY BERRYHILL One-man Bo11eott To the Edllor: The United States Supreme Court, pressured on Oil( side by the giant cor· porate Interests, and on the other by the needs of the people, uaually acrew1 up everything ti gels !is hands on. The lites! spasm ol U-nine men la their decision to enjoin the American Pilots Union frmn participating ID the International Federallon of Airline Pilots Association's strike against enemy coun- tries that welcome and provide uylum for skyjacken. NOW IF THAT Isn't the crime of aiding, abetting and giving comfort to the enemy, It wlil have to do unUI 1 better one comes along. 5uch a crime could bring the death penalty ID tbne of war, MAILBOX ' Letters /rom readers are welcome.: Normallfl writers should convey thcir11 messaQtl in 300 word$ or Jess. TM right to ccmdtnse letters to fit IJ>C!)• or eliminate Libel is re.rerved. All li ters mu.st Include rignatMr11 and mall· ing addrt11, but names mav H uiit~ li•ld on nque1t I/ fUfflci<711 ""'°" ii apparrnl Poltrv will. !IOI bt pul>- lilhtcl. '. but we are at peace, man ad you blttn believe It -a 0 puct." that lllowl raw- pant tnaaon to ., ~. u 1111 w~ no more than a frea..blte. :1 AND JUST LAST ·w..kend ~ American plane wu hijacked to the i.,. of half a mllllon bucks, plus a free leu6n In sky diving !or the bandit. So I ".'II' declare a one-man boycott of ~ Supreme Court for aiding t!t pennissivene11 wtilcti permits the • jacking to 10 on and on without cooperaUon from the offend1ng nations that coddle the bandits. MILT BASl!XM. Tl-f or a Clulnge~ To the Editor : I WU recently divoroed llld custody ~ my children, -I years. If It had been my wife who ed custot\' I would be upected to child suflllbrt •hlch I would gladly Now u I have the children and ~ve work to keep them In baby sitters, should she be able to escape the fl mponslbillty when she helped to b thenr Into this world. She works and earn u much as I. Im'i tt time for a change? , _fl' ALAN K. BRO<JIS (Englishman !or Mens Lib:) • Innovative Railroads lndutrlal New1 R<Ylew Genuine price stabillzaUon depends on many things -none more Jmportant than sheer producllon ond distribution ef. ficle.ncy. In the latter c a t ego r y , transportation ls the heart of lht; matter, and the nation's railroads with their uni· que capacity for mau movement of goods at low cOlt keep the heart belling. Moreover, holding the cost line In an In· flaUonrldden era calla for constant iJ>. novaUon. A dozen yean ago, the railroad Industry developed what It called unit trains. A unit tra1n 11 an entire train dedicated to the hauling of a 1lnglt com- modity. moving continuously between one fixed point and another. THE NET EFFECI' or unit train aervtce ii improved equipment utllliation -with comepondln1 rtductlons-ID lh!p.-- ping costa. For more than a decade, the use of unit tral111 !or low-cost lransporta. lion or coal for utlilty companies saved the public an estimated •too mlJllon a ' year In electric rates. Today, more than 2.500 unll trains haul such varied prod- ucts as Iron ore pellets, orange and gr1perrult juice, sraln, potash and automobiles. Unit ~trains help to cre1te new Industries and new jobs. A Fkrlda citrus ju1ee • company fOr lnstance, depcndJ upon a unit 1r;!n !or delivery of fresh orange "1Jd,fraper1111t juice to the New York mlfket Ires. The 6kar "JUiee train"," as It la .called, hauls about a mlillon gallons -or 16 million eight· O<Jnce glasses -of juice uch trip and mates two trlpt a w.U during the pealr: of the cllnll ....... ml!: RAILROAD Industry la stuclylng many other devtlol)menta of the unit train principle; and, as tbeir research cmlea them ahead, the public benefils from bttaldhrougbi In transportalioa lechnoloSY that tend to hold down cMI and thus stabilize pricts. This is ju.rt one of the reuons why encour•ging a strong tr ansport system should be an llfl'lll concern of the pres<nt Congrea. ·---B u Geo"fle --- Dear George: My husband ond f both thin) there ii such a lhlng u rein: carnation. How do you think"" can arrange tl 10 we t11.n both.....come.-!- tiiiCk to eech other? · SELMA AND JACK Dear Selma and Jack : Just do the um• thing yoo dld:I thil time. I Dear Geofle: J How did Bu!l1lo Bill get bls • name! Dur lludent : Ht ..., named after bis masttr Bill It"s a11ood a name u any r... a buffalo. (VOii mow the trouble with this I generation ii that their teacboB if!~ them "A" on uswert lie I • Cranston Son Faces rug Rap ANGELES (uPI) -Robbi 14-year-old eon o! Sen. Alaa (D-Ca!JI.), WU indlettd Tu ... dfils·olaog with a man once Identified by a .,......., •• a prominent New Yort """"· oa cllerfes of dniQlng a former Playboy Club bunnl' with grape Julee 8"&oily dosed with an e l o I I c ""11Ucinosen. Th< girl charged she • u f le r e d "ffYcboJogical aberrations" and still gets "ltashbacka" of drug distortions. ,/f.be younger Cranston pleaded innocent to:fbarges of administering a dangeroug dpig and felonious assault. He was P!aCO!I on probation for tlltte years for a marijuana amuggling conviction in 1968. "Robin told me he was innocent," the atnat« said in a statement. "I believe him and stand behind him." tncllcted by the county grand jury rid Marcus, rt, referred to ·ln an the Aug. 9 Issue of New Yort • entered as evidence belore the grand jury, •• "the second creatts\ pimp I~ York.'' Marcu.s was charged wJtb 1 Musalna a rest>icted drug, aocessory ., 'the fact lo the drugging , false hn· nment, battery and attempted oral laUon. . _ . _ nstOn works for a television pro. ion company and Marcua ls the ~alor of 1 Beverly HUis discotheque, t fl'aradise Ballroom, which was once a f ooable and exclusive club for show " figures known as The Factory. 'tlranston surrendered, with former i!uperior Court Judge Ralph Nutter ap- pearing u his attorney, but MarcUJ did not appear and a warrant was issued for ~arrest. \ ' •• To Pre•lde11ct1 Alvia Barfield of Los Angeles acceded to the top position of the A!sociation of Classroom Teachers of t!e National Edu· cation Association, during the NEA convention In Atlanta City, N.J. Sinatra Agrees To Be Witness Before House HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Frank Sinatra, who bas bee'n popping up and vanishing again around Europe while congressional rackets proben waited to question him, bas agreed to testify voluntarily. ;Mllri jliana Initiative On Ballot SACllAMENTO (AP) -caJifomla volen will decide In November whether lo legalize the private uae ol marijuana by adults. The order Tuesday pulling tile issue on the ballot sported predictions from backen of the marijuana measure that tbeY will turn out hundreds of thousands or young voters and shake up the state's entire political power structure. Secretary ol State Edmund G. Brown Jr. said that a voter initiative to legalize the pri~ate use of marijuana by persons 18 and olde~ qualified with more than the 325,504 voter signatures required to place it on the Nov. 7 general election ballot. Brown said an unofficial canvass of returns from California's 58 counties ' found the petitions for legalization of marijuana have the signatures of 338,187 votera. He told county clerks they could stop counting signatures on the marijuana petitions and concentrate on petitions for five other voter Initiatives that are still seeking a place on the ballot. San Francisco attorney Bob Ashford, -who headed the petition drive to put the marijuana measure on the ballot, said his campaign crew -which he claimed numbers over 10,000 vo1Wlteers -will now launch a campai~ to register young voters. . , Ashford predicted his campaign will have a big impact on other elections in the state, from the presidential race down through congressional and state legislative contests. , -~ce Marie Wllllama, 23, Playboy ~Y-turned·actresa, said sbe wu given •1-Ctus of grape juJce at Marcus' lux- urfous Coldwater Canyon home on March Sinatra's lawyer, Milton Rudin, said Tuesday that the singer will appear on his own before the House Select COm· mittee on Crime July 18. A spokesman for the committee said that under the agreement with Rudin Sinatra will not be served with the subpoenas that have been awaiting him at every U.S. port of entry. The Committee wants to ask Sinatra about a $55,000 investment he made in 1962 in the Berkshire Downs, Mass., horse racing track. which allegedly bad undenvorld coMections. "There are 2.6 million unregistered persons between ages 18 and 24. We can sign up a significant nwnber of them." California DOW has 9.1 m i 11 i 0 D registered voters, with Democrats out- numbering Republicans by 1.7 million, a 3-2 ratio. Among young voters that ratio is 4-1" Democratic. ~- I ' I ' ' • ' r, > ' . ' . . The B _iggar -Summer· Sale of '72 there's a whole " lot • going ... for you J STARTS JUNE 29 THE SIGNIFICANT QUALITY: • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Upholstery THE SIGNIFICANT SAYINGS: Save 10 to 30% and more off DINING ROOM BEDROOM LIVING ROOM GARDEN/PATIO CARPETING ... on the fa,gest •ummer sole •election of the Biggar thing• of quality ever offered. Entire collection• to lndi\l'iduol pieces· all token from our regular •lock. • .for every home fumishing oc;cosion, including upholstery, bedding, and carpeting. Truly, the expected quolity ot unexpected savings. • ' THESE + MANY MOH HENIEDON SANllR ·Contemporary Bedroom ALVARADO · ·Mediterranean Bedroom, Dining Rc»m a. living Room CAPRI · hallon Clol1ic Dining Room NEAPOllTAN. Italian Clo11ic living Room : . HEllTAGE MADRIGAL · Medi1er1oneon Bedroom, Dining Room, living Room Boritini. Italian Bedroom, Dining Room • Uving Room CAMEO • holion Clo11ic Dining Room • living Rciom. GRAND T6uR . Classic Bedroom & living Room COURIER • Contempotory Bedroom, Dining Room & living Room MILLENNIA· Conremporory living Room BRENTANO -llalion CJossic Dining Roe»n DIEXEL MAICHESA ·Continental Bedroom, Dining Room, & Living WElUNGTON PARK . Contemporary Bedroom & Dining Room PARF'AIT . French Yovth Bedroom NEW GENERATION • COf'ltemporory Youth Bedroom ESPEllANTO & VERLERO Bedroom, Dinif\g Room & living Room available on 'IM' ciol order ot 1ole price1. STANLEY OLE· Mediterranean yoofti bfdroom Bo1+c·wit1 PORTS O''CALL • Naut+col look youth bedroom l lOWN JORDAN · Outdoor furniture • CARPET · lorg• selection from fomou• mokeri 11arringot 6.95 p•r.squore yord RICLIN EIS STIATOLOUNGll ·Many mod•I• ct red11c!d Pf'k•• l lCLINllS STIATOlOUNGll • Mcny models ct Muted prices • ~TTRESS Allll~gkw qn!lt!9a_~e1. Sale P tc•d 5'M ONS~cr d• lo R•n10 BocUhield lin.e SGJ. priced .- ALL fTEMS SUBJECTTo PRIOR SAL.E BIGGAR'S OWN BUDGET ACCOUNT-llankAmericerd-MeaterCherae • Comptet-. ..... -~-lll~lnt•rlorOesianservk:_•AsUsu•f SANTA ANA r 1110 N. Moin St. 547·1621 ,ASAOlNA• 680 E. Colorado Blvd. 792-6136 POMONA • 160 E. HoH Av•. • ~edntsday, J'? 28, 1912 DAILY PILOT 5 'Action~' Assembly In Budget N o ~fault Forces SACRAMENTO (AP) -Backers of the Jut survJving major no-fault auto In- surance bilJ. this year "y uteY will try again lo ram the bill lllrough the Officer Talks Gu nm an Down SAN JOSE (AP) - A ooftspoken police sergeant with a knack for 0 dealing with people" talked a gunman into givtng him.sell up after switching places with the man's beaten estranged wife to become a hostage. "I was the closest one, so I was it," Sgt. Merle Johns, 4.1, said Tuesday of his offer to become a hostage so that Leilarii Fink, 28, would be aet free. Johns was dispatched to the home after neighbors reported hearing screams. When he arrived, he found Miss Fink beaten and her former husband Joseph Lettrich, 'J:I, pointing a .32-<:allber automatic at her bead. Lettrich agreed to release his former wife, but only if he got an unarmed hostage in return, Johns said. Another officer, patrolman Roger Sides, was disanned by Lettrich, who kept Sides' .38-caliber police revolver and forced him to leave. For the next three hours, Johns tried to talk the man into giving him the weapons, talking to him about his three children and "how thls would be a ter. ribte thing, someone being shot." Finally, John said, "Joe, I'm going to put my hand out, and I'd like you to give me the gun." · Lettrich surrendered without incident at1d was taken to Santa Clara Valley Medical Center for psychiatric observa- tion. Legislature -overcoming II! rejecUon by a key Senate eommlttee. But even if they are successfuJ In reversing the committee action the bill i5 probably stm doomed, says the chairman of another Senate commltlee tbat wlll- also review the measare. The Senate Judiciary Commj_ttee killed Ass<mblyman Jack Fenlon'• no-fault bill on a 6-5 vote Tuesday, one short of the seven votes needed to send it out of the 13-member committee. Rejection came despite 1ast·minute support of the measure by the Reagan Administration. Supporters immediately said they would try for reconsideration in the com· mittee at an unspecified later date. Only one committee member, Oak I and Democrat Nicholas Petrb, was absent during the bearing. Sen. George Deukme- jian (R-Long Beach) abstained. If backers do get the measure through the Judiciary Committee on another try, the bill would face a hearing before the Senate Finance COmmiltee, .which ~ not allowed a no-fault bill to reach the floor this year. Finance Committee chainnan Randolph Collier (0-Yreka) doesn' t!tink Fen. ton's bill would clear his committee either. "I'm just reflecting back on the votes that were taken on previous bills and I suspect it would be similar," he said in an interview. I doubt whether the votes would change." Fenton, however, was still optimistic after the Judiciary Committee vote that at Jeast temporarily sidelined his bill. "It doesn't mean anything yet unless reconsideration falls," be said. "I'd say there's still a pretty fair chance." Under a no-fault system, each m. surance company pays ·damages for its own customer rio matter who was at fault in an accident. Ove rr ide SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assombly has taken the first step toward an ovtr· ride of Gov. Ronald Reagan's veto of f7S million worth of new state money for local schools. At the same time, the Senate prepared. Its own attempt to override another of the Republican governor's budget vetoes. Opponents attacked the proposed exlra school appropriation as a piecemeal solu· tion that will only perpetuate present school problems. e Quafff119 QuGJJ h ed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee quashed a measure Tuesday that would have lowered the drinking age to 18 in California. The proposed amendment to the state constitution by Assemblyman John Knox, a Richmond Democrat, fell two votes short of the number needed to pass it out of the committee. e v.s. Aids Valle v SACRAMENTO (AP) -President Nix- on bas declared a portion of southeastern Sacramento CoWlty a disaster area after floods hit the area when a Jevee broke last week. The declaration Tuesday permits the use of federal funds to help in relief and recovery efforts. e Wallace Dele,,at es? LOS ANGELES (AP) -Supporters of Gov. George Wallace say they plan to draft a slate of alternate C8lifomia delegates to the h-fiami Democratic Na· tional convention. Wallace and three other losers in the Calilornia Democratic primary election object to the "winner take all " provision by which Sen. George McGovern got all 271 California delegates. OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUNDAY 10·7 J . COTIQN SHORTS • 47 .... t.97 , __ . .tJI,,. Boya' "cut off" atyle ava ilable. in solids and fancies. Keep cool in the _!_U'1tm•r weother.8-1 8. Alto in jr. boys' 4-7. Chorgo it. MEN'SCOnON . KNIT SHIRTS .... 2.97 or 2.57 ... Wa rm weather comfort a vailable in o fashion g roup of the latett looks in m•I''• 1hort·1l11ved, com·bed cotton knits. ·Choo11 from mo ny style1, incl udi ng crew neQ. solids , f0nc1es .·S·M·l:Xl. Terrific vol uel • ., • 7 \