HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-11 - Orange Coast Pilot--
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EDIT19H N.Y. Stoek.s CapistraJ10
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• • ~ .. ,_ .,..f • • vo~ .. 6( NO.' :193, 4 SECTIONS, ..... PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDA v; JULY ·1 f, 01972 . JEN CENTS . ' ~ . . .. • • • .. I • ' , .• '
Capo CO.U~cil Refuses: 24l~acre Rezone Plan
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By PA.1JUCR; BOYLE
\" Of tllt oallr '!let tt1ff
Despite several ' 'con~ion1 bY. , the
developer,' Saa .Jwin Cilplstrapo ' city '
co.unciltnen Monday refused to approve ·
the rezone of 241 acres nortb of the city
for a 'pf m?nu,nity. ~
·The entlre)na. was referred ~&Ck to
the planning · , com ss\on with in-
struCtl'ons tha-t several SJ>:eCific con<Utions
be proposed, for placemeDt'OI) tbe·!'tzone.
At a long but. calm J>Ublic bearing,
architect R®ert Van Roe)el, speaking
for Covington Brothers Development
'Company, said the !inn's proposal had
beeo re<fuced f""° 816 units to· 720 units.
BOwing to nearby homeowners' cam·
plaints about th~ "quality" of the
development, Van Roekel added that con-
dominiums an4 ·duplexes · herd been
eliminated !rom the proposal and that
homes there will sell from $24,000 to
$60,000. • . .
· Van Roeket _ 1ave a0• lengtby· ·slide
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presentation, showing the area as it is
now -a citrus orclw'd backed by steep,.,
rolling hills -and renderings and maps
· of the development, with homes along the
ridges and in the valleys. The tops of the
hills woul~ be leveled and the valleys fill·
ed ijt, he added, to vrOvide a Oat surface
for borne construction.
Each of the councilmen e1pressed
some aSUsfaction with .the planntd cci,m···
munity concept, saying it"WOUld be better
lhi• sul><llv1sloo devel-"'1~ 1be prop-
ttty is located Inland -of the lreeway
between Mission Hilla Ranch aod Village
San Juan.
However, a majority of the councii
favored placing conditions ·on the rezone
·to insure that tile .developer, when con·
struction finally begins, sticks with ~
proposal Councilman Ed Chennak noted
that such conditiCN are normally im·
posed on the tentative tract ma~, not on
the rezone.
"I 'alnys thought that was kind of a
la arrior'
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Parade Request
'Antiwar Group
.
Fighting Denial
,A major controversy over who can
march in San CJemente's fiesta parade
and who can not -exploded today and
as Of last reports wiJl be settled in
Orange County Superior Court. 1
An antiwar grot!.p Imo~ as Vietnam
Veterans Against the War -the entity
which spoiisired the· major march In
Washingti>n D.C., ~I year; bas taken the
San CleJnerite Chaniber of Commerce· lo
court•to fiBll! denial 'ol a parode entry in
this Saturdiy's annual edition ·of the
Jiarade. r 1 ,
, Cllmnbe!l officials aid' Ibis mOrning
. tjlat IJley, u yet have not -~
with 1f1Y court documents In tlje asserted Iel1lf action, lllUI sald that uhless they are ........i. tter will not coouneirt al ' . . -.
lengttl \II the e!i-IPU\OS.
The antiwar gh.K.-..,. it bas been
determin¢, applied recently f o r
penni!sioo to enter a 100.man marehing
unit in· the parade.
Tbe permission was denied by a special
parade screening committee of the
~hamber. _The panel cited stiff rules
about ·politically-oriented entries being
exempted from the parade. •
The· veterau's .. groiip then decided to
~ court.act.ion, and a final ruling is
~-Ft~y. lt '~u leamed la the court~· Jildg' ~-F. Judge. ."We CIJl't mmment on tbe Incident
an1'io · We receive fdrmat docUmellts
re~ ·to . a eow1 action,'' Quunber
...._ R!>bett Evans said today.
~. , . . . . ,.u,.;y.;-......
;: Califonlia delegate1LpriniJa B<:own .of.Ricbmon\i· n-p• dtl\ing the pro-
Board Eyes $1.1 Million
Tai 'Windfall' in· Capo
: • c,.ungs at·tl!e Democralic,l'!lal;iOrial C!:onvenU9'1. At•rigbf•is Tony-Pol· Trustees of the capistrano Unified
• vorosa of Sill !4ndro.• · 1 • ·: • ' ' School District Monday beard inllial
; , ' ' . reports on what they mlgbt do with fl.I
·:;· ·P· .'.~'~t•::.-.:.,1··g' L4:'· S~"-. :i~~. ~ ~sca1""::."y dicin·~ ~ ~.I; · ~·, ' ••-11 · 1 ' -~ • • • District administrators banded trustees
· •. .-, • • · · ·" ' · ·' · · a 14-page· report lndica""" the board
,,;_ •-! f '' ,· •I /• , I ' ,-"' ' ""'--'6 • • · • , • . , could beef up the district'• spending pro-:.capo .D4,tt.~ ·p areri'ts· '.tO Petitwn gram for 1be coming year by •bout • . . , , . . . . $640,000. 'f!>e. rest of the $1.1 million could
' • • • .... , : 1 ·;' • • go into the district's reserve fund, school
'A group pf parent! ·<iincemed ·abOul·a-·-Tbe·proposal inusl·now·be approved by officials said.
li!ed foe ~' pools .Jn the the• ·county. I.local Agency Formation But trustees agreed to take the re-
Cllpislrano Unllied School District have Commission malnder of this week to study the detail-
...,.. city council permission to cirCulate Bruee De.~. speaking for. Jhe • ·
ed suggestions. They will meet In a two-
hour opeclal aeuion Monday nigbt to
make a final. action.
The new tax income will be yielded by
a 28-percenl increaae la aasessed valua-
Uon in·tlie dlatrlct.
But board Preslaent Bob Hurst em:
phulzed that, despite advanlages to the
district, the sting In pocketbooks of tax-
payers will be severely felt. ·
Citing whopping Increases on bis own
tax assessment, Hurst stressed that the
board "should keep the taxpayer In mind
Monday."
The stall . repOrl suggests that the
district's esistlng tax rate ol $4.62 be
kept intact because of the new-
auessmenta:. ~tions. in San Juao caplstrano. Parents on Pools Committee, told the F• p
'• . .council Monllay night his group, it seek· . le8ta ancake --touncilm'¢if:N· · -:tn_g·l°~··:~Y.setvJ¢e •re1W1i1hli. · :. -c..: • --· ._, ·· · · ··
Items recommended by ICbool officials
· • J nctude ,major increases for: .
_ ·_ · -· Reliistating. the. j>Ositlori ci! .cur-"
riculum coordinator. -:-:., ' · · · =~~ ~! .-:..;,,~ced~ ·: BieakfasrSlated
R. ffl Pro· ect would 1.vy • 10 cent property tax per , 8 e ] $100 of aasessed valuation for possibly a Plans ore nearly complete foe lhla « two-year period. • year's edition of !he Fiesta pancake
.):Jespile a strong verbal ·•J>Pllll from a· Deacon said Ibis would 'raise about breoklast to be sponsored this coming
P;na Point tesiden4 San J u a n $400,DOO, which his (roU,P bopes will be weekend >by the Sao Clemente Kiwanis
dapistrano city councilmen Monday nigbt enough to build two· rom(iell)iod-slzed Club. " ·
mused to ·allow the .door-to.door selling swinunlai pools In lhe If"•· Aware. of The traditional annual. event will be
alsed the large flguie, he noted that au olYJTI· ·held In Albertaon'•· Marke( parking lot
of raffle tickets that would have r , pie-sized pool just built at Newport from 7 to 10 a,m. Saturday ape! Sunday. ~y to send a group o! blind young· Harbor High School In Newport Beach Tickets art available by cajling 492-
slOrs £0: Europe. , . ~J cost $391,000. . . · · 3631 or • 492-lilM.• Alt members of the .
Only· Mayor' Jim ThQrpe voted againsl J The assessment .mial* not be Kiwanis Club a19o are selling tickets at
a motion to refUle ,..·i,.1{.lioJi rightS to ll9CeSllrY for two years, Ilea"?' added, II for adulls and IO cents f0< children u... .,,.,,.-beca-foderat funds could pay for one der 12. Tickets al'ao will be.sold each day
the group. The ..Uvlty ~ have been ball the CODllnlcUon costs. at the breakfast. ··· •
~sored by the Balboa BayiADlll'Club.
llay Wheeler told the council tbat the •
ci,ib had c1onatee1 • """ -11e 1o be.-Aa· -·-•ti-s-""" .. , uaed in the raffle. OUJ ol the price of a $1 •-.,._ --ii~•
-;:-jncreases la teachlbg pel'IOMet,
maintenance e m pt o y e s • health-care
wdrkers'lll' and . other aide'\ in many
categories. · ,
-Reinstatinl a.m a Io r 11\ainlenance
program which. would include' ilte lm-
prov,ements at most district achools as
weU u painling o! a major portion of
classroom buildings at San. ,Clemente ..
Higb School.
~ 8¢ing up auppliea and equipment
recently removed from the budget with a
special emi>hl!sis on the amount of
materials needed to open Dana Hills
Hiib ScbooL
I ticket, Wheeler said 25 centii' would bavo pe Into lhe Project E . .Fund,
which ha• been' tel up by =. to tho
Blind In Santa Ano. The...,,._ -
have paid the studeal sollcl~ and tbl -cOst of the auto. '
·Capo· May Move Near Sea.
screwed-up standard before I ever got on
the COl:IDCil," Jim Weathers responded,
sayJng he favored imposing the con-
ditions. Weathers was dected in April on
a platform of slowing Oown growth of the
commlinity. :·
· Several conditions sUggested by the
Council were first mentioned by r~sidents
during the public hear ing.
Jack Connelly, representing lt1lss.ion
Hills Ranch homeowners, said the. pro-
posed · school site in the development is
ows
THROWS IN TOWEL
Ex-andjdato Humphrey
next to a planned freeway interchange.
CO!ll1elly also raised the q_.., oC
whether a natural pond, the only one in
San Juan C&pistcano, should be filled in
for home construction.
"Once you ~roy that .pond." Con~
nelly said, "you can never brjng it back."
He sa id many Mission Hills youngsters
fish in the small pond.
Bob . ~1cCullum1 representing t h e
Alliance of Homeowners' Associations
(Ste REZONE, Page I)
McGovern
On His Way
To Victory
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The self-sty!.
ed happy warrior, Hubert H. Hwnphrey.
pulled out of ·the race today fer the
Democratic presldenh'"'al nomination in
the face of the speeding MGovern
1teamroller.
Humphrey, the 1968 nominee, appeared
with his wife Muriel and daughter at hit
aide at 9: 22 p.m.' PDT befo;e .a crowded
room full of reporten to/anoouunce bis
withdrawai, 11ying ¥,wu releuinc his
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delegates to~'vo as Ibey wish." He did
not oay, bowev , whether ha would IUp-
' . Mrimlna .. MGov . "!' ol~ ltlmd, for tb1 ' · no 11t191'' McGovern Foes Hum~_....i .... 11erui.ra11 ·•·
'. . . • lhfe-ppotqripb ICatllnenl Oii' hla deeision tblt -.uilched lhi nomination May St,ep Aside Wec1nesda1 'Dllht 1qt Georre s. McGov$.
His voi~ troke slightly toward the end . As Senator Ro.lls o1 1he.•tateni0nt .. he thanked hi• •t•dff , and supporters :who worked lor him.
MIAMI BEACH ·(UPI) _ George S. After reading the prepared slatement,
McGovern clinched the· Democratic Humphrey added' a few words saying,
presidential· nomination today u Hubert • ~w:·:t. f~t the good fight ... Now we
H. Humphrey. stepped, out of the raee aod ~cGovem'• other key rivals .moved. to do He thew hugged Muriel and walked the •"'.aY from the rnicrophmes. same. , Humphrey was said to have reached
McGovern relaxed in his 'hotel as the · his decisloo to withdraw early todaY. .
coalillon, which hoped to ' stop 'him after •OOni IWi rnajorhope of.bvertaking
Wednesday night dlssolv~ around him. McGovern !all. That waa the convenUon'a
He talked by telephone to Humi)hrey decision to ·five .McGovern . all · 217
after the "happy wafrior's" ,bow-ou. t and delegates from Calllomia, lnsle.ad. ol
praised him . for, "his ~year fight !or splilling them up with Humphr~1et1'"" human jus~ce.11
• ' ~ -Humphrey, vicilm of M.cGovem'1 t&o tot and MGovern 120 bated Oil June I
month beltle for -the nominatio,n and ·of ~~~.slept.., hla decllloii a
.slick conventioh floor maneuvers on the · few hours and met with his top advisen part of the South Dakotan Monday night, i'--•·• released his· delegates to vote as they at m -·---·Later, he called together . h. . his Slaff for a· closed meeting •nd -as WJS • • lea .... I I d' ...,. Seo. F.4mund S. 'Muskie, who still ~ rs were JJllCU, nc u 1ng some by
trots some 700 ·convention vote11 ind' Sen. Muriel Humphrey -be told them be wa1
Henry M. :Jacksbo, with oYer 50, both bowing out.
called afternoon n~ws conferences, most The Humphrey statement said :
likely fu follow the palb stiuekr by "After CODIU!tatlon with some of my
Humphrey. . • cloaest ht~ and s~pporters, I have
-McGovern· was just ~ votes short ol d-llion to continue the beltle I
the t 509 needed for victory 11ben name to be enterod la nomination at the
batkithfg i....jj,, 'iii lhO c<>tiV.ntion Iialt convention, and..-i· am -·releasing ml wedn<idar~ght ,-_ ~ ----· ·.,-· -delega1es-t.-votnn11ey·~ -=
ilump&rey·~ 429-plus delegates; many "Mr wltbdnwal from the presidential
(See McGOVERN, Pase. l) race " a withdraw al of candidacy only.
It is not 1 withdrawal ol spirit, or ol
President Pays
Surpris~ Visit ,
To Capo Cafe
President Nixon -1porting a 1rand
appetite for Mexican food -dropped Into
llis favorite local restaurant Moodly
·night.
It was the fi.rst visit to the Et A-in
Sao Juan C8pistrano in at least I year
for the President and bis small party.
detennlnalton ~ continue the battle l
have waged all my' public life QD bellalf
of lOOee wbo bac! llO voice. 1
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The weatherlady -cl..,. aud
sunny skies lhroqb Wednesday,
wilh highs of 70 . al Oraoae Coast
sands, ri•ll1c to IO degrees lnlaud.
LoWs 5741; ·
INSmE TODAY •
And the Cble! Executive sat far from
any avallabte television oels -holding
'true to hi1 11de'1 promises that the ,
President would not alter his schedule to Chicogo Jfayor Richard 1. Do-
follow the Democratic National Con-l•v rtflutd eomprombe •ffom
GOP Vote )Jlitz Set.
• '!'lie laudlocked city or Juan
C8plltrano will move a few milf:s closer
to the sea ii I pn>poHd a11DW1tiOO is M appmed by county officials. ·
ventlon, (Related story, Page 3.) bu Stt1. llcG0vtrn on the lhorRV
dlreetor T. J. Meadows. For ofllclal pe 1190 said ht Is '!Jest expinsionist" Nixon was accompanied on the queaticm of deltpote seating. Ar
purposes, Meadows said It will be rerer-thin be used to be. surprise dinner outing by Reader'• a rt1u!I, l>al•v lost his 1eat S« .
SAN DIEGO' (A.Pl -A mloority porty
'In San Diego County for the first time
since 1917, Republltaul plan • -
roclltration bllts featuring Sen. Barry
red to as the Pryor Homestead Al> Dlges~ Board CbalrmaQ Hobart Lewis, •lo<\I a!ld other con""'liolt rt·
.nexatlon in keeping wllh the name o! the The aonex never gre" out Of 1 recent close .friend C. G. "Bebe" Rebom ol sulu °"Page f .
ptoperty found on old maps o! the com-proposal from I property owner who Florida and Presidential Navy Aide Lt. L.M • ..,. , -,.,.
munlty. wanted his 38 acres to tiecome part ol the Cmdr ~Crai&~mpbell. • ._ • --"
Mayor Jim Thorpe voted against ask-city. In au erlort to al gn the city boui> Nlxon orderect~Ue relteno Ind t~ ~ "':: = .=: •,:
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I , Goldwater "!-~I E ~...."!.. 4lort 11to
-up ......... ~--cbalrman, 11id 400 tickets bave -sold
for a $100oa·plata flmd.ralsinl -
Thunday. Gold'l'atq will be ibe rnaJn
speaker.
City 'councilmen Monday, ·with one
disaenting voti, agr<ed to apply for the
annexation · of some 100 acres of
ltnlnhabited land along tbe ooutbern
rHChu ol Sau Juan a-tek.
Ing the coun.., Local •11tnMt Formation dary with &h•t of Water Work1 District from the bill of fare, then later pltced 01 11 ''' 1• , ... .....,. ""' '7 6~ '""I Dti1'I l>tellaot IS .... "'"' Commlsoion to consider the anneutton.-Number Eour, the <OUDCil «defacl_clty_anolber..ordcr for mou..1Aeoe1~-,----l-":Z,:' ''" • !".'!1'!11 · "-•-~.-...
Thorpe said the land Uu In the flood plain s~f to see lf' any other adjactnt pro~ Wire services, In an appartnt cm-:=.-• ;tlt ....... •i:
\· I
The IOlllO< ...Wd llUlh the city bourl-
dary "'°lb along Del Obl!po to Stonehllt
Drlv., according to city public ·voeu
) :
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and will IOl'Deday cause the city a trty owners would fJvor annexation. celllon to Eastern readera, de.9cribed ,. .,.. klWf tt :::1..,. ..._ 11>11
multllucle of problems If 1 landownt.r The !()).acres proposal is the result o! chlle relleno as "green pepper enveloped =-~" . ;; · -. 1
ever wauts to develop IL that e!forL . In an omclelle-like cheese wrapper."
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!fl DAILY PILOl TlllSd&y, J•ll 11, 1972
Allies Hit-:-Quang u Tri
U.S. Copters Lift Troops ~n Over . B~rrage
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Marl n e
.beUOOpten lilted South Vietnamese
-/
Hinshaw
S ent Most ' .
·.--...-..· troopl __ into _ iCOmbat-....ssault north Of
Qiiiili'J'ilCity IOOay, flYliii'illlo a he.-.,.
banqe of lire behind enemy li!les that
knocked dawn at least three helicopters,
nounc0ment lnlm the U.S. 7th Fleet in-The SIJ&on command reported that 104
dlcaled tbat· troopo from the two CHles · North Vietnam ... troope were ltlUed ond
'alfY4Fh:lid -~-o!t:"'Tbo-e ttanlal dettroyed, Jl!soof them In one --~ ... ~--
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the U.S. Command said.
The landings, by South Vietnamese
rnarlnas. put government forces on three
aldet of tile enemy-held provincial
capital.
U.S. military spokesmen said the
~wmen of two CH46 m e d J u m
helicopters were safe. going down inside
South Vietnamese lines after being hit by
antiaircraft artillery and mnall·anns
fire. .
The late of the crewmen aboard the
third helicopter, a CH53, the biggest U.S.
troo~rrying ·helicopter, was not im·
mediately known.
'111e U.S. Command said it had DO ad·
ditional details.
lt was not clear whether there were
South Vietnamese troops aboard or
whetber they had been dropped off
before the helicopters were bit. An a.n·
belicoptera -rro~ert:-• ttt-navaft· gunfil' romd-ttoutlr-
. The new assault by several hWldred Vietnamese artillery support.
South Vittnamese marines north of "The North Vietnamese are in there to
Quang Tri enlarged the government stay," said Capt. Don Dickenson, 25, of
forces' ring around the northernmost Bradenton, Ftta., an adviser with the
provincial capital. paratroopers. "The' guys who are there
A 7th Fleet announcement said tha t have been ordered to stay there."
0 1nltlal action on the ground was hot as Associated Press correspondent Dennis
the South Vietnamese mfrlnes mov~ ~!f Neeld reported from the <front that
the helicopters and on to the 0U~ns1v~. Dickenson told him North Vietnamese
The marines were landc:d 2 ~ mdes troops were well dug in and around the
north-northwest of the e1ty, ~n the Citadel in the heart of Quang Tri City. eastern side of the Thach Han River o~ .. ' . ,. poslte the Quang Tri corilbat base. Th~ ~~e In ,well-prepared bunkers,
For the fifth su~sslve day, en· he sa1~ They ve, been there .for .two
trenched North Vietnamese f o r c e s ~O!i1!15 an~ they ve used therr tune
inanaged to stall the South Vietname$e JU~tcaously.
drive to recapture the city lost 10 weeks You can put 105 and even 155 artillery
ago. on those bunkers .. and you 'll only give
Tank-led North Vietnamese in. them a headache.
· fantrymen and South V· i e t n a m e s e Dickenson said ~e .had seen SOO.pound
paratroopers and marines battled at four bombs ~pped w1th1n 20 yards of ~e
different points on the northeastern and North Vietnamese .b~ers and they fail·
the st tsklr•· f Qu Tri ed to hurt anyone Uls1de. · IOU a em OU wt 0 ang . "It' fight' . 't' " .:: 'd "It' · s 1ng m CJ 1es, ne saJ . s
Vneonventional Del.egates
Thelma Buchholdt (left), vice chairman of the Alaskan delegation,
and Shawn Miller. delegate from Pocatello, Idaho, came costumed in
contrast at the Democratic convention in Miami Beach.
NASA Scores 3 Astronauts
--··-~·~-
Andrew J. Hlnshaw, succwrut 39th
Congrtsslonal District Republican carr
dJdate and Orange County assessor,
emerged today as the biggest speoaer lb
the primary ~palgn of those reJ)ortlnJ
todate.
Hinshaw reported that he spent $86,677.
His opponent Rep. John G. Schmitz cit.
Tustin) spent $7S,904.
However, the biggest spender. Ralph
Djedrich seeking to unseat lncumben~
Supervisor William J. Phillips in the.
third district, ~JY; have spent close t9
$90,000, it was eslitnated today. ·
Diedrich has until 5 p.m. today to fill.
the fjnal report, Other supervisorial cli.q.
didates, William Wenke and Supervisor-·
Robert Battin or the first district, alsb_ .
have riot filed as yet. . .
The second biggest spender re~rimg'.
Capo Councilmen Okay
Park Deve/,opment Fund
dirty. It's rough, and it's different from
anything we'v,e had since the Tet ·of·
fensive in 1968. It's no longer the quiet
little rice-paddy war."
Treasurer
Will Appear
At Airporter
For Unauthorized Actions
Dr. William Brashears of Fullerton, said
$52,000 was spent in his unsuccessful
write-in campaign in the 3 4 t b
Congressional District.
John D. Ratteree, sucecssful candidate
for the GOP nomination in the 34th;
WASHINGTON (AP) _ The space ed t 1 . teported spending only $4,1300· He got c ures. o carry persona souven1r4 type 18,684 votes to Brashears' 7 ,303.
agency today disciplined the three Apollo items, including some posta1 covers. Brashears demanded 8 hand count of
15 astronauts for ~arrying 4 0 0 The permission was granted with the the votes, but when results did not show
A community clubhouse might he a
long tlme in becoming a reality, but
under a meuure passed by city COtDl·
cilmen Mcinday, San Juan C&plstraoo will
have more money for parks develop-
menL
lhat $13,035 had been set aside over the
past few years under a fonnula designed
to someday finance a clubhouse. When
developers pay the required park fee to
the city, Paquin said 20 percent of the
mol!ey, under present policy, goes into
this fund.
unauthorized postal covers to the moon condition that the articles be retained by significant change after three days ol
and back last July and then turning 100 the astronauts or be given to personal counting, he called it off. He had been
of them over to an acquaintance in West friends. They were not to be used for forced to wage a write-in campaign
Germany. commercial or fund4 raising purposes or because he appeared two minutes late ta
The 100 moon-stamped envelopes later personal gain, NASA said. file his nomination papers in March.
apparently were sold to stamp collectors On Apollo 15, the astronauts were Hinshaw's list of contributors showed
for ,1,500 each, the National Aeronautics auf.borized to carry 232 of the specially that his public relations adviser Chip
Parks and Recreation commission
chairman Dennls Paquin told the council
Judge Forbids
Cartoon Figures
ExpJoi~ti~ys
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A fedenl
judge bu put his Judicial foot down on
andqround carinonllla alleged t o
portray MJckey Mouse and other Walt
Disney caRoon character& as dope_ped-
dlen and aexual activists.
U.S. D1'trict O>urt Judge Albert C.
Wollenberg Monday erjolned tbe car-
toonists from making or selllng any of
the disputed comic bcioks and ordered all
copies of two lsaues in his court, pending
ouinome of a fl(I0,000 copyright 1z>.
ftbigemeot suit
Disney Productions in its suit said the
cartoon characters encourage 0 an image ot Innocent delightfulness" but the
underground carinonllls . lhow t. h e
characters in a "degradJni, lewd and of·
tensive mahner."
The judge emphatlcally denied a claim
by tile defendants that they had a rii!ht'
to parody the Disney cartoons under the
First Amendmert.
From Pagel
REZONE •..
(AHA) said the plan called for develop-
ment oo steep hillsides, a matter that
aiJould he carefully considered in terms
of landslides. He also suggested that the
cluster homes in the area should be
acreened.
On the pond Issue, Van Roekel aaid
Covington would probably he happy to
aell tire natural mource in the Mission
Hilla residents, but that it woold de in-
accessl~le to residents of this develop.
meat. He said it would j>e "too much of
a gamble" for developers to plan far in
advance before a rerone was approved,
but added that his client would not objecl to condiUoning the r.,,,ne.
"We could not objecl in being tied
legally in this concept provided we had
tome flexibility to change for technical
reasons," Van Roekel aaid.
He said he and other commissioners
favored a change iii the policy to permit
the money to go toward park develop-
ment.
"At the rate the money is coming in,"
Paquln told the council "in ten years, we
wouldn't have enough for a restroom in a
clubhouse." He silggested the recrea·
Ilona! facility would probably have in be
built through a bond elec\ion.
The council ordered the city attorney
tCI prepare the necessary changes in the
regulaUons in permit the money being
spent directly on tile parks.
In other action, the council approved.
the appointment of Phlllip Schwartze and
Tony ~ to recently vacated terms on
the Parks and Recreation Commission.
Schwartze is the former assistant. city
planner who recently took a job in
Anaheim and Leon will represent the
capistrano Unified School District on the
commission.
Bll;~its H unred;
Goug~d Out Eyes
Of· Two Victims
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
the Uniled States, wiU be guest of honor
at a re-elect the President fund·raising
dinner set for JuJy 18 at Jrvine 's
Airporter Inn .
The dinner is planned by the Orange
County Hispanic Committee to re-elect
President Nixon. All persons are invited
to attend. Dinner reservations are $15
per person.
Mrs. BanueloS is the sixth woman and
the first of Mexican·American descent to
hold the pasition of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Presi-
dent Nixon cited her •iextraordinarily
successful career as a self-made
businesswoman.''
Mrs. Banuelos launched her Los
Angeles food processing firm on $400 in
1949. Today the firm grosses ~ million
annually and employes number more
than 300.
She became director and in 1964
chairman of .the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East L<>s
Angeles.
She was also named outstanding
Businesswoman of .the Year by !As
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A reception is planned for 7 p.m.
followed by the dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from
Ticket Chai rman James. H. Miranda at
55&-0262 or from ticket co-chairman Ale1
Aceve40 at S43-19S3.
and Space Administration said. stamped envelopes with markings show4 Cleary put up a loan of $23,500 in the
NASA said after an investigaiton that ing they bad made the round trip to the form of professional servtci.s, '?'he
astronauts David Scott, Allred Worden moon. The 400 unauthorized covers were assessor reported receiving a totaJ of
and James Irwin "exercised poor judg· carried in addition to the approved ones. $..56,292 in contributions, $30,374 Jess th8n
rnent in their action. he spent. ' Principal contributors in addition to "Therefore, they wlll be reprimanded a p Cleary were Mrs. Patricia Reilly Hitt_
and their actions will be given due con· emente uppet assistant secretary of the U.S. Depart·
sideration in their selection for fu ture ment of Health, Education and WeUar$
assignments ," the agency said. Sh B • and several officials of the Jrvine Coll\"
Dr. G!(>rge Low, NASA deputy ad· OWS to eglll pany Including president William It
ministrator, commented: Mason.
"Astronauts are under extreme stress This summer's series of free puppet A third Republican in the 39tb District
in the months preceding a !light to the shows f<r San Clemente area youngsters Earl Carraway, reported ape n ding
moon, and their poor judgment in car4 will slart Wednesday attanoon 00 the '30,925 and the fourth aspirant, Larrj;
rying the unauthorized covers must be Denna,, spent only $591. :
considered in this light. Community Clubhouse lawn. Supervisor Phillips, who finished sec:-
" onetheless, NASA cannot condone Mrs. Joan Burt, who began the sue. ond to Diedrich in the t bi r d super:
these actions:• cessful shows last summer, Will perform visorial district, reported s p·e n din r
NASA said it learned that the Apollo 15 for youngsters again this summer -$57,289 and said hi.s contributors put ue
crew agreea at one time to provide 100 each Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. $55~!~ supervisorial cand idate I
covers from their forthcoming mission The shows are ~nsored by the reported were Robert Bark, $3,400', to the acquaintance in return for esta~ Frieods of the Library end will be held S h
lishment of i "trust fund" for their child· throughout July and the first two weeks tep en Zirschky, $829 -both in thi In August in the lawn area of the third district race, and Paul Balch, $1,7.80 ren. . in the first d!Strict fighl ';After the covers had been given to the clubhouse near the shuffleboard court.a. State Sen. Claire W. Burgener (R4La
acqbaintarice, however, they -relfu:ed-on Mesa), winner of tbe GOP nod in the new
their own -that this was improper and C U • ff Id 42nd Congressional District which m.
declined in accept either the trust fund or oasl rut lo 0 eludes the southern coastal area of
the alternative offer of -In ex· Orange Cotmty, reported spending
change for the 100 postal covers," NASA Luncheon for Solons $36,824. . • : said. Conrad Tuohey, a Fullerton 'ittomef,
The Apollo 15 crew, like those on Members of the Orange Coonty Coast won the Detn~atlc ,nomination iJi Ui4 ·
earlier moon missions, had NASA's· Assoclation will host state and county 23rd .Con1ressiomi.l District and wu th4:
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -Police of· permission; within established pro-legislators for a special luncheon at 11:30 bigg..t spender among Democrats wilh
flciai b lgned lo extra detectives From Pqe I a.m. Friday in the Balboa Bay Club. $1S,284. • ave us Otto Lacayo of Cypress, who won the
to an "around·tbe-clock, cheek.out-all M GOVERN Coast Association tnembers and guests DemocraUc nomma· "on '" the 35th
I els" h I t ho g ged ,.. Calle S h will hear reports on ~•at 1..;slation al· " "' ea gearc Or WO men W OU '-' • ' o . c wartze. feeling tlJe coast.lin;';;I botb"ihe county aenatorial district spent $2,705; John out the eyes of two robbery victims. .,,. and 1 Black of Ne-rt Beach spent $2,589· to state evel, according to John Mac-·· r-Police identified the 1atest victim as of them almost sure to back McGovern. J W , nab, president of the coast association. win the 39th Congressional District
Robert Paro, 19, of Rochester. will put him easily past the required USt OU t w Ork For reservations to the luncheon, pbone'f Democratic nomination, and Terry
He was attacked and blinded by two quota! 962-6661, or contact the Huntington Beach Moshenko won the Democratic nomina4
robbers Sunday night as he worked at a George c. Wallace announced plans to City councilmen in San Ju 8 n Chamber of Commerce office. . tion in the 70th Assembly District with
Main Street gas station. tb t' fl to · hi t C&pistrano, where streets have colorful spending of $4,225.
Authorltl·es said two men took Paro go to e conven ton oor n1g o press In the 70th Assembly D ts tr I ct
hi fight I th ki d I t. Spanish names, were asked to honor a down a side street, robbed him of $10, s or e n o conserva ive Afros Cause Problem Republican race. Paul Jesilow, a student, •
I he h f fonner city employe Monday night. •i:.u · 1 · gouged out one of his eyes and injured plat onn says the party must ave or Phil Schwartze recenily resigned as • spent ~ in osmg to Assemblyman.
the other. He was in criUcal condition at victory in November. assistant planning director to take a post MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The creden-Robert H. Burke (R·HunUngton Beach) St. Mary's Hospit31,' With a botUe of beer, a long, thin cigar, 1·0 Anaheun' and ••· counc1·1 was thinking t' I b d I d I t d It wQveported apending $6,SSI. Earn S nd . 1 bhet ho we 1a s a ges or e ega es· an a ernates rAssemblyman Robert Badham (ft. er u ay, a one ro w his shoes ldcked off and his tie discarded, of passing a resolution honoring him. come attached to an elastic cord. ~,·s N ' bled f p • 11 ts "' ewport Beach) spent lll,S70 although rtSem one 0 Saaro s al ssaC Scahafn gou72g7 McGovern watched on television in his "We could name a street after him, 11 has pased a problem for same m 1 a ck he was unopposed in the 7tst district, aod
ed qut the eyes of mue · er, • tho ui I h I ·tec1 councilmen Jim Weathers suggested. delega•·s since the cords are t I tin W'lli D also of Rochester, police said. pen uses teas al is riva s -uni ''Oalle Schwartze." Insteed "'-• chose ..,. • no ong a rney 1 am annemeyer reported The assailant asked for fresh orange in their fervor to stop him -fell to the the resolutiOB. w ... ~ enough to stretch over some of the bushy spending $5,617 to win the Republican
juice in Schafer's store and when told power of his tightly disciplined loyalists 1---------------A_f_ro_hai_._rc_u_ts_. _________ _::no::m::i::na::t::ion:::.:in::..:th::e..:69th=:..""'=::m::b::-IY:._D:•:'s:t11::'c:l
that there was only orange .soda, he on the convention Oqor.
demanded money. 1 • The 'Supremely confident Prairie state In a brief scuffle, the robber gouged out both of Schafer's eyes. Schafer was senator planned to seclude himself today.
reported in good condition at Genessee possibly on a boat, to go over drafts of
Ho;pital. the acceptance speech he fully expected
Police said+ they are seeking two men. to deliver before the convention Thurs.. K .., one man described._3:5 about. 36.~"i_th a __ (t§y night-4ollowlng W e·d n es d a_.y~' L -·•---
medium Afro.style haircut , and the other presidential balloting.
BE'ITE:R 1:A'[E 'IHAN NEVER!
DAILY PILOT
??le Ort* C..f DAlt.Y PJLOT, wttrl wflldl
II combined "" ""'·Prtu. II Mlblllf n
tllt Or•"'• CO.•t Plltlllthlfle Comp.ny. s..,.
r•lt tdlllona •rt pi,d>Ui,,_, MOlllll•Y tl'lt'Wlll
Frld1y, for COii• Mes•, Htwport '"'"'
Hi.mllnflon llt.CPl/Founllln V1ll1y, L•O"'"' IMCll, lrvlne/hddl•bKk •nd•$1n Clfmttllef
Sen ,hlM Ctpi)lt•oo. A 11'119:1t n:g1-I
ed!llot\ ls PUblblled $elurd1ys .,_ 54#id•'I"\
Tiit prfnclotl publltl'lltll 1111111 If el JlO WtJI
811 SlrMI, (O:ll• Mew, C1tll9rnif, f2'M.
Robert N. W11d
Pl'ftldfnt '""' PUD!t,.,...r
J1clr: It. Curlty
Vke Prtsldwil •rod Gtntrtl Mtt110tr
Thom•• Ktt•il
Editor
1'11om11 A. Murph1111
Mllllfllrlt Editor
Ch11l1t H, loot Richerd P, Nill
A11 r1t1nl M•n•olfto Edilora s.. c1 ........ Offkll
)OS Norfh El C1mlt10 lte:•I. t2672
OrW Olff ...
C.1!t MIM: »o W!'!:f $1r•I Newport ... di: 1UJ H loult¥•rl H111111ntfM I~; 1"1S IMttt AOu ...... rtl
UtlVM hlcllt 2JJ FCW.t A¥tnUt
Toi ...... 17141 Ml-41Jl
C1-lllN A-Holoo '4l .. 67t
S.. C ..... te .Al h!l&ilWM1;
Toi.,i.-4flM21
CilWf'ltflt, .,,,, Of'•llOI Olhl ,,,.,.,"'"" ~r. He MWI ••Ill lfl1t1!r""'"" .. frotlltl fl'lltt.. .,. Mi¥frtlHtMntt fier9111
fNY Ill ~ 1rfltiovt ..... "" lrllMllll • ~IOflf ... .
about 20. There was no word from him about a
Scores Attend
A the•' 11goras'
Funeral Service
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP)-Funeral
tervices for EcumtnlcaJ P a t r i a r c h
Athenagoras were held today before
scores of officials representing many na·
tions and the Protestant and Roman
C&tholic churches.
Meanwhile the election of a new
&pirltuaJ leader for the 250-milllon
member Eastern Orthodox Church gave
the Turkish government Increasing con-·
cern In the face ol protests from the
Greek govenunenl
Black-robed Orthodox bishops with
flowing white btards chanted the funeral
servi~· presided over by Mttropolltan ·
(Archbishop) Melilon, a member of the
patriarchal Holy Synod. Meliton i• con-
sidered the leading candidate to sucoeed
Athenagoras Who died FTiday at 16.
choice of a running-mate.
·The ·action shifts tonight to the party'1
platform, with Wallace hoping to make a
personal appearance at the convention ~
but probably not from its rostrum -to
lead the fight for his own philosophy.
The Wallace forces hoped to purge
from the plaUonn liberal planks on bus·
ing, weUare and national defense which
reflect McGovern's viewpoint.
This time the McGovern forces planned
to join with liberal supporters of
Humphrey, Muskie and Rep. Shirley
Chisholm to ward off the WJ..Uace attack.
McGovern today promised families of
American POWs, .,We will never aban4
don those men" if he becomes president.
He said some military capability would
be retained in Southeast Asia until the
GJs taken prL!on~r in the war. are re-
leased.
While working in seclusion on the ac-
ceptance speech he expects to deliver to
the Dem9Cratic Coo.vention Wednesday
night; McGovern ssued the statement In
response to endorsement or •ifamilles for
Immediate Release," an organization oC
people with husbands. ·sons or brot11eno
tnisalng in action or held as priSonera ot
war In Indochina .
'
We' re only one week late to
wish you a Happy Independence
Day-but •••
Really, we s~ould celebrate all
year long.
In this $pirit we are offering
red, white, &: blue s h a g n y I o n
ca r pet in g at $7.95 an·d $8.95
installed. . .
Ide a I for boats, children's
rooms, area rugs, etc.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
J
1663 Placentla AYI.
a.c.nd dell ,..,... .... .. c.t. MtMI; t-f---"1 -~~ •s•ao""lotl -·lw Cll"111' au fNl'ffllYI ~ INll U.lf lflOl'tflllrl fft!flltlY ............ ..,..., """'lllr·
Hundreds of pe!'SO!IS pecked the •mall
church ol St. George within the one-acr~
patriarchate. 'Michael Ramsey,
archblshop_ol C&nter!l<!!JI and Anglican
---afurcb bead, stood next lOPope PlUJ'•
repre1ent1tive, Jan CardfnaJ
l\'11lebrand1, president of the Vatican'•
Secretariat for Otrlstlan Unity.
McGovern eapressed his gratitude and
promised that he would "use every
resource available in the prealdent, m.
eluding dirtct penonal diplomacy • In
Hanoi, to Insist upon release ol all
prilOl!ers andal!o complete, lmpartl'1 ac-
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOUIS: w ... llinr Tlion., f ,. S:JO -Fri, f,. t-Sat, t:JO,. I
• • -'
counting for missing In action."
.,
• . ' .
•
•
'
J
JO DAILY PILOT SC TtltldJJ, Ji11Y 11, nn
OVER THE COUNTER
,IEllEAAl
AYIATIG ll fLIGMT
CENT(I
0AY£ !:OS\ '0N<IAC: \
EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR
5 YfAR/50,000 MILE
wa1H~anty
FOR TODAY'S
HOMEMAKERS
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• • .. ,
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COMPLETE= EW YORK STOCK UST
-I
-... ..._, ..... .__c-.Oit.
•
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' '
Tuts<l.lf, Ju~ 11, 1972 DAILY PILOT II
By Phil lntitrlancll Two Winners Back Texas Chain Junior ROTC Op e1i to Gals
' <' WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe offer the junior R<n'C program Buys Paper Anny hu IMOllllC<d that tbe throughout the un11ed .S1eter, JUl))or R<n'C programs in high Puerto Rico, Guam and the •
New Garbenstangels, Old Faces at Plaza ' ~" be to · Ls Canal :zone. : ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -ad>ooLs ww open g~ Women who ta~e part :will
Harte-Hanks Newspapers of beginning with the new achoo! incur no obUgatlon lo join' tha year In September.
Abilene, Tu. bu purcbued~~~~lore~~than~;600~~hl~gh~schoo~~ls~~Ar~m~y~upo~~ngr~a~du~a~Uon~. ~=-Two Junior garbenslangelers of wood and a door throogh together. Paddle wheels and tbe aemiweelrJy San Francloco
'· r' which a gl~ invitee §PeCtatcSi't other movin( parts are Progress from, Henry F. '1!'"11.,,:-11=--"'bo-WOD-~ ilL,.st yea s •---tan I ·-er-ed by marbles trickling Budd Public t•--I '-J to t-llter u or £&rL!f:li.:J ge el" ,....... e 8 IUI""• DC. ~YMIMl'Wftt flnt Build a B e t t e r aons... down through troughs, worked In acquiring The Program • c
Garbenstangel Contest and Acting as judges were Deve Into the design, He calls it, !or M 908 sharea of Its stock ' ' No Plastic ream J le tlonal RaJlye Saturday de Soto, radio station KMPC's "Free Will Decision Maker." Hart.e-H..W: adds ~. SaD W .• mi•
became repeat winners. "Man in Orange County," and WiMers tn the Open Dlv.ision, Francisco market to 19 '~ .. • F Artif" • IT th
1be both took top prizes in Golden West College graphic ~ ad$d1~~ ~pla~s, ;:ei; ntwspa~ marketing areas It Jniehtion or -1c1a I ee -
the second edjtlon of the ailly ~r;5 g==~~~. Tardy, garbenstaggel gelt ( s 0 u th ~~ t.ighi.~~de, wh,:se ArtHldll , .......... Feit ~h~~;.• revolutioni1ed deat~•
aeuon conteat preSented----i:Yy 1be judges created a special coast -Plaza gilt certificates) father founded The Progress S. llltll'll W... It Jett you bite harder, chew bet~
The Dally PUot and South award for Walt John.son, 24, of for first, second and third in 1923, announced the . sale NowJorthe6nttime,acienceoft'ma ttr, eat matt nawral,ly. F,;.~~
Coast Plaza. 135-A Magoolia Ave., Costa places, respectively. Johnson jointly with Harte-Han.ts. p1uticcre&m,1tholda~~wu a1 ~tu':. hJ:?'titR:!,1':.n1ia1 t1>
Bobby Davis, 12, of 1211 Mesa. He entered a tower corr was given $20 in "gelt" as bis Published Wednesdays and =~~1:,m.:O.:l'J:~icr.e;: health. See your dentist ~.!r;
Donegal Place, Costa Mesa, structed o f approximately .special award. Fridaya, The Progress lists a ,,ahtr•l '"""' -t,...,,, .nii.. It'• ., Get 6!1SY·to-uee i>)xODEMT \ whole made-over ice cream 2,000 popsicle sticks glued Junior Division winners circulation of more than uraiqueru.ticoveryCalledFlXOOENt9 Adbe11veCream. •
carton,
41
Starbengangel," won ~ved trophies and "gelt"• ~1~90~,000~.~~;;_~~_:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ in 'JutUor Divl!lon last year, ranging from $M for f~li
became the 1972 champ in the S T place lo l20 for second and 110
same .division with c. out roop !or third place.
• •
"1-JI . ,· . ~ 0 C..F-~-.lt7J.Y..Wtit\.lt .......
"No, !'111 n0t nuJning for anything. I Just need friends.·~
l'',,' L. Jtl •. Boy,_~::
·~ Marsh Hare Dish
"starbengangel II ." The perpetual tropht design.
Paul Chaplin, al.so 1%, or 912% Takes Form ed for the Collegiate Division Cliristine DriYe, Huntington by Noack Trophy Co. was
Beach, last year'• third place given to Orange C o a s t
winner, took second place wilh A new boy scout troop , w~th College's two--man team~ .
hJs entry, "Pneumatic ~ta~-an emphasis on camping and The OCO team, Bob Crick
tallc," whlch he told judges ts hiking, i9Jonning in east Hunt· and steve Shanafelt, will be
a ''party pooper eliminator." ington Beach. . given complet~ sPorl outfits
Third place in the division The Ii r 5 t organizational from South Coast Plaza's Gen·
was won by Scott Yelich, 12, meeting for Troop 408 will be try, Ud. as their individual
345 Westbrook Piece, Costa held at 7:30 p.IJ), Thursday, in ·awards.
SALINAS PASHIONS
HONG KONG • BIG~. ·
c-Tallon ho Nowport llKlt
2 Do•lll• 'I I o· 00 · , kilt Salh ~ I SALE·
2 DAYS
ONLY ~ ti _.. ... -Mll'lll TlllwM lulll, SHff CNh & J1clr1t1.
cMMe fNm ll!illldr .. 1 ., aamplff tJ tM Wlrldi fl11111 11llrlc1 lo 111 1 _, Mia, Dell'ltfl' -4 WMllL
Siik Molt•lr Suits $55. Siik Sharkskin
Wool lhlirklkln Suits .......................... $60.
Suits _ .... _ ............ _ . .$45. FhM Wonttd Sulh $60. ,
.,.... CMtl -.--··-·...... cu ... "' Mild• Shirt• $6.
CALL FOR APPplNTMINT-Mr. J. S. Glen
{I-IOAM & I PM)
THE NEWPORTll INN
1107 JamMr• li:oM, N•wport leach
~1700 '
tUES.
7·11
&
WED.
T-12
Really Muskrat
Mesa. His was an untitled mvaJos School, 19692 Lex-Winner of the "Piece March"
garbens taogel whose various tngtoo Lane. It's for boys JO'k contest; putting together a
parts-a buzzer, a model train years or older who live in the jigsaw puu.Je published on the
locomotive, lights , etc.-was area of Adams Avenue and South c.oast Pina page in the
activated by a steel ball bear-Brookhurst Slreet. DAILY PILOT lut w-.
Ing rolling down a copper-lined Dads must accompany each day was Ml"I. K. Pokari
trough to close various elec-boy who wants to join the new of 10701 W. Woodbmy, Gardtft
tric circuits. scout troop. For further izl.. Grove. She allo WU rnnled
V(lnner in the open divisi<!D _:f_:orma.:::::_uon_:_pho_ne_962._233_L ___ l50_in_cgar_bena1Anpl ____ •_ -~!!!!!;;;~;;;~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ WU Jim Hadden, 21, 223 Via,-
That professional man leest apt tO ask a matzimonlal
counaelor for help lo save his marriage Ls said lo be the
doctor. lt js the doctor, also, whose marriage js most
Ukely to get into trouble, the experts conlend. Why Is no
.Jl)Jltery. A tot of mf<licai practitioners a.re known to be
... confronted with an unusuaJ number of temptations to step -::om.
:~·' THOSE 10 most popular names for new~ baby girls ?;!' thls year, in order, are said to be ; 1.
·: Jennifer. 2. Michele. 3. Lisa. 4. Eliza-
;: beth. 5. Christine. 6. Nico1e. 7. Allison.
• 8. Amy. 9. Julie. 10. Jane. .
EVER eaten that dark meat deli·
caCy known as marsh hare? How
about terrapin? lt's actually muskrat,
I'm told.
EVERY lotb honeybee Is a C.U·
fornian.
QUERIES -Q. "Haw big a vo-_
cabuJary has tJfe average 2-year..()ld?"
A. Just m words, say the experts.
Q. '1CAN an ostrich run as fast as a man?"
A. Twice u fast. In spurts.
Q. "BOW' many police~ were murdered in this
country lut year?" .
• • ' A. E1actly 126, the record shows. . · IN A TRICKY traffic situation that calls for quick
• '1'e8Ctlon the man not the woman, is the better driver.
· But tn those tedi~ cross-country hauls, it's likely the
woman, not the man, will stay, alert longer, SO tire less.
SUch were the recent fln<fings Of the auto experts. 111.eY
theorize theDefore that the girls actually would be superior
truck drivers wer1e it not for the loading and unloading.
TALlt-Jt's not that men don't talk as much as wom~.
•.Jj:They do Difference is women spray the conversation
arouOO bidlacriminately, still never missing a word any·
body · el!e says. Men can't seem to ~ that. ~Y ~ve to
tate· tums. Or such is the contention of a soc1olog1st who
specializes 1n that therapeutic phenomenon known among
the aophomores as the sensitivity session._ _
WHY J don't know, but school teat'hers. In the West "
are generally younger than the eastern t~rs. Average
male teacher In the United States is 36.7-~s old, aver-
Orvleto, Newport Beach. His .
entry, "Woozle," blows bub-
bles, shows slides cf sumets,
displays numbers en an elec·
Ironic digital display board
and plays a tap recording of
"The Halleluja Chorus.'
,,, Second place went to Doug
... Parmentier, 55, 1517 Eton
Place, Newport Beach, Y.1hose
"Orange County X-rated All-
American Special" included
even a set er signal flags spell-
ing out "DAILY PILOT"
(which did not, honest, ~
fluence the judges). cart VanCouvering, 38, of
lt32 Salvadore St., Costa
lflesa, took third place in the
Open Dlviskm.
His garbenstangel, titled
"Un f In is bed Sympathy,"
featured old car and ttailer
parts and included a handsaw
slicing its way through a block
Beach Youth
Given Award
Bill Sendra, son of Mr. and
Mra. Fred Sendra, of 8541
Donald C i r c I e , Huntington
Beach, has been award.ed a
!400 Standard Oil Company
4-H Scholarship.
Sendra, a Fountain Valley
Cloverdale 4-H Club Member,
was. awarded the scholar~hip
on f.H achievementa .and
scholastic performance.
The Fountain Valley High
»~ I
would
Wells Fargo-Bank .
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~n your next loan.
•
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purpose (excluding the purchase of-an automobile) these special Wells Fargo Bank coupons can
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COUPON VMUE CHART
The More You Bomnr, Tbc More You Snc! _,__
C..,.•t.hrre'lllflr.
$1,00lor-$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
$5,001 .. $1,000 $ 75 $ 7S $ 7S $ 75 $ 75 $ 75
si.ooi .. $5,000 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50
$1,501 IO $1,000 $ 25
Fer • .•••••••• 36-. 4111!*-60-. n-. M-. 96-.
Nott: c:oupoa has the effect of reducing the interest yaa pay. For eumDle, when
the amount financed i.s $4,000.00, with.., llJOllthty inltallments of_ sroj,Jj each. totalina $4.9S9."4, it has aa ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of_ Jt.'7%. But
by usin& thit coupon, worth $.!0.00, your fint monthly paymcot ii only $53.33,
whlch lowm your total paymeptl 10 $4,909.84, and reduce:s yauractual ANNUAL
PERCENI'AGE RATE•to ltMIJO. In oo case will coupon be honored for aiore -than a.aw::NDt o( lint paymat. age woman ls 44.4 years old. ~
TRUE, more words start with ''s" than wjth any other
leUer. Addr<SI mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo• 1875, NtW-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
Cal-Poly State University, San • = School graduate plans to enter ·----------.... -------------·"l.,1------------------------·~"
Luis Oblipo, this fall and ma· COUPON "• 'UE ,,... • -jor in vet medicine or '"" ""'""'
Movie Men
Facing Lure
Of Nevada
;: CARSON CITY (AP) -
:Nevada's new program to Jure
;mcvie producers into the state
'l.! in operation, says Darryl
Monahan or the state Qepart·
ment . c+ Econ·om-l·c -
Development.
Monahan, deputy director
· for tourism, said a network of
individual contacts has been
established in all 17 Ne vada
!counties to escort interested
:film makers to various scenic
!locaUons. '
·: He said a three.man com-
:inlttee Is also working on an
:8dvertising campaign similar :lo those of Florida, Utah,
:J>regon and other western
)states.
Monahan said the prQpooed
01tate "Movie Development
~uthority" ..-Qlill also fili(ure ·
-.ut what/equipment rolling
:.tock, such u old wagons and
,coacbes and other material, is
.available for films and will !abo make sure producers can
·,.i ...,... to land where they
......i to sl>oot films.
! He noted that Arizona set
·aside tl0,000 for the coming
:yur In vi.., of the feet that
:tJJmln8 U aegment'.s of a
lelevtaloo aerier In the state
lrought In mon: than '2
mWJoa last year,
Au11tria Healthy?
VIENNA (AP) -FlitY·lour
:,.....i of elderly Austrian• :..myed thaught their health
:wu aatisfact«y or excellent.
;Al>other 31 percent complained
,.f .... aliments and 10 per-
·...,t aald their health was bad.
•
forestry. • 'IbcMoreYouBomnr, TbcMoRYouSrtet
THE
RECOGNITION
HE DESERVES
The Rolex oirroate, ultimate achievement
of the watchmaker'• lkill, worn by heads
of State, lead.,. of lndoatry. and tanioua
sports champtona-arid recognized fMry.
where u the wor1d'a bldge of auccea.
A superb 3().jowal, Mil-winding dly and date
. chronometer, guaranteed iw-aure-proof
to a depth ,of 1 es· when cue. crown, and
crystal are Intact. The famous Oyster
case la oolld 18 karat gold, with
matching 18 karat gold Preoldenra
bracelet. Recognition beyond question.
The recognttion he..,_. $1.30().
Do Something B11utlful • .,.
ot,.,. ""'""" ........
llfMflC•• ... '""" llMAfllel'luN Mill .....,. CMifltt ....
SLA. VIC:K'S Jewelers Since 1917
IWASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT IEACH-444·1310
O...n Mon, ond Fri. I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m. W.• --.1iw of: TtN1nc1, Ortntt, U CMrltot,, LaHffr ..
AllOio kil DltfO a. Lh ., .....
-,......-. c..,.. ........... ,.,:
$6,001 or-$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
$4,001 !0$6,000 $ 50 $IO $IO $IO $IO $ 50
$1,001 .. $4,000 $'5 '" •• $U $SI
$2.001 .. $3,000 $ 2S • 2S • 2S $ 25 $ 25 .... '• ........ 36 .... 41-. 60-. 12 .... M-.120-.
Nott: Coupon bu the effect of n:ducin1 fl>e interat you~. For ewnple, when
the amount tinana:d ii S2,.SOO.OO, with 36 monthly installments ot. $82.47 each.
totalina $2,968.71. it baa an ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of 11.51". But
by .usina this coupon, worth $25.00! your lint monthly payrnc:ot is only Sf7.4'7,
which lowenyourtotal payments to 2'43.92.aDd reduces your actual ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RA'IE to 11.tl!JO. ID DO caac will c:oupoo. be booored for moro
tbau amount d. 6nt p&fmCDL ---. -1------~ -------·_;---------------------4-------------------------------
COUPON VAWE CHART
'Ibo More You Borrow: Tho MoR You S....Cl ' -,..1pomw, ~·--Ion
$2,001 •-$25 . • $2S $2S
$1.IOl IOU.000 $IS sis • ' $11
11,001 !0$1,!00 $10 $10 $10
w ••••••••• 12-"-:14-
Not#: Q)upoa has the effect of rc:duciq the.._ J'Otl pay. For aampleJ wboll
Jbe 11im~pt.fl~ is $1,7.SO.OO, with 18 monthly imtallmentt ~ S109.1S each,
totlllf\& Jl~u, 11 bu an ANNUAL P!RCENTACE RATE of JS.It". But
by .mini thU eoupon. wotth SIS.()() )'OUr fi:nt DIOCllhtJ payment ia oaly $9o4.1S '
which loftn)'OW'tot.al l'JiYmcntstoil.951.j(J,aad redlll*yoarKt'Dil ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RAD to 14.14"· la no case wiD coupon be booored-for mon tbM amoaac of filll Jllyment
' Clp1l1ese~nowl _
·'tuck them away some safe place. 'IJleti, 'Wheri you're ~Y to apply for your loan,
bring ~he appropriate coupon to the nemst Wclls Fargo Bant
•
-.
... .·:
·:. ... ... ... : :: ... ... ... ... . .. . .. .,
' ::; Wells Fargo Bank has over 280 ofttces throughout C.lllomia. Coe1a Meu Office: ~62 E88117Ih Street, 92627/A&sets overS7 billion/Member F.D.l.C.
Orange C08SI Piiot..-•...... • r ;~
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I"""" "' lfl 1..dy" atl9fl '4 P{f.,..?·10• r .st•nd :tt 'jl'" .... I IH,j ~ .:~'Ir :I. H1 11 .ts
II> ... ·"° ~ev w 1,JO I~~~··;~ ~IT 2.3' ..,,,, ~ Win"' J ........ NYHon • ~~~G j•I! Nv.se:i ~ HfffMe 1.10 NltMOI .l.'1> Nl1Mpf l.fO
NllMDf J.:zs Nl111.Sll .tel NL ll'ldu:st 1 NL'f Co .30d
NGl'folkW1 S Norunc .30d
Norr!'! l.04 NA Co.I .60 NA Ml 1.20d
N Atn Pllll I
No.t. RI!: 1.AO • NoAR 111 .V.
NAIO,pf 1.3.S
NO..I Ut .fl
NoCntGs -'O NoltlG1 1.12
NUG11W 1.tO
N ll\PS 1.ll
NCNIG1 2.60 NoStf'W l,77
NoSPcl •.S. No.SPiii 7.M NoSPot .... North1Nlt E NoMllrOCIC l NthroOI l.~ Hw1tAlrl .•S Nw 81n 1.60 Nwst In .2Sd Nwst Ind 1in Nwst In pf :S Nwstlot •.20 Nwstlnpf( S NwMu 1.Ud Now1tSlt 76 Nor"1Co I Vt
No•ISlm ·y NrtS1pj I. NVP' Co lJ
0.k Ind .1. OctdPI .12" CkcldPI ot 4 OccP~t l.61.1 Olldt !'IC D .60 i " Ed .... pWpt l .O<i
l•GE 11! GEol Olll•NG 1. OllnCoro .u Om1rk Inell o,..ld•L .10 Or ll;~kl 1 20
0!11EIC01 Oll!bord M Oultel c _,,
0-..Trn .60 OweftCf' .11 Clwfl1!11 1.«I Ownll ot ~_,,. Oxfrdlnd .60
•
TiltJday, July ll, 19n
1fuesday's Closing PnCes-C.Omplete New York Stock-Exchange List -DAil Y PllOT J:J.
For
\Veekender
Advertising
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Lisr
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I.lit• Ntl (llch.) Nltll Ln Clnt C119.
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Briefs . .
,. ....... , . .
SEATTLE Abollt 20
million poundJ of nalibut, hair
the 1972 catch limit, WU
landed by June IO, the lnterna-
Ollional PaclOc Hollbut com-
mlulon announced .
Tbo catch '° far thi1 year
IOO,llDO poundJ mote than !ht
catch.by Junr.30 lu\ yur, tho
C.mrnllslon Slid, lhou&h K
noted lat year'•......,_..
a week later •
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,JI DAILY PILOT ..
.
For The
Record
•: •
T-. July 11, 1972
Eyes Bus -servree--
Sets Bus Service ' •. . ..
•
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-Population Meeting--1-~~~jii~~
Slated · at UC Irvine
'Ille UC Irvine-Project 2l Olicago, Illinois.
Study Team will Jepoft M -Population Growth · and
~~~~-~~~~-~B:y~J~ACK;B~ROBACK from Seal · Beach to Balboa Orange COUnty's popu)ation Envlromnent Quality -()p-;j-----. . °' "' oo1• ~"' '"" Boolevanl In Newport Beach, goals at a confmnce·July 12 tlona
0
lor Orange County, Jf•rriflge SAP.fXXN'K-"7.-liii!Cl>us-n>. . · ·. ri'om 9 a.nt 'tin!3tr11=mM.-1 ... n-..m><>ode!'e~-o~m .. 'II>
fare of :ti centa, frequent ~ -EI Toro Road ' Ir o m UCI's science lecture ball. · Workman, s t u d y team
I
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D111elution1 minute oervlce and r...i Jm. Rockfield Bouievanl eouth to ,. Registration is from a:30 cbairmall and pas1 chairman pl....,.•llon ot bus lines from Laguna Canyon Road aod then RA a.m. to 9 a.m. Fee for the Local Agency Formation Com· ·--• ·1·--. onloLagunaBeach,7.lmiles. 0 NGE COUNTY day's sessions, Including missioo. ·
1tt. =A.~ ":,.""' f;.,. La Habra to Newport Beoch -San Diego Freeway from lunch, is $5. ~itizen Input to Growth
M Harllor Boulevanl and from Orange c.unty Afl1lOrl lo El 'Ille public ls lnvit..i. Policy, Gerry IC om mo n s ,
lluntlogton-Beach to UC Toro Rood, east on El'1'oro lo Morning lles.!ion topics aod County Direction FI nd in g
Irvine-on Adams Avenue-were Jlockfield, eoulh •JL RQ!;kfi~ speakers are: · r~Co~mm~~iss~ion~. -~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
pollciesadoptedbytbeOrange to ."°" Ali~. east on Loe Ex-waitress---Orange County's tniili,, TranSI . Alisos lo Mwrlands, aouth on tional growth policy and its County t Di.!trlct Mon-Muirlands · to La · P a z implications, FOttSt Dickason,
day. Boulevard, east.on La Paz to Sues pair co<inty planning director .
. 'Ille lr.!psit district program Marguerite Parkway, south on -Environmental Q u 11 l It y Is•~ to get under way Mar_guerite lo Crown 'Vall~y &VITA ANA -A waltr~ and 'ita relation.hip to growth,
HAMS .. • So Good ft WlD . .
10 mld;l!m. • · Pafkway and then to P.acilic who claimed she was fired by Frank J. • Tysen, state en-
In odditiolt, an ·experlmental CoastHigbway,2Umiles. the El Adobe restaurant in vlronmental quality study Haunt You 'TH It's Gone"
Dial .. A·Bus operation ·will be Transit di!trict G en er a 1 San Juan caplstrano when two council.
inaugurated ln La Habra by M&nllger G. J. •'Pete'' patrons gave her a bad check -Population and dev~ , the end of the year. Fielding said bids for 16 new lias sued both the restaurant ment goals, Dr. Thomas • loOdy lo· 5ene •ltli HOlltf '• Splct Glau
The adopted policies were buses would be opened July 20 and the patrons for $15,000 in Ashley, president, 'A s'b J ·~ • .. Ideal For-I No Pr,pararlon
included in a 81-pa.ge report and that lie hopes a cor1tract Orange County Superior Court. Economic Services, Inc. · 9 Import.:., ·Cll~ .:.d Wines
offer.ed by V'l'N Of Orange for their purchase i:oold be Mrs. Grace lleirnbuecher ·Afternoon session topics.aod e Dollcat-wltll $andwlcht1 To Go
CoUnly aod Alan M. Voor'hees awarded in August. named. D. N. Weber and Deb-speakerf;are: . .,. • antj Associates. of Virginia fu a He also said stepo had been hie Dawn Webber as · the · -Orailge County .ts not • .• Al Typn of Cattrlot .
$40,000 opeclal bw! need5 taken to provide parking areas patrons who stopped a check alone, Earl Finkler, · !ienioi · · nto L Cod Hrn, c-., II• -.,,__
atudy. and bus stations tor treeway ~is~su~ed;;t;h•~m~in~pa~ym'.ren[t :to~the'.:_j'esearc~~h~assoc~~ia~te~, ~Am~erl~can;· JL~~~~~~~~;~~~~-;:~~;·;•5"*;;--~"~"~";-~~·~ .. "~'~"~"~;;;;;~ IJe•tfl J\'otfees ~t of the oountywlde mass tranait lo relieve'CO!lS... restaurant last Aug. 8. §oclety of Planning Officials, nU's. .. ,~ ... •• ......... Hl-24'1 ' tr• lYsfem over an eigirt-lion on the main arteriea. ~"""" ,,.,,..,. ·:. .. ,.:! ..... tt. of 111VJ year ~od ls eJ~ated at ue ea id negotiations for an m,~•'G;:m...!s~~'' o1,::,tt1, Ju~'~ $2 million the fnt year, 11-acre parcel adjoining the C.i~:~~~•rk. "=Tul.r. building to '5 mUiion ln U1e Santa Ana and Riverside free-
iUirDN fourth year_ and Jevelipg. to ways in Fullerton were under ~~-· ·~· . '" "1 ~-~ bout .. 5 mill"-all ;:;n; Gr , ~ Hll .. s~ ~ .,.., 1UU amu Y un-way with the State Division of. Mn!~~i. ,lr,~;~i'C'J:.,.,.~ til 1980. The federal govern-Highways.
et cet. F111w~. ~~.,rn two-thirds of the cost through could accommodate t , o O o
ntombnWlt KnoffWoad ~-
"""'1,l~r.11-· "'11.r::l'~""'i"tlt. ment ls expected lo· provide 'Ille proposed parking lll'e8
-c .. n , O" 1 o. A•· gra1""'. automobiles and should con-=-~~· ""MtCennkk ...__ hKn During the fU'St year, 45 tribute to easing congestion
fl!~' •1"':'1 "'"' or.. " buses .,.. to operate for about the freeways Fielding said. :.hi&.:'!lf , ~ ~~~~ ~ 2.1 million bus .miles. This i! · '
'"'" ,.._ 1 ~:;.i-·o;;~ tirir1111r, ex"""'ted to build to 18'1 buses ,G=a • Or:i strv "' Wltd· r -' " AM. -~ In the fifth lo eighth years D } . . -'IA l!ll'lf' with 9.1 million bw! miles. eve oper
• ·~ L ••ldlH. Me .o, of 10526 Momll'IO Vf i':Jrdt, FO\lllttlll Yjllft'. o.t• of Bus corridors to be Im-. ""' )illv 1, 1m, Silrv YMI bY '°"" 1 •-• 'bl . ~_, R=:d1 oaxm=:· 1.1,.,. p emenu:u -.s !OOn as poss1 e F • S • -~"" "' ";:!, e'"~ •~1•0 J,~ in addition lo the Harbor 8Clllg , filt -'I ue t.1::90 PM. Pltk n-·J -~ --• "Ad • v Colorol• ,~1~,."-· """ eva.ru anu a m s ~'1fi E wmon. u.11 c11t11e Lane. Avenues lines include: SANTA ANA -N-"
i vi.~1o Oat• of dtatt'I, Jiiiy 10, A nA-..L n-.la --.! line .. ,..,. • !'I" " ~ J>M, .., ~. --cr• ~v~u Beach deffioper John Lusk = -~" .'f!~-:. -th=.~"'~ueh~. from La Habra BouteVard io bas been sued for $45,000 by a e W~T1'J.'Z:~ R~w~: Pacific Coast Highway, 20.5 Corona del Mar couple who
.=~.~ ..... ~M.•~ J;.,. . s~...= miles. · accuse him of negligence in 7fci.tt:.'T~~~:O =.;.....of· -Imperial Highway !rom construction of their home.
Euclid . Strtel to State College Howanl and Josephine Sip.
Boulevard, south to Chapman pie, 3614 Surf View Larie,
Avenue, ea.st on . Chapman name Lusk and Lust Homes,
Avenue to Main Street, IOUth Inc~ as principal defendants in
on Main to M a c Ar. t h u· r their Orange C.Ounty Superior
;
SALTZ BERGERON
11tJNERAL HOME'
eor-de! -m-1111
Ooota -14Wll4 •
Bl!LL aloADWAY
MORTUARY
u1~.eo.1a11eA u f.3113
• • M~~~~R~A ·
1711 ~ CUyoa lid.
'4fl.l(ll
PACIF!t VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
(lemefery • ,.....,,
Cllapel
UGt Pacific View Drive
Newport Beoeb, Colllonda -PEElt 'AMILY
'COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
'.'lllllolaA ...
'11'.,est~ 111ms
SMlTllS' afoRTUARY . 11.'1 Mala 81.
llntlqtoll Booell
~HAI
B o u 1 e v a rd , '.· south on C.ourt action .
MacArthur to Pacific' Coast The Sipples allege that the
Highway in Corona del Mar foundation of their home set·
and lo Fashion lslaod, 26.I tied and the walls cracked
miles. after they moved in and that
-Westminster Avenue from . Lusk failed to remedy the
Rossmoor Leisure World South defects. The couple claims it
lo Holt Street and on Holt lo would cost at least $15,500 to
4th Street, !U innes. repair the foll!'·year-old home.
-Balboa Boulevanl Io Their lawsilit states that the
. Pacll1c .(loast lll~ay and .. boriie, Iii goOd repair, sbould
eouth on tile. highway ·to · l>e ·wodh .$1(1,llell. It i• worth
Leguna BeadJ, '11.S .miles; $IO 000 in its present condition
-San Diec• Freeway from 111e' ctiOn .;,_ . ' El 'l'oro ~ to ·1s1 s~ hi 8 .,...es.
Sailta Ahli, west on !st to
Main Stroet and nortl) on Main
to 4th Stree~ Ill.I miles.
-Kalua Avenue in Tustin
from Newport 'Avenue to Red
Hill Avenue, 80Utb on Red Hill
to B81'1'31k:a Road, east on
Barranca to . Culver street,
aouth on Culver to Campus
. ' Drive In UC!, Campus to
Univenity Avenue and west
on University to Mic:Arthur
Boulevanl then south t o
Fashioo laland, 13.5 miles.
-Pacific Coast Highwa .
I ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HAllOI cnnn
"91 H•rller Ct11ler C..I• MtM, Callfentll ... 1714) t7t·2313
1n7 S. ll'llklltlnt St. AHlltlm, C:.L t8M
... 17141 776.Jlot
I do. Right to· the door of the store.
I
•A window dresser Is no dummy
• , , and I know the 'benefils of riding
lhe ExtraCar to work Instead of driv·
Ing. Expense-wise, I save $130 per
month on the average. That's like a
ralte In pay with no deduction&.
•eut there's more. The ExtraCar
dr9ps ma ofl close to the store. No
hunting for a parking ~lace. And
when I work late, no long walk to a
spoolty parking lot or garage.
"The ExtraCar ls dependable, too.
t carry a limo table, sq there's no
waiting and with my Monlhly Pass I
ride as often as I please. You bet, ihe
ExtraCar has a lol go(ng ·for Ill"
Southern California ~ MCf}
RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT o
1
-0
ltullman ~ M11.71ger Adverti.sing
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It's
Convention
Time in Miami
And •••••
The best way to
. '
keep abreast of the can--
di dates ... the issues ••.
the day to day develop-
ments, is with Cable TV: . .
Keep informed with our
011vellllion . . . .. .fl
·ou·rce FREE INSTALLATION
\ <I
y
•
•
movies. The<!hampio:n-
ship sporting events.
The best'spectaculars
the networks have to
off er. All the progi-am-
to the added ming you might have
progr~ms. See the issues : missed without Cable TV.
clearer wit!] the best' · You and Cabl~ TV. It's a
reception on the ticket Winningticket
And politics isn't all . ~LE.P __ RRmnrlm~
. you'll get ~ith Cable TV. ~ LI v
extra channels. Be a party There's the first-run Set t11tr11rhillf thtrt ii to Stt . . ,
.Our RetUlar $14.95 Cahte TV lnstollatlon FREE
• You r-rorty 1 _'s_ln _.
OllSIOlll• ..........
eca;u ra·•tlllP4: •'•--'""" Dial 642-3260
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I~'" . ! ' I~ I~
ll 211 ·~· 'l " 1 " 1J A 14 • !' ,; ~I: u ~~. !l I
Monday's Closing
. •' • •!I!!!' ...... 'rr.' JD tvdi. ~ ~ts
""'Inf ~?: .... LOO ~~~" \fl N~l-10 NfeMpf l • .O
H!llMPf J.60 J•l\1Mpf 3.90
NllMpt J.2S Nllll Sii .t.iti
NLttnd111t 1 Nl'f CP .30d
NorflllkWs s Norlll\C .300 Ncitthl l.C<I NA Cott .60
NA Ml l.20d NAmPllll l
floA in J.60
M<IAlt "' .u. NAftkpt J.lJ ffGe.I U! .fl NOCn!Gt .AO 1'1011:01 1,12
HllGtOr 1.90 ·a ... , 1.:n a ~~ st'! N Gril S.60 H~pt 5.IO N Pw 1.17 N •pf 3,60
pf <1.10
pf •.11 pl 7,1.i
NOl:lfle&I• E NortJINIPC I Nllll'Dpf l .'5 Nw11Alrl ..&li Nwtl In ,l5d
Nwtl ll'ld WI Nwu lnpt s
NW'ftlpf •.20 NwMu 1.11d ·-~II .1• Nori D 11il NOl't S rn .2 Nrtl! pt 1.60 NVF Co ldl
PKOM l .72 Ptclt• J.• P1cPefrl .c Plcl'WI' l...e PICSWll Air ""f.! '-N Pe l pf6 P•c. I" .601
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PllllllPf 11! Pllel pf 1 PllEli.ltf 1 •
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Piii 'l:t' 1.r, ~ n ., .« p II .12 Pit 8 .61 Pitt otO .IO Pltlttoro .60Q PL•ll . Rtirch Pl•t!lav .1 1 Pl...., ,12 ~I""'" ~ ' e 1.0 Pot trll F 1 Pot I Pwr 1 Pot I pl' IY.
Pot \Pf •.IW PPOlnd 1.16 Pretnl!'ld .» ;~g: 1:
Prodll" .10 Pu9C.OI 1.16 PSll.G 1.71 "P." "l
PS pt t.6 "! pf 1,40 P pf •.II p pf 5.ct PS flt 7..52 PS Got I.GI Pu,,llld 2.1' PS l>IHI I.« Pullllctlr JI! Puet>foL .'Hol .,.,.,1tc -'°
PU'!ISP 1.14 PvlllM!'llrt 2 P~•CP .1£ P11'9llff' .14
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·PriCes-Complete New y ·ork Stock Exchange Li~!
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Sv OAILV P!LO'f J J
Finance
Briefs
LOS ANGELES -Harry
S:tltlntnn, ch a I r n1 n a or
Technicolor lnc 's cxccut~o '
1..•omrn1UL"f!. has lsold the bulk
of hi5 ·rechnlcolor stock for
$7.6 million to an undlsclostd
bU)'t"r, the t.'Om~iny said.
Finance
Briefs
e Xere.lll .Sult.I
NEW YORK -Xerox Corp.
~ys It hos been sued by lwo
subsldlarl.. o! L 11 to n
.!"~tries, Jnc., 1n two
_. •1Jarate actloDI charging -cro:t with trying to monopo-
liT.e 1r11de In office copfe". •
Xerox a!Jlo sald Lllton Jlad
filed a respon,. In a)New York
federal court to a poltnt In·
frlnge:ment actlon Xtr0i had
btougbl qalml Litton In ccn-
nectfon wllb LI I ton• 1
marketin& or an office copier.
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J 0 DAI LY PILOT Mo~. Ju~ 10, 1972
Money's Worth
Pocketbook Issue
To _!li_ghlj.gl1t '72 -
By SYLVIA PORTER
"Th• gul Issue Is going to be
th• pocketbook lssu.e." This
inelegantly phraatd judgment
But your real spendable
earnings -the purcM!ing
power of your after-tax dollars
-is up from 190.17 to 195.24.
of AF!,CfO pruident Georg• YOUR REAL gai n In this
Meany turned ~ a spec-entire span has been onJy
tacularty accurate forecast oC $4.57, a modest 5 percent.
the 1970 elecllorui; il could tum If you're a typlca.I ,,·orker
out even more so in um. "'ilh no dependents, y o u r
And by ''pock et b'O o k,'' spenda ble weekly pay Is up to
Meany wasn't referring to the $109.47, a full $21,26 over yuur
fancy ·econ· spendable earn ing in '89.
omics which But, once again, your real
wUI be.fuddle lJpendable earnings have risen
many of the oaJ~"$$A9 in almost rour years
raucoua ae. .,to. a~ of $87.79, an increase
slons of the or 6.7 percent.
Oemocratr This is the sort o f
I h e r e this breakdown which dramallies
week -the more than thousands ot words
ranking of why so many mJllions of
1 n a t I o n a I voters f.etl they hnve been in a
PO•n• priorities, never-ending s q u e e z e -
redistribution ·of our income1. despite Nixon's assurances
tax reform. minimum income that if elected In 1968, he
grants. would bring back eco nomic
For to the vast majority of stability in the U.S. This is the
Americans. the PQCk"!tbook reason. expressed in simple
issue is your paycheclC and stat isti cs, why so many
your C03t of living -about as Americarui are deep I y
unfancy and as close to the dissatisfied with the way our
reality of everyday living a1 economy has been performing
you can get. since the Vietnam escalation
HOW, mEN, does the began in 1965 and helped to transform what had been a
pocketbook issue shape up -mag n i ncently functionin~
after almost four years with a economy into a nightmare of
• Republican in the W h i t e innation.
House.? This ls how: And by themselves, these few figures underline the ex·
If you are a typical 11.S. tent to which inflation has -
work.er, your gross weekly under the GOP as under the
':8muigs are now up to tin ally Democrat! _ continued to t1m~ average of $ 1 3 :i,.-3,1 make a mockery out of the ap..
against $110._33 w~en N1ion . parent rise in our Incomes. No
became ~es1dent m ~anu~ amount of rhetoric by anyone 1969. That g a hefty 1ncreas can hide this.
$22.88 a week, or 20.7 cent. BUT WHAT about the
But ln real dollars -mean--\ record aince Nixon 11adopted"
Ing after adjustment tor J.n.. the Oemocratl' policies and
creases In consumer prlcea shi!ted to prl~wage controls
since the bue period of 11117 lJi Aug111t 1171? -your pay bas risen rrom In real pay, the worker with
$103.40 at the start of the Nix· three dependents has gained
on administration to $106.82 1.2 percent in the p 11 st 11
now. months in comparison with a
That 's an improvement of gain of 2.8 percent in the 30
only $3.42. or a mere 3.3 per· Nixon months preceding wag~
cent in nearly four years. That price contr-ols. A n i.m-
averages out to a picayune provement but hardly areal.
yearly gain or Jess than 1 per· In real pay, the single
cent. worker has gained % percent in
U you're a typical married these 11 months of wage--price
worker with three dependents. freeze and then controls,
your spendable weekly earn· against a rise of 4.6 percent in
ings -average pal{ afler the much longer pre-control
deduction for federal income period. Scarcely an im·
and Social Security ta1es -is provement to shout about.
a record $118.77 against $96.7~ or course, th• pocketbook
at the begiMing of '69, an in· issue is not cut-and-dried and
crease of $22.03, or 22.3 per· it couldn't ever be in a nation
cent. so diverse as ours.
DAVE ROSS PON11AC S
[J:CLU~IVE M£W CAR
5 YEAR/50,000 MILE
W6QQ6nty
At No E )(Ira Cha rge
"• • .. ' • ' t • ' ~ •
~ --~---1000 "'° §
ORDER · ~ · ,.autiful
, ~ Stick-on YOURS \ LABELS
TODAY! •
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yourself or a Fritnd
May ht used on enYelopes as return 1ddr1ss
lebels. Also very handy •s idtntification
labels for markin9 personal items such •s
books, records, photos, etc. Libels stick on
9l1ss •nd may be used 4or m1rking home
canned focd ifem1. All libels tte printed
with stylish Vo9u1 fypt on fjn1 quelify whit ..
9umm1d ptper.
.,-~----·--·--------------, ~II liil ftlh ""'"° cli, W Nil wttfl 11.21 tt; I I Pli.t .. rflltllltl LfMI Of• .. P.O. la,,.. 1
: C.111 M...; c.!lf. nu' '
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COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST
HIW VOlK IUlll)-IJollooli.... ''' P'iul ~ fhR HM Y~ 51«1. EUMl'Qf.
LUXURY CAR RECORD -Theodore Robins (cen-
ter, Costa '?t1esa Ford Dealer, admires the millionth
Thunderbird bu ilt by Ford Motor Company. Stand-
ing \vith Robins are Frank E. Zimmerm'an , (left),
general marketing manager of Ford Division, and
John t . Hall , Ford Division Los Angeles district
sales manager.
It• Higli Gear
S.lt&(MiJ Hftlll Lw Lall O..
=•IC. AlrP~ .~ Aire• .MiJ •J l~tr• ~ib"::U
•• 1nt1t blrtoC .'2
DltrTlll ·" "ic.11 Al .. Ako SI~ ~ii ~ic:"l• :;JJ
AllNnl. .2Acl AltfllCp .10d
llethl\MI I AllO Ludpf l
,ltitlg Pw 1 . ..0 ... , .. ,. Grp 41 Allll;ICll 1.lO "~Mn I .d '\ mr .1J A Prod .61 AllleclPClpf J
AIUtdSr I .• Alld 541~1 Allli (It ,JU
Allr,t.uro "• ...... ,II Ind Al(o;i 1.to AIMISll I.to Amt>K .$0 Amt1rte 1.20 Am Hu ,JS. A H11 pl l\olo
AmAIJ'FI .<IO Am Alrllnff Am8K. .71)
... lll'l'ld 7.2' A I red l.'IO
Am tlOQ .M
Am C111 '·'° AC111pf 11'! Am Cm 'I A CnM 1.7«1 AmCNlnl
Jtim(IS11 ! . .tO
""''"''" 1'4 ... .., 0111111 1 AOF1ITI .20d
A Du11 .!to AOul pf .Ma AmEltc 1.7. Am E.J"pal1
Am EXPr Pl
A ~1 .. sv 1.10
AGriBd l\lid A Gl'i Int .57 A Gn pf 1.10
Millionth Thunderbird ~!:~~# A M«lkorP AMelCx 1 . .i • All'\l'I" Mol«
Completed .at LA Pl AmHGt l .JD
t Am Snt .n an ~i~t, ·1~ Am5 Afr .70
A mS!ndM
By CARL CARSTENSEN
01 lhe o.1H1 l'llol Sl1tf
The millionth Thunderbird
for sale in tbe United States
was built a few days ago at
Ford's Los Angeles assembly
plant and company officials
termed it "the fJ.rSt personal
luxury car to reach Uiat
mHestone."
"Thunderbird over the years
has set the pace for many
des:ign and engineering in.
novations and created markets
that have contributed much to
What About
'U 1irecalled'
Used Cars?
AmSIOPI .WO
the health of the auto in-~~t~1 :U
dustry," said Frank E. Zim· ::\';.'\J w,4
merman, Ford Divis Ion :m~:.·~ t:,
general marketing manager. :=;: _.::
Lis . AMF lllCP 1 TING Thunderbird's ac· AmtK ..,,
complishments, Zimmerman ~~ .~
said it gave Ford Division the t::r.! eel.
prestJgious car it needed ; ti:~~ t~
sowed the seeds for the Ford :m:r "'1n"1
Mustang; brought to Ford a =· .20 Joyal and dedicated group of ~ ""o.J
buyers. ,.,.,,rg 1:• Anotlk.1 .11
Thunderbird has led the ,,::~~. ·~
personal luxury segment of Al't(o .120
h APL Corp t e market in sales every year """Ppf 1 . .io
except one since its 19SS in--:~1r! 1'ti
troduction. "~~~ .. 1~
E I · . h rod . Arclk Ento xp ammg w y p uction Arb PS t .• of the classic two-seater T· Arl:' BnJ!
Bird was discontinued after :~:.s"i.11
th~ 1957 mod~I, ZimmerJlan :~i;.r: ~:,
said "Jt was JUSt plain good Anne of nr.
business.'' ~~:il'!o 1:=
''Our d~signers starte d ~"olr'1.:Ji
working On the four-seater ~·,~
DETROIT (AP) -The late-v~ion (introduced in 1958) =Pl'"T~
model car at the comer of the before the public: saw the first "l~ ,.m
used car lot looks good and the two-seater/' he said. "The re 's ,,l'~7c~J1
price is right. But there's one no doubt that the two-seater ""ch p1 3"6
na gging question : Does it have was beautifully styled. That it ::r11:ec~1o·1·~
a potentially dangerous defect was named a classic car just :~~'inc '~I~
which never has been cor-four years after the last two-:~:;, t~
rected? ~ter w~s produced is inde~ ::: co c:;:
Last year, the four major high praJ.Se. Avm of i.z
U.S. automakers recalted just "But the styling of the 1958 ::rPd .i~
d Thunderblf. d also '•-1-' set "~"t, "' un er eight million cars for in. ue ~ ..... ...,, " spection and repair of possible industry trends. Particularly B1b&Wll .ss
aafety hazards. imitated were the one--piece ::~~~ :rf
They ranged from brand~ grille and bumper and the ::f,'Za, ;'.::
1972 ocl la clean, contemporary lines. l~':&r' ,~n new m el.li to wheezing 1.1neor P11
196ls. · ... ~ '"--; 11BY .THE END of the 1960 :~MJ",I'~ ~
The potential defects ran the model year the four.passenger L'*' Tr 12.~
gamut from minor electrical Thunderbird had accounted R:~ :~
system flaws to prob lems for 2~.896 sales -more than l:f~ _1~
which could leave a n four hmes as many as the ·~ B•1"M/' 1 '57 models." l:ti~it :~ unsuspecting driver tooling !~'" L. .1,
down the highway with a Thunderbird ~me ~ true c:~.~: :::_
throttle jammed wide open. luxury car for the fJ.rSt time in I:~ Fo i.1'
Looking at a specific ca .. it 1961. Standard equipment in· eKt:o ·~~
can be difficult to tell wheffier transmission, power steering l::t'ei ~ · elu ded automatic 88!!0".,c ."'' 1t has been involved in a recall · '"' " ~ campaign. Last year alone, transmission. power steering B~l!tt~' .4!0
tfij!re were 44 separate retall and power brakes. a~=I~ P1·j · . . 1 . d 1 The 1964 model -"'c;, '; campaigns 1nvo v1ng ozens o available in hardtop, con-,.•;., •,: models built in 12: model 111 years. vertlble and Landau body 11et ,.~ styles -inmxtuced t h e tth stt 1.20
Some of the recalls, such as "cockpit" look in which m. l:J';5.,1
the massive .Chevrolet engine struments were mounted 1n ri1rL~'li.~ 1
mount campaign, involve easl· separate pods and a command il' ;P._
ly identifiable can. In that console contained controls. It 1111 c1'.';
case, every s i x · c y l l n d er accounted for 85,841 Ales, ~ 't~
Chevrolet, Chevy ll, Nova and a Thunderbird record (or one l:ll Gamaro built in t.he 1965 year -'_ • --wr 1\~
through 1969 model years was-~Nloor·model-was ad--l:rl;'i.~~
called back for modifications ded. to the Thunderbird line in :::rJ•,.~
to erevent a serious hazard ii 1967. Passenger capacity was ~~r,~ 1~
an engine mount were to increased from four to six the l:J~.,. 1·12:°~
break. following year. l~lf,.':l ".'.J
Some recalls are much nar· T h e 1970 Thunderbird 1roo ~.11 .11
rower, Ford t-.1otor Co. recall-featured a long hood treat-:1c:t. J1 ~rl
ed 189 cars built during a brier ment and unique grille·bumper =~~ \~ ·oc1 h sty1·1ag 11r11 Shf"• .26 per1 at l e co1npany's · erF1rr1s ·°'
Chi bi I 1.A Brvnswk .16 cago asscm y pant. Tm; THUNDERBIRD for 1912 auae ''° only way to tell if a car was &Ilda comp involved in· t•-t -au would was all -new, wlth emphasis on :~ .. 'r ~J
Wj .... " the styling, ride and comfort. 1vc1F1 pr ''°
be to cheek its serial number· "We've made many cbanpl M.!~ 1;:
against publjshed 'list. over the yean t111t batt been E~ n
Fortunately, it1s relaUve.ly based on emnomics, but we've 1:1 \,10 11-:
simple for a prospecUve used also tried to retain what we 1ur1N pf .ss
car buyer to find out JI a car started with -that ii. unique. t~~ ·:ll
was involved in a recall. ness, individuality, and "' uni"r
And if the car was recalled engineering innovtaion," Zlm· ~~ fr?!
for any reason, thtre ls a good merman said. "We think c.11,, '/,,:~
chance the previOIJ.! owner bad we've accomplished that." ~~r.i ~A
the problem corrected. C.m• i 1.10
lnformation on what can ~:,.~"'.::
have been recalled is easy to Divi· dends -:~tJ . .J~,.·~ .. ' come by. The National = 1":
Highway Tra!Jic S a h t y ~:i'o. s
Admlnlstratlon. publishes an At Beckman ·~£ '~ ....
annual pamphlet. ' ' M o lo r ""'c:
Vehicle Safety Ddect lleall D!redctrl of B e c k "' an " .;
Camps!gns," listing a I i !nstrurnt11ll Inc. o1 Fullcton, ;)
ttea!ls, the cars Involved and declared a divldead ol 111> 'cl;..
lh••ctlon taken to correc:I the cents per 1111tt. payable Aue. '" · 1
probltm. Z8 to llhareholden ol record ~ll
The pamphlet Is kept up to Aug. 7. CJ~ dale with quarterly sup-B e c k m a n DWJUfactura I'
plemenls and both t he predsloo a n a I y 11 c 1 I In-t
pamphlet snd the suppl•m•nll 11tumtoll and eledra>iC Cllll-f
aro available to the publlc pooenll fO< oclnllflc. modk:ll
from the Superlotcnd•nt. or ·and indultrW ... 'l1le com-:;i: .~·
Documents, Government Prln--pany had 3,CM,000 lbarel .. :::;! j'3 tlni Oflic:e, Washington, D.C. oulslandilll IX\ Jugo 30. I~ ;i
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Lag1111a . Beae_.
EDITION
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. St.eeks
\'01.'. 65, NO. ·192, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • MONDAY, JULY 10, 1972 TEN CENTS
.
Laguna SChool Trustee. Recall Try Launched
By BARBARA KJIEIBICH
Of Ille D-'Jr PM91 Steff
A ·drive lo r<eall two Laguna Beach
!dlool lru5tffs got under way Saturday,
with cln:ulaUon of new peUUons bearing
both the recall charges and responses ol
trusteu Patricia . Gillette and Gerald Llnke. .. .. :
'lbe campalgn'l'llV&1 delayfd for a week
when the county cou.,.l ruled the
original recall notice had •been filed with
the wro~ county oliice.
I
Laguna Meeting
" " ''
PeUtionl, alreody printed, w e r e
cllocanled, and ... petitions bearing the
trulteel' t9poolel wtft printed in time
for clrcul1tloa Saturday.
About 7$ petlllolll were In circulation
over the weebnd, ICCOl<llng to 1booMis
Cassidy, ~.of 06n<erned Citians
for Schools, and It,' eoch bearing 20
signatures, had -lurn<d in by Sundoy
afternoon.
Jo. loW ol 2.1111 verified algnaturu ol
• reg1aterec1 vlilln will be nqured 1o
ace
School-~Fin8itoes
0
To Be Outlined
The findings of an investigative Be.
countant's atudy of the financial picture
of the LaglDll Bea.ch Unilied Scliool
District will be made known Tuesday
night.
Words He Said:
Hurt His Ears
PARIS (AP) -"Thonlc you,
~t McGqvem," said Ronald
Reagan. "And I hope I never have to use that exprellion again."
The C.lilornia governor, making
a speech before the American Club
of Paris today, was Introduced by
its president, David McGovern.
Robert Pugh, a Newport Beach la<
consultant, will addresa memben ol tho
boanl ol educaUoo at the 7:30 p.m.
meeting at the district board room, 550
Blumont SL
Pugh was hired as a coasultant at the
rate · ol .• t511 per clay In 1 H board
decisioo June 20. Trustees Norman
Ilj'one and JIDO lloJ<\ djmnted
Ammlbe 1t -Ill'-Wll1lmn -. l?lllh -' n.. days looklnc at ...................... \be
l>•ai-:olllce ... wlll .. ....i ...,. ol
making fhww:ill matters easier ... to
understand.
"He WU not hired to dtserecllt anyone
1n the busiDeu office," Thomas stressed.
"We just want to make this budget
analysis easter for the boan!."
Tbomu described Pugh as an "In-
dustrial type" accountant who in the past
hu -for 1he Federal Bureau o!
lnvestigaUoo and the National Labor
R<lations Board.
Other Items included in the lengthy
agenda are:
force a rteaI1 elecUon.
Cassidy Aid the weekend signature-
plber~ procoedocl without iocid<nt, dllpl\!' IOnle coocem over a recent U:S.
&iprmM! Court decision in ao Orange
caee, whlch ruled that the owQer or a
!!hopping center bas the-right to ej<ct
petitioners ·and pamphleteers. even
though the ge,....al public is admitted lo
his property. .
The ruling, contni:Y to opinio.. handed
. down by tilt. Californi' courts, is being
analyzed ·by the di.strict ettomey's office
to ~ine tts relation to state law on
the subjec!.
The S<:bool recall petiUo,..... worked
from tables and Utree local markets as
well as door-to-door in neighborhoods.
Though the ftelll proponents question:
the recent court deCision, Cassidy said,
the volunteer petitio~lrculators are
being instruded to ablde by it, should
they be asked to leave a location.
The two trustees are charged with
failure to respect the eq>ressed will of
the community in favoc of present school
programs, failure to provkie soUnd finan-
cfl plamting and to strive for effective
conununicaUon with t e a ch e r s , ad-
minlstraton 1.nd parents and refusal to
renew the contracts of Superintendent
\VHliam Ullom and his two top ad-
ministrators.
,Jn their respohses, ~1rs. Gillette and
Linke maintain they are properly
representing the voters who elected them
r
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DAILY PILOT Staff ,...,.
in April 197l IOd charge that the r<eaU
drive is the wort of a small apec1a1.
interest group in the comm111Jlty.
in her response, lilrs. Gillette It.ates: .
-There has been no action taken to
dismiss· Dr. Ullom. A policy change was
made to provide a. six-r(lonth tenninatlon
not.ice.
-Federal funds turned down applled
only to projects in two pilot .schools and.
would have cost the district a con-.
!See RECAJ.1,, Page I)
ar
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Governor
'Still In'
At Miami
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George
Wallace said today he has no plans to be
" third party presidential candidate lf
dissatisfied with the choice of the
DemocraUc convention.
The Alabama governor, at his first fulJ.
blown news conference 11ince being
critically wounded in an assassination at,
tempt May 15, said' at the same time that
he doe! not believe the Democrats can
win the election wilhout tlie help of those
who support him.
Silting before a battery o! microphones
In a wbeelcbair beCIHoe al poralyals
from the -dOwn from oae at the
bulleta !bat lit\ lllnl. W,olllce Uid bl wu
.UU Id ICtlve Cllldidata -and -·t
have stayed In Ille raca lf)le felt be CllUld •
not pllyalCl!ly ta.It IL •
Wallace ,_ apln tha,t be felt tho
Democrats would be Jn llUl trouble In
November If they did not adopt a plat·
form along the lines he adVocates -fn..
cludJng an anUbus.inp; stand and 1 plank
(9ee WALLACE, Page I)
What is Price
Of Devotion
" By Firefight,ers?
-Adoption ol a r<SOlutlon to borrow
$400,000 to meet elptDles omtil tu
money begins to come In at the end ol
the yeor. Such a loan ii considered
"routlne" for most school districts.
LAGUNA'BEACH FIREMEN ·CHECK GASOLfNE DAl'jGER AT LAGUNA CA
0
NYON CRASH SCENE
Twe><1r Collision Sunday Night COUM!i I njurios to Four Por10f1s on C<owdod Road ------'------., .
General Killed
With 3 Others
By Enemy Shell . .
Aa rm:y schoolboy knows, firemen
boldly tackles all maoner of lif....,.
dangering task& dally -and the Laguna
Beoch fll'tJ!teD aro "" exc<ption. But
what price devotion to duty?
-Purchase ol a new school bus frilm
the Engs Motor QimjlOlly for '311,000.
Business Maoager Charles Hess Is ·
MXmmending the district make five
equal payments on· the new bus over a
five-year period. ·The bus being replaced
either will be aold or kept as a· stand·by
unit .
Trustees Face
Problem: How
Crossover -Causes· C:rash,-· SAIGON (UPI) -A North Vletnameaa
artilltrY shell killed Big. Gen. Richard J,
Tallman and three other AmericBDI SW"..
day near the bdlqed ·provtncW 'tlpltal
of An Loe, military IOUrcel llid today.
. . . ..
. Two 11kunks, who, apparentJy took ex,
.cepUon 19 two Laguna Beach residences
and vented their anger in the customary
manner, were the investigaton t:l week-
end activity by Laguna Beach firemen
tent to quell the raging smell. ~
-Discussion of a rect11l accredlla~
rtp!ll'I of Top of the World EtemenWJ
School prepared by the Western Assoc:la·
. . .
To .Spend Funds Injriries to Four Persons Two ~other U.S. 11ervicemen were
wounded in the atlack, the sources said.
Tallman, 47, o{ Honesdale, Pa., was
deputy commlOder ol the 3rd R<glollal
Assistance Command operating In the An
The fint call for aid was at a residence
at 4S5 Bent St., where firemen washed
d°"" a back porcll to estinguish the odor.
'!be second call came in from Mrs.
Gene D'J.sabella, 1! U7 Holly St. Sunday.
-~en m!!<!nding 19..lhe call there ~
ed a "1!0ke ejector fan to clear the air.
lion of Scliools IOd Collegu. The Laguna Beach Board ol F.<lucation
-DisCusaioo ol three' bidl, • raoglng bas en intcres\ing •dilemma. It bas to
between 11,400 and 12,200 for feoclng ol figure out a way to spend $300,000.
the p!ayf!tOUnd at Top o1 the World The windfall bit the·dislricl last week
Elementary School. Board president when figures released by the County
William Thomu bas roquestad the boanl Assessor's Office showed the assessed
take acUon to cut ~ on the number of valuation for the district climbed 15.9 ~J!ho .. .-.m the brusb.bef"'-11tft<!ll-this-pas~
the campus, causing 1 fire hazard. At a special study session Friday even· .
Four persons were injured in a Laguna
Canyon !load traffic accident Sunday
night when a small domestic car skidded
BUt of control across the center line and
collided with another vehicle.
Injured were.Archie L; Br~.A _9f
2335 2nd Avenue;. Corona del Mar ;
Maurice L, Demon. 40, of La Habra :
Muskie Remainingµ. Race
Ing, Business' Manager Charles Hess
recommended the lxlard consider a
aeven-cent cut in the general fund tax
nte and use tbe extra money to restore cUt1 made during the past two years Jn
custodial, maintenance, salary increase,
new equipment and reserve accounts.
Mavis Benson, of La Habra; and
Winifred Skipper, 57, or La Habra.
The three La Habra persons were
treated and released at South Coast
Community , Hospital. They w e r e
passengers in a car eutbound on the Ca·
nyon Road when t~ accident occured.
'
But· Vows to Make Peace
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Sen. Edmund
S. Muskie, pledging to remain a cat>o
didate untll the Democrctic pmldfttUil
nomlnatlon ls settled, took on the role ol
a peacemaker today In 1 move to head
olf what he called 1 potenlially fatal
crtdelltials Wit.
Muskie called for a meeting of the
chief contenden for the nomination to
try to n!ICh I ltltlement ol the creden-
tlals queslloa betcn II ruchel 1he floor
tonlcht:
Hubert H. Humphrty acceptad the bid
wblle fr<latnlnnel' 0...,. S. McGovern
balked II any compromlle roached
behind clooed door1.
• The nhllnc wu arranged for the 11th
floor o111cet of Dtmoc:r•l1< 'Na.ilooot
Chllrmln Lawrence F. O'Brien bJ tho
'\
Fontainebleau Hotel. . ..
Muakle decllllld to lllte his poottlon on
wbelber McGovern lhould be g1 ven back
the Ill C.llfornla delqalel ltrtpped
i-blm In pre<onv..U... ndlnp.
11We hive eetn thil eommtkm being
turned Into two onned Clll!pl," Muskie
oald, "prepared to -to tvtrl'
parUamealar)o --wbicl> mlgli(
•
contribute to the victory or one or
aoolher candidate. U pttpintloU for
battle conllnle, and battle II joined on Its
present .-_ the toll In polltlcal dead
and lnjur"f coldd be hOmndoul and our
psi)' and Its -could be among the casualties.''
Before ..rn,. for the meeting ol the
praidentlal bopefula Muskie to l d
n!porlen, "I'm 1Ull a Cllldldtte and will
be a candldale until' thll, conveotton ta
ended.'' He llld be WU b<plng the
llelegates pledpd to him.
'!be front-<UMing McGovern 11ld be
llW "little to ba ilined by tolng into I
closed roam wlth lb< 11111-McGovern C1Jr
didatea." He uld be mlibl reconsider
it ropor!ft and -oulltdln were
allond In tho -' W!lile 1the -ton c red 1 n ti a !a
maneuvers oontl~ at 1he .-'! olrlp
hotels, about IClll antiwar demollllr1ton
marched on the convenUon cent.er car-
rying Viet Coor flap and lhoullng
1lopm. ·
There WU no Yiolence ln Ille Jll'llelt
ltd by the Vietnam V-Aplnot Iba
war u a -111......, ,._ lllocb
(!lee llVllJB, .... I)
. -~ '
'Ibe sizable assessed valuation in·
crease, Hess said, will also lower the
bond interest and redemption tax ~te
about five cents. Combine this with tbe
general fund rate cut, and the total tax
Uiee PROBLEM, Page II
Brainard, wu treated at South Coast
Hospita1, and then transfetted to the
Orange County Medical Center, He has
been released by Monday morning, a
hospital aide 11id.
Police said the accident occutted when
Nudes Nabbed.
Score: Poli.Ce 2, Nature 0
. . . Two young women, both from out of town, were cited ror misdemeanor
Indecent exposure by Leguna Bea<h poUce over the weekend for appearing
bare-cbes!Oll "" the bea<h. ' The first Incident ~ed Friday when an 11-yeaNld woman al Crescent
Bay Beach basked topleta on blr back.
Police Sgt. Neil Pllrcell 111d that she was attracting "considerable atten-Uon." ,. , ,.
A 21·yeaMld woman was cited Salttrday at the belch just ooulh or Sleepy
Hollow, also for going topless.
8otb women told officers they believed their costumes, or lack of them,
were legal since a Supreme Court ruling that the bare human figure wu not
ol ltseU lewd. ' •
Purcell noted that the ruling pertained ooly to bare -~ on "secluded
boacbes.'' 1'.0lkt wezo llOllfled by cUileh, calls, he Aid. • •
•
• .,
the westbound car drlven ~by Bralnard Loe ana, eo miles north of Saigon. ·
went into a high-speed skid. He was the father of seven children
Police Sgt. Norman Babcock said IOd bas been stationed In South Vietnam
witnesses reported the Brainard ear was
traveling at a high rate of speed, that it for 8 year. . . . ~ several other cars on the roadway The o~ Am~r1cans were ~heved to
shoulder and !hilt the lkid ,sllrtlill 'llhon._ be . adv1sei:s woth .South Voel.-_
the Vehicle e!ternpted to nerve between forces flg)rting their way up Hlgbw1y _u
two other c•s ' toward An Loe, an embattled provincial
Sgt. Babcock said that a complaint capital under siege since April (.
may be sought against Brainard. At. least nine U.S. generals. one U.S.
, . admoral IOd five South Vietnamese
Sur~ing &~test
Set in 18th Year
Laguna Beach'• Brooks Street Surf!.,g
OQnt<ot, oldesl on the Well Coast, trill
be held for the 181h consecutlvo year on
Saturday, beglming a\ 8 a.m,
Entries are limited to mldents ol the
Leguna Beach Unified School Dlstricl
area.
Trophies and plaques will be awarded
by the city Reoreatloo Department to the
four lnp ranking finishers in categories
for senior men'1 .surfing, junior men's
surfing, boya' aurilng, minnie> surf'mg,
women's surfing, men's and boys' body
surfing IOd board ractng.
Entry form.s ore available at the Oak
S~ Surf Shop, Ille Recreation ·and
, Lliquud ' Deportmonll, 17$ .N, Coast
lfighWay, and. II City Hall. .
'
· A'TT A.CKING RAM
KILLS TEA.CHER
FR!BOURG, Switu:rland (AP) -A
ram •!ticked 1 SwisJ t .. cher "" a
mountain excuraion Sunday IOd k:nocbd
him ovtr a dill. lie fell 11111 Jolt lo lda -· .
1enerals bad been idlled In Iba Vietnam
war. .......
.. ,., ......
. More -·for Ibo Orange
Cout Is wbat Ille ....,lady ta
predicting. Temperotorea ol lfOlllld
70 are e<pected at the beaches,
· rising to Iba low ••1 lnllnd. Lowa
In the (li's.
INSIDE TOPAY
Tht PmlaQoll f>aperr trial of
Daniel l:U.b<rv and Anlllonv
Russo btgi!ll m L-01 Angtltt I<> ctov, Jll • pc111cl of 100 prospeo-
tivc Jvrt1r1 toas .summontd to CJ>
ptar for a 11ltction proctu tllat
Ir eipccttil lo tak• abotlt a
week. Ste Stoll', Page 6.
l .M...,. r ...... . c.111eo• • -,. .. --" lJ ...".""" ' _...., ... . -. ..... , , .. 1, ""-ee W•ll ,.,,... ..... '
.... , llfl M
. .
DAILY PILOT LB
---I .. -
. B~e Wi~fall . --OVCrll Denwcrat,s
Capo. Board . Sets ·€onfident · ' ' Seek Man
. l . . . ..
__ J:ax Mon · ~ ~ud_y Of Wi~n~-c
Last week'• record wlndlall o( a,bout
i1.s million in new ttvenue from hikes in . . a...-valuation will bead ~ llst or
ltema for dtacusston tonlght bx ctruatees
of tho CoplllnDo Untiled Scboo1 Dlltrlct .•
The board la eipected to dtacuu the
pooalble uaes of the pmJected lncreaae In
tu revenue generated by last week's U..
~t boots in assessed valuation
~I the diltrlct for the coming
)1ar.
'!'rust.I orfClnally bad laced an ex·
tremely blaak lfll fiscal year because o!
domlnda on Income cauaed by the open· t,. ol llaoa Hills High School. ~uae of that budget drain and
pG!entlal loaa of revenue from the prob-
aMe coveroment purchaM! oC the North American lloclrwall faclllty In Laguna
Nlpal, the dlltrlct waa laced with cut-
blcka In capital lmp~ll and
matotenance. • . ·
But SUpt. Truman Benedict said late
last week that the whopping increase in
aaessed valuation will give the l;loard a
inucb greater laUtude in pan:tlinil .out dJ.trkt fuDda.
Till ..., 1'llOll9)' will probably allllw
t-to beef up purclwoa of aupplles
and eQUlpmen\ •lar Dana Hll11, Jmprove
the cllilrlct matotenance.llld bd!U.U... staffs llld relnatate other funda Into
cleploted badiet categories.
other items set for board di!cussion
and action tonight starting at 7:30 p.m,
IDclude:
-FUrther dllcUnlon and poaatble ac-
Ecology Groups
Will Honor Pair
For Efforts
Pro-environment People and Village J..aauoa will co-sponsor a community din-
.., Tueldly hooorlnc LalUJllllS Jame1
Dllll)' anc1 Gary Herbertloo.
Thi two men will bt lauded for their •lfledl,. ancl perMverinl ellorta and
oontribuUona for pnserv[~ and bel-Wl"I Ille env~nment,' a r o u p .......... wd.
DUiiy, a Lquna bookltote owner, 11
the -ol the Clttsena' Town Plan· nlu&· AuoclaUoo and the Laauna ~.Ille.
tion on complei, new trustee-area boun--
daries which are an attempt, trustees
said, to equalize the number ot voters
represented ln each ol seven lrwltee
areas. Whichever alignment lhe board
cboole1 for the areas, voters will make
tht lnal choice. ·-AMual eltction or board offlcers for
the period of the next 12 months . The
current president of ihe trustees is Bob
fiilll'!Jt of Laguna Niguel.
-Evaluation of an archltec:t'1 report
on the feulblllty of usln1 . the I.I-acre
school 1lte donated recenUy by Avco
Communlty Developera In the lint major
land gift by a developer to the Caplxtrano
d11trlct. • -conaideratlon of 1alary acheduleda
for the distriCt's-teaohlng e.mpJoye1 for~
the coming fiscal year. Alobtugh the
matter of thou wages appear cloee to
settlement, negotiations are far from
over with the district's teachlng _,em-
ploy es who seek increases in wages and
benefit&.
Nixon Slates
uiei Week
Of Meets, TV
Prealdent Ntson plans another quiet
w .. k of conferences with a group of top
advllers - a week oplced with televlaton
Vi•wlnc of the predicted hattle1 on the
convention fioor In Miami Beach.
Bud1et talka will be the subject o!
Tueaday'I talkl with Ctapar Weinberger,
ditoetor of !lie olllce of Management and
the Budiat.
Later In the week Nixon pla1111 con-
ferenct1 wltb'Sec:ralary of State William
Roam and former Treaaury Secretary
John Connally. Both men have bffD
trav.U., abroad for Nixon.
Tbe two m111 are not expe<ted unUI
Jale-thll Wiik oncl ftie diJcuaaiOlll will
revolve around foreJcn-pollcy mattera -
foculln1, It II expected, on the reopenlnf
of ne10Uatlona Tuelday at the Parll
Peace talks. Dr. HerbertaGI\ ii the mlnlater of the
LqllDa Beaclt Unlted M'etbodlal Church. Ha j1ll! returned ll'om the Unlltd Natto!)I
..,......S World Eo~nment Olli'
-In l!l'edtn. . .
The put waekend for-the President
and h1I wife, Pat1 wu punctuated Sun-
day by a trip to Loa Anlelea and a brief,
rare family raunton at tile borne of Mr1.
Nixon'• ball brother near Qrllfltb Park.
"Tiit d1DMr will bt lllld at HOUM Of
By)lll Cb1MM -urant. A no-bolt bar :win be open at s p.m. wllb d!Mer to be
terVed at I p.m.
Tiit ....t ii open to the~bllc and *-"tlona may be made calllna rr-Enllthardl at 414-or Loll ~elm)' ti Wl-1113. Colt la .. per penon.
~ P'ollowlol Ibo dinner Dr. llerbertaon p-iii show ilJdea or the ilN C<lnlmnce.
{
flina Knsoonson
er'Vices Tuesday
, A maao1al service wilt be beld at II
1.m. Tuleday In the Neighborhood
~ational Church for A t n a irliienion, lonlllme Three Arch Bay
tutdant wbo dled Wedneaday at the aae
Iii •. Mrt. Krlltenaon 11 aurvtved by a niece,
Mrt. Eucen• Hill of San Dloao and a
llepolater, Mrt. Lourlnt Kelly of Canoga f>:rk. A nau .. of Sweden, abe had lived In
(l>e Lal(llDI area for IS yoarl and wr ' an
aetlve member of the CQnaregat::nal
Church oncl the SiNdlah Vua Order.
The Prealdant and Finl Lady new to
Loll Anrelea by helicopter In the early
. aftamoon for the brief vlaft to the home
of Matthew Bender. He 11 recovering
from aur1ary.
Alao on band for the brief reunion wort
two of Mra, Nixon '• brothers, Biii and
Tom Ryan ·and their wt vu.
The Pruldent'a elder 1l1ter, Neva
Rettier, and her hUlband , allo ·were
there.
Security precauuon1 for the trip were
especially keen and agenll blocked of(
the narrow road leading to the home In
the hills of Los Angeles. Neighbors living
close to the house were ordered orf the
curbs before the Presidential party ar-
rived.
The Nlxona l1ndl!!d five milea from the
house -in a school baseball field -then
rode in a car the rest of the way to the
reunign. That landing bro1.11ht out about
200 well-wlshera from nearby resldenllal
area.!.
TOPICS Traffic 1 Tbe Rev. John Reynold& will conduct
Ille memortll aervtce.
I ~!fer Lasun• Beach Mortuary waa In Studv D1' scussed dlarp of· arrangements !or private In-J . '
llmmllll. __ __'.llle 1'91.!CS traffic study of the
blAf!W•YI Md b;'Way1 or'tiiuna Beach
wili be discussed by the Downtown
Buolne!S As110Clatlon Tuesday 81 7:15
a.m. in the Hotel Laguna Marine Room.
OIANtl COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
~ ~ Collt Dl'll.Y PILOT, trlltl ~Ith
It ~ 1111 Htwt-P',..., a. Plblrwd W
tM OIWWt COttt Publls.lllnl Olrttt!lnr. ,.,,._
t ,. .. .cilt ..... ,.. pWIW!W, Mtnd•y "''*""' ~ Hr CO.NI MtM, Ntwwt 111-,
Mljr\n,.tM kKll/"*'nhlln V•llty, l•lllMI
9tldt. ln1M/S.ci.llellltdt Md Strt C'ltmenlt/
SM Ju. OIPlllfNM. A. 1Jnul• r.glontl
""'"" .. pvblW.. .... ,.. Md lllnd1yi.
TM ,,-.1 •lbtll11t '4a"' k 11 »o West
111 Jfr'Mt, c.ta M-. C.!lrorn11, m2'.
ll:1lt1rt N, W11d ,.,.,.,,. ... ,.....,..
J11k II:. Curl1y VliDt ~I 111111 Gentr-11 Mtnllt1r
TJri.111111 K11•ll a1111rw
Ttritfl'ltt A. Mutplrllnt MaMor,. £it1tw
Chtrl• H. IA11 lti1hat4 P. Nill ......... MIMtlnl lllltotrt
--~-Jll M1t AYt"ll'
M1rh11 AM,.n, r.o. ••• •••, t2•1z ---°"'.Mall -'=':Cf'""' •5••1 -..., •. ,. "*" leldlt ,.,... ti! .......... ,.
len C Ifill ....... ,II CtflllM AMI
'"•'••• C1141 '4!-4111
Cl.WW Altwfl t c '41·1671 ,...... ................... ,
'''"'
7
4ff.f.M6 C~, t"' .,,...... CM1t l'IMW!lrf =-~" ..tl,,. "';' J:i.i:-....=''=: ____ ....,,_., ... ...... " ., . .,...,..
=-:."'-.;:: ..... ·= ~ =I llp MIMi.:; .. ..,....,,, Mn~ _ .... _
' ,
The federally-funded study, prepared
by Wilbur Smith and Associates of San
Francllco, makes a number of recom·
mend•tlons for. traffic signals, parking
facilities and "channelization" of traffic
ir. the downtown basin.
The report suggests closure or Fo,..11
Avenue be(w .. n S. Coast Highway and
Glenneyre Street and recommends Sec-
ond Stne! be extended through to
Ocean Avenue.
Also slated on the 11enda Is election of
otncera and board members.
Budget Session
Set in Laguna ·
•
Lal(llDI Beacb city councilmen wlll
open their budget atudy aeulons at
· a 1peotll meeting at 7:!0 p.m. Wedl!ff-
day in city baH council chllmberl.
Under discoHlon will ba a propooed
14.2 million budget for llscal 11172-73,
whlcb tnttlal figures Indicated would In-
volve a de/Jclt of more than llOQ,000 and
a begiMlnl balance or only $20,000.
However, an unupected windfall
from a 14.8 perce"ftJ!crease in aS1C9aed
valuation -oomp~p;:,• with the 1 or 2
percent anticipated In lhe bucirtt -ta ••~led to make aome : aubotanUll
cban101 In' the budlet plctlll'I.
The Wednesday 1tudy session ls open
lo the public.
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)
Democrats approached the slarl of t~elr
1972 nbmlnating convention today with
,George McGovern holding to the lnside
trick.
McGovern'• hopet for a nrat·ballot vier
tory were buoyed by two favorable
parliamentary rulings and signs of sup-
port from uncomm itted delegates.
The South Dakota aenator aaid he was
confident of winning back 1!1 crlllcal
Callfornfa votei taken from him by rivals
on ihe ,pafcy's Credentials Corngilttee.
But ln the labor rank•, there waa
evldl!!nce of a mounting drive to head off .
McOoverp.
AFt-C!O offlclal1 were clrculattng
privately a har1h'!y ~worded att~ck on
McGovel'h11 record oh labor, the Vietnam
war, communism, cl vii rl&hta and a laun..
dry list of other llaues. ·
•
' MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Th t
DtmocraUc "name came" reached for
vice presidential possibilities today.
Among those mentioned was Edmund S.
Muskle, who once tbou&ht the presiden-
Ull nomination waa hll for the asking.
MU1kle1 wM ran tor vlet prtlldent
wilh Huber! Humphrey four years ago,
emphasized that he was not seeking that
role again, and there waa no eign i'f
would be offered to him. Hov;ever,
Muskie stopped ohort of oaylng he would
no\ accept It.
Mu1kle'1 name w11 among a dozen or
so be!ng mentioned by convention
delegates 11.s possible runnlng-mate1 if
sen. Geor1e M.cGovem locked up the
prile. None of the apeculaUon aeemed to
have much to support ti.
Others mentioned included. From the headquarters of another can-.
didate, George C. Wallace, came a call
'for party chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien
to rula:n as convention chainnan or ask
for a vote or confidence from tbe con-
vention's delegates.
Charles S. Snider, the Alabama
aovernor'1 campaign manager, said hi1
-action wa1 prompted by O'Brien'• rulings
Sunday on California credlentlals.
-sen. Edward M. Kennedy, (D-Ma!S.),
whorp McGovern himself named • as
among: the first persona he would call to ,
talk about the second spot on I~ Ucket,
althouah be did not say he woilill offer
the paa! to him. Kennedy •till WU 11Ylng
no to all talk. /_
-Leonard Woodcock, preoldent of the
'-'----ii.rTilii'11i-_Unlte<LAuto .. Workm and one oLthe_Jew
top unlon leaders friendly to McGovern. O'Brien, who will preside over the con-
vention, held it would take a majority of
those elegible to vote to adopt cre-
dentials reports and that the unconsested
members of challenged delegations m8y
vote on the challi:nges.
ALABAMA GOV. GEORGE WALLACE WORKING OUT IN MIAMI McGovern bimsell mentioned Woodcock
Wounded Candidate Preparing for Strenuous Conve ntion Activity as one possibility. As a presidential can·
didate he would badly need labor support
so far denied him.
TbeH rullna• could be Important
aource1 of llrenalh to McGovern. U be
capturte the conte1ted C a It f o r n t a
deleaates be could be lllted to within IO
votea of a llnt·ballot triumph WednHday
night, accordJna lo Tbe Auoclaled PreH'
tally.
Labor leaden, never very keen on
McGovern, slashed at hll comment laat
month lhal he would 10 to Hanoi and beg
JI he !bought that would win a rele~ of
American prllonen of w1r.
FromPGfeJ
MUSKIE •.•
throuah lhe Miami Beacli bu1lne11
district and past 1lde 11r .. 1a lined with
retirement hotela.
Security remained Ught with federll
troopa and st.le pollce forces atandlna
by, ~d olive drab helicopters patrolllnl
the cloud-acudded akiu over the white
· llnea of boteil.
Rep. Shirley Chllbolm picked up a
potanUll 13 add!Uonll flral ballot votes
today when Sen. Humpbroy told black
deleaatu pledaed to him lboy could vote
for ber on the Initial pre1ld111Ual roll-call
Wedneaday, • L._
Aldu·satd Humphrey telephoned Mrs.
Chilhohn to announce hla declalon, made
In .. aponaa to her proposal that black
deloaatea 1hould stick toaelher for at
lea1t one vote.
Mra. Chllbolm, lint black woman to
aeek the pre1ldenUll nomlnaUon, claim•
to have aa dtle11tu ln her camp, but ha1
been fllhthia a move from Julian Bond
lo !trip her of aome of tboae,
Blast Kills Woman
In Paris Restroom
NANCY, France (AP) - A youna
woman burned her111!!lf to death In the
toilet of thi; Strasbourg-Paris express
train today.
The train was stopped after an ex-
plo!lon burled plecea of wood, metal and
glass on to 1 t a t J o n platfonn at
Lerouville. Trainmen found a partially
empty &asoline container and the char-
red body of the woman, eatlmated to be
about 20 years old, Inside the toilet of a
p111eneer car.
FrotnPageJ
PROBLEM •••
rate of 13.37 per $100 aaaeaaed vlluaUon
could drop to 13.21 during the 1172-73
fiscal year.
A peraon owning a '401000 home would
realize a $12 decreaaa In ht• tsxu U the
board goes alona wltb Heu' recom-
mendation. / .1
The board agreed to bold a study
auafon 11 s a.m. saturday to hammer out
priorities for UIO or the extra !undo.
"lt11 the flrat time in •ix or seven
yean the board baa bad this kind of
money to work with," Heu remarked.
Board Pre1tdent William Tbom11 oald he
would like to reatort cull tn custodial,
reserve, da11Uled, (aecretary, mafn..
tenance men etc.) a 1alary increase and
teacher aalary increase accounts, In that
order.
Gerald Linke aald the most pre!Slng
problem wu "Care and maintenance of
the bulldJna•" and that tboae accounta be
replenlabed.
Talk of beefing up aome of the ac-
count. apptrenUy annoyed t r u 1 t e e
Patilcla Glflelte who w~ Ille would
1tand 'behind the EducatlonAI Priorities
Study Committee recommendaUon for a
.. bare bone• budget."
Heu responded that the district has
been working with a tight budget 1lnce
1970 wben deep cuts were made In pro-
gram• and the tu rate wa1 cut 11 centr.
Further cut1 wue made laat year.
The bualneu manager warned agaln1t
auch an acUon this year.
Heaa afao told the lJoard Friday that
--pruning practices durlns the past
year have lef't the district with $95,000
that wa1 budgeted but not 1pent. Also re-
maining la $50,000 of undistributed
reserve money, Hess 1aid.
Because trustees must adopt a budget
for publication Tuesday night, Hess
recommended that the ending balance
and the new money due to the asse1sed
valuation jump be placed in the reserve
account until trustees decide what to do
with the money. •
"There is no way between now and
Tuesday that you can spend all that
money," He1s told the board. 11We wHI
take all the money .. put it in the beg!n-
nlna balance account. That way you'll
have three week.I to decide what you
want ro ao." The budget will come up for
final adopllon Au1. I.
FrotnPageJ
WALLACE ...
for a strong national defense.
"I want the Democratic party to
become the party of thl!! average
citizen," \Vallace said.
But he said the party must change its
direction or "it will pass into oblivion."
As for a third party bid this year,
Wallace 1aid, "I don't have any .plana at
all!' !or that.
Wallace expressed willingness to
discuss a possible compromise with other
c...ndidates on the disputed California
delegate Issue. ~ut left uncertain Just
what hll poolUon would be, saying 'I'd
altnply be fair."
He also said t: had no plans for the
time being to make an appearance on the
convenUon floor.
Wallace bas displayed far lel8 infiu·
ence so far than aides predicted, remain-
ing secluded In his 20th floor presldenUal
suite of the luxurio\11 Sheraton F o u r
Ambasaador1 In downtown Miami •
His 1talf dlscontlnued medical reporta
on his condlUon, f e a r 1 n g ml!ln·
terpretatlons.
They conceded that his face aometlme1
unexpectedly contorted with 1>4ln !rom
hl1 abdominal woundJ. But they 1 a I d
Wallace wou1d make an appearance in
his wheelchair "at least once" at the
convention, perhaps to denounce the plat-
form 's "asinJne" endorsement of com·
pulsory school busing as a useful tool
toward lntegr-atlon.
Trio Arrested
In Drug Sale
A narcotics squad purchase of SO doses
of the drug: .meacalJne and accompanying
arrest ol three men Saturday marked a
weekend of 23 drug related arrests by
Laguna Beach police.
Of the total arrest•, eight were of
juvenilu. All the arrests were for
possession of minor quantities of
dangeroua drugs or marijuana, police
said.
The mescaline purchase waa made in a
shopping market parking lot at the cor·
ner of South Coaat Highway and St.
Ann's Drive, police said. Purchue price
was $$0.
-Reub in Askew, the governor of
Florida and Democratic convention
keynoter. Aakew won naUonal attentlon
but popular "Jectton In hta own atate In
a referendum that saw him pitted
again.It opponents of busing.
From Pagel
RECALL •..
1iderable amount of money.
-I b~ summer school because
if offers remedial work for cl)lldren who
need it and allows high schoolSt°udents to
accelerate to take courses they are
unable to take durlnl the 1chool year.
Over 400 parents -wanted 1ummer school
for their cblldnn .
-I support the evaluation of textbooks
in our district.
-My concern for flscal reaponstblllty
was expressed In my insistence on a
150,000 reserve fund tbla year and a
$100,000 reserve for next year.
-I believe In a "U&ht lhip d<Jcl>llie."
-1 am appalled at the inability ol
1~cial lntere1t groups ·to comprth~d
that board members are e1ected by the
citirens of thll community, who are lhe
owners of the tcbools.
Llnke, In bl• formal mponse, llatu:
-My campaign tor truatee aave th•
voter• a clear choice. I told them what I
stood for, they elected me, and It I.I their
voice which I hold to be the upreaaed
will of the community, not that ol I Te.
call committee.
-In the face of a taxpayer revolt, our
school system continues as the costliest
in Orange COuntf. Ta1payers want to
know, In cleare1t language poulble, bow
much is sp«?nt on what kJnds of in-
struction and whether we're achlevtne:
sound, timely, educaUonll folla; Ill of
the boasting of national acclaim and
references to parent and teacher
popularity -polls, fall 11 controvenlal
rhetoric alongside this basic need.
-My philosphy on education ia not
shared by !boat who contend there la no
truth, no real valuea, that put hl1tory is
lrrevelant •.. while an electorate 1eu
wisdom In balanclna a viewpoint, Educ ..
tlon does not
-Football 11 one of the moll popular
eporU tn Amulca. Every year our varal-
ty contributes thouaaDda to our school; It
ia our only profl~maklng compeUtlon.
-Recall in Laguna II becomfna the ID-
strument of auualnaUon of the aplrJt
and Intent of orderly government and
human vaJue.
--.. ~---------•
. . ' . Cl ti 'J COST A MESA JEWELRY .. LOAN ~ New ancl Ukt New Mll'Chancll11
DIAMONDS
U.Dllt wtUTI oot.D
DIAMOND A RING IMllALI • °" • a. ,....,. ..
• ti llMll Die,,_. e .11 Ct. T•I Wtltlll
Liii
ONLY $995 NIW
U.DllS 141( W,t .
DIAMOND RUBY
CLUSTIR RING
.. Mtwfw&nt.M
Lill
ONLY$325 OPIN a NIW
' ,. 7 6 ALL CARRY OUR MON. MONIY IACK THRU GYARANTEE SAT.
. COSTA MESA JEWILRY It LOAN
IUI NIWl'OllT aL VD,
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA
PINDIR SHOWMAN OUl:T'AR
AMP. and DUAL "40WMAN
SPIAKIR IOX
with two 15" Dl30 JIL's
~::. $395
' GlllSON GUITAR
S.G. St11141t4 llt,trlil
CHlllY PINllH Ull $245
WITH CAii NIW
646-7741
•
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CAMIRAS
HMM SAU 11\.i.-JllOW~ MM MOVll IRA
MODl1. Dl•7' Ull $2'5 NIW
SIL&.-MOWIL\. 1• MM SOUND PROJICTOR
MODI!. PILMIOUND Ull $245 AUTO LOAD NIW -
-STDIO .
JUC STIRIO AM-PM
CASllTIE PHONO
· · w/two lpttktrs
NIW -$245
ettNf TWACJC
SONY TAPE DICK
llCOH•
PIATIACI
MMot Liii $65 rct NIW
WI
OUAllANTll
IVIRYTHINO •
WI SILL
I
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17
I
I _,
I
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Saddlehaek TOtlay's Flllal
N.Y. Steeks
. ' .· '
VOC. 65, N_O. ·192, ·2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES .. ORANGE COl,ll'ITY, ~L1FORNIA MONDAY, JULY '10,-·1977 TEN CENTS
' ~ All-1Jea~.School 1 0ll to Good Start
' '• ' . I • "'
• • • •
ByCANDACE 'PEAllSON
~ .., Deity '""' steff
... J • -•
:un:...i ~ ~ i::ts pll~ 1~!:'~a::: =~~A= : =i~!.::.i;.:n~;r ~~"! .
Ilsa Ripley dropped her lunch pail and ~at El ~,'School. . Lane In April. of the 45-15 say it makes more ef!ective
His friend agreed because "there's
nothing to do in. the summer" and
because when be was on double sessions
he ''never had MY. time to play because I
got out of school at t :20 p.m."
like any other tint day of achool,
whether in September or July.
Appearances bore this out as both boys
and girls showed up wearing new abots
and brrying shiny lunch pails.
a~ldeotally 'stepped on 00-sandwich, ~-. _, __ f ' t ~ ~.,,_ di lded Int I ,,.. of acho!>I billldlngs and avolijs the ., ''.~ 45-~t-:thit !be chll\lftn go Bu ~ ""'w•n•are v o our tru-...month "summer learning loss."
bufoUJerwise everything went witholit a IM>'lih f~ eye.lea .In wliti:h·tbey atl/'fld groupc anil only .three groupc attend The cblldren at El C8mino .thts morn-hit<h lhil mor · w""0 about 570 • • · rung , "::"f' . school for .Qine weeka:,(45 1~)1and then ,school 'lt One time. ., , · ing were obivious tO these technicalities
. . !:hilclrolf ~an tbeirlif$1 day in Irvine's . go on vacation _!Of ll!i:ee, W~ks (15 dayal... w;.o.the fourth groufi• begins . ii•~ first and ·to any past dlsaenters to the Idea.
A third-grader uid she likes coming
back· .to school J\OW "becailse I like to
wprk In ])ot weather."
• Principal Delaine RiChards . direc!«f.
the crowd with a bullhorn. ~d>ers' •
estimations of the day rang!!'d fnin can-
ing it "the same as any other'~ to Nying .•
"the children ~ more enthusiastic
this time."
· first yaar-round Chool. A. total of 711 dilldren are registered., dayilf ocbool July 31, ,one group will go They were ju$! happy to be there. ,'llhe: !taclitlooal • three-monlh ·summer for El ·C8mind 'School, wjlidt wlll f... for it.I fllS~ three -voca~on. , "It's fun and I like it," said ooe boy
' "The consen51.1s 'of opinion as buses
unloaded and children searched for their
new teachers seemed to be that this was vacation was !flOl'leneel to three weeks abandooed'Rancho · San. Joaquin School'. .'l'be to!al nwn~OI school dayo-180-a · about cooling back to school
I
•
Boarr's · First . :
Meeting Tonight
The f~t .. f!icial lrvi!)e Unified School
Board meeting will take place tooight at
7:30 ln,tlte lecture hall at Univenity•High
&hool.
The resuJts of the unification election
have been certified by the Orange County
reglstrar·ol votera ·and· the Orange Coun-
ty ScboOI Bo8nl ]!as .P!'5'ie<I a resolution
making the district.I official. Trustees wlll 'be gl•en th!o·oath of of!ice
by Dewey Jlillman from tbe county
department of education. • . ·
The eloctl911·oi ofllcers, desii!i&Uim of
an ofliclal JUllM 'lllil meeting times will
be the first orller of ~-· .' Tlie remalnder 'of·the;agenda Will con-
<entnte. on finaiicial mattm like mte
school building iiid applicationa, bond and
tax, r.lt<lions, lu!)<!sifot; tbe first year of
operation, possible exemption from · a
long:range master pJan, the Wit · oJ u:·
IStlag district. 11'...lmi)el and fmlda ltJf
coOsultants In.~ a superintenden.t. · The new trustees are C h a r I e s
lloolanger, Lee~lcoll, Sb1!111ft sircello;R.
Dean Olson and Nolui Ginsburg. '
Barbecue Slated'
' For Irvine Teens
The Irvine T~ Center will s~r. a
barbecue for au area, teenagers at
University High School Friday from,7::!0
~ 'i •
IQOl!l'T :~1v,...;irs-.A1:Mos:r , AS-GOOD ·As 1NEW' !
Vohmlffr Lo,11.~ Hflpa Llsa.Rlpley With Lunch
•
U~S. Gener~l, 3 Others
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• • •
Killea ·b 1 ·Enem-Shell ; .. -.. Y .... y .· p.m. to ll p.m.
, '"" tem center is, operated "'®day, SAIGPN.(lil'):) .,-,A'}icirtb y~ stepped out of their helicopter when a
Wednesday and Frldiy nights at the high -ar1mery shell killed Bil-Gen. Richard J. shell hit nearby. •
school by the city recreation program. Tallman and .three other Americana SUn· . They jumped i\lto : a bunker, then
The berbecl>e In tbe ,quad and gym day near the besiepd .}lfovlnclal, caplW climbed out apln and wera running for a
area ia free. Participants mutt .bring of An Lac, n!uilary ...,_ Aid today. · command piJBt 100 -yarits away when 1
their ~ food for grilllng · ~l!lh Two 'Other. 11.fl.1 ""'tlliiudl w.ro :~ shell nploded In their litiolll-~ watennelon, ~ and-wounded In~ attact,,tllt -'•Id: 1 •• l'l'Sident NflllY'll Van Thieu landed In ~'--will-·. vtded..' f r ' raun..J •,of.. llGneld6Ji, 'Pli,,•,..,. theaamespottwiodaysagodurtiic'lntn·
•-""Pl" : 1.. deputy ~'ol"lbe 3rdi ~' · Uon-butnoart1Uery11beU.capie Ava~ i.•conter acllytUes include t ~ c;.,na.111!1 _..,il!C ln,the An thin .00-1lrds of the Tbieu party. • Ping~, 1118C1:Jime, .Jll!l!L t.abl,e.1, Locaru,et'inllesllOrih·o!SailOIL Meanwlllle a 1ollo-man South Viet·
...Ue)'ball aild color lelOvlltlil. • ' ' ffei 'I'll ~ lathar <I. .oeven ,c;bll~ namese -· foree' that moved Into bat·
• ' ' · and bas ·lloen MtiClle<l111 ~-•l<l!Wn • tered ~ Tri Wt weekoM "'1bdrew
1 ' ~ •• I fs"~i '%;.. ~· • 1 • '1l '1~ • • tD tlle .. edp.of town today ;Xd ~fdlOf.
()8\land Strike .;.""....;~=:.:'!·~=~-:i~cav~
: . . -.
Hopeful Fails to Settle Squabble
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern gained new delegate momen-
twn again.st a divided1and desperate op-
position today and confidently.spurned a
-, e-bour peace-making effort by Ed·
1 ~ S. Muskie ,to .compromise the
California delegate siating dispute.
Muskie, assuming the reconciler's role
but refusing to abandon his ovm can-
didacy in McGovern's favor, warned that .
the Democratic National C:Onventlon
beginning only bours away was "being
tprned into two armed camps" whic.b
would commit p8rty suicide i n
November.
· But MCGovern rejected Muskie's c~ll
for all candidates to meet with
Democratic . National C ha i rm a n
Lawrence F. O'Brien in his Fon-
tainebleau Hotel offices this afternoon to
discuss a Califom,ia and Dltnl?is creden-
tials compromise to avert the "prospec-
tive self-slaughter" on the convention
floor .
Muskie .said l\is secret P,lan ·would
ti neither assure J'IOr preel• cendidacy"
~· l!elliplelf idicide tile •R'••ld•tial
noinlnatfoll -Wednesday-~ht. ' ·
But McGo'1rii uld .be""'"d "aee· little.
, · to,be,pfned by_...,,.lnto a claaed !'.OoD>
, with m an U-llleGqvern candidates. I
have a feeTuig the ...Wt would be! to l."
Muskie went to O'Brien's room, as did
Sen. Hubert ,H. Humpbrei, Sen. Henry
M. Jackaon an4 former North-Corollna
governor Terp Sanford but they ·called
off the meeting 'when McGovern failed to
delegates should stick together for at
least Q!!e vote. •
Mrs. Chisholm, first black woman to
seek the presidential nomination, claims
·to have 28 delegates in her camp, but has •
been fighting a move from Julian Bond
to strip her of some of those.
McGovern met with a group of farm.
state delegates, toured state delegations
largely opposed to him and met with a
caucus of women in an effort to have lhe
convention overturn his big setback by
the party credentials committee.
Hwnphrey held a staff meeting a n d
then visited a gathering of women
delegates, continuing to drum on the
"J'm-no-qultter" theme he hu been
.wundinC in hotel corridors, caucusu and
news conferences.
"We will fig~t hard but -my lair,• be
said. "Are we'ralslng a breed that •YI
'give it to me: I've earned it and If YoU
don't I'm 1olng to pick up my marbles
and walk home'?"
Nudes Nabbed
Sco re: Police 2, Nature 0
Two young women, both from out of town, were cited for misdemeanor
Jndecent exposure by Laguna Beach police over the weekend for appurlna:
bare-chested on the beach. •
The first incident occurred Friday when an 11--year~Jd woman at Crescent
, Bay' Beach baske~ topless on her b~ck. ' · · -• -
· PollCe Sgt. Neil Purtell said" !hat she was attracllilg "caiilli!erable attei>-tion." . '
A ~-yaar-old ......,. -clled SatardQ al die budl Joa! ...itb of li.w , B!>l!o•.:abo tor .01p1 tiJP1e!i: • . .
Both women told officers· they believed their eo.tum.is, or laci: of lllim,
were legal aince a Supreme-Court-ruling that the hara human fl&ure -not
of ltaeU lewd. ·7
.Purcell noted•that .the ruling pertained .only•to bore"''"".., "aecluded
,beaches.',' Police were notifi~ by citizen calls, be said.
Wallace Rules Out Raee '.
8~df ~nfident. of a. floor Vi~ in
hiS_ bid to regain 151· California delegates
crucial to bis chances for a f11'8t-ballot nop-iination~ ·~ ftoot-running,·~cGovern
said, "It is my present inclination .to Jet
the cpnvention decide these disputes;."
. Muskie declined to state his pojtuon.on Al::!_ Th. 11'•. d . .-Party .Candi" date whether ·McGovern should' be given back :;;::i
tbe -151 caJilornla delegates : stripped
from him In pre-eonvenlion rullnq. ' · ·
"We have seen this conven~ion being MIAMI B£ACH (UPI) George become the -·party of the .average
turned into two anned camps," Muskie WaJlace said today he has no plans to be citizen/' Wallace said.
•. aaid, ~prepared. II> resort · to ~very_ • -third ~rty presidential Can""·te ii But be said the party must ""•·-!'-parliamentary maneuver whlCh might r-_,.. ......... ~ .,.
contribute . to tha victory of ·one or dissati.slled with the choice of the direction or "It will pus Into. obllvtan."
another candidate. If preparatioris for Democratic convention. M f<Jr a third party bid tbli ,..,,
battle continue, and battle is joined on its The Alabama governor, at his first.full-Wallace said, "I don 't have any plans at
present ground, the toll in political dead blown news _conference since being all" for that.
and injured could.be horrendous and our critically wounded ln an assaSBination at-
party and .Its nominee could be among tempt May 15, said al t)le same tlnle that Wallace e1J1reased willingness 1 o
the casualties." he does not belleve the Democrats can discuss a possible compromise With Othel'I
Before calling ·for the meeting of the win the elecllon wilhout tha help of those c.ndidates on the disputed Calilornla
presidential hopefuls Muskie told who support.him. · • delegate iasue, bllt left uncertain just
rtporters, "I'm still a ca'ndidate and will ·Sitting before a b8ttery.of microphones what hll position would be, saying ••I'd
be a candJdate until this convehtion is in a wheelchair because of P.lralysis simply be fair."
ended." He said he waa keeping the from · the waist down from one' of the 'He ,l)so said he had no plans for tbe
delegates pledged to blm. bullets tbal liit him, WallaooWd:1' waa time.being to make an appearance on the
.While the convention c red en l la Is still an active candidate '....:. aod woUldn't conventiocrfloor. L
maneuv .. s continued ht the r..ort strip have stayed In the race if beTellne could -Wlllace""ll...-di!jltaye<l far less inlli>
hotels, about 500 antiwar demonstrators not physically lake it. ence so far thM aides predicted, remain-m~hed on the convention center c.ar· Wallace stressed ag&in.that be , felt the ing aecluded in his 2oth fJoor presidenUal
rymg Viet Cong flags and mouUng Democrats would be In "'at trouble In suite of the !uxurioul Sheraton Four
alogan1. • Novemberif they did not 'ad.pt a plat· Ambaasaclon In -town Mloml.
'!'here wa• no violence m the j>rotes\ . fonn along the lines he advocates _ in· Hts stall discoatlnaed medical. reporta
led by the Vietnam. Veterans Against the eluding an antibuaing stilhd and a plank ·· (8oe WALLACE, Pap I)
War as it w~ its_ way seven b~ks for a strong national defense. :
through the Mumu Beach business "I want the DemocraUc i-irty to dlstttct and past aide streets lined with .
retirement botell.
Security remained Ught with federal
lroopc and mte police forces standing
by, and olive drab helicopters patrolling
the cloud-scudded skies over the white
lines of hotels.
Rep. Sh\fley Chisholm picked up a
potenUal 93 addillnnal first ballot vote•
toe!PY when Sen. Humphrey told black
delegates pledged to him they could vote
for her on the Initial presidential roll-call
Wednesday. .
Aides 'said Humphrey telephoned Mn.
Chisholm to announce his decision, made
In .response to her proposal that black
Autos Sprayed . •. ' .
With ·Obscellities
In Laguna Hills .. -~
_ Fourteen Lai\ina JU~ J,elsurt World
residents today face the reoalntlng· of 11\eir-automo6i1e1 and the. obflteratlon of
·oblceniUes , sprayed on the caro , by
unknown Intruders during the wee~
...... <'4ialt
More aunshlne foe tbe Or-
Coasl ls · what the -therlady 11
predicting. Ttmperatum of .......r
70 are espected al tbe beacbel,
rising to the low IO'• Inland. Lows
in the 80'•·
INSmE TODAY
• •
I • f...,.. fllbtinl lllelr'way up lllglm'y 1J f!.m the ~ • • ·Ends in ·1% Hike· -. ""1.0c, lD-0\ftbalt!<'f']llOYlncial. Tbe Soutll Vlelna-. said Friday \hat . , • ', • , copltal ... _.. alnce Ajlril I. govmunellt i._ ..,.....ed·two-thlrda of : W.ords ll e Said
Oran;., Coun~. Sheriffs , off Ice r ~ the danlage inflicted to the
cara and ne111;tiy washroom wlllll and
bull~ In the Ronda Granada IOClOr OI
'the ratliemtnt complex al neortr. a.ooo.
Tht Pttttogon Nptra biol of
O.niel Ell11><111 and Anthonr
R!'JSO beQini in Leif Angctc1 to-
day, "' a f'Glltl of 100 pnl>lp<O>
tiue ;urors 19111 11Amfll0Md to OJ><
ptar for a 1elccticm proceu that
II erpeefed to "t47'e about • t
week. See Jttni, Pagic 5.
O·~ ·-(AP). -'!be ·•--'-~t lealt nlDe .14..s.·_.-ata, one U.S. the city and the only.major~ ... ' ~"' ~-, admiral and ,llol! Sooth Viet._ the ca ... -of the _..._. .... _.._ ~ .... ·llllh aaalllll Kaller _ .. bail ~ ...... _,___ ...... ~--_,
' Found1llon JaclltU.. In lbe 1lut Bly hU .. ---kWOd In ""'• ,..._., • citadel near the __. of tho cflJ, .
ended wilb raUflcaUo~ al a -~--· Howev•, Allied oflicors Mid tadaJ Ille' Ins clirlrl a. 7 ~ _,,.,... I ~" 47, tnd !is party llod just Ns>rt-Vietnam-dll1111dtra nt<IWd
increaoe. • • • • ·~and an prtpareof to 'fillll alid'l'be~~::.:O~~ · :R~ Gi;onp to M~t rm;.~t.fu11,o1ng1obeVt11~to
111 • menlbenhlp meotlq s.nqy to ..,. take. 'Ille bunker o:omplex~ are un-
qpt tho tW<>,...--· Jrallle'1dt1-adtlui7-1ttaaon believable,"• U.S. adv;. told UPI cor-' ,The old -.ct foe worllera at Kai1tt ,...._ Wll -t !1111fP1 at 7:11 ID ,.piodent Barney-Seibert. "They ara
!actlltiel ID O.kland , lllollmorld, Hay· CIM1ftllf1Dil11HIC 1nta fte mutlq dltarmlned to hold Quang Tri. There ii
ward •ad Borteley OlpirOd May I. . la.-ID die ~ (lee GEND.U., Pip ~
~-
• •
,
' Hurt His Ears
.' PARIS (AP) -''Thank you,
President McGovern~" Slid Ronald
' Reagan. "And I bope I ne-have
to usa !hot upr.,.lon aptn."
The California governor; malling
. a speech b<lore tbe Amtrlcan Club
of Paris today, waL lntroduetd by
Its -Iden~ Da~ld McGovern.
'
•
DepUtlel said the ln!raden .uHd• spray
paint. IO ,de/ace the , 14 can, -by
sldewalb and bllildlap and llalhlng
machines In the adjacent community
wundry. •
"One Or .two of • the vlctlma Im-
mediately did their own wpraytnc on top
of tho obsceniUeo until they could got
their car1 to a paint lhop," an in-•
v..tlptor said. "Some of the messqos
Clabbed on their can wera about u vlle
•you'll· ever llnd."
L,M. ,..,.. 1
...... I
-· I =-/~ ,......,., u --' .............. ............. , .. ,, -.. " ............. ' .... i I 1• .
.... ....-... u -" --. --' lffN,..., • --=--·:: -.. -. =---.,
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DAILY PILOT IS
McGovern Nixon Sets
Confident Quk.t lf eek
•
Of-Winning-· . . . Of Meets · ~
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
Delpoc:rlbl approocbed the start of their
ltft .nomlnatlnc convention today with
Geqo McGovern boldloa to the Inside
lnlcl<.,
McGovern's hopes lar a first-ballot Yic·
tory were buoyed by two favorable
porllamontary rulinp ond 1lp ol oup-
porl lrom unoommitltd delegat.,.
Tiie South Dakota senator Nid. he was
....Odtnt ol wlrinlns back 151 cr!Ucal
Cll'Jomla YOln taken lrom bin> by rivals
1111 the party's Credentlall Commltlee. •
Bui In the l!l)lor ronks, there waa
mdeDct of! a mlunting' drlve to btad off
McGovern:
A!'J-CIO officla)s were . ~lmll~~rig .
privately a harahly worded ·att!i<li· ori
·iMcGovern'1 record on labor, tJ>e Vtet~m
war •. communiam, civil right• and a laun-
dry nst of olher lsauea. .
From the headquarters of 8ftotll'ft'"can-
dldate, 0-,e C. Wallace, came • call
,lar party chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien
&o ·reaign aa-coovention-ebairman or uk
for a vote of confidence from the con-
vention's deJqates.
Charles S. Snider, the Alabama
pemor'1 campaign manager, 1ald his.·
action wu prompted by O'Brien'• rulings
liwlday on Calllomla credlentlals.
O'Brien, who will preside over the con-1
wentlon, held II would lake a majority ol
-tleglble to vote to adopt cre-
denilals reporta ond that the unconaested
members ol challenged dtlegaUOlll may
wle on the challqes.
TbeM rullnp could bO Important
10UrCe1 ol strensth to McGovern. II he
captures the contested C a 111 o r n I a
delegates he could be lifted to within Iii
votel ol a flrat·ballot triumph Wednesday
Dight, according to The Aa!ociated Pren'
tally.
Labor leaden, never very keen m
JfcGovern, llubed at hll comment last
111C111th that he would 10 to Hanoi and beg
If he tbouibt that -Id win a releaae of
American pril<inera ol war.
"The notion that an American pres1-
~ lhould go begging to· Hanoi will
. mab -only to~ who believe
. that In the Vietnam war all right la on
one lide, Han61'1 and all M'Clllg OD the
other, oun," ll1d the paper.
• McGovern wu crlUclzed al10 !or volell
aplnat minimum wage Inc r e a a e s ,
unemployment comPen11tton and
ftderall7 ouppoNd job projecta. On civil ~. It uld he had been abaent
~ ....... olblr times.
• • ' Yorba Linda Set :
!fo Protest Plan
' . For Chino Hills
. Mayor Rudolph Castro of Yorba Llnda
tolled • spedal city co!UICU meellng Sun· •1 to protest 6:e propoael! Chino llills
• airporl planned locr and a hall miles
'l1ortll of the city.
, CUtro told a crowd ol 300 ciilaens that
'Jira• and Plncenlla were JoW., his city , ' ·m lho battl~ to prttent development or
·the jel lacillty.
• PrlYloully, Olinda Village and Brea
:ll'OUJll had 901ced proteata. Cutro lald
La Babra oflldals pn>bably would join
. the light, too.
• The mayor uld telegrams were aent
.Pro I ea I In C Fadoral Aviation
_,_ation atr space approval of the
r,cwt)' announced last week.
• The FAA approval must be followed by
an envtronmenlal lmpacl study of the
propooed Fparl on 23,000 acte11 strad-
dllnl the Orange-Son Bernardlnd Counly
llne, north ol the Riverside Freeway.
,
IS
DAILY PILOT
,,_ Or11111t c..t DAil Y PILOT, '#lfll 1dllc1'
k ~ lhll ...._~"'"' '-Mliw.I DV ... Or .... co.st "*'Wlll'le ~r. sep..
,... ......... ,. _.....,, MonNy ~
Fl'WI,, tit Olla MtM, Nt'#llOft loch.
H111tl..,_ ia.ci.tft91,Mttil'I Y•llty, Laoi-
hldl. trvlMltNll•ctr wd s1" cie-111
krl JMn c.lf...._ A tlnt19 tt11ionfl
Mllion a. ,.., .. ,,_ .. ..,_.,. •nd Surld•ys.
r11e llll'lndPll ... Int _. t. 11 a wn1
ltr $1rttl, C.'9 M-. 'C.lfftmll. n.».
··~•rt N. W..4 .,.. ...... .,..,.......,
Jack It. Curley ·
Yk1 fJtealffn,! and Otfttrll MWltr
ThH'lll k11Yil
""" The191e1 A. M11rp~iRe
Mt .... lllt E•lter
Ck1rl1& H. l••• litfl~r4 P, Nill
Aul8;1tfll Mlnllhl Ulkn " -C.tt Mu: m wo.t 1'1 Sfrllt H.-..rt 19Ktl: WJ NtwNrt .... ...,.,.. L9'UM .. ldl: m ,.,...1 A_. ,_llflolwl ... tc111 1111& IMCfl ao.levON' S.1t c~": as,..,_ El c;.,....A.a
Ttl.,._ 17141 MJ.4Ul
ci..lllH A4N"hloJ MZ.U71
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S. Ctsas .. w Al 0.Po•l-1fl;
To..,._ 4'Z-44zt
~ .,: 0r-. (fflt ,,.,.~~ ~. ttt ,..... •tttJn, n1tntr1lloM, ......,"' ....-. .......,........ "'"'" ...., M , • .._.. wl"*'C 1PKllil flllt• ........, .. .,,.,. .......
President Nixon plans another quiet
week of conferences with a group o( top
advisers - a week spiced with· television
viewing of the predicted batUea on the
convention fiOQI' in Miami Beach.
Budget t~lu will be the aubject of
Tuesday's talks with Caapar Weinberger,
director of the office of Management and
the Budge!.
Later in the week Nixon plans con·
ferences wit h Secretary of State William
Rogers and former Treasury secretary
John Cofl:!lally. Both men have been
traveling abroad for Nixon.
Comedian Bob Hope bas re-
cruited a planeload of Holly·
wood personalities to appear
with him July 22 in a six-state
telethon to raise money fo r
v~ctims of t r o p i c a l storm
Agnes. , The two Dien are not expected until
late this week and the discussions will
revolve around foreign-poli~ ·
focusing;it la ezi>ected, on 1be reo2fning N ·
·, ol negotlaUona Tuesday at the Par;.!> . ewswonian,
""P•ace talks. . •·£. "' . • • . _ 1 ~ .....
The ~. weekend !or the "-idenl ,
'ZIPPIES' AT CONVENTION -Leslie Bacon Oeft)
stands by as a member of the 'Zippies' tears a card·
board se¥ of the Democratic National Convention
Ul"IT...._..
after removing it from a wall of the conve11tion hall.
The charge against 'Miss Bacon of conspiracy to
bomb a government building was recently dropped.
" and bia wUe, Pal, WU punctualeirsun-Artist Eaton day by a trip to Loa Angelea and a brief,
"tare family reunion at the' home of Mrs. · '
Nixon's half brother near GrUlilh Park. n d---57 The President and Flrat !.ally flew to 0~ at .
Loa An1t1ea by belicopter ii 4lt -ly ' : ·"'7U ·
~ame Game Under Way,. GENERAL .••
From Pagel
afternoon !or the brief vlall Co the home
ol Matthew Bender. He is recovering
from ourgery.
A1lo on band for the erief reunion wt.re
two of Mrs. Nixon's brothers, Bill and
Tom Ryan and their -wives.
caro Cogan Eaton, 57, for rn e r
newspaperwoman and p r o m i n e n t
SouUtland artist who lived In Orange
County !or 55 years, died July 9 alter a
brief illness. She was a Newport Beach
For Democrat VP Spot at least a battalion (about 500 men) in
there."
In another development, U.S. Navy of.
ficials said an American destroyer unk
three barges Sunday that were unlnadin,
a Chinese freighter off lhe coast of North
Vietnam. The freighter WftS not fired
upan. The 7th Fleet said the incident oo-
curred 33 miles northeast of Dong Hol.
The President's elder slater, Neva
Reiner, and ·her husband, also were there. .
Secwity precautions for the hip were
especially keen and agenla blocked off
the narmw road leading to the ho'!'• In
the bills of Loa Angeles. Neighbors Dvlng
close to the house were ordered 'off the
curbs before the Presidential party ar.
rived.
resident. ·
There was no funeral seryJce. Crema.
tion and inunnent were at Paclfic View
Memorial Park. ,
ldlA!dl BEACH / (UPI) - T h e
DemocraUc "name game" reached for
vice presldenUal possibilities today.
Among those mentioned was Edmund s.
Muskie, who once thought the presiden-
tial nomination was his for the asking.
Muskie, who ran for vice president
with Hubert Humphrey lour years ago,
ernphaalzed that he was not seeking that
role again, and Utere was no sign it
wou1d be offered lo him. However,
Muskie stopped short of saying he would
not accept it.
Mwik1e11 name wu among a dozen or
IO being mentioned by convention
dtlegatea 11 poulble running-mate& il
Sen. George McGovern locked up the
prize. None of the speeulaUon seemed to
have much to support ft.
Others menUoned included. -sen. Edward Id. Kennedy, ([).Mass.),
wbom Mc<:ov,m hlmaeU named as
amonr the llrst peraona he would call to
bilk 1bout the aecond apot on the Uckel,
although he did not aay be would offer
the past to him. Kennedy sUll wu saying
DO ,to all talk.
-Leonard Woodcock, president of the
United Auto Workera ond one of the few
top union leaders friendly to McGovern.
McGovern himself mentioned \Voodcock
u oae possibility. As a presidential can·
dldale he Would badly need labor rJppor!
so far denied him.
-Reubln Aske\\'1 the governor or
Florida and Democratic convention
keynoter. Askew won national atte,nUon
but popular qjectio'n In bl! own stale In
a referendum that uw him pitted
against opponenlll of busing.
What is Price
Of Devotion
By Firefighwrs?
As overy scboolboy knows, firemen
boldly tackles all manner of llfe-en-
dangerlng lul!IJ, daUy -ond the Laguna
!leech firt""" are ao uception. But
what price devotion to duty?
Two alrunks, who 1pparenUy. took U·
cepUon to..two Laeuna Beach reaide:ncea
and vented their anger tn the cuttomary
manner, were the invesUgatoi:s of. week·
end activity by Laguna Beach lirtmen
sent to quell· t!>e raging smell.
The first call for aid was at a residence
at 455 Bent St., where firemen washed
down a hack porch to u1iniuJ•h the odor.
The second call came in· frQm Mrs .
Gene D'Iubella, at 337 Holly st. Sundsy.
Firemen responding to the call there us.
ed a smoke: ejector fan to clear the air.
Hare Krishnas
Servinp Meals
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The
menu includes chapatUa and Klttrle, not
to mention ·'banana bread, at the Hare
Krlshn• tr3ller In n.urrecUon City II.
"There '-no meat, flab or eggs in any
ol our lood," said the cook, a pigtailed
20-year-<>ld membtr ol the 1ect. ..
AnYone wbo uked, countercu!lure
member bedded do• i In the campground
or curious apectatot , wu given a plate of
lood by one ol the group drtssed In now-
Ing, peach-colored robe.s. •
"No charge, but would you please
make a donation?" asked the girl.
Cbapatlls are nat pancak .. slze dl!CI
made of wholfl wheat flour resembllng
Mexican tor)lllu. ·
Klltrle Is a mlxlure ol spilt peas,
be1111, rice and 11whateve:r vegetables
-Sen. Adlai Stevenson llf lllinois,
whose father twice ran for president and
whose great-grandfather was vice presi·
dent. The Stevenson name is well known,
at least to the over-30 electorSte and
Illinois would be a major electoral prize.
-Rep. Wilbur D. MM Is ([).Ark.),
chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee and the possessor of a solid
conservaUve reputation .that might be
helpful on a liberal-oriented McGovern
ticket. But Mills has been close to the
04atop McGovern" forces and presumably
would not be interested.
-Rodding carter III, the young editor
and pl}blisher of the De.lta Democrat·
Times of Greenville, Miss. Carter wals an
active member of the party reform com·
rnlttee headed by Rep. James G. O'Hara ([).Mich.).
-John Gilligan, governor of Ohio,
another electoral prize. Gilligan has been
active ~re in seeking to line: up vote
sw~tc.hea .to put McGovern over the top.
From Pagel
WALLACE .••
on his condJtion, f e: a r i n g misin-
tf:l'}Jretatio:u .
They CO:DCtded _that his face sometimes
unexpectedly contorted with pain from
hlis t.:bdoml11a1 wounds. But they s a i d
Wallace \l'oulc:f make an appearance in
his whee!chair "at least once" at the
canvenµon, perhaps to denounce the plat·
fonn'• "aalnine" endorsement of com·
pullory school busing as a useful tool
toward 11ntegration.
Body Found in Bay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The a>r·
oner'• office said a body found floating in
San Francisco Bay,. a half-mile north of
Tri!s11.1te Island, was that of Robert D.
Stewrt, 57, of Redwood Clly. The fully
clothed body, sighted by a yachlllman
Sunday, had been in the water about five
daya, a deputy said. An autopsy was
scheduled.
Else\\1here over the north, U.S. fighter
bombers knocked out 28 waler supply
craft. American planes fie:w more than
300 sorties over the north in the period
ending at 5 p.m. Sunday.
The numbei of U.S. Army troops In
South Vietnam increased last week but
overaU American military strength fell
by 500 men to 47,500, the U.S. command
said today.
A command spokesman said the in.
crease of 100 in Army strlltb was the
result of "bureaucratic lag" in begin.
ning lhe ninth phase of tbe U.S. military
withdrawal program ..
The eighth phase was completed the
previous week, and President Nixon an-
nounced the nlnth pbue would reduce
the number of Americans 1n South Viet·
nam to 39,000 by Sept. I.
Military sourcea said that most of the
100 Marines and 500 Air Force men who
'left South Vietnam ,last • week were
transferred to Thailand, where they will
continue to help launch combat missions.
Zumwalt Attends
~
Coasl Ceremony
' LONG BEACH (AP) -Adm. Elmo R.
Zumwalt, chief of naval operations, bu
taken part in commissioning ce:remonlea
for the USS Brewton, a new destroyer
escort named after a personal tpend of
the admiral's killed In Vietnam combat.
Zumwalt had known Lt. John Brewton
of Mobile, Ala., when the two were in
Vietnam. ·
Zmnwalt said al the commissioning
Saturday, "Nothing could he more fitting
then to place John Brewton'1.name on a
warship. The qualltiea so evident in the
man will be equally essenUal to the
ship."
A native Californian, Mrs. E'ltO'l was
born in oakland and came to Tu!:f.in in
1917 when her father, the late Charles J.
Cogan, acctpted an executive position
:With the Irvine Ranch.
She atlend~ls In Tustin and San-
ta Ana and m graduated from the
University of Oregon In 1938.
Volunteers Eyed
For Work at YES
She began her newspaper career.on the
old Sonia Ana Journal ond laler became
..,,, society editor ol the Santa Ana Register.
Aller rellrlng from joumaJiam In the
early 1950's, Mrs. Eaton d~voted full
time to her hobby of palnllng ond publlcl·
ty work for charitable organizations. She
was nalionally recognized for her water
colors .
Adult volunteers are needed to stall
the ..,. Irvine Youth Employment Serv·
fee (YES) ,,..kdaya from I p.m. to 5
p.m. in Ute city's oflioes In Irvine Town ee.ter.
ll<!oldent& who can w<rk from an hotjJ'
to a few afternoons a week are asked to
call YES bead Rooe Palmer at city hall · 833-3840. •
Slgnups for !all volunteers are also
being taken.now.
Irvine youth lf.yean<>ld and older can ·
sign up for possible job openlnp Mon-
day, Wedne.sday and .Friday nights at the
tee~ center operated at Unlveralty Hlgb
School.
Buslneaes cl' resldenbl with job of.
lerings can call YES at city ball,
Anything from a lull-time oummer posl· .
tloo to a one-time yard -k or baby .. 11·
ting stint la welcome, city officials aaid.
Exhibits Slated
In Mission Viejo
The Mission Viejo Asaoclatlon .i 1 ArUota and Craftsmen Is aponooring lout
exhlbilll In the community during the
month of July.
· Gu .. t exhibitor ls Mary Drew, wboae
palntlnp ol missions and landacapes,are
oo display at the Mission Viejo Library.
Rose Reader Is exhibiting her florals
and landacapes in the offices of La Paz
Realty. Lucille Montier Is allowing a col·
lectlot! ol olla al the Home Decorating
Center, located In La Pas Plaza. At the
ldlsslon Viejo Swim and Racquet Club,
Cynthia Freiberg hu cboaen to display
several of her pallette-knife florals and
landscapes. . .,F
•
In recent years she se"ed as publicity
director of the Laguna Beach Art
Association.
She was a member of Delta Gamma
sorority, Ebel! Cl ub" of Newport Beach
· and was a founder of the Southern
Orange County ch~pter of the Holy
Family Adoption Guild.
She was also affiliated with the
Episcopal Chwi:h of the Messiah, Sanla
Ana.
She Is survived by husband Charles S.
Eaton, of 2534 Vista Baya, Newport
Beach; her mother, Mrs. Charles J,
Cogan, of Santa Ana; two sisters, Mrs.
Paul Hansen of Santa Ana and Mrs.
Robert Davies ol Toledo, Ohio. · .
The lamlly bas •uggested tributes In
the fonn of donations to the Laguna
Beach Art Association.
Tennis Handball
Courts Studied
A revised coptract for the CODJtruction
of lenDls and handball, courts at Unlvers~
ty High School In Irvine will be con-
sidered tonight al 7:30 by Tustin Union
Hlgb School District trusteea.
The board meelll at TusUn Hlgh School,
1717 Laguna Road, TusUn .
Superitendenl' William 7'>gg baa pro-
posed a contract between the district and
architeclll William Hutchason &
Associates. Ullder his ouggestloo, plans
would be drawn from existing ones UHd
for Mission Viejo High facllllles .
About $117,000 has been allocated In the
preliminary 1972·73 budget for the courts.
DIAMONDS
UDlll WMITI ML.D
DIAMOND • RING
PINDIR SHOWMAN GUITAR
AM,.. ind DUAL SHOWMAN
S~IAKIR IOX •
wllh twe 15" D130 JIL'a
LIU t'.tee NIW .,..,ii
CAMERAS
llMM SALi
llLL-MOWIU. '' MM ..,. MOVIE CAMlllA
IMllALD e 0.. 1 C't. llMl"IN
• 11 ll'Mfl _ ........
e.nc1.Ttt11w_.
LIKI
ONLY $995 NIW
UDlll 1« W •••
DIAMONO RUBY
CLUSTER RING
IHI fltw ,_, Jnt.H
LIU • $325
OPEN a NIW ONLY
' A
to
' ALL CARRY OUR.
MON. MONEY BACK
THRU OUARANTIE
SAT •
'
GllSON GUITAR
$.~. St11'H111rtl llectrl1
CHDlT l'INllH ·UD $245
WITH CAii · NIW
r
7
LIU $295 MOHL Dl·11 NIW
111.1.-NOWl\.I. W MM
SOUND PROJECTOR
MODIL l'ILMIOUND LID $245
AUTO LOAD, NIW· ,
STBEO
JUC STIRIO AM-PM
CASSml PHONO
. w/twe Speakan
' NIW $245
· lteNT Tl~ SONY T A,.I DICK
llCOID • M...r LIU $65
l'UTIACl TCI NIW
•
..... C1"l .... MM' el Codi /MM, Clll•& .._,.,..,. W ttrtltr 11.U
""""""' W NII U.ll "*""'YI mllltm' Rll'.¢d:., ...... ftWll~.
· )'OU have,'' lhe younc cook esplained. Ottiet delicacies Offered were curry
potatoes, rice and tomatoes and tomalo
~hutney.
COSTA MESA JEWELRY&: LOA,.
'
'
I ! • (' ' .
_/
"
'
17
"
17
..
Hnnting~on Beaeh
Fo11ntain \.,alley
•
•
Today's Flllal
vot:. 65, No: '192, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~ONDAY, JULY 10, 1972 TEN C.ENTS
AirpOrt Colllpl~X Study Gets · Favorable· Eye
By TERR\' COVILLE
Of .. DaijW' •11tt Sl•ff
A county l"'OpoaaJ to lludy creation of
an aviation, .industrial and recreational
complex around Meodowlark Airport bu
d r awn favcrable reactim from Hun·
tington Beach 1 .. ders.
All agree the plan ahould at lea.st be
,tudled and they aay it might offer a
aolutloo to the economic prqblems whit!>
'have plagued .the small, private airstrip.
"I certainly concur that a study should
be made,• City Adminlllrator David
Rowlands flld today. "There is a
aborlage ol space for private planes."
ID a seven page r<port to the county'•
airport conunlalion, Robert Bresoaban,
Orange·c.unty Director ol A~ll°""IUI-'
guts a jolllt powers qreeihent Setween'
the city and CO!lllly,to,create a sis.acre
aviation, induatrial and recreaUonal ~ !.
plex. _
· Hb propoaal includes· purebase of the
SO.acre airport, the llkcre ~wlar\
~DAttY PILOT .... ~
COUNCILMAN'S SERVICE STATION TEMPORARILY OUT QF. BUSINESS AFTER .ACCIDENT
Motorist, 76, Wreab H .... ot H .... l'!I'"" ~ 'Statlen Owned lly T'!L,""""' , · .
Councilman's .
Serviee Station
Smashed by Car
Huntington Beach City CoonciJJnln Ted
Bartlett wu temponrily put out of
buAiness SUnday altenlooD when a 75-
year .. ld hotel owner lost contrOI of bis
car and crubed lbn>ugb the Bartlett
..... ice stauon. •
Andrew Erwin Sbandrlck, oome; o1 tile
Clark Hotel, 12811 Main st., Huntington
Beicb, told poUce he W.. driving east-
bound on Watnut street when bis gu
pedal stuck and he loll control of bis car.
He veerid onto Main Street and went
another block before be smashed into a
gas ·pump and lbrough-the ol!!ce of the
muon on the corner of Main Street and
Olive Avenue. ,
The station, operated by 'Bartlett for
more than 25 years, was closed at .the
tin\e of the iccldent.
Wltneaso ' to the accident said that
Sbadrlck'was moving about 40 mJlea per
hour when be bit the pump and embed
through the concrete wall' of the oervice
atatioo. . '
Yorba Linda Set
To Protest Plan . .
For Chino Hills
. . l ..
Mayor Rudolph CUtro of Yorba Linda
called a specW city council mee!ini Sun-
day to protest the proposed Chino Hllls
airport •planned four and a half mllea
north of the city.
CUtro told a <ftWd of 300 <llllenl lhal
Brea and Placentia were Jotnlnl bis clly
tn the bottle to prevent deveJoPmellt of
the jet facility. •
U.s~. Ge~~a-~, 3 Qthert-'
l ' " ' •, ' ... . . -Kil~~ by Enemy Shell
. . . I
SAIGON (UPI) - A North Vietnam ...
artillery abelJ killed Bil-'Gea. Richan! J,
Tallman and t!ne ·itbel' Amerlcanl Sun-
day near the besieged provincial capitai " . ol An I.;oC, pillitary IQUl'Cell said today •
Two otber U.S. servicemen. were
wounded ID the attack,.tbe IOUl'Cea said. . ' Tallman, 47, of Honesdale, Pa., :wu
deputy · commander o1 the w 11eg1ona1 . ' AulatanCe Command operating ID the·An
Loc·area, .60 mlle1 north of Saigon.-'
He was the father of seven children
alld bu been .Ut!oned ID South Vietnam
for a"year:
The other-Americarui: were believed to
be advlaerl with "South ·Vletrwnele
fon:e1 flg'biing-tlieir way up Hlglnray JJ
toward An .Loe; an embottled provincial "'!lital under siege .m-April I. •
At' least n1ne U.S. "ceneralt, ... U.S.
.School Board Meet
Changed to Thursday
admiral and five South Vietnamese
genenli bod been ti1jed ID the Vietnam
war.
'l'albnan, 47, aliil "bis party had just
stepPed out of their · belicopler When a
lbe1J bit~.
They jumped .Into a , bunker, then
climbed oUt acatn and .;.,e l'Ulllllnc for a
command poot .100 .yiidl aw., when a
"""""" .alJe!J exploded in their mid.st.
Prelli!ent Nguyen Vap Thieu ~ ID
the wne 1pot two lli_ya MO during an in-
spection toqr but.no &rtU!ery 1heill came
within 100 )'ll'da ol the Thieu party.
Meanwblle,· _a t,000-man SOutb VJet ..
namese tut force that moved Into bat-
tered Quang Tri last -kend witbdr,fw
to the edge of town today and Allied of-
ficm said" they . aj)!!C! a major fight be!...; .reeapturlng lhO provinclal capilal
fnlm the Olnmunistl. -
'lbe South -•Id Friday !bet
governmeal,U.. ~ tW<Hhirdl of
the d!J and the anty111aj(lf -.Cle· ....
the. ca~ tile .~ !Ith century
dlade1 ..... the cen1er,of the city. ~Y nilbt'• ,...tar meeting of However, AWed oll!cWI aid tqdoy the
-ol llio ~~,City. North VJetim11 .. """"'*'' n:celved c-:.;:r,>· ~ ,~ u. -·-'*·-ind ...... _.i to,filht po . 11rt!1 ,,,._11 Glllclall .., for tile !city, · "-,
.......... • ' • "<I ,, , "~1'rf ls &Ointto be'Very biid to
• The cbang• wu made becauae oee lake. The .bunke'r , oompleus are un-
i'nembei' tf ·the bMtd ·-'which .already believable/' a U.S •. adviser told UPI cor·
lacka Cllie j>erson due to'the rulcM119ifof respondenl Barney Selbert. "They are
trustee Ivan Liggett ..! wu 1111ble •to cleterm1ned to bold Quang TQ. There ;,
come 'l'il<ldly. (See GENERAL, Pap I) I' ; • •
' I 2 rr., ..... B!f'•
'
coune. A Jo"'I ......;,. -1 might
allow 111 to pt IOme federal J\mdl. '' • ~ "W1tbout this apPrOaclt, "" llJe · ez .. ~ol that ~is,gretty abort,"
Coon aid be beUevea the entire concil l'ldlolll:1 feell the I*-' ls a good con-
cept 11111 II -111 llludylnr,
"We ... , occomplllh lloee what ""'d UR to -''•h We need !lie bllcklng
"' tlio ~ an4 the federal covem-meot,11 ht Aid. ~
_ _,
Roger Slate1 serves a trtple funcUon.'
Aa an airport commissioner, he may "
review Breanaban'1 pro~ Tuesday
· night. Slates ls abo a Huntington Beach
Plannln& Cmnnisstoner and president of
the local chamber of commerce.
"It's interesting," he says. 0 1 don't
know ti there are any real.problems to it.
We'd have to find out .U the ben~its
would outweigh the cool." /J
On the runway i'e-alperil( Slates
aatd: "It mates seiiie' to me. Jt &Ives· us
<'
a longer clear zone. We wouldn't be bit-
ting those wlrel (the power lines aJoog
Heil )." ""
,.1ost of Bresnahan'a plan came from
John Turner, the current private
operator of the airport who first wanted
the county to buy hla tbree-y~ 1..,. oo
the field for m,ooo.
Bresnahan has recommended against ..
purelwe of the lease, Instead propot1lng
• (See AlRPORT, Pase I)-.
Permits Opposed '
Group J>rotest,s Police 'Licensing'
Several Hun urant
DWlli•ll and blrtenders ve called for
a cillzens ~·ADU State Co~
mlsaion" meettng at 7 p.m., Tbursdii<, ID
the conference room of the Sheraton
Beach IM-
The purpoae of the citluna gathering ls
to lonn an action group to challenge a
proposed city_law wbich would give the
polJce department licensing control over
certain types of business operations and
aome employen.
Backers of the cilizena effort hope to
secure 4,000 ldgnatures against the
ordlnance prior to the July 17 city council
meettng.
They object to aome of the restrictions
placed cm aome businesses as 'WOil u to a
-ol the propooed law wlilch would
require pollce ·work permJla o I
~; .cocktaU ,.al-, tul
Mt hit t $ tjCJmi-w C1tb1ri!
lilme "' Iba ~ of flit dtlzem <omat~ iocladO lljchae1 •Cocl>ce llill
Jalm Aili "' "' """""'"' -MoDllbt rl Jerko'1, MIU Olla ol the r ... wladl, .1o11n RydefJai Ibo~
Pl*' aod -Hall "' the lberaton liUcb lniL . -'
The .. _.i .-.... 11ltl -45
'"-wlllcb would have to acquire a ;i;.,,..i ......... Jker.ae plul ID ad-
ditiODll pollce.perml~
Thi! object of acqutr1ng the police
perml~ accord1nc to city olllclals, is to
give the police departmeilt a chance to
i n v a11p1e .,....uany questionable
operatioM. • . -,
The otdlna-11-tbi.jlOl!a! dileJ .the
power to deny .a perm1~.and abo the
...-~ e1-ID operattng buslllal. An
appeal can be made to a council.ap-
pointed police permit appeals board.
Some of the affected tjasinesses include
IUrf shops, night cJubl, lockamltbs,
maaaoce parlors, piwn shops,~. a
circus, carnivals and auto wrecking
yanis. .
City councilmen have delayed action on
the ordlnance pending further study by
the city staff and members of the local
busineu community.
A 1trong proteit to certain strict rulu
of operaticm already bu been lodged by
local masaage parlor. ownen. .
The city's Chamber ol Commerce also
bal tis leglalative actton colnmlttee 1tu-
Words He Said
" Hurt His Ears
PARIS (AP) -''Thank you,
President McGov1n1," Aid Ronald
Ragan. "And I hope I never have
to use that OJkeoalon again."
'lbe caHlornla governor, making
a -11 hem the American Club
of Parla today, WU Introduced by
lta prealdeet, David McGovern.
< ,
dying the proposed ordinance with the ci-
ty stall.
The chamber ls taking a more low-
keyed approach to the problem, uya
chimlle? Prelld<llt Roger Slates.
"We feel the ordinance is necessary,
but there may be some Areas we have
questions ab o u t," States explained.
"Some of the definitions and the licensing
of bart.nden and barmaids could hi a
problem."
"'lut ,.. feel a low-keyed approach 11
better than ranting and ravine beloni tho
cit· council," be aald.
Ralph Kloer, director of the diamher,
said about 50 businesses which belong to
the chamber might be affected by the
proposed law,
$600 Stolen
2 Armed Bandits Rob McDonald's
Two m;uted bandits w I e 1 d i n g
automatic pistols Sunday night escaped
with $800 after they forced five employe1
of a Htmllngton Beach McDonald'& bam-
burllr ~t Into a f....,,.r,
fnz6: CUrtls, assistant manager of the
restaurant at' IOllS lleacb Blvd. lold
jlblloo ... _ ............. al 11:•
p.m. -two -·pee -wllll ... mukl puUed over their faces ...,.
tJ1roui1! the rear door.
'iDoo't loot at my face and put your
hands behind your bead," one of the ha.
dlta said. They then ordei:ed all the other
empioyel Into the · basement of the
restaurant, according to pollce.
Curtis wu ordered to empty all t.ht
money from the safe Into a plastic lrash
bag wbJle ..,. of the men kept yelling at
hJn, "We Cltlly wmtbWI, no coins."
All ol the ...,..,. nra tllen forced
into the -llld IDW to., !here 10
minutet or Ibey~ "' ~ One of ,
lllo -II -a )lollll If'~
llllploJt .... -alrtlkl 11111 ... fl#il
-· accordlns to ,pollce. Qlrtls aid tllo -nilllnled to the freezer after two minulel to be ..,.. the
re.staurant WOi an -. st1D there. They
then fled with tho -y, acconllng to
police.
McGovern Rejects Muski~
Miami Peace-making Call
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern 1alned new delegate momen-
·1um against a divided ud desperate op-
po1fticm today ancj. conlldentiy ~ ~
lat .. bour peace-making . effort by Ed-
mund S. Mldlde to compromise the
C.ltfomta delecate seattng dlapute.
Muskie, auum'Ina the reconciler'• role
but refuaing to abandon bis own can-
didacy ID McGovern'• favor, warned that
the Democratic National Convention
beglnnlnc oely hours away was "being
turned lilto two armed CllDJNi" which
would commit party autcide In
November. '
But McGovem rejected Muatte'• can
• for all candidates to ,_ with
Democratic National C b a t r m a n
Lawrence F. O'Brien ID bll Fon-
tiUnebleau Hotel offlcet tbis lftemoon to
dtlCUll a C.Ulomla and Dllnois creden-
ti411 compromise to avert the 0prospec~
t!ve .elf-slau&]rter" on tht convention
floor. .
Muskie uld his · -plan would
"neither wure nor preclude candidacy"
when delegate1 decide· the pre1ldentlal
nomination Wedneeday i)libl.
But McGovern lllld be could "aee lltU~
to be gained by going Into a closed room
with Iii anU-McGovem candtdllel. I
party and Its nominee could be among
the cuu.alUes."
Before calling for the meeting of the
pteatdentlal bope!Ub Muskie to Id
reporten, "I'm stlll a candldale and will
be a ..,.udale ui>tt1 this -la. ended." He •id be wu beplmc ·t!IO
delegates pledged to him.
While the convention c r e de n t I a I 1
maneuvers continued at the reaort strip
hotdl, about 500 antiwar demon&traton
marched on the convention center car-l'YinC Viet Cong nags and shooting
slogans. "
There was no violence In the protest
led by the Vietnam Veterans Agatnsl tho
War 11 Jt wound Ila way aeven bJocb
througlt the Mllml Beach buaU-
distrlct and. past side streets lined with
retirement boteb.
Security nmalned tight with federal
lrooJNi and state police fon:es standing
by, .... o11 ... *-b bellcopten patrolllng
(lee MUllKl!l, Pap J) ......
.........
Pro.-ly, Olinda Vlllap and Brea
groups bid ,.Iced )ll'OWU: CUtro said
La Habra olflciall probobiJ' would join
the llpt. loe. . .
'lbe mlJGI' oald ~lqraml .... -pro t e 1t1 n I Feclenl1 1Avt.ltioa
AdminllG'-llr lplCe IPIJ'OVll of the •
fadlltr ... ---1111 --
All~ye.~r 'School 'Smooth'
have a feellng¥!1wouldhe•to1.• Muskie went to O en'• room, u did
Sen. Hubert H. pbrey, Sen. Henry
M.' JackQI er ·North C&rollna
governor Te . or<I • but they caJ1<id
olf the meeting when McGovern failed to
appear.
Mm IUiilblnt ,.. the Oranp
Coast ls what the weatherlldy la
predicting. Tmlperaturu of around
70 are eJpected at the heachel,
rblng to the low •'• Inland, Lon in the .,,.. ' .
' 'lbeFAA•_...al-MlollowedbJ an envt.-ntal Imped 111141 ol the
~ airport .. 11,lllO .... -
dJlng the OranpSon --°"'*' line, ~ ol the Rhenlda .... _ _,_
A.TTA.CKING RAM
KILLS TE..4CHEll ·
FRIBOURG, Swit>erland (AP) -A
nm ·attacked a SWJ. ttocber on a
~ escursl<n SUnday llid knocked
.im "'"' a clifL lie fell • feet to bis ....
•
. zw.n ,~ .......
Two"'~ Oounly'a In~
In 111-yw educatlao pt under 'lflY
wi-• bitch tbls moniJll In the Oeoan
VlewScboollllllrld.
A tolal of • d!l1dml -or •. I 1111'
cent ol am _.i -marched llllo
c1--al a.it View and ·--ldlooll -belll ........ tllo 11111 ol ...,...,., IUIDllltl' vacatJoa_
''To tell tho trutb. H -llDOOlber .... I !lad _.led," uld Weetmont
prindpll Monte McMmT1y, "Wt
UloaPt lhlrt -be ..............
liil ..... -.. ci.r lodaJ --
1hln -----days 11a ..... Netlhlr adlool II 1111 lo "l"iar ft.
~ ......... Jl'al'ty atudeala al
a.it Vlllr and •• -oplod' not
111 .... an-,. ................. They
wil1 NDalo • vll<llllon until i!opllmblr,
when tlle -will bul tllom, ID heilhbortal ldioola ., tr a~ 111 on a I ........
In addltlao, -lltO .,,.ill ""
-pla 0( • ··11· .._ ealondar, oalr ~ oL. acJloal
_,,,.,,j\y ls la cll9111 a CIVWI •·
Tbaa lhla _,,.., "11 *' "' Q'lll Vlew'I 4IO ltudeatl ' 111'1 • ' o f
Westmont11 • ltudentl an di 1' M
for cluL The _.....,. studentl wlll
bqlo 111-ytlt ..... willl • tine-< -·--Of .,.... wllo did ............. ...
--alD .... -.... llc!on
Alrtody con11dent of a 11oor vlct«y 1n INSmE TODAY
ptling a vacotion, QOt<lUlrler will go bis bid to npln 111 caltfomta deleptea
iilx -U wi-one, and on&q11arter cnictaJ 'to bll cbancel for a llr1t·hlllot Th• P""'"-l'apors lrl4I of
will have to p the full Dine -ta of a DlllDllaatlon, the !ront-i)lllDlnc McGovern Doni<!I Elll~ a1'CI AntMfttl
regular term. aid, "It II my -1 incUnatlon to Jet RllHO btgins m Loi A!!Qlill to-
Once the plan ls ID full operitlon, the -decide tbea disputes." day, GI a ,,...1 of JOO ~
iiludentl wlll attend ocbool on four eyolel Mualde declined to stale 1111 potiltlon on llvc juron "'°' """"'°""' to ~
por ,.., each one oompooed ol nine wbetber McGovern ahould be ctven bacl: pear for a ietecll<n\ .,,_., tMI ='-of -~ by three -ta of the ijl Callfornta delegllel stripped is trpected to IGlle abotll • .• ,.,. from blm In pre-conventloa Nl1np_ wetk, Su 1tory, l'aQc .S.
•1Stldentt IDIJ be a JIUJe unhappy .. Wt have 1ee11 l.bll emfefttion being La:..,.. " • ~ n
lbOUt l&artlng ICbool eo JOOn after turned illo two armed eam .. ," Mu.skle ::ii=. : =:., ..., ': resuJar ldac!ol lel tut/' aUd McJ4u:rray, aald, 0 )11"1pU'ed to r..n to 'every c1tt1tt1111 ,.. ..._ ...., '
"boll -they lliit eotttnc all -parliar:ltntiiY -which might r.=.. ll t."': -..: -week vacatlom later on, I think oontrlbute to the v""-of one or _,, -• · - -,.,. -'ll .... all ~·-little' \.-i ~-,, ........ ..... • .,..... • _,, ~ ·1.ear ~ a Qlll:.,. another candldatt. U prtparatlons f'or 1 .... 11••••• 1•1• ,_,.,. "
ter." bottle contlnue. and liattlo ls joined on ita •-,... -.; ·~....._ w School p_............ ' _.. -~-at -~nt p.uod, the toll In polltlcll dead ... "'' .. - -
(Ito .W..Y&U, Pap II iilNaJllNCI c:..ild be l1111·remlw• and our "'----------'
,• ••
• --DAILY PILOT H
"'r•t Press 7ff eet r---
Wallace . Reject~
, . -
,____Third· Party .Tr
l4IAMl BEACH . (UPI) -Georae
Wallace said today he bu no plans lo be
• tlilrd party prUiclentlal candidate ll
diwt!Jfied with the choice of tbe
DtmocraUc convention.
his wheelchair "1t leut once" at the
convention, perhaps to denounce the plat-
tonn's "asinine" endorsement of com-
pllbory school busing as a uajul Ui01
loward ln!egratloo.
'lbe Alabama gijvernor, al h\f lirst lull-• ,
blown news conference since being From Pqe 1
critically wounded in an assassination at-AR
tempt lolay 15, said at lhe same time that ALL-YE ' . . •
he -not believe tbe ll<mocral.s can ...
..., the election without the help of those morning wu reported normal, while at
wbe 111pport him. Q-est View It was "a lltlle high," ae-
-Sitting before a bit~ of microphones cording 1o Principal Joe Diamond.
in a wbeelchalr because o! paralysl.s "Some of our studenta are on family
,
from the wail\ down from one of the vacaUons1" explained Diamond, 11and we . w-"--.d be e<pected thi.s. Some parenl.s have to put' • bulleti that hit him, ~ .sa• WH In their vacation tln1• In December and
ltil1 .. ,active eandidale -and wouldn't we didn't make the decl.slon to go tO all-
baft ltayed in the race U he~ .. t b&could year achooil 1Mntlj:1much lattr,:• "
Dot Pbysl~y take IL -.~ ' But both MClol~a.y and \))amond 11!!1.d
•· 1 ' · \yallilce· streF,<f again that felt the that cfilldren whO'miss time during ~r. :'I;~~-· ts ouid be in "'reat tro!Jble in · •assigned sessl~ -wh~ther through ill-' ·'U.:::t:. _ ~ .w . • · n~ or vacation -will be allowed to mbllf'>if ~.did not adopt a pl~t-make up the tlme during the three-week
form ·akla&: theiines he advocates -m-vacations. 1~~
' eluding an aDtibusing stand and a plank "This is another advantage <1ver the
for a strong ~tlonal defense. ~dlti<!na! calendar," sa!d D~•~™?;
"I. want the Del'nOcratlc party to We d1dn t used to have this ne11bllity.
\beanne Uie party or the average .
citizen," Wallace said.
But he said the party must change its
dlrectloo or ·~it W pus into oblivion."
Aa for a "'party bid this year,
Wallace said, ' don't have any plans at
all" for that.
W.U-exprea<d wll1Jngnea t o
.u;ci.. a poalble -milio with other
c..ndldatel m the dllputed Calllomla
delegate !slue, but !di uncertain just
what hil pooltloo would be, saying "I'd
&Imply be fair."
He alli> oald he had no plans for the
time being to make an appearance on the
convention floor.
Wallace bas displayed far less influ-
ence so far than aide! predlcted, remain--
Ing oecluded In his 20th floor prestdentlal
oulte ol the lunrilllll Sheraton F o •·r
AmbuaadorS 1n downtown Miami.
Hla stall dlacontinued medical reports
m hil <Cllldltloo. le a r I n g mlsln-
t<l'pntallonl.
They conceded that his face sometimes
.-pectedly contorted with pain from
hll ltxlamlnal wounds. But they said
Wallace would make an appearance in
FromPqel
GENERAL ••.
at least a battalion (about 500 men) In
there."
In another development, U.S. Navy of~
flclala said an American deslrilyer sank
three bargea Sunday that were unloa
a Chinese lrelghter off the coast of No
Vietnam. The freighter was mt fired
upon. The 7th Fleet said the Incident oc
curred 33 miles northeast of Dong Hoi .
Else\\•here over the north, U.S. fighter
bombers knocked out 28 water supply
craft. American planes new more than
300 1c>rtlea over the north in the period
ending at 5 p.m. Sllnday.
The number of U.S. Anny troops in
Soulb Vietnam lncreued last week but
overall American military strength fell
by 500 men lo 47,500, the U.S. command
aaid today. .
A command spokesman laid the in--
crease of 100 In Army st?enrtb was the
result of "bureaucratic lag" in begin-
ning the ninlb pbaae of the U.S. military
withdrawal program.
The eJahth phase wea completed the
USKIE -previoll5 week, and President !'II.son an-
• • • • .........i· tht nWh pbaie would nduce
the number af Americans in South Vlet-
doud-aeUdded llles over the while nam to 39,000 by Stpl. 1.
lines ol ;bolela. tlllltary llOlll'<lt! said that most of tbO
; Rep. Slllrlay Cblllholm l'l!:ked up a Jiil •Marinel apd 500 Air Force men wbe I potential ta .addl~I lint _ ballot1.'(0lel ·1e1t South Vietnam I~\ •eek were
!today when s'en. Humphrey to1d ""'ck iramferred lo Tllaliand, where they wW
; deltgates pledged to him they could vote continue to help launch combat missions.
: for her on the Initial presidential roll-call
iW~. '
I Aides lald Humphrey leiepbened'Mrs.
•Chlllholm to.....,...,. his decisloo, made
1n response lo her proposal that black
~delegates should stick together for at
• Ieut one vote. ,
I Mrs. Ch!llbolm, lint black .woman lo
; ... k the presidentlal nomination, claims
fto have 28 delegates In her .i:tmi>, but baa
!been flghllng a move from Julian Bond
'to strip her o! some of U-. .
I McGovern met with a group o! farm-
111a1e delegales, loured state delegations
'largely opposed to him and met with"a f c:aUC111 o( iromen,ln .. effort to have the
,convention overturn hia big selback by
llbe party eredentlala commtltee.
• Humphrey held a stall meeting • n d ~then vi.sited a gathering of women
10.Iegatet, continuing lo drum on the
"I'm-no-quitter" theme he has been
sounding iD hotel corridors, caucwies and
news confere,nce1: · '
"We will !lghl hard but slay !air," he
said.. "An we raialng a breed that says
•gtve it to me ; I've earned it and if you
don't I'm going to pick up my marbles
and walk home'?"
OlAN•I COAST Ml
DAILY PILOT
Tht ~ CMlt DAIL 't PIL.Ot wlilrl Milch
I& CC1mWM11 ftle Ntw1-,.,... la putilllhtd by
flle °""" COlsl P11bt1llllne COIYIPln'(. SePI•
r1lt etltloM •re piibllsl!tll. Mondi';' throwh
Ft111..,, fOr Coll• Mn1, Newport lletdl,
Hunl11191o!t 8uc:ll/FOll'llfl1" Vtllty, La111.1n1
llffdl. lrvlnt/$ttlllltbtd: Ind Sin Clemente/
s.n Jv111 c.,ilttano. A 11ng!t r~lontl
eGlllon '' putili.!Md SllUtdtl't tM Sll!ld1y5,
The pr'lnclP'I llVblllhlftt Pllnt'lt II UG Wesl
Ill' Sir"'• Costa Mell, Ctlltornl•, tuH.
~ob1rt N, W.ed ,,.Iden, ... P'~llhlt
J•dt •· C11rl•v Vla!·,,_ldtfll Mii 0..11 Mfllfttr
Thom•• Kotvil
Beach_ Trustees
To View Policy
Of Equal Hiring
Trustees of the Huntlniton Beach
Union High SCbool Dl.stilct will consider
a resolution Tuesday night aimed at pro-
moting equal hlriilg and promotion pro-
cedures without regard to race, color,
religion or sei:.
The resolution is based on. the federal
Equal Opportunity Act ol 1972 which ex-
tends the provisions of the 1964 Civil
Rlghta Acl lo tax supported schools.
The equal opportunity resolution comes
on the heels of the Thursday decl.slon by
the stale Fair Employment Practices
Commission (FEPC) lo intensify their
investigation of the school's employment
procedures.
The FEPC baa been conducting a probe
or the hirlnl and testing procedures of
It,, dlslrlct for .more tban live months lo
see U any-nc1.ryr.jlldlce exlltJ in
dlstricl ..
The probe came after apokesmen ol
the Mexican-American Committee on
Education charged the district wu not
hiring enough Chicano teachers and ad-
ministraton.
The trustees will meet 1t 7:30 .in the ·
Huntington Beach SChool caleteria.
Unit Continues
Land Use Plan
' ··-----..
Arraigning
In Murders
' .
Scheduled
Trlpl .. murder suspect Amos L .
Ratcliff was being held without bail this·
morning in Westminate< jail with formal
arraignment expected Tuesday.
The ~year-old aerospace worker
allegedly shot his estranged wile and a
male friend aa they returned lo her
Fountain Valley home eacly Sa\u'day
morning. Police charge that RatclHI then
went to Westmlnstei where he killOs\ a
third person, Betty Carew, 42, of 9360
McFadden Ave.
According lo police accounts. Ratclifl
broke into the home o! Betty L. Ratclifl.
41, of 10526 Morning Glory Ave., and
waited for her to return hOme.
When abe arrived about 12 :45 a.m.
Saturday, she was accompanJed by Craig
P. Hirst, about 50, of Anaheim.. 'll1e two '
then entered the house and found
Ratcllif waiting With a .ZZ caliber rifle.
·. ~, pair fan to .... esca_ee, according to
police, but Ratcllfl steiii>ed. OUU!ide and
gunned them down. ·
Police said RatclUf then returned to his
. Hughes Gives
Sclwol Money
R£NO, Nev. (UPI) -A check
f« QI0,000 from bllllonalre recluse
Howar<I lhlgtlea baa been received
b)' Unlvenlly of Nevada Regenia
meeting here.
Hughes baa promised the Reno
"'ca~ t!t°"year medic.i _~
$200,000 a year for 20 years. 1be
cbeclt was tbe second Installment. • •
Valley's School
Busing Prog~an1
Up 50 Perce1!t
Fountain Valley's school busing opera.
tioos will grow by 50 pm:erit next year
and .....,.. two new 9'1'JlO'l'llger buses.-
accordlrig to school· o!ftclals. ·-
'Ibis year the Fountain Valley SChool
District 1"1nsported 1;650 elementary
scllool children to and from school, ac-
cording to Assistant Superintendent
Chari" Woodfin, Next year the ligure ii , ..
expected to 1>0·;480 In the ll,000 st..iM
system. • · .. · · ~ "'S·
0.t.11..v ,,LOT sttH ,...,. mobile home in Anaheim and piclced up a
HOW All· YEAR SCHOOLING WORKS IN OCEAN VIEW second gun, and.went lo the' home ol Bet-
___ :_Pr:::l::.nc::i~p•::l.::Mo="::.'':.::M.::c.::M.::u.:.rr:::•::_Y_:E:::x::.p.:.l•.::in.:.•.:.S.:.c.:.h.:.td_u_l.:.t_lo_P_or_o_n_ts~--· ~Y R~mf· was picked up in Westminster
Woodfin recommended the purchase of
dlesel buses because, he said, they are
70 pertent less expen.sive to operate than
standard' opes. Tota.I cost over five years
was estimated at $78,000. ~bile Writing a oote to his two Children
Psychiatrist Testi~
In Defense of Doct,qr
-aged 19 and 22 -in which he allegedly
said was SOrTY for 0 what he bad done,"
·-accordlng to police.
FromPqel
AIRPORT ....
School officials said the increased bus-
ing would be necessary because the dis-
trict is not permitted by the-state to bulld
enough schools to keep up with the
growth. The FOWltaln Valley SChool Dis-
tricts master plan calls for elimination
ol all daily l\llSillg in the di.strict by 1982.
Trustees have agreed to accept bids
m the new buses.
By TOM BARLEY
Of 1M Oat" r tltl Sltff
Susan O'Donnell was described today
y a psychiatrist who counseled her three
months before her death in Mexico as a
''sensitive, immature psycho-neurotic"
who had already attempted to commit
suicide by slashing her wrists.
Dr. Walter Briehl testified as attorney
Reed Bridges opened his defense of Dr.
Merrill C. '1Mike" O'Donnell in the
Orange County Superior Court civil trial.
He said he examined ttlrs . O'Donnell. 38,
at the insistence of her husband, a
Newport Beach plastic surgeon.
"She very much needed therapy," Dr.
Briehl said, recalling that Mrs. O'Donnell
moved out of the home abe shared with
the defendant at 420 Kings Road at about
tbe time he discussed ber problems with
her in a two-hour interview.
·Briehl aald O'Donnell, 57, was his pa·
tlent before <Mre. O'DoMell waa referred
to him. He described the surgeon as In-
secure with problems relating to hi!:
children from a previous marriage •.
"[ concluded that Mrs. O'boMell was a
very sensitive, weak ego penon wilh a
beetle bJstoey of unhappiness and emo-
tional conflict," Briehl said. .
Briehl 'Js the first of a number.-of
medical witnesses scheduled by Bridges
and attorney Mike McCray in their
defense to charges by Mrs •. Gertrude
Itame~t that her sorrin-la'! was responsi·
ble for the death of Susan O'Donnell on
March 19, 1968.
It baa ·betn testilied that Mexican
phYslcians who uhumed the body ol
Mrs. O'Donnell 19 days after her death
on Cozumel Island found her death to be
caused by barbiturate poisoning.
Mexican authorities said the substance
involved in Mrs. O'Donnell's death was
"almost certainly" luminol, a highly tox·
le liqllld barbltw'ate.
'lbelr findings have been supported by
Dr. Melvin Sommer, a Beverly Hills
pathologisC who examined the decom·
posed remains of Mrs. O'Donnell in Mex~
ico City a year later.
Mrs. Barnett, 63, of Seal Beach Leisure
World, wants $1 million in damages from
O'Donnell. She is seeking in a related ac·
lion to ·bar the physician from in~
herltance of his wife's estate.
O'Doimell, who practices at 2011-
Westcllff Drive and 307 Placentia Avenue
In Newport Beach and at 18782 Main St.,
Huntington Beach, hu countersued Mrs .
Barnett and 70 other defendants In ae-
tions llled 1n Otange and Riverside Coun-
ties.
Mrs. Barnett testified today that her
daughter called her a week beCore her
death in Mexico and told her about the
second trip taken by her and O'Donnell to
Mexico within a two-month period.
Mrs. Barnett said her daughter told
her that she and O'Donnell had resolved
their marital differences and that the
physician had promised to sign a new
marriage settlement on their return to
California.
Mrs. Barnett said ber daughlel" eound-
ed "veey happy" and 114ld sbe had betn
told by her estranred buoband that the
lrlp would solve his problems and that
the Mexican government had promised to
pay the lull costs o! the Cozumel recon-
ciliation trip.
Mrs. Barnett said her daughter told
her that ()!Donnell had lokl her, that the
trip would also enable him to investigate
a property deal In which the Mexican
government had become tnyolved. l
"Isn't it true thal your daughter and
Dr. O'Doimell signed a marrlage set-
tlement at the time of their marriage. in
1965?" Bridges pked Mrs. Barnett.
"The agreem~f was delivered ~ my
daughter just one hour before the mar·
riage ceremony," Mrs. Barnett replied. . ,,
Lifeguards Busy
At City B-eaches
Huge rnidswnmer crowds and high surf ·
kepi Huntington city and stale ll!e-
guards busy with 120 rescues over the
weekend, officials aaid this morning .
City lileguards reported the heaviest
activity Suqday when 60,000 beachgoers
required 58 rescues.
Water temperature hit 67 degrees and
surf n1D four to five feet high as the
Huntington beach season moved Into high
gear.
4 ., A total of 190,000 persons came to Hun-
tington city and state, and Boba Chica
State beaches, according to official
estimates.
•
purchaae ol the land. ;,;;, •
Turner Ill eomewhal Atpltcal of any
actlon coming out of Bremal)an's pro-
poaal: "I've been saying Ibis for 10
years. There bas never been an:; question
about the Med• !or airports, but this
county has never taken any positive ac-
ti .. on.
"The city council has done all It could
to help Meadowlark," Turner said. "But
when it comes to aviation in Orange
County, you's better forget it. 'Ibere are
too many political pressurp."
Turner did say the runway re-align-
ment could eaally work, and In fact it
was the original iilnway 20 years ago.
Bresnahan's proposal must be ll:udied
by the alrplO'I commission, the hoard of
supervisors and the city council, before
any part of it is implemented.
He auggests a sludy o! Meadowfark
should be completed by December, but
city and county authorities have not yet
set up their own Umes for reading his
report.
Fire Laid to Arson
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ...:. Fire Ol·
ficials say an arsonist touched oU the
headquarters of the Society lo r
Indlv1dual Rights, doii1g abeut $20,000
damage.
Lost Boys Found
In Wyoming
DUBOIS, Wyo. (AP;z Two Callfornia
youths, mi513ing for nearly 24 houra in
Wyoming's west-central mountains\ were
' rescued near here.
The Fremon! COWlty sher!frs depart-
ment said the youths -Jell Dunlap,
12, and David Williams, 16, holb ol Long
Beach -were in good splrll.s but S1Jlfered
some wind burns.
Election of Officers
Set for Ocean View
The annual electloo of new officers will
top the agenda for trustees of the Ocean
View School District tonight when they
meet at 7:30 in a regular business
session.
Trustees are also expected to pick a
replacement . for James Carvell, who
moved from assistant superintendent of
personnel to district superintendent on
July I. '!be meeting will he held in
district · oCficts, 1ocated at the comer of
Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue.
Nudes Nabbed
Score: Police 2, Nature 0
Two young women, both from out of town, were cited for misdemeanor
indecent uposure by Laguna Beach police over the weekend !or appearlnf
bare-chested on the beach.
'!be first lncldent llCC1llTed Friday when an II-year-old woman at Crescent
Bay Beach baslle<I tople11 on ber back.
Police Sgt. Nell Purcell said that she was attiactlng 11cons1derable attm-
u .. on.
A 21-year-old woman was cited Saturday at the beach just south of Sleepy
Hollow, also !or going lopleas.
Both women told officers they believed their costumes, or lack or them,
were legal since a Supreme Court ruling that the bare human figure was not
o! Itself lewd. -
Purcell noted that the ruling pertained only to bare basking on "secluded
beachea." P~oe were notWed by citizen calls, he said.
"
DIAMONDS FEl!DER SHOWMAN GUITAR
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Airport Land Use CommiJalon.
Tbe comml.salon acled on requests
from the Cypress and Loa Alamitoa City
Councils. Representatives or !hole cities
and othen near the naval air !aclllty
have protested federal government plans
to ezpand fllgbl activities 1t the alrfleld:
Truman to Be X·rayed
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Docton
hope lo X-ra7 form<\' Pr81dent HlllTJ S
Truman'• lower 1aatro-lntestlnal tract !Ills week, 'l1le .. ,.,., dela,..S .......i
times because or bis lrrllate<l <olon, .,.
Iha onlJ ecbeduled toat nmalnlns lot tbt
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bis second week la llaeardl Hoepltal
and Medical Center.
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l!_ope11 BUOfed
·.·l\f cGovern Holds
'Inside _Trac~.,_.--+"
" MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
Democrats approached the start of their
1972 nominating convention today with
George McGovern holding ,to the in!lde
track. • ~
McGovern's bopt.s for 1 firllt·ballot vic-
tory \\'ete buoyed by two ... yvorable
parliamentary rulings and signs of SUJ>
part from uncomm1uea delegates .
The Soolb Dakota senator sald he w13
Newswopian,
Artist_ Eaton'
Deaiflt :5 7. ,
' .. ,,.
' . . .... •. ... .. , ·""' . confident of whining J{ack tSt critical
C&lifomia votes ti ken ttom .bl.In tiy rivals
on the party's Credentials Committee.
But in the labor ranks, there wu
evidence of a mounting drive to bead off
itcGovern. ,
AFL-CIO officials were circutstlng
privately a harlbly worded a.ttact on
McGovern's record on labor, the Vietnam
war, communi.sm, civil rights and I laun-
dry list of other issues.
Frolp the headquarters of another can-·
didate, George C. Wallace, came a call
for party chairman Lawrence F, O'Brien
\9 resign u coovenUoo chairman or ask
for a vote of confidence from the con-
vention's delegates.
Charles S, Snider, the !,Jabama
governor's ·campaip mana1er t ~aald hia
action was prompted by O'Brien's rulings
Sunday_ on Call!ornla cr~,81a:.
O'Brien, wbo will preside"~~~
vention, held it would take a majorltrOf' .h
. Caro C.Ogan Eaton, 57, f o r m e r those elegible to yote to adopt ·er~
newspaperwoman an·d"~P r o mine n t dentials reports and th8l'hi ieiconse1ted
Southland artist who lived in Orange members of chal~e . ~Ions may
. County for 55 years, dled July 9 after a vote on theleban • ·· ·
brief illness. She was a Newport Beach These nlllngs uf'? be important
resident sources of strength to McGovern. If he
'ZIPPIES' AT CONVENTION -Leslie Bacon Oe!l)
stands by as a member of the 'Zippies' tears a card ..
board seal of the Democratic National Convention
' -· ·-
r ' U,I T ...... lt
H OAJl.Y PILOT ,.
Nixon Sets
Quiet Week
' Of: Meets ,. ='------
President Ntson plans another quiet
week of conferences with a aroup of top
advisers -a week spiced with televtalon
viewing of the predi~ted ~ttJes GD the
convention floor in Miami Buch.
Budget ta!U will be lbe subject of
Tuesday's talks with Caspar Welnberpt,
director of the office of Management and
~ Budget.,
Laler in the week Nixon pl.a¥ coo-~ · ferences "'ilh Secretary oC State Wl~am
Rogers and ~ormer Treasury Secretary
John CoMally. Both men have been
traVeling abroad for Nixon.
The t"·o men are not expected until , 4i1e. this w~and the di~ll!"' will
:~Ive arot'5i.CB°forelgn-policy matters -
!QCusing, i; !s expected, on the reopening
iit negotiations Tue!day · at the Parls "
Peace talks.
The past week end ror the Pre1i~ ' and his wile, (fit, was punctuated .• z,.:
day by a trip to Los Angeles and a bri ,
rare family reunion at the home of Mrl •..
Nixon's half brother near Grilfith Park. "'
--There· was no funeral servict-Grema--captuns the -contested-Ca 1 if or ni a
after removing lt from a wall of the convention ft:~.
The charge against Miss Baco n of conspiracy to
bomb a government building was recently dropped. The President and First Lady flew to
Los Angelea by helicopter Jn tbe early
. afternoon for tbe J>riej vljlt to the home
ol Malthe"!; ~er. He ts recovering
from surgery.
•
tion and lnunnenl were at Pacific View delegates be could be lilted to within 50
Memorial Park. votes of a first-ballot triumph Wednesday
A native Californian, Mrs. Eaton was night, according to The Alsociated Press' Muskie Suggested
born in Oakland and came to Tustin in tally.
1917 when her father, the la te Charles J. Labor leaders, never very keen on
Cogan. accepted an executive JlOSition McGovern, slashed at bis comment lut
with the Irvine Rancb. mootb that be would 10 to Hanoi and beg
She attended acboolJ In Tustin and San-if be thought that would win a release of D,emocrats Seek No : 2 Man
Abo on band for the brie.f rtunion were
two of Mrt. NlJ.on '1 brothers, Bill and
Tom Ryan and the.Ir wivu.
The Prealdent's elder llster, Neva
Relner, and · her husband, alao were
there. ta Ana and was graduated. from the American prisooe:rs of war.
University of Oregon in 1931. "The notion that an American presi-
Sbe began. her newspaper career on the dent should go begging to Hanoi will'
old Santa Ana Journal and later became ~ersense only to those who .believe
&OClety editor of the Santa Ana .Register. that~in tbe'Vletnam war -all right ~ on ,
After retiring from journalism in the one side, Hanoi's and all wn:>91' on ·the
early 1950's, Mrs. Eaton devoted full other, ours," said the paper .. ' . '
time to her hobby of painting and publici-McGovern was criUcized al50 fOr votes
ty work for charitable organizations. She against minimum wage i n c r e a s e 1 ,
wa s natlonalJy recognized for her water unemployment com P.e n sat ion and
colors. federally supported job project.I. On civil
In recent years she served as publicity rights, it said he had been absent
director of the Laguna Beach Art sometimes, wrong other times.
AssociaUon.
She was a member of Delta Gamma
sorority, Ebell Club of Newport Beach
and was a founder of the SOuthem
Orange County chapter of the Holy
Family Adoption Guild.
She was also aUUiated with the
Episcopal Cburcb of tbe Me3slab, Santa
Ana.
She is survived by hll3band Charles S.
Eaton, of 2534 Vista Baya, Newport
Be,ach~ her mother, Mn. Charles J,
Cogan of ~Ana; two sisters, Mrs.
Paul Hansen '"of Santa Ana and. iMrs.
Robed Davies of Toledo, Ohio .. •· 1•
The family h8I suggested trlbutea , ifl
the form of donations to the Laguna
Beach Art Association. •
'
Cyclist, Boy, 2,
Accident Victims
A Garden Grove motorcycll!t and a Z.
year"ld Santa Ana boy were weekend
·Orange County trallic fatalities, the
county coroner'• office reporfed.
lloderlck N. Jokela, II, or 10101 Dewey
Drive,. was thrown from hi! cycle while
participating in a motocross race at Sad·
dleback Motorcycle Park Sunday, of·
!icers said. His body wu diacovered by
other riders.
Joseph Menchaca, victim of a hit run
driver on June 26, died at Santa Ana
Community Hospital SUnday of hi& in-
juries, the coroner's office reported. 1 Poitce said the boy was struck by a car
at Flower' and Bishop Streets in Santa
Ana. The driver, Dale Mathewson, 23, of
santa Ana, has been arrested, according
to police.
Autos Sprayed
With Obscenities
In Laguna Hills
Fourteen Laguna Hilla Leisure World
resldtota today face the repainilnc of
their aut<?m~lles \"d ~ obptera\JOn,pf
obaceniUJ sprayed on the c~ liy
unknQwn intruclera during the weekend.
Orilnge · ·cianty Sheriffs o f fl c e r .
estimated the damage inflicted to the
cars and nearby wuhroom walls and
buJldinga in the Ronda Granada sector of
lhe reUrement complei: at nearly f2,000.
Deputies aald tbe intruders used spray
paint to deface the 14 cars, nearby
sidewalka and buildinp-.. nd .. -wallhing ·
machiDes jn ·the adjacent communlty
laundry. ·
''One or two of the vict.iml im-
mediately J!ld their own spra)'illi on top
of the obscenities until they could get
their carr to a paint shop;" an in-
vestigator said. "Some of the meuages
dabbed on t&eir cart were about u vile as you'll ever find. ..
I Thieves Too Clumsy
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two mtn wbo
stopped to pick up co)ns spilled alter Ibey
allegedly robbed a supennerket found
themselves picked up and taken to jail,
police said. Orlando W. RobeN, 25, and
Jesse Wataon, 33, who police identified as
tramleott, were booked for investigation
of robbery !Junday, oflicen said.
Y ouagest Ohio De'legtlte
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) The
~ocratic .. l!ame £'1!1e.. reached for
vice' presidential possibilities today.
Among those mentioned was &imund S.
MuSkie, who once thought the presiden-
tial nomination was his for the asking.
Muskie, ,who ran for vice president
with Hubert Humphrey four years ago,
emphasized that be was not seeking that
role again, and there was no sign it
would be offered to him. However,
Muskie stopped short of saying he would
not accept it.
Muakle'1 name was among a dozen or
Deputies Raid
N.udie 'Church,'
•
Arres t 'Priests'·
. DUARTE (UPI) · -• A "~~!nation
Chruch' aM beer bar featurink nude
dancers has been raided by sheriff's
deputies who arrested four "priests," a
dancer and a' member of the co~
gregatlon.
The weekerxl arrests at the Church of
Hl-bUe ···in-this-1:.os-Angeles--s-u-b·u-r-b-
came after a one-month investigation.
"We were a little surprised when the
place opened up, 11 a sheriff's spokesman
said, referring to the church angle.
He said the bar was lleensed u a
church but was unsure by which agency.
Dej>uUes a8.id the 11churcb" was divid-
ed Into two parts. In the front half, a
church.goer colild buy beer at a bar. In
the rear -for a 13 donation -be could
watch the nude danc«'1, or movies, and
drink free beer.
Those arrested I n c I u d e d Leo
Barbarlck, 42; Martin Ordway, 22;
Robert Allen Pasch, 37, and Galen
Thompson Pearson Jr., 43. They were
booked on suspicion of permitting lewd
conduct and exhibiting lewd material.
A dancer, Lena Kay Marquez, 23, Fon-
tana, wu booked on SU!picion of lewd
conduct. --.
lteilh Thompaon. 18, youngest of th~ Ohio. deleplet
to the Democratic National Convenl1on, di.splays biJ
McGovern badge at the convention site in Miami
Beacb where proceedings open today.
•
I I
•
so being mentioned by convenlitxl
delegales o poaaible running-mates H
. Sen. George McGovero locked up the
prize. None of the speculation seemed to
have much to support it.
Others mentioned included.
-Sen. Edward M. KeMedy, (Jl.Mus.),
whom McGovern himstlf named aa
among the first persons he would call to
talk about the second spot Or. the ticket,
although he did not aay he would offer
the llO"l to him. Kennedy stilt was saying
no to all talk.
-Leonard Woodcock, president of tbe
United Auto Workera and one of the few
top union leaders friendly to McGovern.
McGovern hlmleJI mentioned Woodcock
as one jJOSllbillty. A> a prestdenUal can-
didate be would badly need labor 111pport
10 far dented bim.
-Reubln Altew. the governor of
Florida and Democratic ~ co..nvention
keynoter. Mkaw won D8liooal attenllon
but popular rejection tn bis own otate tn
a relereodmn that saw him pitted
against opponents of busing.
-Sen. Adlai Stevenaon of !Wnots,
wboae father twice ran for president and
wboae great.grandfather wu vice preal-
dent. The Stevenson name is well known.
at leut to the over--30 electorate and
Illinois would be a major electoral prize.
-Rep. Wilbur D. M 111 s (Jl.Ark.),
chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee and the possessor of a solid
conservative reputation that m.lght be
helpful on a liberal-oriented McGovern
ticket. But Mills has been close to the
"stop McGovern'' forces and presumably
would not be Interested.
-Hodding Carter Ill, tbe young editor
and publisher of the Delta Democrat-
Tunea of Greenville, Miu. Carter was an
active member of the party reform com~
mlttee headed by Rep. James G. O'Hara
(Jl.Mlch.).
--John Gilligan, governor of Ohio,
another electoral prize. Gilligan bu been
active here ln ~lng to · line up vote
switcbel to, t McGovern over the top,
Security precautlo111 for tbe trip _..
0speclally keen and agents blocked off
the narrow road laadJnc to the 1xlme la
the bllla of Loo Anseles. Nelcbban n.lal
cloae to the boule were ordered elf Iha
curt.. before tbe Presidential party ar-
rived.
Burton Fills In,
Donat.es $45,000
LONDON (UPI ) -Rlcbard Burton
stood In for Ellubeth Taylor at a United
Nations Qill.dren's Fund ceremony. Ht
said he was there 'because she was "lock·
ed in aome embracing scene with
Laurence Harvey" while filmln& .. Nl&bt
Watch."
Burton presented Mlsa Taylor's check
for $U,llOll to UNICEF. It matched the
amount he -' far bs 40th birthday
party tn Budapest 1ut February.
l/"'fldi Semi Annual
-e1•c -
••o•· ' · ·· { ' l I ,
.-------WOMEN'S-------.
PENAUO e l.ADY R.ORSHEIM e DELIGO e HILL & DALE
e VALLEY e
e VITALITY
e RISQUE e ENNA JETIICKS e COBBLERS e WOMEN'S SANDALS
UP TO Y3 OFF and MORE
SIZES T_O_ll-VALUES TO $30 __ AAAA to C
MEN'S " • Children'•
FLOIJSHEIMS
llt?Yi I S17o80 to $27 <80 -~-~--·-1 I' t ~ c§ THE1 !Rm: TRIDE .
. ~HOE,
VALUES TO $36.95
WINTHROP E. T. WRIGHT . GIRLS fJff BOYS '8"
$17.80 $29.90 Values to $17'.00
I OPEN MON., & FRI. NITE. TILL 9:30 P .M.
USE YOUR BANIWDCARO, MASTER CHARS~ HEMPHILL CHARGE.
J •
DISCONTINUED STYLES· BROKEN SIZES. ALL SALES FINAL:
'
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTEI 644 4123
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;f DAil Y PILOT
'Wlek•
•• II((_ j\ftack 6tieit1. Nb S-tew
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·n,iey~ ths same chsssmen
BObby Fisher uses!' .
Fischer Gets
·His : Chair-· ' .
:: Mai~h 'Be;,1,·~ ·· .. a~~~1('ii-3,· ' . REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UP
Boris Spusky·Bobby Fischer world~Ciless
match can begin -Fischer's favorite/
~ has arrjved.
~ ~ -7be swiv~l chair 'tn metal and black
lqUier was flown from New York to
IOdand and put on the stage in the Reyk-
javik chw hall SUnday.
Speaslcy'• Russian advisers anived
lilortly alter Ille much taJkod aboat chair
.. llld-ltudled it IUl)lldoual,y. Tbm they lell
wilboal «m1menL
Now the Ic.landlc orpnlwl face a
DeW problem: Where to find a •il!illar
cbalr.in Iceland? "It woold loot better if
both Spuaty llld Filcber bid !be same
cbain," 11\d Gudmundur Tbonrinslm,
praideat ol the ICtlandic Chess Federa-
tion. ,
Fi!clw took one look at the dozoo di!-
r.r.nt ch a Ir s the Icelanden had
assembled from Reykjavik's furniture
stores the other day, sat down in some of
them and then gave hla verdict : "Fly tn
my own chair." ,
Spassky, the 35-year-old world cham·
pion, did not seem to worry much about
details ol the $2511,000 match.
Before leavtng for a salmon fishing
tour ol northern Iceland the defending
champion Aid, "I am not going to argue -t chairs, cbtu bolrcls llld 1e1a. I
will !Nft that to Bobby. It m8kel DO di!·
ftttnee to me."
Alter lencthY and drematle preludes,
-Fiacber •IDCI Spulliy appeared ready to lltarl Ibo ftnt ol lbolr M games
2'uelda7.
"Boliby II nlutd IDCI nedy. We will
llllY _, un1ess·11pus1iy ts m," said
Fred .Cramer, vice president ol the U.S. . a.ea J'odoratloa.
But the ployers 11ll1 hive to lmi>ect
"1d approve the facJliiies in the fiaU,
where the organizers expect 3,000 fans
paying" each to be .. hand Tueaday.
Ends Truce;
By COIJN BAXER
BELFAST (UPI) -Irish Republican
Army (IRA) gunmen n:tumed to the at·
tact today, their JUay cease-fire aban·
cloned. Gunbatlles spread across Beilul.
and Londooderry and JO persons died In
the flgbiing or through •<xecutlons."
In the rirst houn after the l)IA
Provisional wing cilled off its truce Sun-
day night, aix civiliani' died in Belfast, ·
including• 14-year-old girl 1µ1d a Roman
Catholic priest who was .Bhat aa be ad·
ministered the last rites to another vic--
tiJn. Sixteen soldiers and 10 ciyiliw
were wounded. ·
Earlier SUnday while the cease-fire
was sllJI In effect, police found the bodies "GI ri;ur mlil ,.,,. ~ppa..OtlY.li3d been ex,
ecuted: ·.The 'dea~.,P,lsed'>1be ~I l~r
Northern. Ireland'• three ye8rs l (jf
bloodal!ed to 411. Sixteen civilians and "
one IOldler died tlurlng the truce period.
The Rev. Martin Sinltb~'oqe · of the
leaders ol the militant Protestant Ulster
Vanguard Movement. said today, "We
are in a state of civil war. Irishman is
fighting Irishman. What else can it be
called?"
He spoke two days before ltbe tradi-
tional . Orange Day ,celebration--eom--
memorating f.he 1690 b8tUe of the Boyne.
Some 50,000 Protestants are expected to
march through the province and the
Briti5h government today announced
another 850 10ldiers were en route to
Northern Irmnd, bringing tolal troop
lllrength an tho province to 15,ll50.
~larf ol Slate William Whitelaw fl.W,.to Northern J:r.land today from
England to eonfer with oecurity advisers
· on Ibo latest crial&.
Protestallts, Roman Catholics and the
British Army, meanwblle, mobilized men
today in the wake ~f the ceasefire's sud·
den end. Sources in the IRA and the mili·
tant Protestant Ulster Defense Associa·
tlon (UDA) said con41lgency plans were
being put into effect by. both groups to
bring them to peak readiness for more
hostilities.
Sharp gunbattles raged in several parts
of Bellast" until the early morning hours.
Most were between troops and Catholic
snipers, although Protestant gunmen
were drawn into the gun duels as well.
Some of the bitterest fighiing raged in
the Catholic llallymurpby oectioo. An
army oboerVatlon post tn a lumber yard
wu near w b ere that Father Noel
Fitipatrict wu ehot in Ibo neck as he
knelt over a dying man to administer the
last rites.
A Provillonal IRA llatement from
Dublbi acOIJod Briiilh troops of breaking
the ceuellre by firing rubber bullets and
naillea gas al almost Z.llOO Oltholics, in-cludint womm IDCI chlldrm, !lying to
take over abandoned houses in the
Proiestanl Suffolk housing estate. The
confnxltation developed into a gunbatile
between troops and snipers.
Briiilh commanders denied troops had
broken the truce and said their men fired
only when fired upon.
Northern Ireland Secretary William
Wbltelaw said in a statement 1111te in-
cident was clearly set up by the-IRA to
Gudnumdur Amla-, d e p u t y
referee ol the match, -1 all day SIUll
day pollshlng oil the fine details. He
tested. several chess boatds and finally
settled' for one made in Iceland opeclaliy
for the' match. It his been put log ether
from Icelandic stones.
AmllllCSIOD. who hid to take over
when the chief referee Lothar•Scbmid ol
Germany Dew home Saturday, ailO his a
cboice·ol five or six different chess sets
• provide 'a jusillication for a resumption
-of terrorist activity."
o1 var1aus mes. ,
Schmid Aid bo -id mum 'l'hllnda1
alter vi!liing hil oon, who was Injured in
I traffic accident.
Ship Returning
To Alameda Port
Armored Car Robbed
MONTEIUIEY, Mmco \AP) -Two '
armed men held up an anmttd car ol
the -ol Nuevo Leon Slturday and
escaped with a hlul estimated unolfi·
cillly et $160,000. Police said ., one was
Injured.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
SAIGON (AP) -The aircraft carrier Dell\ltry of the Dally Piiot
America, normally a part of the U.S. ls guaranteed
AUantic Fleet, bas replaced the carrier MO!ldly.,rld•'t': tt you 11o "°' 11,ve yow Coral sea in the 7th Fleet operating' off ptper by $:)11 p,m,, all Md 'flVf copy Wiii Vietnam, the Navy bu annoimced. ra b;::"' ,. you. C•lll .,.. tn.-i until
. The Coral Sea ii en route to 1tl home 1ttwMv .i ~ ff wu • not r.c11w
port tn • , ___ ,_ fl --•~ f )'Wt" COCIY It)' ' •.m. S.h.rrdty, or • ''""' ~ a er eeven UIVUU&iJ o Slnide't'. ·a11 11111 • ctP't' w111 " brOU9tlt .. duty In the combat zone. rev. ca11t '" ht! .. un111 10 1.m.
The America Is based tn Norfolk, Va., Telephon<S
MIAMI
...
• ..
-~ AT'Z.AlfTIC
OCZA/I • .. . Hllil-t •:::%::a;+> _:::::: ---.......... · ..
-----. ...:·.: ~ -·· -::;:.: ';,:.. .. ~:'": ~ .. ·-.--... -----· -..... ....... . .. ~--:.(b:O·· .. • ..
:JULIA fUTTlf
MIAMI~
BEACH
• • • McGOVIRN
UPI T"'""'
MIAMI HEADQUARTERS .SITE FOR DEMOCRATS, GOP
Mop Shows Hotels Where Mojor CandldalOI Will Stay
Examination Requested
For Japanese Terrorist
LOO, Israel (AP) -The Japanese ter·
rorist who survived the Tel Aviv airport
massacre pleaded guilty at the opening
of his t1'W today, bul his lawyer asked
for a psychiatric examination, and the
three-man military court recessed to
consider the request and the plea.
"I don't want an examination •• , I
don't want an examination," shouted 24-
year.old Kaz.o Okamoto before the court
recessed.
His clllef lawyer, Max Kirtzman, said
he did Id coolend Okamoto was now In·
sane, "but he should have an ex-
amination to determine if he was sane at
the time of the commission of the offense
•.• or whether he was under some ir·
reversible influence •.• or under the in·
fluenCe of drugs ."
Kirtzman said he had no rna'f.erial yet
"to convince you of the defendant's men-
tal state," but added, "in the
$!i~.tanceL __ and. in the defendant's
behavior since leaving his Jtomeland for a
faraway country, with which he had no
connection, we see that the facts speak
for themselves."
Under Israeli law a defendant in a
capital case has to to plead innocent.
otando lo el]JeOted to get life im· prisonment.
The opening of the trial was delayed 55
minutes by strict security checks. Many
of those at the trial stood in line for more
than two ·hours before they could enter
the courtroom about four miles
southwest of Lod Airport, where the
massacre took place.
Wearing a red shirt and dark slacks,
the smaU solemn defendant stood· in a
waist-high wooden enclosure manacled to
two husky policemen as the chief pros-
ecutor, U. Col. David lsraeli, read the
four charges against him .
Asked If be understood, Okamoto
replied quietly, "Yes."
but at a policeman as· well , .. " Then he
pleaded guilty.
Jn effect, the charge sheet accused
OkamotO of participating with two other
Japanese radicals, Yasuyaki Yasuda and
Tsuyosbi Okuaira, in the murder d' ... 26
persons at Lod Airport May 30. Yasuda
and Okudai~ were also killed, and 67
other persons were wounded in the carnage. ·
The Japanese wer~ acting for the Arab
Popula,r Front [or the Liberation of
Palestine.
Three of the charges aglinst Okamoto
carry a maximum pena1ty of death. But
the only person ever put to death by
Israel was Nazi war criminal Adolf
Eichmann, and Premier Golda Meir has
expressed Opposition to capital punish·
ment for Okamoto. ·
" Negotiator Back
At Paris Talks
With Same Line
PARIS (AP) -Hanoi's chief peace
negotiator, ~uan Thuy, returned to Paris
tod;ly lepeating the old Communist pro-
posals to end the war in Vietnam.
Thuy told an airport news conference :
"We still consider that .the seven·point
solution is the correct basis for the set·
tlement of the-Vietnam problem.''
He added however: "We will gladly
examine any new proposals from the
United Slates."
The North Vietnamese <>fficial also
discfosed that Hanoi Politburo member
Le Due 'nlo will be returning to Paris,
but he did not say when.
Thuy said "We have come back to
Paris with good will and a serious at-
titude to resume pegotiations Thursday,''
when the l50th ..SSion of the peace talks
is scheduled. The talks hive been suspen-
ded by the United Slates and South Viel·
Senior .Citizens
~gnore_Yippies .~.-_
together with the lelljor citlunl 1'les®y j
* * * Telethon Raises
$4.5 Million-
It's N~t Enough
MJAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -. The
Democ;ratic party says· nearly $U
millioli was pledged during its 19-hour
money-raising telethon.
But despite the financial success of the
program, the party is still more than $6
million in debt Crom the 1968 campaign.
The party conducted the television eJ·
travaganza in .an effort to wipe out a
$9.3-million 1968' debt. Performers ap-
pearing on the show which ended SUnday
night donated their services, .but the
Democrats reportedly had to pay the
ABC television network $1.6 million for
the airtime.
Officials were hopeful that late mail-in
contributiom wouki push the shaw's
gross over $5 million.
· Viewers pledged the C011trirutlot111 . via
telephone calls to 32 regional centers
manned by 12,000 volunteers or cjwged
II to credit cards.
nJihl at Lummus Pair\:. Tiiey called ii a 1
"?Wriafe between the generaUons."
Schedule Set
For Democrats·
Vice President
Seat? 'NQ Way'
Says Kennedy_
HYANmS, ·Mw. (UPI) -l While
others 'Ml!Tied about the credeotials fight
and his name was bandied about Bl 1
possible candidete ol Mioml Beach, Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy wmt t18iJ1nC ol1 cape Cod.
Hyannis WU besieged by reporien
await~ word from tile Kennedy com·
pound. on developments al t h •
Democratic National Conventicn in
Florida .
'"Ibere is no way l will take the vice
presidthtial oornination," Kennnedy said
Sunday. "f owe it. to Joan (his wife ), the
children, my mother and sisters. There is
no way I will take the nomination."
Kennedy's wife went to the convention,
and appeared at the Democrats' national
telethon. She said her husband was not a
presidential candidat~ and tbe decision
was 04fina1."
However, KeMedy has been unable to
.dampen speculation all year -deopite
constant disavowals of his candidacy -
and his name is still , cropping , up. Ken.
lucky Gov. Wendell H. Ford, for ex· amp~ said Sunday night he could llUP'
port a Ucket led by.Rep. Wilbur Mills (IJ.
Ark.), and with Kennedy U Vici
presidential candidalo.
Kemedy has been·menUoned ailO as •
pos8ible running mate for Sen. George S.
McGovern. .
)
I
\
I
I
but bu beeq temporarily uaipd 'to the =~~"t'un=.! = ""!'"•• .. ~ ..
7th.Fleet .. in..mponse to the North VJ~ -~9"'=i::.':~~···-··· .... ~.J*lnt
namese invasion of south Vietnam,11 the 1 "" J1Mtn c.pi1tr.no. D1~t1t.
Askt!d how he pleaded to the charges,
Okamoto replied: "On the 30th of May
l!m I discharged firearms with two
other persons ••• I forgot their names
~~-not know how J1)any ~e J nam sigce May~ ___ ----
Navy laid. .__...,. __ .._ __ ._...,_""_. .... •---·-··-· _-_ __, "I have many things I want to say in
court ••• I fired arms not only at tourists
Gulf Air Tt:iggers Storms .
Ka1isas; Ohio Valley, North Have Rain; West Dry
MA1IOMAl WtA1Mfl SI IYKI POllCA&l I• 1AM 1 &l 1 ·11 • 11
..
If
._, W1AMOi~.u1 •
1-c'* ....,.. "*'f 200.000 btktd ..
-Stm.1 MllllC'9 ..... 'llltltrt '°'' Cfll .... --11U 5 1 .. ""'"· • fltlff'f """" ........ ~ ""' ... Mf ., """' .... lllc:Hlt ..
-'r11111 w.di1•• -rlptldlM. 11• ....,. ................... ~
'"' Ctllr.ml• ... ......., tta.
'
.IAIM l;~-~~...0·
~ .. ~lllOWtll ","l10W
f:outal l1' eatlter
MosUy IUl'lfl't' lofty, LJtllt \'•fi1bl1
Wfncl• nlgtit Incl n'Klrrll"' l\oVfS blcom-11'19 ..,..,,,, . ., • to ti knob In ef'l•moon•
loN't' .ll\CI TUffd1y. HIOll tod.t't' 70.
Coe1l•I lttl'IPfl'tl\lt'tt ranot ffOl'l'I IO
t111 n, 1n11nc1 ttn'IPtrtl\tf11 ''"" fror!I to to 11. Weter ttrroptr lhlni 61.
SNM, M-. TWe1
MOWDAY
s.tOllll ""' .. , ......... f :" "'"' .. . SICOllll W ••• , .• ,, ,;lS p.m. 2.1 TUllDAT
Flnt ...,.. , ........... U:Jf1.m. 4,,
Fl"' loW .............. •:G1.ll'I. ·lJ _..,.Mtft , ........... Jl:UP.11'1. 1.1 S......., ............ 4r04p.ll'I. f,f
lllft ...... l ;#l,fft. ..,. •:•p.m.
.-.. .,_ J;JI '·""' .... t :U ,,_
·-{
Xuan Thuy, who his been tn Hanoi for
about two months, appeared to be ttlu·
ed and tn pod humor and some of hil
listenefl thought that he · uaod lw in-
vective than usual in· referring to the
Uniled Slates. But he twice repeated his
side's old peace proposals and gave no
indication that Hanoi would.change them
at Thursday's meeting.
They call for the United stales to set a
date for complete, uncond~tional
withdrawal from Vietnam and replace--
ment of South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thieu by a c~lition govern. ..
ment.
Thuy was asked about a statement he
made in Hanoi several weeks ago that he
was returning with "new dlreCtivea." He
replied with a broad smile "My new in-
structions ,..,., to come back to Paris to
coniinue Ibo negotlailoa1 With the Unllad
Slates. With good will and a -at-
Utude we can come to a aettlemeat
rapidly." .
Thuy, who stopped In PekinC IDCI
Moscow en route to Parll, waa aated
about the attitude ol tho Sevlet Unl111 and
Communist China toward the Vietnam
problem.
He replied: "The Moocow IDCI PekinC
leaden said thsl ii the Uniled Stales oon-
tinues its aggressive. war, the two coun ..
tries will continue lo .._t the Viet-
118mese people. Tiie ~ and PUlnc
!elders n:alllrmed their ~ for lht
~plan."
lie repeated charges that the United
States II bom~ dikel, acbool.!.
holpltall llld populated ..... and ""latlnc • t• qr-i lo bait •1-
tacltl m the l'lclrllL '
• ...
D.ANCIU PULSATI AT 'IMOKl-IN SMACK' PARTY IN MIAMI ..... 'Jr..• ...... c.n ........ 14111 .. Ml ,...,.,_cw
I
l
17
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17
• -~ :: 't \-.I t •
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•
Orange (;oast
., . •
-.T ... y'•
EDITION
--*-----..
VOL. 65, NO. '192, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES MONDAY, :JULY 10, ·1972 > " NC ; ,, TEN CENTS
• \. • ~ I
Wallace . Rejects 3rd ·.Party; .Still t/in ... ·Race .. ,,,, .. \ ....
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George Sitting before a battery or microphones !or a ltnllll natiallal defense. delqate issue, but left uncertala just
Wallace said todllY be hu no plans to be In a wheelchair becall!e or paralysis "I waot lhe' Democratic party to what bll pooltlon would be, saylnc ;•pd
a third party presidential candidate il from the waist down from one o! the become lhe part~,~of the average simply be fair.'" • ·
dlssatlsfled with the choice of the bullets that bit him, Wallace said he was ciutent'' Wallace saw:.
Democratic conventloo. still ao active caodidato -aod wouldn't 'But be ~d lhe party must chaos• its He also Said be had no pllllJ for lhe
Tbe Aiabama governor, at his fii'st fulJ. have stayed in the race if be felt be could direction or "it will pass into oblivion." time being to make an appearance an the
bloim nein confer<llce · aince ·being not ph)'llc:ally take il ·o, · · A& for a lhlnl patty bid lhls year, oonvention l(oor. . .
~cally_ ~In ap. assassination at· Wallace stressed again, thl't.fiO !ell lhe · Wallace said, "I don't have any plaos al Wallace bu diaplayed far 'lea lnfi ..
\empt May 15, Said at Ille same time that ·=rala would be In gre_at trouble In ~" J9r that. , ...ce so far tli8b aides predicted..._~
lie dod liol believe tbe Demllcrats can No r il they did not adopt a p)lll· "' "'8Dill:e exprWed ll'iJllngness t o · ·lhg secluded In bll 2IOtb floor pr~den~
win lhe election without the belp of tbose form the llnes be advocates -In-.di-i PJl"iille d>Dlprorgise with otber suit• of tbe luxurious •SherJton F o ~)
who support ~ ... ·' .. ~~ch.ding an:an~ stand and~• plaD;k .c~~ on ~ 'disP:Llled :~ifomia . A.!1'bas.sadors in downtown ?ifiamL ~ ~'~j,.1
.:-:ft _ ... ':A ...... YJ'"f.-·--'"1! " * -i1,.:. I ' ~';;...: -~, .. · ~~~-. F. * /* ii~.: '
-overn
Late M.uskie Offer Spurned in Hea~d ~attle
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern gained new delegate momen-
twn agalnat a divided aod desperate op-
poaitloo today aod conlldenUy spumed a
late-hour peace-making effort by Ed·
mund S. Muskie to compromise the
California delegate seating dispute. Re-
lated stories, pictures Pages 3, 4.
Muskie, assuming the reconciler's role
but refusing to abandon his own can·
didacy in McGovern's favor.,..warned that
the Democratic liational c:onvention
beginning only hours away was "being
turqed into two anned camps" which
would commit party suicide I n
November.
But McGovern rejected MU!kie's c811
for all candidates to meet with
Democratic National C b a i r m a n
Lawrence F. O'Brien in his Fon-
tainebleau Hotel offices this afternoon to
discuss a california and· Illinois credeir
tial.$ compromise to avert the "prospec-
tive sell-slaughter" on the convention
floor.
Muskie said bis secret plan would
"neither a.ssure nor preclude candidacy"
when delegates decide the presidential
nominaUon Wednesday nigbt.
But McGovern said be could "see Uttle
to be gained by golhg Into a closed room
with six anti-McGovern candidates. I
have a feeling the result would be G to I.''
Muskie went to O'Brien.'s room, as did
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, Sen. Henry
M. Jacbon and fonner North C.arolina
governor Terry. Saolonl but. they called .
off the meeting when McGovern falled to
appear.
Already conlldent ol a Door victory jn
his bid to regain 151 California dtlec•tea
crucial to his chancea for a !Int-ballot
llOlllinallon, the front.running McGovern
said. "It Is my present lnclinatlon to let
the ~nvention decide these d.llputes."
Muskie declined to alate his position on
whether McGovern should be given bad:
the 151 Catuornla delegates stripped
from him in pre-convention rulinp.
•
''• .. ' , .... ' .... .. .
' f
U'IT1...._
Route Issue
Hearing Set
For Public
Coast Guard
Arrests Two
After Pursuit
HWe have seen this convention being
turned into two anned camps," Muskie
said, "prepared to resort to every
j>&rllamentary maneuver wbicb mlglll.
contribute to the victory of one or
another candidate. If prtparaliona for
battle continue, aod batUe 11,]!llned on its
present ground. the toll In political"_
and lnjurtd could' be horrendoua aod our
psty and its nominee could be ._
the casualUes. '.'
ALABAMA GOV. GEORGE WALLACE WORKING OUT· IN MIAMI Wo~nded Candidate Preperlng for St...,_ Convention Activity
Costa Mesana will .J>e asked fflr. l!!eir
opiniOlll on the boillnf Newport Freeway•
reall_.t laaue dll'tnc 1 pubUc bear-
lhi wlthln a week to 10 days, Jack Ham-
mett, mayor'o! Coota -· llid today. The bearing, to be conducted by the
Costa Mesa Freeway Committee, will
focus on the desfrabipty of placing tbe
freeway on Newport Boulevard, as
originally proposed.
Meaowbile, Hammett said, Costa Mesa
off'lciall will be meetin1 wllh the otate
Highway Commi.S!ion to determine why
It has offered Costa Mesa the optloo of
reallgnlng the freeway on the old route.
The Newport Boulevard alignment
could have detrimental effects to traffic
circulation In Newport Beach since all
Ille• freeway tra!!ic would be funneled
directly Into the center or the city. -
eun-.ot plails call for the freeway to
nm along Superior Avenue and to con-
nect with the proposed Pacific Coast
Freeway. _
Last week in a Jetter to Robert Bowles,
ei:ecutive secretary of the Highway Com-
mission, Mayor Hammett said be felt en-
ding the freeway in Costa Mesa "would
appear to have catastrophic results for
the people of Costa Mesa."
Citizens Group
Studies Traf fie
In Newport Area
A Newport Beach citizens committee
Tuesday will decide whether to include a
freeway as a potential solution to traffic
problems and wlll also look Into Im-
provements of the Back Bay bridge bot·
tleneck. .•
The transportation Plan C i t i z e n s
Advisory Committee, noting the near
death of the Pacific Coast Freeway, Is
considering instructions to Its traffic con·
sultant as to whether he should even
think aboUt a freeway 11 he prepares a
traffic plan !or re<"Ommendation to the
. city c:ouncll
The paJlel alao will hear reports of
recomnieftded Improvements to • the .
Dover IJrtve.Plcl!ic Coast Highway in-
~· neor the brldp over Upper Newport Bay. .
The panel wUI meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
Marine Slf<ly Department Head·
quarten, 7V Newport Pier; Newport
Beach.
Words He Said
Hurt His Ears
PARIS (AP) -''Thank you,
President McGovern,"' said Ronald
Reaaan. "And I hope I never ba ve
to UM a..! -1on again."
Tbe Calllornia governor. making
a speech hefore the American Club
or Paris todlly, waa introduced by
lit prealdent, David McGovetn.
INJURED IN FALL
Newport ~pr Mc.I~ni•
Mcinn~ Injured
In Pool Mishap,.
, May Miss Meet
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of Ille o.llY P'Ott Sllff
Mayor Donald A. Mclnnil was Injured
in a swimming pool accident in Palm
Springs Saturday and it is uncertain
whether he will attend tonight's Newport
Beach city council meeting.
The mayor's absence may cause coun-
cilmen to postpone action on two major
matters -the proposed $135 million
Collins Radio Company project and the
appeaJ by developers of the Versailles
apartmenls for expanJion of their West
Newport bluff project.
Councilmen are scbeduled to meet at
7: 30 tonight In City Hall.
!fclnnls reportedly was 'hurt when' lie
slipped on a pool deck at the Tropi!"
Hotel where he was weekending with bis
wile aod Mr. aod Mrs. Robert Reed.
Reed Is the city's marine safety director.
Mcinnis underwent an examination by
his personal physician this morning
although X-rays taken at a Palm Springs
hospital were negaUve.
"He WIS lucky.'' Reed sakt this morn-
ing. "be waa walking down a step ooto
the pool deck when he sllpped and reaUy
cracked bis foreheaCS." '
Reed said the wyor appeared to !eel
better Satunlay .......,. when they went
out to -aod was able to Dy bome In
his airplane Sunday aftemoon. .
Besides the controversial Collins and
Venallles projecls, oouncllnien . tonight
alao will · be aaked to rocoosider a
-to eroct a .... pelt.. bulldlnl 00
the city hall lawn.
• City Manager Robert L. Wynn has urg-
ed the oounc:ll oonaldor construction o! a
police aubotaUoa In Corona deI Mar
before ,.rnodelinl or ttbuilding oo the
preltDt Ille. '
Coundlmen also w!1I consider I P'°'
posed emergency onllnaoce to bell the
eonstructlon of duplexes on Balboo bland
!or IO days untll tbe city can decide
whether to strip that zoning from lhe
lslaod aod subetituto a new R 1.S ,_ In
lta place.
'l1!c new IOlling claasm-.Uon -14
allow glll'll' aparlmentl, but not full•
ed second !llllts.
' The U.S. eoD <ti.rd <IUtran a
111111)'JY l>altl ,.S.turday In a c-that
""'1ed a ""1lep lludent's brief defiance
Before cal,linc for the meetin& of lhe
.-uaI llofell!ls Muokle 1 t I q
rep<ftn, "I'm lllll a~ al will
be a Cllldldlle-unlll lhll ......... ii
endod." Be llid bl WU \:IOlliil lbt
delacateo jilodpl to him.
U.S. General, 3 Others
of maritime authority. · . .
The atuden~ Michael Park, 24, was
booked for resisting arrest and operating
an Improperly registered boat. His
female companion was booked as 1 a
juvenile rw:iaway. Both are from San
Diego.
IVhlle the convenlloll credanllals
maneuvors continued at the -atrtp bolets, about 500 antiwar 'domonatraton
marched on the convention center car-
rying Vlei Cong Oap and liJoutln(
slogaos.
Killed by Enemy Slu!ll
According to a Harbor P a t r o I
spokesman, the pair's arrest eight miles
of~ Newport Beach pier was the close
of a~ se:tes of events which. started Fri-
day . '-~-• • ~ .f .
Harbor Patrolman Dominick Chambers
said he stopped Park coming Into the
harbor Friday for improper registration
o! his 38-!oot flShing boat. Park allegedly
assured the officer that he would correct
the situation immediately so Chambers
let him go.
The ne:rt day, the patrolman saw the
boat moored In lbe harbor, so be decided
to check on the regi!tration again . .
According to Harbor Department
reports, Park was ' Dot •aboard, but the
girt was. She assertedty told the
patrolman that Park was out fi:ring the
registration. ·
Chambers _µid be wu: 1u.spicious that
she might be a runaway so he took her
name and address. While be was in
Harbor Department offices verifying that
she waa a nmaway from San Diego, be
saw the boat leaving the harbor.
Chambers pursued. the pair , but lie
claims Park merely .waved at him when
he beard the patrol boat •a· siren.
'J:bat's when tbe .coast Guard CUtter
Point Divide was called in. Park's boat
was finally stopped wben the lar1er
veaeI pullad across Its bow elgbt miles
to ....
Body Found in Bay
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tbe cor-
oner's office said a body found floating in
Sao Franclaoo Bay, a hail·mJle north of
fmsuro laland, WU that o! Robert 0,
Stewart, 51, of Redwood City.
There was .no violence in the prolelt
led by the Vietnam Veterans Al•lnst the.
War as II wound lta way -aeven bkJcb
through the Miami Beocb buaineia
district and past side streets llned with
retirement hotels .
Security remained Ught wltb federal
troops and slate police forces s!1n4ing
by, aod ollve drab beltooptera patrolling
the cloud-scudded skies over the wbtte
lines or botels.
Rep. Shirley Chilbolm picked up a
potential 13 additional first ballot votea
today when Sen. Humphrey told' black
delegates pledged to him they could vote
for ber on the Initial presidential roll-call
Wednesday.
Aides said Humphrey telephoned Mrs.
Chisholm to announce his declsJon, made
in responae to her propoeal that black
delegates should 1tick together for at
least one vote.
Mrs. Chlsbolm, first black womao to
seek the presidential nomination, claims
to have 28 delegates In her camp, but has
been fighting a move from Julian Bond
to strip ber or some or u-.
McGovern met with a iP'OUll ol farm·
state delegates, toured -.te delegat!onl
111111ely opposed to him abd met with a
cauct11 of•women in an effort· to hive the
convention overturn bll big aetback by
the party credentials commlltee.
Newport High Class
Slates 20th Reunion
The cluo of 1951 r.-Newport liart>or
Hlgb Sebool will hold a :IO-year reunion
Sept. 9 at tbe Balboo Pavilion.
Deadline for. reservations Is August 15.
For ,_-yations er additional In-
formation call Mrs. John Steelsmlth at
557~145 er Mrs. Richards. .. at 131-4139.
Nudes Nabbed
Score: Police 2, Nature 0
SAIGON (UPI) -A North Vietnamese
ll'ltllery .shell killed Bl&-Gen. Richard J.
Tallman and three other Americans Sun-
<Uy near the besieged provincial capital
ol An Loe, military llOUt'Cel said today.
Two other U.S. JFVicemtR were
wounded In the attack, lhe sources aald.
Tallman, 47, ot Honeedale, Pa., was
deputy commander ol the 'Jrd Regional
Aiststance Command operating In the An
Loc area, eo ip11es north of Saigon.
He wu the father of seven children
aJld has been stationed In South Vtetnam
for a year.
The other AmertC1J11 were believed to
be advisers with South Vietnamese
forces fighting their way up HJgliway 13
toward An Loe, an embattled provincial
capttal under •lei• alnce April I.
At lout nine u.s. generall, one iJ.s.
admiral aod five South Vietnamese
generals bad been killed In the Vietnam
war.
Tallman, 47, aod his party had jusl
ll<!pped out ,o! their helicopter wben a
shell hit nearby.
They jumped Into a bunker, tben
climbed out agaln _aod were runoln& for a
commaod post 100 yards away wben a
aecond shell exploded In their midst.
President Nguyen Vao Thieu laoded In
the 111111e spot two,days ago durin, an ln-
apectlon tour but ., artillery &bells came
within fOO yarda ol the Thieu party.
Meanwhile, a !,~marl South Viet. :~-~ ~ 1utthe!..'k..:1 !';~
to the edce or town today aod Allied or.
ficers aald they expect a major fi8ht
lle!ore recapturing the provincial Ctpital
from the Oimmunlata.
The South Vleti)amde satd Friday that
govermneat troopl occupied lwl>thlrda of
the city aod the only major obstacle -
the capture or the walled, 19th Ct!ltury
citadel near the center of the city.
However, Allied offlcen aald 1oUJ the
North Vietnamese delenden '"!'efved
relnforoemebta and are prepue4 1" dcht
for the city.
"Quanr Tri ii gofnl to be ..., llanl to
take. 1Iie bunker compl<IOI are un-
believable," a U.S. adviler told UPI cor·
Two YotlD( women, both irom out of to.rn, were citod for misdemeanor · r•pondont Barney Selbert.' "They art
indecent exposure by Laguna l!elch pollce over the weekend ror a_.u,, delo!'lnlned to hold Quanr Tri. Tbero Is bar~ on the beaeh. . _ <' 11 .~ a battelliln (about 500 men) In
The flrat lncldmt occurrad Fridly when ao 11-~ear-old woman at er-t ' thoN. · Bay Beacb basked topleas on Ila-back. la -deftlopnlOlll, U.S. Navy of.
Pollce Sgt. Nell l'llrall llld thal abo wu attraetlns "conalclerable ath-lletaII oald ao ~can destroyer sank tlon." llnt."'"1• &Jnday that were unloading
A 21-year<>ld woman WU cltod Saturday II the beach juat """" of Sl .. py a Ch1-freighter off the cout of North
Hollow, alao for roinl toplesa. ' Vietnam. The fnlghter WU not fired
Both women told officers tht,y believed their costumes or lack or them, upon. The '1111 Fleet aatd lhe Incident oc-
wert legal since a Supreme Court ru8ng that the bare hu.;an figure waa nol curred 13 miles northeast ol Donr Hof. ol ttaeff lewd . Ellewbere .... the north, U.S. llibter • . bombers knocked oal • water aupply Pu":!ll noted that .the rullnr pertelned only to hare baaldh( oo "tee!• erafl. American pl .... ne,. more than
beachea. Police ftre nolllied by cttlaell ,calla, he said. a. IOCtla over ·tbe norlh ln the period
endJas It i p.m. ~.' t
\ •
The number of U.S. Army ln>opl In
South •Vletnam increased last week-bul
overall Am erican mllltary strength feJJ
by 500 men to 47,500, the U.S. command
aald today.
Yorba Linda Set
To Protest Plan ...
For Chino Hills
Mayor l\udolpb C&slro of Yorbe Undo
called a apecla[ city council~
day to pro!ell the propoaed Ollno HlDI
airport planned four and 1 half mllu
north of the city.
cutro told a crowd of 300 cltluns that
Brea aod Placentia were joining his city
Jn the battle to prevent development of tlie jet facility .
Previously, Olinda Village and Brea
groupa !Jad voiced protests. castro said
La Habra officials probably would join
the fight, too.
The mayor said telegrams were sen!
p r.o t e 1 ting Federal Aviation
Admlniltrafion air space approval of the
faelllty IJ1lliJunoell last weet.
The FAA -al must be followed by
an enviroamefttal Impact study of the
proposed airport m 21,000 acree strad·
dllhg the Oraoge,San Bernardino Col,mty
llne, north or lhe ~ l"teeway,
·Ornfe C:.1•
w .. t1ter
More llllLlhlne for the 0r.,.,_
Coast ts what Iha weolherlady ii
predicting. TempenluNI ol·around
ro are upecled 11 the beo<hea,
rising to Iha low IO'• lnlaod. Lon
Jn the f011.
• INSmE TODAY '
Tht PllltoQOll Papen trial of .
Danit! Elllbng dtld AnUlooor
Ruuo btgi., Hl·Los Angclt1 to-
da~, os • pontl of 100 ,,,,,.,.,,. «v• juror• .,.. 11'llllll0ncd lo OJ>
p<or for • ••lfetloa proca" 11141 u t%ptcttd to take obovt •
10ttlc. Set ltory, P0gt 5.
L.M, ,..,. ' ....... ' Cal..,..,., I Ct.."tllf!W .,. -" (,...... ,,
DM111 ,.._ ' ....... , ... ' ......,......,. , .. ,,
....... Moll ,., .. ---' 'Ila illS I M
-'-UMlln ,, -" Ml'llnll ..... • .,..,. c...., t """' .... " -..... ........... "'" ..,....... .. -.. =--...! -......
" • . :
. '
' •
' .. . .. .• .
N'C
. ~~elays Y ote
0 ··On 2 Issues
g ,. ~I:;
l'wo major proposals before the
i wport Beach plaMlng commission -a
ommercial deve lopment near Balboa
()Rd a zone change for the North (J
• • I ~Jrifil area -ba-ve ~9, COD•
--,....~ IO'~y'!ro. . .
...-The' proposals by the Irvi~e Compa ny , . · ~ wete to• ·have be,_en ac~~d upon Thursday
LI lllJ~l,bub'i"~!.ll"'ed lo-lhe next plan-
, fililg~~o\i meeting at the Jiiq'uesl
( o(~ <Oiiipan,y .·. o
'
DAILY ,ILOT PllM9 ~ Ltt ,l'f'M '. ·. '.!"".~. ulfnit,pi•p -:ou1d create .A-d *he Ear*h ... oved ~''~two l"llJUtan!.sj!~. an of~buUding •• "' "' ir•
1 ~.and.!'irtlni.on'.i.iicl at t~ sou"!limfkor-,-::rliilll · . . , ~
• " iier-'p( the lalan!I tirldge elitt1mce. .? 'tltolOking a bi( like so many mecpanical ants, giant , ment in Newport Beach. Vi'ew' is from Ford Road
· -' ·. · · • earth movers line up in "pll'king lot" atop ridge'itt , towll'd high rise buildin. gbi'LN, elfpilrt <;enter, •
· ' 'Ille llol'lb F~~~ .. ~volves •re-t~e middle of ·Big Canyon Country Club develoP. W "
'
-·-
_ A!"1·aigning
In Murders
Scheduled
,.·
Tripl e-murdef · suspect Amos L,
Ratcliff was being held without bail this
inorning in We stminster jail with formal
arralgnment ex pected Tuesday .
The 50-year-old aerospace worker
allegedly shot his estranged wife and a
male friend as they returned to her
Fountain Valley home early Saturday
morning. PouQ\c.harge that Ratcliff theo
went to Westrnirfiter where he killed a Dope For t'icti111s
third person, Betty Carew, U, or 9360 • ·
McFadden Ave. Comedian Bob !lope has re.
According to poUce accounts, Ratciill cruited a plan~load of Holly-
broke into the hoffif of Betty L. Ratciilf, wood &'llfrsonaUlles to _appear
11, of 1052$ Mon\lng Glory Ave., and~with 1!iiil>luly .22 m a six-state
p waited for her to retyrq ho~. ... telethon to raise . mopey, for
. When slr.l.~ved -about .. 12:15 a.m. victims -0( tr op_ 1 l:"\, storm
Saturda)"';H'_was accompanied by Craig .. Agnes. P. lllI:$lr aboUt60,ofAnahelm.Tbelwo ~-=-~~~~~~~~-,-.~
then ~terfd ~L house apd ·found ~ ~ " _:.,. !!t~l?~;:'"I:eE:. ~ .~' Ar =."(·-... , P. ; ~ h: . . ~ ','. ·1. ~ {,. -·'
!:T .. 1::~:an10:nc1Jr."t':h '·t'":es~~T rests , ,) . SJC lafrtsl. tJ ;¢~fl ~; \~
R_atclilf Walt!ng ,Willi .-..-= caliber rifle: . n· . -i' 'rt' : ~.. . ~ • ' The ,pair ran to escape,.eccording lo (v 4' urt m r ~
police, but .Ratc;lill itepped OutMle a!,>d . • • ..,;.~ ->-t;?·~~ .. '• '._. ~~ .... gu~ them do~. '. , ....,, ~ • • R--"1 .. , •
Road. ·· :-,,,~ '" Man 'tte Oaims :>.t." •
• In othet\•,;:lleli®> Thursday,; •com-0 'f ~·. ::::.;:;~ve~:e~:=: Fired, at H-im -ln_Def ertSe--0 . Qoctor
• . ··""Jl'olil:e said _ll§)clilf t_hell returned to hi!> fifruliy· on . oaa ~ne home ~·m and picked ~1 • •
~ond gun, and went to the hOme of t
-ty Carew. . ~ tt' • I guna Beach Ratclill was picked up in Westminster -na
, .
'
•
Oran&• Cowiti; Airport. • • "
~ ~!so gave their ap-
~ to a IUbd/.!'iliOlll of Ii> homes to be
MftlGped by the George and William
IW•ein. CGmpony at the northeast cor-
-ol llllNllll Drive and Vista de! Oro.
P!w fer dev~ of a Harbor
Vin lllfll pl-community -e delQod mitt! July :Ill alao. Plannera and
deveiopen ~ tht addillaoal time
for -study ol the allgnment of smi-IDll rood.
'Ille KMltllclry Fried C b f c k e n
tlllaunnl at 30tb -and Newport Bouievanf will be pltJnc a large bucket ..,. aftar ._..,......,. oklyed a use
permit fer the lip. .
And three alpo advertiling the Park
Newport a,.-comples will be
r-.d and replaced with one large
.... wlllcb will be located along Jam-
-Rood lolJowlnc.commisllon aclion:
Teacher's Firing
UpheUl for Use
Of 'Gutt-er' Talk
OAKLAND (AP) -A judge has upheld
Ibo llrlai of a ffa¥wanl junior hlgb
scbool teacher for dJSClllSlng oral copula-
tion with Jllllllls and using whal ad-
mlnll1ralcn d"""1bed as "gutter
language."
Alameda County Superior court Judge
Lyle E. Cook ruled that Mn. Aagela H.
Mohr, 42, of San Jose wu not entJUed to
reinllateme'11 In the social sci~ and
_hlatGry fel!<blng jo!J from which she was
dilcharged last I~ on gr<lllllds of im-
monl and unprofessional conduct.
Mrs. Mohr testllied in a lhree-<lay trial
that when she described a juvenile
judge'• apeicb to a youth conference as
11»-." abe considered the term no
worse than the expression "baloney."
Victim Slugged
By Thief for $2
David E. Combe, a 21-y..,.-old cook
from Costa Mesa, is nursing a tender
jaw hlday, caused by a brazen robber
who holt<d him on the sidewalk.
Oombe turned over the CU!lents of his
walld, amounting to $2, but not before
the robber doubled up his fist and struck
him In the lace, polloe raid.
Tho ld®p took place at 1941 Harbor
Blvd. around midnight, just .. Qimbe
wu meting his way home from a bar.
acccnli!Jg to police reports.
OIW4M COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
TM Of'Mfil c..t °"IL' Y 'ILOT, wtlll wtltctl
ft a11•llll tllt Ntw1oPrftS. Is Nb11*1t by
fPte or.., Qatt Mlr.tllr!I CO"'Plnf, ...,...
r1I• adlfJIMI •N llUbll5ht14 MOMty fllro1i1Dh
Frick;', fW' Cor.t1 Mu1, Ntwptrt lt1ch,
tt.nfllll!On lddl/Ftlll'lllln \1111.-,, L .. 11111
9Mdl, lr\'JM/SHcllelllct •nd Stn Cltmtnte!
sen JHft Ctplelrtno. A 1lngl1 reg10..-1
edlt!M h MlltMd SllUl'ft.,. ~ SW!d•Y•·
Tl'I• prll'IC .... I Pllbllatlfnl •ltnl 11 11 »:I Wet!
llY strMt. c.1, M.,., Clll!trnr•, f UH.
R•b•rt N. W11d Ptttkllflt •llCI PubtW!er
J1clr. k. Curl1y \IQ Prtlldlnl •nd Glnlnll MtMttr
T1io111111 IC•t•il
Eclllor
'TttomH A. Murphiri•
Mlntgl,,_ Edllor
0.1rl1• H. Looi l lch1r4 P'. Nill
A»'*"I Mlnt!lll'll Ed/tort -CO.ti Mini J» West lly Sltttt
N..,.,, lffch: :mJ NIWPll1 IOllll"llnl
Uewll·hKfil: m "'"'*''" ,,_ H.stlnttM IMctll 17'1J ltldl iolMYanl
11111 C"""'""t JOI Htr111 El ClmlM "-Ml
T"•P•••• l714J '42..CJJt
C._"*I Afrww11 ... 641·1171
PNfll Clllltltl A,... '""' If U,.W INdt 4fl.oMJI
,_,...., Nww. Of•-C.Wty (lfllll'""*
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~I, 1f7t. Ortl!OS C-0.11 Pubt!thlnf ~!"'· .._ Mwt. 1httlft,, fll11tlr1llo1"11. ... ..,,., Mlltlr W .. lltrt1Mtl'l"1U lltl'tll'I :."•'=··=' soteltl ""
..... (llW ,...... Nill II Collt MRI. ~ ""9c:rl•Ollfl ... U f'r lll' tt.d
__,.,, "' """ a.11 "*lffllr: mftlrtty ...,., .. etM """""'· •
A Costa Mesa man was placed under
citizen's arrest Sunday for allegedJy fir·
ing a pistol at another man be placed • under citizen's arrest a week ago for
trespassing.
Timothy P. Baldwin, 25, of 1987 Church
St., was taken Into custody on suspicion
of exhlbiUng a firearm after Robert M.
Lee, La MJrada; complained to CO.la
Mesa pollce that Baldwin bad threatened
him with the weapon.
Lee told offlcen he was taking pictures
of a fence on Ba1dwin11 property when
Baldwin came out of a neighbor's house
with a .38 caliber pistol pd fired one
1hot into the air.
The fence, which bor$fers on a Costa
Mesa nightclub, was jumped by Lee last
week and prompted Baldwin to place Lee
undei' arrest for trespauing,
Baldwin said he had no intention of fir·
Ing the weapoo u Lee waa phoiograpbin g
the fence from the curb but that he "ac-
cidentally pulled the trigger."
In his statement to police Baldwin said
he had borrowed the weapon from his
friend to clean it and that be did not
know it was loaded.
"l! scared hell out of me, 11 Baldwin
told officers about the gun going off.
Marine Reserves ' '
Hit Air Station
For Training
The sprawling Marine Corps Air Sta-
tor'\ in ~ Toro !f'S in~ded this weekend
·by Marine Alr Reserve troops who are
beginning two weeks of active d u t y
training. ·
The friendly inYaders include reserves
.ftom the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing ; the
Yuma, Ariz., air station; 29 Palms, and
troops from as far away u Pennsylvanta
and Dllnois.
Southern Californians, meanwhile, will
be on active duty until July 22 wiUi the
El Toro--based fixed wing Marine Attack
Squadron 135 will leave for training at
Yuma, as will the Helicopter Attack
Squadron m from Santa Ana .
Col. Eugene R. Howard , Jr., com-
manding officer of the El Toro Marine
Air Reserve Detachment and Marine
Aircraft Group 46, says the culmination
of the training operations will be a major
desert exercise at Twentynine Palms
July 18-20.
What is Price
Of Devotion
By Firefighwrs?
As every schoorboy knows, firemen
boldly tackles all manner of Jife-en-
dangering tasks daily - and the Lag una
.Beach firemen are no exception. But
what price devotion to duty?
Two skunks, who apparently took ex-
ception to t\vo Lag una Beach residences
and vented their anger in the customary
manner, were the investigators of wee k·
end activity by Laguna Beach firemen
sent to. quell the raging smeU.
The ftrst can for aid was at a residence
at 455 Bent St.1 where fir emen 'vashed
down a back porch ·to extingu.ish the odor.
The second call came in from ~trs.
Gene D'lsabeila, at 387 Holly St. Sunda y.
Firemen responding to the Call there us·
ed a smoke ejector fan to clear the air,
Zumwalt Attends
Coast Ceremony
LONG BEACH (AP ) -Adm. Elmo R.
Zumwalt, chief or naval ojX'ratlons, has
taken part In commissioning ceremonies
for the USS Brewton, a ne\v destroyer
escort named after a personal friend of
the admiral's klllod in Vietnam combat.
Zumwalt had known Lt. J ohn Br<wto n
of Mobile, Ala., when tbe two were In
Vietnam.
' By TOM BARLEY
01 t1'141 O.lly Pllfl Sl&ff
Susan O'Donnell was described today
by a psychiatrist who counseled her thr~e
months before her death in Mexico as a
"sensitive, immature psyc~neurotic"
who had already attempted to commit
suicide by slashing her wrists.
Dr. Walter Briehl testified a1 attorney
Reed Bridges opened his defense of Dr.
Merrill C. "Mike" O'DonJJell in the
Orange County Superior Court civil trial.
He said he examined Mrs. O'Donnell, 38,
at the insistence of her husband, a
• Newport Beach plastic surgeon .
0 She very much . needtd therapy,'' Dr.
Briehl said, recalling that Mrs. O'Donnell
moved out of the home she shared with
the defendant at 420 Kings Road at about
the time he discussed her problems with
her in a two--hour interview.
Briehl said O'Donnell, 57, was his pa,·
tient before Mrs. O'Donnell was referred
to him. He described the surgeon as in-
secure with problems relating to his
children from a previous marriage.
"I concluded that Mrs. O'Donnell was a
very sensitive, weak ego person with a
hectic history of unhappiness and emo--
tional conflict," Briehl said.
Briehl is the first of a number of
medical witnesses scheduled by Bridges
and attorney Mike McCray in their
defense to charge! by 'Mrs. Gertrude
Barnett that her son-In-Jaw was responsi-
ble for the death of Susan O'Donnell on
March 19, 1968.
It . bas been testified that Mexican
physicians who ex1wmed the body of
Mrs. O'Donnell 19 days after her death
on C:OZumel Island found her death to be
caused by barbiturate poisoning.
Mexican authorities said the substance
involved in Mrs. O'Donnell's death was
'jalmost certainly" Iuritinot, a highly tox-
ic liquid barbiturate.
Their finWngs have been supported by
Dr. Melvin Sommer, a Beverly Hills
pathologist who examined the decom-
]>OSed re.mains of Mrs. O'Donnell in Mex-
ico City a year later.
Mrs. Barnett, 63, of Seal Beach Leisure
World, wants $1 mililon In dam.,.. from
. Truman to Be X-rayed
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Doctors
hope to X-ray former President Harry s
Tru'man's lower gastro-intestinal tract
this week. The z:-rays, delayed several
times because of his irritated colon, are
the only scheduled test remaining for the
nation's 33rd chief executive as he begins
his second week in Research Hospital
and Medical Center.
O'Donnell. She is see\ing in a related ac-
tion to bar the physician from in·
heritance of his wile's estate.
O'Donnell, who practices at 2011
Westcllff Drive and 307 Placentia Avenue
in Newport Beach and at 18782 Main St.1
Huntington Beach, bas countersued Mrs.
Barnett and 70 olher defendants In ac-
tions liled in Or~e and Riverside Coun-ties. ·
Mrs. Barnell testified today that her
daughter called her 4 week before her
death in Mexico and told her about the
second trip taken by her and O'Donnell to
Mexico within a two-month period.
Mrs. Barnett ·s&id her daughter told
her that she and O'Donnell had resolved
their marital differences and that the
physician had promised to sign a new
marriage settlement on their return to
California.
Mrs. Barnett said her daughter sound-
ed "very happy" and said she bad been
told by her estranged husband that the
trip would solve his problems and that
the Mexican government had prOmised to
pay the full costs of the Cozumel recoir
ciliation trip.
Mrs. Barnett said her da\llhter told
her that O'Donnell had told her that the
trip would also enable him to investigate
a proi>erty deal in which W Mni..n
government had become involved.
"Isn't it true that J°fm daughter and
Dr. O'Donnell 'signal a inartftiife let-
tlement at the time of their marriage in
1965?" Bridges asked Mrs. Barnett.
"Tbe agreement was delivered-to my
daughter just one hour before the mar-
riage ceremony," Mrs. Barnett rep1ied.
Hare Krishnas
Serving Meals
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The
menu includes chapatt'.wll\d Kittrie, not ·
to mention banana breail, .at the Hare
Krishna trailer In Resurreclton City ll.
"There is no meat, fish or eggs in any
of our food," said the cook, a pigtailed
20.year-old member of the sect.
Anyone who asked , COWlterculture
member bedded down In the campground
or curious spectator, was given a plate of
food by one of the group dressed In now-
ing, peach-colored robes.
"No charge, but would you please
make a donation?" asked the girl.
Cbapattis are flat pancake-size di8CS
made of whole wheat flour resembling
Mexican tortillas.
Kittrie is a mixture of split peas,
beans, rice and 0 whatever vegetables
you have," the young cook eiplained.
while writ ing a note to his two children
-aged 19 and 22 -in which he allegedly
said was sorry for ''what he had done,"
according to police.
Courses Offered
In Lif esaviilg
Tw<>-week lifesaving couraes for youths
tt and older will begin July 17 under the
guidance of the Newport Beach Marine
Safety Department.
Junior and Senior grou(le: will meet
from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday at the 10th Street bay
beach on the Balboa Penlnaula.
Registration will be from July 11 to Ju·
Jy 14 between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. at the
Community Youth Center, 5th Sfreet and
Iris. Corona del Mar. For more in-
formation, call the. Parks, Beaches and
Recreation ~ent. 673-31111.
Newport-Mesa
Session Tuesday
Trustees of the Newp6rt-Mesa Unilied
School Dl.irtct will meet Tueoday at 7::!0
p.m. at ·FA!tancia Hlah School
Board members are slated to bold elec-
tions of board officers and set a date for
the fmal public hearing of their lm-73
budget.
Tuesday's meeting will take place in
the Choral Room, No. 376, of the ecbool,
2323 Placentia Ave., Coeta Mesa.
Wilson Accepts Post
On Cities Committee
Robert M. Wilson. city councilman of
Costa Mesa, has been appointed member
of the Committee , on International
Cooperation of the National League of
Cities.
Wilson is part of a three-member
delegation from California to the com-
mittee. The terms expire Nov. 30.
The primary function of the committee
is the administration of the sister city
program _of which C:OSta Mesa is not cur·
rently a member. .
Fire Laid to Arson.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Fire ol-
ficlals say ·an arsonist touched off the
headquarters of the Society f o r
Indlvidual Rights, doiilg about $20,llOO
damage.
Four persons were injured in a Laguno
Canyon Road traffic accident Sunday
night when a small domest ic car skidded
out of control across the center line and
collided with another vehicle.
Injured were Archie L. Brainard, 35, of
2S35 2nd Avenue, Corona de! Mar;
Mat.rice L. Benson, 40, of La Habra:
Mavis Benson, of La Habra; and
Wlnilre<! Skipper, S7, ol La Habra.
The three La Habra persons were
treated and released at South Coast
Community Hospital. They w e r e
passengers in a car eastbound on the Ca·
nyon Road when the acc ident occured.
Brainard, was treated at South Coast
Hospital, and then transferred ~ the
Orange County Medical Center. He has
been released by Monday morning , a
hospital aide said.
. Police said the accident occurred when
the westbound car driven by Brainard
went into a high-speed skid.
Police Sgt. Norman Babcock sald
witnesses reported the Brainard cer was
traveling at a high rate of speed, that it
. pas.sed several other cars on the roadway
shoulder and that the skid started when
the vehicle attempted to swerve betw~
two other cars.
Sgt. Babcock said that a complaint
may be aought against Brainard.
195,000 Enjoy
Newport Sands
Over Weekend
An estimated 195,000 beacbgoers -
85,CMXI on Saturday and 110,000 on SUnday
-found rising water temperatures and
genUe winds in N•wport Beach.
Water temperatures rose from 83
degrees on Saturday to 66 degrees on
Sunday. These warmer temperatures
brought a slight Increase In the jellyfish
population, and a Marine Sa f e t y
spokesman reported a proportional in-
crease in first aid treatments for
jellyfish wounds.
Winds ranged from eight to 10 knots.
Although boat traffic was heavy, oo ac-
cidents were reported.
Air temperatures remained 74 degrees
and three-foot waves attracted heavy
surfboard traffic at 19th Street on the
Balboa Peninsula and the ri ver jetty.
Lifeguards reported no problems with
riptides beyond warning nearly 700 swim·
mers of possible riptide danger. They
reported 36 rescues during the two days.
" ..
DIAMONDS
l.ADlll WHITI .OLD • DIAMOND It RING
FENDER SHOWMAN GUITAR
AMP. ·anc1 DUAL SHOWMAN
SPEAKIR BOX
CAMIRAS
16MM SAU
alLL-MOWILL 1• MM MOVIE CAMERA
IMlaALD
• oi,. a a . .....,. ..
• 11 lnttn °"' ........ • .n ct. rtt11 wt1t11t
LllCI
ONLY $995 NIW
' • LAOlll 141( w,e ,
DIAMOND RUBY
CLUSTER RING
SIN N ... ,., lnut
LllCI
ONLY$325 NIW OPEN ' 9
to
6 • ALL C.t,RRY OUR
MON. MONIY.BACK
THRU GUARANTEE ~· SAT .
COSTA MESA J!WELRY & LOAN
1131 NEWPORT BLVD,
DOWNTOWN COSTA MISA
with two 15" Dl30 JIL'•
, ~::. $395
GIBSON GUITAR s.c;. Stint!•~ El•1trlc
CHIHY "NISH ' UQ $245 WITH CAii , NIW .
646-7741
•
•
MODIJ. Dl•7t ~::, $295
alLi...MOWliLL 1• MM SOUND PROJECTOR
llODIL P!LMIOUND LIQ $245 AUTO LOAD NIW
STEREO .
JUC STllllO AM-PM
CASSITTI PHONO
w/two SpMkors
NIW $245 . lltHT TitlC SONY TAP DECK
llCOID I
PLAYIACI M-~= $65 ' fCI
WI
GUAllANTll
EVIRYTHING
WE SELL
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(
• •
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-. • • • ,
I
~ u
••• . ----~ ...
"'"""""ensures
~nlOOdy -Patrol1nali
• •
. Bail~itS -S011ght
"' ; ' • I I • . . . . . . ·. -( ~ ' • ' • t • I ' '
After ~ougin.·g Out" ·'. ·-.·,Fires:. Gun·· for Aid
.
· Eye~ ~f · 2· .vi~ti~s·-~ ; ' ·. 1 . • . . c -·~ f o!lo~Ing _CT ash
• ,.,,. -. • . . --lJ ,.,,. _.. --.. ' ,,._ -.....:: ., ~'
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TUESDAY'AFTERNOON, 'j\)LY. t1; 19.n
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' ·t.ll~ght N~pping
.• ' l • -
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Votes Freed
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. ~ .~H.appy · War~j9r'<·.
• f .. I
Calls It Quits . .
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MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -'Ille sell-sty). port lllGoVern, m old !rim!, for the
ed happy warrior, Hubert ll Humphrey, nomlllltlon. _
pulled wt of the race today f<r the · Humpl{rey ·~ aomber as be read
Democntic presidential nomlnatioo in • a illfl.pplngrapb statement on his _ ~,=-!t~ o1 . ifie_ , ~ .. ,lllGovern detjllon . that _ clincbed . the nomlnatl°l'
""""""""' w-.y night for ' George S.
lel'nomlnee, ~ ~
I and' dan&hter II hil 1111 voice troke allgbtly toward the end
, DT before.• crowded ol tbe llatement as he thanked his lladff room full of'reportt" to annouunce his witbdrawa~ sa)'.lng .he, wu re1""1nB his and aupportera Wl!o worked for him. ,
• • ' · "" ' 1 1 • .,....... delegates to "vote u they wtlli." He did 1 After reading the prepared statement,
-" · · • " -. · j ""-.-'.,,...:.i ~ .;J.k_ d d~~~,.Uie' ' not aay,;...-.r,-. w ..... ber be -d M~ Hum_pbrey ldded .. a few. words •)'In(, '!:California 'delegafe•i.,u~da _.,._",..¥"' """"°on ·naps urw ,pro-.~·,.-·-, ""' , ••.--''We've IOupl tbe •pod· flPl ... Now we 1; ci!di.ngs rat-the Democratil:,l!latioiitl C!>Qve~6n: At right:ls; ony·Plll·, l\01' out."
::vorosa.0J.San.I'.ea.ndro1"• " ... :!. ::_ .. '.. -., ·1,, ., .• ,. in7"u,red· Lawman .• .,:. :!~~~Walked
~ • Humphrey wu said to have reached .:_ · · A . F f his decision to withdraw early today NASAScores_3 .. S~OllflU~S ires 0 f Gun Su1~~1=~~
... _
. TH!(QWS ,IN T~L .
_ Ex-cendldoO.,Humphrey ,
)
{J~ndits H u~~d;:
Gquged Out Eyes
Of T~o Victims
• ·! ' ' I " • · To . Attract Aid deJoptes 1rom caJJforn1a, instead o1 . . u 'h I • ,:,:~ ·.l . , ' . sj>llttlng them up with Humphrey cettinB ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -Police ol-F or narit ori.Zru·~cttons ~~~:,.~~eea: ;.:~/'~~I20basedoot~J ... , ~i~~.:.::~::a~tr:~\i::;
·; • pistol to bring help eerly this morning, Humphrey tbeD alipt oo his· necislon a leads'1 ~ for two men who gouged ~ I -..-· •. lifter lili car siiiashecfinli> tber<ar of 1 few boun and met with his top adVf>en.' ·out-the eyes of two robbery·vlctilllB.-
;wASHINGTON (AP) -The space acquaintanct, l>Owever, thty ·te11izecHn parked van near the Bolsa Chica bluffs in at mldm<rning. Laler, he called together Police ldentUled the latest victim as
acencrtodaY disciplined the three Apollo their own -!hit this was ·tm.,,..,._ md H"""""'" Beach his staff !or• closed meeting and -as Robert Paro, 19, o! Rochester. ut f rrying 4 O O · " ,..,,~ ~,.~n ' • teara ,.... lbed, including •aome by· ~ astrona s or ca be declined to accept<elther ~·trull fiDl'Or J'oliee said David Ryan, 26, a patrol ol· Muriel Humphrey-be told them he was He ,.._. i!tacted and blinded by two ~~u~~~t~~I .:!'~to u!-..ina'"':°o:: ~ alternative ofJer Gt iianll'I,;~ .tJ. · flcor ;wttt>i tile Uing Bea\'h Police Depart-' bowing out. · ~:/::";1r~:, ~~~lo~~ he worked· at a ~'them overitb an acquaintance in West "<.' aaid~e for: tbe too postal~en, );ASA'' ~!t:n°.:r1::. ~P~~~ c;:! TheftHumphrey statement aaid : Authorities said two men tobk Paro , "~"~'" "A er consultation with "°"'" o! my do Id -•<~ ny, •• .'J1ie '.ApOllo' 15 crew,:'llke. ~ an ~car blocked his lane and ldrced-closest friends and supporters, I have .. wn a s e itreet, ·~ him o!.$10,.
, 100· moon-otamped envelopes later earlier moon ~ hid NASA 'I. · 'him lo snwh lnlO tbe rear of 1 van park· determination to oontinue the battle l 100ied out one of his eyee and Injured
•fli>arently w.re ¥d~~m.I_> collecl<J'"• ~. , withtn ellabllabod ~ ed.., the lldO of the road. name lo be entered tn nomination at the the other. He w,s in critical condttion at
fqr $1,500 each, tlie .. °'Jal Mrooaatica i:o;dunls: to corry pmomiJ .......,.typo; The nccupant' or· the •van, Jimmy R. convention, and I am now releasing my St. Mary'• Hoopltal. ilJd Space Admlnlltr~tion aald. , , iltlllll, tncJiidlnr 111me ~l ccmra. • Paultel! ol Buena Part wu uleep when dolet•tes to vole u Ibey wish. . F;artlt~ Sunday, a lone robhet _who
::NASA said aner an invellipiten that . • Tbe pern;-. was·rslnttd , witlr~ Ibo <ICddemt occlliied: Wiien he emerged ''.l\ly withdrawal rn.n the presiden!W resembled ·one o! Paro's aosallants goug-
allronauts David Scott, ~red Worden (let ASrl!ONAU'fll, Jlqo I), I lroit> tbe van II& !Glpld· Ryan bleeding race is a wjthdrawal ol candidacy only. ed .U~tbe eyes ol Samuel C. Scha!er, n ,
al\\IJBIDOil Ir1'in ·"~~Pl'!"~,jodg-., 1• '' • pnjll!l'lyilild'WG·ll>getbelp. It ii not a ·wttbdranl ol opiri~ qr ol al'!Oollloclieat.r,•paf!ctaaid. ·
ment in their acUop. . ,. Mtonwhlleo Rjan "'milled out ol his delonnlnaiton to conlinue the battle I The uallant asked ·!or fresh ora1141e
"Therel<re, Ibey will he reprimanded Dem· ocrnt r:me plct-<lp and made·hll w., to·tbe back of have waged all my publlo Ille 00 behalf Jule• in Scha!er'1 stort and when told aa!f their action& will be given due ...,. ...,. "' the ..,. and 1oy ..,... there. When .., one ol those • who bad ,. voice. that there '!'•• only orarige aoda, · be
sidieratkrl in their selection [fl!' fUturt ' came to his aid alter oeveral milllte1 he "On beball o! Mn. Humphrey and me, demanded money. '
l9ligtlmeata,'' tbe .....,., ~. ~.. · _' f '-1 ..J , began to Ori bis J>litd In the air. I wish to lhlnt tbose who have worked In ·a briel ocume, the robber gouged
Dr: Ge!rc~~Ja~· ~ ad' • UUJ. Five unlde!lll!ied lllrfers on the beach 80 bard for -put "1x months not on-out both o! Scha!er'1 eyes. Scha!er was
mJniltrator, t !'" I• -• ., ,, • hellll the -and -blm. They· then ly !or Ill)' __..._, but for tile -·ter reported in 1ood condlllon at Genessee ;_~ are -1ft all-·-· Jiubi, drove into downtown Hlintington Beach gOal of a ;;;;-~....-.ed will> j.;;t;ce Hospital. • ii.,.. monU. pr ... a ._,. Ille ~ Uc and stopped tbe firs! police Cll' on the and compualoo. • 1'ollce sald 'tbey are seeking two men , ~· aJld their poOr' Judlpbooit!n"'" ~ llreeL 'Ad llbbq, eyes glllfenlng,' a !aint oneedlumman.~_!lbedl baalrcuts •toc::~~~'~.•
, ""'" the lnl8uthcrJsedl coven -ee, ~ Paustell, in the meanlime, hid bltcbed • .-oo bts llpa, Hum'*'-'1' .then Q>Ok• m ~~·Y ' • ~ ~ 0~r
COl!lli<jered in this-llghl ' a ride to Huntington Beach Po11ce Head-o1 baW>g !ought Ille f>od flaht wi11iin the . about Ill.
· /~onetbeless, NAM ca~not· ~done , quarter& and' contactod o!flcen tbe.... nila inil -lilg thlt bts lplrll w11 not . ,
actions.'' . ·" • Police arrived 20 tllillites after the• ac-brollen, . ' • N
ASA said K learnod that tbe,:\pol5 15 . cldeal ocourred cjurlog whl<h time no ... .., 1111 wllhlmnll.-Huntplu:ty ~ GO p Servmg ewsmen
. . • /I ..A P.. '7
;· ·~
• _;,
Keylijvals
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Move Aside
At Confab ..
~II BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern cl1nched the Democratic
presidential nomination today as Hubert
H. Humphrey stepped out of the race and
McGovern's other key rivals moved to do
the same.
MCGovem ?!laxcd in hia hotel as the
· ·coamion· "which -hbped "' stop him
Wednesday night dissolved around him.
lie talked by telephone to Humphrey
after the "happy wanior's1' bow-oot and
pta_laed him for "his 2$-year llgbt fllr
human juitlce."'
Hu.m~,,.\tictlm o( McGovern's lS.
month battle for the nomination and of
sllck convention fioor maneuvers on the
part o! the Sooth Dakotan Monday night ,
released , biJ delegates to vote as they
wish.
·Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who still coo-
trols some 700 convention votes, and Sen.
Henry M. Jackson, with over 50, both
called afternoon news conferences, most
likely to follow the path struck by
Humphrey. _
McGovern was just 43 votes shod. of
the 1,509 needed !or victory when
balloting heginl In tbe convention hall
Wednesday nJclll.
Hiunrihr'1'• Gt-plus delegates, many
of them aimo,t su,.. to back McGovern,
(See McGOVERN, Page I)
The weatherlady .... clear and
sunny sties through Wedneaday,
with highs of 711 at Orange Coast
sands, rlslng to IO degrees inland.
'\.Lows 57~.
INSIDE TODAY
Chicago Mavor Richard J, Do·
l•V r1f111ed compromfle ef/ori.
by Sen. McGqU<rn on lh< lhomv
qutstion of delcgaU .seating. As
a rtsult, Daley JOit llir seat. Sta
stOTJI and otlu!r conpention ,.,.
$11lt8 qn POQO 4.
t.,M, hft • • -1 .. ,.
C1llftttM • --" Cllllll.._ .... ............... ~. c-k• " 0r..., c'"" " c-" ... -.... .... 11 m11 ..,...a1.,. -• ilowtdt nt' _ bad llopped to Bi•• aid to tho bedly in-pl.oy Ibo role ol party un!Olr, •bly , · ~ rrom ~~ 111k1••1t, jund ollicer, ~to poUce. 1pr.._, .-.,..k ~1-iOlll-r tbll .M!AMl-l!EA.etf-(·ftP,)-) _w.....,'fthlnor-GComm-..--1-'!"" ... -->-::c:._
to the ~ta mun\l l« _.. Ryan --led in uUafactory.,,... would bnfl"MI llkGomn'• cbancn ol · mlltee !<r the R ... 1ect1on ol the Ptesi· --ll ...... ,..,,
•.i11ri. -.. ·-"'" -....
JlllnDO>lt of a "truat f...S" fCIC' tbelr dllJd. dttloo thll Dloinln( at Paclllca Hoepttal ~ IUpJIOft """' <rpnllod labor in dent ,hll a hoapltalll)' rooM, In tbe F..,.
.,._ with bold ltljaries, ""'"•a'ool and parlfcular. Labor ii distlDctlJ coo!' to · talntbloltHotellornewmnenCOYeringtbo
•Ml<r tbe _,.bod been Jlvtn to the a~ Mc<lo¥wa. DemocraUc National Convmtlon • • • '
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J DAILY PILOT N C
Commission
Delay s Vote
On 2 Issues
Two inajor proposals berore the ·
Newport Beacb planning commls31oli -a
commercial development near Balboa
J1land and a zone c6ang( for the North
Ford indu.trial area -Have been con-
tinued to July 20.
' '
M°"""· Ju~ 10, lfll
~ proposals by the Irvine Cotnpany
were to ha ve been acted upon Thursday r
ni~, but were mqved to the ~xt plan-
n.,inl co~mi.,!On meeting at the request
'Of the comptiy. -<r . ~--. The Balboa laland plan would create
two .-.1aurant Illes, an office building And thfl,' Ear.t._.h Mpved
and parking on land at the soulheut cor-~"J!'S' 9-ner ol the illand bride• entranc•. Looking a bit like SO-many mechinical ants, giant ment in Newport Bea<h. View is frpm Ford ROiid
... •
Arraigning
In Murders
Scheduled
Triple-murder suspect Amos ... L •
Ratclirf wu beini held wllhput bail this
morning in Westminster jail with formal
arraignment expected Tuesday.
1be 50-year-old aerospace worker
allegedly shot his estranged wife and a
male friend as they returned to her
FQUntain Valley home ea rly Saturday
•
,"" ~~rning. Po,Y.ce. charge that Ratcliff then u .. 1 T••Clllllll•
'Went to Welitmmster where he killed a ·Jlope For ¥1cthfl• .
.third person;· Betty Carew. '2, of \9360 McFadden 11~ . .,, . \'Comedian Bob Hop.e has re-
.According to police acc~s, RatcWI crulted a planeload of Holly'
..
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4'ke Into 'the bome of Betty L. RatcUU, wood personalities to appear
41, of t0526 l,lom!ng Glory .Ave., and with hllll ~uly 22 in a six-state .-'7 wal~pr her to :return bome.. · • , telethon lo raise money for 1 . When she arrived about . .lu:•Sc,a.111-. victims of tr op i ca l storm .cl ,
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'Ille North Ferd proposal Involves a re-earth movers IT,;.11~ in "parking lot" atop ridge in toward high rise buildings in Newport C~l\ter. .,
q...i to allolf commercial development • th""'1ll:i;;· ig .. a~~o~. C~un\rY Club de~~l~p-. i' ' ,.~ ' . . ,. . . , ~ •J
Saturday, she was accompanied by ~'1 . Agnes., !. S-'1 "C" • ~
• P. :HJrst, ~b\>Ut 5Q, oJ Anaheim. Tb$.:i1Vl!·· .. f .. .;. ~· ~· .,.,,_, .. "~. then entered the house ·and . ..;Jo~ .~. ,_ ,..·. ,• , ~\l' -·• f~, .. =~ar.i;~$~~-'·~~-,, .. A~·~;tS -~;~~~ P.,/sx.'~h.fu~~ist,'T estifie~ .. llatclilf Waiting With_. :22 .~Ubei-·rt11e; . '·~ ii'o '·. •' '"' •
The Mir Tan. to escape, according to 4 H urt · 1n "Ii
police, but Ratcliff stepped outs.Ide and
and lbe. extension or Bol])IJ canyon -,"!µ
Rold. ,,... M .y 'O. ··«~ ,r
guMed them down.
Police said Ratcliff llieri returned.to-his On Canyon
In other actions ~YT com· alf . V~ alillS s_; :::-i:;:~;~ve~=:i~:= Fired.1it Him In De_fe.Jis.e of Doctor ·
.mobile home in Anaheim and picked01p a -a
second gun, and \yent to the home of Bet.-""~ ·
ty Carew. , . ' In Laguna eacl.
Orange County Airport. '
CGmmiaioPerS also gave their ap-
proval to 1 lilbdtvislon of 40 homea to he
~ by the George and WUUam
Hollteln Company at u.e northeast cor4
nor olJ EMtblulf Drive and Villa der Oro.
l'lalll for development of a Harbor
View Hllll planned community were
delayed until July 311 alao. Plannen and
devetopera requested the addllioftll time
for further study of the alignment of
&pnlau 11111 road.
'1'llt ~II)' Fried C b I c k en
rmtaunnl at lllth Street and Newport
llGulnanl will he 1ettinc a large bucket
lip alter· commlll1onera okayed a uae
pormll· for lhe llln·
And lhrat lllila ad\'Ortlalnl the PJ(k
Newport aplrWmt · complex will be
~ and replaced wtlh. one large
lip wblclt will he located along Jam,
-Rood lollowlnl commlalon action:
Teacher's Firing
UpheUl for Use
Of 'Gutt.er' Talk
OAKLAND (AP) -A Judie lw upheld
the flrlai of a ffi7w•n1 jWllor high
ICbool teadler for clllcualng oral copula-
tion wllh pupil> and using wbat ad-
mlniafratarl d<9Cl1bed as "gutter
languaae."
Alameda County Superior COurt Judge
Lyle E. COok ruled lhal Mn. Angela H.
. Moir, a, of Ban JOle waa not entitled 'to
relnllatement In the oocJal science and
biltory ~ Jo!> from wbicti ahe was
dilc:barged laat f~ on gl'Ol!nds of im-
moral and unprofessional conduct.
Mra. Mohr testilied in a lhree<lay trial
that wben she de>cr!bed a juvenile
Judae'• lpreecb to a yOQth conference as
,..,_._.,,, ahe considered the term no
\\'orse than the expression °baloney."
Victim Slugged
By Thief for $2
• David E. Combe, a 21-year-old cook
from O»ta Mesa, is nursing a tender
jaw today, caused by a brazen robber
wllo llalted him m tile sidewalk.
Oomhe turned over the cootents ol his
walld, amounting to $2, but not before
the -doobled up his fist and struck
bhn In the lace, police said.
Tho holdup took place at 1911 Harbor
BMI. around midnight, just as Combe
wu making his way home from a bat .
acairdln~ to police reports.
OI!ANfi COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
'"'9 °'*"' CtMt DAILY PILOT, wl~ wflkh
" ......,.. ... """"'"''"· .. l!Vbllthtd by fllt' ~ c-.1 ,,,_111111n1 CM!Plnr. ,..,., ,,
r•fe lllllt*-•r• llUblW!td, M011111y lllr01111h
Fr*y, ,., cost. Mt», Hnriictrt Inell,
Hwnflrwtoi. ltfetl,,ounllll'I V1lltY, L-oun1
8..0.. lrvlM/SHllMIHCll •nd $11\ C~!e/
Sit! '-" C'lplll~. /(. •Ingle 1f9loMI
9dltttn h Mlllllld Sallll'dtt" •!'Ill h ncllvs.
JM prJnc .. I publlatllnt prtnl II •t »O West
hy Strff!, CO.hi M...,, Cllltornl•, t1'1',
Rob•rt N. w.,d
Ptllldtttl end PUltllshor
J1e:~ l. C11rloy Vk:t Prallltnt end O«llr11 Ml""'r
llio111•1 KotYil Editor
Thor1tu A. Murphino
Mt111$1lntl f.tlltor
0.1rl1s H. Leo• 1Ue:lttt4 '· Non AAIMlflt .¥.aMGlnt Ecll~ . -CO.to Met: DI West lly Sf""1 N"""'1 lffdlt IW NtWfllrt •MMnl U,W. IMdl: m hnll A'ftf!W
H•lnl• 1..ai: 1ms •••di 11ou1rt1r11 a.. Oll'Ml\tei as Nern. l[l tamJM At.I
t.e1,tr111 fn4t '42-4111
Cl.-Hlei .. ....,. .... 64t.st71
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I
A Cos(a'1.!esa -man W8$ placed under
citizen's arrest Sunday for allegedly fir·
ing a pistol at another man he p}(lced
under citizen's arrest a week ago I for
lrelpalslng.
Timolhy P. Baldwin, 25, of 1967 Church
St., was taken in~ custody on suspicion
of exhibiting a .firearm alter Robert M.
Lee, La Mirada, complained to Costa
Meaa police that Baldwin bad lhreatened
him with the weapon.
Lee told ollicen he was taking pictures
of a fence on Baldwin's property when
Baldwin came out of a neighbor's house
with a .38 caliber pistol and fired one
shot into the air.
The fence , which borders on a Costa
Mesa nightclub, was jumped by Lee last
. week and prompted B41dwln to place Lee
undef arrest for trespaasing.
Baldwin said he had no intention of fir-
ing the weapon u Lee was photographing
the fence from lhe curb but that he "ac·
..._cldentally pulled the trigger."
f In his statement to poUce Baldwin said
he had borrowed the weapon from hi s
friend to clean it and lhat he did not
!mow it waa loaded.
"It scared hell out of me," Baldwin
told officers about the gun going off.
Marine Reserv~
Hit Air Station
For Training . .
The sprawling Marine Corps Air Sta-
toq in El Toro was invaded this weekend
·by Marine /Jr 'Reserve troops Who 8re
beginning two weeks of active d u t y
training. ·' The friendly invade.rs include reserves
from the 4th Marine Aircfaft Wing ; the
Yuma, Ariz., air station; 29 Palms, and
troops from as far away as Pennsylv8~
and Illinois.
Southern Califorruans, meanwhile, will
be on active dufy until July 22. with the
El Toro-based fixed wing Marine Attack
Squadron 135 will leave for training at
Yuma, as will the HellCopter Attack
Squadron 773 from Santa Ana.
Col. Eugene R. Howard 1 Jr.. com-
manding officer of the El Toro 'Marine
Air Reserve Detachment and MaMne
Aircraft Group 46, says the culmination
of the training operations will be a major
desert exercise at Twentynine Palms
July 18·20.
Wliat is Price
Of Devotion
By Firefighters?
As every schoolboy knows, firemen
boldly tackles all manner of Jife-en-
dangering tasks daily -and the Laguna
.Beach firemen are no exception. But
what price devotion to duty?
Two skunks,. who apparently took ex·
ception to l\vo Laguna Beach residences
and vented their anger in the customary
manner, were the investigato rs of week-
end activity by Laguna Beach firemen
sent to queO the raging smell
The firs t call for aid was at ll residence
at 455 Bent St.. where firemen washed
down a back porch to extinguish the odor.
The second caU came in from Mrs.
Gene D'lsabella, at 387 Holly St. Sunday.
Firemen responding to the call there u~
ed a smoke ejector fan to clear the alr.
Ztimwalt Attends
Coast Ceremony
LONG B~ACH (AP) -Adm. Elmo R.
Zumwall, chief of noval operations, has
taken part Jn commissioning ceremonies
for the USS Brewton, a ne\v destroyer
escort named aUer a personal friend of
the admiral's kllled In Vlolnim combat.
Zumwalt h•d known Lt. John Brewton
of MobUe, Ala., when the two were In
Vietnam.
By TOM BARLEY
or 1111 OIUr Piie! Stitt
Susan O'DoMell was described today
by a psychiatrist who counseled her three
mont~before her death in Mexico as a
"5ensitl'Ve, immature psycho-neurotic"
who had already attempted to commit
suicide by slashing her wrists.
Dr. Walter Briehl testified aa attorney
Reed Bridges opened his defense of Dr.
Merrill C. "Mike" O'DoMell in the
Orange County Slij)E!rior eourl civil trial.
He said he examined Mrs. O'DoMell, 38.
at the insistence of her husband, a
Newport Beach plastic surgeon.
ushe very much needed therapy," Dr.
Briehl saia, recalling that Mrs. O'DoMell
moved out of the home she shared with
the defendant at 420 Kings Road at abou t
the time he discussed her problems with
her in a two-hour intervie\v.
Briehl said O'DoMell, 57, was his pa·
tient befoai...Vrs. O'Donnell was referred
to him. He described the surgeon as in·
secure with problems relating to his
children from a previous marriage.
"I concluded that Mrs. O'Donnell was a
very sensitive, weak ego person with a
hectic history of unhappiness and eme>-
tional conflict," Briehl said.
Briehl is the first· of .a numb6 of
medical witnesses · scheduled by Bridges
and attorney Mike McCray in their
defense to charges by 'Mrs. Gerlrude
Barnett that her ton-in-Jaw·wu respoqsi-
ble for the death of Susan O'DoMell on
Marcb 19, 1968.
It . bas been testified that Mexican
physiciana who ez!uuned', !be body of
Mrs. O'Donnell 19 days alter her death
on Cozwnel Island found her death to be
caused by barbiturate poisoning.
Mexican authorities said the substance
involved in Mrs. O'Donnell's death was
"almost certainly" lumino1, a higlily toi·
ic liquid barbiturate.
!l'heir ltndlngs have been supporte<J by
Dr. Melvin Sommer, a Beverly Hills
pathologist wbo emmlned the decom-
posed remains of Mrs. O'Donnell in Mex·
ico City a year later.
Mrs. Barnett, 63, of Seal Beach Leilure
World, wants $1 million In damag'e5 from
Trp.man to Be X-rayed
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Doctors
hope lo X-ray former President Harry S
Tniman's lower gastro-intestinal tract
this week. The x-rays, dela¥ed several
times because of his irTitatea colon, are
the only scheduled test rerpalning for the
nation's 33rd chief ex~uUVe as be begins
his second week in Research Hospital
and Medical Center.
O'DoMell. She is seeking in a related ac·
lion to bar the physician from in·
heritance of his wife's esta te.
O'DoMell, who Practices at 2011
Westcliff Drive and 307 Placentia Avenue
in Newport Beach and at 1878'l Main St.,
Huntington Beach, has countersued Mrs.
Barnett and 70 other cterendants In ac-
tions filed in Orange and Riverside Coon·
ties.
Mrs. Barnett testified today lhal her
· daughter called her a week before her
death in Mexico and told ber ·about the
second trip taken by her and O'Donnell to
Mexico within a two-month period.
Mrs. Barnett said he< daughter told
her that she and O'Donnell had resolved
their marital differences and that the
~hysician had promised to sign a new
marriage settlement on their return to
California.
Mr1. Barnett said her daughter sound-
ed "very happy" and said she had been
told by her estranged husband that the
trip would solve his problems and that
the Mexican government bad promised to
pay the full costs of the Cozumel recon-
ciliation trip.
Mr.I. Barnell said he< daughter told
her lhat O'Donnell had told her thet the
trip would also enable him to inv~lgate
a propetty deal in· whlcb tlW Mmcan
government had become involved.
"Isn't it lrue tba_t '/!"' claugb!er tnd
Dr. O'DolllJOU 'mgijei· a 'mariUire kt-
tlement at the time of their marriage in
1965?" Bridg.s asked Mn. ,Barnell.
''The agreement was delivered to my
daughter just one hour before the mar·
riage ceremony," Mrs. Barnett replied.
· Hare Krishnas ·
·Serving Meals
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The
menu includes chapattis and Kittrie, not
to mention banana bread, at the Hare
KriJhna trailer in Resurrection City II.
"There ls no meat, fish or eggs in any
or our food," said the cook, a pigtailed
20-year-old member of the sect.
Anyone who asked, counterculture
member bedded down in the campground
or curious spectator, was given a plate of
food by one of the group dressed in flow-
ing, peach~lored robes.·
"No charge, but would you please
make a donation?" asked the girl.
Chapattis are flat pancake-size dlacs
made of whole wheat flour r~mbling
Mexican tortillas.
.Klttrie is a· mixture of split P!_as,
beans, rice and "whatever vegetabtes
you have," the young cook eiplalned.
•
~atc!il~ ~as picked up !n Westminster .•• • :JI while writing a note to his two children -~
-aged 19 and 22 -in which he allegedly Four perso ns were injured in a Laguna
said was sorry for "what he had done.'' Canyon Road traffic accident Sunday
according to police. night when a small domestic car skidded
out of control across the center line and
Courses Offered
In Lifesaving
Two-week lifesaving courses ror youths
It and older will begin July 17 under the
'guidance of the Newport Beach Marine
Safety Department.
Junior and Senior groups will meet
fr om 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday
)hrough Friday al the tilth Street bay
beach on the BalDoa Peninsula.
Registration will be from July 11 to Ju-
ly 14 between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. at the
Community Youth Center, 5th Street and
Iris, Corona del Mar. For more in·
fmmation , call the Pad<!, Beaches and
Recreation Department, 871-3110.
Newport-Mesa
Session Tuesday
Tnlatees o( the NewpOrt-M ... Urillied
School !Jiltrtct.wlll meet Tueoday al 7:30
p.m. at ~ lll&h School
Boan! memhen are slated to bold elec-
llom oJ board olliC«I and set a date !or
the final public hearing ol their 1972-73
budget.
Tuesday's meeting will take place in
the Choral Room, No. 378, or the IChool,
2m Placentia Ave., Coota Mesa.
Wilson 'Accepts Post
On Cities Committee
Robert M. Wilson, city councilman of
Costa Mesa, bas: been appointed member
of the Committee on International
Cooperation of the National League of
Cities. .
Wilson is part of a three-member
delegation from california to tbe com-
mittee.~Tbe tenns elJ)lre Nov. 30.
The primary function of the committee
is the administration of the sister city
program or which Costa Mesa iJ not cur-
rently a member.
Fire Laid to Arson
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Fire of-
ficials say an arsol)lst touched oU the
headquarters of the Society f o r
Individual Rights, dohig about ll0,000
damage.
colllded wllh anothe< vehicle.
Injured were Archie L. Brainard, 35, of
2.135 2nd A venue, Cbrona del Mar;
Maurice L. Benson, 40, of La Habra;
Mavis Benson.. of ta Habra; and
Winifred Skipper, 57, ol La Habra.
. The three La Habra persons were
treated and released at South ' Coast
Communitf Hospital. They we r e
passengers in a car eastbound on the Ca-
nyon Road when the accident occured.
Brainard, was treated at South Coast
H°"Pital, and then transferred to the
Orange County Medical Center. He has
been released by Monday morning, a ·
hospital aide said.
, Police said the accident occurred when
the westbound car driven by Brainard
went into a high-speed skid.
PoLie< Sgt. Norman Babcock said
witnesses reported the Brainard car was
traveling at a high rate of speed, that it
passed several other cars on the roadway
shoulder and lhal the skid started wben
the vehicle attempted to swerve betw~
two other cars.
Sgt. Babcock said that a complalnl
may he sougltt against Brainard.
195,000 Enjoy
Newport Sands
Over Weekend
An estimated 195,000 heacbgQer! -
85,000 on Saturday and 110,000 on ·~ay
-found rising water temperatures and
gentle winds In Newport Beach.
Water temperatures rose from f3
degrees on Saturday to 16 degree! on
Sunday. These warmer temperatures
brought a slight Increase In tbe jdlyfish
population, and a Marine S a f e t y
spokesman reported a proportional in-
crease in first aid treatments for
jellyfish wounds.
Winds raimed from eight to 10 knots.
Although boat traffic was beavy, no ac-
cidents were reported.
Air temperatures remained 74 degrees
and three-foot waves attracted heavy
surfboard traUic at l!tth Street on the
Balboa Peninsula and the. river jetty.
Lifeguards reported no problems with
riptides beyond warning nearly 700 swim-
mers of possible riptide danger. They
reported 36 rescues during the two days.
•
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"OUARANTll
EVIRYTHING
WI SELL
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TUESDAY'AFTERNOON, JOLY.1'1; ·19n -
VOL. ... NO. 4 .. CTKHIS. +t PMll . ' .
.. •• . .. •
..
'
• • -·
' ..... .. ...
·BIOOdy Patrolnian . ' • ' • • 'II -..
··Fires Gu·n for · Aid
. ... ..)G . ... ' -· ( ~ . l" \·. ' '
. 'b' • • • -. . ~. ~~!'°'~ng . ~c~a~h
-' ' '\'!( ' • • .~, ., ,
• • v
• I
..
, ..
, ./
'~.aPP¥~w~~~i9:~' .. '.
·Keyffivals
# ~ ' \ ' • .' •
Move Aside
• . . ' ,
Calls It· Qriiis . .
tcali!orni£:~fileg~~~~fic~da 11rmfa .,{ rudm:nd naps '4.lJi.l'~:·~;;;. .
1 cedings 'llt"tlie· Democratii:1 ~atill°'1 Cpl)~e!ltlon: At right:is/fony· Pill·. ;;yorosa_.Qf~an.~,!Ddrb. ~ ·, _ · · .. :! ·,.. _ 1
'.' __:. ¥ ) • 1.-: ~\ ·· ... · .... .. . . ~ .. ~ ! -··,. +
NASA Scores 3 Astronauts . . ~~., ,·{·,!·.·"'I"~·:·"
For UnauthoriieCI·A·ctidns . . ., .
MIAMtBEACH (UPI) -The sell·lllyl·
ed ~Pl'Y warrior, Hubert H; llumphrey,
pulled ool of ·the race today for lbe
~tic presidential nomination in
_tlle.J•~,o!. the. ~-.lll~em
lleaml'Ouer.
Hunl!W'er, the lill'nomlnee, ~
with hi.s wife Muriel and'~ucJlter at hll·
alde'at t:2Z p.m. PDT before, a crowded
room full of reporters to annouuilce bit'
withdrawal, saying J>e,' was releasing hli
delegates to. "vote as they· wish'." He did
not say ;bo"'OVU"wbelber be -•d 1111p-'. '1 I , ., f ~VMjl
lnjufed Lawman ._
Fires Off Gun
To Jttract Ltid
• ' . ' :WASHINGTON (AP) -The space
agency todliy disciplined the three Apollo
1~ astronauts for carrying 4. 0 0
u~uthorized postal covers to the· moon
and ba<k last July and lhen turning '!OO
,;, b1ooci..oait0d, off-duly i.ong Beach
polioonan fired several abots from his
pistol to bring help early thll morning, ~· f --' ·.,..,.. alter"Jili car 'sriii.sbe"d.-iillO the ·rear of a
acquaintalice, liOwever • tbty 'tHllzi!d.on parked van near tbe Boba Chica bluffs In
i. .m over to an acquaintance in West
any. ·
~ 100 moon-stamP,ed envelopes 1ater ·
ailt>arenlly were )old to,~mp .!'11llecl'!rs
!Qr $1,500 each, tlie Na't!'"l•l .Ae!'OIJ"utlc,
apd Space Kdmtntstr~tion ·sa1d .. 1
:'NASA said after an inv.~tigaiton that
oltrooauls David '.Scott, ~red Worden
a(\\LJ&roel ~.'·:.6"ll'~.P<Jl1~~11118:
rnent in their action.
"Therefore, Ibey will be reprimanded
aqi;I their actions will be given due con.
sideration in their selection fQl' future
their own -that this Wl\'frn.P"QP'!f and Huntington Bes4 ,
declined to accept either Ille t~ flnl'0r l'Ollce llliil David Ryan, 26, a patrol of·
the allemalive oUer or. 'liuli111-;iq..h· ~ wltl\ the Long Beach Police llopart.
change for the 100 Postal.iOOY~, 1,.· N~ rnent: was driving east· on Pacific Coast
said.. ' • ' ' ·• • \ . at about ·5' a.m. ·thts morning when
The ApQllo· 15 ctew,-'llke •tbolO ·m another car blocked hi.s ·lane and forced earli~r'. moon .m1u1ona,,. bid NA'SA'I; · 'blm to amaah.infu tbe rear ol a van park·
perlllll8""1, , witbin -bllahod -· ed on the side of the IOOd. • , codures~ ~carry pmoail '.OU.enir-type; The oocupanr or' lhe"Van. Jimmy R.
Items, including some poilal COTtra. • l'ailltell of Buela Park, waa asleep when
The permission was J'""*"'; witb-tltf' tlie l!Cddent oc<Utred. Wben be emerged
(See ASTllQNA1.\1'911~,J) I fl'OI" the . van be fooro · Ryan bleeding
, .... _....,..,__..__ • ., • ..,....,..,.•.._._, pnll\aely and ·went•.to get help.
' MioiiwM!e Rian stumbled Out of bit
Dem·. ocra• T:me plck<IJI and mac1e·blt war to·tbe baclt 01
" " Ibo oor and lay oo"1t lhere. When no Oil<
' . ar,~~ t:~.d4~•puiy ·""' .. s.~.Led. "'d.-.'l'..µ ... ,,. '.. mjniltratOI", commenflli:f; I:!.... ' ' < f' ~,
"¥tronaull are :Unaer ~·-' ~·BEACH, if;ia. (AP)'.,..
capie to his . aid al~ . several miooles be
berm to 1irt hla piltol in the air. ·
Five unldeotilied surfers on the besch
beam the IMll and round him. They then
drove into downtown Huntington Beacb
and stopped the fil'lt police car on the
llreel In~ manlha jJreeedlllc a llgk.11> f/le ~~aUc Nltloa)r ~ ._ · Md their !"""" Jud!liilenl In ciO'· • l1P.:\. s ·a tllO ~; r~' the unauthorlucl coven ~ lie, • ' , ldr fa IOllJIW,l·
C<lllkjere<! In this Ughl ' . Um PDT!· _ 1 -~J ,
• "None!Iieless, NASA caru10l' condooe 4 p. . -Sesslc8 CJllelll. , -., th actions.'' ' . • • $ jJ'.m. approal!naftely~' ASA said ~learned tbal'tbe,ipoI» 15 • aUcio of lilt ConunllllO<
<l'el!o ..... .al~ Jiftle to Ji'ivlll'~' I• , H ' . I:=• ~.· ~· , ~ ""'" their> JorthCOQllJlg •p-.-. - -to ·tlie ocqllllinlldee Jn return' fol' eo11i.. mltlet · ftlllft tdiedl '
liallmtnt of a "trust fund" for their child-:f:· =~ ao IDdlelllaa cf ~Alt<r the coven had be<n givtn to the
• • •• .~ J•
r •
•
.. Pllustell, In the meantime, had hlldled
a ride to Huntington Beach ·Police Head-
-~and coolacted off1cen there. -'POllci arrived 20 minulel after tbe ac-
•
cident occumd chnin& lfhlch time no one
had otopped to Ii•• ale! to the bedl7 in-jured olf'icw, Ml<Ording to poUce. -
Ryan WU reported in satllfactory COO<
dllloa tb!a ....,,q-at Paclllca Hoopllll
with beod IJjjurles, eoolUlionl and
abrulom.
" ,
I '
Ii>-# MGovern, an old friend, for the ·
DOlllinatlon.
'lfumPJ,rey appear!"l "!inl>er ai be read
a thrl-ppa?agraph lllatement on hi.I
ii~. th!IL clincbed . the nomlnalloo.
w'ediielday night for ' George s'.
~
His .. ice troke ollgbtty toward the end
cf the 11&1ement u 11e thank<d·blt 111adff •
and oupporten who worked lor him.
r After reading the preplired 1tatement.
Humphre( added .. a few, worda aying,
"We've ~ tbe ·ll'Od· flglll ... N'ow we
liow out'.."
'lie -hugged Muriel ,ancf walked
•Wiiy from . Ille microphooes.
Hwnphrey was said I<> have reached ,
his decision to withdraw early today
after see"1i! hla major119Pe of overtsldilg
McGoritn fall. 11lit wU the codventbt's '
declJ!on to give McGovern all 217
delegates from California, inlllead of
. . . ""',........
TH!iQWS ,IN row.L
. _ Ex,undldoi. Humpt>reY
;
~~nd~ts Hunte~;:
~fiuged· ·<Jut Ex es
Of T~o Vict ims "
sj>l!Ufng them UP, with Humphrey setting ROCHESTER , N.Y. (UPI) -Police of-
lf.16iand JiJGovern 120 based on lbe June • r flcia;ls-have .wigited.10 ~tra detectives
primary; votlnJ. . . , to an. "around-lh&dock, cbec1t-out11n Huin.P¥eY then 1li!pt on bis· dec:ilicn a leads" search for twci men who gouged
few houri and met .with lUa top fftisen.' ·olit·the eyes of ·two robbery ·victimJ.-
at midmornlng. Later, he called together Police identified the latest victim as
hi.s ataH for a closed meeting and -11 Robert Paro, l9, of Rochester.
lean .... obed, lncludlng •aome by· He wa,s ittacked and blinded by two
Muriel llumplirey-be told them be was robbers SUnday night as he worked .at a bowing out. · The llumphrey statement said: Main str:eet gas station. ~·
0 After consultation with ~ f Authorities said two men took Paro
closest friends aad aapporten:, 1° ha1: -· down a side street, .robbed him of .sip,·
determination to oonlinue tlie baltle l gouged out one of. hi.s .eyes and l~jureil
name to be entered in nomination at the the other; He was 1n cr1t1ca1 condition at
convention. and I am now ftle11ing my St. Mary s Hospital. .
delegalea to vole u t!ll!'·wlsh ' 1 ll=arJle~ SUriday, a lone rOl?ber ,who
"My withdrawal irOm. the P.esldential rese~bled ·on_e ol Paro's assailant! goug-.
r,ace ii a wjthdrawal of candidacy only. ed our the eyes of .Samuel C: Schafer, '12,
11 ii not 11 ,withdrawal of spirit qr ·of ~ of ROcbeater, police 111d. .
detennlnallon to continue tbe bolUe 1 ·The mallant
0
aalced •for freth .orange
bave waged all my publlc life 00 behalf juice -in Scbalera store and ·When told
of tho$e •wbo had no voice. · thal there 'la• onJf orange aocla, he
. "On behail ol Mrs. Humphrey and me . demanded money.
I wish to thank lhoae who have -nJ .In • brief !CUIOe, the robber gouged
ao bard for these put lix montbl not on-' out both of Schafer's eyes. Scb8.rer was
ly for my candldoey, but for the lfe•l<r reported in aood condition at Geneasee •
pl of a nation gowned Yllth Justice Hospital. and ..,,;,pasaion, • 'Police said they are seeking two men,
•Ad libbing · ey.. glistening · 11 faint ODO man described as about 30, with a
lllllle oa bis '11po, Humplny ,then opoke • medium Al.rotlJ'le haircut, and the other
ol hmnr lwgllt Ille aood ftgllt witttin Ille • about IO.
nilfl lllil lllnising thlt bit oplril WU not , , ·
~~. w!lhdiawal , Hlllllfllu'ey ...:.id GOP Serving Newsmen
play the role of party unlfler, poaibly .
ainadlnl a spirit of --lhal MIAMI BEACH' (AP) -'l1le Com-
would Improve McGovero'1 Chances of • mlttee lot the R ... lecliclll of the Preli·
whmb• aupport -orpnllod labor in dent bu a hoepltallty room In the F,..
partlcular. ~bor ii d11Unct17 coot' to talnebieu Hotel tor Mwsmtn COYerlog tilt
Mc<loon. Democralic Natloaal Convellllon •
;/ ,1,. ' . " ' . ...
• ..
At Confab
' .
MIA¥! BEACll (UPI) -George S.
McGovern , clinched . the Demociatie
presidential nomination today as Hubert
H. Humphrey stepped out of the race and
McGovem'1 dtber key rivals moved to do
.the same. M~vem reiaxed in his hotel as the
· ·coamion· · which · hoj)<d to stop him
Wednesday n!ghl dissolved around him.
J1e · talkod by telephone to Humphrey
after the "hippy warrior's" bow-out and
praised~ him .lOr ·~rus 25-year fight for
human Justice."
w HumpJu:ey, •. v.ictim of McGovern's lS.
month baitle for the nomin ation and of
slick convenUon floor mane uvers on the
part of the South Dakotan Monday night,
released · his delegates to vote as they
wish.
Sen. Edinund S. Muskie, who still con----:
trols SOme 700 convention votes, and Sen.
Henry M. Jackson, with over 50, both
called afternoon news conferences, most
likely to follow the path struck by
Humphrey.
Mc9ovem was just 43 votes short of
the 1,509 needed for victory when
balloting begins in the eoovenllon hall
Wednesday "!c/!l.
Humphi07'i •m:plus ·delegates, many
of them ·~t sure to back McGovern,
· (See McGOYERN, Pqe J)
. . .......
' . ' '
The weatherlady tees clear and
IUllllY skies through Wednesday,
' with highs of 70 at Orange Coast
· aands, rising to 80 degrees Inland.
Lows 57-61. ·
•
INSmE TODAY
Chicago MayOf' Rlcl1ard J. Da·
ley refUHd compromise •fforU
by Sen. McG°""rn on tilt thorny
4 que.s tirm of d4J.tgate seating. At
a result. Daltfl lott hi.s stat. Ste
stoTJI and other convention rt·
..11s on Page 4.
L.M, -.,,. f ~ 1•19 Ca11"'1M f M-..i l'WMt .. ci...1HH -.. ,.._., ,,.....,,
c-k• 11 ....... ,....., 11
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Ml""91P• ' T.......... • ·~ ,..,. ~ .... ......... , .. ,, ......, .
flit ... ..... 11 ._.. ....... 1).14
Mlillll I !4 WWflll...... t """'UMlln ,,
.
s
Alli~s Hit Quang Tri
U.S. Copters Lift 'froops in Over Barrage-
SAIGON (APl -U.S. MI r In e
hellcoptm lilied South ·Vletnameae
troops into a combat assauJ t north of
~g Tri city today, Oying Into a heaV)'
tten:age of fire behind enemy lines that
knOcked down at Jeast three hellcopttra,
helicopters were ufe, coing down lnl!de
South Vletnc. altar being bit by antiaircraft and amall-&nn1
fire. . Tbe fato the crewmen aboard the
before the helioopten were !)It. All .,,.
Munc.ment from the U.S. 7th FJfOt IJ>.
dicoled that i,._ fnm the two CHiii
alrudy had -dropped di. Tbo
bellcoplen new -the caniel'I.
• the U.S. Command said.
thin! helicopter, a CH&3, the biggest U.S.
trooparrylng helicopter, wu not Im-
mediately tnowo.
The ntw .... u11 by aeveral lllndred
South Vtetlwneae marines nortb ol.
Quang Tri enlarged the govemmeot
forces' ring around the nortbemmool
provincial capital.
Tiie landings, by South Vietoameae
marines, put government 'forces on three
: iklcs of the enemy-held provinclaf
et1pital: q.$. military spokesmen said tha
crewmen of tY.'O CH46 m e d i u m
•
The U.S. Command said It had no ad·
dltlonal details.
lt was not clear whether there were
South Vietnameae troopa aboard or
whether they had been dropped of!
Justtte Halts Heari~g
• A 7th Flett ._.....,! aaid that
4'inltial action cm. U.. ground wu bot u
the South Vteinameae marines lllOlled,olf
the heli"'1\>ttrs· and on to the oUeoslve."
The marines were lande<i Jin milet
north-northwest of the city, on the
eulem side ol the Thach Han River op-
posite the Quan& Tri combat base.
For the -fifth successive day, en-
' trenched North Vietnamese f o r c e 1 lnva"litLina . 9 Police~n -..~ · ::,:'°'\\!.~ ~ ~~~i~~~.:: ~ ~ ~ ~ · ~''~•":!\>'..' d • -• Tiii!l-loil. North VI et name 1 e Io-
tt# J ... • .... ,,,e, "b" ~. ..... • , fantryme\\ and Sooth Vietnam e 1 e
By TOM BARLEY -booked him .. charges of l!saull'iitb I )>ar•trcoeen and marinea balded at loor
Of t11t l!f"" """' s1.n deadly weapon., ; ~1 different po!Dts on the nortbeuterD and
An ~e Col!Jlty SUptrlor Court In any event, ti.. lawsuit med by the ""'theall«n O!ltakirll of Quang Trl
judge today llepped in io halt a city alate1, ti.. 16,591 wu locked away . The Saigon command repcrted that IOI
munlcipol court contempt hearing !or for safe keeping pe0clin1 a court North Vieinameae troops were killed and
two llualington 1!eacl! patrolmen and set determination on ti.. future deatinatiao ellht tanU deltrayed, alx ol. them in one
the llap for a three-way tug of war over of Crittenden'• funds . battle, by U.S. naval gunfire and Soutb
$5,000 between the police depaQ.JJt$k·.the 'fbe Internal Revenue Service was first Vietnamne artillery aupport.
Int.ul Revenue Service an<l~Sanla on the acene with a notice of !e\'Y that "The Norih Vletnameae are in there to
Ana lawyer. demanded aurrender or tt.. lull 16,59L llay," aald C&pL Don ~~~~n,th2S'.~!
.Judge James F. Judge set July 21 u Then attorney James A. Rlddett told Bradenton, Fla., an a.,_ '" ~
··-date 'or a hear•·· on which he will lb 't that he led" 000 f th ,.,... car•troopen:;-''The guys who are there u~ " .,. e Cl y wan ~. o .e ~ .. v •--d ed to t th " r.Vl·ew the plea by the ci'ty ol Hunt1'ngton d I d I t I I I ave un:n or er • ay ere. # ten en un s or paymen o ega Associated Presa correspondent Dennis
Beach for a ruling on actions that led tO services provided by him for the defen-Neeld reported from the frOnt that
the filing or contempt charges against of· dint. Dickenson told him North Vietnamese
ficers Fred B. Loya and Robert .Judge Sft'lltb took R!ddett's side May 17 troops were well dug in and around the
Cavender. and ordered the city to pay the l•>Uer Citadel, In the heart or Quang Tri City.
· Hl.s acUon balta lbe contempt heiring bis fee deaplle the IRS demand' !or the "They are in well-prepared bunkers,"
acbedaled for tbi.s morning by Weal lull '8,111. he aald. "They've been there !or two
<Jranie County Municipal Court Judge The city continued to hold the Cril· montha and they'va used their lime
Jame1 L. Smith. And It also halta until tenden funds and Judge Smith ordered judiciously."
July 21 any actioo on the · $5,000 at the both pilrolmen involved in b1s arrest to 11You can put 105 and even 155 artillery
root ol the taue. appear today in hlJ court to provide on those bunkers and you'll only Iii••
Charp.s IUed agalnlt James LeroJ reaaona why they should not be cited for them a headache."
Crittenden, 28, Huntington Beach, shortly contempt. Dickenson said he had seen 500-pound
alter hli arreat April 1 indicate that the The city • action that delays the bombs dropped within 20 yards of the
$5,000 was part of fe,591 that originally municipal court bearing names· the IRS, North Vietnamese bunkers and they fail-
bel ..... aed to him. . Crittenden and Riddell as defendant.!. All ed to hurt anyone in.side. ·-ed uJ ·"It's fighting in cities," be said. "It's Loya and Cavender clailn that CrJt. three have been order to appear J y tenden thraw ~.000 out of b1J cor u be 21 before Judge Judge. dirty. It'• rough, and It's dil!erent from
,_,_ ed The "they f d An RJddett tod bl ed the anything we've hid slnoe the Tet of---• purau · Y aay oun Bnil'Y •Y am felllive In 11188. It'• no i.tlger the quiet a further ff.Ill in hlJ vehicle when they IRS !or the Impasse and condemned the Utile rice-paddy war." federal agency for what be aald wu their
Judge Forbids
C&rtoon Figures
Exploitations
SAN ,FRANCISCO (AP)' - A federal
Judge baa put hla judicial fool down on
Wlderground cartoonists alleged to
portray Mickey Mouse and other Wall
DiJney cartoon characters u dope ped-
dlers and sexual actlvlats.
U.S. .District Olurl Judge Albert C.
Wollenberg Monday enjoined llte car-
toonlsla from making or selling any. of
the diipuled comic books and onlered all
copies of two issues to his court, pending
recent accusation that hil fees were too
high. .
"That'• the reuon behind their
persiltence," RJddett anapped. "They've
even threatened to audit my income tax
returns for the last five years in an
outrageous attempt to make me abandon
my eflorta to obtain my '5,000 fee."
r ...... P .. eJ
ASTRONAUTS ••
condition that the artlclea be retained by
the utronauta or be given to penonal
friends. They were not to be used for
1
commercial or 'fwid-<aillng purpoaea or
pel'IOllOl.Jain, NASA aald. ,
McGOVERN. ••
will put him easily pl!! the required
quota.
George C. Wallace announced plans to
go to the convenUon floor tonight to press
his fight for the kind of conservative
plaUorm he says the party must have !or
victory in November.
_ _..,_ of a $@,000 copyright In-
fringement aull
• On Apollo 15, the utronauls were
authortzed to carry m of the specially
•lamped enve1-with markll>P-lbow·
ing they had made the round trip to the
m01>ft. The 400 unauthorized covm were 1
carried in addition to the approved ones.
With a bottle ol beer, a long, thin cl11r,
his sboea ticked off and bla tie dtac.snled,
McGovern watched on television in hill
penthouse suite as all bJs rivals -united
in their fervor to •top him -!ell to the
power of".hiJ ttcbUy disciplined loyallsla
on the coavention floor.
The supremely confident Prairie atate
senator planned to seclude himself today,
pouibly on a boat, to go over drafts of
the acceptance speech be fully eipectejl
Disney Productions ln...il.! suit said the
cartoon characters encourage "an image .
of I n n o c e n t delightfulness" but the
underground cartoonists show t h e
characters in a "degrading, lewd and of·
tensive manner."
The judge emphaUcally denied a claim
by the defendants that they had a right
to par6cly the Disney cartoons under the
First Amendment.
"To extend the First Amendment pro-
jection to cover this case," said the
judge, "would serve to obliterate
copyright protection in any instances jn
which the alleged infringer could claim ·
• the intent to convey an.idea."
The Disney organization sued January
7 after publica_tion in comic book form of
"Mickey MOU!e Meeta the Air Plrales"
and "Air Pirates." 'These~ were "<\he two
publications onlered Impounded.
The cartoonists are Dan O'Neill, Ted
Richards, Gary Hallgran and Bobby Lon-
don. The. suit demands $100,000 punitive
damages against each artist and $5,000
• . from each for co pyri,e:ht infringemen t.
• IT
DAILY PILOT
Snoopy Geu
College Degree
BERKELEY. (AP) ~ .UC
Berkeley ha1 conferred a n
honer arr degree on Snoopy, the In-
tellectual beagle or Charles Schulz'
comic strip, "Peanuts."
The honor came from Sanford
Elberg, dean of the university's
gradUate division, arter the pooch
complained ... in a strip that another
June had gone by leaving him
again bereft of a degree.
Snoopy was pronounced "Assi&-
tant Dean in Charge of Canine and
Related Programs," and 1
doghouse-size certificate of ap-
pointment made out to 11Snoopy
Beagle SchuJ:t" was sent to his
aeator, cartoonist Charles Shuli.
. to deliver before the convention Thurs-
day night following Wed n e 1day•1
pre.!ideoUal balloting.
There was no word from him a~t a
cllOice of a running-mate. . , . .
·The action abllta tonlfht to the party's
plaUorm, with Wallace hoping to make a
personal appearance at the convention -
but probably not from Ito rostrum -to
lead the fllht for hlJ own philoaophy.
The W alJace fol'Cel hoped lo plll'IO
from the plaUonn liberal planb on bus-
ing, welfare and national defellle w)Jjcb
reflect McGovern'• viewpoint. · ·
This time tbe McGovern lorcea planned
lo join with liberal supporte,. of
Humphrey, Muskie and Rep. Shirley
Chisholm to wan! oU the Wallact altaclt.
McGovern 1oday promlaed families of
American POWs, jjWe wui never aban--
don those men" II he becomes pr<aident. ·
He aald some military capability would
be retained in Southeast Alla unUI the
Gia taken priaooer in the war are re-
leased.
TM O...nge COISt DAllY PILOT, wllh wllltlt
h combll'Md fM N•.,,,.Ptru. K Jll,lblllhtd b.,
tM On1199 Co.st PWll.tllftg ~"f. 5tP9-
r1t. edlliotll .,.. publbfted. Mtiln4•'t '"'°"'" Frld1y, fOr Cost• Mn •. 1r1-p1rt I t.ell,
Himllnglon 111<:11/Founrtln v1 u.-,, Ltgun1
Bad!, ll"'llMJsHi:lltbKk 811C11 hn CltrMn!t/
5M Jv111 C.Mtr«11. A afngle rt111or!1I
edllltn ll publbhed SllUrdaYI 1N SM!t\'1.
Thi ptlilclPll MIW.11111 pa,111 11 t i U) W!ll
a.y $trttt, cos11 M ... , Cllltom141, m 1'.
Olympics Sailing Racers
Finish in Tight Oump
R.o\r1 rf N. W114
Pfnlrm!! Ind l"Ublbflet
J1tk R. Curl1y
Vici Pra)denl Ind Cei!«•I Miniver
Thom•• K11vif Editor
11torn11 A. Murphi111
M•netllw l!:dltot'
Ch1rl11 H. loo1 Rtc~1r4 P. Nall
A»ltl1nt MtMGlfto !dllorl -Cult Mm: »e wnr ky St.wt
Nt'llrpOrt I_,.: W Nft'11811 '°""""~ lftunt &ffdl: m ,..._, AWllW
M11111l'"9Mn 1-.:11: 17*1J eetdl ~
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'!be 26
boata in the third race or the Star ClaM
U.S. Olympic yachting trials finished t!>e'
l 1-mile San Francisco Bay coune Mon-
day with only 10 minutes separating the
winner, Dennis Connor of San Diego, and
the last-place boat.
Connor croaaed the linbb line one ...,.
o(ld and only a few feet ahead of Alan
Holt of Seallle who bad a lint and sec-
ond in racea Saturday 1nd SUnday and
leads the point standings.
O'Connor ii oecond in total poinla 10<
the tine racea, with U.4 lo !loll'• 1lx.
Lowell Norih or San Diego and Bill ·
Buchan of Mercer Island, Wash., Were
lied for thin! in the three-race lolals and
J.M. "Dltl ScbootmiaiB' ol Miami WU
fifth.
North, with 4-44 flnlm, and Buchan,_
1-1-1 had 21.7 polnta, ,. point lliead of
flcboonmUer With H-4. •
Winds !or. Monday'• 'nco tncreued
from 15 knoll to I brlat 18 II the !iniJh •
The fleet .wu cluatered moot of ti.. way.
I '
Places from 11xth tlJrvulh 10th were
taken in order by Steve l!Untlclt of
Ithaca, N. Y.. Allen Mllcbell ol Tlbunin,
Calli., Tom Bl1ckaller ol Son Fnnclaco,
Jolin Bennett ol. San DltlO and Reed
Ruggles ol Miami.
Because of atructur•1 damage to bl&
boa~ Charles Morgan ol St. Pe1tnbur1,
Fla. withdrew from the trials .
Standings alter Mooday'1 third raco:
I. Alan Hol~ SeoU!e, 1-H, S poinla.
2. Dennis 'Connor, San Dteco. W-1,
Ui.4. •
3. Tie between Lowell North, S a n Dieco. 4-4.J, an4 Bill Bueban, M....,..
Island. Wub., 1-14, 1!.7.
1. J .M. -Schocimnmr, Miami, 2-1-4,
:D.7 ••
I. Don Tralk, oatland, Calli.' W.12.
31.
1. Tom Blackallet, San Franclaco, M ...
40.
I. Allen MltebeU, Tlbunln, Calli., 11•7, "· I. Jolin Bennett, San DMc<>. 10.IH, &
10. Reed R\laltl, Miami, IH .. !ll, a
•
;;
Candidate • •
. . . . • Hinshaw .. • • •
Spent Most
Andrew J. Hinshaw, auccesafUI !9th
Congressional District Republican carr
clJdate and Orange County assessor,
emeried today as the biggest spender ln
the primary campaign of those reporting
todate. ~ ·
Hinshaw reported that he speQt $81,677 •.
His opponeht Rep. John G. Schmitz {R-
Tusttn) spenf $75,904. , •
However, the biggest apender, Ralpl\
Diedrich seeking to unseat incumbent
§upervisor William J . Pbilllpa--In the
. . .. .. . . . . • ..
Ulll T.._... third district, may have spent close to 1<
l'letor ; ; . . . $90,000, it wa~ estimated _t~y. ~ . • ... ,, \-n:
• -. . ; ·1 , Pi!dtic@bu ·unup p!'m~oday to f$:e · · • -.r...
Fra#IO;ankj(w1ci, Sent George the 'fmal r.pOrt'. Oilier au~tvisorial e&n" ·! • .. :·. -· .. ·
McGovern'& floor J9'1fer..-an-"' d' • ~ :: d.,._,";;:·;-.:t1~rct: swered questions after recap-" idates, WU~lam W!n~~ and_ su.per;lsor &~::1~ • .. -~·~-1:1 .
turing 151 delegates fro)ll Cali-Robert BaWn of the first di>tr1ci, ~J.so ··~elinty queeii ~, ;;... "( ~ f~rnja, in a giant step toward have not filed ~s yet. ~ ... ~ • . ~. .t~r! .-, _ ,.t~
h'lt goal of, nom~atton on be Tbe-IOCOlld biggesi opendei reporling, · • Diani!> Marie •Hblt,<)a, of Hun· .•
lint b4llot · ' Dr. William Brlllie~a or Fuller!'\!). said • ting1j>n Be u:Ji .. has ·~been •.
. • ~.OIO .... apent in bis unsueceSllul ...... crownOd Miss oi'Lnge County, .~·
write-in campaign in the 3 41 for the ·Miss Univeylie"JfMeanL . •
Poisonous ·Fumes
Killed Student
After Studies
FOF1!1Aldehyde fumes killed a Santa
Ana College student fowid dead in bed
after cutting up a cat cadaver for
anatomy class June 6, but not exactly in
the manner originally ·auspected. ~
Orange Counly Corooer'1 cleputles con-
finned today that Chris Lacher, 20, died
as a result 'of inhaling the acrid
preservative while bent over his project.
Lacher, who lived at bis family'• home
In Orange, however, had a chronic
bronchitis condition.
He apparently suffered a hypersensl;-
tive allergic reaction to the fonnaklehyde
f\Sllea and this caused his larynx to awell
up. abutting of! the breathing pa!'"'le.
The former Orange Coat Collqe stu-
dent died in bla sleep alter retlrin& about
5 a.m., from an overnl&ht ltSSion prepar-
ing for final anatomy clasa gnding.
The youth who had tranaferTed to San-ta Ana College to play baaketball wu
diacovered by bla twin brother.
Scores Attend
Athenagoras'
Funeral Service
ISTANBUL, Tar k o y (AP)-Funeral
services for Ecumenical P a tr 11 r c h
Atbenagoru were held today before
ICOl'!:S of officials representing many na-
liona-.ed· the-l'roleltant and ljoman
Calllolic churche!.
Meanwhile the election of a new
51>ifitual~INdet -ror the~250-milllon
member Eastern Orthodox Church gave
the Turkish government increasing con-
.,.... in the race •I proteata lro111 the
G<eek government.
Black-robed Orlllodox bishops' with
flowing white beardJ chanted the funeral
aervic<, preaided over by Metropolitan
(Ar<bbishop) Mellton, a member or the
palriarcbal Holy Synod. Meliton iJ con-
sidered the leading condldale to succeed
Albeoagoru who died Friday at 88.
Hundreds of perlOlll poclted the amall
dturch of St. George within the one-acre
patriarchate. Michael Ramsey,
arcbbiJhop of Canterl!ury and Aaglican
Qiurob i..ad, llood nut to Pope Paul's
repreaentat-lve, Jan Cardinal
Willebrands, president of the Vatican'•
Secretariat for Christian Unity.
Caolreaaional Dbtrici. . The 36-24-S!itlbeauly wUl,com· :'
·.John D. llatteree •. 'IUC•casful candidate pete for th~·"1iss Cilifornla :
for the GQP nomination in the 34th, title Jn August ... ·_. : " : reported apendlng only 14,130. He got 41" .' "
11,191 voles to llrubOan'. 7,303. •
Brubears dem•MM a band count ot ~
1he voles, but wben re.UICI dld~nol show Pres~ident Pays .-algnlllcant clWige alter three days of
counting, be called It oil. He had J>eai
·forced to wage • write-in cainpaJgn S • V • •
because he appeared two minute. late to urprise isit
Lile ·bis nominatA>n ·papers in March. . .
Hinshaw's lisr'of contributors showed T C C f that his public relations adviser Chip 0 . apo a e.
Cleary put up a loan of $23,500 in the
form or professional services. The
assessor reparted receiving a , total of
$56,292 in contributions, $30,374 less than
..
1'! spent.
Principal conlrihuton in addition to
Cleary were Mrs. Patricia Reilly HHt,
assistant secretary of the U.S. Depart ..
ment ot Health, Education and Welfare
and aeveral officials of the Irvine Qnn ..
pany including president William R.
Mason.
A third Republican in the 39th District
Ear{ Carraway, reported 1 p e n d J n g
'30,925 aod the fourth aspirant, Larry
Denna, apent only $591.
Supervisor PhilJips, who finished sec·
ond to Diedrich in the t h i rd auper ..
vlsorlaJ district. reported s p e n d I n g
157,289 and said his contrlbutora put up
'55,144.
Other-&upervisoriaJ c a n d i d a t e 1
reported were Robert Bark, $3,400;
Stephen Zirscbky, $829 -both in the
third district race, and Paul Balch, •t,280
in ti.. first district lighl
Stale Sen. Claire W. Burgener (Jt.La
Mesa), winner of the GOP nod in the new
42nd Coocrellktnal District which in·
cludes the eoutbem coastal area of
Oran1e• County, reported a p e n d I n g
'311,824.
Conrad Tuohey, a Fullerton 111orney,
won the Democratic nomination In the 23nl CongrWlbnal Dlatrlct and was the '
biga:est 1pender among Democrats wilb
115,21(1 ••
0tto:L1Cayo of Cypreu,!who won the -
Democratlc nomination ln the 35th
aenatorlal dlitrlct spent $2,7111; John
Blact or Newport Beach spent $2,589 to
win the 39th Congressional District
OemocraUe 1nomination, • and T.erry
Moabenko WOI the Democratic nomina·
lion in the 70th Aslembly District with
apelldlns of ff,225.
In the 70th As>embly D Is I r I ct
Republican race, Paul JesUow, a student,
spent $550 in loaing to ,As>emblyman
Robert ff, Burke (R-Hunllngton Beach)
who rePQrled apending $6,881. ~
Aasemblyman Robert Badham (I\'
Newport Beach) spent 111,570 although
he was unopposed in the 71st district, and
attorney William Dannemeyer reported
spending $5,617 to win the Republican
nomination in the 69th Assembly District.
.
President Nixon -SPorting a granll.
appetite ror Mexican food -dropped into!
his favorite local restaurant Mondat,
nig ht.
It was the fi rst visit to the El Adobt-tn:
San Juan Capistrano in at least a year.;
for the President and his small party. 1
And the Chief Executive sat far from:
any available television Bets -holdint
true to his aide's promises that the
President would not alter his schedule tO:
follow the Democratic National Con'-
vention. (Related story, Page 3.) •
Nixon was accompanied on tht
surprise dinner outing by Reader'I
Digest Board Chainnan Hobart Lewis ·
close friend C. G. "Bebe'; Rebozo ai. ·
Florida and Presidential NavY Aide Lt,
Cmdr. era;, Campbell. •
Nixon ordered chile relleno and tacor .
from the bill of fare , then later placed
another order for more tacos. •
Wire services, in an apparent con:
cession to Eastern readers, describei
chile relleno as "green pepper enveloped ·
in an omelette-like Cheese wrapper." :
Death of Man ... -~ ~
. • '·' .. In :Say 'Probed
r,y.N rn111.c1sco (AP) -Popce ar. •
iifOest1gatmg the death of a man whose
body was found in San Francisco Bay
with his hands and feet wired together
beh ind his back and bis body weight~
down with a concrete slab tied around hp
waist.
The body of Colvin McCright, 46, San
Francisco was found Monday.
Homicide Inspector Frank Falzon said
it was unknown whether McQight wU
tos.sed into the bay alive.
"We're proceedjng on either assumP:
lion -he may have been murdered
berore being thrown in or be could have.
drowned," Falzon said. ·,
McCright, a supervising janitor fol:,
Standard Oil Company, had been missing ·
since July 4, Falzon said.
BETI'ER LATE THAN NEVERt-
'
•
We're only one weeli late to
wish you e Happy Independence
Day-but ...
Really, we sliould celebrate all
year long.
In this spirit we ere offering
red, white, & blue s h a g n y Io n
carpetfng et $7.95 an'd $8 .. 95
installed.
Ide e I for boah, cl1ilclren's
rooms, area rugs, etc.
-
.. •
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentfa· Ave.
COSTA MIS.A
646-4138 . ' HOWS: Moli.llini....._ t le l:JD-M,t 1et-Sot.t:J01e I
•
•
"
.•
•
..
I
fO<
him
the
•
· The
bigb
par
or
eac
lzed
wl
Ing
bac
tern
aJon
au
4-y
the
fro
or
ho
of
thl
tall
onl
to
y
F
tt11
spoctl
aelll
Ill
Sad
~amp
bus in
raise
c..,ts
$27.lO
and I
In
R
Huntington Parade:
Is It~ earing ~~.
. ! • ' .. • · By RICllARD t. DRAKJ • ' ..,._ .• ,
Of 111r1 ~ltJ ,lltt IMN '• "·..,.
IN THE CBILD'S We, "The Emperor's New 'botbea, • a kine· la bk'"
for a bundle because a "cou~j, o/ lharple tailors playlnl Oil h!J vanity cqnvince
him tbey Cl!) 11'ke"'ihbn ..,._pclil~t new aet of thread> out of ma11c clotb only
!lie aood and pure ofwrfcan .... -•
Naturally the 'kln1 moke~ 1 apectacl~ or himaeJI In
l.J_>.frade, bu\ no one is about lo admit !lie king 11' a shabby
l\l!de "1d not really ·ctotlled In tbe lineal of robea. But -
stfine kid, who only .knows whit ht sees, exposes the con
1•or 11.nd,)~-•ll CQ{JIU·t\1' llf th~ wash... • . .ww ~'tm!v,dle'wno· .. *' ~l'hil' .aUfmltlnrto• llia_\:!l'"'·~Jlal ~ "ol'4u]'t..~, Did ~,eJH',
-teef'llie.Nli!W<f ~molhln•. -ali.r •tlnvtlno In thellUI! fpr !hr~'"--.-."? ~ -W-3\-:i-.-J.:. -~\:"-, .._ I" ' . ....~.. ' ' --·;,)IJ.. ;--' ' ' . ,·'f!· ... . f ,, ~
;;, · . ouK• . .-. · .~ bo~·Qp,~make a parade lut three hours?
The 'Rosf! Parade, the Rolls Royce. of paraats, ls only about two bours lortJ.
· One tric}f [tl Huntin~~n Belch Is to have u malty Clance s"tudi'o, junior
high and parks departm<nt drill and baton "twirl« i'11111 11 pouible In the
parade. Tbeh they have each team member tDarch at least 10 feet behind his
or her nelrest teammate and they allow about a quarter or a mile between
each group.
Anotbu way they make the parade Jut ls by finding 11 lTllny mechln.
ized Shriner grou~ as possible. These are installed near the front of the pair1de
with their cute litUe motor scooters. Then, when everything aeem1 to be mov·
Ing &Jong too swiftly, the Shrinu1 can tum quickly and..10 1ltteway1, or even
back against !lie flow o[ tbe parade, performln( !lie Intricate crossln( pat.:
terns so popular with pairade w1tcher1 and raiaing 'the carbon monoilde le.vet
along the parade route to intoler1ble levels.
But I digress.
PATRIOTISM, like any kind of love. is hard to de1cribe. But is it even
remotely coMected to a min in an Uncle Sim costume on 12·foot atllta, carry·
ing a sign and reminding parade Watchers through a bullhorn of the vlrtue11
of thrift. especially by opening an account at Marinera Slvinja? .
. A few fond and proud momenta in the military came to mind u the
color. guard strode by, but when the Burger King float and Ronald McDonald
went by me, the lump in my throat' ·wu only indigestion. I failed to 1te any
connection with our country's birthday.
For the &8th annual Huntington Beach parade, people were said to hive
worked for a year to bring you the Or&JYl:e County Dune Buggy Aaeociation
(eighl usomd rebuilt Volkswa1ens), tbe Hollywood Dor Obedience Club, a
chann school convertible with four girls in the back, two vehicles from
a put control firm and the scattering of horseback riders to whom no distance
ls too great to travel for an opportunity to wear I cowboy suit in front of an
audience.
A BANNER announcing a drill team was carried by a sweet-faced litUe
4-year-old. She stagered through !lie horse droppln1s 1nd you could toll from
the resigned look on her face tbal she really appreclatod the opportunity her
parents gave her to break in her new white shoes on this forced march.
Arid then there were the poor guest!: of honor -about a dozen men
from the Long Beach Veteran's Hospital. All were confined to wheel chain
or gurneys. They were placed at the curb, racing the sun. where for three
hours, relieved only by an ·occasional snow cone, they wer! asked in the name
of patriotism to opce again give that last full measure.
But I don 't want to leave you with the Impression I didn't find IOme-
thing about the parade t liked. There was this leay majorette about six feet
WI In a tighl costume wltb tbe curves all In the rl&ht places. But she went by
only once and 30 seconds out of three bolD's wasn't enouah to make me want
to come back next year.
THINGS GO our of style and maybe parades like th!J are out ol style.
I have a f e e 1 i n g they are primarily far the people who organize them and
march in them. Take away that mq:ic cloth and there11 not much to aet. U
you don't believe me, take a real bard look nut time. For you can be lllrt,
derpite my views, there will be a nut time.
YMCA Kw· Ou-t-Ra,iSing ..
Funds for Days at CamP:
!l's tba t time o[ year qaln when pn>-
opective YMCA e1mp-1oers bit the trail
aellln& (OOdles door·t<><loor to finance I
aummer campout.
Saddleback YMCA will begin Its da y·
camp program July 24, but junior
bu sinessmen are already out trying to
raise the m.so the day camp program
costs members. Non-members pay
$17.50. The acUvily iJ open lo both boya
and &iris.
There are four conoecullv1 weeb In
Confusion Cited
In Councilman,
Recall Election
ConfuliCll1 ovor -Ihe exact meanln( of
the ballot tbal will be preaentod to
Lquna Beach voten In the July 2S
recall<OUncll eleclion, at1ll ulsts, Cily
Clerk llorotby Mulfelt said tbil -k.
''Peop)e who want to vote 'no' on the
recall may .WI voi. for a caridldata and
bavo tbelr vote countod, In case tbl
nicall ahould aucceed," Mn. Muslelt U ·
plalned.
"The Important tblnl to remember, II
that no vol< for a cudldale will ba
countod unleu !lie voi.r lw marklld tho
btllot either 1yea• or •no• on the recall
qlltlticm .••
In the event !lie recall falls, the council
tl1Ult appoint a paraon to replace Coun-
cllman Edward Lorr when his restsna-
tloa becomes eflecllva July II, but tbll
....,,. nol 11ecet11rlly be tho candldata
wltb ' moat votes, or even any of tho
candidatea, she acldlld.
<lnly II a majority of voten approva
the recall will the candidato wltll tbl
moat volel automaUcally replaco LorT.
. FREE MARTHA.
MIAMI (APJ -llutlolla boJna woro by aome strollm alGlll
Collins A\'91111, the pllllb botel row
In Mlaml Boach. 111: "Re-
Martba Mitchell. 11
-
fill day-camp )lnlll'lm, t.!ch with I dif.
ferent . theme. .
Pioneer week will run from July 'H to
29 and will have a trip to Disneyland for
the campers.
Space week will run from July 31 to
Aug. 5 and it features a trip to the
Japane.se'beer Park. Crazy Daya Week
will go from Aug. 7 to 12 with a apeci.a.I
trip to Universal Studios. Safari Week
from Aug. 14 lo 11 will have a special
trip to Knolls' Berry Farm. .
The opeclal lrlpo ant to. be llllde tbl
'lburlday of each day-camp week. Each
day , day~mper1 will bt aone: from t :JO
1.m. to 4:18 p.m. with camp activity
centM'lld around O'Neill Park.
An overnifllll olelpoul wlll he belct'Frl-
d1y evcmln( with a campout dlnnlr to
which parent& are lnvltad.• Chlldren will
retum homo lrom the al_.t at 1bout
10:!0 a.m., f!alunlly.
·Carpenter's Bill
To Change s1'nog
Testing Killed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Calllomla
llenate has 1111olherlld a hill to chana-
automobile emillion control teatinc pro-
ceduru.
The hill, by Sen. Dennla ca.,,..tet fR·
Newport Beach), cited on I IM volA
MClllday. Sponaored by !lie California Air
-Board, It caoc:erned llate ap-
proval of -cars '°"" "' 1111 . "-nl law requlna new can to meet
... ;ollutlon law llandan!I, and tho
<UllClmtr ii tlleorttlcally auurlld lt -
by a atlcker on !lie car's winGshleld.
Carpmttt's bill -pannil all can
.. ba -Ille lw Alo tbroulh the ._,biJ llnl teattnc ol two parcut ol
all tbl can ol .., -type.
Ca .... aid tbll -parmll !Ito u. ol 1111W tat wlllcb w.tlcl ba too a·
Jlfllll" lo apply "' all can. But II •Po
plied lo only !ft percont ol 1111 pro-
• ductlClll, tho coot -ba ooty ·-lO tell ..,la per car II pro-ratad ...,. all or
tbotn.
I
~~ ' (; • t"-
Tuttdq, Jull 11, lm ~ ",
" ' ... DAJLY'PILOJ ~;.."
" Nixo~Eyes . . N. ~. ,, u· \. , . ixon:--10ign:s :_ ,'
' u•
0 Pollu . " ?l\ -,£) .
'
(
Democrat,s
At· Whim Measures ~· . . .
J'raldeot NIDn Dll1 ba_.lntenated 1n
whal will ._ tbll week at Iha
Democrltic Natkmll O.vention, "But
he _, ... any a1eep W1tchin1 It," bis
preu l!CN!llry lllcl MClllday ~-
&aald Zleiitr iald Mr. Nb:oo milht
call fnr a televillon sel to be broulht Into
bis olllc"r In San Clemente periodically
tbil week.
"But he lw to) d me be _.•t m.
terrupt hll ,cbedu]e much to Watch."
' President Nixon Monday lifnlld a bill
calcul1ted lo fl1hl oil allcks In Unltod
states harbors. 11v1n1 the Coan Guard
,sllon1er muscle tO enforce 'anUpollulioa.
la'Ws. ... l · · '
Labelin& !lie bill part of bis 10-polnt
· program to fight water po11Utton, the . ' ' President 'cUed tht recent disaster in San
Francisco Bay which caused a masalve •
lpill.
"\Ve mus t -and can. -p~0eve.nt ll1Ch
lncjdents frorttotecl,U'I'ina,'' he uld. ' ..
The new Jegi'19Uoo . Ji"es' die ·.coist,
'
' I
"'
Ziqler pucklably clraftad bis' IDIWU
aftor a q~ It Jolmdoy's brleflnr by
CBS newsman Robert Pierpoint, who
liked II the· President 'WU &olnl jo
· · watch "the Qlondblth It\ Miami Beach"
4tJ televialoa. . ' ' ' ,,.
· Gua.rd powers.Jo ¢o¢1'l,.•~~itftic~O .,1n::;d waterways amt µ,!rttoilil! ~j•r.• ,; ·
' ' ;.):<gullJle_ lbe_,llOl'~:••t , ¢~f •o .
..
Ziij'tet,.:> "'o.\_ t'O g I n I".' :J o "~ !'\!!:
stenocrapbm, ~· ('I want ycu to quo
Pierpoint on 'blooitbath~ ~ I know
that alter all the tr1111Crlplioos ·•re ov<r·
with, It'll be Zieller who called the .con-·
ventioo a 'bloodblth. 1 ,.: ~ • •
OJ 11ngerou*t~t'lri ~· n .~· • •. .
' '
"To answer your question," ~tr ii:J..
ded alttt taurbter aubalded, "the Presi·
d..,t keeps a telev!Jion In the ani.room
to bis office and from . lime to lime ha
probably will watch portion& of tbe coo-
venlion."
He uid Mr. Nixno 1enerally retirea
between 10:111 p.m. and midnl&ht.
11You people m.Jcbt 1tay up late thia:
week to watch It all, but be told me he
plans lo retire at bis cuslOmary bour
d~ite the coverage."
Besides the apparently s p o r a d i c
televt.skm viewing, the President expects
to keep abreast of the convention through
his daily morning news summaries and
his penonal sCannin& of newspapers,
Zieper 1dded.
Delinquent Bill
Payments Aired
Because o·r eontroversy over La.gun&
Beach'• wute man1gement procram,
nolicea of clellnqueney In trash bill
paymentl, nonnally malllld at !lie beJln· Dini ol July, have not yet been sent oul,
Finance Dfrec:lor Robert Green lold !lie
City Council recently.
"Most of the remaining questions on .
d!Jputod billln&• are relaUvely minor,"
aaid Green. "but we would like some
direction from the council."
He baa 1 completo lial of property
owners whole trub bills are "tot.ally
dellnquen~" Gr"" 1dcled.
Mayor Ricba.rll Goldberg, with council
concurrence, uted the finance director
to pre1e11t completo lnfonnaUon u to
how much mcmey ii involved in the delm.
quenci.. at tbl budlOt "1Iudy Miilon
WedJleaday. ·
·· ..... The law-1. ·sets ur--: standard! for
. J"":"'at.erfront..i equipment, design-'\en4 coh-
'f ~cllon of storage f1ci11Ues and
, ,.,.., .. ~ ~'u~··nftiintenenct-and~UQn-biiL&nkus;
, • The President !~Jit-Jlfa<-1jljatu~ 'on ~
" d~ument was signlrtc:ant··bel:auM ·Jt.~i\.
the first environmental proposal tO· come
froi;n the-92nd Congress.
In recent' days the President and his
aides have blasted the inaction of that
Congress and vowed that Nilan would
UPI l,..,.,..,.
Ponders Politics ,. ...
Josif Brodsky, one of the Soviet Union's most talented poets. \vho
was ordered to leave Russia last month, pondered a question about
art and politics at a news conference in Ann Arbor. He has taken a
position at the University of Michigan.
Capo H i-Storical V nit
Seeks Show Quarters
The homeless San Juan Capistrano
lflltorical Society was given free
quarters reCently -but now officials
can~ find volunteen to keep the display
room open on a regul ar basis.
For the past month, a collection of
tro~es, pictures and year books from
the old Capistrano Union High School
have been on display at the office,
located in the Provincial Building at
31811 Camino Capistrano. But visitors
have only been able to see · them on
weekends, when society president Eloise
Dunn is free to staff the o[fice herself.
The apace has been donated to the ,
aociety by Bruce Swartout.
Mrs. Dunn says the Society's 180 or so
members have "lots of excuses" for not
being able to donate a few hours a month
to staffing the "museum."
"It would only need to be open .11 couple
of hours a day," she says, "If wi did
that, we would only need six people a
week to keep it open on a regular basis."
The display changes monthly and the
high school collection Is scheduled for
replacement within the next week. The
society has been housed in the office
since Swallows Day, March 19.
Mrs. Dunn notes that, wilh her staffing
problem, it would probably be futile for
the society to ever obtain the old Santa
Fe Rai!Jl>ad Depot as 1 museum.
"Jt'Y'?'eally sad. Even if we 1ot the
depot, we couldn't get anyone to 1tt
there."
'
veto any new bills which e1ceeded his
already-stated budget ceilings.
Altbou&h the anU-oll-slick Ie1lslatlon iJ
complete, a score of otbera related to im·
proving the environment remain stalled
in Congress .
The backlog. he said, Includes updating
water-quality laWJ, improving pesticide
regulations. controlllnc disposal of tolie
~ubstances, fighting noise pollution and
ocean dumping, regulating strip mlninr
and more than a dozen other auggeatiom.
"Time is not on our aide on any of
these fronts ,0 he aaid. "The treqdl ad
forces which C011trlbute to envtronmmtal
degred.11tion continue 1pace. even durtnC
the polltlc.11t seuoo."
The President stressed. however. that
there is still lime for the r.ongreu "to
meel (ilsl rtopo111lblllty lo t b •
American People" by rehmlin& to
session later this month and completlq
v.·ork on the enviromnent.al leaillatlon.
Small Business Head
To Explain Programs
The various uaiatance irocnm• of the
Small BlllineJt Admlni.9tratioo will ba
explained by Donald McLunu, deputy
region•I director ol SBA at Ute Friday
I~ meetln1 ol the La(UDI 1*ch
Rotary Club In llotel Lquna.
McLlman, a /.,._ nlllooal baDli
preoident, "111 dlicmo Ute Nlltionllllpa
ol private enterpr!Jo and Illa &IA, tar
mutuaJ cooperatton.
A HOLIDAY . IDEA
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• • • 1600, 2000, 2600 V-6
Best Selection of the Year .••• on· the'"lmport Car of the Year"
Drive one home or ask about our , • ,
-EUROPEAN ORDER PLAN
Hey! You Folks Going toEurope this year,
We can arrange for your new CAPRI to he
waiting there for you and save 1 S $, tool
•orano• CoV111t1's r...a, of 11 .. em.-
Htmie Of The New Car • , ,
,,,. ...... 2'...0'' o hn son & son .
• 211211 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • 114DlllO
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Home Of 'llle New Car • , , ....,.,.. r.11e1a"
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:·
4 DAILV PILOT T"""'1, .lu!J'·ll, 1'72
•
Daley Nixe~r ·,
Pro~~s,
Loses Seats
MIAMI BEACH (uPI) -Cbicogo
~r Richard J. Daley loot 1 hare-
knucltl.. polltlc1I f'ibt today, b11t
nobody, not even h!J v_anqui~r.:.. wa
, • re1dy to count h1m out at a ~ulnf
ion.. ID the Democratic par\Y.
Daley wisted ,.. remalnll)g a10C?f from _ .
the b>flghtil!a of :~-j>ast aever>I
moalhs, rejttted all lppeaq for tori" .
promlae, and decided IO carry hla fight'
for convention delegate seats to the coo-
\l'eotion floor.
... . ........ He Jost--a rarit~,. ~ ~ G"' ''t.•~
In tact he loot · ~ <e<>~romlai:'; •
. cqo..,...lO, . ....... . 6 .. "' •
•
R~yTears
Down Fence
•
Around Hall
MIAMI BEACH: Fla. (AP) -A group
cf S>O demonstrators splintered from a
Poor People'• rally fUtBide t be
Democratic N a t I o n a I Convention on
the opening n1iibt of the convention and
tore do#n a section of 'Ghaln-link fence
around the Convention Hall.
They backed away quickly when 200
policemen Conned a double line in the IG-
foot'wide ·breach.
Al!tr an hour of nJ\l!lll1i .around the ~. Oowlr-Covere<f fence, JU'mping against it . ~ . . -.~. "t1~--. arii1 k1cki{ll gates; the demonstrators, ..... . ' ... . .. , ,,.
. ost o! them young wbitea,,~l!'<hl!>'c< • MCGOVERN ·r.:EADll!'-'W!p.ie -~
their camPllte atnear • laini!l&o ~k : . · O'fP, head ol_jhe ¥;~~vern ·
"'around &:30 p.m. P · / · '· .P. · lorcef t~,,Cillilo~~ a ' ~ "'A Poli~ serge4J1t '.. _.;tl!J.;,.Y.e · ·Pl>ill~ aslliraddresses.:d~a!e1..:-
111J!«g· •·gate was or~n. ~T-~a't'-Atl!f~llc-t'National
fro~bl ·-~e .~: .•
llllf. ltr .
bNll,falled;<!,113 ~ll.IU.-.. . ~ · -ftnl1o11 qllll .. ~ea ..91 .. aa1er
.......... l,41!1,116.to ·l,l'll~-• ·"'· • -. '1r~-1 ·.:_..,oln ' tiJ.!' H!i/!ie~~ D ' . ... , ~~~1.:::r: . -.. vi, '
. , ChlctPc',._~'f'~ted ~111'~..:wa: . ~ . .,. ~~~w ··~~~~·!'"' • ,,.~_.~e ~"'AiMt'·flta ~he 18:fDt .man':'~tii :~;:, .. ni.~ part ID the 1'12 -• ·
v . , •ItbouBh-be :wlll certainly wttlil o '1
-· lalluence ' cm ·whether lb& -~ -ID!nols in November,, ' '·
Ul"IT .......
Even lhdqh the Chicago bllurgenll
llld McGovern both I wanted a cont-
JllOID!ae to keep Daley happy, ~
t11tD10rJ of Ille Cbicqo mayor'a role 1p ...
1111 IJlllUOlltl1 wu too 1"'11 for the
new-breed eoovention delegates to forget.
lloley heclme mayor and bead of the
OiJcqo political macbiDe in llllf alter
rillllc t"'-1> ward ranka by preoedenta
IOlldly esta61ubed by the machlne-bou
WATCHING THE ACTION -Relaxing in his hotel
suite, Presidential Candidate Senator George Mc·
Govern watches TV as Chairman Lawrence O'Brie n
opens the 1972 ~emocratic National Convention.
...,., .. before blm.
Bui II the loolo( fi,Jit to I 3l·year-old
lawyer and Cb.leap alderman, William
Sio8er, didn't knock Daley oot of the
pollll<ll p>Wer circlea, it revealed
eotmtleo1 llawa In Judc1nl the mood of
the -le aod the party, and the power
a bunch of political novices were able to
muster. .
Daley'I bluest m!lcalculatloo IP'
peared to he tiie mannor In which he car·
rled Gii the midenlllla flibt II rankled
even ..... delecates who . mlcht
othenrlae have been ID hla comer.
When the Singer IJOUP llled challengea
to the lloley deleptloa, Daley's men
toupt back with llall tactlca and verbal
broldllitla. When the lnlurgenb held
meetlnp In O!lcago to -an
alternative delegation, fistllahb erupted
between Singer -1e and the Daley men wbo lnflltrated in large numhen.
A battery o f Daley-organisation
laWJtn, meanwhile, canied a separate
fight thn>IJih the court< -In Chicago
and in Wuhlngton -using every legal
maneuver they could to heat the 111-
aurgents or at Jeut delay them.
Their lobbying effortl were never as
amootb or as urgent 11 that carried on
by the Singer -le, who appeared to be
everywhere during credentials p~
ceedltli• In WubJniton and then . m
Miami Beach when the v1rloua deleg•
Ilona held their caUOJ .... The Daley men
also were heavy-handed 1t times, and
bad a Hawaii delegate on the Credentlala
Committee in tears when she cast her
vote for Daley'• aide.
Through It all, Daley wu active only
behind cloaed doon. He refuted to be
seen In Miami Beach until he Jitd won 1
seat at the convention. He never wu seen
1t all.
Beatty 'Beautiful'
ML\MI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Al the
Doral Hotel, where Sen. G e o r I e
McGovern and his party are ataylng, a
chief target of youthful 1utosraph
seektn Monday was a nonpollUcal acf..
viaer-actor, Warren Beatty, wti) bu
raised several million for McGovern.
His girl friend, 1ctreu Julie Cbristle,
accompanled him. "He'a beautilul.'' one
teenybOpper sighed out.Ide the coffee
shop after getting Beatty'a autograph.
Morphine 'Coasting'
Tom Murphine'a "Just Coastlns" col-
wnn will not appear thla week while be is
on vacation.
Dis puws Stnged
Ove r Democratic
Pa rty "Platform
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Democrats
Who talked the nation to sleep in a cre-
deittial! battle early today may do it
again tonight in a dispute over platform
planks on busing, wellare, gun and birth
control, and gay liberation.
After a n~hour credential! wrangle
that went on unW l :~ a.m. PDT -a
modem record -the delegates were to
resume deliberations at 4 p.m. and hoped
to get to the platform by 7.
Philip 1.eidman, executive director of
the plaUorm committee, said that even if
no roll calls were demanded -an un-
Hkely possibility .,. consideration of the
basic document and 20 minority planks
could' take as long aa 6 houn.
IJ dratted in advance by a 150-
member committee, the proposed policy
statement commits the party to end the
Vietnam War, fight inflalion, restore full
employment, end the draft, close tax
JoopboJen, reform wellare, end the sale of
cheap lllndcum and uaure "the right to.
be different."
II al9o aupport.. busing as "another tool
to accomplish desegregation." Tonight 's
biggest fight, to he mounted by Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace in a personal-
appearance at the convention, is ex-
pected to he about ·that. ·
Cbarlt1 Snider. Wallace's campaign
manager, called the busing language a
party "suicide note" for November. He
and other Wallace .supporters were p~
posing a substitute plant calling for a
constitutional amendment to outlaw bu,.
ing 11 related to scbooI integration.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otllwrj of thl Diiiy Piiot
It guaranteed
MIMly.,r!Hy: ff )IOU do not h•W ~ -~ llY .S:30 p.m .. c•ll •nd Y'Ollr eopy wU/ be brought til 'fOll. C.1111 llr• 11111:"1 untll
1;.JO p.m.
S.tvnlay •nd 5und•YI " rev do not rKtfW
your copy bY t •.rn. Slt11rct.y, or • •.m.
Sunday. ull •net • toP'I' wm 118 11111119111 tio ~ c.ri. ,,.. 1.iten 1111111 10 •• m.
Ttlephonn
Molt Oreflfl COUnfy ... ,.... .. ...... '4:1"4m ,..,,,,,.,.,, H1111tlfi01M 8Mdll
~ Watmlnt.t11r .................. ,..Int 1111 Cttnwni., C.pl1ft8M Inch
S.n J111n C.pl1lr•1111, 0.111 hlnt. Sovtll utuM, UllN H !Owl .. , , ftf.-
'P r os' B eaten
McGo vern Crushes 'Old'
Coalition at Conven tion
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -First they
tried to ignore him, then they tried to
beat him, and fmally they tried to gang
up on him.
Nothing worked. George S. McGovern
beat the old·time pros at every turn.
The 49-year-old South Dakota senator
made them take notice in the early
.Primaries, whiplashed them in the final
ont1, and finally Monday night and early
this morning confronted and crushed the
whole coalition.
I NEWS ANALYSIS I
Coming into Miami Beach for the 36th
quadreMial Democratic N a t i o n a I
Convention, Hubert H. Humphrey, Ed·
mund S. Muskie, and Henry M. Jackson
preached the need for unity for the fight
ahead against President Nixon.
But the unity they practiced was
among themselves and the common
er.emy was McGovern. Unless they could
stop the upstart senator from the prairie,
their own chances for the presidential
nomination were going and, given their
ages, gone for. all time.
They enlisted in their alliance some
strange partners.
George c. · Wallas;e, the crippled
Alabama governor, who rose to fame for
standing in a xhoolhouse door to ~r
desegregation and bolted the party m
1968; Shirley Chisholm, the New York
congresswoman, who decided she was
the black candidate without consulting
Lettuce State?
A tradition fell ~·hen the New Yo r k
state delegation decided to abandon its
century"ld motto, "New York, the
Empire State." Instead the delegation
decided It would anoounq its roll-<:all -----. votes with the opening ... New York, the
state that boycotts lettuce."
any blacks; Terry 8anford, the pro-
gressive former southern governor, who
found a short-lived refuge from politics
a~ president of Duke University.
-The key to their efforts was Monday
night's attempt to deny McGovern 151 of
California's 271 delegate vott1, a
shortage which could have spelled
disaster for ~1cGovem's hopes of the
nomination.
The coalition, partly due · lo a rare
lapse in good planning by . McGovern,
managed to convince the Democratic
party's Credentials Committee that
McGovern should be stripped of the 151
votes. ~
Turn~ back by the Supreme Court,
McGovern had to go to the convention to
seek the reversal.
Less than 12 hours. before the vote,
McGovern, admittedly slightly nervous
about the outcome; had a chance to get
olf the hook.
Muskie, seeking to assume the pivotal
role of peace-broker. asked aU candidates
to meet with him and seek a compromise
on the California and other credentials
fights .
Into the spacious office suite assigned
to National Chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien high above Miami Beach strode
Muskie, Humphrey, Jackson and San·
ford. Wallace wanted to come but his in-
firmity prohibited the trip.
McGovern won. The others lost. So,
take them all on and let the convention
be the judge.
McGove N won. The others Jost. So.
perhaps, did the Democratic party and
its chances (or post-eonvention unity.
Humphrey, the 1968 standard·bearer,
cou1dn't beat McGovern in the California
primary and jumped at the chance to
beat him before the Credentials Com·
mittee. Then he led the Mailni Beach
coalition. In the process, be almost sure-
ly Jost his standing, for all time, with the
McGovemiles.
Muskie, Humphrey's running·mate four
years ago, couldn't beat Mc(]pvem or
almost anyone else in the primaries and
finally ~ to pull out. Despite occasional
Outterings, Muskie refused to endorse
fl.1cGovem and finally ticked away his
last chance Monday.
Balmy Air Predominating
Proclaiming himseU neutral, Muskie
said he had not made up his mind on the
California challenge. Then, bearing out
Humphrey's contention that be was
''solid as a rock,'' Muskie threw in with
the coalition. 1
The alliance has one more chance )a
beat McGovern:-It will come W~Y. ":.
when the Democrats nominate their
presidential candidate. Almost surely ••
they.will, once again, Jose and McGovem,1 '
wUI move into the presidential campaign
owing them nothing.
Ex-delegaws
Asked to Sroy
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The 151
ousted california convention
delegateJ replaced by supporters of
George McGovern today were In-
vited to stay as "honored guests."
The supestion by Convention
Chairman La~ce O'Brien .wu
endorsed on a voice vote and a
round of applause. O'Brien said
they -.Id he given "preferred ....... elf the -Door.
vOluntee~ healt ... group '-sa.kf.:.: .a-~eV' COnven' t nday .eve~ing.
. ,de-atoi•·>r.~-~!9--~.-: .... , ;••{~ · "--· · • ~ iF.,es fromchelDJC _a ~.---.":.-. , . 1 .~ " poi:. arrest was1bia' ·: -~<.~:--.::~ ·FB·, -j.~~ -~[S ~Wli:d. ~ ..
About 2,000 peni>ns led by t~ 'Re~, • '' ~
Ralph David AbematJiyJiad walked from
the park for the rauy l!lponsored by the . A's Confab Okays Poor People'• Coalition. Most of them
stayed in the area in front of the hall set
aside for demonstrations. Black leaders
of 1he rally later tried to stop the
assaults on the fence.
During the rally, delegatea hurried by
to attend the convenUnn's opening
session. 'M:le disorder occurred during its
first hour and little notice was taken
inside.
"No attempt will be made to force our
way into the convention," Abernathy
said. "We don't believe in using force.
We have other ways to dealing with the
Democratic party."
Police said about 300 officers rushed
from the Convention Hall basement to
take stations around the fence and on one
occiston some '30 Highway Patrol cars
raced down a ~t, blue lights flashing,
·10 dispefse a crowd.
Clearwat,er Man
Made His Point
-Des piw Loss
McGovern Slate
ML\MI BEACH, F1a. (AP) -~
jaunty leader of Sen. George McGovern's
challeoged California camp stood before
the Democratic National c.onvention
Monday and pleaded, "Give me back mY,
delegation." It did.
So Monday night, said McGovern
Cochalnnan Willie Brown Jr., "I'm com-
ing in with all 271 of my people."
The convention, in an opening night
battle that lived up to all its advance bill·
ing, voted t,61S.l,238 to seat the entire
. 271~vote slate McGovern captured in
Califolnia's June 6 primary election.
The major surprise was the margin of
victory. Only 1,433 votes were needed to
unseat the 151 temporary California
delegates -most of them belonging to
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey.
"That.'s it!" declared Brown' 1
cochainnan, John L. Burton, when Ohio
gave McGovern's California slate 73 yes
votes at 10: 18 a.m. PDT -an hour and
16 minutes after the California debate
·11egci . I MI.A.MI BEACH (UPI) -Norman Bie "That means George McGovern is our
Jr., a Clearwater attorney who dates his next nominee for President -lhat:1
suppart of George Wallace back to 1964, what it means/' declared Burton.
didn 't bat an eye when his young son an-The California batUe had been buildtna
nOunCed at the supper table that he ever since June 29 when the convention
might campaign for President Nixon. .-Credentials Committee, in a stunning
"I'm glad he 's beginning to think for move, stripped McGovern of the 151
himself. I don't want to dictate to him," delegates, ruling that California's winner-
he said. take-all pr,imary went against the spirit Bie leaped Into the limelight at the . of party reforms.
Democratic National Convention early Humphrey's California floor chief, San
today when be challenged the ruling by Francisco M1yor Joseph Alioto, accepted
party leaders that 120 California dele-defeat.
gates could vote on a challenge of the
other 151 delegates from that state.
"I felt €halnnan Lawrenc. O'Brien
wu' trying to railroad the. whole thing,"
he aajd , '1It was likt putting 120 votes on
the board before the roll was called."
He lost the challenge, but made his
point before mllliOM of televis¥>o
viewera:.
A second generation Flolidiali, Bie
Jikes Wallace beclfu.se "he ta I k 1
straight."
He said he got intereated eight years
ago when Wallace spoke at a rally.
"He waa thinking about running for
president then," said Bie, 48.
It was because he was an attorney tliat
delegation chairman Bill 'France picked
Bie to make the point of order.
California Delegate
On Miami Honeymoon
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Yvonne
Braithwaite Burke, the beautilul bllclt
Vice-chainnan of the D e m o c r a t 1 c
Convention, is on her honeymoon here.
Radiantly wearing huge diamonda on
both hands, Mrs. Burke, 39, a member of
the CaUfornla state assembly, was
married last month to William Burke, a
former Army colonel who supports Sen.
Hubert H. Humpl!rey. She Is for Sen.
George S. McGovern. "I'm bringing.him
around," she grinned. ''I'm a dove."
The delepi. canmitted to .,...
-other thin M.0.WU loot their Callfomla aeai. ltben the ...,_
watlott ovtrtumed iU CredenUab
Committee and voted to 1e1t Ille
McGovtm people.
... _
llAAI CONVINTION IMILI -Tbt laal openlftf lllllon of Iba ;
Dtmomtic eon.muon took its t.oll ob tbae rpectalon wbo sprawled ~
· . on lbelr chain. Only one individual wu able to retain • IDille Iller .;
tho meeting closed early this mominr. :; •• ·l·
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Welfare Offic;nls •A ,. ""' , Mira~le~·
' Pentago11 Pap ers
' . To Probe Earning Boy Shot by Motlier ' Lives
•
BRIEFS
, -No ooe complajned that it
r "'Ou ld clog Up the jails.
The bill, introduced by Sen.
George Deukmejian (R-Long
• .Beach) would give drunk
' drivers onJy one escape road:
" ..signing_upJor an alcohol or
drug rehabilitation course ~nd
···.·convincing the judge this
would be punishment enough.
:)vo·f•ult: 'On'
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The
•• on-again, off-again no-fault
, auto insurance issue is on
.. again with the reviVal or two
bilJs by the Senate Finance
Committee.
• The committee v o t e d
... "ithout dissent Monday to
• .. reconsider dead measures by
1, Sens. George M05COfle (D-San
. FrancL.co), and Alfred Song
CP.M'onterey Park).
' ·.Stiulent Guilty
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 19·
year~ld. college student was
. convicted Monday of charges
. stenuning from a rock-throw-
, Ing mtlee and conceivably
·could be sentenced to life Jn
; prison.
The student, Ernest Patrick
'i· Esquibel of San Diego, was
... J:Qnyicted by ~ jury o( assault
with • deadly weapon on a
police officer. assault on
another policeman, t h r e e
counts or resisting arrest or
resisting lawful orders of a
policeman, r i o t i n g and
:.malicious mischief.
•
' ~mployes'
Units ·split
' On Prisons
SAGRAMENTO (AP) -A
deep split. over whether Calif-
ornia prison employes should
go on strike over ~Y aod
working conditions has surfac-
ed in sharply contrasting
resolutions by two leading
employe organizationl.
State officials, nieantime,
express hope that disputes can
be resolved short of a walkout
or work slowdown.
Strike-slowdown t a c t i c s
were rejected 13--0 Monday by
the California Correctional Of.
ficers Association's OOard dur-
ing a meeting in Sacramento.
That development came in
the wake or unanimous en-
dorsement of ' a strike -if
necessary to mee~ employe
demands :-by t~ 27 board
members of · the California
State Employes Association1 Los Angeles.
Also, Teamsters U n i o n
Local 96o has threatened a
strike by the l.500 correctional
officers it 1represents.
The CCOA board resolution
said the organization •"is not
,now, nor has it ever endorsed
a concept of inilitant approach
to accomplishing J ta ob-
jective." 1
F
I , '.
•. AN ELEGANT CHATHAM
I .. •
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That's right! All th~ee Orange County offl ~es of
Imperial Bank are offering)! free blanket when you
open a mini mal depo,ital:c6unt. lt's1n
·celebration of the opening bf the new Cos a Mesa
office, our third in Qrange County. . . ~ l
. .
• • . •
•• •
• · 'LIMITED TIME ONLX-STOP IN J.O DAY!
• " .j . ' \· \ ;. l
\ rlEI .{
' .
: :.-lm~ria1 i-~
.. '.'.. Bank
• • • where the customer Is king
,. . .. . I ..
COOTA
0
M£SA Harbor Blvd. ~I Fair Orlve/979·1oo0
ANAHEIM L/ftootn at Beach/121-64l0
SANTA AHA 1l'th ai Brlllot/835-0151
Hours: Otlly 10 lo 5/F.;dty 10 jo 8
Resource• over $125 million. Member FDIC
• . ' George, lh lrl•rwlly lm{llrlt/ Senk Uon
• •
We puf a lot iift! ii:
You can put a lot m.it •
' • •
What you Ln put In: over 60
cubic feet. Put the rear seat down and
!here's 60:6 cubic fee.I of carrying space.
for comparison, VW Squorebdck and
Vega Kommback both give;you
Some Detoll1.
1. The lih gale swings up
and.out of the way •
2. The rear passenger
windows.flip open. •
· 3. The spore tire do~'t
toke up any load room
because it hos its own well
under the floor. And be-
neath it all, the rear suspen·
sion isspeciollydesigned
for load carrying.
• Sticler 'rke. EK,ludeJ deoler prepol'O•
lion chorgeJ, If ony, d.sflnotion charges
IS105,00).. tirle, to11e1ond CoUl01nlo
embsion111i.n1 IS13.87J.
•
'
o bit over 50 cubic feet •.
I ,-....-........,
•
The .....C $2265• •i•L
It's the ideal choice for people ,
who wont on economy cor that
carries more-or o waQQn that costs
less. The white sidewall I.ires (shown here)
ore $28.00 extra. The wheel covers. $23.23 .
I
Front Disc lrokes. Stondqrd. And
there's precise rock.-and·pinion steering,
which is normally found .only in some of
the more expensive sports cars.
"'-·-~·-·
I 2000ccOver11e1111c-.
•
J
1
, 1 ........ l(srugged,ecor.o•lcr:I.
peppy-and stondatd equipment. l. · A 4·speed floor mounted all-
synchromesh tl'Onsmilsion is •.
l. standard •.
letter idea for oafaly ••• llumle-' ' .,..
The Squire Option. That ~stinctive woad'sided wagon look,
plus wheel covers, special trim, and more. No other economy
wogon offers anything like it. Price with the Squire Option, $2479. •
The luggoge rack is $45.53 axtro. The white sidewall !iret $28.00.
FORD PINTO
See Your Ford Deal&· . . ' ,
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• ... n.y PD.OT EDDvlllil PAGE
Disaster Protection
•
c A ,_ • lut Ft~. 9, Callfornla ~!" ill 10th
~quake since 1812, -.ch with Joa of lift and
bte¥y prqperty clamafe. CounUeu llllnor 1qual<aa have ~
ca~~; ProPerly"<laniaft over l)la 190 yeara of
ncon!--y.,.f. kl . .
"I C') '!'ht 11.sHit oil\, In the lA. Anftles area, &!tered "Clil..,... ctoloslif, cil1 1 ''l>il*lutak faul~" tht Soledad -~ CaaJOll rault. It b t0 11n1lF th it it i. IOlcl0111 noted on ,. · -oloa maps. • · •
• Ac:cordtnfly ,.0.... tc:lentiaLI btlleve 1 ireat earth· ~ . quote (inleM!tY. ~ mort than 8 on tht Richter Scale
· ~ to 8.il for lut year's quake) will lllllOll cu-
', · · . 11. «:Cttr in ~ centllry 'aloDI !be San Andreu Taul I,
. bl( one which l'Wll tht lenflh of tht state. (A local
ruder nporll in G!Ooiny Gut today that his extraHfl-r · ...., perttp11an telll.hlm on• will occur oround July 17.) ~
\
every property owner n1Uonwid1 throu&h the priva~ _. '
lnJUl:Ance lnduttry would follow a federal rejnsunnct ;IJ Pl-oc*m. '*' •.· ' 1
' ' . -jrwo naUonal usoclaUons of Insurance men have '
jolntd tho Californi1 morlface bankers in declaring such
I •YS""1 fully workabltJlll th• FHA/VA pattern. And it
can only work if It hit ~ full'llreneth of the fed eral
iovernment behind ll "' ·
What b now lacldn1 b leaderlhlp in Concre .... Cali·
rornia's IODal«I and repreaenlttivu mi1ht well aasume
that role -and the t00ner tbt better.
Schmitz . StilJ..Peteiminoo · . _., . ,, . l · · Tl!t ~ec:ount at. votu-ln tht.311tb..Consreulonal Dia--
,,,.
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, -~ ,! -' .... ..,,,.__ Wh.., a pt alrthquaio ~ oceur tpin, it'• t
!1_rtaiDty tb1t populiUon concentr1tions will 111~an , ""'1 loa of life and bup property dlllllft. ~
• l1iM ended Saturdiy with Incumbent John G.-Schmit'
..(!t-'NiC!nl.al!<>'llnf a net gain, of 37 votes but still loslnc
·• '.IO. 'eounty Aaseasor Andrew :/. lfm1haw , by 2,484 ,votes.
• . Recounting of all 88,220~otes (at a cost to Schmit.
.. . a-=· ,_ .
·~-..
• floods ill the out lhll JMI' bavt hHn tlit moot dtv: ,
utatlnc in hlalory In 1111111 aras. , >.
DllUler inluraDct CoaJ4. llld abould covet-' "" . i-Bui tbli ~oltto ~ deducllblto IO ID
ianlJll, ud th~ to lilqiOnnanent th•t m~ ~owners pao It by. Thli meaDI a c1t11tropht eo.dd Wipe them out. . ~ •
, The Cllllomla lloliOft ~-Aatociatloll, n·
lilllilr ol 120 mambot ftriiil -lly oervin4 ne~lf ,} aa lillllen ill nil tllale mortia,.., aucPlls Wr-tinl'i ·
to adopt Ille nlniunnct pattern Mt by tllA/VJ.")(il· IJam line bten bolptd to bUy llomes alnce 11133 liec1U11
ol fedenl nlnnnnce, or cuanai.,. ·of mortr•••·
'nit uaodatlon ~ tbll tllluWr Insurance mode
anllalil• u Jow.cClll, llOll<lllCellable pottcllon for
A>(, ,l,512) .fully confirms Hinshaw'• nominaUon but th•
ultra·conaervative 11y1 he lllll won't throw in the lowel. • '\
Schmit.. told a crowd at the New Eng!alid Rally for
God, Faniily ind Country in Botton recently, "l'1111oinc
to come back stronger than) ever." How? Certai.Dly ~ot
u a Republican: He had"'only unkind worda tor. tho
party ht nominally represenLI in Washington.
H ho It prohibited by jaw frolft running again this
year, tlie lame duck congreum•ll 1aid he may run his
wife for Congreas in November on the American •Ind ..
pendent Partr. Uckel • -......._
H Schnut. really . believes George Wallace's old
plrly can win either him or his wife a seat in Congress
from Oran1e County or anywhere else in California, then ht ii even more deluded about the real world in
1972 than most voters thought.
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Burger-~azelon Enmity
TM Welfare One of ~Jn erica's
Balloon ls
[ J Pat Ninn -ti the Nian compound.
JAll!'TT ANDERSQ:.1 Portlud 0rt1oaiu One of the chiel problems in America
\.&IL , '.1., "YOU WOVWN'T believe It," he ts that every "ctjief problem" turns into 1 '-----------"· marYeled. "All !bit electranic ll!CUrity The urgency of national wettm relonn a business. The P,toblem isn't-l!Olv.:d~· _ .. ,,...~SYD NEY J .llARRIS • lt\df, iurrrrm. wbeeeeet, eteeeeoho. I iJ implicit in figures released by the a lot of people make a lot of profit from
Committee appttltd the rilllnl, Buraer felt I hid to 111 a loot at the nm1 al federal government. Public a5.11stance "dealing" with itl
sent to tbt Appmll Court far the popen ~ blnfl, to uncfentand them." costs and caseloads are skyrocketing. Housing is a b<iati-
I tn tbe cue. Hoffman ii not Jimitiq: hil harumtent C.OstJ have tripled, ciaseloads doubled in tiful -or uglf1--
T!iole who know1 Buraer uy he would of the GOP to Pat Nixon. Hil Phone the past 19 yeari. a prosperous decade, example. We Jlre
have enjoyed nothln. mort than over· P'reat Convention will s?.ve a top prize to bKleed, when compared to the 1930s, hardJy any better
rulint bll-o&d J'J¥Jl-~Thil-Ny--tha.man.-~U..lirtt..tolJ..free..call•--;w_,b"'en°"'the'~~· c;ste~m~tha"t=now='="'e"xists=:::-'w~•=s-of~w..-than we
I di:iwn to the pupil, there is only a trickle
/ left out of the flood. The rest has di~p-
Peared in administrative e-0sts. fancy
E;QUipment of doubt!u! utility. reports,
Surveys, physical plants that only call fo r
more upkeep and security -and nolhinl
lo show that the schools are improvin&
the quality of education.
lhave beee tbt reuon he wu in IUCb a to Vice .President Spiro Agnew._. conceiv •• an emergency measure. were in 1948, "'1en
hurry to m1e'tl' the 0.,._ Phone lrtUI whilper, wheeze, wbiJtle In the loog range, the system has Senator Taft SUP!"'!'·
TD MADCAP YIPPIB -Ablllt l!olfmln llaa pronilsed the Democrals to
limit bis --in Mlan>l to 4,000 this
-· Bui be allo Aid .. would rally 100,000 )'tlplnJ Yipplot to dllrupt 1bt
GOP convention in AVIUll.
Tbt brash and bubblinl llollman -!Inned to UI !bit be bu met con-
fidentially with Democratic Natlaoaf
Ccmmlltet -tnd bu qraed to
try to hip llllnp coal tlds -· "Wt baYO Jli-tbt Dtmoaoll no
truub&e," Hoffmu eonceded. 0 Atter au.
Ibey pl UI tbt ~le al Flaminp
Part. -dtl, tbelr ..,.uciatl8 art not
whtt ""''d can 1 bealthJ lhow al
vtllainl.''
!'Ok TD UPUILJCANI, however,
Hotfman Md no IUCh compellion. "We
-~them1-lsl"llollman
llld. 'Jlle Y1ddllll wml ...... trouble, ---.. , ... '* .... ybodJ to -if Ibey Wllll lo, 1111111 tbt)r CID CGlllt to only mie,
to.eomt lor tllt lltpubllcam in~ ...
be told 1111 -t• Lii Whitten. "Rllht now, we'n just ptddling lllrqb, waillnl
fer Bil Dick."
Earlier, Abl>le mldt ae unpublicized
and beep iato telepla8, duplicaliJll tbt resulted in tying IOllle families genera. ted 1 massive pub-
electraUc mecbanlms which lriQ:er tion aftet reneralion to the nation's lie housing bill.I In lonl dllt-callJ. Tbt tel..,i-com-apron llrinp, bapeaking the numbinief· the interim, billioos ponlaaraipoplellelboti~theP"actice. fed of dependency. The consequtnce is hav e been sptnt,
· insrained poverty on the one hand and a and millions made, but the poor still
•11'E'VI GO!' AGNEWtS unlilted num-cruabin& burden of tuition on the other. live in totten cmlditions. •
ber .. We 11117 even want to put a call Drug addict~~j.is the latest·~xample.,t
through to Maecow. The geatelt phone YET THE U.S. UNATE has not come is now a billiut'1'ollar national industry,
freaks in America will be convtnin& ri&ht cloee to ~n on the Ni 1: on but the results are ambiguous. to say the
here In Miami Belch," uid Hoffmln. Administration'• welfare reform legisla· leasf. All kinds Of money is being tossed F~: llepubiicanl art pmdnebo tim .,._ I>)'. the HOUll WI year. The around by the federaL government . but
wonlld .....-Hlftnwi11 t1n8t, llUt ta., apper home will debate welfare this only a trickle gets "down to the people~
point GUI. that, despite ...-•entlon lllllllllOf, centering ill attention 00.: a who nted the help.
publicity In , !Ml, lloffman tnd _.., Senate committee'• blll l1cking some im·
moderate Jef'tiltl wve able to tum eut portant features of the Nixon plan.
only about 10,°"° d.-traton. Meanwhilti the working people of the
nation hive borne a continually rising Joi~ of welfare cosfs.' 'I'tle statistics are
10bering. Ten years ago, there were
SEN. GEORGJ: MCGOVERN/I
lleutenanll have ollend. inlomuilly to
pick up tht campaip debta al bil
pmidefiUal rivals ofter lbt Dtmocr1tie
eonveotion H bt lhould win the JlllDina.
tlon .•• Gtcqe Mc:Gottm bu -prom.
lied over nationwide &elerilion, H be'•
nominated, to keep Lmy O'Brien u
~lie National Cbalnnan, But
prlvalely, McGovern Isn't happy with
O'Brien and orillnaD1 planned to replace
him. When wml luted out, bowtver, the
u~ llllOllg party "'""'" forced McGovern to cbanp hll pl&lll ..
abaur7.t million perlOlll, young and old,
on public uaistance rolls. Today the
munber Is 1baut 15 million. Current
paymmta are at the annual rate of $18
billion, Well over three times that of a
dtcade .,.,
THE MOST SPECl'A R jrowth in
weUare rolll and pa . has come
within the Jut three years. at time,
RECENTI..Y, WE have learned that
oiµ-enormous "crime control " program
h;as been largt1y a case 0£ frittered
funds. Municipalities have used the
money they were given for dubious and
fragmentary programs or equipment,
and the net fesult hu been prosperity !or
the politicians and the same degree of
immunity for the criminals.
Same ·thing with the schools. An
enonnous j>erCtntage of tax money goes
for school support, and more is cried for
every year. Yet it can be demonstrated
BY THE THE school funds get
. .
It is all a vast business, with pro-
moters, and contractors, and speculaton.
and concessionaires, and politicians, and
· every conceivable vested and unvested
interest taking a bite out of tbe pie. The
ill-housed, the poor, the crippled, the old,
the ignorant, t~ addicted, get only a lick
of the crust. if 'that
BUT IF IT'S WRONG -as the en-
trepreneurs insist -to turn businesa into
a socialized, collectivized activity, then it
must be just a.s wrong to tum IOcial pro.
grams into a Juccative business, and to
milk them for all they're worth, while ig·
noring the ultimate recipients for whom
these programs were set up in the firat
place.
If we have to keep a clear separation
between the private and the public sec·
tors, then we ought to see that nobody is
able to line his pockets oot of IOcial
misery and need, or use the mast of
l>fnevolence to cover up huge pilferage of
public projects. The line between en·
terprise and exploitation .is thin e.D01Jib
f,lready.
A Baffling ·Mix in Vietnam·
the toUil popullUon of the nation. ,,.
creased by an estimated ail million, and
welfare redpienta have increa!ed by five
millim, IO percent of them in families
recolmg aid to depend'.l't children.
• that nobody,is learning better than a decade ago.
'T e Boys of Summer'
aevoral years .,., half a miUlon
American soldiers with air ll!uralion
and ~ technoloclcal ...... t.uld . not ovm .the North Vitt-
W.Viend ttnditc to a ''reallatic" com-.
~ U tht only IOlulioo. ·(THE BOOKM~)
;'•
:!. •
...,_ and their
prrilla alUta. .
Now, with only a
low "-lean llol·
tallonl In f!tace .....
bit, the' -burden ntLI .. tht
llouth v-.
wltb a olrtnllb al,
llY1 a mlllicD men.
The 'lblai ...,.,,.
( ROYCE BRIER )
pli... .
Wclllo not tmw the __... al the
llOi tlltm tcrrc.., lout it ....... lulletan-
tially leS hn 11111 of tht ooutbern c1e1-.. 'll>t latter canno1· irucce.tuny
Wt .., likely to trunk tbtt Vietnam
Upeece" 11 the most tortuour and Jll'~
lndtd .... lllCOUlltend, at leaat in the
_.,, llmt. But ii ii doubtful. All wan
. are ..., to 11#1. btaJ1 to 11op, _.iany
civil wan wfiere there Is oullide In-
ttrvtm;on.
'Ibo Uliled Stales WIS not phylic1lly
,__by Ila intervention ; It....,
oplrltually -ualed wilen It became ap.
par111t the moral fooling ~-m.
'l'be ADC _,om 11 currently the ma·
jor element in welfare, having long •IO
IU1'pUltd old ::.ge assistance, which has
been llmlled by the npansion of Social
Security. About 10.7 millioo penons now
receive mmthly ADC aasiatance as com·
pored to a Utile more than two million
recelliinl old ap wlllance, I0,000 aid to
the blind, and one million each
~ -and 1enertl -THE CRUX Or THE Niloo plan is to
nduce tllt. ADC procrttn by providing
trlininc and inCentt've for parents to
remove their children from dependence
on the ,.;.mment and thua from the cy-
Roger Kahn members two base run·
ners heading f second from opposite
directions, not an unusual display of in·
elegance in the Ebbets Field of his youth.
That was the era: when the Dodgers were
sUll a comedy t!am. But Brooklyn fans
loved them anyway, and loved them even
more when they got gfeat, in the early
1950s, when Kahn began traveling with
them a.s a Herald-Tribune baseball
writer.
not particularly a Dodg~ a fan ·
or individual players., llke'~
or Vida Blue_. He is not convinced, 11
some proress1onal m0la'rler1 seem to be,
that basebtll is a dying game.
ltlb hu Amlrlcaa equipment, and Is
1ldod lq -meuurt by atrial
tdlaclt and mllllnl to mt nar1btrn sup.
.. ll•COMT
DAILY PILOT
Mlm N • .,, ..... l'llblisAtr
n-rMa..ldllor
Alhrl'll' .......
"I ... ,. .....
'1'111 ..._ -"' tllo lllllr ""'-·---· .... ' '?• .., ... ,,. tldl •--.w•... _,_ ,., ..... .,_, .....
4a Trz 't.;aaw'' a•·.._. ... ., ..... ' .: a::.-:;a~:c:e.:= --... "*• . ,......,, JDl1.lt. 1m
fend oil --hem -· but the nor111 -to Itek a decisive punch,
Ill -run out al 1teom. 'l'be ooulh
--positions to the north, then .....,.. to recover them without fatal =:i::_1on. Nill' "' ~. north .cM11
IT 13 FAJTR In Wullinl!On military,
and -political drdtl, tbet nm them mora1t II oillllinl, but tbert is no
evldenc:O al M ltl'finl llelllnd t aaspect
structoro of foolish IJllllmilm, er ti
delil>Onlte dilltnmlatlon.
Hence tht mDltary llllation In
·-lodoy -not dlll• in elernenta lnm lht days whtn Gii wert
evwywhen; then 11 a .. uw of we-
-Ind fallur .. fGr both skits. 'llltra
Is no """""' al military "vlclotY" lot
titbtr ...... !or tho -· .. lor the lol..-~ It Is a now llakmate.
Mllltary atallmttet camot aist ln-
dellnltely. The '"'lY l'tlolutlon II ....,.
Jll'Oll>ltt, • l!lldlinf Nlurn to • mora , -1 btlanoe O! (.....,, coiled pto«,
... .... eynlc:tJ\y • CllUO'flrt.
'IUllJ: D A lllll:r but pd Olll!ylis al .... .,.,._, 1n tit camnl U.S.
Ntwo tnd Wcrld ~. It Is dtrlvtd
from -al tbt mqulnt'• opinion
---.... It """ wltll llOlftlcal llld cilJia 1 flcln bqflW llrt la Illa eaolllel, ... ~al .....
l
volvtment wu aliJ1Pt11, and I it w11
a f\Jtllt _._ al our oner , 'Ibis
doubt -altO lo alllict the in· i:...-.:.. ~ ~ 1idC, lhi Sovie!
Thi doubt -not in the ttme degree
touch the toatbtm tnd nortllern Viet-
,.-•· It lt tbtlr nr and their fate . It
Is du t btfllinl mix ol motives, &Olis,
'-and dlslllullobl and that m1y be
'lllly lt ls t0 blnl to i.u. to an tnd. .. -'
Dear
Gloomy
Goa
I have a 1Joomy ESP prediction -
that an 11rtllqulko of ...,trt ln-
i-lty will OOCUl' In Soalbtrn .caJi.
-lbaal JuJy 17.
-T.J. ,,. .............. ~ ........ -
1111111., .............. ... ,., ................... ...,,,....
,_ •
cle of weUare pnerations.
11 lhould not be uaurned that welfare
families art miltinl the 1overnment to
lead · soft Uvea. ldlmiA under welfare
teiini 11 no -lied · cil ni.a. The ••erace
ADC family recelv.. leal than '200 a
month. Averqe old .,e pt)'Dlent is 1bout
llO a month ; aid to the blind, and db-
abled, a Uttle over •100; and general ...
sistance, about SU a cue. Try iti you
wm't like II.
The fundamental ob)ectio• to the na-
tion'• public welfare tyltem ii not jta
cool Tbt .,....a. cost ls modeat. 'l'be In-
tolerable lhla( 1boul the 1)'11<111 Is that it
. ht• mared mllllolll and Is ...-ring
mlllioal mon In llv .. of detpolr and inr
povorilllmenl. U.S. Mn&forl, including u-nmlnc !Gr pr..ident, should pay
•
CIOIUatlelltlon.
Quotes
Elmtr W-a, l'n'*• '-"Now that tbt ,_ ....... 111111 (hu URd)
farce lo Mlllt tbtlr conlmerl)' .. ttb
Plklltan, -C1111101 btlp lout rellect
upon tbe Illa al Mlhttma Gandhi (wllo)
did bllinflel1'1nort far hb peopla willl a
pnllram. llf •rl0 IFID'1
It ii the Dodgers or that period that
Kahn concentrates on in bis book, "The
Boys of Summer." 'J1heir names were
Jackie Robinson, Gil Hodges, Roy
Campanella, Pee Wee Reese and the
others, a pantheon of (olk heroes which,
although they neVtt played west or St.
Louis , became a national institution In
-years.
THAT MAY EXPLAIN tile popularity
of the book, tile Coanecticul·btsed •!lthOr
suggested di.ring i r\HQl.., visit bert. But
then it is autobiography as well as.
baseball; It's about Brooklyn in 1 simpler
lime, a commlD'lity Ula! was a country of
the mind. Kahn Still can't believe this
r1rst book of his was 1 Boolt<Jl-lhe-Month
Club choice. It would seem too penonal •
work for that. be thinks and not feminine-
oriented, 11 moot book club choices tend
to,.be.
Bearded and dapper, !{alvl migllt be
taken for an usillant prolossor or
English rllller than' a middle-aging presa
box d<ttiz.en. He ~· Dylan 'l'hOmas ("the boys of IUllllller°'iS I ,,,..,OS llne)
as well u ancient i.1t1n1 averages, and
find• 1t _,.lldri1g t1at ae e1c1 spor1s
writer hu mode ii to the point of 1111 ng
lnl""1ewtd <Iii lbt Toda'--· R<ceilly a ~ cr1Uc for Esquire,
who 'l!lll per1oi m the , ... function /or
Harper's masuine bec1nnin11 in the fall ,
Kn """""' • bueball fin, altl!OUCb
•
BE AGREES THAT the dream Ieam
his .. boys of summer" became i.s mllkely
to appear again. The raoge Of their
personalities, the strength of their
athletic skills (Robinson, for --
taught a whole generation how to oteal
bases)· were too vivid ever to duplicate.
And tllat, Kahn Is convinced, is not mere
ll06lalgla.
Then there was the Brooklyn Ibey
played in. Loi Angeles could never Jll'O-
vide lbe wonderful frenzied aetUnc even
if a dream team were assembled there.
The real secret ol the book's succeu
may be simply tpe. Jcq ...,. time, tilt
place and people Kahn writes lbout -
the good old days (Harper : '6.111).
WIDltm Hope
~--..... ,..., --..
Dear George:
Since I moved to the fl11lllnds fl
Florido rrom tho hills of West
Virginia l!lY l'I• ache all the timt
and I think It ls from Wlltlng ..
Jovel sround all tht timt when I om
used to hillsides. II Ibero ••• t0l"' lion! • -v
lllLL81IJ. y
0.ar Hillbilly:
Have you lritd wearin& -elev1tl&r lhoe !
... :,~-
• kl
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.,
I-':
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\\•
·;.
I '
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•
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•• "-t i' " '• • 1: . . . , .
.... 1:) -<~. . ~Three-D~ Klekend''
~. ll ' • . •.
• J, I.I" ~-, . ' .. ,..l-· • •
•
'
•
c ='-._
' .
Winston's real, rich, satisfying taste makes any occasion
1 a little more pleasurable.
· Because Winston always tastes good; like a cigarette should •
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Detennined That
Ciga11111 Smoking Is Dang1ro~1 10 Your H11lth,
I
..,
• ••• , ••. ~ ........ ",...., .... _..,.llT ............ t.I...... ~
KING. 20 mg. "11(', l4 ..... eox. 20 ing."111", ti • lioulii .. ft. Plf ..... FTC Alpurt APR. 72.
. I
•
•
• • l
' /
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•
'
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'
& DAILY 'iLOT
Civil War
Looming . '
In Ireland · .
~·:·'BELFAST, Northern Ireland !AP) -
The British administra,tor for Northern
lrellnd, William Whlltlaw, flew beck to
the province today in I bid to Stave O(f
pouible civil wart as Pro'6tant ~
Raman Catholic gurunM-rou1ht in
-lJelfast. · , ··
• HJs arrival from London broulhl 1
I
Tut5day, Jul7 ll, l' •• l
temporary lull..,in mse\...filhtini ·• that bu r11ed fit t!li"pro~~capll1I '
.; }Ince the Provlll~I wing o/ the,Aish
:: Republican Armya 1tled o!! its l:klay .
:; cease-fire Sunday nia:ht. ti
: · Jljval Prolell"lll ~xtremlall 1nd IRA .,
:: sunmen la West Betrut traded• lire in i
4 spate of sniping e1chln1es. The Britillt 3 anny ~rted ri lhootin& tncldonu In 41 .
. .( mtnute1 durini the momlnJ but .tat
... _
~ vlolenl 21-hour perloda to ran.. .. ... ,... w ateher• ~ were reported.•
:: The shooting followed one GI lbt Piii Tll.,e are some of the ways people In New York watched Mondl7'1
=~ vlolent 24-boui periods to ......,. tlii II-1olar eclipse. Girl, upper left , looks through 'fogged film; men, upper ·
;: ty since sectarian flihlill ..... Iii rl&hl, looks through mirrored ,sunglasses; man, 'lo'l!'lf let~ <uli ~ 1~taliw's •ides declirllll 111 .. • . ttllr shadow throuah hole in his cookie and youngstm, lower rip\
~ .. · Irilh newspapor "'1'I u 1 awvll el lun'1 lm111 cut onto piper throu1h blnpcul1h.
:: Proviliooala' leoderl Will -Wiiii
: 1ov....._1 ollictall II I IM Pl '[ 11111
::. fer calm GD the ftl fl Ill 11M'1 rl
: Proleltanl celebraU. a p 11111 • .... : !If o! the Boyne, • Pill 11111 ....,
•• ,.., Catholic fortol .. -
... Securily m .....
ce)ebrotions set •• r' 1 tt 1 fWhpoinl In the ..........
Whitelaw dee Ire .. ...ill 111111
quest for pe1ce II 11111~& i ..._. 1111
odded la I tal ... --.....,
....... Michigan Gird&
To Fight Ruli11g
On Bm Purcluues
nJchl lhat "If -.. E ... , ... -thetrc~ ....... J ferocity, the ann1 • • ;;...&.+
p1a-1o confer • n1111t 11111111
today llJld rem1la lslls1I .. ..... J die Proteltant )·
Mllllant Ptotealltlif. a I I I w ~I it , ::;...~
'
DICTllOIT (UPI) -llllu olllcllll
raJlltd f4llll' lot I flPt qtfllll I . , ..... °""" niUnc nqulrlq llllm to
llu7 • bulot lot pootlblt c,......,lltrict
· llullal to 1cblm . raclally ballFctd
rnetropolllBr _.,, . threaleaod lo lake dlt di ..... 1111
troubled irovlnce.
Tbe Proleltant Ullhr ,,. =·
lion, wbicb claims it 142! -ed lllOl1 Into the field, tlii
do oat crmh the -... rtllu of the lrilb Repuilllllll lnlt, ..
-.11oa will take the off"""' .......
the IRA llJld do Its "levtl • fl tllmtnote llJld destroy It."
,
~ -.. ~.
Altomty o-11 Fruit J. Ktllty eel~
td Ill ... 11111 lo 1111 Ill)' ot Ult -----•new-to 11 ... ,. to ·tllll chirp'., .. lllto'•
1tp1 "•, &21 .. 111t r.iq -"1
U.l plllrlet J .. 118pbm J. l\ttll. .. 1111 ...u.,, ..... ._... ,,._
' Bobby Fischer Fidgeting;
,_ -_,,.,. .... .,.,.... tilt
......... ....... Wll uqr111111ble ..
tllll Ult lllto OIUld 1111 I II t r d tilt SI
"'l::.1 'i:l: ::: .... 1111
1111 "'= t11t II·
l1lllfllllr .,... llt -ml•-lo
................ plBt --II I flit piotJ lo lrli .... 'DtlNll lflllllllllllrllnl .....
--··'-·-· ········---·-'
Chess Match Due to Start lff lie 'ileW tllt lllle'I' llljllJtl lo
""'1 ftu6tr -ID lbt DtlNll' ... ~ .. ..-., ., 1111 ,•
. 8EYKJAVJK, Iceland ·(UPI) -The mu.ooo world champion.ship cheu match
be(,.... American Bobby Flacher and
Ruisia's Boris Spuaky WIS still JO to-
. day, but Filcber made 1 litt minute de-
mand to slop talevislng the first of lhe
sthtduled 24-gome aeries.
"i,,.r. will be no TV filming loni1h1.
but we hope IOIM: other arrangements
can be made IO they can film later dur·
tng the m1tch," said Fred Cramer, vice
'president of the U.S. Chess Federation.
Fllcber said the television cameru,
hidden behind cloth-<OVel'ed ICl!lqldq
lbove 1111 .... """' 1111 ...,.... will 11~ WOllllll Ill wt lllm. ..
GOP Seeks ·
Ciie Delay
WASIUNO'ION (UPI) -
The ~1111 to Jle.oloct""
Prealdetl ....... to oourt lo
delly ... llltr Ibo pmlden-
tlal eJ-1111 hearing Of I
Democratic N1Uon1I Com-
mlltae dYll Miii 11 k I n I
damqea la tht attempt lo bug
the DelllOCrltlc headquarters.
The commttuo colUnded In
an actloa llled 'Monday In U.S.
DiJlrlct Court la tho Dlltrlct
of Columllil Illa! hooriag the
suij prior II 1111 election would ,
cause .. ..,..,.lable'' da1n1ge
lo Ni-'I e1111palgu.
. The Du rcntlc N1tionll ·
Commi"'9 111111 I $1 mlllloa
lawsutl ..-i 1111 IMltcllan
c::ommlt&el .. ftn men ar·
rested bJr llltt oorly In Ult
mornlns cl -17 ~
I .
iullli' 1111 ........ :'1'0ttrett'1
Fischer's ,opl!Oflent, -Id .....,.. Pi'ld ¢ llllrltlr . llllck ICbatll t rt
. Boris Spassky, said he was roldy 18 ~· I dtllllnllb ............ ' ·
"Everything is fine wilh me " •Id lbt 1111 • bulti; II -I '11,• ....
la Ru . •• ...W•-•t._r-~ popu r ss1an . • • 1111111111 II • llllertlll Cramer said earJier that Fischer was ti~n ptm for DttrfAt \
"go, go, go." predominantly wtui. aibutbl.
The first game was scheduled to start The ~se: of the buses was reeGm·
at 10 a.m. (PDT) wilh Fischer the ei:· men~ed by the panel createt:! to draw ~p , . . a c1ty·to-suburb desegregat)OI) plan m-pe:rts favonte: but Spassky far ahead m volving only elementary schools this fall
the popularity poll. and a "full and complete plan by Se~
Both men made final inspection tours tember 1973 ... The plan would invol ve a
of tbe lpOfts arena wher-e the match will huge metropolitan district or about
be played: Fischer made an unannounced 800,000 students -one-third of the state's
~.,.. early in the day :ind Spassky stroll· student enrollment -in De troit and its
Id ilrt. at DODD. $ a.m. (PDT). 1uburbs.
•
, • THE 81SBEST SHOW OF ITS KIND
·r'·• · Im OF THE MISSISSIPPI!
• ..
--Wino
Fino L'-
~loa
,._.._ Produco -""'-HOME
DELIVERY
675-3510
IM7 LCOAIT HW Y.
ORONA DELMA
ANAHllM CONYINTION CINTll
(•Ir conditioned J
SHOW HOIJll1 5-11 p& W~~dayl
Hoon· 11,...,.hlwdavs
No0n -9p.m. ~~-.
ADULTS •••••••• •2.00'
.1u111•• • • • • • • • 1.00
~ ...... ,,,,.. ... ~
, , , llGGER AND IETTER THAN EVU WORE!
· A GEORGE COLOURIS PRODUCTION
•
-----------.
./ ' .
,.
Bid• BeJeeted ~ONG~ONG
CUltOM TAM.OU IN Ow«if COUHll
R S P --·--s&VIUPT05~ ogers ays ·ope ~s135 ."'", .. ,.,.., .. , .. ..... '""" .... ... -.... """'t"· ......... .
. • J 0 1 O..W. lall .... $t.s ... •WI nf ANT Sill
.. 11111 """'-" • • • • • .. tS •'ANT JTYll (Of'llD
F . h .. I .. l!f!IJW-c.i.-...•... ff s• •"'f • .D ~ ...... u 62 ' •flUALTllATIONI zg M or -. LS ::..;~:.:.,-:
11
..... leB .. ™'":: . .'0
• ,.. '""'' IWtlffl 10 ... ... 1• WMUlll • -.. 0 1n , ....., 1 .. s • v
' ' :·
VATICAN CrrY (AP ) -tion of the peace talks Thurs-' ,,.,, .,,,..,. za ,._ 1u.o211 •
Secretary of State Willi•m P. day opens "a peephole of ! J~°"~·~·°';!.,.~1"~·=~'..,.;-~:!.~·.Wt~·;..:;::; .. "';.:.,.=,.,.=·~=--~··~ ... =~~~ """" Mid ...., -Ibo hope," bul he added: '"!'he ,_
Vllloaa Ml ....... _., .,U. ..-i _IDetooct which have
....... • ... •as1srs ._ tilt IDDI of the negotia-
llf'•!•WI. _. md llr .. ~ lao 1111 mustje
'--11111 ~"If .,. II It a I -· NlllllWOi· atll." I M ,_1111 ti .......... -........ ·~-
........ wt1k .... l'mrl VI ,;;;;t,..., II -•
. ~ vi:-111~ ..... rou1e -·•'#..: •••II'• ,JI 1111'· II,,. vlsiu lo aloo -11.,..
.... '• llflr• ol ed Moad!t1 ·-11111'1-
prl•n. • -.. lat premier, Giulio-· ... An r It• P01r1 ... 1 ..,rt bi1 lordp m•n!eW, G1-tm tlMl,... '11tsr 1t1 • MedicL ~.
AnrlloW .\1111 .11 Nlrtll &cm wu lo leavo I« Willra. . Wlllhlng!aa later today. :
'nil Vllltll llN 1111 ......
............. tllt
--., 1111 ,... ,.... lalU WW 11111 lo •1 N111111t
""" flflll .-" lo """ tboV.....wv.a.11111 ...
..... • ..... mild ... ... ... lo .. ,. ... .,
aD die \'llSZ?Plll ....... ..
~ .......... ..
plallllil "1111 f'.111 llrNll II
P1101.urslM-e1•1rllld lo. rllir--lo~
-1111111 .... -llflllilllaal " "Wt 111ppm1d bll pin
........ " ... .., Ull(ul " ...... ~ ' ,,.. llllfll . ud t h • -..-..~-
-... ""' -• blur. ,,,. Vtllall 11111 _, lltt •• -..
Reagan Hoping
Viet Not Issue
lwJatD 141') -Gov .
~~":.:. r:=
--11111 ""' Ire:::: Ill tblJ ,_ ... U.L
111111111 "Win""··-lf'llUllll l 11 ... to • ...,.
CllJbW Vlllree I lnllt1r
Prrrldlllt NI 111 illlllrllM.
.._ ttld --·--II' tit •t1 k1•'1 _, .,,. ................ ..
lllltflll ........... ~ lfllll ,,, •••
' ' -
11111 lliiJladay.
Thl"tl lrt looklng up Ill Leno lllall. Wllh our smil ·
lftt, ••llHI Jltl l!ld dltlfy, low leres, h.-i·
..... 111111111F11no1HO119 Jull llound the corner.
L.llllWlill, llOlllMlllO llld 1111 ~ Call us °'
JN M1i11ng ... IGllL NA ... JOU • lift.
-"lbt ...... .;;:;;;. la tlle lllddlt lliol. U.L
pr'-t ti w1r II Karlll
Vlotnlm end Prtlldtnt .. NI>
.... -lo Nina ud ~.
,,,. Popo tft Uyl ...
'modi I Dito for IE ... lo "1111 tntoln&la 11111 lllotd:r _ .. la
THE VETliRAN'S MARl(lll AT MY ~AANDFATHlll'S
&RA VE IS ALM05T UNlllAOAILL IS · IT POSSllLI
TO HAVE THIS llTHlll lllPAllllD Oil ltlPLACID? v~. 111111111111 -••
Death P~nalty
Battle Slated
MWa llACll. "" ~
• fl *••llu tar=• .......... , ....... II It .. i.e. • .,.. llletlWll fN• ...... .. ... ......,• 17 I b It ........... H .. wlll tOIM Illy •• , ., •
-Gov ........... ,,,. ..
wW nll tilt 111111111rn 1r1t ~ ....... lfrf.2111-
tldtr ...... llrl ••. I • --iiJ llililll lrl .... bt,,,,... Irr 11111111·••1111 ......... 111121 111111 ..
1111 DMi JJllllt 11ti1ti11 =-:--..... r::::..=
.... wt. II •'Ill,_ ... RIP I I ........ _. r.,l .. 11111.ttllb1tw frerw __ ,,..,. .. Ir •
•• .. IC., 12%,...,"....,.. ......... , ,, ,, ................... 41, ... . r:• 11111 ._.. ISP Et If ...... ti ......,1 ... It h elle tile ,.11c,
............... ,..llSllltj .. I ... ., • W.ue l'kttiiM tM t r ... 111:""' 811111f ...... ti ...... W Jlllll1Ms ... l.t Mnke ,.,lM wn tet•
............... 'llff .. IJ a ,,,.., ' •
•: .... I 1£151115 .......... ""'-...... wrlre 9f' col. WllelWMr '°"'"'' . _ ............... ......
......_8er,eron Funeral Ho111e
OOITA -• LOCATIONS CORONA def MAR ....... 673-9450
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18th
AriniYersary
Feo luring:
THOMASVILLE. ,
SEALY, SIMMONS,
REMBRANDT,
CAVALIER,
LA·Z-BOY,
ROY AL COACH , '
e FREE
Delivery
Of Course
See our new lines of:
ANTIQUE PINE;-· --·
COLOl>llAL,
'· COUNTRY FRENCH,
ENGLISH .ond
MEDITERRANEAN.
CAL·SHOP.S,
HECKMAN CABINET,
BRANDT,
HAMMARY,
'BERKUNE.
ALL AT '
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SALE PRICES
We et·Mertin'z feel thet our bu1ineu is 1omething more. than just sell.
Ing wood, peint end fabrics, es s1ems to be today's trend. We feel that
we ere helping to focus attention directly on the home, which is the cen·
ler of the family -the hearthside. "'
The p11t 18 years, we have tried to offer ·the best merchandise, the
best prices, end the best pet,onal service humanl ,.....,..ibl1 -end we
intend to keep if up~ l
COME IN AND GET ACQUAINTED DURING T
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IANKAMEllCARD ·e MASTER CHAR5E
OUR OWN UYOLYIQ CHARfH
1165 HARIOR ILYD.
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Downtown COIN M-• 541-5131 FURNITURE
YOUR FULL SERVICE FURNITURE STORE I
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• T11tsd.ly, .My l • 1972 OAILV PILOT 11
CURNIE Two Winners 0·.·:Back Texas Chain Junior ROTC Operi to Gals .
P WASHINGTON (AP.) -The ort<r the junior ROTC prOlf"m Buys aper Al'll\)' has announced that the throughout the United stales,
junior ROTC progr"""' In hijih Puerto Rico, Cuom and the New Garbeustangels, Old Faces at Plaza SAN FRANc!isco <AP) -:ioogio~1n:~11\'."~r.~:0.;i: ~~~~ .. ~ho take par1.,.m
U · __Harle.Hanks Newspapers or 0 •'neut no obl'••lioo to join· the " year in September. '6 Abilene, Tex. bas purchased. "'ore than 600 high schools Army upon graduation. -,. two junior garbenstangelers of wood and a door through together. Paddle wheels and the semlweekly SOJr Francisco =~~~~~~~~~=~~=~==== v.·bo won priw: In last year's which a .sign Invites spectators other moving parts are Progress from Henry F.:
to enter 11for garbenstangele> powertd by marbles trickling Budde PubUcaUons, Inc. -••"'""-' ., . first Build a B e t t e r • do ... _. ... " trou hs ked Cont nd sons." wo ....... ! •~r In' acquking The Program C ·
Internatl allye Saturday deSoto. radio station KMPC'1 "F~ \\IUl-D•d•loo Maker." Haile-Hanks adds the Sao . , OW• ·• . . ' Garbens est a Acting as judges v.•ere Dave into the de.sign. He calls it, for 64,908 shares of• Its stock, ....; Plast·1c rea~·
rs. "Man in Orange County," and Winners In the Open Division, Francisco ma rket lo 19 lnven· ti~· . 'fof.A. f.' .. titie.;• .. • .l" . •' k·"'. ·; rlzes in Golden West CoUege graphic in addition to plaques, receiv· newspaper market ing areas it --Hll
silly arts lnslntctor Gene Tar<J,y, ed $100, $jO and $20 in has in eight sla~;. ,
the garbenstan'gel pro. ltrlaenst.angel gelt (Sou fh · Henry F. Budde, ·whose Artificial Tee ··wffer. Felt -t ~~··r 1 \"ed dtnt,u• ·.
seTbeasoiail t"' a~t~u~h The judges created a special c.oasf~Plaza gift certificates) father fo~ed-Th6 So Mata.ral Before . .' ·~. :\!tf'!Ct ilr<kr. ~fte• btt· award for Walt Johnson, 24, of ,ror first ,' second and tbifd: 'in 1923; anno.utc.td th ·ibi!l.~rit"tdl'tnfft ~1tr~"Ht. au1plly .. l';1JIOO!~'T
Cf) ·I! > 1•"A Magno· lia ~ve.. CoSta. places, respectively. JohnsOn· 10· inUy w-tt11 l'•rl u 'IM.cnruit that holdsd,,11.u:~·s "~ 1. t (or hours. ~ mo;'~ur:· . •. • ' ~' of •• 12.L& M":'.'•• .. J!e-•~\er--a tow" con-w .. gt'v•• -m' ".gelt'' 11., .. :n. ~·b"·"u ... W • nevi&~1"otmfan.,.l:ntu:Jn~n1U" 1 ·, t'~r, ~ that fit tre mltl'\ 0
-• ~ '<!" ~· ....., -. ·~ ,..-u 1.1:),111:\1 • Ji;r&he that },/pJ llild lilt..:.-t.i 111o· I'; >!lh ~ ... your dcnt11t rtA~Y· ·~ •. ;-. ta. -~ffp, structed o I ttl)I .apeola1 award. ~ Fridays •• Tlls~ss .,~·~~-lit rtr-+mN1J 0TJ-i~1ftrll.11/f. It'." c •l·t ~· -~·-t?"wc F•xOD!r-.'T yen ure k'==~ made-over ice "Cl"e3m z,OOO po~~~f lued Junior DivlslM.~~irme.Ni cirtulatiQn~~ · !' _que d.itc0\·trycalled Fi_xoo1:~r• ·Adhc$nc Cream. • l!,.l~ir.b<ngangel,'" won · -e received trophies and "gelt" .,190,000. • .. · r·~~~~~·~· :!i~~~;;;:;::.....:::;~====;;=:; nior Division last year, •;'ff-0 ,
/1
ranging from • for first ;,;ii;·-~ Iii "-'----'-._ -·-
iitjjjiit' "the 1972 champ in the S · T place to $20 for second and r-
same d iv i si~n with . (,!OUt -roop for third place. . · ..
~· t. M. Boyd '
Marsh ll~re Dish
Really Muslua~
.. "Slarbei}ganil:el U.' • . .. - . · The perpetual .irophy de!ign.
Paul Chaplin, also 12, of 9122 'T ke F' · -. ed for the CoUegi~le Divisl°'1 Christine Drive, HuntingtOn -. ll 8 . OrTn by Noack Ti;ophy Co, .was
Beach, la~ year's third }llace " given · to Orange . Coa·st
\\1nner , took second plcice wi~h ::--4~ i new boy scout troop, wJth College's t"-o:man team ..
·his entry, "Pneumatic St~tf2 an emphasis on camping and The oc.c team , Bo}> ~ck
ta tic,'' which he told judgi4. is hilting, is fanning in east Hunt· .. and Steve Shanafel~, · wiU . ~
a "party pooper eliminat~r·." ington Beach. given complete spprt ,at.itf1~
Third place in the division The Ii r s t organizational from South Coast Pl~ s ~lh
was won by Scott YeUch, 12-, meeting for Troop 408 will be try, Ltd . as their irtdivtdual
345 Westbrook Place, Costa held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in awards. ,,
lwlesa. }Us was an untitled Arevalos School 19692 Lex· Winner of the "Piece March
garbenstange l whose various ington Lane. It's' tor boys IO'n contest, putting together a
parts-a buzzer, a model train years or older who live in the jigsaw puzzle published on the
locomotive, lights, elc.-was area or Adams Avenue and South Coast Plua page In the
activated by a steel ball bear· Brookhurst Skeet. DAILY PILOT last Wednes:
ing rolling down a copper-lined Dads must accompany each day was Mn. K. Polcar1
trough to close various elec· boy ~ho wants to join the new of 10701 W. Woodbury, Garden
tric circuits. scout troop. For further in-Grove. She also was awarded
Winner in the open division formation phone 962-2331. S50 in garbenstangel gelt.
v.·as Jim Hadden, 21, 223 Vi3
Orvieto, Newport Beach. His -
entry, ''Woozle," blows bub--: That professional man least apl to ask a matrimonial hies, shows slides o! sunsets,
·counselor for help to save his marriage is said to be the displays numbers on. an elec·
'.<foctor. Jt is the doctor, also, whose marriage is most tronic digital display board
:likely to get into trouble, the experts contend. Why is no and plays a tap recording or
confronted with an unusual nfunber of temptations to step Second place went to Doug
"f Out. · -Parmentier, 55, 1517 Etonl-------------
SALINAS FASHIONS BIG . HONG K
Custom Tollors in Newport Beech
2 Double S l,I I 0 00 Knit Suits I • I SA~E ·
2DAYS
ONLY M•dt lo mu 1ur1 -H•nd T •lland su111, 5POrl cou1 a J•c~t"
Clloei• trom hllfMlrt•h at ump1cs cl rn1 warld'1 llneu l•t>rkt " ••' 1 '"~ ,111, 0111"1'1 -4 Wet~I.
Siik Mo>u1lr Suits SSS. Silk Sharkskin
Wool Sh•rkskln SuitJ ___ ,$60.
Suits . . .......... $65. f"in• Worsted Suits $~0-,
Sport Coats . . .. • 540. Custom M•de Shirts $6.
CAL.L FOR APPOINTM ENT-Mr. J, S. Gltn
(Between 10 AM & I PM)
THE NF.WPORTER INN
11 07 Jamboree Road, Newport Be.ictl
644-1700
TUES.
7-11
&
WED.
7-12
'mystery_ A lot or medical practitioners are known to be "The Ha11eluja Chorus.' -Fa rgo Ban k
THOSE to most popular names for newborn baby girls Place, Newpart Beach, whose Id t•IG ~· this year, in order. are said to be: 1. ... "Prange County X-rated All· to to $100·
; JeMlfer. 2. Michele. 3. Lisa. 4. Eliz.a-American Special" included wou I e s~e ~ou up
: ~t~~~-~~~:;:· ~-~:!~-7. ~ll~n-fu;n ~~it ~~~~~i na~~~~ . ~ Y ' I '
· EVER eaten that dark mea t dell-(which did not, honest, Ul· • ~ I
cacy known as marsh hare? How fluence the judges). on your ne oan about terrapin' It's actually muskrat, Carl vanCouvering, 38, ol .
I'm told. 1132 Salvadore St., Costa
, EVERY 10th hooeybeo is a Cali-Mesa, took thrrd place in the If ' been "dering · bo 1 "
:' tomian. ,_,,. . open Division. youve COllSI ·gett1nga at oan,ahomeimproven1entloan oraloaniorsomcother
:. cabuiary has t1te-averag~~~Id?"Q. "~o_w ~·g a_ vc._ .~~1 i ~~,~~~~:~~~ purpose (excluding the purchase of an automobile) these special Wells Fargo Bank coupons can
A. Just 2'12 words, say the experts. featured old car and trailer . save you anywhere from $10 to $100 worth of interest. Have a look: Q, ."CAN an ostrich run as fast as a man?" .. parts and included a handsaw
A. Twice as fast. In spurts. ·m this slicing Its way Utrough a· block Q. "HOW many policemen were murdered
-country last year?" • -
A. Exactly 126. the record shows. .
IN A TRICKY traffic situation that calls for quick
reaction the man ·not the woman, is the better driver.
But in loose tedi00s cross-country hauls, it's likely the
woman, not the, man, will stay aler~ longer, so tire less.
Such were "the recent findings of the auto experts. ~ey
theorize therefore, that the girls actually would be s~per1or
• truck drivers were it not for the loading aJ1d unloading.
TALK-Jt's not that men 'don't talk as much ~as wom~n.
;:They do. Difference is women spray ~e conversation
arowid indiscriminately, stil! never J.lllS.smg a word any-
bQ!:ly elae says. Men can't seem •to do that. T~y ~ave to
tale turns. Or such is the contention of a sociologist who
specializes in that therapeutic phenomenon known among
the 90phomores as the sensitivity session. . •
WHY I don 'l know, but school teachers m the West
are generally youngei' than the eastern teachers. Averag~
male teacher in the United St,ales i9 36.7 years old, ,aver·
age woman Is 44.4 years old. -
Beach Youth
..
Given Award
Bill Sendra , son 0£ Mr. and
~1rs. Fred Sendra, of 8541·
Donald C i r c I e , Huntington
Beach, has been awarded a
$400 Standard Oil COmpaoy
tH Scholarship.
~ Sendta, a Fountain ValleY
Cloverdale 4-H Cluh Member,
.eas awarded the scholarship
on 4-H achievements and
scholastic performance.
COUPON VAWE CHART
TbeMmeYoulloa'Ow, Tho Mere You Savel _,.._ C.,.••• I ... fen
$1.001•-$100 $100 $loo $100 $100
$5,001 .. $1,000 $ 75 $ 75 $ 75 $ 75 $ 71
$3,001 .. $5,000 $IO $ 50 $ 50 •
$1,501 .. $3.000 $ 2S
$100
$ 75
,. •, ........ M-. lfi-. 60 -. 12-. 14-. 96mos.
Nolt!: Coupoa bu the effect of reducins the inlerelt_ JOU ,.,._ For ei:ample. Wflen
the a.!l)()unt fiaanccd is $4,000.00, with 48 monlhly imtalhnents of $103.33 each,
totaling $4,959.84, it bu an ANNUAL PDlCBNTAGE llA1'£ of 11.'7". But
by using thiJ coupon, worth SS0.00, )'om" line monthly payment is ooly $53.JJ,
which lowenyourtotal paymentato$4~.M, and reduca JOW"actu:al ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE to JIM", In J'IO case will coupon be honored for more
thaa amount ol fint pll}'IDCDL
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TRUE, more "'-'Ords s~""th "s'' ~ with any other
letter Address mail to L. ~. Boyd, P. O: Box 1875, Nell>
"The Fountain Valley High
SChool graduate plans to enter
cal-Poly Slate University, San
Luis Obispo, this fall and ma-
jor in vet medicine o r
forestry.
-·-----------------------~11------'-·-, ..... ---------------·----.. COUPON VAlUE CHART 1 J>OTI Beach, Calif. 92660.'
Movie Men
Facing Lure
Of Nevada
·CARSON CITY (AP) -~evada's new program to lure
movie producers into the state
1s in operation, says Darryl
Monahan or 'the state Depart·
inent of E c onomic
bevelopmenl. i Monahan, deputy director
'.for tourism, said a network or ~vidual contacts has been
)istabllshed in all 17 Nevada
-tounties to escort' interested
=t'ilm makers to various scenic
~tion•. ;. He 11~ a three-man com-
:jn1ttee is also working on afi
8dvertising campaign similar
io tlio"I, of Florida, Utah,
,Oregon and other weslern
1tai.... _ ... Manahan Said the pro,..-.
,iate "Movie Development
t\ut.bority" will also f~e
out what equipment Mlh'!g itoct such as old wagoM and Coaches and other material, is
Avalllble for films and will
Alao make sure producers can tet ..,.,... to land where they
jvant to abool films.
~ He noted that Arizona set
tslde ll0,000 foe tho coming
:)'ear in view of the fact that
)ftJming U aegments of a
le1evi.slon series in the state
,tirougbt In more than $2
)llIIIJon Jut year. .
Austria Healthy?
,: VIENNA .(AP) :... Fifty.four
i>erC1D1 al elderly Austrians
...-..,..i thought their heallh
lru NUsfoctory or excellent.
l'nolller 11 percent complall1ed
pl ...,. ailment! 1nd 10 per-
l"llt Nici their health was bad. ..
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' I THE
RECOGNITION
HE DESERVES .
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ROLE%
The Rolex flay-Date. ultimate achievement
of the watchmaker's skill, worn by heads
of State, leaders of industry, and ta.mous
sports champions-and recognized """"I"
wher• .. the world's badge of success.
A superb 3(}jewet, self-winding day and date
chronometer, guaranteed presaur•proof
to a depth of 165' when case, crown, and
crystal era intact. The famous Oyster
CHO iS IOlid 18 karat gold, with
matching 18 klrat gold Pr'9lldent'1
bracelet. Racogniltln beyond question.
The tec0gnttion ha deserves. $1.300.
Do Something B11utlful.,.
Cllllr .. A<~" """""' ... ""'""'"' ........ .... ~ ......... a.,.. ....
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SLA.VICK'S Jewelers Since 1917
I 8 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT IEACH-644-l llO
Optn Mon. tnd Fri. 10 •·"'·to 9:30 p.m •
Woltl lo0tlol!1 of: Ttfrlnct, Of ... , l1 Ctn""' &.1"-1.
, Allo, SM °"'ft&. u., V ... 1.
TheMc:RYouBauow ThoMmeYouSavel I • • _,.._
~ ...... _,.,,
$6,001•-_$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
$4,001 ,. $6.000 $ 50 $ 50 $IO $ 50 $ 50 $ 50
$S,OOI to $4,000 $U •• •• SU $35
$2.00t .. $3.000 $ 2S $ 25 s 2S $ 25 $ 25
For.,,." ••• • .. 36-. ...... -.a .... 71 ............ 120-..
Nori!: Coupon bu the c:«cc:t of redueina tbe interest rou pay. For example When
the amount financed is $2JOO.OO, with 36.monthly installments of $82.47 each
totaling $2,968.72, it hu an ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of 11.52%. Bui
by _using this COU1*1. worth $2J.OO, ~r lint moothJy payment is only SS7.~~ which Jowcnyourtoet.J pa)'mentltoS'Z,941.92,udmtuca your actual ANNU~
PERCENTAGE RATE to 11.fl'5. lo DO cue will coupon be bonom1fix1D010
than amoant Ill first pa)'IDC:Gt.
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COUPON VALUE CHAIT
The More You Borr.... Mme Yoo Save I ' -.. . .. _,.,,,.,,
Not~: Coupon hM the afect of reducina Che. i9lerat :'!&:n~°" nample, w.bco tho..., .. , financed lo !J,1j~·~.!."h 11 ....... , i• of St09.25 ..... to&alina St.966.jO, it bal an AANUAL n.csN'IAG£ RATE ol. 15.119'. But
by ,usin& thia coupoR. worth SIS.001 JOUI' Int noDtb1J payment ii only $94.lJ,
which lowen)'OUftotal_ptYmeattto,f>'1.1C),a.I reduca)'OUrac;tml ANNUAL
Pf.RCENTAGE RATE to 14.1.,., Jn no tall will o0upon be hoftorcd for more
t1tao -of lint pa ....... •
Cip ll aeso CGUpf?l1S now!
Tuck them away some safe place. Then, when you~re ready to apply for your Joan,
bring the approQrjate coupon to the nearest Wells Fargo Bank. . ·
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Oiange Com Pilot-••••• ,
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J. !k'ILV PILQT • • s fl.1611ar, J~lr 11, 1972
Car Hikes
DAILY PILOT
THE HELPFUL GUIDE
FOR TODAY'S
HOME MAKERS
MUTUAL FUNDS
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Ju~ 1972 s --Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange list ,
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oµ!.V PILOT J( ~
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Briefs
eBulk Sale
LOS ANGELES -Harry
Saltzman , ch airman ~of
Te<:hnlcolor Inc. '-s executive •
committee. has sold the bulk .
of his Technicolor stQCk for
f1 .6 million to en undisclosed
buyer, the company sajd,
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JJ DAILY PILOT Tllf!d11. July ll, 1972
•
For The Eyes Bus Service
•
Record Sets Bus Se~vice .
8ALTZ BERGERON
FVNERAL DOME
'C.-delMor -
Dllla lfeq . -
BD.L mfoADWAY
MORTUARY
Ill llnoclwly, Ceola Mell
LI UGI
McCQJIMk,\ LAGUNA
BEACB iAORTUARY
lltl I,qaa CUyoo 114.. -PACIFlt VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK C-iery Mtl'lllary
Cbopel
1111 Pldllc View Dr!Ye
_ New]IGl1 Be ... , Cllllonda
llf41GI! '
rEiat ,AMILY
COLONIAL FUNE1IAL DOME
"'1 .... A.._
Wat-111 llZS
11111'1111' !lfoRnJARY "'Malo Ill. ........ -·-
Developer
Facing Suit
I AlfTHOll1' ICHOOU
HAllOI CINTll
2111 Mtrw CMM ceet• MtM, C1...,_le
Pll. 17141 't7f.ZJIJ
tm 1 •• ,......,. ,._·
AlllllliM. c.I. .... ' ,., 1n41 776-llM
I do. Right to the door of the store.
"A window dresser is no durilmy
••• and I know the benefits of rid ing
the ExtraCar to work Instead of driv-
ing. Expense-wise, I save $130 per
montll on ·the average. That's like a
ral.-In pay with no deductions.
"But there's more. The ExtraCar
drops me off close to the store. No
hunting for a parking place. And
when I worl: late, no long walk to a
spobky parking lot or garage.
"The ExtraCar Is dependable, toe.
I carry a time table, so there's no
waiting and with my Monthly Pass I
ride as often as I please. You bet, the
ExtraCar has a 101 going for ill"
· · Southern California E£X•ec':!}
RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT o · o
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1111 liorl! HlfA1'ol.Am.1M A'fllM, C.li{.llll021 r •
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Population Meeting
Slated at UC Irvine
, he
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It's
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col
Ch
bei
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th11
the
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from
$14 w
why
allow
h
there
My
have
"sbap
Tiie
$2 ti
mani
sham
maid
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bome1
tally
even ...... . We
hu ba
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• TO-ay<t Means •
IQ_n Living
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By LAUlllE IASPER 111'1111 ot Ule otyle. lier column appears and their al>joclln .. _ to be In II a "new oolulllllill" -tlle ....,, °' ., --'"" eoch -1< in tile DAILY PILOT. alliance with -·· -· • ju11 wrilo abOut ciotheo. ~ ......... ! "~-"--" •·no more. She wu "' Loll Alllelel ftCeDUy to In addition to •-col .., ~ ,"~ •~ Y • view anotber dimension ot that Ule atyle ~ 'llO~ .,. · ·-UD1DI • •
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'!think fuhion hol !~Dlucb. ~iqer • •-J'here~iWuthe~"'c • "lllck·Eut, 10U'11 lllld more·...,,"""' is noted for· ttinl'lnill"olow1
meaning. Fa.shiaa," said Marian diriiiy, -~tf"n toolilled. ''Women .Jg....., and men cool al least on Ibo the b'ard-t<>get cele ... • ,..~ ·'
.,.., ••means livm,-.... !J , ' '.' ·:· ' ~)aere."_.{1\·~ aurfece )" ' • . • It took bu I "good ind a hall'' to
Rather Iha~ almply ot t111'1ieat llrig!ltllt' .c:o1Pn, dll'IJ, ilouncti and "&cit·~: _,,....,...,.. tillc;Nd, .... tile Dute and of w-.
~ ' . ~ ~-;~DOo;;1;:t~ ·=.~~:"~~= 'lbeY""lllhW',"lilouplained. "Sit tracect dirt th 0 LuCe from
umnis\ sald a 11 deindni' •:in ·~ i. are J,!q_ "llicblY ll#lt.butli!iJiea" While tbtN Jllllbl,bt • leellne ol anob-Honolulu to W . only "' bt.nfua.
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·~. .. , . •
Syndicated fashion
corumnist Marian
Christy feels
being en achiever
~as more status
than being on
the best dressed· lid.
r
• &
Clipping ·Fol·lows
~ ' .
Shampoo ·a.nd Set
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I just came
from the beauty 11hop where I spent f18 for
$14 worth of work. Will you please tell me
why American women (me included)
allow themselves to be browbeaten and
hornswoggled into tipping people who are
there to perform a service for the shop?
My shampoo and set C<l6I $3. I had 14
have a few hairs clipped -this is called
"shaping" -and it came to another $3.
'!be manicure was $.1. Total bill $14, plus
$2 tip for the operator, $1 for the
manicurist, 50 cents for the girl who
shampooed my head and 50 cents for the
maid who wiZlpped my ~ and
--, "" ~ \ ..
' , .. ·o ,
brought me a cup of cold coffee and an
old mpVie magazine.
The prk:e.s these days are ba~ ~nou~,·
but that tipping racket bums me 14 a cm-
der. Why don't you Wage a campaign to
put an end 14 tipping in beauty sbo'I"'?
TeU the women to express their re.sent~
menl by staying a"'1y !mn the Bhops for
a month. It's not hard 14 twist your own
hair 1t home if you have to -and when
they slart back to the sbop-oo tipping.
-MRS. AMERJCAN CHUMP
DEAR Ml\S.: Most bea•ly operat<n,
like -nltreut1, depead • llpl lo
Uve "· URfalr! Maybe, bat M"• &M
sy.-aod I Me • .. ,. ol ch .. II .
in tbo oear latare. ·
l Dow of few oeeapatiom wMn ..._.
for tile lack ol Ill cu· make oach a bi«
clllfere..t. JI YOU '1111111 lo llay llome
aod .twtst your hair lor a moDtll, be m)'
gaesl, bot my Leo• makes a coacerlt<I
eflort .IO do bit bell for'!'"• alllfJ lllow
my apinciatloa by leavlq a grllhllty. . . . . .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: There are.
homes for old folks, homes lor the mell'
Uliy Ill, bomes for d1!51itute children and
even homes ror unwanted anima\J. But
•·here do unwanted wives go?
We mUll llvo under the same roof with
husbands who don'I want 01. Our
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•\ .. ,
children have made lt plain that lhey ·
have no· il!lmtion of risldqg .their•,..,..
r(ages by having a motl!eND-law •ll'OUDd.
So rwe live "lritb men ·we;don\ k>ve or
mP«t whlle they do ·their own thing,
which ~means, drink to<)IDucl:t, have
women. Oil the side and · corne home·
whenever they feel like it
Being · lea than oainll; ..,. blood
pressure goes up and our tenpm blow.
We are labeled ~ •. nap .. and
bopelessiy neurolic. People feel 11JrtY f<r
our busbandr -not us. "
U your adTlce II "leave," then tell us
when! we -id "" we ... "'° old to worit and we mve no spicilll ·~i.. We
.....,, ~ attractive .or sexy 14
--manandftknowfl We
are juot ...itn.J, tired; bltt.r --
w:orn out and belt down. Any suggestion,
Alln! -A LOSER • . · · .
DEAll 1'RIBND: 11'1 -·IUt ,...
lrH'I ..... -oal el Ille bol ml' . ' are 1"!' 1!'1111 Y• "!"' 14 become .....
votved la ~ -ol y.-ewa
...,., I ~.-
A-~, ........ ..., .. ..... _. ... .....__t_
Ille ... _ _.. ........ Ille -.
Tile lllltlllllp,.. ...... do It -I'm -a11tbW tllll& JW 1199 el ,..nelf
to 1tm!lll. ls Ina ....... -lt'I ........... PllPle ... 1rtlkk
., ---Gel ............ iact .. ,... '
CONm>Blft'IAL TO WHAT ARE THE
F ACl1, llA' AM: The hid! are that
evtl')'lllin( thal appean -my byline ~me and II copyrighted by
Syndicote. But I oan't
pollce ii. newspapers Ill ..... the ""'"'"
try and niile Coln with people Who steal
from Ill)' eollllnn.
llH1 ... .,...... 111 •• , ......... ...
llol lo -· Plar II .,.i · -A19 ..... nl pNo .. --.. pd 1'tllllll
--Art Ille LlllllltT" -,_ ... .-ell tt .la I 71ten II cue .41 1te
DA1tTPltOI',. r 111' I 8 c9M II•
................ , ... ·••1111• ..
,vtlope •
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•
' • .-' • · • ""( beey on tlle ~ CJ)UI, -1e bere td an In~. B Ille cltdn'I glve <ap •.
' genenlly lttlll ~more frle~. MW with the 11No'' anawel-aDd finally" wu
,
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Miu Christy must define
'fashion' on l:!oth
coasts end around globe.
Qlr:lsty Slid. ~ • granted th'& i.&view. · "' ,J. ,. 11
She WU DOI -"' belni called such CAUSES CjJill9fllTY . • • •
endeari111 teniia as "honey," "darling" She said abe really -ks at ~u._ ...
or ·".sweetbtart." At first, she wondettd terviews, continually uk1na fer ii. ffllJI·
If II wun1 phony but an.r a lew days If she is refused r~. "Maybo tliey .
she uld, ~I .don't mind .it an~" · mett~ me out ~ ~ity."' lhe said..
Sbe · wu llere 14 aee -d!Herences thinking that !hot mlglil jull want to ...
u ...U as to lalt 14 ceiebritiel and what thu stubbor1i person ii lite.
faabion ·-le. She's younger !hon one might think bul
u1 lib to get with the tempo and get on said , ''Don~l ask bow old I am." And shefa.
the.wavelength of people ••. get the attractive, slim and 1lyles her long blact
rflythm of the world. This is what I hair in a simple IDp. ,
nally Uh 14 do, get the rhythm of the Occ•f€"811Y lhe punctuates h er
world." -<A sentences· Wlth a gesture of her ringed:
Last •~er.' ll10 was In Athens but hands .
her work aloo'.ha• tal<en her 14 Pam, "I ,do everytl>lng °" the point ct
&me and Spain. Many of the people she challenge," alle said. "Everything I do I
lalks to are in N1w York or Washington. like to do the way it would not be done: I
VBllllAL TOUCH like to blaze trails and do things other
I all people ---,._'I try." · . " re y want to touch au bases," she WVWWI
aal<L And this can be clone best with the She wu with Women's Wear Dally for
-.to..ne verbal touch. sil years bu,t Aid she left there when
'"'n!ere are no people \\'ho are there no longer was 1 challenge. Without
~ntaUve. '1 this, she said, "lire becomes rather
To get the cross-section she wants she blah."
bu talk.ed to such -le U a designer of She's been with the Globe for MVtll
tunny plastic jewelry, block designers, years but •tarted only u fashion edlto<.
Mn. Clatre Boothe Luce, Mrs. Nbcon, Her editor, bowover, has a line, "Whal
Mrs. Reagan and even 1tudents wrapped wouid you like to do kid? I run a 1oOle
up 1n the "jeans syndrome." ship."
Although Ille feell women stlll are in-COMPETES NATIONALLY
ler<sted in clothes u a bacqround, she One day llhe annered by aylnc that
laid other dimensionll ol lodoy's life ..,. llhe would like a ~l!!ll <Qlumn. Ho
Ollenhaclowing and overpowering the aaid he'd mab a pilone call and,.. what
lradlllonol lnl«eal in fashion. could be done but warned her not 14 ex·
0 1 think the new trend ta to be an pect too much.
acblever, 14 be a doer. I think 14 be an Within two days, ahe wos oyndicated
..achiever has much more status than and within a year and 1 half, lhe .wn
belnc on the beat-dressed list." writing lor !Oil pepers, the aame number
She finds that .. _le juat Interested · which receive ber column Wday,
In clotllel are rather dull." You aee an She coll!iden it a miracle that she haa
exlerlcr of tbeae -le but no Interior, been able to """pet• nationally by com.
ohe Aid, and It is tbe "gut level" ol peo-muting from -· which II DOI ... any
pie wblch II more lnt....tlng. noted in the trmdy falhion wwid, to New
The women's lib movement, she saJd, York and other dtles.
"rather .U\tered.lnditional 'fashion'." But a recent survey of newspaper1
showed her to have 1 heavy leld over
similar columnllU:.
ANYTHING GOES
The midi with ita ugly hemline came
"at the Ume when liberation WU OD
everybody'• mind," lhe exp Jaine d.
Womm nijected dlctuml that they had to
-H and In c1o1nc oo ~ the ---otfuliian,
"Now ........ -..........
<Jirllty Mld. Todly'a u-y II "lll)'llllnf
-• • .do """° own thing."
"To do what . I'm do1rlc requiret
11orif1ct," lilo Mid. a. _, IUen "
vacation In 11" ,_., ml -llloa lho
WU called -lo fll a ...,., Wfllo In
Southern Cllllanda. ..... -llo ... 1mJ wwt:llC It do atU' 4( I 2' Jil. .. ~ ,.. .. 11-.·• ....
lU,c Al'll)IRSON, Editor ,•
· ,...,. ...., "" lnl r .... U
Youth. allO played a part in this w,... "'lb< "jouna equate faahlon with
• mateiiallsm." 11-y beJJeve "value II In ... Pl!l'.IClft.,. ..
"Only 10U ""II decide II 1111. pdoo 11 lot dear."
And .... -. •y.., ........ .....,,
.,.. lallllNI, "' --. <• e?ahu to mve had-) bul I tell you, -11
Vf!tY, Wf1 IWlll."
t
" A. --·~ lul>ion bu nolved -l1lla and <hlaly belloveo ....
•
. On ·Bl .ackwell' s ,Blacklist
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BY MAlllAll ClllUJTY
Ah, Blackwell, UM the mouth IOlnti
more.
Keep the axe chopping t~ Biactwell.
We love )'OU, Blackwell. You.,. a rabel
like UJ.
Yeah, down tbe dtctatm, Blactwell.
Lit Angeles-hued laobton desilner Mr.
Blackwell, as famous tor nil nonawp acid
toogue u hil _, llollywood-lnllplnd
clothes, recently went on an am.ique ex-
pediUon In New Yort'1 Gmnwich
VUJoce. .
"' rapid -• qua1et "' hippies wllo had gleelully waldled him wrbllly
debllltaie ctlebrltlea and -lalhlons m national TV lalt ab>wa made H clear
be ataoda among the .... -Tho above at.temonts -. punctuateil
with aeemlngly -1 m 11t1 ,
-and bad: pats.
Until lhll Impromptu confrontation,
Blackwell had bem lo!'inl with the.Idea of
ditcilin( hil -.. lloctive needle known as the Wont·Droaed Llsl
. Bu~ oh, dear, are the preuures crul
for airing what Blactw.U oonatrues 14 be the nated truth. The man i.. 1uccumbed
14 'tbe presaures of S111aahing ·.....ueci
!doll .
WORST DllESllED
Blactwtll and Johnny Canon have a
gentlemen'• agreement that on January
2, lt'IJ. Blackwell will •-on the "Tonight Show" and tbrult two excluUW
aworda In a lot ol bacb: 'l11e Wor'at-
ll!'t91ed Lisi and the Wont·Deaigner
Llsl The latter dynamlt. is a new blast •
'
1Knl!ing isn't b Id if it re Ip I
1 om e th i n 1 poelUve. I've decided
not to d it ch my Diii becaUM . It
belpo the -... !hot tbe ~ bualnas ll-big lraud.
Blackwoll'1 1111 Wonl-Dr...i Uo? lo
portlally """plettd and be'• _,,._ It
-lmpreaaiona. . ·-
Cloris 1-hrn11m who recently won ae
Oscar Award 1.r ·"The Last Pictura
Show": "She'• a walklng atrocity. A total
mlas from loplmot to tights. I bale her
v'"'81 outcrt.. for love. She cir.,... hatefully, II
Liz.a M.lnnelli: · "She wears Hallton'e
rags. Sbe'1 the -.! projection of a atar
I've ever teen. I admir abe11 magic on
tile. acreen. Nol becauae 11'1 Judy up
there -but because she generates her
own electrlclly. But Ll2a heneU is deca-
dent, gross, ugly/'
Eibcabeth Taylor Burton: "God, Illa!
_,, II ti 'and oont-lo aalurate
eyery luhion mtatake In the -id. Her
diamond " enot. Somebody should i.n
her that.with a roct that lbce,,lhen'a no
need !or frizzy wip and lluhy """'"· Too had Lis wur1 clothes two ma. too
.smaH." '
. ·DiSCOVNT DUD8.
Jane fonda:" "Siie loots a 11 Ille
emerged from the ·salvation Anny dis.
count. te111er. But, then, "'" -a
nothing ewil -Kenneth did her holr and she -. original Coco <Jianel
suits." .
It'• time to get "' the ,.,.... ol had dreainll, AYI Blackwell, who II IUdy to
knock clown c1eai1J1 colleagues,
.\t the moment'be's nalllng YVM Saini
Laureat 14 his Wont-Designer !Jal:
"That man ii makt~ slr!et walten out
of otbel wbl senslble wmen. He h19
taken the worst ot the «i. and made It
---. He turns women lnw llupld
_caricliu:tw " -
Hollywood in!J>ires
the 'sexy clothes
of Mr. Bleekwell
like this bias-cut .. evening gown. ,
"K..,. bas created ciUlllSJ' car!Jqe
thet 11 libeled chi<. I'm aick of delignen who dllguise femtnlnlly and deatray ,... men. /
"Betaey JicttalM ftln! lflUlll ' I« cats who pm to walk in alleyS. Slit
" hu ·caused fem! inlly to deotruct with · '
tindergamn clot """' with clop and
apple.jlrlnted lmit-atoctings." --
Glcqlo di S.pt' Ancelo hll a1ao
desro,od womanliness, accordlJW lo'
Blackwell. ·
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Simple Chi"cken Joke
.
Only Ruffles Feathers
By. ERMA BOMB ECK ethnic humor 1.m'I. ••. "
Telling my kids a joke is "It 11 not 1 Polilh chicken,"
like' ticldill!r: ~ fqt>da wllh ~aid biJ lither patiently.
an lndim re.aiet •. --~ :;ivem, ~ .. In ')'l\b. il's · . :.~ t6e law . to let a They alt Uiue h~e a ~ Ciilckan nin Ioooe .... .,
tz.qedy will\ ·~.~ "For . t ..... .,
AT
WIT'S
END
demand, "Whats 00 , fUJllll' "'l'llli OU -· about that!" • •19 · ~ 1'ln the eecolid p1a«:,' the ,; ..
To me, it is rather frighten-chicken would never ~et for the ~ke of the joke. No,r.'~~ ·
ing to imagine that if a poll across the road. StaUstics why would he cross the roa4?"
were taken tomorrow ~ ~ there were m 0 re Our son tttuued b l 1 our young people, t b e i r hig!l,!"ay-deatllo last year tllan. shoulders.
favorite flumorisll would be • · · "TO GET TO THE OTHER
Dan J\ather and Pauline "Will you atop being so SIDE," said his father, · 1l1p-
FTederick. seriOUJ about a lOU!Y ping him on the l>ack. •
Illy hu$band says I am 1n chlcken?" shouted his f1lher. "Are you nylng the! ~·
alarmist. He sa~ young peer "You'd be serious, too,'' he chicken is aiding and abetting
pie do too laugh. They are just said, "if you were a poultry the enemy by de!ectlnr lo
a liWe more aeriom· and In-grower. Do you know chickens another power?" ~
volved in current affairs. are cheaper than lunch meat? Hia father slumped .in a
, To prove a point, be collared It hardly pays to grow !hem q,.Jr and burled bi& held In
one of our sons the other night . • . ·~ bis hands. . 7
·and snickered1"Hey, eon, why "look," said his father, "You don't baVe~ ~ get 80
does ,.a ~cken cross the "The chicken is n o t b in g JJptigbt about e dlicken you
road?" special .••. It wu·ralsed to be don't eVM know, Dad. Just
"Who wants lo know?'' uk· cl\'"P· di8Maed and dumb. come on and tell me the end of
ed my son, hls eyes narrowing enough to a'Oll tbe road ~ ,~~ke. '' . .t:-suspiciou.sly. 'unlls isn't a Y~ ... .-~
question on the last cens115, _is b T · '! --:;:~~ 001·" wd my Bar ecue ips
. Crown s Polishe d for W~ek~nd ' . Coro nat ion
! Mrs. lli>berf Alexander polishes one crown which will go to a win·
J1er <>f the · Junior 'King and Queen Contest sponsored by the San
Clemente Junior Woman '• Club while Mrs. Charles Orr tries the
•' .\
other on her daughter, Mary Jane. They will reign over the Fiesta
La Christianita during pie weekend of July 14-16.
Your Horoscope
"Wbat kind of a chlcken is
it?" he continued.
"That's oot important... _F.1tst on L·1st. "l\alph ·-.Nader t bin ks
chickens are important. He
did an inve:stigtion that proved
"
"This has nothing to do with
Ralph Nader. It's a joke."
"Is this a Polish chicken?"
be asked, ''becau.1e if it i.!I,
'
Onmge Coast restdenll will
be enjoying a variety of ac-
tivities dlring the next few
days in settings ranging from
the kikben to a cruise.
Meat Info .
Robert Guggenheim, H.
Wallace Mettyman and Henry
T. Seger1 t rom , vice
president!; Mrs. Robert J.
Mar!hall, secretary, and
David S. Robertson, treasurer.
New board members are Jack
GleM, Denis: E. SUllivan and
David Steinmetz. ·
Sagittarius: Creative
Endeavors Successful
San Diego Gas and Electric
Company, In coopention wilh
the San Diego Meat Packers
.Association, will present a
homedlaking show For the
Outdoor Olef at 10 a.m.
Wednesday, July 12, .In llie
SDG&E auditorium, S a n
Clemente.
A meat~t.ting demonstr.
tion and film u well as hints
and recipe:i for cooking the
variou.I cuts will be presented.
New Ari of Orange County
will be on view 1t the muaeum
from noon to 4 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday through July
)6.
SC Juniors
l\lembers of the South Coast
Junior Woman's Club will
participate In a storybook boor
of educational a n d mo
tertaining JiJms for chlldnn in
Colonia Juarez through August
29.
.....
New Direction :
WEDNESDAY
JULY 12
By SYDNEY OMARR
It often is difficult to tell a
Taurus how to do anything.
Natives of this zodiacal sign
want their OY.'n way -they
feel that the best wa y is their
way . Many Limes, they are
right. Other times, Taurus can
be wrong but is determined
enough to continue along that
erroneous path. 'I'aurus can be
obstinate, irritating and con-
troversiaJ. But these natives
also have mclgnetic appeal,
·; . can create something where ,Ql.,.•;:ojjJ.;·"' ;.. ~there was nothing, can fight
uP'1 T,,...,,.,. ... for a cause and cau be ex·
~ 0 tremely loyal and talented. "l"W ~EN -Attorney Some famous persons born un-
Cynthia Ed.gar (left) der Taurus include Barbra
may soon JOin Barbara Streisand Bert Bacharach Her~g (a~ve) who is Yogi Be~, Joseph Cotten and
special assistant to act· Lainle Kazan.
Ing FBI director J. Pa-
trick Gray Ill as first
women to become ·spe-
cial agents. Recent rul-
ings opened the posi·
tions to ·qualified wom-
en.
AIUES (l\larcti 21-April 19):
Personal magnetism soars.
Relationships are intensified .
Change, travel. variety are
featured . Sudden a c ti on s
dominate. Give logk equal
time with impulse. Analyze af-
fair of heart. Sagittarius plays
key role.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20 ):
Strive to understand family
member. Feeling o f an·
tagonism is but tempoi:ary .
Know it and act like you know
it. Don't harbor grud~e. Check
details. Go after facts ; discard
rumors. Desire for greater
freedom will be fulfilled.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ):
Take special care in traffic
and around ele ctricity.
Neighbors, relatives a re
argumentative. M a i n t a i n
balance and sense of humor.
Some ideas, theories need ad-
' ditional testing. Don 't be in too
much of a h!JfTY.
CANCER (June 21-July 221:
You get green light in finan-
cial area. There is activity and
there are profits. Don't pro-
crast-inate. Buy and se ll -get
money's worth. Count change.
Check budget. Taurus, Libra
perSons will cooperate.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221:
Personality now is dynamic.
You are aggressive. You
overcome obstacles. One who
thought little of you does an
about face. Impress w i t h
s how m anship, originality
Take lead. Your ideas reach
wider audience.
VIllGO (Aug. 23-Sept.22):
Emotional "explosion " due
unless you are aware, mature
and somewhat shrewd. There
is pressure. But realize those
in authority will side with you.
Capricorn f i g u r e s prom·
They ' re Bugged ·About
FBI ' s -A l ~male · Edict
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white ~lossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women 's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
DENVER (UPI) Mrs '.' begin taking applications from
Sandra Nemser has changed women for special agents'
her mind. She doesn't want to jobs.
be an FBr agent after all. Mrs. Ncmser said ·she was f"'~ The 29-year-old Denver at· glad the regulation had been
• ",tprney was on~ of two \vomen changed, and she even thought
·Who filed a court challenge of reapplying for an agent's
;t!arlier tltis year to the male· job.
'only policy for FBI agenls ' "But then I got to thinkjng
"'•abHshed by the late J. about all the things I'm Jn-
Edgar Hoover. voJved with here in Denver,"
' Acting FBI Director L. she said. f Patrick Gray III announced "My husband and l also like
Fridaf he was changing the Jiving here very much. We
·policy and said the FBJ would aren't certain we'd like to
' '
' .. iN"ING IRIDGl • LISSONS
l1 MOM. &..WIO. -71» l".M.
.COffA •Ml=U., ICll,ATION ILOG. • ,,..,. __ ~,.. .. fl'tfl'!
"'"'" .. ' ...... CNM; l•1ll'llC1lf ,. "-' -,,.
THE BEST
: Rtede,..iiJp po J 11 prove ~uta" ff ont o! the krJd'I most popu_!ar comic
-llL Rood ft U1J¥ in the
11Alt.T PILOT. , - -
"
l
FINE STATIONERY
hml...A1111Hl
HALF PRICE '
SALE
111) l C•AU 111,NWAl 111..flll
CllllA..ULl.U...cMWtlll.11 1.t.allll
move to Butte, Mont., or stime
of the other towns where "new
agents are usually assigned."
Mrs . Nemser said as a
lawyer she was cOmffiitted
now to poverty, criminal. and
sex discrimination law.
"In this kind of work, I can
really have an effect in
eliminating such discrimina·
tion," she said. "And I'm not
certain that as an FBI agent
be used. "
For engagement announcements it ls
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and· white glossy pictur.e, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met. only a story will
be used. ·
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
1·~ be able to accomplish thel~iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; same kind of things."
•
DIAMOND
REMOUNTING ... ..,._,.,,. wfft-lttfr '-l'ltf"· ......
tflf • · · W. Mvt .. llllllltlllMI c«ltctlH .. ,,.,,... '°" .. """' .. '"'4111111111 ..... tllft ....
21 Yt!lf Exptrltnc•
ADAMS .. noo•~UHT
HUNTIN•TON llACH H1.n12--~
Complete Selectloa
B ALDWIN
PIANOS and ORGANS-'-
H_. llie v.,ice of loldwi11 , • • --1""111==:'.1
o~d yo1111 11-Ill• dllf....act..
.,.~
"'HOME Of f"'I tALOW/N MUSIC LAI"
I Oal1 Authorbtd BllldYia Deel• ill Orup CoatJ
WOODWORTH
'I.I.WO AMO OllG.t.N SAL.II
SU HOUK.MAii, SANTA &II& • 547.1111
•
inently. Money sharing is up
for argument.
LIBRA !Sepl. 23-0ct. 221:
Frien~s display aggressive
qualities. Some relationships
are put to test. You do have
life ot your own to live. Be
considerate. not weak. Be in-
terested, not foolish. Don't
carry aoother's burden.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21 ):
Work, achievement, promotion
- these are highlighted. Take
initiative. Bring forth origina1
concepts. Make room for
yOurself at top. Exude con-
fidence. You are due to be
rewarded for efforts. Act like
you know it.
SAGITTAIUUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): What bad been
delayed, postponed, is reac·
tivated. Open lines or com·
munication. Write and ad-
vertise. Publicize e f for t s.
Aquariao is much in picture.
Creative endeavors will suc-
ceed.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Stress versatility, humor.
What was a deep, dark secret
is revealed. Results can be
fi.Jnny. Know It and laugh at
your own foibles . Money will
flow. Obstacles art removed.
Agree to home, property Im·
provements.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb.
18): Be sure .you are correctly
qooted. Some now h a v e
tendency to make trouble for
no good reason. Guard image;
.stress better public relations.
Avoid foolish disputes in-
volving mate, partner. Take
special care in legal area.
PISCES (Feb. 19-l\larch 20):
All Aboa rd
Mesa-Harbor members will
enjoy .a sctrllc cruise of the
harl>or Island> aboard lhe
Pavilion Queen at 7 p.m.
Thursday, July 13 . .An evening
of cocktiail1, hor d'.oeuvres and danctnc is planned.
Secretaries
The Bahia atapter of the
National Secretaries Associa-
.. tion will meet at ~ p.m. Thurs·
day. July 13, in the Irvine
Coast Counlry Club.
Mrs. R08e Marie McCarthy,
certified. graphoanalyst, will
present a lecture a n d
demonstpition in answer to
the question, How can the
study of .a person 's
handwriting e n a b I e the
gniphoanalyst lo understand
why the writer thinks, feels,
acts and reacts as he does?
Art Mu seum
T. Phillipa l\lorgan beads lhe
new slate OCOff1cers for-the
Newport Harbor Art Museum.
Others are "Ben. C. Deane,
Drive' Begins
California Elementary
School PTA will continue its
monlhly paper drive through
the IUllUll« months. Collec-
tion dates art Wednesdays,
Aurust 2 and September 6,
from 7 lo IO a.m.
Newapapers should be tied
Into bundles or aacked in
brown paper bags. Clean glass
and aJuminwn are collected
alao.
AF Mom s
Mrs. William Francis will
discuss the Orange County
Eye Banlc when members ot
Flight 19, United States Air
Force Mothers convene at 7:30
p.in. Thursday, July 13.
The group will gather in the
Hyde Park Mobile Estates
Recreation Hall, Santa Ana.
ABWA
Miss Ricky Harris, as&stant
professor of dance on Chap-
. man O,Ilege's World Campus
Afloat, will share her ei-
periences on the ship with
members of the Newport
Beach Charter Chapter of the
American Business Women's
Association during a dinner
meeting Thursday, July 13.
The 7 p.m. gathering will
take Jftace in Richard 's Coffee
Shop, Newport Beach. Elec-
tion of officers and presen-
tation of awards also are on
lhe agenda.
Double Duty
Body suits with matching or
contrasting skirts add up to
the neatest and n e w e s t
doubleduty fashiODI Off with
the skirt and you're ready for
tennis. On with the skirt and
you're ready for shopping or
lunch. '
A new batch of Bel-
crest body 21uits with such
skirts is designed by Glama of
Hong Kong. Some are trimm;c
w I t h appltques of ·
clubs or tennis racquets ot.
the nautical set, anchort
Obtain valid hint from ---========-=:-------..----Capricorn ~ge. Money I
and basic services are in pic-
ture. Aries individual could
play key role. Review employ-
ment picture. Take -nothing for
granted. Accept nfec! for
change of procedure.
To find ou'I who'• lllCk't for yeu Ill ITIOl\e't •nd lovt, oro.r S"tdMy Oinflrt'I
booklet, "Seer•! Hints fol' M!' '"' Womtn." Sftid blrthcltt• •rid 1 ""'' to Om•rr Aslrolot't S«r1tl, tM OAlL Y PILOT, Box :n.o, Gr•nf Cenlr•I II•
flllfl, NIW York. N.Y, !0017,
THE RED
BALLOON
LTD.
~ .
the finest clothet
tor children
from the best American A Eu~.
deslsners -i'•·1·
-""-'P'l' • '.\' ~
111. ,.. .. , d111111t11r.11, -•t •1'11.t,..· ... _ •• llttt ...... "l.41
l!untln(lo1 Hlrboor
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TOll'D 4 C011111rJ
Orlllp
(111) 1111111
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M!~L CCM~!NICN
Hcluily F8ITlll ol Ohio
HDRSEH!DISHFLAVOR
S!UCE* ---... ... •1n,,,.,,.._
• ,,,,,,. ,,.,. .... mild yet ......... -""°'., .... ••ho 'T11t 1111Mfllrlll ll .....
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MUT"T,
I~
MAKE AAEWi!?-.
FIGMENTS
KJT, l<EVW •• -
I \Wff \OU
6UY610 60 sruram:N UP
THAT ROOI\ OF
\0-RS !
..-L---·-·-
"NANCY
ACROSS
1 Sweet PttSca S Express
rldlculr-
10 EnclJUfillJt
14 Dn,ig sourc@
<45 lowtt In statiis
;.1 Headland
119 Do ii garden-, Ing chore
IT!
HE RUNS
A DOG-
00EDIENCE
SCHOOL.
1S -'"' """' ·~~ i6 Fluld rock
1:7 Ctylon native
19 StnOll!ded by
20 Certain tabl~ ware Items: 2 ....
SO Girl's name
51 C:,oup of tents
53 Person of
small stature 55 Knot lace·
56 Find by se:rch!ng
•
21 N;mw ngtt ,,. ..
22 Beer cm-
talnm: Abbr.
23 S@nator from
llllnols
'2S Boss In China
26 Soakll: In a
llquld
30 Descry
31 A. --: With
• Ice cream: 2 ....
14 Be ol nlut
36 Cl!urcil
olflc"
38Ja11: Slq
)'l British Columbia
'""'"' ¥ta: 2 Minis 42 Fonner out-'
cast class In
J-
•3 01'+''"9 bl~
44 fro11 this -·
. '
61 C#rat Lakes
""' 62 Wiped cut
M Culture
mi!d'illlll 65 Hit hard
66 Kind of agent
67 Part of the .,.
68 Pointers m a
clock
69 TV await
oon
l Continue bl exlslence ·
2 "I cannot tell '
--";2
""'' 3-LIU:
4 Entr!ats
S Writing
111blels
L Naugltt
1 HiW190Vtt
"'"' 8 lttrate
9 Side of a
• domino
10 Soutllem
sta~:
Informal
llSlM ofa
woody plant:
'""'' 12 llektdnrss
13 Small boys
l8 Cognlnnt: Slang: Vw.
24 Pass a rope
.~ .... 25 Wet land
26 Act1111Ulated . .,., ,, .... _
28 A C'"tral Amrrlcan
2' Uroe to chasr
Jl Hawaiian
9•!Md 32 Social
affair
33Cmcluded
3SY-Tttritory -· IJ7 lrwoltntary
•lslon
40 Closed 11~1 .. ,,.,
41 Actor -Ayre
46 ins«ts-
48 Dl'l'ldes
51 Kind of Illy
S2 Family 11en1t
· :53 .Gl'llUine
54 Make e;vne
appeal
SS Technical:
Abbr-' fa ~~IOI
59 Maple Lear~ "'c •••• ,. 60 lhlrlpooJ
63 Drfam;iitcry ·-
Nearly Everyone
' Listens to Landers-
"
• •I
, __
...
WHU"T'S, ti:W.1.M.C. Mei:N?
COMEON-
yoU'U. MAKE
rTI JUST SAY,
'I.WILLI
l WILL!
IWILL!
PEANUTS
•I • t. -~
, -ii
JUDGE PARKER
'
\
MISS PEACH
• ' I
I •
"f 11 'l\IR E
BRAI~
$11~
,..\~flUCA
111HT HIRI
PERKINS
.,
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ly
lllSIOlllljl -~ PAPP. I PRl!RR,,,
Sj(l'ltll UFI •IZI!.
By Al Smffh
I WILL!
I WILL!
I WILLI
ly Dale Hale
by Emi• lushmmer
-.
•
-~·.r; tr J.(l)i.IM
CONr:O/UlB CONCORZlll
~
... ---.. . ..
•• , .. •• •• . ... .. ... ... ...
'
I •
...
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G~SOUNE AWY
•
SALLY BANANAS
Wf),11 ®~/'fl(jf
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
•
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!I !I •
ANIMAL CRACKERS
j)
.,,~
By Charles M. Schub
By Harold Le Doux
l BEnER GET MOVING! l'V1' GOT
TO PLANT THOSE ARTICLES IN TllE
GOOP JUDGE'S CAR!f---~
By Mel
'· ..
By John Miles
CONCORDE
•• .. . .. . .. .
, J .•
1
I
•
Tutldty, Jllir 11, 19Ji IWl.Y PILOT Jii
• ly Did Maaru · ·
I~. Mr. Willlet ... l think
$Uqar6 kinda' tock-to UoUI
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd JohMOn
H~Tlll'Y m.:)
By R09er Bollen
.rr 1S11rr £olSll Nl£illi'lll~ A
ld1R1-G111!!i S TO . '
GO'!?> .. ~" Fll.M RISTlllAI--
THE GIRLS
"Oar dltt1 do1't .alhw us a dttlert ud we were ft1tC:1erb1i
if you'd mlocl.brlaglllg., ea~ 1 elloeollte .-
by mlltake ?"
DENNIS TftE MENACE
J
~y
I
·1
•
JI DAILY PILOT ' " Tmd•· July 11, 19n ... ,
.
Seymour: He Didn't Give Op
•
* J~hnson:. Loses 12.9 Clocking
• • '72 Olympian
Was Mediocre
At HB High
By ROOliR CARLSON'
Of fllt Dflllr ....... , ...
Persevennce. hard work and a
gamble paid olf for Huntinfton Beach's
Jim Seymour and u thei mJJlht do. It in
the movlee, he'• off for Munich anct tho 20llJ Olympic Game1 lboo11y after qual~
fyl"i In Ille 41JO.meler hurdles aJ Eugene, Ore.. '
Seymour, who •kipped the atlcu lot
Hunt!nctan Beacb High and Golden w .. t
College before • competln( at t he
UnlVelllly of WUIJinilon, 1tunned b11
advenarta In the Olympic lriali with a
third place f1nilh In 41.3, his llfeUme
belt•
Ii> a -his btll ever effort In the 120
hiCllhurdl• wu IU, hardly a mark to
be COOlldered 81 a future repre.entaUve
of tM United Statee In the Gamea.
"I """' euctly bleteed wllh natural ablltly and I didn't mature phy1lcally u
flllt ·as IOIDe ln high achoo!/' 1 a y s
Se)'IDOW'.
"A Joi of JIOOPle get clllcouraaed In high
' school. When guys· who are more
pnysically malure heat them, they give
up."·
Seymour cheeked In at 1!0 pound! and
stood 5-11 In bJib tchool. Now, at 22, he's
11-1 and llO -ds.
The gamble he look wu taking a leave
of ablence from his CPA job. in Orange
County six xnoothl qo ao 11 to con--
c~te on quallly1na for the Olympics. "l knew It would take a lol of work to
mne Jt •• We've aone·lnto debt a llltle, but
It tumt out It wu all wort1I .It. ll'a IOlllltlllnf you work a lq'tlme for end
youjual can't afford not to try. ·~way )'Oii know for llll'e whether
ycu had wbal It takea," addl leymour.
Ileoptte the rfctd lralnln& -Ions and time opent, lleymour COlll!dered hlmsell
sixih In the fteld of 21 candidates for lhe
tlrio qualllylnJ bertha. . ':0-ot. tlloM I ficurod ahead of me
dl6i maka the flnala and another only
nlllla llna ona. lo I fi1ured I only b8d to
heal Giii IU)' (Penn'• NCAA champion
Bruce Oolllnl) and he finished fourth.
''Ha wu.an my lnllda In lane lbree and
I dldn' ... b!m uoUI I hit lhe 1tral1bl an4 the Jul tbree llurdlaa. ''I wu pretty aure I .. u third when I
....... the f1nilh line but I uked aom•
ODii !1111 to mau aure.
'',Abollt 10 yards away from the flnllh I
lbaifbl, 'I've made It, all that l"ork bu
peiil otl.,' ,, •YI Seymour.
The former Hunlln(lon Beach fla1b
had toured the event Jn 19.7 a year prior
in an AAU meet at the same track ao he
wa .. ,aware of any problenu that the
1urface mlaht preaenl. ~ on the a1enc1a for Seymour Is
m<fi! traininf with the Olympic tqued Jn
Bfll!ISwlck, Me. • Siymour te&vea Huntington Beach lo IO
dan and la elated !or Dino doYI In Maine,
th<!! on to Ollo, Norway for a tbr ... week
staii and an lnternallonal meet prior to M~cb Aua. It. Ai for lmprovlnf bis time co111lderably
an4=be!Df 1 prime candidate for a medal
at 9lunlcb, Seymour feels be bu a good
1hql at It JI· he can Improve Ills effort& In
tl1<(111lddle of lhe event.
"1')1 be workin& on 1ettlng a !uter
J>l'9 In the middle of the race. That 's my
prG:blem, I have too much le.ft at the end
of \he race. 'I came down the atr1J1ht and almost
btO.. It at Eugene by choppln1 the ninth
huldle. I 1ot too close to the hurdle. I
sb6uld have been a little tired at that
poiht and It would h a v t come
naturally."
With nine yean of work and dreams
be~ind him, Jim Seymour is poised and
r~y for the final push towards Munich.
JIM SEYMOUR PATTI JOHNSON
.Berry Destroys
Yanks With Bat
One week ago Ken Berry was suffering
from a pain In the neck.
Monday night he was a pain in the neck
to the New York Yankees.
Berry's discomfort, the result of an old
football Injury, WOI eased by therapy last
Frldly, at which time be was mired in
an o.for.11 slump.
Bui Berry'• back Is all right now and
IO ii h1I bat. He stroked a double and two
•ln&lll 11 the California Angels heat the
Yanlreu t-3 behind the stubborn elsbl·hit
pltchin1 of Clyde Wright
Since retuming·to the lineup, Berry has
bit safely nine times in 20 tries, driven in
1lx runt and raised hll average to .307,
pulJtna b!m among the top five in the
American Leaaue.
Thi veteran centerfielder, who batted
only .1111 lul year, thinks he mlght stay
above the .aoo plateau this year for the
fl:. t time In his career.
"I've felt all aJoni this ......, that I
can do It, 11 he said. 111 Just need to •1-Y
reuonably healthy and refuse to swing
at bad pllobea and I've (QI a good 1hol.."
Wrlibl -bis ninth 1ame In 13
KEN llRRY
decialonl and ,...1ved good aupport. ylelded all 13 Ana el hltJ .Jn · a six·lnnlng
In addltloa IO Berry's three hits, Ken 1tlnl.
McMullen hit bll llllh hol!ler ond singled The two clubs meet again tonight wllh
. while Art }\usnyer and Leo Cardenas Rudy May, 2.fi, throwing for California
both singled twice and Sandy Alomar ad· against New York's Fritz Peterson, 7-10.
ded a run-scoring doubl e. Peterson holds a 12-4 lifetime advantage
The loser was Mike Kekich, 8-7, who against the Angels while May is 3-9
a@Jnst New York.
--Wright's performance came 24 hours LITTLER PLAYS .18 alter Nolan Ryan's JS.strikeout one-hiller
against Boston.
IN COMEBACK TRY
LA JOLLA (AP) -Gene Littler 18ld
Monday alter playing bll first 18 holes of
10Jf alnce a bout with cancer that he
plw to compete in two 18-bolo
tournaments this month.
The fonner U.S. Open champion said
he will ' play next Monday at Amana,
Iowa, and the following Monday in a one-
day event at Lancaster, Pa.
"I can't go back to the tOur yet," Lit·
tier said, referring to the pro circuit,
"11-ly arm isn't strong enough. I played
my first 18 holes in four months yester·
day at La Jolla County Club and .shot a
79.
"I might shoot 80 In those Eastern
events, but I'JI have some fun."
Littler, 41, underwent surgery earlier
th is year for cancer of the lymph glands.
"I W<lrked just as hard as Nolan with
th e Same result -we both won," Wright
said .
''That was one of the toughest games
mentally I've had in the majors. 1 wasn't
getting strikes ()n the close pitches and
that makes you concentrate a heck ()f a
lot more."
New York scored an unearned run in
the seccnd on an Alomar throwing error,
Felipe Alou1s single and two groundouts.
catifomia tied it in the same Inning ()n
McMullen's fifth homer and took the lead
for good in the fourth on. a walk..and
singles by Cardenas and Kusnyer.
The Angels added two more In lhe
sixth when Oardenas and Ku?Sner lined
lnto a double play, Alomar doubled for a
run and Berry singled for another.
Palmer Chats About '72
· The only earned run Wrlsbt pennllted
came in the seventh when Rem Swoboda
cracked ,a pinch-hit homer, his firat of
the year. New Yock got lts final run in
the ninth ()n a Cardenas error, Wright's
wild pitch and Bobby Murcer's single.
Htw Ytrtl t'I ClllfeNlll (4J'
lllrllr'M lllrllrtl
Cl•f'll•, Jlt s I 0 0 AIOMer, n • l I 1
• • •
And HisFailureto Win
' lllUffiF~. Scotland (AP) -.. ,
kelp on trying to make something hap-
pen -but tt just doetn'I."
Arnold Palmer. perhaps the most
popular player golf has ever known and
the man generally acknowledged to be
the driving force behind the enormous
growth of the game, was talking about
hia' future to win this season.
.
peded to his side to witness anothtr
miracle. .
Jnstead they viewed consecutive three-
putl bogeys thet killed it all. ·
"Each time," be re<:alled. "I was
trying to make birdie and ran the fi rst
putt too far beyond the hole."
At Greensboro, be held a two.stroke
lea~ going to the par three 16th hole In
the final day.
Mu111on, c 1 o o O Berry, ct 4 o ' 1
Murcer, ct S o J I Kosco, rf • O O o
While, II s I 1 0 Sllnlon, rf 0 0 O o
F.Alou, lb ' O I 0 R,011¥'4', lb 3 0 1 O Slnc11tr, 3b • o 2 O McMullen1 lb 4 1 2 1
Torrts, rf 3 0 1 0 Molforl, I ' I I • Mld'll1l,ss 401 1,ln~,lf IOOt Kt'kich, p 1 0 O o C1rdtne1, 11 4 I 2 t
.SWObOda, ph I 1 1 1 Kutn)'tl', c • t 2 I
Betne,p ooo owr1t111,, •o oo .J .ElllS, ph I 0 0 0
T0:11ts . l6 J I l Toi.It ~ I 12 4
N1w Yort. 010 OQO 101 -l Callfarnia 010 102 0011-4
E -Alamtr, C1 rtttt11i . bP -Nw Yori!: 1,
LOB -New Yor-10, C1lltor1111 t. 21 -Berry,
At0m.1r, HI'!: -M'MUUll'I tJIL Swobodl 0).
ll'Mll•llllSO Keklch (L, .. 5J 6 11 4 4 2 1
BH"e 208f01 Wrl;hl fW,f..41 f I 3 1 2 I
HS, -Oy Wrl1ht (Totl'ftl. WP -Wrltlhl, TIMf -2:1A. AlllndPl'ICt -•.ill,
San Oemente·-z
Olympian Has
Goal D.enled .
By LAURIE BECKLUND
Of-. o~ PMM lt1n
Patti Johnson, San Clemente'• 22-)'ear--
old wife of a marine who has a reputa-
tion for recycling U.S. burdles record!, la
bulY puttin1 atlCle memories of Jut
wt'!tkend's Olympic trials and focusin&".
on winning a medal in Munich.
The young blonde with bowlcing curls
~t another U.S. JOO.meter gurdtes record
at the trial•, breaking the previous 13.I
ahe shared with Mamie Collins.
She was credited with a 12.9 in the race
but had the mark subatituted for a 13.0
several hours later after one of four
tlmen said he was uncertain about ac-
curacy of hiJ clocking.
The man had her stopped In 12.8 while
ot her watchea read 12.9, 13.0 and 13.1. He
said he may not have caught the start
accurateJr on his watch so his ti.min&
was voided.
That left it a compromise between the
oth~r three -thua the 13 flat. LA'S WILLIE DAVIS SCORES IN SPLIT WITH PHILLY.
"I was kind « dlsappoblted after they
told me I bad a 13.0," Patti says. "The
meet was almost over when they told
me. J had wanted to break 13 seconds for
so long."
Putting aside the discouraging mixu p,
her voice brightens as she says, "I'll nm
it again in less than that anyway ... in
fact J'll be disappointed if I don't get at
least a 12.7 at the Olympics."
Faced with a 12.5 world record held by
an Australian 4Jld an East German who
are excellent sprinters as well as
Dodgers, Phils
To Pitch Stars
hurdlers, Patti says she'll just have to
make up for what she terms ''my lack ()f
basic natural speed" with a little extr~
work on technique .
"J need W()rk ()n my starts really badly
•.. that aloog with some more polish.Ing
on form. It's not as smooth as I want it
because I haVe some trouble with my
shoulders turning and you're not sup-
posed to have any side-to-side move-
ment."
Patti recalls little ()f the race at the
trials, eicept she was slow getting out of
the starting block and that she passed up
second place Lacey O'Neal when their
anns tangled about halfway through the
race.
"I never really remember the good
races -only the bad ones," Patti says.
"They're a blur." ,
Al!() on her list of Olympic prepara·
tiOlll are a possible special AAU meet in
Southern Callfornia for 0 I y m p i c
qualifiers and a triangular ineet with
Canada and Latin America at the Olym·
pie training camp beginning Aug. 13.
PHILAOEU'HIA (AP) -A trip
around the bases by Dick Dietz sym-
bolized the Los Angeles Dodgers'
fortunes Monday night.
The veteran catcher started out
gloriously, hitting his first home fWl in a
Los Angeles uniform in the seventh in·
ning of the first game to help lift the
Dodgers to a 6-4 victory over the
Philadelphia Phillies in 11 innings.
On the way to first base, Dietz, who
Dodger• Slate
AU Ol-f Ill 1(,1 ('40)
J111Y 1T Doclg.n It Phflldtlphl1
July 12 Doclgeri 11 PllUM11tphl1
4:l0 11.m,
4::Ja 11.m.
has spent most of his time this season
warmi.og up pitchers in the bullpen,
started waVing trh:tmphantly to his pals
in the pen.
As he was looking out to see their reac-
tions , he tripped over the base.
The stumble was a foretaste of things
to come in the second game, when the
Dodgers were tripped by the lowly
Phillies 9-1 and Jost a chance to·cut a fu11
game.off Cincinn ati 's lead in the National
League West.
"But it's going to be very , very hard to
Improve on my fourth at Mexico City,"
Patti warns herself. 41Even if I run ·a
perfect tenth of a second for every hur-
dle, combined wlth my slo\v sprint speed,
that means about a 12.7." Los Angeles, still five games back in
Taking a realistic look at the two East __ ~hird plac:e, face the Phils again tonight
Germans, two Polish girls and one -~ m the third of :1 f~ur-game series t.bat
Australian who have clocked better times will match the p1tchmg aces of both aides
than she, Patti says: -Don Sutton, IM, against Steve
"It 'll he hard but I know I can do ii. I Carlton, IH.
have confidence in myseU that in the Dietz was und isturbed by his lack of
Olympics with all the pressure and being fancy footwork. "J haven't been on the
super-psyched up, I don't think I'll have bases much lately," he explained.
any limit. I can do anything." Willie Davi!, Manny Mota and Wes
And with bet history of shredding up Parker were the hitting heroes as the
the paper ()]d records were written ()b Dodgers came back from deficits of 3-0
and turning cut brand, spanking new and 4-3 to win the first game. Mota hit a
ones with almost eVery race,, who can pair of ru n-scoring singles to tie the
doubt it? score at 3-31 Davis homered in the ninth
Rams .Inje~ted
Hepatitis Menace Hits
LONG BEACH -Every foolball player, coacb and front oflice man In the
Los Ange lei Rama tralnln& camp has been ln0c1llated against hepatitis 'after
laboratory teata abowed a player may have the disease. .
Earlier Monday, the team held lhelr flnt training camp workoula of the
seallOD, with two practice aeuk>nl end.Ina in a DOD-Contact scrimmage.
Tesm plly1lclan Jule! Ra sinski said a blood test from the phy1lcal exam·
inaUon taken Sunday showed Bill Drake, a rookie defeblive back from the Unf.
versity of Oregon, who signed as a free agent, pouibJy has hepatitis, ,a Uver
ailment. · .
Drake was pieced In lsolalton Monday nigh! and wlll he sent home to Port· Ian~ Tuesday to rest for two weeks .
If blood tests taken in two weeks fall to show the presence of the disease,
Drake wlll be allowed to return to the Rams. Thirty.five rookies and II vet-
erans are In the National Football League. team's camp, including a pair of
newly acquired players expected to be defeo.sive regulan, end Fred Dryer and
linebacker Jell Staggs.
Due to a sljOl'lage of centers, coach Tommy Prothro shifted Cbrls Veil,
who was an offensive tackle at Oregon State list year, to center. ,
to send the game into extra lnnlngs and
Parker lUt a game-winning sacrifice Dy
in the llth.
Bill Buckner followed with a pinch
single for an insurance run.
Oavls had four hits in the first game
but was outdone by Mota, who bad three
in each game to raise his average to .341.
"Have you evei: seen a guy with a better
swing than Mota ?" marveled DaVis.
Of his ()wn hittlng, Davis, who has rais-
ed his average back to .276, aaid, "I've
found a lot of little things I'm dotng
wrong. I think J've cured them· and will
finish strong."
Ih the second game, Woodle Fryman, •
who entered with a 2·9 record, pitched a
Six·hitter and Willie Montanez drove in
five runs with a single, triple and homer
as the Phils won their first game under
jnterim manager Paul Owens. Mota's
fifth homer of the le8$0l1 in the eighth in· nfn.'.: averted a shutout.
The loss went to Mike Strahler, 0-2, ln
his first major league start.
llllllT •AMI
Lei Alltfllt Ul Phllattf!Ntl• 10 ••rllrtll 1•r11rM
L1cy, tb J 0 1 O Bowa, st 4 1 o o W.Oo1ovlf, d ' J 4 I H•rmon, 2b 5 I J o
Mot1,lf !IJ2Mane:y,)b 412J
F.lloblnson, rt • 0 I O 0.Jallnson, lb J o o o W.P•rktr, lb S o J 1 Hutton, lb 1 t o o
Or•b.lrk'wl!Z,lb 5 o O O !lr•ndorl, p t o o o 811Ckner, ph I o 1 I Lijz!nskl, If 4 1 1
Lel'IOvre, 3b 0 0 0 0 W.Rablntllfl, ff I O O 011!1, c 4 I 1 1 Freed, rt 4 1 O
Cr•Wford, pr o O O t Mone.Mt, (f • O o Rlcllttt, P 1 O O o 811emtn, c 2 1 o
WI/It, ti 4 0 I 0 G1m1>le, Pf' 0 0 o Downlr.g, p 2 O I o M.llyan, c I o o
V1ttnllne, ph I l I 0 IC,lll"'"°ld., p t I o
Brtwer, p O O o O S1>1m1, JI o o o G1rvey, Ph I o 0 o Lit, ph I 1 o
Mikkelsen, P O o O 0 M.Scarct p 1 t o C•nnlnaro, c I o O 0 Koegel, fb o t o
Tottls '5 • IJ • Totals J7 10 4
Lo. Angeles .,.'901 OOD 201 02 -• Ph!IM11lphl1 300 000 010 00 -4
OP -L~ Anvtlu '· LOii -Loi Ant•!•• 11. Ph!l8dt!plll1 6, Hll -Money (I ), Dlllr. "l• W.
O.vl• !'), s -Mont1n11, Mori..,., Wiiis. F -W. P1rk~r.
t,Hllllla•so Dowrilng • j 3 , 1 •
Br•wer 120011
Mlkktlstn 2 2 1 1 1 2 ltlchtrl (W,1·1) 2 I o o o 2
K,Reyno!Ot "''' t J J 1 , Se!me 113000 0 0 M.k1rct (L,0.1) 3 6 J J 2 J
l rlndon 1 1 0 t . 1 1
HIP -lly IC, llltynokb (Motil by DoWll l"9
{Frtfd). WP -M, k1rct. PEI -81t1rnen. Tlrnt -l:O•.
SICOHO GAME
L'* A111111t UI Phlllfltllltlll Ctl
11trllrt11 ••rllrb{ L1cy,111 40IOBow1,1• Jtoo
W,DIYll, cl 4 0 1 0 Money, ,., ' t 0 0
Cr1wto"', rf e o o o Hullon, If 4 1 1 2
Mot11 II • 1 J 1 0 .JohnJO", lit I 1 2 I P.RooklJOn, rr 3 o t O W.Roblnton, Pt 1 1 o o
Vlltl'l!lne, rt I o I o Mon11nu, cf s 2 J s W,,1rk1r, lb 4 0 0 0 G1mbl1, rt 2 o 1 1
CtnnllllrO. c 2 e O I Bil.men c 4 o 1 o Or1IMU'\'Wl1J.,q 4 0 0 0 OD~!f, 2, 3 O O O
Wl\11, •• J o o 0 l"rYINn, P • o l o Wlhel"'.'tP 0100 DI.tr, pn 1 0 0 0
S!rlh!tr, p 1 O 0 0
PINl,P OOOt
GPfW'(, ~ 2 0 0 t
Totelt iJ 1 • 1 TOIPll ~ ' 11 '
LOI AllOlfts 000 oot 011 -1
PhlttOl llll'tll I= 00 "°" -f E -Gr11Nrkewl!r 2. D, -LOI Anttlit ..
LO& -LO• A"911ff t, Phllld1IJlhl1• .. 21 -~tcy,
'" -Mont•llff. Hit -Monttnea "'· MOii UI. $1" -Gimble. , • ''° H Str1M1r CL.Ml +Ill J
l'en1 l•l/J ' Wllht llll ' e
l"rytrlln ('W,).f) ' '
WI" -SlrPhltl'. Tlmt -t :IJ.
...
I l 0 • I I """:--~
•• 10 . ,
1 • 1 • • •
'1J've had a chance to win three times,
reel good chances," Palmer said, a
sJtaht, puzzled frown cre••lng one of the
world '• IDOll.pllotograpbed faces .
''11111 every time I 1ot Irr position to wtn, _,. time I ·thought I had
..,..lhlltr Finl, aomething always hap-
_.i. I llllDk I just wanted to win too
mucb ..r IOI too anxlOUJ."
America'• televialon audlenct watched
Jn dismay and dl•hellef as he hit Into a
shallow stream at the bottom of a ditch.
elected to play It out and took a lend-
destroylng, conridence-shatterln1 triple
bogey •ix that coat him the title. ,
Amazing: Reds Can't Win at Home
'ltie 0.yearGld muter who pul tbc.
woid ''dalrce" ln 10U't Jextcon was
mAlng one at his Ubted ru111 at the
1ea11en· ID Ibo llnal round or the Bob lfltl ~ aa.Jc -lbelt hit one out of ., .... · 4PJn al Dollu, In the .,_ Nelson
.be -ltd a Wt round
'Ilia --GUI: "Amie's ,,.. _... ii mk'"I bit move."
Ria ;"!;..= pllerf ,,,.lied to m ·ve u Iha lallltlul atam-..
I • ;
'
''I've had trouble with my con·
centration," he mwd before a practice
round for the Britilh Open, whi~ begins
Wednesday. 'rMy mind wanders. All.of a
sudden I'm not there. I'm or! in a cloud
or somethinf IOlfttWhere else." .
He's had other trouble, too. With his
putter, with hl•:.l~s. even with bis
driver, usually tlJe moat nlloble club In
his b<g.
An.d there 's his eyes. fie'• er·
perlmentcd with eyeglastei end contact
len1es to correct a ne1r-11lghted con·
dlllon. He recently ebnndoned them. · .
I
CINCINNATI (AP) .-The Cincinnati
Reds can't aeem to shake the Riverfront
Stadium Jinx.
In a very unusual situation for a
divisi()h or pennant contender, the Reds
have a lolln1-record al home 17-20.
"If we katw the.answer, We might be
able to do tomelh1n1 about it, 11 Ctn·
t lMati catchlr John Btncb uld, echoing
s1atements illade by managor Sparl!y
Anderton end oome player1.
~ few weeks ego, ibe Reds 1ur1cd lo
the top of · the Nallonal L<arue 'West
DM1lon oo the llnmgth of an outatan-
dlng road trip. At one atretch, they W<>n
10 at II awat game& They now stand 28-
ll on the road.
But Finl back to when the Rede won
the NaUonll !.<ague pennant. In 19111, no
team bu won the pennant or a division
rece Without bavJn& posted • 47~ mark
or helter at homo.
The SID Francisco Giants won the pen-
nant In 19111 and bad a SHI home r~d.
"We j111t 11even•t had «ood tlmea 11
RJvtrlr9nt, 11 sald Bench, wbo bas ex·
•
. . perlenccd the most lrultrabon In the
confines of the ·50,000 ·seat ttadlum where
the Red! began playlllll midway lhrou&h
1170.
"I •Imply 4on•t know what the reuon
Is," Andfnon nld after the Redl ~
peel tbelr llnt doubleheader of the aeaton
S\lnday and loot \heir fourth gaM ltl, Ibo
last 11• outlllp at home .
•·Maybe there Is pressure here,"
"'Oltderell Bench, who was booed et'home
earlier thls year after a sJow . start.
"Maybe I am pressing t> some extent
I
-.-~--
"The ballpark ll dellnllely n o t
!a\lorable to a home run hitter. The ball
· doesn't CAJTY weU hire."
The stadium la COlllidered 1 pit••
park. mainly hecluse of a laclc « wind
and the dJataneea to the fencea -3111 feel
down eech line, m feet to the power
alleys aod IOI !Ml to dead center.
lltncll Is b<lllq .271, bu dubbed 21
home """ and driven Jn 13 1'11111. But on-
ly 111 « the bomerl IDd Ill of the rbl
have come al Riverfront and he II b<t-
llng .191 there.
..
•
..
' 0
'
•
' J
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
"' "' m
'
DAll.Y I'll.OT llllf ...._,.
' ' .. • DAILY 'lLOf 17
San Clementeans, Fullerton '. .
• • "
Tramples
Westminster Win ' Rustlers
Sin C lem ente and
Wellmlnater .,.,. lilt only
OrlJ!ll Cout area tt.a ma to
come out of Sund1 y's
American Lqlon b a 1 1 b a 11
plJy llllJCllhtd, taklna v ....
dlcll from TUatln and Buena
Park.
Coach Join Spinfman'1 San
Clem .. \> nloe bated h o 1 t
Tustin In 10 lnnlqa, 4-J, whil•
coet.h Gene LOomer'1 West-
min1ter nine c a m e from
behind to po1t 1 &-3 win over
visitln1 ButOI Pari:.
Other .acUon resulted in
Newport droppillJ an 18-3
dtc.ilion to Garden Grove •t
Costa Meu High ; t h e
Fullerton Ancel• 1 b • l I t d
vbiitin& Mlsaion Viejo, M : and
Founllln Vllley came out on
the 1hoit end. of 1 5-S scor1
with vialtina Anaheim Ruede.
The Fulltrton Hu 1 t I era
hill to the Sao Clemento a~ llCOl'td mat" Randy &mbr.y ocorod In each oi lilt !Int 11$
11cAlk. ft il"'c .. rdt "'' "· No. 1 and Nell LendJlon (twltt).--IMlnp SUnd1y t111oule to i ._ ""' Fountain Valley's thrte-run l" •·-I I I Se lk R ti to' :. o f I t n 1 I v • player for outburst in the fourth inning .,... .,,...,-1 0 n ui era ·
Westminster. 1trokln& a pair a1alnlt A.nahtlm ·Ruede came Metro League baaeball 1cUon,
of hjts to 1ccount for three rbJ .. In on a passed ball, an uror knock.Ing the latter Into a
Buena Park had •Awned 1 and Vtc LucchfJlal 'a alnglt. thre~ ror second place. ,...
3·l ltad through •~ innings Joe Panlalone hid 1 double ln othe.r Metro action It w11):
before: Locmtr'I crew went to for the only ei:tra base blow Saddleback coming up with Its ~
work with three In the 1eventh by Fountain Valley. second win of $)\e camp1lgn
and two more In the eiJhth In-T r o y H l & h ' s l\.f 1 r k with an 8-3 declllon 9ver hoa~ • J
ning. Wultameytr stymied Miu ion Cyprtss while Ward's Pirates '1
Tom Nelh produetd lbe only Viejo on three hits. He struck took pofts.Jion of the cell1r
Newport runs when hiJ 11nfles out 17 with hi, fastball In a following their 1.0 setback In .\
in the third and fourth lnnln11 night 11rne at Ameriae Park. eight innings to lht La Foncf•.•
Dons at El Modena 11igh.
Play• for Cub•
Unemployed Ace
Finally Gets Job
Former Golden West hurlr:r
Dave Klungre seter was the
winn ing pitcher ror t h t
11ustlers, striking out nine in a
li ve inning stint and allowed
only one hlt.
Rick H1ml in's pin c h h It
si ngle with u~ b~e! loaded in
the fourth wat1; the biggest
blow for the Rustlers.
'" '" "' l"ll"TH llA(I!. 3$0 Yl fdl, I Ytlr old1.
BIG CALICO -Tony Rubenstein of Newport Beach caught this JO-pound calico
bass while fishing aboard the Westerner out of Davey's Locker, Newport.
San Clerrtente'1 w i n n i n g
maraln came about when win-
ning pitcher Matt Keough led
orf the loth frame with a
1lnJ!e and advanced to second
on Toby Reachan'1 sacrifice
bunt.
CHICAGO (AP) -Al lhe
age of 32, Tonlmy Davis hit
.324 for the Oakland Athletic.!!.
At age 33, ht WIS unemployed .
"T played a detecti ve and tr
you 1ee the mo vie, don ·1 blink,
you may miss me."
Steve Williams and Rick
Peregud produced solo home •,
runs for Saddleback as Ruben
Paramo wen t the distanct-for
the winners , spacing out 11
hi1s.
Saddleblc.k returns In 11ctl<ln
tonight in a doubleheeder
aga inst the Senik Rustlers and '" "' "' '" "' Total Effort
With lwo out Bob Palmer
nursed a walk, then Rich
Oougla11 aent Keough home
with the tie breaking tally on a
single.
Two days ago, ht went to
Florida to work out and for
the last week had been work·
La Fonda Dons at MemoriaJ .•
Park in Santa Ana beginning
at 6 o'clock.
Atiow1nc1. Purw Sl.900..
Par Ott Qonl. H. Cro1bY
E1tnll1'1 0111!1, II. ll1nk1
P"1,l)UI Moon, c. Plrt'lfr
G1ve-lman, T. Llpl'l1m
Sonntv't 01ndv, E. c;.rz1
Hob lV Vi n t11r, 0 . AJtllol'I
Trvdl Doo. O. Knl;hl M~rv lft, I(, Hirt
Wilch Z'1 F1ncv, ). Orrv1r
R111! 'N ReMlv, L. Wrl9hl
AwlM f:lltlbi.
"' "' '" "' '"
Ml11 flock111lr>er, J. W1tlOl'I 111
N1~n1r1 Llr. J.lrook 1 ,,,
Pirat,es Di-spiny
Area Ocean
Angling
Still Slow
Keough struck out aevu and
w1lked five in going the
distance to give San Clemente
a 12-4 record, third behind the
Fullerton Dodgers and Tustin
in the National Le1gue.
Davis finally got 1 job Fri-
day with the Chicago Cubs. On
Sunday, he helped the Cubs
break a slump with three hi ts
in five at bats and three runs
batted in during a double·
header sweep over Cincinnati.
"I thought baseball had
forgotten me," he sa id. "At 3..1,
I didn't tblnk 1 was through.
but no one seemed to want
ing out with the Cub~. He"s
still ovtr his normal playing
weight of 195, but s.ays: ""If
you think I'm fat now. you
should have seen me before I
began work ing out.''
The Pirates lost out lo La
Fonda when the "·inners put
together 1 single and one.out
double.
Ml11 Monlc1. C. !.mlth 111
$1m1nt111 Ptrr, K. Hirt 1U
Sll(TH ltACI!. GI v1rd1. 3 Yetr 01<11.
(lf,,mll\ll. PUfH 11,IOO. Clt lmlnt prltl
lf.500.
Run MoO/I Ihm. R. Adtlr 171'1
Mr. A1lro Z.t!H, II:. VtU ... fl 111
Alt N!Ohl Lor19, S, Tr1111Ufl 111
Versatile Setup
Sportfishing continut1 to run
belcw average in Orange
Coast area waters with ex-
pectations of a good albacore
run still a horiron away .
Keough, Reschan a n d
Douglau each contributed two me.''
Nevertheless , he was ac·
tivated by the Cubs Frida y
and installed at firs t base
against left-hander Don
Gullett In Sunday's first eame.
His first time up be walked,
the next time he broke 1
scoreles~ tie with a two-out
line single up the middle. The
Cubs went on to win the game
5-0.
Dan Quisenberry struck out
seven in 1 l01ing cause !or the
Pirat~.
* * * Clr1C11"1 81vou, H. Crosl:l'I' 111
Bio lrucklt. It. B1nk1 111
Geiilltm1n Jel, C. Smith 111
G1ltlff, 0. Knl9hl llC
!our C1!. T. l loh1m l?Q
P1rr Citbbfr, J. W1rd 170
Roc;kv Roy1l11u111. c. P1r11tr 117
SEVENTH RACI!. JJO y1rd1. 3 Yllf
t1ld1 & u11. Cltlmlnv. PurH IJ,000.
Cl1lmlno "'ke 110.000.
Oll<:k Daolln, A. IJ1utlhn Liz 81bv, J. WllMJ11
Mr M1r1 81r, J. W1tSOt1
You Hever ICl'OW, T. Llllh1m
0 1>1nln9 Gun, K. Hlfl
Moo!ati 0 11mon11, F. e-
"' '" '" "' '" "' llGHTH It.I.Cl. l50 v1rd1. J Vtlr
elds .. IJ9. Allowll'l(I. PU'MI 12,IOll.
SCOOP'S Al.,,,_!, T, Llph1m 11 1
,ti n! Hiii, C. Prrner 111
Jet's L•dv Lucli.. O. Alli-11•
Wli.e Wiiii•, A. M 1lr
suo1r Linc:~. H1n
Oon'I look BKk, A. 81nk1
Mn C1lun 81r. J. lt!U..rds
Roo::te1 Mkk. 1<. aone
T1nv Sert, J . Ortv1r
l l1st1r. C. smr1n
"' "' "' "' '" "' "' NINTH A,t,CE. 170 v1rd1 J Ylff Olds
.. UP. Cl1lmlne. PurH $1,toO. Cll lml"v
prlCI 51.'°°.
TOP 1IOr, T. Llpl'l1m 117
Miu 0.1 lltlf 81,, W. IN1Hllblcl! 113
au11 To 8 urn, H. Cro.bv 116
llleotNlt Aoo::k1!, C. Smith 111
Sn11<k 'em, H. P1ve llct
e 11zlnv H1rrv, A. Adllr 117
Hff H1 w, 0. l(nlt tll 116
Anr'lt<l C1M1, J. Wl!\11!1 II&
Alamitos
esults
July It, 1tn
Cl11r & '"' ,llt5T ll:AC E -350 y1rth l y11r
01dl a. UP. C111m 1,.., Pur11 SllOO. Gold t!IOdi (Crosbvl J~.llO 10.20 j Oil
F11t Edc:U1 IW1hon1 10.0D j.60
DH-S<>1~i1h Leve IAlc•11rclsl 1 IO
OH-True C1n Fly !Smtih) l .IXI
Timt -.11 l 10
Alio r1n -Brffll M count, C111CH'
R-1. PKtn Bir, Whit LllU, D1n-
dv's JPI. l1 Pl1t1 J19. <,c.r1lcl'led -I To 90, Otrr1b l l ,
01vf1 Jeni!, Hu1111,.. BoY 7. OH--Oel!dt>ltl for !hlrd.
If E111ct1 6 -Gold lntot & 4 -,Ill
Eclcllt, 11111 Ul7.JD.
SECOND It.I.Cl -J50 v1rcl1. t Ytar
1lld1. ,<li!tOWll'\(I , PurM 11'0(1.
Ml1s Limits rsmltl'll '8.lct 1' Ml 6 )0
Cllou Cl'l!!U (811\ltJ) 17.IO 1.60
Tr1011c111 COllV rwr!vh!! • 00 Tlmt -.11 3110.
Also rn" -Mll'fl'llt M S1>1K1. lrn"
Nole, X1111d11, FHlu,,, Good, IJ1ll1nt o" No 1cr1kht•. TMIRO II.I.ti -ll'O v1rd1. l 'f'rt r
llldl .. UP. Cl1lml!'ltl PurH 12000
G1,....l11 County (LIQl'l1ml l.«t J.lct 2.20
Tris F!rr (Smith) 4.00 1 IO
Rl!W1r<I Rtc11111trd IWll1Dl'I 2.60
Tfmt -.'64 !110.
Also r1n -llrltl l"', Aoc:kt tl'. lltlcl.
Slst1r Gil
No i.cr1tthf:i. '0UltTK ll:ACE -'00 v1rct1. J vttr
oll'fl. Al111W1nc:1. PlirH 12100.
l'IKI tpfiy !A.clt lrJ 7,1(1 S.lct J.IO
•IO 3«1
>.~ Lt>ltr!GI" (Kn!v+>!I
Roc1tr1 Mine {AIC111rd1
Tim• -.20 4/1 0. ~
,t,1so r1n -,<lil1ml!01 J19, Truly J1I ,
M111 0t H_, Artll, LY"" t H ,
No Kfl !Chtl.
FIFTH It.I.Cf. -Ult y1rd1. l vr1r
lllcll. Cl~ulfll'd ,ti llo'*1ncP. P11r\e il«"I!
Sh1Ml"OGkll (Acl1!rl l.ICI 2 60 1 :I'll
Nuevo MllChlC"° IK.,!lht) l.20 '•"
DH-Plulldllf fWrlvtlt\ t Ill
DH-Rocke! 51lu!t CW1rcll ' Ill
Tlmt -.n 111!.
PITI'SBURGH IAPl-lleach
strength and the ability to
score runs in the late innings
have been two keys to the suc·
cess of the Pittsburgh Pirates
after 75 games.
The defending world cham·
pions have a 4&-27 record and
a 417 game lead over the New
York Mets in the National
League East Division.
In 23 of their victories, the
Pirates came from behind to
win. On 31 ~sions, the y
have scored runs after there
were two outs and nobOOy on
base.
But perhaps the biggest fac-
tor is the team's depth.
Manager Bill Virdon's ou t-
field strength is so great he
can take Willie Stargell out of
left and put him on first, and
he can rest Roberto Cle·mente
and Stargell at the same time
-as he did in a recent
doubleheader -and win.
His infield strength is so
deep that he can move Bob
Robertson to third base to pla-
toon with Richie Hebner. and
he can use Hebner in the out-
field .
He can rest catcher Manny
Pele Plays
At Coliseum
LOS ANGELES -Brazil 's
all-time all-star soccer player,
Pele, and his Santos team-
maters battle the strong Club
America of Mexico team
tonight (8) at the Coliseum.
Promoters have estimated
the farewell Los Angeles ap..
pearance of Pele could bring a
crowd surpassing the 31.921
record a the Coliseum in 1967
when Pele and Santos Jost to
J\rgentina's River Plate team
4-2. Pele heads five Santos
players 'A'ho led Brazil to the
World Cup title in 1970. •
The Brazilian star plans to
retire from soccer after his
team's current world tour.
Sanguillen In a doubleheader
and his replace ment, Milt
May. gets seven hit s in nine
trips to the plate.
Stargell with 56 rbi and Al
Oliver with 55 are among the
league's top five in runs bat-
ted in, and Stargell is among
the home run hitters with 18.
Operators out of Davey's
Locker and Art's Landing In
Newport Beach, Dana Whari
and McCullah Brothers in
Huntington !\each, report fair
catches on rock t'Od ud bass
with occasional book ups with
A positive attitude, which halibut, sculpin and bar·
must come et least · in part racuda.
from success, is .also a Pirate Art's Landing has switched
strength, and the Stargell-its usual albacore run to an
Robertson move is an example overnight trip to Sar1·Clemente
of it. Island , leaving at midnight
Says Robertson: and returning the following
'·If Stargell playing first la te afternoon .
makes us a better team then Davey's continues with its
J 'II accept it." trek to Catalina Island, leav-
Robertson opened the season ing at 2 a.m. and returning the
with a disasterous slump, but following afternoon w h i I e
has belted five home runs Dana Wharf is 1ticking with
since mid-June to boost his its search for alblcore every
season total to seven. night at 11.
His batting average has Davey's half day boats leave
climbed about 41) points, but it at 6 a.m. and 12:30. The '4
is still a meager .156. day Del Mar goes from 7 a.m.
,._ .. hi V1Nw fU ... , .. "" ... J'lt••-· cf , I , . llrtell, u 4 1 O lmm1r ft 4 2 1 H•J'i~~Ji. -,111, lb 2> •, o o
Mor1m11n. ti' 4 I ~ :
V. Lucchluf, rl j o ! •' Liu•, c I
Mtuler. • t I t I Totllll )II •
kltl" lllllhm ••• A.n1 ll:U4dt -000 JI 1-S 1 t Ftn v111e.,. oeo * ot»-J • t
MIMllll YMlt (I)
'' r 11"4 Htl'Mlrk.._, 111 j t t t ='·.d ,: 't I, II:. l'tr~, 1• jj Orlmn, c 1 o ,• 1ttmmt1. 11 I , II: kh•l'OMfl, .. ' • 0
Wl!l!t, lb I • ,• • ,,,,s. rf I •,
Tattl1 ~ "' 1_:1191 J • • • ~.1·~. mm~ 1 i
.... '""'"" 141 •• r '"' I. s...1 ... , .... ""· • 1 I I I , ..... ! et •
kM111911. • 4 I I ' lt..etllltl. rf •
Davia was released by
Oakland In March in what was
considered partial retribution
for hls role as Vida Blue's con-
fidant. He' worked out for 10
days with the Cubs I n
Scott.sdale, Ariz., but wa~
released and went home to
Loa Angeles.
Then the Cobs went into a
hitting slump, and Divis sot a
telephone call from Chicago
general man1ger J o h n
Holland.
"I hadn't done any playing,''
Davis said. "I was spendh:ig •
lot of money and doing a lot of
hustling. J managed a musical
group, 10ld cable wire and
even appeared In a movie with
Jim Brown.
In the second game, he went
two-for-three with two more
rbi in the C\Jbs' 10-5 victory .
In both games. he was replac-
ed for defensive reasons by
Joe Pepitone.
Manager Leo Duroch er sa id
he plans to platoon Davis and
Pepitone at first . w it h
Pepitone filling in as a late·in·
ning defensive replacement
and Jim Hickman shuttling
between first and the ouUitld.
•· 1Jttlnt1mafl, lb 4 : I 1 ~~'.~·" l j !, •1' Laguna Club Offers
GrffflM, II J o
T'f:!l'lllOl'I, It I f I s
.::··; .. k ..... ~ ::.11::,~· ••• : Free afe. ty Shoot
TutllM 109 09t .. ._, ' I
"It I w.as hitting," said the to 3 p.m. Wtttfftffni.. ''' 1 Frostburg, Md., oati·ve, "ti.-Action from Dena'a Whatf • I' , ",... A ree guns .safety and public wJth the only restriction
ll'C ' ..!.",,.·· •• ).'.,. I •, ',1 '1 hoot• I ail bl "-t ... d 13 move probably wouldn't h.ave can be obtained on four half "" rf • 1 mg program • av a 1 l.fMI youwa un er must be
been necessary. So I am day boat&, leaving et 1:30 aod ~:::., 11 , l to the public al Llgun1 Hilll accompanied by a parent.
lo -~ 5 30 0-111"", 111 ' • j I Gun Club starting July f1. Jt'1 limited to the fll'st 70 going abcut it without the a.m., noon Jllal : p.m. Ttt1Tet. ~ , 1 least bit of hard feelings. 1be all day vessel leaves at ~:'~·.. L' t , I Classes run from 7 to I p.m. applicants and Interested
"There is no question in 6 a.m. "'f.r.r."' • l f 1 for three Thursdays and in· partits abould make their
my mind that this is the best SAN 01100 tM..,. .,..,, _ "' ,.,. "' •• 11: " • eluded in the gratis prorram reservations with Holland by
for the team and I am all for 1ne11rs: l.l» 11ueor1, 11 .,.nowi111. •-"••k ooo cm 11111)....3 1 I are the use or guns, am· callin& 830-1001.
• ., DANA wKA11:' -1.u 11111en: 1.121 W•trr11r11"' 001 oot l'b:-4 ' munition and largetJ. In addit'°11 to lectures and
it. u11c1 :rn. " """~'· ' hlUMit, 111 ""'"" '!~ , The purpose of the sesalons 1ctual ahootlng, there will be
Stargell did not demand to ""t~~~ '••ACM 11111M111t ,...,1 -JI l11<lt.Jb ' • ftt j is to te1ch gun nfety, gun films and visual aids :>ffered
play first base. •11tltt•: 42 u Mc• ""'· 24 'fl\f.k cell. ~1~~ •• a ~. 1' l I •--•"-g and to m' troduce "-Ith "-f ty nd •--•1· "I 'd I ould I I ft 111"11 -" •11111tr1: u u1111 "''· ' Ku1111t1 c u.iuiuw1 urc w I.lie' u e a ~iu mg sa1 w P ay e borltto. ' h•lltMJt, J 1ntetent. 1 l'Otk J1ct Dtln, c 1 I 1 , public to trap and skeet aspects of the sport 1tf'Hled ..
field this year but I intended aid. '""""""' L ...... I -" 111111'1: IYH·m~" ','•· :I ': T I ': shooting. to ak .1 1 . th 1 1 led 122 c111e1 ""' • ,_ cltl. Holland also pqinll out that m e 1 P a1n a wan 1MP11R1•1. •••<M -ea .... ,,: 11 \ Ed Holland will also have on all 1tu•-n•--1·11 -•--t oo uch to pl f. l ba 1 ,,_._ ""'"1.,•. ,, ' I l I ~ ~ " u~ ay 1rs se nei: J111Wf"CHllT 101...r'• L.u.r1 -,,, Mcie."" I tap special demonalralions by •'•ht season." he said. •Mitt•: .s to1rr1aidl. J '*'"°' 1u L~~r· • 11 J ·-· ii m ~ C'Ocl 1 "' rr11ut '° sur. i.v 111411, club instructors Hugh Roberts The gun club 11 located 1t . Virdon said he had explained ~~':.~ 1,.,;1 u•1
1
-' "
1191
R w • and "'""·• Coffing. 9601 M It p kw his decision to move Stargell ,,..1.,.,: S1 .,111 bl,1, 4111 reek c.ed. G••• GfflYI 1H 205 OJS-11 11 1 UU\16 ou on . ar ay, near
t both H b sra1. •••CH _ uo ,,..11r•: 1.200 NewflllG 001100 ...... J ' • The program i11 open to the Lion Country Safari. o e ner and Robertson. rock «1c1. 1s tillco to1i:1, 1 111111)1.11. • ----------------'--"----'----------'-----.;;;;;;;;;;;;; "The re really isn't anything UNI cod. 1 11nv tod. ••••• -n I
' . laHIMlcll Ill .. • • rM ....
~•rte, tb l I I I kl"9. lb
Jol!I M,,11, ·ri ' •• ,, .... ,,, I ' ! ,
• ,, .. IHI, rf , ' Wllt11m1 c ' ' ' ¥,oen, ti • I ! • olbert, cl ' • P1r1m1, I , ' • Tot1!1 » • • • Ice,. IV lftn11111 ' .. SMdl.o.t.k 1111 ti I -I t 1
CYIPl'IU 1°' 000 G-.l 11 l
SMllk R1t1!11r1 141 ,,,,,,,
Slm•tOf!, cf i-o T , M1c1ultv, ,b I , ' S11rt1. n ! t ~llktl•v.1 rl·u o e g' tlcl.,, te ' I I •l•rlOll, 1ll 0 e I Noctl1"9, II t I 1 I
AllMrlMll!, II I 0 t I
YWl•,)11 1''1 • t o •1 ttel.c I l -· ..,,., ' ,. W!IU1m1 1 ! I I P1rll,tr. • ~lmllfl, •II I •• ,l'IOl.. • I . . '1:1:1.. l s ' _.,_
• • •• Hutlllf'I 1\) tn ...... ,, II 1
ll:Utlltr' •1 'II --• I I Stnlli: ll:llllllrt Ml I ..... •
........ 1'l ~~~:--~," j
""""""" I '°''""''• et
' ''""!• I I I·
I I .t ,
... mm. ,, I I I I Gr1111, •• • =·~· i 11 ·r ii~rv. • I ·,1·
itl1-" ,. , -~
IJcert 111¥ '"'"'• ,.,, .. '"' ,.,,,,.. Ill Ill lll:l i 't '. '
GENERAL
SUPERINTENDENT
• •I••• 11 II I11 • ..,.rlMttr
wl"' tr.wt!Hrlwlflll MMe ........ lllft""''·
Mwl 111 u~IMI 511 PHA """'"HM '"' ct,.... If """"''"' lllN '"'I""'"' .. t clllff.
IJIM NMlllM II
Sl1M11,..~ltk c,,.,
lMI W. MKArtflw IMI.
c..t1 M•, C1lll, HAH.
ATT'1111 .._......_
r
·~
" " ......
' th Y do bo t "t . I •n•ltrs: 20 ''"" bin, 1 htllbvt. 22 B b ll s d 0 to~d ~:::. tho~ is ~he1
.. :;1~ ;, m"""' ase a Ulll ings DIAN LIWIS
going to be ,'' said Vinton . ~
"But 1 think both of them took Baseball's it very well ."
Since Stargell has been
playing first , Vic DavaliUo and
Gene Clines have been sharing
left field duties .
Virdon, howevef", suggested
he may use Hebner in left too,
with Robertscn at third and
St'llrgell at first.
·~'d like to think we'd have
alf three of those guys hitting
at the same time," Virdon
said.
Top Ten
l1Md on 17' •• aSll.
AMIRIU.111 LUal.ll
Jll1ytr CIA e Al R M I'd.
Sclllfnlllll!T> KC U 20i 21 6' .231
.. lnltftl KC 14 2" 4l fl .Dt
11:1.1111 Otk n m " tt .J\4
Olli KC n V4 ll 15 .J11
hrrt C1I ti 116 n 14 .-1
C. Ml ¥ Chi 7J 2'4 ... 7f ·"'
Fist e1n st 1ts Jt SI .2t7
1Ep1t1ln O.k 7f 24"1 lll 11 ,m
C1r1w Min 74 211 21 U .2'5
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlridoo
W L Pct. GB
Pitubursh 41 %1 .MO
New York 44 :!% .571 41>
St. Louis 40 31 .533 I •
Chl~go 41 36 .• 533 I
M..,lnal 33 43 .434 151>
Phll1c!elphla 27 51 .Ml 211>
.592
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eall Dtvflfotl
W L Pe~ GB
Detroit 41 34 .547
Baltlmor. 40 35 .533 1
Bolton 35 !I . 413 4
Ne" York 31 37 .418 411
-clevtl1od SJ 4Z .432 II>
M1I .. 1uket 29 44 .3117 11
ll'Ht Dt.t1loa
Oakland 41 21 .&12
Chicago 43 34 .151 51!
' ..
·:
,, .
Alto r1n -BOD'1 fl1r ~nd, Mr. ,tirl'I!.
P:ic1'1 Gold. N~ Kflltl'ltl.
DH -0ttd!le1t for third.
SIXTH ll:ACI -t00 v1rd1. ) Vftr
eld1 & up. Cl1lmln1. Pur11 12100. Public Lunch Includes MIYlllNY ICC 71 W U ?7 .291 ........ '
D, ,ti!ltfl, OlletOO, If/ C1tll, o.trllt,
16; II:. JKI!_, Olkllnd, IJI •1111!11,
Olltl•rlcl· 141 O\lrloull, 01lilltllf. 1).
Cincinnati
Houston
Dod1er1
AUanta .
Well Dl•fllo1
4.1 31
4.1 33
41 37
San Frlncisco
S1~ Diego
un
35 4A
21 41
.177 l
.126 I
.ID 10
.422 131!
.372 17
MIM"°ta
Kwa1 City
Aqel1
31 SI
39 37
36 42
.114 • .513 • BOB SEVERSON
.412 13
DI Judgt IW1rtll '·'° S.'0 l .00 Bav W9r Chic 10 ,tVltl 1.60 I 1111
Dttll Tonto !Lllll!1ml l.20
AIM! r1n -ll!t ck MOlld, Ml!l'll Dii i,
E1st lndl111. Jll'llOl1!, Sll'IOt P1nd1.
Nil Kflltl'lll.
tS IKICll I -DI JIHIM 6 t -•IJ
W1r Clllc, '9111 lltSM
Deacon Jones, Trojans
SIVINTN RACll -IJtt 11rd1. 3 Vttr
ci!clS .. UP. Allowl l'I« ... urM IHOO. \ll:~rm; (Ad1lr l :W.00 12.ao It 00
Tl9ht ltlllffll !111'111.11 SM S.)O
U11 Cht •OI IW1hcl'I) 7.0D
Tl"'41 -'5 ... 1D.
The Thursday sporh; lunch
bunch at Anaheim Stadium
wlll turn lo football this week
with speakers from the Los
Angeles Rims. San Diego
aiargers and use. Also r111 -lt11¥1I K1J'lfl, 0 1116Y'I &ov, c:Nt• f11r, Otwtl Mffk,
G1t111r!110. Lineba c ker Marlin
'-1cKeever and assistant to the
pr,.ldenl Jack Teele will lead
•-• •.60 •the Rams delegation. The
c • or 1 Chargers will be represented
NII Kt1lc1'1!l. llOHTH lACI -«Ill VINll, 2 Vllf
fll4I. ,t.llfWMIC'to-'"""" wot. Tht M011a1, DH -Lit"• Wtr .Cllk
fAd1lr) S,«I DH -Miii Dlflll• (J>tr.....-1 •. al 7 JI S,40 , s.to by defensive e.nd Deacon
Jones . late or tbe Rams. and
public relations director Jerry
WyM,
Jus,llk• l'I (l1111N) 1lrTlt -.• It'll. 1.IMI rl fl -Tl11rt1' Ml'.llln Dl't'e, S..1
_Of._ St1t'I, Color Me Jl!ftll, ''"' •14. lf'!'I II~. Ho ICl'lldlll.
OH -t>HdMll tor tlrat •
• ~ • Jll!NTH 11:.ACI -»II Y•rd•· J v••r
flkll. C!11fnlnt. JllH'N tlOOO. ,
H"" Ti.er rC rlllb•l lOl,.tll 21., 111.110
Ct"IHI !Lllllltl'l'I) .... J,le tlll• Tt (l!'O(llct) J.M
Tlmt -,\I 4/10. -AlllCI r111 -JllllH'I JIOll!I, l 1r TM
Moon, not.flt•, Di,,.. l1r k "'""°'' Rf'bel, Dt•lcl Coe.Ill.
ktllltNd ... "'""1111 '"'· lloMV 1 100. Ytu MlltlY Y"', l lt Trut .. 11.
f'trt Clltltiitr.
16 l)ICll ' -H4tM TIW I f -
C1l1ltla, •1111 IU*I ...
Trojan sports Information
director Don Andersen will
bring uslstanl football coach
Wllllo Brown and head ba1kot-
b1ll coach Bob Boyd, reC.ntly
returned fro\11 the. OI)'lllpiCll
basketball tryout camp In
Colonclo Springs.
A record .crowd ol 1711 a~
tended last Thur1d1 r '•
Stadium Clu~ lunch to hear
Angels Bob Oliver and Jini
Spencer. •nd Brewers Del
Crandall, FranJc. Lane and Jim
Colborn.
i:tiur9!1•y luncheons a r. e
open to the public. Cost ol
lunch Is 13. including ta1 and
lip. Reservations may be made
by calling l he Angell'
IWitchboard 17141133-2000. The cocktail lounge opens at
11 1.m., rolloWld by lunch at
noon end th< start of the pro-
gram at 12 :30 p.m. .
Steve Bailey, e 1 e cu t Iv e
aporll producer of KMPC. Is
the weekly emcee. 'l'ht au·
dlonce la Invited to auh1111t
questions to guest rpcakers on
written rorms.
The July lo program will Jn.
elude Dodgen, Now York
Met1 and auto ncina u-
ecuU>e J. C. Ag.ianian.
"
·-1111141 I• 0 . ,till'" ChltlOO, 571 MIVllllT\'1
K•n$11 City, 4'1 R. Ollwr, (lllltnll•,
4'1 C. M•'f• Chlt11111, '41 f ptlll,,, O.k•
l11'1d. 4"11 l1ndo. Olkl11\d, ''·
.. ltcNM 11 DMlllMtl
11:111. MlnnttOt1, lt-1, .133; Qd«rl,
D•kltnd, 7·2, .m1 P•l.-r. •1111mere.
11 ..... 7J)1 KHM NW Yorlf, 14 , .m 1
Munttr, Olk\llld, lt-4. .1u: flt~•·
011tl1M, $-L .1U; t...lldl. OffrWI, IU.
.7'0; 2 TIM With .ff't.
MllMI.,... 11:-11·
l11 A!llllM "4-1, Jll'IKM11!,iotl1 ~-·
MllllrMI 6. S.n Dllll I
kn ,r1ncll(:I S, Ntw Ytr1r: •
Ofl!Y ""'* achqullcl.
T..,.t l1m11
l1A Cliett (ltl"" e.tJ 11 Mtnlr11t (Tll'rtr Ml
""' ,tlltCIKI (l ry111I ._,, It N-Ylrl: fl(_.,
11\lfl 641
I.II ....... llllllM 11--0 1t l"tlllldtlMll le.tr,_
1911 11 .. ) "*""'" ,,.,tdl ..., 11'111 ltolllrt1 J.f) 11 CM-
'""' ( ........ ,_., l ll!f Hl!'llll U l, t
111111'1!1 !Hi. ..... 11 11 SI. Ltul• l llnttrlfll UI
l'llllllr.Hll {Metil J.IJ 11 CIMllWlltl fl lll!M-
• "'" ...
Te111 33 44
MIMllW't Rltllllh
MlllNM!t I , M!lw1uktt I
JIC111111 City 1, lllll!l'WI t
C,....llrllf t, Cfrllc111 I
IHl'Nll I, Tetcl~ )
... .... '· Olllt11111 t C1IHW11111 4, Ntw Y1rtt t ,. ... .,.. .. ""'
.421 111>
16tt111 fJl•"I" .Ml 11 01klll\tf IMtrlt!I Ml
HIW vn (""'""' J-ltl I I CIMfllnl'I f~v Ml Mllwrlult" U .. ldr:MM 4ofl 11 M"-"11 lw.lfl. _ .. ,
T11111 II,.,. J.71 11 OWllf IT!~ .,.
Ctlle111 ll tllll-11·0 If C ...... llM lll""ll J.J)
ICl!lth Clfto !Dr,.. 1·1) 11 lllll!l'llt"9! fJl11,,.,...
11-0
DEAN LEWI~
•
1966 HARIOl ILYD., COSTA Ml$A
' .
S.l'Vl<t anti Pam fw All lml'"rtod Cera
MMorn IMr Shop fff All Cart ••
'46·tJOJ
Oran11 County's Largest and Mosl Modern Toyota and Volvo o.aier
OVHH'.AI DnlVHY IHCtALlfTI
•
• l
D1tft L•wis Imports t" Costa
M1s1 .h•pplly 1nnounces _ _th•
errival of its n•w service "''""'
•t•r lob Siverson of Corona
del Mer. lob ha'• t1ken ov•r
the 1ervic• f•cility for both
Toyota •ncl Volvos. lob h11
twenty-11ven y1ar1 11.p•rience
in imporl end domettic eut°"
moltilf 11~ic,1.. Ov1r fw1nty
mech•nic1 will b• under his di-
rect control encl hit 1xp•ri•nce
.,
"'
" .,
will ben•fit both d1•f•t'11iip--ii; .. -· i!
customer•. lob It ·m1rried ind
hit two childr•n. He llk11 to
fish 1nd..fra.w1I in kis sfM're time.
)
·' II . '
·.
I
' •
J8 DAILY PILOT '
Splendid Rend·ltio11 . ----..
TONIGHT'S ........ , •tcTrTMM,I' ·~·,.··· ,.,nn..,. IVillltlSI
Festival Chorale
NOTK• TO ceaDlTOIU PICTITIOUI IUllNUI NMll ITATIMINT HAMa iTATIMl.JIT
tUHeKMI COUllT W THI 1 tlAMI I T.&TIMl.ltl' Tht 19'._..,. ,.. .. lfi "'"' M IN» TM feUow!IW ..,_ It ..,t,.. Ml-fTAT1 °" CA&.IPOIMIA •oe ,.. _....,.. ,.,..... .,, ..,,.. u· • Al: •
f NI (OUWTT OP OllANOI 1111.111 ....... : 'THOM,Kltl AllOCIATll, tt 1 S 11: • H OISTltllUTOR.S. _,, ,.,I l .. ai. ti HIJHtY c. llllc;JMANN, COLLINI I AIKMA,. IHOUITllll, C.I• .... 11,...,. Nnpol1 IHdl. '•Ill, CM-'tf Ii'!. H~ ~ ,..._ 0.C.._., UK., 7a H~ A-. w.tM11411W, t'JMI, ll:w..rtl 1!:"1 Hun1tr. W2f hf1
...
NOT.Cl' ts Ma-ll:llV OIYll!N .. the CMl*"IL ' >-lit. ,,...,...,c:. .. c..t.IM CM'ditl I"!,, N~ I Hd\.
_,tdMn .. IN ...... _,., ...... Dl4c: & c.t.=::... ~:l:'d.~ llt •• M.....,, ..._ ·t. ,,..., M Tllk Ml-\t """ ~ ., M
ttltf ti\,..._ .... lM cs.in. ...... 1M A-....... y_.. Mr# Yont ,._, 1M1W 1t MIM Cllf ""1 ... l.Wi'delu•L
.. lcl ~ .,-, r.w1ni11 M tilt ""'°"' Tllll llMINM k Clilll'llllUCtM IW , CM• INllvldWI. -llUCHAllD !. HUwlMT•ll C Wiit\ tN ~ ~ Ill tllt .tfkil ,_,,IOll. ... .,. N, Tiii• 1t1l-I fl lld Ill 1111 ountY
.... (lefk .. llM MiO¥• 4t1lltlt0 QNrt, ... COUJNI .. AllC.MAilll Tiii• .. .._.... flltcl wllt\ ""'" (~ ci.n. af Dr•1191 Cownty .. ; JV..., 1•. lttt. to -• m-. wffll 1t1t .......,,. C~l"OAATION Clerk 9' Ot-. c-..tY .. l Jllftt lt. I IY 1-"Y J. Mllldall DtPllfY (aunty _..,., M 1M unclenl .... t i 111t off~ 5ltNll ., C. L Dlfirlll IY ~r J. ~ °""'ty COUftl'I' c;.1tt11 •
.. IW l~I T. G. OALTON, $ twtfl TrffWI" c;MrL r 1MM 1'~11""'6 DrlftN (.oMI D1lt: ;:;:
Offers Requiem TV IDGHLIGHTS
NBS a and CBS e 4:00 -Democratic Nationll
Convention -ContlnuaUon of th·e gavel-to-aavel
coverage. ABC U airs 90 minutes of higbllghlf in·
duding nominations, at 6:30. ·
11t11"" ,,,., 1111.. , .. , Lot -""""· ni. .,,~ wu "ltd """' "" c.,,.. ~.,,. °'.,. c-t °"" itnor, J11t1t ». 11, •NI JulV ., 11, ttn ,,.._,, BY TOM BARLEY ~~~·.,'::~'$'..,!:. ~11.i,:-,,:. .. ,,-°"'*"' °'.,.. °""""' • JtrM '°''1!'-=~"'~"~·~-".'!~'~"~'~·~·•'.'.,!"~n!_~'-~n~l'--'-"-'7;.,;7;,;;;;M.,,.---1 -iell!fllS ,. Ille .,, ... ot Hid ft(.0.111 ,.. .ws« 1. I .,.GAL NOTICE l..EGAL NOT1CB Df .. Dliltr l'llitt Steff
""nMll ,...,,. ,_,,. '"" "" """ "'°". ..111111'1:--.:...~~"".'.~~~~~=----l ----;;c;;;t;;Ouliiliiooiii___ B -•--• 0 . n -u1 (ti~ .. ""' notlet. l'lilbil~ Or•• eo.11 O•llr Piiot ,ICTITIDUI 1U11Na 11 'rdnn• erman ....... ""! em Dt*I Ji;M :rt, lt72. J~I· 1, U, 1a. a, ltn 11..n MOTICI IMVITINO llot . HA.Ml ITAT•M« .. T 1.. t cert Jnl t -'· t MAll:Y C.. l l!llGMAIOt ~ 11 ,._.br flV•ll 11111 thl ~rG ,..,_ fl>Uowlnt Ptt-It clohtt bWIMll 14 mos I 1/ DO UC ype e11te11trt• et 111e wm of LEGAL NOTICE of 1rus1• of tM F011111e111 V•lltv 11: of choral worlt you look to
ltw ,.,.,._., rielMd dtctdtfll Stflool Ol11rld ef Or•not '°""'"'' '6111· IHODPY'5, 2000 N.wporl 81\td,, Co111 when y ou •--1c1e to give the T. e. OM..TOlt orllle. will real .... .,...1111 bid• up to ~ '2621, ~
4il Je. ltwl4't It .. k1fit 1• SUit•llOft COU•T Of' TMI t:• P.M. Oii tN 1tl cit¥ et A119i1'I, 1t72, How•rf E. Hll'l'llYltr, 1•51 GrMflbl'l1r local folks tomethlng special lM A~. c.ill. ... II ITATI OI' CALllloaNIA •OI 11 ._ eftke of 111111 Klloof lill1trld Wt'• Rd., L0111 ltKll, Ct . MllU.
T•ti 1ru1 MA .... s Tll• COUllfn' °" ott•N•• dlltl .. cMOtl"tMll)t ,, wt11C11 11,,,. Mkl T1111 1111.inni 11 r..1"' ctr*lcttci .,., '" In the way of I party plece or
Aftw..., IW •11«¥'1f'f• -. At:JDM ~• wlll .. .,._. Ind .,,..... for "" llldNlcWol. Chriatmu o(f11rir1tr f"Vllll"*ll or.. co.ti DallV Pllof, HOT.Cl OF 'Hd.ltiM Of' "TITlott ,_. of Mio PltMrltW 1WMI. HowtNI I . MMnlrltf' --.,.
J\lly .C. 11, It. 25, 1'12 17S1·11 •cwt PRO.All O• Wll.I. AMO ~~ .. Nnll.,.d j;~clln«i wtlt'I Tillt 1ltltn'lt!'ll IUtd ~1111 1tlf County Jt ii I haunUiagly scored,
coo1c:11L1 .. ""•"w~•••'•a11. TUTAMaN-1p9C:lt\caH--°" flte 111 "" ,.,,., Cllttl llf °'"'" Coun!Y .. : Jvn. JI, im. solidly ·~-'cal work.~ •• "· TAR't ., ,...~, ..._~--.. -• '"' ly ,k'tvtr J. M111C1oa Deputy Count~ ~ Wl~I uuc:
LEGAL NOTll"P. E'sttt• fl HEHll:V SRENT, Otc11ted. ~.,..,1141 __ ,,,_.. ,,... Olll't Cltflt. kJnd f de-·-•· "·t ... ,.. MOTIC! 11 tlflll:~IY GIV!N tll.i v....,. kllaat Dlltrkl, nurncw -UOl\l· " 11111 0 n.wuua UUI Vt ry -----~-----'---l zt111t1t ,:em l rMtft&i Iii.cl ,..,.lift I Mfl· llOWf UM, CorMr 'If T .. Wt Ind Hew-PubllsNcl DrlftO' Coe1t Diiiy PUof, (luick.Jy aort out the Wheat l'ICTITIOUI IUSIM••• lion for .. ,..,.,, of Wiii Md for tlclldl i...ci StrMI, FllUlllllrt Valley, C.llforfll• Jltlly •• ti, 11, 25, 1m 17'2·1'l
HAMI'. ITAT•~JllT 1lld Ltlltrl Tffl..-V1ry to Ptllllotlfl' t2101. 11from the chaff. Jt COmpeJs the ™ 10•1ow1ne ""'°,.. .,., dOIM (IOl'ICI w111v.ci1 rtt.,91'1C• • Wflktl 11 IY ORDEll OF THE 10A1to LEGAL NO'nCE a blest of choral directors to 91ut.i-• t1; n'llelt for f\N'ltlto' Nrtlalllft."" llllt ttlf Of TRUI T!EJ, PAllllCWOOO VILLAGE I.TD. C• tlrM Incl p~ Gf llHl'lnt llllo 'unw Ilea FOUMTAIH VAU.•Y · take •~long bard look at the
C:11/tornl1 llmlt..r -~1. 11'71 bMn ... tor July u. 1m. ti•:•'""'·· Ill IGHODl. Ollllll(T "ICTITIOUI IUllJlllll caliber ol ... choir' he m ust lrvltte aouMYIAI, lwfln. c.llt. !hf '°",.,._,. of °""'""""" No. ~ of Mtl'y HI•, Clffi! Gf the lotrtl MAM• ITAl«MINT ' u.ii:;
DOii Koll c-. lllC. f• Ctllfonll11 .... CO!Jrt, II 100 .Cl<Ac Clllltf Drive Pllbllltwd Or'•llOI COIU O•lly Piiot, T"" tolioWIM ptrMW .,. Golne work with Jn an gf!ering~that
COfHf'llloll), 1'01 Dow llrMI, NtwpOrl Wnt, 111 llW CllY "S.l'lft""" C•lll«nlL Jlllr II '"' Jlllr 11, 1m 111'-'2 M IMM I I: .A, .. their ---·-· to ... 8t.cll, C..111, 0.-Jutr 1. 1172 ~DICAL lEASIHG COMll'AHY, 500 Ull .,._.. .. ~ I.I.JC
Thontr & l lrmll"lflllm C-trvdlerl w, I. 11 JOHN LEGAL NOTICE H-1 Cl!lltf or,. Ste. m. Newport fuU.
Cori. (11 <1lltornl1 °"'°''''°"''· Intl Cou111Y Cleilt 8HCfl, C1tlf, ""°· lrtlM loulrl•rcl. TUllln. c.u.. CAR,INTIR, MAL.c:OM AND OA.1.1' RllPll E. Or.n.m. 2SOI Elli Cll•P. If director Jack KrefUng Tiiie blnlnn1 11 belM condudecl bY 1 All«lll'l'I 11 Lew ITATIMl!HT 0, AIAHDOHMl!ltT 0" llltfl. Ort ,..., C1llfarnlt . j
l imit ... P11rt,..rehl1 '>t1• Clm11,11 Ortve Ull OP "ICTITH>UI IUllHISS NAM• JM E. l.onll, 2ll$ M ~Ill Main shares this critic's V eWS fO-
piAll:KWOOD VILLAGE l TD.. H .... rt •..en. CAHr.rllll,.,... TM jollowlllt -IOI! 1111 •blnclotlld tlM SlfMI, S•nlt Ma, C1fltarnl1, d ay on the ability of . the lly DON KHOll COMPANY. INC. Atllfllln"' Pltlllllllt UN of thl 11c1rt1ou1 ~ n11ne J AND T~ E. JOIWIOll, IOCI Nl'NtlOrl F ' I Cho I
I Y! o. P. Mlclclf'""" Publl&llM Or#IOI cot.t oe11r ll'llot. J STOC K "OIUM. an1 ·TrlNty, Cott• CttttlL'r or .. si.. no, Htwport 1111ai, Laguna est1va ra e to
T1111 11•1-1 n11c1 w11t1 ""' cou111v Jiiiy 11 .. 12, i-. 1'12 1111.12 M•••· <1111. ca1l1w1111. measure up to B r a h m s 1 Cltrk of Or•llOll c_,., on1 Jiiiy 6, lf1'J. TM lkllllout ~I"'" Mmt rlftrrld to 81n L. Hll'pt!', UOl E11t Cll1111ntn,
1v Arll'lur e. K,.,.,, 0t1111ry c;ou111y •boY• w11 lllH In or1"91 C1>1mty °" June 10 r1nu1, Cllllornl1. m assive demands then he b, a
c1tr11. LEGAL NOTICE ,., 1t11, t111 M IMt.1 re bel111 (Olldl,icted tty • h p . deed • 11161 Ectwt11 11. writ•, 3112 'Trlnlf'f, cost1 G-r•I P•rlntBlllP. very ap Y man ID •
P111111a11111 or.,. ,coe11 0111v Piiot, Mna. c1l1tornfi . T11om11 E. Jollniron F or his Lafronans, backed July 11, "· " 11111 Auov1t t, tm 17117·72 CITY 0, IRVINI Tiii• bu1l11111 Wll <Olld!J(led lw Ill ·~ Tl!ll 1l1temllllf lllH wllll 1111 Countv
PUILIC llllOTICI c11v1e1ue1. c~ of Or1111M County 011: June 30. 1t12. by choristers rom St. Mary's
Ari ,,.,.lc.tfon 1111 bHn fllld ltY eowiN •· WR.ATE 11'1' leverlY J, Mlddox DrP11ty Counlr Episcopal 8 n d Community MCOOHNEll. DOUGLAS CORP, for 1 !At "·IOI• Clert.,
Plt'mlt, No. UP-»24 lo Hrmlt lhl Pllbll1hld Or11191 C0111t DILiy Piiat, ' ll77I Presbyterian CbUrches in the Hlt bll"'"""" of 1 mHkll cllnlt, July ~ II II 2.5 1972 11•72 Publlahld OflllOll COii! 0•11'1' Piiot, Art Col .-.. h , 'ICTITIOUI IUllHlll ln:hlfkl engll'\Mr ofn(tt ni. •rcNIK t • • ' • Jutr •• 11, 11. u. 1972 uu.n ony, came UITTJUg In
HAMI! ITATIMINT PllMWI' o111ca. 1r1v11 •• ,.,1ce, r1111ty of. LEGAL NOTICE· s plendid style last weekend in TM foOowlnt Plll'ION art cktlll'I lier, M lrlff1 office m1111l1t1 PllbllWr,., ___ .=:_:__ _ _:.::__..:.::___ LEGAL NOTICE
M 11t111 ••: ,nc1 ldmll'llitr.ilve 1nc1 .,p1,111tn11 p1.1 !--------~~----! a program that would h ave I OWMANDll: APAlll:TMl'NTI. Ul3 lie.ti Wllllln lw!J lllllllnt b1Jlldlnt1 loca!H P'ICTITIOlll SUllHEl l "ICTITIOUS SUllH!ll daunted many choirs of com-Wflt C.oe•I Hlt11Wt1', lull• JOO. NtwPOrt 111 l tN 19 of fl,I ltfl A'fh«I lrvlM NAM• STATEMENT MA.Ml! ITATIMl!HT
h«l'I. Clllforftl• ""'° l110u1tri.1 PC "PMll\Mcl Commvllltv" n.. 1ouow1111 ",_ .,, dOl111 Thi tollowlr11 per-11 ClolM bWl1t1•• parable s ta tus. Tltl Greenwldl G<OllP lllCOl'porllld, f lltrlct. l:M.tllMM ff: H '
Oftllw1r1, .J:m Wfft Coe1I Hltl!WtY, located Oii 1111 rwlM11rerty cor1t1r of CAll:PENTER. MALCOLM ..._.AND 'HOME lll:OICEll:S _ HUNTIHGTOPA Their Work th? 0 U g h 0 U t
Svli. :llO. Newowl hid!. C•llfomlt MICArttwr lllYd. •ncl C•mM Dt l\'e, In DALY, "16 Campvs Drive, llEACH, INC., !IOll Sroolll'Hlrn Slre.t, deLighted a Laguna Woman's 91'60 • Ille Cltv of lt\111141. Su.:ll, CilHornla, nMO HvnllntlOll 111<11. C1Htarnl1 t11M.
Alton I. Crowtll, Jr., nos 4'JMl'lllt A lllblk 1111r1n. wlN be Nld .. 11111 IP' T11otr1111 Jt, M•lcolm. , .. VI• Unclh11, Home 1ro11..,1 • Hlolnllll'llOll llKll, Club audience with their best
Ot'lw. 1,.._ 8tldl. c1111orn11, pl1et11on ov "" citv af 1rv11t1 Pl.Wnt Llae 111t. c 1H1or1111 inc.., C•Hloo'nl• cOl'POl'111on. efforts, from this "" .. 'tic's seat. Tiii• l:M.t1l1t1u 11 belnt (Ollll!KI"' b' 1 Cornmh.1iofl °" TiwrMley, Jvly :II, 1172, 11 Ot1rlft D. 0 1tv, 2 Gow• Clrele, 'Tllll tll.lllMll II beflll conClllctef br MA ,., Llmll'ld "•rtlllll'llll1, 7:JO P,M, In t1tll Plt rwtllllil C1m1nf111on Ml111on Vltlo, Ctlllornlt CorPOrlllOl'I" comillg in the second half Of
1111 GrMflWlctt GrOllJI ltl•rl"" room. "°""" 20ll. 1rv1111 Town T1111 bl.lllMu h. twine condvcltd b1 • war ri. "· '"''"'-this •lorlOUS' work. Their an-1ncorpor1tt11, Cenltr, lrvl1141, C1Htarnll. P1rtlllll'N1111. Prtslderrt P Giner•• P1rlnt1". JOI! 1rv~1r For partt<ullr .. Pl!oM mse.e or <111 CHARLES D. DALY ni11 11,1_. 111"' w1111 "" county dante -"Here on e arth we •w: JOI\ 1ru1>tk1r at 1111 ottlu If 1111 Irvine c11~ P11""1111 n.11 ,,.,_, 1111c1 w1111 the Countv c11r11 ot orin01 countv 011: Ju"' 16, 1912, have no contm' um' g ... 1ace" _ Slnlor Vlui l'r11•ldl!ll•S.C:rlll•l'Y Dlptrtmlftl, City Htll """'•· 4101 Ctm-(18"1 ol Or•rio• COIHl!y .. J11111 ''· 1972. I Y e ... rlY J, Mlddolt 0.Plllr County ti'
Tiiis 1ltlem1nt 111111 Wllll 11111 Counl'f Olll Drlv1, lrYIM TOW!! Cen!lt, lrvl111. l y l1verty J . Mldclox, Deputy Coun!y Clltk. WaS superbly delivered and
ci..11 of °''""' C1111nty ""~ JulY •• 1tn . Publl.ntd 0r.,.. Gllst O•Uy Piiot, Cltrk. , 1'461 h he
• I Y Artllur !. Krtt'lll', Defwb' Collll!Y Julv 11, ltn ltot·tt , 1U.U PubtlSl!ecl Or11191 Coe1I Dally Piiot, Controlled and quite l e St ~1er11. Pubt1111.ci Or•"" coe1t D111r Pllot, June 20, 21, and J ulY 4. 11. 1m 15'4-72 pnrtion of the 'Requiem. ''"''1. ___ LEG~~AL~~N~OTl~~C~E:._ ___ 1.'~·~M'._'."c'~":"::'~";"~·~·c"~·~··~·~·~"'~-''~"~·:1~·11 ~--l:i~iAi:-iiOTiiCi:---1 PubllM!ed o r'""' Co111 o.11y Piiot, LEGAL NOTICE They bad fine soloists to
July 11, 11•" •11<1 A119utt 1. 1'12 t11'-n suP11t10• cou111:T o, THI LEGAL NOTICE light their ~ay in th i s
llAT• 0" CALl,ORHIA "01t "ICTITIOUI 8Ullltl!IS :t I h TM• COUNTY ., OltANO• BAR •1• NAMI! ITATEMIHT breathtakingly beautuu ymn
NI. A-7UU ll'ICtlT1ous au11H«11 Thi 1o1iow1"" "''°" 11 ao1n11 ttutlntu of pra ise in the persons of IUPllllOR COUltT or THI! HOTICI! 0, HIAltlMO 0, PITITIOH HI.ME ITAT!Ml!NT t l :
STATI 0, CALl,DllMIA "011: '011: "RDIAT• 0, WILL AMO ,o. Tiii lollDWfllf perwi 11 0011111 MIMH SHADOW I OATS. 7"1 GrlC• I.•"'· soprano Marily n lnterlandi
TNI CDUHT1' 0, ORAHO• L•n•lll TllTAMIHTAR'f" (80HO 11: 111c19. 5 &. " COii• MllM. and barito ne William San·
H1. A·1UJI W,\.IVl'DI BEACH CARIURETOll: SHOP, 11D lrvc• Oonol!ut C1r11tt, 4 l f HDTICI 0, HIAlll:IH• Oii "ITITION Ett•le of All:THUll .... ADAlll:, Yorltt-n A\flnl,!9, Huntington 8•~11. Ml....,.rue. Corona cit! Mir. didg e.
FOil PllOIATI 011' WILi. AHO LIT· o.cuwci. C1lllornlt , t2"'6 Th!• buslnne II bel"' COl'lclll<lld b~ •n Miss Inter Inn d i was Tlllll TllTAM«HTAll:Y NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIV!N lHAT L1wrenct Orr!n Ltdwla, 2 71 4 lncllvlduol.
1!:11111 of EVELYN RUTH ROSIEN !1•11 E, Meir llu lllld ltlr•ln. llltlllcfl Albltrou Drlve, Colt• Miii, Clll!Ornl•, Brue• D. Ct rllff magnificent in the anda!lte, Olce1Hd. for PrCINI• Gf WIU •1111 for l•Utrs '16U This 1t1tement ll lll!d wllll !hi Count'f'
f:OTICE IS HE ll:!IY GIVEN ff\11 Ttsllll'lll'lllry to PtlltlOrllf l loncl Wtlv.cl l Titll b1,.l11tu I• bel111 cOl'lcllK"" bY •n Cieri! ol or ..... CounlY °"' June 30. 1912. LEGAL NOTICE
EVIi-ROIMl'I 1111 llllcl 11.,tln I Pllltl .. rllllf'lllCI t11 w 111 ( II 11 lfllcll for lnc11wldu11. -8~ l tverlY J. Mlddllll DffllfY Counf'f, ---------~---! tor ProNll ol Wltl •lld for /JIWlr<• of lutllltr Nrtkvllr .. Incl 11111"" time Incl Llfl'l'lr>C.t Orrl" LldWl9 Clerk. I'
letltr1 T11l-ltl'Y lo Ptll"-Illa o1 IM!1rlnll Ille llmt 1111 been 111 Tiill 1t.tement Iii.cl Wlll'I 1111 CDUnty , 111• "ICTITIOUI IUllHIESI
refirtne;e lo wlllc:tt II """/' fW hmlllr for JulY 2.5, lffl, ti t :• 1.m,. 111 1111 Cleft llf Oftfttll Cou"IY °'" Junt 29, 1972. ~lsl'lld Ot1nge CMll Dilly Pltol, HI.Ml ITATEMEHT
"" ... "'',""' .. ''" ... , ... _ ..... , ... , -, (Ollrtroom of Oelllrtmtnl No. 3 Gf llkl I~ kY•rlY J. Mlddo•. DtOllty County July "' "· 11, "· ltn IT.D-72 TM 1o11ow1.. Ptf'ICll\$ IA Claln9 Gf r "' .. .,,. II .. or VIY ~. •I 1'0ll Civic: C•n••r Orlvt Wttl, lft Clerk. btlll!lftl Is:
ti. 1tn, 11 t :30 e.rn .. In IM ClOIH'I'-" or the c ttr of $1n11 Ana. c1u1or111a. DANl•L •· suCKHUM LEGAL NOTICE 11:EN&1ssA,Nce FAllltCS, 3 l O l °'"1'inllnl No, I ol llld atvrl, ti 100 Dtlef J uty ,, lt71. AnOllNIY AT LAW N,_t l lwl .. NewPOrt lleacl'I.
Civic C'lftltr Orlw Wttt, In 1111 City of W. E. $1 JOHN .. ......,.,. Ctnter Dli"' SlliM W Elrnlr J. Mueller, 222 l1rtsour,
Santi Ana, C1 lltornl•. (OUntr Cltrll. H•P"ff lffdl. Call!. nMI ,ICTITIOUS IUllNISI (orOM 1111 Mllr, Cl. ~, .. Jl,!Pll a. lt1'J. MITCMIU AHO TUCICI• Tit• ln4) .... IDI HAM! ITATIEMIJllT GrK• J. Muelltf', 222 l •rbPur, W. !, II JOHN, ,........,.. et 1.IW '4 JM lollowln9 1111'-tre d011'19 CorOM Cltl Mii' ..
COU1'IY Cllrt .. H ........ c ...... Otlv• llllte,.. " 117 bull...,. IS: Rabi'. H. Loi, 116 Presidio Dr, COlll MARMOH D. l •AHNIJt I IMwlll1 •11e11, C.ltfwllll nwt Publlahld Ot11101 COlll Delly Pilot, J &. J STOCK ,OW:MS, ·7701 Ldlll(I Mtll, Ct.
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
''Ye now are AOn"OWful'', in a
dellvery that oo vi vidly
reminded this erlUc ol w hat
choral genius Farrandolle 111-
ed to call 11the next layer
voice" -the captu1i ng of un
elhereal q u a II t y best
demonstrated In our time,
perbapa, by Kathleen Ferrier.
Sandidge ,alto shone in the
andante ·moderato that telllj ua
in just three lines lhe .....age
that Bra hms had for us when
he scored this unique tribute
in r equiem fonn to the living:
"Lord, make me to know the
measure of my dayt on earth,
"To consider my frailty ••• "
ed.
A word befpre we leave for
KHJ a 7:30 -"The Running Man.'' Lee Remick
and Laurence Harvey are teamed in this 1955 ad-
venture movie.
: KCET rl!l 8:00 -"Laguna Aris FesUval.'' The ·
36th annual F<0stival of Arts and Pageant of tho
Masters ls filme<I from Laguna Beach ln this spe-
cial edition of Citywatchers.
· ABC U 9:00 -"Marcus Welby, MD." D~vid ¥e-
callum guest stars ln a story of a college Instructor
who assumes responsibility for the raising of his
y,ounger brother. • KTLA a 11 :30 -"I Love a Soldler." This Wll'
time (1944) drama features Paulette GOddud and
Sonny Tuft..
that moat capable ·~ .............. ..,"" .. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllD companlsl,. Fred Barnes. HJs
support at the piano, vital to
any chorale .faced with a work
of this dimensim. was im-.
pecca ble and beautifully pitch-
Well done, Fe s tival
Chorale. It's good to have
something like the Brahms
R equiem under your belts.
Guard Rail
Saves Actor
B _..,
Tuesday
Evening
JULY 11·
l!ONOLULiJ (AP) A l:OO l)(IJ -tie "'"'"" CH·
guard rail saved. s tunt driver Wiit.ion (cont'd llOll'l 4PM) llvt rrom
George Fra ine from taking a ~~m~::· ::rt~rncr;:r~~= :~
1,500-foot flight dowo a clUf •l'lllJst, respecti'l'tl}',
during filming of a recent rn D Imm m ....,
"Hawaii F ive-0" televis ion 0 !Ii ID DllMcntlc Mltlwil C.-.liN (cont'd llom 4 PM) Lin
episode. coverap of proceedlnrs lrom Con·
Fraine was driving ,a $15,000 rention Htll In Ml1ml Beach. John
Ita lian sports c.ar down a Chl11ttllot 1nd Dlvld Brinkley 1t1
1nchormen, EdWin Nnm1n h11 the
l\visting, single-lane road· on special •ssipment ol lnt11viewfn1
Tantalus, a m o u n t a i n candld•les, Pl!rf)' lltden tnd otht•
overlooldng Honolulu. AS he •er politlc1I fi1u11s •I l~lions off
r oared through a hairpin turn, the convention noor. II TM Iii V1tlef
F raine found to his surprise a (I) TNO. ., CMMqunm
r eal-life Honolulu P o I i c e m TM m.tst.1111
Department car blocking the ~ =" .:"'
roa d . fE Ab T1n9o1
F raine's car fishtailed into a @) IWllPMf't lodat
guard r a il, but be came out a...,.....,., Rfl
unhurt. The sequ ence was part Em T1 II AnlncH
of an episode titled, "Death EE llirM ....,
Wish on T anta lus Mountain." t:lO D (})(])a> DtlMCtltic NrilMI
'Scorpio' Cast
Colnonhs kttpt•nce of tht 1972
Dlrnocntk pllttonn 11111 1101T1ln•·
lions ire l•turtd m TIM n,;.1 NINI
or hls rounpr arottw ii torcad ti
tHYllUlll hit ... llfo H4 bll flf11
Wv1, wtitlna. Dl'l'id Mee.Hum 111C
B11ry Higlu aunt '
tli Kl.._. l111J•JM1 "Tiii Cftlt
Mo~ Dtllrt"
m 11J-mu • .._,......,
!E)llCrloOllltlCrloOI 9"'-m-
t :lO 0 lt01llll "' ,... -""' 811'1 Ecbtlfll weltofMs WCtllst l.,.
rez Alu111dr\ti, fhrllll: Bobbi H1111to
phrry, 11111 tM Jollnnr H1mlllOllf
Qurrttl o _,,.,.
(j) I Dru• II Juull em -11!11!11 Diii' H "Wilk On, >In,..
11rl" Docu1111nt1ry t11 im hnlsl:
Lrror Vlnntt•r. Pro1rem 1llo f11·
t11ie1 inl1rvitwa wltll AN 11111"9
G11y Ow1n1 i ncl "°'1• CNffofd. m•-. Ill_, __ ....
IO:OO Cil h -• ....., "''""' om -00 .......
Q -"A Soos Cl"' R~
vtn11N Sal Mlntiq, Edd ""*· JICl
WtslOll, 111111 HMdini. A JOIMI 11111•
et who 1111 *°"' ,... wlttl the
youthful public vi• '°' lb ,..
newed 1tttntlon throulll tM •••
ttf of • moril lllD(lll.
Jllll:OMI D. JAVllllllCK Tll: cno .... 1d71 Julr •, II, 11, 2S, \972 175'·72 Place, Wtstmln1l1r, C1tl10r11l1. LY11t1 c, Loe. 116 itrn ldlo Dr. Cosll
tJI» Vtlllwa atv«. ltlfll 41• AtttnllYt ftr '"'"'-"' Rlell•rd E. Wr1W. 7~1 Lltlltl! P11c1, Miii. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) 1""-~ C.ilMfl111 l lllJ Pvbllsllld 0r1,.. Coat 01llY Piiot, LEGAL NO'I1CE Wlllmlnlltr, C•lll. Thi• bu1l111u i. M/1111 ((ll'ldlKllcl b~ 1
Teti !1'11 .. 1-41• July 11 12.. 11. 1m -1116'72 Helm Wr•t•, 1101 lrllltlt P l1<.1, P•rtrwn111.e. Burt Lancast er and Alain
Qj) lhturt ti U.ric11 ftlk Mnk m 111ttt.,.,. 1))-..... -"""_'_ an.1a11....,. Anll'IWI ftr1,htlllllltr ' W1JSlml1111ef. Call!, ELMEll J. MUELi.ER I h ~-· h .... NOTIC« TO CltlDITDltl Tiiis bullntU 11 be1nt (-U<lld by • Thi• •l•te""'11 fi led will! "" Counlv De on ave uct:O cas t WJI LEGAL NOTICE o" 1ulK TlllAHSF£111: , .. -fl Id · 'Seo · • Publllhld Or•• coe11 0111y Piiot, '"''· 4111 _ 4111 u .c.c .J P1rtlllll'1hlp. Cltrk Gt o~enH Countv on : J une JO, 1tn. Paul Seo e m ' rpto, • an ''~"'~·~·~·c'c' ~"~·~•rrn'.'_ ____ _!'~'"~n•l--N.rn,;o-o.o.;u<Til:iirniA-Nolle• 11 Nr•ttv viven to tM c rldlliJrt Helen Wr•t• 11 leverlY J, M111c1011: °'""'' countv 1'nte mat1'onal spy drama with -HOTltl 0, I ULK, TJi.AMl,all I T 1 who" lllctl•rd E. Wri te Clerk. • LEGAL NOTICE ·cucc II 1111 • 4111) of MJll End 5111Jp1, nc.. r•ru eror, 'Tiii• st1tem1111 llltd will! Ille County , 11m l r . w shin t D c
:.: TO CREOITORS OF GUY e,', FDITEll, :::." ~~~~· 1!t 2').fo~~=~·1s.~1!'u': Clerk ot Orange Cou111y °" JuM :1(1, 19n by Publltl!ld Of•!IV' COid Dally Piiot, oca tons Jn a g on, ' .,
• 21~ JR., •ncl 8EnY RUTH FOITE!ll:, d/tJ/• Cllllorfll• !Ml II bull lr•Ml•r 1, •bolrt lo ltv1r1Y J, Mlddoll. Otputy County Clirk.l'Jl"'r';';·;";··;·;··;";· ;";n;;;;;';";";";;E;n;g;l~a~nd~, ~V~ie~nn~a~a~n~d~P~ans~·~·~ll IU,•RIOlll: COUll:T OF THI CHOCOLATE TJtEE, TRANS,ERORI: be m1c1e' lo F .. p Fltlrla. 1ne, " bll.ntd Or c ff 0 II ,~~1U ITATI Of' CALl,OtfNIA "011: Ne!l(f II lltrlbY llVlfl 11'111 1111 Tr1Mltrte WbOS1 bulln111 lllklrff1 It 330 U •fife Cl>' 1 V ot, , ... COUNTY o• Olll:AHOI lr•n~ffr«I, GUY e. FOSTElll:. Jll. Incl £, Olyrnpl~ l lvd., LOI Al'IO'lll, Counly Gf Julr 4, ll. II, u. nn 114t-72 ~. No A·J'JMI IETI'Y ll •U l H FO$T!ll:, d/bl l• AllOlllll Sl1!1 of C1lllor111 •.
.; NDTIC• D, Hl.f.ll:ING '°' it•Tl'l;IDlt CHOCOLATE TREE, 1r1 a0out lo m1k1. Tiit .. ~ ... y lo bl tr1111lerred b LEGAL NanCE
• f'OR ~11.0IATI M Wll.I. ANO •OR llllllr lr1ntffr ' of Pl'_,., 10 ftl.I U~ locl l ... 11 2M lroedw1y, L11UN l •ldl·i-------------
1.ITTIRI TllTAMllflAllY ~1111-ao•. F. OGLE and· 8IVEll:LY County of Or111M, Siil• ot C.lllOrnll. FICTITIDUI IUllMlll
'" E'llt ... of llOl.AHD ST AH F 0 ll D JEAH OGLE. TRA!'fSFEREES. Slld lll'Olllr!Y II cltllCrlbld In 11e111r1I NAMI ITATIMIMT 1 toREMAM. O.Culld. 'Tiil lllllll'INS'Wir.11 Gt llM lr1111ftror• 1•1ANMidi111 ,..,.., fhd......_ 14Vlpllllfll TM lollowln9 perw111 1111 dol111 >' NOTICE IS NER!IY GIVEN 11111 Incl 1,..nlfet ... art: 11M1 .... -'R ef !Ml lilll1il D\BllllS1I bu1i1t1U ts:
i' How1rC1 II. 8ottlllll'I Ills fjlH l!tl'1ln TrlNllllll'OI': 11421 SHI 111<1'1 81vCI., tnown 11 Miii End Sllopl, Irie. llld locltld CALIFORN IA FENC! CO., 11!1(2
J 1 H!Ult11 for Probel1 of Will 111d for SHI lffcll, C1Hfornl1. 11 %M lrotdw1r, 1.Hulll Bffdl. County M1ln $tr"I. Tu•llll, Ctlllornl1 t'2'9t ll1111na Gt l•lltr11 l"ll mtnlltY to 1111 Tr11111.,....: 1141 Siii llldl llYd., of Or•""• Sl1t1 of C1llfornlt. St1w111 II. H1YW1rCI, 617VI POllY
lll'llllontr rllffanca to wlllcll 11 mldlt 1or St'll htdl. .(eHtOl"llla. Tiii bl.Ilk tr11111tr will 1111 COlllllll'lmllecl $1rMI, Corot11 Cltll Mar, CtMfomll
lurll'lw p1r11<u lltl, Incl 11111 thl tlmt •lld TIM loc1tt1111 of IN ~ to be on or alt.If 1111 t41tt d1r Gf JulT, 1972, ff John H. R1ymond, IMtl BrttWr11
P11c1 Gt llurl nt 1111 Ntnt Mt bf.In wt lran&flr'9cl 11 lJ.m' S..I IMCl't 111\ICI .. t :IO A.M. al Fltldt, Fllill and Ftln1ll!n, ROid, Tustin. C1Ufornl1
for Juty 11, 1,72, 11 •:Ill 1.rn~ 111 1111 Ofllll" C-ty, Stll lll(fi, C.Uloml1, 1"33 V111hlr1 11'1'11 .. Encino, COlltll'I' of Tl!is bu1IMS1 I• bll111 <llndlK!ld lty I
COllrlrOMI of °""'11Mftl' NI. i of Hid Thi MOPll'll' to bf """lerrld 11 •11 LOI """""' Stai. of (llllotllll . GeMrll Part111r111111 (_,, ti 70I Cl'tlc C1t1I• Otl'H Wt1f, 111 •tact Ill 11'111e, fb1tvr11, -.Ulpment 11111 l~ Sii l1r •• ~ lo 1111 Tr1111feree, 111 JOHN H, RAYMOND
, 11'11 City of s.n11 ,.,,., C1llfornlt , wtltorY of 11111 r.ien M inni knoWn 11 DUI.Inn• n11rne1 •lld ldrnws uH'd by Tiils 1!1!emlnt llltd wllll tlll County
;: Oiled J-JO, 1m. 1111 "Cl'locollte T,_.. 1te1tec1 et 12427 Tr1111i.ror lw lhl tllrM "''' 1111 P11I. Clert. of Orlfllill C111,111tr 1111 Jlll'll J6, 1m
WILLIAM E. St JOH.... SHI 8'Kll llVd., Or .... C-ty, 5111 •r•: BY leverlr J. Mlddoll, Otpu1y COll!lty
COllf'lty Cltrll' l ffdl. C1l!lornl1. Sim• Cle-rt . ••Vilt, COH«N 6 JlllUI' So fir 11 llnown to.the tr1111l1r-. 11t1 Oiied July S. 1972
•• '111 Wlllll6r11 aiv. .. "'"' U1 f1•n•ltror1 ,,..... llOI UMd l ftY M IMtl F • F Flbrlu. Inc. •. Sl'ff!'tr Hll11. Ce/II_., "211 fll<nl or lcldr111 otll.er 111111 tltl 1bovt 'Tr1nll11rM
; Tiie (1111 JtMlJJ durlrit 11'11 """·.,..,. ...... '"'· l ll<IPPI! Sy: TllortLll Ftl!tl AllorM'l'I "'! HHI..,.., None, SKrtt1ry
• 1NU Publllhed Or1t1111 Coest 01lly Piiot,
June 21 Incl JulY •· 11, ll. lt72 14G-72
LEGAL NOTICE Publllhld Or•noe (NII D•llr ll'Uot, Thi butk l rt111l•r ,. to be CltnlUmmlled ,ublfahld ·Or•t111• Coe•I D•llr Piiot,
July 4, s. 11, lffl 175'·72 on or •lier Ju"' ~. 11n. 11 Lot Al1m1tos, Julr 11. 1t72 ' 1•10-n l----,-,,-,-,-,-10-.-,-,-.-,-,.-,-,-,---C1llf'orn11: '
LEGAL NOTICE Dllld ~ Jv111 12, 1t12 HAM.I: STATIMEHT
108 F. OGLE LEGAL NOTICE Th• lollowlno PlflOfl 11 dol111 bull111s1
11: HOTICll TO CltlDITOltl T,•.•,M.",',"v NOT ICI TD CllEDITOlll:I 1) A TO I MAINTENA~CE , 2.) A TO
SUPlll:IOll COUll:T O" TMI JEAN OGLE SUll'!lll:IOlt COURT M THI Z HANDYMAN, 3622 W, CMn lllt , S111!1 STATE 0, CALll'ORltLA •o• .. bll·I~nl~l"M ,.__ ITAll °' CALl,OllHIA ,o. Ant . Cell!. t27Gol. TMI COllHTY 0,. OlllANOI! U ~...., •not ...... it Dilly Plf'ol, TMI COUHTY O, OllANOI! J. T. Arrne:nl, :Mtt W, Clmlll•, S111t1 H•. A 7UIJ July n . lt72 111:t-1'l No. A·1Jltl A~. C•UI.
Elll le ol C1tl'ltrl~ Hurlll, lllO known Elllll ot GLENN J, IAK£11:, alto This bullntH 11 bl!"" tOl'ICIUdld bY •n 11 C111Mrl111 C. Hvrtll, •llO •-" 11 C. LEGAL N011CE kMWn It GLENN J, IAKER. JR., lndlvktull, Hurlll, DtcHMd. Deitealld. J, T. ARMENT
NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN kt 1111 ' • 11"4 NOTICE tS HEREllY GIV£H lo 11M Titl1 Jllltmllll flllcl wllll IM County
(redltorJ of 1111 l llow Nlrned dtcl'Clenl MOTICI TO (Rl!DITORI CAdltorl of '"' ibovt namld dtc«lent Cl'.rll OI OrellOI County Gii: JuM, 1., 1,72,
1!'111 tM Ptl'tOlll IMIVll!I (l1lm1 H l ln$t 1111 IUP£•10ll COURT O' TMI 11111 i ll plrlOnl hl VIM clllm• 1111ln1t 1111 IY ll'lll'IY J, ~ DtPUty C111tn1Y N ici ~Ill l fl r1111ulrl'CI Ill !!11 !Mm. ITATI! 0" CAl.l,Olll:HIA ,011: llld CIKtdlnl arr re<N lred ll tilt llll'm, Cieri!,
Wlfll lhl 111C1111rv vouc11tr1, In 1111 ofllct TN! COUNTY 0, OUMO• wlltt 1111 -wiry vouclltrs, In '"" llltlct , 1 ... 1
af 1111 (ltf'k ol 1111 1boYt entlllld covrt, or N1. A·1llU Gf 1111 (ltrll of llM 1-.,. entll\td court, Of Publltl!td °""'" COii! D1J1Y Pllol, ~~ :-"'-~-~ ...... < -... •M,,ty ES!lle of PATIY JEAN IEAI.,. DI· kt prff1ft1 tMrn. wltrc Thi ntctsMll'Y JUM ZI, 21, .. nCI Julw ot. II, lt12 14Q0.72
~"·o··'·' In Color ..... .. .... :;, .. ,,. .... ~·., ··~!::.. ~OllU•llll And
. this time, lt1'1 not alone! !POI=::~
11----.CCHILLIHe CO-Hl1.---· ---'-II
'1ALES FROM THE CRYPT"
• .._. .. ,., 0 u • ....,.,.,, • "'' (IOlfd, vwcntra. lo lttt llT!Cltr1!9nld t i 1111 elfl(f
of Ill• Altorntv .. NOlllfMll, Wllln, Sarti NOTICE 1f Ne.REIY Gl't'EH 1tt 11tt of ,,., Attw!Wf, JM'MJ w, ttooUtr•llffl,1----~--------,j!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~;~~I •1111 lllorNn, .US SO!ltll Flolllf'OI, :IOlll tredllors of Ille 1boYI 11111\td dKedlftl S4 ~ Rltlftg llrtll, Loi AnOeln:, LEGAL NOTICE
F'-• LOI A""llt .. Callfornli toOU, 11111 111 Plf'IOnl ll1'Jh,_ cl11lrm 1111MI t111 Ctllfornl1 flll\S. wtllcll II !I'll I I.CC oli-------------
'°""lcll 1• fltl plKI of """""' of llle WlCI CIKedlnl .,. r111ufrtd lo n11 1""'1. bllllllftl ol I"" lll'ldlnl9Mcl In •II ll'lllltrl ,.ICTITIOUI IUllNUS ~:::ci ollll ... ~ ==!.~~~~~~ wllfl 1111 1141U111rv Y011CMr1. It! Ille offlc1 w t1lnJ111 kt 11M a llle af wkl Gtra!ftnl, JllA~ ITATIMIHT '"°""" •lttr !Ill tlr1t M ll<lllOll 01 1111 of 1111 dt rt of 1111 11»,.. ""lli.t court, or w11111n tour ll'IOlllll• 1lltr !I'll first llUblJca. Tiit Pollowl1'4 Pel'IOlll -lllol"" r.otlu. 1 kt ll'ete:nl lhlfn, Wllll ""' lllUlllfY tlon of !his notice, 1M1tlnf$1 11:
DllH Ju1111"" nn voudMr1. 111 '"" ullll•r•ltnH .. 1111 Gfllc• °''"' Juty 10. 1972 WHY WEl~HT FOOO COMl'ANY,
Mt'fMft M WI" of 1111 •ltoNllY, M. WILLIAM TILDEN. KATHLeEH M. 9AKE R • '°'° S111t1 Anti• StrHt, Ot•-· A I I ' ul 1't Weil Fourth Street, 1111 l1~rdl110, E•KUlrbl Clllfornl1 t2166
elm n 11'11°' C•lllOf'l'lll , '°""Ldl I• 11!1 plac11 Gf bullMu of IM WJU of Ille E. Garv l 1rl. '122 VIiie Woodl Dr!W. ~ '::C.~11'!!~ dtctdtnl of tltl ulldtrllanH In 111 """'" P1r· 1bcnl1 MmldST• •necldenl v1111 Pt rt, C1llfornl1
Hlltamlll W1i.n lcol1 •nd llllN111 ltllllll'I to ""' Hitt• Gf ••Id Otcldent, JAMii w. HOOK " 1: .. , Albert CU'lltr. "'' !11lwoocl Clrtt.,
141 """' ·,i,.....M atlll ,.._ wllllln low l'llllrlllll tn.t' 1111 f Ir• I M S.lh Stlt'lllt ltrllf VIiia Plfk, C.llfornl1
I.It ,. ........ C1llf.;1111 •u l>Ubllettlon Gf !I'll• nofl(I. Ltt """'*'· CIUfotMll "°'' Thi• bull-II btll!ll CllllChlctlcl ~ In tllr lrJJJ •2Wnl Dllld Ju11e 10. 1m. T11I: 1111) ••t• . Ptrlner•lllp,
All#Mtl ftr A*'11111 1 It Cl YOE IE, IE Al, Jll., Att.r1111 for ••KVl,,11 A. Cl/lier !74~1 r Aclmlnlttrth!r'ff fl!t 11t1i. Pll-119~ l}l11 1111-1 fll" w!lll 1111 County
PubU1h4d Or•nM Coe11 D•llY P!lot of "" •bovt nllrned dlc:tdtlll, Publlllled Or•1111• Coeit D•llr Piiot, Cllfflt Gf'Or111at County 1111 JUM 2 .. 117,f J11n1 ti Ind Jut,' 4, II II n11 16ft.,; M. WILLIAM TILDIH Jlllr 11, It. " •rid Augu~t 1. 19n U01·12 I r ,.,...,Ir J. Mlddoll, Dtputr C9W1fY ·c=.::..=.::::..::.:c·.=·.:::.:_..:.:.::.::::1 m w11t ,our111 ltrt•t ctrrk.
-5•n 8tr"'l'if!111, CtHforflla " 1"91
LEGAL NOTICE T11: 17141 IM·tlfl LEGAL NOTICE Publlll!td Ori"" Co11I Dell'I' PUii,
-------------i AllOt'MW llr Afmlt1l11AW 1--------------1Ju"''U11'111 Jutr 4. 11, 1e. ltJJ 1~72 •&Ill: 2'ft Pubtllllrcl O!'lllOI Cc.Ml OtllY l'ltol, IUl'IRIOll COUJtl 0, THI JUl1 4, 11, 11, 25, 1•12 17.W.1' HOTICI 0, It.ILK T•ANl,«11: ITATI OP''CA&.1,0llHIA ,011: (Siu. '111-4117 U.C.C.)
TMI COUHTY 0, ORAMGI Hollte Is htrtev l (WI\ 10 "" Crtdllors
MD, AD"" LEGAL NOTICE II o. c.. Mor llt DI A 0 . C. Morllz 8r•u1-------------·ll CITATION •ouMrJ, Tr1,,_llll'or wlloM bl/llllffl 116-I II ..
LEGAL NOTICE
In 1M mt litr of H11 AOollllarl P1tltl011 MN le 113 ll'lllu1trlll Way, C111;11 Miii, HDTIC•'TO CRIDITO!tt
91 All.THUii: w. MOORE. J R., Aelo9tilll HOTICI TO Clll~TOttl Coullty of°''"""' Stilt pl Ctlllomlt, 11111 lt.!"'1111:1011. COURT Dr TM• Parenl. IUP!ll:lotl COURT 0, TN• t 1111111: 11'1fttftr 11 Mtovl lo be midi to 0. ITATI: 0, CALl,.ORJlllA "011:
TO CITEI : HA~ VEHTEH HAA· STATE 0, CAll,OllHIA "" c. Morllt •r•P ' Aluml!Wm Fovndrv, TMI COUMTY °" "" .... FOll:D : TMf COUltTY O" OU.NOi Inc., Trtnf{tf'lft, ""'°" llUllMll lddl'ISI Ht. A·1"
PLEASE TAK! NOTICE THAT N .. A•1Wt · I• 111 llllklrirlll Way, Colla Mne. COllll" E1t1t1 9' C. H. CAlll:R t1ll
ARTHU R W. MOO•E, Jll,, t111 flMd IE1t11t' Gt G!OllGE SZEKELY, Dt-ty Gt °''""·,Jiii• If C11llon'\11. CLAYIOll:ME H. CA~ll. Dlullslll
hfr1l11 1 Plllllon far 1111 Moptlon o1 cuwe. TM~ lo Ill tr1n11tt111 It IDCtled NOllC! IS Hllll8Y G'tVIM It tlll
EDITH ll.VlllA HAHFOllD llMI JAMES NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN to ""' ti 1~ lnctu1t1l•I Way, COlll Mt'N. CwnlY u.c!Jton of ""' above ftlmld dK .....
DOUClAS HAHFOllD, minor dlUdt'tll, credlter1 ot Ille ~ ftllftled ltKldlnt of Or.,_., Sltlt of Ctllfomll. thll 111 ...,_... Nr'fllll (i.fmt .... Ml tlte
YOU Altli. Hl llEIY CIT!D lO tPOllr NI Ill Pl!rlClll lllVllll Clllms IMlfWt flll '-111 1r1t111r11' 11 clncrltltd 111 """It NJd clKedl!tl .,.. ,.. ...... fllt fNm. • .-..Ult 10. 1m •• f ;IS ll'(lock, A.M., Q ld dladlnl -,_lrtld to n .. ""'""' M: A" .... tn ..... " ......... ft .... wttll .. __,,, wwclllrt. In .. eff!CI
1rt DIHrllMlll I ot 1111 1b0¥t t11llllld ""ltt lhl l'llCttNry ·¥0Uetwt. Ill IN lfflCI 1M IM'll wl• ti tfllll FIMICll"( tMlntM ff 1M cttflt of flll 1C1ove 1ntllll0 cowl. er
aurl, '*''" 111 1111 Cl'flc CllllW o n.,. af lhl cltftt of ""' lbovt 111tllltc1 c-t, or kt'IOW'll •• D. c. Morltt lr1u Foundf'f' 11'111 to iHfltl'tl tt-. wttti Ill ,,.....,., Wn1. llflll An&. CIM!ty 11 Or-. .. llffttnt lttlm, Wlllt 1111 __,, locltllf It 13) 1""'111rl .. W.y, (Wll _., 'M1CMrt, tt tlll llfllfln1911111 11 tlll onlca
C.llfll"lll' Pill .,_ c_, " .,.... Y011 ~to IM Undtl'11tl'llll 11 IN e111CM Oivnty of Oflftl'I Sii .. ff Ctltfonlll. ,. ... .....,.,., •NYOlll, O'Hlll..
Nw. """ l6lcl •1111111111 ptlltllll "*'" ol WITTMAN .. SCHMIDT, A"'""'5 et Tl'lt IMll. ffwltt' wlH .. ••w-9111 HMtCOCIC. ASHWOlll:T"' II'• flair °"'
ftlll • •r•ntM. Lew, JM Slit Ml~ Of., •tt. JOt. 111 or tftef fl)t ltl city If Avwlt. tm. It A-, 1111111 '""'""• Clllfwillll "* Ri,liRIHCI I• '*'"' IMdl fo MICI Hft'POl't, leactr, C1llf, .... wtlldl , ..... 111 /l'tdlltll'lll WlfY, (•I•..,....., c__,, wMdt II "" "'"' ol b•Jllllll• ot ....
Mtltillll -Nttlltr Hrlk~i1n. P'K• of tll.lt!Mt.t .of thl IMCMflllnld ln •II or ...... 11•1• of C•Ufoml1. "'*"''"* Ill '" !Nitti'• •1•1111119 to
Olm .,.,.,. Inf illncl 11111 lilt .... ot m'"'" Hrl•lnlM ,. lllt Hiii• of ••Id lo ,., ... •llOWft l't .11'11 TrlMt'tf .... •11 1111 "''"of Mlcl dlcletlll, wlthlll flW
ftll s,...,IOr COWi ot "" .,.,, OI CIKl'lltllt, 'Mlll1n ICiilr INtllllu •It., IM MIMM ,,..,.... ltnd ldfreu. uMd .... "'°""" ........... ""' ftlillll'ic.tton tf flll•
(•llf0ml1, Clllllt'I' fll Ornlltl. ttil1 1111'1 "''' M1tu 111111 ol ltl1• nouc.. Tr•nslll'W 111r It'll ""'" ..,. • .., tnl pat II llOllCI,
d.ty of J unl, '''L D1tld Jllflf 10, 1t11. dlft•rtnt from 111t eooYt. 1ret Oiied JVIY 7, lt7'. ¥tlLLl"-M f, Ir JOHN, EDITA, 5ZllCl lV. o. c. Morl'1 •r•u FouMry, '» l.11.1.IAN CAllll
Clttlt. llllC\llria ot ille wm " ll'dut,lli1I W•r Cosi1 MIN or ... ~ . Aclrnh1btr .. rh1 Gf .,,. !1!1Jtt
l 'I' .AaTUAO I . GUIVAIA ll'lt 1111Wt MmH clKtdflll ly, C1t1Mtn'111. Gt ll'lfi 1ttove llllTlftl Clk_.,.l
"""fY Ci.rtl WlttM111 a kllm._, 0. C, Meritt I r"' .... A~llltllll "°""' PIYDI•• O'H•U., NAN(OC:K I .IOIP'R P, LIDDY ~ A'"""¥1 It L.lw dry, I» ll'tdllllrlt t W~, C•ll ,.,_., AIHWD~TH •
..., •~ 11ate1&1 """ *I•-..... or .. """• 0t11101 c.unty. , .. ,..,.... 11to1 ,, .. om ,.,,_. ....... c.tf. -.......,. ._., Clllf. ~ o.t.fi~ J Uiy a. ltn. S.111 l'....U, CtMw* nJlt
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7:00 0 hwlina ftr Dlll1rt Chkk H11rn 0 Wbt'1 MJ U111l
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10:>0 fJ -Jtny O.nphy D "· -u. .,. • ...., 7:30 8 MMe: (t) (2lw) "'laip" (sci· C.lldlls'" Col.Ill Wmn chan1t1
Ii) 'il-Midllel Goulh, Mirio from 1 rltioMI hu""" illn1 I• a John• Cl MllM $ Ml'rit: (C) (nf) "llll t111n to be ftlrtt.
l11Hhl1 llbll" (I~) '55--Le1 Rtm· 8 Tai: I.ct
ki, l1urenct H•MJ. W Nm m ... , ••.• Heron ai S. ..... ,__
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BlondtU, Humphrey Bo111t.
ll:OOfJ -: -I ·--1:00 B Ml .. Dlu,Us .._ Jolnlnr Mike Dtulllr (fl1YS) '56-.o. Allllfl'tl!lt
· 1nd co.host Milton S.rlt 111 co· Join fOfttJlne
medltnne MOl!ll Mtblty, comedl1n a D Ill min,.._
H11111y Youn1m11 tnd Ann Callo who ,.., I))~ -does· I YIUdevilla revivtl. lo«.! let' o moo m ..... •cRJ ·~11 o ..,..,_
G111tly, SWtet Jenil" 'N fr"· Cll MnnMI ._
mlft 11': 11111 lallt ll1Pm1 auest 0 MtM: fC) "IW (*') •iz-
ln • t1!1 of vtrl(tlnce, wittt Ptte Jkk1t GltQOll, Kithelhlt oo
Cocht111t tht vn1inptCtlni tlrpt DI m . 1 k!llel's nndettt Tnll '( C1111 4 n I a ,,;., · m .. "' ,.;, 1.111
m"' -.i.u. •"' -Tiii m ""1 .._ 111 ....... (Rl ' ' m--ll:llD GIG---fJi) QtJlwldNt1 "l:•IJIUI AIU fes·
tiv1I" (R) fffb.11911 II ltpN
Betcb's 36th annllll fatlnl of ArU
Ind hftlJll•Df the l(atl,, wblch
r1-cru111 111•t •ks of •It 111rn1
livl model$.
IDLIC..-m--m--
tlO ID ....., •'""' -lli\1111-II .... Doc WI· ...........
IDM: .,._..-en
M An• later.
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, ... _ .... -...... 11111 t ... _ -('ill) 'S1 -
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·Wednesday
DAffiMt MOVIEs
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~egroos' Success Lotag Tittte Conaing MA°'TlfNAL Cl'IDXI.
Black Revolution Movie Bonanza
THUTRES
Editor'• Note -Films b~ market are being financed on b~k,, . •tamno black.s, sitable budgets by major
c1med for tlie black n1ar-studios.
ket ii a t1e10 -and highly Tltis is lhe result of a black
profitable -deve lopitiettt revolution in the movie in·
in the <1.merican entertain-dustry. Film comparlles have
nient . fitld. How did it discovered belatedly that
, come about1 Are the Pie;· millions of dollars can be ~ &ures truly represrntative made by aiming mo v I es I~. ·of the black experienc? primarily at the big cily black
• Followina ii th first of t_wo audience . Jf the movies con-
article1 Ofl tl1e bLac}f film • lain enough quality, they also
Ph<t1ome11011. will draw patronage from
B:Y BOB TJIO,\IAS whites. '
Hence, a bonanza such as '
' ENTERTAINMENT HOLLYWOOD (AP J -In MGM produced last year with
the current film "Shaft's Big "Shaft." The film reportedly. ,
Score.:• the black private grossed $18 million in the ·
detective hero scorns a New United States and Canada . It '----.... -----" York police investigator, also was MGM's only big hit in
black, "My mother told me to 1971.
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:·
·~
~
. ' ii:
stay a~ay from ~!ack honkies The Negro's advent to ~ilm
\\1th bis !lat feet . ptomineoce was a long time
1i~1ve years ago, such a put coming.
down of whites, and blacks During the earliest years of
. who work for the white movies, the bJack w a s
establishment might ha v e portrayed al dthei servile. as
caused outrage. 1 in various versions or "Uncle
II'oday such scenes are com-Toll)'S Cabin ." or 'lazy. as in
mon: And OOt merely in low two 1910 series, "Rastus" and
?µdge~ ell:ploitatlon 'f IJ m.s. "San,ibo." . .
Films made by blacks and The black as v11la1n was ex-
almed primarily at the black ploited by D. W. Griffith in the
.
Snapshot Contest
leading to Kodak International
Newspaper Snapshot
Awards IKINSA '72j Competition
Rules:
1. The co11te1t i1 strictly ior eme+•ur photogfeph•rs IA11 em•·
teur is defin .. d es one whose hobby or ••oc1tio11 i1 pictur•·i1king
111d who doe1 not m1lr1 e11y 1ub1tenti1I p1rt of hi1 livin g through
t1kin9 pictur11 I. ·
2. Bl1ck·1nd·whit• ot color picture1 teken tfter July I, 1911
er• eli9ible. No pictures m1y b1 1nter1d by eny •.mploy1 of
th1 DAILY PIL.OT ot by 1ny il!d i•idutl who p1r1011•lly u 1ngtg1d
in the m1nuf1ch1r1, ,11l1, comm1rci1I fini1hing or prof111ion1/ use
of photogt1phic qood1.
J. Sn1p1hot1 mey be t•k•n with eny mike of etmert1 on 1ny
brtnd of 'film. No ertwork or retouching i1 permitted on n1g1·
tivet oi' p..;~11--110 composite ·pietur1s, n'll.1ltiple llfpo1ures or
1nultiple prinlin9 ..
4. AD't 1111inh'ir C!('!PlcJures m1y be ent11ed. Conte.'tent'.s n•m•,1 •cldre1; ;nd phon• n1,11T1ber must be writt111 cletrly o" th~ b1clr
of e1eh picture. M•il or d•li¥er prints or fr•nt:p•re11e111 lo :
DAILY PILOT Sn1pshot Conte1t Editor, P. O. Bo• 1560, Coit•
M•11, CA, 92626. IEntrie1 c1n be hend--deli•eted t o •"Y DAILY
PILOT office, but 'mut:t be phy1ic.t tly 111 hind i" those offices by
detdlin1 ••eh w,,k, I Contest offlci•I• re1er•• the right to e1rry
o•er ltte 111trie1 for judging froll'I o"• weelr to -the 11erl end lo ••cl~cle from jud9i11t •ltog•ther ·e11y entrie1 recei¥1cl l•f• in the
f'in•I weelr. I . No bl•ck-•iw:l-white picture1 will l:.e returned. Conte1tent
mu1t be 4ible to furni1h the origin•I ne9•ti¥e, if r1que1ted hy
_the Contest Ed itor. The DAILY PILOT ••1ume1 no ro1pon1ibiliy
for ne9eti.;.1 or print1. COLOR PRINTS OR SLIDES WILL I E-RE-
TURNED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED SY A STAMPED, SELF-
ADDRESSED ENVEllJPE.
6. Contert111t1 •r• permitted to. 1ubm it pictur11 to only 011•
new1ptper p1rticip1ting in the Kod•k l"tern•lion1I S11•p1hot
Aw1rd1.
7. To•'' eli9ibl1 for • loc•I gr•nd pri!1, • conl•~l•."t m~1t
1l9n • tf•lemenl th1t the pictur1, or •nother closely 11m1l•r pie·
tur• of the 11me subieet or 1ilu•lio11, h•1 not bo•n, •nd will not
h1.ontered by him in •"Y other cont•1t ind will not be offered
for pul:.lic•flon lo eny publieetion not con necltd with thl1 Conle1t.
I. IMPORTANT: Be 1ure you know the nomes end tcldren11
of en'( recognii1ble p1rson1 1pp1ering in your pie.lure. Tliis i1
111ces1•rv bec1u1e, ~II order for it to be entered in the 111tlon1 I
iudgl119, you mu1t b1 1ble to 9et th• written con1ent of 1uch
person 'or per1oii1 for their 1~9el qu1rdi•t11, in tlie c~sef of
1T1i11or1I to pemit u1• of the picture for th• purpo1e o.f 1llu1h•·
lion, 4cf¥1rljling 1r public•lion in eny menner. I
' j
'.I
' . ..;Enter Every Week
July 2 Through Aug;· 26
Deadline Wednesday Noon
/ NOW!
.. /YOU CAN SEf ,
"THE JiRAOUA TE" AGAIN ·
·• \ OR FOR THE
/.• \FIRST T1ME.
. \
••• DI.... '--.,. ,\
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&MIMlE ~
Kl THEllNE ROSS
DUSTIN HOFFMAN·
lNNEllNCIOR
ACAt!OIYAIMllll-
""DMlCTGfl..._t:--.1 .._ ___ .,, ___ ...J
JOSEPH l. L(VM-.
Mll.E NICHOt.S LAWMHCC flMMAH ,.
·lffERKl!'!•Jl
EUZA8Ellf TAYLOR ·IN·
"RAMMlllMlfH
~~ ~01$1..
~~~Po<?""
........... l!i]o
2N~ TOP COMIOY
WOOOYAllEN
"TAU TQ MMIT Alt Ille"
IS OUT" (I I
~;~ST WEEKI ~~ .. ;
' ~. • •
. ,
•
: ,"' "•• &DWAlltDS ••• :
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• • • • •
1915 "'Birth ot Nation." Grif-
fith was so astonished by the
ou tcry of 'J)rl:judice that he
made the epic "Intolerance"
in his own defense.
The talkie _period brought
some all btaCk f i I m s-:
"Hallelu jah" by MCA-f in 1929:
''The Green Pa s ture s , ''
Warner Brothers, I 9 3 6 :
.. Stonny Weather," 20th · Fox,
1943; "Cabin in the Sky."
MGA-1, 1943; "Carmen Jones,''
Preminger, 1954; "Porgy and
Bess," Goldwyn, 1959: ''Raisin
in the Sun," Columbia, 1961.
None of these films was a
financial success. and pro-·
Yorty Gets
His Card
LOS ANGELES !UP!)
Mayor Sam Yorty has· been
issued a PRESS card .
Yor ty, who once carried
newspapers for the Lincoln,
Neb., Star. was issued the
card along with membership in
the PRESS Club, an honorary
organization made up of
former newspaper c a r r I e r
boys. PRESS stands for Paper
Route Experience Spells Sue·
cess.
Other members or the
organiza tion include former
President Harry S Truman,
the late President Dwight D.
Eisenhower and the late FBI
Director J. Edgar Hoover.
. ·•·~· " .. ---STA.ITS ·WEDNESDAY
Wolt DISM"t'l.
':NOW YOU ·SEE HIM,
NOW YOU DON'T:'
llM -W.it Dfu9y°s -IGI
"PERRY"·
ACADIMY AWAltD
WINNl!R.S 1
Ben J ohn1on l
Clori• Le•ehmtn
"THE LAST
PICTURE SHOW" ...
Georg• Seg1I
. "WHERE'S.
POPPA?"
ducers over tht yearS adopted
lhe maxim that ''colored pic.
tures don't sell."
and WOO the Oscar IS btst ic-
tor.
Hollywood was quick to
rtalize the value <if the new-
found star, and he appeared in
such moneymakers as "A
"COlD
TURKEY" Then. was scant work ror
black act.ors during the first 50
yea.rs of film history. A few
became well known, largely Jn
roles as ··menials: Clarence
Muse, Louise Beavers, Bill
Robinson, Ethel Waters, Eddie
"Rochester" Anderson. Hattie
A-1c;Danlel won an Oscar for
her role as Mammy in '·Gone
With the Wind.''
Patch of Blue," "To Sir '\\1ith m9ileou>1t 'Y o.Lll• ..,.......,.
Love," "Jn ~he Heat of the ~ w, _ l :Jt , ... Night" and "0\tess Who's --.c:-
Coming lo Dinner." Always he ~
portrayed a successful black
In the white world. · r • .;.-..-
Others were relegated to
roles: in which they appeared
incredibly lazy or frightened
or ghosts, Stepln Fetchit,
Willie Best, Farina of the Our
Gang comedies, and an actor
v.•ho was called ''Sleep 'n'
• Eat"
"The industr:y discovered
something from p 0 i t i e r • s
films," says JUn. Brown. the
pro footballer who became a
black r~m star. "Over haV the
patronage came from blacks
in the big cities.
.. That pointed out two things
to the producers: that the in-
dustry needed some black
stars; and that dignity was
needed in the portrayal of
blftclts on the screen.".
Paul Robeson played a few
leading roles in the 1930s.
mostly in non Hollywood films
such as ~·The Emperor
Jones," and "Sanders or the
River. '1 Lena Horne appeared
in ~GM musicals, but her
songs were carefully isolated
so they could be cut-from
sho\vings'in the South.
Poitier's immense Successl~~~~g~~~~~~~I helped create stardoin for
other black actors : Brown, -
ijaymond St. Jacq~s, Richard
Roundtree, G o d f e y Cam-
bridge, Calvin Lo k hart ,
Sidney Poitier was the star
who triggered the Black
Re volution in films.
Yaphet Kotto. · .
Black pictures helped solve
a crisis for theater owners,
"THE GOLDEN
llREED"
The Nassau-born actor had
been in movies since j'No Way
Out" in 1950, but he seemed
destined for billing under such
stars as Tony Curtis and Rock
Hudson. Then in 1963 he
starred in "Lilies of the Field ,"
With whites moving to the
suburbs, massive old theaters
In the central ci ties seemed
doomed to decay and destruc-
tion. The lure or black films !~~~~~~~~~~~ began filling up those theaterslJ
with Negroes who remained in
the cities.
"BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER'.
"Tiil YW'S filST llUUY SAYllFY .. , 111 Clll•UCW.
••11ic:11 Fl•. Ill Of TNl •osr llltlTll AID ......
ClfflOlltCllS Of A•HH:H llfl llll DHIHll lrlTllll
TNl U•ITS If PDPUl.AR lmlTAll•lilr." '
-Vincent C1~b.Y.!~tw York Times
'"TNl IDDflTllll' II I lrGTACllAI utll, Oil Of THl
fllllT HlllTU llltlll llll llAllll'"
1111 NBC·TV
.. ~1.2
·SO UTHLAND HOME .&
.GARDEN
SHOW
JULY 14·2 3
ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
(air condilipned I
SHOW HOURS: 5-11 p.m. W11kdays
Noon-11 p.m.Sotvrdays
Noon -9 p.m.Sunday1
ADUL Tl ••• • •••• '2.H
JUNIHI • ,. •• •• IM
~ .... n_.,._
• . • KeiUt AND tlmlt l/"iAN lVllt ~l!
A GEORGE COLOURtS . '
)
K llMMON~~ ~ 1111 ir1ni1
JJ lltie ~ml! tna -~-
l1tbrl ~11lb111 iooirl ~mil ,,_,_ ....
"""(MIT AIU .. _ .. ,_Iii !ft·] ••••man o•
IE-.'.Ii' "SKYJACKm" CONTJNUOUS DAILY CHAll.fON HOfON 17,30 . 3,30 Y'llm-X 7,00 & 10,00 P.M. ...~ ...... ie.
•
Ill . IPGI
MATINEES DAILY
•
) I'
:
2nd Grut WHk .._.,_
"Duck, You Sucker" __._
"Ch1to'1 Land" C•8tl•••• S-M•. J:ot
_....,._ .... _ .. ........ _ .. ....
HE.ILOYU
It's n•w,
It's th• best
"CON9UHT OF
THE PLANO OF
T!IE APU"
Also IPG I
J•m•s Coburn
''THE HONICllS"
Phone
6424321
Fo1·
Weekender
Advertising
_ __,~ • "THI OfH11•
ANO
....
....
"WAIT UNTIL llAak"
DAILY ,U.OT J ~
Too Late To Cla . ' ify
I -·-l~I -·.. I~
LIDO ISLE 45' LOT ON ORVIETO
,Great family homo. 4 targe Bdrm's., huge
F.R., DR. & living rm. Across from small
pri. beach & near club. Good value $89,500.
Eugene Vreeland.
180' ~EAN VIEW
181 MONARCH BAY OP EN SUN 7/16
3 BR. & bonus Rm . -Lovely villa style
home . 10' ceilings. \\'ailed courtyard. Room
!or pool , S82.50Q. Bob Yorke.
EXPLORE A NEW ADDRESS TODAY
Triplex on fashionable LIDO ISLE, Two 2
BR.. & one 3 BR. Walking distance to beach-
es. anchorages. stores & restaurants. $110.-
000. Bill Bents.
SELLER ANXIOUS
Just reduced price to $67 .500 for huge 4 bed~
roo1n -3000 ft. )louse .\vit h ocean vie\v. Big
yard \vith trees & roon1 for pool. \Valk to
all Nelvport school s ! Bill Comstock .
EXCEPTIONAL APPEAL
Sunny -cheerful University Park vie\v lo-
cation home. 3 BR .. 2 BA .• ~eat family rm.
& kitchen. Call to see. $54.900. "Chu ck"
Le,vis.
SO. HWY. 4 BDRM.~ 2 BA. R-2
Sharp doll hou se completely redecorated.
Custom shutters throughout. Shag carpeting,
Sunny kitchen. Prime Corona del Mar .
Triona Bergin. ·
BEAUTIFUL BAYFRONTS
Both \Vith space for 1arger boats. Ne\v Linda
Isle 5 BR. Fantastic construction. Immacu-
late Lido Nord 4 BR. in new condition. Ex-
citing decor. Eileen Hudson .
SPARKLING VI EW
Architect designed split le vel 4 BR . in Irvine
Terrace. You must see th~~ lt'S a beauty.
J im Muller.
CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE
Nearly 1h ac. Perfect for entertaining. Huge
rooms. pool, cabana. fa bulous ba r,-4 Bdrm
-5\ti baths. Call !or pies. Ask in g $175.000.
George Grupe.
133-0700 =....--1 Coldwell, Benlcar
644-2430 \ ~
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.I.
·--CtN/f!Dtl/ lO
' I I f I. , ·-Crt fOOtlf 11
• r • • 1 •
---
,\'.14//1//+! I .. -. . -
-- -. SI:~·/'+' J .. -. . ----' St411111t1 1 .. -.. . -
"TMI •llltOUNO ITAlt COHSPlltACT" Cl"OI
ANO
. .=:::-.:..-:.::::z.,
"'" ' 11 • .., • Acoellrir Awerft• ....,... •• ON TH9 lt00fr".
"Tq CANDIDATI" (WI ....
"C90L MAltD LUICI" Cll"I
"StMPTS Dll SCOlltl.". • "DIT CAITllt"
"DUCK. YOU IUCKllt"' • "CMATO'S LAND"
, ...... Mco.-
·.1v1uoa IOllfHllt" fN>
"'lffPUL 01' DOLLAll:I" l•OI "INAUKO" 11"01 .
I
"IKY.IACKIO" 11'01
ANO
"'TNI CAllllY
TltlATMINT'" tl'GI
'
•
• ,.
,.,._, Ju1111. 1m
Everyone Has
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad
·rhe Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for.Fast Results •
General
THE WORK IS DONE
... and, it will tontinue to be DONE by the
m.ainteaance staff as sponsored by the corn·
· :IJl~nity assoc. YOU only maintain your patio
~ interior of your own townhouse. It 's a con·
• venient style ol livin g -here are two cb<>ice
· pr~perties for your consifieration. ' * THE BLUFFS -An xlnt bdrm. unit. Now
vacant & ready for quick occupancy. $39,950 * VISTA LAREDO -choice 4 bedrm. 3
bath home with 2200 sq. ft. of living space.
-$48,500
Convenient J'lftl'klng-eaay to be
_..,_
Gener el Gi ner al
AN~K,.E P~lE~l I
Came<> Highlands. Architect designed-New
_carpets & drapes. 4 Bedrooms, convertible
den , 3 baths, cathedral ceilings and 2 used
brick· fireplaces, famjly room. built·in kitch·
en & B-B·Q, PLUS MANY EXTRAS. Enter·
lain around your own POOL . . ... $76,500.
"FOR THE YOUNG AT HEART"
IN TURTLE ROCK
General
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
101 Linda Isle Drive
Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs
waterfront mstr. suite & lge. game rm. or
study. Mexican tile floors , beam ceilings
quality construction, slip . . . . . . . . . $155,ooO
For Complete Information
On All Homes & lots, Pl4ese Cal"!:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Baysid1 Dr., Suile 1, N.B. 675-6161
General
4 Bedrm + Pool
$33,500!
Swfm you swimmers all sun1-
me.r long in th e lovely pool,
loads of decking, patio areas,
low malnte.nance landscap.
in1. 4 bedrooms, 2 bath, ele·
gant fireplace, all electr ic
push button builtin kitchen,
dishwasher. Formal dining
room. Plush cloud &oft car·
peting, drapes. An addrcs..~
of distinction. Bkr, 5-4()..1720.
TARBELL
NEW LISTING
;G;e;n;e;r1;J;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;:;;IG;;';n;er;•;l;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;1
EASY LIVING HOME AND
F...,hly painted 3 BR home OFFICE PLUS
w/ncar new drps & shag + RUMPUS ROOM lots ot paneling. I / $22 950 ll'Ol;d you b<licv• I h • ' • \VJ-IOLE THING Is all in
one beautiflN,. home in lo\.ely
Newport COLLEGE PARK and you
can ASSUri.1E the 5%. nIA at
F1irvi1w I
6-46-8811 I
{1nytime)
loa.n \Vil h payments of only
$187. PITL A lot ot b:>me
for 11. little money.
l6Jla._ COATS
~WAL~ACE
Owner Soys Sen.if•. REAL TORS -.,.--546-4141-
Republic home jui;;t h\.'o (Ope. n Evenintt)
Gener.al Qcean side o( 1-lwy., Corona , .Years young! Large living --~~~=~-~ 1-----------------1 <lei Mar. Be8"tifully furn .. I room w;th cathedral beam-SPANISH
General
plus carptg., de c or a tor ed ceilings. Fonnal dining p· LUS POOL.I
drapes; lge. family r1n., room and breakfast nook in
wo~baver kitch. Huge covd. kitchen. Separate I am 11 y MAJ ESTIC Spanish archway
patio. Custom thruout! Walk room ,vith brick fireplace. to double door entry~ Dou·
up the brick 'valk to this Asking $42,750. Call 546-2313 ble brick lir~lace. Sunken
beauty, you 'll never want to 1 for more information. formal Jiving room and d~
• a ''DROP.IN" et Bay & Beach Realty · 675-3000
You 'll love this beauty! Atrium entry, 3 bed·
room 2 bath, FAMILY ROOM, built-in kitch·
en. SHAG carpets, CUSTOM drapes, beau·
tiful covered PATIO with gorgeous land·
scaping on fee land. A real love at .. $47,900 . !Pave! Absentee owner says ing room. Step down family
sell at $75,000. room. Garden or iented
%
"START SMART"
WITH THIS CONDO CORBIN -kilcb<m. Redwood '°""<ed
patio operu; to sparkfuic ldd-
IN BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom, 2'Ji bath.
builtin kitchen, stone fireplace, FAMILY
ROOM. community pool & REC. ROOMS in-
cluding biUjards. Fee land and close to every·
SE RENE NEIGHBORHOOD surrounds this
4 bdrm. Baycrest pool home . Excellent floor
plan for ''teenager" family. Mstr. suite on
one side and three big, bedrooms on the
other with a deep water pool just off the fam-
lly room. Unique offering at $77,900.
MA RT IN 5% DOWN ney shaped pool. Sundeck
Tha t is $1550. on this 3 Bed· balcony. PRICED TO SELL
FAST' Call row 645-0303.
Ge neral General
* * * * * *
thing. .. . .. . . . . . .. .. . ............... $32,500
"BUT BEAUTIFUL"
IS THIS
PHONE UNl9UE HOMES, NEWPORT lfACH, 445·6500
REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
REALTORS 644-7662
2X3
room, l * Bath Home. Up.
per Newport Bay Area.
Large Open B/J Gas Kit.
chen. Fireplace. Shake Roof.
Boat Stowage. $30,500. Call
646·055.5, Evenings 644· 7003.
COLWELL
IORl\I I Ol\O\
" l ' • ' ,) ~
CONDOMINIUM TAYLOR CO.
BALBOA PENINSULA POINT
New offering! Ru stic Provincial with 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths on a prime corner site in
the prestigious quiet area of peninsula point.
Perfect for beach lovers. Better be early for
this one ......................... $75,000.
Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom 3 bath,
2 fireplaces, FAM ILY ROOM. formal din-
ing room, NEW carpets and drapes, island
kitchen, SOMERSET model on FEE land in
HARBOR VIEW HOMES ............ $72,500.
READY AND WAITING
JUST FOR YOU
is this MONTEGO model on FEE LAND. 4
Bedroom, 2 baths, formal dining room with
FAMILY ROOM adjacent to the built-in is-
land kitchen. See this HARBOR VIEW l'OME
2 SeparalC' unils on 1 lot -3
usages; Take your pir.k!
Commercial 1vith 3 BR
General General home. 2 l'<'S. incon1e unit:i; or PROPERTIES. INC.
REALTORS
1
---------1 use bolh units commercial.
True Pool Lovers OCEAN VIEW on1y 134,:;oo.
Almost Olympic FROM ALL $27,900 I s· . Newport 4 Bdrm., + Den
IZe ANGLES at Channing exterior with some:
Heated&: filtered!J>OOI on !his Tired of looking al neighbor's F . . rock work Iha! sets off the
large private •· Private \valls? Cast your eyes on the airview I hon1e. 4 Bedrooms. Ureplace,
Perfect for easy living. Thill
one is in delightfully sharp
condition. 'T'he Rtrlect 3
bedroom, 2 bath home, just
a short walk to clubhouse
and pools. Throw away the
lawnmower and enjoy the
\1•eekends, Asking only ••.
and buy .......................... ..
,t'/"4/i#-S#dd I
r ••Our 27th Year''
WESt;f! N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors
2111 Sin Jooquin Hills Rood
low maim.ena~ landscap-sparkling blue Pacific Mm 646·8811 built-in range & oven, dish·
ing. 3 spaeiou bedrooms, any window of this custom ( t• ) \va'sher, patio, bier, 540-1720.
S<'parate fami room and Temple I-fills Mansion. any ime
dining room . v.-alk to schools \Vatch the sun set tdtindl!!;;;;;;;;~..,;,..,.. TARBELL NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
General General and park. It's country Living Catalina Island. Buy a telc· CORIANDER
at $41 ,950. You must see thi.~ scope. Words can't describe 4 ;PLEX 2955 1-larbor. C.Osta l\.1esa
FOUR BEDROOM
-REPO-
EASTSIDE
EXECUTIVE
SPECIAL
~ IJID ASsoclATU home to believe i!. Call the beauty, this 3 bedroom 'FOUR-PL EX 842-~ for appointment , has it all. Formal dining Nol .""". bu! two beau. tifu_lly
REALTORS
644-7270
Now! eel A ~l lif'rt's a bargain for , you. room, lush carpets and niai~lain · ~,ex un its side Four 2 Br. units, all vacant
matching drapes. We will by std~. Each has 3-2 BR, 2 and re·painted in and out.
trade anything you have for BA units ~nd ~nc ~ BR -: 2 Fanla stif (inanci ng. Only this $60,000 castle. You will BA owner s unit with patio. $1,000 DN.
tor this superb 3 bedroom
home nestled among trees
and shrubs. Sparkling qua!·
iljl'"'"tor· ·rme'"'enfen&rriiriit. 2828 .. EA"S'i' ·coAS'f "liiGHWAY -.
Lush deep pB• carpeting CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. LEASE OPTION
agree. Call for -appointment. C~ta Mesa's best su.ited $4~~GAN REAL TY
uruts for owner occupancy. 174,"'10 eaoh 673-6642 675-6459
COuntr)t size Ja1chVJ, -fo?iria
l'linin,, <.'OZ)' Circplacf' and
huge yard. Only $239 per
mo. includes P&:J, Best hur-
l')'! CaJJ 545-842.f.
545-9491 Call 613-8'{;) for infonnation. I COSTA MESA with custom matching OPEN DAI l Y
drapes, all electric kitcben/"!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11 195 MONTE VISTA, CM I Realtors
!::WAI l(fR & LH
with all th~ trimmings, fan· General General LO\V, LOW DOWN . OPen Eves.
tas tjc fireplace. What a show·l -::,,'::C'.:O'CU'.':N':'.T:CR~Y:-:-S:cC~E"'"N"E"'"''' I·--------Eastside, sparkling clean ,
r:;;:;:-, THE REAL
II· ESTATERS
Dandy 11alecrest, vacant
move right in. 3 bcl. 2 ba.
ll<'W paint in and out, brand
llf!w green shag carpets .
$29,950 90'"/c loan ava ila ble.
(Open Evcsl
Be5t Hurry! CaU 545-8424. • SALESMEN NEEDED •
place for $39,500! ~4er , HAVE A GREAT custom built 3 BR. 2 BA.
is .prepa<ed for GI and FHA ' $27,950! NEIGHBOR! Hving + dilting • r •a
lerms, now's the time, Call Beaul iJul rear yard, privacy And take advan+ .. ...: of this fireplace , FA hi .. bllns, nu
unlim ited, lovely (ruil & grea.L opportt.inif7;0 O\vn a shag crptg + drps , patio . aha~ trees , colorful carpet· Rancho La Cuesta Mme tor dbl gar, fenced yd. Vacant. O w!\111fH & 111
Real!ors 545-9491 iOg, large covered patio -less than replacement cost, I CALL ANYTIME
Open Eves. ,relax after a hard day's compared with current ba...e 646-3928 or Eve. ,548..9416
"Dramatic Flair
Witlt View".
This Is it~ You have waited
and looked too long. Let us
"Show you this 4 Bedroom. 3
, '' "i l '•I "•
' UNBEATABLE
For Price & Size
I J iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-work! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, price on the new i10mes. -NEW-. delulxe buEHllin kit,chef_n, dlish· Popular, Monterey f.todel
Lachenmyer
Bath home with a view that 5 Bdrm., 3. BA, FORMAL
Is truly a view. A large J?IN. family room, t"'O
family room, built-in eltt· ftreplaces, large corner lot,
tric kitchen _ Pr i v a 1 e room for boat or caf!'per. ---------mester suite and pro-Walk lo beach. Only $45,500. was 1cr. egan irep ace with 3 bedrooms. family
B·•RGAINI LISTING lends added chann •o ,,.,. ""' roon1, rorn1al d i n i n g ,
Owner reajly anxious to move I BEAtrrIFUL COURTYARD pitable living room. Prime upgraded appliances and
lo the deserl., It want! lo
1
. ENTRY -to this grea t -4 location · walk 10 every-niany other re a t u re s · liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
sell bis Eastslde 3 BR, 2 bedroo m home. The large thing. S40·I720. Localed near beach, schools
20
,X
22
,
ba. home. Bll·ins & new car· 1·ountry kitchen aUords rom· and shopping on quiet "
pet. Priced to sell for $17,250 I rortable family livirig. 0'NT'I-c:ul-<:le-sac. Full pr ice BONUS ROOM
Realtor
fessionaJly landscaped yard
are only a few or the good
lbings in store for you, Call
673-.!560. $79,900.
'O THE REAL
\"'\, ESTATERS ' ' '
4 BEDROOMS I ers arr !raving area and $38,500. f or additional in· These are had to find in this have thrir home in move:·in 2955 1-larbor. Costa Mesa formation and appoin tment \VJTH CONVERSATION PIT
d .. f I 11 °'"23 surrounding Swedish * price range & Jt's really I f'OIJ 1t1on or a fast sale. p ease ca .nir 13. * 133 900 H • H b fireplace plus large modern
•***• GINNY *'·M* MORRISON ~'Jlt,_: REAL TORS
••••• 557-4130
$30,500
Spanish Design
• Lady In Foreclosure *
Let's help her. ill & behind
in paymts. 3 Br, plus 2 Br.
!nev.•er), i.n fast C.M. Only
$72.500. Call for details to
see.
CH UCK CAJlOTHERS
REAL ESTATE
TREASURES
1831 WestcliU, N.B. 646-5152
$18,500
$22,500.
540-11 51 f0f)('n Eves.)
.,. t. -HERITAGE
REALTORS
Separate Master
Bedroom
Bridge The
Generation Gap
Own 3 custom doU hou&f1 on
a lot. Prime east Costa
M£'sa area. A t hree
bedroom for parents. A two
bedroom tor soc & wife:. A
one bairoom tor grandma.
Price is $52,500 with 10%
dov.'n. Exclusive with
""""! W i\11(1 H /\ I I 1
Realtors $tS.-Ot65
Open Eves ' l'M!&I! Im!11ac .. cond. 2 i ' . unt1n9ton ar or kitchen. dining room, huge Jemts Spence
Bath•. Cov d pallo & own"· PETE BARRETT Island Liv'1n" liv;ng room, 3 big bedrooms 218J Vislo Entrodo
an,;ous! Only $27."'10. REALTOR .,, Newport Buch MORGAN REAL TY --At Its Best and 2 baths. Beaut. grounds You are the wi nner oI 1
* Authentic arch ways, huge
entry way, 4 Bedrooms, xtra
baths, Roman bath ofl mas·
tcr bedroom. famOlis "Gar·
den" kitchen. terraced en-
lrance. huge family room,
dining room, bkr. ~1720.
Total Price NEWPORT ISLAND
673-6642 67>4459 j 642-5200 Truly delightful 4 bedroom,~ =~l.eteBe;;ith!\.f:: t ~~::.i! 2 tickets lo lhe
bath oome on · Davenporl HORSE RANCH location and priced $33•750. Southland
Glnerel Generol !~and. Bri•ht. , u n n y ONLY $29,9501, Home & Gorden !-------------------e \11ith 5% do,vn paymt. kHchen family area. Must AL,lO<."T' 11. ACRE 1 1 Call 546-5880 (Open Eves.) Show
'
MACNAB
IRVINE ________ .... ______ _
FINER HOMES
' TURTLEROCK TO DISNEYLAND!!
Top cond ition -GR EAT TurUerock Joca·
tion ! Panoramic VJE\V! Laszlo Sharkany
644-6200.
* 57 LINDA ISLE *
Discover Silence ... in thj s handso1ne1
quiet home on the Linda Lagoon . 4 BR,
31> bath. DR , FR. $189 .500. Charlene
Reichmann 642-8235.
FOR THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN
Riding & board ing slables within walking
distance. Spacious 2-s lo ry 5 BR. 3 bath in
estate area. Priced for qu ick sale . 644-6200,
SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR $43,SOO
3 BR .• FR. pool. Light, airy -be~m
ceiling, . w /stcpdown \ve t bar & fire-.
plac . e to schools & shopping -show s
beautilull . Walter King 644-6200.
'!>·-----
[Irvine I Mocnob·lrvln< Ro<llyCampony I
IOI OoYtrDtlVt '42·1235
1'44 --~·1200
.. /
•
I bed . l "" ~ pus ovt'· ,, •h" set" mas er room suite ly R"ED RANCH STYLE •·
v.·hich completely t."'Overs ro. HOME ! Giant shade trees ANAHEIM (.'Ond floor. Ocean view r ..... 111 CONVENTION '" galore. Knotty pine living · halcony, Pr iced at only room and kitchen. Ranch CENTER
$60,500. For .further In. ""'""""'"""'"'"""""'"""'"I J I 14 J I 23 kitchen .. vith bean1 ceiling. u Y • u Y tormaiion call 847...@10. AREA CONSCIOUS? Pl 11 °'" 5678 Dining room. Gian! covered · ease ca ,,.,_,.. , ext. 314
patio. BARGAIN -call nov.' Tf so .. see th is Spolk!ss between 9 and S pm to claim
645--0303. F.a·stside Costa !\1esa Home. your tickets. (North County fO)THEREAL
\'\( ESTATERS ' •, I I•<,•
1111!1\I I Ol~O\
3 Bedrooms, 2 Battis. Shake toll·free number i! 540-1220)
Roof. \\'e can 't begin l"O put * * *
BEAT THE BLAHS
Tired of looking at a bunch
of dogs? Welt, we have the
oolut ion -just listed super
ncal 3 bcdroont 2 hlith l.1esa
del 1\-1ar hon1e. Absolutely
perfect inside .and even bet·
ter outside w11h sculptured
•patio in park-likC' setting
with big trtt11. Thr best part
1$ the pri~.
Call M6-58RO 'Open Eves.1
·-_$ • HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
View With a Volue
,,, .. ,• ' ,__) ~ '
FIVE BIG
BEDROOMS
Canveniently Jocate'd
Cedar Gll'n atta. Costa
t\.fe/la. Spa<:ious-5 bedroom
And family. All the good
fca ru1't'!i you are looking tor
in a 011(' 11tory home. or.
ft'red wilh no do\l'Tl VA
term!I or asi:;ulll(' existing !
S% r,;. loan,
CaJI ~1151 {Open Eves.)
._,. HERITAGE
in print au that has ~n
dO!ll'. !\1UST SEE -Otlettd
for $33, 750. Call ~.
Evenings 646-5226.
COLWE LL
PROPERTIE S. IN C
REALTORS
$24,000
Assume s~•/. Loan
Low monlhly payments • Jess '
than rent. 3 Bednns -f den,
or can be 4th bedroom, 2
baths, dining room . built·in
range & oven, bier. 540-t720.
TARBELL
REALTORS Harbor View HUis hOme: with ~======="" 2005 •lnrbor , Co1'tt~ ?IIesa
both bay and OCt'an vii;tJ\, ---
Sp.cimts <bedroom. lonnal QUIET STREET 4 SINGL~ HOMES
ctin!ng a1-ea. family . room NewJ!Prl Httgbti. SPo.rkling Better hurry _ This ts
designro for elegant ~n· Coon inside and o u I'. today 'll bei;I incoinc buy, .c
tr11ain1ng and gracious If\,. Almost New Skiing, Roo<ing two bedroom homes \Yith
11'15(. Prote('tcd patio artfl •nd Carpets. Large Servk;:e ICJ)tU'8te g11tageit Spotles'
\\"Ith 111.rge pool. Attracti\'e ~rch. Privalcr Carden St'!· rondltion, Separate patios -lea.~hold of Jusr S::K!O per 'u:'i Rear Yard . 2 Bedroom. I comp I e fe I y pr lve.te.
Y<'ar. Askh\g l79.9.30. Din\ng Room. 2 Car Plu8 1 Prores,,ionalty landsc:Upirc.
C. F. Colesw.orthy, Garng!: $.l:i.lXXl. C_• 11 Cholct convenient loc3UUf1.
IORl\I I. Ol\11\
;." • • I • ,
Bayfront Condo
S Sr, 2 Ba, pool, pier A. sUr:i.
Delightful 179.500
EMERALD BAY
lmmaculale 3 Br + fam rm.
Ocean side ot hwy. View.
l\lUllt !JC('.! $149,000
Toe! Hubert l Assoc.
3471 Vin J.1t.n 67>8500
, REFLECTS
PRIDE!
COLWELL ·
64&-0,""J..1,,1, Evenlngll 646--5226. Askin; $61, 700 EZ tc.rn1s & Company c.u 673-8S.i0.
EASTBLUFF OFFICE
2545 E11tblufl Drw• .,
640·0020
PRDPf RTIF s IN C
RlALTUHS
1-Q',THE Rr,AL
"'\. t:STA'i'Sll.S
l bdrm, In MW: VERDE,
..... ~<d In """"'· Clo5o lo eolr COii~ Owner tnn. t.
I
f
Mual move by ""'· lsL Oo11 138,ll!O. Bkr. 551-4l'IO.
(
• ••
$too per month f o ta I Charming Provinci.a.\ bome
paymcnl , vaca n1 . renr to on R-2 lot. 2 Bdrms., trplc ..
c.·loi;e or escrow. c a I J patio. In xlnt cond. Vaca,rit:..
847-6010. THE RE A L quick pos!ession, $49,500.
TARBELL ESTATERS. Call: 673--3663 64.2-2253 Eves.
EASTSIDE associated
OPEN DAILY
4 large Bdrms . 3 baths,
Formal dining + Jrg family
nn. & kit. Immcd, occ! 38J
Santa Isabel, C.M.
BROK ER S-REAL TORS
2025 W Balboa 613·1/>b)
0 Rearrange letler• of t'he
four Krombled words b.·
low 1g form four simple words.
I YENTIIN ' I
_
1 I 1· I _ I .
I NOWGA 1 1
.__..._I .___1 • .__I L.....J,. I·
, .
I HEHIC 1 ~
I I• j I • l0$er'5 lomenf: "I clwoy1
• . . • . . get blamed for everything. .-------~Evon os o baby •hey wore
I p I K p E L 1-1hi""s on me.• 'J•tJ
1--1;...' ..:,[..;;' :..;I ....:,,.I ~, -J e C...plei. the <hudle ..,.red by filling Jn the missing wqrd
L. -L-..1..-l-'-.J..-l. )'Ol,I develop ff'OITI slop No. 3 below. o :~,~~~~w~~!11n1Rs 1• 1• 1., r 1• 1• r 1
6 ~sc.~~i\ lETTf!S TO I I I I I I I I
I •
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700
)
' \.
' ,
T
I
t
<
r •
" h
h
10
• •• ~ ly
In
Re~
N• Bd
ed '
10
Buil
wit
$49
CA
N
AW
Thi•
just
"" rwm
suite.
clea.n
beam
wate
lush
·be:li
listed
••
Colla Mna
=FM==.=D=Roo=M= s.,.r Older Home
-$35,950.-Large Lot
This opoclotlt 5 bedroom, UnUIUal old<r. J bedroom,
ramlly room " 2 story home l~ bath home on hup lot.
la for )'OU! You will low tbe Could bolid another boute
cOlY fireplace, modern bullt· an nar. Priced •l oaJy
! 2 tlo $33,500. Additional -I'll, Pl attas and child· •dJolnlna available al.lo.
ttn'r ployhoo/<. ld<ally ~ first time atlv..U...S. Call
e ated _ck>te ta part, achoolt, 645-nn to ttt.
ahopp1nc and ocean. Jf :t'O'J
\lo'ttnl to bt•t the Summf'(
heat, tl\en you helter • this
home: now! New ftstini -
!-a:>" THE REAL ''X ESTAT ERS
. .
TllttdaJ, .Mr 11, an
•
DAILY l'ILOT
(el[--1~1 ;;;1 -~·-~,l~~e I --~.:..[ -~....;.1~~1~1 --~lriJ~ ._-.. • .. -..:••
,_.,Va.., Hunt..,._. -Lido Isle Molllle llon1N Income Pn••TtV· '"In--H-11 """""-•
T 1 1 u R o N TOWM. GEORGIA CQLONW. , PIER , SLIP ,.,. s.i. 115 °""""""''Y m HOUSE •EU.LES _ mammot• bedrooms,,,...,., · • l'LAMINGO Mo»U. -. 4B Units LEARN LANDLOIDSI
$32-910 to'PA,•. bl!•vy lhlkt roof with all Xbc5T te""1p tn fa.mil)' park, Dtlwce ~la. Air mndltianed, ftf®vinc the~:.. ~ Wt lpeel•llM II NewpOllt
larwln ,..tty -s!dlnp, lattk<d bay Lido Nord Bayfront whmi .... pet& art all •I« . :N .... -...,,, 1>1><• ol -!lobhftl fro S.ach • ~ dal Mu e
9'M405 (:N •-• windows, lantloeaped with 4 BR. 4 S.11\L 523>,000 ........... -swim poolt; 2 bothl. -Ip!~ lovtl JI )todml A An~ .~ •. .:: 6 Lquna, Oar Jl<ntal &a-··~ LICO REAL TY Ir ~nd a ba11 ft. 3 l><clroona, J baths, I lour . ·~"' ·~···~·· >ice ts FR!Z to Yout T'7 ~ER. anxious. Tf'anrMo. ~. =:= .:1:: 3371 Via Lido. N.8. mond· ttt.10 t'fCreation hallt· bedrooms_ I bt.thl S pools Alto mterklr Ir I tch• n Nq.V1ew!
"'1. drculat driwway ... , brick flttplaco. EllecuUve · * 673-7300 * pool ~blt1 A llluttl•boord. ....-A pa&., n,..'. eabineta. pan<Hlna. deno. NU-VllW lllNTALS
to thil ~· C bedrooms, nelchborhood,, w a I k I n I -.-.:::.......c.c...;-"''--"'--'l'Wo bedrooms, one ii kmi-pl.acts. b:~ptional rutal Ilic money make.•, '* ol C'l3-4030 cw -.-
den, bu.ilt~inl. dlrhwatbt:r, dll:tantw to oce11A BKRt Mesa Verde *e; plenty or doeet and area ck>le to tw., major work. Can net _,or mott a
newly d<anted, pork lllce ~ -spaee· 1.., Ir ltffway1 a ahoppinf. y1• <lat· W•rl< dooo on custom<r SHARP 4 BEDROOM.
yu<t, brit. U>,960. 962-0566. ,,·,:-,,-..-,,---,,=,,,-,,, 4 Bll A o.n. q c:omtt lot, putlman batha: di.tiwatllu: cancy 1 ... than 4~. F!t'ldble P"mlen 0< Mot>. WW ti,,. ALL BUILTIN KITCH.
Huntfneten IHdt MR. Executive -Hent it ·•! net.r Coif eoune. 0-'TW • built ln r&nf'-, OVt'n ~ financlna. Salta P r~rci 70 hrs of pro f e • • l o n • I QUIET CUlrO&.SAC
s Bis bdmw, 2 lpl, ~ily m.ooo. ~ma ~··· b ·~ 000 Will -··'d tnlnlna. n.-2000. •xi. ..,70. PHONE A' GENT .11 .. 1-........... 11 re .. '"''·-; I a r a 1 e ..-.. . l.'Vfl&I er .... ... ... , •• It Isn't Yours Yet rm.~~ •• ·~" ••.no. ,.._ .. -di-": wat11 .. & dry<r: tradu. 133-1264. ,~w~a·~~·m_•_-____ 546-1151 JACK
Rrlm&n th. New paint ·tn • .... ,...., •ha& carpel; cu a tom * • • -RENT~•••~" out. \Valk tD beach A R lph RI I 111 .._.,~,v
•chools. s.u.r la motivated. Decorator Delight I ::.""..:' ~,"' 1,:!~~ ·~ 170ll Selnt ;:drew• H:;: 2:~. ~. -
lO?'o down. "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I' That'• the only thln& wronc
•
COATS
&
WA LUCE
REALTORS
Open Eveni"9•
• '61-4454 •
POOL TABLE
\\'IU ftt with room to Spratt
in 15' i: 30' den. 3 Bedrm 2
bath, ti~pl&ce, bltins. Xlflt
in 6' out ..
$32,950
with this lovely hom~. Haa
everytblng the a v e r a 1 •
family wants. Four larie
bedrooms, 2 betha plus
rnaoy extras. Walk to beach
A 8Choo.IA. ONLY $27,150.
Alt tenn9 and cd;y $t3,950. Thi& II: a 4 bedroom home 1ton.a:• a.heel; t: a r p 0 rt: L•ne
C&ll ~ conwrted to 1 bedroom• · cocMer, FA ~at. Huntlnnton Be•ch 3 BR, 2 BA, tam rm, $215 per C & W and ~. b ··• mo. 905 Uard. 179-7(12 cw (1) • Y room Y • In nttHtnt eonditioo thru-You art the ·winnf'r of
.tamWy th. exmrisitt' tutr, out SH to appree. Ca.it for 20ll Buslaesa Cent• Dr. 2 tick•ts to the ~SSS._35!6 __ • ~~----1 LUXURY HOME and they wd coot I• no •I> appt 5ll-729C. For sale by llvlo< Southl•nd CorOl\O del Mar
Thi• 'UfCUtive home bu 4 Jfct. You have to 1ee the 3 OWf'ld'. $8500.00, nnanci.ng Home & Gerden VA NO DOWN spacious bdrma, blr famll> inoh dttp lhq carp<ting to available wkh 10~ dn. 16 UNITS Show EXCEPTIONAL I
Roy McC•r dlt Realtor Realtor• , ~ nn. Immac:ulate! This tri· betiev. it, c 0 n t r a 1 t ~ d BA \TRONT Ana.helm location 2 Br. 2 Ba home, 1 blk beach .
-· I W ··ilf ·, ,.
. en this tan valllt'. 2 S41-n2f l~el featurn Parquet entry, ap.i~ .stained. cf! d a r MAGNIFICENT VJE\V near Riverside tree""ay at lhf' llug" liv nn, 2 used brick
bedrooma .. ch unit. On. 1810 N•wport Blvd., C.M. YOUNG LOVERS hardwood !loon, Jae patio, -., the Living mom, S.bedu!ed 1"'•1h SUM. ANAHEIM trplc'1. boama. tllutten, all
unit now vacant q ready Thl'ff apaciom bedrooms, water aofttntr +other nice famil)' room and dinina: ~At I: MY.-est 3lx40 Loan usumabl,.. CONVENTION hltna, 1467 aq. tt. on lfJ lol.
for imm~iate • oeilipaney: MESA VERDE l" baths, hardwood noon. to have :xtru. Priced to •ll room. Etqanee it curled mobile .home at LidG P•rk. Can bt: lncl-east'd. CENTER S350.
Each unit nnts tor Slf6. PRIDE OF OWNER Garq:elafiniahedandcou1d at only Ul.950. CiU • 1tt. throughout the. rest of ttwi Cu~ built, 2 ~. 2 BA. Priced to st-II J uly 14 . J uly 23 NU-VllW RENTALS 'Ky-=~•.'!!. horn. U~ mrtalha·-;,.~n La.fKt 3 bdnn., 2 batb,, ta.ml· be used tor speCial parties 962-7637. hotw end can allO be AHn ~o ~~~ s~: at $156.500. Plrase call 642·&6'18, ext. 314 673-~ nr 494-3248 ~ J.N -1--. ., ~ I bit 2 lrpl T al 15 1 ------~--In tht 1and3Caping. All for ' . · be t\\'ttn 9 and S pm _to cla.1m * * DUP' ~'X B R A ~ 0 In the aervlce call Y rm., ns, cs. ot paymenlll $ 1 per only S38 soo yoU Parle, 710 Lldo f'ark Dr, your tickets. (North County ~ ,, ' us. Beautiful 550 sq, It. magter roo'nlh if YoU take over fil'lit Irvine ' · may Nev.-0 -ch Lldo ~nm· NF:\\', H•11•f' dlx owntt's assume the low interest IJ'l:a ' .--o: • toll·frte numbrr i,s S40-l22Q) -1ulte incl. separate den. T.D. ~xisting. HURRY! 1.;:===-=-=-==:;;;;; FHA lot.n. CaU 646-nn. MOBILE home lOX50 ,v/ex-* • \ • unit. S BR .. 3 BA .,
Deluxe carpeting & Mexican HOME OF ndo 2 BR bl •-Jo"irepl1ce, bltina, lllOO sq. tt. tu ·--bl ti u d pa . ' tns O< re.frill:, 1•• e uuurs. me 0 ere • DISTINCTION f reed he I It d -+ 3 deck• w/vlP\V of bay,
Realtors s.15-0465 open 12 to 5· Priced for D·alt ,A .. AAU: Quiet cul-de-u.c k>cation ~ ... ,., tu~.' v":"'ry cl-n.~~ REALTORS ll0 .'1EOWNERS•. ()('flan, A hill-. \V1lk to bch
0 -n =-· 1 quick sale. $15,500. 3260 ""' on u"'".... . ~...,. '"' """' " -•-.__ . 1 1 ·-..,. i;.viw: With a view for thia 4 to appt'f!Ciate. S 3 5 O O . SINCE 1944 BORROW ~ luupplJ!C. YT' .,e. ~·
CONDOMINIUM Michigan. own<r. 541'-2638. $21 950 bdrm., 211 ba. horn<. Hu NEWPORT "3&-1111 673•4400 R•b. r<qut...i. •15-&90<!.
SVc"!. FHA • • nice family room Mth L
N rt a. h l30 ~ Lo I 3 •-~ 2 ba h/J HEIGHTS IKE new, 6 mos., 2 BR, 2 !!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~""'""''! $1000 $10 000 U "'ALK to bch-3 BR. tun ewpo ncac ,.MJ. Two POOL HOME ve Y ,,_...,.,m t ust buill·inl!. fiuo~scent kit· BA, lndt1epd, beaut park, 1 INDUSTRIAL & · • P decks, hue v « r )'t h I n I ·
Bdrms., two batM. Enclos· 3 BR. 2 BA, crpll, drps, ttd., covd patio, e:lec ltit, 2 chen ceiling, detcin.tor floor 5 BEDROOMS mi to beach, pool'!, clubhse, LOW MONTHLY kldafpttl.
ed<patio on comer lot. Steps bloc k walla, heated pool, car gar, din rm, well ldacpd, eovttinp and drapes and clae to shoppg. lM $8.5 mo. COMMERCIAL PAYMENTS Rint·A-House t7t-8430
to pool. <'IOSI! to school.!;, trwys, with $1,100. dn, mo. pymts lam of patio artL ~.500. $58,QQQ $ll 900 H t Bch ALL . build ' f I LOANS on ANY HOM£, TRIPLEX aho Londond La $2)6. pays &II. Nr Brookhunt Including Janel. -' . n g n . mu tngs or Y e PAID FOR <>r NOT CLEAN j bf', J aty, nu C!'pt,
ppg. erry · I: Garfil!:ld. Call now! TM-level home, great for 675-5347. or lease. Ready for u~n. or ......... !PARE OUR C 0 ST S e~ct kit, pr, -.undeek. nr
Building an Eatatl!:! ~n AAking $3.1,900. 646-1661 or i · ~-eel h1·11 l!!ntm:aini.or, "-"et bar,~ VACANCIES! HOOSJ ER i~ton. Call lrl\'t"Slment 1..vn FIRST' he•ch. 5.U..Qr534 aft 4.
with this income property. -m.4119-~2~· ~~~=--If sun deck, very larp lot. TRAILER COURT. Coeta diVJmn 546-l600. r~IRESIDE i.oAN Coit• Met•
S49.950. SAVE TIME r<ar yu<t ideal tor '"""' 'I ~--It ~ 531 5111 (-J '••1 5111 pool "f!la, ~ o own . ....-cea GUARANTEE: CALL ~e 6•6·1•1• Cook, watch the kids &: talk. . '" -tH • court I: • Many trtta. to 40• '-It Adu!~ N • cozy l Sr--IUrn. Nr
• .. to Dad, 3 BR., 2 ba .. famizy I............................. petJ $65. incld'c au. LO AN tm OTiiER stom. Yrd for 1ml l"f!t, 'l;I' -REALTY Rear acce11 far boat or up ~ · .... o If )'OU can get the SA?ttE
,. aMC. rm. $29,500. FHA/VA. Ch_,.......__n Rent Univ. Pork C.nt<r, Irvl"" tnilu. Call 64&-nn. s.s.irio --M-m sny 111~ RIA.LTY GEIM -r-· •nu Call Anytime, 83.l--0820 ... ,, .... ....-. LENDER in California •t I •
N••r Newp•rl •••• orrlt• 1 111---TOTAL COST TO YOU $'150 ~ Houn 8 AM to I PM 33' Sparta.n, 1 BR, ba., awn-OPEN HOUSE RATES LESS THAN \VE ALA Rent• s 64$-3900
*Flxir Upper 3 BR.* 1610 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. or take over existinf $157 trig, priv beach I: dock, S•t. & Sun. 12 te S p.m. OFFER, r eturn the e BEST BEi'! 2 !Ir, bled
Corner k>t. Xlnt ftoor plan. REALTORS 642-4623 • per month payment on this A VIEW $1800. Bay Shore Parle. ll2 TRIPLEXES. Models ai 17th MONEY within 15 daya, and )'Td, encl pr, lddl/pet&.
t\vo story condo 4 THAT NEVER STOPS! W. Cst Hv.')'., N.B. Sp E-13, St. in Huntington Beach, YOUR LOAN with US ii $140. ·
8rq YoUI' po;nt bnl•h" 4 BIL, juot pa;nted. Lg. llv. • BLUFFS "E" PLAN 870-0978. wallttnboach.Call-=. FREE! R.C. WERNER • AU Rent•l1 e ~·-aave $.Good loc. clou to all rm .• lam. rm. ln kitch. 11~ bedrooms, 2 bathl plua PRIME k>c. in beaut. Turtle 'ICnn. 1 3 B • ~ 'd 1 ~•,..
ichoobi. HWTy! Ba. W/W cpt. thruou.t. N.B. many, many extras. HUR-Rocle Hlll 1. ovedoolrirw _...,sq. t. r., ~~Ba. SACRIFICE in Lido .--• ..,si ('n LEASEOPTION·SBR,
BALBOA BAY PROP. Hlfh & Woodlaod Schls. RY ! UCL 3 Bdrm• .. 2 batha. plus family room. Vacant, wat•-nt park, 2 br. FIRESIDE Thrift 2 BA. lam. rm .. EHt-* 642-7491 * cbe to pa!'OChial 9Chl. lam. rm., fully ~ clean, move-in ready at '$.1,995, Al9D dbl wide at1---,;:-==.--=12328 'd $325
$3) 00) 5J6....lW 'ditionel:t. All t'!lec. kitch., $500. per month, $5,995. f13.3ll?. 19 UNITS Harbor Bl., C.M. 64.5-1000 SAi e . t •~11.· ~r Emo.
&.lbN Island . MESA VERDE I e If -t I ea n in r ovens. .... lx42, 2 BR, . hldlcpd $2)4,cm • 6.3 x Gr 0. I 319 N. Main, S.A. S4T~ gen . U'9V" • ve:
XLN'T LOCATION 4 br, huge ram rm, b'm din Realtors W-4455 Oec:orated thruout in quiet, ~·;'\<.... rec room -' si::: walk ~ Walker• Ltt 54a-TI3l. 1 I TD L 548-9416.
Cl...U: l~aod horn<. 3 Br+ rm. B<aut lndacpd. Cul d< ~::·:,:;;:·.=-~ a<><>d tut<. C:~t ~\) 1'J tUtf' lhoppg. S65 mo. $23XI. lndu.frlal P"'"rty 161 s oans ·!,~;-1 ,!';.. $~-
bunk houae. Oiatinctivf' ~)(· IAC. $45,500. l!MO Kildetr tor & full 1izf!<I pool table. 4 (;~ ¥,/ ...a!!ll 646-84&4 e~% INTEREST 'ALA Rtnt1ls •
ter. i\fany unique ff!fltiu?s. Cir. 9'own by a pp t. twin aized bedroome. xtra ti "" really 3'x37' Mobile home wt;n·~· M·l ZONE 2 d To· l
Quality C()nstr\letion. Patio, ~9745. • al •~ d' • · CabaM., carpeted .. ~--t• n oans OR 1 ==~~~~~~~ batM, • v , .. ..,....,&ce, m-""'. • CfWA.~•· ... ,. x 300' lot. hu d\\•ellin1 • M !: "Room! 3 B'R, '2 Ba, =~ l':rfe;~r !~' t~! o:.:~M~V=r4 =· ~ ~8~uil~~· =. 24~4 Va~ ~I :0 : =2~htd. $1800. Arm-and Ill"». 500 Lov.·~llt ratn Orange Co. ~tr· Ri:::,t:-· ;:"·
hom.t. By Owner • sn.500. dwn. 3280 Michigan. 540-9347 962-1373. "SINCE 1946" 644-~ AN~lME 1~. 1 Br 1'1'obUt home Roy Mcc.;dl• R1altor "WE BUY TD'S" 3 br, 'bl, <.'Pl!, drpa, bltnA, 673-&2<1. El Toro -"'-'"'"'"'$~2=3~,5~0~0=---bt w ....... Bank Bldg. BAYIBONT located In N.B. SJ.500. Ou! 541-7719 Sattlor Mtg. Co. .,...nod •''"'· dbl .......
Colltge P•rk 3 BR 2 BA ts drpl I GI or FHA TERMS. 3 Bed· Univrt'sity Parle, Irvine MAGNIFICENT VIEW of town owner 111Xious. 1!10 N~ Blvd.. C.M. 642·2171 54~11 Irnmed. nccupancy. ta.
POOL. ColltE~ Park. 3 BR, &' 1 ., ~ · ' :: rm, fenced yard, attached D•ys 552-7000 Nights l...e.rgftt & newest ~40 646-99'26, man&ge.r Serving l-11.l'bcT Itta 21 yn. ,.1'na North. SIT..e.MS, "Rich.
1% bll. &: Fam Rm. $32,500. !8'~ I'!'~ bloc=~ \\<'8.ll, 1arage, Cle'an in and out. ~ile ~ •2t BL!do 2Park. GREAT l....akes 2 Br Ex· Lots for Sale 170 WE m&lce Joan11 on proptrfy. 4 Bit J BA, blt1rs, tanoed
5% dwn. FCJ< appt. coHI d.,. to xtnt 1Ch•oll , Gl'snodown ROOMS FOR om ' R. BA. pondo, lnd!epd, 5 star atilt Al., buy T0'1, McClur<, ya;! .. tlo --
'2131941--0737. Brit. markelll. new ma 11. * 347.8sJ1 * ANYTH. INGI ~o :n. $2'1:1. SpaL'~ pk. Shop, $6,SOO. 545-6616. LOT on beach in 1'1orrn Bil)' Bkr. 49U332 or 492-00C. ~·..,_ -. ,... =c-0,.....--d'"e""I "'Ma7""r---1 R<a0<>nabl•. s 3T -115 3 , the RHI Eotate Mart • · rat< lY, ~ ·n SKYLINE 20x52, 2 br. 2 • 67xlll'. S.ll or Ind<. mo. CaD ,.... -41.
494-21l6 aft 5:30 A: wk-4!!nd!. Five biz bedrooms including Park. 710 Udo Park Dr, b1, lhag, 2 1heds, nu court, Mi-4610.
C M Fo REPOSSESSIONS Newport B<Rch Lldo 1"'nin J;:-;-..,-,,--=---0---1 J~ 3'Br, 3 •. '3llO mo. lit A D r Fountain vanev . a huge muter bedroom. • . xtras, S.A. 567-4507. Mount•ln, Detert, ..... ,..... ..-.. 1ut + ..... clepollt. • • D ? For b!!onnatlon Al1d location Loi• of wlk·ln clo!et&. Larga PANORAMIC VIEW Reoort 174 _ . TIC Wat.r 6 .-bf No.hlftC) own of theM FHA • VA bomea. family room ott the modmi Beaut. mabltalned home MJ..78
y,., th< Col,.... c.m,any, A REAL DREAM C01t!acl -kitch<n. Big livina ,..m with 2 B<droomo A lute lamlly I I~ UO AC. FOR RIU.LE ===·=-...__..,_.,.__,
tM 1atgest VA_ ~r tn , Loveb' 3 • df!ft aia&le atory KASAllAN a Iittpla~ and ...,_te rm. Pool. ....-.. ":',.!:!r' 160 • " r e 1 surveyed and HoUMI 'urnl1hecl 300 $140-2' BR. pr, ,.., ._
CaillOmla, can ..,..,. tor hotn~ w/many: many_:xtru. Real Est•t• dinin& area. Thia 2500 Squan Geor9e Wiiiiamson . recon:led Into (41 40 acre Gene I fncd b' ~ you to dettrmlhe Yoti' VA 1.ots of muonry Work. wood· _______ 14_T_-ff04_ Foot Irvine beauty ii onJy Realtor lots for ~le. In IA194!n ... ra Rent-Ao.HovM f7'f.lal
or GI eligibility and then to work and l<hcpg hav~ amt TIME'S wutin' .. this VA· Sfl,900 lnclutfini the land! 541-4570 .. S-15'4 Commercial O>unty. Nr. pt.Yed mad, Na· $115-Ba.\. Isl Irr 1 Br. e HUG!: BacMk:r w/
buy up kfOO, !iO « pemaps Int• this houa<. ~ upcrad<d CANT J be<lroom 2 bath 646-nn. -·THE POI T P"--rty ISi &n.! ,....et. ph>e ..... " privacy' A charm. ' porch. child, om! 'pet '*·
ov.,, a 70 thousand dollar .,,,., A drpo. frHhly paint home ;, y•amina for a N · ~ Yin• o1 Mt. Shuta. 129.960. Jm.Dana Pl. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Utll Inc $ll0. ~ ftir mth1ng down ed. The back )'ll"d is a pie-family. Early move in to Exclusive Balbot. PeninsWa. One of the L•tt $2.950 dn . .Ir: $249 per mo. le frplc, all featuru. ALA Rentals • '45-2'00
and internt at only 7~. turesque of flowers. incl qualified buyers. Askin& Imprustve 4 BR., 3 bath, Vacant downmn parctla in can &ive 4 deem. ructl ~Lquna. Beaut turn 2
Pef'hape ,~of you seHen many expensive roee: buahn. S27,00J. NO DOWN GI'• or extra large liv. nn. Huae U LaKUJ18. Beach. This land Prouty, LA.NOWAY. 714 : ~ frill, view! e E--Z Doet tt! 2 ltr, llDYe,
rerr!c, cpll/drp1, NICE!
$145 .. WCKJtd like ~ta nplained to So clean you 'll ttally h>ve LO w o ow N TO 1,----:--,-"---i: 40 family nn. with beam i1 well k>cated ,a.;, ready 622-1&15. NU-VllW RENTALS
you. Aleo; 1t could be the it! Priced at $39,500. It NON-VETS. Call SEYMOUR _L_•,..llUIMI________ ceilings, massive frplc., for dl!'Vf!.lopment. Buy now 2 Lota, lecludf!<I S2,'50 ~ or 494-3248
wettssful way _, ~Ii your won't lut. Near Milt Square REALTY, 147-1221 MYSTIC HILLS larp patio. ONLY $79,500. Ir build or hold tor Moonridp cabin ns,750 LOVELY 2 bedroom and
property at full pr-a. Cati Parle • SEUJNG!? Sell dirtct to Oce vi , 4 Bdrm 2 ba.. CALL (!) '41·141• appreciation. Zoned C-2. Lakeside cabin $33,00ll d@n. Good klcation. $315. a
AU Rentals e 645-3900
l!alf lluft
6Ta-7225. If . • Blcr. No long li11ti111 per· 0ce-:n =~living :··dining £.~ _. Reak>nomlcs, Bkr. ~Call 86M60 or write; month. Available tor one Ala O:lndo. 3 BR. 2 BA, e iod, immediat~ cuh to you rma. ~-level yard, room ~-EXCLUSIVE C·l 1ii acre, =~Real !:l!Ate, P. O. )'te.J' or more. No pet.! or 1 levtl. S325 mo.
531·5111 ( :J 531•5111 e t'Vt!n U behind tn paymts for p6oL Xlnt neighborhood, N••r Pfe•p•r,1 P••I Off le• level. 1247 Brookhunt, ahop-• Bir Bear Lake, ama.11 children. A I ~n t 4fi..l06' ev•. COL WEL L
PROPERTIE~ INC
REALTORS
• or have notes due. Penon-cloM! to 1ehool&. $49;5oo. plna: center, A a ab elm . Calif. 615-7225. C.P.I.
SEYMOUR AAAA RATED e al, confidontial attenuo-* 4911-2800 * BACK BAY VIEW 56-4389. LOTho ;n famou. Lak• Havuu, FREE Roni 1 f\111.yr.+ ;nc:, 2 EAST Bluff condo. 3 BR. 2
e Call -~-E 963 A""" Plus view of Fuhkm Ill&nd BY Owner -Nwpt Bch, me ot the world famous Br. Kid• I peta ok. ~.!· ~ « *-· sm mo.
C & W 'd4kNa. Ir: E&stbluff. Just 11 beauti· Ocean vu, 6-untt bldg, I )Tl. n .,.e. ~ted Rent-A--HouM t7'.t4JO -----'----1 buy of the week. l m· ;,o.o--, ves 1VOM e ..__ Londo Br!A.. • ---o:nr-•
m11.culale 4 bedroom 2 bath ~ ful at night u in the CitY. old, compl. nturbl.chf!d. clOlf! to all achoal1 A city. C t IM 'Pevntaln Viitley iiiiiiiiiiiiiii I homl'! Features bright . 'n OWNER tram. A Ill u m e llO. COlliln' MW'( A beautirul home wit h 3 Income $775 mo. $75.000. $9000 ()I' will trade for Cotta ,."=-"--'"-----A WARD WINNER! chttry ltitchf!n. overlooking 5%% loan, 'payment• lf!M ,.,. ... =-=oo. tpacioQs bedrooms A; • 673-~29. Mna or Newport Beach 1n-1 'BR trailer tor rent. Adutui VERY Nce l hr, tam rm,
luscious pool liu yard with than rent. 3 balrooms. den, CLOSE-IN charming family room for 2068 Newport Blvd .• Cl\.1'. C2 come prop. 6#-4687. onl.y. 140 CabTillo St. walk to T. V. k l Sehl. Aft T This~ family~ double patio, e:xtraorinary xtn. cabinets and lhelvea In only $64,500. Call ft6.717I. mne lOOxllS. Owneir will JUST lJSTED ·-Lakt'front 645.3974 ~""~·-13T_-IDS __ . -----I
just waiting tor )'OU. storage 1pa.ce. cu 1 tom ' at modem kitchen, builtins, 2 block!'! to beach. town I: C'aJT)' TD. Prine. oNy. ~-500-lg lot-Need! fin. NeWPOrt h•ch
the warm A cmy Hvin& dr11.pe11 and carpeting, con· expensive wallpaper, many school• pufB thill chinning 2 6G-U21 ....,, ·
room to the ape.cioui muter wniently located In pride of custom feature11, covel'ed bdrm, 1 bath cottage dOM! • PROF. Bl.DC. -$34,000. OCEANTRONT Homf! on I 'O'_,.,,,.,,_,..,...=----
•uite, tbis bt,auty is frelh. ownership are•. A Must patio with natunl brick to ewrythlng. S3S..950. Condominiums SECLUDEI).. 9' ac:re-3 Bdr. beach. Slttpa I. ?t1onth of •tu~~~~ :a" and am7ady! 4 ~ Re-pri~ right at $33,250. fftplace. brk., s 2'. 0 0 0 . ~~ 2..CHANNELFRONT for .. ,. 160 Cabin make oUer. Allf\lll $1200. Mr. Robtnaori as. '
watr;:1-!adt1 y °'~~ra~e. I SEY?t10UR wUI take your 846-()604. .,./T"O/an, Newer 1 Br, &. den, 3·.ba. CONOO far Sa.le. 3 BR., 2Mi OJ~M SHEU.-$10,tjl), ·Davis Realty '42-7000. ALA Rentals e MJ.:3'00
lush shag, and, twuld )00 home in trade. Ca I J VEI'S SJOO TOTAL CASH. with c:rpt'd pier A slip tor Ba .. 2 car pn.ae. w/pool ~!:1:::~ep(~4~J:j 1 BLOCK tn l>Mt'h. 2 BR. lUru>
h<li<!I". much man!' Jll't SEY M 0 UR REALTY Xlnt nice 4 bdrm In xlnt REAL ESTATE 2T boot 0..rlool<s N'pt r.I. prlv!. N<ar Hoar Hoop, $a)O. Mo. on yr1y ts.. i.1 " eyrd ~·Find I=· A>cd listed-llurry~ Call 979-1000. 817-1221 or 546-4212 H.B. ant near Oouglu, 1190 Gltnnt)'ft! SL PAric. $87.500. 673--9183.. Rul E1tate WantM 114 tut. 6'13-3807. ; crw:: pr, /peta .
.... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiio I cl<.-t• ochl1 • !hopplrc. 4M-9473 ~16 MEDITT. OUPLEX Duplexn/Unlh PVT pf)' want& 3 "' ' Br HOU-Un/Vrn. iJ ~ R Ontu BONUS ROOM VACANT. lmm<d ..... B<1tt 3 BR. I Oen $36,fSO ?,!oder' duplex. 3 • 2 A d•n. le U2 ontalo • 645-3900 111'21 4 B'R. 2 BA, 18'0 IMI ft, ne\\' ol all only $28,~ Hutty,, Unique white brick mer Pier • •II~. 3 way water N , , . hio?M. Call Han')', 833-1129 CNNraf •WE blw a larl't llltction ~, . paint lmid< A out, x!nt loc, won't luL ~ gat<d 'ontry. 2 Ba., blt·inl'. Yi<w"" N'p I~. $99.500: CDM BEAUTY w\olys: 64"-2312 wltndo •1 --------ol I ... f ..,._ ...,. ~ I I !iO' x 120· eu!~•c lot, C & W lrplc., carp. Yan! n«d1 675-1!'12 At<•:· 67";H073 ~t, ~ ., -lnto
brick !pl, tam rm. cr¢5. f OWNER work. but a real bu¥ for the ,WATERFRONT ,Lido Ilrie, Ttlf' front homt b a 3 ~ .trmMdLatll7 •'_.
bl tin ~ dbl oven handyman. Call: Via Lido Saud. Priced for ~tn 2 bl.th channerall
1
R •I t • 0 t t I e • p I a a,
'&Y OWNER -Mesa de:l Mar. dshwshr. ove~ml dbl aar: TRANSFERRED MISSION REALTY $f731 quick Ille by owne:r~ Prl~ with formal dining room, fNndlf .SHERWOOD Jt·J:ALTT •
. " 3 Bedrm 1% bllth boat or cJ~•-onl Into fT"l-4100 freshly decorated with • HoUNI * Apl1. 1• ISSS 4 BR. 2 BA, 1amily nn. New patio. $33,000. takes all. ' '1-NEAR Vietor HUIO'• -OWN-.,...... y. 1 : modern kitchen and an ln-jiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiilmiiiiil * ••1·0111 * "" , ...... crpts. Corner. Reidy • camper aate neu u.::ach &: yo·~~WN 1 ~ h t~-4706. • · -2 1 , __ Ill 11 ,,.. 0 If sehool 5% down Only vrY'V •P · nr --.c • formal eati'* aN?a Jn the , r., f19'1i. tin /0,
\• Move-In! $ 3 5 . 5 o.. $24.soO. Call 96"-mi. $27,000.,N•tt, R!tr., 494-9311. The .Sky Is fa!lhlgl kitchen. The r<ar aportm.,,. Buol-• mw.1tthCOITAMlllA FA ht.; ••""-WxlOI' cm::~ Parl< .• B,., 2 ba. I "Z-4471 ( =1 l44-llOJ RED CARPET REALTOM Lquna Nl9uol FaUirc r!i<hl Into the kU· lo brand ... w. I WO Opportunity 2DO fnctl. let, ....... v ..
,am rn' 'f••y 1-·0·1 •-1. LOWER than RENT BR 0 ADM 0 0 R. N;--i ehen -riiht lhroua'h t h t: bedrooms, cathedral ttl-OL tot i;s-~CU~A BachelorV _!'~· cent -MeW In Wey.
"-· '" •= ,._. SKYLIGHT f th' ha '"""· • .., a ...,,... ....... e UNIQUE GIFT ' ""''"· a-·· .,_ -• ~nt -· . ~r:u 61:1'1. ·Prinv·,~•• only. -OWNER m1nt 1ell. ~ Assume: lhil 5%~ VA loan ....-.. __ .. _ · 4 Br • 0 SJ: .c rm· HURnYI ,.,_. .,,_ ....,.
.,., ... NlolV r--.,..... ..--~. oct1U1v,.;W. , • cu-MB)IILT~ , and ut i lity room SHOP• ~11.,~••1 •
Pri-ton Dr ""t~•. roomt.. C bedroonui. xtra w/pa,ym!! o( only Sl.39/mo f. II 2 "· 2 old 1111 ;;;:uv ,..,me. * --=== ..... =~=-,..--! ·~'° . J"f.r •uo am Y nn. .oa. yrs . It' .•.• lalli-'nto .... •tta. Priced ri&ht and • -'=~~~"'m=i!9,-.,.-bat ha . 111a1nlf i ce:ot includlncprinclpa],intfftlt, -n Id d • .--... ""' 1 11"' --.... Call-.-FORSALE-Specialty lhopln$~DDruATE i..:...... w/ 2 ATillAcrIVE 3 BR bocm, * CALL ~ * r:.--i•-. -· d rap• I , ... H • •--·-. 3 BR. -l(f ' IC J> • SPAR.KUNG HEATED A ,. .. ..,.,.,.. u,.,.,..,_ -·•··.. • V"' • '""'"' 1" BA •• "' .... ...:. '""'" ...... • ..... u........... drpe/tptd 3 car pn&f c11.uu.1\.'C ttnte.r. Orance. Bt. cptl. drps, pr, JddJ ok. n • ftnctd )'9f'tt wtatt.
5barp ... vaC''11t 3 I-4
11
8R "·allpapcr acctnts, naural Cl'Jlh I: dtps. $16.U>. Bnuqhll 'tamily home. ~ Fll.TERD> POOL. A on Santa Ana Uft. Many ex· * IU'IP'· tmnwd ~. nr
Repoe. in , 1.1'!•· W J • wood ~. bkr, $29,930. KASABIAN R. E. &l'l!'a with n~. •fe beech the patio, A through another duliw featurft. Owner's $14().COZY' COttqe 1 Br. llChooif It llhopp~. chlldnrn
R.ealty. AG-6991. 847..e604 £vet 96)..5319 --"-ll i kytight in tbt Pf'l.P! Bul related lnterw dernandlns •ncl .. ~ -· pet ,a.;, pe11, .. 'ricmnt. 1• m accesg, .,...~,...,.,, ......... owner. ll'1 -..tectJy ae.fe in a"\I of uu •-con-
3 BORM; _ _rt~.:.-' double OWNER. leaving. Yoo can OWNER dupftate. rwim 49&-63.\4. the 4 ~n•. the ~Wy mol't' tlmf!'. C&.11 Rob Sln-~ ' · li\1'MAC. l + 2 + f'am. rm.
carage --•~ r..... new walk '° th& bet.ch. Newly pool, 3 bedrooma, 2% llaths. LidO Isle, roi>m, the dinlnr room A the =-2 "er=='=u~;=====,. fol'd, GRUBB I-ELI.JS 4300 . * Ctnt. pa&, c,ts. ttri-. cw.. -pe.int i. d'pl. C-2 )ot. 186 decorated, 4 bed ro o rn i , built-Im, d I• h w a• her • • nfurn., am. yard, CampU1 Dr. NA 557·7'1KMl, Sl»-rRESHLY de<:ora~ , ctw.ac. Nf. MDAC. DIG.
WeUa Ptace. 127.900. ~r. buKt~n ~. oven . ¥.'l.llPIP'f aettnts, mirrored SALESMAN · ~~;tRA"i:°~oc:onde;~ ~ 'f~~~dulta. BOAT Rental -Summtt' 'Fun Br, bUna. 1rs )'1"d tor~ .l m.M.17 aft S « t2U) ~. dillh"'•uher, huge Ii~. -.'&)J, new thick 1 b a c We bav• an ~In& tor • ' · aci w: • · Plzzu -$30,000 + net Gift pet. 346-6430.
DESI' Colltae Parle' 1re1. 3 yard with 6 m1turt ftult carpetirc. ctntral f Io or h11h calibre, enattvt nteso .ED CAntEDRAL CEIL-Income Property 1" lhop. llallmark * ~LUSE=="'l2IO= • ....,,Brand-~now--a·
Sr. 2 Ba, encl. patlo. bJock trees. colorful iitttias. bric, I pl•n. brlt, • .,~.950. ftM ._.. -ca-'-Je of dt1Un1 ~~=h! Aa~~1 aNt ... !!'. Holl nd lu S I . -~-~-· ..... --~~ _ .. , • NOW ~. ~G • • •• e .. $17>-DOWIOUSE, -2 br, 2 ha. <Pl&. drpl, -wall. ncar -a:hool" $28,750. 133,(0). MZ-2!Wit. OWNER SAYS "SELL." and 1n hiaher priced properUe1. $52& wi h l()t;t down Ca.II . ,..~...,_,,., "The Bloktt -.·Jlh F.rnpathy'' Br. end 1 ar, bltnt, ptUo. f'll' ICNa a ocnn.
"'1 ....,1o1 termo. Prl::C1
23P!;,' •••,500, h<'ll •-thot b•-w\th b --~I ._ •-'nn 1
' . •e•• -~~ _ln6°"""Av<.,C.M. erpl>/d-. -t •k , ft<fr. No ~-.O.m!·,
Ml,y. Call !J.l-llll3, M.-.,. NEAR 8EACH-48R. 2% 8~ """· !;.. 4 oo;;;: h...-::..c:.-,_ -. -""=~· ---61>-4170 -·-· UNDLORDSI 163-2'112 .. -. '
MESA VEJtD& B<autlloUy CONDO. Crpto, drp~ !pl, yard tlOmpl fenctd and In 3415 Via Lido ~ INCOME HOM S ESTABLISllED Gardtnbw Do,,,.. ha»• a VR<aney! We 2 BR, $1!>. 1'-idlfpet lllO 'i ~ecor1t~ A fandlcaped. ~ klt. 2 ctr encl fll.I'. n'ce!l aru. Only S3J,9l0. , 6-NEW DUPLEXES Sts,950 bw:il'ftt-e0mplete wt top can nu lt. Many dtttr&blt BR. ftSS.. Kidtlpeta.
4 !JR, ~.~. 0wnr 551-3794 V.ct1nt, BJa-..Ownr., Eve: Hun")', cJll Bkr, fl62.002l. ELEGANT 6-NEW TRIPLEXES $67,950 fille tqU.fpment I trailer, te~tJ on our wt.Jt!nt •st. Rtnt-A.·HouM ,.,,.....
a>Rr<ER lot <111-<INoc II. 31 86&-U11. ' GOY'T. OWNED ·~~"· ~::~ ;; 9 ICK C·ASH B<A!Jt .... '.I BR Ulllll. $!00 ... b<lt .u .... ~143': • AhMIUJ•ly. NO Cllol.RGES. DAILY PILOT
!!II. 2 BA, lrpl & 1iot1u1 "I" I YEAR ,,.... 5 BIL Gr .... l\<J>OIMHed bt>mu. Low plact1. $92,loo. THROUGH A• 151 E. Bay SL, Com M..._ « t-"'91-1402. • BEACON RENTALS
$3$.llOO. .. Tllll brool< -"'· _. I Comp!•, Ill. Ph; 54UI05. EST. local co!! .. 1hop a Lm. * MJ.Glll * CLASSllllED ADS v. A. ni:ro. 4 BR. 2 BL model. lwln> dub. Avail ~ ~~ boCIO ~ '-,.. DAIL y PILOT BY ...... duplex l yr old to 4 p.m. Yltld ttttl .. Uko to "'"'' °"' _.. POI A-ON.
11111 $tiDO ON. PlO lolo. -$45,916. Tr• n 1 ! • * C R alt1 lire C.plstmo B<ach. $;0,1111). lllnaU lnv<a'"'""' ~ -column It tor yotll .. 11 • •
Autl!orl...t -!4Mll70 -· ~l. rest "" 3415 Vlo L!t!o -WANT AD CJ<lradolorloL-alttt S.54M843. 511,..,lday1fOl'Sbuclt>. '4Z.5'71
Huntinflton hach
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ft DAil V PllOT TUtldfY, July 11, 1972
I _...... !~1.__-_ ...... __,~ I _ ...... lf!ll "··-..... -l!!J , .... _. ... -1~ 11 .... ·-··-I~ [ ........... WJ~ I -I~ !
T_,,....,,. Unfum. W -::Apt:'-._u_nfu:-m_. __ .;.'*'--".A411f.;.;;..· .;u.,.o111;.;..m;;;·~-...;;;3'5;;.I:~:;:· ;;.·;...·;:.u;;.ntv;,;.;.;m..:_ _ _;165;;; Apt. Unfvm. J6S ~· • l~SiiiumiiiiiimoiiiiiiriiiR.miiiiiiiiioiil•~ii41iiO~I Buolnen Rental 445 '(
]~ ~: ......
Heu1a1 UnfunL
_if_unt_lr..:•:..'"'-"-·.; .. ..;·;..~dt;....·__ a.nor•! Get!aral Dono Point Minion VioJo J'"um. or Ullfvm. 310 BAYFRONT t BR. avau all * OFFICE100 oq ft av! f
LOVELY, tmmac a br, l _bl, 31Jr,.l\l k I~ J..ARCt. dtlwct 2 Sr, 2 Ba, e NEW 3 Br, l',i Ba ttep dn Co1t1 or part oC AU£Ulll $500/wk. llOW. 800 Sq. Ft. JN.
tam rm, 1unken Hv rm pool, W. ml btt¢1\. HACIENDA HARBOR ocean view, $.193. Adult.a llv rni, she.r C!'Ptl, drps, OuU • .andlrc view & location DUSTRIAL SJiOP avi Aua:.
W/lrfole, eiee kitciwn, N•1-~$21S=-=mo.=,=53M833:.-=:=--From $150 only. 496-3138. bltns. 'patio, pool• roe f&c, Sum-Rentals nr jetty. Rftponslble tamuy,=646-21=~00-·=-.,,-,---
el•m 4Cbl, Jr~• Hta. Unlvarslty Pori< DELUXE l & 2 BEDROOMS Fountoln Volley l:t:lO. 8.10-«n. PALM MEfA APTS. onlf. 673-4303 tor •Pl"· BEAUT. 1600 oq ft, "°" on
Mall. 1m ..... 847-. Fumlahed" " Unfumlohod ' Nowpori Baoch llf1NUTES or NPr. ljCll. BAY m I -Coast Hwy, CdM. Low rent.
RENT w-oplion ,. """· 3 br, •~E ru -~on. Heated Pool -' Garages _ Shag CarpeliDg 4 BR, 211 Ba, •net r•nze, , • .. .. ., ~, FURN. IJ.NFIJRN, ;,i..pa' 4 eompletely tur.nl!h: Call Jonian 644-4000. ,l
2 ... fl-pie, cptg, dr\>f. •ncl 3 BR, BA, ALL REC~ llishw"her =-All Ulilit,ies Paid. po<i & rten>ation. No pets, 2 PARK NEWPORT Unbell<vobly larp apls., .. Avall June to 5ept. mo lnduslrl•I Rental 4SD ' l
yd. Vacant. $235, ht A Jul FACIL. ~150/mo. 'rn49118 ,., chl\dm. S2SIJ. S67-IGl4. huge ~1 Jacuzzi elect -mon'" Adults ·•·· ' mo...,,,, 645-4583. Duplex~ Unfurn. ·-,...ufts Only .No P.ra APARTMENTS. bit.Int,~~ crptl, ,_., :'."--~-•. o • ., COSTA MESA ·' •• _, 2•1 Avouclo St., Coat• Mou "'12"' Huntington Baod! ~... --.,~ c 150 2 ba b t t 1 n , -~ .., th bay sauna etc. Mu.Its, no petJ. i..io & 2880 Sq ft. ~~her, .,.'tio. Gd .chi Costa MeN 01 e ._ SINGLES ••••••••• From $135 NO. 62 Beacon Bay, N:B. CABINET MAKE~
dtlt. A""ll _" L $175. ·VILLA MARSEILLES ON BEACH' Luxury apartmeot llvlnrov, 1 BEDRM .•••.•.•. Fromll,~ Watertroot 4 BR. 4 BA, . FIBERGLASS
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-• UNFURN. duplex 2 BR, encl SPACIOUS I & 2 IEDllOOM An. • •llooklntt the w .. er. Enjoy • BEDRM .•••••• From ~-. Aur •. $2700. See Owner CCI N & so ~ .. '.:;~:;_;~=------! can"e. $135/mo. AduJta or;. Furn ...... & um"m1··-~ 1--'·allh 1-~ ' .. ~ I r. N\vptFrwy .... , ... y. 'frvlne • , .,_ 2 BR. 2 BA Unl. Fr. $251 ,....,,wu m:' IJ>I, 11wwi• lou'tt right, they're tun-' tse' 2931 Grace Lo.
ly. Call 548-8835. Mu:lt Lfvlftf • .2 BR. Furn Pr $308 ~Jll pools, 7 Ughted ten~ dn-.priced 1561 Mesa Or: ( ?iA Cove doll hou.se. (So. of Baker, E. ol F&lrview
2 BR. Un.turn. Sml yanl. Dishwasher color coordinated . appliance! • ADULTS . ONLY · n11 cour\8. ,Plus mlle• a.r CS biks trom Newport Blvd.) Vtew or bay. Pvt. beacb. ~ Mi) Representative there
4 BR., 2\0 ba ••••••• 136SIS'15 Carport. $1.'l.llmo. Adult.. Plusb_SbaJ Carpe~ •mirrored wardrobe doors-, Furniture Available blcycte trails, putting, llh"f· 546--9860 , $115 wk. July. $200 wk. Aug. 9 am-12 noon.
3 BR., 216Ditlii ........ $350 J~H;;:nu~10n~t:;P1-~ac:!!11flCon:!:!1'o~Bo;::.130~~,!.&ll-05~~-i-~ndlreet-lightmg· 1n kitchen --·--break!ast--bir~-car p'ili'ilraJ>™!~hwuhtr ~-m 11-7.,£':'>11!150. m-0<10.thlJ:'.®', .. ! •1 ....__...__ nb ..,0 Ron R.,.el, 6~ Rltr. (714) 919-4434 or 8194711_ •.:
4 BR., 2 balhl .......... 1810 ·~ ~ . huge priv,te fenced patio • plush land~cap-heated pool.quoaa-tennls uv ~ , -._._........,...., ,.. ·•
3 BR.,1 balha: •••••••••• S340. mg • bnck Bar-00-Ques .. large heated pools rec room«ean views 8.hd· 2-bedroom plabl and Sparldin& New Adult Apta. Vacation"Rtntal• 425 FOR .lease by owner, m· ·'
S BR, i,Batht .••.••.••. $400 IMM.AC. 1 BR le ()e:n-cov & lanai. Air conditioning. . patiow.mple parkhl& 2-story tow.n houses. Etec-• 1 BR.-Unturn !lf!l dw;trial bldg. 10,000 sq. ll15
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-. retk II
patio; Crpt, drps. bltnl, 3101 So. Bristol St"* S•nta. Ana 5574200 Security Guards. trlc kltchen1, private patios e 1 BR-turn $l90. ~ · .* CA!ALINA * ) Borchard, nr Edinger &
-,· doood • ., . .,-Joyely-!"ivate --cOtDWELl:;'l:A:NKER-&-c HUNTINGTON or balconies, cm-peting, dra· • 1 BR 2 Ba-tum 1245 Jl<,aut>lul view home. ,5 Br. Grand, Santa Aoa. GU-39U .
..ground•, Waler "'aarooner Ml\NA,GING AGENT PACIFIC peries. Su6tonaiieM park· • 2 BR 2Ba•tuni1245, . By week or month 673--0148. NEW DELUXE M-1 Unlu.·i
pd. Re!ponsible married Ing with elevator.s. Optional Priwte patio5 l\llh. forest ph. poll·er. 1733 Monrovia
couple. $165. (AdUlts) no 711 OCEAN AVE H B maid_ sen.rice. Jt1.1t north of setting. Carport' ,, gas pa;d, Rentals to Sh~re 430 543-3145: 836-9798 eves.
REALTY
Univ. Paric: Center, Irvine
. Call Anytime 833.()820
Office hourt I AM tci I PM
~. ••• 3276 A_pt1. Furn. ·~ &-' Unfv n .,. " . . Fashoon Istan4 at Jamboree ll4 E -st C . ••• --. . ' ~ -· _., _______ ... _I..,.'" r • ~ (714) 536-1487 and San Jo in Hills 'Road. · 41111.fl •• .M. W'tO'"Vu1 FE~ALE -11tr1ught-w/same Rent•ll Wanted 460 ,
Dt/J>LEX for rent, $135. Huntl-ton l5Mch Coifo Moso Otc open 10 am-6 pm Dally T r..i.-.. aqu(714) .... ·1,,,.,,. pr1/room le board a: Jaund ·~ ·l 2 Br, cptll~ drps. 624 Geneva, ... WllJ.JA¥ WALTERS CO. e e., .. ., .. e . ---~ Huntf~ Be1dt $150 mo .. Nice Mme Nr 19th RESPONSIBLE older lady '
Apt A. HB Call Manager, · RE£ tn'llJTlES -um tor rental inlonnahoa 2 8· " & Pomona CM ~2761 needs roo"m w I k It Ch~ n ' I
5.16-000 apt, $130 up Bach<lor 185. H OR NEW beaut 2 BR, •hag crpts. DEWXF. 2 Br., I ha .• "1JI., R FROM $ 13 FEMALE 'to · • prlvg~ by August 1, cl~• to ""
3BR.2Ba.,tam.nn .•• $.325 1 ~~~~~~~~~ 'Nr beach~ Pool . ARB GREENS drapes, bltins, has frplc. new .. arp. &: paint Encl MOVE IN TODAYt house. Worki~a~ ~~ta:" shoppmgarea'.646-&48:>. ii 4 BR., 2% ba.
1
ffl!WI,. nn. '375 J · 536-3777/536-'1282. Near beach. Open house Sat gar. Adults over 30; no Kids & pets OK, Pool. All 22plus-no child..:n 642-~23· 3 BR~-or Ire. apt unfurn -~1 3B~~~~tr~$32S · I Ap1rtm1ntsfotRent lfV) oL°'q-'-'u"n•=lla::..co=clt=----Furnished & i!;4~~.t(,.623 9th St. Ot call ch_lldren or ptts, $190. extras. 3 Br, $199. 17392-A GIRL fo share ~ 1 b . for ttnt-Olean. Until Jan. i:, . . Unfurnished 645-4443. Kedson Lane. (Nr. Slatu & apa.rtm t . H B $85 r ,1973. $425 per mo. in CdM or •·
NO. end -nr bch Bachelor WALK to Be•ch BAL. Penin Deluxe 2 &: 3 Beach Bl.) 847-3669. 847-rn:~~:. · · mo. Newport Bcb. 644-3402. •:
apt, cook'g facil, aep en1, From $120 to $215 mo 2 Br., cpts, drps, dshwshr BR. Frplc. Bar. Brand new. FURN or unfum 2 & 3 br REFINED retired gentleman 1• :!-i:t,lo~ until pd. 125 & 308 16th, 847-3957 Nr. Pavillion. Yr I y. J 1~ ba, pet OK, 'From $145.' ~f~ my m':t~~ home wants R&B or share deluxe ;:
Bachelors e 1 Bdrms LARGE 2 BR 1 story 4-plex. 842-8148. 1 blk to 5hpg center. $150/m~. Slraigh~~-home. Top$$. 5.58-1799 .1:
2 Bclrm1 e 3 Bdrms Cpts, drps, r/o, gar fucd, PARK Newport l BR. apt. Manager's addren: mt · · \VANTED: 4-5 BR bOme tn 1'
uo
"SINCE lNG''
111 Western -Bids. University Park, Irvine
Doya . 552-7GGO Nltfttt
L-Maell
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iii I N•wport Boaclt A BA YFRONT RENT AL
Bold 301 Edgewater al Coronado. New Cancept Yearly lease only 1315. 3
BR. 2 baths, garage. Pr!v. FURNITURE RENTAL beach. Available nmv. MR. ROBIN&>N
1 Vt or 2 Full B•ths · child OK. $135. 847.0i4s. Bay v1ew overlooking tennis Elli11 No, D, H.B. 842-1831. BEAUTIFUL la~ ~ to Ensign-Harbor Hi di.mict. J: M~ter alze bedrooms w/ L19un• Bef.<h 645-0600 8-4:30,"' 640-1266 2 BR duplex. SOOVE' refrig share. Newport Be a ch. Will sign least. 642-5.173. ,•
hi h be llin Jar
aft 5. dsh/~sh, wsh/dry,· crpts: Prlv. room & Ba. 64>n4.1. Garage lo• I year. Costa ,;
g am ce gs. ge DELUXE 2 BR view duplex drpa $165. eoo..i... f 15lll G f " living room . w/gas or • gar walk to beach 1265 ' BEAOf area apartments ' 1""' pre· 1rages or Rent 435 Mesa or Ne\Yporl Beach. ' "
wood burning fireplace. ' · !rom $175 per month Yfiy. Olive. 5.15-8S23. -642-4789 · ;;
Convenient laundry area $275 mo. Good Real Estate. AGT. 673-8563. ·Mr. ~n GARAGE for car or stora~e. · • ::
oft kitchen. Enclosed pa· 494-7518. Newport Be•ch S:.>. per rm. 918 Palm St. , "
LAGUNA N;guel. 4 BR. 2
BA.. liv nn It dining area,
IamWy nn, trpl, builttna.
carpets, drapes, fenced .t:
gprillk(erl, 2-<ar garage'
Irnmac. $315 mo .. 1st, laat A
depo11lt. Available Au.a:. 24IB,
tios. 2 swimming pools,l;N<.-::endr, "2"'B"'R. "2"~BA"'.-. -nr NEWPORT -BAYFRONT H.B. 536-4678, 536-4979. l['ii14l ::
$210 PER month sublet 7n5 1auna, recreation facili-beach & market. Adults, no APT, 2 Br. 2 Ba $425. For wn.L you rent Annoutarn1ntt "
to 9/IS. Large single apt ties. Security guard. pets. $160 mo. 494-6912. Details Call 642-2202. OAKWOOD garage NB/C~f ~oe =~ i:
DAVIS REALTY GU-7000
~I, Tennis & Spa. Models Open 'til 9 pm. * NEW 2 BR., blk to beach. Newport Shqre1 furn? 646.8473. •-""'~::;;::~..,.-2700 P t 1 W CM Spectacular view. $260 up. 1 BR. unfurn. 1 blk acean, Office Rent•I 440 Announcements 500 ';...-· A~-.P-•·_u_n_i_u_rn_. ___ 365_ • nr j.,.·:..: B1:J·,. 494-3383 or 4~2339. The Last DESK ' • -· Gener•I Adams 1m~~~pt~rpn:;~ d~~";: :.i;:J..,l!Saft~~ty 216
Word In mo. w:'~~= ~~~e~=y~e~~ ;
546•5025
1170/mo. Call 842-4904. Apts., Great · al IS mo. ""'-ring ...-vice r"1pmwble for any debll or . i· Furn. or Unfvrn. 370 available. 222 Forest Ave. liabilities contracted by :0
$175--Nice 1 Br, No. end. ON THE BEACH! N..,, eptio/drpa, blhlll, zar. 517 W. 19th, CM 548-3431
12llf-Walk to bch & town. 2 -N
H .61.N. • Main, SA 547.0n4 1 BR Fu .. u fum Br. ~d~View. 1 • m. n .
1275-EI Toro • B" 2 Ba, Balboa Ponlnoula FROM ONLY $195
frpl, blt-lns, aar, yrd, patio, OCEAN QUEEN
NU-VIEW RENTALS e $45 WK A UP. On Ocean :WOE. Ocean Flvd.
673-fOlO or 494-3248 Lovely Bach • i Br •• Rooms Long Beach (213) 4J5.5S45
Maid Service. Pool • Utll Pd. Mng'd by Wllllam Walters Co. NO. End channing 2 Br, dln
rm, frpl, gar, tft'l'ace wt • Call 675-8740 • Balboa Island
ocean view, 11,S b I k 1 Cott• Mesa be a c b I 1 h 0 p •a. AdllJ. 1---------UTrLE Island 1 Br tux. ii.pt. 4~1838, .\9f.-7256 * $30 WEEK & UP * S225/mo. Yrly .. also 1 Br • Studio & 1 BR Apts $175. weekly 673-7178. -..
Loguna Nlguol
NEW Home. 3 BR. 2 BA,
1am rm, bllrls, t:rpts, drps,
view, 4 ml to OCf!&n no pets,
Jeue, '$280. owner 213:
361).2024
L-Hill•
3 Br, 2 ba, bltlns, carpeting
& ~: Pool facll itie1,
Mainteriince in c I u dTd.
551-3951. • t
Ml"lon Vlafo
• TV A Maid Service Avail B•lboa Peninsula • Phone Service-Htd Pool 1---·-----· .....;'luf e QLildre:n &: Pet section 2 BR. l~ ba., patio, balcony,
2376 Newport Blvd, CM 315 E. Bay. $:225. monthly on
50-9755 or MS-3961 yrly lease. Jnquire at Apt.
'Thia Ad worth $5 on Rent C. 673-1521 or 548-rin.
SNEAK PREVIEW of pro-Coron• del Mar
bably the be5t n e w I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
apartments tn...O>csta Meaa,
featuring fireplaces, walk ln
closets, exposed beamed
celling, clubhouse, twim-
mlna pool, and many other
goodies. Bachelor &· l ON TEN ACRES * * 2 BR. 1 \I BA, El Bedroom from $1.'l.I per ri\o.
Dorado.-Compl. crpt'd & 140 W. Wilson. Costa Mesa.
drp'd, BIU.. Fncd ytd . I< 1 ~--2 1rg · -1 •MS89! BR. ~ w-11. • closets,
1 '!!!!!!!!~!!\!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IL-l_nd_a_i._1._____ __..;...;....____ Apartments! Laguna B<ach. -°'" Beau Proteaskmal : j ~ Mes• Verde ~ost• Men . . NE\VPORT wATERntONT Grooming as of 6/U/72. · ~:
LIVE IN A GARDEN I & 2 BR. rum. or unfum . ll!hat more can you •ay OFFICE. Prestige locahoo Auto transportotlon 525 ):
DELUXE 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba, Pool. S140 Up. Children's abou.t an apartment corn· ~posite Unda Isle. Carpet, 1~ .•.
and enjoy privacy, luxury encl gar, $155 up. Rental se<:tion. ELM GARDENS muruty that comes with $1 m , gd prk:ing Ml Baymde ~·
and iiecurity at a price you Ofc., 3095 Mace Ave , API'S. 177 E. 2'lnd St, C.M. million worth of recreation! Dr. 673-1620/e~s. 548--1019 * B II M* * ::
can afford. 1~546-:.:,.:1:.;0347.C-;----~= 642-364.5. DESK rpa~ av11lable $.50 i •xwell ;; * 1500 !IQ, It. of living Apt. Unfum. KS -A-p-t."U~nfv::__m_.---~165=1 Or a tennis pro & activities mo. WW provide furnlture P.O. Box 151 , . : * 2 Ot' 3 bedrooms, 2 baths ~irtttor plus areat fun at S5 mo.~ service B•lbo• lsl•nd :· * Firepla~. patio, garage Newport Beach Newport Buch limes? • available. 11375 Beach Blvd. You are the winner of Huntington Beach 642-4321 2 tickets to the
*Pool and putting r-PlCitf r lllM«W Rents from $145 · Southland You-....... from $195 Co 2 ADJOINING off 1' c e s see~" ,...,,., · me ~ available. 2 different loca-Home & G•rd1n
THE VENDOME , ~ICil~ 111~ :~i1J::te'.'_ ~1150. • s100.1mo. AN~~h~IM
1845 Anaheim Avenue eJWU! Modelii Open Daily NEWPORT Beach 0 11 ice CONVENTION
Call Mrs. Phillips, 642-2824 From 10 am to 7 pm space available 450 sq. It. CENTER
NEWPORT 25c. per fl Contact Norm
Park-Like Surroundlnn ~; Pbiliips, M5-3MO. July 14 • July 23 ··• • OAKWOOD Pl ... -QUIET· DELUXE EXECUTIVE APARTMENTS GARDEN APTS IDEAL !oc av!. Aug. 1 oase call ~-~00• '"'· 3l4
. .
" ' • " , , I
' ' " • " " .,
.· :
''.1':
' . 2 A 3 .BR APTS N rt Beach' Harbor Blvd CM. Good traf. heh•een 9 and 5 pm to claim
Prv. patios * Htd Pools ' ewpo . . $ fie ---. 1000 oq ft. your tickets. (North County N tho Newport Beach South .......... ~... t ll free ber · 540-1220) , ;. Martl;i;~du!A;:. Most Prestigious Allilress . 1100 ~~~1reet 08!: ~.;. ... · ~ old ~:~· ~n~wn~·~"~=·~I .• !:
1m Santa Ana Ave."C.M. The Coast's finest, That one statement says Newport Blvd., 3 blks No. of , ;:
Mgr. Apt. 113 646-5542 it all. High on Newport's western -most Newport Beach North ~ 300 sq. ft. $95/mo. I ~ 1 ~;
SNEAK PREVIEW of pro-bNleuflwpos orvt eHrarloo00kinhg Libedo Isle, thteedOctheanSoanthd 880 ~:;,,~.venue BAY VIE ~-iiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·'~~I "' bahly the best new r as en crea e u • ~ W OFFICES "
apartments in Costa Mesa, land's most exquisite apartment homes in a ~~~!!'!!!!'!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!~I Deluxe, air-conditioned · :·
1..:.pa;:;!io;.c.:.. • .:.-.-=;..cmoc.·:....:.c-.:..:.c....;·_ 1 queen the bed, priv dress-
ing rm. x~ 1ra rooms, el)C).
gar w/storage. Adults C1nly, N•wport Buell
no pets. fl.50Jtno.
featuring fireplaces walk in matchless setting of luxurianUy landspaced 22M W. Oceanfront, lg l BR, Redecoratect Lido area _P_•.._....,,..,,,.-'"--.,---"°-·"' .,'
closets, exposed 'beamed 'lakes, winding drives fountains and !onnal summer & winter rentals, RealoDomics, Bkr. 675-6700 -
$190 2 BR. .front dplx, frpl ceiling. clublJJILSE', swim-gardens ..• all inspired by the renowned gar· avail July I, 644-5307. O"FF;;;;;I;;CE;;'-'$60:=.:mo=n~th,,..::.:crp:.:::t::_d, Sellin: c:,~uyin9 : l
Gold shag, no pet/Child. ming pool1 and many other dens, and elegant architecture of the famed So Clo util pd. In shopp;.,.,. center. goodies Bachelor & ·1 al t y ail! n mente N'b Before 1eeing • de.eler
Apts. turn./untum. Lease
Fireplaces I prlv, patios.
Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bldst.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll
MacArthur nr Coast Hwy)
2035 Fullerton, C.M.
1 Br Ir& $150 .. $140. S/pool.
Adlta only, ideal f o r
bachelon, 1993 Church, CM
54&-9633.
gar sett clean rng, no frost • p ace a ers es. 333 E. 17th St., C.M. 673.0140. Cell 645,6333
ref 433 Iris vacant 642-3331. Bedroom from $135 per mo. SPACIOUS twnhse 2 BR + 2 Business Rtnt•I 44.S
2 IDt_ Coro LJoo. Apt. Adults, 140 W. Wilson, Costa 'Mesa. We can't tell you here of all of the wonders ba, dswshr, shaa thruout, nr __ ..;,;..;.;,;,;,;;;:.;._..;.;::I We hive priv.ete ·
pool, no pets. 4200 E. Coast * * $180 * * that await J.ou at Versailles. Yo u must see lxl!/pier/shops, 492-4313. 1738 A 11 ahe1 m, c.M. Buyer1 & Sel,lers
Hwy. 546-4924. 3 Br, 1% Ba, newly paint~ for yourse • The full ~lass walls to the in-B ualne••~ikl PAI...i.'\f, CARDS 6 SPIIUT· ~.:
: ·'
Bltins, crpVdrps, encl patio. comparable views. Frreplaces. Built-in -floor, parking., nr. 17th & \.IAL READINGS. Bring ad .:
HARBOR View, Carmel, Costa Mt1• Nr schls & ahop'g. Oiildrell bars: ~pacious mirrored dressing areas. The Jf &) Newport C.M. 500 aq. tt. for reduction. 10831 Beach \." :·
beaut. carpt'd & draped; 3 ok, no pets. 880 'Center St., prov1s1ons for your comfort and security Rentall . ,-SlOOmo.673-2654. Blvd.,Stanttm.lmiswth of ·i:.
BR., 2 ba. Paneled tam. LARGE l br, w/w cpt, tile AP~=~~~~TS ·CM. 642·8340 or 543-2682. • •. ~ate house to the enclosed community,· ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:;m; OFFICE, store near N'pt. ~·-;;";;;'.;·>-.Ms-M~=24::,·--~-I " ::
rm., trpl.; vaqey view. $425 bath, pvt patio, $135. Mar· Air Cond. Frplc's. 3 SWlm· MODERN 2 Br, w/gl&c>S parkmg within your building1 elevator to :oomi 400 Post otc. ~ Greyhound ASl'ROLOGICAL compatible =\~:: Mo., lease. Nope~ rleds pret'd. 646-82'16. . • walled liv rm., beam ceiJ. your floor. And ... The Versailles Club. • • • Depot. 537 ft. $150; 736 Ft. dates singles dances w/Uve ;,_f;
Corbin-Martin Rltrs 644-Ui62 Dana Point mi1lnlg PooCols • Health Spa • tngs, lrg patio: $160 On E. yoµr own uclusive club with its sumptuously Q u 1 ET Ne lg hborliOOCP' $225 Montb. Agent 646-2414. music in N.B. SingleJ : !:
---------Ten s . urta • GtPne and 16th SI. See Mgr, at •-(urm'shed Joung bill" d . v • OFFICE Chal t .,~,. "'~"'• ' ' 4 Bdim 2 bath Harbor View 2 BR 1., BA .,~ walk Blll'ard Roo ...,. es, tar room, exercISe nitcheTI priv. ~.......i.---i space or comm'l e , ~V"'1'111'7'f, • ,:
Home.' nea~ Pool & to sh' ~ ' ~mo .. ! 1
1 BR. From.m 1160 Princeton Dr. <nr Harbor and sauna rooms, heated pool, sun deck and man 165 rno. sii00.6""'~ !tore avail. Approx. 500 aq. ALCOHOLICS Ano~-. · ",:
Cl
··-· • .,. 1 ppmg, no .,... .... Pease. Blvd_l. . · '4A uI ft 11~ ., ..... m Ul11Moi&e .,..,,,,, mo. ease, 499-3596'. 1 BR. & Den From $180 our unl9,Ue cap co type" aqua bar. 5PM. · 'J\.P't Beach Blvd .. H.B. POOne 542-7217 or write i:
Garoener included, AgeN H "EDITERRANEAN GARDEN apt. 3 BR, 2 ba, Everything to contribute to luxurious livillg ROOMS 123 & Up. Overtook· Ca1184"1-8S31 Agt. P.O. Box 1223, eo.11 M.... ,· •. ).:
640-0020. untington Beach M avail about Aug. 1. $1" per m an unparalleled atmosphere of prestiee ing Harbor & Ocean . ~1.
= • ••y w duplex 2 • VILLAGE mo, bt & last tn advan ce. and pr1'vacy Just the finest there 1·s that"s $.1.5/wk. " blk -··. -* * * * * * •.:;;;;.: i ba: 0.,,,,., dl"J>• .. LaQUINTA HERMOSA 2400 Harbor Blvd., c.M. $50 clean leo. 2 children all. . . • . ,. --· -
blhlll. Best Newgort toca· Spaoish Country E;.tlte Llv· (714) 557-8020 onlf. No pets, 546-6985. i::w~c: up wild!. ISO ;,. j,
tion like hse 675-4179 or mg le Spacious Apts. Te:r-RENTAL OFTICE SPAC 2 & 3 Br ant $140 up. wk up Apf!, 2376 Newport ~ .... j .. ·
675-2675. · raced pool; sunken gas OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM Pool, cpt/drp, blbls, kids Blvd, CM 54$-9T:6. BBQ. Unbelievable Llvlng •I ~,.o.:.=_:::...:::::::.c::..:c.:..:::..... T d -IVESTCLlFF, Exec u t; v e Only E/s!de 2 BR. 1\1 Ba adult ok. Hotels, Motel1 410 ra er's Parad1"se ~t:,·
home. 4 BR. 3 Ba. Beaut. 1 BR. FURN. $175 townhouse. End pe.tlo. $165. 1996 Maple No. l • • • 642-3813 * . I
atrium Yearly. CaU : AIL UTILITIES PAID 136 Melody Ln. $48-96$ or 2'206 OJlle&e No. 5 ••• 64:Z.7035 * * ~!,
\VINTON, Realtor 615-.13.11 548-5986 aft 6 pm. $195 2 BR front dplx, .trpl Cr•lt Ne•I 1 • ' I,
(4 Gold 3101 s. Brlatol Ines
EAST BLUFF beautilul 4 blk! S. of San Diego Frwy 2 BR, 2 BA. Bltno, crpts, shag, no peVchild, gar
BR, 2 BA, aep. family rm, on Beach. l blk W. on Holt drps, garage, Adult!. 1623 self ~eati rng, no frost re:t You ~~".~~~~--oJ t• ::
Jge kit. $475. Jse. Avail. to 16211 Parkside Lane.) ~r Dr. No. A, Cl\f 4.U lrll, vacant 642-3331. ... .. WO: w.uu~-I mes ' ':~
August 10th. 833-14ll ew. <714l B4?-SW 557-5459 * *BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. .
2 =1:: l·
3 BR., 2 Ba. Near bt>acb. . $145 $165 SPACIOUS, CLEAN st\\d~ 2 Contemporary Garden Apts. Home & G1rdtn d 11 • :·
Bkr
Avail. Sept. 1. S~;1-I Bachelor & i aR, patios, Bb1':.._w1w,,.cpbt. nuprid!l><v , -tlo PanroliosCal, lllJ!','·.;..\"'°'· l1Si> . Show 0 ars ~1
• J'lo-.i:w frplc's, priv. garages , ...... i"' a, pa: • • ~J...... at the ' '
OCEANFRONT-2 &. 2 Ba. Dh•kkld bath & Jots of 545-4893. NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. dbl One Bedroom -Studios from : $180. ANAHEIM l'--------:----.;_--..JI ,; !.
even has gar, Yearly, closels. Rec hall, pool & 2 BR., unfum., childl-en. garage, Sm month, BIUns, Two BedrOdm from: $265. CONVENTION IRVINE TetTace View k>t ~' i
1
Rent4HouM 97f.8430 pool Tabl~s. sau na baths. Absol. no pets. Inquire at crpts, drapes. 6 4 5-4 2 0 3, . Furnished Units available CENTER $30,000 lo a $950. annual lse. WANTED:
4
place •Ing eng · 1·
Condomtnfum1 ~ for yourself f 17301 381 No. 2, E 18th St. ~-"'=;.c.:.7,.....~-~---1 ~ (Small pets welcomed) July 14 . July 23 F~ avail. Want improved ~;~A motor hme. Have ~·~ ~
Funt. 31 SI ~:elsol nl hLink. NII fbSllk W. or &U-U63. 2 BR, t tove &: refrig, crpts, Four beautiful furm"shed models ~en from Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 Palm Desert-La Quinta. 23' aail'::,r v~e:'umYeqor~~pr.. , • 1---------'-ucllC 1, . o atet). CLEAN 2 Br, 1tudlo, drpa/ drpt, A pnge. Adults. 1 in-between 9 and 5 pm to claim Elliot-Owner 7-6854
1
"° • Dona Point 842-7848 crpt/bltns/gar, Adult~ no rant ok. No P<'JI. 174 Moote 9 to 6. Frolll" Newport Bouleva turn .at your tickets, (North County ' · h..J\ld furn . Moving. 548-0535 < ii
BACHELOR ApL. P-00!-U~I. pet.. $155. 548-6357. Vista, C.M'. Hospital Road (one block north of Pacific toll·froe number 11 540-122tll Olr, 3 al condo, clear WANT hse or units 6range < :: * pd. lll5. Stove & Refrig. 2 BR. un!urn. Crptl, drpc, ;;;SP°'Ai';Clii:ovi<iiisF-•2 -.Brc:---.-,"'"t. Coast Highway at Lido Isle) to entrance. * * * d land, T.D.a, tor In· Co. bave TD'• plu., l ·l I:
17676 Camcorn, Apt A. range/oveo. refrlg. No pets. $135/mo. Oktet' prdt:LNd. •s---='~7"'-...,;; ::<qe property. Local ot $an. Acres Oregon for TD'.1, hie, _1'0.j•,: 842-5192. $l40/mo. 968--l4S5. 67341.S ummer R.m1lt 420 Diego. Valu \50M. All or units t Eu)llg M. Kenned)',
* Get!a Morlnoecl *
11709 EY•'lrHn Clrelo
Founloln Volley
You a.re the winner of
2 ticketJ to the
Southloncl
Home& Oor<ltn
Show
ot tb~
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CINTER
Ju!y K • July 23
Pl•-call -· .... !14 ..,_ ........... -
l/Ollr -Ol<!rlb Oaunty toll·bw ........ MO-l2:WJ) • * *
Sell .. oltl -flay die -atull.
* WINTER RENTALS ' * DELUXE 1 • 2 BR. * 3 BR. 2 Ba. E 18th SL, SPf,c, LAGUNA Beach. Studio apt. l~part_ . ..;.519-39 __ 1.:;3·____ ,,Ex.,,ch:;;ango.:;::r:... -=!l6.1-301=:..o::.. ~~I ~ !:
1. 2. 3. 4 BR. Reserve Now!. Bltnl, dshwshr, gar., nr So. encl gan~. Adlts, $17S. cloet to beach. $100 wlC. Jul, 2 Br bOUk, E/1ldt, C.M. HAVE '69 Datiun station
ABBEY REALTY 642--3850 Coe.st Plata. e *232l. 54t)..3TI'6/S«M4Jl. S1Z Aua:. 494-5303. for vacant lot, laod, car or w~n. Tr8.tle tor small !.J;
TIME FOR 3 BR, 2 Ba, 6~g cpt~. Near I 1 BR unturn w / 1 t 0 v e • BALBOA Perlin. Aug/Sept what have youf houSe, lot and stock, what ::
O.C.C. $180/mo. Upstatn Convtnfant localiort. $135 $200 wk. 2 br, 2 ba. 3ll '1Jn-Myers, 673-4756 have you. :
Ou ICK CASH 2873 Mendon., Apt. C. per n>0. 55'7·7768 c:fo, m-t020 • 646-'mO f
•
2 Sr. Adults, no -u.D ;..;";;";;"..;"";..;;Int;;;;,____ CORONA del M~ Irr BR'• COMM'L Prop • Xl68 New· 7 Unib + faz:n dwell., lid, ~ •-l blk °"""."A~·~ I -· port Bl., CM. C.2 -· ltl!lx ·~ ~ l
TH
ft BAY MEADOWS APTS. ~-315 Owntt lll any TO • -·-ncome, OCff.n fnmt .:tf•l'Aff A 381W.BaySt.CM~ ~ 2 BR, 2 Ba dQJ>tu. ~·.:.=_· _J.:ub'-;:_;A:::Ul::.·..:12::2000..::wk.::c..:~:::..=·r PrlnconJy,;'or~A<le.; •tr. Lag. Bch. ,!St.1111 -
o 2 nn nl pt 114, N '"""" drpa, dahw1hr, 1$:D)BLK_IO ocean. -AN·lm-"'-por••b."'ll21 Consider ...... Open <l· n,, I LY LO ~· u urn a ' ~ 0 ' ........ $:D)., ·~ 33Stl6 -~ ~ .... ••• •• -House of SlUlrt. -· :~.
"9T'' Pl T ~'.1~· =·Cl Cent., A~ .:;;~~R. J~, ~n •· l1>4T3I lT DRAKE-0-aft F;l<pre11 liAVE oe<an!tont duplo, • i
WANT AD /I 1600 oq. f~ I Br, l Ba. 11)1, Z... otffn W. lldl loolc· BAU!OA IJ!LAND 2 bedrm Cru .... , 275 bp, Ciuy•l<t N'pt. Bch. Wan! M.....ie~ •'-!' ' = ok~ta, 1210. out pl. yacht harbor, UID.. _Donald J, Scholz & Company n':"--~~.!,~ ._. ~::·:,: ::· ::;~ :! f:~p. ~:;;I~= i:, ';', ·
642.5678, or • 496-0789. 4911-2055. 901 CaP!',Y Lane, Newj,rt Beach .BAL. lol. HoWt • -lliiii or !If 1714! -R .. 1.,.,, 644-IDL "
For !hit Item •ncier 1!iO. "Y s.u .,. old stutt. 13uy the California 92660 (714 646-624" n-~ * ~ * * * ?
th< P<nny IPlncber. ~""'".:::..:::otu::;:f::;I· __ -;--lf:....:o!a•~ .... -..:llt.::l'l-•SI=•·::== . 110 -" llO wit. 127 ,. * . , Apte. 67$.38U. I
·,
•
SL,
c.~
BLA
RHO doz.
4~
on
OR
Silort
ten,
'4fl·
MAN .,...
LOii
)~
Socl1I Clubt 595
FIND YOURSELF · INSOMEONE~.
DISCOVER
DISCOVERY
n4/835.6885 %131387-3393
Tr•v•I 540
WINDJAMMER
TAHITI
Saililla W>AI• • Sou1h Seaa.
Share work I: coit1.
2U/371-1239
][SJ
Anna's
Pre-Sclloal
Klndor9arton, bl & 2nd Grodo . .
SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM
REGISTER NOW FOR FALL
Grodo
• Full looming Pr09r
• Phonics Stressed
• Arlt & Crofts
• Music
Found (fr11 1d1)
• Roodlnt Spocl11ty
550 • Sports Acllvltlos -. BLACK Ii white female long
haired cat, very t ht n .
Vicinity Falrvtew Ro a d
near Sen DleKO F w y .
549-2164.
211a Thurln Avo., Co1t1 Mos1 Ph : 646-1444
PART Hu&key -pa r t
Shepherd Male, Vic. Slater
& W&rd. F.V. Vf!ry well
trained. Flea co 11 a r,
962-00!6.
MALE Samoyed, 9-12 mo.
hurt. Vk . La Plata It Crown
Valley, Lag. Nl1uel.
4~ aft. 1:00 P.M.
MALE ~rman Shepherd.
Friendly, vie Harbor
Eatates San Cle mente,
4116-9851.
i'OUND puppy between
Fairgrounds, & OCC, Coi!a
Mesa. Owner Identify.
540-3994.
FOUND BAiiet Hound vk.
Stater Bros. Market on 19th
St., C.M 8.00 W, 18th St.,
C.M. after 5 pm.
BLACK LabradOr femak',
approx. 2 yrs old, found tn
lol'pg Hgts on Santa Ana
Ave. 1 week ll&O· 646-3723.
FOUND Z skunks, vicinlfy
Balearic Drive, Coat.a Mesa.
545-4595.
FOUND \Vednesday, 6-Zl.
Black puppy, male. Hun-
tington Beach, 536-8449.
FOUND female on.nae A
black doc b)' Meaa Bowltna:
Alley, O>tta Mesa. 646-1138.
FOUND 6125, vie •. Tustin A
Cabrl!Jo, C.M. Wlllte, amall
dof.646-6536.
SMALL gn,y & white kitten.
Vk: Baker I: Fairview.
Hurt °""' 642-3404.
GERMAN Shepherd found
near ..... allCI Ci> ·M-~
Balboa B!Yd A Poclllc Cout
-Hwy, M2-51SO. I
MAN'S 10 tpeed bicyol•, vie.
Mem. Verde Drive It .Apa.ms
Ave., Corta Meu.. Call
9'!9-4240 to klentlly.
MALE lf'l.Y &: white killen
found at Costa Mftia High
SCbool. 546-8301 .
GIRLS 3 tpd bicyc le .
Vic-Paloma Dr. & Holiday
Rd. 548-5Z7C to ldentlly.
WHITE parakeet w • I e 1
band. Vic. 19th le Fullerton,
,Cotta Neu.. 642--6457.
F'OUND: Keys at Heller
Park in Cotta Meu. 11
Keys in all. M8·5360.
FND. Gemtan Shepherd pup,
approx 2'Ai mos. fem. O.C.
Fairgrnd8. Sun. 893-2822.
SET of keyi. Nr Newport &
Falt, O>lta Mesa. call to
ldently. 646-5341.
SEARS girl.a st in rra 1
blcyd, vie. 2lth A S.A. --RHODESIAN Ridge Back
dof. Owner call 7 14 :
.f94-34!M and identify.
Interested In
A Real Estate Career?
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM
IN FO"R WEEKS
LICENS ING PREPARATION FOR
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
• Sales Success Training
• Employment Placement For
Graduates
• Day Alll Evening Classes
For Information-Brochure
FrM Guest Lecture
Newport, 325 Old No. Nprt. Blvd., 541-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Real Estate Education Since 1964
ACADEMY REAL ESTATE
CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS
DOG ~
OBEDIENCE
scuoor
' PRIVATE TRAINING
&
CLASSES fOR ALL BREEDS
Novlco Thru Utlllty
Also, Schooling For Dot Trainers
MARTINCREST
KENNELS
20061 Cypress Santa Ana
Call 546-0989
r...,.,, .11111 11, 1972 OAILY PILOT J3
"Mommy, I
anything · to
don't
do"
have
It happens every Summer •.•
Kids are out of school and out o! things to do.
-Suggestion: This Summer, send them back to school.
SUNFLOWER EARLY ACHIEVEMENT CENTER
Our special Summer cluses run !rom June 19th through September 8th (three week
sessions) to fit in with your vacation plans.
Any child aged 2-11 can attend.
In addition we offer separate swim lesso ns, ballet and modern dance and a new
program specifically . designed to introduce eligible children entering kindergarten
to the fundamental structure and requirements of the public school system. This is
taught by a public school kindergarten teacher -2 days a week.
Our fun filled program will be divided into four sessions and your child can enroll
in one or all.
1st S.11lon
2nd Se11lon
3rd Se11lon
4th St11lon
6/19-7/7
7/10. 7/21
7/31-8/11
8/21. 9/8
lltoraturo & Dram• (Childrons Thoalrt 7/7)
Sclonct& N1luro !Sclonco Fair 7/21)
Crootlvo Art (Ari Show I /Ill
Music/Body Movement (Mu sic Fostlval 9/8)
Consulting child psyeholo9ist, ped iatrician ,.
speech therapist and bus service.
Afternoon recreational activities include:
PHOTOGltAPHY
COOKING
POnERY
Sunflower Early Achievement Center
251 5 West Sunflower Avenue
oanta Ana. catlfomla 92704
714/540-4750
and all excitin g things that your child would want.
. I
SMALL
WORLD
PRE-SCHOOL
NOW OPEN
AGES 2 THRU 6
0pon All You 6:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
PULL AND V2 DAY• STATI LICINSID
CREATIVE EDUCATIONAL &
PLAY PROGRAMS
HOT LUNCH & TWO SNACKS
CERTIFICATED TEACHERS
Reservations Now Being Token
For. Fall Kindorgarten
DAY OR
EVENING 549-3877
HIW IA•THQUAJCI SA,I aUILDINI
2950 McClinlock Woy, Cosio Mt11
, SW C....., ef .._A P9hlew
A member or Iha u. S. F.ln1nclal Group
Newport Air Associates
Flight Scllool & F~ing Club
UARN TO FLY
$500. * FAA APPROVED *
Couroo lncludosi
35 Houri fl ight time in Ce11na 150'• with
20 houri dual instruction. Club member1hip.
3 Month'• frtt dues. Individual instruction,
loilorod to YOUR ability.
10 AIRCRAFT AYAILAILI AT
LOWEST RA.TIS IN ORAN•I COUNTY
Learn to fly now - -end have fun I * Fly Moxlco & C1n1d1 * Spocl1I R1IH for Commorcl1I or
Instrument Studtnt1.
For Complot1 Dot11f1 Coll NOW
979-1155
-.
Nolt Tu...toy Ao Amclll09 op,..,..olty
Yoga la fl.in! Bharat! Devi (le!t) A Ka lldna have
tau,e;ht over 570 students \11ho rave about fttllng
tx>ttcr, success In Ule, JM•rsonal fulfillment &:
relaxlng t'or the first tlnte in years. Only 1,t Yoga
Cf'nte r do you gtt RAJ A YOGA tor the ' mind •
llATHA YOGA for the body!
Free Demon1tratlH
NHt TundGy ot I PM
1 Pl•n Now To Attend!
Y .. a Center
1141 L 17th It.
Clltt Meta 646-12tt
are worth training for
• TRAVEL
(
• ADVANCEMENT
• SECURITY
AIRLINE
SCHOOlS PACIFIC
Learn How You Can Qualify
Call 543·6655
610 E. 17th SI., Soni• Ana
Computer Reservations Training For Quall·
fied Graduates At Los Angeles International
Airport.
•• By
CONTINENTAL
AIRLINES
THE BLUJ;FS
DAY NURSERY
IMILY-WEEKLY·
HOURLY
Ont Hot Moor +
Snick.
Atos Up To
5 Y1or1
T r1nsport1tion To Kindergarten
Furnished,
For Information Call
645-4302 or 646-5788
I
I
l
I ' j
I I·
l
• • • i • • • ,. . I
l
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l •
Short hair rra> striped kit· lost 555 Lost ,._ 555 B1by1lttlnt• Carponlor 01nltnlnt l1nllnlnt i ten, found in Meaa VerlJe, , , • •••• •• •••. "' * * *D -...,r1_vow;...;1;.:y.;.1 ___ _
546-'l!IOll. * "GEORGE" * . SMALL, thin whlte/bcloe -LARGE OR SMALL John Mc Co ln QUALITY aeal c 0 a 11 n r, --------
MAN'S watch W e 1 t c 11 ft Young, all white, short female poodle, ( G o I d I e ) YOUNG SET SOiOOL. ages All Types Work? Cut doors, 358 15th Str•tt \Vealher ru, oil re1Jitant. YARD a.EAN'·UP TIM!:T JAPANESE Gardener
531 •10'1 d haired tom cat ii mi.aaing in 713. Nr Oout Hwy, CdM. 2-8 open 1 ~a. 6am--7:90 ......... !, remodel, t In I 1 h , C t M Stay1 " -•. Ha•• It y • 1 Tree removal, pruni.,., lawn Comp. Yardt.'Orlc • OwM!p. arta. ...., ays. Lido Peninsula are a. Re'l.'U'd. fl'S.4616. pm. Profeaaiona.I teachers _.... OI • ••• DIA"" " Free estlmatn. M2-3IOI I
Loat 555 Reward for infonnation A WARD'S Hunt. Bcb. Blk kq S20 wetkl)' &46-3m:i. frame, repair• etc. 962.l961. Yoo2 ·~~~: ;1r:r of S4S-Sl9S. ~~~~ ~ EXP. Hawaiian Gardener
SO.VER fftY malt poodle.,.,.,_,., Call colle ct haired 4 Y'" puuy caL RESPONSIBLEexper. ·';olllllf• Southland Eloctrlc1I DrtvewayoMalod$lll. Completeprdenl,.aemco I
Vielntty Sun f Io we r A Halsey (213} 243-Qm Cl' Reward. 531.-,, babysitter, your home. Je~ Acoustical Cdlinp bio Home &. Oirdtn ELECTRICIAN, lJetnRd, &U-419l ~ Kamalani, ~ ..
Fairview. 1100 Reward. 3'78 Wh<M'Y 61~ or Godbey nller 61M952. achlne Utd Fr wn Show bonded, Small jobs, malnt. AL'S GARDENING JOHNSONS' GARDENING ~
SUI Rafael Cir., Colt& Mesa 6Ta--6320. Jn •PP · e& °' at the &: repairs. 5'3-53l3. for ~ 6 1m1 l l Yard MabJtenance, Plantq: '
545-4;629. SIAMESE, lemal• cot. sat I ~-111¥] C1rpot 5trvlct Umat ... Guar, 644-n'3. ANAHEIM ELECTRICAL WORK. All landlcaplnl Mrvtcts, call Cl•anupa • I
OLD Collle Shepllml mixed, JW10 24. t.quna Nlgud, vie . . ~---·-Comont, Concrete CONVENTION ldnd1. Bir or small Llc'd .l 540-619I en• Sarvt nr EXPERT Ja-~
brown on white. Vie. -Goll n>une, West Nlnr STEAM Carpet ~~... . CENTER lnl. Fr<e est. 546--0211. Newport, CdM, Colta MtM, * 66-17" *
View Homta. R e W a r d I Dr1vt. 4£16.5813. prof. at lowt1t prlcea. 300 FREE lcleu, advice .00 Jul.)' 14 • July 23 Dover Sboret. \VHtclltt. 04 or NB area
-· Plo110 Coll Aeoln ~~,__ 57 "I• ft. $29.95. 9l2o-06'l2. ••UmatOI, AU I cbarre Jor Pt .... call 642-l61I ext 314 Fumlturo PROFESSIONAL tree ""'11, JIM'S Gml•ninr, ........ lo
LOST in COM. in Lulk Burmese cat milsing rrom "'" -. S JOHN'S Carpet A Upb>lster)t is a.. beautilul lob at a reu. betwl'en 9 and 5 J>ni to claim A'ITN: Jtomt 1: B 08 t pr u n Inc, tr Imm In I , lawn 'yard et.rt, c:lam.zps. holn~I. nr Slndcallle N. Dana Pt. SmJ fem adlt, II AN Cle an er t • EX tr a price. &1Xi073. )'OUr tiekct1, (Nortll County Owners. Don't r-e up h 0 I . tpnyJng, •Pr l n k 1er1 . ,14~S.::;!662~~alt~S pm,~---
• Blue Ke7. Short hair dk brown. Reward. 496-.17'5. INVliSTIGATOR Ort-shampoo fl'ee Scotch-JOHN'S Patlo, poot cJeclal A toll-tree number ta 540-1.2lll) Ha .. vinyl lllm ...... Ired. Landacaplnf, c I a an v P. "'
Blk S.m cat. wearlnr REWARD, !•male medium Recorded M•IUI• T•U. How ruard <Soll 1\etar<lantl), block. Fr<e est. _, Jor • • * 136-841~ GeorK• ~-0-rol Strvl~
Qeor ft•• '-'>liar. Reward 1lze dog w/lhort hair 6 Call Toll Fr<e Dtll"UCO'I • all «>lor •PPL daYI or alt. ~ YOUNG SET Summer camp 01rdonl119 * LANDSCAPING * JACKSON • Tbe M .. ld&n
644 613.1 °' !W<Hll8I perfect QlllJe mu1d ... l (I) IOM2M2n' :ten::: !t.s~! mlnvt: PATIOS-Ylalkl, drlve, Install ... , IHO, txeltlnr fi•ld New lawno, 51>rtl1k!m. deck•. rnln. ot •pell blndlrnr mq1<
LOST white male Belalall color. Um:ot on rlcbt Jee. It CERTIFIED CtJ. teacl'ltr Slvt )'Out mont)' by ~ni new lawna, aw, break, trlps, awimminc, beach, Jones Lawn SeMce cleanup, State Uc d. 538-1225. for chUdrens putliel. a
Shtpberd. vktnlty ~ found call M1..U. will tutor In )"O\lt home. Mr. me extra trtps. WW clftn l'f'DlOVt. 54M668 for.nt. 1kattre, bowltna, artJ It Mow. ~·· vacu~m. Small, AL'S LandlCl.pll'll. Tl't'f -'=-=~·~==~~
Cat O>lltre, anrwen to Lost WHITE RABBIT. Anthony P<rono. C-71116. llvtnr nn.. dlnJnr nn. " • CUSTOM CEMENT WORK en.Its. 6*-3106, ,.,.., .s ......... 545-:&U. t<moval, Yard romodetlnl. TOTAL SEl\VlCES en
"O ab b 1 ". 14 M9116: Vic: BaMr A GranL 8 • lttlnt · hall Ill. ""'1' rm. 11.lO Drtvt1, walb, patloo, Cd ct COMPLETE Lawn .l Truh h&ullnf, lot cltam1p. Pluml>a Install'•. Carp.ntJy.
1116411. 1/9. -· 1'Y1 cooch 110. Cbalr 15, u .,..: poot declcs. Don, ~I ntro or ~nine aorvlce. H•utlnc ll<palr 1prtnklm. m-1166. Elac r.paln, cemtnt ..n,
NEAi\ FCrdham A Bock"'U SML red cocm/Nt"'I" mix. I WILL bab,.si. "'1 homo, lllP-II wbal """'11, not EXPERIENCED con t· r. JACK Tau I a no-Repair "<le&1>up. Jim -. LAWN SERVICE 14&-1119.
CM, iA'I" 7 1" Jorwhalrod Male. llnd<r blto. CM lfta. •,..lcdal._ vie. Bvlh&N A melhnd. I do wort myoeJI. Pa.tlot •"all!I. ckl..,, brlcit n mod .. addlt. :IO yrs. up. Sell the old ani!L !Iv)' the CUI ·Edr•· TrtJn Dependable N"'<ed-,-a-."Pa'"°"d'~'t°"Placo,.--ao-ld~l f
T-CaL 5'0-e239. Rftard. 54MU9. H•ll. eJ1tM Good .. r. Nl.-OIOJ. I< otump stone wk. 1194-:1633. Llo'd, My Way Co. 541.00!6. new atutt. Ev .. alt. I. -SI-, Call fG4m,
--~-----'
., ' I
24 DAILY PILOT
[Il) I [ .,,.., .. .,. l[Il) [ , .,,..,,_ , J[Il) [ I~
Hauhng JoB 1 -.~~1 lilod, Mal• 700 Help W1ntod, MI. F 710 Help Wentod, MI. F 710 Appll•n-C
•
1---'~~~--~
:mEE • ""· ..... ftlllOVll. y"" • !Nb d..,, ....
Rototllllnc, movinf, 2 truckl "+ 5 ton flat dump. 1 da.y, U br. Call M 4 T &12-1103.
SKIPLOADER Ir dump truck
\\'Ork. Concrtte &. aaph<
Mwttla' .a breaktn1 . 1-.mo.
LOCAL Moves. Exp college
1tOOent. Lrg truck. Reu •
53.'J.'1946 collect.
YARD, prq:e cleanups.
Rmlove trtta. dJrt., l\!Y.
Drivew.,.., fl"dlng, W-2666
YARD t. ea..,. Cleanup.
Im •II. 1 dlY>. Call
anytime, scg..,scm,
Hou-laanlng
HOUSE OF
CLEAN
FLOORS, CARPETS,
WINDOWS t. WALLS.
6 YEARS AREA-
642-6824
SC RAM LETS Quhier • part llm<, Tbe EXP'D ulealady for ottlee lJCENSED ahempoo llfrl RE"L EST"-WAl'l'RESSES ""P only, Eu:cmONIC control
• Earl'• Plumbing lnc. 11Upply 110re:. Newpon Sta· ~ed. fJ)ply Wed thru Sat ,.., "'1 ~ Secn!tary must be ovtt 21, day or Maytq ps drytt, ecttltenl
ANSWE ll!s 642·17'3 !!one"' apply Sylvia w ... anernoon before 4 pm. PROFESSION/\L WORK AT blitrt •hilla open, 495-t)IJ, worklllr ocmdltk>n $90 .
Ill -Chol wenttd-:-Exp. ~1-9'ID. 615-6070 ... ;,.. ====~ Salmnen t. brokerat The FASHION ISLAND 1,;;:Sl'l::,,·;lli;:,52.;---,--,,-,.,-.,...,,. ~5-<lm.
Nitt<l)'-W('3<ln-Chlm.-$1000mo, Call 615>4ill EXP'D..i.tpenonneiMole LITE-BOOKKEEPER opportunil)'lsberel Youare Bu.utUul ate of a Iara•. co. WANTED middltafed VETERAN dlsabied, "1ll,
Nippl•-PINNINO. I.ottt"• llft 4 pm. Blue Beet & female. Apply ln pl!'NJO'l'I. Good job, 00 typinc, Ctrt f"rl. nte<11 Eld immedia~ for our =~ '::.. ~~C:: ~1-anlnv_'e. Jakla•dycare11 or would apprec applianetl
lame:rtt: "I alway, gel .-iiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii Fuhlon Callery, 000 N. day pmnancnt. Prot.11 ~ rap d!y . expanding Re a I at noon. Gttat bend.it&. Start sem uuu , ·ave that \\'Otk, \Vilt ~u.y or tree.
blAmed for evtrythJng. Even COut lliway, Laguna Sch. tna '4 htalth Ins. Mark c . Estate division, Positive op. $550 C.o Pay F . Other CJ.1'. Let phone ri~ tor~ 1 _:!>J3.-0203.::..c=:.· ------
•• a btby they were PlN· c~ f Floral designer, male or fnll. Bloomr, 3005 Harbor Blvd., poriunlty for advancement. Fee. J'o~. Calli Na:, May, ~7 MobUe Ji 0 me• MAYTAG .repaJrm&n hall
NING tbhip •on me." • Age 25 or over. Exper, in O:tst• Meu.. 1 PhQrie. M:>-6o55, Coastal Agency.I,,;.~;:.::.·:__ _____ , \.\'ashets $35. to $100. Can
AUTO. Mech. WaJlt.. to l!rtCa all phuta. 540-mO or UCENSED vooationaJ mme 2790 Harbor Bl •t Ada.ma WANTED: Nurses 11\dcs, exp, deliv~r "'/l yr. guarn.
becQme working partner in 545-8895. "'',..lte scc'l d~. CM. ' pttt, 7-3:30, ll·7~30 ahilh1.1 -=-::,;l:c77~8:.... ~--~--I
estab. auto
1
ISf!l'V bu1 e STAT CLERK F'RY cook, young w-e.xper. SECRETARY ~"Cirl Flida)t, SEX:'RETARY Orderly reUefs, 2 da)'I wk. MOVING. NorKe a-as dryer,
HB/f'V area. C4Jl J ack e TYPIST/CLERK Meadowlark Cowrtry Club. varied ore dutles. lJJe med ..::;:::::::;::::========IFor il p Of!i Park Udo Flagship Rd.. $40;
-11.~•2 1........ 'd P enonnel ce. Nwpt. Sch 642..fK>.44 Call ~• "" _....,""""· .ww Craham Ave, ()tf exper req · Rul Est•te C•reer 50 M typing, 100 WPM · • .............. .w•
Job W•nted F•male"702 ~ aklll1 needed. LUt,1 ao-warner, Hie Bebo See Chef. TECHNOLOClsr -caw New or tiJC~euced, join the SholMb\.nd required. Appl \VOMAN to work In Do11ut OVER 100 washers, dryers,
___ ,,,,. • , c1drnt " beaJth tnsunnce FURN. Showroom n e e d 1 l.icE'ruied, VHJVer o.ll dtnicfl,I Company that' I growiq. lf p e r 5 n net o fl t c e Shop a:ttern!l. No phone calls refrigerators trom $39.95.
GOOD TYPIST preferred, but not euenUaJ. ca.pable gal to co-ordinaW lab aper. )'OU do not have a license, CapL<itT UnlUed Schooi please. WinchcU's, 2 9 4 7 545-0TfKI.
Wiii do your typing at INTERVJEWING nat'J acet. ~3'.133. NB. LABORATORY a a: 1 tat· check on our bi.strict. 26126 v t ct or ta Hatbor Bl, Cl\f, I ·c.;;a::m:.::ce::ra:...s_&=-----1
her home. Wiii r Jckup A1on lhru Fri 9-12:30 pm GAL Fri.-Sharp, dependable, =rm various lab !Uno-$49 Blvd., lstrano XI.NT Oppor. Nat'l C.oflC(lrn Equipment ,808 •nd delfver Joca H.B., ON 3 days a \\'k. Hn flexible. SECRET pe, file, sh Has openings for route _,.;....;., ____ _
F .V., West, 75c per pg. SITE Of' OUR J-2 Yn ofc exper, 642-3$'.l. ;-;;;i.M;;:ri':.:CSC'nyd':"'e7'r',.:-==2343;::,._,,.1 Real Estate or spd writing de!iired but Wersmen in Orf. 962--0416. VERY LATEST MINOLTA
or will work by hour LIVE-In housekt'eI!E'r & C8l'e LI J mt essen. 1 Yrexper. Appts tJI·MATIC FULLY·AUTO· call M7-J095. NEW BUILDING GEL.COAT TOUCH-UP for 3 children ages 1l to 4. c:en• ng Course Avail. Sat. Also, Z\1on-Fli IflATIC,ELECTRONlC 35mm
FlBEROLASS MOLDERS Must have car. 540-4828. Full aaJe. training program 3P?tf -4PAI . Apply [ ll~l RAN'GEFINDER C.UfERA SPANISH spea1dJlr \\1'.llntln PACIFIC MUTUAL Costa.I Recreation, Inc. MAID full time 1 _ J:30 -no cost. Management op. Hybridyne, Inc. 315 o Mllchw..... ·. Features gaJore: Electronic ~"! J~in pos.idon Exln F ASlUON ISLAND 940 W~.~ ~ .. Street "''kend rotation ex per, pref. ro:u~~. '~-~.c-Mraal· Pullman St. CM. 540-5935, . exposure control gives exact ="'· QCB.tb area. • <Corner Santa Cruz ~ ~ Personnel Office South B42-6581. wa: uw.a1u• ._, SECRETARY, constniction • e:tposure in both nonnal and
"°'enred. Re!s. av a I I . Newvor Center Drive) Coast Comm H ro th Ant1q 800 flash usage even 549-1.847 Fee. GENERAL 9FFICE Laguna. 499-iru. °'t ;~ Tarbell Realtors "wk· Call between 9 & 4:30 ues decides "''hen io' riash. Ex-
NEED help at home? \Ve * FREE daily bu• Young woman to answer opportunity employer. REAL "r'Alate Sale-·-man SECRPll'· ET96M;&JARY: ·540-45 ::·exp SILVER p LATIN G -posw·e range from f/11 at
MESA Cleaning. Cupeta, have Aides • Nunes • transportation for work in phones, figure & type fn..1-"=~2:;-':~==-~ °"" ,., wJnc.Jon, floo'r • etc. HousekPrs e Companlons e Los 'Angeles until move 1? voJces & $1iipplng orders. MAIDS WANTED' l~~ local o!fice. Must be Shorthand, Calculator exp: Heirlooms btiautt f ulty lllOOOth second for action
Resid/com'J... 5 51-6 7 4 2' ff om em a k e r a-Upjohn NeWJ>Ort, Sept. '72. Must be able to work under Jamaica Inn iic d. Guaranteed + com· $500-.$600 mo 675-3551 restored -~1oU 's Antiques 81:opping pictures to f/1.7 at
S4&-4lll M' 2 · 2101 E Coast HY..)' NB m~~ion. Call Mrs. Hardin, SECURITY, GUAR.DS 31fi60 Coo.st Hwy, so. 2 full seconds allowing pie. • . 547~. ----------pressure. in. yrs pnor E. C . 645--0lll or 97~2ll3. Laguna, 4MJ90I, tures even in moonlight. Ded1uted Cleanl-COLLEGE age Men & ofc exper. necess. MAINT NAN E man wanted ,,.,.. ··• DO you ~ any plumbing, \Vomen 10 sell brand _,, Apply MC.slon VieJQ' "··-ea"·n RECEPT 1 t Long term assignment for tun ASA range from 25 to 500, *WEDOEVERYTHING• paint! ~··t · '"'... n.cu ..., • De\V a\V o c. or··~"-So O ge Sh ti e r sp d et ng, v...., enng 0 r environmental product. Mr. * Orange Coast Plastics * Center. 2 yrs. exper branch Laguna Hills. 7/17, ._.. wne, · ran Appliances 802 u e e 1
Rtts. Free elt. 646--2839 landscaping done! U _, call Gordon 83l-ll77. 850 West l8th St. in maint &: custodial work req Typ' bl ( 2 1 3 Co. area. UN I F 0 R M S -· automatically at 1/20th for
Excellent HowiecleaniJ!& Creg 642-00'22 1,,.;;;:,:;::;.;=..:c,.:,.,~~= _-595ing,lpersona e, ) ~· l~ for over-Rent Wa1her1/0ryer1 flash synchronzation. Super
b)' day. Ovm trans. ' · · CCX>K F/timc, 5 AM·l:30 PM. Coret Mesa, Cali!. Call 837-4084 ror appt. "''' · time, vac pay, bonu.s plan. $2. Wk. Full malnt. imposed rangefinder focus-* 836--0648 * Help Wanted, M & F 710 High school grad. Exper. I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.. MANAGEMENT Traintt!I, REC E PT I ONISI': Fee Free group life ins. 18 Yrs * 639-1~2 * ing from 2.6 ft. to Infinity.
XI 'l •-r·i Co la M General Superintendent 1 •• 21 A I p 'd/AI F J b H BAY le Beach Janitorial. n ut:ne 1 s. s esa muii """over yrs. pp y al so ee o !I O\V or older. RECOND. washen, A--. INCLUDES: Elcctroflash-2
Memorial J-lospital, 301 Vic-Outstanding opportunity with Thurs July 13th, lOam~pm \\'Ould you like to work for A Iy ~'"" iall I HI MAT!C E Cr-l wlndows/Ooon, etc. Accountant/Coru;tr $800 th · t-" h b lid a PP dw'a -m "". Guar., delvrd espec Y or -' ,,... toria. Contact Mrs. Dunlap. grow -onen t"U ome u · at Me 'n Eds Pizza Parlour, f t · al J J & ADT St · uv ~ ,....,...,..,• lilt I Reldd/Comm'L 646-1401. Sec'y1.C.Onstr to $800 ing company. as growing re es a e • erling by r'pnnn. 546-5218, 839-7620. .....,..,_,.1ng cast!. er ense,
F/C Bkkpl'·Eacrows $750 COOK 12731 Garden Grove Bl, GG. investme11t co? Youn g Security Service all-leather gadget bag, !:'~ ~n!:!. Gen'I Ofc-Omstr $500 Some exper, necess, Apply 1:~c=~nc:pa~l~ MANICURIST part time. modern ro--v.wkers. $500 3~ S, Lemon St., Anaheim ~anRI~~~R,t ~ ~ Recently purchased 1 or
Ca1I tdt 5)6..!508
4
Pa,yroU Clerk to S6.50 in person, Love's BBQ, managing field operations in Xlnt Joe. Newport Beach Call Helen Hayes, 540-6055, 533-7370 • e OU · • $185.00, will sell for $9'S,00.
Du ' 2 bn. General OUlce $520 Brookhurst & Adams, HS 5 co·•~. area. C.all 548-4179. Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 0 SERVICE Station Salesmen Westminster Avt., Westm. Phone 642--6840, or see at 75.5
JAPANESE lad ~ like ~" NEW Whirl I dish be W 18th St A t 60 (Vil.1 Y Bkkpr/Sec'y-Laguna to $700 Send resume to Standard· MECHAN1€-Serv. Sta. CdM Harbor Bl a t Adams, CM. (2) F/time, day & eve pqo wa& r. · ·• P · • a
•bouseeleanlng. K-•.-her •l<M Cosmetician, p/time 'P u· Corp 1565 W a-. T~ pay. To nooo & shifts Min 2 l/tim $100. West Apts.) Sun.-Thuni. e 646-4541 e . .,.,....... _...., ac 1c •• • ''"' -r .,~ RECEPTIONIST: Typillg • · yrs e ex· Ev 831 913) (evening!) July 9th thru Ju. NEWPORT Licensed girl needed lo MacArthur Blvd., Costa up. Must know alignment &: filing, gen'l c I er i ca I per. req'd. Desire top e -
p Intl & PersonMf Agency \\'Ork in ,J. W. 'Robinson's Mesa, Calif. m26. Attn: air oond. Ph. 673-8818. back gr 0 u n d . Exper salesman. Lite mecha.n. OLDER Phiico automatic _J~y~l3_lh_. ------t
• ng 133 Do D N 8 Beauty Sak>n tor national Glen Holmes. ?ti E o I c AL Receptlorrist desirable, but not necess. knowledge. Neat in appear. refrigt'nltcr, Top freezer. SeU the old stuff Buy the new
P•perMnglng ;,:r,..ft;• · ' comnetlc co. Work invol ves General Ofc $46T needed _ must be bi-lingual Apply Hybridyne, Inc., 3150 Apply mornings. 2 5 9 O $50, After 6 pm, ~l199. stutl.
EXT. painting, Free nt. =~~~~~~~'."I fac;aJ treatmem, indiv;dual Type 50, lite sh helpful (Spanish), Posilion avail. Pullman St, C.M. SM>-5935. Newport, Bl., C.M. • •••••••••• --.~.~.~.~.-.-.-.-.-1
Real! lJc'd. Guar. ~~OU.Piclc ALTERATIONIST lashes & make-up demo. Wt! Caf.I I..omrine immed. Salary open. Co~ RELIEF Medical Attendant, SERVICE Writer-Par18man,
co10r ~ we'll do rest. Lido Area. will train. Salacy + comm. WESTCLIFF tact Mrs. Nestlinger-RN, nites. Newport Villa full time· Service Dept. Ap... ::-;a.;• ~-~;,.o::::=--"===-=--
6'2-853). Call 675-5405 att 6 pm Be-c':':U.2800 Pei-scmnef Agency 5.57-6300. 642-5861 ply in person, Mesa Centt't O';o..I\ :(. ~JJ t .IJJJJ_,.,,AJ
PAINTING &. Repalr 35 yn. ASSEMBL y Robin~o~~· 3Z 2043 Westcliff Dr., NB MOTEL maid, part or full RESTAURANT applications Automotive, 196 E. 16th St., .,./(/~"IV~
Exp. Avg. room & clolet ,,___ Id . . No. 2 Fuhion Island, NB 645--2770 time. 460 N. Coast Hwy,, being taken for cocktail =Cos=la=M=e~sa~·~----
..,c. Inter & exter. Exct!1Jent ""'"N 30 ering & wire wrnp Laguna Beach .on• •unA si;-RVICE Statio Att ndant •w Xtr J Equal Opyor. Employer. GENERAL Ofc. e x p er. · ~. girls, hostesses, waiters. '.t"' • n e , work. Call Farria 5f6..5336 e-xper. necessary. a ong pe.rt & flt & 'ft-• term &111lgnment. Penn. F/time pos. Type 65 NEWCOMER WELCOMING: busboys, dishwashers & !me, .eves ~ Irvine 541M450 CUSTODIAN, $2.li6/hr, full on IBM Exec., gd Hospitality Hostmic broiler men. Wind & Sea wknds. Unkln Station, 1645
No Wutinr * WALLPAPER * WMn )'Oil call "Mac'•
511-1441 146-lnJ
PROFESmONAL Painter.
Honest work. reu. Llc/tns.
Jntf£)rt. Free est. Reb.
NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO time, penn. position, 7 am -w/numbers. 546-4370 ask To Call LOCALLY on new Restaurant, Dana Point 1=A::,damc.c,,•::,•,.:C:...Mc..~----
TEMPO 3:30 pm. Exper. required. for Clµis. resident families bringing Marina, July 1().14 & 11·21 SERVICE Station: Graveyd.
Temporary Help Personnel Office, Sou th General Office gifts & civic info. Good pay bet 9 & 11 am. 8hift,PreUtimf' e. Mu.st be ex·
Coast Comm. Hosp., ~uth Cashier experience • good P/time. Must have happy SALES: Some exp e r. per. er coUege student.
AVON INVITES YOU to Laguna. 499--1311 . An equal on phone. Lite typing. smile, car, typing ability. Fashion & .sportswear. Full Arco, 19th & Newport, CM.
start eamlng extra cash opportunity employer. The Earl's Plumbing Inc, 547-3095. or P/Time. 1\.11 2-2444, Mrs. SERVICE Station Help, ex·
U IHng our exciting cos-DENTAL Receptionist -Ex· 642-1753. NIGHT hostees • cashier O'l\Ialley. per. Full & PfI'ime. 990 E.
metlc faahlons tor summer, =~-'------I ,721 For a personal appt. e cut iv e Secretary . GIRL Friday: Type, ~n'l needed, experienced only, s ALE SMAN, aggressive, Coo.st Hwy., N.B.
* PAINTING _ PAPERING ~~::..:·:::.~.:.;~:.:'I::·____ Man ager l a I position f al apply in person after 3 pm. neat. Stere o equipment, SHARP GAL ~·~ ·1 bl 'th · 0 c. s es, phones, good 35 o!de The Derb · pl ha Interior Exterior 8"81 a e w1 progressive pel'90nality. &42-8400. yrs or r y comnussion us. Must ve Looking for a career tn
SU..2159.
Lie. Insured Guaranteed AUTO SALES d<.'tTtal office. Salary limited Resalurant, 1262 S. E. pM'k>us exp selling same. bo uti que aal e s &
Call Hurla 642-4558 Would like experienced man. only by abi!ity to assume HEALTH FOOD sales c~rk. Bristol, Costa Mesa. Must also be willing to do management. Must have
INTER/Ext:tT ,Paint In e .
Llc'df . lnL Refll. Reu.
Free .... Cbucl<, &ls.-0809.
Profenionel Painting
tnter/exter. Quality \\'Ol'k
Reu $7-7456
PAINTER Specl.aliat outside
Join one of the most llUC· responsibilities. &1>-3730. 40 hour wttk. Costa Mesa. lite cleanup. APPl.Y betwn display & sales exp. If you
• ces1ful Ford Dealerships in DENTAL Receptionist, ca~ Mature, personable \l.'Oltt8.Jl, NOTE TELLER llam & 2pm only, USA qualify & are looking for a
Orange County. Top com· able & exper. in all den-\\'i.th experience preferred. Experienced Stereo Equip Warehouse, lasting position, call for a~
missions. Inmu-ance, Demo taJ ofc procedures including 548·9537· 179 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa pointment.
Plan. We need a''truly pro· chatrside & X-ray. Newport f:IOME MANAGER U E or call for appt. 645-2442. THE LOOK
feuklnal new ear aaletman. Center, 644--0922. Competent woman to Ive-in -NIT D -Must be able to \\-Ork full 644-6500 Apply in penon to Don ~;::.::,::.;,=;;,,,.,.,.,-.,-= &: m8J'J8ge Orange County California Bank time
Crevier. Theodore Robins DENTAL Receptionist, Of· home for J adults. To ar-. •SINGLE needle Operators,
Ford, 2)60 Harbor Blvd., lice Manager, exper. Sallll')' range interview fll> 6 Monarch Bay Plaza SALESparly ~er".;.!_emgood&le~ ~ exper. on dresses &
Costa Mesa. open. &!me eves & Sa'ts. poinbnent, call ( 21 3 ) South Laguna . pa..... ' sportswear. 646--0308, ~9672 Previous sales exp. re-t~'-----'-'---
PROF p lnt:ing abo ls BABYSITTER wantE'd, Mon, . 867-6361. 496-1273 quired. Full time. Apply in SINGLE Need1e .operators •
· a _11 • I "'° ' w~ ~ y ~-N B DISHW 4SHER & BUSBOY HOSTESS/Cash'-11. ~-. 9 am , pm. 801 Overlock, speeiaL Exper &CCOUL .. ~., nter/ecter. """• en, m '""'""' .. Must be clean & neat. A-ly n::r, p nne. Equal Oppor. Employer .. ~......... ""' only T
trim kllcbtm and baths.
60-12!5
!Jc/Ina. Free .,.t. 6f5..S191. Own t r a n 1 , Reference. tn person only. Surf w> &: No SUn or Ho 11 d a y s. Baker St., C.M. Mr. 1-Iarper. • ~p 1 ~ • steady. Pd.
548-7592. Kramer's O:ilonial }{jtchen, SALESMAN WANTED vac. or an;&U-3472. WALLPAPER HUNG SITT Sirloin, 5930 w. Coast Hwy, l!l1h & Harbor, CM. NURSES, pvt duly, all types Carl Rebko MB-2449 BABY ER & lite Mewrk Newport Beach. all !!hilts. Lesooulie Nurse's ~table & sharp. No exp. rD\ llll. n: IXnt"rv.. a.'"
DISCOUNT 00 ~ if 5 days week. 94 pm. MY i =D~l~S~H,..W~A~S~H~E"'R"°·"'M'"o-rn"'lng-s HOSTESS/Cashier,exper.for Registry, 351 Hospital Rd., necessary. High potential. 11'\.Vll~t::. fU\.J\.Jl"'tl"CC:L ~.. WC LI /I 1,:.H::OM'E;:;:::..,;:0:..;NL=Y:,,;_! .:;613--0:::..::..;14::;8·:_,__1 ,..._. main dining rm. Apply in N.B. \Vork f'ri..Tues. Phone SERYJCES•ArC'h..V""V "'V on . , c Ill, call BARMAID N APPlY in person, ZJOO E. '-"" Lagu '-n ..,.,. N>t:.I!: .,An .vv:.. o.,~ n211 alt ll "'-"""'-I n.e H SfT-SMS . o exper nee. CdM Equal Oppo person, Hotel na, ..,.... V'IM""lr.MJ 01' '1'N"""'" OoJJ"'\I er am. lndt11. Engr/Comm'l to l6k l=c==-=,....,~==~· = Apply Vikki's L ou n ge, ~wy,l ' r. tween l1 a.m, & 6 p.m. 425 l-,,;::C!n'°t'°ervlews""=::o9-'05:.....:M.:.;fF.:.,_~ SECRETARY, dictaphone. Journeyman Mech. $785
PAINTING A PAPERING, 1791~ Newport Blvd, CM.1,:.;:m~po,:oye=r:.c·--~~= So. Cst. Hwy, Lag. Bch. OPPORTUNITY for top hair No shrthnd. Type 70 wpm. Draftsman to $693 :!.~ tnReH.-
1
, A-~~~~~ 548-9242. 0!1;1' pre~ °[ra1ytor 1 ~O HOUSEKEEPER -Cook -dresser. w-some following Reception, variety. $500 mo .
.,.,.iua.i. • lwn. ~. BARTENDER. Apply l n E~c1[~ou~lai~p Vly~ Companion to et de r l y in area. ~errell Hair N.B. Call Elly, 10 to 12 am. Indus. Engr/Comm'J to $16k
PAINTING • Bonett, clean, pel'90n THE BLUE BEET. DRIVE A SCHOOL BUS gentlemen. Live-in, drive, 5 Design, CDM. Call eves on-642-1634. Secretary S550
guaranteed work. Llcenled 107 21st Place, NB. aft 4 day wk. Enjoy fishing. Good ly, 494-8ro9. * * * F/C Bkkpr/Coostr to $800
Ir: insured. 615-5740. pm. 1'-alning starting shortly for salary. Prefer lady 45 to 55. "'P::;.A;;YR""OLLo:;;.c.cl,..erk_,..-need-°"ed~im-,-John Buchannan Payroll/EDP to im>
Plaater, Patch, Rt,"Mlr
* PATCH PLASTERING
"11 t;ypes. Free e11timata
CaD540-M25
BEAtrl'ICIAN Exper. No pennanent part time school Rers required. 613-2938. med. Prepare s er v Ice 2324 i'A'' Via AIP Clerks to $550
1ollowing necesa. Busy v."ell bus drivers. Be Ucen~d & H 0 U S E KEEPER, Com· bureau input, maintain P/R Veraposa West GE'lleJ'al Ofc/Mkt:ng to $550
eatab. salon. Cuarn. salary ready to work when school pank>n. P/time. ?tfust drive. records, compile I a b or Laguna Hills Dictaphone/Recept to ~
to slf.11. Ask for Betty, starts Sept. 15· 11ust be de--N o smoking/drinking. hours for job costing. Use 10 You are the winner of Clerk Typists to S450 pendable & have a good ....,,. 1:"".. CJ lcal ~-·oo· •· $350 Gigi's Hairstyles, 846-5000. driving record. Routes open --~=~'-. ~H~.B~·===-kl')-'. Lite typing. Able to 2 tickets to the er c~I ?l!I w
For an ad In Woman's World
Cell Mary Beth 642-5678, ext 330
Key To Slimming! Knit Wordrobe!
Plumblnt
1--=P""LU"'M"'B'""I NG
D\ltall·Remodel·Repair,
Free Estimates, Lie,
51.!-8m
B~·UTY tor INS AGCY GIRL cross train Into other tune-Southland PBX-Typist ;425 ~· opera • exper. in many areas. • 488 E 17th ( t •-"·-) CM 9465 female. Gwen's Be au t y (Xlnt job for housewives) Need exper, insurance girl tlons. Start $52S mo. Send Home & Garden ' 642 a147uo•"~ Q k kn
PLUMBING REPAIR
No job too small * 642-3128 •
COLE PLUMBING
24. hr. aervice. 64f>.l161
Drainl unclogged -$1.50
Sewer Une to 100' .. $15. * S&.2502 *
~ Ml "'-cb St Laguna C I 22 9 3 lorn of ~ Jab agency qualifications: OassHiecl :Ad Show • 10%1.20~ u k it a glamorous .... "'l'• ~ ·• all n4 835-37 , am to ew c v• es · • N 436 Dall Pifot p 0 , 11j; wardrobe for her doll.
Beach. 494-3294. pm Mon·Fro', Ins. & claims know'! essen. 0• ' y ' · ' at !he ,,., ..tr • I ,.,.: Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. TRAINEE · t11M•"'" M1.,... Knits have "give" easy BEAUTY OPR ASST. DRUG 1 --•-m~ Call Mr. Harper or Miss ~ ANAHEIM !0< a dilld to~-doll.• Use
I bu 8 ore -• •"" ex-Nichols, 636-1492. ··=~ro:. . ..,.--.,.--~-CO TION ASSEMBLERS ~= Ass st sy salon owner. elusive Laguna Be a c h -'---'---===.::..---PBX A . rvke NVE N ANGLE SEA.i'\ilNG is the k:1t over yarn for dress,
Top aala.ry +. 646-1345 phannacy. Must be ex. INSURANCE Secretary (No , . nswering se . CENTER To $4 Per Hr kei to slenderiz~ waist and bathing suit, sOOrts slackB,
BEAUTY operators _ tun & perienced. Apply in person. life ). for estab. N.B •. firm. Exper pref. Relier shift. July 14 • July 2l NO FEE hips. Sew flattering tunic and 3-pc. suit for ll~I:" t'een doll.
part time. Commissions/ Bushard's Pharmacy, 244 Exp essential. Gd. salary & Steady work. 536-888l. Please call 642-5678 ext. 314 pants as well as dl'eS'!I in Pattern 7034: easy direc-
guaranty. 645-1050. Forest Ave., Laguna Bch. benefits. 548-1183. PladRACTLJ~ ~ fotr eSallderly between 9 and 5 p~ to claim Afpplicit:'tionsbl beingNaccepted polyester or double knit. tk>N.
JANITORIAL W~ for male y, ives m or ou . ary your tickets. (North County or assem ers •. o exper. Printed Pettern 94fi5: NEW SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS
Boat Manufacturer EPOXY adhesive /paint "'" open. 548-7741 e 548-6774. ·-i necess All shifts avail H"' ••---NeedS B 0 at Carpenters, man u I act u re r needs :a:> or O\.'Cr. Part tim~ on toll·free number is 540-""' · · °"' ~ 10%, 12Y.r. l41A.i, for each pattern _.. add 25 · al '-nd ~ ••92 PROFESSIONAL * * · * Must be able to start 16%, 18%, 20;2. Size 14% cents for each pattern for
Jiardware In,.ta ll ers, energetic mature rn e fac-_w="=='~·,,~:;.c=~·~--,,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,l 7/14172 ( Plumbers & Ge 1 ·Coa t tory ~er. High schl & JANl'OORS wantaf Laguna, R.ESI'AURANT & HOTEL , buet 37) tunfc, pants 3%. Air Mall and Special Rand).
Touch-up. Good benefits. Yr Ml11tary comp. FUll time Newport Beach area, even. EMPWYMENT AGENCY Secret•ry to $650 P .P .S. yd!"..,. 45-in. ing; otherwise third-claas
around k 4 Day k dBHay open. 548-5125. ing work. 630-l60l. ManagETs • .••.• Salary Open Great oppar. Great co. Gttat Pac If Jc ..,,.,..VENTY·FIVE CENTS delivery will take three
Remodel & Repair wk. Ex';:~ .. only. A';;y 1.:::;E~S;:;C;..R~O;;;W;;:,.::;;S;E;:;C:;:'Y;,__ Xlnt oppor. w/lrg Corp. tr• benefits. Good skills Personnel Services for each pattern -add 25 weeks or nwre. Send to JR. STENOGRAPHER Asst Mgr Trne $'6'.50-.$'l!i0 mo. & pleasant per!Ot'Kllity wiU ll2 No. Tower cents tor each pattern for Alice Brooks the DAILY
CUSTOM Remod/ Alterations. EMon-Th
1
urs. EqualColOpporb. · nie Irvine Company seeks Minimum. 3 years experience. Cooks, (2nd Broiler) get this one. OJ. Pays uru·on Bank •-·are Air Mail and Special Handt· PILOT, 1D5, Needlecraft
What have you. David m P 0 Yer · um 18 an escrow 11 e c re tar y Shorthand 00 wpm, typing 9WJl"t Order ••••• $2)-.$28 9hft Fee/& Fee POSITIONS. o-·-c~a1u" Ing; otherwise thtrd-c:lau Dept., Box 163. Old Chelsea s·-.. ~ gen'! contractor, Yachts, m Mc C orm I ck 'W/min. 2 """ Joan dept ex· ie=: wpm. Dulo'ea to Include .,....,, -~ ..... '6 ... , • .L..l:O...... __ _,_,, tak ---~--A CM ,.. ~ Waitresoe~ over 21 Call Barbara King ~ 54·7.6446 ~ .• .,, ~ • uu= Station, New York, N.Y. "
646-2847. , __ v_•·.c· __ . -----per. w/bank, S&L co, or answering all lncomJng tele-Food & Cocktail ••••• $1.00 hr ~NEWPORT weeks or more. Send to 10011. Print Name, Addreq,
Roofing BOAT CARPENTERS related real estate escrow phone calls, dictation, typing Hostess&: PERSONNEL AGENCY ll30 E . Edinger, S.A. Marian Martin, the D'AILY Zi p, PatlerD.Number •.
"1ust have exper buildlni lge exper. Typing 60 "'.p.m. and filing for busy Real Hostess Cashiers •• $2-$2.50 hr 3848 Camput Dr, NB 559.9444 PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., NEEDLE CRAFT '72!
L£& Rooting Co. Rooring all yachts. Long range pro-Ability to operate adding Estate Management Com· Mgr Frnt Dsk hotel •••• $3 hr 232 WW 18lh St., New Crochet, knit, etc. Free
typea. Reeover, repain, gram. Top wages & machine' or calculator. Xln't pany. Salary to$525. Submit Bellman·hotel . $1.65 hr+tlps Sec'y Buyer Trne to $600 SMAIL co~wner produ~ York, N.Y. 10011. Print directions. 50e
1hermO root cooting!I, \\'bite benefits. Apply Willard Boat c:ompany benefits & \\'Orking resume to P.O. Box 1810, FEE No sh. Key spot for advance-manufacturing re q u l r f! tJ NAME, ADDRESS with 1n8tant Macrame Book. a co&or. Uc/bonded, since Workt, 1300 Logan AV'l!., conditions. Newport Beach 92663. ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY mcnt tn dynamic growing ~atw'e !emaJe. Typing SH, ZIP, SIZE and ·STYLE Baste, fancy knots, pnt.
19f7. Free est. 642.-7222. _eo="::.•.c:M:..:c=sa=·-----Call Mrs. Smoot LANDSCAPER. exper., tem· 3848 Campus Drive Irvine area electronics firm. bi.Mlngl exp. N •. 8 • area. NUMBER. term. fl. e T. Cuy Roofing. Dea.I . B 0 0 K KEEPER FOR 644-3389 pora.ry, possibly full time, Strite l19, Newport Beach Will train to buy soft items. Good saJary, working oonds SEE MORE 'Q u 1 ck Ea87 Art ,,, Ba I rp I a
Difttd. I do my own work. SMALL BUSINESS, 1 to 2 kno'>''ledge of 80iJ prep., 557-2800 Beautiful tuturt. Top bene-& tringt benefits. Phone Fashk>M and choose ooo ();lei.et .. over 26 designi to \~. 5'8-9590. hn. daHy, includes daHy Executive Secretary plantina: A: r ip rap wall PUlt:P Island S a Its man' fits. Abigail Abbot Penonnel 646-m4.. pattttn free trom our make. $1.
•-·. /Alt .1 post.I~ of time & expenSE's ?itagazille publisher needs building. Good wages. Write CcL'\I atta. 5 Dayi, 50 hl"ll. Agency, 230 \V. warner, TAILOR wanl«I, Mt-. D Spring-summer Ca.taloa'. AU l nttaat Qothet Boot ..
.n11ng er•t on1 for the nt.lt 30 day!:, plua gOOd right arm with top ~ Suite 219, S.A. 557-6122. Tailor-Shop, UJ C-1\astln aizetl Only 50c. . learn by pictures! Pattern&. -si.YUtG~ESiGNiN'Q' future work. Robertll, P. o. ~kil.ls. flfust be \veil organ-:~~.;_. ~~ 1
' ~ ~8;: ap~s. SECRETARY: Vtce Pres. ol Ave, N.B. 548---0146. INstANT ~ BOOK $1. ii• n .women. Re8.llOna.ble Box lM, So. 1..aguM ~77. .ed, sell starter, fa.st, ac--1••• ..... iiioi•--""'l .itiiiiiiiioiiiiiaiiiiii.iiOoiim;..1 1 -•·· co In "" dynamlc TELEPHONE salts· Sell llt!W tod6y, Vt'e(l.l' tomorrow. Comf)lete IMtanl Ollt Boot· curote, capable or handling "'""'"u'6 • wt: · • $1. .. more than 100 gift.I. -$1..
nb!ll. Ten dolltr m inimum. BOYS own correspondence. Ability LEGAL Rei.I Estate Sales hoUJing tlcld. Be au t t t u J SOUthern Orange County'• m srANT FA s H 10 N Oomplete Afghu Boole ..
Eltimaln. C&U ~7450. Ap 10-14 to dthVl'I' pa-1 Lictnsed rael estate modC":rn olllce ..... ocean Favorite Ncwapaper from BOOK • H .. ~~, of ,1 r-•w o 'vrite good promotional "7 t....-. k ~~~ •
Alterations 642-5845 ln the Dana Point. San Oe-copy a Big Pluft:, For intu. TRAINEE salt'SpeNIOMI Wl'nted. tm-Family abnospbere. $650. )'OUr '~ MGea e M much fuhkm tacts. $1. 11 lltt;r a.., Books .. 5lk N•'1 accurUe. 2i) ye~ exp. mente areas. medlat(dy or H~op Call Hclcn Hayes, 5'10-6055. as you '"".,...., ncrou.s com. • $... DAl ~LOT view, Pat Brumm, 5'6"'370. Beach ., ... Pho ne Cou!AI Agency, 2790 mlsalo• on ••ch we. Call 9UICK CASH Boot ol It""' .. .vi-.
EXPER Cooks or Cook Train. -Work In NewPOl't-Cent.. n4/4!JH'f39, / Harbor Bl at Adams, 01. 557-6139. THROUGH A ~tdtt llOolt 1 -16 pall.,,,.,
M> llapfllc SltlJ1S TIME FOR .., llJ'ply in peraon, Colony Siar! ~ mo, J\<qulre1 l(eC> S EC RETA R Y-Famlllor TV Trol .• Outside. Elgo'd. 50c
$5.lllooebAup. ~;~~ap::::.".""s!!'M:" :;';~~""P",ll'Pt6owpm, D~ILY PILOT ! w /worklllf w_lcl..,lfied ~Viejoarea. DAJLY PILOT M;_. qaut Boot 1-
TilecaD.,._uiytime DAILY Pl~OT EXPERIENCED medical Roland s~ Borcume w·NT •o =rl4lp/=Jll~'.1°~.! • ~~s • W64A2NT5 7A8D ~Jlfllor,....., •• u ..... ~_..,.,.,....,,,,,..-:=-CLASSIFIED ADS rectptlonlsi. Call 9 to 5. G#-00%! ~; I'. pref'd. WUI consldtl' alter Fast. accun.Je typlsJ wanted • 6 a I>etoutlful patt""" 50c_
CllWol1C Tiit, Kltdtenl. I ~M:,,9"-:;._:Frl.:,:;,• ;.~;;,,::025;:;;·--~ bn. (213) &ll-2255. to typt addrtues. Apply In =-~ C~.:S.m CALL '42-5678 -NCeedall :.:~·.' Plru:e .. ad! F.,t ,.Nits ere Ju.It a pbOne 642-5678 /A aood want ad II a pd b> pe ... n. i'eneysal'er, 15l" •••••••••••••••••••
-·• eall AW'1 642-5678. ....,,,.nL Newport Blvd, C.M. ·j 1 ·
• " •
= ·--------•
' " .. . ' : . ,.
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• I
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•
• • -Tlmdly, MY U, 1m ~Al\. Y PILOT J.f
SEE IT FREE Find Your Name
Everything For Your Home
Even Traveling 'Home•, ltt
Recreation Vehicle Exhilrit•
Hy .. -111..-llla ~M-ltc .... __ _,...._
flCGllM, .. looll .t ..... al -,.... M2.S'78, ht_,_ .114, Mtw-
t ..,.. ...i 1 r.·'"· to .,.._ ....,,_h to pick op yow tlcktll <II _,
-•l•I DA LY PILOT office.
Be. lhe-Guest-.of the,.,DAILLPILOJ ._ .. •· ~ '
ComorH &M :-l-sc_1_ll_•neou __ s ___ 11_1 Sewing M•chlnes
~"°"
Cycl11, Bikes,
Scooters · .,_E_q_u_lpm __ •_nt ____ IOl_ 1 ~EREO: U72 C a r r a rd * *
PF:I'RI FT camera. Seldom Model Electrophonic lull Alin Veg• DOOflS OPEN L<JT'J Tr I um p h BonnevlUe
used. C. C. auto. l:l.8 f.55 &izef 1stereo changer,k base • 25nl Pidua fi50cc. 51.pd. Excel eond.
mm. No. 306666. With Dash r e ~x spea e~• L-un• Hills u.r......i.endl •12 Noon las than 30lO n1i. l-IM .1.t .... ..i.--nt. .,Oil or -·"e AM~ I FM /~X I STERF.O -• n.-t ll ~··•~ " "-g • You a.re the winner ot new LA job. Mus se or olier. 542--1734 eves & • track ape player, Still
b--• 1 1 2 tickets to the We-•"-• 5 p.m. !rack' for p.u. truck. $1350. v1eekends. •o..uu new n carton -eft Southland 800 W..t Kat~la, Anaheim, CIJlfomil --1 • ~t<»·n or aft 6pm-5.36-3492.
KOBENA 421 Su""'r 8 --•e on lay-a-way. Oriirinally H d ·-• Lad --ora. i-~-n~t c•rtri"".'d .. ge sold for $386.95. pay oft om1 & Gar en BRAND new ble,. .... E-L y·,. ... ..,.. ,..,... balance 11~ '! t Show Ralel&:h Sport. S70. Call
lo.di-. Pow•r telephoto o.,,,. or paymen s I@ I I~ 32 -~ of 19 00 month! USA at the • --• _ .. ..,__.. Bolts and • }If 642-6,;23 after 5 or 642-4 I.
wide angle lens. Almost · y. ANAHEIM Ptt•and"'PP''*' ...,,. -..---.. . . MlrintEquipment . lC. ext. 233.
new. $75 or makt ofter. ~;~ llEqthuSip ~arehouse, CONVENTION 11 ..:::1::.9T1,::::Y::.M-IA~H~A-t25~,~LX~.-54Z..1734 eves & weekends. · · t., ........ ta. Mesa, 645-2442. CENTER ii Low miles and ready to rat'E'
NIKON-new '}ikkormat. 1-1.4. DINING Rm set, Hlll"W$t Ju1y l4 _ July 23 Pets, General 850 Horsu -; 156 BNts, Power 906 Clean! S500
SOmill. leps. w I ca' e · tbl/6 chairs, Hutch, Mahog, Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 * "Sherry's'', Grooming 10 7 YR old reg Appaloosa 15' PERFORMER Havoc, Ask for John 644-1742
495-5046. antique white. Dry 8\nk. betw~n 9 and 5 pm to clai!'1 Yrs in all breeds. (Free w/saddle & bridle. $500. ,~1hite & blue metal flake. '69 Yamaha Enduro in A-1
Bt"aul. cus·I. mi.de. Spinet your tickets. (No~_h <;ounty pickup). Boarding, poodle $1-6776. new upholstery, all gauges. condition. Make ofler. Furniture 110 desk-fine eond. Gone Witt! toll-free number IS 540-1220) puppies. 546-2848. 1 nine yr. old mare. Half 75 h.p. Chrysler cng. Brake· &16-5669
BENTWOOD The Wind Lamp. Antique * . * * Cats 852 Morian & half Arabian. R\\'ay trlr. All in slnt cond. BUM PER RACKS
CHAIRS trays. 2 bTaided ruis 9x12, Sporting Goods 830 $250. 6.17~3. $1295. 548-1285 after 7. for i\1otorl'yrlc SIO
Need at least four fin, or un· 12x20. Antique'2 drawl"t Oak AFFECTIONATE female '72 Enterprise. 170 HP Voh•o, 'A
0
sk for John 644-l742
fin. Bentwood chain, Ap-chest, Antique caster set-6 POOL table, complete w/ae-kitty free to you 11 weeks I S~ND Pony, perft'Ct 6 cyl. Chry. Outdrivt', 40 '69 HONDA SL-350
pearance not important, but pc. Antique ladies cheir &: ceSISl".lries, $150. Fine cond. old. Needs a hom~ with Jots for ~ildren, sv."eet natured l\1PH. Seals 12. Good Buy & Getting 1narried. n1ust sell.
must be in good cond, No fern stand & many others Moving. 962-'1940. of love & good cat food . & tranied. $150. Full saddle OCeiln-008[ LOa.Oed \Yilh Best 4'.lffer. 675-6950 (.1\:es.
antiques, Free or reas. _54&-9760-.-:.· ====~~I TV, Redio, HiFI, Smokey grey with whlte & tack,~. m-5368. equip. $4500. An Y tim e . HONDA Mini Blke. tube.>
price. Mike, 897-7791 aJt. s * AUCTION * Stereo 136 pews. 644-"rnl. 67$-6279. chassis, ne,.,. eni,: .. Sl50. Xlnt
LADDERBACK CH A IR s. Fine Furniture srEREO 1972 Garr 8 rd PERSIAN kittens, blacks, -"°")!.~ I! ... }f J 23' SOUTH Coast Runabout, cond. f)4 5-3182.
Need at least four matching & Appliances equipped with full sized pro-CFA reg., $100, Also persian ~·-·· . lc.. Chrysler Crm\!n Marine lTO POWEU.. tra1l/dirl htkc.
high, ladderback chairs. Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. fessk>nal changer, AM/FM stud service from white or h.p. $2500 or make offer. Rugged t..'(crl. c: 0 n cl,
Fin. or unfln. Must be Windy's Auction Barn JJtereo receiver, sealed air· black smoke proven studs. CoUe_ct (2131 2 5 5 -714 3 546-lsTii.
sturdy. N() antiques. nee (If suspension speakers, tape 892-2970 General 900 (Bu siness hours). ----------2075% Newport, CM 646-8686 HELi\IET reuonable price. Ph. Mike Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'l deck & bead phone plug-in FREE kittens-Cute & loving. Ferro Cement Boats SKIPJACK 24 with twin Bell SUper t.iagnum S:wl
at 897-7791 after 5. jacks. Brand new in box & Wl'"aned & trained. 6 Tabby Volvo engines. 150 hr.!
LI Power-Sail-Commereial Ask for John 644-1742 6 "TinNLINE" 41" high iron 00 PATIO SALE. Gd guaranteed. Originally pric· colored, ·1 white w/ blk. tail · v.·/tialler. 646-0681 eves. --'"'--'---'--''---• d ' · lawn mower 110 Edger •• ed •I 1-95 Balance $87 & ~.11 837 ~.. Immediate Delivery. '70 Honda 350-Strect. 111: .... ,,..., mt..., chni. 48" ' • ' .... ''"'· · ears • .._... -i.Jl.IV.), 9· BOSTON \'~-'er "-._.. '"" G............... di""' '"" Solid h -" t Stock &. custom designs. ''U!l.I '"'"' 2000 mi. $475 t.lust S<'!I .round white form. hi/loped """"5"' ..,.., ""'· cas or smau paymen s. Large,.dog House dinghy, nt1v.' cond. without bt'R9S andirons, $15. Sngle L a y _a way o , p t , Continental Commercial 5--0904 544-3417 tbl. U-t piano, sew Almost Brand New C ~~-~~J·>:::~'-:_!"~-~~--1---1.immm:--water ski, $12. Artist's 714/893--0501. orp. _""''v · _...,,,. .,.. ·
me.ch, K~ az BR set. Twin easel., $.5. New guitar, SM. must sell $15 (714)224-8382: (714)449-5011 '70 Skipjack 24, LEATHERS beds. Misc. Make offer. 1590 ZENrnI & RCA-«ave $50 to Phone 847-8115 Plant·. l'k . t .......... , Moto X Waist 28", length 28 Posture typing chair, $10. 1 e new, priva e .,...,J. Myrtlewood St, CM. 6'1:µ,}llg, $150 during our end of Dogs IS4 1250 N. Marshall, El Cajon Xtras. 963-1045• 525-0262 $45. Ask for John 644-1742
~1514. model year sale. Most '73's,I--"--------1970 Maico 2511 MX
RARE modern cab 1 n et, 2 TURQUOISE naugahyde now in gt~k. Priced leu * Dog Obedience * 12' FISHING Boat, motor. 141,I' PERFORMER, motor Plus extrar.. $5.50.
massive 7• long, with spaee ~ 110 each. Antique than the dlSCOUntel'S w/3 yr Try this proven love method k Trailer excellent con-& rtlr. lrmnac. $ 3 7 5. 673-13.28
tor hiti components, hall dressing table $:Kl. 2 lawn picture tube wan-anty, 1 yr Oass starting Laguna-dition. $400. 546-9051 645-0.192/548-4648 aft 4 pm.
bookshelf lop, beautiful mower& S2 each. Vacuum parts, 1 yr service, delivery San Oemente area. 13' Santa Fe, sips
wood. 8' round area rug, $.1. 18 vohu~ aet of en-& 3et-up. Tetms or cash 90 Days 492-4401: eves f)49-3931 porta-potty, $650.
wool, blu~n c a 11 cydopedie.a + countries & plan. Hurry for full selec-John Martin, Prof'I Trainer Call 64~2163
anytime 644-6913. Cd.?d'. people $2). 3 bird cages $1 tion ot '72 models. ABC AK.C PUPS-9 week old Ger.
·n Kawasaki 125. dirt. 4' Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 Xtras. Low mileage Xlnt
AutoaforS.
Tr•ll•r1. Trevel MS Autos W•nhd __ ..;._ __ _
TENT TRAILER
SIHps 7
Kitchen & Cabarul.
f'nune rtblt to carry
3 motorl')'cies mo
540.3894
-~-Nlr-.IROD tent tratlc.r. !-IN'ri-'
5 adults. 1 C"l;1l<l .
\\'/comp[(1l' zip r>n kunll}
f'C1.)0), $500. 8..10-:\.'l,6S.
NIMROD ft>nt trallr i="U~-~
t1n1cs, $300 or bf-st nl{f'r
Call f>.lll-72'.....t.
Trailers, Utility 947
:? \VHE EL .s!ecl baggage
ll'atl<'r SIOO.
646-4.1121'
REWARD
WILL PAY OYER
Kelley Blue Book
For 1ete model, clean,
low mileage domes~
tics, imports, trucks or
camper1.
Call and ask ror Buyer
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
----Auto ServiC.:-Parti""949 j 2480 Harbor Blvd.
TIRE CITY 1 Coste Mesa 54~17
Tirf's·\Vhecls·Ttrcs·\Vhttls WE PAY TOP
4th July Super Deals. Good· CASH y~ar Polyglass & Po1y6tcel -
Blc1ns. Hi Jackers $34.50 pr ..
!\print type n1ags 14.'1:7
$19.SO, 1 1x~1 ~ $15.80, 15x8~i
S28.RO, 15xl0 $34.80. F'GOx15 ·
$28.~. A60xl3 . $39.80, ll7~x
14 Poly~tl'rl -$29.SO, E7().f'70.
G70·tl70 15·• or 14" 1st $24.80.
Nc1v t·ar take ofl.s. U$ed
Radials 23.5x:l5 $23.50. Closed
Sun .. l\lon., TuC',
19JO Nc"·po11: Blvd., C.M.
645-3554. 12345 E, Carson,
Jla\va1la n Gardens
21.l-860-0345.
GOODYEAR Po I y I I.a e: 1
Blems. AU sizes. HI Jack-
rrs $34.50 pr, 14x7 Mags
$19.95.
TIRE CITY
1950 Newport, Costa l\tei;a
'TI Tof(lta body parts, cng.
trans., diff., radio, .sea.ta,
etc. 15,!XX) miles. Call
673-1784.
for Ultd can A trucks, 1Wil: can us f(lr free' esttmatu.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Mk fDr Sales Manqer
18211 Beach Blvd.
H\llltincton Beacb
In.QT Kl,_
WE buy all makes ofClean
UJed sports can. pakf tor
or noL Please drive In kw
fne lll'fl'alaal.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Cout Hwy.,
Newport Beach
641-9405
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS •~=~---~.---ee. f kitchen chairs 75c ea. Coklr TV, oo:n Atlanta, ho . ·•-· . Id 5 1 MUST move-Class top C.Omplete single bed $5. Hun~on Beach, ~3329. s rt.ha.in, ... ...,w & fie ,
wrought iron teble, lamps & Baby bed $1. M2-8IS2. 1 ---~------week old great da.nes, best
DINGHY-or fish boat ,
fiberglass, 10'-floatation-new
$150. 536-ti646, 213 : 43>5419.
C.Ond. $500 firm. S30-9076
27' AUX. SLOOP HONDA 4:;o 1970, lo miles,
Perfect for weekend cruises xlnt cond, froo.
to Catalina. Fully equipped. 548-4543 ALLEN SNYCROG RAPll
l\10DEL E 1415 HD J7F
DISTRIBUTOR r.tAQIJNE.
542-1734 E\•es & \\"eckends.
PORSCHE engine', 1750 ('C,
chrm & hand paint, 1961 VW
body, no eng. 552-1916.
U ycur car 11 extra clean.
see 111 first.
pole lampg, diesel fuel & LEAR Jet stereo 8 portable in temperament & show. Boots/ Merine BAUER BUICK
2925 Harbor Blvd. pump, etc. 545-5363. WANTED to buy '64 to '67 El ta~ ple.ye'l", solid state, M art i n c re 'S t Kennels
Camino or Ranchero truck. Model p 510 Plug into o::A., ""°" FURNITURE factory selling · • .,...,......,..",
Equip. 904
.SS rad kl, ROF. sleeps six.
6'2" headroom, <;<>mplete
galley. Club rate!!. Lots ol
parking, Call for info.
'71 Ossa Pioneer 250 cc
3000 Mi. Gd. cond.
$675. 548-6417 aft 4 pm. Costa Mesa 979-ZOO
out at CO«t, all floor samples Musl be ttasonable. Phone cbe;gttare~e UH~~rl o~-~'!!sp6 Dd 2-M--llo-b_;_e_P_•_P-,-_-A_K_C_, JOHNSON 35 horsepower,
whife stock laats. 845 Baker, &42-4689. • enei. iuu Y W!'t!'ll. at Ranch:> dobie. Show slock. electric start. with controls,
557-9046 aft. 6:30, 'TI Harley Dav i dson
Sportster, Uiw mi. l\1ust
sell. $1700. ~ aft, 5.
Autoo, Imported 970
Costa Mesa. QUEEN size bed & maple ~~e:~!~· ~1734 eves Ea.rs. tail, shots. Excel mechanically perfect. fiD). ~----.----headboard $40. Maple desk watch dog. Bred for guards. Sonar i>-1020, D epth
FOR sale. king size maple $25. Maple nightstand 110. .....,..,OX A-77 Ta-d k nde 1~ 3 G •--•-•• book headboard 1 .rw:.• ·""" ec 54&-2647 545-5976 80U r. 1v. as uu~ . ..., old.~ cond •• $tf. p=t64~3641k3. \\'/du9t cover. 10',)" reela. OBED~CE~To Start 1""15h.J!Oa~scolbbalt~~
646-1862. R-·~G. I e new. Heed-$300. ~mo. Wed. Ju1y 26th 7:30 PM in • • anc • ...,. ...,. ~~ -··~· ·---1 ,~~~~~~~~~I 551-2321 . PECAN coffee & end table!!
$275. Decorator dinette set
$1.l;. 51>7~. .
uvwu, ... vuau ... v.., .....,... the Newport-Irvine area. -'-"""'='------
Fri att 6 or ID day Sat. -I old 546-4928 estimates. Good V.'Ork. Fair
tique. Leaving area. Call I [i Open fu all dogs over 5 mo's Ml.RINE Mecb&nic Free
494-3896. rrw to You •• · · prices save you money. Call
8' SOFA & Jove seat, never FREE cute, loving kittens. DOG OBEDIENCE clasfles BuJT Buman 675-8677.
lJJOd. Bolh $150, Sewing Weanod & tralnel!. 6 tabby 3 Lines, 2 Tim ... $2.00 begiMlng Jul. 11., 9,., -Character hoat, 21'
mach $25. Pvt Pty 963-7910. 1•••••••••1 10:30 am & 7:30-8:30 pm. colored, 1 wht wt blk tail & Martincrest K~nnels Santa 4cyl inboard/Excel cond.
: TVd_b.1 ~nd,0tad~re'e,..s, con!l1';, inlsc''\1>11>. •• ,'"'"""~··~Cal"""f•837'0""-500.1=-.· -~ TOR TO~~ Sbe&U Fm.._:.!'!~, .Ana~c:H~""~·~-~~'.:.· __ J . ....:.P:;;aras&n~i;:;"""~";;:·,,=133-7.;1:'".::5c.. , oeo: , Cit'. LRG Webber Ba.rbque, 1,) ten. ~ucu • auu.-iune. -British Sea Gull, Shp.
' brlc-a-b~c. 646-1456. price. Schwinn Girls bike Trained. To gd. home. NEEDS home, male, tan Lo haft $150 ..
'
Boots, Sall 909
'71 Honda 350 SL, pvt.
NEW MARK 11 pty. New cond. i;oo.
Plartrend PT lO * 673-To83 * Newest & Fastest 30 Footer l---:...:c::...::::...;. __ _
Immediate Delivery Motor Homes 940
KETTENBURG
Dana Point Marina
. 496-4020
P.CAT. No. 777. Excel cond.
w/~r & lots of storage.
North Sails. Must gee to ap.
preciate. S295(1. 524--0IMiS
Flipper, Sail No. 630.
"BILL WHfl'LIDGES"
SUNSET MOTORS
.ORANGE COUNTY
LOCATION
ELDOR'ADO
Mini
MOTOR HOME
Autos fot S.lc l§J
Dune BU91it1 956
'71 . Dune B119~y
Slr~t legal. ExoUc Green.
Black vinyl roof. All en-
closed C943EFP) Take pick·
up or 4'.llder car in trade, -
Can finance. private party.
Call dlr 494-68U aft 11.
546-8736. ~ FENDER table steel guitar, $7, 2 twin matt sett SIS set. 546-2050 Of, Shepherd, good with kids, ng S:S.,.1400 ·
; 1 aingle neck, $60. Maple detik =64~4~4~30'!~. -~~=-== FREE-Cute, loving kittens. needs room to run. $5. ------~~-1970 MYERS Toad. .street
:; &. chair, $9. 58&-0933. 21" RCA con&0le TV, B&:W. Need good homes. 6 tabby 842-6331. l~PE}:~~'.' out-4!i' 8 Meter Sloop. converted legal. Pt11ect condition.
$6448 Xfnl.«lnd .. $225 • * 548.()315 *
j; GLASStop de.sk & chr $45. 36,. wardrobe-cfoset, wood. oolored, 1 w~te w/ blk tail PUPPIES AKC po o d I e, & tlr .'!75 ~ vm, mtr. tor crui.sfng. Xlnt ed. $17,500. FULLY SELF CONTAINED $Jn. Call 536-0269.
ALFA ROMEO
Affa Romeo '72-
2000
NOW IN STOCK
" For lmmedla'9
Dell very
lnstent Credit
BANK FINANCING
COAST
0
IMPORTS ~; ~ Mapl.e hutch. $:15 or best otter. 645-6573 &: ears, Call 837-500'3. teacup & to)'ll. Xtra tiny fe. • "" · I 6444048 • 642-5146. A: IT'S BRAND NEW! 1-=""-='-"'c..c='---
$1«5. IM2-8182. each. ~ St. Bemard/1Ai:Great Dane Yorkie. Stud s er v 1 <:: e • Boats, Power 906 , CAL-~ extras ind~ use Ser. •2132.07 Truck• 961 """""' ......... W ·p lfi Cst H ~~-------dog, Well trained. Gd watch· 893·9719. (If mooring for summer. Phone 6t5-6677 ~ · ac c · wy.
'1 Garage Sale 811 M iscellaneous dog. Fem, To adult• only AFGHANS. C>wnp. i;ire, * * * 12.750. 673-m>. 1970 Harbor Blvd. '63 Chov, I> T, P.U. with Newport Beach <114> 642.0408
•_w_a_n_ted _____ m_ 673-2849. pt/ah. Will seW reasonably John Bohn SABO'I', .......... cond. Fully Coste "-M H/D/sutpenaion. 3 gpeed, Alfa Romeo
A'-IQUES. furniture, 11e1v t ood home M •--»ff air co nd new battery · :,, BENTWOOD FREE kittens. White w/one 0 g s. ae, 304 Dahlia Ave., equipped w/6d., $125 . "" ' ., ' candles, artificial flowers, I S blk ~. Need Iov•-home. 5.17-mo. C d 1 M "'" =i. carb., 2 tires, clutch, and hundreds of misc Items. Sat CHA R "Y"' ~""' orona e ar ~ paint. Very clean $750.
only, 10241 HaJawa Dr, H.B. Need at least four fin. or un-675-6970/494-4Jll8 eve. I~~ Se-~:f'lO mo. f~m~e. You are the wiMer of 'Boots, Slips/Docks 91.0 ~1879.
(Yorktown & Brookhurrt), fin. Bentwood ch4lrs.. Ap-7 pups, Lab/Stiepherd mix. • ice to ov1ng 2 tickets to the ~=~~-~-~--
8 to 5. 962-1260. pe&l'.anco not Important, but Good w/kids. Includes food home. 1100. 646-4109. Southlond * 35. SLIP* '57 Ford 1/2 Ton
UNBELIEVABLE! must be tn good eond. No &dish.64$-Xl13att4. ffiISHSE'I"IER pups, AKC Home & Garden POWER BOAT. Pickup
Everything from aptiques. Free or reu. FREE happy healthy kittens. regis. for field or mow. Show S.50. 673-9187 Immaculate, Must Sell, dlr
tape-?ayers to ~It eh en priCe.' Mike, 897•7791 aft. 5· Weaned &: trained. Phone Born May 13· 827 ... 7618· at the 17' Schiada SK with llO 897.()224.
utermls! ! Thurs. July U, LADDqtBACK CH A IRS . 548-4615. DALMATIAN puppy. female, ANAHEIM M·erc OB. Canvas cove'l', OP.EN ROAD .::::.-,1950:.,:-l:.,CHEVY==,....,p""'--10AM-4PM. 821 No. ·west Need at least four matching Sweet Dispostlioned mate AKC, rta®1:'8ble. CONVENTION Sharp! $1750. 962-3894 MOTOR HOMES lckup
St .. Anaheim. high, ladderback , chain. cock-a-poo, loves people. 645-6456 CENTER * SLIP avail up IO 40' boat, 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. ~·e~~ ~ REF $5()..Ladder, garden Fin. or untin. Must be Shots and License. 962-6103. BEAtrl' puppies. German July 14 • July 23 ample parking. 52 Balboa Garden Grove 894-4479
tools, burglar alarm-tape sturdy. No antiques. Freo or ki 11 ,_ Shepherd-Samoyod m I x. Please call 64~5678, ext. 314 Co $50 6T.J..8!4S '66 GMC TRUCK
reasonable price. Ph. Mike FEMALE tty, WA&, $30. a.ft ~ 842-5325. between 9 and 5 pm to claim __ v_".:.· __ m_o_. --"'"'--I * Mam·n Pearce*
ttcorder, sofa, cha.tr, pie· at 897-7'l91 aft S. needs home w/love, Smokey '====-~---~ "our tickets. <North County B .. ts, S---• & Ski 911 Radio, heater, C•VS8139). tures, dog & runway. 3109 '°"~-~-,,--...,---= grey w/wht paws. 644-nll. SIBERIAN Husky, maJe, <# .--$775. dlr, 131);.6535,
Roosevelt w.,. 971H!968. Musical Instruments m purebred, 8 mo. I 2 5 . *toll-tree nwn*ber Is 540-U20.' 15' ALLEN SK hull, -Motor Homes '70 D d J/ T GARAGE i;ale. Din set, baby FREE sifver. mini at u.r e 846-5956. Mere. 0 CJ• 74 on
f!qUip, chest, HO train, GUIW Mark IV Guitar pedigree poodle. male. To ~Sl:;;L::;K;.l;::E;:::..=T.,,.~,..;e-r~Pu~p-p•,...e-,, hC~ •• E~.-, .. , A.,-c"k'"""A"c•k-e_r_m_a..,,.n , 1000; & tr~~-v.s, Auto Trans, with serv1ce
misc. 833-3915. 18791 Via w/case. $lSO. good home. 96l-29Z7. AKC, 9 wks. Shedless, ador-Newporter Ketch builder & ___ ...=:..::;.::..___ Sales • Rentals Body, Must sell, dlr 897--022C
Verone, Irvine. July 9-12. * 545-3192 * FREE 2 kittE"ns, must find able. Reduced! 962·8371'. designer is now a broker '69 COUGAR 15' 125 hp, 558-3222 '63 ,Chevy "• Ton Offlce Fumlturt/ homes. Very lovable, goo9 ==~,.....-~,.....~~~I with David t . Fraser. His trailer & many extras. $2000 ;~
• Machinery 816 Equip. 124 w/children. 521-2281. ' REGIS. G(rman Shorthaired v..ars of boat building & or best 675-6621 otfer. .lru. S. Vllla.ge Way, s:A. mmaculate, Mu1t Sell, dlr 'J.,-.,..,-o:~-:0::-0:""'"°"""'"" Pointer, fern. 1 yr old. Call J-~~~~~~~~~~i · ,ot17.()224, ALLEN SYNCROGRAPH, Bl.ack & white mixed a57_7548. surveying experience, sail Motor Home Rentals ~.,
MODEL E 1415 HD J7F, MOVING: desks, 2 drawer 8 mos old pup, male. SHELTIE _ TOY COLLIE. & power, will be most vaJ. lil Available for daily, weekly 1972 * Too. GMC
DJ5J'RIBU1UR MACHINE. horizontal lf.1:al file, elec. -~=*~84-'c:l-<=1•39~*=~-uable to the prospective Trinsportation Ill or monthly buts. 21', 23', S.W.B. $3,795,
542-1734 e~ & weekends. typewriters, control le FREE KITTENS * 557 7~~-5 * buyer. He)lookl forward to and 25' aelt contained Mo-Call 586-093.1
DRIU.. press .. welder & elec. display P a n e 11 ' auto 642-0068 befort! 2 pm -pm assisting you and 11eeing his tor Homes, all equlpt with ''68"°FO""a-"o=l!;.,.:;T;;.-:::cp/'i'u-, '6-cy'°"'"'I ..
air compressor. Good cond. ~=:n ;:;~ :::; NEW BATHTUB t **al 2 PUG~ ~ papers, many friends again. Of!lce Campers, Sale/Rent 920 generator, root air, &nd 3 spd .. R/H, Jong wide bed.
837...()049. ......,.i ... r ~-t e-'·-•t" 5 •• white 675:-6007 m e &* fe642m ·30' ,~ *after 6. at 3424 Oporto, Npt. Bch. many other extras. All lmmac. pvt, :ity., 893-4174,
Van,
NOW ON .D~T . I
Salee -Paru Body ~
COAST IMPORTS r•
lfJ00.1200 W. Coast H''Y· :
Newport Beach ~
'69 ALFA ROMEO ~
1750 GTY
Cpe, 5 Spd, Lo Lo mileaie1
AM/FM ~dio, New Racii.i
all, CZSVI57).
MAKE OFFER
~""' • uw.. ,....,,&"" ... '-" 714: 673·5252. ..,.. T. Ranger pickup Coaches ate 1972 models.
Miscell1neous 675-8881. 2 TIGER KITl'ENS complete COLLlE trk:olor ma 1 e w/air-auto. 3 spct trans. \Ve have the: all steel Ami&O Auto Leeslng 964 Icm-llXI W. Paclllc Cit. Hwy.
; I ·1-4-· _Boo_t _&..,.tra°"u'"er-."E"vi"''nrodo-.,.p __ 1o_n_ .. _,_o_rt ___ o_n_s ___ ._26 w/week's supply of food. AKC Ail 11hots. 7 tn03. $25: 15' Glass Flat w/8' overhead c ll m per abio. Pleaae call 839-9560. Newport Beach (n4J 642-IH06'
COAST
·IMPORTS 111
~ 35bp $360. 7' steel bench, STONE PARTY !~··""" _...._ n..i bed'=963-~50'l5=·~~~---w/boot.4>1 sink. 3 burner BUS/motor home. 35', excel ~NG 546-l5l9 , \~ 36" high. M-1 rifle. 23" col· Mon, J'uly 17, 7.9 pm ""fw:.i:. na"""' <.vuu1. IJl1 ELEGANT AFGHANS pet &: BOftOm Ski' Hull 11tove. w/see thru oven. motor, new ttm stereo. air ~
' TV __ , ~ ~7 f~ box aprlng, mettrea. ........ . & ... breed' Good condition. 64&-43'l9 aft cond, color TV,' -pt. Much AUDI or 1.v11B1.ne. ;,ryv-vuc:t • with Tim Storrs-.. 111-NW puppies au mg " Try our le:ase experts tor
HONDA 90, Trail bike. $125. oumta~ organiM from 645-0045 aft 6' 1tock. All ~rs. 962.-6956. White/metal.flake red. 65 hp 4 pm. • mot'(). 538-62Sl Savina1 • Satt.!actlon ·Ser----------1
Sabot, complete $125. Boy'11 Hammond Organ Company. l KITTENS, l black, 2 WEIMARANER pij~shotll Mere O/B, tilt trailer $1200. ~DODGE VAN. 6 cyt '12 WINNEBAGO 27'. aleepg vice. '70 ~ud'J lOOSL. AM/FM, ~Y ~-~2732. Hear the old & new In striped. ~f:k family. Sh?w & fil'!d. Futurlfy 836-1954. Wl~~~::1:it. 6, alr/cond. Delux. Reterve WE LEASE AU. POPULAR :i:.!;:~ust G~111 n$~15 ~ ~
LAWNMOWR $65, Othor Hammond Organs. nominat<d. 8;9-3257. -~F~IS~H=IN~G~T~l~M~E~I-now.~. 1972MAX.ESATCOMPETI. tJ#.8593• ·
miJc, Garden toool~. Rell'eshmt'nls TO right home, 4 kittens, 8 A friend! Id Cycle1, Bfi<ts, Rent A Motor Home TIVE RATES. * 557-3lll * HAMMOND ORGAN wks. 3 trl-Ollor temales, 1 f ~ryf a.I y ~"*-41' Chrisovltch Sport Flishu, Scocters 925 for your Vocotlon Call Malcolm Reid tor '70 AUDI 100 LS, xlnt concl. t1gier male, 64>5362. a & an or s e, •u.i· fully equipped, twin d eoiels. 1----------tu.rtMr detall11• 1n ·we.rrt:y, AM/FM, must
:ll6 tt. sttt\ shel1vir>e ESTUDIOS llil•••••••ll-..!l~l!~yr~.:_1M~a~le::_.!96Z-~9894~-113 In1.,.,11or sale. Share 1971 YAMAHA 250 MX. very * Uf.4301 * THEOOORE ..U, mso. 833--0416
"t.yon" 18"x36' ghe vea $75. 2154 • Coast Hwy. SAMOYED Husky, AKC. 4 expenses & charter profits. clean, has only n1n 5 tank• '72. 20' Harvest. Under 3000 ROBINS FORD
544-3417 Corona dtl Mar [ Ptt• and..,..· 1[~ I mos. shots, hou,.b1<>ken $00.• 114,500. 548-0572 foi lull ;nto. of gas. Ph. 831>-7218. mil••· Call aft. 5 w"kd•YI· 2060 Harbor Blvd. BMW
CARPET FOR SALE 644-893o . r", Loves child. 968-4026. 23• ~ThW'Mklrblt'd. Formula 1970 Triumph cusmm 549-2488. Costa Mesa 642.oolO --,-6-9_B_MW 2002
by CARPET i.oyor. Call PIANO SAl EI ;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~I WEIMAJUMER pup~ 1911 215 HP lnl>oard.oUlhrd chopper. Lo mil••· • 72 LIFETlME M.11., :13' A Autos Wonted 968
• ~45 • ~-Plal'IO used in· teachers Pett Oener•l l50 10 wkll. No papen. $25. ,depth findPr, radio, lrl r. Must i;coll. 968-5348 25'. Air, lux. & aafety equlp,.
ROYAL portable typewriter, studiot; flo6r model':; dis· ' 543-48'.M Best offer over $7500 494-8843 • "l.2 ltond3 CB50()..Four. xlnt rates, Pvt. pty., 968-1~7 lMPOR.TS WANT.CO
just cleMa1 I: ovtrbauled. continued modela; dama&cd P~All colon, $1 HorMI 156 or 645-4871. Equity $295 & T. 0 . P •• 70 BSA &50. PERFECT. 600) ~; =: ;i;: p~~~-ft. ~t~~':n~U ~~~C: on =~· ~C:~-.ii~ch. ~re: * APPAiOos'A" * 35~?":u~r.~1:ri~nc7. ~ ~n~ ~;ii Hondas, ::1~=-4S:.~~e over 8ILL8881MAXEY TOYOTA
t'rpted le: pane~. Mu.t see Walllchs Music City pond-11zed Soidfish $3 each. 3 Id Id' , Very oean Ch\'fM!r may 50 CC'•· Lic'd. Xlnt COJld, 1 Beach Blvd.
to apprec. $125. -Soulh Coast Plua 968-(J833. . ~::rste"r..i ~7s'."' flntnco. S<Hm. 1150 ea. &l7-t!50. Trailers, Trovel 945 ff. Beach. I'll. 8474$55
TYPEWRITER. up r 1th t, 540-2830 DOG .to C.t owno"', tmh CALL ANYTIME 16' 1'Tl NEWPORT, 9',\ IDB) HUSKY Ml 18' ~-,n, ,.11 cont., h.,d, WILL Buy your car paid for '
$19; guitar. tOf) cond, $12; ORAND Plano; EbollJI nn;sh; heof or chicken 17c lb. Free 540 3803 Johm<>n Mly • q u Ip ~ • d , 1825. Good condittion shower, /10t water. ,,. stv I or not. Call Ralp)i a-n
-arm chair. 19. ~-8652. Fh,. condition; $loo , ham• d.UVl'tY hn. 10 to 9. • ··1m. 547·9645: ~. -& rdri" '$1295. 54&.3132. 613-0900-415 E. Cout Hwy.
499-1635. MF 835-775.l. BO nn NG -AB NT il -• 6 Newport Beach. Tblfaltfftdrawtn the West ' · A,WJPl .,~ LES 13' BOS'TI:>N Whale:r «> h.p. '71 TRIUMPH 600, TR-6 TE tn. tt, iwp1 • S~.
••• s OaWy Pilot CluaUled Sell the old 1tult Bu,y the Daily Pict Want Ada have Bf&ut. new. 20271 Acacia tlec. motor, cood cond. $850. Sll"OO. •1 sink, k-1 ·box, hardtop. $700. For that item under ~ try
Ad ... ~. now stltlt bargains plort. Sant• An1 Hts. 51>7~lt. 613-339.1alt6. 616-IDO 64+-TU8• the P""'1 Pincher.
·-
' •
" • • !
(Slk •T·l.ooAl.
condition.
Beautltul
$2199
CREVIER
MOTORS
208 w. ht St., Sant.a ,...
135-3111. .
The Wbel draw 1n the \\1est.
• . .. OtllY Pilot Oaallled
Ad.6U-l671.
I
•
' '
! _...... ]§]!;' ~-~--~;j _,,,.. l~ I -·· --i.. l§l [ _,,,... l§J I ........ l§J [ -·-l§J •·~, Im-Wiii 910 ::::::-::::•,;.70~ I ~.;.~~.;;,.~;~~97~01 1.-. ,.......,... f70 AJllL lo '1 IM 910 Autoo, u..i 9'0 A"'°" UM '90 -· Usocl "' --~ Aul-. ll1opc1... ~·-"'' -~ _ _;'--_,.,.-.,..,,,.--
BMW DATS_U_N _ OPEL ,72T~Tf9TOAT' A .. *YOLISWACHN* __EADILLAC CHEVROLET _HOR_N_ET __ ,
Je DAll.V PIUT
EAN LEWI
VOLVO
Oran9• County's
Fastest GrowlnCJ
Dealer
FREE
DEMO
OYDNIGHT
TD
TEST DRIV£
BUY or
-t1ASE-
'72
All MODELS
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
':'"'l e Brand New
Sport Wagon
• 164 Models • Wagons
• Sedans
1972-VOLVO·
2 DR. SEDAN
?8 DWN.
'7800 o.-1' 1"" Dew• ,..,....
$867' 11 T•t•I
M•lltttlt ,..,"'"'
Cash price 11 $3550. plus
tax & 1i1:9n1e. Deferred
payment includes bal-
loon of $1425 plu1 35 pay·
mont1 of $86.76. Total
deforred $4539.60. A1>-
' I
ALL MODELS '711ATSUN 240Z '70 OPEL GT OYc * 1971 CADILLAC '67 Corvette: 421 4-opd. Air Br•nd Now un ·~L~~~~E Oxnpttltioo Onnae, BJMlk CO$R109&6LLA .~:.,.":,i, {t~~~:c ~!.~ := HORNETS '~. Atr ,._,. M••• SUvrr Bu~t StltJ. 4 a:pd dlr. Ex~ ...: --..11tlon. ~···
Low. Bank financimr -~~ ~ · Tu1tln vtnyt top,p1ulh rull leather Excdlent ~ v~· . uor. with jllack. b>ttrlor, 13,000 ttlleni oondlllon. Can fl-actu&l mJlra., Perfect in nance private par;y (IND-(+ T. a J,..} You a.re the winntt of lgterior, full power, Ult &: 828-00.
On 48 Mo. Terms -1'1 WIY <919DZX1. :ll<). Call _, aft 10 .... °' 2 =.:..... ::i: . .'!:":Sw'::. '68 Impala Custam
$4495 5Nl36. $39.30 MO, H-& Go....,, An .. _lool value at this
PORSCHE Show 1ow we pric. !718CQI>.
& Or B01t Ollar IVLL cul\ pilce 11.096.:IO fa. t the $5111
COAST PORSCHE 19'111 9ll·T Tarp, cludll!l <u 6 lice.,., DoWn , ~llM =· =· 1~~t-tc;';1i ==~~= CONVENTION ' " CENTER
SEE us ABOUT IMPORTS bet ... n 9 am a• pm, ask PIYnltnt includlnl b>t.,..1, July 14 • J >y 23 Q. Nabers
COUPE, Factocy Air, (VZU.
549) n4!15, dlr. 83!H>5.15.
'67 CH1')$LE 2 DR. H.T.
V-8, A¥alic, Factory Air ' ~ltloriing (VEF 210)
$1295 * dlr, Dt-6535.
Oversee• Delivery for Karl. ~n ~en~ -:;Y =. Pleue call 642-~, ext. ~4 5jl CadUlac CREVIER MOTORS 1970 PORSCHE 91H, lo Tola! de!""' pay price betiveen9and5pmtoclaun 2600 HARBOR BL., CHRYSLEll Now Available with
7J:le W. 1!' .. 1rSf~·17"""1 ta Ana l!X»-1200 \V. PacUlc Cst. Hwy , miles, factory w 8 r r 1 y ' $2,575.50. A.P n 11~. On )'OW' tickets. (North Coun~ COSTA MESA AIR CONDITIONING ~ h n 'J ... ·~ AM/FM, magi. Sacrilice "' toll tr.. •wnber 11 ~ 17!ll 1960 2 dr, 'p/o, p/b, ~~. -=,....::=..::.:.:..:,__-.--Newport Beac ( ' ~ $4700. After 6 pm call pre -lll'l'anged c re d t t • · ~ .,,_. 540-9100 Open Stmday •.i_.N
Vlsll our new home! 546-4529 (300785). * * * Call7 pmRlch. . , 557-1991 b<wn 5 & AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
& '69 DATSijN 510-968-.mn. 1971 YW 1969 CAOILLAC •66,, 5-Spd, mac whls., ~ l • • • SEDAN DEVILLE COMET STATlON WAGON header, recently re bi 1 9 m f.U)U SU""r BHtle ' Factocy air conditioning, full Specially equl .. cars now
lmma<'lllale. YPUm. engb>e sm> -after TOYOTA r-power, vteyl top, plush full -------$1295 , 6, ' · Radio, heater, automatic leather interior, tilt & tele. 1960 Comet staUon Wagon, a.vallahle ln 2 Dr, 4~ and
ROY CARVER, Inc. SANTA ANA TOYOTA etlck lhift, .uper deluxe. BCope iteerinl, door locb & new tires & new battecy f75. sportabout WllJOll Se<vice ~1 open 1969 PORSCHE, Sll·T Orig 1966 Harbor, C.M. 6'0-9303 ('161EIE) a '--of ·-·-delux -· Call 64U13l ~· IMMEDIATE DELIVERY :134 E. 17th SL "':'~ · owner, 34,COI miles. Excel $1888 •~• ~~· ··-Costa Mesa 546-1444 7,90 am lil 9 pm cond. $4850. 54!1-2526 SAT •• SUN,
6
..
9
sPECIAL Truly an ex.,.ptloni valu• CONTINENTAL =;;;....-"'~-~-~ ' 1i1on.F'ri. 540-5212 at this low price,
1960 BMW •. nins xln't. 60 .fl.7 w. warner, Santa Ana XLN'T. cond. 911-T Porsche, •••AA * '69 M rk Ill * 'IT• _.a S.Lee
ml'• gaL $200 or bat ofr. '72 DATSUN Pickup xlnl ) .... FuUy equlpt. ll<SI OI· TOYOTA CORONA '. Nabers .......... . a YYOJU Call 968-Il!ll. cond ust ll ' fer. 67.i-5850. 4 door, whilc fin ish, 4 speed . Low miles, <llr. FP, Air, Anwlcln MalDra"
BORGWARD "m 97s'."25j6 '68 Ponche 912, am/Im, ex-1ZKZ425 ). .Cadillac beaut ,..,w/biack landau, ceUent c:oodilion. $ 3 6 O O • e $1 099 2600 HARBOR BL., Nabers black leather, tilt wheel 547-5816
l960 Borgward I 1 ab c I I a 240 Z, 1970. 21,000 mile!!. 8W-2'l54. COSTA MESA $3975 846-7368. 1234 So. Main St.
Coupe. Classic model. Mmt Ma.,. Xlnt cond. $3650. * .=.=R;c.E=N=A~U~L"'T'°""-BILL MAXEY 540-9100 Open Sunday Cadillac '66 Continental Cpo. Santa Aoa
body and palnl. Engine in _<:.:.94-5.=142=·-----I ___ .....__..,...,....... '68 YW BUG 2600 HARBOR BL., Immaculale, Loaded, Must MERCURY
""" good cood. Four good FERRARI Renault Demo Sele . COSTA MESA .Se~ll,..:dlr:;;,,;· 89'1;::,:--022:::::'·--~ ~--------
. ew-n.d'lo.-Must Sell --------Sem"1 Annual TOYOTA ~ 4 spd dlr. Extra clean-in....&. Mf).9100--Open SUnday ~-Contl dr. Leathei int, '70 MERCURY Colony Parle
I ·-r::M! .-i.e ... out. Sacrifice! Take small st 10 Steel ar -.C-APR.I '66 FERRARI Ill h , .. , downw1'llfinance(WVHS24) YOUR ONLY vinyl top. Low cost Juxwy. a wagon. pass, Demonstrator 1 1 •••• 1 _ $975. 833-3916. belted tires, root rack, A/C . .,_ • Call 546-8736 aft JO am. F ACJ'ORY p S. 1 Clearance Sale Huntington leach 1'7.UU 49Wlll AUTHORIZED '61 Llncoln. New palnl Looks I P/B, elc. owner.
'71 CAPRI 330GT COUPE This Weekend " tlllff'l\S• •tOVING MUST SELL CADILLAC good! Runs good! $275. G""'.;~;:·~=·
5 Spd, Mtll: \Vhttls, Show· Unbeatable Prices .. • • '61 VW Bug, wrecked front S48-9S09. ~~~·~. ~~'~fi~lng, room Frelh, 36,ooo ao1ual ALL 1972 MODELS 1ft9\HS end, no engine, good tran" Laraest ~= ol Cadll· CORVEI IE '65 MUSTANG
$2150
miles, (SAVtl.18l. IN STOCK FOR --Good for bUJlil'-Best cash Jaco In Orani• eoun~. '66 C It F stba k lmmaculale, Sacrifice, Musi
MAKE OFFER
•• ,.ta "' Jaguar Dealer ,ofl=-er-=548-~5380.:.:....,,...--.,-1 Sales-Leasing. v orve e a c sell, dlr, 897-0224. IMMEDIATE Authorized Sales .t. Service 1• •61 vw eu .. Runs~ DELIVERY 900 S. O>ast Hlgb ......, • N L.--l96il MUSTANG O>nv. New
COAST way Reblt trans. SOOD ar Guwn 4 Spd, ~Radio, Extra tires, air, auto tram:. $1295.
Co.AST INS!~~~o'v~~DIT 1-naT BeRlaUchMPH54().3100 best. 847-1427 ev"' Cadillac Clean, (YGU358J. Good cond. 84&-1807.
BANK FINANCING '70 VW Sunroof, AM/FM 2600 HARBOR BL., MAKE OFFER 1965 Mustang. R<lllt enc .. IMPORTS IMPORTS COAST '65 Triumph Spitfire =...~ w,:b~le;,:,: 54().9lgiSTA0~5~-COAST ~.~~;~~ ... Take c/pyrnt.. Trade for 1970 CADILLAC: '65 ~lustang. Immac. Lo ml
JlXQ.U>O W, Pacific Csl Hwy. Cs! H (J\fQA928) trans car. 64.5-0222 Days. COUPE DE VILLE Sacritice. Must sell
Newport Beach cn4) 642-0406 l!X»l200 W. Pacific . wy. IMPORTS $790 yt 546-4529 Newport ll<~gw 642-0400 ''!., ~~('·,.';;:; .,:,~ {t~T~~N~~ IMPORTS 642 .. 789 • CITROEN ski rack & chains. Xln l Full power, padded top, 1966 MUSTANG V..S. veey
M I
FIAT ~w:: ~~~~~4~~~ COAST cond. $600. 536-4685. beautiful cloth &: leather m.. 100'.).m w. Paclflc Cst. Hwy. ~ ~ 6~m.«ind.
Citroen Sport• ..... t -----·---'10 VW, Sunroof, air cond., terior, tilt & telescopic steer· Newport Beach m•> -0 DSMOBI 0..... Count;y headquarten '71 FIAT 124 Renault Salts & Service r/h, FM stereo radio, $Jf,OO.-Ing, stereo, door Jocks, new 546-4529 .L LE
tor iocaJ & Europ ean lo< over a decade In 0..... IMPORTS ~. call belwn 4 & 7 WSW tires, low mileage. delivery. County PM. Gem that shows xlnt. care DODGE
Jim Siemon• Import• ROADSTER Serv. Dept Open tD I p.m. '66 vw Squarebaci< Wagon Inside .l out. !Ser 137010) 4
'69 OLDS 98
SEDAN zm So. Main, Santa Ana Monday l000.l200 W. Pacific Cst. Hwy. g o o d con d It i on..'. others to chaos@ from.
557-5242 Open Sun. 5 Spd, Radio, Heater. Low Jim Slemc:'M Renault Newport Beach <714> 642-0406 radio-heater, good tires $825 Prices start at
IX>DGE '98 Monaco. $1,0!f>.
V-3, A·T, JJ'AT brks, str, 4 Dr. H.T, i'ull power, 1ac·
v.1nd, seat, dr locks. Ft dlBc tory air, vinyl top, AM-FM
brks, tilt whl, fact a•, lugg r ad io, lilt -tele. wheel, new
rack. pvt pty. CRYB986) whi le wall tires. llard to CORTINA Low Mlloa••· !'8lcKZl . 22<ll So. Mam, Santa Ana 540-4529 or besl offer 96Z.3822. $4444
$2545 1 bll<. north of Warner * TRIUMPHS * ' Service Department 546--014 '111 VW Bus. Gd. Cood.
'66 FORD CORTINA . Sale; ne..,-n1 557-5242 '71 CLOSEOUT W/sunroof. Slen:o hookup.
COAST SAAB SPITFIRES AS I.OW AS $2399 Bes! oUer .<ll not be -=Nabers
U <;adlllac
114/645-2875. line! any clean~r. CY~).
1969 Dodge Charger good $2666
(284CKT) A real Special Car
tor crily
$399
COAST
IMPORTS
1000-1200 W. Pacific Cat. Hwy.
Newport Beach (ll4) 642-0400
546-4529
DATSUN
'71 DATSUN PICKUP
W/Gem Top Camper
4 Spd, Radio, Healer, Low
Low Mileage, (350CPll),
$2095
COAST
IMPORTS
GT-6 SAVE $500 ttluseti.64&-3389aft5. condition. $1295. or trade 1er
IMPORTS BRAND NEW Spo~mc':,mC:~er ·~u~ ~~: <>;;,00~~":
0 R AN G.E C 0 U NT y • S ,,;:531).;:,.:!59;,:;2·,..--.....,-.,-,~
1972 SAAB 99£ LARGEST '66 VW Van. nu pa"1L Runs
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540-9100 Open SUnda,y
CA MARO
conV£'1'tible small c a r •
549--0530.
DODGE Dart 1967,
automatic, ps, pb, good con-
&Nabers
Cadillac
1(0).1200 W. Pacific Cit. Hwy.
Newport Beach (714) 642-0400
546-4529
MAZDA
RO'FARrS
lmmocllot. O.llvery
HUNTINGTON BEACH
59.9, over
Dealers Cost
tax and lie
!99722009140)
(99122010249)
COAST
IMPORTS
1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cit. Hwy.
Newport Beach Cn4) 642-0400
==========""'~ 546-<529
SUBARU * SUBARU *
As Lo\v u $1599
FRITZ WARREN'S
MERCEDES BENZ Sport Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY'S
50 USED MERCEDES LARGEST ON DISPLAY NOW no E. h t St., S.A. 547--0764
dition. $750. 536-1004. 2600 HARBOR BL., no E. 1st, s.A. 547--0764 & looks good. $950. Dir.
'66 TR4A IRS ZXV669. _<213.....,.)~498-~281~6·==,..--1--------
0verdrivc, w'/wheel s. '68 VW SQBCK. * CAMARO '68. 327, PS,
'64 Dodge Dart, 6 cyl., 2 dr., OJSTA MESA
auto., rib gd. work car, $150. 540-9100 Open Sunday ,
642·9153. 1970 TORONADO GT. Excel
1966 DODGE VAN. Good oond, fllll pwr equip, vinyl
cor.tttion. $950 or best otler. top, air oond, AM/FM
Sharp, Only $1199.00 DLR. * M6-2-IJ7 * R&H, Auto, vinyl top. $1400.
547--0764, Pvt pty. 645-5718.
VOLVO '66 TR..-4 A, I.R.S. Good.1 __ ..,... _____ ,,__
Cond.-$600. Herb~ Ga!'llg(!. 1972 VOLVO 54 .. 9tl4. Betw. 8·5.
'67 TRIUMPl-1 SPITFIRE
XLNT. CONDITION
646--0780 after 5PM
Loaso Todoy ot
Best Rates
VOLKSWAGEN o.A.c$18~~~!°irans..
, disc brake•. 36 mo.
68 VW GOOD CONDmON. For Leasing or buying
!900.
Call 673-3426 anytime · ~ .... 1 •• ..! .1
'69, VW BUS -WI" UllM reblt engb>e, 43,000 mj. VOLVO .
12000. * 213: 59~sm
'66 VW Bug, sun roof, xlnt 1966 Harb:Jr, C.M. MS-9303
cond. $675. 642-9153. '66 Volvo Station Wagon,
'11 VW 7 pass. bus. 4500 mi Roof Racks, 4 Spd. Rebuilt
Air-Cond. Take over Engine, $985 Bkr, 646-3242.
payments. 645-6827 Autos, Used 990
BUICK
'68 CAMARO. 327. Auto,
MH, PS, vinyl top.-l!vt ply. n400. 645-6m ....
CHEVROLET
'70 NOVA SS
64S«:i76:: SltftO w/tape deck. $3;495.
FIREBIRD ·~ 540-9892: ev••
'68 FIREBIRD 350, vinyl top, PLYMOUTH
mag whls, Michelin tirel, --------1
$1750 firm, 613-7267. '65 Plymouth Barracuda auto
Coupe. 350 VS. Vteyi top, FORD Iran!., 273 ere., one owner,
brown w/beige vinyl bucket very clean. 893-4013.
seats. Automatic (Door shift} =,.,,-..,.,,,--<""-..,..!-"-;.;.;.;;~~--! C00110ie, factocy guages, 1959 Fani. No running, needa PONTIAC
power di.\C brks, exterior fenders,. Hood and radiator. --------1
chrome. TOP SHAPE! $165 Motor and tranL in very '71 Grand Prix
Below Book. Must Sell! Will good cond. Good fer parts. 1 owner, Dark Grren, Fully
go quick. Call 531·1218. $50. For every t b t n e Equipt, 18,00> actual miles,
'67 Chovello Spt. Cpo. 64&-2607, :::'.utely Immaculate.
Radio, heater, automatic, a '63 Ford Wagon, V-8, auto.,
real beauty. •22G437. R I: H, Air oond., $15(1.
$1099 firm. 543.J691. Call after •
Low Down Low Terms pm.
PHONE 645-5799 ~1964=ro=R~O-F~a~lri~ane-500-~Sta
NEAL MOTORS
BONDED OEALER
2100 ~Brbot Blvd CCl'Jla M~
64~ 7161
?i~~ ~~d.A Wgn. good mecb. cond. $300. 1966 Pontiac Ventura. 4 Dr.,
nual Percentage Rate 1(0).!ZXI w. Pacific Cat. Hwy.
11.00'k. Newport ll<ach (nt) 64Ul406
I 546-4529
Loas4 New Mercedtt TOYOTA $118.71 Monthly
HOUSE OF IMPORTS
6862 Manchester, Buena Pk
523-7250 on Santa Ana Frwy.
SACRIF1CE-'70 Toye ta
Corolla ~a Wgn. l..e!ying
for Europe. $.'X). & take
over. Bob, 847-9914.
'64 VW Van, runs good, new
paint, carpet le Paneling,
$8!)5. 54~. 1970 BUICK
'59 VW, needs \\o1'.lrk, $225. er DELUXE RIVJERA CPE.
cub. 673-38J) V-8, AT, ~ PB, Air Cond., Costa ;M"esa .. ..., '64 T-Bird, aJJ power, air Low low miles, Clea.n ins1de
'70 Townsman Wagon $3'5 or besl ofler. " out, Must Sacrtllce.
DEAN LEWIS ' '68 Datsun Roadster
Hard Top le Soft Top, 4 Spd,
Radio, Heater, 41,000 actual
miles. CWTY5841
Very AtttactlYt
Leasing Plan
Example;
1972 VOLVO
88.74 ~~
~ M ·•~le, 411t lll•••t'I. ••·
,, ,, .... J6 "''·
•
ur ou• ururs
HlNDU YOUl
OVUSllS D!LIYHT
llDUC! THI WOllY
•
Dean Lewis
Volvo
6;5-9308
$1395
or best offer
COAST
IMPORTS
1®-1200 W. Pacific Cal Hwy,
Newport Beach {714) 642-0406
I -A MtchaniCI Delight
'67 DATSUN
STATION WAGON
(a real fixer upper)
ONLY $325. CASH
Call 548-MM after 7 p.m.
)()()().1211 W. Pacific C.t Hwy. Newport 0..ch (Ill ) 84U4ll6 -** 1968 DATSUN 510
41,000 ml, $100o. Pvt ply.
'f'= 'IWl'l·
' •
Restorer1s Attention
MGTC
Transmis:iion oon1plcte.
Xlnt oondltlon,
• 546-0135 •
MGB
'69 MGB w/w, R&H, dark
gm. make offer. (213)
\.10-4726 Seal Beach
OPEL
1971 Toyota ?dark ll wagon.
A/C. Like new. $2995.
644-8984.
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
* 615-<;382 * 847-3095. best. Vinee, FACTORY AIR
847-9!114 CONDITIONING '70 V\V Fastback, xlnt conct, Full power, strato seat!, V8, Automatic, Power Steer-JEEPS REPOSSE.SSION-po n t •
$1600. 644-4100 before 5 pm, stereo sport wheels vinyl Ing, (403BHL) $1995, dlr. """"'°" ______ , Ftrebird ·n. 2,IXX> q.
ask for Janet. top, b-at beauty thai looks 1 ~~~,..:.:._____ '69 Ford Bronco, 4 WO, miles. Exe. cond., financing
RED '68 Voll<n-agen, 46.tm & runs like day it was de. 1970 Chev, Concours Estate, air cond., many extras. available, call 842--7701.
" Ra ~~• Call 8 Pa Sta W Pwr SJ975. 835-1808 dy&. m ues. Clio. •i.v-. livered new, (799ASP), ss. • gn. · '64 Bonneville convert.
675--0070. $3888 Stecrire & brakes, AM·FM IMPERIAL Loaded. Great cond.
.70 V\V. Pop top camper Stereo radio, tilt steer. wbl. * 673--1494 *
wftent. Lo miles. AM/FM, Factory Air, luggage rack, '70 lmp-·1al 66 PO M 5J6..2824 """ tires & brakes. Panel· ~ ' NTIAC GTO, 4 opted, any extras. · -=-Nabers 1n1. Asking 13100. 557-4861. LeBaron bucket>, v1nyi root $600.
19'7l VW bus. Crpted, new gi 1..;.;962-6409_;_=.· -~---1
llres, Bilsleln shocks, tack. Cadillac '67 CAMARO r::.a=:e:i~"."'.n~: T·BIRD
;2200. 64&-21l0. . '600 HARBOR BL.. VII Automatic (TSR'19l $1095 ..:::::..::~;i;:~:;i,;.:..::=: II--_;_::=:_ __
Autot, tmportoel Auto1, lmporr.d 970 COSTA MESA dlr. ~. GREMUN '56 a-;., Thunderbinf Top
---:...----'---..;.. ____ 540-9100 Open SUnday i ,,~69~Cbe~vy-"sta-wgn-.-Alr-. -c:ood-, --a-,-.nd--Ne-w-1-972--c:ood. nsoo. 970
'64 LUX Bulclt 9 pau Sta rack, new tires. Gd cond. GR MLINS 67'..:noo. Wgn., lo ml. XIII! oond. $2,>m. 61J.8901. E '59 T..J31rd 2 dr htp. $99.00.
Must sell $'1'S. cub. Pri ..;..,;,..;..:.,_:..:.:.:=..___ Full pow air H • H A to 1966 Chewll Wagon. V-3, · · • u pty. 642--0966 after 5 pm. ~-1-2186 H·~ ~'vd P/1, P/b, auto, R/H, xlnt ..-.., cu'\IW" a. ., •n Buick conv. Jmmac. Sac-cond, $9X>, ~ Cotta Maa. 642.-1Q6.
rlflce. Lo miles. Must sell! 64 '55 T-BIRO
642-4789. I El ~lnQ 4i:pd, V8, ORlGrNAL OWNER
'69 RM.era. Fully eqWp. * 673-~ j. 67W389 a!tfr 5PM
Low mW:. $2800. '59 Chevy B_,,,,. b" aale VEGA
642-5146 -
'70 OPEL 1900·--
RALLYE KADETTE
All 72 Models.· SAVE
52399
URAND NEW '71 SrJTFIRI
1952 Buick Straight 8 cheap~ 6'8-3757 'ff" VEGA PANO.__._,
Just rebH. Take.best , For aal.~7 Chevy,
oiler. 548-366l 2 door Pl)!I. Makt
1911 BUICK 4 DR. oU,.,. SIS-3611
Runsi $30. call beiw.en 5 pm ,681m;;;c
over 23 Gremlins in stock t Spd, Air Condltlonlnr Mac
•ll modell, I: colon avail-~i.., Lual.P Rack.
able for ~ 000 mllet (12!164J)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . $Z095 • 4 Spd, Radkl, Heal4!r, 28,000
mil('~. Bronze \\'ltll whlte
inlcrk»' C307Bl-tLI.
$1695
COAST
IMPORTS
l()()().l>m W, PaclO. Cst. Hwy.
Newport Beoch (n4) 64Z-0406 ~ '
'
& tO PM. 549-2193. .,..._
'69 ELDORADO ·86 Chev. "Caprice" ndla1 Ward S.Lee COAST FACTORY AJr fllll I tlttL See to approclatt.
:' .-:i.~ ·~ 0::·1:::
1
Wagon. ~.::-S" IMPORTS
'69 Cad -. de Vtllo 39.000 v~. euto, P/S. air, RAH. 1234 So. Mell> St.
mUes. Oritr owner. Excel $49G. M2-llill3 •ntr 5. -~..,,s.n~ta=Ana~=-· ll()()().llOO W. Paclllc Cat. HWJ'.
cood. AM/Fii( I I ere 0 • '57, 7: o-. noo-:--MA YERICK Ntwport Beech (711) -
!l!Hll>L 26 Falrw!ll' Drive ~
'6! CAO Coupe de Vlllo, Cotta Mna All f mo"MAVERICK, RAH, Don't oPYO up Ille lhllll v~ top. cJee.n. l'Ur'll Fut ftllllts are jC< a pboat dtan. lo mUca. Good t1na. "Liit" it ln cla•Ult'd, Shtp
good. $2660. ~7-t9!f call •Wl1 -$1.llO. l.l&-Tll5. to Shen R<!sullll &0-6671.
CADILLAC 1mmacu1a1c, s.cr111ce, Mt11t .. n dlr, 897-0224.
I -
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..
•
• .
• San ~le•••enie
Ca pi.st~
• • VO~ •. 65, N0."193, 4.'SECTIONS, 44 PAGES
-
EDITl9H
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
'
TUESOA Y; JULY 'I r .. ·1972
TodaY's l'lnal
.\
N.Y. Steeb
• . JEN CENTS
Capo Council Refuses 241-acr e Rezo ne Plan
'
By PATRICK BOYLE pt 1tlt Daltr Pllet .IMff
Despl~ seve,r~ concessions bx ·Ille
deve1oper, Safi Juan Cav.lstrapo city
coµnciJmen Monday refused t9 approve
the rezone of 241 acres north of the city
for a planned community.
The enUre )llalter was referred back to
the planning cqmrnission · with in· -
struCtions that several spetfi(lc conditions
be proposed. for p~ment OQ the rezone.
At a long but calm public bearing, •
'
arcllited Robert Van Rouel, speaking tot Covington Brothers Development
Company, old the firm'• proposal had
'beeo-redUc<doftom 118 units to '120 units.
Bowing to nearby· homeowners' cam·
plaints about tbe "quality" of the
development, Van Roekel added that con·
dominiums and duplexes had been
eliminated from the propocal and that
homes there will sell from $24,000 to
$60,000. .
Van Roekel 1ave a lengthy 'slide
presentation, showing the area 1s It i.!
now -• citrus on:bard backed by 1teep,
rolling hilla -and renderings and maps
of the development, with homes along the
ridges and in the valleys. Tile tops of the
hills •'IMlld be leveled and the vaJieys rm.
ed in, be added, to provide 1 fiat surface
for borne construction.
Each of the , councilmen ezpressed
eome saUsfaction with the planned, com-
munity ooncept, saying It would be better
Iha• --develOJX!lOl!I, The -
erty ii loclted lnlend of tbe l<eeway
between Misalon Hills Ranch and Village
San Juan.
However, a majority of the council
favored placing conditions on the rezone
to insure that Ute developer, when con-
struction finally begins, slicks with tbe
proposal. Councilman Ed Cbennak noted
that IUch. conditions are normally im-
PoOed oo the tentative tract msp, not on
· the rezone.
"I 'a!W.ys thOught thot was kind of a
/ . . ' ··arr1or,
Parade Request
Antiwar Group
Fighting Denial
A major coo'troversy oVer who can
march in San Clemeote'a fiesta porade
and who can not -ezploded today and
as of last reports wUJ. be settled in
Orange County Superior Court. · ,
length !a the dlspUtes.
The antiwar group it bu been
determined, applied recently f o r
permiSsiOn to enter a .100-man marching
unit in· the parade. .
The permission was denied by a special
parade screening committee of the
~r. The panel cited still rules
about · pollUcally-orieoted entries being
exempted from the parade. ·
screwed-lJp standard before I ever got on
the (.'()W\cil /' Jim Weathers responded,
saying he favored lmpoolng the con-
ditions. Weathers was elected in April on
a platlorm or slowlng down growth of the
commlinity.
Several conditioM suggested by tht
c;:ouncil were first menUoned by residents
during the public ~ring.
Jack C'.onnelly, re~ntinC M~n
Hills Ranch homeoW"t'tl, said the pro-
posed school site In L'le development ;,
UPI T•l-.lt
THROWS IN TOW EL
Exoandjdato Hum phrey
An anUwu group Imo~ as Vietnam
Veterans Against the War -the entity
"'1lldl spooslred the· maj<r march in
Washington D.C., last y .. r, bu taken the
Sao Clemente Cl>amber of Commerce IO
court'in fight denial 'of a parade eotry In
this Saturday's amual edition of the. , Jiarade: . • •
The' veteran's gro&iJ, then decided to
seek court •c\loll. and a final ruling is
expected fi1day, lt'\VU leamed in the
court 'ot lildp ~unes F. audge.
\ '· 'u'I T-..
·: callidrnia delegate~ Bi:own of.Richmond ':l•P• during the pro-
: • c'4i1lgs at. the Deniocratic.NatiDrial <!:onvenUoit • ..U,right is Tony ·Pol·
• vorosa of San Le4J>dro.
. . . •
-.. P•t· ~· :f.i·gh.t:~ .. -. S~t·,
I> ' I • , ( I • 1
:·Capo ,J)~.trid ·p are n:u 1.0 Petitio n .. .. . '
'A group pf pattnts coocemed ·about·a·
~ for swimming pools ln the
Qiplstraoo Unified Scbool District have
'1"11 city council permi!slon to circulate
if.llUons In San Juan C.plstrano.
' ·.· . • ..
Councilmen 'Nix.
Jlaffle P roject
" J)espite a strong verbal appe1l trom a
Iiana Point resident, San J u a n
C&pistrano city councilmen Monday night
reru.ed to aJiow the.door..tc>door selling
of raffle tickets that would have railed
lllllll<Y to send a group of blind )'OWll·
ner• to Europe.
Only Mayor Jim 1borl>'! voted 1ga(nal
a motion to ,._ IOlicltaUoo rilbb to
the group. Tile activity -1d bf!,. been
1ponaored by the Balboa Bay Lions Club.
Th«propooal inust now bf approved by
the• ·-y. Local Agt!Dcy Formatioo
C.OmrnJsaion.
Bruce Deacon, apeaking for the
Parents on Pools Committee, told the
Q)UD<il.Mooday night his group, is seek·
ing to form a county service area in the
school . district. The 'service . area · -
similar to an assessment di!trlct -
would levy a 10 cent property tax per
$100 of aaessed valuation for possibly a
two-yur period.
Dtacoo said this would raise aboot
$400,000, which his group ~ wUI be
enough in build two COllOPeUtlooHlsed
swiJmnlni pools In IJie •rea, Aware• of
the large figure, he noted that an olym·
pie-shed pool ju.t built at Newport
Harbor Jllgh School in Newport Beach
baJ cost ~1,000. .
Tile asseament mijht not b.
nocesaary !or two yura, Deacon odded,
beca1111 federal functo could pay for one
ball Ibo Cllllllnlctlon COlb.
' Chomba! ol!ici4ls llld' this mlimlnl-
t,bat tlleycu ·yet ·have not -ltrVed
with Af1Y court documents in the assertea leral action, and said that unless they
are -. they Will not oommeiit al
"We can't comment on the lncident
. anleia . .... rece1.. fdrmai document• relatbtt ·to a eourt action, 1• Clwnber
~Robert Evans old today,
Board Eyes $1.1 Million
Tax '.Windfall' in Capo
Trustees -of the Ciplstrano Unified
Scbool District Monday beard lniUal
reports oo what they might do with $1.I
million in tu moaey they dida~ upect
to hive in liscaJ lfl2.73.
District adminlatralora handed trustee•
a 14-pag;e· report indlcating the board
could beef up the district'• spending pro-
gram for the coming year by about
$64-0,000. 'J1'e rest of the $1.I million could
go into the district's reserve fund, school
officials said.
But trusleet agreed to toke the re-
mainder of this weeit to study the detail·
Fiesta Pancake
Breakfast Slated
Plans are nearly complete for thil
yesr's edition of the Fiesta pancake
breakfast to be sponaored this coming;
weekend by the San Clemente Kiwanis
Club. ·
The traditional annual . event will be
held in ·AlbertllOll'S Market parking lot
from 7 to 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday.
Tlckels are available by calling 491-
3631 or !ll'Ul34. All members of the
· Kiwanis Club aloo are selling tickets at
$1 for adults and IO cents for children -
· der 12. Th:kets afao will be told tach day
at the breakfast.
ed Sllif!Stlons. Tiley will meet In a two-
hour specill sesaioo Mon<lay night to
mska a final action.
The new tax Income will be yielded by
a 28-percent increase in assessed valua·
tion in·tbe district.
Bui board President Bob Huro! em·
phasized that, despite advantages to the
district, the sting In pocketbooks of tax·
payers will be 1everely felt.
Citing whopping lncreaaes on his own
tax assessment, Hurst stressed that the
board "sbould keep the tllpayer in mind
Monday."
The ital! report suggests that the
district's exlstlng ' tax rate of. '4.12 be
kept lnilct because of Ille new
assessments.
ftems recommended by school oUlclalJ
include major increases for:
-Reinstating the position of cur ..
riculum coordinator.
-Increases in teaching penonnel,
maintenance e m p I o y e s , bealtlH::are
worken and other aides in many
categories, •
-Relnltatlng a m a j or maintenance
program which would Include site Im·
prov~ents at most district acboota u
well u painting of a major portion of
cluiroom buildings at San Clemente
Jllgh School.
-Beefing up supplieo and equipment
recently removed from the budlet with a
specill emphasis on the amount of
maltrials oeoded to open Daoa Hilll
. Jllgh ScbooL
..
McGovern Foes
May St.ep A.side
As Senator Rolls
' MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern cliocbed the Democratic
presidential nomlnatton today u Hubert
H. Humphrey, stepped. out of the race and
McGovern'• otber key rivals moved to do
the same.
McGovern relaxed lo his 'hotel u tbe
coaJIUorr which hoped to stop him
Wedneaday night dissolved around him.
Ho talked by telephooe to Hwnpllrey
after the ;'happy warrior's'" .bow-out and
praised him for "his 25'year fi&bt for
h1:1man justice." . '
Humphrey, victim of McGovern's 11-
month botUe for the nomlnatlop and of
slick convention Door maneuvers on tht .
part of the South Dakotan Monday nlg~t,
released his· ~egates to vote as they
wish. ·
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who sllll con-
trols some 700 convention votes, and'Stn.
Henry M. ·Jack.son, with over 50, both
caUed arternoon news conferences, most
likely to follow tbe path 1truot1 by
Humphrey.
McGovern was just 43 voles 1horl of
the ll$09 needed for victory When
baJloting begins in the coriventlon hall
Wednesday night.
Humphrey'•· 1291>1u. delegates, many
(See McGOVERN, Pase ' I)
President Pa ys
Surprise Vis it
To Capo Cafe
Pr .. ldent Nixon -sporting 1 ll'lnd
appetite for Mexican food -dropped Into
his lavorile local restaurant Mooday
night.
It was the first vtolt to the El Adobe in
San Juan captstrano in at least a year
for the President and his small party.
Ray Wheeltt told the oouncli !hat the
club had donated a new automobllo to 1-
Uled In the ra!Oe. out of the price of 11!
ticket, Wheeler said 25 cents would hav1
1one into the Project Europe Ftmd,
which ba1 been set up by Services to tht
Blind in Santa AM. The rtlllalacler _,Id
bave paid the sludeDI IOllclton and tho
cost of the auto. '
Capo· May Move Near Sea And the Chlo! Executive sat far from
any 1vall1ble television sets -holding
true to his aide'• promises that tbe
President would not alter his schedule to
follow the Democratic Nallonal Con-
vention. (Related story, Pago S.)
GOP Vote Blitz Set
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A minority party
In San lllego County for the ftnl Ume
oiltce llf/' Republlcalll plan a -
<l'tliltratlon bllto featurlnc Soa. Batr7
Goldwater of Arbona In Al tllort lo•
eotch up. Leslie I!:. Gehrea, ~
. cbalrman, 111d a tlckell 111,. ._ IDld
'!or a $101h·t>late funcl.ralstnl dlaDer
Tbul'lday. Goldwa~ wUI be ilie IDlin
spoeker.
I
The landlocl:ed city of San Juan
C.pistrano will move • few mllea closer
to the sea ii a proposed annexation is
ever approved by county officials.
City councilmen Monday, with one
diJaenllng vole, all'eed to apply for the
annexation of some 100 acres of
uninhabited land along the IOUthern
-of san Juan Q-eek.
Tile annu would Plllh the city .,....,.
dory ' IOOth llon1 Del Obl1po to StonehUI
Drive, according to city public works
I
I
director T. J. Meadows. For ofiicial
purpooe., Meadow• said It Will ~ ref•r·
red to u the Pryor ltome1lead A"'
neutlon in keeping with the name of the
property found on old maps of the com· munlty.
Mayor Jim Thorpe 'IOl<d against uli·
Ing the county Local Acency Formation
Commi11lon to oomlder the aMexallon.
Thorpe uid the land U.. In the llood plaln
and wiU -Y COUii the city a
multiludo of )WObloms if a landowaor
ever wanto lo .:..oJop IL
(
pe alto said he Is "le11 upansionht" ,:;: :i:., a"::';'"~ :;.der~
than be used to bt. Di1est Board Chairman Hobort Lowis,
The IJUltX never gre'' out of a r~nt cloae friend c. G. 0 Bebe" Rebtm o(
proposal from a property owner who Florida and Prtliclenllal Navy Aide Lt.
.;anted his 18 acrt1 to l!ecome part of the Qndr. Craig Campbell.
city. In on effort to all&n the city boUJ> Nixon ord<red chUe reUeno ll'd tac-.
dary With that of Water Works Dlatricl from the bill of fare, thbl later placed
Number Four, the council orderod city anotber order for m0re taCOI.
at.If to see If any other adjaeent p?OP' Wlr< services, in an 1pparenl ..,,.
eny ownen would !ovor annexallon. cession to Eastern reeden, de>cribed
The 1111).ocres proposal II the result of chlle relleno u "green pepper enveloped
that tfforL ' in an omelette-like cheese wrappu .11
I (
next to a planned freeway intercha~e.
Connelly also raised the qu..tlon o(
whether a natural pond, the only one in
San Juan Capistrano, should be filled bl
for home construction.
"'Once you destroy that pond." Con-
nelly said, "you can never bring it bAc.k."
Ht sakt many Mission Hills youngsters
fl.sh In the small poild.
Rob ~tcCullwn, representing t h e .
All iallCe of Homeowners' Associations
!See REZONE, Page II
McGovern
On His Way
To Victory
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The self·styl·
ed happy warrior, Hubert H. Humphrey,
pulled out of the race today fer tht
Democratic presidential nomination in
the face of the speeding MGovem
1teamroller.
Humphrey, the 1968 nominee, -ared
with his wlfe Muriel and daughter at hi•
side at 9:22 p.m.' PDT before ,a crowded
room lull of reporten in lllnOllllllCe hli
withdrawal, 11ylng he wu reloul'I( his
delegates to ''vole u the)' wialL" Ho did
!IOI Ny, ho-er, 'llllother bo -.Jd -P<!l'I MGovern, an old Irland, 1or Ibo ..Omhiat!On. ' ' .
Humphrey·_....i-u ml'lad
a thre-p-apb llatemlill ... hll
decision !bot tuncltoc1 Ibo -!Jon
Wedneaday llipl fqt Gtorp I . McGo~ern.
His voice troke 1Ilghtly toward the end
of the. 1tatam0nl as be tbanked his stada
and supporten who worked for him.
After reacfing the prepared statement,
Humphrey added a few words saylnc,
"We've fot11bt the iood !lght ... Now wo
bow out."
He theo huaed Muriel and walked
awey from the· microphones.
Humphrey was said to have reached
his decision to withdraw early today
after seeing bls majorbope of overtaklnc
McGovern fall. That wu the convention'•
decision to live McGovern all. 217
delegates from Call!ornia, lnltead o(
splitting; them up with Humphrey plllnc
108 and MGovenr 120 ~ m Ibo .i.. I
primary voting.
Humphrey then slepl on hll decfllaa a
few houn and met with his top advilen
at midrrunlng. Later1 he called tocetber
bis staff for a closed meeting and .-u
tears were shed, including 10me by
Muriel Humphrey -he lold them be wu
bowing out.
The Humphrey 1talemenl said:
"After comultatlon with some of my
closest friendl and aupporter11 I have
determination to cootlnue the bettle I
name to be entered 1D nominaUon at the
convention, and I am now relea1Ina my
delegates to Tote u they wiall.
"My withdrawal from the presldenllal
race is 1 wllbdrawll of candidacy only.
It Is nol a wllhdnwal of spirit, or rJ.
determlnaiton to continue the battle I
have WoCod aJI my public life Qn -
of -who bad ao voice.
.......
'l1>e ,..•tberlady -elev and sunny skies thrqb Wednnclay,
with hllba of 70 at Oranre Cout
sands, rt1bt& to IO degrw lnland.
LoW1 17-47. -
INSIDE TOD~'Y •
Chlcogo If-ltlacml J. IJo.
l•u r<fused compr...itt •llarr. bu Sm. !lcGor>ma on IM lllonlv
que1t1on of cltl<pate -g. A•
a rrn11t, Dolry lolt hW 11at. Src
1torv and ot...,. con..,.dott r<·
sultl on PaQe 4.
L.M. """ ' " ...... ... .. C...,_ S M.,,..,__ lt , ......... ~ ,. ......... ,.
f.Mlkt 11 ~ '""" 11 0111111• lf , ........ ...., .,... '"'"" .. ,... .... , .. ....,.. ..... . ,,...,..... ,.
·~ ..... .,,,....,.. ...... ,._. lf.11 ...... • -.. 111t ._...,. n ~ .._ ..,.,.
..... IMIN t• ........ t ..... L.Mlltrt ,,
I If DAILY PIL01 T"""-1, July 11, 1972 '
Allies Hit Quang Tri Candidate
Hinshaw •
U.S. Copters Lift Troops in Over B~rrage .
Spent Most SAIOON (AP) -U.S. M a Jin 1
helicopters lilted South Vittn9mese
troops lnto • combat assault oottb of
Quang Tri city today, flying into allleavy
barrage of fire behind enemy line/ that
knocked down at least three helicopters,
the U.S. Command said.
Tho landings, by South Vietnamese
marines, put government forces on three
aldea of the enemy-held provlncll\l
capital. :
l).S. military spokesmen sald the
crewmen of two CH46 m e d i lt<t»
ht·llcopters were sale, going down inslae
South Vietnamese lines afte r being bit by
antiaircraft artillery and small-arms
fll'e.
The fate of the crewmen aboard the
third hellcoptu, a CHs:I, the biggest U.S.
troo1>"C3rrying helicopter, was not lm·
mediately known.
Tho U.S. Command $aid ii had no ad·
diUonal delalll.
lt was not clear whether there were
South · Vietnamese troops aboard or
wheiJier they had been dropped oil
before the bellcoptus were biL An an·
110U11<e111ent f,... the u.s. 71h Fleet tn-Tho SaJron ooa!mand reporl<d that 104
dlcoted that ltoope from the two Clltas North Vlelnlmea troopo were killed and alrtadr hid been dtopped off. The eight lank.I deatroyed, 111 ol tbtm In ono
helicopters new from the carriers. battle, by U.S. naval gunlire and South
The new assault by several hundred Vietnamese artillery &upport.
Soulli Vietnamese tJli,rines north of "the North Vietnamese are in there to
•Quang '.l'rl enlarged the government stay," said Capt. Don Dickenson. is, of
forces' ling around the northernmost Bradenton. Fh1., an adviser with the
provincial capital. paratroopers. "The guys who are there
A 7th Fleet announcement said that have been ordered to stay there."
"initial action on the g~d was hot as Associated Press correspondent Dennis
the So~th Vietnamese marines mov~ ~!f ~eeld reported from the front that
the hehcopf!rs and on to the offensiv~. Dickenson to ld him North Vietnamese
The marines were land~d 21h miles troops were well dug in and around the
north-northwest of the -city, ~ the Citadel, in the heart of Quang Tri City.
eastern side of the Thach Han River op-.. , 11 posite the Quang Tri .combat base. Th~y ~~e 1n ,well-prepared bunkers,
For the fifth successive day, en· he said. They ve, been there ,for ~wo
trenched North Vietnamese f o r c e s mo~ths an~ they ve used their ttme
managed to stall the South Vietnamese ju~iclously · . drive to recapture the city lost 10 weeks You can put 105 and even 155 artillery
ago. on those bunkers,, and you'll only give
Tank-led North Vietnamese in-tHem a headache .
rantryrnen and South v t et n ames e Dickenson said .he had seen SOO.pound
paratroopers and marines battled at four bombs t;froppe:d within 20 yards of t~e
different points on the hortheastern 811d North Vietnamese .b~kers and they fail·
theast '·klrts f Qu Tri ed to hurt anyone ms1de. aou ern ou~ o ang • "It' 1· h . . 'ti " h 'd "It' s 1g tmgmc1 es, esa1. s
' Wl .a
Vnconv entional Delegates
Thelma Buchboldt Oeft), vice Chairman of the Alaskan delegation,
and Shawn Mi4er1 delegate from Pocatello, ld~ho, came costumed in
contrast at the Democratic convention iii Miami Beach.
NASA Score s 3 Astronauts
Andrew J. Hinshaw, 1ucceS1!ul 39th
Congressional District Republican ca'l"
dldate and Orange County assessor.
emerged toda)o as the biggest spender lb
!he primary campaign of those reportinJ
todate.
Ilinshaw reported that he spent $86,877,
l'!ls opponent Rep. John G. Schmitz (Jt.
Tustin) spent $75,904.
However, the biggest spender, Ralph
Diedrich seeking to unseat incumbent
Supervisor William J. Phillips in the.
third district, may have spent close tp
$90,000, it was estimated today.
Diedrich has until 5 p.m. today to fill
the final report. Other supervisorial caq-
didates, William Wenke and Supervisor ·
Robert Battin of the first district, alsO
have not filed as yet. ,
Capo Council me n Okay
dirty. It's rough, and it's different from
anything we've had since the Tet of-
fensive in 1968. It's no longer the quiet
little rice-paddy war." For Unauthorized Action s
The second biggest spender reporting',
Dr. William Brashears of Fullerton, said
$52,090 was spent in his unsuccessful
write-in campaign in the 3 4 t b
Congressional District.
Jobi! D. Ratteree, sucecssful candidate
for the GOP nomination in the 34th,:
reported spending only $4,130. He got
18,684 votes to Brashears' 7 ,303. • Park Deve'lopment Fund
A community clubhouae might be •
Jong time in becoming a reality, but
under a measure passed by city c:oun-
cilmen Monday, san Juan Capistrano will
have more money for pirks develop-
menL
Parks and Recreation commission
chairman Dennls Paquin told the council --
Judge Forbids
Cartoon Figures
Exploitations
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A federal
judge bu put bia judicial foot down on
underground cartoonists alleged to
portray Mickey Mouse and other Walt
Dilney cartoon characters aa dope pod·
dlen and oesual actlvlsla.
U.S. DiJtr1ct OJuit Judge Albert C.
Wollenberg Monday enjoined 11le car-
toonists from maklng or selling any, of
the dilpuitd comic booka and ordered all
c:opitl of two lalues to bia court, pending
ould>mo of a llOll,000 copyrlibt Jn.
fr!ngement sul~
Disney Productions in !ls suit uid the
cartoon characters encourage "an image
al Innocent delightfulness'• but the
underground cartoonlsts show t h e
characters in a ·0 degrading, lewd and of·
tensive manner."
The judge emphatically denied a clsim
by the defendanla that they had a right
to panxly the Disney cartoons under the
Finl Amendment.
From Pagel
REZONE ...
(AHA) aald the plan called for develop-
ment on steep hillsides, a matter that
llhould he camully considered in rerms
of landslideo. He also suggested 11lat the
cluster homes in the area should be
ecreened.
On the pond issue, Van Roekel aald
Covingloo -.Id probably he happy to
aell the natural resource to ll1e Mlaaion
Hllll residenla, but that II would de !Ji.
accessible to residents of this develop-
ment. He 11!d it would he "too much of
a gamble" for developers to plan far in
advance before a re:r.one was approved.
but added that his client would not object
to coodilionlng the re.one.
"We could not object to being tied
legally to .this concept provided we had
IOl11e flexibility to change for technical
reasons/' Van Roekel said.
OltllN•I COAST IC
DAILY PILOT
'l'M Or•• C.t CAILY PJLOT, wltll wt.Id
~ CM1blned 11\e N..w.Prn .. fs PllMW.• w
rht 01111119 C011t Pvtllr.t'llnt C"""'1y. &..-
r•lt tdllionl ltl PllOlllfled.. Merid•Y rhrot.111ft
Frld11, for Ct1t1 Mei.., NtwPOl't It.ell,
Huntlntlon l1kh/F111,11i111n \11H1r. Ltt11111
8MCl'I, ltvlne/Stcklllbaa. 1nd·:i•n Cllrr!etltel
&In Jr.1111 C1pl1tr1no. A 11"919 ntklnll
tdltJOn b jlllblr....-Stlurd1ys 1nd SIJl'ld1ys.
Tiit prll'ICIPll pubHthlnll pl1nl II 11 UO Weil
a.v $1rHI,, (Ott# MIU, Ctl!tornle, fl'26.
Rob1rt N. w •• d
Pr'ftllltt'll •nd PWlllller
J•ck R. C11rl•y
Vlu Prnldtnl 1nc1 G'111r11 Mil'lf"r
Thotl'I•• IC1tvil Editor
Tito"''' A. Murphl111 M-alt!f Edilor
Cha1l•s H. Loot · Rlch1 rd P. Nall A11lt!1nl M1n1tlnt Editon. s. Cl ..... Offlc•
JOf Nortfi El C11"11i"t R••I, tl672 --Qata MIU: IJO w:,::r '''"' N...,.rt l1tc11: mJ H l811tl'flt' Hllftfi;ifllll lucll.: 11111 lllCll kultv1rf UtilM 1Mc11: 22t Jlorett A'ml\lt
Ttlup t • f114J '42-4J21 c._.,,... ,.,..,,..,.. ••z.sa11
S. Ca.wt. Al D.,erlwM•:
T.t .. e• •tZ-4411
~t. wn. ~ C.t ll'Otlllsllfllt ~. N9 ...,. •Witt lll11tlr•llto'll. •ftorill '"9tfW etr MYttlfHMll\IJ ""-"' _, .. ~ -"'*" .,.111 "" """* ., .,... ... .-..
....... d• .............. c.t• Mtta, c.tlfMlloa. .........,_ W C9!TiH UM ~, .., .... , N.11 """""' mllitvr ......... llM fMl!fllho.
I
that $13,035 had been set aside over the
put few years under a formuJa designed
to someday finance a clubhouse. When
developers pay the required park fee to
t6e city, Paquhf said 20 percent of the
mob.ey, under present policy, goes into
!his fund .
He said he and other commissioners
favored a change in the policy to permit
the money to go toward park develop-
ment.
"At the rate the money Js coming in,"
Paquin told the council "in ten years, we
wouldn't have enough for a restroom in a
clubhouse." He suggested the recrea-
tional facility would probably have lo he
built through a bond election.
The council ordered the city attorney
ttt prepare the neceasary changes in the
regulations to permit the money being
spent directly OD the parks.
In other action, the council approved
the appointment of Pbillip SChwartu and
Tony Leon to recently vacated tenns on
the Parks and Recreation Commission.
Schwartze ls the fonner assistant city
planner who recently took a job in
Anaheim and Leon will represent the
Capistrano Unified SCbool District on the
coilUJliMlon.
Bandits Hunted;
Gouged Out Ey es
Of Two Vic tims
ROCHESTER N.Y. (UP!) -Police of· ' . ficials have assigned 10 extra detectives to an "around·the-clock, check-out·all
Jeads" search for two men who gouged
out the eyes of two robbery victims.
Police identified the latest victim as
Robert Paro, 19, of Rochester.
He was attacked and blinded by two
robbers SUnday night as be worked at a
Main Street gas station.
Authorities ~aid two -men took Paro
down a side street, robbed him of '10,
gouged out one of his eyes and l_njured
the otb!t. He was in critica1 condition at St. Mary's Hospit811 Earlier Sunday, a lone robber who
reseinbled one of Paro's assailants goug·
ed qut the eyes of Samuel c. Schafer, n:
also of Rochester, police said.
The assailant asked for fresh orange
juice in Schafer's store and when told
that there was only orange soda, he
demanded money.
In a brief scuffle, the robber gouged
out both of SChafer's eyes. Schafer was
reported in good condition at Genessee
Hospital.
Police said they are seeking two men,
one man described as about 30, with a
medium Af~style haircut, and the other
about 20.
Scores Attend
Athenagoras'
F uneral Service
ISTANBUL, Tu rke y (AP)-Funeral
services for Ecumenlcal P a t r i a r c h
Atbenagoras were held today before
scores of officials representing many na·
tions and the Protestant and Roman
Catholic churches.
Meanwhile the election of a new
Bpiritu al leader for the 25()..million
member Eastern OrthOOox Church gave
the Turkish government increasing <:on-
Cfl'll in the face of protesla from the
Greek government. ll '
Black-robed Orthodox bishops with
flowing white beards chanted the funer;ll
service, presided over by Metropolitan ·
(Archbishop) MeUton, a member of the
patriarchal Holy Synod. Meliton L• con-
sidered the leading candidate to succeed
Alhenagoras who died Friday al 86.
Hundreds of persona packed the small
c:hurch of SI. George within the'one-acre
pa triarchate. Micha.el Ramsey,
archbishop ol canterbury end Anglican
Church held, stood next to Pope P1u1'1
repreaentatJve, Jan cardinal
Wlllebrands, president of the V1tican'1
Secretariat for Christian Unity.
Treasurer
W ill A ppear
A t A irporter
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
the United ·states, wiU be guest of honor
at a re-elect the President fWld·raising
dinner set for JuJy 18 at Irvine's
Airporter Inn.
The dinner is planned by the Orange
County Hispanic Committee to re-elect
President Niion. All persons are invited
to attend. Dinner reservations are $15
per person.
Mrs. Banuelos is the sixth woman an d
the first of Mexican-American descent to
hold the position of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Presi·
dent Nixon cited her "extraordinarily
successful career as a self-made
businesswoman."
Mrs. Banuelos laWlched her Los
Angeles food processing firm on $400 in
1949. Today the firm grosses $5 million
annually and employes number more
than 300.
She became director and in 1964
chairman of .the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Los
Angeles.
She was alSo named Outstanding
Businesswoman of the Year by Los
Angeles· Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A reception is planned for 7 p.m.
followed by the dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from
Ticket Chairman James. H. Miranda at
553-0262 or from ticket co-ehairman Alex
Acevedo at 543-1953.
From Pagel
McGOVERN . • •
WASHINGTON (AP) -The space '
agency today disciplined the three Apollo
15 astronauts for carrying 4 0 0
unauthorized postal covers to the moon
and back last July and then turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance in West
Germany.
The 100 moon.stamped envelopes later
apparently were sold to stamp collectors
for $1 ,500 each, the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration said.
NASA said after an investigaiton that
astronauts David Scott, Allred Worden
and James Irwin "e1ercised poor judg-
ment in their action.
"Therefore. they will be reprimanded
and their actions will be given due con-
sideration in their selection for future
assignments," the agency said . '
Or. George Low, NASA deputy ad·
ministrator. commented:
"Astronauts are under extreme stress
in the montha pieceding a flight lo the
moon, and their poor judgment in car·
rying the unauthorized covers must be
considered in this light.
·~NOnetheless, NASA cannot condone
these actions."
NASA said it learned that the Apollo 15
crew agreea at one tiine to provide 100
covers from their forthcoming mission
to the acquaintance in return for esta~
lishment of i "trust fund" for their child·
ren.
"After the covers had been given to the
acquaintance, however, they rellized-on
their own -that this was improper and
declined to accept either the trust fund or
the alternative offer of sarnps in ex-
change for the 100 postal covers," NASA
said.
The Apollo 15 crew, like those on
earlier moon missions, had NASA's
permission, within established pro-
cedures. to carry personal souvenir-type
items, including some postal covers.
The permission was granted with the
condition that the articles be retained by
the astronauts or be given to personal
friends. They were not to be used for
commercial or fWld-raising purposes or
personal gain, NASA said. · ·
On Apollo 15, the astronauts were
authorized to carry 232 of the specially
stamped envelopes with markings shOw-
ing they had made the round trip to the
moon. The .fOO unauthorized covers were
carried in addition to the approved ones.
Oemente Puppet
Shows to Begin
'Ibis summer's series of free puppet
shows for San Clemente area youngs.ters
will start Wednesday afternoon oo the
Community Clubhouse lawn.
Mrs. Joan Burt, who began the suc--
cessful shows last sllnlmer. will perform
for youngsters again this summer -
each Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
The shows are sponoored by ~
Friends of the Library and will be held
throughout July and tlte first two weeka in August in the lawn area of the
clubhouse near the shuffleboard courts.
Coast Unit to Hold
Lunch eon for Solons
Brashears demanded a hand count Of
the votes, but when results did not show
significant change after three days ol
counting, he called it off. He had bee11
forced to wage a write-in campaigit
because he appeared two minutes late to
file his nomination papers in March.
Hinshaw's list of contributors showed
that his public relations adviser Chip
Cleary put up a loan of 123,500 in the
form of professional services. Tite
assessor reported receiving a total ol
156,292 in contributions, $30,3H less thao
be spent. ' •
Principal contributors in addition to
Cleary were Mrs. Patricia Reilly Hitt,.
assistant secretary of the U.S. Depa,rt;.
ment of Health, Education and Welfar•
and several officials of the Irvine Conr
pany including president William ii>
Mason. •
A third Republican in the 39th District,
Earl. Carraway, reported s p en~ in i'
$30,925 and the fourth aspirant, Lan1.
Denna,, spent only 1591. ;·
Supervlaor Phillips, wbo finished a~
ond to Diedrich in the th I r d auper,
visorial district, reported a: p e n d in g
$57,!.89 and aald his contrlbu!Qrs put up
$55,144. '
other supervisorial c an d i d a t e i
reported were Robert Bark, $3,400;·
Stephen Zirschky1 $829 -both in tbi
third district race, and Paul Balch, $1.280
in the first district fighl :
Slate Sen. Claire W. Burgener '(Jt.La
Mesa), winner of the GOP nod in the new
42nd Congressional District which in-
cludes the southern coastal area of
Orange County, reported. spending
$38,824. :
Conrad Tuohey, a Fullerton attorneY 1
Members or the Orange County Coast \Wn the Democratic nomination in ~
Association will host state and county 23rd Congressional District and was th4I
legislators for a special luncheon at 11 :30 biggest spender-amoog-Democrats with
a.m. Friday In the Balboa Bay Club. 415,284. , Coast Aasoclstion members and guestJ O!tO Lacayo of Cypress, wbo woo the
Calle Sch·wa· rtze will hear reports on special legislation al· Democratic nomination in the 3Sth feeling the coastline at both the county aenatorial district spent $2,705; John
and state level, according to John Mac-Black of Newport Beach spent $2,589 to
ot them almost sure to back McGovern. J W ' W k nab, president of the coast association. win the 39th Congressional District
will put him easily past the required USt OU t OT For reservations to the luncheon, phone Democratic nomination, and Terry
quota: 962-6661, or contact the Huntington Beach Moshenko won the Democratic nomina-
George c. Wallace announced plans to City councilmen in San J u an Chamber of Commerce office. tion in the 10th Assembly District with
t h t. fl t · ht t p s Capistrano, where stree•· have colorful spending of $4,225. go o t e conven ion oor on1g o re s ~ Jn the 7oth Assembly D I 5 tr l c t
h. 1· hi f the kind f atlv Spanish names, were asked to honor a " 1g or o conserv • Afros Cause Problem Republican race, Paul Jesilow, a student, platfonn he says the party must have for former city employe Monday night. spent $550 in losing to Assemblyman . Phil Schwartze recenily resigned as • R bert victory in November. assistant· planning director to take a post MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The creden-o H. Burke (R·HunUngton Beach)
· With a bottle of beer, a long, thin cigar, in Anabe;, ... and the council -· Ihm' king 1· I bad r d I d 1 who reported spending $5,881.
ed
...... ...... 1a s ges or e egates an a ternates Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·
his shoes kicked off and his tie discard , of passing a resolution honoring him. come attached to an elastic cord. This Newport Beach) spent $11,570 although
McGovern watched on television in his "We could name a street after him," has posed a problem for same m 1 a ck he was unopposed in the 7lst district, and
penthouse suite as all his rivals _ united councilmen Jim Weathers suggested. delegates, since the cords are not Jong attorney William Dannemeyer reported
in their fervor to stop him_ fell to the •'OaJJe Schwartze." Instead they chose enough to stretch over some of the bushy spending $5,617 to win the Republican the resolutiOlt. Afro haircuts. · t' · th 69th • •• bl D' power of his tightly disciplined loyalists 1------------------:_:_ _________ ,::n:om:::m=a:to:n:_:tn:::._::::e:..:::::-:'.".em~:::Y':..'.'.:'.'.lS~tri~· c::t
on the convention floor.
The supremely confident Prairie state
senator planned to seclude himself today,
possibly on a boat, to go over drafts of
the acceptance speech he fully expected
to deliver before the convention Thurs--
day night fo!Jowlng W e d n es d a y ' s
presidential balloting. ~
There was no word from him about a
choice of a running·mate.
· The action shifts toni~ht to the party's
platrorm , with Wallace hoping to make a
personal appearance at the convention -
but probably not from its rostrum -to
lead the fight for his own philosophy.
The Wallace forces hoped to purge
from the platform liberal planks on bu.s-
ing, welfare and national defense which
renect McGovern's viewpoint.
This time the McGovern forces plaMed
to join with liberal supporters of
Humphrey, Muskie and Jtep. Shirley
Chisholm to ward off the wauace attack.
McGovern today promised families of
American POWs, "We will never aban·
don those men11 if he becomes president.
He said some military capability would
be retained in Southeast Asia until the
GJs taken prisoner in the war are re-
leased. .
While working in seclusion on the ec·
ceptance speech he exJ)ects to deliver to
the Democratic Convention Wednesday
night, McGovern Jssued the statement in
response to endorsement ot "families lor
lmmediate Release," an organizaUon o[
people with husbands, sons or brothers
missing In action or held as prisoners of
war In Indochina.
McGovern expressed his gratitude and
promfJed that .he would "use every
l'elOllr<e •v•iloble to the president, in-
cluding dlrec! personal diplomacy In
Hanoi, to Insist upon relea.. of all
prlsoners •nd a complere, Impartial ac.
counting for all missing in action.••
BETfERLATE THAN NEVER!
We're only one week' late to
wish you a Happy Ind ependence
Day-but ...
Reall y, we sliould celebrate all
ye ar long.
In this spirit we are offeri ng
red, wh ite, & blue sh a g n y Io n
c a r pet in g at $7.95 an'd $8.95
ALDEN'S
installed. --
1 d e a I for boats, ch ildren's
room s, a re a ru gs, etc.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placetltla Aw.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
HOUH: U..thnilrs..tl91:JO-M.,t l9t-Sat.t :JOf9•
J
•
-!
'
•
OAJLY PILOT SC:
THE HELPFUL GUIDE
FOR TODAY 'S
HOMEMAKERS
-
;
' •
• •
·• • Tut!d•Y. July 11, 1972 OAILY PILeT 9
T W'• B k Texas Oiaip .Ju n,ior ROTC Ope1i 'to Gll:_~S WO . Inners . -ac . ·--·n ---·---p ----wAmINGTONlAPr=nw -&rerliie1 1lrtlor1lOTet>fOl':i'•m----tl uys . aper Ar hu IMOllllCed that Ute throughout Ute United Stat~&,
. j~ ROTC pr<>grams ln high Puerto Rico, Guam and • µie
New Garb e1istangels Old Faces at Plaza ' sMI FRANcisco <AP>~ :';"~~i:":':wto.!~ C.:.~~n~ho take part:Wut
' Ram.Hanko Newspapers of year In september. .' Incur no obligation to join· the
· AbU..e, 'Tex. has pur~oed Mott than IOtl high schools Army upon graduation.
Two junlor garbenslangelen of wood and a door Utrough together. Paddle wbeeb and Ute aemiweekly San Fraowco =~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~~= l which a sign invites spectators other moving--parts are Progress from Henry F • .f"ho Won prizes in a.st year'• to enter "for garbenstangeles-powered by marbles trickling Budde Publlcationa, Inc. _...,.,.....,,....,
lint Build a 8 e t t e r aons... · down through trougha worked In acquirln( Tile Program
Garbenstangel Conttsl and A . . d Dav ipln Ute design. He caU. it, f •• --·----of Its stock . No' -' ~ Pl st•c Cream cling as JU ges were e .. .;i. .. Will Decl!ion Maker." Rqrar:·H~-:..""~ •••• ~ ••• .: . w.. ... a I lnternational RaUye Saturday de Soto, radio station KMPC's "l • ~ ~ ~ ~ -~
became repeat winners. "'Man in Orange County," and Winners in the Open Division, Francisco ·market to 19 F Artifi" • IT th
nie both took_ top .P.!'~ ln Golden West College graphic edln ad$dlill0tion to$50plaandques, ~fmy-newhas ~~marketing areas it Jn-......:on or c1a I ee
be Ill arts Instructor Gene Tardy, , ,.. m e;,...t slates. alU ··-"""""' edition or t I y be t I g It ( s 0 u t b d b • .-....... , .... .._ F-" ~·,·-~·~:.· ,, .. 1ulioni .. d .,., ..... "~ ,,,. ••. -Ute g.vbenstangel pro. gar ns ange e Henry F. 11ud e, w :te --....., .,, • ~.
season contest presented by 1be judges created a special Coast Plaza gift certificates) father founded The Proeress St llltlnl llfwt It Jell YoU bite harder, chew btt· .:the Daily Pilot and South award for Walt Johnson, 24, of for first, second and · PJird· in 1923, announced the , sale Now forlhefinttime,ttienceoltma ter, eat more natf{81.1~· F1~~T
,. Coast Plaza. ..:.,, 135-A Magnolia Ave., Costa places, respectively. Jolmson jointly ·w i t h Harte-H~s. plaat0ic cream that holde den~ure1 •• l11st• ror h:!_(·6t !:5 :S.:tial tii • .. ~ · ' Bobby Davis, 12, of 1218 Mesa. He entered a tower con· was given $20 ·in 11gelt'1 as his Published Wednesdays and ~~~~~~L:e}C::e:; ~~See youryde~krc~1r_J;
Donegal Place, Costa Mesa, 1tructed of approximaiety special award. Fridays, The Progress lists a •atu111tli1.,.ofynr......U. It'•• Get~sy·to-uae ix
whose made-over ice cream 2 ooo popsicle sticks glued Junior Division winnersli~c~ir~cu~l~at~lo~n~o~f ~mo;;;;re;;;;;Ut;;-!an~uniiiqiiueiiii._.~~ii"iined~F~•x~ooo~""'~iiAiidhii"'~"ii""""~ii·~~~~, carton, "Starbengangel," won 1 received trophies and Hgelt" · 190,000. . .
in Junior Division last year, ranging from $80 for first
became the 1972 champ in the S ·t· 1J1 place to $20 for second and •10
.,
~-II "' ....... ~ CDi11.._~,__ltn.W.WriPlo....-.·
"~o. I'tn nQt lill)ning ror anylhing. 1·~ust need friends."
L.· ltf .; Boyd
i. Marsh Hare Dish
' ' . .
•am e div ts Ion w Ith COU c-1-l'fHlH-for thli'<I p1ace. . "'Slarbengangel II." ~ ., r The perpetual trophy design-
Paul Chaplin, also l,2, or 9122 Takes Form ed for the .Collegiate Division Christine Drive, Huntington by Noack Trophy Co. was
Beach, last year's third· place given to Orange Coast
winner, took second place with A new boy scout troop,. with College's two.-man team.
his entry, "Pneumatic Stati-an emphasis on camping and The OCC team, Bob Crick
tatic,11 which he told judges is· hilting, is Conning in east !Junt-and Steve shanatelt, will be
a "party pooper eliminator." ington Beach. · given complete sport outfits
Third place in the diviskm The f I r s t organizational from South Coast Plaza's Gen-
was won by Scott Ye~ch, 12, meeting for Troop 408 will be try, Ltd. as their individual
345 Westbrook Place, Costa held at 7:30 p.m\ Thursday, in ~ards.
-ntlH.ls-FASHtONS
.. HONG KONG BIG
C111tom TallorS lo Newport .• _. •
2 ~:"~T,, $1 I 0.00 I SALE
2 DAYS
ONLY ~ .. _,, -NIIMI TliltfM SUltl, SJitrt CNh a J 1ckth.
c-... t,.m ltUIMlrtch tf ,.mpla ff tlM WClrld'I tlMll ftllrla to tit.,
MY .U.. Dell¥tf'Y -4 Wltlla.
Siik Mohair Suits $55. Siik Sharklkln
Wool Sharkskin Suits ......................... .$60.
Suits -············-··-·· ..... JU. Fine Worsted Sult• $60., Sport CNtt ..... -.. -.. .$40. Cust.M ~· Shirts $6.
CALL POI APPJUNTMENT-Mr. J, S. Glen
(lotwMn 10 AM & I PM). '
THI NIWPORTIR INN
1107 JamMrH Road, Nowport l•ach
644-1700
tUES.
7-11
&
.WED.
T-12
.Really Muskrat
Mesa. His was an untitled Arevalos School; 19692 Lex-Winner of the "PleciMarch"
garbenstangel whose various ington Lane. It's fof boys lOlh contest, putting together a
parts-a buzzer, a model train years or older who live in the jigsaw puzzle pub1ished on the
locomotive, lights. etc.-wa9 area of Adams Avenue and South Coast Plaza page in the
activated by a steel ball bear' Brookhurst Street. DAILY P!lill last Wednes-
ing rolling down a coppe.r-lil)ed Dads must accompany each day was Mrs. K. Polcari
trough to close various elec-boy who wants to join the new of 10701. W. Woodbury, Garden
tric circuits. scout _ trootJ. For further in· Grove. She also was awarded
Winner in the open division _i1~orma~~tion~~i>ho~ne~962-~233~L __ _!l50~in~g~ar~be~nstan~~g~e~l !ge~u:. -~~;:;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!!!'} was Jim Hadden, 21, 223 Via .-
Orvieto, Newport Beach. His
entry, "Woozle," blows bul>
bles, shows slides of sunsets,
displays numbers on an elec·
tronic digital display board
and plays a tap recording of
"The Halleluja Chorus.'
That professional man least apt to ask a matrimonial
oounaelor for help to save hil marriage Is ... 1d to be Ute
dottor. Jt is the doctor, also, whose marriage is most
likely to gel Into trouble, the experts contend. Why Is no
·,myttery. A lot of mfdical practitioner• are known to be
·.cc::wdronted with an unusual number of temptations to step
:i~· TBOllE 10 most popular names for newborn qoby girls
'}-' th ii year, in order, are said to be; 1.
;.: Jennifer. 2. Michele. ·3. Lisa. 4. Eliza·
·:· beth. 5. Christine. 6. Nicole. 7. Allison.
:·: 8. Amy. 9. J ulie-. 10. Jane. ~· EVER eaten that·dark meat deli·
cacy known as marsh hare? How
about terrapin? It's actually muskrat,
I'm told.
EVERY IOUt honeybee is a cali-
fomian.
QUERIES -Q. "How big a v ..
· cabulary has the average 2-year-old?"
A. JWJt 272 words, say thif'txperts.. -
. Q, "CAN an ostrich run as fast as a man?"
·A. Twice u last. In spurts.
Q. "ROW many policemen were murdered in this
. country last year?"
• · A.• E1actly 126, the record shows. .
: · • 'IN A TRICKY traffic situation that calls for quick
;• reacUon the man mt the woman, is the better driver.
•· But in those tedi~us crosKOURtry hauls, it's likely the
woman, not the man, will stay alert longer, So tire Jess.
Such were the-recent' findings of the auto experts. ~ey
theorize themefore tha~ the girls actually wouJd be super1or
truck drivers w~r'e it not for the l~ding and unloading.
TALK-It's not that men don't talk as much as wom~ ..
·They do. Differe nce is women sprar ~e conversation
atoUDd indiscriminately, s(ill never nussmg a word any·
body else says. Men can't seem to do that. They ~ve to
take turns. Or such is the contention of a sociologist who
specializes in that therapeutic phenon:ienon known among
the aophomores as the sensitivity .session.
WHY J don't know, but school teachers In the West
are geoeraJly younger than the ea~tern teachers. Averag~
· mate ·teachei''in ·the -United· ·States ~s~38.-7. years old, ~ver
age woman is 44.4 years old. TRUE, more words start with "s" than with any other
!etterAddrtu mail lo L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, New-
port. Beach, Calif. 92660.
Second place went to Doug
, Parmentier, 55, 1517 Eton
Pi8ce, Newport Beach, whose
"Orange County X-rated All-
American Special" included
even a set oJ,signal flags speU-
ing out "DAILY PILOT"
(which did not,., honest, in-
fluence the judges).
Carl VanCouvering, 38, o!
1132 Salvadore st., Costa
Mesa, took third place in the
Open Dlvision1 His -garbenstangel, titled
uuntinis h ed Sympathy,"
featured old car and trailer
parts and included a handsaw
slicing its way through a block
Beach Youth
Given Award
Bill Sendra, son of Mr. 8nd
Mrs. Fred Sendra;···of 8541
DonaJd C i r c I e , Huntington
Beach, has been awarded a
$400 Standard Oil Company
4-H Scholarship.
Sendra, a Fountain Valley
Cloverdale 4-H Club Member,
was aw arded the scholarship
on 4-H achievements and
scholastic performance.
The Fountain Valley High
School graduate plans to enter
Cal-Poly State University, San
Lui! Obilj>o, Ut\!. fall and ma·
jor in vet medicine or
forestry.
MoVie Men
Facing Lure
Of Nevada ..
;; CARSON CIT Y (AP)
:Nevada's new program to lure
;movie producers into the state
:is in operation, says Darryl
Monahan of the state Depart-
men t of Eco n omic
Development.
THE
RECOGN ITION
HE DESERVES
Monahmi, deputy director
for tourism, said a network of
individual contacts has been
established in all 17 Nevada
icountles to escort interested
:rum makers to various scenic
!locations.
•: He said a three-man com-
:inittee is also worklng on an
:·advertising campaign similar
:10 those of Florida, Utah,
:.oregon and other western
fJtates.
:LMonaban said the proposed ~11tate "Movie Development
. '.Authority" wiU also fi~ure
icut what equipment rolling
!stock, such as old wagons and
;coaches and other material , is
.available for films and will
.!alto ¥e sure produce.rs can ·,et access to land where they :..nt to shoot films.
• He noted that Arizona set
:u14e ll0,000 for the coming g vtew of the fact that
Jt segments of a
terJes i.Jl Ple state
In more than fl
••• INt year.
Amtria Healthy?
vaMIIA <M'l..----=ty-our
..,_ . ti illllm1Y Austrians ...,.. • II'" Uteir healUt
,.. ..illlr 11117 or excellent.
•••• • ,.....t.complained ..
~ -.uments and 10 per--_ llid tllelr health was bad.
ii'
ROLEJC
The Rofex Day.Date .. ultimate achievement
of the-watchmakar'e-lklll, womi>y-haads
of State, laadanl of lndustiy, end famous
sports champlona-erid recognized svery-
where ea the world'• bldga of success.
A superb 3().jewel, NII-winding day end date
chronometer, gu1re~teed pr8tlSUre-proof _
to e depth of 165' when case, crown, end
crystal era Intact. The famous Oyster
case ii aolld 18 karat gold, with
matching 18 ka rat gold Praident'a
bracelet. Recognition beyond question.
The recognition he deserves. 01,000.
Do Solllelhing 8aautiful. ..
oi.,.. """"" 111¥1 ... ...... 1e111 hlitft• llllk>\Mlf'tcenl ... Ml..., cu,,.. ...
SLAVICK'S
r:.l'l-----'i'J@l!'elera Since 1917
I 8 FASHION' ISLAND
--·-·NEWPORT I EACii'-644-1380
Open Mon. and Fri. I 0 t .m. to 9:10 p.m.
Wltll !Kttltnt oh Torr•nt•, °""*• Lt etrrlltf,, LIH4111t"
•••• M' ·-Altot kl! Dl"IO i. l•• ........
• would
Wells Fargo Bank
like to save Y'!~ up·to$100
on your next loan.
If you've been considering getting a boat loan, a home ii:nprov~t loan or a loan for some other
purpose (excluding the purchase of an automobile) these special Wells Fargo Bank ooupons can
save you anywhere from $10 to $100 worth of interest. Have a look:
COUPON VALUE CHART
The More You llorrolr, The Moro You Sne! -,..-C...-.wll .. h111Ndlfen
$1,00ler-$100 $100 $100 $100 $100 I $100
$5,001 "$1.000 $ 75 $ 7S $ 75 $ 75 $75 .$75
$3.aot "$5,000 . $ 50 $ 50 $ 50
$1,501 lo $3.000 $ 25 ,. •.• ......... 36-. 41~ 60-. n-. H-. 96-.
Note: Coupon has the effect of reducing the interest you pay. For example, when
the amount financed is $4,000.00, with 43 monthly iml.allmcnts ol $103.33.eacb,
totaling $4,9!19.84, it has an ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of tt.'7%. But
by tni.na thit coupon, worth $.S0.00, your fint monthly payment ii oaly S!ll.33,
which lowers your total payments 10 $4,909.84, and rcduc::es yoor actual ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE to 11.44%. In no ct3C will coupon be honored for aiore thu amount of fint payment.
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COUPON VALUE CHARI'
. I
Tho More You Borrow, The More You Snll _,.._ c...-•••···•i.t:
$6.001 .. -$100 $100 $100 $1 00 $100 $1 00.
$4.001 "$6.000 $ 50 $ !IO • Jiii $ Jiii $ Jiii $ 50
$3.001 " $4,000 $25 $25 •• $,. $25
$2,001 "$3.000 $ 2S •• • 2S $ 25 $ 25
For •••.•••••• 36-41-60-12-14-120-
Note: Coupon bas the effect of reducina the Interest fOU pay, For eumple, when
lbe amount financed is $2,500.00, with 36 monthly 1mta1lments of $82.-47 .ch.
totalini $2,968.72. it has an ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of 11.52". But
by .using this coupon, worth $25.001 your lint monthly payment ii only $57.471 whic:h lowen your total paymeots to ~2,943.92.and reduces yoor actuaJ ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE to 11.'8%. In no c;:aae·will coupon bo honored for more
than amount d.. tint paymeaL .
I
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----·----------------·-----l---------------------------------
COUPON VALUE CHARI'
Tho More You B-OrtOW: 'Ilic More You Sae! •
'-,.. """"" c..;,.. ..... -..... ,.,
$2,o.cn .,_ $15 ' $25
I ,!IOI lo $2,000 . $15 $15 '.
l.001 to$1,500 $10 SIO
~ ...... · ... 12-11-
$21
J!•
$10
:14-
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No1" ~ hu tl1e effect of ....i..-., the -.=~ For -. -ihe..amooptfl_na(lced is $1.750.00 ~th l8 mot1lhly · d.1109.1$ eacb.
tota11n1 Yl,7t>OJU, it has an ANNO.AL PERCENTAGE RA.TE iii JS.It". a.-
by uaina this coupon, worth s 1 s.on1 your ftnt moeddy payment ii °".!t!~;2S, •
which knversyourtotal paymentsto~l,9.Sl.'10,ud ,.._yaared1111 ~nuAL 1 ~
PERCENTAGE RA'll to J.f.14%. In no case will coupon be bonoled-for more I
than lmOWlt of fiall:1'1lyrncnL I
\ , I
Clp lltese coupons nowl
.Tuck them away some-safe place. Thep, when you're teady to apply for your loan,
. bring the approprilµe coui>on to the nearest Wells Fargo Bank. .
,
•t :· ·:: : :: <· : : : ...
~ ~ ~ ::: .; ., . ' .,
Wells Fargo .Sank has over 280 offices lhroughout California. Coeta M<lat Olfoce: ¢! Eaal 171h Streel, ~71 Assets ,<Nflr $7 bil110n/Member F .0.1.E;
~ Ot ange Cosst Pilol..-, •• , ., , . . -~·---
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T"""'1, Ju!y 11, 1972 DAJLV PILOT U .
Tuesday's Closing Priees-Gnnplete New York Stock Exchange List ..
Investors Wary,
Convention Eyed
NEW VOil& (AP) -WbUe·prlces sa11ged Tues·
. day ip the stock market's \bird consecubve declin·
Ing session. brokers and buyers kept a wary eye on
developments at the Democratic National Conven·
lion. Tradinl was dull.
Declining issues on the New York Stock Ex·
change were running more than 2 to 1 ahead ot ad·
vanclng stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial average
was off 6.40 points.
lfl4om .iufd :r • .,~ ,u plT.,. I.le•
r 1,.J !ii·n 11 t1r • f t fe.I f'-r.11 .to U11t:f ,'5d 1toir111 .2' flltunit • .lO tY Pw 1.lO twbtr .101 ~fi 1~ lOT T 2.3' Ill .» wmnr l .OI wmnll'f ,.,..
YHgi .10d N~se; 2.oe NYlE:; t::
Nl111Mo I.lo Nl1Mpf J.61)
NllM.pf 3.fO •11M.(lf S.2.S
N q ,$11 ·'*' NL lrw:lust I
NLTCp .lOd
NorlalkWa J NorllnC .lad
Norrl1I 1.o.I
J.IA C11el .60 NA Mt 1.20d
N .i.11'1 Pihl l NoA Ak 1.60
J.lcAA llf '"" NARk11f I.» N~f Uf ,9f NoCntG1 AO NolllGs 1.n NllGuw 1.fO N 11\PS 1.12 NoNIGI l .60
NaSt'°'w 1.77 NoSPof •.56 Ni;SPol 7.U NeSPpl t,,,
NO<'!hgtlt E NorlhtopC I
J.lthrppf 1.'5 Nwi!Alrl .•.S Nw !11n 1.«t NW1t In .lid
NW'l l Ind ws N~t ln pl $
Nw1l1pt l,JO Nwrt nPtC $ NwMu l.11d Now.TSU 16 ""~" 'y Nori Sim . NrtSI pf 1. NVl"Co 1
P1(Gl1 t.n
PIK t.t• 1 ... P1(P1trl .«I P1(Pwr t.44
'"IWll Air P< tT 1.20 P( T T 11! 6
Pee Tlt1 ·'°"' Pllflll Wdlll P11ftotWb pf P1lm Ill .25 Pin Arn WA P1nlldl l,IO P1P1r1; ,llOo ··~i· ·" 1 n 1.04 ~.. 11'1 .40 P1"° In<: PIYLNW .'CT ~ .. 11 G1Uon
tM cenir =tt 1.0A ~enn FrV7t
P1C tf ).°'!i ~'~ ;!J ~:10
PPt·PI I.Ml ,. p pl ....
PPl:l>f •.SO Pennwi 1.20 p,nMll>f 21.'J
"'""" pf ,,.., PtMlOll .IO Ptn1lpf 1.33
P-' Or ..55 P..ci• 2.16 Pesi1IC0 l P1rldnEI .:n Pit Inc: 1,l5 P1!1n[l>f ,IO Pt!ffPI 1.20 P1lr!1 St .Cl
Pllrl 1.16d ··~~ "' Pflzt .M:llo ~~fi1e~ ?:~ PllEl.f.' 7,IO PllllEh1I ™ Phil El pf 7 "rJ pl ... Ph •Ill 3.13 Ph iub 1.20 "ln.sM i.v Ph P•ln .20 l"hlldnd pl I PMlf'tt 1.3!> PhJIVnH .«I Plcllwlk Tnl1
p HING I"' P!llllt>ry .«
PlanG1s .12 Plllll'I' 8 .61 PlllF«; .IO PITH FIW Pl P!Tl1lon ,60IJ Pl1n Ra.rel'!
Pl1'1'bo¥ .12 Pln11p ,12 Pol~rold ,n PoMtC .80 Parterl>f Sift P«tGE 1.A2 Po1r.ttr1 F I PolEI Pwr 1 Pol!J pl l ift Potl!;lpl 2.4'
PPGtnd lM
l"rtfl'I pf .to Proct GI 1111
Prod!litJ .10 l"llS Co~ 1,1,
l"SColpf /"' P!E•G .n P E Gls rt• PSEGPI ,,6? PSEGM' l,'11 P5EGPI •.30 PS~!fllf J.OJ ~~eG:f ::: ;::s Ind ,.16 .~l:f ,':, PSlndpf 1.0I
'
Phone
6424321
For
Weekender
Ad vertising
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
Finance
Briefs
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JI DollL Y PILOT .. T..W.,, Ju~ 11, 1972
J For The
Record '·
Eyes Bus Service
Set,s Bus Service
I ANntoNY SCHOOLS
MAllOI CINTll
2M "'"" Cellttf C.t• Mtst, ta"""'" ,., 1n41 t7t.JJIJ
1711 I. 1.-Md It.
.......,..,Cll,ft94 '
. Pll.1714J nwtt1
I do. Right to the door of the store.
"A window dresser Is no dummy
• , • and I know the benefits oi riding
the ExtnlCar to work Instead of driv-
ing. Expenae-wise, I save $130 per
month on the 8verage. That's Rite a
ral19 In PIY with no deductione.
"But .there'• more. The ExtraCer
drops me off clo!e to the store. No
'
\" , I I
hunting for a parking place. And
when I work late, no long walk to a
spoolty parking lot or garage.
"The ExtraC8r Is dependable, too.
I carry a time tablf, sq there 's no
wailing and with my Monthly Paaa I
ride as ottan as I please. You bet, the
EidraCar has a lot going ·for It!"
• •
Population Meeting
Slated · at UC Irvine
'
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.Mitt 1~ .... , ..... ,.
1 .... 10 ........ """"1• L.-t Oly, ........ ... -.1-............ ~ ..._. Ad11l1tltn fUI• CNldfeAtllld«11,_
HAMS .. • So Good It WID ' .
he
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It's
Convention
. Time in Miami
And .••••
The best way to
keep abreast oi the can-·
didates ... the issues'. ..
the day to day develop:.
ments, is with Cable TV.
Keep informed with our
•
•
·ollwention .!/.
FREE ource INSTALLATION
to the added
programs. See the issues
clearer with the best
reception on the ticket
And politics isn't all
you'll get with Cable TV.
"'
movies. The-champion-
ship sporting events. · ·
The best'spectaculars
the networks have to
off er. All the program-
ming you might have
: missed without Cable TV.
. You and Cable TV. It's a
winning ticket
TELE RDmPTER
• -r::-=vt • . LI\.'../
extra channels. Be a party There's the first-run Set emylhing thtre ii to set
~
.Our R~r $14.95 Cable TV Installation FREE . .
You llll' orllt 1 _,., •• -tn-. °"" ................ .
eCz; Qt&f #lu ,.,_.,._,.,.,. Dial 642-3260
.
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• N• ~: Nt r
I ~· ~~ ~~ m NI NI
" "' ~t N ~A N• ~
N NA
N • "" "" NI ~
N No ~" N ~" Nor ·~ "'" Nw Nw ... .. ... Nw ~ "'" "" NV
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Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stoek ~change List
• :'Trading Vol11me,
' Prices Both Off
~'"" ·" iil.•Pr .IO I ..... ,.. pf ' f>lpf l.60 Outltf C AS °'iNG 1.U m 1 i:~ °"' M 1 Outlloord M 1
§lll l:!I Co 2 t!<U.L .70 .. ~ .... OhPw t .04 ~=~! i.ll Oil''\: lndl ~~,:~ OWt!lfF .11 §" "' II l,.0
r.:d ·.:i
f'•C0•1 t.n f'acLlt 1.61 Ptef'tlrl . .0 P1ciP111r 1.u P1dws.t Air •• !Ji" 1.10 Pe Tpf 6 ··~ ..... Pt•• W.otl
f: ne Wll.Ji :!UI 1:il .,.... .'1 ·:w· ... i" . '·" :f' M 1: • •• r" f Gii cm ~' -Ctnlr . , .. .:::11. 1" f'9ftn Frv I ~~'.'I ....
" 0-:, 1:;8 ' c.;;;,;; .. ,, •=r:.1' ,~;! ·~'·" P9M pf l.U f' Or .lS .. J.16 .... , , ' P~n I .11 P lrpcj l.U
p rPSI 1~ ~=:re,.. .2' ~el _pl l.S, .tr t I.Nd
l1tt' .MMI
Phtll 0 /:'° ••11•11 .. 6'1 ··~ ,, ·~ .. pf 7. P~E !.P.I 7. ··~·11::1 of 7 P h -•.40 ..... :l !·" Phl b .:IO
P tlll pM 1.24 Pnll 1111 .10 ""'I ..,, P I nH . .cl P G 1 24 P II 1.« p ••• 12 •11 8 .61 P It oro .IO Pittston .6<111 Pl•!\ A:1a.rcl'o p$= ,12 ,. .12
P rod .» Porttc .IO
POl1GE 1.42 ••r!Ch F 1 ~:: t ~WI'.~
Pol lpl 4,04 PPIJlnd 1.'6
Prtfl'\18i .» Pr"" .fO Protl I IV. ~~ ..
1
,.\' di
PS •O 1.72 ~i G: {lJ ·1 pl '·"° p pf '·'' p ttf s.os PS Of 7.SJ PS pf l .i:. Pu . !'Id J,16 PS frlH• f_,, Pullllckr !It
Pu.tllal .2'11
PuwtRC ·"'° P\nfSP 1.84 PuHIMl'l1n 2 P\/f'l)Cp .u Pllf'tilttr ....
~IW .!S,lll:K ~l -~ IS ~ ,_ .. Mel M.. • . .. . tOt.IO fi~ lira .... ....: l~ tlll tw A T & T ....... , .0,700 • ._. c:111• Cot. '"ttr.11 , . .. n.toO .c·r. •.. :::·. ,~ J ;,~ ~.~ .. ~ <• ... :: 111 •••••••• • ' Oii ........ ff, ····-" . . ~ "i-.. .. Ollna. •. -\6. IM I.a -··•·•· 66. k'l\ T Wtl •••• , -1' WlrNr • .,, "'6
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DAIL PllOT JI
Briefs
C Bulk Snle
LOS ANGEL ES -Harry
Saltzman, c h 3 I r m n n of
1·l'Chnicolor · Jnc.'s executive
conuuit tee, bas sold the. bulk
of his Technicolor !tock for
$7 6 million to nn undl!closed
buyer, the c..'Ontpo.ny said.
·Briefs
e xero.r Suits • NEW YORK -Xerox Corp.
says il bas botn IU<d by two
wbsldlarlts ot L I t t 0 0
..!,i,d!;!!trle!, Inc.. In two
• '1'lralc .ctlonl charging -crox with trying to monopo-
lize trade in office copl!:!rs.
Xerox 1lso said Lltlon bad
filed a nsponse In a Now York
ledcral court to a patent io-
ftlngement action Xuox had
brou'!ht against Utton In c:oo-
nection \\'1th L 1 l lo n ' 1
markctln& or an olli<e coplor.
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JI DAILY PILOT Meftdiy, July 10, 1972
l'••llw C:lrcms '111 Bii Ke•11e Only 10 Percent Work Well
·Cold-Remedies Under Fire
WASHINGTON (AP) -The coagestlon; Wyamine Sulfate congestion; Tri-span U Hout
National Aca<lemy of Sciencts Nasal; Wyamlne In b a I er: decongestant tablel.t Io r symptomatic reliel ol na.ul accept& 1eu than JO percent of Clopane HCL IOUIUon j Va!IOI• congestion due to hay fever;
ellectivenesa claims made for y 1 N a • a l So 1 u t I o n and Ampar Timed Release
a repr~sentative sampling of Phenylpropaoolamlne H C L capsules for nual congestion
27 tW>nprHCription cot d Nyscap Urned re1eue for due to hay fever.
remedies. ~~~ct ~or ~~f ofco::;s,t~~~~ Possibly effective -Tuamlne
Among popular over-the-Inhaler; Tagathen Tablets;
couater (OTC) compounds AntistJ.ne.Privine ·Nasal -Solu·
rated Ineffective in a report tlon as a decongestatit-an-
just released is Coricldin t I h I atamine; lnhiston-APC
cold tablets, manufactured by M, , k • Tablets for hay f e v e r :
Scbering Corp. or Bloomfield, inis irt Brt.tlamln APC Tablets !or N.J. pain relief following dental
C o n t a c sustained-release • D 9 w o r t ; Pbtnylpropaf!Olamine
"\.capsules, made by Menley & annerOUS. f!Cl Nyscap capsule for nasal
Armstrong -
Reinstated
In Church
PASADENA (AP)
Garner Ted Armstrong ls back
at h!J post. as radio and
television commentator for the
Worldwide Church 0£ God and ,
Ambassador College, b o t h
headquartered here.
With his father, Herbert W.
Armstrong, standing at h!J
side last week , the younger
church leader said his private
life ls no one else's business
and that h!J public lile ls more
than ever dedicated to God. James L a b o r a t o r I e s of " congestion and as a timed· Phil d I hi j d d . release capsule; Nasalalre The senior A r m s ~ r o n g ' a e p a, were u g e KAMPALA, l1 g and a Inhaler; Quadrin Tabletf for
• posshe lb
1
1y efl~dive, 1::,earun!he· g (UPI) -The judge told • naaal C<!Ogesllon; C 0 n tac founder of both the church and
•<.. t' and &L-It ... , • • t re s no eVJ ence t t Y Else Hajtelin, 31, a Dan-ca~es for 12-hour relief and college, said he pennltted his -..w~I 1m.1 -_lJlLl.1.V.tn:J.Leaty_._. __ ~--wor.k-12-hour.&--against-cold !sh tourist, she risked a for relief of colds' nasal con· son to return last month after
congestion. three-month jail sentence gesUori i Trl·Span tiblet~ ~for 5':15P:f~lon last winter for
Among 4 S effectiveness for walking around in a l2-hour relief; Ampar· Timed G 1SC1phnary reasons.
claims (or the cold remedies miniskirt. He let her go Release <;apsules for nasal He said his son's repen·
evaluated, the academy's Na-with the warning, adding congestion due to cold.Sand as lance, a condition of return
' 1972
• 18th Annual
SOUTHLAND
HOME .&
GARDEN
SHOW
JULY 14".23
ANAHEIM CONYINTION CINTll
(•lt conditioned I '
... ·--w HOURS: s..11 p.nt. w .. kdoys
Noon ·) 1 p.m. Soturdcryt
Noon -9 p.m. Sundays
A .. TS ••••••••'2.M , .............. , ...
.......... 11,._ .. ,.....
Valley Peop"le Battle
Tiny Troub"lemakers
tional Research Council that the government was a timed-release. capsulei and from several months of exile
judged four as effective, eight not legally responsible for Chlorephrine Nyscaps for tn Colorado, is "full end A GEOIGE COLOUllS PIODUCTtoN
ineffective as fixed com-molestatlon~o{ girls wear-colds; nasal congestion. permanent, otherwise h el;~~~~~~~~~========~
COACHE!l.A ( A P ) -rounding areas from March lo
Imagine hundreds of gnats• November, forcing field work-
1wanning ever your face, ers to wear veils. They drive
crawling toward your eyes, away go I le r s from Palm
mouth and ears. For residehts Springs. Some cf the gnats
of the Coac'lella Valley, such a carry conjunctivitis, an eye-
prospect takes no Imagination irritating malady also know as
at all. Tbey've been living "pinkeye."
with the problem for years. In an Infested field, as many
binalions, five effective with ing short sltirts. Ineffective as fixed com-wouldn't be here."
reservations, 15 possibly er-binations·Histadyl & A.S.A. The two men met with a
fective and 13 probably ef-Compound; Decapryn with Pasadena newsman as Garner
feclive. • aspirin, phenacetin and caf-Ted prepared a 30-~ute
Rated effective without Dog•ged Case £ein; Coricldin Cold Tablets; television aegment on "Proo£
reservatlon were lsophrin nose The p ho r in-AC Tablets; of God."
drops for nasal congestion; LONDON (AP) _ Heavy Inhiston·APC Tablets for Garner Ted's suspension for
Fedrazil for hay fever ; and earth moving equipment failed symptomatic relief of colds; undisclosed sins rocked the
Chlorephrine Nyscaps for hay-to reach a terrier trapped four Bristamin APC 1 Tablets for 75,000-member r e I i a: i o u s
fever nasal congestion and as days in a 30-foot crevice. Then symptomatic relief of colds; group.
a time-release capsule. ·the dog's owner dangled his relief of colds' nasal con-The 81-year-old Armstrong
\
For Advertising In
OUT 'N ABOUT
Phone
Norm Stanley .
642-4321 'They even have a name for as 500 to l,000 female eye
waving a hand in frustration gnats will land on the face,
at the gnats -the "Coachella searchlng for protein.
At the request of the Food cap at the end of a rope into Tri· Sp an 12 -Hour said God has forgiven his son
and Drug Administration, NAS the hole. The terrier sank hiJ Decongestant Tablets f o r for self-professed sins and
studied 420 OTC drugs as part teeth into the cap and was relief of colds' nasal conges-asked why people couldn't do
or an effectiveness review of hauJed to the surface. tlon. the same. ____ 2================== about 3,000 prescription drugs.l...;..::.:_:_ _ __:.c:_ ________________ _
Valley salute." Researchers at the Universl·
But relief bas arrived in the ty of cilifom.ia at Riverside
form 0( fr e e z Hried eggs developed the lethal bait being
laced with insecficide. used q ainst the pe!ts in the
'I1le hippelatea eye gnat in-Q>achella Valley and ( r o rn
rests the valley and' 8Uf-Palm Springs to Thermal.
Solid Role
Dehydrated ·egga are blended
with w a t e rt fermented for
10 d a y s In pl astic barrels,
freeze.<lrled and mixed with
an insecticide which kills the
gnats but not -their natural
enemies, officials say.
A bout 25 percent of the OTC-
drug claims were judged ef-
fective, compared with about
60 percent or the prescriplion-
drug claims rated effective or
probably effective.
Effective/Fedrazil for hay
fever; Chlorephrine Nyscaps
for nasal congestion due to
hay fever and as time-release
capsule; and Isophrin nose-
drop solution for symptomatic
relief of nasal congestion in
colds, sinus and hay fever. For Sophia
ROME (AP) -Sophia
Loren bas been .. cast" in
a new role -Ceres, Ro-
man goddess of agrlcul·
tore -on a medal issue
by the U. N. Food and
Agriculture Organization.
· The medal, struck in
bronze, sliver and gold,
commemorat.s ; !he lO
years that FAO bu been
hued In Italy. Mia I.am
Lt represented In U.-
quarter lace, bol4lril ..
ear of wheat
The concoction has reduced
the number of gnats by 80 to
90 percent where it's been used
says Dr. Mir S. MuJla of
UC Riverside. .
Though it's not known ex-
actly what attracts the gnats
chemically, the egg -base
answers Lbe female's need for
protein, researcbers say.
'lbe Coachella Valley Mos-
quito Abatement D i s t r i c t
distributes the bait, with men
In llDall, three-wheeled cyctes
n l c bamed "gnatmbblles"
~ the llUlf thro~gh
grape Ylneyuds,·and ""'s of
citrus trees and date palms
and at goH courses.
Effective with reservations
-Bena-Fedrin solution ;
Inhiston-APC t a b 1 e t s for
symptomatic relief of aches,
pains, colds, hay fever and
simple headaches; Bristamin
APC tablets as pain reliever·
antihistamine and as a pain
reliever; and Quadrin tablets
clalmlng lo be safer and laster •
than aspirin.
Probably effective -J>ro.
padrtne HCL EliJ:ir; J>ri..
vjn HCL n a s a I jelly;
B~rex Inhaler; Forthane
Inhaler; Antistine-Privfne for
symptomatic relief of nasal
Our ''give 'em the brush"
Perm Sale!
·Now in our Beauty Salon
A comp lime ntary professional brush comes with
you r Brush 'n Go Perm, now sale pr iced for a
carefree su mmer. No muss, no fuss styling. Just
a casual set for upkeep. For a limi~d time only,
Ihis un ique perm, plus your gift brush. Reg. $30.
Now, incl uding cut.$15 . •
BeoutY So Ion.
ROBINSON'S
NEWl'OlT ~ENT!~ • I FASHION ISLAND M4·2100 SHOr TONIGHT UNTIL t :lO r ,M.
• . '
ltS one reason we need
--additional power plants.
-
Have you ever thought
about how electricity puts
food on your table?
Electricity helps grow it,
freeze it , can it and ship it.
And think about how
electriCity helps you pre-
pare food for your family.
As the population expands,
there will be more Alvins ·
(and Alices) to feed.
That means more farm
production-and more
demand for electricity.
To meet these demands,
Edison must be permitted
•
to build additional power
plants now. And trans·
mission lines to deliver
that power.
Otherwise, there simply
won't be enough
electricity to go around.
Nuclear power plants are
one way to provide more
electricity. They're proven, .
'
clean a:nd smog-free.
Other ways to generate
electricity are under
intensive research or being
developed now. Meanwhile,
existing methods are
steadily being improved.
If you ever hear somebody
say we don't need more .
electricity, just think
about food.
Food and electricity ..
The t\vo go together.
s' E
Southern Callfomls Edison "" -""°°""""'-
LI
Planners Part1d.e~t
R eq~st
Agendas
.. Ant_iwar Group
' g Denial
"Right hand, this is !en hand. This Is
what I'm doing."
Tfiat's ~ the sort of ·c0mmuntcatlon
aoughl by the Laguna Beach Planning
Commission with the City Council1 a,
communication which according to the
Plannlng Commission bas been painfully
Jacking, L
To assist liaison between the two
governmental botlies, planning com-
missioners at their Monday night study
business to them as well as city coun-
the packets of city cquncil agendas and
business to them as wel las city coun·
cilmen.
. Then planning commissioners c o u 1 d
follow council activities and appear ·
before the city fathers if an important
Planning Commission item were to be
acted upon.
Commissioners also mulled t h e ·
possibility or changing their meeting day
to enable clerical work to be completed
on commission actions and minutes. As
things now stand, commission meetings
precede council meetings by two days.
This does no~ allow time necessary for
processing of the paperwork ..
The meeting lime would be changed so
that the commission met a week and two
days before the council.
The commission concern over com·
municaUon has been building for some
time.
·Planners have been dismayed to find
themselves out in the cold on some Jetms
-such as the proJ>OSed aignallzation at
Thalia and Glenneyre Streets -and into
the frying pan on others -such as the
Campus Drive report.
Commissioners also attempted to
unravel the environmental impact state-
ment red tape tangle.
The impact statements are required by
atate Jaw for any governmental project
such as road construction, sewer line
placement, park development and so
fourth.
But the legislation is cloudy on what
exacUy is to be done with the impact
statement after tt is written.
A case in point is the pending Campll!
Drive land purchase. An impact state-
ment made by city staff dea lt only with
the impact the pure purchase of land
would have on that land.
It did not consider the implications of
road building, as only the purchue was
the question at issue. /
But planning commissioners in a
rather testy critique of the report said
that the land purchase and future use of
the propeJ'.ly could not be divorced.
The report waa forwarded to the cJty
council with the commiJsion request
that the road purchase a p p r o v a I
previously made by the city council be
delayed so that another study could be
made.
DesJ)ltetheplannen' reservations;ttie
councU affirmed its intent to buy the prop-
erty. County supervisors also approved
purchase of the county's part or the land.
Discussion at the study session Monday
seemed to establish lhal the commission
may send impact statements back to the
drawing b o a r d if the' commission
disagrees with approach or conclusions.
Further, it appears that future impact
11tatements will be treated as a vehicle
for informlng the ublic of governmental
Intentions. In Laguna that may be lbe
only action necessary, observed one com·
missioner.
• "The legislation seems to invite You to
give the Environmental Impact Report to
the community, and in Laguna, that
means we'll all hv.; about it,'' remarked
Roger Lanphear.
Hawaii-Dockers Idle
HONOLULU (UPI) -Hawail's 900
longshoremen sbu t down p o r t s
throughout the islands Monday to
register displeasure over sta1led contract
negotiations. Another work·stop meeting
was set today by the International
Longshortmen's and Warehousemen's
Unioil, an action that brings a halt to the
vital Shionln~ lifeline. ..
DAILY PILOT
A msjor
rna_rch ~
and who can
as of Jast
Orange
An
Veter
whid!
Wasl)lngt
San Clem
c:oorl to figb
this saturday's
pC~ber officials said this · morning
that they as yet have not been served
with any court documents in the asserted
legal action, and said tha~ unless they
are served, they Will not comment at
l"'glh i• the disputes,
The antiwar group it has been
determined, applied recently f o r
permission to enter a 100-man marching
unit in the parade.
The permission was denied by a special
parade screening committee of the
chamber. The panel cited stiff rules
about politically~riented entries being
exempted from the parade.
The veteran's grou"' then decided to
seek court action, and a final ruling is
Bandits Hunted ;
Gouged Out Eyes
Of Two Victims
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -Police of·
ficials have assigned 10 extra detectives
to an "around-the-clock, check~ut·all
leads" search for two men who gouged
out the eyes of two robbery victims.
Police identified. the latest victim as
RDberl Paro, 11, of Rochester.
He w .. attacked and blinded by two
robbers Sunday night as be worked at a
Main Street ga• station.
Authorities aaid two men took Paro
down a side street, robbed him or 110,
gouged out one of hiJ eyes and injured.
the other. He was in critical condition at
St. Mary 's Hospital.
Earlier Sunday, a Jone robber who
resembled one of Paro's assailants goug·
ed out the eye.s of Samuel C. Schafer, 72,
also of Rochester, police said.
The assailant asked for fresh orange
juice in Schafer's store and when told
that there Wa3 only orange soda, he
demanded money . ·
Jn a brief scuffle, the robber gouged
out both of Schafer's eyes. Schafer was
reported in good condition at Genes.see
Hospital.
Police said they are seeking two men,
one man described as about 30, with a
medium Afr<Htyle haircut, and the other
about 20.
Head of Citizen
Group Critical
Of Contentions
Q>nt.ention cf Laguna Beach school
trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald
Linke that they represent the majority of
the community is "ludicrous," 'Thomas
Cassidy, president of Concerned Citizen!i
for Schools said today.
' The head of the group seeking to recall
the two trustees said charges against
Mrs. Glllette and Linke have been
answered by them, and by board presil:
·dent Mlliam Thomas, With "empty
.phrases and half truUts."
"Jn tht first place," said Cassidy, "on·
ly 27 percent of those registered in
Laguna voted in the election •which put
them in, and Of that number, each got
less than half the votes cast. So of the
total electorate only 11.S percent voted
for Mrs. Gillette and 10.3 percent voted
for Linke. I don't consider that any man-
date from the people."
Cassidy added, "I don't know why ·a lot
of people didn't vote in the last election;
maybe they were too complacent about
our excellent school system: maybe they
didn't think it could be threatened.
"But the fact is it now is threatened
and seriously so. If it were not, we as
parents, citizens and teachers would not
begin the recall action."
Tiie on,,.. co.st l».ILY P'JLOT, wlTfl Wllldt
h combined tt111 N..,.,.,.... h J1Ublllhed w
' th• °"'"Ge tout Publltfllnl COmpeny, s.,..
rtll tdlllona IN publllhld, Mcnd1y tt1111111fl
Frld1y, far Cllslt MIMI, H ..... rt Bud!,
Huntl"81on affeh/Fovnttln V•lley, L•11vn•
Be1dl, TrvlM/Stddltbadt 1rri/ $.rt Cle~fll/
$fl'lo JVlll C1pt.tr1110o A llt19l1 Nllonll
ldlllon h publbflld Stlllr"lll)'l Ind Sund1ys,
The prlnclpel pvbllahlllf Jl(lnl Ii 11 Ut W11t
.. ., llrltt, Colt• Mw, Clllfornl•, t»a6.
a:o&.rt H. Wied
P'rtlldll'lt •nd P1.lblllhlr
J1ck It C11rl1y
VICI ..... 1c1.,1 Ind Ctnir1I Mlntlltr no"'•• k11¥n Editor
TI\omtt A. M11rphl111 MIM!llnl £dl1W
Chitin H. looi Rlchtnf '· Nill . A»llllnf M1nttll'll Edrtort
In answer to Linke'a contention that
••recall in Laguna is becoming an in·
strument of orderly government and is a
and intent of orderly government,"
Cassidy' Aid, "Recall is tn fact an in-
strument of orderly government and ss a
right guaranteed the people of California
by our Constitution. All we are saying is
that now we have seen these two trustees
in action for a. year, we as citizens and
taxpayers want a chance to make our
voices heard.'' i..---222 For11t A¥11t11•
M1llll1t All4tttt; P.O ........ 92611 --. co.fl M..1 n W.. ,_,. Strllt . ·=dll -"'"""" lov!WI ... """' 9'1d't: 1111$1-.:11 ...... ... '"' c t1; as *"" •• C1n11M .. .
Toi-cnu '42-4111 . '
ClwHW A"*'" ts 1 '4.M&Jt
1.9t-lllllU AI 01faf ..... S
Coast Unit to Hold
Luncheon for Solons
'
expected Friday, it was ,Jeamed in lht
court 'ol Judge James f. Judge.
"W~ c·an•t COftl11lent on the Incident
unless · we receive formal documents
-rel1ting . to a court action," Chamber
manager Robert Evans said today.
Treasurer
W ill A ppear
A t A ·irporter
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
the United States, will be guest of honor
at a re-elect the President fund-raising
diMer set for July 18 at Irvine'a
Airporter IM.
The dinner is planned by the Orange.
County Hispanic Committee to re-el ect
President Nixon. All persons are invited
to attend . Dinner reservations are $15
per person.
Mrs. Banuelos is the sixth woman and
the first of Mexican-American descent to
hold the position of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Presi-
dent Nixon cited her "extraordinarily
successful career as a self-made
businesswoman."
Mrs. Banuelos launched her Los
Angeles food processing firm on $400 in
1949. Today the firm grosses ~ million
annually and employes number more
than 300. ·
She became director and in 1964
chairman of the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Los
Angeles.
She was also named Outstanding
Businesswoman of the Year by Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A reception is planned for 1 p.m.
followed by the dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from
Ticket Chairman James. H. Miranda at
558-0262 or from ticket co-chairman Alex
Acevedo at 54:3-1953.
Scores Attend
Athenagoras'
Funeral Service
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP)-Funeral
services for Ecumenical P a t r i a r c h
Atbenagoras were held today before
scores of officials representin_g many na·
tions and the Protestant ana Roman
CatiioUc churches.
Meanwhile the election of a new
spiritual leader for the 250-million
member Eastern Orthodox Church gave
the Turkish government inete.a:sing con-
cern in the face of protests from the
Greek government.
Black-robed Orthodox bishops with
nowing white beards chanted the funeral
aervice, presided over by Metropolitan
(Archbishop) Mellton, a member or the
patriarchal Holy Synod. Meliton is corr
sidered the leading candidate to succeed
Athenagoras who died F'Tiday at 86.
Hundreds of persons packed the small
church of St. George within the one-acre
patriarchate. Michael Ramsey,
archbishop of Csnterbury and Anglican
Church head, stood next to Pope Paul's
r ep r esentative , Jan Cardinal
Willebrands, president of the Vatican's
Secretariat for Christian Unity.
Charles Barnes
Rites Conducted
Funeral services were held Monday in
Sheffer Laguna Beach Chapel for Charles
Jenckes Barn ea, Jr., longtime Laguna
Beach resident who died Thursday at the
age of 59 .
Mr. Barnes, who resided at 3058 Zell
Drive, had lived in the Art Colony since
1923, was a charter member and past
president of the Rotary Club, pastcom·
missioner of Boy Scouts for the South
Coast District, a member of the Elks
Club and an active volunteer wilh Little
League and Babe Ruth baseball learns.
He is survived by his widow, Frances ;
son, Charles Barnes III of Seattle;
daughter,· Constance B. McClish of San
Jose; grandsons, Christopher Barnes of
Redlands and Mark McClish of San Jose ;
granddaughters, Elizabelh Ware of Dana
Point and Florence Barnes Ford of
Redlands, and greal·grandsons, David
and Kelly Ware of Dana Point.
I
Terrorist Nixed
P sychology Test
ZRIFIN, Israel (IJP) -A thr ... judge
military court refused a defenae request
todoy la order psychologlcal ttst& for
Japanese lerrorlrt Koto Jlkamoto.
Only 90 minutes earlier, Okamoto said
he didn't went the tests because be is a1
normal as anyone else.
''From a ·psychological point of view
T1l1p•111 4t4-t4U
Qlpyrlgtlt, tm, °"'"'* Cotti ..........,. """"I "Y· NO' ,..,. ltlrift, 1"-t'9t11N. Id "4'111 f911ttr • .,_.~ MrtJrl
IN'I' M "'"""*' Wllllovt tlllCJlll ... mlulo!I ef ~r[lflt .,,_,,
Membeu of the Orange Counw Coast
Auoclatll>n will hoot stale and county
lcglslatou for a opeclal luncb<on al 11:30
1.m. Friday in the Balboa Boy Club.
Cou\ Moociltlon members and gliem
wtu 1*r reporla on 1pecill leglalaUoo al·
feeling the coutllne 11 bolb the coonly
and stale level, according to John Mac-
nab, president of the coast a1SOClallon.
· l'm a normal man and there i& nothing · wrong with me."
Okamoto Is on trial on chargea stern·
rnlng from Ute Loci lntern1Uonal Airpol'.l
messacre In Tel A v1v on May 31. The at-
tack left 26 ~ dead and 71 other•
wounded. Two other Japeose die<! during
the attack.
I
ifCOl'd tlle• ........ Mid ti COii• Mal,
C1llf0n'ltl. lubtcTr.t"" bf ~l'f'ltf' GM 1Mf11111¥1 11¥ m1ll U.11. motlllll'I'' Plllltrlt't
ClltllntllW $2,'5 lftOl'lll'll'(.
~.
For rewvatlons la the luncheon, Phone -1. er contact the Hunling)on &each
Chamber of Commerce oH!ce. ·
I
• • . . .........
..
llnconventi onal Delegates
Thelma Bucbboldt Qefl), vi ce chairman or the Alaskan delegation,
and Shawn Miller, delegate from Pocatello, tdahd. came cos tumed in
,_.... contrast at the Democratic convention in Miami Beach.
NASA Score s 3 Astronauts
For Unauthorized Acti ons
WASHINGTON (AP) -The space
agency today disciJ)lined the three Apollo
15 astronauts for carrying 4 0 0
unauthorized postal covers to the moon
and back last July and then turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance in West
Germany.
The 100 moon.stamped envelopes later
apparently were so ld to stamp collectors
for $1,500 each, the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration said.
NASA said after an investlgaiton that
astronauts David Scott , Allred Worden
and James Irwin "exercised poor jlJd&·
rnent in their action.
"Therefore, they will be reprimanded
and their actions will be given due con·
sideration in their selection for future
assignments," the agency said.
Dr. George Low, NASA deputy ad·
ministrator, commented:
"Astronauts are under utreme strea
in the months preceding • flight to the
moon , and their poor judgment in car-
rying the unauthorized covers must be,
considered in th.is light.
"Nonetheless, NASA cannot condone
these actloris ."
President Pays
Surprise Visit
To Capo Cafe
President Nixon -sporting a grand
appetite for Mexican food -dropped into
his favorite local restaurant Monday
night.
It was the first visit to the El Adobe ln
S!in Juan Capistrano in at least a year
for the President and his small party,
And the Chief Executive sat far from
any available television sets -holding
true to his ai~'s promises that the ,
President would not alter his schedule to
follow the Democratic National Con·
venlion. (Related story, Page S.)
Nixon was accompanied on the
surprise dinner outing by Reader'•
Digest Board Chairman Hobart Lewi1,
close friend C. G. "Bebe" RebOio of
Florida and Presidential Navy Aide Lt.
Cmdr. Craig Campbell.
Nixon ordered chlle relleno and tacos
from the bill of fare, then later placed
another order for more tacos.
Wire services, in an apparent con-
cession to Eastern readen, described
chlle relleno as "green pepper enveloped
in an omelette-like cheese wrapper.'1
NASA said it learned that the Apollo 15
crew agree11 at one time to provide JOO
covers from their forthcOlning mission
to the acquaintance In return for estab-
lishment of a "trust fund " for their child·
ren.
"After !he covers had been given to the
acquaintance, however. lhcy realized-on
their own -that this was improper and
declined to aceept either the trust fund· or
the alternaUve offer or samps in ex·
cban(e for the 100 poatal covers," NASA said.
The Apollo ts crew, U~e those on
earlier moon missions, had NASA 's
permission, within established pro-
ctdurea, to carry personal souvenir-type
ltems1 Including some-postal covers.
The permission was granted with the
condition that the articles be retained by t~ astronauts or be given to personal
friends. They were not to be used for
commercial or fund-ralaing purposes or
peraonal gain, NASA said.
On Apollo JS, the astronauts were
aulhorized to carry 232 of the specially
stamped envelopes with markings show·
1ng they had made the round trip to the
moon. The 400 unauthorized covers were
carried ln addition to the approved ones.
Man Says He Set
Building Ablaze
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police say a
Sin F'rancl'1'•n !denUfied as Jellrey
Duvll hu turned blmstlr in and claimed
118 Ml a """-! organhallon head-
quarten on lire.
Fire olllcla!a aid about '20.000
damsge waa done Sunday to the Sixth
Street headquarters of the Society for
Individual RIChis.
Rotary Elect8 New
Chief, Directors
Dr. RDberl Ralston hes been lnslalied
as the president of the Laguna B e a c h
Rotary succeeding Charles Benton.
New Rotary directors are Don Hausht,
Ted Inouye and Joe Lewshenla. Ed Hind
continues as secretary and Hal Meyers Is
treasurer.
Other directors ol the 90-member ser·
vice club are Bob Kronfeldt, Bill Lister,
Charles Johnaon, and Benton.
Candidate .
Hinshaw •
•
• . . • Sp ent Most . •
Andrew J. Hinshaw , successful 39lh
CongressJonal Dl8trlct Republican can..
didate "nd Orange County assessoi-.
emerged !Oday as the biggest spender ln
the primary campaign of those reporlili1
todate.
Hinshaw reported that he ape:nt $86,67f.
}Us opponent Rep. J6h.ri G. Schmlll (ft,.
Tustin I spent $7~.004.
lfov.•ever, the biggest spender, RalPh
Diedrich seeking to un seat incumbeot .
Supervisor Willianl J. Phillips in the
third district, may ha ve spent close \o
$90 ,000, it .was estimated today. '
Diedrich has until s p.m. today to file
1he final report. Other supervisorial can ..
didates, Willia m \Venke and Supervisor
liobert Battin · of the rirst dis trict, a lip
ha ve not filed as yet. :
The second biggest spender reporting,
Dr. \V illia m Brashears o( Fullerton, said
$52,090 was spent in his un successflll
write-i n campaign in the 3 4 ttt
Congressional District.
J ohn 0. Ratteree, sucecssful candidate
for the GOP nomination in the 34tli,
reported spending only $4,130. He got
18.684 votes to Brashears' 7.303.
Brashears demanded a hand count Of
the votes, but when results did not show
significant change after three days <if
counting, he called it off. He had been
forced to wage a write-in campaign
because he appeared two minute! late to
file his nomination pape.rs in March .
Hinshaw's list of t'-Ontrlbutors showed
that his public relations adviser ChJp
Cleary put up a Joan·-of $23,500 ln the
form of professional services. The
1ssessor reported receiving 1 total o.f •
116,292 in coatrlbuUons, l30,S71 leu thin ;
be spent.
Principal contributors in addition \o •
Cleary were Mrs. Patricia Reilly Hltt1 •
assistant secretary ot the U.S. Depart·
ment of Health, Educatio n and Welfare
and severll officials of the Irvine. ColD·
pany Including president William R.
Mason. •
A third Republican In the 3mh Oistrlot,
Earl Carr1way, reported s p e n d t n· g
$30,925 and the fourth aspirant, Larry·
Denna, 1pent only 1591. '
Supervloor Phillips, who finished s"'·
ond to Diedrich in the t h J r d aUPfJ'·
visorlal diatrlct, report~ ape n di n,g·
157,:189 and said his contributors put up.
$55.144.
Other tupervisorial c a n d I d a t 8 s
reported were Robert Bark. fl,IOO ;
Stephen Zlrllchky1 ll2t -bolb in tile
third district rece, and Paul Batch, ,1,2'0
in tbe fint dl1lrtcl l!ibl. •
State Sen. Clllrt W. ~ (~
M->. winner of the GOP nod ID the ....
Und Conp:ualonal -wldc:b fll: eludes the *IUlll!!m aiutel. .,. of
Ora111e County, npqjl.d 1 pe a d I n, i
$31,821. •
Conrad Tuohey, • ~ llltomey,
won the 0tmocr1llc nomination In lb•
23rd Concmstonal District and wu tlle
biggest spender among DemocratJ with
115,281.
Otto LIC1yo of Cypress, who won the
Democratic nomination in the 3&lh
senatorlal district spent $2,705; John
Black of Newpol'.l Beach spent $2,589 lo
win the 18th Congresslonal District
Democratic nomination, and Terry
Moahenko 'won the Democratic nomtna ..
tlon in the 10th Assembly District with ··
spending ol $4,225.
In the 10th Assembly 0 I s l r I c I
Republican race, Paul Jesilow, a student,
spent $550 , in losing to Assemblyman
RDbel'.l H. Burke (R-Hun~nglan Beach)
who reported spending '8,881. '
Auemblyman Robert Badham (11-
Newpol'.l Belch) spent 111,170 lllhouih
he was unopposed in the 71st dlslrid. and
attorney William Dannemeyer rePorted
spending ' $5,617 to win the RepubUcan.
nomination in the 69th Assembly District.
BE1.I'ER LATE THAN NEVER!
.
We 're only one weeli late to
wish yo u a Happy ' Ind epend enc e
De y -but •••
Really, we sliould c&!ob,~·~e all
year long .
In th is spirit we are offe ring
re d, wh ite, & blue s h ag n y Io n
c a r p eti ng at $7.95 e nd $8.95
inst alled.
Ide a I for boats, children 's
rooms, area rugs, etc.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1UJ PJacentla A••·
COSTA MESA
646-4831
HOU ltS: M ....... 'lliws., 9 lo S:JO -Fri., t lot -Sat., t :JO,. I
I
7
•
• '
•
Lig1111a
~·65, NO. 193, '4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• •
TUESDAY, JULY 'If, ·1972
Teday's Final
N.Y. Sleeks. •
TEN CENTS
Planners Give Wary Eye to . Tract Proposal ·
.
JIJ JACk OBAPPELL alteinaUves were available lo the dty to
• 0t .. Dtltr ,.Iliff s....-llmit encroachment of development into
The ~ Rdounoor tra<t stretch-the area.
Ing · ontO 'the baguna • --• land Among ltew· di!euued at the aludy again receiVed a deluge of Un.fa\lorable . session were the extension of Die(,.'el&arY
comments from the Uguna lltach ~ ' L;iguoa City serv~ in the area .if it
~Com.mJuion Monday ~ den1'Js • were annei:ed.
day that the .dty was contemplating an-The lire ilepartment said the area
aexaUoo. ' , ' • would require its own lire stalloo aod the
Cotntrussiorlers, who fear tbe trickle of police· depal!(ment rec om men d e d
de~t oow might become a Oood slgoalizatioo of two development streets
al' ciillllructioo • law, OOllSidered · what joining El Toro 'Road.
••
. Mla.Y PILOT Sten ~ .. ,_ iiit · Bfl Jt10,4Dref1Cle
~ . . . . . . :. Kelly BreruWI, 10; of 30732 Oriltw~ Drive, ~uth Laguna, was giv-
• en· emergency tr~tment at a bosp1tal for bl'Ul3eJ and released Mon-
day af~r she · wu at,ruct by a ll)OU>rcycl~-· Police said the youngster
.:'fan across'Part Avenue at .Maniaruta •Drive ancLwas struck by~ ve-
::hicle operated' by Micbael,Borahboe!~r_. 20, ~f Co~ Mesi. He said be ~·.as. unable to ~void the g\fl., The aCCJdent ts; ~mg mvestigat"!I. , ,
-r ' '. l • '! 'l ' . J • • ~
• ' ' • , • • • • .. 1. ·c~ntroverswl Riiws · Se ·t • --
For School · Board -Meet •' . • ' '
"'A .controversial set of parliamentary
.,,ies are expected to be lJ!ied at tonight's
~lar meeting of the ·Laguna Beach
lloard of Education.
t"fbe rules, which limit the manner in
whicb members of the public may ad-crea: the board, were used during a
*>rtny meeting June 20.
, Under the rules, no person may ad-
dress the board during the course of a
meeting unleu he has received prior
lletmission from th< board president. If
be has not received pemiission, he muat
watt until oral communications lo speak.
Historical Unit
f.ommittee Eyed
; Members cf a five-man ad hoc
Rlstorical Preservation Committee were
IUlllOW1Ced by the Laguna Beach Plan--Comm-at their Monday nigbt
lllid7 -Ion. Ommlilteo Jl1'lllbers m: ·c ra I g
~. realtor; Harry Jeflrty, prt0l-
.,. of the Loguno Beach Community
~ l!Gdel)'; Kltberine Isch Petty,
111U'le LICW>ID: Mn. Merit Ramsey,
i...,. Beech ldlt«lan; and Howard
'llu-. Iocol ....... designer IDd
~ II tM "'Lquna Warnan/' I n.-,... old 11um111 atull
Tiit --wtD establish historical
llrilerll; ldellll1 hlltorically slgnlflcaot
lloAW'8, llddlnll. moos sod t h en
Jei:M* rd 9llltKlda for preservation.
I •
Olle provlsloo·of the aet-ol rules states
Ulat any person who willluliy disrupts a
board meeting Is guilty of a misde-
meanor punishable by a fine not leas thao
$10 nor greater than 1100. Tbts Is based
on section 16701 of tbeiEducattoD Code.· ·
.The rules also are placed oo the .agen'
da to become regular board policy. The
first reading will lie held tonight, with
the second reading ·•od final adoption
slated for July 11.
· Illlrlng the June 211 meeting, o n I y
trustee Jaoe Boyd voted against approval
o! the rules for uae during the meeting.
She argued that it wu an attempt to
slltoce the public atteoding. the board
meetings. '
Board president William Thom&! main.
tained the rules are needed to maintain
deconnn aod order In the meetings.
Recently, ICOrts of per;sons h~ve,been at4
leodlng the meetiogs, many wisHing t~
apeat on board actions.
Ex-Texas Aide Named
FORT WORTH, Tes. (UPI) -
Former Tesu Atlorney General Wag-
goner carr aod olr others were charged
Monday with using fund. from ooe of
their own Insuraoce firms to pay of!
personal deblz in .. -of $511Z,llOO. The
federal lndiclment WI! lbe first criminal
acUoo againlt Carr to come out of the
Teru ltock fraud acandal •llbouch he
wu • defendant ta a clvll ault filed II
mooths ago by the SecurtUes aod Er-
cbsoge Commissioo.
Wayne Moody, city director cl planning
•od development, said loday Ibo city has
given "absolutely no consideration to an-
nexation."
"We do not seek annexation," Moody
said. He noted that annexation is done by
petition by the property owner, 1'1 doubt.
that the property owner would be in~
terested," he said
Moody termed the fire and police
· department observ11tions on the area
"routine."
The Laguna Beach city llmlts do abut
the area Wlder development now,
however. ' .
The Rosmtoor tract discussed by com·
missionen is the last of t h r e e
developinenl! now in the governmental
mill.
The tract map has been l~ed with the
county aod Is peoding approval by the
COUllty Pllllllling Commi!Sioo. The tract
. would include about 158 acres in . the-
watersbed. AJ proposed, between 13. 7
aod 1~ living llllits per acre are '°"gbt in
the tract.
II approved by the COUllly Planning
Commission, the city would have no·
recourse for appeal.
Alte1'iatives available to the city entail
a request to the county for a zone change
in tl)e waler.ihed, a moratorium on
~velopment in .the watershed, and
preparation of an environmental impact
statement.
arrior' ·ows
Street Clnsing Rapped
By Laguna Merchants
Several dowptown Laguna Beach
mercllants this mornins protested a traf-
fic circulation ttudy recommendation
that Forest Avenue between South Coast
Highway aod Glenneyre Street be closed
to automobiles.
"We need the short·tenn curbside
parking," commented Fred ]{jbbey,
owner of Kibbey's Restaurant, 2lKl S.
Coast Highway.
"U they take it out, customers ?t'Oll't
COIJ'lt," ,he told fellow members of the
Downtown Business Association.
The recommendation lo ck\!ie th< 700-
foot -Of Fomt AY<llue Is made in
th< Traffic !JPeratloo Program to,
Improve Ciipeclly aod Safely (TOPICS)
atudy prepared by Wiibur Smith aod
Alloclatea cf San Francisco. The firm bu bem atudylng tralliC problems in
Lacuna lleach for tlje post three years.
DBA president Bill Marriner agreed
with Klbbey that tiie Forest Avenue
merchants need "the fast turnover ciirb parklnJ!."
He based his comment on a statistic
from the report which llhows curbside
metered parking spaces have a
"turnover r.ate" of 5.t, meaning that, on
the average, six different cars wie a
apa.ce during eech day. ·
Marriner painted' out,. however, t h a t
the turnover rate for Forest Avenue,
w:ith preferred diag~nal parking, is much
higher. ·
Members attending the m c r n I n g
meeting also went on record against
removing the left turn pocket oo South
Coast Highway allowing turns onto
Forest Avenue. 'lbe report recommends
that a medlno replace the lllrn pocket.
A suggestion by city couricilman
Olarltoo Boyd that the left turn pocket
be retaibed at Forest, with new pocket!
at Ocean Avenue and Laguna Avenue
was favored by the DBA members. "
MaITlner pointed out, however, that
Ocean Avenue so that persoM may take
advantage of the three public parking
Jets located along the street.
Traffic, said Marriner, is limited on
the street since left. turns are oot allowed
from South Coast Highway aod because
traffic from Laguna Canyon Road is not
permitted lo turn down Ocean. Only one-
way traffic is permitted on Ocean
between Beach Street and Forest
Avenue. _
A . plan for · interconnected traffic
sigoals alollg Glenneyre Street claimed in
· the report to allow ·"smoolh flowing pla·
tOOM of traffic" will r>Qt be supported by
the DB>\: "I· think we should leave that
alone and put our effort into widening
catalina street," said Kibbey. Other
members. nodded agreement.
Marriner aaid that the DBA rec:om-
mendation.1 would be made known to the
planning commission aod·clty staff traf-
fic committees as detailed discussions on
the TOPICS plan are held in the future.
Lumber Company
In Laguna Beach
Hit for $2,~00
An early mcrning customer ~ up
moteriaJ· at the Laguoa· Beach Lumber
~y ylfll, 381 Forat A~ spotted a
bn>keo-deor aod woodow in th< llrm's of-
fice buUdjng aOO alerted police to Whal
!Urned Q!il· to be a mide but major._
burglary.
Oflicen summoned from the nearby
police station at 6:30 a.m. t:>y Robert
Wesley Wheeler found the office ..ie bad
been broRn lnlo aod UlO!leY bags con-
taining an estimated $2,500 in cash and
checks removed.
Further iospect;on of the yard· turned
up an .ueortment of coins and checks
scattered among the piles ol 'Iumher by
the burglar who apparently was in-
terested only in C\ITency.
Police classily .the burglary as· ao
amateur job, ooling that -I dil-lereot melboda were used to crack the
large aale, oooe Indicating professional
skill The thief apparently-liid behind -the
large lumber piles to sort the loot, of-
ficers said. Exact amount of the cur-
rency Josi was being tallied this morniJlS.
Pa1*y Kicks Off
Laguna Football ·
A wine..tasUng party lo kick of! the
19'12 season of Laguna Beach Junior All
American Football·will-be held tonight at
7 o'clock at Beil Brown Restaurant, 31106
S. Coast Highway, South. Laguna.
The party, aald publicU.t Ed Bowen, "ts
Intended.as our thanks lor the support we
. received' from the commtm~ last year
and to gi!ner~e new interest and er>-
tbusiasm ·for .the \IPCOfWlg season~'
' Jllllior All American F,o ot b a II
sponsort!d by the LqUna Bea1'h Youth
AthleUc Aasoclatlon, Is for boys o!
elementaly school age. Games •between
local aod neighboring cities teams will
heglil thia Jail· '
UPIT .......
THROWS IN TOWEL
Ex-candld1i1 Humphrey
McGovern.. Foes.
May ,St.ep Aside·
As Senaior R_~Us
MIAMI JIEACH (UPI) -George S,
McGovern clinched the Democratic • presidential nomination today u Hube.rt ' H. Humphrey stepped out of the race aod
McGovern's other key rivals moved to,do
the same. · .
McGovern relased in bis hotel u the
coalition which hoped ' lo slop ·him
Wedo~ay nigbt dlslolved· &round him.
He talked by tel~ lo Hum(!hrey
after the "bappy-warrior-'s" bow.out: .. ,
McGovern s a i,d Humphrey's with-
drawal 0 Ieaves us all wUb a sense 'cf
poigMilcy, but mll.'lt of·all It reminds us
of his 2S-yeer fight . for human~ ji'istice.'•
"For many years, he has been my
neighbor, my lrieolj aod my personal
COUllSelot. That relationship .will · COO-tinue." · • . ·
~r.· vict_im of i McGovern's 18-monlh batt e for the DOhlinaUon and of
slick ~tion ·floor mwuven oft :the
part of the South Dekotab Mooday '1lght,.
released bis delegates lo vole u . they
Wish. I , • .
Sen. 'Edmund S. Muskie, who· atill coo-,
trots some 700 conVt!lllion votea, laler1 in
the. day followed l)umpbrey's wilhdrowaL
. McGovern was just G votes lhort ot
·the 1,509 Reeded for viclory wbeo
balloting beg.ins in the cooveotlon baJ\
Wedoeaday nieht. · ,
•over the., Top~
,Hum{>hrey;1 4Zf.plus delegates, mao1
of tlitni allllOlt sure lo'bact McGovem,
·w111 put him euily plat the ,ieqµlred
quota.' 1 '· :·
, Gei>rge C. Wallace 8llllOUDCed· plans to
go lo the convention l1oor toljiih~lo press
bis fight for the kind of cooaervative
platlorm he says the party lllllll have I«:
vlclory'in Novomher. .
With a bottle of beer, a IOllg, thin.cigar,
his shoes kickec! oil aod bis tie djaca.rded;
McGovern watched ·oo television ta •hi'i
penthouoe suite U · all bis rjvaJS -united
in their fervor lo stop him -fell to the
power Of bis tightly~ ~
oo the convention lloor. '
·Singers Get Boost From Festival
A leoglhy luod-ralsing drive b)"
membtts 'of the uaguna Beach Hi(ll
School Artill Cllorale was boosted oY<I'
1he top Monday when Festival o! Arts
directors voled lo chip in the $2,500 need-
ed to insure that no ooe will he lefl
behind when the group ru.. oll on a
European coocert tour in August.
The 30 )'OOng musicians, including the
chamber chonls, 10lolsts, a braSI
ensemble and an early music ensemble.
are booted for a »<Say tou< that wlll
take them to Italy, Austria, France aod
Enslaod, willl eiglll concerts· acbeduled
~theway ..
The travelers will combine sightaeelng
· 1od atudy with their music, receiving col-
Je11e credit under the College Abroad pro-
gram.
With lbt departure dale drawing
•
clooer, director Frederick Stouler reallz-
ed thal, despite auch efforts as benefit
concerts, garage aales, car washes and
individual, jobs, aome . of the ltudents
would not liea ble to come up wtth the
.Sl,000 needed lo poy travtlhV e.penoes.
Spectllcally, Helen Xeeley tqld fellow
Festival directors, the $111,0001nvel IUnll
WIS short $2;245, oot ~ -pocket
money for the travelers, anl thi1 meant
,..,,. members of the group wtio bad
portlclpjlted in all rellearaala, -..uld not
be -'1o mate the trip. They hove pr_..i a ttperloirt. ol 10
munbers. lhe noted, lncludirtg music
from eech coun1ey they will visit, along
with Alnertcaa faYorila
The 'board, In a unanlrnoua vote.
·agre<id lo contribute $2,500, to ·· be
dlstrlbuted u needed by Stoufer.
I
• The supremely confident 'Pralr!e state
selialor planned lo aedude bimaall loday,
possibly on·a bolt, to go over drllts'of
tho accepLll>Ce speedi he fully upectod
lo deliver before the -'rlln-day ni&ht following 11' e d D e I d a y ' I
-ldentlal blllottng.
There waa 110 -.i from him about a
choice ol 1 nmnlng-mate.
Tii.e -lbifta tonllbt to the party'•
·iilad'Grm, wtlll Wlllaot boplnc to -a
'penmal _....at the --
1iut problbl1 not fnlm Ito --to lllld Ille fllbt for bis own plifloqby.
· Tbe wallaco 1on:a bopod to p111e
from the platlorm liberal pl-"' boo-. Ing, ... 1f1n1 aod 111Uoo1I defeMO wblch
rellecl McGomn't viewpoint.
Commlssionen preViously initiated a
letter from the city to the county plan-
ning body expressing Laguna's concern-
Commissioners fear that with cemen--
tlng and rooliag of abo<rptive ground in
the watershed runoff water would be in4
creased in both quantity aod speed of
Oow.
Laguna Beach's central bus in e 1 s
disttlct lies at the eod. of the La'""8 Can·
yon Oood plain. ' .
McGovern
On _His Way
To Victory
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The sell-styl-
ed happy warrior, Hubert H, Humphrey,
pulled out of tilt race today 10< the
Democratic presidential nomination In
the face of tbe speeding MGovern
steamroller.
Humphrey, the 1961 nominee, appeared
with his wife Muriel and daughter at his
side at 9: 22 pm, PDT before a crowded
room full of reporters to armounce hi!
withdrawal, saying be was releasing hi.!
delegates to "'vote as they wish." He did
not say, however, whether he wouJd sup.
port McGovern, ao old friend, for the
nomination.
Humphrey appeared somber as he read
a thr~paragraph 11tatement on his
dectslon that cliilched the oomioatioo
Wednesday night for George 'S •
McGovern.
· His vo~ broke sligbUy toward the end
of the statement as he thanked his stalt
and supporters who worked for him.
Aller reading the prepared statement,
Humphrey added a few words: saying,
"We've fougl;it the good figbt ... Now we
bow out." · •
lie ihell hugged Muriel ml walked
away fnlm lhe micropbooes.
Humphrey wu said to have reached
his decision to withdraw early loday
after seeing .his major hope cf overtaking'
MqGovem ~·-'!'h:at was the convention'•
declalon to give M'CCOVern ilf "217
del egates from Calilorula, Instead o!
splitting them up with Humphrey getting
106 aod McGovern 120 based oo the J1111e 6
primary voting.
Humphrey then slept on his decision a
few hours 8od met with his lop 'advlsen
•:midmorning. Later, he·caOed·logether
hi.! stall for a cloaed meeUng aod -as
tears were abed, including aome by
Muriel Humphrey -he told them be was 1 bowing out .
The Humphrey statement said:
"After consultation with some of my
close!t friends and supporters, I have
determined Ulat I will DOI permit my
name lo he entered in oomioation at the
con"'.ention, and I am now releasing my delegates lo vote as they wish. ____ ,, __
"My withdrawal from the presidential
race Is a withdrawal of candidacy only •
It Is oot a withdrawal of aplrit or of
.detennination to continue the battle I
have waged all my public me on behalf
of ·tbose who bad oo voice. .......
'll'e•tller
The weatherlady -clear aod
SW1ny skies through Wedoeaday
with highs Of '19 at Oraoge eoui
sand., rising lo 10 de~ ln1ud.
Lows 57-47.
INSmE 'l'GD~Y
Chicog<> Ila~ Richard J. Da-le~ te/Uled ..,,.promlat tfforts
bl/ s .... 11.a_,.,. °" Ult thonlr
quesllO!O of dfl<9otc uat11111. A1
a ....it, Daley tori hil HGI. Su
•torr and oehn co•or"tioft rt· 1ull1 on Pagc 4.
L-.M. ..,. 1' .,_ ·---11 Odea:• 11 --" --. 9-11 I '"" ~ ,..,,
P4ll' ........ ,,
..... I t• Mii Uflelrl ,.
('
...... . .... --" ................
--q ---·" .... ...11 -" -. •n -. .......... ,." --. •
•, .. ·-.
'
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 65, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, +t PA&ES
.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . .._ TUESDAY,, JULY ·1 f, 1972 TEN CENTS
•
2nd_ Newport-Irvine Talk on Airport Urged
By L. ,PETER KRIEG
OI .. Nllt' PllM 1'9ff
A joint NeWJ\"'1 Bta<b-ltvine com-
mttt.. will get anothe~ chance to talk
about land uae planning aroinul Orange
Coomty A~rt. 1 belort ' any n e w
dev.l<lprnenta !JI.the aru are approYtd.
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
nilbt delayetl actiori on the propOoed ,135 .
niiulQD 'Collins · Ra<lio' Com~y" project
for 30 days'·anil· told their liaison con\-
mi!tee to si! down willt Irvine again to ' ' .
1st ;Meeti.ng
To Be Held
•
In. C.ity ~all
The city of J:vine!s new offices in
Irvine Town Center are nearing com-
pletion with tbe nrSt council meeting in
tiiO"new chambers set for oext Tuesday.
Adminlatrative aide Sieve De Lapp
said today·clly staff have moved into 1ht
a,400-sq ... foot addition to city offic9,
-In Town Omter: Laal-mlnUle elec-
lri<al -contlmled ..... the htada of the 11 ·full.tiine city ·tlll[llolel, however.
Renovation of · the former UC Irvina
faculty club -room :11111 of Town· Center
-bu cost lbt'city and the 1rv1ne c:om-
PanY a total of nearly $25,000. Of t!lia
..,,....t, the city will pay only '9,lllO pro-
v1'1ing II continllff to lease the spaet for At least three years at 1 monthly rental
oi' 11,296.
Se.ven private offices, a: reception and
clerical area, confer,ence room and coun-
cil ·cbaIDbers are bicluded in·tbe rental.
'IJn>oee .ew offices house City Manager Wiiuanl WOollett Jr., his executive ·assis·
tanl Paul Brady, 'Ile Lapp, aide Richard
J;)Qfris, recrutlon coordinator Brian
C!Fk and fiv• aecretaries.
'A>ioclate ~ lllke: Barris and ---·~a· ....... icmpomy ""';m;:;; -.iii d>otlnua tO _.......,. ' lilll ..
.-ce~l'Cdll•.-_ r ~-.
That ---llli liilll-
lhi -lplarte!t. "" -bl'' -CiJJMn Gabiklli.,..,.. at l!IO a~
and for a' um. -u the tcianciJ and planning commJaa ·meotinC .-.
Wbon(s:.ddi~ ~i • .u: made
Recount f.osts
• • •
talk •boot the ~ proposal.
Tllo delay -after: .:. Tllo lrvlnt ¢.mpaoy said the traffic
a,...,.. lbiOOiliout 111 entire indusfriil
complu may be overloaded and aug-
1~ a 11""1 to -..mint if !lie zoning
on !he <lllire t ,oao.acre complex -and
il'J .= Noftb.FOld ind-1al park
-be rolJed back. -Sewn! eomcllm•n found Ibey bad
not been pven the plai1ning commisslo.,.
approved v,nion of the planned com-
D&n.v PILOT '"'" """
TO LEAD SCHOOL BOARD
lrvlne'1 Boulanger
Tiistin (Whoops)
1~-'inmees
Ehret Pii.tde~t . ' '
"I ~like to ·nom1na1e Charles
Bou!Mgei 6>r-[ll'Olldent of the Tustin
Unified . School Boord," Jn>ine school .~ R. .Dean · Obon ~d Monday n!Jh( .
'lhere wis-a mOment of silence in the
room at Uniyenlty High School and then
-loudly Wl'JIPtred that Olson blld
said •''T\ZIUD" by lniJtake.
"Did I Uy: 'l'llltin,!' uked the wide-
~ 12 eyed Rancb'reaidint.·"Wbat a boo-boo." Schmitz $1,.,t. , The ·small cro1fd laughed · and 01son
> ' quickly resisted 'lJs nomination with the "" • -· 3 7 ·v· te poot-unillcalion J14me, 1rv1ne. .iams • · 0 S Boulanger, u, i University Park resi·
. dmt. and ·a pr!Dclpal In the Cypress
·rb!al muits of.an e111it-day rec00nt of El~tary . Scbool District, was """""'•l!JI ~ elidlon votes 111ow , u111iiiml>ualy, ~ to the post. c;f~an John G. Scbrni\% (R-He -td Ille most votes in the June
Tualin) spent $lo.al per' vOie U) i:tduce ' election. Ol'anie Cotinty Aaseaaor A n d re w 9>aron , Slrcello, :JS, University Park,
Hinshaw" lead by only '37 votea. It ""'tllen elected.clerk of·tlle board. She mOan. Hinshaw 1s· the certain GOP can-is a;teacber.\n tile Huntington Beach: City
dldate In Novet)lber. · · (Elemeatary) School Diairlcl.
"Tbe 'recount.ofJunel'ballots ·ordered -k "-k •-{;( bl' thee irlcumbent 39lb Congrosslonal ·
District repr.-niaU .. -. him '1~12. • . . • •
Tailles were completed Monday. lrvme DIStrict While Hinabaw ltd Schmitz by 2,121
"'1H In the earlier canvass of votes, tbe
:' .. final tally cuts. the figure to l ,!M Seeks. $).25,000 .
'A Schmitz aide In Wasl\ing\O!', Robert
Geier, aald Monday Con Ir e.11 m a..n
Sclunitz 11has some plans, but ht ls not
ready to divulge lbem."
Schmits' Orange COUnlY aide, Randy
Brnith, today dtcllntd to 'l[iOcU!ate oil •
poa!ble wr!t .. in campallJI, but said,
1'$cbrnill baa not ruled GUI Ill)' optlCIOI to
Cllte."
Final ballot coonti give Hinabaw 42,726
otes. Schmitz lbowa ·40,JU,
• ·"Earl C&mway, an El Tt1-o blmker, '°8t
1111 votes in the recount for 1 lblrd place
.tally cl 1.117. .
'.'Larry Denna. --up wllb nine.--
-1or a total ot 1,a.
'Prior to the_.....,.,.~
1lle lollowlDI ..... _, ...... w.
•G,711: Scbmitl, 40,Jll: can....,,, ,11 ..
ind Demla, 1,581. ..
:-Mesan in Jail .
.. On Burglary Rap
A Colla MiluL-~ • llarCllr1 =.~"fa=~~ 11roak1n1 llllo an II Toro llln. .
-Deputiol ~fled Gtnld Eu.-Boom« ... of ID1I Ollrlt 81. .. the ...
tnldlr who uwWIJ dllnliad • tlln04ool r..... aurrvantllog Ille Balldtro
Emporhlm, -Rocldleld Rold, and lhrfw tho -of 0 comenl Wiler f-
lain tbroulh a plate ·--· Olllcero called to the -..... ltd ioomer and booked him Into Orange
Comity Jail. 'l1loy ..i.I notllh!c of valua
.... -lften In the brWln.
•
Loan From State • By CANDlCE PEARSON
Of .. ....., ""' ,, .. Tbe now-official ,Irvine Unified School .
Dillrlct lnlsttet YOltd ll~y nicbt to
requeot a ,120,llOll ~-lne !nan ~m
the state for thelr nm year of operation.
The bulk of the <monef'requeottd ,-
1$1,000 ..: is budp!ed to go for aalaries
for a auperintendtnt and other district
adpJlnialratora. • , • • ,
Trulle8 bad Indicated at an earlier,
llDOlllclal meetlnC lbel they would only
ut for f!IO,llOll out of Ille state'& '4!0,llOll ·""1vta8 fund se('up fnr newly unified
dllltktl.
ll'!l·after ~,ln_,!"t"1J110lied the .aame -·new ...._k vapey trustees
Aid they'd uk <.for the remaining
IZI0.000. coonty acbools ofllclal Dewey
• 11111aum-. uld M-y. He auggesttd
Jrvila'I l't<luee\ be'Upptd, . ' . fte laan, whlcb bu a IWO'year pay
llM* dluse, ii -to cover operations mtll the board takta' over all Irvine
.,... .. JuJy 1, an.
11-, mttUnr before about 25 peo-
ple al University lltcb School, agreed to
•tlw __. cluwlflolllonl fnr the !nan:
-c.tlilcatod -= !51,llOll. -0.uted lalarloo: 111,llOll.
-Oaolultan11 (l[lllRiom, m 1 11 er
plln): 1111,llOll.
~rental : 11.000. --Office .. _, 11,000.
-Eltcllom: fl,000.
-Travel: '4,111111.
Tbe fl,Olll election fee. Rnlmtn aald,
-id be V the cilftrlct held tW. separate
(See 'l'IW8TEES, hp I)
manity text for the high rise office OOlll6
pl ex.
-Daniel Emory. a leader of the ahp>rl
no1.se ngbt, reitented. his ~dorsemenJ of
the project provided tenants are told tbe
city is balUing to rid lbt airport of com-
mercial flights.·
~lllns officials promised to help the
city in that ficht.
-Collins officials ·Mid,. if the council
·retains the nquirement tO approve the
project in phases (the Don Koll Com·
pany) tbe buyer won't get its institution.at
lender (Kaiser-Aetna ) to come up with
the cash.
-Be~~_resRlent Allan Beelf c8stlgaied---coUDCilinen ror--even ~
sldering a development that might help
sustein the airpx't.
"I sat here two years ago and didn't
have the sense ,to -Hze the Emkay proj-
ect (across MacArthur ~1evard)
wOuld have an im'paet on Orange County
Airport," Betk aakl.
'Happy
'
1;.
"Supervl!Or (Ronald W.) Caspers has
thrown that In our teeth, saying if we're
serious about fighting the airport, why do
we approve commercial development
around the-periphery.'~
''I don't care if the statistics on airport
Impact are right or wrong,'" Beek said,
"politically it will have an impact (if it's
approve!!).
"The. supervisors will take note," he
said. "Irvine w\U take note."
"Collins' heroic effort comes only when
it's necessary to get apptOval, they have
not been in the forefront of the fight to
get rid or the airport," Beek said .
Collins' ofrer oI assistance came from
Rogers S. liopklns~irectOr-of cOrporate
real estate, who cited statistics from a
consult ant that contend the developmeht
Will have minimum impact on the con-
troversial commercial flights.
Tbe Irv ine ~pany's call for more .
detailed study came fro m Larry Moore,
!See COWNS. Page !J
uits
(
Humphrey Drops Presmential Bid ,
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The self·styl·
ed happy warrior, Hubert H. Humphrey,
pulled out ol the r>ce today for the
Democratic presidential nomination in
the · 1ace of · the speeding MGovern
steamroller.
Humphrey, the 1968 nominee, appeared
Jnsregard Pleas
with his wife Muriel and daughter at his
side at 9:22 p.m. PDT before a crowded
room full of reporters to announce his
withdrawal, saying be was releasing bi!
delegates to "vote as they wish." He did
not say, however 1 whether be would sup-
Supervisors Delay Action
On El Toro Road Project
Despite pressure from the Orange
County Road Department and a group of
property owners, the county Board of
Supe{VisOl's today> delayod decision oo
impmotn"'11 cl 2.1 <JDiles of El Toro
Road wblcll biclUdeo dedlcatioo of fl
acrtf' of iaiiil-Jo the county.
Asaistant Oounly .Road Commissioner
Murray Storm urged board membera to
a~ dedication of landa In the Aliso oreet floocipiaia, give the landoWners
Jocal parklanif credits and receive and
fi!.. a disputed environmental impact
statement by the road department.
Storm pointed ouf that ill tlie past two
yt.-·s on the stretch of roadway between
Trabuco Road and Live Oak canyon
Road, there have been 101 accidents, S2
injuries and five deaths.
Despite Storm's urging, the board
voted unanimously to accept a recom·
mendatlon of the county1 Planning Com·
mission to refer it back to that body for a ' .
Judge Forbids
Cartoon Figlll'es
Exploitations
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A federal
judge bu put his judicial foot down on
underground cartoonists alleged t o
portray Mickey Mouse and other Walt
Disney cartoon characters as dope ped·
review of the impact statement.
The cornm.iasion was urged, however,
to expedite the review and report back
... .Al!g. l ,
At!Omey Rodger ·Howell, represenUng
Iha' landowMn, agreed to the three-week
delay, 11111 warned that i[ oub1111ntial
changes Wttt made In tbe plan the offer
to dedicate lbe fl acres of floodplain
properly might be wldldrawn.
Howell refeqed to "the incredible coo.
sumption of time ' in this matter, which
has been under study for more than two
years. 11-· He "said-tbe-1andowners have
spent .10re lban •10,000 In developing the
project and had been "blocked by
theoretical proposals by c o u n t y
departments."
He urged board members to "use some
muscle. Il tbe offer of free land is
withdrawn you will later have to con-
demn the, property and pay for it," be
warned.
County Planning Director Forest
Dickason urged that the environmental
imP,act statement be referred back to the
commission as that body had not been
given an opport~ty to review it as re-
quired by board-adopted policy.
Tustin Trustees
OK Uni High'.s
Play Coµrt Bid
dlers and sexual activists.
U s Di · ~.J J d Albert c Tustin Union High School District · • strict """"'• u ge · trustees Monday night approved a corr
Wollenberg Monday enjoined the car-tract with arthitects Willis K. Hutchason
toonists Crorii malting or selling any of and Associates to design tennis and
the disputed comic books and ordered all handball Coutts at University High School
copies of two issues to his court, pending in Irvine. .
outcome of a $500,000 copyright in-· 'Ihat action, coupled with approval a week ago to call for bids on the project,
fringement suit. could mean University High will have Jts
D.i$ney Productions in its suit said the courts by mid-November, di.strict of-
cattoon characters encourage 0 an image ficials ·said. . .
port 1'-1cGovern, an old friend, for the
nomination.
Humphrey appeared somber as he read
·a three-paragraph statement on his
decision that clinched the nomination
Wednesday night for George S •
McGovern.
His voice broke slightly toward the end
of the· statement as he thanked his staff
and supporters who worked for him.
After reading the prepared statement,
Humphrey added a few words saying,
t•We've fought the good fight ... Now we
bow out."
~ thew hugged Muriel and walked
away from the microphones.
Humphrey was sa id to have reached
~iwLlQ....}l'ilhdra1Learly_today _ ~
after seeing his major hope of overtaking
McGovern fail. That was the convention's
decision to give McGovern all 217
delegates from California, instead of
splitting them up with Humphrey 1etting
IOI ...i Mc;!Jovern 120 baaed on the June 6
THROWS IN TOWEL
Ex-candlo!at• Humphr.y
Pfltnary voting. · , . _... ..
• Humphrey then alept • bla dtc'illtli a
few ho\irt and met with his tw advilm
at midmorning. Later, he called together
his stall for a closed. meeting and -as
tears were shed, including some by
Muriel Humphrey -.. he told them he was
bowi:~ Ollt. Tb umpbrey statement said :
"After consultatioµ with so,ne of my
closest friends and supportJ!rS, I have
determined .that. I will not permit my
name to be entered in nomination· at the
convention, and I am now releasing my
delegittes to vote as they wish.
"My withdrawal from the presidential
race: is a withdrawal or candidacy only.
It is not a withdrawal· of' sPirlt, or of
determination to continue the battle 'I
have waged all my public lile on beball
of those who had no voice.
"On behalf of Mrs. Humphrey and me
I wish to thank those who have worked
so hard for these past six months not oit-
ly for my candidacy, but for the grea~
goal of a nation gowned with juatice
and compassion."
Ad libbing; eyes gllslening, a faint
smile on, his lips, Humphrey then spoke
o[ having fought tile good fight within the
ruJes .and stressing that his spirit was not
broken ..
By his withdrawal, Humphrey could
play the role of party unifier, possibly
spreading a spirit of reconciliation that
would irilprove McGovern's chances of ·
winning support from organized labor in
particular. Labor is distinctly cool' to
McGovern. 1
Humphrey also could •id McGovern In
his elforts to gain the support of Chicago
Mayor Richard Daley, whose delegates
were rejected by the fu11 tobventlon in
the credentlala challenges earlier today.
McGovern Foes
May Step Aside
As Senawr Rolls
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Ceorge S.
McGove('n clinched the Democratic
presideoti~ nomination today as Hubert
H. Humphrey stepped out of tbe race and
McGove111'1 other key rivals moved to do
the aame.
McGovern relaxed Jn his hotel as the
coalition wbich hoped to . slop him
Wednesday nJght dissolved around him.
He talked by telephone to llumphrey
after the' "happy warrior's" bow-oul.
McGovern s a i d Humphrey'.s. witt.-
drawa l "leaves us all .. with a sense-·of
poignancy, but most of all it reminds us
of his 25-year fight for human justice.••
''~or rJl:lBJ!Y ·Yeh!, he bu been my
neigbbor, my friend and my penonal
counselor. Thal ·relaUOlllblp will con-
. tinue."
Hwnpbr,ey, victim of McGovern's IS.
month baiite for the nomination and of
sllck.convenUOil-noot maneuvers on-tfle
part .of the South Dakotan Monday nighl.
released, bi.a delegates to vote as they
wish. .
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who still con·
trots some 700 convention votes. later in
the day fou'Owed Humphrey's withdrawal.
McGovern was just 43 votes short of
the 1,509 needed for victory when
balloting begins in the convention hall
Wtdnelday night.
Humphrey's 429-plos delegates, many
of !hem 1lmost sure to back McGovel",
will put him ... uy past the requiied
quota.
GeOrge C. Wallace announced plans 1to
.(See McGOVERN, Pa10 ll
of innocent deligbtfulness'' but the Bids will be opened Aug. 4. Construc-
underkround cartoonists show th e tioti should begin within a few weeks · •
characters in a "degrading, lewd and of· a11er that and be completed 90 day• · Sen Muskie Toq
fensive manner.'' later, school officials aald. • ' '
The judge emphatically denied a claim .The project has been budgeted·al about
by the defendants that they had a right • in1,ooo. Tustin Trustee Dickran Bora·
to parody the Dianey cartoons under the nian has asked that an alternate bid in-
First Am<ndment. eluding llghls be considered.
· Irvine Council Action
Here. In brier, are the major acllons taken Monday ni&ht by the Irvine
Unified SChool District: '
Sll'EARING IN: Aller being given the oath of office, the board members
elect.!! Cypresa School principal Charles Boulanger u chairman and officially
named the ditlrict Irvine Unilied, ·
BONDS, TAXES: Aaked the county department of tdu<atlon to see ii the
registrar of voten will qree to a Nov. 7. bond .election. ,
SUPERINTENDl!Hr: Set ihe date for • rneoUng wltli five eomultanls to
determine qualllicalionl on Aug. ta and approved '150 a day fee for each.
LOAN· AI'PLICATION: Voted to req-,1$,!Jl)O In an lllle-slate
loan for a first year operation. . ' .
BU!Lb!NG AID: PuO«i a reao olion epjirOV!ng ~ Joaquin School Dwf!Ct
1ppllcatlons to Ille state for money to con-. design or add to Illes, two of
which aro In Irvine.
DOOllLE SESSIONS: Resolved to "implore" San Joaquin School District to
keep all cil1ldren oil double -. this year.
l
Pulls From Race
,For Nomination
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Sen. Ed-
mund S. Muskie of Maine· bowed to tha
intvliable today and dropped out of Iha
.race. for the bemocratlc preiidential
nomination.
Muslde withdrew as front·runner
George McGovern piled op enouah votes
to win tht ,10mlnallon on the first ballot.
Sen. Hubert H. H\Jlllphrey of MioneS(lts,
another rival, abandoned the race earlier
In the day.
Muskie ••Id he WU qultlinl bee• ... It
II ~pparent that McGovern Is &Oina to be
the nominee.-
Under these circwNtanctt, Muol<le said, there was no point In ~avllla bis
--nam. evt1t"lnlt"'1uced llllo nom._,
.• Sen. Henry M. lackson, however,
declined to leave !he now .. maahtd &top.
McOovem el!ort, aaylng be II Ill the light
to Ill end.
• George c. Wallact gave no eYldence he
bad Ill)' Intention of qutt11n1 either.
•
......
'
The weatherlady .... clear ind
sunny skies through Wednesday,
with highs o( 70 at Orange coast
sands, rising to IO degrees inland. Low• SH7. . . ' INSmE TODAY
Chfcogo Mcvor Richard J. '.Do·
l•y rt/U3ed compromise '•/forts
. bv Sen. McGovern on the lhorni/
qut1tlon O/.daltfl<lle 1eaiit1g. Al
a re1u!t, Daley lost his •••~ s ..
1tory and other convention. re·
nils on Page 4.
•
"
-'
' Tut!Qi, Jui!-11, ltn
Allies Hit ·Q'uang Tri
-· __ U.!~~!!P.~r_!, ~.!!! ... Troops In Ov'2 Barrage
'
·SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Mar In•
beli<opten lltted South Viel!Um1ese
troops into a combat aasault north of
QuaJ11 Tri dty today, flying into a heavy
barrq• of fire behind enemy lines that
ltnoctod down at least three helicopters,
the U.S. Command aald. .
'lbe landings, by South Vietnam ...
ll'Llrinet, put government force• on three.
1ida ol the· .•n<DU'held provincial
capltaL
·u.s. military opolcmnen aald the
crewmen of two CH4' m e d I u m
NASA Action
heIJcopterl were ale. Join( down Ina& belon the bellooptero were hll An ..,.
South Vietnamele llnea alter being hll by nowicement from the U.S. !th F'lfft 1Ji.
antiaircraft ' lrtillery and omall-ltllll dlcated that troops from the two CHiio
fire. already had been dropped oll. The
The fate of the crewmen aboard the heUcopters llew from the carriers.
third helicopltr, • CJW, the biggest U.S. The new assault by several hundred
troop-carrying helicopter, was not Im-South Vietnamese marines north of
mediately known . Quang Tri enlarged the government
'll1e V.S. Command said It had no ad· foree1' ring around the northernmost
ditiCllal details. •• provincial capital.
11· was not clear 1'hethet there were A 7th Fleet announcement said that
South Vietllamese troops aboard oi; ••initial action on the ground wu hot as
whether they had been dropped off the South Vietnamese marines moved off
the heli~pters and on to the offensive."
3 Astronauts Censured
The marines were landed 211.z miles
north-northwest of the city, on the
eastern side of the Thach Han River op-
posite the Quang Tri combat base.
For the fifth successive day, en·
trenched North Vietnamese f o r c es
managed to stall the South Vietnamese
drive to recapture the city lost 10 weeks
ago.
Over P ostal Cover Case
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The space
agency today cllJciplined the thr .. Apollo
15 astronaull for car\-y!ng 4 O O
imauthoriud poota1 covers to the moon
and bock.Lui July and then turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance In West
O<nnany.
Tllo 100 lllOOIHlamped envelopes later
apporenlly _., aold tO otamp collectors
for $1,lllO each, the Nallooal Aeronautica
and 8paco AdmlnlJtratlon .. 1d.
NASA Aid alter an investlgaiton lbat -.i. David Scott, Allred Worden
and Jamt:1 Irwin .. exercised poor Jud&·
mmt In their action.
"Tberofll'•, they will be reprlmlnded
and their actlom will be given due con-
alderatlao In their l<lectlon for !utur• ~." the .,...,;. oald.
Dr. Geori• Low, NASA depuly ad-
mlnlltrator, _.,..n.d:
.. Altronauta are under extreme etress
In the montha preceding a fllaht to the
-· and their poor judcm<nt In car-l'Yinl the unauthorlud covero mual be
ocmldered In lhll lijJht.
.. Nooethelea, NASA cannot condone
tbele actionl."
NASA aid 11 learned lbat the #011915 crew._. at one time to ~100
covero from their forthcoming mlaion
to the acquaintance ·In nturn for .. tab-
lllliinentOf a""''tniit fimd" for.their child·
~Arter the covers had been given to the
acquaintance, however, they realized~n
their own -that this waa improper and
declined to accept •lther the truat fund or
the altemaUve offer of aampe 1n ex·
l'ret11P .. eJ
COLLINS .••
'uaoc!ate plaonlng admlnlslrator, who
aald his vow to review the r.onlng of the
lndultrlal area "came from the Seventh
Floor" (meaning the office of Irvine
pnoidmt Wllllam R. Maaon).
Talking about f.,......ble Iner...., In
traffic, Moore saJd: 0 J'd Uke to make a
point here, and that Is that when we look·
ed at these numbers , lt waa very obvious
that what we were saying to ourselves
was that the complex is overloaded, and
lt's going to be overloaded U it's built out
lndu.trtal as planned today with the
facilities that can reasonably develop,
and · if that Is the case, we are not also
eaylng that perhaps the 20lling out there
right now Is too high.
"Now, that took a trip up to the
seventh floor to management to ask
them whether they wanted to face that
question. ..
"I could just see one of the councilmen
•)'Ing 'are you telling me that we should
n>l1 bock the zoning?' 'Ille point IJ that
we are that fearful of the overload in
that complex. We feel that the study that
baa to be done has to answer that ques--
tion, and U that is the Indication, then the
apprvp iete action has to be taken from
there. That ii how worried we are about
this."
ORAN•I COAST "
DAILY PILOT
Tiit Or•l'll'I~ DAILY PILOT, llril!I wttlch
I• amlMntd flll N..-Pl"lls, It Dllbllllh«t av
"'-OrAl\Oll CN1t Publfllllng C~y. StPI•
"'' 1111111 .... .,., IUbl""-1. Mlncl•'I tllrouob
Frlcl1y, IW COlll Mtw, N.wporl 81Kll,
Hunllnt'On h1ch/Fount1in V11l1y, LHU!ll
at1c:t1. l~/Slddltbtdl llld 5111 CllmllllW
S.11 Ju.n Gtpiatr-A il119lt AOJlanel
tdlllOft 15 publlil'lld S.t\ll"llay, Ind $vnd1ys.
TM P'"lnclN/ Mllttlltit p1t11t 11 ti :no Whl
a.y $1/"MI, COl!t Mew. C1tliamlt, Qilf.
l:obtrf N. W,ff
""9;1dt11t Ind Plllll~r
Jtc:k R. Curlty
Ykl f'r9ldtfll •!"Ill Gtr\fnl MIMgtf
Thom•• K•evil
Edlk>r
1hor11t1 A. Murphi11•
Ma11111nt1 Editor
Ch1tl•t H. Loos Rlth•nl P. Ni ll
"'-1•1"'11 MINI! .. Edlltra
Olfkot
eo.11 M111: m w~ SINll'f Nitwport latdl: UU Iii a.ult\I.,_ ~UNI 8 .. d'I: 222 t<or"I .ti'IGllllll Mvrllll'le"" ettdl: 17111 euctl .... ..,.,.,
$1~ a.-.. : JOIN.,_ El ~AMI
lot.,-17141 '42 .. J21
et..lflM ·"-""" 142-1171
S. C.._.. Al 0.,..IWlfsi 1•-•'2 ......
=~ mi. OfWltt CMtt '*"''"' . ... -.....,., ............. •li.rJtl IMl!tr ., tll-1"-19 fllnlll _, .. ~ ........... , ..... ............ ....,,. .... .
lttfl'ld c:i.. ""''°' .... .. Colt• MtM. C11/~ ~-t¥ a"°ler IW "*lllllr1 ., _., a.ti ~· rritllttr
tlttl'lntftlM 11.6' ~-
!
change for the 100 postal cavers," NASA
1aid.
The APollo 15 crew, like those on
earlier moon milsions, had NASA's
permission, within established pro--
cedures, to carry personal 50uvenlr-type
items, including some postal Coven.
The permission was granted with the
condition that the articles be retained by
the astronauts or be given to personal
friends. They wer.e not to be used ror
commercial or fund-raising purposes or
'personal gain, NASA said.
On Apallo 15. the astronauts were
authorized to carry 232 of the speciaUy
stamped envelopes with markings show·
ing they bad made the round trip to the
moon. 11>e 400 unauthorized covers were
carried in addition to the approved ones.
A NASA spokesman identified the ac-
quaintance to whom ht said the 100
unauthorized postal covers were given as
H<nt (Wa!ter ) Eireman, a naturalized
American living at Stuttgart. Elreman
met the astronauts when working for an
aerospace cont.ractor at Cocoa Beach,
Fla., the spokesman said.
A Gennan dealer involved was iden-
tified as Herman E. Sleger, D 7973
Lorch, Germany.
Mrs. Banuelos
To Attend Fete
For Nixon Funds
Mn. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
tbe United States, will be guest of honor
at a re-elect the President fund-raising
dinner set for July 18 at Irvine's
AJrport<r Inn.
The dinner is plaMed -by the Orange
O>unty Hispanic Committee to re-elect
President Nixon. AU persons are invited
to attend. Dinner reservations are $15
per person.
Mrs. Banuelos I! the sixth woman and
tl:e first of Mexican-American descent to
ho11 the position of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Presi·
dent Nixon cited her "extraordinarily
successful career as a self-made
businesswoman.''
Mrs. Banuelos Jaunched her Los
Angeles food processing firm on $400 in
1949. Today the firm grosses $5 million
annually and employes number more
than soo.
She became director and In 1964
chairman of the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Los
Angeles.
She was also named Outstanding
Businesswoman of the Year by Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A reception is planned for 7 p.m.
followed by the dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from
Ticket Chalnnan James. H. Miranda at
558--0262 or from ticket co-chairman Alex
Acevedo at 543-1953.
Greenbelts Idea
To Be Presented
Jrvlne Planning Commissioner Wesley
Mi'fT-'Will attend the county planning
commission's hearing on open space to
present the city's idea on greenbelts.
The Irvine commission supports the
county's open space plan "in trouble."
chairman Wayne Clark explained. It also
feels that a few community homeowners'
groups could give an accurate picture of
the cost of greenbelt maintenance. which
Clark says ls not as high as some county
officials have estimated.
Marx will be on hand to offer that In·
formaUon.
The county comml~ion's meeting bas
not been scheduled but is expected to
take place within the next two months .
Coast Unit to Hold
Luncheott fo r Solons
Memhen of the Orangp County Coast
Association •Ill bolt atat• and county
leglaletors for a 1peclal luncheon at 11:30
a.m. Friday In the Balboa Bay Club ..
Coast 'Asloclatlon mernherl 1nd guem
·will hear nporll on 1peclal leglalatton 1!.'
fectlnr the coastline at both the county
and s!ate level, according to John Mac-
n1b, president of the coast association.
For reaervatlonx to the luncheon, phone
162-!ell , or contact tbe Runtlngton 8uch
Chamber or Commerce offlce.
r
Tank-led North V i e t n a m e s e In-
fantrymen and South V I e t n a m e s e
par'atroopers and marines battled at four
different points on the northeastern and
&outheastern outskirts of Quang Tri.
The Saigon command reported that HM
North Vietnamese troops were killed and
eight tanks destroyed. six of them in one
battle, by U.S. naval gunfire and South
Vietnamese artillery support.
"The North Vietnamese are in there lo
stay," said Capt. Don Dickenson, 25, of
Bradenton, Fla ., an adviser with the
paratroopers. "The guys who are there
have been ordered to stay there."
Associated Press correspondent Dennis
Neeld reported from the front that
Dickenson told him North Vietnamese
troops were well dug in and around the
Citadel , in the heart of Quang Tri Ci,ty.
"They are in well-prepared bunkers."
he said. "They've been there for two
months and they've used their time
judiciously.''
"You can put 105 and even 155 artillery
on those bunkers and you'll only give
them a headache ."
Dickenson said he had seen 5()0.pound
bombs dropped within 20 yards of the
North Vietnamese bunkers and they fail-
ed to hurt anyone inside. ,
"It's fighting in cities," he said. "It's
dirty. It's rough, and it's diffetent from
anything we've had 11ince/ihe Tet of-
fensive in 1968. It's no longer the quiet
little rice-paddy war." .
From Pagel
McGOVERN. ••
go to the. convention floor tonight to press
his fight for the kind of conservative
plaUonn he says the party must have for
victory in November.
With a bottle of beer, a Jong, thin clgar,
his shoes kicked off and his tie discarded.
McGovern watched on television in his
penthouse suite as all his rivals -united
in their fervor to stop him -fell to the
·power of his tightly disciplined loyalists
on the convention floor.
The supremely confident Prairie state
senator planned to seclude himself today,
possibly on a boat, to go over drafts of
the acce ptance speech he fully expected
to deliver before the convention Thurs·
day night following Wed n1e s day 's
presidential balloting.
There was no word from him about a
choice of a running-mate.
The action shifts tonight to the party's
platform, with Wallace hoping to make a
personal appearance at the convention -
but probably not from its rostrum -to
Jead the fight for his own philosophy.
Capo Council
Nixes Rezoning
For Community
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 fflt DtllJ l"llel ll1H
Despite several concessions by the
developer, San Juan Capistrano city
councilmen Monday refused to approve
the rezone of 241 acres north of the city
for a planned community.
The entire matter was referred back to
the planning commission with in-
structions that several specific conditions
~ proposed for placement on the rezone.
At a long but calm public hearing,
architect Robert Van Roekel, speaking
for Covington Brothers Development
Company, said the firm 's proposal had
been reduced from 816 units to 720 units.
Bowing to nearby homeowners' cam·
plaints about the "quality'' of the
development, Van Roekel added that con-
dominiums and duplexes had been
eliminated from the proposal and that
homes there will sell from $24,000 to
$60.000.
Van Roekcl gave a lengthy slide
presentation, showing the area as it is
now -a citrus orchard backed by steep.
rolling hills -and renderings and maps
of the development, with homes along the
ridges and in the valleys. The tops of the
hills would be leveled and the valleys fill~
ed In he added, to provide a flat surface ' . for home construction. .
Each of the councilmen ex.pressed
some satisfaction with the planned com-
munity concept, saying il would he better
thu sub-dJvision development. The prop-
erty Is iocat.d Inland ol the freeway
between Mlasion Hills ·Ranch and Villa&•
Sill Juan.
However, a majority • of the coUncl1
!avored placing cooditlona ot1 the mone to lnlUre lbat the cSevelopcr, when con-
atruclloo llnall.Y bt&l!1s. lllcb with the
propoul. Councilman F.d Oiermalt noted
that IUCll conditlonl are normally Im·
poled .., the tentative tract map, not on
the 1't':1one.
• •
U'I Ttl..iioll
Ho, Hu m
California delegate Lucinda Brown of Richmond naps during the pro-
cedings at the Democratic National Convention. At right is Tony Pol-
vorosa of San Leandro.
Democrat Time
Schedule Told
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
The Democratic National Conven-
tion has announced the following
scheduJe for tonJght's activities:
times are PDT:
4 p.m. -Session opens .
5 p.m. approximately~sider
alion of the Platform committee
report.
Consideration of the Rules com-
mittee report is scheduled to fol-
low, but there was no indication of
the expected time.
President Pays
Surprise Visit
To Capo Cafe
President Nixon -sporting a grand
appetite for Mexican food -dropped into
his favorite local restaurant Monday
night.
It was the first visit to the EI Adobe in
San Juan Capistrano in at least a year
for the President and his small party.
And the Chief Executive sat far from
any available television sets -holding
true to his aide's promises that the
President would not alter his schedule to
follow the Democratic National Con·
vention, (Related story, Page 3.)
Nixon was accompanied on the
surprise dinner outing by Reader's -
Digest Board Chainnan Hobart Lewis,
close friend C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of
Florida arid Presidential Navy Aide Lt.
Cmdr. Craig Campbell.
Nixon ordered chile relleno and tacos
from the bill of fare, then later placed
another order for more tacos.
Wire services, in an apparent con-
cession to Eastern readers, described
chile relleno as "green pepper enveloped
in an omelette-like cheese wrapper."
Nursery School
Meeting Slated
An organizational meeting for the first
parent-participation nursery school in
Irvine will take place Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Culverdale Clubhouse.
Parent-participation nursery schools
are a nation-wide program where parents
volunteer time to bring down the costs,
organizer Jeanne Holt said.
There are about 30 children signed up
ror the Irvine program now, she said. but
40 are needed to open It and apply for
state aid. For more information, call
Mrs. Holt at 551-2386.
Citizens Groups
Meet Wednesday
Four Irvine citizen advisory com·
millees plan meetings Wednesday.
The arts and culture committee will
meet at 7:30 p.m. in Room 175 of the
social sciences tower on the UC lr\line
campus.
A joint meeting of the parks and open
space and environmental quality com-
mittees will begin at 7:30 p.m . .in the city
hall Mnex , on the ground floor of Irvine
Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive. ·
The public highways and transportation
committee meets at 7:30 p.m. in the
Verano Recreation Center, 3300 Verano
Place, also on the UCI campus.
Advisory group meetings are open to
the public.
Hawaii Dockers Idle
HONOLULU (UPI) -Hawaii's 900
longshoremen shut down p o r t s
throughout the islands Monday to
register displeasure over stalled contract
negotiations. Another work-stop meeting
was set today by the International
Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's
Union, an action that brings a halt to the
vital shipping lifeline.
Fre•P .. eJ
TRUSTEES •.• •. . .
electlool for tai, bond and ap-.'
portiooment lau<I.
Trust.., Indicated they want to bol4
--and taa eJecllao In ... jwlctloa.:
with the Nov. 7 1enera1 dectlon and at!.
ed Hillman to ... II Orange Countx·
" registror of voten Dave Hitchcock would·
recommend this to the Board of,
SUpervtsora. :·
Hillman said he J<qew Hitchcock was:
against It because qf Its Hlnconvenience. ••,
San Joaquln district official Dave Kine.
warned that "it coats more for a:
November election plus It's a conf111tni
time for the voters."
Trustee Lee Slcoli answered, 11Frankly.:
I am slck of that old saw" and added.
that ''Irvine voters have supported alr ·
school money issues yery well." •
The November elections would also.
bring a greatu tumo.ul, !rust ... agreed: :
Of the $30,000 listed for consultants if\ ·
the requested loan, a small amount. will-•
go to fund a workshop Aug. 18 with fiv&
consultants. Set to begin at 9 a.m. af
University High School , the open board.
meeting will be to discuss qualificationS
for a superintendent. Trustees may ad.;
journ lo an executive session to dlscusi
individuals recommended ror the job bli'
the consultants, who will be paid $150 a. ·
day and travel expenses for their help. :
The five, who have already a~ceptei{
the pGSts, are Lamar Mayer, Downey .
School District; John ~1oore, Sacramento:.
County Board of Education; Willia~
Cunningham, Association of CaUforni~
School Administrators : Clarence HaUt ·
state associate superintendent of publio
Instruction and Richard Foster, Ber kele;
School District. •
Trustees took _three actions relating to
the San Joaquin School Distri ct. :
They approved a total of seven &J>t
plications for state school building aid
being requested by the San Joaquirt
board before the state allocation board in
July and August.
The first two applications -aC·
quisltion and construction of a school in
Irvine's College Park area for $1."Q
rnjllion and construction of a school in
Mission Viejo for $1.9 million -now
have Irvine and Saddleback Valley ap;
proval. They also need approval of Tustin
Unified trustees in order to go to the
state.
Based on 1971-72 assessed valuatiOll.
Irvine would ~ liable for $1.S million on
those loans. •
Of the five remaining appllcations, only
one - a six classroom addition (o
Rancho San Joaquin School -is in
Irvine. ft would cost $288.599 and Irvine
would be liable for $209,000. The other
four site constructions are in Mission
Viejo. Only Irvine has approved the!i9
measures. ~
Irvine trustees also passed a resolutiOfl
11implorlng" San Joaquin trustees to dp
everything possible to keep all distzi~
children off double sessions this fall. •
Sharon Sircello and Lee · S I c o l t
volunteered for a committee of two tO
study food service systems before San
Joaquin district officials take out kitcheO
equipment in University Park School thl&
year to make one San Joaquin kitchen.:
The next board meeting will be July 21
at 7:30 p.m. at University High School.:
J'romPageJ
CTTY HALL. • •
meeting ln the 300-square-foot room lJn..
possible, the Irvine Com pany let the city
use the vacant room 200 -over Ute
Store, UCl's student watering hole ahd
juke box heaven.
For the six or more weeks the new of-
fices have been being constructed. and
sound dampening carpeting has been laid
in the councll ,chambers, city meetln~s
have been heJd in a former dry cleaner•
store on the ground floor of Town Center.
Despite the moves, the city haJJ ad.
dress continues to be 4201 Campus DriVt.
and th• postal address IJ Box DZ, lrvlite
92664. •
" BE1.fER LATE TIIAN NEVER!
•
\
We're onl y one week late to
wish you a Happy Independence
Day -but •••
Really, we s~ould celebrate all
year long.
In this spirit we are offering
red, white, & blue sh a g n y Ion
ca r pet in g at $7 .95 an~ $8.95
installed.
I d e a I for boats,
rooms, area rugs, etc.
children's
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 P11c111ti. An.
COSTA MISA
64Ml31
HOUIS: MIL !lino 'Ilion.. t le 1120 -l'rf., t let -w. ttJO le I •• •
1
}
I
'
Hantingion Be.aeh
Foanf,&i~:-Y a~e1_. Teday's Flnal
N.Y. Steek.8'\
VOL 65, NO. 193, '.4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
'Happy Warrior' Humphrey Steps O.ut of Race
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Tiie lell«yl-not uy, •bowevtl', whether ho-would sup.
ed happy warrior, lfubelt H, Humpllrey, part McGovern, an old Irland, for the
' pulled out of the race today for the nomiJ>atl.m. • ·
Democratic presidential DOminltlon in '>Hwnpliriy-8re<i somber aa be read
-lhe~face-<f-tbe -1I01--l.!Govem_a_~_M>!L statement on his
steamroller. , . . d9ctalm · that clinched the noqlilulllon
Humphrey, the 11111 nomlnet, appwed W«!nelclOy ' night !or G<Orge S . wit1' his l!lfe Muriel and dau,bter 1t his McGovern. .
Bl~ 1t t : IZ p.m. PDT ,before a . c~ His voice 1nte· 1Ugbtly toward the end
room lull ol reporters to 1J1DOU11ce his ol the stat..nent . ., be thanked bis stair
withdrawal, saying. he Wu releasing Jµs and sUppotteit who worked for blm.
deltgatea to "vote as they wiJb." He did 'Aft'er' re1dlnc ibe ·Prepared 1tatement,
* * * McGovern
Cinches
Nomination
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -George S.
McGovern clinched the Democratic
presidential. '!"lllinatlon today u Hubert
H. Hwnphrty steppe!I out of the race and
McGovem'1 other key rivals moVed to do
tlie ...... . •
McGovern reined in his hoW u the
c:oalltioo which hoped to atop him
Wednesday oigbt dlJsolved arouod blm.
He Wked by ttlep1-to Hompbrey
atter the "happy warrior'•" botM>Ut.
lMcGovem a a i d Humpbrey.11 wit.ho
drawal "leaves us all wilb •a aeme ol.
polllJlancy, but most of all It reminds ua
of,'his 25-year fight for human justlct."
"For many years, be hu been my
neighbor, my friend and my penonal
~lor. That relatiooshlp will coo-
~e." .
Humphrey, victim •of lfcGovem'1 11-
tnontb bsttle for the nonllnatloo and of
1llck convention floor JDl:DeUYen on the
part ~f the.South Da111i1ao Monday night, i;ei.....i bis . delegates to vote u they
wish. . '
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who ~ con.
trols ·some 100-conventicm votes, later in
Ibo cilY fol!Qwed HUl!lphnoy'1 withdrawal.
· M:cGov"" ~ l1lft 41 -lbort ol the 1,509 needed for · victory wbell
ha!Joting begins Ill the ..., ... tloo ball
w.........,~ ..
~~.,, .. ~ ..
Humphrey added a few words saying,
"We've !ought the good figbt ... Now we
bow out."
He thee bugged Muriel and walked
away Crom the microphones. '
Humphre.y was7iili:I to Jiiive reached
his decision to withdraw early today
after seeing h1s Jpajor hope of overtaking
McGovern fail. 'Ibat wu'tbe convention's
decision to give McGovern all. 217
delegates from California, instead of
1plitting theni up witb Humphrey getting
Jlwnj•1Q'a • ,.. t ' ··~ 1Blllf OI them ali!ioll .,n ID 1loclt -.,,,
will plll bbn _, put the nqulnd
quota . . •
GeoJ'IO C. Wallace ~ plans ID
10 to the cmvenllm &or tmlgbt ro prtss
his light !or the kind of comervative
Platform be says the porty must haye !or :nc:tory in November.
Thj!' qlJI, ~onal tower of Huntington Beach High Scb.ool presents an Odd bacltdrop fdr ·t~e' city's brand new, $10.5 million dvlc center un~er conslnJction. acrvss·t~e street. The civic center.is scheduied to
open Its doors in October, 1973, but city officials say ·th:e work is
ahead of schedUle now. Shown here is !be police facility which di-,
reclly faces the old high school.
, 1\'ltb· a.bottle ol beer, a loog, thin ~:
·"1> shoes-. oil and bis tie dlaca
McGovern ntdled oo ldevisloe in his
pentbouae llUltt u .all bis rlvala -united
in their fervor to atop him -!ell to the
power of ,his tigbt!y 'dlsclplined loyalists
on the conven.tiaa noor-.
• The supre1Dely ainl'Mlellt Pralr1o stale
senator planned to leclude h!nwlf today,
P1>5Sibly oo a bolt, to g0 over dralll of Uic acceptance apeeclt be lully upected
to deliver before the convention 11nn·•
day night tollowing ,Wedoe1day'1
presidential balloting.
There was no word from him about •
choice of a numing-mate.
The action shifts tonight to the party'&
plaUonn, wltb Wallace hoping to make a
~rsonal appearance at the convenUon -
but probably not from Its l'O!trwn -to
lead the fight for bis own ~·
The w allace forces hoped to purge
lroqi the plaUorm llbUal .plankS oo \xl>-
ing, welfare and national defense which
reflect McGovun'1 viewpoint.
Kennedy, Woodcock Eyed
' -· -As McGovern VP Hopeful
~ Bl!'\CH, Fla. (~) ~ On the
eve ol. George Mi:Gov!f!I 'I• likely oomJnii-
tlOn rm: pretfd'en~ ainior afaes said today
they regard Seo. Edward M. Kennedy as
the SOUt!t Dakota seoat:or's ·top choice as
a running mate.
B~t there is .111rpr1Jingly strong back-
ing for
0
labor leader Leonard·Wo0dc0ck.
. Thia.ls the substance of 4Jl ua:eument
based on a aeries of interviews in w'hich
Ille advisen weer asked Co list tile thre<
most likely McGovern choices if, as ex-
pected, be wins the presidential nomina·
lion Wednesday .night.
before and arter McGovern's victory in
Monday ·night's califomia credential!
light brwght him to tile lxink ol first.
ballot nomination in balloting scheduled
Wednesday nigh!.
Several advl.sen said they f e I t
McGovern probably narrowed the list of
possible l'W1.Ding mates down to a
handful. All agreed tl!at, instead or
soliciting .pcmible _running mates from a
brood Circle ol party leaders, the South
Dakota Senator ts more likely to ask
their views on one or two of bis own
choices.
1118 and McGovern 120 hosed Oil the June 6
primary voting.
Humphrey then 1lept on his decision a
few houri and met With hiS top advtsers
at mi<lmomiJ>g. Later, be called ~tber
his stii!rlor&croseame.11ng and -..
tears were abed, including some by
Muriel Hwnpbrey-be told them he was
bowing out.
The HUJ!llibreY statement said:
"After conwltation with Some of my
closest friends and supporten, l have
deteonined that I will not pennl.t• my
name to be entered in nomination at the
convenUon, and I am now releasing my
dete~to volt"-' ~ish.
"My withdrawal from tbe presldenUal
raCe ls a withdrawal of candidacy only.
It ls not a withdrawal or spirit, or o(
determinalton to continue the battle I
have waged all my public life on behalf
of those who had no voice.
''On behalf or Mrs. llwnphrey-and·me,
I wish lo thank th<J6e who have -
so hard for these past slx months not o.
ly for my candidacy, but for the greater
goal o1 a natloo govmoed witb jUJ!ice
and compassloo."
Ad libbing, eyes glistening, a faint
smile on hi' lips, Humphrey then spoke
or having fought the good fight within the
rules and stressing that his spirit was not
broken.
Spacemen Scolded
-
NASA Slaps Wrists for St.a mp Sale
WASlilNG'l'ON (AP) -The space
agency today dlaclplined the three APollo
15 aslronauts for carrying 4 o O
unauthorized postal coven to the moon
and back last July and tbeo turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance in West
Germany.
The 100 moon-stamped envelopes later
•ppattnUy were sold to stamp collectors
for $1,500 each, the Nation-1 Aeronautics
and Space Admlrtistration aaid.
NASA said after an investigaiton that
Bandits Rob
Store, Eatery
In Huntington
Gunmen sacked a Huntington Beach
convenience store and a Mexidut
restaurant for a total of .,1,722 in C83h in
tv;o apparenUy ·unrelated robberies late
Monday aod early today. Police Aid-a yoi!tc ro~r ~pPro&ched
the cashier at Don Jose's, 9093 Adams
Ave., about 9:50 p.m. and asked her 19
chinP i qwu'ler. But what be rtally
'Wllllfad wu more money and ho ordered
her ID empty the till. -
Mia -Elliot, the caabier, told ln-vtstigaton she never saw the acnHcar·
red bandit brandish a gun, but'!ollowed
liis ORien to fill a brown paper bag With
the money. The Joss was reported to be
$1,534.
Later tbal night two bandit., one arm-
ed with a .38 caliber revolver, held up the
Stop aod Go Market at MU Edinger Ave.
aod escaped wltb $188.
The two men, described in their mld-
30s, walked into the store shortly after
midoigbt, ostensibly to buy cigarettts.
As cle.rt Steven F..dwards reached for a
pack, one·of the meo .pulled the.revolver
and said, "Give me all your money 1n the
cash reg!Jttr or I'll lttll you," police
ttPoried.
The gunmen then asked for more
money and Edwards took them to the
back of the store where another small
box with money was kept.
After se~ the box the two men fled ,
leaving Edwards in the rear of the store.
No getaway car was seen.
WITH NA ME LIKE
THAT, I'D RUN
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -ClaS!Uied
ad: "Lo!t -gray and white female cat.
Answers to electric can opener."
astronauts David Scott, Alfred \Vorden
and James Irwin "exercised poor judg·
ment in their action .
"Therefore, they will be reprinlanded
and their actions will be given due con-
sideration in the.Ir aelectlon for future
assignments," the agency said,
Dr. George Low, NASA deputy 1d-
ministrator, commented:
"Astronauts are under extreme streS!
In the months preceding a flight to the
moon, and their poor judgment in car-
rying the unauthorizect covers must be
comidered in this light.
"Nonetheless, NASA caMOt condone
these actions."
NASA said It learned that the Apollo IS
crew agreea 1t ooe time to provide lOG
covers from their lortbcomlng mlalloa
to the acquointance.in retum !or -
llJhment of 1 "trust fund" for their child-
ren.
"After the covers had been given to the
<See ASrRONAUTS, P1ge %)
Shots Bring Aid
Injured Officer Finall y Helped
A blood-!Oaked , off-duty Long Beach
p>llceman fired several shots from his
pistol to lxing help early this morning,
after his car smashed into the rear oI a
parked van near the Bolsa Ollca bluffs in
Huntington Beach.
Police said David Ryan, 26,· a patrol af.
ficer wllh the Long Beed> Pjllce ~
ment, 'f'U clriving eut on ,l>odllc· £'list
at aboul $ a.m. this mornina: when
another car blocked h1I lane and !orced
him to smash Into Ille rear of a vao park-
ed on the side of the road.
The occupant of the Van, Jimmy R.
Paustel! ol Buena Plrl:, was asleep when the accident occurred •. Wbeo be emerged
from the vao he found Ryan bleeding
profusely and went to get help.
Meanwblle Ryan atwnbled out of his
pick-up and made his way to the back of
the car and lay dow• there. When no one
came to his aid alter severaJ minutes be
began to fire hiJ pistol In the air.
Five unld.ntuled surfer& on the beach
heard the ahola and found him. Tiiey then
drove Into downtown HunlinllOD Beach
and stopped the first PQllee car rm the
,streeL
Pauatall, In Ibo meantime, had Ill-
a ride to Hunllngtoo Beach filllc:o Rllll-
quartera IDll eoatr.alld c•11t1 u.n.
Pollc:e arrived » -allar tilt IC>
cident .....,. dolrinf wllidl -no -had Bl~ to rive aid to the bodir. In-
jured ofl)l:er, according to Police.
Ryan. wa1 reported in satisfactory ~
dition this morning at Pacillca Hospital
with head Injuries, contusions and
abrasions.
Three Count'"1 Residents
Die in S-wimming Poo"ls
"swimming pools Monday, the county eor-
oner'1 olllc:e reported today,
The victhrus :
Joan Dorfinger, :!ti, of 1678! Montclair
Lane, Huntington Beach.
Fritz P. Goossenes, 70, of H~t N.
Park Blvd., Santa Ana.
Ellzabetb Ann Conely, l3, o! 11431
Birmingham Place, near Tustin.
Huntington Belch firemen '8ld Mia
Oorflinger was swimming in the Marina
High School pool Monday evening when
Oho was sirlc ken. Emergency lreetment
was given but she was pronounced dead
on arTival at Huntington. Intercommunity
Hmpital.
The coroner'• office is cooducting tats
to deternilne the uact cau .. of death.
Mn. Conely, wife of Dr. John Comly,
Santa Ana neurosurgeon , wu-lound· 111
her husband fleeting face down In the
family pool.
Mr. G0088enes apparently drowned in
a nei&hbor'11 pool at 2.111 Benton Way,
Santa Ana.
He was found by the owner who had
been alerted by children.
Media-'Hali' Wits?
Carpenter's Bill
1To Change Smo g
Testing Killed
,.'Don't let anybody fool you/' one ad·
vlser satd. "He's the mbst serious
posllblDty 1<>lng. This IJ not a ploy !or
labor support." Success Seen • Ill Cavities
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -
0
Employes at
the convention headquarters hotel,' many
of them CUiiens, hove been chuckling
over t~ bad&es used by newsmen. They
read "Media," which In Spanish means
"Hal!." .......
, SACRAMENTO "(AP) -Tiie Callloroio
Senate has miolhered a btll to . cllange
1utomobile emlllioa control lttllnc pn>o
cedum. ,
• The blD, by Sen. Demi& carpenter (11-
Newporl Belch), died oo a IW •Ole
)fooday. Spoooored by the Callloroio Air
llesourtea Board, 11 -atatt •P.
·provol ol new can ...., '"' sale.
Pruent Jaw requ1m -can to lllHI
state pollution Jaw -· and the
•customer ts t1-'lllca1IJ -It -
by a stlclter m tbe ar'a -leld
<:arpenler'a bill Wild. ponnlt aD can
lo be certified Ille for sale 1mwlb Ille
uaembly line leal1nfl ol two peroeot ol
all the ..,. ol. .., -typo.
c.rponter ·Ald tbb would parmll lhl
.. ol I DOW tat Which would be loo a-
Jl"lllVI to l1'l'IJ OD all cara. Bal If ap.
:piled ID only · two pemnl ol. the pn>o
dud1on, the COil would be oo1y allllll IO
to 'II ..,.. per ear ll pronllll over all ol
Ulem.
I 1
•
Bestdea Kennedy, the Interviews show·
ed considerable bockini · for ' three · ·
l\OOBtors -Gl¥lord NebOn of WiJCOllSln,
Philip A. Hart ol Mlchicao and Abraham
A. lll6icolt ol. Connecticut -and for c<w. lleubln Aake• ol Florida. Rlbi<ofl
md Aakew hive aid they're not inttr-
'111e 'lillervlews were cOOdilcted both '
Democrat Tim e .
ScOOdule To ld ·
!llWll BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
'ftle Democntlc N1Uon1l Conver>-·
lion baa announced the foilowiog
I• !ldle<lult for tmight's activities: times are PDT:
4 p.m. --. opens.
I ·p.m. approxlmately--Oln•kler-
.allon of tbe PlaUorm Committee
~ ol the llulel Com-
mittee report 11 ICheduled lo fol·
low, bot tliere 'WU DO indlcallon of.
the apected -
•
•
•
' ...
Mat h Teac her RewardS'His Stude11.ts With Cand ies . . .
By JOHN ZALLER
Of Nit Dt!IY , 'llllt St•tf
~tb teacher William Gerhardt says
he can measure the success of his
student. by the 11110Unt of weight they
gain. Or the number of cavittes they get.
"It's not lhe usual way to taech math,"
he admits. "But it does work.,..
Gerhardt's trick is a si mple one. He
r!Wlrds his atudenta at the s u m m e r
moth clinic at Lark View School In Hun-
.llOltoo jleach with candy !or each right
answer.
The candy be u,.. is penny for penny
the best incentive be could use, ar be
sees It
"Sure, 1 can think of better rewards,
but not for the money. And It has cbang·
ed the way a lot of Ir.ids loolc at matb.
"'l'bere are some who ,,._ liked math
Ind lle\'tr AW any rtaa to -k hard
al IL But once candy got them 1ntere1ted
In the lllbject, they found lhat they ""1ld
do H and that they mo like H."
Gerhardt 11s u.lng a bulc method
known as "positive reinforcement" that Is
rapidly becoming popular in educational
circles. While the specific incentives may
vary, the method st.ruses reward for ac-
. compll!hmeot rather tban punishment
for. failure.
Aa educators vie• It, the enticement of
reward is 1 11\Gtt powerful motivator than
fear of punlJhment.
"But 11'1 not all gravy," Gerhardt
points out. "We test cblldren when they
co11111 Into class to find out their levd of
achievemenL Then we give them
IUlgnmenll that are cballenglng; but art
f t the same time ones thlt we're sure
• they can bapdle." ·
"!'he reward ayatem I• ~lllJled so tbat <hildnn must perform just llittle belier
111 each IUC<tedlnl test In order to q..ury for candy.
R<wardl may be dispensed !or rlaht annrin: on a test , for answtrl given in
clau lnltrucUon, or (or achJevemtDl of
an Individual project.
"Mostly we're able to keep it ngulattd
pretty well, but there was one a:lrl who
earned 72 M I< M's on a 1ingle lett. That
was too much, but It showed whet she
could do."
Of course, there are many other corn.
Ponenls to Gerhardt's matb clw beltdea
the candy rewards. The odul~to-ctudtnt
ratio averages a.1, and can go u low as
'91. Such novel kttaa as ''homework for
partnts" are rtgular featurea, and In-
volve teaching younpten trick problema
wltb which tbeY can bo!Oe the!\"
Aerospace dada. In ldditloo, ail ol the
mattrlll uaed in the clinic ii dlllereftt
from that used In the npler c!.-m1 ·
so 'that kldJ are ...,.,.1eec1 a dlllerllll fpproocb to' the aubject.
'
"Obe Indication of -b tbal kids ;1ar1 show Ing up half-an-hour before
cl1ss begins," Gerhardt ..,s. "ltkls doo'l
(See MATO, P111 t)
•
• . . (
Ce••
Wutlaer
The wtathetlody -ci.r and sunny skies through Wednesday •
with highs ol 70 at Orooge Coast
sand!, rising to ao de1reea Inland.
Low1 17-47.
INSWE TODAY
Chfccoo Mal/Or !Ucllard J . .00.
ley rr1"'ed compromi.1 •/Jori.
by Sen. McGov...,. on th• thomv
que1tion of delegate seating. Al
p restllt, Daley lo1t hfi aeot Sec •uirr and otlic:r conwntion rt-
suli. .. Pao• 4.
l,M, -• -' ,_ -._ " c,..,... 'J _.. ....... It --. ... ,, l .. lt
JIMMll -.u "" ....... ,, .... _... 1• ... ._ u
...
I
-
"
,·], . . . ·~
-.... JJ.;....,,,;.
Huntington Parade:
Is It Wearing Thin?
By RICHARD L DIWU!
Of 11t O.lff' 'U•t ''-"
IN THE CRILD'S Lile, 11'Mle Emperor's New Clothe.1," I king 11 taken
fer 1 bundle because a couple of sharpie tailors playing on his v11nlty convint.-e
him they can make him a special new stt of threads out of magic cloth only
the good and pure of beart can see. ->
Naturally the king makes a spectacle ()f himself ln
a parade, but no one is about to admit the king is a shabby
nude and not really clothed In the finest of robes. But
some kid. who only knows what he 1ees, exposes the con
game and it all comes out tn the wash.
Was J tbe only one who saw whit 1 aaw at Huntin1ton
Beach's aMual Fourth of July Parade? Ojd anyone else
feel I.My mtased something after ltandin& in the sun for
three bourtl
o•••• FIRST, how do you make a parade last three houri?
The Rose Paride, ~ Rolls RQyce Of parades, is only ,aboUt two hoU:r1 long.
Ooe trick in Huntington Beach ls to ibave as many dance stud io, junior
hi&h and parks department drill and baton twirler teams as possible in the
parade. Then they have each team member march at least JO reet behind his
or her nearest teammate and they allow about a quarter of a mile between
-group. Another way they make the parade lut 11 by finding is many mechan-
bld Shrlner groupe 11 poulble. These ire htttalled near the front of the parade
wttb: their cute lltU1 motor ICOOten. Then. when everytbinL.Jeerrui to be mov-
ing along too swiftly, the Shrlners can tum quickly and go sidewa ys, or even
back against the now of the parade, performing the intricate crossing pat-
term ao popular with parade watchers and raising the carbon monoxide level
along the parade route. to intolerable levels.
Su~I clJirw,
PATRIOTISM, like any kind of love, is hard to describe. But is it even
remotely connected to 1 man in an Uncle sam costume on 12-foot stilts, carry-
ing 1 1lgn 1nd reminding pa.ride watchers thfough a bullhorn of the virtues
of thrift, e1peclally by openln1 an 1ccount at Mariners Savings?
A few fond ind proud momenta In the military came to mind as the
color pard strode by, but when the Burger KJng float and Ronald McDonald
went by me, the lump tn my throat was only lndJgesUon. I failed to see any
connection with our country's birthday.
For the Mth aMual Hunllngton Beach parade, people were said to have
worked for a'Jear to bring ·you the Orange County Dune Buggy Association
(al&bt UIOrt rebuilt Volklwagens), the Hollywood Dog Obedience Club, a
charm achool convertlble with four girls in Lhe back, two vehicles from
a pest control firm and the acatlering of horseback riders to whom no distance
b too snat to travel for an opportunity to W'ear a cowboy suit ln front or an
1udience.
A IA.NNER announcing a drill team w11 carried by a sweet.raced little
4-~ .. ld. She 1taggered through the hone droppings and you could tell from
the rellgned look on her fact that she really appreciated the opportunity her
parents gave her to break in her new white shoes on this forced march.
And then there were the poor guest.s of honor -about a dozen men
from tht Long Beach Veteran11 Ho1pltal. AU were confined to wheel chairs
.. or tumeya. They were placed at the curb, facing the sun, where tor three
houri, relieved only by an occaaional mow cone. they were asked in the name ot P1triotllm to once again 11v1 thit las\ full meaaure.
But I don't w1nt to leave you with the Impression I didn 't find some-thlna about the parade I liked. There was this leggy majorette about sil: feet
1111 In a tllht COl!wne wllh the CIJM/eJ all In the right place•. But she went by
cmly once ind ao eecondl out of lhree houri wa1111't enough to make me want
to come back next year.
THINGS GO OIJT of style and maybf parades like lhil are oot of style.
I b&Yt a f e e 11 n g they are prlmarlly for the people who organize tllem and
march in them. Take iway that magic cloth and there's not much to see. lf
yw don't b11leve me, tlke a real hard look next time. For you can be sure,
~Ja my view•, there will bf a nut time.
'
Justice Halts Hearing
Involving 2 Policemen
By TOM BARLEY
Of t1M O.llY '"" lltff
An Orani• County Superior Court
judge today 1tepped In to hall a
municipal court contempt bearing for
two Huntington Beach patrolmen and set
the ,ttqe for 1 three-way tug of war over
it,al!CI between the police department. the
Jntema.I Revenue Service and a Santa
An• lawyer.
• Jlldge Jamel F. Judge set July 21 as
the datt for a hearing on which he will
review the plea by the city of Hunttn1ton
Beach for a ruling oo actions that led to
the filing of contempt char1es against or.
ficers Fred B. Loya and Robert
Cavender.
oaANtl COAST "'
DAILY PILOT
Tht o;.,.. c .. 11 DAILY PILOT wrfll ..+i1ti.
It ~ ttM Ntwt-P'r-nt, 11 flllbll.n.d •Y
tM °"'"" COit! 1"1161r,hlnt COl'l'\Ptnv, s~
nlft tdHllM t1r1 Pllbllthed, Monda'I' through
Frld1v, for Coll• Mts•. ,.twsiort eet ch,
tfllnll!'Gl«I htdVFounllln Vt lley, U.1-
...,._ lr\llM/$.lddltMdt end ltn C~Mt/
ltn J111n C.plslr-. A tl"Olt r-vlanel
911111oft h J!Ublllfltd ltl11'111V1 tind SU!ldlVL
TIM> PffndlNI PUllllshltlt .. lllnl It •t IXI w,.i
.. , l trwt. a.t• Mtw, c1n1wn11, rUlll.
l•ltert N. W1ecl
Prttldtflt •tllf '11bllthtr
J eck It. C11rl1l Vkt·,,.lcl911t ft OIMtt M.,.,.,.
Thim•• ke1•il ldllor
T>i1rne1 A. M11r,hl~•
MtMflllf EclHtr
Clic1tlH H. L.01 ~ich•" P. Nill
At1l1te111 M11111'"9 Edlter&
T1rrt C.Y!lle
Wttt Or•"fe Cllll'lt'f' fdllll" .. ...._ __
17171 le•dt l111l1Yet4
M1Uh11 A44r11 n P.O. 11• 7t0, t1•41 -Olfk .. UftiN lllcft• 222 """' .......... Clell """'' 230 Wnf .. .,. llrMI N.....,-t IM<ft: Ji# """" '°"!WIN IM Clll'Mntt1 .a Norw. 11 C•ll'llN lllMI T .. •P•••• (7141 '42o4JJ1 --••""'*I '42-1'71 '""' Ntrlfl w..._.. CtWllJ c-m.n ... 141-1211
~ '"" °'.,.,. CMll filwfltl ..... ~.,.. ... """" ...... htf1tltM, ~,,.....-~..._.. ....... """ ... ......... ""'*" ....... ..... """"'""...,,.,, ..... .
.. ·~--............... c..t1 M..,, . '-tt!ltllll ... tttr• ...... IMftffl"°'' "' Milt" N .11 ll'llflllill'r1 MllltvY ........ llM ........
I
His action halts the contempt heariog
scheduled ror this morning by West
Oranae County Municipal Court Judie
Jamea L. Smith. And it also halil until
July 21 any action on the $5,000 'at the
root ~f the issue.
Charges filed 1gainst James Leroy
Crittenden, 28, Huntington Beach, shortly
arter his arrest April 1 lndlcate th.at the
15;000 was part or 16,591 that originally
ti.longed lo him.
Uiy1 and cavender claim that Crit-
tenden threw $2,000 out of his car as he
w11 being pursued. They uy they found
a further $4,591 in his vehicle when they
booked him on charges of assault with a
deadJy weapon.
In any event, the lawsuit filed by the
city 1tates, the $6,~91 was locked away
for safe keeping pending a court
determination on the future destination
of Crittenden's funds.
The lnternal Revenue Service was first
on the scene with a noti ce of levy that
demanded surrender of the full $6,59,1.
Sen. Muskie, Too,
Pulls From Race
For Nomination
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (API -Sen. Ed·
mund S. Muskle of Milne bowed to lhe
inevitable today and dropped out of the
race for the. Democratic presldentl1I
nomination.
Muskie withdrew a1 front.-runnl!r
George McGovern plied up enough votea
to win the .10mlnatlon on the first ballot.
Sen. Hubfrt H. Humphrey of MlMe110ta.
1nolher rlv1l, abandoned the race earlier
In the day,
Mu1klo 11ld he w11 quJtUng l>ecau .. It
Is apparent that McGovern ls going to bf
the nominee.
Under th... clrcumafanoea. Musltle
llkf; there. was no point In having his
na_"!e ••en IDtroduced Into nomtnauon.
~ fl~ry M. J1<:boo, ho•ever,
decllnid to leavt the now .. maahed 1top-
McGovitli effort, 11ylng he Is In the flaht
to Ill end.
Geoige C. Wallace rave no evidence ht
had any tntenUon of quilting either.
I
Pathologist
Testifies
' For Doctor
By TOM BARLEY
Of ,,,. ~'" ~lltf '''"
A pathologist called t.o the witness
stand by Dr. Merrtlt C. '"Mike'" O'Don-.
nell's lawyers today testlried that
barbiturate levels detected In a body ten
mont.ba after death would be Identical to
tho8e found at the time of death. IJt. Robert Richiards, responding to
data based on the death in ~1exico four
yeer1 ago of Susan O'Donnell, the plastic
surgeon's wife, commented that a
regular Intake of barbiturate1 would al110
ht reflected In the organs and tissues of
a deceased person.
Hts testimony In the Orange County
Superior Court civil trial of a Sl million
lawsuit filed against the ph ys ician by
. Mrs. O'Donnell's mother a ~ared to
strike al ea rlier testimony th a t
barbituate levels round in the dead
woman nearly a year later indicated
much higher levels of poisoning at the
time or he r dea th.
O'DoMell, 57, of 420 Kings Road ,
Newport Beach is actused of bringing
abou t the death of his attracti ve artist
wife by injecting into her what Mexican
aur horities believed to be luminol -a
highly toxic barbit urate .
Mrs. O'Donne ll. 38, died in her Cozumel
Island hotel on March 19. 1968. She was
buried in the Yucata n Peninsula resort
the next day and he r remains were ex-
humed by local authorities 19 da ys later.
Richards testified today that alcohol
consumed In considerable quantities in
the hours before any intake o f
barbiturates would amplify the effects of
lhe drug In direct relation to the quan-
ti ties of both drink and dru gs.
O'Donnell 's lawyers claim th at t h e
surgeon and his wife drank heavily
throughout the day berore her death to
celebrate wh at has been stated to be a
third annlveN1ary trip and an attempt to
patch up a disintegrating marria ge.
O'Donnell. who pra ctices at 2011
Westcliff Drive and 307 Placentia Avenue
in Newport Beach. sent a telegram to his
wUe's famil y three days after her death
in which he stated that she died in a traf-
fic accident.
He arri ved in California five days arter
her death to tell her famil y that the
telegram vers ion or her death had been
intended to spare them as much shock as
possible.
Mrs. Gertrude Barnett , 63. or Seal
Beach Leisure World has testified that
her son-in-law then told her and other
members of the fami ly that Mrs. O'Don·
nell died of a heart attack.
O'Donnell has stated in e later coort
deposition that he hes "no opinion" today
on the cause of his wife's dea th. •
O'Donnell's rormer medical secretary
tsetlfled before Dr. Richards was called
that her employer's wire frequently pick-
ed up barbiturates from his office then at
18782 Main St., Huntington Beach.
Carol L. Ellis. 206S2 Farnsworth
Lane, Huntington Beach. testified in the
nonjury trial before Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
Rutter that Mrs. O'Donnell sought her
ad vjct about her increasing use of drugs.
Miss Ellis testified that Mrs. O'Donnell
told her 11he had taken an overdose of
drugs on a visit with her surgeon hus-
band to Cozumel Island two months
before and that she had been very ill on
that occasion.
Miss Ellis testified that Mrs. O'Dormell
had a key to her husband's office and
that she took barbiturate samples from
the oflice on several occasions including
the time that the couple were separaljfj,
She also stated that Mrs. oi0o•n
told her that she had been drinking
heavily and was worried about her air
parent addiction to alcohol.
* * * Doctor's Suit
Moved to County
A $200,000 libel action filed by Dr. Mer·
rill C. O'Donnell in Riverside County two
years ago has been transferred 10
Orange County for tr ial over the phys!·
clan's objections.
The lawsui t names three county
newspapers, ~1.rs. Barne tt, a Newport
Beach law firm, Hoag Memorial Hospital
and American Airlines an;iong its 70
dcrendanls. It was placed on file today.
Dr. O'Donnell opposed its tran sfer on
lhe grounds that publicity accorded to
lhe action filed by Mrs. Barnett and Ben
Haggott, Susan O'Donnell) falhe.r, would
prevent a fair hearing of his complaint Jn
this area.
The lawsuit is awaiting the setting of a
trial date.
Quality of Air
To Be Discussed
Ci ty Councllman J11ck Orf!tn wlll tell
tht Huntington Beach Environmental
Council tonl&ht how the air quality in lhil
town should bf Improved.
Green Is executi ve director of the
Re(lonel Anll·Pollutlon Aulhorlty for the
Coachella Valley, based In Palm Springs.
The public Is lnviled to the en'
vironmental council meetlnr which ls
-.Cheduled for l :lO p.m .• In the city hall
admtnlstraUve annu. llS Main St.
Mrs. Mar1arel Qlrlbet1. prealdtnl of
the council, Mid there will bt only one
meettnc por montb dllrin( the IUllUller •
The next one 11 set (or Aug. l
•
'
Elec(ed
Attorney R. James Shaffer was
elected by his fellow board
members Monday night to
serve a one-year term as presi·
.dent of Huntington Beach's
Ocean View School District
Board of Trustees.
Treasurer
Will Appear
At Airporter
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
the United States, will be guest of honor
a t a re-elect the President fund.raising
dinner set for July 18 at Irvine'• Airporter Inn.
The dinner Is plaMed by the Orange
County Hispanic Committee to re-elect
President NiJ:on. All persons art invited
to attend. Dinner reservations are •1s
per person.
Mrs. Banuelos Is the sixth woman and
tr~ rirst of Mexican-American descent to
hol1 the position of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Prtsl-
dent Nixon clled her "'elrtraonflnarily
successful career u 1 aelf-made
businesswoman.''
Mrs. Banuelos launched her Ula
Angeles food processing flnn on MOO in
1949. Today the firm grosses f5 millkm
annually and employes number more
than 300.
She became director and ln 1954
chairman of the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Loa
Angeles.
She was aJao named outstanding
Businesswoman of the Year by Lot
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1989.
A reception ls planned for 7 p.m.
followed by the dinner at a p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from.
Ticket Chairman James. H. Mlr1nd1 at
558-0262 or from lleket co-chairman Alex
Acevedo al 543-19M.
Meberg to Take
School Position
Kenneth Meberg. 34, was named assis-
tant superintendent for personnel Mon-
day night by trustees of the Ocean View
School District. Meberg, promoted from
his post as North District Zone
Administrator , will replact J a m e s
Carvell. who recently became district
superintendent.
Meberg will be paid $23.000 a year, the
u me aalary Carvell received.
Meberg came to the district in 196.1 as
a teacher at Pleasant View School. He
also is a Conner principal of Marine View
School. and this year was chairman of
the district task force on ·111-year schools.
,
Fre•P .. el
ASTRONAtJTS • • '
acqua.lntanoo, ho-er. they rulliad ...
thdr own -that this wu Jmproprr and
declined to acctpt either the trust IWKI or
the alttm1tJve orfer of wnps in u-
chin,.. w the JOO poolaf coven." HAM
•Id.
The Apollo ts crew, like those oo
earlier moon mlNlooa:, had NASA'a
permission , whhln establ ished pn;
ctdures, to carry personal souvenir-type
ttems, including JOme postal covera.
The pumlaalon w11 granted with the
condition that the arti cles be retained by
the astronauts or be given to personal
friends . Tbty were not to be u.ed for
commercial or fund-raising purpoaea or
pe_raonal &•in, NASA aald.
On Apollo JS, the astronauts wtre
authorized to carry 132. of the specially
stamped envelopes with markings show·
Ing they had made the round trip to the
moon. The 400 unauthorl.zed coven were
carried in addition to the approved ones.
A NASA spokesman ldentl£led the 1c-
qualolance to whom he said the 100
unauthorized postal coven were given as
Hont C\fatter) Elreman, a naturalized
Ametic1n living 1t Stuttgart. Elremen
met the astronaut.s when working for 1n
aerotp1ct contractor at Cocoa Beach,
Fla., the 1pokesman aaid .
A Gennan dealer Involved was Iden-
tified as Herman E. Sieger, D 7973
Lorch, Germany.
A copy of a West German newspaper
advertisement circulated here thowed
that SJe1er offered the material for 43SO
DM, or about 11,IOO each.
Man Arrested
After Alleged
Car-cycle Chase
A ~year-old man who allegedly chas-
ed 1 motorcyclist for two miles before
catching and running him down last
month w11 amsted by Fountain Valley
police Monday on charges of assault with
a deadly weapon and felony hit and run
driving.
Theodore D. Whitfield of Stanton was
bflng held this morning on 15,000 ball In
Orange County Jall. Arraignment was
scheduled for today in West Orange
County Judicial District Court.
The Incident took Place June 27, ac-
cording to police, after Whitfield alleged-
ly struck 1 wooden street barricade near
Bsookhurst Street and Adams Avenue.
Splinters struck .a moton:ycllst, Jame•
R. Alvord, 20, San Bernardino, who told
police he then uked the SllJpecl poltttly
lo be more careful.
This an1ered WhlUleld, according to
Alvord, and when the cycllat drove off,
Whitfield chased him up Brookhunt
Street at apeeds reaching 70 miles an
hour.
Just IOUth ot Talbert Avenue, IC-
cording to police accounts, Whitfield
allegedly caught up with the cyclist and
rear-ended him 1s he was attempting to
make a left tum. The colll!lon took place
at Adobe River Couri at a 1petd bftween
50 and &O miles an hour, according to
police, and caused Alvord to lote control
of his bike and crash.
Alvord subsequently was treated l'nd
released from the hospital for severe
abrasions.
Whitfield. was arrested at his home,
7882 Santi Monica Ave., following a two.
week investigation by Fountain Valley
police.
From Pagel
MATH ..•
usually come early to a summer math
class unless they like it."
Gerhardt's class, which Is designed to
Increase f a c 111 t y with math for
youngsters of all ages and abilities.
meets one hour a day in two-week
session that began Monday. Any child
may 1ttend. Call 847-9651.
U,I Tt!Wllltl
Vietor
Frank Mankiewicz, Sen . George
McGovern's floor leader, an-
swered questions after recap-
turing l~l delegates from Cali·
fornia, In a giant step toward
his goal of nomination on the
first ballot.
Bandits H unwd, ·
Gouged Out Eyes
Of Two Victims
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPI) -Police o(·
ficlals have assigned 10 extra detectives
to an ''around·the-elock. check-out-all
leads" search for two men who gouged
out the eyes of two robbery vlcllms.
Police Identified the latest victim as
Robert Paro, 19, or Rochester.
He was attacked and blinded by two
robbers Sunday night as be worked at ~
Main Street gas st1tion.
Authorities said two men took Paro
down a side street, robbed him of an_.
gouged out ane of his eyes and injtni4
the other. He was In critical conditiOW
St. M1ry's Hoapital. ~
Earlier Sunday, a lone robber $
resembled one of Paro's assailants go1,11r
ed out the efes of Samuel C. Scharer, 7Z1 also of Rochester, police said.
The assailant asked for fre sh oranee
juice In Schafer's store and when told
that there was only orange IOCl1, he
demanded money.
In a brief scuffle, the robber gougetJ
out both of Schafer'• eyes. Scharer was
reported in good condition at Genesaee
Hospital.
Police 1ald they are 11eeking two men,
one min described as about 30, wlth a
medium Afro-style haircut, end the other about 20. ·
Planning Data
Now Available
Full packet! of information on each
Fountain Valley Planning commission
agenda are now available for publlci
penJ>al In the Foontatn Valley llbniry
prior to each commission meeting. ,
The commission meets at 7:30 p.m. on
the second and fourth Wednesday of eaob
month. .
The fuH comnUsslOI agenda, with u~
planatory infonnatlon, will be placed in
the library the Friday bffore each com·
mls11lon session, city ofrlcials have an-
nounced.
Members of tht public also may view
the plBMlng agenda at city hall duri/!f
normaIJ>ffice houn. The library remainl
open during the evening.
BE1.I'ER LATE THAN NEVER!
•
We're only one week lete to
wish you e Heppy Independence
Dey-but ..•
Really, we sliould celebrate all
year long ..
In thi1 spirit we ere offering
red , white, & blue s h • g n y I o n
c e r p et in 9 at $7.95 and $8.95
installed.
Ide a I for boats, children's
rooms, area rugs , etc.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MllA
64MUI
HOUIS: Moa. llin 'lhn., t le ltJO -"'·· t let-ler, tlJt,le I
• •
•
• .
.;
• I
DAILY PILOT 3 .
Allies · ·Hit Quang Tri Candidate I ' . • • . • Hinshaw •
U.S. Copters Lift Troops In Over Barrage • . .
' • Spent Most • SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Marini
bollcopttrs lilted South Vietnll)We
t;oops into a combat asuult north of 'PDI Tri city todoy, Oyin1 into a heavy
ICrap of fi!'I behind entmy lines that
lmocked down 1t !~st three bellcopt<rt,
i\ntl.011 Slle k
•
•
the UJ!. COl)lnwld IOld .
Tbe lll\dings •. by : ·Sout!i Vietnlme5e
marines. put govetnm~t-forces on lhrff
aidff · or .tbe'f., 101fnY·held provlnclal
capital. , •
U.S. nillltuy ajio~men aaid thl
·~'.Water Pollution Bill
Approved by President
President Ni1on Monday signed a bill
calculated to fight oil slicks in United
6tates harbors. &iving the Coast Guard
stronger muscle to enfofce antipollullon
laws.
!Abeling the bill part of his 11).point
program to fight water pOllutlon, the
President cited the recent dlmter in San
Francisoo Bay which caused a massive
spill.
."We must -and can -prevent 1uch
incident.I from recurring," he aald.
The new legislation giv'ts the C.oast
Guard powers to control vessel traffic in
inland waterways and territorial aeas
and to regulate the storage and .transport
of dangerous cargo on the waterfront.
The law set.s up standards for
fiaterfront equipment, design and con·
1lruction of storage facilities and
* * * Nixon Watching
Democrat Action
:-Occasionally
~ .. Preslden\ Nlxon may be interested ln
what will happen this week at the
bemocratic National Convention, "But
be won't lose any 1leep watching it." bis
press secretary said Monday afternoon.
Ronald Ziegler said NI x on might
C,.U for 1 television set to be brought into
lits offices in San Clemente periodically
this week.
"But he has t o l d me he won't in·
terrupt his schedule much to watch."
• Ziegler puckishly drafted hls answer
ifter a query at Monday's briefing by
CBS newsman Robert Pierpoint, who
aSked If the President was going to
fiatch ''the bloodbath in Miami Beach" on television.
Ziegler. motioning toward
stenographers. said. "I want you to quote
Pierpoint on 'bloodbath', because r know
that after all the transcriptions art over
\\'ith, it'll be Ziegler who caned the con·
vention a 'bloodbath.'
1 "To answer your question," Ziegler ad·
ded after laughter subsiQed. "the Presi·
dr 1 ~ keeps a television in the anteroom
tO his office and from time to time be
probably will watch portions o( the con·
ventlon ."
· He said NI 1 on 1enerally retlrea
between 10:30 p.m. and midnight.
''You people might stay up late thiJ
wetk to watch It all. but he told me be
plans to retire at his customary hour
despite the coverage.''
· <Besides the apparently s p o r • d i c
Wevisk>n viewing. the Prt!ident expects
to k!tp abreast of the convention ~gh
bls daily morning neWI aummanea and
his personal 1c1Ming of newspaper•,
Ziegler added.
. -Judge Forbids
(:artoon Fig ures
~xploitations
: SAN FRANCISCO ( APJ -A federal
jpd1e h11 put hla judicial foot down on
~derarouncl cortoonlstl alleged t o
portray Mickey MoU!e Ind other Walt
I)Ianey cartoon characters as dope ped· dien and 1tIUal activists.
:U.S. D!strlct C<lurt Judge Albert C.
Wollenberg Monday enjoln<d the cat·
toonlsll from maklna: or selling any of
the disputed comic books ond ordered all
eoples of two l55ues to his court, pendlnc O.tcome of a l500,llOO copyright ln-
Uingemenl 1u1t. D~nty Productions In Ill suit uld the
cartoon characters encourege "an image
ol I n n o c • n t ddipUulnesa" bUt the
· Wlderground c1rtoonl!t1 show t h e
chlr1cler1 in 1 "degr1ding, lewd ond of·
renttve manner."
·:The judge emphatlc11ly denied a claim
by the defendants that they hid a rtsht
to puody the Disney carloonl under the
Finl AmenclmenL
Small Bueine8s Head
To Explain Programs
The vulous as1lll111Ce prorr1m1 of the
Smoll Bu~neaa Admln11tr1tloo will be
uplalned by Dcnlld McLarnon, deputy
...,.,..i director ol SSA It !ht trldly I~ meetln1 ol the Lall\JllA Belcll
Rotlry Club In llot<l i..iuoa.
· McLaman, a former n1tloo1I b<nk
president. will di&euM the rdatlonshlpt
of pri•1te enlerprlM 1nd the SBA, far
mutuaJ cooperation.
•
maintenance and operation of tankeri.
The Pre1ident said his. signature on the
document was signUicant because It ii
the first environmental proposal to come
from the 92nd Congress.
Jn recent days the President and hls
aides have blasted the inaction of that
Congresa and vowed that Nl1on would
veto any new bills' which exceeded hiJ
already-stated budget ceilings.
Although the anli~il-sllck legislation is
complete, a score of others related to im·
proving the environment remain stalled
in congress. '
The backlog, he said, includes updating
water-quality laws, improving pesticide
regulations, controlling disposal of to1lc
substances, fighting noise pollution and
ocean dumping, regulating strip mining
and more than a dozen other suggestions.
"Time is not on our side on any of
these fronts ," he said. "The trench and
forces which contribute to environmental
degredatlon continue apace , even during
lhe political season."
The President stressed, however, that
there is still time for the Congresa "to
mett (It.a) responsibility to the
American People" by returning Lo
session later this month and completing
work on the environmental legislation.
* * * President Pays
Surprise Visit
To Capo Cafe
President Niloo -sportini a grand
appetite for Mexican food -dropped lnto
his favorite local restaurant Monda)'
nighl.
Il was the first visit to the El Adobe in
San Juan Capistrano in at lust a year
for the President and his small party.
And the Chief Executive sat far from
any available television sets -holding
true to his aide's promiset that the
President would not alter hls scheduJe to
follow the Democratic National c:on.
vention. (Related story, Page 3.)
Nixon was accompanied on the
surprise dinner outing by Reader'•
Digest Board Chairman Hobart Lewis,
cloge friend C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo of
Florida and Presidential Navy Aide Lt.
Cmdr. Craig CfJnpbell.
Ni1on ordered chile re11eno and tacos
from the bill of fare. then later placed
another order for more tacos.
Wire services. in an apparent con·
ces.sion to Eastern readers, described
chile relleno as "green pepper enveloped
in an omelette-like cheese wrapper."
Recount Costs
Schmitz $1,512 ,
Gains 3 7 Votes
Final results of an eight-day recount of
Republican primary election votes 1how
Congrwman John G. Schmit> (11-
Tustin ) 1penL $40.lltl per vote to reduce
Oranae County Aueuor A n d r e w
Hinshaw'a lead by only 37 votes. lt
means Hinshaw Is the certain GOP can·
did.ate In November.
The recount ot June I ballot.a ordered
by the incumbent 3'th Congr ... lonal
District representative cost him fl,612 .
Tallies were completed Monday.
While Hinshaw led Schmit> by U21
votet in the earlier canvas.s of votes. the
new ftnal tally cull tbe figure to 2,414
votes .
A Schmitz aide In Washington. Robert
Geier, uid Monday Con gressman
Schmitz "haa !ome plans, but he ii not
ready to divulge them. '1
.Schmits' Oronge CounLy llde, IWldy
Smith, today C::clined to speculate on a
possible wrlt .. ln campaign. but uld.
"Schmitz lw not ruled out ony options to
date."
Fin1l bellOI counts give Hlnabew U,lU
votea. Schmitz shows 40.242.
Elrl C1rnway, an El Toro benktr. loot
288 votes in the recount for a third place
tally of !,847.
Larry Denna wound up with nine more
votes for 1 total of I.IOI.
Prior lo the recount candidates ahowed
the followtnc vote counts: Hinahaw,
42.782; Sc.hmltz, 4&,261 ; Carraway, 1111,
and Denna; 1,597.
FREE MA RTH A
MIAMI (API -Buttolll beinl worn by ...... 1trollm 1long
'eoUlns Avenue. the pl118h bolo! row
In Miami Beach, 11y: ••ReJeue
M>rth1 · Mltcbell."
crewmen of two CHM m e d I u m
bellcootm were Ille. aotnc down inllde
South Viewm... linu 1ri.r ~bit by
1nltllrtrllt lrtlllery lllCf ~
fi!'I.
Tbe f1ta ol the crewmen 1bolrd tho
third bdicopter, 1 CHl3, the bigut U.S.
troop<:lrry~ helicopter, wu not Im-
mediately llllown.
The U.S. CommlllCf said It bad no ad·
ditional detalls-i
It' was not clear whether there wtrl
South Vtatnomeae <roope 1bolnf or
whether they had been dropped oil
btfore the btlloopten wm hit. An an·
nouncemtnt from the U.S. 7th Fleet In·
dlc11<d that tn>OpS from the two CH46s
alrudy bed been dropped off. The
bellcopten new from the carrie.n.
The new asaaulf by 1everal hundred
South Vietnamese marines nort.h of
Quang Tri enlarged the government
forces' ring around the northernmost
provincial capital.
A 7th Fleet announcement said that
""initial action on the ground was hot II
the South Vietnamese marines moved off
the hellcopten and on to the offensive ."
The marines were landed 1~ mllu
north-northwest of the city, on the
eastern 1lde of the Thach Han River ~
• posite the Qulng Tri combat hose.
For the flfth successive day, en-
trenched North Vietnamese f o r c e 1
managed to stall the South VietnameMt
drive to recapture the city lost 10 weeks
ago.
Tank·led North V i e t n 1 m e s e in-
fantrymen and South V i e t n a m e s e
paratroopers and m11rines battled at four
different points on the northeastern and
southeastern outskirts of Quang Tri.
The Saigon command reported that 104
North Vietnamese troops were killed and
ei1ht tanks destroyed, six of them in one
battle, by U.S. naval gunfire and South
Vietnamese: artillery support.
"The North Vietnamese are in there to
stay," said Capt. Don Dickenson, 25, of
Bradenton, Fla.. an advi ser with the
paratroopers. "The guys who are there
have been ordered to &tay there."
Associated Pres.s correspondent Dennis
Neeld reported from the front that
Dickenson told him North Vietnamese
troops were weU dug in and around the
Citadel, In the heart of Quang Tri City.
"They are in weli-prepared bunkers,"
he said. '''Ibey've been there for two
months and they've used their lime
judiciously."
"You can put 105 and even lSS artillery
on those bunkers and you'll ,only give
them a headache."
Dickenson said he had 1een 500-pound
bombs dropped within 20 yards of the
North Vietnamese bunkers and they fall·
ed to hurt anyone inside.
"It's fighlin1 in cltlea," he said. "It'•
dirty. It's rough, and it's different from
anything we've had aince the Tet of-
fensive in Ul68. It's no lon1er the quiet
little rice-paddy war."
Kennedy'• 'Running'
Sen. Edw1rd M. Kennedy nces his young aon Patrick down the beach
at his ~uaw Island home near Hyannis Port, Mass. He said there is
••no way 1 he would agree to be vlce presidential candidate for the
Democrats.
Olympics Sailing Rac er s
Finish in Tight Clump
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The 26
boats in the third race of the Star Class
U.S. Olympic yachting trials finished the
11-mile San Francisco Bay course Mon·
day with only 10 minutes separating the
winner. DenniS Connor of San Diego, and
the last-place boat.
Connor crossed the finish line one sec-
ond and only a few feel ehead of Alan
Holt of Seattle who had a firSt and sec·
ond in ra ces Saturday and Sunday and
leads the point standing:s.
O'Connor is second in total points for
the three racer.;, with 11.4 to Holl'• sil.
Lowell North of San Diego and Bill
Buchan of Mercer lslancl, Wash., were
tied for third in the three-race totals and
J .M. "Dig Schoonmaker of Miami wu
fifth .
North, with 4-4·3 finishes, and Buchan.
6-1-5 had 21.7 points, a point ahead of
Schoonmaker with 2-6-4.
Wind.. for Monday's race lncreased
from 15 knoll to a brisk 28 at the finish,
The fleet was clustered most of the way.
Places from. sixth throuah loth were
taken In order by Steve Haan.tick of
Ithaca, N.Y., Allen ~1itchell of Tiburon,
Calif., Tom Blackaller of San Francisco.
John Bennett of San Diego and Reed
·Ruggles of Miami.
Because of structural damage to his
boat, Charles Morgan of St. Petersburg.
Fla. withdrew from the trials.
Standings after Monda y's third r11ce:
I. Alan Holt. Seattle. l-2·2. 6 point!.
2. Dennis Connor. San Diego, 3·3· I,
111.4.
3. Tie between Lowell North. S A n
Diego, 4-4-3, and Bill Buchan, Mercer
Island. \Vash .. 6-l -S, 21.7.
5. J .M. Schoonmaker, Miami. 2-6-4.
22.7.
6. Don Trask, Oakland . Calif .. S.S·l2 ,
38.
7. Tom Blackaller. San Franci11eo. 7·7·8.
40.
8. Allen Mitchell, Tiburon, Calil.1 11-8-7,
44 .•
9. John Bennett, San Dieso, 11).12-9. II.
10. Reed Ruggles. Miami . IHHO. 114.
•
,,.,.
Andrew J. Hlns~. successfUI ~
COngrtssional District Republican ca~
dld11 te and Oran1e County auessor. 1 emerged today as the biggest spender tn •
the prlmuy campalfn of those noporting •
iodate. !
Hinshaw reported that he spent $81 ,&n.
His oppoht!nL Rtp. John G. Schmit> (11-
Tustln ) 11pent $76,904.
However, the biggest spender, Ralph
Diedrich seekmg to unseat incumbent
~uperv1sor \VIJHam J Phillips in the
third distric t. m;iy have spent close to
,90,000 l! .... ·as estimated today .
Diedrich has until 5 p.m. today to file
the final report Other superv1sor11l can·
didates. William Wenke and Supervl!OI"
Robfrt Battin or lbe first dlslrict. 1\so
have not filed as !yet.
Thf> second biggest spe nder reporting,
Dr \\'ill1am Brashears or Fullerron, said
SS.Z,090 was spent in his unsuccessful
write-in campaign In tht 3 4th
ConJi!ressional District.
John D. Ratterec, sucecssful candidate
for lhe GOP nomination 1n the 34lh,
reported spending only S4.130. He got
18.684 votes to Brashears' 7.303 .
Brashears demanded a Qand count of
the votes. but when results did not show
significant change after three days of
counting. he called it off. He had been
forced to wage a Yi'rtte-in campaign
because he appeared tv.·o minutes late to
file his nomination papers in March.
Hinshaw 's list of contributors showed
lhat his public relations adviser Chip
Cleary put up a loan of $23,500 in the
form of professional strvWles. The
assessor reported receiving a total or
SM,292 in contrlbut.lons, $30,37( leas than
he spent.
Principal contributors in addiUon to
Cleary wer~ Mn. P1trlcll Reilly Hitt. •
ass.Jstant secretary of the U.S. De~ •
n1ent of Health, Zducation and Wtlfare
;ind several officials of the Irvine Com·
pan y including president William R.
t-.lason .
A third Republican in the 3tlth Dillrict.
Earl Carraway, reported s pend l n 1
SJ0,925 and the fourth aspirant, Lam
Denna, spent only $S91.
Supervi!IOr Phillipa, who finished seo-
on~ ID Diedrich in the l h i rd auper.
visorlal district, reported ape n d In•
$57,289 and said hia c<intributors put up
~5.144.
Other su pervlsorial ca n d I d a t e 1
reported were Robert Bark. $3:,400 ;
Slephen Zirschky, 1829 -both in the
third di.!!itrict race, and Paul Balch, $1 ,280
In the first district fight.
State Sen. Cl1lre W. Burpntr (!I-La
Me~a). winner of the GOP nod tn the new
42nd Congrelllonal DI.strict which In-
cludes the aouthem coastal art.a of
Oronge County, reported 1 p 1 n d In I
138,121.
A . HOLIDAY IDEA
..• 1600, 2000, 2600 V-6
Best Selection of the Ye ar •.•• on the "Import Car of the Ye ar"
Drive one home or aak about ou~ •••
-EUROPEAN ORDER PLAN
Hey! You Folks Going to Europe this year ,
We can arrange for your new CAPRI to be
waiting there for you and save $ $ $, tool
•ormigt County'• 11J11tRy f1f TIM Can"
Rome Of The New Car •••
"Gel4ett T•iieh"
211211 HAR BOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • MO_..
I I
Home Of 'nte New Car •••
"G.14ett T•iieJa"
.
J
t•
I-
•
_ 4 DAILY PILOT
Daley Nixes
, ,
ProPosals,
Loses Seats
MIAMI BEACH (UPI> -Chicago
Mayor Rlch>nl J. Daloy loll a bare-
knucldes polltlcal fight today, but
nobody, not even his vanqulsbttl, wu
ready to count hlm out aa a continuing
loroe In the Democratic party.
Daley insisted oo remJlnlng aloof from
the in-lighting of the put aev•ral
months, rejected all 1ppeals !or com-
promise, and decided to carry hit fl&hl
for conventJon delegate seats to the con-
vention floor. ~
He lost - a rarity indeed.
In !act be lost twice. A compromlst
move from backers of Sen. George S.
McGovern lo aeat both the 1)aley bloc
and itl challengen on a vOte-sbaring
basts failed, 1,413 to 1,411: Then the con-
ventioo. again rejected seating the Dale1
delegptes, 1,186.115 to 1,371.55.
It 'w .. Daley, In hit home ba,. ol
Chicago, who domlnaled the 1968 con·
ventlOn, the bloodiest and most rowdy
ever held . And It ii the same man who
will have no acUve part in the 1m con-
vention, although he will certainly wield
tremendous ~uence on whether tbe
nominee 'Carries Dllnols in November.
Even though the Chicago insurgents
and McGovern both wanted a oom·
promise to keep Daley bappy, the
memory of the ducago mayor's role in
1961 apparently was too fresh for the
new-breed convention delegates to forget.
Daley became mayor and bead of tbe
Chicago pollUcal machille In 1958 after
rising through ward ranks by precedents
aollclly est.sblilhed by the machine-boss
mayon before him.
But U the losing fight to a 31-yeaM>ld
lawyer and C1Ucago aldennan, William
Singer, didn't knock Daley out of the
pollUCal power circles, It revealed
counilw naw• In judging the mood 'of
the people and the party, and tbe power
a bunch of political novices were able to
muster. _,
Daley's biggest mlscalculatlon ap-
peared to be the manner in which he car·
ried oo the credentials ficbt. It rankled
even some delegates who m l I b t
otherwise have beeo in hla comer.
When tbe Singer group ftled ch>llenges
to the Daley delegation, Daley'~ men
lougbt back with stall tactics and verbal
broadsides. When the ln!urgent.s beld
meetings in Chicago to choose an
alternative delegation, fistfights erupted
between Slnler people and the Daley
men who infdtrated in large numbers.
A batleiy o f Daley-organizatloo
lawyers, meanwhile, carried a separate
fight through the <OUrts -In Chicago
and in Washington -using every legal
maneuver they could to beat the in-
IW'genta or at least delay them.
•Tbelr lobbying efforts were never as
smooth or as urgent as that carried on
by the Singer people, who appeared to be
everyWhere during credentials pro-
ceedings In washillgtoo and then In
Miam'i Beach when the various delega·
tions held their caucuses. The Daley men
also were heavy-banded at times, and
had a Hawall delegate on the Credentials
Committee in tears when she cast . her
vote for Daley's side.
Through it an, Daley was active on1y
behind cloaed doors. He refused to be
seen in Miami Beach until be had won a
seat at the convention. He never wu seen
al all.
Beatty 'Beautiful'
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -At tbe
Doral Hotel, where Sen. Ge o r I e
McGovern and bis party are staying, a
chief target of youthful autograph
seekers Monday was a nonpolitical act.
viser-aclor, Warren Beatty, who hu
raised several million for McGovern.
Hls girl friend, actress Julie ChrlsUe,
accompanied him. "He's beautiful," one
teenybopper sighed outalde the coffee
shop after getting Beatty's autograph.
Morphine 'Coasting'
Tom Murphine's "Just Coasting" col-
umn will not appear this week while he is
on vacation.
...
, UPIT.._...i.
WATCHING THE ACTION -Relaxing in his hotel
suite, Presidential Candidate Senaror George Mc·
Govern watches TV as Chairman Lawrence O'Brien
opens the 1972 Democratic National Convention.
Disput.es Staged
Over Democratic
Party Platform
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Democrats
who talked the nation Jo sleep In a cre-
dentlail battle early today may do It
again tonight in a di.spute over platfonn
planks on bm1ing, welfare, gun and ·birth
control, and gay llberatloo.
After a nine-hour credentials wrangle
that went on until 1:54 a.m. PDT -a
modem record -the delegates were to
resume deliberations at 4 p.m. and hoped
to get to the platlorm by 7.
Philip Zeldman, executive director of
the plaUorm committee, said lbat even if
no roll calls ·were demanded -an un:
likely possiblllty -consideration of the
basic document and 20 minority planks
could take as long u a hours .
As drafted in advance by a 1~
member committee, the proposed policy
statement commits the party to end the
Vietnam War, fight inO.atfon, restore full
employment, end the draft, close tax
IOopboles, reform weUare, end the sale of
cheap handguns and assure 11 tbe right to
be different."
Jt aJso supports busing as 0 anolher tool
to accomplish desegregation." Tonlght'1
biggest fight , to be mounted by Alabama
Gov. George C. Wallace in a personal
appearance at the convention, is ex-
pected to be about that.
Charles Snider, Wallaet'• campaign
manager, called the busing language a
party "suicide note" for November. He ·
and other Wallace supporters were pro-
posing a substitute plank calling for a
coosUtutlooal amendment to ooUaw blJI.
ing u related lo school Integration.
DAIL 1 I'll.OT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otllwiy of tho Dal~ Piiot
Is guaranUtd
Mondl.,.,rldlr: H you 1111 111t hew Y9llf' ,....,. by l :JO p.rn., c1H Ind your C'OP'I' 'WHI
119 IN'OuOllf to you., C.111 •r• ttktn unll
7::IO p.m.
SllvnS9Y tM llllldl'fl ff ~ do not rtellYI
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Ttlephontl
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a.11 ci.n.nr., cap11tr-•Hetti Siii Jvan Clplt~. Din. ,. ftt,
SOVfll l.tl\llll, LlfUN H lvllll .. • • ..,.....
'Pros' Beaten
McGove rn Crushes 'Old:
Coalition at Convention
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -First they
tried to ignore · bim, then Ibey tried to
beat bim, and finally Ibey tried to gang
up on him.
Nothing worked. George S. McGovern
beat the old-time pros at every tum.
The 49-year~ld 'South Dakota senator
made them taie notice in the early
primarlts, whiplashed them ·m the final
ooes,.and finally Mooday night and early
this morning coofrollted and crushed the
whole co8lition. I NEWS ANALYSIS I
Coming Into Miami Beach !or tbe 36th
quadreMial Democratic N a t I o n a I
Cooveotloo, Hubert H. Humphrey, Ed·
mund S. Muskie, and Henry M. Jacksoo
preached the need !or unity for the fight
abead .qlinst President Ntsoo. .
But the unity they practiced was
among themselves and the common
enemy was McGovern. Unless they could
stop the upstart aeoator lrom the pralrie,
their own cbancft: for the presidential
nomlnatloo were going and, pven their
ages, gone for all time.
They mllJted In their aJllance aome
strance parlnen.
George C. Willace, the crippled
Alabama governor, who rDR to fame for
atandlnc In a acboOlboule door to bar
deaegregatloo and bolted the party In
19M; Shirley Cblsbolm, the New York
coacresswoman, who decided lbe WU
the black candidate without COOIUiting
Lettuce State?
A tradition fell when the New Y o r k
1tate dele&atioo. decided to abandon its
century-old motto, "New Yott, the
Empire State." Instead the delqatloo
ileC!ded" it would ennounce lt.s n>ll-eall
votes with the opening. 11New York, the
state that boycottl lettuce."
aoy blacks; Terry sanlonl, . tbe pro-
gressive former southern governor, wbo
found a short-lived refuge from politics
as president of Duke University ..
The key to their efforts was Monday
night's attempt to deny McGovern 151 of
California's 271 delegate . votes, a
shortage which could have spelled
disaster for ~lcGovern's hopes of the
nomination.
The coalition, partly due to a rare
lapse ln good planning by McGovern,
m~aged to convince the Democratic
party's Credentials Committee that
McGovern sbould be stripped ol the Ul
votes.
TUrned back by the Supreme Court,
McGovern had m,go to the convention to
seek the reversal.
Less than 12 hours before the vote,
McGovern, admittedly slightly nervous
about the outcome, bad a chance to get
off the hook.
Muskie, seeking to assume the pivotal
role of peace-broker, asked all candidates
to meet with him and seek a compromise
on the California and other credentials
fight..
Into the spacious office suite wigned
to National Chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien high above Miami Beach strode
Muskie, Humphrey, Jackson and San-
ford. Wallace wanted to come but h1s in-
firmity prohibited the trip.
McGovern won. The others lost. SO,
take them all on and let the convention
be tbe judge.
McGove N won. The others lost. So,
perbapo, did the Democratic party and
its chancei for post-convention unity.
HlD'Ilphrey, the 1968 standard-bearer,
couldn't beat McGovern in the california
primary and jumped at the cbance to
beat hlm before the Credentials Com.-
mlttee. Then he led the MaiJnl Beach
coalition. In the process, be almost sure-
ly lost his standing, !or all time, with tbe
McGovemites.
Mu.!!kle, Humphrey's running-mate four
years ago; couldn't beat McGovern or
almost anyone else In the primarlos and
finally had to pull out. Despite occaaiooal
flutterlnp, Muskie refused to endorse
McGovern and finally kicked awey bit
last chance Mooday.
Balmy Air Predominating
Proclaiming himself neutral, Muskie
said he had not made up his mind on the
California chaJlenge. Then. bearing out
Humphrey's contention that he was
"solid as a rock, 11 Muskie threw in with
tbe coalition.
The alliance has one more chance to
beat McGovern. It will come Wednesday
when the Democrats nominate thel~
presidential candidate. Almost •IUl'el1
they will, once again, Jose and McGovern
will move into the presidential campaign
owing them nothing.
I
Temperatures
Altte11y, cloudy
Att•11!1, clt•r
l!llrmlneMm. d11r
l!I01t11t, clttr
l.uflala, cklud1
CMrlnlOfl. r1l11
Clltrlotte, clWllY
Clltc19G, c1t1r
(lror;l11111tl, clt1r
CkveltM. Clfff
Oll\wf', dHr o. MolMt. cloultf
Dltnllt, cloudy
H011d\111t, clMY
H01t1ton, clOltdf
k:lllNl City, cloudy
Llil V ... 1. dllr
Utt'-Reck, clMr
LOltll¥111t, dOltdy
Ml~. dOlldy
Ml1w..iltt1, clt1r
Mpl .. .St. Pl!ll, CIOltdy
Htw OrlHM, (!oudy
NNYOtlt. tlffr
Oll1•111ma City, cloucly o.n.111, deuclr
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I
Ex-delegat.es
Asked to Stay
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The 1$t
ousted calUOnlla convent Ion
deleg1tes replaced by supportera•ol
George McGovern today were In-
vited to stay as "honored guests/'
The 11111est1oo by Convention
a.airman ~ Lawrence O'Brien wu.
endorsed on a voice vote and •
round of 1ppl1use. O'Brien llid
they would be glvm "prelemd
1Mtl" aft the floor. •
Thi delolalel conunltted to -_.... olllor t111D NcGotom loot
tllelr Callfomla ... ts -the --tioo owertumed tis Crt<I<mUal•
Colrmltlel and 'fOtecl lo ... t lbe
NcGovorn -It.
Rally Tears
DoIDiFence
AroilndHall
MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP ) -A group
of 500 demonstrators splintered from a
Poor People's rally outside th e
Democratic N ' t I o n a 1 CoovenUon. on
•the opening night of the convention and
' tore down a aectlon or ch>in-lillk lence
around the Convention Hall. .
Tbey backed 1way quickly wbep 200
policemen formed a double line in the 60-
foot-wlde breach.
After an hour of ·nmnlng _around the
flower-covered fmce, jumping ·agalnst it
and tlcting gates, the demonstrators,
most ot tbtm younc whites, retreated to
their campcsite at nearby Flamingo Park
around 6:30 p.m. PDT Monday.
A police sergeant was cut over the eye
when 1 I gate WIS forced open, anii a
volunteer health group said a few
demonstrators were treated for burning
efes from chemical Mace sprayed by
police.
One mest was made.
About 2,000 persons led by the Rev.
Ralpb David Abernathy had walked from
the park for the rally sponsored by the
Poor People's Coalition. Most of them
stayed in the area in front of the hall set
aside for demonstrations. Black leaders
of the rally later tried to stop the
assaults on the fence.
During the rally, delegates hurried by
to attend the conventlnn's opening
session. The disorder occurred during its
first hour and little notice was taken
inside.
"No attempt Will be made to force our
way into lhe convenUon," Abem.athY,:
said, "We don't believe in using force.
We have other ways to dealing with the
Democratic party."
Police said about 300 officers rushed
from the ConvenUon Hall basement to
take stations around the fence and on one
occasion some 30 Highway · Patrol cars
raced down a etreet, blue lights flashing,
to disperse a crowd.
Clearwat.er Man
Made His Point
-Despite Loss
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Norman Bie
Jr., a Clearwater attorney who dates his
support of George Wallace back to 1964,
didn't bat an eye when his young son an-
nounced at the supper table that he
might campaign for President Ni.Ion.
"I'm glad he's beginning to think for
himself. l don't want to dictate to him,"
be said.
1.11'11' .......
MCGOVERN LEADER-Willie
Brown, bead of the McGovern
forces in California, stresses a
point as he addresses deleptes
at the Democratic . National
Convention Monday evening.
Brown Gets Wish
As Confali Okays
l\f c(;overn Slate
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The
jaunty leader of Sen. ~ge McGovern'•
challenged California camp stood before,
the · Democratic National Convention
Monday and plead~, "Give me back m,;
delegation." It did.
So Monday night, eaid McGovern
Cochairman Willie Brown Jr., 1'l1m com·
Ing in with all 271 of my people.''
The convention, in an opening night
battle that lived up to all Its advance bUl·
Ing, voted 1,618-1,236 to seat the enUre
271-vote slate McGovern captured in
California's JWle 6 primary election.
The major surprise was the margin °'
victory. Only 1,433 votes were needed to
unseat the 151 temparary California
delegates -most of them belonging to
Sen. Rubert H. Humphrey.
''That's it!" declared Brown's
cochairman, John L. Burton, when Ohio
gave McGovern's California slate 73 yes
votes at 10:16 a.m. PDT-an hour and
16 minutdi after the California debate
bega"l.
"That means George McGovern ls our
next nominee for President -th1t11
what it means," declared B~on.
The California battle had been. bulldinl
ever· since June 29 when the convention
credentials Committee, in a stunninc
move, stripped McGovern of the 151
delegates, ruling that Callfomla's winner·
take-all primary ->Y•nt against tbe 1pirlt
of party refonns.
. I
'
Ble leaped Into ·tbe limelight at the
Democratic · National Convention early
today when he cbalJenged the ruling by
party leaders that 120 California del ..
gates could vote on a challenge of the
other 151 delegates from that state.
Humphrey's California Ooor chief, Sin
Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto, accepted
defeat. l '
"l felt Chairman Lawrence O'Brien
was trying to railroad the whole thillg,"
he said. "It was .like putting 120 votes on
the board before the roll was called."
He lost the challenge, but made hi!
point before millions of television
viewers.
A second generation Floridian, Bie
likes Wallaet because "he ta 1 ks
straight." • ,
He said he got interested eight years
ago wMn Wallace spoke at a rally.
"He was thinking about running for
president then," said Bie, 46.
California Delegate
On Miami Honeymoon
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -Yvonne
Braithwaite Burke, the beautlful black
vice-chairman of the D e mo c r a t 1 c
O>nvenlion, is on her honeymoon here.
Radiantly ,.earing huge diamonds on
both hands, Mrs. Burke, 39, a member of
the Caillomia state assembly, was
married last month to William Burke, a
lormer Army colonel who supports Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey. Sbe ls !or Seo:
I
It was becau.se he WI! an attorney that
delegation chairman Bill France picked
Bie to make the 'point of order.
George S, McGovern. 11J'm bringing him~ -
around," she grinned ... I'm a dove." ;
.. ,_
RAii CONVINTION SMILI -The long .openJng le!Sion ol. Ille
Demou1Uc Convention look ill-roll on tbese apectarora wbo sprawled
on their chalr1. OJl!y one individual wa.s able to.retain 1 •mile afler
the meeting closed early till$ morning.
'
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Orange Co
EDJTldN' . N.Y. Stoeks
r .
Teday'• Fbull '
VOL 65, NO. ·19~, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES H TEN CENTS • •
Newport Council Delays lligh Rise ShowdoW~1 ,
Newport · Beach cquncUmen ppatpaoed
a showdown on the-controversial issue of
hl1h rue Monday night, d u c k I n g
decisions oo amendmenta to the planning
commission version of the ne.1' height
ordlnanc< until Aug. 14.
Councilmeri reviewed proposals to ti·
Jlude Newport Center from any limits
and beard a motion by Vice Mayor
How.ard Rogers to lower the 50-foot
waterfront ceiling, but said they'd wait
until the fonnal public bearing before ac-
'
ting Oii any of them.
"We're 1o1n& to be consfderinc more
amendmen.ts .at that time anyway,"
noted Councilman Jobit Sfort, pointing
out thet would . for<e lonnlJ ,..,Jn.
troductlon of the onliDlllJ)e and a final
public: bearing Aug. 21.
Before the vote to delay, Councilman
Paul Ryckolf had propooed a aeries of
amendments he ~Id he'll bring up again
when the council'• ready 'to' act.
· They include cbanies in the proposed
..
A Room ·W..Stla a V~~',:" .. • . ,, .
four·2Clle llmlts that would have aUq\.ed
unllmlled height for the north and wesl
secllont of Newport· Center, tr.... .tbe
Avco building westward to the plllllled
Marriott Hotel just west of the entrance
road from PacUlc Cout ffighway. ·
Ryclioff also wants a num~ of
changes proposed by Newport R,esidents
United, Including:
-A 26-foot limit on Jamboree Road ·
between Park Newport Apartments, and
tbe Newpor!tr"··. wllh a SO.foot set·
bl(:k. • "' .-ReducJnc the llmlt In Old Newport
and the 1Jdo Ptninsula from 50 feet to l%
feet.
-IJmltlng the height along Mariner's
Mile to 32 feel.
-Placing a 12-foot maximum on· the
Castaways property along Dover Drive.
He ,also supported an Irvine Company
requost that areas 'with eilstlng planned
communlt1, ordlnanees -Big Clnyoo,
Harbor View Hills, Jumine Cleek,
NorU>Ford, Yersalllea on the Bluffs and
the Elllkay property by Orllllie County
Airport, be ucluded from the new
restrictions.
The propoeed waterfront ione, a last-
minute addition propooed by Planning
Commissioner Gordon Glass when his
body voted on the ordinance, drew sharp
criticism which prompted Rogers' motion
to do away ,With it.
Developers and residents alike aereed
that the provision tn the waterrront. •
allowing for buildings to crow taller -uP
to 50 feet -the further tbey are from
the "''a ter, was unsatisfactory. '
"l don't see what it will accomplish,"
said Councilman Richard Crout, ••except
to demand pyramid buildings."
Councilmen upressed concern that
there is no proYision for increased
sideyard setbacks in -the :zones, but Com·
munit y Developme(\t Director Richard V.
IS.. filGH RISE, Pace I)
·Humphrey uits
'Happy. Warrior ' Coricedes Battle
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The self·styJ.
ed happy warrior. Hubert H. Hwnpbrey,
pulled out of tbe race today for the
Democratic presidential nomination in
lbe lace of the speeding MGovern
steamroller.' .
Hwnphrey, the 1968 nominee, •Jllleal'ed
with his wile Muriel and daughter at his
aide 1t 9:2:l p.m. PDT before a crowded
room full of reporters to announce his
withdrawal, saying he was releaaing bis
delegates 10 ·~te as they wish." He did
' * * * Rivals 'Give'
·Nomination
· To McGovern
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -C..rge S.
McGovern clinched the Democi-atic
presldentlal nomination today as Hubert
H.·HumJ>!i!ey<atepped out of tbe race and
)llca-r.~1-ley rivall m..ed.to'clo
' the ume. ·
not say, however, \vhether he Would su~
port McGovern, an old friend, for the
nominati on.
Humphrey appeared somber u he read
a three-paragraph 1t1.tement on his
decision that clinched the nomination
Wedneaday night for GeorJe S ,
McGovern.
His voice broke slightly toward the end
of the statement as ht thanked hls staff
and ·supporten who worked for him.
Aller reading the prepared statement.
Humphrey added a few word! sayinf,
"We've fought the 1ood figbt ... Now wa
bow out."
He theo huaed Muriel and walked
away from the microphones.
Humphrey wu aalcl to haYO nKlled
ht• decision to "trlthdrew -Jy lodal
alter seelnJ hla major hope GI~
McGovern fall. that was the convenUon._
decision to give McGovern all IJ.7 •
delegates from California, Instead , ol · ·•
(See IRJMPHREY, Pace II •
Newport Council Action
Here In brief are major actions taken bu ~wport Beach councilmen f\1on-
day night: /""'
ffiGH RISE -Scheduled a public hearing Aug. 14 at 7:30 p.m. ln city ball
on height controls after reviewing a series of amendments to the plaMing com-
mission-backed ordinance.
PROJECl'S DELAYED -Postponed public hearings and cJecta1011a oo both ,
the fl35 rnllllon Collins Radio Compan y zone. chanie and tbe requelled use ;
permit tor the Versailles apartments in West Newport until Aue. 14. • ·
POU CE SUBSTATION -Told City Manager Rohell L. Wynn to -n
cost and feasibility study of 1 propolled 1>91lce deparbMit lllbetatlon ID Oorw
del; liJw,. I 1 , \
Carpenter Steve Morales Wo.b on framing for seo--
ond story of new home on Spy Gius Glass Hill in
Newport Beach. Devel oper. John Lusk ·iK buijding
118 homes in the first unit of hillside homes a)lOve .
omna de! Mar. The bomel overlooking the )llJ
lanyon Resenoir and Newport Ce~ter are. seillng · tor f79;500 to '116,500. Mare than SOO homes l1'e
, planned for th~ development.
McGovem ieiued In his hotel as tbe
melllfaa . wltlch hoped to stop him
Wednelday llight dissolved around him.
ll!LAND DUPLEXl!S-Poolponed consideration of •' propolled l'do)' emer-
gency ordinance banning conslructlon of duplexea oo Dllboa lllanil 111111'""'
21 because 11J: oouncJJJiien must approve Jt and only flvo ...,. prwm.
PARK ACQVIBITION -Found out lncrtased .-. --wlll "'1nt In an unexpected ,'400,00ll hnevenue·1hat couJd ·alJow acqWJUon ol Cliff Drive
view park and part lite on Balboa Is.land. Asked P1rks1 Beaches and Recrea-
tion Commission's opinion. That body meets tonight.
He talked by telephone to Humphrey
after the ''-JWY W'1Tior's" bow-out.
Collins Pr.oj .ect ·Delayed
McGovern ·s a i d Humphrey's with·
drawal 0 leaves us all with a sense of
poignancy; but most of all It reminds us
o.r his !>year fight for hUllWI Justice ...
"For many years, he bas been my
neiibbor. my friend and my per10nal
Counselor. That relationship will con-
tinue."
YOUTH COUNOO. -Told City Manager Robert L. Wynn to prepare out·
line for creation of a Youth Advisory Council orpenons "under and over 11"
to use "alfa sounding board towards the thinking of youth today."
MARINA CLEANUP -Told city oflilcals to lo\lghen leases with marin.u
regarding regulations qalnst debris. .
• " New port Beach-Irvine Unit . to Discuss Land Use
Hwnphrey, victim of McGovern's IS-3 Ap.ollnnauts Sco·lded
For Judgfn£nt ·in Sales
•I "'• ' '
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 ft!t Dal~ 1'119t lfllff
A joint Newport Beacb-lrvint com-
nllllee will get another chance to talk
abbut land use plaru;tlng around Orange
County Airport • before "any n e w
developments In tbe area are approved.
Newport Beach councillJlen Mooday1
nt1ht delayed action oo the proposed fl35
rnlllloe' ·Collins Radio Company project
for 30 days and told their liaison com~
mHtee to Sit down with Irvine again to
talk about the specific proposal.
The delay came after:
'-The Irvine Company ·said the traffic:·
system throughout ita ehtlre i}:M:tustrial
complex may be overloaded and sug-.
gested a study to determine if the zoning
on the entire 4,000.acre complex -and
it'• proposed No~Ford industrial park
-should be rolled back.
-severel councilmen found they had
not been given the planning commissian-
approved version Of the planned com-
munity text for the high rise office com-
plex .
-Daniel Emory, a leader of the airport
noise fight, reiterated his endorsement o/.
the project provided tenants are told the
city ts battling to rid tbe airport of "'!""
mercial flights.
project In phases (the Don Koll Com-
p&lly,) the buyer W.Oll't get its Institutional
lender (Kaiaer·Aeins) to come up with
tbe cash.
: -)!esoon . Bay resi,dent All311 Beek
castigated councilmen for even con-
sllleiiq .• ~evelopmept that mlibt help
sustain the airport.
"I sat-here two years 1go and-didn't
have the aense to ,.,.111.e the Emkay proj-·
ect (across MacA:tbur Boulevlrll)
would have an impact oo Qranie County
Airport," Beek said.
"Supervloor (Ronald , W.) c.spe.a has
·thrown·that ·ln «ir i..t!t, aylDf Jf•we're
serio .. about ftgblln'g the airport, why do
we. ~ llJPl'OVe commertial develoPment .
around tbe periphery."
"I don't care if the staliltlca on airport
Impact are right or wrong," Beet said,
"politically tt will have an impact (il It's
approved).
"The supervilorl will t1ke; note," be
said, "Irvine wW take note."
"Collins' h<rolc ef!CJ!I ooma only wllen ·
It's necosaary to get -al. tbey have
not been in tile forefront or tbe fight to
. get rid of the aitport'/' Beek 11id. month battle for the nomination and of
Collins' offer of assi!t&ix:e -c"'ame "from ··· sllck_ conv~·noor maneuvers ·orr the·
Rogers s. Hopkins, dittctor of corporate part of tbe South Dakotan Monday night,
I tal -•-'led •• .,~•--fro released his delegates to vote as tbey rea es e, "JIU CI ~ ... '""'~ ~ a wish.
consul.tan! that <Olltend the . development Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, who still con-
wlll , have min1µwm impact on , tbt con-trots tc¥De 7~ convention votes, later iB
trovorslal a>!iunen:laJ·flighta. · tbe day followed Humphrey's wlthdrawol.
The. Irvine c.ompan).'s call for more Mc09vern was just 43 . \'.(ltes 1bort of
the 1,509 ~ed for victory when detailed study came from Larry Moore, balloting begins In the convention hall
associate planning administrator, who Wednesday night.
said his vow to review the zoning of the Humphrey's 429-plus delegateJ, DllDY
indUltrial area "came from tbe Seventh Of them almost sure to back MCGovem,
Floor" (meaning tbe office of Irvine will put .hlm easily past the required
pnoideilt WJllWn R. Muon), , quota.
Talking about ro...,,...ble illcreues 1n· George ·c. Wallace announced plans to
traffic, Moore said. "l'.d like to make a go to the convention floor tonight to press
point here, and that ls that when we look· his fight ·for the kind of conservative
ed at these numbers, it wu Vf!r'J o~ua pll\tlorm he says the party mu.st have for
that-what we were saying to oprselves victorY in November. ·
was that the complex is overloaded, and With a bottle of beer. a Jong, thin cigar
it's gotne to be overloaded If it's built out bls lhoes kicked off and h1I Ue discarded:
lndustrlal as p)~ today with the M~ watched on.television In his
laclUties that can . reasonably develop, penthoiJae suite u all his rtvala -united
.and H thlt JS the case; ... are not also In their feryor to atop him -fell to the
saylnJ tliat perl10pl tl>f IOOing out there, power or his tightly disciplined loyalists
.(flee COLLINS;,Pap I) on tbe convention floor.
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Tbe llplCt
agency today dlad pJlned· the three Apollo
15 astronauts for carrylh1 f 0 0
unauthorized poltal coven to the moon
and hick last July and Ulen turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance in Wot
Germany .
The 100 moon-stamped envelopea liter
apparently were sold to stamp coUtcton
for fl,500 each, the Natlooal Aeronautics
and Space Administration said .
fo{ASA said after an lnvest11alton that
astronaut.I David Scott, Alfred Worden
and J~es Irwin "~tsed poor Judi·
ment in their action •
"Therefore, they wlll he reprimanded
and tbelr actions will be given due con.
sideration. in their 1electlon for· future
assignments ,'' the a1ency l&Jd.
Dr. George L<>w. NASA deputy ad-
ministrator, commented:
--Olllins officials promised to !\tip the
city in that fight. 1 , • •
--O>Uins officials illd, ll 'tbe council
r~ins the requlnnnent to 1pprove the .. Del)ris ·in.:· ~a·rinas Eyed ...
"Astronauts 11'1 under extreme ltrnl
In the montha preceding a flight to the
moon, and their poor Judcment in car-
rying the unautbortsed cov<rs must be
coosldered In this light. '
-'"Nonethelea,-·NASA cannot condooe
theae actions."
NASA said It learned that the Apollo 15
crew 1rreea at one ume to provkte 100
coven from their forthcominl mlasllm.
to tbe acquslnt'ance In. return for eotab-
U.,brnent of a ••trust fund" for the.Ir child-
Democrat Time
' Sc hedUh Told ·
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -
Tbe llemocraUc National ConYen-
Uon has ·announced Ole followln(
11<hedule f..-toollht'1 activities:
lim<I are PDT:
. 4 p.m. -Seaoion opens.
• I
5 p.m. approlimately-Conoldel'
atlon of tbe PlaUorm Commltl<e
report. /
Consideration of the Rules Ccim-
mlttee report ts scheduled to fol·
Jo\11, bUt there wu 1>0· 1nc11cauon ol
the espected time.
•
By JO ANNE 11EY1iOLDS .. .... , ......
Newport Beach C<iunc:llmen Monday
ogned ID ooopente with tile Orqo·
Cooml1 Harbor. Dei>ortment in a
-.. Doalinl -In the marina that rlnc Newport Harbor,
The problem WU brouibt to COi.iD-~ la a -from Harbor Director x.nnethSa-.
Tho Harbor Commlallon feell "the
Har1Jor District's pr-m e!forts with tile
boot 'Scooper' to pldl up dllrta f!ootln&
In the main cbannell and major -..
tbe beaches bu -beaallclal, but that more needs ID be done," Sampaon said.
·-"11ie Jllllo dwntll "" quite allm
-,,,.. the llalkboodl and lllpc within private and conunordil marlnu '
are Jammed with floatiqi litter. The oon-
~ wu'that;l(thla ii true, aoin<thing
needs to he done to clean up Ille marina
..,..., " his letter "8d :
Councllmad Carl Kymla becked -P'
son's recommendation that marlns leue
cla-which require trash cleanup be
enforced.
"l looked at alt m.vlnu over tile
weekend.'' the councilman said, 11and
they were In deplorable condition."
City Managll' Robert Wynn auggesled
that councilmen COllllder a I en or a I
ordinance ror cleanlinesl or puttlJtC
llron&er cl•-In the new Jeues.
Another-""'""'11 ~ ......
' l'tC.'Ol!ll!lfllded letteta' )I "" operalora because· "'l' lllln1I
••
' enough ordlnancel !hot are dlfficuJt to
enrorce now." Stcre suggested an aMual
award Could be made to the cleanest marina ren. · "Al~ the coven.had been pven to the
Robert Inman, manager of marinas acqualntance, however, they rulhetkln
and ncration for the Irvine Company. t&eir own -that this wn Improper and
1pob of tbe marina cperators' side of declined to accept either the trust fund or ~m In a memo be sent ~ thO alternallve offer of sarnpa In es• """-lU.--change for the 100 poetal covm/' NASA Ho COllCOded that some landings are In Id
sucll dilapidated condition tbat tb<ir
18 rh. Apollo 15 ·cnw, like -on
phyalcal oondltlon looka cluttered. But he earfier moon mlsslC11s: had NASA'• alao oullinod tbe atepo taken at Irvine __ ,...._ with! esiabllahed
0ompoll)' marlnu cltan up trub. ....~-.. • ......
"Our maintenance crews 1 n d ctduru, to carry penonal IOUYtlllMype
mpeclally tile part.time men that work .• Items, lncllldinJI ICMDe poltll COYtlJI.
dlrlltf ... -..... the· spocJllc , ~ potnilallGn, .... ...-1lllb Ille ._.... " ~ -4otd wllbln .... C$ldillcia. tbal t&e.l!lldoo ... nlalnod _,. 'I'°' ~.I}, Pip 11 the utronauta .,. be ~ 11 pswt
¢ ;
frtenda. They were not to he used f<><
commercial or fund-raising purposes or
personal 1aln1 NASA said .
On Apollo 15, the astronauts were
authorlud to carry 232 of the specially
stam~ envelopes with markings •bow·
Ing they had made the rouOd trip · to tho
moon. The 400 unauthorized coven were
carried in addlUon to the approved ones.
A NAM l]>Okesman Identified the ..,.
qualntance to whom he said tbe lilt unalthcl'bed poetiaJ coven were given as
Hont (Walter) Etreman, a naturaliJed •
American llvlng at Stuttgart. ElreDIOl)-
met tbe lllr'oDauta when working for an·
ae!'Oljl&CO contractor at Coooo Beach;
Fla., the spokesman said.
Weadler
_Tbe weatherlady -clear and
sunny 1kleJ through w~ .
with highs of 70 at Orqe Coast
sandl, rising to IO dearee1 lnland.
L<>wa 17-t7.
INSWE TODAY
Chicago Mauor Rfcliord J. f)o.
l•u r</w•d compn>mlse </forts
by S"1. Al.cG®trn on Ill< "'°"'U
'
' ' • • •' •
q11csticm of dellQGlc ...,ung. A• • ,
a 11.tult, Dolet1 lo1t hil 1tot. Swe •t.orv cmd othtr con..,.lton ,,.
111lts on Pogr 4. • • L.M........ • -~ . (......... ..." g:_:,,4 It " 0.-. _.... It ..... , ....
• ... , I Ill "'" ,:...... ....,
"' ......... 11 ..... 1111 1• .. L-.rt ,,
-.. " --" .............. ..... c..... , • ._....._..,.n --....
-g ---. ....... ...... 1t-M ....... ,•
DAILY PILOT H
Pathologist
Testifies
For Doctor
By TOM BARLEY
Of fllt Dtll' "U•t ll•ft
A pathologist called to the witness
1tiind by Dr. Merrill C. "M_ike" O'Don·
nell'a lllwyer1 today testified that
barbiturate levels detected In • body ten
rnonUu after death woukl be Identical to
those found at the time of deal.h.
Dr. Robert Richards, responding to
dall hued on the death ln Mexico four
yean •I• ol Suun O'Don,,.,11, the plaatle
1Urgeon'1 wife, commented that a
regular Intake of barbiturates would also
be reflected 1n the organs atld tissues of
a deceased perton.
Hll teatlmony ln lhe Or1nge County
Superlor C.ourt civil trlal or a $1 million
lawsuit rued agalnlt the ph ysician by
Mrs. O'Donnell's . mother appeared to •
strike at earlier testimony t h a t
barbltuate levels found In the dead
woman nearly a year later indicated
much higher 'levell of poisoning at the
time of her death . ..
O'Donnell, 57, ol 420 Klnga Rood,
Newport Be1cb la accused ol bringing
about the death or his attractive artist
wife by injecUng Into her what Mexican
authorities bellev.ed to be lumlnol -a
highly torlc barbiturate.
Mrs. O'Donnell, 18, died In btr Cozu""'I
Island hotel on March 19, 1961. She w"
buried in the Yucatan Peninsula resort
the nut day and her remain.! were ex-
humed by Joell authorltlet 19 dayo later.
Ho, Huni
California delegate Lucinda lJrown of Rich mond naps during Ln e pro-
cedings at the Democratic Niational Convention. At right is Tony Pol·
vorosa of San Leandro.
•
Vice President
Candidates Eyed
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -On the
eve of George McGovern'a likely nomina-
tion for presJdenr,' senior aide! said today
they regard Aen. Edward M. KeMed)' a1
the Sou~ Dakota 1enator'1 top ch<rice at
a running mate.
Bul "(here 111 1urprisiilgly 1trons back·
Ing for labor leader Leonard Woodcock .
This is the substance of an assessment
based on a series ·of interviews in whi ch
ttlt adviser. weer aaked to ll!t the three
soliciting possible running males from a
broad <lrcit of party leaders the Soulh
Dakota Senator is more llk~ly LO ask
their views on one or two ol. hiJ own
choices.
From Page 1
HIGH RISE. ••
rnosl likely McGovern cholee11 Ir, a11 ex-Jlogan !!&Id they can be controlled.
~led, he wins t~ preaidential nom1na-.. They are not apecificaJly included " hon Wednesday n11ht. , ' "Don 't.let anybody fool \'oir.•-one an said. 'It was felt that to get a use
viser s8'4:· . "He's the m~ 'P'''lf , P'DJ'.llt approval and meet the criteria of
poSsibility 1oJn&. ThiJ· iJ not a ploy for "Ftie planning commission that sldeyard
labor 11upport." setback would be considered under the
Besides. Kennedy, the Jntervlews ahow-stipulation that 'more public open apace
ed considerable backll)g fo~ lh~ee and vte·wg . . . with particular atten-
senators -Gaylord Nelson of W1s~ns1n, tion ... setback and open 3rea1" be Pro-
Phlllp A. Hart of Michigan and Abraham vlded .
A. Ribicoff of C:Onnecticut -and for Baslcally, In the for m It will be
Ciov. Reubin Askew of Florida. Ribicof( presented at the Augu st 14 hearing the
and Ask ew have saJd they 're not inter-ordinance eatabllthea the Jollowln1 'four The interviews were conducted both zones:
before and after McGovern's victory Jn -29-foot (up to S2 feet with 1 use
Monday ni1ht'1 California credentials permit) in most residential areaa.
fight brought him to the brink of flrst· -28 feet (up to '° feet with a use
ballot nomination tn balloting IC!>eduled permit) ·in. specified waterfront zo;iea .
Wednesday nlaht. -32 feet (up to 50 with a use perm it)
Several ad:vtaers aa ld they 1e1 t In certain commercial and multJ..famlly areaa. McGovern probably n.!lrrowed the list or _ 50 feet (u 11 lted with Ill possible rurmlng mates down to a n m • u11e perm
handful All aareed that instead 'of In 11peclflc areas ioned for office · ' buildings.
•
l
VISITING ORANGE COUNTY
U.S. Treasurer 8anutlo1
Mrs. Banuelos
To Atte11d Fete
For Nixon Funds
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasu rer of
the United States, will be guest of honor
al a re-elect !he President fund-ral~lng
dinner set for July 18 al lrvlne's
Alrporter Inn.
Rlcllanll tettlfied today that alcohol
consumed In considerable quantities In
the boun before any Inta ke o r
barbiturates would amplify the effects of
the drul ln d rect relation to the quan-
uu .. of both drink and drugs .
From Page 1
HUMPHREY • • •
Chess Match Under Way;
Earlier Mondiy, during the council's
1rternoon 1tudy aesalon, the entire con-
cept of the ordinance came under fire
from Mr11. Emory Moore, who had 11t on
the CltJi.en11 High Ri1e Committee.
The dinner ls planned by lhe Orsnga
C.OUnty Hispanic Committee to rt-elect
President Nixon. All persons are invited
to attend. DIMer reservallon1 art tIS
per person.
Mrs. Banuelo11 Is the sixth woman and
tt ~ first of Mexican-American descent to
hol1 the position of U.S. Treasurer.
O'Donnell'• lawyers clalm thst t he
l\IJ'PGft and his wile drank heavily
throull)>out the day before her death to
celebrate what has been ateted to be a
third annlveraary trip and an attempt to
patch up a disintegrating marriage.
O'DoMell, who practices at 2011
Westcliff Drive and 307 Placentia A venue
In Newport Beach, aent a telegram to hJs
wife'• family three d1y1 after her death
Jn which he stated that she died in a traf-
fic accident.
He arrived 1n C&JJfornla live da ya after
her dealh to tell her family that the
te.letram ver1I01 of her death had been
Intended to spare them u much shock as
po..slble.
Mrt. Gertrude Barnett, 53, of Seal
Beach Letaure World has testified that
ber son-ln·law then told her and other
members al the family that Ml'!. O'llon·
nell died of a heart attack.
O'DonneU has ltated In a later court
deposition that he has "no opinion" today
on the cause of his wife'• death.
O'Donnell's (ormer medical secretary
tseUfJed before Dr. Richards was ca!Jed
that her employer'• wife frequently pick·
Id up borbfturates lrom his office then at !8781 Main St., Huntington Beach.
Carol L. Ellla, 206.\2 Farnawcrth
Ltne, Huntington Beach, testified in the
nonjury trill before Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
Rutter that Mrs. O'Donnell sought her
advice about her Increasing use of drugs.
Miu Elll1 testllled that Mra. O'Donnell
told her she had taken an overdose of
drug1 on a visit with her surgeon hus-
band to Cozumel Island two months
before and that she had been very ill on
that occasion.
Miss Ellla le1ttlild that Mrs. O'Donnell
had a key to her husband's office and
that she took barbiturate samples from
the office on several occasions including
the time that the couple were separated.
She also stated that Mrs. O'Donnell
told her that she had be<n drinking
heavily and was worried about her ap-
parent ad.diction to alcohol.
500th Orbiter Fired
MOSCOW (AP) -Tass announced t~
day that the lllOth satcUlte In the Soviet
Union's unmanned Cos.mos teries was
leflt up Monday.
OIANOI COAST '
DAILY PILOT
Thf C>nlnte Ce11t DAILY ,ILOT, wtlll 'llfMtll
II ON'-1 tn. Htws.,rru. 11 PllbtlaMcl by
tfle OnllsM 0.st '"'llfllnl Ctrnptf!Y. ~
At. •HIMt •r9 llllMWIM, MIPllll1y lllrOlllll
Frlclty, for CD!lll M.,1, NewpOrl 8eecll,
H1111tlngkln 8e1d'llFOVr1111n Valley, L111un1
aMdl. lf'Ylnt/S1ddltb1di: ,..,. St11 Cllmt!l11/
llill JVl#I C1plslt1111 A 1r1111lt l"f!llo<!tl
cdltkln hi P'ibll"' .. S.11/nllYJ 11111 Sund•V'-
Tllt pl'll'ICIP•I publtsh!1111 pi.nr 11 ,, l),l WMI
111 StrMI, Cnt1 MIU, Clll!omlt, f2112'.
Rob1rl N. W11d
f'rttldtlli 111111 ,.11bll1ller
J1c:~ R. C11tf1y
Vke l"rtllden1 ,,,. Oan.r1J MIMl)tr
Tho11111 K1111!1
l!'c1o1o<
Thom11 A, M11rphi11e
Mllllll"I Elliw
L P1l1r k ri19
Hr"'llOf"I hftll Cll'I' Ed11or
Htwpert le•&lri Orflct
lJJJ N1w,ort lo11l1w1rd
Meill111 Adllre11: l',0, 101 1111, '266J
Ott.er OH'lc"
C.11 M .. : 2111 Wttt .. y Strfft UD\1111 auc11: m ~bl A'tll'l\lt Hvtl!"'91fn 8ttdl: 171t7J Bllldl Mulf\111"11 Jen Cltment1: al Hertfl 11 Col"llnt au1
Teltphefte (714) •4! ... JJ1
Cl..m.• A•ftffld11t '424671
~.. 1f1'-ar-.~ eo.11 f"l.lblllf!l1111
c.PmHtr1, No MW• 1111rre. fltu.lr11lori1, ... llWlll IMtltr ~ Mffffllt1'M!111 htnlft
ITltY .. f'llWofkM wtlhout ~I "" rnbtlol! of CO,Vrltf11 O'f"I«•
splitting them up with Humphrey getting
106 and AfcCovem 120 based oo thl: June 8
primary voting.
Humphrey then 1Jept on his decision a
few hours and met with his top advisers
at midmorning. Later, he called together
his staff for a closed meeting and -as
tears were .1hed, including soml: by
Muriel Humphrey -he told them he was
bowing out.
The Humphrey statement sa id :
"After consUJtatlon with tome of my
closest friends and supporters, t have
determined that I will not permit my
name to be entered in nomination at the
convention, and l am now releasing my
delega tea to vote as they wish.
* * * Sen. Muskie Also
Pulls From Race
For Nomination
MIAMI BEACH, Flo. !AP) -Sen. Ed-
mund S. Muskie of 1t1aine bowed lo the
inevitable today and dropped out of the
ra ce for the Democratic presidential
nomination.
tlfuskie withdrew as front-runner
George McGovern piled up enou1h votes
to win the .iomination on the first ballot.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of MiMesola,
another rival, abandoned the race earlier
In the day.
Muskie said he was quitting because It
is apparent that McGovern Is going to be
the nominee.
Under these circumstances, Muskie
said, there was no point in htvina hla
name even introduced Into nomination.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson , however,
declined to leave the now-smashed stop-
McGovern ~!Cort. saying he it in the fight
to its end.
George C. \Vallace g11 ve no evidence he
had any intention of quitting either.
Fro111 Page 1
COLLINS ...
tight now i11 too high.
"Now, th.!lt took ! tr ip up to the
seventh floor to management to ask
them whether they wanted to face that
question.
"I could just see one or the councJlmen
sa ying 'are you telling me that we should
roll back the zoning?' The point is that
we are that fearfu l of the overload In
that complex. Wt feel that the study that
has to 1be done has to answer that ques-
tion , and if that ia the indication, then the
appropriate ttction has to be taken from
the.re. That ia how worried we are about
this.'"
Moore said the eledge extt.ndcd to the
company's prized 1ndustrlal park in lhe
planning stages for property above the
Phil~Ford Aerontron ic plant .
''North-Ford as well. if that Is whAI is
indicated lo make the system work .'. he
said. ·
Councilman Cirl Kymla made the mo-
tion to delay action.
"Be tween now and Aug . 14 we will
have a unlqut opportunity to continue our
negotiations witb Irvine ... they offered
to work with us on land use ... some of
!heir councilmen art serious," he 1aid.
Collins was represented by several of·
ficials dnd experts before the council.
St¢Olld Cl111 •lttt PIM 11 Ce.ti Mr\t,
Cttlf'Ol"'nll. "*'Ctllrlltft 0,. <Iffier U.•J
rtlOllfh"t "° fNll lJ.lJ "*"""' Mlll11ry
dttf!NflMI .... """"' .. "
Arehllcct Ernest c. Wlbon pointed out
the tlevtlopmcnl, althouah larger (It's 177
•cres) would be less den"' than the
nearby.Emkny porcel.
Peter Tilton, a marketing analyst, said 1
there ls a 1reot demand for olllct apoce
In the aru, Jar gruler than the dem1nd
lor indU•trlally toned property.
•
Fischer 7 Minutes Late
"If we are to e&tabllsh the Identity we
put (Orth In Newport Tomorrow I Wt:
aren't making It." Mra. Moore 11ld.
Calllng for an outrl1ht ban on high rise
fn the future, Mrs. Moore 11ald, "Wt have
high rise now, look up at the hill. 1'ht1
place to 1top la now . . . U wt don't,
we're Just batting at ll wlndmill.
When appointed last December, Presl-
denl Nlxon cited her "extraon:l lnarl1y
auccessful career as a 1ell-made
buslnes1woman." ~
REYKJAVIK, Tceland <APl -The
world championship of chess got und er
"'ay today without Robby Fischer. the
American challenger. He. showed up
seven minutes after Russian titleholder
Boris Spassky msde the firat move.
(Earlier story, Page 8).
It see med another ont or these
psychological ploys that chess mesters
often use in an attempt to unsettle their
opponent.
Spassky was there on the dot of 5 p.m.,
waited a minute. then calmly pushed his
queen's pawn forward two spaces.
Eastbluff Kids
To Get Crossing
Guard on Street
Bv .JAN EDWARDS
01 1111 0.11'1' ~llfl S!1ff
Easlblulf Elementary School children
art going to get a crossing guard .
Newport Beach city councilmen Mon·
day night authorized fund~ for a ,uard
!or the remaining three weeks of sum·
mer school In respon~ to a pies by Mrs.
Jean MacKinnon. school principal.
For two weeks she had been receiving
complaints from parents that their
child ren were not being ~rted acros~
Eastbluff Drive at Viita del Oro and hitd
authorized a volunteer group of mothers
to guide-them.
Mrs. MacKinnon, after waiting until
12:20 a.m. to be heard. asked councilmen
for guards before school and at 12: 10
p.m. when the more than 400 children are
released for the da y.
The council approved allocation of
fund s for at least one guard to begin
Wednesday in the morning and a.f lhc
noon hour for the remaining two and one-
half weeks of summer school.
A part of the city council budget. the
guard or guards will be paid through a
mid-year budget adju11tment.
Prior to last night's council action, 19
mothers had beeii sharing I h e
responsibility of escorting the children
across. between noon and 12: 30 p.m.
Parents , some of whom had been call-
in., the school complaining to school of-
ficials since the first day, June 26, were
told last week the mothers group had
volunteered their services. 1'hls was done
"through .en Informal procedure'' and
wl!J the approval ol E11!tbluff School of-
flctals. said Mrs. MacKinnon.
Council Delays
'
Expansion Talks
On Apartments
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
postpooed action on the proposed ex-
pansion of the v,rS31illes tpartml!nta In
West Newport at the request of the
developer who said he wanted the matter
heard when Mayor Donald A. Mclnnla,
who repreBtnta WeeL Newport, Is prettnl.
Mcinnis missed the meeting because ol
1 racial injury su1t1lntd In 1 swlmmJn1
pool accident In Palm Sprtnp Saturn.,.
His secretary said this mornlng ht !1 at
home under -lnstrucllono lot complete
bed rett. He wu no!' taklnl •ny c1lll.
Developet'I (Jf the contro•erli•I bluff·
lop 1p1ftmerill •rt •ppoo.11111 pl1MIOI
commiMlon rejection al 1 Ull pom1lt to
1Jlow 1 700-unlt upo-. Mc!,nnla _, the..., cwnellmon no1
feellna w•ll MOlllla1 nJil!l. Councilman
Mll111 Doltal Jell tbe -· aboUt Ill
midw•y point llYU. he hid tJ!.e IJ\1·
Rereree Lothar Schmid of Weiit
Germany S)ulhed the button on the time
clock and the match had beaun.
Fischer 10metlmes choolel to be lat.e
to tournaments and mate~. lt waa not
known where he was.
Seven rnlnutea after Spauky beaan the
game. F'lacher appeared from off1ta1e
Iott. With 10111 atrldet, he aped to the
black le•ther iwl"1 chair ploced behind
!ha whlta '1de of the boltrd.
Applauae w1lk:h greeted Fischer's ar-
rival il'Mt fn et11eerido when Sp1uky
,...... IM'Wlril Imm the olde of the at11e
-"'"" llli liod ~ wilting to 1hake
Fllchet'a hand .
Manager Allowed
Month of Study
Of Substation
City Manager Robert L. Wynn Monday
night was given one month to prepare s
feasibility report on a police substation in
Corona del Mar.
Newport Beach councnmen told Wynn
to review the possibility of a substation
and file a report on propased locations,
size, cost, cash flow and a method of
financing.
Wynn hid 1u~ted the 1ub9t1tion
concept as an alternative to building a
new central police. heedquarter1 on the
city hall lawn -as ordered by coun-
cilmen tar1ier thia year.
Wynn cited the fact that the apparent
death of the Pacific Coast Freeway wl\J
leave the city without 1 high speed, ea!t-
west connector and the substation con·
cept may help provide better poUce
service.
"You can 41lk about design all you
want," 1he said, "when you look at the
hill . you 'vt got OO•es In the 1ky."
Thomas Houston, r e p r e 1 e n t I n g
Newport Residents United, urged coun--
cllmen to do away with the use permit
portion of the ordinance altogether.
Carpenter's Bill
To Change Smog
Testing Killed
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California
Senate has smothered a bill to change
automobile emission control te.ttlng pro-
cedure.!!. ,
The bill, oy Sen. DennJs Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach ), died on a 2U vote
Monday. Sponsored by the California Air
Resources Board, it concerned state ap.
proval of new cars going on sale.
Present I.aw requires n~w cara to meet
11tate pollutlon law standards, and the
customer Is theoreticAlly assured it does
by a sticker on the car's windshield.
Carpenter's bill would permit all car1
to be certified aafe for sale through the
assembly line testing of two percent of
all the cal'I of any one type.
Carpenter said this would permit the
use of a new test which would be too ex·
pensive to apply on all car11. But If ap.
plied to only two percent of the pro-
duction, the ' cost would be on1y about &O
to 75 cents. per car If pr~rated over all of
them.
We're only one week late to
wish you 9 Happy Independence
Day -but .•.
Mrs. Banuelos launched her Los
Angeles food proces11lng firm on *400 ift
1949. Today the firm gro.m:s •~ mllllon
annually and employes number more
than 300.
She became director and in 1964
chairman of the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Lot
Angelu.
She wa~ allO named Outsl3nding
Busl"e1swoman of lhe Year by Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A rtceptlon Is planned for 1 p.m.
followed by the dinner at ft p.m.
Reservation~ can be obtainl:d from
Ticket Chalnnan Jame11. H. Miranda at
ssg.qi91 or from ti cket co-chairman Alex
Acevedo •l 143-lm.
From Page 1
MARINAS ...
slips, according to planning department
basis.
"We presently are spending eight hours
per wetk In the removal of surface trash
and debris from within the area of our
five landings.
"The question arises that po~ibly the
public is dumping Lrash in the bay faster
than we can clea n it up," he concluded.
The city holds the leases on 18'7
residential piers and 236 commercial
slips according lo planning department
staff member Rod GUM.
Animals Untt·ained
MIAMI BEACH (UPI
The two donkeys thlt a North Carolina
11oepe:I 1lnger brought lo Convention Hall
Monday night to drum up support for
Gov. George C. WalJace aren't
housebroken. Cleanup men moved In
after the animals' accident whlle Wallace
workera ronUnued to lead them on a tour
o/ the lobby,
Really, we sliould celebrate all
year long. ,,.
In this spirit we are offering
red, white, & blue 1 h a 9 n y I o n
carpeting at $7 .95 and $8 .95
installed.
ALDEN'S
I
Ide a I
rooms, areo
•
for boots ,
rugs, etc.
children's
CARPETS e DRAmtES
•
1663 P'laceiltJ. AH.
COSTA MW
646-4131,
.ltOUWI: ..... tin 'l1lorso t "' l:Jt -l'rf,' "'t -·Sat,''""' I
1
I I
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N.Y. Steelu -
VOL 65; N0."193, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORAN&E COUNlY, CALIFORNIA" c TEN CENTS
'Happy W ar-rior' Humphrey Steps Out of Race
-
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) -The ,.II-sly!·
ed hippy warrior, Hubert H. Humphrey,
pulled out of the race todoy !or the
Democratic presldentJal nomination in
the lace of the speedlfll MGovem
steamroll ....
HumjWey, the 11161 oominee, appeared
with bis wife Muriel and daughter at his
side at 9:22 a.m. PDT before a crowded
room full or reporters to announce his
withdrawal , sa~ he wu releaslng 1his ·
delegates to "vote u they wish." He did
oot say, however, wbetber be would -Humphrey added a !ew. words saying,
port .McGovern, an old. friend, lor the •:we've fought the good fight. .. Now we
nomination. bow out.''
Humphrey appeared somber as be read He thetl bugged Muriel and walked
a three-paragraph statement on bis away from the microphooes.
decision that clinched the nomination Humphrey wa.s said to have reached
W~ay night for George S . bis dec~ion to withdraw early today
McGovern. · I.after seemg bis major hope of overtaking
His Voice. broke slightly toward the end McGoveni fail . That was the convenUon's
of tbe statement as be thanked hlJ staff decision to give McGovern all lt7
and supwrtel's wbo worked /or him, delegates from. Ca!)fornia, instead . o!
Alter reading tbe prepared atatement, aplitting them up with Humphrey cetting
108andMcGovern120 based on the Juno 6
primary voting.
Humphrey then slept on ·hi! decision a
few hours and met with his top advisers
at midmorning. Later,'he called together
bis stall for a clooed. meeting and -as
tears were shed, including some by
Muriel Hwnphrey -be told them be was
bowing out.
The llumphrey statement said:
"Mer coruiultatioD wilh !Orne of lJlY
closest · fi!ends· and supporters, I, have
' determined that I will not permit my
name to be entered in nomlnatlon at the
convention, and l am now releasing my
delegates to vote as they wish .
"My withdrawal from the presidential
race Ls a withdrawal of candidacy only.
1~ is not a withdrawal of spirit, or or
detennination . to continue the batlle I
• have waged all my public life on behal!
of ·those who had nO voice. :
"On behalf of Mrs. Humphrey and me,
I wish to thank 0,. who hove worked
so hard for these past six months not on-
ly for my candidacy, but for the greater
goal ol a natim governed with justice
and ~mpassion."
Ad libbing, eyes glistening. a faint
smile on his Ups, Humphrey then spoke
or havin' fought _«ie good fight within tht
tules and 11tressing that bis !pirit .was not
broken.
* *· * McGovern
Cinehes · Spacemeu Sc_olded
Nomination NASA Slaps Wrists for Stamp Sale
~UAMI BEACH (UPI) -Georges.
McGovern clinched the Democrati"f
preSidential nomination today as Hubert
H. Humphrey stepped out ol the race and
McGovertl'I othei key rivals moved to do
the same ..
McGovern relued in his hotel as the
c:oalltion which hoped to stop him
Wedneaday night dissolved around him.
He talked by telephone to Humphrey
after tlie "happy warrior'•" bow-<>ut.
McGovern said Humphrey's wilh·
tlrawal "leaves us all with a sense of
1 Poignancy, but most of all it reminds us
of his 25--year fight for human jll!tice."
"For many years, be has been my
neighbor, my friend and my personal
counselor. That relationship will con·
tinue."
Hump~, victim of Mc:Govem's 18-
month batlle ror the nominatioo and o!
'lick corivenUOn floor maneuvers en the
part.~!. the .SO.th Dakotan Mooclay night,
relealed bis de1egatea to vote .,, they
wisti.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskle, who Jlill coo-
trolt MRi11 ecntnaao trrcUI, ilter in
the day f.._ Hwnpblty'• wltbclrawal. Ba,H•m ·
WASHINGTON· (AP) -Tbe space
agency today disciptlned the three Apollo
15 astronauts for carrying 4 O O
unauthorized postal covers to the moon
and back last July and then turning 100
of them over to an acquaintance in West
Gennany. ·
The 100 mOon-11tamped envelopes later
apparently were sold to stamp collectors
for ,1,500 each, the National Aeronautics
and Space· Administration said.
NASA said i!ter an inveatigaiton that
11 at 'Noisy'
Party Nabbed
For Drug Use
Complaints ol a loud Ping-Pong party
led c.eta 'Mesa pO);ce to baUI bi a-large
..,.I of an.pi 1"irlj111118 '8nd II ponons
la lloaday, ioclnding , lltudlnb, . a
•teWamar · and a llonollllu~ cir!
known to her pals .. PJ-1e-I
McGovern -Jut1 43 wtea lhor\ or
tbe l,50ll • -.i. fof' victory when
b&lloting begina in the convention hall
Wedneaday night.
Humphrey's at-plus delegates, many
ot them almost sure to ~ck Mc:Q9vem,.
will put Jilin easlly past the required
·quota.
. ' . . '
• . , California deleg!fle Luci.i>da.Brown d! Richmond :naps during the pro-
, cediQgs at the J?emocratic National.Convention •. At1ri.gbt is Tony 'Pol·
. vorosa of San Leandro. · • '
studeDts from diapm111 College, UC
Irvine, several state 'Universities and a
Haw3uan community college We r f.
amonc tlie arreetees.
Georg~ C. Wallace announced plans to
go to the' convention Door toolght to press
his flgbt for the kind ol conservative
plaUorm be says the party must bave for
Victory in November.
With a botUe of beer, a long; thin cigar,
his·sboes klclred off'and his tie discarded,
McGovern watched on television in his
pen~ sµite u all his rivals -united to their fervor to atop him -!ell to the
poW<r-of his tightly dUciplined loyallsts
on the convention floor.
The · su~ly confident Prairie state
oeriator p!illned to seclude hlmsell today,
polilibly op a boat, to go over drafts of
the aa:eptanC. speech be fully expected
to deliver before the convention ThW°S"'
day night following W e d n es d a Y ' s
presidential balloting. ·
There was no word from him about a
choice of ti running·mate.
" '
Fiesta Parade Controversy
' .
Explodes, fo Go to . Court
. A major controversy over who can
ma(ch ul S;m · Clementf• !leU per-'·· __ _,1,lf I• f• -r: aoo who can ,l\01 -:;-.e~plo<le<I today and
as Or ·Jilst rei>orts will be settled iii
OMll!&e. County Sui)erior Court.
An antiwar group known as Vietnam·
Veterans Against tbe War -the entity
whi<'h sponsired the major march In
Wasblngtoo D.C., lut year, has taken the
S:in Clemeote Chamber of Commerce to
court to fight denial of a paradP. entry in
expected Friday, .It was "!tamed in the
CaurtofJUdgeJame)i·~ • .JucSie~· · i,.
. ")\'~ ,can1 comD).eiil. -0fi the fnc;ideiit
unless ,we receive·, fofmal documerits
relating to· a court ·aC~iQll," Charilber
lnahager Robert Evans sa!d today: . .
They were booked on charges including
poosessitJn o! marijilana, ~ing tlie vie
of marijuana and being in a place where
~jtfana .is lleing u.ed.
Bail ranges from ll,000 to $ll0 fOI' the
variOus an'eslees, 'aCCOf'ding to a
vol unii.nous stack of ft'PCH:1.S.
A sergeant and thlee patrolmen
were dispatched to 320 Ramona Place
about 11:30 p.m., after area residents
complained ol too much noise. ·
Marijuana-smoking was a 11 e g e d I y
observa~le through windows, they· said,
while sounds of' merriment emanated
from the rear yard.
The officers said they knocked and
Identified themselves, asking ' pennisson
to enter, and were at first ignoted,
possibly due to noise from the Ping-Pong
players.
Finally entering, they alleged one
female arrestee tried to make ol! with a
14-inch bowl containing a large quantity
of grassy material seized as evklence. Tbe action ablfla tonight to the party's
platronn, with Wallace hoping to make a
penonal appearance at the convention -
but probably not from its rostrum -to
lead the lloht !or bis own philosophy.
· lhi! Saturday1s ann11aJ edition or the
Hijack Jumper
Gets 45 Years Costa Meaa arrestees included Tbomas
W. Jewell: arid Ralph E. Myers, both 29
and both of the Ramona Place address:
plus Andrea C. Dudley, 31, of 1563 Santa
Ana Ave., and John L Vallery, 28, of 1116 The Wallace forces hoped to purge ~~m the platform liberal planks on bus-
ing, ftllare and national de!..,. which
reflect McGovern'• viewpoint.
Tbis t~ tbe McGovern forces p!anoed
• (See McGOVERN, Pa1e I)
* * * ~sen.MuskieAlso •
Pulls From Race
~For Nomination
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Stn. Ed-
mund S. Ill-of Maine boWed to the ·
inevllable today and dropped oul of tbe nee I« the Democratic presidential
llQlllinatlon. M-wlthdmr u froni.........
George McGoven piled up -.II valel
to win the .-tlon ... tho lint bollot.
Seo. Hubert IL Hwuplu., ct -· .-r1va1, a.-.i tho noo wlllr
ID the doJ.
111.-aaJd ho -qdlloc lloca111e " 11-IDl lbll _.,,, II golq to be
the--
Under thele ~. MuMie
lald, then 1'11 no point In havtn1 b1a ·
nameennlntroduced!ntollOIDlnatloo.
Sen. Henry M. J-, however,
dedlDed to leaft the now-.bed ~
McGoftTn e«ort, aaylng he 11 ii the fight
to lb encl. o-p C. Wallace pve no evidence be
1lod "'1 ID-ol quitting eltller.
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parade. ST. LOUIS (AP), -A federal grand
Chamber officials said this morning jury has indicted two Detroit-area men
that lhey as yet have not been served on two counts each of air piracy in con--with any court docwnenU in the asserted legal action, and said that unless they nection with the hijacking of two
are served, they will OOl comment at American Airlines jets here June 23-24.
length iJ1. the disputes. The indictments were returned Monday
The antiwar group it has been again.st Martin J . McNally, 28, of Wyan-.
determined, applied rec:enily t~ r dotte, Mich., and Walter J. Petlikowsky!
permission ·to enter a 100.man marcbhig, ' 11,t of"Ecorse, Mich., both in custody o
unit in the parade. ; • • .Mictligah. authorities ~er $10,000 bonds.
The permissloo was denied by a special McNally was accused by federal
parade screening committee of the aulhorities ·of hijacking a plane en route
chamber. The panel cited stiff rules from st. Louis· to Tulsa, Okla,,. June 23,
about politically-oriented entries being' and a second plane early the next morn-
exempted from the parade. · ing after 1the first aircraft was disabled
The veteran's crou1t then decided to by a car whicb rammed its ·landing gear
... k COUrl lction, and a final ruling is it Lambert Airport in St. LOuis,
' .
Keilned1, WNdceeii 0.-List
E. Wilson St., police aid.
Newport Beach suspects are . Cynthia
A. Svend.Jon, 22, of 1801 E. Bay Ave.,;
Michael M. Monlaport, 23, Sharon P,
"Pineapple" Ventar, 20, both of 910 W.
Balboa Blvd.; Hobert L. Powell, 24, or
911 W. Oceanfront, and Thomu W,
Miller, 27, of 8091,2 Marguerite Ave.,
invesUgatora said.
Other arrestees iocluded Cbrlsty R,
Haworth, 23, and Randal J. Haworth, 25,
both o! Long Beach.
Tran.portatlon officers used a paddy
wagon van to hlul the men to city jail
and the women to Orance County Jail
McGovern .VP .Picks Eyed
lllAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -On the
eve of <leorle McGovern '1 llltely nomlna·
tlan far president, aenlGr aides llid today
they npnt Sen. Edward Ill. Kennedy ...
the -Dakota aenator'a lop choice· u
a running mate.
But there ta llJl'Pflll"'1Y lttOnl back-
ing !or labor leader Leonard Woodcock.
This Is the substance of an _,..t
bued on a aerlel of Interviews ln-wblcb
Ille ldviserl _, asked to Un the tlitie
moot Ukely McGovern cbolcos II, u ...
peeled, be wins the presldenilal llCllJl!na.
tioo Wednelday Difbt.
"Don't let anybody fool you," one ad-Monday night's Ca!Uornla .credentials
viaer said, "He's the moat Rrlous fl&lll brought him to the brink ol f!rat.
:=b:~~~·g. This It not a ploy !or , ==-:~:. in balloting ocbedultd
Besidea Kennedy, the interviews lho"" Seyeral aavlaera said they I e I t
ed considerable bocking !or threo McGovern probably narrowed the lilt o(
aenaton -Gaylord Nelson or Wl1C011Sln, poalble rut1Dlng mates down to a
Pbilip A. Harl of Michigan and Abralwn handful, All ~ that, Instead ol
A. Rlblcof! or Connecticut -amt !or aollcitlac poalble runnina mateJ from a
Gov. Reubin A.!kew ol Florida. Rlblcofl brood dJ:l:1-ol party leoden, tbe South
IOd Aalew haVe said they're nol Inter-Dakota Senator Is more llkely to aak
'Ille lnttrviews were conducted both tbelr Views m ..,. or two of bla ..,.-
before and aflor McGovern's victory in choices.
astronauts David Scott, Alfred \Vorden
and James Irwin "exercised poor judg-
ment in their action.
11Therefore, they will be reprimanded
and their actions will be given due con-
sideration . in their selection for future
assignments," the agency said. '
Dr. Georg Low. NASA deputy ad-
minl!trator. commented :
'"Astronauts are under extreme stress
in the months preceding a flight to the
moon, and their poor judgment in car-
rying the unauthorized covers must be
considered in.this light .
"Nonetheless, NASA cannot condone
these actlons. ''
NASA said It learned that the Apollo II
crew agreea at one time to provide IOI
Ci7Vers from their forthcoming mlaaion.
to the acquaintance ln return for estab-
lishment of 1 "trust !und" for their child-
ren.
"After the .covel'3 had been given to the
(See ASTRONAUTS, Pa1e I) '
It's Your .tlove
Spassky Begi11s Without Fisclier
REYKJAVIK, Iceland CAP) -The
world championship of chess got under
way today without Bobby Fischer, the
American challenger. He showed up
seven minutes after Russian titleholder
jloria Spuoky made tho flrlt move •
(Earlier atory, Paae ll.. .
II aeemed another Giie et · theie ~Ycboloilcal plo)'I that chess masters
often use in an attempt to unsettle their
oppOnent.
Spassky wa11 there on the dot of 5 p'.m.,
waited a minute, then calmJy pushed bis
queen's pawn forward two 11paces.
Referee Lothar Schmid or West
Germany pushed the button on the tlmt
clock and the match bad bet1Un.
Fischer aometlme& -to he Jato
to tournamen.ta and matcbm. It was not
known where he ~·· Seven m!nulea an. stiallll1 't!IPol the game, Fllcher a_....t from ollltap
left. With 1<j11C ltrlde&, be sped to t.11o
black leather awlvel dlalr placed behind
the.white side ot t.llo bolrd.
Applause wlllcb ll'eoled Fllcber's ar-
rival arote in c,_endo when SpuU:y
moved forward from the side or the stage
where he bad been waiting to shake
Flscher11 band.
Hurt Policeman Fires
Shots to Summon Aid
A hlood·aoaked, oil-duty Long Beach
policeman fired aeveraJ ahots from Illa
pistol to bririg help early thll momtng,
alter his car smashed into the rear of a
parked van near the Bolsa cliica bluffs in
Huntington Beach.
Police said David Ryan, 26, a patrol of-
ficer wilfl the Lona Beach Police Ile!lari-
ment, was driving east on PiclfiC Coast
at abowt 5 a.m. this morning when
anotbel car blocked bis lane and forced
him to smash into the rear of a van park~
ed on the side of the road. .
The occul>"'!t of the Van, Jimmy !\.
Paustell o! Buena Park, wu asleep when
the accident oc:curred.'When he emerged
from the van he found Ryan bleeding
Carpenter's Bill-
To Change Smog
Testing Killed
SAC!\AMEN:J'O (AP) -The California
Senate has amothered a bill to change
automobile emission control testing pro-
cedures. ·
The blll, oy Sen. Dennll Cllrpenter (JI.
Newport Beach), died on a 2U wte
Monday. Sponaored by the Call!ornla Air
Resouroes Board, It concerned state ap-
proval of new cars going on sale.
Present ta'-requlret new can to meet
atate pollution law standards, and the
cuatomer la tbeorttlcally _,,ed It does
by a sticker m the car's windohleld.
Cllrpenter'I bill would permit all can
to be certl!ltd safe I« aale thrl>uih the
auembly .llDI teatlng ol two percent ol
all the-cars ol any one type.
Carpaiter 181d thJs .... Id perlllft the
we·ofa new test which woWd be too el·
penslv• to apply ... au can. But ii .... 1Jl!ed to only two percent of the pro-
duction, the coat would be Gnl)' aboot 10
lo 75 cents per car If pro.rated over all of
them.
profusely and went to set help .
Meanwhile Ryan stumbled out of hJs
pick-up and made hls way to the bid: OC
the car and iay dowa there. Wben no -
came to his aid after several minutes ha
began to fire his pistol in the air.
Five unidentified surfers on the beach
heard the shots and found him. They then
drove into downtown Huntington Beach
and stopped the first police car on the
street.
Pauatell, in the meantime, had hitched
a ride to HunUngton Beach Police He~
quarters and contacted officers there.
Police arrived 20 minutes after the a~
cident OC()lfl'ed during which time no ont
had otopped to give aid to the badiy in-
jUred olftcer, accordlnc to police.
Ryan WU ttported In satisfactory COl>-
ditim this 11>0rning at Pac!IJca Hospital
with bead Injuries, contusions and
abrulons.
Orufe c. ...
~\
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"I -·-rlf
The weatberlady aees cleat and
llWlllY akles through Wednaday,
with blgha of 70 at Orange Cout
sands, rlsina to IO degrees Inland.
Low1 rl.f?.
INSWE TODAY
Chicago Mavor Richard J. D<>
k V re/wed compromilt •ffoTla
by Stn. McGOllenl °" Ille thonlf
qvestton of d<let1Dte H•d"CI. 111
a rctult, Dc1e11 IOlt AU 1tot. S11
l'tory and othtr C'OnPeneion ,,.
lvlll on PO{lt 4.
~ :--..., ·--=..-:. .. , ~ lJ "-C... " ~ ti ---:s _.... flllfkw 11 ... ... ~',T .,: =:" ....... ,.. .. _ .
.._ ... a_.. ti ._.. .... .,,M
I• I 1• --I .... u.w. t.t
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2 DAILY PILOl c lutsd•r. J~ U. 1972
Huntington Parade:
Is It Weari11g Thin?
Dy RICHARD L. DRAKE
01 1t1t 0.11, "llolf Sftff
. IN TBE CHJLO'S tale, 1'The Emperor's New Clothes," • king Is taken
' for a bundle because st couple of sharpie tniJors playing on his vanity convince
him they can make him a special new set of threads out or magic cloth only
the good af\d pure of heart can sec.
· Natura lly the king 1nakes a spectacle of hlmsell in
a parade, but no one is about to admit the klng is a shabby
nude and not realJy clothed in the finest of robes. But
some kid, who only knows what he sees, exposes the con
game and It all comes out In the wash. ,
\
Was I the only one who saw what I saw at Huntington
Beach's annual fourth of July Parade? Did anyone else
feel they missed something after standing in the sun for
three hours?
o•.t.ice-FIRST, how do you make a parade last three hours?
The. Rose Parade, the Rolls Royce of parades, is only about two hours l~ng:
One trick in Huntington Be~ch is to have. as many dance stu_dio, JUDI-Or
high and parks departmcntelrill and baton twirler teams as possible tn the
parade. Then they have each team member march at least 10 feet behind his
or her nearest teammate and they allow about a quarter of a mile between
each group.
Another way they make the parade last is by rinding as many mechan-
ized Shriner groups as possible. These are installed near t~ front of the parade
with their cute little motor scooters. Then. when everything seems to be mov·
ing along too swiftly, the Shriners can tum quickly and go sideways, or even
back against the flow of the parade, performing the intricate crossing pat.
terns so popular with parade watchers and raising the carbon monoxide level
along the parade route to intolerable levels.
But I digress.
PATRIOTISM, Hke any kind of love. is hard to describe. But is it even
remotel y connected to a man in an Uncle Sam costume on 12-foot stilts, carry·
lng a sign and reminding parade watchers throu~h a bull~rn of the virtues
of thrift especially by opening an account at Mariners Savmgs?
A 'few fond and proud moments in the military came to mind as the
color guard strode by, but when the Burger King .float. and Ro~ald McDonald
went by me, the 'lump in my throat was only indigestion. I failed lo see any
connection with our country's birthday. .
For the 68th annual Huntington Beach parade, people were said to. have
worked ror 8 year to bring you the Orange County Dune Bugg.y Association
(eight assorted rebuilt Volkswagens). the Hollywood Dog Obed1en~e Club, a
t:harm school convertible with four girls in the back, two vehicle~ from
a pest control firm and the scattering of horseback riders to w~oi:n no distance
is too great to travel for an opportunity to wear a cowboy suit m front of an
audience.
A BANNER announcing a drill team was carried by a sweet-raced little
4-year-old. She staggered through the horse droppings and you could tell from
the resigned look on her face that she re~lly appreciated. the opportunity her
parents gave her to break in her new white shoes on this forced march.
And then there were the poor guests of honor -about a dozen m.en
from the Long Beach Veteran's Hospital. All were confined to wheel chairs
or gurneys. They were placed at the curb, facing the sun, where for three
hours, relieved only by an occasional snow cone. they were asked in the name
of patriotism to once again give that last full measure.
But I don't want to leave you with the impression I didn't find .some-
thing ·about the parade I liked. There was this leggy majorette about six feet
tall in a tight costume with the cur~es all in the right places. But she went by
only once and 30 .second! out of three hours wasn 't enough to make me want
to come back next year.
THINGS GO OUT of style and maybe parades like this are out of style.
I have a f e e J J n g they are primarily for the people who organJze them and
march in them. Take away· that magic cloth and there's not much to 1ee. If
you don't believe me, take a rear bard look nett time. For you can be sure,
despite my views, there wlll be a next time.
Scores Attend Funeral
Services for Patriarch
•
ISTANBUL, Turke y (APl-Funeral
services for Ecumenical P a t r i a r c h
Athenagoras were held today before
scores of officials representing many na·
tions and the Protestant and Roman
Catholic churches.
Athenagoras who died Friday at 86.
Hundreds of persons packed the small
church of St. George within the one-acre
patriarchate . Michael Ramsey,
archbishop of Canterbury and Anglican
Church head, stood next to Pope Paul's
re present at Ive, Jan Cardinal
Willebrands, president of the Vatican's
Secretariat for Christian Unity.
Meanwhile the election of a new
spirltual ltader for the 250-million
member Eastern Orthodox Church gave
the Turkish government increasing con-
cern in the face of protests from the
Greek government. Park Concerts Black-robed Orthodox bishops with
flowing white beards chanted tile funeral
service. presided over by Metropolitan Slated Sunday (Archbishop) Melilon, a member of the .
patriarchal Holy Synod. Meliton ls con· , .. . ,. sidered the leading candidate to succeed Costa Mesas Concert 1n the Park
.-------------,>.-this Sunday features the Ansell Hill
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Dance Orchestra in a free performance
at 18th and Center Streets.
The 4 p.m, concert should bring back
fond memories with such tunes as "Dan-
cing in the Dark," "Night and Day,''
"More Th11n You Know,'' "Lil' Darlin' "
and "Flight of the Foo _Bird, '1 all made
famous by Count Basie.
The Ansell l;llll Dance Band used to
perform at the Rendezvous Ballroom in
Balboa. Over the years some of its musi·
clans have become famous and include
Ray Coniff, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims and
Paul Smith.
Currently the ba:1d has 18 professional
musicians, a guest vocalist and An.sell
Hill. leader and saxophonist.
Mesan in Jail
O~. Burglary Rap
A Costa Mesan was jailtd on burglary
c1"'rges Mon<lay night by Orange County
Sheriffs offictrs who accused him of
breakir~ Into an ~I Toro store.
Deputies identified Gerald Eugene
Boomer, 25, of 2015 Ch&rle St. as the in-
t rudtr who asstrtedly climbed a nine-foot
fencs •.surrounding the B 1.1IIder1
Emporium, 211192 Rockfield l!Qad, an<l
threw tbe &ase of a cement wafer fow:t-lliln throufh a plate gla" window.
Officers called to the scene arrested
Boomer an<l booked hlm into Orange
County Jall. They did nothinr of value
had betn taken In the brukln.
NY PoliCe
"
Seek Eye
Gouge Duo
ROCHESTER, N.Y. IUP!l -Police of·
ficlal-i have assigned 10 utra detect ives
to an "around ·tJ1e-clock. check-out-all
leads" search for two men who gouged
out the eye.s of two robbery victims .
Pollce identified tbe latest victim as
Robe.rt Paro, 19, of Rochester.
He was attacked and blinded by two
robbers Sunday night as he worked at a
Main Street gas station.
Authorities said two men took Paro
down a sfde street. robbed him of $10,
gouged out one of his eyes and injured
the other. He was in critical condition at
St. Mary'1 Hospital
Earlier Sunday, a lone robber who
' resembled one of Paro's assailants goug·
eel out ~he eyes of Samuel C. Schafer, 72,
also of Rochester . police said.
The assailant asked for fresh orange
juice in Schafer's store and when told
that there was only orange soda, he
demanded money.
In a brief SC\Jffle, the robber gouged
out both of Schafer's eyes. Schafer was
reported in good condition at Genessee
Hospital.
Police said they are seeking two men,
one man described as about :JO. with a
medium Afro-style haircut. and the other
at>c;iut 20.
Veterans Sought
For Job Offers
If you live in C:Osta Mesa, are a Viet-
nam veteran and looking for work. there
may be a job for you.
The Public Employment Program,
more popularly known as the PEP pro-
gram. has been highly successful at the
Orange County Public Library. Positions
have been filled at nearly all 25 branches
of the library.
There are still some job opportunities
for interested Costa Mesans. These in-
clude openings for clerks, typists. a
library specialist, and a children's
coordinator.
For further information, contact the
Orange County Personnel Department,
625 North Ro6s St., Santa Ana, 834-2844.
Burglars Sought
By Mesa Police
A pair of second story men -or
perhaps aecood story boys -are sought
today by C.O.ta Mes3 police, ror the
skylight burglary of a commercial firm
discovered Monday.
Gary South, artist and tn11ner of Art
Services South, 336 E. 17th St .. said he
lost $19 worth of materials including a
knile and assorted, colored)nking pens.
He added that the same fhing happened
several times before, always involving
items-children might envy. •
A woman witness contacted by police
said she has seen two boys in Bermuda
shorts, aged about 8 to 10, climbing down
a ladder from the roof.
Picnic Planned
At Estancia Site
An •·oid Timtr-New Timer" picnic
has been scheduled for Aug. 6 at Estan-
cia Park, sfte of the historic Estancia
adobe.
Sponsored by the Costa Mes a
Historical Society, lhe pot-luck picnic
gets under way at 1: 30 p.m, Afterward
there will be tours of the Estancia House.
A living tree will be dedicated to the
late Judge Donald J. Dodge. the first
judge of the former Costa Mesa C:Ourt.
Judge Dodge died last year.
Those interested in participating in the
pot-luck affair should contact Lucy
Pinkley, 548-1505, or the Costa Mesa
Chamber of C:Ommerce. 646-0536.
Terrorist Nixed
Psychology Test
ZRIFJN, Israel !UP) -A three-judge
military court refused a defense request
today to order psychological tests for
Japanese terrorist Kozo Okamoto.
Only 90 minutes earlier, Okamoto said
he didn't want the tests because he is as
normal as anyone else.
"From a psychological point of view
l'm a nonnal man and there is nothing
wrong with me ."
Okamoto ls on ttial on charge! stm-
ming from the Loci International Airport
massacre in Tel Aviv on May 31.'The at·
tack left 26 persons dead and 76 others
wounded. Two othtr Japense died during
the attack.
Younger Eyes Death
SAN LUIS O~JSPO (AP ) -Alty. Gen.
. ........ .... "',
l1ncmiventional Delegates
Thelma Buchholdt (left), vice chairman of the Alaskan delegation,
and Shawn Miller, delegate from Pocatello, Idaho. came costumed in
contrast al the Democratic convention in l\1iami Beach.
Mrs. Banuelos to Join
Nixon Dinner in Irvine
Mrs. Romana Banuelos, treasurer of
the United States, will be guest of honor
at a re-elect the President fund-raising
dinner set for JuJy 18 at Irvine's
Airporter lnn.
From Pagel
ASTRONAUTS • •
acquaintance, however. they realized-on
their own -that this was improper and
declined to accept either the trust fund or
the alternative of.£er ()f samps in ex·
change for the 100 postal covers," NASA
said.
The ApollO 15 crew, like those on
earlier moon missions. had NASA's
permission, within established pro-
cedures. to carry personal souvenir-type
items, including some postal covers.
The permission was granted with the
condition that the articles be retained by
the astronauts or be given to personal
friends. They were not to be used for
commercial or fund-raising purposes or
personal gain, NASA said.
On Apollo 15, the astronauts were
authorized to carry 232 of the specially
stamped envelopes with markings show·
ing they had made the round trip to the
moon. The 400 unauthorized covers were
carried in aadition to the approved ones.
A NASA spokesman identified !he ac-
quaintance to whom he said the 100
unaurhorlzcd postal covers were given as
Hl)rst /Walter) Eireman, a naturalized
American living at Stuttgart. Eireman
met the aslro!#iuts when .,.,·orking for an
aerospace contractor at Cocoa Beach,
Fla., the spokesman said.
A G<!rman dealer involved was iden-
tified as Herman E. Sieger. D 7973
Lorch, Gennany.
A copy of a West German newspaper
advertisement circulated here showed
Lhat Sieger offered the material for 48W
DM, or about $1 ,500 each.
The advertisement c a r r i e d a
photograph of the coveted cover with ex-
planations in German of the English
terms.
The upper left hand corner carried the
handwritten remark, ''Landed at Hadley
Moon July 30. 1971 ," with the signatures
of Dave Scott and.Jim Irwin .
The 10-cent U.S. stamp in the upper
right hand corner carried the caption
"First Man on the Moon," and was
postmarked on the USS Okinawa
July 25, a.m .. 1971.
The dinner is planned by the Orange
County Hispanic Committee to re-elect
President Nixon. All persons are invited
to attend. Dinner reservations are $15
per person .
Mrs. Banuelos is the sixth woman and
tr~ fi rst 0£ ~1exican-American descent to
holi the position of U.S. Treasurer.
When appointed last December, Presi·
dent Nixon cited her •·extraordinarUy
successful career as a self.made
businesswoman ."
Mrs. Banuelos launched her Los
Angeles food processing firm on $400 in
1949. Today the firm grosses $5 million
annually and employes number more
than :JOO.
She became director and in 1964
chairman of the board of the Pan
American National Bank in East Los
Angeles.
She \\'as also named Outstanding
Businesswoman of the Year by Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty in 1969.
A reception is planned for 7 p.m.
followed by the dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained from
Ticket Chairman James. H. Miranda at
558-0'l62 or from ticket co-chairman Alex
Acevedo at 543-1953.
From Pa.gel
McGOVERN. • •
to join with liberal supporters of
Humphre y. Muskie and Rep. Shirley
Chisholm to ward off the Wallace attack.
McGovern today promised families of
American POWs. "\\le will never aban-
don those men" if he becomes president.
He said some military capability would
be. retained in Southeast Asia until the
Gls taken prisoner in the war are re-
lellse<i.
\Vhile \Vorking in seclusion on the ac-
Cf'ptance speech he expects to deliver lo
lhe Democratic Convention Wednesday
night, McGovern issue<i the statement in
response to endorsement of '·families for
Immediate Release ," an organization of
people with husbands, sons or brothers
1nissin3 in action or held as prisoners or
war in Indochina.
t-.1cGovem expressed his gratitude and
promised that he would "use every
resource available to the president. in-
cluding direct personal diplomacy in
Hanoi. to insist upon release of all
prisoners and a complete. impartial ac-
counting for all missing in action."
Pathologis~
Testifies
' For Doctor
By TOM BARLEY
Of flll 0111"1' "'1101 Si.II
A pathologist called to the v.·JtntSS
stand by Or. Merrill C. ''.\1 ikt " O'Don·
nell's lawyers tod a11 lf'~tified that · . bod ten bArbiturale levels detet'tf'd in a Y
months after death would be idtotJcal to
those found at the tlmC> or death.
Dr. Robert Richards, responding ID · four data based on the denlh in ~le>:1co
years ago of Susan O'D<innell. the plastic
surgeon 's wife, conunented that a
regular intake of bl1rb1t ura1cs would also
be reflected In the organs and ti3sues of
a deceased person.
His testimony in thr Or an8e ~~ty
Superior Court civil trjal of a $1 m1ll1on
lawsuit filed agains! the physician b.Y
Mrs. O'Donnell's mother appeared to
strike at earli,er testimony th 11 t
barbituate levels fou nd 1n tKr dead
woman nearly a year lattr 1nd1cared
much higher levels of poisoning al the
time of her death.
O'Donnell, 57. of 420 l\1ngs R~d.
Newport Beach is accusc<l of bnng1.ng
about the death of bis aonH·nve artist
wife by injecting into her 11hat.1'-lex1can
au thorities believed to be lum1nol -a
highly toxic barbitura!e.
Mrs. O'Donnell, :is, died ln her Cotumel
Island hotel on r¥1arch 19. 1968. She wa!
buried in the Yucatan Peninsula resort
the next dav and her remains \Vere ex·
humed bv IOcat authorities 19 da)'S later.
Richards testified todav that alcohol
consumed in considerable quantities in
the hours before anv intake of
barbiturates 1voutd 11:mp\i(y th(' effects of
the drug in direct re lation to the quan-,
tilies of both drink and drugs_
O'Donnell's lawyers clain1 that the
surgeon and his wi fe drank hea111ly
throughout the day before her death to
celebrate what has been stated to be a
third anniversary trip and an attempt to
patch up a disintegrating marriage.
O'Donnell, who practices at 2011
Westcliff Drive and 307 Placentia Avenue
in Newport Beach, sent a telegram to his
wife's famil y three days after her death
in which he stated that she died in a traf·
fie accident.
He arrived in California fi\·e days after
her death to tell her family that the
telegram version of her death had been
intended to spare them as much shock as
possible.
h-1rs. Gertrude Barnett . 63. of Seal
Beach Leisure \Vorld has test ified that
her son-in-1aw then told her and other
members of the family that Mrs. O'Oon·
nell died of a heart attack.
O'Donnell has stated in a later court
deposition that he has "no opinion" today
on the cause of his wife's death.
Snoopy Ge~
College Degree
BERKELEY (AP I UC
Berkeley has conferred a n
honorary degree on Snoopy, the in-
tellectual beagle of Charles Schulz'
comic strip, "Peanuts."
The honor came from Sanford
Elberg. dean of the university's
graduate division. after the pooch
complained in a strip that another
June had gone by leaving him
again bereft of a degree.
Snoopy was pronounced "Assis-
tant Dean in Charge of Canine and
Related Programs." and a
doghouse-size certificate of llp-
pointment made out to "Snoopy
Beagle Schulz" was sent to his
creator, cartoonist Charles Shulz.
BETTER LATE THAN NEVER!
We're only one week late lo
wish you a Happy Independence
Day -but ...
Really, we should celebrate all
year long .
In this spirit we are offering
red , white, & blue 1 ha g n y Io n
carpeting at $7.95 and $8.95
installed.
Ide a I for boall, children'J
rooms, orea rugs, etc.
'
ALDEN-'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS : Moo. thru Thurs., 9 to S:JO -Ff!., 9 to 9 -Sot., 9:]0 to S
Evolle Younger uld Monday t ha l C.Ulornla law ahould be changed to
permit the dealb penel(y • for AOme
crimes. "I am no pea.t fan of Ute death
penalty,'' Vouf18er said, "but t am very
much a Ill! ol the oltlte11$' rlghl lo Im·
pose !be death penalty wbal lbty )hJnk It
11 lmporlanl." 11----------------------------------.1
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