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1972-07-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
• • 6Babid ~· Fox Beturns · ( • " • • • .. Nude Tee n Wife On Assault With eadly WeQpon Rap Suspe ~t Sought .. JHU RSOAY AFTER~OCi)N, :n:.1LY·27,.}'172 I VOL,.~-4.SICl'IOitS.)«>P•I' I ' ' • '~ .,_ . I • ' . ' • I esa aza un • .. , .~otli~r _.Young Camper Surgeori Says Pit.ching Hurts One Suspect Nabb ed, One . . ttacked ·by Wild Animal EUGENE, Ore. (UPll -An orthopedic surgeon is suggesting the elimination or the position of pitcher Io LlUle League baseball . Gets Away By JACK a!APPEU. "'.''f Of tM &M4tr ....... SS.ff :jAnotber ..nall child was attacked and 'liltten by • wild animal ~ -ibly • #8bid fox -early this morning u be lay aleeplng at the ·San Clemente Slate Plll'k l 1'No kid or mine would ever pitch Orange County Health Depa1'tment. of. LitUe Leegue baseball," Dr. Joseph liclals said today that the cllild will bave D. Godlrey, chief of orthopedic to undergo the , "cfuck..egg" rabies treat.. surgery at BuifaJo's Children's ment of 21 injedlona. Hospital, said Wednesday. · By ARTHUR R. VINSEL , Of tlle DlllY l'/Mt Sl•lf A lox was shot about 200 Yros lroin the "The mssibilities of -MJStaihing Shot ed ·-site of the bite by Eugene .JIDl' e'tte·, . .::'.L•ef ,,.~ . gun-a rm officers sealed :Off uu pennanent elbow re,trictions of South Coast Plaza earl y today in an . ..raising possibility that the park will be Ranger for ~tbe Ofaiige Coast District, motion or an abnonnal area at the inch-by-inch manhunt, following the cap- about 90 minutes ·lifter the biting in-elbow may definitely. stem .from ture .o.l . one suspect spotted sprlqtinl • losed. ' . L N'me-year .. ld J'ohn Metzler' of C&noga cident. . . throwing overhand at an early from a• window smashed burglary scene. ' -lll'k"""',nmbed':IO>Miali<¥1.i0llnnl!Wty •• .,~.)/o!f.l!J,\.Qf,'·~ .. "'ll!'\>I· !IV~s.,swiljty. , . age.;~,he~Slljd. ~ , , • ·~. ·\ ;lj!vptigi114l!:s""id~"~d·:JllllliFln r;taken by .COunty animal conti:Ol person-Guwre,. saiu be would ;-re~tn .. ~ inSu:re:·ine·srore ·6r Otf~cer <>Wen ~ '.Hospital by<his _latber awakened by !'IS : aon's cries at 3 a.m. at the tent grotin~ ' ' Five puncture wounds in the chlld'a up. r J!el and the head of the fox was being ex-mend methods such as' a pitching apparently escaped, abandoning 1 '1,o3mined today for rabies by the ·health machine, a tee as In golf, or a toss-cOntainlng several thousand do • per right arm were treated at tile hospital and the boy was given a tetanus shot by stall. • . epartment today. up mechanism be used to sef up the worth of stolen clothing. • . , Dr. Thomas HamiltQn, director oC ball to hit in both practice sessions Newport Beach and Huntington ch Health Services said that> re·gardless of and games. detectives were joining the investig4ion ttle ootcome of the examination, the Met-today, theorizing it could involve a tJaf!1 to ' .tier chlld will have to undergo the rabies of highly-successful window 3 m lllS h N d T W 'f ,. .treatment. , burglars recently active in the Hafj>or u e een i ~ ' . The child WU unab e to Identify the s t A' Area. ·~ .;linimal that bit him as a fox, and tber< is ena C p pt'OVCS Several Costa Mesa officers proi.Jed Chok d D ~-. ~·ino guarantee that the dead animal is in thr~gb Sears, Roebuck and ComDiny . e f,o ~at 1•cl the one whi~h attacked the child, Ban on Killing durmg Pre<tawn hours , but fa iled to11!nd ~anger Junette said. __ ---anyone hiding. S H ted l • Dr. Hamilton aaid tbat without treat· They were assisled by Hunt~~n us nect un ~ ."ment, rabies is fatal. . (\/, ~o u -I Beach Patrolman Len Damerow at~is ·'~~-~~'1<"1>(~"'·"' cll '~...;:.11.)V~v,o .1!1.f,rM.lll~"'~~l..o\!'4-iWW,~ .• s ... ~~~~·,cJj'.!"".!,tsrhep1herd ,. g. HomiCide investigators ·today ~eri , "'v1iiW,y 'peop e are noiW~iDLenl's".'119"of on ... · ' 1Btml"....--., ....,.., ..... , a1 • · • bing the strangulation murder~! , 1 the grbund. ·r don't tnow about cam-WASHINGTON (AP)_ A 1;.year ban Watch Commander Lt. Mike1Healey t ed Santa An H found · 1;« pers," Dr. Hamilton said. . . . said most uniformed orf1ce.rs retur""4 to r:':g..,.;... the 1:.tw;eri •her :Oiltm~ · Dependin upon the results o!' the agamst kilting and lmporl!ng whales, sea patrol duty alter the initial ,_j;Jbut ( 'I' E x-ets -tO Buli ~. ···:. --· '·>; ... ·;.. ----· r -"'" , . . 'Pediatrician Benjamin Spock said•tod~y h~ eibects the People's Party convention to retain him as its candiil'ite for ·President rather than'to , suppmt Democrat George McGove111 .. ln 1iis S\ •. Lo)lia. hotel, he >Waid· ,. telling his party's message was "inCOIDp..,al>ly ·more difficult" be- , husl)ara,i rttumed OOme froin ·~rffi~ laboratory· fe,;s on 1he· hi-ain of the· dead · otters, dolp~ins 8!Jd. oth~r. ~:911 m_am-, one ~~ood. gu~fd at the scene witft ~- ... noon· WedneSday. > • • ..,. · • : ~ .. • ~ Ox, Dt.'ita1rlttt0ri said , .. stei)S""Woullf'~be mals. wus . close to reality ·tO<Jay after , . , -(See SMA.SH,iPap ·~ .J ~· : Tests -were being _ conducte<ti t'.q taken." being approved 88 to 2 in the Senate .. cause of the McGovern candidacy. ' 'I Councihnan Jailed After l . . . . 1 ' • ~ -A·~~g~~ Qf~!~~~A~~~~!~ , . By TOM BARLEY · ,· q\Ucluy:dllaml Wealb<n. H .. was booked , °' * D•'"' '"" ,,.,, ",intO Orange County Jail on.._ charges of • ="u · -·'"'llt~wllh "deadlf ·-·-. n-Juan· ca tstrano ntftll'·, ......_ .. _ . " """"r" , \ • • J°m. Keith wca'S::,rs was Jll led' early • 'o.pitlei tr¥ed the o~ or the.m- (Odly by btange County Sheriff's officers cidelll to a c•.'\-••11Jllllni fracas al .Dana wbo claimed he used a loodod abolaun to M.trlno In w~h an aulcl operated by prevent their Investigation of an ap-. Mor Weatheis ~l~gedly was ramnled by poren1 marital dl.!pute. her b111bolld. 1 I • O(llctrs aald they were roaponding lo a Olfictl'I said "an unl<knlifled niale" all fGr bolp from Mrs. Ellen Weathers was a third p~J to the Ilana Marina In- tl the -o1 mutuol friends In Million cldent. Tberrefliled to comment further Viejo wbon the 37·yeaMld COllD<llman at tllll llqt on Ila apl(lrtnl lnvolvemtiit • ma lbom at the front -of tbe boule. in tho dispute. Tho, Uld no ahots wero fired In Ille From there, alllcors said, tbe action brief controatalion and !My wn Ult to !lot W&\111111, Pap-JI I • • ____ ____.,"--'-! __ ---".._ --- determine if Linda S. Smit, 18, of 2919 Nl · Among those steps, the complete Close Wednesday. Bristol St., w .. sexually assawted 6efote· down of the state park would have to be ' The ineasure'llHi!lllii'loirConference being killed. . . 11 considered, he said. Committee w•·,re i\ will be reconciled Her shaken husband, Eric R. Smit, 221 He said that attempts by the Park . . . ui:: • was Interrogated at leogtb by poll~ but Rangers to keep people ~m sleeping on with a • 51milar bill approved by the apj)81'eDUy-'was 1D1able lo slled anil lipt the ground were apparenUy not working. House. 1 on the possible identity of the v~im:s Attempts to trap the foxes in the park · The Senate voted an exemption from slayer. . •I ~re not working, Dr. Hamilton said. the ban for Alaskan E~ and 111:here are !"° suspects as ~ now," <S "The foxes are pretty smart," he authorized the secretary of eomme~ce to honuclde detail spokesman said. .ti. observed. A number of skunks have been . , . Detective Sgt. Ralph CUrial told capbJred in the traps, however. Issue ~lal . ~ts for scientific and ne~ there .were still no lea. « Dr. Hamilton said that small wild oommerc1al fishing purpose•. this morning. t • ·~ inlmals ''normally will bite only if pro-Sponsors of the bill said it is a com· Coroner's deputies said Mrs. S~ ~· v,oked or ll they are sick," promise between conservationists who killed so~tiJne.between 1:45 ~.m .wf>eA •. Three pen:ms were bitten by a fox in wanted a complete ban and commertiaJ <lllli1ll -a.w\ofl!!i\kW~·ea,. 11r~"r111Mtf111••""' ••·a(}'~Mif'\.,'i;~'" when be 'retumed lo lilld Ille body. 1 they lay sleeping on the ground in the ' ~n~ d b . A Santa Ana Fire oa,ortment rescue i tate park. io~ ~n usrness. squad was dlspatdlod lo the scene, bul An all-oot· bunt' far the creature was Another exemptiQn , was a~proved for efforls tao revive -~ woman failed. not succesa(ul at that time. The last the tuna lndua\ll, giving , it two years· to Fire Capt. Doug Robertson wd no ao-reconjed capture ol a rabid fox in Orange !ind ways of catching tuna wiibout killing tual wounds ~d be seen oo t~ vlctim's O>unty was 19401 ho,-e~er, a~tborities ~re pbrpofses · a:t the same time. body when he and his crew arrived. worried due to the aggressive behavior 1 He did aay two b!Oodstains were on shown by the state ~k animals. . . The House blil, approved In March, f~· Mrs. Smit's neck, bot violent stranguta-A f7·YeaN>ld Cos\a Meaa youth bitten es a fiv .. year moratoriwn on taking any \ion usually involvta some bleeding from the last time appeara lo have proaressed mamma!J, but would not a[fect fishing nose, mouth or both, police said. aausractority, Or, Hamilton said. operations included in an agreement with Coroner's deputld at 11,rst sa id He noted that the youth had no advene Canada Japan and Russia It also would . postmortem UllDllillloll £alled to con-reaction to the aerie& tttatment that the ' · ctuoively show ~ but more with department wu aware ol. establish a commission to study con- minute studies confirmed the caUM ol He said tbal' tbe normal policy was to servation and make gr.mill to states Md deatll. ' • (Ste M"IES, .P ... I) qenclel for research. Orange .. Continued bot weather is on thei agenda for Friday, with biglls In: the 90 inland. Beach temperalurer will remain around 75 along ~ Oraoge Coast. Lows SH5. : ' " ..... ~E~ovi:. : o loo (cmg ag'a; backpack~ i1tg into tilt notton·1· wiltftnw~· areas was le/I to lhe hard~. bre~ct of outdoortme'J. Bue ..: t~e last /ew.vr•r11 the 1Dild<r ' ness has l(e,n inlJndatecl IOlfll hike~s. Sto.-y Paa• 34. • · • ' l .M. It"' t C•!Utn'I• t Clliulflti ,...... Ctm:ct n ,........ " °""' ffefkfl 1t •«~ ,.... • ......... ""'"" .,, P-..C• ~1 ,. ........... 1t MM e tt .... " ........ • \ l f . ' .. 2 DAILY Pl " State Offieials .:Economic Lift • Seen Ill .. By BILL STOCKTON ..., I CleJW;I Wr11tr • LOS ANGELES -The awarding of the giuJtibillion-dollar space shuttle contract to '"North Amer ican Rockwell means that tbousonds of badly needed new jobs will afV. the 1tate'1 aaggin& economy a ma- jtir "liftoff. ·state orUcials are expressing delight ijla,t the California-based company won ~· contract. They are looking to the ~tie to speed tht laborious climb of ~ 1tate'1 lCOMMY from the depths of ~ployment that began in 1967 with aerospace cutbacks and reached bottom 'l·¥Pr ago. • J:'ational A e r o na u t l c 11 and Space .:· .. U.S. Trade .. " . Deficit Hits New Recorcl .. ·WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's tftckl deficit for the first half of the year seaeed to a record '3.3 billion with no ~.l. of improvement 1pparent, the """""ment said today. ~.Pt commerce Department said the Uz·JDOOth figure resulted after anothl!!r 'sizable deficit in International commerce • fn,,r4UfJe, with the value of imports e1· 'l!"'lng merchandise exporled by !!90.3 l!)llllon. • • .. This was worse than the May deficit of fW ,4 million and It represented the tl,k)ttl consecutive month ln which the """ll'Y hu turned In a red-Ink figure. in !lade. .. _J)lmestically, the economic news is bett<r. The dei>artment reported that Its ,cohJposite indez of leading business In· djeators rose 0.5 percent in June on top !di.• large upward-revised lnc~ of 1.4 ~cent in May. The leading indicators index , while not the most reliable of government economic barometers, Is supposed to presage broad economic movements. 0urfu1 the ecmomlc recovery. the index bas gone strongly upward. The Nixon Administration has said it !>dj8ves Juhe could be the last month of the long deterloraUon in trade· figures ~i<:h began last year. The nation had its IU-.Lt rado deficit In thts cenlury In 1971 of -~ blfUon. · ~ trade deficit represents a loss of i!Oriipet!Uveneas by U.S. Industry ao woll ~ a potential !OSI of jobs. '!'.the adm'inlstration is depending on 1 ttliii around in trade figures to correct Its ldrta'Ume balane&<>f·payments deficit. '"Ulst December's devaluation of the !klllar should begin having an lmpact on ~: :1rade figures later this year, ad- rdbilstratlon economic offlcials have did:' Devaluation served to make im- ~ more expenaive and U.S. eIJJOrtS c&e'iper in other COlDltries. ~t officia~s 1ay it wUl take lime for this economic faci. to turn the deficit aroWK1. AS for the domestic economy, Asst. SfCtetary of Commerce Harold C. Passer said the rise· in leading ind1cators "is continuing to signal strong economic ex· panslon In the months ahead." Of the eight ind1cators available in the tndex for June, four were favorable. tl)rie were unfavorable, and one was liiic:l)anged. There are four other in· dfi:i,:tors for whlch fig(Jres will be relea~ e<t).ilter. "'the favorable ind1cators were the a.ie'rage work week, new orders for dilrable goods. building permils, and stock prices. Showing declines were in· dustrlal materials prices, the ratio of prices to labor costs, and claims for unemployment insuranct, which in- creased and therefore are unfavorable. ·There was no change In the indicator for contracts and orders for plant and equipment. The index rose 'to 142.5 per· cent of its 1967 average, OIANH COAST ar DAILY PILOT Tflt 01'11'11• CN1t bAILY PILOT, wltfl wll~h 11 QOmbll'td tn. Ntwt-ltrna, 11 llUbfl.iiff bi' th• Or•na• CN11 Publl1hlng C0111N"f. s- , ... _.lllor\1 1re pvbll1hed, MeM1v fhro1111h Frldev, tor COii• M"•· N-r·1 leecl'I, HtMll~lon ll11eh/f'OU"tll" Vlllty, Lllllfll 8'Ndl. lr\illn1/S•cldl11Nck •rid "" Clem11111i S... ,,.,., C.cilltrtN. A 1lngle r111 r-1 edlllf#I 11 Pllblldlllll S.lurdt't't 11'1d Svnd1vs. Tiii prlndp1I pubtlltllftt pltnl fl Ii U1 W11t •• .,. SlrNI, COii• MIH, C.llfornlt, 92'2'. Robert N. 'We1d l'r"lft,nt Ind Putllll!llr J1,k R. Curley V•tl l'r"llllftt ll'ld G""9rel MtM9t Tho1t1•• kt1¥il ll!•ltor Thorn11 A. M11tphint M1 .... lng l!dltor Ch1rl t1 H. l11e1 Ri che~ P. Nill Al1ltt1nt M•!\191111 E411on. Offtuo Cost. MM: U Wnt a.y Strltt Ht\ll'JIOrt ltldli m;a H•"""'1 loulh'll'd Utvftl hlcti: 1tt l'tAsl A~ fhMll..-91.tc!I: 11t,, IMtll loll1...,_,. ... °""'"!•I JOI ~ (I Clmlnf 11:.a . Tot-1710 642 .. IJt a..lfW AINrthlet 641•1611 ,,.. a..-r ........... " utlMI lttdt 4tl""4411 ,,_ N'"91 Or•Mt Clll!!ty Ctftl!Mftltltt 140.121t ~ 1m, Ct--. C.0.11 ~ubllthflll ~. ... IWWt •IOl'lu, llh,11h'llllftt., ...... Ill mitt... tr ....... 11,_... i'llttll'I _... .. ~-Wlfrllut ~If• ,.,.. ~ ., Ull'rfllM twntr. ..... delt ...., ... Niii ti C.Ollt Mtw. CltfflJin'll.. lilllto'i.tltn ..,. Ctl'Tler IJ.U ..........,r a, Mell IJ.tf IMflfflh'1 mlllf11Y ....... UM~. Shuttle .. Adr'{'llnistratlon officials 1l n noun c e d Wednesday in Wu hinaton thal North American, the company that built the Apollo moon 'program's command and service modules, would get the ~veted f2,6 billi on contract to build five reUJible 1hutlle craft. Hailing the deci1ion, Sen. John V, TUn· ne y said tbe space shutlle could •·create more tban 60,000 jobs: and add 11 much as $4 billion to the state'• economy over the neJJ 10 years ." Gov. Ronald Reagan said he was •·thoroughly deh~hted" with NASA's decision and predlcted California would gain 25,000 new jobs as a result. A spokesman (or North American said the company's Seal Beach plant would get "a substant ial porlion or the jobs created" by tfie project. Bui he cautioned that b!-!ildup ror the five-year shuttle pro- gram would be gradual. Officia ls at McDonnell Dou g 1 as Astronauti cs Co1npany in Hunlington Beach said they hoped to get jobs from the shuttle, too. "We were one of the ma jor bidders for the overall contract, so obviously we feel we have the e:itpertise to win many of the subcontracts involved with the shuttle," a company spokesmar. said. lie added that North American's d1sclosure that 50 percent of shuttle work will be sub- contracted outside the company "w1s good news here ." A spokesman for Philco-Ford in Newport Beach said he did not expect any related subcontracting for the com· pany. Under the initial payment of $530 million over two years, North American will build the first two orbiters -one to be used for 1tatic testing and the other for horizontal test flights starting in 1976. Three operational vehicles are to be built for manned orbital miMion.s, with test flights beginning in 1978. The 120-foot-long craft with a ~foot wing span are lo be in full operation by 1980. They are lo be used over and over again to carry men, satellites and equip- ment into earth orbit and to bring person- nel and materials back to earth. At North American 's plants in Downey, SJ)Okesmen said hiring of new employes: would begin immediately and that the work force eventually would swell by 9,000 persons. Los Angeles County's aero s pa c e employment peak came in 1987 when 359,100 persons worked in the industry. That's when the progra m lo land men on the moon was in high. gear. the Vietnam Wi:lr was a.t l1s peak end the airline in· dustry was experiencing tremendous growth. But by mid-1970, 124,000 aerospace workers in Los Angeles County had losl their jobs. The award Wednesday was sweet Ionic for such officials, who swallowed a bitter pill last spring when Cape Kennedy. Fla., was chosen as lhe shuttle launch site. N. Viets Reject Peace Offering By U.S. Team PARIS (AP) -North Vietnam re- jected today a renewed urgent American appeal for an Immediate cease-fire in Vietnam. Hanoi 's chief negotiator told the 152nd session of the Vietnam peace conference that a cease-fire can take place "after agreement on all the military and political questions." Xuan Thuy scoffed at President Nix· on's May 8 plan, whi ch Included a call for a cease·fire, saying it contains "nothing new and constructive." (South Viet- namese troops have now been pulled out of the Citadel in Quang Tri, see Story, Page 4). U.S. Ambassador \Villiam J. Porter had urged acceptance of the cease-fire, saying : "There seems to be no more compelling lask for us than that of en· ding the killing and doing so as soon as we can. Cease.fire is the key ." Porter said an end to the shooting would enhance the prospects for political negotiation. But Thuy said that if the United States really wants to negotiate seriously it should "'p1,1t an Immediate end to the mining and blockade of North Viet· namese ports, to its bombing raids - particularly lo those against dikes and dams ... It should stop all Its acts of genocidal war In South Vietnam." The communist side clung to lhe seven-point plan of the Viet Cong's revolutionary government, which calls for the United States to set a date for total and u00>ndltlonal withdrawal of ils fort"es and the replacement of thci Saigon regime of Nguyen Van Thieu by a coall· tion government. Porter also asked today "why ar- rangements cannot be planned now for the time when our men will return to their country ?" He proposed that discussions begin on facilities for the return of American prisoners. handling their mill and check· ing I.heir physical condition. Thuy replied : "We hsve repealedly stated that had the Nixon Administration responded to the seven-point plan ... American captive servkemen would havr relumed among their famlllea long ago. Tht continuation of the war by the United States will only rurther lenctJ>en ' the list of American prisoner1." ' ; UPI T1l11Mt. • Eagleton Aiiles Deny \VAS lll Nl;TON (ArJ) -Columnist Jnck Anderson !>llid today he had traced records !>how1ng l)en1ocrallc v Ic e prl·sidt•nt1al nominee 'l'homas Eagleton had been arrested by Missouri police on drunken dr1v1ng charges. (!n \\'ashington, a spokesman for Eagleton hils ternH~d !he report "abso- lutely and flatly untrue"), Eagleton . \l'ho is in Ha"·aii, could not be rea('hcd 1mmcd1a1cly for comment, but spokesrncn for presidential nominee George S. t-.'lcGovrrn said they had no In· fonnation on !he report. Anderson 1nade lus c h a r g e s dur· Ing his daily program on the Mutual Broadcasting System. NASA HAS SELECTED NORTH AMERICAN ROCKWELL CORP. OF DOWNEY TO BUILD SPACE SHUTTLE Tho Multlblllion.dollar Con.tract Will Provldo Thouunds of NHdod Jobi In C1llfornl1 The syndicated co!urnnist end broad· 'caster said he talked lo a t-.1issouri of· ficial who claimed tG have seen photoslats of al le<ist six police arrest forms. He said the photostats were sho11•n the official by a t-.·!tssouri state trooper, From Page J SMASH ... tives Wayne Harber and George Wilson . Officer Kreui , who captured the lone suspect, was dispatched at 4:39 a.m. when a silent burglar alarm was trig· gered al the store. Harold L. Britton, 22, of 1439 S. Minnie St., Santa Ana, was caught outside in the huge parking Jot, according to police. Identified as a cook at Anaheim Stadium, Britton was booked on suspicion of burglary. • Detectives are now attempting to determine if he and whoever else was in the store could be linked to a string of auch bit.and-run break-ins. One Corona del Mar women 's wear l!ihop was hit twice recently, two weeks to the minute apart. with a $5,000 loss once and $6,000 in goods taken the second time. A similar incident occurred at a ladies' clothing shop on Balboa Island. Huntington Beach police also have had at least one identical window-smash burglary at Huntington Center. The method in most cases is to hurl a milk bottle crate through the glass, snatch clothing from racks and flee, being blocks away within moment!. Stores without alarm systems are particularly good targets and police have suggested hanging apparel with hooks fa ci ng in alternate directions to stymie smash-and-snatch burglars. Costa Mesa poliCe were still standing by until Sears' 9:30 a.m. opening to ob- tain an inventory of goods recovered in today's latest case. · From Pagel WEATHERS. •• moved to the Mission Viejo home where Mrs. Weathers was said to have sought help after the confrontation with her bus. band at the Dana Marina. Deputies said Weathers appeared to have followed bis wife to her friends' house and a further altercation was in progress when they arrived. They said they rang the bell and were confronted by Weathers and the shotgun. Officers said they also confiscated a handgun which they believe was in Weathers. possession during the Dana Marina incident. The arrest of Weathers, who lives with his wife and two children at 27341 Ortega Highway, today astonished San Juan residents. "It's just the most astonishing thing I've ever heard," a business associate commented . "Jim Weathers is just the nicest guy on two feet and it's very dif- ficult lo believe he could be involved in this kind of incident." Weathers, who is the manager or Capistrano Hardware. 31921 Camino Capistrano. h.:1s lived ln the community (or the past eight years. He was elected to the San Juan Capistrano City Council in April of this year. Deputies said Mrs. \\leathers told them that she and her husband recently separated And v:ere no longer living together. Cranston's Son Arrested Again LOS ANGELES (AP I Robin Cranston, son of Sen. Alan Cranston, (!> Calif.) hlls been arrcsltd again. Police said Cranston , 24, was Involved in an auto accident Wedntsday. Officers arriving on the setne madt a telephone check'and found that Cranston had failed to appear alter being cited on separ1te occasions for speeding, driving wll hout a license and having an unregistered vehi- cle. a police •POkeaman ,.Id. He WBI freed on 119°'50 bail . F,.....Pagel RABIES ... provkle the rabies v1ccine. free ind lhll ii be odmlnlstered by 1 family doctor. The trtalmtnt ae.rles involves two 1hota per day for one wffk. and then ono Injection • day for •nolher Wltk, I stituatlon which we "all could do wltbout," Dr. Hamilton u.ld. ' LAFC Gives Irvine Okay A check or police records in ~lissourl by The Associated Press found !out recorded traffic violations by Eagleton. The earliest went back to "'hen Eagleton v.'as 18 years old and none involved drunk en driving. No trace of the Ander· son documents could be found. For Annex of 8,200 Acres BY JACK'BROBACK Of fht O.ltt' Pllet Sttll The fledgling city of Irvine Wednesday won Local Agency Formation Com· mission approval of an 8,ZOO.acre an· ne1ation and became the largest com· munity in land area in Orange COunty. The annexation, also largest in the county's history , boosts Irvine's land area to approximately 26,400 acres compared to runnerup Anaheim's 23,189. Anaheim includes 36.24 square miles in its boun-, daries, while Irvine will cover 41 square miles. Irvine officials also conv inced the LAFC that their 51 ,000-acre sphere of in· rJuence proposal was legitimate laying the groundwork for a future city of 400,000 people by the year 2000. Such a ci· ty is proposed tiy the Irvine company. Only serious opposition came from Santa Ana and Saddleback Valley in· terests. Santa Ana, through deputy city at- torney Charles Liberto, asks that both the sphere of influence and annexation be delayed pending outcome of Santa Ana 's lawsuit to disincorporate the seven- month old city. Ed Olson, president of the SaddJeback Chamber of Commerce and Bart Spendlove, head of the s3ddleback Area Coordinating Council, fought a losing bat· tie for the fast growing communities located south of the approved annexation. In contention was a t.600-acre section southeast of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station earmarked by the Ir vine Com- pany fo r industrial development. Spendlove and Olson argued that this property adjoined the developed popula- tion areas of Saddleback which are much closer to the industrial acreage than the developed areas of Irvine. "They are after our future tax base and warit planning control of the area," Spendlove charged. "If you approve these proposals you may f o r c e premature incorporation of cities in our area." Laguna Beach, represented by plan- ning commission chairman Carl Johnson Jr. aought and recelvld a compromise ' agreement on 1,100 acres in the upper Laguna Canyon area. The LAFC ruled that .ill watershed areas draining into Laguna Canyon should be reserved for. future annexalion to that city. . . . Irvine offlclats agreed to thl.s stipula· lion and both cilloa plan to pre5e0l a precise boundary line of the area t.o the commlsslon within 35 days. · Those Were Good Old Days PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Chief Magistrate Robert E. Dauer wasn't very sympathetic Wednesday when ·Charley Fragspane, 46, asked for more time to pay a down payment on $1,640 he owes the city in traffic fines. Dauer instructed Fragapane to 1 pay the $200 down payment today and $25 each week until the amount is paid or face another arrest for not paying the fines on the 110 tickets. The 300 pound Fragapane said he had meant to do something about the fines but times had changed. "In the old days I could've gotten all these tickets fixed for $40," he said. A spokesman for An derson said later the source cou ld not be identified but was "a high official in t-.1 issouri." The Anderso n spokes ma n said the of· ficial ''has c&if1rn1ed IG us !hat I t-.1issouri policeman delivered lo him some photost.ats or arrest records on Eagleton involving charges ranginR !r?m drunken driving and reckless driving do\vn to speeding." Anderson said the official recalled that at least two of the arrests wer~ for drunken driving and all dated back into the 196-0s. The Anderson aid e said the columnist did not have the photostats and had not seen them. He also said it was not cer· taln whether the unnamed Missouri of· ficial still had lhe records. EaglelOn reve3Jed Tuesday that he had voluntarily hospitalized himself on three occasions for mental fatigue between 1960 and 1966. But he denied ru mors that he had a drinking problem. Eagleton , t-.iissouri's f irst-t er m Democratic senator, has said he \YOU\d drop off the party's presidential ticket if reaction to his medical history threatens McGovern's chances in November. The AP found that records of the Missouri Highway Patrol showed Eagleton was fined for speeding in 1962 and was involved in a one-car accident in 1963. Records of St. l.-0uis City police listed two speeding tickets for Eagleton, one when he was 18 years old and the second "'hen he was 24. Eagleton "'as cited on ~larch 11. 1962 for going 85 miles per hour in a 65-mile an hour zone near Fulton, Mo. Judge Hugh P. \ll illiamson. who handl- ed the matter in court, said Eagleton was fined S35 plus court costs and "that's all there is to it." ., I Richard Radford. now a high"·ay patrol lieutenant, who caugh l Eagleton through r~dar that evening. called it "just 1 simple speeding violation'' when asked about it today. sofa bed sale! npw. · . queen size • • $299. .. Open 11 bod • <l;ual, size •.• $249. these _are very comfortable sofa beds for sitting and sleeping. • A wide selection of fabrics and ' ' colors to choo'8 from. ' • RMrsible backs and se,t cushions. 1• ~!'.<>!:"- H.J.GARREIT fURNITURE ~ PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS- ' Op., Mon., Thurs. I: Fri. Eves. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. , c u c t a a 0 a a u r I d Ii w n I 0 • g m cl y a .. .. • • Laguna Study Asked Planners Facing Flooding Fears Alarmed because an Anny Corps of Engineers report on the Laguna Can4 yon flood plain has f{llled to recommend any kind of flood protection for Laguna ... Beach , planning commlssionen this wtek pondered the possibility of legal action by the city to restrain development pending 1nore detailed flood hazard studies. Ackno wledging that present flood con-. trol facilities are inadequate and that development might increase runoff dangers, the report examined three alternatives for flood control : a land fill in the Big Bend area, a retaining basin near El Toro Road and an e1panded flood control channel through Laguna. However. the engineers concluded the unsatisfactory cost·benefit ratio would make any such major p r o j e c t economically infeasible. '·They acknowledge the hazard but they don 't seem to think a little town like Laguna is worth saving if it would cost a lot of money," commented com· missioner Roger Lanphear. After discussing the report, the com- missioners agreed to recommend that the City Council seek an injunction against further building in at least part of El Toro Canyon, where the Rossmoor C:Orporation has tracts planned, until the actual flood threat can be ascertained. Rossmoor now has five diUerent tracts in various stages of development, some already being graded and two as yet unrecorded . The commission would recomme nd seeking that the latter at least be delayed. "There is a great deal of discrepancy In the information we get as to the extent development would im:rease f l o o d runoff," said Lanphear. "We'd hate to find out after a development was in that \Ye 'd made a terrible mistake and Laguna was now threatened with periodic floods. \Ye 're really very nervous about this and we reel it would be remiss in our obligations to the city if we did not make Acupuncture Aid Limited in NY To Resec'lrcl1ers ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI) -New Yorkers 150 inclined will have to wait a while before they can receive acupuncture therapy Jn an approved clinic. ·rne state board for medicine said \Yednesday it considered acupuncture "strictly as an invesligationa! pro. cedure" and should be performed only in medical centers and teaching hospitals having committees on human research. The board noted, however, the neces..i- 1y ror investigation ol the ancient Chinese treatment , saying it desires 't'o encourage further research in the tech- niques, mechanisms of action, and uses of acupuncture." • The panel of 23 physicians, which gov erns professional conduct i n medicine, explained \vhy it ordered the closi ng of an acupuncture clinic in New York. believed to be the nation's first. The clinic, run by Dr. Amold Benson and staffed by rive Chinese-trained acupuncturists, operated for one week between July 19 and July 26. The committee's chairman, Dr. John H. Morton , a Rochester surgeon. said that research into acupuncture was "most important," and that the board is 0 confident that scientific studies wlll be pursued prompUy in the state or New York and elsewhere in the nation ." Acupuncturists claim to be able to cure a variety of ailments, and cause a type of anethesia , by inserting fine needles into certain parts of the body. • Fond FareweR . every ellort to ascertain the !acts and take . the needed steps to proted the downtown area." The planners' recommendation for le. gal intervention will be presented to the City b>uncil, which must make the final decision .. Jt is expected to come up for discussion at the Aua:. 2 meeting. At that meeting, Planning Cootmission chairman Carl Johnson, who would have presented the commission's views to the council, will begin blJ tenn of office as a newly elected COiUDcllman. Sa~ Sign ~ To Remain On Building The $2.S billion space shuttle contTact awarded to North American Rockwell is not likely to take the 0 for sale" sign off the firm's giant ''ziggurat" in Laguna Niguel, a spokesman for NA's Autonetics Division in Anaheim said today. "We would like to get a piece ol the ac- tion," said Ernie Brubear, "but the only thing we could take part in would be on' the electronics side and that ,would be further in the future. "We hope to bid on some of the sub- contracts, but the lead division, in this case the Space Division in Downey, always takes the position that sister divisions have to compete for sub- contracts like any other outside firm." In any case, he added, ~re would be .. no relationship at all" with the pending sale of the million-square-foot Niguel facility. Negotiations for its transfer are still under way with the govenunent's General Services Administration. "We have cut down our employes;'! the spokesman explained, "and there is plen· ty of space available without it. At this point we don't anticipate any large amount of work. but. we are tickled to death the Space Division got the contract because lots of people in Orange County work in the Space Division. both 1n Downey and at their Seal Beach facili- ty ." "Autonetics is not in the picture at the moment," said Ralph Qakley at the Space Division. "We will bO building the frame under the prime contract and aboul 50 percent of the dollars will be paid out in sulx.'ontracts. Autonetics will have to bid on those along with other electronics firms. We treat our divisions like any other suboootractor." Subcontracts on the Apollo project, he said, began to be let out one at a, thne a few weeks after the prime contract was awarded. He estimated it might be "a couple of months" before bids on elec- tronics subcontracts for the space shuttle would come into the picture. Citizens Off er 01,d Buihlings Old Laguna Beach buildings, some of which might be of interest as historic sites, are becoming available in in- creasing numbers, Vice Mayor Charlton Boyd told Chamber of Commerce direc- tors th.is week. Certain owners said Boyd, are ready to o!!er the buildings to the city. "Some could be turned into 30melhing interesting and unique -sites that would make· Laguna a more Interesting destina- tion for travelers," he said, suggesting that the chamber might join other groups, like the historical society, to evaluate the potential of the JandlNlrk structures. V'IT ........ Cowgirl Lane Allison of Salinas gives a goodbye kiss to Jody, the chimp, who was one of Ille ad• al the 62na annual Callfornla Rodeo whlch ended a lour-<lay engagement in Salinu. -' Ttlundu, Ju~ 27, 19n s DAILY PILOT 3 Oceanfront .: ' ... Home Tract Hits Snag Two appllcations !or use pennlt1 for construction of -alon& the ocean- front blull in South LaJlWUI ran Into a few snags before Orange County plannin( commissioners this week. Aeling on a moUon by commlss~ Ron Yeo a request for can.strucllon ol • two story house near Aliso Circle was postponed unli Aug. 15. . • An application for a use permit lo 11: low construction or a four-car de~ garage on property at 32007 S. Coa$t Highway was deferred until Aug. I. • Edward Bowler's request for 1 ~ l)ermit for the two story home asks that he be allowed to enc~ch into sideyan:f setbacks and to construct taU retainin1; walls around the properly to support the dirt on which the house will sit. .... One resident of the area said he woul<l- not want to look into ''tall cement watts'" and asked the variance from the ~thack v requiremerits ahould not be granted. Happily Unmarried? Yeo suggested the matter be refe~ to the Ocean and Shoreline Steerirt Committee !or study and that the plan- ning staff continue to research the el(~ or the development of the land witb ! study now under way on the Aliso Creei- \Vatershed. Protest also was sounced to a proposfl by Mrs. C8tberine Froman to construct a rour car garage on her land along the highway near loth Street.. Charles and Mary Hammond, happily married for three years, file divorce papers in preparation for a happier life in sin. The Hammonds, both. office \vorkers. with combined incon1e of $18 ,000, '"ant to dramatize their bel ief th at tax la\YS penalize mar- ried people. Smoking in U.S. Reaches Record; FTC in Warning WASHINGTON (UPI) -Americans purchased a record a47 .2 billion cigaret- tes in 1971. The Federal Trade Commission gave the figure Wednesday and called on Congress to take these actions. - -Require stronger health hazard warn- ings about the dangers of smoking. -Provide for government purchase of newspaper, radio and tel evision an- tismoking messages. The ITC said cigarette purchases last year were "well above the previous high mark of 540.3 billion units sold in 1968." The law since November, 1970, has re- quired all cigarette packages to bear the statement. "Warning. 'Mle s u r g eon general has determined that cigarette smolting is dangerous to your health." FTC spokesmen repeated an earlier suggestion that {'a more strongly worded warning1 statment would be in the public interest." It called on Congress to amend the law. A major effect of banning cigarette ads from the broadcast media, the FTC said, has been the disappearance of an- tismoking messages from television. The FTC urged Congress to provide the Department of Health, Eduaction and Welfare with enough money to "purchase time on ocmmerical broadcasting facili- ties and space in print media for the dis- semination of messages designed to dis- courage cigarette smoking." Another commission recommendation was that there shouJd be funds provided for the National Institutes for Health to develop a cigarette not hazardous · to human health. The FI'C report said that while per .J capita consumption of cigarettes rose last year for the first time since 1966. it was still well below the 1964 level when the surgeon general's report was first published. Daugliter's Pl.ea Brings Couple Togetlier _4gai 1i VISALIA (AP) -A !~year-old girl who pleaded with a judge in a letter to "please, please, please help a 10-year-old keep a mom and dad'' has received her wish . Superior Court Judge Jay Ballantyne said Wedmesday the girl's parents had reconsidered their plans for a divorce and have agreed to give their 12-year-old marriage another try. After the parents, who were not Iden· tlfied, met briefly in chambers with the judge, the mother tearfully t o I d newsmen: "I didn't know everyone was so friend- ly. We are moving back together -it's so wonderful that people care when they don't even .know you. Maybe lhis wtll help a lot ol other people. I really hope so." Judge ~lantyne said h!J office was .. flooded" with letters Crom concerned persons fl'om all over the country after he made the girl's letter public a week ago. She ha4 written: "Honorable Sir. my mom and ~dad is getting a divorce ..• Please don't let them get a divorce . ~fy momma loves !RY dad ; if you could put him In the hospital he could quit drink· Ing. 11Slr, you are a judge and this is your job, to divorce people. "Only where do on .. go that still love the husbands? And how do you divorce a Il).year-otd? Can you cut out my heart and stop It from hurting? Please, please. plellse help a 10-year-old keep a mom and dad." The rather agreed to aeek help for a drlnldnc problem with A I c o h o 11 c • AnoeytDOUI, it WU ltamed. Hel.p Too Late The garage would sit just below ttie highway levtl with a rail-tram running• to a house further down the cliff. Mrs: Froman received a use pennit for con-· struction of the house and a smaller garage, but has since decided to enlarge the garage so it can accommodate .- boat ' Flat Tire Delays Aid to Boy, 14 commission chairman Fred Jefferson . objeded to the four car garqe, c~ the number of cars would crute trlfftf~ problems when cars backed out onto 1he highway. • WENDOVER, Utah (AP) -A !utile and agonizing 100-mile ride across the scorchi ng desert to save the life of little Jimmy Carlos was made in vain, possibly because of a flat tire. Jimmy, 14, had just finished taking a shower . and came out of the bathroom at his home gasping for breath. When Deputy Sheriff Marion Carter Scie1itists Find Method to Make Rodents Sterile MENLO PARK (AP), --Stanford Research Institute scientists s.1y they have developed a compound !hat makes male mice sterile fo,r about seven weeks but appears to have no harm!ul side ef- fects. The compound possibly couJd be used !or humans, but its most immeJia.tl! al>" plication appears to be in controlluig animal populations, especially rod~r.ts and other pests, they said. The compoWld, which blocks dfvcfop- ment of the immature sperm, wa~ tested on more than 100 male mice over three years, Dr. W. A. Skinner and Hvrner H. Tong, said Thursday. They conducted tt,e research. Except for occasional slight weiiht Joss, the mice lhat received thf' com- pound orally or by injection were as healthy as control subjects not receiving it, they reported. To clear the compound for use in con· trol or animal populations will take aLont two more years of tests, they estimated. The male mouse receiving the com- pound remains fertile for three or four days, then becomes infertile and renrain~ so until new sperm develop, which r~ quires a cycle of 50 days. The spermatogenic cycle in humam is about 90 days. and state Highway Patrolman Scott Sparks arrived al lhe home , they revived Jimmy but deter mined lhat he needed hospital care. Two weeks earlier, Jimmy S"'allo\Yed an accidental overdose of family prescription and was flown to a Salt Lake City hospi tal where doctors revived him. Tuesday, howeYer, Wendover's only ambuJance driver was out of town. so the officers, with the boy·s mother, put the gasping Jimmy in Carter's oxygen.equip- ped cruiser for the ride across the Great Salt Lake Desert to a hospital in Tooele, 100 miles au'ay. Wendover. di rectly vtest of Salt Lake City, is tucked along the NeYada-Utah border. Four miles out of Wendover, a tire blew. Carter called far help on his radio as the precious oxygen ran out. Jimmy struggled for life. His mother \Yas frantic watching him thrash about the cruiser's rear seat. The car's spare tire had been used three days earlier after anothe" tire blew out on the hot desert pavement. Meanwhile, Sparks ran to a nearby potash plant for a bottle of industrial ox· ygen. He made the trip three times in temperatures believed more than 100 degrees. Jimmy revived to a state o f semiconsciousness as another cruiser ar- riYed, and the ride to Tooele continued. But Sparks suffered a mild heart attack due to exhaustion, and he needed oxygen. He shared Jimmy's. When they arrived at the hospital, Jim- my was dead. Carter later said he was told by service station attendants that the car tire had been deliberately stashed with a sharp object. Carter said Jimmy died because some- one cut the tire on purpose, just enough to have it fail when he needed it the most. "We don't always write tickets,'' Carter said. ''We do sometimes try to save lives." A BIG RIME 8DICE tNS Yeo recommended Mrs. Froman try.ti· reach an agreement wlth owners or ·the· neighboring property to the south for ·a common driveway, thus allowing a tum around for cars. With a turn around, cen would not have to back onto the highway. ~1rs. Froman said she would explore the suggestion and report back to th& commission at it! Aug. I regula-Y meeting. County Supports. Dana Units Plan- ' .. c.onstrudion of I to-unit Cllldmniniunt• at the lnte-of Alta Villa npff. and stooehlll Drive in Dana Polllt red\v:• ed approval from the Orq1 CCunJ.y. planning commluloo tbll week. · • The townboules wjlJ be clustered ·In groups of four over the I.I a<re parceLqr land, wUh private recreational faciJiti~i. to be provided by the developer, California Sierra Properties. , · CCmmiAioners unanimously •Cttplojl the mollall by Ron Yeo to approve !)ii; project, after hearing a staff recom-,.. mendltion that the project be granted,. subject to a nwnber of standard ~. ditions. The only requirement not being met by' the developer is inclusion of one half acre of park land. Instead, a park fee is bein& paid to the county by the developer. Beauty Queen Dead ' CARTAGENA, Spain (UPl)-A IS-yw;/' old beauty queen was ldentilled toliay' P." one of the IO peraon.s who drowned w~ a float unk in Cartagena harbor du-ring~ the town's marine summer fiesta Wednesday. She was Dionlsia Martinez,. beauty queen or the neighboring town ol San Joie Obrero. J1~TI111~·flmlrl * CUSTOM DRAPERIES * AT LIVINGSTON'S Wt CO"'V the largu1 a11d Jin.,I Carpel & Drapcl'JI selection at1Gllabl1 Today's rleslre for sttf .. xpres- 1ion hu brought with it 1 ....d for cra1tiv1 im4lgin1tlon ind ••· pertise. Our skilleCI experts will be happy to create now ide11 for you or Clfry out your own. Bed of 1n, they c1n work those tr1nsform1tions for you, with pin money or big budget fabrics. PRll llTIMATU PMONI 147.JHJ Open Dally 'Ill 6:30 -Frld11t 'tn t• ·.. "" • . ' ., • ' ---~ --: -' • • I I j • I -· I j; DAllY PILOT llundlJ, Ju~ 27, 1972 McGovern Plagued by Comm uni cations Gaps r 11. g r.tcGovem delegates to vote 117 CAllL P. LEtlllSOOllJ' EqJetm hid -boopilallsod !or es· McGovm> nevtt Hetlwd eoough detail U.S. troopo in Thailand II an end to U.S. A 1 .... days lattr, he conceded that the wert te in "' ~tklil wntw hauatJoo and one, Gordon Weill, wu to take the matter serk>usly. involvement failed to brlng the prtsoners talk of troops in ThaJland was "merely a agalmt Daley. . In the South CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -Questlom about llllined to c:bect 11111 point btloni the ho -" ha lltU fled Earlier that ev.rung, S SUGG~ tha c.. alf c.. t me. gesture," but wvwd ve e e on 1_.. cr·'·n"a'~ case, McGovern "~· and how much, Sen. 0-ge MJ-.rl aenator wu picked a' Tm ~·• t ·~ st ·~ no One lo Mc:Gov aide Frederick G the rth VI Carol•~ = " ~ I Mc,Govern mew about Sen. Tbomu r. McGovern'• nmnlna mate. always taken lul.ficient care in keejl.ng P em • · No etname.se. fl managers switched a number 0 Eagltton'a medk:al hi.story muJt, fn Well'• phone check. _preu eecntary him lnfonned. And McGovern knows that Dutton, was astounded when shown the As the convention opened, McGovern oor . t the proposal to add more -. .. rrom the latest in a serita of com. rucbard n-... 1...-. Aid Wednesday, nro--ultlmlttly any blame for stall ml!haps statement. The assistant who drafted it, wu quoted in an interview as saying he votes againsking to avoid a result that ,._., &IVW6~•, r I him. John HI ~ed · ed Id be t• r 'I women. see . 1.: .. 1."""'"S in the later ml.nUcltloos gaps with his staff that have ducecl nothlnc of •1twf1nct. McGovern wll fall on o um , ....... "'~ 1t reprtSent an wou accept t sea 1ng o "' ayor could jeopardue uw c"""'"" piqued the Danocntic presldt.ntl.al wu never told about. It and that night There were several communications elaboration of McGovern's position. Richard J . Daley's regular Illinois rr ra vote -. when he asked Eqlttoa ll there were lapoes at the recent Democratic National delegation -insltad ol a challenging Ca 1 orn ·ho !edged his support !or ~ 1111 he knew very little un-any problems tn bla bacqround, be 1ot Q>ovenUon. TR .E N E X T D A Y , an c r y group that included many McGovern sup-1itcGoveci~lin: challenge to the N~ .. til 'Eqleton'1 dram.aUc d1lclosurt here and ncctpted 1 necattve mnn:r. After McGovern met with relatives of demonstrators filled the senator's hotel porters -once be won the crucial th0enr:Omen Political Caucus, sal.d this Tueld.l,y. &.en after Frank M 1 n kt ew t c z, U.S. prisoners of war, a statement was Jobby to protest bis statement. McGovern CAiifornia challenge. ~eek ie did not knoelw ~h.at wu going on McGovern'• top poUUcal advller, con-issued In his name that raised for the finally spoke to them and Insisted bis until be saw it on t evi.s1on. ~ AIDES knew ol reports tacted ID EqJOloa aide OD 1lto matltr, flnl lime the pooslblllty ol maintaining Southeast Asian policy badn'I changed. AT THE SAME time, floor managers ~· Viets Losing • . Citadel· to Reds , ' .. • . WGON (UPI) -South Vlelnlmele oll1cera onlered a battered paratroop ~alloo out of the beavtly deleaded Qi\11111 Tri Cltadd today, re1iDqullh1ng :!?:."' they hid fought !« lhree daY> to flilltory spokolmen said 500 fresh midDel _.. -t In IO relieve the ...,.._.. bul they were not able to li,in jllolr way back inaldo the fortreas dejplle I fierce Its-hour battle northeast ii 11te -tury bulkllnc. l ~TROOPS, In ID •Jllllttlll ·~ IO divert South Vlf!namese r~ from Quang Tri. overran two fire bqea OD the outaldrtl Of Hue about 40 miles to tht ooutb. Some llOUJ'W pr"1leted the Communills would try I m4or ·-apllllt Hue, the anclellt lmf9lll capital. , _"qi._,.,.._.., .-.!be atadd a.;: .,. ...... eaplltrecl part "' the O...,. lwbeu before Ibey were stopped "1 ;well q-tn North Vlttnlm11e i._. l eatcan awnmlDd apc+M«ND aald the -_.. aeat to., 11ndtsdooed area for I Dew opntloa. No cuuaJty fi&ura .......... Goftntment IJIOkelm<n Aid they could llOC A1 the city bu -rocaptund until loolth Vletnamete trvopo control the CJIMlel, cjvANG TRI ~ce and Its Cilpital, ~ Tri City, lell IO the Communists In ...;. -Vletnamele President N ... V• ,_ prlllllUled to recapture lllo: -by Sepl. It lllCI aent 20,000 men oodb -Bue m June :II to drive 1lto OOIJ w.eoi: __ .,. __ have ""* ...., .fiW'ttnmist rulltance lo ~ Tri <111 and alool the 20 miles ,of ~ ''lesdl!JI froni iliO govemiiOllt'• ' -.W.. Doe 10 tbe pmlnclal ~ * * * • [!.S. Spo~man . . tf.ssdil,s Reports ~ . ' . °=f Dike .Bombing 1'ASHINGTOll (AP) -Some U.S. bolllbl may hive hit d!Ul. in North Vlet- nom, the Statt Department 11y1, but thet ...re nOt '!iombed ·purposely and daliial• Wll nol extensive. ~ 1f, Bny, I Blatt on>artment · 1~ Aid W~ the .Ulllltd Sla1"' CU IUpport. tblJ claim with evldettct 1iUt dldn1 revell Uto evidence. ft'e ... lied what be termed "rather caRlu1ty orchatraltd propaganda" that """" U.S. bombing bu oerloual1 danaied the ditel. 'Ibey have alao kept up the r,ressure on Hue, South Vietnam'• third argeat city located 400 mllea north ol 5aigon. U. S. 80111\CES ll"id Communists cap- tured fire basel Bastogne a n d Checkmate, two vital links in Hue'• c1e1..... One 10Un:e aald Baslogne haa cbanged bands Its tlmea since the "'" rent Communist oUemlve started Mardi 30. '!be .....,.. sald North Vietnamese gunners during the nlgl\! blasted the two bases -plUJ Fire Bases Birmingham, T· Bone lllCI Lion along the But defense line -with more than 1,000 rounds ol 12Zmm artillery, rockets and mortar shells. Another JM-round barrage of mortar and recollless rifle fire hit an element of South Vietnam's Mth Regiment a mile from Butogne but the infantrymen <OUDttrallacked and killed 17 Co01· mtmlJts at a COit of two govermnent troopo dead and ail< wounded, the Saigon coounand said. * * * Copter Disaster Kept From News By 2 Commands SAIGON (AP) -'!be U.S. and South Vlttnamese coJDIDIDds for ..,~ than two weeks concealed the bed news about a ~ north of Quang Tri City in wblch 21 ol 11 American hellcopltrs weee reported ltll by ........, fire and 50 South Vietnam.,. marines were killed in one crub. 'Ollliien Ill lhi field lllcl the hellcopters landed in tbe lllllddle Of I po-1ul North ViflN._ force that U.S. mt strikes were suppoaed IO knock out. But they oild !hi BS2I dropped their bo01bo ball a niue oll 1lto large~ A South Vietnam• commander who was Wounded in the operation July 11 said a ol tbe 31 u.s. Marine ~ hellcoptera that brought the South Viet· namese battalion In we~ bit by ground lire. Ht Aid moat of them were able to fly out of the betUe area and prestmU1hly made ii back to the Vth Fleet landing llhlpo ,lrom which they came. The U.S. Command reported on the dat of the. landing that one ol the big CIUS hellcopltn WU .shot down, and latte It said two ol the American crewmen were missing and aeventl were wounded. But ·no1 until today did the South Vietnamese 'COmma.'IC!, In mponae to a quecy, admit that 50 South Viet- namese marines on board wm killed. It wu the biggest death toll of any hellcopttr crub in the Vietnam war. Gawking, Talking Police on duty outside Madison Square Garden dur· ing the final performance oJ the Rolling Stones Wednesday night, had their hands -and eyes - lull. At right, two boys explain to a policeman how they were assaulted and had their tickets taken away as they tried to enter the concert. At left, another lawman casts an appreciative glance at a young lady as she takes her tickets from her band· bag. Dad Asks Mercy I For Trucker Who Killed Son MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A latlrer whose young son was killed in a traffic accident pleaded with a judge not to send a truck driver to jail, because Hhe can't help my son from there. The boy is dead, there is nothing more we can do." Truck driver Willie Reath, 41, whose own son was killed by a bit-and-run driver two years ago, sobbed Wednesday as William F. Williams added: "I don't hold eny vindictive motive or anything against him because, after all, he has to live with it the same as I do." Reath was charged with leaving t1* scene of an accident June 9 alter his pickup truck collided with a bicycle rid- den by 13-year-old Robert Williams. Police said Reath returned to the scene within 10 minutes, appearing dazed, and said be bad been unable to stop in heavy traffic. Brit~h Longslwremen Cast Vote for Strike LONDON (UPI) -Leaders of the British dockworkers union today turned down a proposed solution to the touchy containerization dispute end voted to' start an official strike Friday, com- plicating the country's tangled labor situation. ( ____ 1_N_S_H_OR_T_ •• _. __,) The nation's ports have already been shut down for five days by an unofficial strike protesting the jailing of five dockers: The men were freed Wednesday but the basic cause of the dispute -the containerization problem -was still unsettled. The Trades Union Congress (TUC), which represents 10 million workers, voted Wednesday to call a one~ay na- tional strike Monday if the five dockworkers were not freed. Repuhllcan Army hit back at British troops who have invaded t h e i r strongbolds . The militant Protestant Ulster Defense Association said it would throw up 1 blockade today to etop all fuel oil deliveries to Londonderry's Bogside and Creggan districts, hoping to force the Catholic families to move out of the IRA stronghold!:. Their idea was that then the army would go in and round up the guer· rillas. e Seo" Booted SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - David R. Scott haa been booted from the astronaut corps due to a scheme to make money from stamp coven smuggled to the moon and back. Scott, a 46-year-old Air Forte colone~ in turn was named technical assistant to the manager ol the Apollo spacecralt program. But olficials said Wedoesday the job was offered only after it was detumlned Scott was to be kicked out ol tbe astronaut corps. Glaucoma? Marijuana Might Help SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -An ac· cidental discovery during rcs_earch Into the effects (lf smoking marl1uan~ su~ gests that p<ll may be . effective in treating glaucoma, a, maior cause ot blindness, researchers say. The u1timate problem will be to develop a nonintoxicating dei:ivatlve .for use as regular medication 1n treatmg glaucoma -an eye disease c~rac teri.zed by excessive fluid pressurt 1n the eyeball, according to Dr. Ira lw1 .. Frank, an assistant professor of psychiatry at UCLA . "WE CAN'T HAVE people walking the streets high. because of their glauC<lma medicine," explained Dr. Stephen Szara; a collaborator with Frank. Szara, a National Inslitute <lf Mental Health researcher, addressed t he International Congress on Pharmacology on Wednesday. Marijuana':i effect in reducing pressure levels within the eye was discovered last November during a UCLA stU:dy on how marijuana smoking affected driving ability. Advertisements in the Daily Bruin, liCLA campus neY.'Spaper, attracted a flood of volW'lteers for the pot smoking tests, Frank said. The study was carried out with 30 healthy subjects, aged 2l to 29. \\'ho were selected after a strict psychological and medical screening process. FRANK SAID the test r e s u l t 1 demonstrated that marijuana smoking did not affect visual cleames,,, color and depth perception, or peripheral vision. During the intensive eye effects testing, a UCLA opthalmologist, Dr. Robert S. Hepler, detennined that mari- juana significantly reduced intraocular - internal eye -pressures. The normal pressure ranges from 10 to 20 millimeters of mercury. In the test group, the average pressure after ma.Ji. juaria smoking dropped from 14.3 to 9.2. Hepler followed up with a marijuana test on a patient with Bevere glaucoma and a peak pressure level of 56. The 4z..year-(lld woman puffed her mar- ijuana after standard eye drop drugs bad lowered the pressure level to 29. An hour later the pressure reading was 17. "PRELIMINARY evidence from one glaucoma patient suggests t h a t pathologically I n c r e a s e d intraocular pressures can be reduced to normal levels for a few hours by the ad- ministration of marijuana/' Siara said in a paper on the project. "Further experiments are indicated and are under way to explore the mechanism of action and to verify these fmdings i.a a larger number of glaucoma patients," he added. ••yarioua QOkesmtn, m)'lelf lncluded,'' B..:V lllcl, "have allowed !or the !act that in ltrlkinl at mlllWy largtla Which are: localtd in proximity to, or in &0mt ta"8 even on the diku, aome ot our bombl may have hit dikes." Bui If and when this happened, he aid, II Ud only "the moat btctdtntal and mlior Impact on the ayatem ol levea." He aald the dikes have not been tariell. South Vietnamese spokesmen uld it was the mpomlbillty ol the U.S. Com- mand to report the cuualttea because they occurred in an American aircraft. But a U.S. spokesman, Lt Col. Robert A. Culagnelto, saJd Jt WU t b e responaiblllty ol the South Vietnamese to "report South Vletnameoe caaualties to hooUle fire in an Oft10lnf operation ••• and such lnlonnaUon won1 be roleued unless they want to do It." Williams, told Criminal Court Judge Allo.,. C. Sepe that he called Reath the night of the accident. moments after identifying his son's body, and told him not to feel bad ". . . accidents are ac· cldenta and sometimes you can't pre vent them." He said Reath replied : "No sir, I got a 800 that got killed the same way, but the driver didn't stop. He kept going." After listening to Williams' plea Sepe placed Reath, the lather ol eight children. on probation and sent him home. Since the men were released, the strike was apparenily averted, but some unions asked the TUC to go ahead with the strike anyway to show organized labor's angry at the government's labor policies. e A1'1C Reco.,ery DETROIT (AP) -American Motors Corp., renectlng the strong recovery of both the firm and the U.S. auto industry, reported. today it earned $27.2 million in the first nine months of its fiscal year. more than three times the profit reported in the same period last year. Wednesday's 7th Chess Game Closes in 'Draw' • North Cool; South Sweats Nation's Weather Picture Shows Split Personality ... ·" 2.u ·" T l:n .. :ll ':ll N4l~ wt"1'Mft Nl'tl(l toltW1 .. 7AM 111 7 ·11·7'1 3AOO 3~00 Uf1 wt AMI lotot.A.A • C•llfortd• Tfw WN""' Ml;\lfct ttMy ""9'ttd ::i.=t~"'l:.llr.:.J',:i\ = U..-.:::f Prlflir .,. ,....., lfttt ...... "-' actr1111y uttndld from ttie Mldwnl ll'llo fM Ohio V•l1•v. TIM.lrldttl'-ml rDll9d kfDU fht ltoc:kle1 end Pltlns, whert Iller• lllt•t rtp0rt1 of OIHIY Wlllds. htrd rtl,_ t'MI ..,,. nan. Sunny CS..,. tM f•lr ri;ht1 In !he Ftr WHI midi 11.,fflt ple ... nt llltrt, U· t.,i In -coe1!1I rtglO!'lll whll"t tog •1111 cloud ~, Wirf apcill ... 1. TtmPtt"tivrn bttort dtwn r11111H from 45 •I Stull si.. MMl1, Mlcll .• to t7 ti lfT\P11111, Ctlll. Sun, /lfoon, Tides TMUllSOAV SICCfld Moll .......... , 1112' p.m. 6.1 S«OPld low . . • •:27 p.m. 1.t ,.!DAV 'Int llltfl ............. tl:N 1.m. 4.• ,Int l(Jaf .............. l!M 1.m. .... s.oc:.. llloh ............ lt10f "'"" s.• SllCCINI '°"' ............ .S1llp.m. 1.1 Sill! ..... l:J1 •. ,,,, Sitt 1!JI p,m. MeM ..... l :.Q -.m. .... 1i21 •·"'- The profit for the period .ended June 30, equivalent to 99 cents per share, was up from $8.3 million, or 32 cents per share, in the first nine months of fiscal 1971. Because of heavy losses in recent years, including a stunning-$56.2 million in 1970, AMC paid no federal income tax- es on the current earnings. Under cor- porate tu law, earnings a.re ei:empt from income taxes until they exceed the lasses amassed in previous yea.rs. e Belfast Violence BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Assassins killed' two more men in Belfast during the night, and the I r i s h DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtllW!'Y of Ill< D~~ Pilot IS ;u&rlnlttd MOnlfty-Frld•'f'I ff 'fDU fO not llt\lt \'OllP PllPll' ll'Y' J:• ,,m., c•" trill YoVr COP'f' Wltl DI bf"ouOlll to fllll> (Ills •rt lt~tn llftfl 1:• """' S..tvrdt'f' Ind $undly1 " 1'llU di 1'1111 rlOllW 'f'Olif" *" by t t.m. &l!urdt\" ot I 1.M. Sinlty, all tnd • totl'f •Ill bl """'8flt ti ""· Ctlll lft ~'" 1111111 10 '·""' Most Ortllft C-IY ...,.... .... , ... MMlh "'°'"'"""' Huftftfit• ~ IN W.trnlNlw .. ., ............ •1S11 "" Cltftltnlt. c.1111-.no •..m. "'" Jlilfl Ctollll'IN, Dllllfl ,..,.,, lofltl l.e91No ...... "'""" .... ...,,.. REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) -The moves ot the aeventb game of the Boris Spassky-&bby . Fischer world cheas champion,,hip. Spassky-W Fischer-B I. P-K4, P-QBI ll. P·RI, JI.Kil 2. Kt-KB3, P-0 22. Q-QB4, JI.Kl ch 3. P-Ql, PxP 23. K·Rl P·BS 4. KtxP, K~KBI 21. P-!tU, P·Kt4 5. Kt.Qm, P4113 JS. Q)l.KJ, Q-Kt5 6. Jl.KKt5, P-KJ JI. QxQ, KbQ 7. P·Kil4, Q-Kt3 'ZI. R-KJ, K-Ktt 8. ~. QxP :II. Kt-RS, P-Kt3 9. Kt·Kt3, Q-IU 29. K~ll4. Kt;?! to. 1!43, B«2 ' 30. Kt 134 .qi, Jl.134 11. 0-0, P·KR3 31. K~KtV, sR-Qlll 12. Jl.R4, KtxP 32. P·84, Kt-/(6 13. KtxKt, BiB 83. R-83, KtxP 14. P·KB5, PxP 14. PxP, P-Kt5 15. Jl.Kts, PxB 83. R43, P-R4 16. Kil<P ch, K-Bl 31. P-IU, Kt·R4 17. Ktxll, Kt.SS 3'/, Kt.qi, BxKl 18. Kt-Qe, 11.QJ It. Ktxll, IR·BI ch 19. KtxP Kt5, Q-KJ 31. K·Rd, K>BS 20. Q-134, P·Kl3 40. K>K4 c:h, K·Kt3 adJ-Md 41. P.R4, P-BI 48. K•Bll ch, K·Bf 42. R·KI, R-B7 ch 47. R-K4, R·BI ch 43. K·KU, 1 K·84 48. K·IU, R·B7 ch 44. K~Kt7 c:h, KzP 49, K·Ktl 45. R-Ql ch, K·Klf draw In Angle>Saxon cltcaa not.UM, .. ch file on the playlnf board ii listed ac- cording to the fir11 lnltl'I ol the piece orlginaUy posled Oii II, 11bUe rankl ani numbered from H •'flfl lrcm the J player, A rank Is a ..., ol eight uares parallel to the whit. and bllck aqaldea. Flies are perpendicular to the ranl;r An esample ol a move In doocrl; oota~ would be 11P-QB4," or Pl.::1~ Queen I Bishop lour, With the lnltJa\ ol the movlng piece folloWed by the desljnaUon of the IQllltt moved to. The symbol "X" lndlcatea The symbol "0.0" lndlcatts ~ ~=« maneuver. "Qi11 means 1 move his t.o. ed an opponent'• king in check Tllo P bot "M" or mate means checicm.te ': the same ii over. Tbe symbol "Kt" ii us-ed for klll&hL I • j D,\ll)Y PILOT If Restroom Liberated Review Set ' Killed by Co11amittee ~;-·: l .s J ; Pentagon Papers Trial Suspended Tax Reform Battle Looms ' . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The sexually aqregated Board o r SUpervbors restroom at City Hall hu been liberated by Supervisor Diane Fein- stein. Mrs. Fetfnsteln air nounced Wednesday she had used en unmarked bathroom previously rest;rved exclusJvely by male"board members. Speaking for he....U and Supervisor Dorothy von Beroldinger, the trium- phant Mrs. Feinstein aald "It's a liberated restroo~ now. We have equal rights there." LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Pentagon Papers trial b tern· porarlly BW1pended today as three appeals court judges review a defeme demand to see wiretap information the government has on a member of the def~nse team. The 9th Circuit Court of Ap- peals judges took the matter under submission after hear- ing 111 hours of I e g a I arguments at an emergency session Wednesday afternoon. A series of last-minute e!· forts by defense attorneys for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo won a stay of the trial CALIFORNIA less than three hours before '--------- opening arguments were to begin. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A rare alllance o! Republican Gov. Reagan and I he Assembly's IDO!t power f u I Democrat struggled to bring a IU blllioq school financt-tax refonn measure back to life today. T h e controversial com- promise was defeated by a Teen Drinking Bill Swamped in Senate No-fault Insurance Law Pas~age Hopes Revived The rapid-fire legal develop- ment! interrupted the appeals judges• attendance at a judicial conference in nearby Pasadena. U.S. Supreme C'.ourt Justice William O. Douglas, who presides over the 9th ClrcuJt, also was at the con· lerence and wound up bearing informal argwnents for the delay of trial. Defense attorneys Leonard Welnglass and fonner Sen. Charles Goodell had worked with other defense team mem· hers through the nlght on a petition for stay. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A proposed constitutional change to allow J8-year-0lds to drink alcoholic beverages has been swamped by a 14-ZS Senate vote. The proposed cOnstitutlonal amendment would end "a paradox" in California law which aJlows persons between 18 and 21 to vote but doesn't allow them to drink, said Sen. Alrred Song. would also, Bradley said, open up topless-bottomless bars to teenagers. ''I don't think young people are prepared to go into some of these places," he said. Zoo Rhino Gets Change Of Scenery SACRAMENTO (AP)-Hope has been revived for enact- ment of a no-fault auto In- surance law for Oallfonlla,thls year in the wake of approval by a key Senate committee. In crucial vote Wednesday, the upper house'a Judiciary Committee gave 7-3 tpproval to a no.fault biU authorized by Assemblyman Jack Fenton despite heavy lobbying against the measure from t r i a I lawyers. A1iti-Veto Effort Fails In Senate · SACRAMENTO (AP) Three more attempts to over- ride a governor's veto have failed in the Senate. But one of the attempts, on Wednesday, came within a The tally wu the minimum required for passage by the U.. member committee, and sent the bill to another high hurdle -the Finance Committee. There wu no immediate ifi.. dication of whether no-fault might be acted on prior to a thf.ee:.month receas which the legislature is planning to take beginning Friday night. All no-fault billa approved by the Judiciary Committee so far this year have died in the Finance C.Ommittee, their last obstacle before they would have reached the full Senate. Wednesday's favorable vole came after Fenton (D-Mon- tebeUo) amended the Assembly.passed bill to clamp a two-year lid on premium rates for personal injury auto insurance. The seventh vote needed for passage wu cut by Sen. David Roberti ( D • L o s Angeles), who had voted to kill Fenton's But Jut month but changed his mind when the proposal was reconsidered. Quake Hits Southland LOS ANGELES (AP) -An earthquake has rattled sec- tk>ns of Los Angeles and Ven- tura counties, causing no dam age but prompting many anxioUll "1elephone calls to police. - The quake at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday measured 3.8 on the Richter sca1e and was cen- tered about 80 miles and wa5 centered about 80 miles north of the Los Angeles basin in a sparsely populated area near Gorman, a spokesman for the Univenity of Southern California seismology laboratory said. The tragic Southern California earthquake on Feb. 9, 1971, measured 6.5. "The 18-year..old of today Is an adult. Let's not deprive him of all the privileges of adulthood," the Monterey SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Park Democrat pleaded. change of scenery was all the It's now theoretically poss!-old white male rhinoceros at ble for an 18-year-old to be the 5an Diego Zoo needed to elected to the Slate Senate yet become a new man. not be able to legally drink a bi highball at a socia1 function The r ·no and his maSie g. nored each other for y s, with other lawmakers, Song sayi Dr. Charles Sehr er, said. director of the zoo, until the "This is really a paradox in 1~year-old male was moved to .our law -that people old the zoo's wild animal park enough to vole and fight for about the time 20 young white the survival of this country rhinos arrived from Africa f.an't legally bey a drink," he last summer. added. "The alght of those beautllul U approved by the Senate, teen-aged rhinos interested the proposal would have been him," Schroeder said in a placed on the November ballot speech Wednesday. 0 We now for a decision by voters. have seven pregnant and two Sen. Clark Bradley, a San more possibly pregnant. Jose Republican who opposed "And, now his old mate the measure, said approval from the zoo has gone out would trigger a jwnp in there and he is eying her in a teenage drunken driving. It different light." single vote of miking it, and .r";;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii.,..,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; another failed by only two votes. The legiJlatun has not over- ridden a governor's veto since 1946. By a two-vote margin, Sen. Walter W. Stiern (J). Bakersfield) failed to r<Jnatate a 128.5 million budget Item that would have cut the amount of tuiUon and fees charged to Bludenls at the University of California. Stiern said the amount should be paid from the general fund, not the students. The one-vote margin came on an efforl by Sen. George R. Moecone (D-San Francloco) to rai5e the salaries of state employes by 71> p e r c e n t rather than the 5 percent that Gov. Reagan approved. The third attempt, which won only 19 votes toward the required two-thlnls majority of 27 votes, was in a bill by Sen. Alfred E. Alqu lsl (D-San Jose). The bill would have given st.to college employes the right to know about derogatory Information I n their files, and an opportunity to explain It. WE HAY! "PIOl'U CONDITIONIU" ., TURT OttANT. •·"' It wa• only a relativ,Jy few years ago that the pro--ctn wu developed ot cool· 1ng the air ln summertime to make people feel more comfortable. But, we th1::~ tt takes more than cont,va ot' the envlrorunent to ttalb' put a penon at eue. In our pharmacy we have developed a proctSS called "people conditlonen." It la a combinaUon or several m. gredient.a -friendliness, pro-fessional servlct, eourte11. informed uJeapeople, and • genuine desire to pleue you Md everr other customer. By creating this type or at- motphert we feel th1t )'OU will want to tt1Y on u1 tor your heal th needs no matter what the temperature m&1 be ln&lde or out.I YOU OR YOUR DOCl'OR CAN PHONE US when JOU need a dtllW'1· Wt will • llver pr0mptly without extra charll<· A 111'111 I many peooJo I rely on UI for thflr health ntfdl. Wt wtleome ftqUNtl tor de.llverJ a• r v t c • t.nd _ ....... ta. PAllK LIDO l'llARMAC"f U1 H..,ttat RHOI .....,...,_h -11• ... 11111-Y SUMMER TRUCKLOAD EVENT! FRIDAY, SATURDAY ancl SUNDAY 1st Quality -Hundreds to Choose from -Bring your Trucks & Trailers 1 GALLON 2 GALLONS 5 GALLONS $222 YOUR CHOICE OF ••• * CITRUS * ASSORTED JUNIPERS * TROPICALS * SHADE TREES * SUN LOVING SHRUBS * VINES AND MANY MANY MORE Kelloa'• NITROHUMUS Is 1 rich compost of natural .humuo usod In th• prtpara· llan of 11-beds, i.w.. and sround ............ .... tore pl1ntln1. K1llou'1 NITROHUMUS lmprovaa both 1011 textu re ind -...... Large Bag only ... •1 3 ' • 2 cu. ft. 811 $1.91 Retain Moisture Keep Roots Cool ' PLANT with. I Garden Grove • Newport B_each • Fashion Island OnlyJ ,JCPehney 24 Fashion \s~d • Newport Center • Newport Beach '. single wte In an angry hear· sales taxes will be increased, increase in slate support fd Ing Wednesday by lhe Senate boW much state money local local schools and.a tax rell~f • Finance Committee. schools wiU get next year and package which lrforetti · uKI·. ·• Boih Reagan and .W.mbly • Speaker Bob Moretti hinted how much -If any -prop-would cut lhe pl r a Ii . slrongly that they would not erty tu relief homeowners ·homeowners r:roperty taxes bi . : :~ Jet the legislature go on the will receive. $200 a year. . three-month recess planned at The MoretU·Reagan plan, The Ollis measure would .: ~ the end of this week if the defeated on a 7-8 Finance give local schools a $9QO massive bill is not passed in Committee vote, would in. million a year increase. But .. . some form. crease state income, sa1es and the only new reY.enue ll pr~ • , Both Reagan and Moretti business taxes and require poses to pay ror ibat hike is a said ln separate stalement s voter approval of most future one.cent per dollar increase tP that they "could not conceive" property tax rate increases . the state sales tax, estimated or allowing the legislature to The new revenue woul~ .be to be worth $595 million a year recess until NO\'. a without used to pay for a $509 rn1lhon in new revenue. resolving the complex tax !p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,,,....;;;;.,.;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i issue. • • (AllvKflMIMlllJ • ,-!. But Rngan refused to say • · . definitely wh•ther he would LOSE 20 POUNDS : -~ order a special session on tax· es if the issue remains unresolved. 1r1oretti would not IN TWO WEEKSI directly .answer questions by J • newsmen on reports he might Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet hold a Senate-passed recess resolution as r.ansom for the tax measure. Howe~r. ~1oretti did reveal bis strategy for reviving his bill. It would invol\'C amending his -bill into the 11th-hour Senate bill which Democratic leaders of the upper house 1 passed after defeating the 1 Moretti·Reagan compromise in the Finance Committee hearing. During the non-snow orr season the U.S. \Vomen's Al- pine Ski Team members go on the ''Ski Team1 ' diet to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right -20 pounds in 14 days~ The basis of the diet is chemical food action and '"'as devised by a famous C.Olorado physician especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal energy is ma lntalQl?d (very important) while reducing that way. Tt's a diet that is easy to follow whether you work. travel or stl!y at home. 4 . ' . ' .· Moretti said i! that measure by Sen. Ralph Dills (J). Gardena), ever reaches the Assembly 1'it will be ex-I tenslvely amended ." Asked ir the amendments might be the l total substitution or hi.s own measure into the Dills bill. Moretti said that is "a This is honestly a fantastically successful diet. lf It weren't, the U.S. Womens' Ski Team "'ouJdn't be permitted to use it! Right? So, give yourself the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets , you owe it .' :: ~ to yourself to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Die l. That is, ~ · of you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. possibility.'' At stake in the dispute Is whether state income and Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Service )-Cash i5 O.K. -to: Informa tion Resources Co., Dept. 19, P.O. Box 173, Encinitas, Calif. 92024. Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski : Team Diet will do! · 1 Du1ing Our Annual Anniversary Storewide SALE! On Sale and Selling Fast Savings from $41.50 t-0 $61.50 -· dur1nr.,.._,._,_ 1.a.z.11oy, maktrl of 1111-l'ldlni,. dlalll, ltlo U1 offer you more for your money. Only La-Z·lloJ ai-,..-. olf..U.. '''""'"' -.. -of clialr alrl• for tollorod ndlntn1 comfort-ind 1 w1rnnty an -111m for u. 11o of"" cllaw. Don' Nttl• for on,ihlns but tho authonllo t.a.z..., a.ow. And rllht now,'°" con pt -oltlll~-.-.. 1n,..,c11otcoolbMutlfulca,..flolf*lcr, ......... _ Quantltln .... -.. ........... ,..,Ylolt .. ey • S.... HOWi: lltllly, 9:00 to S:JO; Fri,, t:.OO h 9:00; Sat. 9:00 to l:JO ~ 1865 HARBOR BLVD. iiiil Don!On C..te M- PHONE 548-5131 ,, .. .. . . •,· .. - '• . . ' . ... -' ' "~" ' .. , ... :~ ' . ·~ ,..-., . '• . ' ' :· ?. ..... r . ~ . . . ' . ' ' ' .. ·'· . ' . .. • -~G..,·,_ . ··~ ~ . -......... ;.:,, . - •. ·. ' ... ; ' I • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Unnecessary and Cost .DROP OUT! THE 5951£/ri ~1/Nl<f!l A utUe i.oosterl.sm never hurt any community, but we will have to take strong exception to a plan by our friends up in Fullerton to establish a permanent branch of the county Superior Court in their city. Judge Bruce Sumner, presiding judge of the county SUperior Court system. calls. the move a "whim of a special Interest group" that will cost the county .a quar· ter of a million dollars a year beglJlning next year. It is · a singular case or bolstering' one· city's ego at the ex· pense of all the county taxpayers. ·Judge Sumner Is joined In this criticism of the Fullerton branch court by the Orange' County Grand Jury, the Orange County Bar Association. the California Judicial Council and a majority of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Add to that 99 percent of the county's attorneys and you have a formidable and im~1 pressive list of opponents. The Superior Court, liready sends one of Its judges to Fullerton one day . weekly. And what does this judge do? He dJsposes .of bis J!:Dtire calendar in an average of 90 minutes .. Further, 'the Superior Court has, for more than 10 years, offered ,to have any contested trial heard In Fullerton. Not one request has been made so far. Yet if the branch court is formed, a new building will be required, a full time judge would be assigned and a full array of clerical facilities, district attorney facilllies and marriage license headquarters would be necessary. 'Branch courts just don't work from an attorney's vlewpi>lnt eith~r. Attorneys traditionally prefer to conduct their court business in one location rather than jump l'rom one courtroom facility to another. And where does this proposal come from? cliiefly from the pen of Fullerton Assemblyman John V. Briggs, Closer Look At McGo vern 'Soc ia lis m' To the Editor: I am writing in response to an article written by Al N. Se ares, entitled "Anti· McGovern." (Mailbox, July 23) I'm not writing to defend Sen. McGovern's views, bllt merely to criticize Mr. Searea un· lounded if not ill·thought statements. Senator McGovern ia called a 11radica1 mclalilt, (a kissing t'OUSin to a O>rnmunlsO. in Mr. Seares's article. loclallam. as defined by Webster's die-t , MAILBOX . ) .....;.-... --·~ """"' _..,..., ........ ::l .• --.~ ................. ..... -~ ............. ~.. ..... .. c_.........,._,_,_...,.....,_ .,... 1M ........ • ,..... If lllffkllllf ,_ .. ...... ......., ............ .. • t.IOnary, ls lhe public ownenhip of the meam of productkJB.'Nowhere in Sen. M<Govem's campaign do I I i n d a . ~I that seeb to hand over the oWllerahlp of lhe cowitries major cor- poratlolll to lhe public. THB AV'l'llOR of this stalemenl thinks of hl-11 u "an analytical ruder ol lhe CpnpealonaJ Record, lhe speeches, and )llated ....,,,..,ts of OW' presidential cindljlalel during recent months.'' Ye~ be dt<S !>O exainples of his careful '6idy. lnltead he uses rhetoric and ~amecaJllng to support his coovictlons. Speculating that Senator McGbvern en-doneo the corrent visit of Jane Fonda to H;not ii certainJy not an arialysis of any ol '.bis •peoches, as Mr. Seares says, because McGovern did not make such an endoi'Hment. MR.' SEARES a I s o feels that McGovern's chances of negotiating the release of our POW'• is unattainable due tO the stubbomess of the North Viet· ,iiamese al the Paris peace talks. Sen. Dear Gloomy Gus Jt'I a shame Senator Eagleton can't loan some of his state! of depression on Spiro Agnew. -M.R. Tt!Ji fffh.ltt reflKI• re.Oen' v!f'WS, not nec:eutrllr ltloM ol fll• M'WlltlHI'. Send vovr p..t PtlW to Gloomr Gui, D•llr Piiot. McGovern's conditions tor the release of our POW's are less demanding on the North Viethamese than those of Presi- dtnt Niion, thus reducing the resistance of Hanoi. With more analysis and less rhetoric and demagoguery, I think a more ac- curate picture of the Democratic presidential candidate can be made. And all candidates for that 111at1er., I JEFl"'GOELITZ . Bo11coU Taxes To the Editor: Re: Article by Mary K. Shell, Page A· 1, Sunday DAILY PJI.ql' coriceming tax on a tax. One aiiswer, maybe, if everYone would agree and spread the.-'ord through the state: Make septliliber a month to remember! l. Liquor tax -try not buying for one month (don't drlnlt): 2. Cigarette tax -try not buying for one month (don't smoke); S. Gu tax -Park your car, walk, ride a bike or fonn a car pool. An!n't 30 days out of'your life (30 days has September) worth a lifetime of tax dollar!" out of your pocket? My husband 18 a chain smoker -and a drinker. He alreadj: bu bought the bike. He says he can do it -how about you? Please, people who hoard, ignore the above plea. Stocking up in August for September won't do Jt. II this works, we can go on from there to all those fraudulent taxes we've beell paying for years and years. MRS. EDWARD H. CAREY T ime for Cynic~m? The United States Senate has voted 11-2 to increase Social Security to 28 mil· Um citizens ·by 20 percent. Preslden!Jilx· ori bas ltCOllUDended 10 percent It goes to thie Hopae, where a 5 percent propos3J rests .. Washington observers say th c ~eficiaries, having ~ted the· Senate's 2'j: percent fare, wouldn't like it at all to get · less, and -Ii at 28 million voters lin't healthy in the capitol. U the increue ls adopted; it will start w I t h October 3 checks, one month before the national e I e c t J o n. II anyone thinks the locrease isn't related to the election. he !l'naive, a euphemism for dumb. llUT THIS ii the way free societies like osn worlt SomeUmes they work more 9'1bUY1 witb lea Con.spicuous jux· tapositic>o of daJes, but . Iller work. Membera of Congress, • And o I J~!m'<O. too, have alway• leaned .towanl dmcel likely to ~ their re--· ~ call Ibis buying votes, but let's 1111 be craq, ~··stick with phrase. like "4oriool llkely to Insure their rHlec· 11111, • 1-bruising to our public ....... To ....,. the lncrwe. tht IDWW'e Wlllll raise ~yroll taxes In 19'13 ond JIN, ... the redl'lents Dtf!ll nol """1 ( ROYCE BRIER ) unduly. A majority of them don't have other income and don't surfer a rtal trauma at income tax time. Besides, tbeY need a raise, since nobody gets rich by savings from social serurity checks. The amendment ls a rider on an act to estend the $450 billion national debt eelJ. Ing lour months. The debt b now $427 billion, about $2000 for each man, woman and child. TIIlS BRlNGS UP taief, 1 whooping Issue In our day, and in the days of the Greeks, Romans, tbeit European suc- cessors, and or <>1;1r American foi:ebears. In Ibis centucy lhe Americans suller a tenacloua tax halluclnotion. They 111 up nll!hts ponderlna the oervlces they can exact from the government, the statea, counties. cllles and villages. They demonstrate, exert unceasing )irtsSUrt on their public·servants for new.services.. They !Oem blind to any r!lallon between the taxes that agonize them, and the .services (hey demand. This begets a splnolf halluelnatlon, or at least a paradox, In beleaguered public servants. Governors, JnaYOI1....-1od µke public officers insbt that if the~ rising costs to the national iovernment, Ibey can .. ve the bome!olb .-y, and make them happy. It II stark nonsense, •nd any public ollicer who la literate knows it. with some pledged asslrtance frolll Sen. James!et> more, a north county resident. Judge Sumner sa ~Y are being backed by "a special Interest group" Iden led as Dr. Arnold O. Beckman, Fullerton lndustrlalis~ R& publican party executive Robert Beaver and the Fullel" ton News-Tribune. •1 Briggs got the bill through the As!embly 58-0, Dllt the Senate Judiciary Committee turned It down July 18. · Undaunted, Briggs said be is asking Sen. Whetmore to revive discussion before the committee. If Whelm~ gets support from Sen. Dennis Carpenter of .Newpdrt Beach, there is a chance it could be brought back to ll!e. The need for the Fullerton court brancl> has been thoroughly disproved. It is unnecessary, inc;onvenient and expensive. The Senate committee should .continue to \ ignore the parochial demands of one single Orange County city. l j I The Right of Cho.ice • Compuloory union membership has long been a fact f of life in the United States. There is Increasing evidence \ that most Americans don't think it should, be· this' way. · \ Opinion . Research Corp. reports that only 18 per-\ cent of the American peopfe favor comptllsdi'y unioniSm -and 62 per cent believe legislabon ,ouUawlng ·.11 ' should be passed. · • · :\\.' Particularly significant is the fact that: 73 per cent of the nation:s Republicans favor such legislation -and with the·GOP convention coming up in Augus~ it's ex· tremely likely that a right-1.,.work plank will be written 1 , .. into President Nixon's 1972 platform. \ Clearly, most Americans support such a proposal. . 'Hey .•• welcome to the club, man.' .. \ Light on Mi nori ty Representation I GOP Will Be White, Clean-Scrubbed WASIIlNGTON, D.' C. -Wllbout refonn on qUotas, tbe Republican con~ vention in August wjll be ·made up of 30 percent women, a percent "youth" and 3 percent blacks, . according to current estimates. This is not bad for a political party that wasn't trying, but it does fall short of the contrived Democratic mix of 36 percent women, 15 percent blacks and 22 percent under 30. The whiter, maier and older Republi· carui: will try to make ~ up in showmanship what they Uick in po- l It I co • sociology. qe.-, scrubbed you I h' win ~ In evidence by the tholis!lnda to play a central part in the festivities . THEY WILL not be in Miami Beach to hold their elders to strict account, as were the indefatigable and mirth1ess young in July, but to share in the jubila· tion with many special events to attract TV's roving eye. The Republican party will be revealed for what it is. a highly respectable and cheerful family gathering without any bosses, not even a father image, but with a candi.date considered qualified· for the the very good year Nixon predicted. Economic analysts agree the economy is expanding rapidly. 'The growth rate has speeded up, profits are rising, bµt the employment rate hangs around six Nobel Peace Prize. percent, which is bad news politically in The Republican convention will know President Nixon's ears. He blames his exactly where it stands on bu.sing and 1960 defeat on a preelection unemploy- abortion. It will· be as vq. ts the ment rise. Democrats on tax refonn. It w'1,boast·of The six percenf unemployment rate many things, including taking out of'Viet· can be rationalized by the experts, but nam *-000 tl'OOIJI pla«d there by npt by those affected by unemploymenL Democrltic presidtQts. Hopes ·.~ rising The rate stays at its embarrassing level, for announcement of a nesoured set· to cite one reason, because ~ many peo- t~ls In Vlelnam. '!lie 1&111e applies to pie are entering the labor market. Two ~.soviet colliboralion •In in-and a hall million people more than a year fluencing a Middle East settlement.I· ago now are at work in ciVllian jobs. '11M!re· will bei ~for tabor;1but Y~ctrs and women are seeking and Iha\ ls a delicate aubjecl a ·political getllJ!8 'lpbs at an unprecedented and parlJ coaunlllfd, t.11¥, work t iJliexpeoted rate. • ainendment, ajlcl ~ I lhe \ l'r~ts are though! to be good for hlacb who belle~ Vf1f:Y 11* what a.sing ·the gap in unemployment in the they bear from \be "NlxOD White H : '1ext year or so, but that is not f(lst THE CHICANOS will come for special attention since, as the Me an- Ameiican vote, they are in a awiDg .. lion In the key sbtes of Texas and C8lifornla. A featured attraction willthe the Lallno treaaurer of the .U~ Sta , MrS. Romsna Acosta Baliueloil, p. pointed by President Ni.Jon. Tlie Nb:on convention, however, wiD be uncomfortable with what ii ~ving to~ ' enough ~ suit Nixon, and thus it 'can reaaooahly !>e expected that be will act in some fashion to stimulate employment. How to do so withoiit also stimulating in- flation ·is· a serious problem. OUT ·OF THIS basic economic con· diilon rises the malaise George S. McGovern and George C. Wallace seek to exploit: The general Sense shared by so many people that no matter what they do or how hard they work. circumstances conspire to thwart their realization of the American dream while the rich. and privileged get richer and m o r e privileged. As the first Republican in the history of presidential elections to be nominated three t1mes, President Nixon suffers from no lack of exposure or fixed ideal about his qualifications for the office. In this respect, he is to the Republican party what Grover Cleveland -also nominated three times 1-was to the Democratic party. Cleveland won the fmt try, lost on the Sf'COnd, and won again on the third attempt. In his respected history of presidential ~lections, Eugene H. Roseboom says of Cleveland: "He saw only the necessity or nSisting discontent ; he did not know how to allay it." NIXON'S PROBLEM is how to allay the discontent he readily recognizes as implicit in McGovern's candidacy so that his own considerable athievements in the presidency can come shining through. While it may be true that, as !.1cGovem says, Nixon is the great uniter of the Democratic party, it is also true that fear of McGovern unites many disparate elements in Nixon's favor. The Republicans in Miami will play out that theme, too. GM Let Off IIook ·on Corvair R ecalls WASHINGTON -Fa«d with tbe recall of 235,000 to 400,000 old Corvairs which could cost lawsuits totaling ten! of millions of dollars, General Motors bas been let gently oil the book by the Transportation Department. · We have evidence, however, that the favorable report on the Corvair not only WM rigged but that Doog Toms, the fed~rat auto safety cuir who issued it, never even read it before it was made public. Instead, the ft-' port and its ac- companying preM release were bandied In the 10th floor offices o( Transportatm Secretary John Volpe. Words were even put in Toma' mouth that he never•pol:e, WHAT TOMS.said' In printe about the problem·plagued llJ60.a Corvalrs was altogether dUlerenl from what the Transportation Department quoted him as saying. "I've driven enough of these can· anil I' , don't Uke them either./' Tomi conftded, to lhe Corvair's nemesis Ralph Nal\fr. "I felt the rl&ht Inside wheel jack up ...-llie Corvalr • • • I know Oorvatn ..U OYe!'· and go out o! conlr;ol ant\ people - problems with them." 1 .. Both Topis and Nader conflrn\ed' thil private conversation to 1111 ._iatt Les Whitten. . Yet the oUlclal -nt...e quoted Tomi as saying that ''bandlhlg'. and 1tabUlty Pbtormance of thole cars ls at leut as good u 4he .. performance of aeveral contemporary domt!sllc , ml foreign veblcl... The : ¢ o ~Ya It performance doet nol result In an ab- normal potenUal f0< loaa of control w rollover." 'l1llS STATEMENT was manufaclured l<!r .....,,., he aclu>owledced, and r.:1 out b7 Volpe '• office. Toms saw It or the lint lime aller It had been nleued. Nol oaly WU the publlclly Oii the ._t _..e.i CD lliP. bot llaore'I 1 \\ is in "anybody's pocket." [ ' J Finally, th& test results were reviewed JACK ANDERSON \ ~~d~%fed e'\~uid~~;~~. :::C:J _ _ ,\no research and testing credentials in car , _ I 1handling. . • evidence the Tranoportatjon Department \'._The tests were vital to GM,. which tampered 'wilh' motorlst safety in setting "'ould have been compelled to start an up the Corvalr teats. . Immensely costly recall campaign ii the reveals ''approxim ately two million dollars . • . have been expended on a system that is not producing operational data." IThe cabled orders f r o m . Washington stress: ''This site should ~me operational as soon as possible." Y~t, M~j. Gen. David Jones, in charge of .tlle proJect, coul:ln't even estimate when the tracking post would be working. For instance. the 1M3 Corvair was CorVairs had been found unsafe. The tested but not the 1960-31~ models. Yet reca_U could also have been used against $100 SCRAPS -United Artists' Mai many of the 309 Corvair suits against GM GM in it.a multimilli~ollar litigation Uiller read that the Treasury Depart· invoJye fataliUa In· the older cars. over• the Corvairs. inent was selling worn out ground up $l New tires were .also used on thf test /to $100 bills to contractors ior packing oil cars liistead of the Worn Ur<S tljat had .•.IJALPR NAD~ called Toms '(~er the rigs and road construction. Since a fig!lred in ni1117 fatal Corvalr rollovers., ~~ <;otvalr report waa laaued. There thousand hills .,eigh only two pounds And, unlike GM, Fon! and other teats in ls a helluva lot .. of' polillcal overtones, / Miller figured a few pounds would ~ the· lNOI, ,, which ·prec1ucec1 nwneromr· I011l,e spoken, some unspohra, about this/ enOugh to supply every movie editor in Corvalr rollovers, the' now federal lesls repQrl; ~i )'OU IUPPOrllng the America with a potential 111111 scra in a uaed "automatic'" pilots" instead of ~ata? 'l'h11·~.a. poUUcal rear. you plastic envelope. This would be :n ex· lnimin test drivers. ~', T~ said · to the nonpartisan cellent promotion gimmick. he felt, for { -• N . .Allen Funt's new movie , "Money Talks." Tlll!SE AUTOMA'IIC .pllols w~e men agree this ls what Toms But Treasucy apparently has more trust ~ by an tnsu!Ule, w\ll<h, was.' nld.,lllut Toma Insisted afterward that In road contractors and the oil lobby than eotabllsbed by a f!O mllllon grant,frc!m he JU dieant to refer only to the polUlcs it does In movie promotera and movie GK, amonc .U.., and ls attll fllhiled, In ' ol-tbi> report1S•critl"". 1 critics. The Treasury offici als turned port, wllh '1 mllllon ·a Jur frGal )he alito• 'Foo6iole: TM new report falls lo1nen-down Miller's bid oo grounds that the lndUllrt. ,. > •• lion even a1 a footnote that Corv~ of currency JOraps mil!ht find their wa · '!be 'l'r1IMllOl'llt 111'111 were fully • •all )'Od have a defecUve~t em from the editors into counterfeit bills Y • ...,. of 'ilila 'baf«e• tbey cl1ose . the design 'that may JlmD)t carbon · flllbwaY ~elY a-m11 1111t1t\iie, monox1c1e 'to lea!< ln!O llie er1'9fll-/ llntfm!ty of' MJdillan, lo participate In partment.. GM, in a letter, has , dmltled tw alliding tt• beodaclor. 1.n the raiii I I llmllule spa);-dealeol to us tbtlt ii -ff ROUOllING rr ..., National Parka c:zar Im't, ·It the Troth! ~"J..'°' .. :;..:::ns~~·1: ' bu91neaa In the nation's para. One oObo , ' B7.C.OU. JUll.n' JR. blggtol"' operated by Donald ,Hummel ... !t-....=r,=.::=lsi: =.:=.,:.,~"="~ "-·•Ill thlllp n,111;,, Clllr country, Hal1zcc .tslled the ~ recently, ho :ii-.~. -lbe.llarl tlloft, Is at gave ~iJl bow tboi\iughlJ ·ht frill ~ ~ tbtl, tu ~ lwlCO, oqce police.. '• operaliea by apeodlnc -uie they .,. ci-like you and ~ daJI_. ·the COllC-~~ir•'• l!riY!lle me, ·and 11aJn -lbej lnlllct ·llldl. •-· awflll mlaer)' apon us and bide behilid the ~~~~ ~ to ....,. our com.Y ~ -1'he Air Force ls • ,.,._ almoll a.,.,,, behind in \-tpalring a pol• "If IN ,,UUc Of/bra IOlU flrfri1111• riddeil ~ • tracking beacon m me:n'.1 r1QM1, IM» ONllhl lo J>011 """'""-~the Atlantlc cle9plle _..,. '-"C1I l/IO• f>l/llr lM!(" ordon lrim to' llln II "Ille -tord Hou In 1102 hlabeot pcb llJ ' la bute lo patcll "" itldklal rlllJug the .......... •· 1'(1!1Moo!lal mta "-------J. • i • ;:.· •• .. ' • ' . Asbestos . ·Big Can$e I Of Cancer · NEW YORK (AP) -Two cancer researchers· say they have confirmed t ttr o ugh human lung cancer cases the theory that occdpatjonal e~ posure to asbestos ·enhances tbe cancer-causing effects of' cigarette smoke. Asbestos exposure by itself, they reported Wednesday, does not appear to increase thi; incidence o! lung cancer among asbestos workers who do not smo.ke. These f i nding s, the researches said, c o n f i r m studies based on such BJ>" proaches as reviewing medical records but com, from what they describe as the first study they are aware of based .()D actual lung ' c a n c e r specimens. The report in the journal Cancer, a publication -0f the American Cancei:: Society, was written by two . pathologists, Dr. Milton Kannerstein, of the Barnet Memorlal H o s p i t a I Center in Paterson, N.J., and Dr. Jacob Churic, of the Mount Sinai ·School of Medicine in New York. The pathologists ~id they compared 50 lung cancer cases In patients oc- cupationally e x p o s e d to asbestos with 50 matched con- trol cases in persons 'not ex- posed to asbestos. The major features (If the CanCers in both groups we.rt! essentially the same; ~ nerstein and Churg ·reported indicating thiit the documented increased i~ cidence of Jung cancer among asbestos workers can' not be attributed to asbestos alone.' This correlates with a find- ing by a leading f!Sbestos researcher. Dr. Irvi ng J. Celikoff of Mount Sinai that occupational exposure does not appear to be carcinog'enic, or cancer causing, among non- tigarette smokers. The incidence of lung 'cancer a m o n g cigarette-smoking asbestos workers was 92 times as high than it is for notismokers not exposed ~ to ' asbestos. ; \ 0 It would appear tiled,"' Kannerstein and Churg said, "that it ls as a cocarcinogen, in combination with cigarette smoking, that asbestos has an effect." · A similar situation bas been suggested for lung cancer • among uranium miners, they said. The authors said they were forced to assume that cig-" arette smokers existed with the same frequenCy in· their two study: groµps ,as they do in those groups at· ~ge because .smoking historifs wer'e not available for all of them. The "' researcher! said they were confident the assumption did not lead to any major error. Bandit P.rofits CANNES, France,(AP) - A woman reported her handbag was stolen while sht lunched at· !I beach cafe. lt was not a routine purse·snatch. 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CelatloUi! or sttredded foam. Many styles, colors. ··Now88P "o~r k PENNZOIL .' PIM!lf 30WJ, I Mlllla ' , ·• ·Jagged steel WJll; heavy t 1acge vinyl liner. No SpE'C· •1 ilf toors neiled. UYS' SPllRTSIHUS ... ~ •EG. • , 1i79 , .. I $hoft <e'fe· Plfmantnl prest If pil}y- ester/cottot1· ble'.nds. Macllifle iiasti- 1ble' priMs,· stripes, wesfert st,yling.6-13. ®I at L01118eacll, Torrance WASTE BASKET ~~~ ·39~A. OUI llG. PllCE 49< EA •. Riqed, firsl qllafity sturdy plastic. Good for ctller uses also. 16" SPORT BALL WASWLE BlANKET SALE OUR •EG. ltc EA. gc IAYll.11 311 TO 1.22 EA. "I tK. Turns yard, gara&'e and muse tights on or off! Adds protection for )'.!luand yaur fi\fflily! #8!17 'OUUIG. 5s•. . l-41 ,......._" Sit 16" •ick. or soccer balls. 72"x90" blankets of man made lite-~lend. Thermal LY regular weaves. Prints Of soli6s. Wads of fMn !or the kids. 10 LBS. CAT LtTTER · Special oiler! Deodorizes cat box; Also makes an ex· cellent barbecue brazi er base. OUR REG. PRICE 59c IA. SOLID STATE RADIO CREST TOOTHPASTE NIW 7 GZ. FAMILY SIZE Select from mint flaVored or retular Crest, for .cleaner, brighter teeth. Now a full V4 oz. larger tube. ·39c 2x8''..RUGS lndoor-autiloor 36' scatter rugs or 24x72" runners of long wearing, .. mildew·and staiHesistant 100% ·polypropylene.pile. Fully ser&ed-on all sides. s3 · ... EA. ; l OHnl.PllCUM Sl;:tt, ditft,'~s 'Wed&es--.ovcr lllJJ•oth llid • ·• (mi"'1• I ' 3088 BRISTOL ST. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVL BEtwEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY 1nd BAKER ST. ··--··""'' ••••n un • I ' .. •.. I 8 DAILY PIL OT .C~pers' Fire·Use ,,. iltestricted ,. FRESllO (AJ!) -;ll<c.allle Sir .. -lire conditiona, 11.S. FONll ltrv1C9 aipervtlor Sotero Munll 111aounc1d reatrlctlona on ..........,.try travel and campfires in Por· tions of Sierra National Forest. Thursday, July 27, 1972 The new measures , effective midnJBht Jlliday, apply to about 25. percent of the forest, mostly below 6,000 feet and charec!trlzed by steep slo pes l and bJghly Oam mable vegeta- tion, Muniz said al a news E'••e o-ers conference. u r-•• • Dreaded Chol era Spreads ' From Far EU:St Strongho ld ATl.ANTA (UPI) -The Federal Center for Dl!ease Control has been quietly warn· log health officials that the dread disease cholera is slow· ly spreading westward from the Far Ea st, and may reach the United States. The CDC said there was "no immediate threat" to the i United States, however. and , "we don't feel it would get any kind of foothold" in this coun- try beca use of It! adequate sanitation and water supplies. or infection to any put al the world, including the Western II e m I s phere. Predictably, some cholera will find Ila way westward." Cholera spreads m o a t readily in "grossly unsanitary environments, 01 the CDC said. warned, and said lhat was :'probably how the disease wu Introduced into Guinea , Weat Africa, in tt'101 and how IPOl'ldlc 'cues have been bn· ported Into Ghana, Japan, Australia and England." THE CDC noted th a t 41mERE ARE vast areas ln mllllona: of tourists, including Latin America wbue hl,Sh!y ,many from America, travel ln susceptible populatlorui are and out of the infected areas, crowded together. under such and said "only f o u r conditions. Even beaches at documepted cases of cholera, ocean resorts may be con-none fatal, have occurred in laminated by human sewage, American travelers. 1. b•nktl'll•tiC•rd e "'''''' <ht19• 7 f11hion i1l1114, 111wport c1nltt 64 .. -5070 FOR THE PAST year, the ,.The riBk is obviously so CDC has been q u i e t I Y especially in the w 8 r m ' small that no one need cancel II ===========:==:==:===:===== distri buting an analysis of the populous cartbbean area,'' the travel plana anywhere in the I= I statm of cboiera ill the world CDC aald. world becauae of it," the CDC For Advertising n 'l'be restrictions · were ruo de J aneiro means sunshine and bathing beauties. prompted by the driest winter It is winter down there but who would ever know it and spring in 40 years, he by looking at these fine citizens. sild. _.;_ __ __.::_ _____________ _ ·:Muntz said the measures :~n Croa-«>11ntry travel by '>Jlol« vehicles, cl06e second· ~ rcodl, cancel compfire :pmnita o u t 1 I d e developed .eamPCrOW>ds and p r o h I b t t 'smoldng outside developed areas, residences or autos. to state health officers, Cholera normally spread! said. OUT N ABOUT epidemiologists and laboratory overland between adjacent Bu\ the CDC iaid many 1 directors. countries, the CDC ~Id, and other countries sun require Ph Nevada · Revenues Soar RENO, Nev. (AP) - Boosted by an $8.5 millio'n federal slot machine tax rebate, Nevada's gaming tax revenues climbed a record 31.7 percent during the last fisca l year, it was announced here Wednl!$day. Taxes collected by the State Gaming Control Board totaled $54,.~ million, officials said, compared to the $41.7 million collected during the previous fi scal year. ''More than one-half of the by water routes within a coun· cholera Va Cc ( D at l On for Ofte world's inhabitants now live In try and between c!istaht cowr travelers. · Norm Stanley ' cholera infected areas on tries. Tbe CDC also w a r n e d three continents," the analysis "Air travel has now added a agalnat over-reaction to 6 4 2 • 4 J 21 Simllar restrictions already "" ill effect at sequoia Na· ;'\tonal Forest. warned. new dimension,'' the CDC cholera. "The three routes of spread1...:=.-.::::::=:::_-.:::::.::..::.:_.:::=::::_ _____ __.:.. _______________ _ -by land, by sea and by air '* -make it practically impossi- ble to prevent the introduction . ' • .. LAST 3 DAYS ~ SAVE NOW! • . . ·: • -.~ •. .· ·: ·. . Frigidaire Week BIG ~AMIL Y SIZE 17 .0 cu. ft. Refrigerator $ 95 You'll never have to d efrost this Frigidaire top- freezer refrigerator -it's 100 °/o frost-proof! A huge refrigerator in a 30,:' cabinet. 17.0 cu. ft. with a 4.75 cu. ft. freezer that stores up to 166 lbs. Re- verse -doors hinge fo r righ t-or-left hand opening. S!"ooth-glide rollers make it easy_ to move. Step out of the heat with these Frigidaire Weekvalues. Compad Frigidaire Refrigerator fits Almost Anywhere! s99ts • Perfect for office, den, rec. room, dorm, bar. • Just 33 7/16" high-.19"wide x 21 ft" deep. •Freezer stores up to 9.8 lbs. • Handy door storage. , Frigidaire BIG 201'2 · with 5.82 cu. k. Frigidaire LAUNDRY PAIR Freezer! All frost-Proof! $36995 • Special F1otur1I Add on Automatic le• Maker now or later. Replaces present Ice service in this refrigerator. •Get' the extra room you want for fresh foods, fro11n foods! freeter stores up to 203 lbs. • On 1toll1rsl Smooth-glide nylon Rollers for tOS'f moving and cleaning! -$338 =~. family 1iz1 tub hold• 1' lb, load. Jet Action, outomoUc took cycle. Proper care fo r today's fabrics. Lid instnldion to help you match water temperatvr• setting to wash l~d, Mt tthlng Flowing Holl ltoctrlc Dryer, P1rm1.Pr1t1 C..... FREE DELIVERY! WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL! . ffi %5 Years of lntegritt1 & DepemlalriHtg ·m COSTA MESA EL TORO NEWPORT BEACH 411 E. Sevenletnth St. SADDLEBACK VALLEY 24366 Rotltfitld Rd. Daily 9.9, Sit. 9-6 (next to SIV-On) Dolly 10-6, Tlt u1'1., Fri. 10.9 646-1684 837-3830 IAOfO DISl'A1CHED IAC10RY AUTHO RIZED TV & APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE ~48 ·3437 I t I VALUE QUALITY SELECTION SERVICE SAYE -SAYE -SAVE HANIMEX· PRAKTICA "[' sin91e-lens reflex CAMERA With F2.8 Lens & Case ,F2.8 Orts!°" ltM & Cas,. .Shullet from 1 •ec. 10 I/ 1000 $et. .~ilt in H~I ShOll INCLUDES FILM DEVELOPING AND 12 JUMBO COLOR PRINTS YORK MODEL K·50 Cassette TAPE RECORDER SLIDE FllM 36 EXPS, OUR REG. Z.59 MICROPHONE JACK REMOTE CONTROL JACK SOLID STATE 357Z • • MOVIE FllM OU~ REG. 1.69 BELL& HOWELL MOVIE PROJECTOR • Single Frame AdQttet. • AJOO' Rttf C11t1C1ty, • 1/1,f %oolll L .... • Fram Df1f. ......... KODACOLOR FILM SPECIAL EITHER AC OR DC CRAIG 2621 TAPE RECORDER 9S DUAL POWERED 97 OUR REG. 24 .95 , • L: M. BOJd Rain, Snow, Hail Correct for July Am asked U lhoae milky diet mixtures, oo popular amoog the heavywelgbta who want to lo&e pound.I, can he homemade. Certainly. Combine 10 ounces of evaporated milk with elgbt ounces of water. SUr Jn slI level table- ' •FJ>OOMI of dexi..... Add 1 Jiaer ol com oil. Blem! well. , : avor the stuff with a couple ol teaspooo.s of lnstant . : coffee, vanilla extract, imltaUon maple : or whatever. Refrigerate. 'lbat'a it, • Oil'! day'a supply. Thi> almple formula, : devised about II yeara ago made the : fint of those canned ~Uons for : caJorie counters. WHAT TUE editor lnadvertenUy len out of the 1860 Farmer's Almanac \ was the weather prediction for July 13. But the typesetter, a wise fellow de- cided "rain" and "snow" and uhauot ·would Ol1 ln the blank quite nicely. He figured the editor would cornet the thing m the proof. The editor didn't. That typeaetter must have had a direct coonection On July 13, It ralned, llM>Wed, hailed. · · QUERIES4l. "What sort of criminals are the brigh~ est as a group?" A. The embezzlers, it's said. Q. "WHAT Was uranium used for before the atom bomb?" A. To color glass ware. Q. "WHERE'S the world's highest post office?" A. At Climax, Colo. That's 11,320 feet. ENERGY -"If harnessed for useful work, a woman's vitality could supply a whole town with electric light pow· er," said Aldous Huxley, peevishly. 0 Tbe physiciatl ought i9 disccver aome way of capturing those enormous stores of energy which accumulate in unemployed women of sanguine temperament. Now It's vented ·in ways generally deplorable -In lnterferlng with other people's affairs, In working up emotional scenes, in thinking about love and making it, and In bolllerlng men until they cannot get Oll With their work ... IN INDONESIA, It has long he<!n the custom for the lady to ask the man for the dance, not vice versa. She sidles up to the old boy with downcast eyes and touches him on the shoulder with her scarf hand. You're it dad, la de da. EVERY NOW and then ln damp dark weather , Iha! big bird known as the loon mistakenly lands on wet pavement, lhlnklng It's a lake. Tno bad. It's stuck. Tbe loon can't take off from hard ground. Needs a water runway. Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Discoverer of Smog Say s Fight Near Erid SAN _DIEGO (AP) -Dr. Arie Haagen-Smlt, who dis- covered bow smog develops, aays his ;o.year f11ht to con- quer the ey .. atJoglng pboto- cbemlcal in the air is "DOW starting to be won." 'l\e latest data, he said, show a steady decrease In at- moopheric concenlrallonS of oxidant, hydrocarhona and carbon monoxide and in some places, the air ii clearer than it Wll! in 1940. "WE BA VE LESS sulfur di- oxide and particulates being emitted now than ln 1940 b& cauae of control 111 ataUmary sources," said Haagen-Smit, chalnnan or the CIJJlornla Air Resources Board. "Back 30 yeara ago, we had no controls. I remember that parts of the Loo Angeles aky were black from the emi.uion of sulfur and particulates. For the first time .since I became involved ln air pollution over 20 yean1 ago, the trend of In- creased air pollution has finally been reversed.'' 'I1>e fact that "this war ls now starting to he won will he evident to San Diegoans by cleaner sties by 1975 and to the -of. Southern CallComla by 19IKI, II be sai<i. IN AN INTERVIEW, Haager>Smlt aald· he thinks California generally will have HO-quality air by 1980. But be said controls are needed on use4 automobiles as well as new ones. Emlsslona standan!s set for 1975 and 1976 model can sbouJd be the final ones, though, he said adding "I don~ think it's worth it to by to get down to emission!. II THE FEDERAL govern- ment ought to give a u t o makers a one-year extension of deadlines so they can met the requirements and at the same time produce a workable car, be said. RecenUy the Environmental Protection Agency rejected a request for such an exteMion under present law. FLY AWAY, LITTtE BIRD A little enCOU111gement to try Ila wings . Exqullltl porcellln figure by Cybil depicta young glri With blue bird In hind. $40. SIA.VICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH -644-lllO Op1n t.4on. ind Fri. I 0 1.m. to 9: JO p.m. W»t1 llelt,_ lh nnw., Of'-.. La C#t'ftllo LI H ... Atlt: IM DMi111 Ml. Lit V-. Tllun<tsy, July 27, 19n DAILY "LOT 9 Wallace Decision to Hurt McGovern? ******************* NEW YORK (AP) -'l\e decialoo ol Allbama Gov. Giorge C. Wallace not lo run aa a third party candidate mJght coat Democr1tic nominee Sen. George McGovern as much as 5 percentage polnta In the fall electlon, the Louls Harris survey reports. Of voter• who had stated preference for Wallace-15 percent at Barria' latest ooun· ty-57 percent aay they will vote for President NI.Jon as against 25 percent f o r McGovern . The survey was conducted among l,iOl houaeholda na- tlnnwide between July 1 and July I. In the North, the r<port said, the Wallace vote at thla stage favors Nilon by $5-25 percent. Jn Iha South, Jhe survey's returns a h o w e d Wallace supportera preferring Nixon by 61·25 percent. SUburban voters, 12 perct11t of whom had favored Wallace, gave Nixon a net gain of four points over tbe South Dakota senator. Among the under-30 group-a majority of whom are not on c o 11 e g e campuses-fonner Wall~ce 1upporter1 now intend to give Nixon a new gain· of Ice Tray • ~•move • whol• irayful or 1 1in9le cube • ' ••• .ntcl colon • St•cli:eltle tray• 39c Elegant Wood f l'llle For Your Medicine Calinel I 16x26 tnch•t-f• •nfr11n1 1ny 1tancl1rd 1iu mMid•• c1bin1t So~ white, 1ttr1cti••lv 1crollM A11tlq111 Gold or s;1,.,, e Tul'n •n or .. inary c1bi111t i11t1 111 ·1l191nt b1throom 1«e11ory 8~ ......... 11 ~ ..,..., GeW •, Slher 1t.H Roller e '" St11cco Black & Decker 3/8 Inch Drill • hft1·C•p1city1 low co1t drill e Double reductfon 911r1 for fwll torque. Mod1I No. 7100 9" e'8ht points, the turvey said. Am on g m ld dle-lncome groups-whert the Wallace vote wu estimated at 11 percent· Nixon scored a net gain of five points. ·Among union m em bers , where Wallace had attracted 18 percent of vote, Nixon runs 2 to l in preference and picks up a net gain of four points, according to the survey. Among independent voters, 17 percent of whom had in- temled to go for Wallace. lf11- on regl!tered a net gain of seven points, the report said. Among Cotholici., w I I b Wallace out of the race, Nixon Clear-Out e Teper• e Spiral1 • 10", 12", , ... e Stock i1 limited e Better hurry! 50% Offl KERM'S SPECIAL VALUE scored a net galn of two polnts, Harrl! .said, addJna Iha~ at last count, Clthollc votm were going ~ per- cent for the President in 1 IM>-way race. ME RCURY SAVINGS Ind loan associltlon NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY Chinese Film ·10A M 4 PM ,., ., -' .. : ,· • ,> • • • • > .' ' ·. . . Open Mon;nus. 91.m.-4 p.m.; Frt 9 un.-6 p.m. SINGAPORE (AP) -Film cenoors decided that tradi- tional Chlnesa filma In which adversaries hack each other to pieces with mactS, spears and blades, were too violent for public .screening. S e v e n movies were banned and BUENA PARK Mercury SIYlnp Bldr .• Valley View at llncoln HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercwy SIYlnp Bid(., Edlnpr at Beach TUSTIN MerCllJ SIYlnp Bldr., lrilne Blvd. 1! Newport Avt. ***************** others edlied. E•otic: torche1 on 6-fool pole1 to land atmo1phere, I-qt. capacity. cl u r • b 1 • baktd t namal fini1fi. 7-Light Patio Lanterns e For patios, pool1, bac•yard1 . e To gldw, 7 colorful little lanl1rn1 e With thalr own bulbt e CoNI lncludtd 29 Kwikset "Tylo" Brass . Entry Lock Set e Security for your home · e Amarictn "''d,, poli1ha4 bra11 Hardwera and 2 key1 inch1ditef 18-ln. Black & Decker . Electric Rotary Mower Si119l1 ltlff1 with q11l1f.runnin9 motor e R1ca11M wll11!1 for clo11r mowin9, folcf down h1ncfl1. Model No. 1010 Prlca •ff«tift ttirout~ Wed., A ... 2. 5999 Glidden latex Long Handled, Heavy llM!se Paint !My Wire Brush • D1P1M •bl1 e lon9 h1ndl1 p1rf1m11nc1 for ••fr• • l r11•h•1 11 l1¥1r•t• 1a1ily with 111 e To119h wlr1 "dr19" bri1tl11 cl11n, e Tool1 cl1a11 11p r1mo•• fl1•ed witfl toep '11 p1int, 1tc, in .... , • jiffy e Mocf1l No. • R11lly do11 ,,., th1 job . Quarrty, Alumi• Strong, Durable 4-ln. Dryer Vent Hood Dryer Vent Hose • Qu1Uty m1cl1 e Ch1n111lt 1lr for 1tr1119th •nd 11fety from .jryer to 011t1id1 • Sturdy, lon9· L.1111'11 l11tin9 m19't huml-'ity i111icf1 • &.t 11 much or G1IY1ni1td II lltff1 11 you naed 29' 2666 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 BB Black & Decker rmisbing Sander • Orbital 11ndln9 action • 1111 in 1ny po1ition • S1ncl1 fl111h on l 1icl11 • Model No • 7410 12" Handy Hose Remnants Yfrth Ends Sturcly, fl11lbl1 ''"'"'"" n ..... '"'"" "''' I/I" I 1/2" WEEkDA YS 9 to 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6 I . -· I I ' f0 DAlLYPILOT . Vrchins Slaita Divers Battling To Rescue J(elp QUEENIE By Phll lnt1rlandi Hurricanes Face Re1iewed Attacks i'YONO «O ~ CUSTOM TAILOIS IN OIANG! COUNTY ..,..., ..... c ..... MH• SAVE UP TO 5.,0 2 SUITS St"S !9!1!ll lNlf 111 Ill ... ~d 1111ont1 (ijllonl Mtdt IU!I\, kwlcttll, 1\IC .. I, Sbllll. • WI '1T ANY Sill • ANT STYU C0,.10 •Jill AllllATIONS :· . PALOS VERDES (AP) - Divers are gradualty pullln.- the bloom back in a once lush underwater forest. Anned with hammers, the divers have killed countless sea urcltins, which over a period ol years have turned parts of the coastal waters in· to an underwater desert. THE URCIUNS , s ma 11, 'spiny echinoderms known as the "pin cushions of the deep," have wiped out the big trees or the ocean's rorest -kelp -by eating away their anchors. Loa or the kelp has thrown the shores' ecological cycle completely out of balance, depriving lobsters. abalone and other marine creatures of the environment in which they thrtVe. · Scientists, divers and Im Angeles County officials have teamed up to restore the balance in a mllc·long stretch off the Palos Verdes Peninsula first by reducing the number of urchins and then by replac· Ing the kelp. The Los Angeles County Board or Supervisors has granted $10,000 for the project, $4,000 being set aside for research at the Californla Institute of Technology. FOR THE PAST year equads of volunteer divers have been attacking t h e urchins, killing them with hammers. And the process has been working, according to Tom Ebro, underwater unit director of tile Los Angeles , Kick-boxing Bill Pushed By Senate SACRAMENTO (AP) -The canromia Senate championed a kJc.k-boxi ng bill during its first nJgbt session this year, and then kicked down two other bills related to pedestrian mal!J and tax reform. The action came Tuesday night after a three-hour after- noon session, and a catered dinner served cafeteria style on the Senate noor. The Senat1 stayed on for two more hours during the n1ght in efforts to recess Fri- day until after the November elections. Two more night sess1ons are scheduled for later this week . The kiok...JJoxlng bill would authorize the state Athletic C.Ommlssion to premulgate rules and regulations on that sport. Sen. George N . 7.enovich (0-Fresno ) s a I d kick-boxing Is widely praCti ced in Thailand and Japan. and is gaining popularit y in Calltornia. Zenovlch"R bill won 23-1 ap- proval and moved to the Assembly. But the hard kicks came to Sens. Nicolas C. Petris (I). Oakland ) and John A. Nejedly Ji.Walnut Creek ). A Petris bill to encourage downtown pedestrian malls went down in a JS-16 defeat. and a Nejedly tax reform measure ran into a 16-16 im- passe . Petris' bill would give $5 million to cities of 150,000 or over whlch would ban auto traffic downtown d u r i n g daylight hours. Petris said this would encourage pedestrian malls, and woul4 help clean up the air pollution in congested areas. Ile cited the pollution health hazard as the com- pelling rea son !or the bill. county Parks and Recreation Department. "The urchin grows very rapidly," he said. "All we are trying to do ls ge t a foothol~. Once the natural balance 1s established there will be no problem." The county sponso r s monthly dives in the area and recently held what Ebro termed "an ext ravaganza ," a well-publicized dive observing fh!' project's first anniversary. Between 400 and 500 divers. assisted by cily life guard boats, killed an estimated 750 .000 urchins in four hours, 7-;.7 . Ebro said. ABSENCE OF the sea otter, ""~•~Oa.,,..._....,._-. tm. ,, .... ..,.._... an urchin predator, and the "Get somebody, quldl: -I think l just ate me of my presence o( an abundance of paperweightll'• sewage, which urchins also---------------------feed , on, have enabled the creatures to outstrip the fast- growing kelp, Ebro said. The otter was driven out years ago by hunters. but the sewage excess is a more re- cent problem, one t h a t ecologists hope to eliminate. Lo nghaired Teen Seeks To Defeat Sheriff, 60 Eventually, Ebro said, proj- ect backers hope to rein- troduce the otter to the area, but their next move after thin-HAWARDEN, Iowa (UPI) but many don't seem ning out the urchins will be to -llawarden's 19-year-old vlnced . plant kelp. dogca tcher has long hair and ln his campaign talks, is running for Sioux County Dykstra maintains Hoogland THAT PHASE will begin In Is not do;•• enough to combat di she riff on a law and order ""'& earnest in January. acct>r ng "lbe high rate of crime in the to Ebro and experts don't platform. county," is not c a t c b i n g think it will take Jong for it to Mike E. Dykstra admits he criminals and should be more get a toehold . Kelp, Ebro ex:· has only a 25 percent chance eager to seek out information plained, can grow as much as of unseali ng Sheriff T e d about criminal activities. two feet a day, reaching a height or more than JOO feet in Hoogland, 60, but he says Hoogland, who has held the maturity. reacti on of folks at the pop-sheriff's job four years, says, Once the kelp has ·been corn stand on Hawarden'a "I am going to stand on my restored , project backers hope Main Street-bis favorite cam-record." to establish a underwater. paigning spot-has been better Hoogland is a Republican reserve in the area . than expected. and Dykstra is bis only OI>' Divers will have to continue Dykstra has hair that ponent in the Aug. 1 primarY. efforts to keep down the reaches down his neck and he There are no Democratic can- number of urchins, Ebro said, says it wJU probably hurt bis didates. but the real battle will have chances of getting elected. He Dykstra graduated from t>c->ri \Von once the kelp takes tells voters hi5 hair should not East Sioux C.Ommunity High WASHINGTON (AP) -'11\< government said It wlll Jry again to seod bWTlcanes this year In an ellort to tstabllsh whtlhor the delttucUve force can be diminlshed. 0 Project Storm F u r y , • ' wblcb has been In effect for yean, will begin IOOll and government planes will be on alert through Oct. 31 wailing a chance to seed a bWTlcane. The Commerce Department said aeeding experiments wiU be conducted oo stonm In the Soothwestem AUantlc. the caribbean and the Gull ol Mexico when the probability 15 10 percent or less that the atonn center will cOme within 50 miles of • populalerl area a boiln alter lltedlng. Last year, the project failed · to achieve ti. main objective. It seeded Hurrlcan <;inger laat September, but . the ·depart- ment said the storm was not suitable fOr large-scale modification. Despite t h e seeding, no significant wind reductions were noted. The ma;or goal this year will be to confirm 1969 ex- periments in' which the force or Hurricane Debbie was diminhbed during two days of seoding wltll silver iodide crystala.iiliiiiiiiiii MOBILE PHOllE Pl•c• I. Receive Telephone Cells in Your C•r -• No License • No C.plftl l11vestmtrlt Monti\ to Monlh lttr1ffl Ba$11 0.-.. c... ........ , .. ~ 411 S.. SMlt '' • Slat. AM US-3305 Who Cares? No other newspaper ln the world cares about your com- munity like your commun1ty daily newspaper·~does. It'• the DAILY Pll..()'I'. hold. make any difference, he said, School this year. Once the Palos Verdes pro-··. ~~;;;ii;i;;;;;;~;;;;io;iii;ii;i..ii;ii;i;iii;.;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;i gran1 has been completed,11 other areas will need to be at- tacked . he said . RESTORATION OF the kelp will provide widespread benefits, project b a c k e r s claim. Kelp by-products are used as thickeners a n d emulsifiers in ice cream, toothpaste, salad dressing andl beer. "This will be a rich and fru itflJI coast in a few years," said one su pporter. Backy<1rd Nudist Club U1ider Gult SA~TA ROSA (AP ) -"1 1 sort or dreaded this thing hap-I pcnh~g, bu! 1 really thought for a while no one would ' discover us," said Barbara Flahe rt y. whose Ileighbors have s t a r t e d complaining because she runs a weekend nudist camp in her backyard. For the past year, Mrs. Flaherty and he r husband Lee have let fellow members of their ~roup. the Quiet Village Nudist Club. u..c;e the poo l and ru1npus room behind a 9-foot ivy-topped wall back of their home in this quiet suburban town 50 miles north of San Francisco. "\Ve played cards, did a tit· tie swintming, or played ping· pong inside," Mrs. Flaherty said. "There were never more than four or five people here at any one time on the "'eek ends." - rHD l IS HO IHTl't flll OHH TO TflNS · ll TMlU 19 Yll. Cond ucted by Talented Teen foundation Win a 3·Week ,.., ... Tour of Europe anti recording 1e11lon I Pick up your free entry fOl'm el '#42 F1shion lsl1nCl-N1w.port Beach smiles SINGl lS -DANCl l S -MUSICIANS Registration d1y Tu11d•y, ~ugu1t 15. Semi-Finals W1dne1cl1y, Thur1d1y i ncl Frid1y on tlie mtll •t Fashion l1l1nd. GRAND FINALS SATURDAY, AUGUST It, 2 • 4 P.M. fineli.-ts will receive fr•• m1rch1ndl11 certificates. Phone 1>+1·2020 for fur!her dotoi11. on and Sal Francisco. 8 times a day. Things ara looking up in Long Beach. With our smil· Ing, smokel ess jets and cheery. low fares. happl· ness and Sen Francisco are Jus1 around tho comer. Lfl<ewlse. Sacramenlo and San Diego. CaU us or your smmng lnvel agenl. PSA gins JOU I NIL ' Phone 644-2020 For Further D1l1~s FA,SHION ;) ISLAND NllWP OKT OBlfT~a • tASY 'AYM~fS 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA OPEN EVERYDAY 9 • 6 ·Bectliti/u f HIBISCUS We'll show you bo\v to plant and land· scape with these tropical plants. Excel- lent flowering shrubs for our area. • Giant reds and yellows. Single and double var\eties. Reg. 1.95 NOW ONLY .98 ·' Orange, Lemo.n, Tangelo, Lime & others. Citru s and Avoc:ido Tr ees Fuerte, lltexicola and the p0pular Lilllecado. Full or dwarf si1es priced frorri 149 to 1995 JAPANESE BLACK PINE We Have HYBRID BERMUDA STOLONS 'OLD FAVORITE ~r.;~ ~~$ Tif-Green Tif-D warf °'S::.>,.. HJ -It%-~~ LOQUAT TREES ' An interesting !oi:al land· scape tree; also good to bonsai. Plant your new lav.'n with these tough, fine textured stolons. Re sis- tant to insects, disease and weeds. Decorative tropical·lype leaves · p\uc: • a yearly crop of delicious fruit. Reg. 2.50 98 , NOW • Bushel 449 Only Hey Kids! STAR JASMINE Sweel-scenl<!d vine use as ground cover or plant in hanging baskets. Reg. $1 .95. .98 Eoch Corn Contest Judging will be next month, so have your garden ready. WE'LL BE CALLING YOU SOON! Dec orative: Bark Use where vou 'rant to !l discourage ~ .. eeds. Also 1 · good used as a mul ch. Lg ., M;B Sm. grades ~DlC~R~ 1 BAG ' SAR( 31or $4.98 . --- RED WOOD BASKETS 198 Reg. 2.50 1--... -~.,. _ _.,__.,.,._-"'.,._Attractive, sturdy, metal . banded baskets with wire hangers. allis}t?S FLORIST SPECIAL ROS ES GET SEVERAL •• Take home a doz. or two of these fresh-cu t long-stemmed beauties! 1.98 SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THRU AUGUST 2 • PHONE 546-5525 .. . ' • ' • I • • • • • • ' • ' I • • • • • I • • .. 1 •• .. :· •• • :· •' • I •• ' . I I . ' • • t .. ' • .. . . ' . j.:Open Door •• :": l's not outer space. This Is actually a tunnel that : .~e~e.s a~ the only entrance to a doorless office ::.budding in New York City. The tunnel is a square : .. Corrugated steel structure with neon lights every ;·~gb(th ridge. . <~~~-"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. · ~·· ·:Drilling Out? ~ew Dental Discovery Told :.CHICAGO (AP I -"Dumb lUck" enabled two Boston dental researchers to discover a compound which they say Will eliminate some of the drilling for repair of decayed teeth. This is the view of one of the researchers, Dr. Joseph Kron- m an, who , with his &>discoverer. Dr. ~1 e I v i n Qoldman, reported on the rtsearch Wedne sday. •' . mE RESEARCHERS, on t!ie faculty of the Tufts University school of dental medicine, presented what they termed preliminary reports on ~ir work at the national con- vention of the American S<x!ie- Zoo Security ' Trouble Told By Director 'tos ANGELES (AP ) - • After hours, the people are ~tting in and the animals are gttting out, says the director of the Los Angeles Zoo. • ~And Chester Hoan says he "1't sure that arming guards · fl, the answer . 'The problem arose when page repart to the city council oage report to the city council c;lting a rising crime rate and . animal escape Incidents as .reasons for needing sidearms far protection. Hogan, in admitting the pro~ .lel!I Tuesday, sa id: :·1 would say the guards hfve overstated the problem. OUr escape problem ls no big- . gir than other zoos and we hive keepers trained In deal- i.Dg with it." :rhe report disagreed with .Hbgan, stating : :· ... officers work alone at night with thousands of e1otic .. od dangerous anlmitls and they receive no tralnlng, have n& access to proper equipment and are left complete l y ~defenseless.'' .City Councilman Billy G. Ml.Its announced that the coun· bUs personnel committee 3'1iuld hold an Inquiry into the J'!l3rdS' complaints. No date hf&_ been set for that hearing. · · Jiogan said equipping the 14 ~s with guns would re· .:qiQ.re additional Jaw en· ~cement training, marked ~rol cars. elevation of the )!fin to special officer and Jtliher salaries. · ~r don 't know whether ann· ~ guards is the way to solve Jtn Hogan said. 0 We want lo ~intain a low ·key at· ·~sphere. We want this to be ~nice place for people lo ~e to." ;~.Meanwhile, zoo keepers .e still looking for a lSG-- p)(md kudu, an African an· ieli>pe, that somehow escaped wi;Sh three other kudu and a blesbok Sunday night. . the other animals were cap-ful;,d. The kudu was last 1een b\imdlng Into the bushea of Gt'lfflth Park. in which the zoo Is •located. The kudu I• not ,dJngerous but is painfully shy. .Jy for Preventive Dentistry. Their compound is known as GK·ll, a chemical code name, the letters standing for the ini- tials of the researchers. It has been found to remove most of the decayed matter in badly decayed teeth without the necessity of drilling and without harm to heaJthy parts or the tooth or gums. Goldman said, "Even U future clinical studies validate our clinical impressions, it's not going to take the place of rotary instruments, for the in- struments are still necess ary for various aspects or cavity preparation." He added, "However, what we are noting here is that GK- 101 may substantially reduce the amount or rotary and hand instrumentation necessary." The ruearchers wouJd not disclose the ingredients of their compound because of pending patent and legal mat- ten. THEY SAID THEY had been working on it for about two years_and, in response to questions from dentists who heard the papers, Goldman said it was discovered seren· dlpitousty-that is, by luck. It was then that Kronma n interjected, "Actually, it was dumb luck." So far, the compound ha& been tried on a few patients, but the results were not available for discussion at Wednesday's presentation. The researchers tested the compound on rats. rabbits and hamsters for possible adverse side effects and found none . GOLDMAN SAID, 1'1n our cllnical testing so far we ha ve had a remarkable absence of pain associated with use of the &0lutions. All of the patients appear to have been quite comfortable and have been delighted by the lack of pain." The solution is awlied to a decayed tooth with a specially designed pump. Within a few minutes, t h e researchers reported, much of the decayed matter is loosened and is then removed by suction. The dentist then completes prepiration of the tooth cavity for a filling by using the tradi- tional instruments. The dentists reported that early studies indicate that their compound may also be useful in the removaJ of dental plaque, the compacted, hard matter that accumulates on teeth around the gum lines. Richard Woo Ne w Deputy S A N FRANCISCO (UP!) -Richard Woo, 23, has become the first permanent C h lnese-American sheriff's deputy of San Francisco COun. ty. "'nle Chinese came to San Francisco over 100 years ago,'' the ·new deputy said.· "It's taken all these yem before one of us became a permanent deJ>Ull ahertlf • , • I'm proud I am the 'first.'' ;5 CASH $ • $ MONEY SAVE IT -MAKE IT .S. . ' BIG WITH NIW COMPANY - NEW MARKnlNG METHOD 40 % OFF RETAIL MARVELOUS CHANCI TO IARN PLUS INCOME NO SIWNOI NO IALUMAN WILL CALL CWI KAVt:·JtOlillll • Thund.,., Ju~ 21. 19n DAILY PILOT J l Rape Crisis Center Aids Victims' By .ANN BLACKMAN and their famUies who ,..k been raped may be too em-"We hove staffers who will enters a hospital be<ause .. ) WASHINGTON (AP) -For local women who suffer the brutal erperlence of being raped, advlce and comfort - often from other rape victims -Is just a telephone call medical and legal advice and, barrassed 10 notify police or accompany n woman to the you go in hysterical. people In sometime&, just ~ympathy. may noL want to go lhr<>wgb a hos.pita!!' said on\'! staffer. the emergency room will pay The dozen or so women who long court procedure. "The staffer \viii explai n more attention to you." organized the Ctllter include , · hospital procedure~ to the le wrr11 A Pl10NE CALL. she woman so she Isn't shocked or se~·eral former v llms of u"set by them.·· T th •-t I h · wi ll be given the name of a ,, rape. o e U't"S o I etr medical center in her area and One piece of advice from O N E STAF FE ll ESTl~1ATED that more than ~ percent of the women who ft! ANTHONY SCHOOL$ II HARIOlt ClNTll 2JOt H11rllor (tlll ... ''''' M.u, C11lllff'lll11 Ph. 1714) f7f•2JSJ away: , . call the center do nol rcpart 1111 s. ''"-11vr11 ''· h . he .,.... t 1. An111e1m, C•I. tU04 Staffers say the montjl-otd Rape ' Crisis Center is receiv- ing about 20 calls daily from current and past rape victims knowledge, the cente r offers informiltion M v en e re 8 I Liz~ \vho, like the other centrr the fi rst such private service d1sease. But the staffers pro-staffers, deellnc s to givfl her in the nation. vlde a list -0f lawyers and name: An example of the Ct>nter's psychologists for vtclim.s who A rape victim should not act av1ng en ra•"°'" o po ice. Ph. f7141 771·5100 ~tost are looklnj? for son1eonc I "!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll! to talk \Vith about their attack, 1· opera tion: A wom<l,Jl1 who has need them... calm and controtlcd \\'hen she sbe said. 1----------- WABEBOUSES-DIBECT TO YOU! ••• & fBE"E 'INS'l'AJ;J;A'l'ION •.. OPEN Nl'l'ES ''l'IJ; 9 DOMES'l'IC and FOREIGN&SPOR TS BRAND NEW e 5.60xl5 5.60xl3 7.00;rl3 4-PLY TUBELESS 'Tl' 5.00xlli 5 .20xl5 5 .20xl4 5.20;rl3 6 .50 ;rl3 $J 295 7 .75x l5 e ach DATSON] ·2 ~.~ TOYOTA ~~hi.;,s:~!~ b eh. + Sl..50 to $2.16 Fed. b . To• lod1 0 ft e e • -l•.To• The famou1 U7i royal La redo Multi Rib tire al10 co lled th• "Rain Tire." Thi1 tire ho1 been purthc111d by million• o_f IOti1fied customers thruout the nation. ~,... 7. 75;r1 4 (E78/l 4) 7 .35;r1 4 (1"18/1 4) 7. 75;r15 (1"78/l 5) 1395 a.asxrs r11sils> ------.--..--------9.ooxr 5 (L78/15) · 8.25xI 4 rr.1i'll4J 3,55zi 4 . rn1"iif14) s 2495 8.~il69~l 5) 8.119;;~5) b<.h. +Sl.76 h:t S2." f•d.i.b. To• .. • • 9 5 5.611xl 5 6 .;)0.Tf J lit~: (878/13) l•ch. +ST.,, 10 S2.31 ftd. f•. Toi (och wi.;,,,...u, s2.,, fdJG ' lli1111!i1t senice wit• 2 Tire • hrck1se.F1U Size U.S. Car~ i1cl1•1s ckeck 11• cerrect caster, c1111 ker, ttt i11. wker1 11cess1ry. Air c111•itl11ell cars 1.t51••iti11al. Radial Belte d T ubeless Whitewalls SllE PllCI f .l.Y. 6.00116 .•.•• '15" .. .. 6.70115 ••••. '1 , .... .. 7.00115 ••••• '22" ... . 7.00116 ••••• •24•• •.•• 7.50116 ••••• '28" •.•• SIZE PllCI f.l.J • l.00· 16.5 •• '34" ,_,. 1.75· 16.5 • .'36" ._,. I 0.00· 16.5 • .'44" ,_,. 12.00· I 6.5 .. '49" .... Custom Wheels 4: 8 99 WOW! FAMOUS~ UAUTIF UI. Super .Sport Wllllel1 in i.ize1 13•• .,.,d 14" to fit 011d bea11tify Ford1, Ch,vi•I 011d Ply-...,.,, LOW PRl(;ES! ALL 4 Wll EEL.5 ·DISC. REGULAR BRAKE JOB DRlJM TYPE 1, INSTAll llEW 4 DISC PADS aN fROK.T 1. INSTALL NfW lllNDED lO.IDD MIL[ WNlELS •'"C•41 llNINli DN ill ( WMEELS 2. TUIN ALl '101fT ti SC IOTOIS • ,..;;;:~ 2. l[IUILI Alt' WNlll CYLINll[RS 'tit 3. PACtt: flllNT W11£El IEAllMliS J. INSPlCT ALL flllU llSC tall ,,.,.. 4, TURN & RESURFACE All' llRUMS 4. REPACK FRDNT wtl[(l IEIRINCS 5. AOD BIAKE FlU10 & llECl llN(S 5. Ul llAU fUlll & Ill ED LINES 1. INSPECT 11111( RrnllN AND HOLi I. INSPECT IMSTTI C'tllNDll.,__,,,,.._, DOWN SPllNCS & NllSES J. INSrt:CT All N[C[SSAIT "W'~ 1. UC 1i11ND All IUKE SHOES MHWAH I SPllNCS t"•ll•t"4 L 111s~CT r ... r CILl!t S"'S lCllCl lMl[llSES rt uu. I. MSncr llUSf SW.I i;:ri=· l ~:MIJUSTMENTS FOi LIFE Of llltMllSlfMWETY ,,,u ... -•·" tt.IOMI TTSTFIRSAfETY 8 29!~.:~ '·"''""' ''·'" •••'1MHu.foliflMfCtM * •etfltl~ll,l•t •U..1Mf41.I& .., f 'OR ALL t'ULL SI ZE IJ.S. CAR S, Except 1elf-adj. brake~ $1 .7.i p~r "''heel a<l <l'tl ftf~rk C. Ble ome teffl "or do le11 fl'l cr n a Balancing s1•0 J'l'r Wheel+ Weigllt& - 95c r-..-.;;. .... SPECl/ll', ma· 2 STRONG B ELTS . l65xl3 s2 9 95 (ii!: (5.90/6.0lh.13! 20Sxl4 83795 . fi11: (Gi8/l I) . 21 Sxl 5 83995 fib : lll ~ll/l.il l9Sxl4 s3 49s fi11: (Pi8/141 21Sxl4 8399;; filJ : (1178/14) ~~ ;,~;~1~15 B 44 95 IUT \ I CORD I . -. '[CORD ] The NEW 7 Rib tubel•ss 2+2 tires which meon 2 ply cord plu5 2 ply BELT for your greater protection. Known for irs performal'lce & hal'ld li ng, this 011f5tonding tire is now ovoiloble al lhe5e low price5 •• , the new loredo BELTED 78 1erie1 WHITEWALLS! 95 F78/I4 f,cl1. + 12 3 I to ll .12 f ed. f•. To • depe"d• ;,.,g 11pol'I lhe 1•1e, Blockaeall• 82.95 Le1•! J7B/l ·S J 78/15 s35u Ol'l'liJI!~ low Prices! ••• Uniroyal original equipment on mill/on1 of new car• ••• dou ble glol1·belted for your sofetyll Hurry !( FREE FREE A 78/13. C78/!3 C78/14 .8'J 8 88 ·S2J95 s229s F78/14 s2 695 F78/15 (:7B/t4 s299s (:78/15 H7H/1 4 s339s H78/la E78/14 s239s L78/15 S:J695 ' SAt'li BltAK E JOB! .,.,. 1:.,.'"""ittll'l1•,t..,..iM.f•h *: ltll .,•I• lilhf ii ~·nn Hlkftff w.kr1I ,,, Ml •I i.1 '"" '''U ... •1tlo ,,,o.~ ,, J Sktlt 11 ltt ,..i1• I'--- Ce1f· •t ",.,,. II .. r,1111d•t1 '"""'• "" ..... , .. """ "'"'"''· 1Jut11U1 ltrt... ,, $11.lll '" lt1J I S"O<ltS flll ti ll!Al ,, •l. fr11 Ati11111•t. II 4111 1 • ' "' '"' flft!JM "-•• lit1 ... 11nn '-* ..iltt" • 111111:1 & Wl11 r1t'! ••• Fifi SJS.IS Offill llf t11•11i1u~ Clfl I " ·I •I '"'• -•ler tYhl'lller, he1t '-llfl. Mt ITW 11111 t1tt1d '·"' ••ltl "• h r1. $1Ji o\H1!1111t. ·~tff Mfflll(I ttly •Ill •he Wl\H. I -1-. ll'fl"'fl• """-•' btori"'f'• '"' ll'tCb&1..,....i111"11o•tte.111tt Mt 1-11ot. L. t---------------,.-------'c ---------•WITMTlffSCOUPCIMOHLY Costa' Mesa Garden Grove La Habra Buena Park 3005 14040 2000 2962 H1rbor Bl. Brookhursl Whlttitr Bl. Lhicoln Bl. (cor. of Whittler (cor. of LIMoln Fullerton 131! So. Euclid ' (1 Ilk. N. of (cor. •f l1k1r a ll1rllorl (cor. of W11tmln1ter & lrookhur1t) .. •••<h) & Knott) ltlY'lrtlde fwy.) (71 4) 557-8000 (714) 530-3100 694-3'66 (714) 816..5550 (714) 870.0100 ... 0.r .. 11••••• 11•ll•t 11 +. ... ll•f terw ,,.. U ..... , .. ,.,~ ..... ti~· •• ,., ...... , ... ,,.. .... ,. ... ,."''•• ,......,.. .... .,.. ........ "" •Ir OINtter ef Ce11••••• "'"•In, Mr. I.: An'-l•11 IJ1~J t1 .. t7~J .... ~., •• , ••• tf -•••• , .. ~·11 ••t .. ,.. .. , .......... , .. (~-- will k ltt•ff llU•rilll • 1111•• Hll••rt' et 1•e IMl .. <fl1ff 11ri .... " I I \ JI DAILY PILOT Tt1ursd17, Jul1 27, 1972 Paramedic Ordinance Debated Battin in East For The Record Program Airpor t Sale s Ban? Concerning Powe r Births HOAO MIMOIUAL HOS,ll','l, J11ly It Mr. •"It .....,._ Ktrlnfl'lt! SGk;m, ··~ Nor!•• ltt1111& 8Htl\, boy lolr. •I'll Mr1. MlcMfl Morot11, 151el M•Vbl'ook SlrNT, Wt1tm!n1lt•, t 1r1 J11ty "' lt1J Mr. tnd Mr1. Cflt!m.,. H••lm•n. 3103 Murr•v L.tnt, Cottt Mttl. jllrl Mr. tfld MrJ. Oontld J, .Htrlm1nn, IP6 Otl Mtr. LHUllt 8UCJ\, 1!rl Mr. tn<I Mr1. HOl'lltroun >.moPI, 1•n A"'''°" Drive, Aol. I, H11fllll'ltlon 8"c:n, bcr Mr. tllCI Mrs. Thom•• 8.lul'N, 'JI E11t 1'11'1 S!rttt, Co,lt Moltl, t lr! M r. Ind Mrl. Or..cry Wtlltu, l d Vlt W11!1rt. HewPOrt 8tKll, 1111 , ...... 11, ,,,, Mr. •nd Mrs. JOMCll'I Momov1, .ior Wt1I Collln'lblne, Stn11 A111. 11lr1 JlllY 11, 1tn Mr. t:l'lf Mrs.. 11:-ld G. k lrlcltnd, 21•5 • $1tll, Celli MIN, boY Mr. tl'ld Mf'I. Ooutllt M. H1rr:i, 22.62 Colt•i. Drive, Cotti Mew, bor Mr. I/Id Mrs. Wllll1m P11rve1, 1S16 S1nlt All& Avtn11t, CO.It Mt1t, 9!rl Mf, 11'111 Mr1. 01111111 t'!Mlef, IU? Sl1tef, A111. A, t:tu11tl111'10n &t•c:fl, bov Mr. •I'd Mrt. Thom•• J, GrlmH. SI) Otl•Wjtrf, H1111li1>11IOl'I &~11th, boll Mr. •rrd Mrt. Ofllkl Elthltr, .W E•1I ltth l rr"'' Cas.11 Mew, t lrl Mr. •nd Mr•. O•vld 5, Fosler, 11..ie 8t11yon Sir.el, FOUl!lfln V•ll1y, boy Mr. •ncl Mr•. M.tt111tl TllO'J'I, '11 Vldorr., Co.It Mffl, boy IN. •r.:I Mrt. Malvin L. Hl!WOO, 7:12· a lw"lo Orl111, COlll Mtu. boY Jiiiy If, 1"2 Mr. •nd Mr•. J•ckl1 Rlch•r•hon, 3'H 1!:111 c:rrcl1, All!. H, Mlr1 Lom1, .,1,1 Mr. trrd Mrt. Lto M. M•rl1I, 11702 Wiid ROM LfM, H1111!1119ton 811<h, ... Mr. ~ Mrs. Stei>1'11n Wtblr, 7Jl Sll•llmer. Coil• MfH, bo't' Mr. tr.:I Mi's, D•nltl A, 01r11,,., ltcll) Wllll(I .t.v..,.._, COS!• Me11, DOy Mr. •nd M". Ot11 V. W1Jclu.tm, 1:1111 LornbfroY Road, G1rde11 Grovr,, 1rr1 Mr. Ind Mrt. Jon M. JollnlO", a $111 B(l'lllrdlno Avlflvt, N~I 111<11, "" Mr. Ind M", w1n11m L. Ft!'•!•. ltfO Pon Eclw•rot Clrclf, Ntwt0rt lt1ch, •lrl Jufy •• ltn Mr. •rid Mr1, Mldl"I G. Mc:Mt"°", 1S7J Or1nt1t, AP!. C. COi.it M-.., bov Mr, 111d Ml'1. JOF111 F. 01Yll. 'i"81 Htr~nth Clrc'-t Hunthtt!Oo! Bt•tl!. t lrl Mr. Ind Mrs. O.nltl J . Mlthtwt. 11112 Pi..11111 Clrct., Hul'lllnglon 811ch. "" Mr. Ind Mrs. Gaortt A, Gt!ltl\tr, 1'601 SWHftn SlrMI, Irvine, t lrl Mr. 1nd Mr1. John R. Huflm111, l~t Soull! Ma111t, $1nl1 Af'll, boV Mr, 1nd Mr1, MlehHI it. (1m~ll, $211 Burtulllh' Clrclt, lrvhM, bof Mr. •nd Mn. Etrl Bcltn, 11'1 L• 11111 Court, FOl.ltlllln V1U.y, t lrt Mr. Ind Mft. J1mff ,.,,!!tr, S30t WMf KHhMJll, Stnt1 Ant. bor Mr, Ind Mr .. 0>1rt•1 E. SPll'IC:I', 211'1 l tnthtm!Gl'I Clrclt, Hunt lnttoit INch, t lrf Mr. •nd MrL Joe urc.11, nJt ROlllld Roff, Huftll11011>n Be1(11, t lrl IOUT~COAST • COMMUHIT HOSPITAL . t "' M~.,.tnd Mri. ou11 k•r• Furd Jr. """'' Llrtwooct Line, e Torp, oln July 14 Mr, •nd Mri. P1r'l W1rd koof of 21'7 Crutvltw Ol'lve, tOUnl Bekll, olrl Mr. ind "'"'· Timothy R•Y GIU(llnew ~lt Jlltf• BtrNr1, S111 C emt11le, .tulr •• Mr. ond Mri. JUlll VtfltcO of tJll N. El C•mlno R•~IVt!lir,c1tmffl1t, alrl Mt. Ind Mn. Gtr1fct Boolh Wllltf, Jr. • of :UOO $, Stitt No. 32. S1nl1 A111. ••• .t111r tt Mr, ind Mrt. Oonlld Lff C1rr 91' OCHlllldt, C1lltoml1, bor Jllty '' Mr. 1M Mr.. f'llltmto Mitt ol LtGUlll 81«.ll, t lrl. Death Notires Approved SANTA ANA -An ex· pC'rimental mobile paramedic training program that could save 17 to 35 percent of the J,250 Otange County residents who die of htart aUac;ks each year has been approved by the Board of Supervisors. First year costs of the pro- gram, $90,000 have been earmarked in 1972-73 rounty budget. Under the program proposed by Dr. John R. Philp, county health officer, 36 res c u e pesonnel employed by the county and participaling cities will receive five m o n t h s specialized training at the Orange County 1-1 e di ca I Center. The program is designed to equip them with skills to pro- vide emergency service to vie~ tims before transporting them to a hospital. Dr. Philp said at the present time few rescue teams have the ability to provide more than minimal first aid. The medical officer said Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, Orange, Santa Ana , Fullerton, and La Habra have expressed interest in joining the project. Fountain Valley Fire Chier Mickey Lawson said his city was ready to spend $130,000 on the program. Philip said full development of the project would take several years. He said future plans call for nine teams of nine paramedics each who would be able to handle emergencies throughout the county on a 24-hour, seven· day-a-week basis. S upervisors Note Lease SANTA ANA -Orange (Aunty Airport Commissioners will hear further debate Aug. 8 on a proposed ordinance that \YOuld curtail unlicensed com· mcrcial activity at the county alrport. Opponents and proponents or the n1easure argued for three :ind a half hours Tuesday night. Air po rt co1nmissloners listened, but did not comment. f\1osf of the s pea k er s. reprcsenlatives or the Orange County P i Io ts Association spoke aga ihst the changes which would attempt to stifle unauthorized activities such as aircraft rentals. flight in- struction, used aircraft sales, repair work and charter services. "The opponents , who dominiited the session, do not seem to realize what the com- mission is trying to do," said county Aviation Dire C' tor Robert Bresnahan Wednes- day. "The county ordinance now in effect bans commercial work wllhout a permit," he explained. "The commission is simply trying to develop guidelines for such work. There have been no effetti\le ground rules In force in the four and a half years that I ha\le been here.'' Commissioners told those present in the packed hearing room they are "keeping an open mind on !he con· troversy." They have been studying changes in the ordinance for more than a year and rem inded speakers that their role is advisory on· Jy. Any permanent changes will be made by the Board ot Supervisors. Speakers Opposing the revisions were led by Robert Fallon, rormer president of the county pilots association. Supporting the proposed changes were Frank Pine of Tall mantz Aviation , a fixed base operator; John Turner, operator of Me.adowlark Airport in Huntington Beach and Ed VanAllen, a former airline pilot and one of the founders of the county pilots association. UCI Grants Given In Many Subjects Projects that range from a Daniel R. Shapiro, 6071f.i study on child abuse in Orange Begonia Ave., Corona del Mar, County to choreographing a classical civilization, "Adap-tation of Salkowski Reaction dance will be undertaken by 10 to Determination of Steroids UC Irvine undergraduates who and Steroid Esters on Thln- have been awarded research layer Chromop lates," $250. fellowships by UC President Martha Anne S h e e h a n , Charles J . Hitch. 14928-S Newport Ave., Tustin, Awards totaling $5,000 have comp a r a ti v e culture, been made to fin ance the "lmportanc;e of Oral Tradition special studies under the pro-in Twi Historiogra ph'y," $450. gram instituted five years ago Jeffrey Howard S i I v e r s , to assist unusually talented 15353 Weddington St., Van students to undertake projec;ts Nuys, biological sci e n c es , under fa culty supervision. "Chemistry of Ions in the Gas SANTA ANA _ Orange The students, listed with Phase," $750. their home addresses. their Victoria Louise Sork, 6810 County Supervisors ha ve noted · · l t. t d ma1ors, prOJec it es an Ocean Front, Newport Beach, without comment a transfer of award amounts, are: the lease on Newport Dunes Anne Elizabeth Castillo, 1101 biological sciences, "Popula· Acquatic Park in Upper w. MacArthur Blvd., Santa lion Ecology and Water Rela- Newport Bay. Ana. soc i at ecology, "Child tions of Four Species or They simply received and Abuse in Orange County," Kangaroo Rats," $400. flied the leg al notice after $300. Steven Eugene Trullinger, County Cou nsel Adrian Kuyper Gary Steven Hurd, 14342 1622 Verano Place, Irvine, explained there was no ap-Eastridge St., Whittier, social physics and mathematics, proval or disapproval for them sciences, ''Activation Analysis ''Theory of Reconstructed ~bit'! "'· 01nP.::1'i~ 12, o1 21M1 to give. of Pottery Fragments," $330. Surfaces of Semi-conductors," rookhur•f St. Huntl11ttOt1 I"'"· 0111 of tllM. 11tl!, Julr 2;, lt12. SUI'\/ ved bY Wiit. The park is ope.rated by Tracey Kahan. 2571 Vista 9<1VV' 1!1f\lde1 Mm. R11 D1n!1c11, o1 FttmOlll, h · I Rob' W l h 11 24552 1flt.'; e11U9h11r1, Mra. Lorr11ne c.i:1n. private interests although it is Drive, Newport Beac , &oc1a 1n es P a , 111n11llOll1t Mrs. Dolorn Moore , d 'd l d · Self! · d D d · A M' · VI· °''""1 Mr1. itfl• M. N•Yloro. Hu111ll'lltm on county-owne ti e an s, sciences, " · eshng an ar an1a ve., 1ss1on eJO, l11eh1 twtnlY 1r1naclllldrtt11 tl'lr" t rut. p h lh " $340 E I' h "C t' W •t• A !r1110Cl!llct•"'· R0111,.,,, 1::lll PM~_Fr1c11r. A group headed by Jack H. syc opa y. . ng 1s , rea 1ve n mg: mlt1'11 .ClllHI. Recilllllfl'I MIU ;)ilturd1Y, K' I A Play," $t50, AM. ss simon "Jude c1thOllc c11urc:h. Bennett of Newport Lisa 1ng, 601 Twe ve cres 11terl!'llfll, Good SNPherG Ctmt1trv. In h lak h Dr' Lo Alt d All f th d ' ' ls mllN MC1r1111rl111t~r{~~··· Inves tments c. as en t e tve, s os, ance, o e awar rec1p1en wuu1 oresser . ..010 Pirro: N.wPOff, No. lease over from Col. Harry D. "Choreographing a Dance," are upperclassmen except ~. ll~"°S~~r:::· ~1'w1V~ c1e~1rc. Ju~~ Byrd of Dallas, Tex. $500. Robin, who is a freshman. ••• ol 1111 llornt; '°"' P1ul Dreswr,J j~~=================================;;;:;il orone dtl Min two 1r1r>dton1, Grgeory $ J•ma. St!'wl(n, Frld1r. July 11, 11 P1cllie V~w CF\&N'L Ft mllr SUI· If lflos• wl• 11'111 fo m•lle memorl1I conlrlbullons. tlH contrlblltt 10 trit Shriner• ~1111 !or CrlpOled Clllld,..,., tntttmtnlf P1c1Uc View Memor1tl Ptrk. Ptcllle V tw MPrlulry, OlrtctCM"I. GIANELLA An n M1r't' Gl1nell1. Al• S., ol 2217 Mtrtior 811/d., API. 0-1, CoSll Me11. 0111 of dMftl, JUIY '111 1t12. Siirvlved bY llVS· tt.11d, Jolm a. Gl.neU11 dt\/911!trs, Anne Mtrlt H1111er ; two t r11'1dcl!Hdr1n; two b'Olllerl t r>d two 1l"1r1. RO!.llf)', Friday, 7:30 PM. ....... i.n-. ....... ,. s..1urd1r~ t AM, gt" II 5! Jctll'I the 81ptl1! 1..111\o!IC tiur~ll. wnh l:tt~. Anll'tr)nv McGnw1n cl· c1111111o 1n11rrntn1, Good Slltplltrd C1met1r1. 81l!J·&tr0tron fU'lltr•l Homt1. Co.I• Mfll, Olr':j::•'itlS Mtr11r" 18utttrl H1rrh. Ollt ol dtltll, July 25h 197'. 8tlov~ mcth1r cf Tim McL111t lln, Roblrt L. McL1t.1tllll11 Ind JO$e~lne di ktrr, Aho 'u•vlvld 1111 1l1l&r1. Mrt. c. w. 8Hbr, llVI •r•nocl'>fldrtn 1nd MVtl! 11 'If I· e r•ndclll drtn. P1cllfe Vltw Morh1•r't', Olrtt;lotl. MOLLAMD W1IU1m E1rl Holl111d. Alll' 6G, or 16«1 "'ew1111rt 81wd.. Cost1 M111. Datt or dtllh, Julv 13. Hn . Survlvtd llr two d1U1llt1r•, SIM!r.,I Ind Bf'ltrl'f Holltnd; two 1l1trn 8erlht Gallow•v •nd Ide Hodt1. bo!h of Oklal'lofn•· Vl1lt1llon 1cn1e111, 'Thursd111, from 5 lo I PM.. Btll 8 rOlldwl\I C1!111el. Prl111t1 ltrYICllo Ind h1termtnl wUI l•kt P111ce en Frldt't'. Bell lrotdWIY MOrll.o1rr, Oirectcr1, MAHONeY wnu1m M1110neY. 1430 s. 11:1111 s1., s11111 An•. °''' DI d•llh, JUI• 2J, 1912. S11rvlw· Id bY wlfl, Norm• E. Mlhonef.. Gravttldt Ml'\llttS Frld1r. 2 PM, Ptcil c V'-W Mtmf:111 Perk. P1clflc VI"' Morfl,Mlf'Y, 0 rtc'=l'•TIN Ji,.Clt """ M1rtrn. •202 E. Co.o~t Hlahw••· eOl'Olll dd Mir. Dile or de1rti, Julw 16, 1tn. Survived 1111 '''"'" Julius and Miry Mtrtln, Hunt1111lon Buch; bf'Olher, WllU•m Det M•''I"• Co1i. Mesi' ii,trr. J untnt M. Marl n, Hunll119I011 8ttch; "&'""'' 1r111dmo!ller, Mr1. Mery M1rlln, Glmd•lt. Srrvk:rs. Frid•~· Jutv 21, 1 PM, ~cllk: VlllW Chtotl. F1mltv 11191111!! i.e wl1ll!nt lo m••e memorl1! con• l~llons. plffle contribute to the Cllr of .._, Pa<lflc View Mortu1ry, Olrtctors. 8ALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 873-9413 Colla Mesa 646-!lll BELL Bl oADWAY MORTUARY Ill Broadway, CO.la Mesa IJ WIU • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH1JORTUARY 11'6 Laguna Canyon lid. '91-MIS PACIF~ VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortoary Cbapel IMI Paclllc View Drive Newport B<ach, caJHond& t«-1111 PEEK ,AM1LY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 1191 Bol11 Aft. w-11111er · ll3-ml lllJTll8' &f oaroARY In Milli S~ -1(100 -••Jt 01/}y Coast~ SoutlzerI/. Qffers · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art llnkletter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. lls membership card perm its you to buy nearly every. thing you need from the fines t closed.door show- rooms at substantia l sav· ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars et the "fleet" price and mo bi le homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· lnas. The Insiders Club • Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimvm. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Cer ti ficate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00 %-6.18% Two to Five Year Cert ificates $5,000 Minimum, Up to 90 days loss of inte'l'est on amounts withdrawn before maturi!y on al! cerlfficate accounts. also provides big d is- counts on tickets to sport. ing and entertainment events •• , plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travele rs checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as· sociate memberships en· titling them to all outside re ferral services. Ask aboul joining at any Coast office. MAIN OFFICE: 9111 & H!ll, Los An1e1es • 623-1351 Other offices WILSHIRE •t GRAMMERCY Pt.AC[: 3933 Wllshrre Blvd~ L.A..• 388-1265 LA. CIVIC CENTE!lt: 2nd & Broadway• 626-1102 . HUNTINGTON IEA.CH: 91 Huntington Center • (71•) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wilshire Blwl, • 393.0746 SAN PEORO: 10th & Pacific • 831-2341 WEST COVINA: [;JsUand St'iopplna ctr.• 331·2201 PANORAMA CITY: Cha~e & van Nuys Blvd.• 192·117~ TARIANA.: la751 Ventur. 81Vd. • 145-8614 LONG I EACH: Jrd & Locust• 43'7·?.c81 EAST LOS o\NQELlS: 8th & Solo • 266-4510 OIAMOND IARl 328 Dt41mond B•r Blvd.• (71•) :itS.752S Dally Houri -I AM to' PM Open Saturday& - 9AMtolPM (Except Civic: C.nter) Bresnahan isaid he dld not think the commissioners would complete their studies and send them on to t h e supervisors for several more months. SANTA ANA -Orange County Supervisor' Robert Bat- tin is touring the East Coast this week, He said berore leav- ing Sunday that he will !pend ble bro\\'nouls and blackouts lf they were not allowed lo e,;~ pand the lluntington Beach facility. Tree Plan Anrwunced ORANGE COUNTY Scout Unit Will Serve 40,000 Boys a week conferri ng with of· ficials there on solutions to power shortages. The first district supervisor, who faces a battle to retain his seat in a November runoff election, has been one of the' most vigorous opponents o( A California Public Utilities Commission ruling approving the expansion was blocked by a state Supreme Co u s ,t decision last year. At that lime Battin appeared before the court to argue against e.x· pansion of the Huntington Beach plant. the proposed expansion or the Ir----------. Southern California Edison 's For Airport Hun tington Beach power plant. 1'1 am seriously concerned HOBIE CAT SAILING · CAMP that an energy shortage could Profe11loMil.IMtr. produce a serious and prolong· AUG. 21 TO 28 SANTA ANA -An Orange County Airport tree planting program has been announced by Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach and county Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan, ed econonlic situation in BIG BEAR LA KE Orange County which could be BOYS & GIR LS 7 TO 17, SANTA ANA -A coun-disastrous," Battin said before WATll SKIING tywide organization that wi_ll his departure. ALL CAMP ACTI YITllS ser've 40,000 boy SCO!.JtS and He said that h i s un-FlE S125 15 000 I d h be derstanding is "the power llllOWS LODGE , ea ers as· en ap-shortage on the East Coast ed b 0 C Home of prov Y range ounty u•as caused by failure of the Snaw Summit Sll Cemp scout officials. companies to plan far ~nough 101 5405,11, hOf Lek•, The merger \Vas studied by ahead." Collf. i2J1S Forty.four 9·foot I re es, grown at the cou n ty's Industrial Farm. \\'ill be planted along a 3,000-foot island between ~1acArthur Boulevard and North Airport Way. Caspers callee! the action 11the first step ,d'r an airport- wide beautificirtion program." scout leaders for eight Southern California Edison PH : 714/866-4171 months. ~o~f~fi~Cl~·a~ls~ha~v~e~w~a~rn~e~d~of~po~s~s~i-~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The North Orange County : He said the plan is intended to improve the appearance of airport facilities to be con- sistent with the appearance of business and industrial developments which adjoin the airport. Council, will be dissolved and N ) E Its council officials, staff and .l ear y veryone volunteer leaders will join the Orange Empire Council. L • L d Headquarters for the joint Jstens to an ers Orange County Council will be located at 3811 S. Bear St., Santa Ana. silve1Woods Starts Today!!! New further reductions on Silverwood's famous quality men's clothing. • Men's Suits .... double knits and all wool worsteds, year-round and tropical weights .......... now Sport Coats ... double knits and wovens, solids, patterns ..... new- est two -button, wide lapel styles Men's Slacks, double knits and texturized polyesters, belt loop & beltless styles ... flares & straights Spee11c11t11 Mtt ll'fVffltOtY Vtlu" Jn our Womtdi Df JMrtmentl, tool .. •·'• s73 AEO. ll.00-125.00 s43 RIO. 80.00-11.00 $ 13 45 FASKION ISLAND, Newport Conltr, Newport lleoch ' 1- " ' ,' :• ... " ... . '" '.• . . . • •' • • • • .. .. . .. ,. . .. •: •• . , . ..... ... • Yea Edit the thi on tlte prtsid "G~orge By HA l/IA gr~lelul who W•ml ''Oemocr 'lion lo United : 41 1 ha .of lhe .pollllcal :history :11ld. " :that gi . ;lhe po ·lallh th :mountai ; Georg :ed aild :this l>emocr ;years e '11£>w mu ·1'HE of a !he pla' reachin from c college from gressma Peace i.li>r. • And minute lhe fall letions, crl)'eful rla:orous AU :Go the aNr people ciuse. row be from ranking " ( bel goals f nedy ga the wa passion heal t ety," And same when Ing lo both pa has bee ed door opened closed. pledges doors o opened closed." life senator ltf13. w to deno oft the ~s fo hie a use him. ~t ha sihce. n4ture ell!phan "?Jeithe h' said, k{OP &'JfDen ~en striate H"' tile mtnt !kGov wb o dt:cour ''I'll hf said would a1tron pr.;e it' ntetory senator ni!ddle ctll off )ly rtCform, •~ndin ~· or: a oo ~!he f l)il that v!Clory aCMla • l'.LL hca ha ~ the df)lca could ... n • • • cGovern Seeks Top Rung ears of Hope, Planning Go lnw Big E'lection Effort Editor's Note -This ts t the third of three a.rticle.s ln Auguat 1969, he already was saying ''if I wt.re to be a candidate, t would have to go the primary route with great vigor." labor support, linln1 up with labor on various le1isl1tive Issues. But when he left, two honorary union cards he had been presented with, remained forgotten on the lectern. on the life of Democro.tic presidential tt o m f ·nee G~orge McGovern. HARRY F. ROSENTHAL WASHINGTON -ll was a :ateful George' McGovern ho took the rottrum 1t aml Bea~h to ac<ept the mocratic party's nomlna· ion for President of the nlted States. "I have been the beneficiary (the most remark1bl e litlcal organi1ation in the i.!tory of this co untry," he id. ult ia an organiuUon at gives dramatic proof to power te love and to a aith that can literally move untalns." George McGovern had work· ahd plaMed and worked for · s mo ment 1inct t h e mocratic convention of four ears eatlier, and who knows w much longer tha n that. -THE HISTORY of this son l a poor , pious pre1cher of he plains was always one of eachlng to a higher rung : rom crack high school and liege debater to professor ; rom party organizer to con- essman; f r o m Food-for- eace administrator to sen· iir. ·And lben , after a l1st- inute try in 1968 to inherit ht fallen Robert Kennedy's etions, McGovern began the areful planning and the ia:orous work of summoning .All his Hfe, Mc· ;Govern luu had the "nice 9u11" aur• .•. ple to his presidential ause. He did It from hls back· w bench, a liberal senator rom a conservative state anking 45th in population. "I believe deeply In the twin oats for which Robert Ken- edy gave his life -an end to be war in Vietnam and a ssionate commitment to ea! the division in our IOCI· ty," he had said in 11&1. And he pounded home that ame theme again In 1972, hen he won the prize: 11Dur-- four adm inistrations of th parties, a terrible war as been charted behind clos· doors . I want those doors pened and I want that war losed. And I make these ledges above an others -the oors of government will be ned and that war will be osed." HE TRIED MINISTRY Sen. George McGovern He made the formal an· noun cement in January last year -a year earlier than anyone else ; and an unusual act in politics. THE PRll\.1ARlES a re history. 1'J think there was a change in him a f t e r Wisconsin," says his pres.s secretary, Richard Dougherty. I think it all came together. I th ink there was almost a sor t of psychic sigh of relief. He gambled an awful lot and I think . that's the first time it looked like he might rake in the pot. Early on, it was an enormous act of faith and I must say an enormous self· Gary Cooper. But to find steel assurance. He 's an extremely In the man, one has to go back se lf-contained and self·sus· only to the thorny battles he ta ined man . Even in New fought to mount his con-Hampshire , he really thought gressional soapbox in the first he might pull it off." place. His respecta ble second place Mrs . Ila Penningt on. twin showing in New Hampshire, sister of McGovern's wife, has the first primary. must have known him since he was been heartening for a man overcoming his y 0 u th f u I who had rated only five per· shyness by being a high school cent in early-year p o l I s . debater. "He's got a great Wisconsin, though, was deal of poise and self-con· halfway to the top of the hill. fldence that helps in all situa· '1He's not one to evidence lions -that remains with him any great melancholy or all the lime." she says. "He depression or great euphoria," seems unflappable. There says Dougherty. ''After ha ve been times, of course. Wisconsin, I think he was when he ha s shown concern. more relaxed. I th ink it was but never in an extreme way noticeable in the way he spoke like some people do. with tern-to crowds. He spoke better. per tantrums and obvious Early on, he felt -and you disturban ce." fiave to remember that But McGovern did ha ve one pedagogical background -he notable public dis play of felt he had to e'lplain himself. temper in the credentials fight He felt he shouldn't leave before the convention. when he anything out. In the course of was stripped of 151 California Wisconsin, as he became more delegates. assured that he was getting There has been some friction with his aides in the course o( hl.s adv ance to the nomination. CuMi ngham . who bas been with McGovern since 1'55, was bypassed in the presiden· tial campaig n -and was known to be J>l.lt out about it. The two aides who traveled most with McGovern during the primary campaign - Gorden Weil and pr e s s secretary Kirby Jones -have been shunted aside for the last quarter·miJe. Weil will prob- ably coordinate po I i c y research work in Washington. Jones, who read about bis im· pending political demise in the newspaper before· being in· form ed officiaJJy, is unsure of his status. Donald Peterson, w h o managed McGovern's 1962 Senate campaign. came in conflict with secretary Pat Donovan and McGove-rn took Miss Donovan's side. Peterson was at the Miami Beach con- Mc6overn ••• became the first to denounce the l'ietnam war on the floor of the Senate. vention seeking support for Eugene McCarthy for Presi- dent and either Edward M. Kennedy or John Lindsay for vice president. AskM ;;,Jout his antipathy to McGovern, Peterson said "I know him too well." across, he began to trim down. "Shabby, back-room deal-His speeches in that period McGOVERN'S RISE has ing," McGovern called it and ~an to get n 0 t 1· c e a b l y b fr "d h " uld 't h ~ een om matchsti ck to sa1 e wo n ave any shorter. Before that, I think he part of any con vent i on was compelled almost to in-nickel-and-dime to high-stakes nominee who would support od ryth' b t poker and he 's naturally thl·s." Bul later he cooled off. tr uce e\e ing a 0 u himself.·• changed with the games. The question, of c o u r s 'e ' "There are a lot more became moot by the action of TO REPORTERS who pressures on him." says Miss the full convention seating the covered the campaign, the Donovan. "Right now he's full delegation . change in Wisconsin also was very tired. It used to be that McGOVERN BEGAN think· noticeable. He see med to ha ve he'd wake up at five in the acquired more presence; his · d h ing serioll!ly about ruMing voice was fullet' he looked mornmg an write a speec or hard for the Presidency soon more confident. read. He used to stay up all ft Ch. 1~· h he night and read even as a kid, a er icago -· w en Hi's adberenls p ro c I aim t I .. ., t afte l th he loves to read. Now, he go 'IVn voes r ess an McGovern as the apostle of h • do h d lh ks d.d t asn t ne as muc rea lng ree wee as a can 1 a e, the new po litics. And indeed and he's so tired." says GeOrge Cunningham, his, he has shown some disdain for long-time aide. "I think it was the normal political amenities. But, he adds, "Underneath it a series of minor·1rustrations all , he's still George and some major dissatisfac-When aides wrote phrases in McGovern. That's a hard thing tlons with oJfices be held. In Spanish into a California to do with the pressures that eaoh he Mimped up against speech aimed at the Chicano are on him , i n c red i b I e . the· limitations of the posi-vote, McGo vern dr o pped pressure of every kind . lion," cunningham says. them. He won't wear funny "And yet he's adapted, he's hats and he has som e dif· not in a cocoon. He shows he He spent 1969 traveling to ficully calling labor audiences college campuses. talking with "brothers and sisters.'' can accomodate to olher McGOVERN HAD been • people, hearing them out -ideas. He shows by the way he There is a vain side of handles the ·staff th.at he's uator only eight months. in just as he had done years McGovern, a concern for learned a lot lrom what he has !"'' when he became the first earlier when he sought the ""'d' unce the V1"etnam war opin ions of South Dakotans. status. In May 1969. arriving seen in the primary days." eno at San Francisco airport for a · the floor of the Senate It But his contacts weren 't i'ust Now, the tall, ·quiet·spoken n · speech and other activities. · f the r-rd mostly on the campus -he made an plainsman with the sparse s or ..... u • McGovern was noti ceably put · ause there were few to hear effort always to speak to out when no official of the hair and shy grin heads to rm busi nessmen too. high noon with Richard Nixon. · 1 "ed t state Democratic part y show-No matter how the November ~t has been his drumbtat "He rea ly tri O plumb ed up to greet him. "I am a sihce. He once compared the the depth of their vi ews on the United Sates senator.'' he showdown ends, his rise to the CO d b I• rostrum at Miami Beach ntture of the war to an e nomy an us ness com· muttered, before ha iling a elephant in a cage with a gnat. munity ,'1 CUnningham uys. taxi. already validates the words of "tleither can kill the other ," "We weren't up there as an his acceptance speech: t said, ''all they can do is to advocate. We were up there as HE SPOKE AT a union hall "American politics w 111 tep up a constant har· 10i•iiii. liiisliieiineiirii.'ii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiNiioriitiih iiBiieniidii, iioiireii.ii' tiiryiiiiing;,.foiiriiiiiineiiviieriiiibeiiiitheiiiisiiamiiiie iiaiigaiiiiin.ii"iiii,,I • ment of one another . 11 ANNOUNCEMENT ~en seven years later, the ~ate beat down , 55 to 39, the H"8 U1eld·McGovern amend· ment to end the w a r • McGovern told a reporter he w•s only t emporari l y ctOcouraged. :·1•11 reCO\'er by tomorrow," h4 said in his quiet voice. "I would have liked to have seen a 'tronger showing. But 1 sup- pqse it's the first time In the biltory of the country that 39 !Mators have stood up in the n:Qddle of a war and voted to clll olf fund s." FASHION J ISLAND ~y speaking out on tax re?orm, welrare, m i 1 i ta r y siSending and other issue!, ~vern changed the image r; a one-issue candidate. And irrtbe four years since 1968, It aJ$o. was a changed personali· t)£' that stood arms akimbo ln viCtory before the lhou,.nd.o ac Miami Beach. • l'LL HIS LIFE, McGovern hes hl.d the "nice guy" aura __, the outspoken, earnest, d'1icated plainsma n w ho ~Id be played well on the a<i'een by James Stewart or • • jErs BE FRIOHll.Y It )IOU have new ncl&hborl c:i know of anyone rnovtnc tO our attl, i>lcaw 1ell us a6 that y,•e may extend • ttlendl.1 wtlC'Ome and help ~m to become acquainted IO their new 1urroundlnp. ; SI. Coast Visitor 4'US1' $Hll llDr Ylsltlr MM17' NEWPORT CENTER SUNDAY SHOPPING The following stores are now OPEN SUNDAYS for your shopping convenience: 1. AT·EASE IS. MANDEL'S SHOES 2. APROPOS 16. MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTS 3. BACK STREET 4. BATH SHOP S. THE BROADWAY 6. BOB BURNS RESTAURANT 7. WALTAH CLARKE'S I . COCO'S 9. B. DALTON 10. EL POCD 11 . HAIR HUNTERS 12. HATCH'S HALLMARK 13. KARLS TDYS 14. LANI 17. MUSIC HALL 18. NEAL'S SPORTING GOODS 19. J. C. PENNEYS 20. PH ELPS MEAGER 21. PAUL AL LAN SHOES 22. THE RIGGER 23. RUSSO'S 24. SEE'S CANDIES 25. THE SHOW.OFF 26. SILVERWOOD'$ 27. THE TOBACCON IST 28. VIKINGS FOUR 29. YAMATO'S RI STAURANT SHOP THI OPIN-Allt. OC I AN·VIEW MALL \ Tbur>dOJ, Jul7 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT J3 1nid season hotne sale di~hwashers ~vith built-in • ~onven1en~e -( ' ... ..:-' • " // / / ' r !. • I . I I ' ,J maytag 289.95 Let Maytag give you o hond with the dishes. G iant copocity, nor~ mol ond heavy-duty cyc les. Self. clean ing filter , eutomotic deter• gent dispenser. Full size upper and lower s p r e y orms, plus center spray. kltchenald 319.95: Fast, effi cient and out-of-the-way. Gold seal heavy-duty motor, fore • ed air d r y in g. 7 pus h-button cy cles ; automatic detergent and rinse agent dis pensers. 9-position upper rock . general electric 159.95 Toke s family size loads in stride. Features 2 lull roll-out rocks, re- movable silver b o s k et, 2-level wa sh. Tuff tub int erior resists staining or peeli ng. Soft foo d dis- poser el iminates pre-rinsing. it's at· the broadway ANAHl tM 444 N. Eu1f1.i 17141 111 ·1121 NEWPOlT 47 Ftthlt~ hlttHI 171 41 ..... 1211 HUNTINWTON I EACH 1111 Etl l111tr A•t~w• 17141 ltJ.JJl I OltANGE, . MAL\. Of OlANGE ?JOO N. Twtti11 S!rttt 1714 ) ····1)11 SHO, 10 A.M.. f• f:JO ,,M. MONDAY THltOUW H FRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. fe 6 P.M. SUNDAY CUAITOS 100 l•• C•rrlte1 Mell 121)1 ••0-04 11 11 HOOH ,. I •.M, I I ' , • • • . 14 DAil Y PILOT dl"IT ....... Striking • Bloao Susan Collett, student body officer at South· ei:n Illinois University, changes slogan on rear of university patrol *r. The word "Men" was .changed to "Peo- 'ple" with the approval of Chief Thomas Leff· Jer who watches the action. Russ Navy Expanding Rapidly LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet navy is expanding to every ocean and "can snap its fingers at all the maritime countries,h the authoritative .Jitne's Fighting Ships said to- day. Russia bas more submarines than the United States, or any other country, can possibly construct now and il!1 reported to be building the first of a fleet of aircraft carriers to match those of the U.S. Navy, Jane's said. IN A FOREWARD to the 1972-73 edition, Jane's editor Raymond Blackman, a bluff ft.year-old former s a i 1 o r , Q>mpared lbe Soviet and U.S. navies ln a soccer analogy to "two first division teams tn the ~p final with the aco~ equal and the young and more- with-it side believing that it can score the dec!lding. goat · and lick the older iind tonger established team at any time. "It is a sobering thought," Blackman said, "that no other country in the world in this day and age of sophistJcation and inflation can possibly build as many submarines as the Soviet navy has at the present time. "THE SOVIET navy's at- titude to the older naval powers," Blackman s a i d , "seems to be anything you can do we can do better. In short, the Soviet navy has given the ,, victory sign to the world." • The British Royal· Navy, Wtiich once ruled the waves, has "'fallen below the safety level," Blackman said. Jane's listed the total U.S. cµbmarine force af98 nuclear submarines, including 4 1 ballistic missile c a r r y t n g vessels, and 35 conventional submarines. It estimated the Soviet sub- marine force at 95 nuclear Powered vessels and 313 con- ventionally powered vessels. : In surface vessels t h e United States has 17 aircraft carriers in service and 9 under construttion, 8 m i s s i I e cruisers, 30 missile frigates, 29 missile destroyers, 104 other destroyers and 69 escorts. JANE'S ESTIMATED Soviet surface ships at 2 helicopter caJ!'iers, 12 guided-missile cntisers, 15 gun cruisers, 35 guided-missile destroyers, 66 gun destroyers, 130 frigates and escorts. Jane's said there have been "many and varied" reports that the Soviet Union is building at least one aircraft carrier and 'that up to eight others are planned. Thursday, July 27, 1972 ~The Great WideWdytoNewYork.~ Fly to New York in the l>iggest,roomiest coach lounge in the sky. And now from the people who brought you the friendly skies-the biggest, roomiest lounges on any plane between here and New York. When you fly to New York on our 747's, you'll have over 2500 miles to wander through our forward Coach lounge where there's enough room for you and a score of friends to have a party. Where the seats swivel. And the tables hold cards. And the bar is packed with goodies. And the atmo- sphere is good old Broadway. Now that's the way to enjoy your flight. And no other airline can give it to you. Or you can stroll to .our other Coach lounge at the back of the plane. And the kids can color or play games or you can read a magazine. Or a map of the New York subway system. So you know where you're .at when you're lost. And then there's our br and new First Class lounge. Available on some flights now, on all flights soon. With more . room than any lounge you've ever seen before.With more windows that let all the good sunshine in. And new colors. And a buffet. That's right. A buffet in the lounge. And the~~ are just the lounges on the 747 New Yorkers .Our DC-10 New Yorkers have their own First Class and Coacb lounges. And our DC-8 New Yorkers have the widest Coach seats in the sky. .. On all our New Yorkers you'll find an array of foods that'll make your eyes dance. And entertainment that-runs the · . . gamut from newsto Mozart to Motown with a side trip to easy listening.All in stereo. And first-run movies on our selected flights. For a slight charge in: Coach. Don't miss out on our Ne\v Yorker flights.And our New Yorker lounges. Call your Travel Agent, or United at (213) 482-2000,"' anP, get your front row center sea.ts on the Great Wide Way. You're gonna love it. -· New Yorker Schedule NONSTOPS To New York/Ne')'ark Depart 8:45 AM(DC-10) 12:00 NOoN (747) l :OO PM . .10:'30PM ' ! ' I A .' · mve 4;54 PM (Kennedy) 8:05 PM (Kennedy) ' 9:00 ?M (Newark) 6:30 JiM (Kennedy.) Fly the friendly skies of United. TheGreatWideWaytoNewYork. . '' Partners in Travel with Western Internation al Hotels . • • • ( • ;:. ., •one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN THURSDAY AND .MONDAY EVENINGS HI PARD·NER·! COME TO THE ONE BIG DAY OF PRICE BUSTIN' SAYINGS 9am to Spm · , \ • • • ., • . I I • JI DAll.Y PILOT Thursd•Y. Ju~ 27, 1912 TH ERE'S A SALE AT W ESTCIFF PLAZ A .Qoo of Ibo blPl'lhll in the Harbor area during mJd. --la lllo Sldenlt Sale coaducled by the merohanll ., -Pim ID help move lhelr summer lllel'Ohlo-... . 24 Distinctive '11111 J'W la no exeeplioa, for on Saturday they will .... lo """' wilb tlleir tables out on the walk loaded ...., •-prices. No men:handlse-Just slashed prices, wi111 _.. of the same cm the inside of tbelr stores. If the public hll never seen sl&sbed prices, they should keep this Saturda)' in mild to gel: vader way for Westcliff Plaza. De aale l>ellJlS at t Lm., lasting lhroogh the one day '!1111 IMlll 5 p.m. But walcll out for the varmins. AJ usual , Illa ~ have ael 1 theme again for their biggest ... ol. ~ year, ud it's Westem. You may expect to be -• by lbe local sberifl, 1 wrangler, Biily the Kid, a -llall doll, a -marm, or maybe just a plain ti' t+· -1 aaloon J<oei>er. Samds like a lot of lun, and ... Md remember of toone tbooe slaahed prlce>-Yipee! • Kids Like To Ask Andy All roada truly lead to Westcliff Plaza. For those !ortunale to live permanently in thi s wonderful part of the country, or to those just pass- ing through, Westcliff Plaza, conveniently located in the hub of the Harbor area at the comer of Irvine Avenue and Westcllff Drive, is within eui· Jy reached .driving distance. From either direction off Coast Highway up Dover Drive, from the West at the end of 17th Street, or from the North, down 1rvine Avenue. The end of the journey la most rewarding. Sp a c i o u.a parking, a pleasant at· PUT YOUR BRAND ON THESE $ $ $ SA YING SPECIALS • DURING OUR GIANT -SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY, JULY 29th WE'VE SHOT DOWN OUR MARKDOWNS HURRY! IAJAl.P1Y ~pry 1058 lrvine-Westcliff· Plaza Newport Beach mo1pbere, and 2• dlatlncUvtly different •hops, catering lo all needs of the lamily and home, with outstanding selecllooa of quality merchandise a n d services. Shops in well-bal- anced Weslcllff Plaza area .•• BANK OF AMERICA -Of. fering four basic personal choice checking plans, and four basic savings account plans f o r indivlduallud service. Recent addlt.i.on on the North side Is a convenient outside window to provide ad- ded service. SA VEON DRUG -Quick service,· cleanllness:, a n d friendliness are among the many factors justifying t h e popularity of SAV-ON in . Southern caufornia, and in particular, the Westcllff Plaza store. Other reasons f or building and maintaining. its enviable reputation are the lop quality merchandise for all family needs. prompt ac- curately filled preacriptiom, and convenient daily hours. RION HARDWARE -In an area devoted to building and bnprovlng new and older homet, apai'tments:, an d lawns, RION, with no end to quanUty of merchandlae and selection available, ha a become headquarters for the flI·il speclaJlal. When It's an item In the electrical, pJum .. b i n g , palnUng, decoraUng, building, repairing, cookware, gillware, or other lines, genial Clerks assist in maki n g personal service more than a motto. THE STOREKEEPER - Specializing in an atemiVe variety of leisw-e wear for men and boys lhla popular opened door shop has gained a reputaUon of being head- quarters for the llkewl!e popular Levi and Hang Ten Jines. Bill Beck, the cong~ storekeeper, has alao slocted Harris slacks, Gant shirt!, and 'Ibane knits in a tremendous selection of color and sizes. The convenient hours of 10 to 9, Monday thru Friday, and JO to 6 on Saturdays, leaves am- ple time for browsing in this incomparable shop. -·~~~~~~~~ii~~;--t--E-!-:.;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~D~ICK~~VER~N~o~N~~A~m~~t. \ SLIP SALE HALF & FULL siz e VALUES TO $18 ALL 81.99 LINGERIE .BRAS 1/2 PRICE SPECIAL PRICES EFFECTIV E DURING SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY, JULY 29 ONLY. OPEN 9 A.M. -5 P.M. Veta's INTIMATE APPAREL Weetcllff ,..._ •• nl'&lrvlfl• ........ """Caltftnl• OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You • • to Variety of Taste . Sho ps · Cater friendly shop where you will Esquire Adldu, aod many recolJl)led as the most sue-attracUve cblldren's sbop car• find • helpful atulude catering others, has conUnued •he cessful alon of Its kind in rles qualily merchandtse for to the young of hear\ when growth unW today, .with their Southem catllornla. the younger generstlon from shopping for your Sportswear outstanding ll'OUP of trained layette to size LZ. NaUonally, needs. Dick'• wife Belly, one -,;shoem;;;en;·~the;;:y=:ha~ve~beco~m;e~;;;HUMPTY~~~D~VMPTY;~-;:;;;;Th;is;:;:.;'S.."""W:;;E:;;STCIJFF===':;;P:;;q;;e:;;3=;1 of the lovely daughtes, or ~ "friend," will delight in show· ing selections of LanZ, Mis& Pat, Tami, Patty Woodward, Le Roy, Garland,. Cole, or (CJtber facowr linel. VETA'S INTIMATE AP· PAl\EL -Exclusively for women, lhla ·sJ\op lea-• lingerie, robes, lomigewear, br.,.ierea and glnlles. The lingerie and r<lbeswe styled by the finest designers -bras and girdles Include the best on the market in well known brands. Veta's also feature! courteoua and h e J p f u l salesw omen who have established and en v lab I e reputaUon. JEAN DAHL -With a dresa shop in W estcllff Plaza and a J>oullque at th e Newporter Inn, here is a name that ts known for fine aelecUon of sportswear separates, not to mention imported knit!, pant suits, dresses and ac- ceasorie.s by famous designers whole aopbl!Ucation makes tlleir name synonymous with faabion everybwere. LA GAIU:RIA -Unique elegance in fashion is tbe slogan of this exquisite sbop providing ou ts t an ding wardrobes to the ladiea in the Harbor and Orange County society circles. From the Ume one enters their magnificent doors the reason is apparent. CHARLES IL B A R R JEW E LER S -Long established on Balboa Island and in Weslcllff Plaza, Barr's is renowned for c u s to m desisned jewelry, a wide selection of gem s t on e s , diamonds, high grsde watchea and gold jewelry of all kinds, plus the finest in jewelry repairing. A place for making decisions when p-easuied gifts or keepsakes are the choice. WESTCLIFF SHOES ~ Where shopping is a real pleasure, this store w a s established in 1964 as the only complete family shoe store in Newport Beach. Perfect fitting and fashion from their ex· tensive inventory of outstan- ding branda like Florsheim, Cobblers, Bass W e e j u m s , SIDEWALK SPECIALS SATURDAY gNLY " ALL STERLING CHARMS ., 00 VALUES TO $7.00 ZODIAC PENDANTS & KEYCHAINS ., 00 REG. $3.50 SELECTED COSTUM~ JEWELRY Y2 PRICE MANY OTHER ITEMS Va PRICE WESTCLl,F Jl.AIA ITORE O••• Mondey Jnd Thvn4ty 'Til 9 P.M. \ CHAR.LES H. BARR 211 ~A*"'· ~-ii;iil. , EvaM, Bernardo, Sperry To(iolder; U.Sc Jteds, Life Stride, Buster BroWn, Hanes,,l"'--------------------------1 QIUG STORE WISTOU_, ,._..A c;>NL Y 17tll fr liYlfil• fll!Y/P!'~f ··~Cif SIDFWAI K SAi. F SATURDAY, JULY 29 ONLY PRICES SLASHED Cameras -Ra dios -Toys Soft Goods -Hundreds Of Miscellaneous Items On The Outside Priced For Clearance -liundreds ' Of Other Values lnsi9e Our Store. GRfAT e IANltAMI RICARD I LUI CH U' STAMPS e ' • Westeliff Wheels These are the members of the 1972 Westcliff Plaza Merchants Association Board of Directors. Seated, from left are Dick Marowitz, Westcliff Shoes, president; Veta Behr, Vela's Intimate Apparel, director; Standing, from left, Mel Uoy, Market Basket, director. Clint Hoose, Rion Hardware, vice president; Bill Beck, The Storekeeper, directorj Bob Im.man, Irvine Company, secretary and Bill Halliday, Halliday's for Men, director. WESTCLIFF 'S BIG SALE ... (From Page 2 J ' advertised brands such as Wm. Carter, Wonderalls, Dan- ny & Debbie Dare, C.talina, Playmore Knits , Van Huesen, Billy the Kid, Rob Roy, Her Majesty, Youngland, Turtle Bay, Polly Flinders, Pandoa, and other have at'racted a Jong list of contented customers. lilCKORY FARMS - America's leading c he e s e store features 126 kinds of domestic and imported cheese to please the palate. The old fashioned country store decor of Hickory Fanns ties in with the merchandising concept of providing foods which taste and smell as good as \he>' did In grandma's time. Specialty foods with excellent taste ap- peal may be sampled as you browse about this unique shop. IIAUJDAY'S -Specializing In the finest traditiona l clothing, the businessman, stu- dent, yachtsman, will know that their natural shoulder selections are styled properly by a courteous experienced staff. Featured a!.. Jlalldiay~s are traditionally Greif suits and sportcoats, C o r b i n trousers, Cactus Casual and Harris slacks, Jzod knits , tailor-made shoes, Sperry Top Siders, Gant, and Sero shirts. MONT G OME RY CLEANERS A N D LAUN· DERERS -Offering pro- fessional cleaning service, this business has 21 years of ex~ perience behind them. A self. service laundry with all new maytag washers and exclusive shirt laundering complet~ the full cycle of service. DARREL'S DEDRICK TUX SHOP -Rents and sells cor· rect formal wear for all oc- casions. The staff is well prepared to m .. t al\ these 111!1 minute dress needs. The shop features the lalest stylea jn jacket cut, color, various shirts, and all the necessary accessories. Darrel's have two other stores : Fashion Sq. in ' Santa Ana and Fashion Square in La Habra. MARKET BASKET -A point of interest besides the discount prlc~ available at this fine market is the outstanding meat department featuring USDA prime and USDA choice meat s guaranteeing 100 p e r c e n t saUsfaction for freshness and tenderness. DR. WU ROY ELDER - Westcliff Plaza's Optometrist, specializes in contact lenses along with refracting, prescribing and eyewear styl- ing. His office features the larest technical equipment in providing accurate analysis. Dr. Elder also has to oiler an exceptional wide selection of styles and colors in glass frames. WE STCLIFF PLAZA BARBERS -'Ibis shop offers the flntst in hair cutting and styling. One appointment will prove they can style your hair the way you like it. ANTllONYS -Twenty. three years of shoe service in the Harbor area with one of their leading shops in Westcliff Plaza. Co m pl e t e services include: shoe repair, dying and re-styling, luggage repair, handbag repair, clean· ing and dying. Anthony's is also regional repair service for Speny Topsiders deck shoes on the West Coast. PAPER IJNLIMITED - 1be store features a variety of popular lines covering all seasons and occasion s throughout the year. True to the store's 'name, there· is an unlimited supply of unusual, colorful, fun party favors, versattJe assortments of rib- bons, papers, slatiQllery and bridge &ccessories. Also added feature include nu m e r o u s decorative accessories, gift Items and party supplies. PLAYBOY HAIR STYLISTS -The beauUful decor of the PLAYBOY salon provides a setting of comfort a n d FREE CONDITIONER With Sh•mpoo & Set SIDEWALK SALE DAY ONLY - SATURDAY, JULY 29 elegance for having your hair done in the latest styles. Manager Charlene Clark and her staff will do their utmost to please you. Miss Monette is available for manicures and pedicures. WESTCL!FF PLAZA SHELL - A service station accentuating the service part. Located at the busy 17th & lrvine intersection, their staff provides the complete service that pleases, including repairs which are made on the premises. RICHARD L. BENNETT, LTD. -The newest and easiest way for a man to ac· quire a custom.made suit, is by the newest and latest metbod'of photometric tailor· ing. · Cameras, m i r r o r s , spotlights and tape compile the data that results in· the perfect fit. A selection of fabric from th e hundreds displayed, and another best dressed is added to the list. Men in Service Army Private Larry P, Debraal, son of Mrs. Patricia M. Debraal, 8841 Rathburn, Westminster, ~ntly com- pleted eight weeks of ad- vanced individual training at the U.S. Army Annor Center, Ft. Knox, Ky. Navy Ensign Stepbea M. Reece, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard D. Reece of 1216 W. Ocean Front, Newp:irt Beach. has completed four months of flight training with Training Squadron 10 at the Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Marine Pvt. William M. Zuber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Zuber of 3073 Yuko11t Costa Mesa, has com- pleted the A viatlon Structural Mechanic School at Memphis. -OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK - nTID@I WESTCLIFF PLAZA -17th l lrvlne 0 0 0 NEWPORT BEACH PHONE: 5410440 i1 A11\ STYLllTS . I Thundq, Ju~ 27, 1972 SATURDAY, JULY 29 HUGE SAVINGS ON HARDWARE-HOUSEWARES-GIFTS ICE CHEST $399 SALE · REG.$7.88 CHICKEN BASKET TIKI TORCHES $1.99 •EG. $4.fl 99c TIRE VULCANIZING KIT 39c MISCo CABINET HDWR, FROM 10c SPRAY PAINT 44c GLASSES, CAND~ES & lO" FLOWERS FROM ,. ASTRO LABELING TAPE 49¢ MISC. SOAP DISHES FROM 59c UNDER COUNTER DRAWERS CANNISTER SETS $2.00 $3.00 PISTOL GRIP HOSE NOZZLE GARDEN HOSE 99c $J69 AUTO VISOR UMBRELLA PAINT GOOFS $1.29 -FRO_M __ _ $1e00 :~~~~~-.... ~1 99 SHALMPOO HOSE & SPRAY 69c FURNACE FILTERS HAIR COOKWARE SETS DRYERS $2995 SPIT BASKETS FOLDING SHELF $199. HARDWARE fl OM CLOSIOUT. LARGE SELECTION POLY VINYL HINGE, A 1 PIECE HINGE SLIDE LOCI! POPULAR SAFETY LOCK FOR 49C INTERIOR OR EXTERIOR DOORS ...........•....... ELECTRIC CAN OPENERS ART SUPP.LIES PLATING ENAMEL 49c 511 99 52" .... IJ," DRAPERY HARDWARE BELOW COST! DAILY '!LOT MONDAY ·l'llDA Y f .f SA TUl DAY 9-' SUNDAY 1M I • • l . • ' ' • ' ' ' I I -. . ' JI DAILY PILOT Thunday, Jul1 27, 1q72 LA Suburb Has All City's 'Prob"lems By CHARLES E. DOLE ol its prvblems and hopefully Into the area In 1968, just of where it lJ going. three years after the Watts COMPTON (AP) -Al first Jn nearby Watts, the black explosion. Wben CC & p paid aJanc:e, the place looks run ghetto of Loi Angeles that 114.7 million for 5411 acres, down at the h e e I s. The burst into flames in l965, alDOlt everyone thought the storefront. are old, the houses home ownership, according to company was n!ive a n d out of date, and the whole Wills, runs to no more than l5 fooli&h. operation seems anything but percent, whUe tn Compton It Is But then Gerald F. Blakeley, Viable. 60 per cent or higher. That CC & F president, began to 11'e community is black -makes the difference. devek>p an industrial park, 70 percent black. And, Ute ideally 11tuated close to the munlclpalltJes all over the ALSO, cpMPTON HAS A Los Angeles Airport as well as country, I.here Just Isn't burgeoning' industrial park the harbors of Los Angles enough money to do all the where, until a few years ago, and Long Beach. Jobs that scream for action. there was on1y open wasteland The Jaod, part of the county, Clearly, thl5 city on the edge which belonged to the county had long been available but no ol Los Angeles is a mkrocosm and not to Compton. one would touch it. After of all the urban problems 'lbe city used to be almost Blakeley took over, he got the which challenge and confuse all white . Incorporated in 1888, land annexed by Compton, the nation. it has Jo.ng been a bedroom usually no small deal. Yet, there's a dif[erence. community for the entire '111e Industrial par)( has Compton has pride and the South Bay area, including boomed, not bombed as many ~ , people ~m to care. Long Beach. bad thought Ii would. There But in the period of a single at'( 35 bUildings up with half of THAT1S 111E IMPRESSION decade, it moved from a them built on speculation; one get.a after driving around white, mlddle.<:lass surburban only three still are empty. the city, talking with a few of city to a predominantly black. Value of the park so far is ~ residenta, and visiting the · middle-class industrial based $125 million with full develoir 1dty :hall. The people are In-city. ment put at double that figure. volved. Now the city is run almost A third of the occupants are ' The city's manager's office, entirely by blacks ,with few fo;eign rums. nine of them for instance, put.a out a er:ceptlons. The police chief is Japanese. Out of 31000 on the per!Mlc ccmmunity nOW3let-·white. Mayor D O'U g 1 a • payroll In the park, 47 percent ter which goes to everyone in Dollarhide was the fint black are: mif1'>rity workers. Only the city. mayor of the I a r g est ~veral hundred live in Berton K. Willa, a likeable, predominantly black city west Compton. outgoing fellow who has been of the Mississippi River. aafstant city manager for WHAT THE PARK 'IS doing Compton for two years while IT WAS IN THIS CONTEXT for Compton is prov.idlng a white and young, admits he that Cabot, Cabot le Forbes, catalyst to get the city moving doesn't live In Compton. But one of the largest industrial agaJn. lt indicates the con-. be ..,. be'1 entbualutic about real-estate development f1nns fidence of a major real-estate Ille place IDd optlb frankly In the United Statea, moved developer In the future of the ~~~~~~========== ~ONTO THESE ••• CLEANING SPECIALS DRAPERY SPECIAL UNLINED area. Too, It II wheitlng the city's enthusiasm In develop- ing a 1 aolld Industrial base, vita1 to the economic success of the cliy. Already tbe city 1' building a new civic etnter, to include a 14-story county courthouse building and library. The city also will get a new city ball, badly needed, city otriclals say. When fully developed the civic center ls expected to employ up to 2,000 worket'3. Comptooltes think tbi! is good news. Although there are practically no public facilities being bulll in black-majority areas in other parts of the country, a Rodeway Inn is under construction here with 101 rooms expandable to 220. The town still needs a couple of good eating spots. You can't find a first-class restaurant in- side Compton now. ''THE PEOPLE A R E MOTIVATED by all of this, 11 declares Wills, "but il the town doesn't make visible prcr gress in the next couple of years, frustration c o u 1 d result." ObviOU3ly, one basic prob- lem, and one common to many communities, is an in- sufficient tax base. But the new CC&F park sbou1d help out even though the city only gets 10 Per cent of the tax take. The county and school district get the ret. Total taxes for 1972 on the Bonus Cans Empty beer cans mean free ice cream to these St. Louis, Mo. boys. Ice cream vendor Jim Wal· thers gives a free ice cream bar for each 10 cans. He plans to recy- .cle some and decorate a wall with others. industrial part will hit about --------- $1.3 million, so the city will get $130,000. At full develop- ment 1n a rew years, the city Rail Use U r 2 ed might net as much as $250,000. '-' But Wills sighs: "That will MOSCOW (AP) _ The only get us through the salary talks for about one year." Soviet Unon has the world's Ideally, the city needs more greatest mileage In electrified_ industrial land but it would railways and the new five-year have to annex some unJ.n.. plan allocates 60 percent more corporated land in the county f th t th th -and that's easier said than money or e sys em an e previous plan, the Soviet news done. • String of Devices Studies Bay Quakes SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - An amy of devices 20 mlle• long haa been lnatalled aouth of here to measure earthquake elfects, npona the N-.1 Oceanic a n d Atmospheric Adminlatration. Beginning just southwest of Crystal Springs ,,_.,oir In the coast range 20 mild south al San Franclaco, the line ol Instruments extenda --across the San Andreas fault, the San Franclaco Bay and the H>yward fau1t It includes a vari<ty o1 selsmlc Instruments, lncludlng creep meters to measure earth movements along fault lines. The various instruments should 11tell much aboUt the relative motion experienced by structures on bedrock, alluvlwn, bay mud and on hillside building sites," scien- tists say. Some i.Mtruments are on ei:· posed bedrock, 9ome on mud, level ground, hillsides, and In holes drilled througb layers of earth to buried bedrock. SPIN THE WHEEL · OF -FORTUNE SATURDAY, JULY 29 Called the Andre••· Penlnaul• Earthquake Engineering IAboratory, Ibo creep melers art designed to provide a po4ential warning device ol coming quake ac- tivity. Chinese Lead UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 'CAP) -Cblna leads the world bl tungsten ore mining and pork raising, the U.N. publlca· tion 1"The Growth of World Industry" reported. • • I EVERYONE WINS I ALL WE ASK IS THAT YOU IE AN ADULT & REGISTER. ONE SPIN TO A FAMILY, PLEASE. WIN Mdse. Valued to 1.49 MANY IN STORE SPECIALS AMERICA'S LEADING CHEESE ST~RES 1ff f tt4ty fd~S00 WESTCLIFF PLAZA 171• & IRYINI NEWPORT IEACH PER PANEL "We've tried to annex agency Tass reported. Track before," says Wills, "but were _.':mil~'!::ea'.'!g~e~w~as~n~o!t! g~iv~'":Jl:·:__~l!!!'!!!I!!!~~~~~~~~~~~ unsuccessful." ·- CLEANED .& FAN FOLDED We CHltet G•e,. .... A9el111t s..r.t BEDSPREADS RUGS-BLANKETS -ONE DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE • MONTGOMERY CLEANERS & LAUNDRY 17th & Irvine Newport Beach -'646-2392 Opon D•lly I A.M. • 9 P.M. -Sat. I A.M. • 6 P.M. SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY, JULY 29 JUMP THE FENCE CLIMB THE WALL! WE'VE GOT THE GREATEST BARGAINS OF lTHEM> ALL! LAST CALL! l/2 OFF & MORE! I SURPRISE GRAB BAG I WESTCLIFF PLAZA STORE ONLY 17th & IRVINE -NEWPORT BEACH I Blind Pastor I Needs Aid; Church Lost SAN ·PEDRO (AP) -·The Rev. DeWitt W. Bradley, who became blind three yean ago, reached out and touched part ol the cold, charred remains of the church he led for 29 years. "I need my eyes today," said the &~year.old minister of the Union Baptist Church. "This is one time 1 need my eyes." An arsonist's fire has all but destroyed the old wooden strlcture c b u r c h, causing $5,()(X) in damage. "WE ARE ON OUR back and our hand is definitely out'' said Mr. Bra dle y , "because we don't know what to do." Mr. Bradley's predicament" Is severe. His church is uninsured, his congregation Is poor, and his younger minister, the Rev. John Gates, is on vacation. The blackened rubble In the church haa not been touched since the fire last week. And though the church'• congregation numbers about 300, Mr. Bradley says the ma- jority of the people can't get time off from wort to start rebuilding. "OUR CHURCH PEOPLE art poor. H they missed a day from wort they'd lose their jobs and starve," be said. "We're flat on oor bacU rigtit now. We know what O\Jl' needs are but our plans are in- complete." The biggest losses. In the fire were two pianos and an organ. Damages to thole were .. .... ,.. .... Fri. 10.t , .... w-i. Sot. IM 0~4-"f.· ~\;.._, ... ,,. •• s'4'ffS "-, ..... 101t ' SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY, JULY 29-0PEN 9-6 DRESSES GRAB BAGS SKIRTS TOMO. llOW S&. &G• TOIU, NOW $4. JAICKETS HOT PANTS SWEATERS To .,. NOW$&. •• "" NOW S2. " •n. NOW $5. '"'"11. i~"~ ~~~·~$ , ~o G~~· o,,s. ~ ~s .... ~ '•Iii ••' • ~:;.:~ir,:::~1;J Westcliff Plaza • 17th and Irvine • Newport wort done In 19118. Now, !be congregation will have to alart over. --' ' w IStclltf l'haa S•adcry 5411165 • "'" ......... ATTENDANT MINISTE!lS TO AILING RARE ORYX IN SHEIK'S CORRAL ' 'Men's Pant ••• Flared · & Tralfrtion REG •. TO 16.00 -NOW 2.50 TO 5.50 Men's Shirts . · •• Knits, Sport & Dress REG. TO 14.00 NOW 2.00 TO 4.00 Men's Short Sleeve Sweat Shirts REG. TO 5.00 NOW 2.00 TO 2.SO Boys' Jeans & Shirts REG. TO 10.00 NOW . 2.00 STARTS TON~TE THRU SATURDAY SIDEYIALK SALE SATURDAY Pie••• tie l11re ef 1i1e1 • , • All S•let Mu1t It Fi11•I. lookint Fo...,,•td to S•tvlt19 You. IANU.MlllCAlD WISTCl.lff PUZ.A 1028 lrvlne, Newport Beach, Callfornla ll2ell0, Phone 6'42· 7081 Thursday, Ju~ 21, 19Tl OAILV l'flnT 'I) :..::;:.=:.!_;;;;..:::..:.;:..:.:..::.~~~~~__o._ Arab Sheik Fights to Save Oryx . .... By BUGH A. MUWGAN A' '""" Ctn"Ufll •• AL ZUBARAB, Qatar -On a hunting expedition in the They are moat sensitive animals. Sometimes at the mett smell of man, they begin to vomit and die." sandy nothingne>a of Rub Al • ••GE WS, Jb the Kah!i-SaudiArabla 's ~ ASCO wl "Empty Quarter" _ Sh.elk same slow, sad ey~s, the pale 11Sheik Hamad ,'' hb secntary a a l d , 0 recelvea m1Qy requests for the white Arabian oryx from zoos .and preservaUon societie1 all over the world, bot he turns !hem all down. He feels the species would have little chanre of surviving outaide a desert en- vironment." world, and often leaves his ornate palaco in Doha !or trips Into Rub Al Kahli, hoping to find new ways of keeping alive his rare, long horned herd. Proud u ho Is of showing them off, he may soon close the ranch to all visitors. "suggested in a nctnt JetteC : !hat perhaJlll It It IJJ old roi; • man, "ho ls bringing Iha germs Iha! l~atened . ~. herd this time. • · It b sad, because now alter> years, centuries no doubt, al being hunted, they seem lo g .. nuinely like being touriat at .. tractions." Qwim Bin Hamad wept when while. anlmalt wllh the dark blaze down their snouts and a rare white Ar•blan ory1: in a the fine, erect, rapier-like dying cbarge de!Uy skewered horns herded, together in the the right !root tire of his jeep middle of the open, sandy pen. with its long, corkscrew horns. Some of the calves, plnk.ish-- There and !hen, t h e bull and wilhout horns, shied remorseless hunter turned a bit and galloped nervouS!Y' dedicated conservationist and toward the shed against the set about ·preserving one or tar' wall when a photographer na!UJ't'• largest and loveliest moved amongst them. The ammals. ~twas seven years adults impassively stood their ago. It already may have been · ground. Two females, still too late. recovering from the bout with "A 'S"O'RVIV AL -e'<pert in England, 11 the secretary said, AFTER BIS conversion by a•-~---------------- punctured jeep tire in 1964, Sheik Hamid captured a nwnber Of live oryxes but ooly three lived ·long enough to reach his ranch in Qatar. The ne1t year he added two more. and lhe tiny herd began breeding. Unti1 the. outbreak of pneumonia, he was averaging eight to 10 calves a year, los- HALLI DAY'S 1HE SHEIK, who is Qatar's · 'minister of education has had occasion to weep again.for the elegant, lopg-pronge4 member of the· antelope family that romantics claim· is a direct desce.ndent of the mythological unicorn. An epidemic o f pleural pneumonia wiped out eight of the 35 whlte Arabian oryxes in ·the herd the sheik had built up as the largest and one of the last in captivity. Two more males died the same' Week in a butting con- test over the affection. of a female, a common end for the love-crazed critters w ho s e horns have long been in de- mand in the Arab world as an aphrodisiac. It's been at least four y·ean DOW since any Bedouin camel caravans or bunting paities \. came across any of the huge milk white hoofed. animals in ·the vast desert just beyond the borders of Qatar; a new nation jutting into the Persian Gull. l mE SPECIES is virtually extinct in the wild. Along with , the 29 white Arabian ory:xes at ' the Phoenix, Ariz., Zoo, the surviving herd at the sheik's ranch, 90 miles from the capital at Doha, may be the sole survivors anywhere in the world. I When we vi!ited the rar}Ch. his private secretary, Ghazi Azzeh, showed us around. "Plea5e,_scrub your boots," he requested as we ap- proached lhe oryx corral, In- pneumQnia, slumped In the shade of the wall; a male with a brok~n Jeg limped about ing several males from the in- evitable love quarrels but still retaining two of the original oryXes. . nearby. The sheik belongs to and keeps in contact with most wild life and faWla preserva- tion societies around the The education .minister, a brother of Qatar's p:rime mipister, DOW devotes much of ·bis persQnal fortune to preserving desert wild life. =='===================! CHRISTMAS CARDS 1/2 OFF IMPRINTING FREE ON 100 CA.IDS 01.MOll OP. SA.Ml DUIGN. MANY TO CHOOSI flOM. ' ISlhlnlly Otlly) GIFT ITEMS ALSO. ON SALE PAPER UNLIMITED dicating" a long brush and · a WUTCLIJf. Pl.AU~ 17~. llVINE trough of strong disinfectant NIWPOIT llACH solution. "In captivity, ~Y 5 4 I. 7. 9 2 l are gentle and shy. ~In~th~e~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ desert, they are brave and'.ex-1 · tremely· dUltcult to capture. I. ' . SIDEWALK s A L E MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING 17th & llYINI AYt. -WISTCLIFF PLAZA NIWPOIT llACH -PH. 641.0792 . UNBE,LIE·YABLE PRICES! ' . . ''-, I OO;S OF PAIRS . ' . FROM OUR ' REGULAR STOCK curt REDUCTIONS ••• SATURDAY, JULY 29 ONLY ••• Lad·ies BOOTS, FlA TS, SANDALS AND DRESS SHOES NATUlt.4L!Zft:.-.uFE STRIDE COllLIR5.-llEDS IASS I OPEN 9 A.M. • 5 P.M.J • ' Mens Regular to $39.95 NOW $ 90 ' Tq $ 90 FLORSHEIM BASS YIEYENBER~LARKS HUSH Pl,IPP-IES KEDS SLIPPERS IP1EASE, ~LL SALES RNAL-NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDSf ! "WfiPre Shopping J~ ..A Real Pfe'"ure" . . 1052 .IRVINE WESTCLIFF PLAZA QJ~@itfSHOES YY! m 1111afj J!nr NEWPORT BEACH .............................. l!lllm .............. ... . . • I i o DAILY PILOT s Th11~, July 27, 1'172 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll11in91 for Wodnud1y, July 26, 1972 FINANCE Count y Firm Okays Bu y OUR OFFICE IN NEWPORT BEACH IS 1 NOW OPEN TO SEftVE YOU Suite 730 AVCO Financial Center 620 Newport Center Drive Phone 640-1460 John F. Sanders M1neg1r J. Patrick Blew Account Exac:utlve Stephen G. Enright Account Execuuve Bernard Degherl Account ExlCUlivt Jon J. Hanousek Account Execlltlvt Charles F. Kelsch Account Eucut!Vt Joseph S. Kolenlc Acco\lnt Extcutlvt James L Michael Account E.Jtecutlve David E. Skogstrom Account Exte.,U.,.. Richard L Spraker Ac:count Encullw Dave W. Sutch Account Executiv. Ronald A. ·Wright Account ElletUUvt Warren Hartling Account ExeeuUn Training Operations Department M. Jane Van Treese Janet S. Busher Heidemarie Haentschel Jeannie L Klech Jennifer J. Smith Bateman Eichler. Hill Ricliards MUTUAL FUNDS COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK U ST l ' f l T T l T T u u ~ 8 ~ u . ' • W e(Jnesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchai1ge List .......... Uttl '''" Jrttl lllft.J H!fll L•w C,.._ Cll1. " '"' ,., I I 1 I 1. ( DAILY PILOT Seturdey1 in The DAILY PILOT •. ' l ' ' -. ' .. . . . . '" . • • • Nat~m:l i ~enthol '"is why. Salem uses only naturalr menthol; nor ··superb golilen tobaccbs. It is .a unigue t~e kind made in a•labor_atcir;y..,Like dur : 'blenp !011nd _in. no other cigarette: 'A .rich, full-flavored tobaccos,·our ·men·· .blend that. gives Salem a taste that's thol 'is naturally groWn. : . . : ~e~rharsh or hot ... a taste as naturally . Theli we blend natural menthol with.our .. cool and fresh as Springtime. ' . l i . • " - • t4 mg. nico1Jn~ SUPER l<I :.20ung.l'.tar~. 1.5 111g,nicntine~av,~er ciganit19.'flt./lepon APR.',. • : I • I. I • .. . • I ,.. l I • • .. ' . " • ' . ' . ' ' -. • •I rlc in w N Im ten wilt a any PR F fell COil dur' I .1 l ' '1 ' I d ' Mii eg hel he I 'I I ~ i • H.e .p • ' . . ~·i.y' 1.AlllIE KUPER Of .. o.itt ........... . ' . ' , ' . ''• •. for OttttT or /01' 1bo1'11, for richer or for ~'''" {,, ricltmn mid in health, unlil ·deat~ do ,,. l"."'t. • ,,H Wben a young couple stand surrounded by thelr family and friends Jn front of a, judae, lltinisler, prit!1t or-rabbi, blwtully stare into each other's eyes and pJ"Oot nounce the wonb, "l will," tbef mean what theJ say. · '· Never before have they. made a more Important promiae wllh sucb good r,,. lentlons. All newlyweds believe tbetr love will .. tunlly enable' tbelll lo' bave a suc- cessful ,rnaniage. Divorce statistics, however, dl.scredit tlliJ b e I I t f, 'I1ie uperlenci of psychologi.m, counselors and ministers is anolbercontrary testlm<my. Larry,Frubllnger, execuuve director of !be /ewlob Fiunjly service, said few peo. pie rUlly. !<now lbelui>ouse before Ibey get married. "l)Qe · ha. his ·beat foot forward during cburtsh;p but theii he leaves his shoes in the family room," be uplained. ' The ll<lv, Lolhat V .. Tornow of tile Chrbt Liltheran Church of Coilta ~ also ·18id few peopt~. youpg or old, have any real concept of nianiage. PREVENTATIVE MEDICINE For 1 this resson, he !pld moat of hi! fellow• In !be. mi(tistry· prefer to counsel couples before ttiey marry them even dutjn& lbe heavy wedding season. And Mfnlsters -and coun1elo r1 •• lhOJ bave 1elriied from • ... perlence, Is lbe buslolt '"""°' for ..... ' J')ages -nol Jimt. In !be' oeem1ng epldemlc or cllwn:et and 4epllltions, minlllln bope lbe1r """'1ielillg ;, "a little bit' of preventative ~~ Tornow believes, "U you fill to plan, you plllll to fall.'' Private psycbologilll and counaelors who sbare wilh ministers !be load of marlW prol>lema agrea with !he aeed lot premar!W counsellng "II II Is dooe right." Jliwever, !be prolealoaals are 1IO!dom called qpoo before thO weddJnc day. As..,.. OOIJDJelor said. "!doll -'• go Into marriage with all l<lnda of bope and don't even thlnt of se6ing advice/' But !be e!ll'led pair must Wk with tbeir minister or Pfiul while making plans f9r .!be ceremofty. DJScuSS· C!REMONY Some, IUdt u !he 11 ... Richard J. Dunlap, First United Methodist ' Cbutth . of Costa Mesa .,. !his meeflns .. a casual roule lo ccunaellng, OOce' !hey start discussing lbe meaning of !he atristian ceremony u a sacrament, he Said, "It kind of conies oul 'do ~ JOve each other?' " , 1 U the Collple needs fur\ber assistance, he can refer them lo one of bis ' Stall ministers who is a psYcbologist but he does not require a aped.fie coumeJing session wilh !be couple. aqree that premarital counseli ng helps 11 couple ha ve a happier marri.age. a M ore P,er ect ' Unio n Since matrlJnaQy 11..,. ol the catllolic dlirch's seven llCl'l11lellls, lht couple pl~ a Calhallc weddlna -tall: with !hie P!ieot DOI anly to complete the ,_..ary r.perwork but also to prepaN to ·receive the aAcramint. !doll 'priests also roqulre !be Couple'• attendance at ..,. of 1he pe"'1dlc ~ Cana Conferences bel4 In Blesaed Sacn- ment Cathollc Church,, Wtatmln81er. UUle personal •tlealloa is a1vm· ben bot !be couples do ~ lo about ~ l>/U!" of talks, S#<ud over tbret rrieetinrs, ~Y manled !"'"Pies, a ~ and & ~ '!'bey e,lto ,have .,... op- partunlty to tall: to ejher couples lbere. Other mtnl.lten, u Rev. Mr. Tomow and !be Rev. Dr. Charles Dlerenlleld ol s~ Andrew'• Presbyterian Cburcb o1 . Newport lleacb, 111&4 appointments wilh !be couple specillcalJy for .,.....1tng, COUNSEIJNG All DllTY Although !he couples are ratber quiet and -when Ibey -lnlo these sessioos, !be ministers cJalm Ibey leave In a bappler mood. ''They appreciate the fact !hat aome- body cares enough Jo alt down and talk with them," Rev. Mr. Tornow said. "I have l)O \nte~. In <;<Jllducllng str81)8ers'. weddlilp." llid. 1Dr. Dleren· field'. "I want tim 81 friends.'' The minlsteia consjder counsellng their right u well as their dµty. Although a "Chrlatlan marriage win- dow," hlue slained-glasapicture of Christ bl::&a • -did couple, la • [II lolr"-ant ~ of bis cbUl'dl, llr. Dlonllllald pcillll •t that hll cburdl II DOI a lllllTlap cbopel. w-., .... conducted by tbe -u a CllN!Jaa aervlce. "God II !he me who -!be mareyina and tho mlnJJJer II J1io ..,. who affirms lo lbem God'• ICtloa," upJaloed Rev. Mr. Dunlap. . Elctpl Jn tbe (lalballc churcb Wbere ..,. ol tho couple ,inm,t be a momber, tha mlalslers uy a majority of tlitir nw- rtacea are nal lot members of tbelr church. EV ANGEUC CHANCE Ai!boup lot aame, !be cburdJ Is used merely for !be medwllcal and IOClal act of geltlnc married, Rev, Mt. Dunlap said, 0 We find quite a number of them con- tinuing Cll In the lift of !be cliurtb ... "God.1 u the creator, ls the source of their love,'' aplalned the minister. 11lf Ibey dlacoonecl lbelll8elves from God, Jove will dlmlnisb and die." But,' be II, quick to add, !his doesn 'I nlean. a pertOn outside !be chur<h bas dlscannected bJmsell from God. "I aay you spell Jove g-l·v-e," Dr. Dlerenlltld said. "The '"''°" you 1et married II IO give • • • Getting la ln- cldenW to !be giving which is the real Joy .... "Just u love it a many splendortd lhlng, 8Q marriage Is a many 1plendared thin&," Rev. Mr. Tornow said. Bui from uptrlence with problem· plaped married cou~Jes, they know .,me of !be pJUalls. TALKS OF CONCERNS Rev. Mr. Dunlap notes far the average couple Ibero , II a 1ood chance !he mar- rllge wUI face trouble oerlOU! enough to u.se at leut consideration of divorce. . Dlerenlield dlac..,ses two lhlngs be found common In marital problems. One ls selfiahneM, which be described u a "badge of immaturity," and lbe other is la~t ol communication. Rev. Mr. Tornow delves into the material and physical aspect.! of mar· riage. Rather than consider problems, he pro- jects what the couple's concerns might be. It is his pbiloaophy that "a CO<I<ern on- ly becomes a problem when you allow il to." So, he notes, "since we create our own problems, then we have to solve them.'' He defines communication for the cou· ple as "the ability to speak to each other and to listen to each other" because "I think people talk at each other for hours and not hear what is bein~ said." GOD'S GOOD THING Another important Ingredient for a good marriage is trust -''the ability to know you can bring up any subject you want without your spouse becoming unglued." Problems might be, he said, that the woman wears curlers In f'raol of ber hus- band or !be two dlfler m lbe calor a wall llbould be painted. Some coupleo have a bard time moJv. Ing lbe1r auual needs, he ..id. Some people bave been JJrooaht up to belle .. that sex II a sin, Although "Ill&• bu let tt become a plaything," be said, "the wrong use doesn't mate sex bad." He defines sex for his engaged couples as "one of God'• good things for mankind." The Rev. Air. Dunlap asks the couple to prepare a budget !or the third month o( marriage. By this time, the wedding gifts are just about allocated, but be doesn 't do I.bi! just to keep the couple out of debt. Through their use of money the couple can determine if they have different values. FURTHER HELP If they discover this difference before the marriage, he said, it could be one less stumbling block on the road to a happy union. He also suggests resol.lrces for the couple to obtain help if they need it after the marriage. One or the last stateme..,ts Rev. ~fr. Tornow matea to the coup,le is that he is interested not Just In the1F Christian life but that they have a happy life. If they have problems later and need a third person to talk to, be says, "ca.LI me." BE A ANDERSON, Editor . ""'""'· '""' v. 1'11 , ... ., Mino.rs Made to Think ' . ' You'Ve met ->. , faJ1m m. love • •. • mendation 'for or against court consent advise young people before marriage of dedded1t0 DWTf. for marriage. the ttspooslbllltlea ol maniqe," U· .. '°" tho pelli!a _. 11, the -to Birth i:erimca1e1 of baih app~canta are P~<li Somull' Dntien. [ll'll1dlac judge . . lnil .. N11d1rilfllaljN.. neeiled alld mlnan ~lo pt·-ol a.;· juvenllt coari, lie -review ,, , ror l1lo "'~ la a bit riod Jl!!lll be reskl et "'"'*'-, ,.i.:.,,.._ do ~· ~..: dlo ld '"' l!llll'O ~I ''tbeblOod tesl, •A IJiaiir fn>m -..,'i<il*dlnt' """"?..-.-~· 1 ~- f!"!.loa'i::.,.:rp.-IDd llp ~. ·-t balilis and lengl!I of .' wi.o,.r be .• 11111 ""'1lmo ID hla -. ~ tll!PIJ>yment II ~ as well as a busy COUrl eoleadlt. siate )aw· ' at,l llodtarbothof schoiuucanddtlmnhlpl'!porl'from the ''Hopelufly, II Ibey .re nm of the tho ..,,pie are qndlj',11, they 1111111 bave ~· acbools or a liJcb school diploma. ·total J'UPCimtblll1y lo each other and :;::n~.a.,w1or Court for I mar-U.lhe fOU111 wunan is pregnant,. she saciel)!, II will make for a better mar- 'l'be Oranie't CiiiilJ Court requlJ'fs 1111111 bave. In addl!Jm tq !be nonnal rlage," be Aid. _, ... t -~~·--• ·~ 'le . report m !be blood tesl, • Jetter from a . "I lhlnt aJ90 one of !be pu~s of tho ~... ~...... ~ -coup moal pl\ylician COllllrmlng lier preJDaney and · • 0:- tate before.Ibey can evm be eliglble for ' giving the esUmated data ol ~L law is lo ellminate !hose Jndlvutuals from CXlllSOllL Written parental ciomenl, ,whlclt bas ~ge .who the court did not feel bad ~~i:i,. ~te :i: ~ eltber nolariJe<I or ,,i~ ,by' a suffld.~t , substance to sustain a mar- and !be COUrl u llumbUna blocks lo probatloo ofllcer, 11 roci'"'"'I of .!be · t1age. mOb tbe. fOUl1I couple slop and thJnl: IDJ!iors. Anojber mµst is dQcumental llEAllT OF LA w belo ,.._ . ··-·~-· . lo ....... J>JOof lo .dlsoolulloa of &JU' former mar-' ~ _, 117 -~ ...., , _.. rilgel. Yet., be feels the "real hearl of the ·': MAJOR "1llPOllE law" Is lo have !he couple sit down and UQ~ · Finally, ~boo aD o£thla bu·beeo·clone, talk aboul marriage. Flrlt, the ,cauple ·must bave vertfica, . the couple accompa!J)ed bJ at least one Wbtjber !his will help them bave a bet-= ~ ~ ~ ~ piren1; m~ be lniervlewed'by an officer ' Jer marriage and decrease the dlvorca 11111\'lage ..,..,k1or, ' II( !be probetlm ~t .. · ; rate•._.~ marrJedl 11 aamo1b1q This letter llbould Include a statemenl Then, Ibey usually · nwst wait •t' lwt · ' wbidl i>iobably· neVOl'will be pilwen. 'l1lo that the "IOClal, economic and , i>nOna1 one -k for 1be1r application to be proc-. • )udge pohlted .l>i.1 iiiat Jt wootd be '"IY i:"'i!,Ul~;,.!;Jd:'~u°::'. ~ =l~Jla":jo• r N•~ is lo diflicujt lo follow !he couple wilw Ibey . ~ ' r-r-stayed In '!he caunty, "Moet of !he kids who come Jn bere don 't really get !hat much out of. !be cowsellng,0 said J. R. Current, Advice For Young Couples: Wait supervisor of tbe probation departmeol'1 division which handles their appllcauam. He feels most youtba are Interested ao- ly In getting !be letter from !he OOIJDJelor ratber !ban learning from what !be counselor has to say. If a person l&t't seeking some kind of belp, lbeo a counselor jU3t ..t.uidn't be able lo help him, said !be Rev. Richard J. Dunlap, of !he First United Melhadist Church of Costa Mesa. By JO OLSON OI ·• "De6lr ,IJlt It.ff Tbere's at least one In every high scbaol class: !he girl who opta for mar- r~ and· S<linetimea malberOOocl belono her llilal gradf• are Jn. Whal ai:e her chances of being IUCoo cessful in corp.bining term papers and finals witll'bililgell and dl•per•! Orange County divorce atatistlcs· li)ow that she must be deJermined to be ...,, ctls.tluJ. In 'tin: counly la1t year for every mar- rlap 11....e lilUed, lbert wu a1moot one petitlao rued for a dluolutloa of malflage, lnllfllment or lfPll'llllon. ilc<Ordi• lo Jobn 'l'llmer, dlrector of !ht Family Smlce ~latlon of Onnje COWl!y, !he marlul ....any rete tn-.,,......,.bell !he bride or brllMgruom ii uqdlr JL ~ ....... lhotfw't~- 1ftor'U, ~Jve a ....-iw ...,.. ~It ~'' 1'ilrfttr, llld. "11'1 preUy b ...... • unW )Ill pt lo t» early IOo. '' Ei:aEPTION ft> llVLE ~.-.llliar*,wbatoq!ll! couJll8 feel !My caa be ui. .,,. ctillUi!tl to !he rule! tum !., ..,.. .... moniad ,_,uy to a., 4t Jill, Ila ldten tlii! Qb.y by her plirenls "becaUll of her m-ily far her .... Sile and ber blllband dllCUUed the pros and "'°" with the Rev. Jim Kirk of st. Mark'• Pretbyterlan Church, In aa- eordance wilb Callfornla'a new law re-qulriitc marrlaie counaelina far youtba unclar JI. They ...,,. given [ltl..,.llty tall lo see bow well Ibey ....,. themsalvea alid eacb o~. ,nnl •-tbelr. ~ bodget and dlacuaed allernaU- Discusall1g alternaUvea wu Important to lbem because '!hey will be-parents before Bob, 1 aophomoro, -coU.Se and suun ·graduales> lrwn' lllP IChooL Flnanceil will be lbeJr, blQesl oblilacle, !hey feet. and !bay lhlDk It will be Im- portant for them to gll away !10lll tbeir old png ·and establish lrltndllllpo wllh olhor~coaples. D.IPLOllA lllPOITANT SUaan mm· I( fs'JmJ>Qrtant for ber lo finish hlgb .ICbooJ. "You di~ 111 too many good jobo wHboul a bJ&h llChool diploma," abe said, "and I wan1 lo JO on to basJnea CW. """' I'm •t of 1ll&h tcbooL" , · • lluan'a maturllf ii a plus i.ctor In Iba -1age. IMr IDOtber feels. ~ "'°' tbe only glil' In tbe family ol llz "°*"" and .... ...,. aeerneo more mature for her ...... """" aod Bob "'""' U.t tbey pt aimc well "We cia tlbll'I iD ~ of G[ltl'Jencel,'° Bob said, "I rully llb to ........ ad ~111111b ..... lib JI. We baw jiHtlJ ihuc1i ... aame taat. and tht ... frlmdt." ' They holh want two or three cblldttn, a l)ome In !be countty and pell, and wlDI to learn to do ~ -•lely ., ucb can grow and ~ SU.an doea DOI feel allt wJll be glYlng op anyllllng lier llnc1t IMnose friends will be doinJ ar ltll1nc. aod said w won't mind btiDC' "tied don to one thlnJ·" NO PROllLl!:M Clothes, one of the teenager's bJaa1 e:rpen9e1, won't be a problem for blr limited budpt ~ Ille eew1 and bu never CODllden4clotha a big llml. sUsan'• motlier"qalp emphUJIOd that maturity II the ~,lo .....,.. In a youlbfUJ' marrJati •Some can mab It, aome, can't," .. ..W... · An early lllOITJqe WU a way oal of Ill uncomfortable home lfl!qollon 'for Becq G,, wbO waa dlftfted Iller lJ 1fMl rt marrlap to ber·flnl lmband, She ,... marritll between btr ~ and -,.... In ll1cb ac1loot 11111 qu1I acbool dllrlnc ber --· The ~·a allllude toward ber 'al tcbooJ 'l'U ~ after her ' malriage,' ibe :a'alcl. '"" 1iOcame .... more, lllrolned """' aba became ,.... 111nt '"l'lley _, .. lenient In 11- dlyf," obi said. •rm aU for glvmc fOllllC mairltds a..c:bance." NO DIPLOMA Tbe lllllTlaft, wllldl Included Jbna aeparllloal, luted lJ ,.... ...... ol Becky's lnablUIJ lo earn a Uvlll( lot beraelf. .. , bad• 1111111Dool'""*'""'"' !IOl'k Uperlala," ... Uplalnad, "Md tbet'1 ..,. ,.._, I lll;rtd lllltrled that lon9.'' She and ber hnbend, Who WU l!Ye 7ean ber llftllar, -lhrouah yean ol counaelJnl bofon Ibey dtclded Iba ml" rlqe could DOI be asved. "I felt It WU a mlllab on m1 weddl-c day," • added, •111111 dlda'l 111" llta courage to can it off." Her only premarital "counseling" was from ber motber, who told her II ••wouJdn•t be a bed of l'OltS.'' Her mother offered lo leave lier atop-father If alte wwld wait unW alter graduatioo lo gel married, she added. "No one offered me an alternative to marriage," Becky uld. uNot.blnC was aver said about collese. I came from tho South durlna tho depn11lon and jUnlGr eolleges were not u prevalent than. The Giiiy lhlng that w11 In tho car.la for my l>wn Ille,.... maniqt." GO TO COLLEGE N°" ...,..nied, Becky cautions youtba cootemplllfng marriage to wall "I don't lbinl: It ever burta to know someone '°""' or helter," she said. "Al lull t1el a couple of yeare of college • "Your taste and ldeall change. Your whole ......,i of W. iaellows. Your tasle Iii people ._, -In llllNndl. Y6u bavt. ~lo~ lhllll• -JOU' mlgllt evm oalCIW -~ "VocaUonV lkllla So a1oac lllth ecfucl. 11on lodq. With 1!'!1111F-o1 nvi.., botll people ollen ~ to -· . • My ...,.. """""' .. IJrougb -form ol premarital ~. >h~•' la a bl!. Job. It ... *f 1'111!.llut you ... to worl at It." 1 ~ ' 'l'bollCI> BarlJln a: -a bl .. ·adlool sraduale, lhe WU only 17 Wben lhe Wal married and factd -1 years of Ugbt budgetln& while lier hulband wu In col· legt. 'lbeJ ncentJy .. 1.hrated their nod weddmc allniverwy, and . Barbara cndlla tbelr ma1urllJ wltll belplac them over lbe rough •poll. BARD TIMES "We bad dlfficult times. to !he poinl of &training the mani1ge," she said. ''Then we considered what It was all about and where we we.re going." Her falher wu In the military service and the family moved a great deal wllh him, and Barbara lhlnb Ibis CQnslanl adjusting belped her to mature early. For lier, marriage wu a way to break away and be lndependeol She 'felt she wa not ttadf for collet)e when abe wu married, bot ..turned lo earn ber bad1· •kn degree aeveral years ap, Now a teacher, Barbara •WI ii t.klnc college dwes. Her advice for yootba cmtemplatlng marriage la lo wall. "It's a Jong time married and there II a lot of growing up to be done ," Ille oak!, "If !hey can hok! oil a.Utile I0111er, lbe1r cllanctli of a.,.,. cesalul m11Tlqe would be, lfUtly ~ hanced." Parenll, perhapo, lliouk! be •nqulred lo come for counaellng lnatead of lbe1r chjldreo, Turner theorized, • Adoleacenll need· a Joi of Jetting al~e. Maybe he's tmtlnJ you. Maybe he ~ts yoo tu uy 'no' or dlSCUBB !ht proo ~ ....... be said. 'irAYOUT Moot famllleo are Involved with t...,. •re marrl11e1, be added, and often are promoting marriage. "Children may be [Jl'Oblema lo pamrts and !his Is a way out for the parents.'' (lee YOUTll3, hp It) Olten when counseling Is a r.qulremenl for something, he said, 11then we'Y1 deslroyed the relationship before It even ge)S going.'' Now !be relatioolbip mlgbl be that t.he two •~are here with me against the whole world." Al!hougb be feels most coupleo pt married too young, Rev. Mr. Dunlap 11m points out !hat It Is not !he factor of ace which II Important but !be maturity ol !he couple whicb counts. EMOTIONAL MAnJRITY Aller five aeaaions wilh 1 17·yarold girl and her 21·year<1ld llimce, he determined that sbe was nnt tuo J011111 to get married. But othm who .. 11 mi&bt be beca\1$e "time years beiwem II 1111<1 20 rea0y mae a dlllerence.'• Altboqb tbe Rev. Dr." Chatlor- field 'of St. Andrei''• ~ Chun:b of Newport Beach a11o bel!eN II 11 tbO emotioruil maturity ratber -tho physical age whicb counts, be -IO con6uct marriages of ..,_ under 17 11undcr any condlllon.11 "I don't want lo be a par\ of a - rlase that baa everylbin~1 Inst II.• lit said, 1k II eltrelnllY wiUl -' rtagdi ,., tbal ''we• .,. llma a aervlce rather !ban a dlarvlce." 1"' feels -le who 111111'1 al -1 YOUD1 age wUI change ao mucb tbeJ wl1I be "perlecl 1trqers" by the Uma lllq are 22 or 13. \ DAILY PILOT SCOOP DU JOUR -Sally Jacobus (rigbt) of New- port Beach shows Teresa Taitano and Evelyn !chi· hara of Guam bow to work an ice cream freezer as tbey get a taste of Southern California life. The scouts will spend three weeks on the mainland . Musicians Tuning Up For 'Wedding March' Mr. and Mr1. Cbarlu T. Dallon ol Costa Meu have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Ch a r 1 o It e Eugenia Dalian la °J o b n .• \ • ,,.,I.ti' ,.o£"'~~ ,,. '"' ' I t "'O•IJ 10,,•t I of coJlfomt., I ALL DRESSES IELOW WHOLISALE Manufacturer's Summer Closeout Sale! SATURDAY, JULY 29 -SUNDAY, JULY ~o 10:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M. J33 Marine A••., Balboa Island Nathan Pierce. They plan la marry Aug. 20 in FairView Baptist Church, Her fiance is the ton of Gerald S. Pieree o( Los Angeles and Mrs. H. Pierce of Longview, Wash. He attended lbe Music Academy of the West, Santa Barbara and Julliard School of Music. Pierce also has played wilh l~~;:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:::~ U.S. l)'l!lphonles, has laured l;:: with the Dorian Woodwind Co6ta Mesa. Mlsl Dalton Is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, Orange Coast College and earned her music degree from tile University of Redlands and masters from Y a I e ·University. She. bas done graduate study at the A!pen MU!ic Festival School and Kent S t a t e Quartet and now Is principal French horn with t b e Goldovsky Opera Tbealer in New York and the New York Lyric Opera orcl!eslra. He also has performed with Radio City Music Hall orchestra and several orch.e1tras for Broadway shows. University,· bas played with 1 __________ 11 various U.S. symphonies )Ind taught at West Texas State University. She Is a member ol Sigma Alpha Iota honorary niusic fraternity. Fall Pastel s,..,.,,, .. U pasleil are best oellers for Snuff -111 · summer, why mt cmy them .Ancllftl Porcolalno on into winter? A new Procloua -(ll'Yinp designer·name Oil New York's 3355 Vii Lido, Suite"(" Seventh Avenue is doing just N...,.n .._. -67s.f711 that. 1be designer is Willi Smith _ ,.1..,. o.riY, s1111, .. u. clftetl MflMlllll' (lr Digits, and the Philadelpliia-born Smith uses pinks, blues and mauves in STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE DON'T MISS THESE GREAT, GREAT VALUES. CHILDREN'S SHOES 30 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH e 644-2464 - Guam Girls Scouting America j>ants, skirts, tops and his fake lur jackets and coats. Final Reductions 1/3 to 1/2 Disneyland and homemade ice cream at ·a pool pariy were welcome sights to eight senior. Girl Scouts who traveled from Guam, the furthest out· post of Scouting in Amwica, to Newport Beach. The vWting scouts, led by Miss Carol Lorenz and Mrs. Olympia Cruz, earned tbe·DeWltt Wallace Reader's Dl&ell scbolanblp ·and raised additional money by neighborhood fund-raising to finance their t'are. They were entertained 1n Orange . .county by Troop 1229 led by Mrs. F. B. Jacobus. Friendships Your Horoscope Tomorro".'." . developed during the weekend via conversational English interspersed with Chamorro phrases. The Misses Janice Crow, Teresa Taitano, Julia Maratita, Evelyn lcblbara, Frances Mendiola, Juanita Purugganan, Ann Rodriguez and Geri Okata r .. ceived official Orange County patches as souvenirs. From the ·Harbor Area, the visitors went to Las Vegas and Salt Lake City before a 2-week camp-out in Wyoming. They will stay in San Francisco and Hawaii en route home. off · ··Capricorn: Conf~sion .. Reigns wOClu• & R•lrHomn & RHtal1 for Mov.,ln CLl!ANINO TtlrHUt • 0-• Slrl, & Wu. PAINTIN9 • 1111,/l!llt. ~ •lmh IN' ,.rt, l"LUMllNG • Dh,..als • I.Mb • S ........ CARl"ETi DrT ,..,,. • ,..., ·~ ......... kWlt-4ry WINDOWS W ... • ll--•• kr-S • {> children unlimited CHILDREN'S HAIR STYLING & FINE APPAREL FRIDAY JULY 28 By SYDNEY OMARR Sagittarius can grasp pic-- ture 11 a whole; these persons are perceptive, advocates of higher ecfucatiqn~ fon4 of travel, teachil\g· ·8nd politics. Saglttariana develop personal philosophiea and ' US11ally are loyal la principles and friends. Thero have been three u.s. pmidenta bohi under Sagit· tariua: Martin Van Buren, . Wedding Plans Told · SUsan LYnn White will become the bride of Daniel R. Miller during n u p ti a I ceremonies Sept1 18 in St. James Epi!c<>pal Ci\ u r ch, NewPQrl Beach.. · The bHde-lo!be, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Charles Whlta .Jr. ol •l!uminglon .Beach, 1s· a gracluale of, Huntington Beach High SchoQl and Orange Coast . ()ollege. · •, Her fiance is the son of Mr. al)d . Mrs .. l'iarm'!Jl ~iller of Newport Beech. . He is a graduate of Newport ·Harbor High School and OCC aod now ii a student at UCI. • • • • • • Black, Asel & White $12 . ' . ~ . -~ry Tayliir ·and Franklin P~trce,. '•. l\lllES (March 1l·Aprll ll): Someone tnllY not be telling you Whole. tnJtb. Do some peuonal lnv!stigatlng. Check library, newspaper ·files. You can su'pc~ lflth aid Of unique group,· organization. Be in- sl!tent'. wh,n it Caines to get- ting 'direct answers. TAVRU~ (April :ZO.May 20): Feelings run deep. Family deciliQDI ore involved. Be con- siderate, liut li"Ve your own !Ke. Means realize that too much self-sacrifice will not be a~iated: TeaCb and learn. Share )cnowledge. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Aceent on .areis'tha\ bllve to do with legal · affaJrs , partnerships, marriage. Your pcogretJS depends on . m o t e realistic attitude. ·SpecUically, let key people know what you ~an 00. One-in authority is m. terestttl. i CANCER .(Jun'e 2i.Ju1y 22): There are numerous in- terruptions, diversions. But ·you n:iust make outline of goals U pi-ogress is to result. What 1 you seek Js at a diftance. Clear up details • Write letters. Prepare formal Reach more people. Advertisb. LEO,(July 23-Aug. 22): Take chance on abillUU. Exude confidence. One wbc) can help wants )o be convinced. Open •• . . • • • byFamolare MllNDELS • ..,.., 1 atore nur JOU •21 FHhioio hlond -64-4 -9941 NEWl'O~T CENTER • • • • • • ... ···-• Mf• ~ 19): Get new perspective. (lb. "LINK YOUR SERVICES" ••• c•ll lain hint from Libra message. RENTAL REI.Diil Discard ~· E x a mine our cnws ...,., N•t, CIMn, unlfotm. repo~. Don't be in too much *'· Stllrp Looklnlll, Enertttlc • "'" r~. Suptrlor Produtts • EqulprMnf UMd. 1616 NEW MacARTHUR BLVD. HARBOR VIEW CENTER dialo£ue, but don't talk about your problems. Gemll!I and Vireo individuals .Ould play key roles. Money arrangement Is settled. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Strive for greater bannony in p tr so n a I r t lationshi}ls. Specifically, make conciliatory gesture to family member. Appliea especially w b e r e mate, partner i!J concerned. Be recepUve. Don't force issues. of a hurry. Aura .of confusion 5"W.19tlln.cosTAMCSA.,..... dominates. If you don 't knowl!r.~~~~~~~~~==~~===~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~ what to <jo, da nothing. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Take 1nventory . Consolidate gains, e f f o r t s • Avoid unnecessary specu]a- tion. cancer individual figures prominently. Get facts , figures . Collect longstanding debt. Don't be shy about mak· . ' UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Shuffle acbedule. Change pace. Gtt rellel from detaiil. Relax -relieve tensions. Those who seek arguments should be made to look elsewhere. Get together with club members, those who share interests. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-i'iov. 21 ): ing requests. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Efforts gain r~gnltlon. Tim- ing is sharp. You can be at right place at proper time. Trust personal judgment. One who is pompous gets just deserts. Maintain iMer tran- quility. Saglttarlan figures prominently. ' Special relatkn1fhips a r e featured. Nothing now occurs halfway. Don't c o m m i t yourself units:; you mean ·business. Coprlcorn is Ukely tol---::;;;;;;;;;;;::-:--~ be ·involved.· ee realistic inf money .matters. Check values, budget accounts. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Study Scorpio message. Think with your head as • well ,s your heart. Prolect security. One who whlapers "'eet nothings may have exactl)' that to offer - nothing. Be ~d. ~ympathetic -but not foolish. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. BRASS RIM @ ! Dhtbtctn. S..rt w ..... A,,_ .. i.y • Norm1n Wl1tt 'Bleylo f Al .. Coif w .. r 2 1T let C..t Hwt. c.,. ......... 671~7•• GIMONE'S FINE · FASHIONS ·FINAL SUMMER . ' . ' . ' SEASON SPICES. AND . OUR C.OOKBOOK IS ALL YOURS. Thor•'• no ooc,.t to g9<1rmot.cooklng. Not with !5th ·s.i-on'a epocial offer. Whon you chooe• any 3 of thslr 88 19inptlng .... onlnga;you raoalw a compllmonlary COP'/ of 'Sp-of th• World Cookbook,' so you'll we ~r new •JiloO• si'rfectty, ' Spl-lndl'lkluolly, 75C·$1. In p.,....locted pecquettaa of •Ix ap-. l',.ncll, ftallan, l'ioota, Salad Bowl, Cocik-out or lntorn&tlonal. $5;75. Gourmet Shop. Want hslp with your cholceo? A domonetralor wlll-lotyou with your aalectlon In our 6ourmot Shop, RoblMon'a Nowport,_Juiy 28 and 211 • ROBINSON'S NEW POU • FASHION ISLAND • 1 • •' c t " f t i g t a r k r I I F g d a a t g c a s y a t of p a p d lb M st w g m ( Tnund,y, Jufy 27, 19n DAILY PILOT 25 lnstamatic Replay Driver Unseats Token Woman Her Prints DEAR ANN LANDERS: You've said a good wont '"' telephone operators, doormen, hotel ma.Ida, teacben, elevator uperaton:, airline stewa.rdeasts a n d waltrews. Now bow about a little help for bus driven? . Not Charming By ERMA DOMBECK I followed the caae of Jackie Onassia' legal hassle with a Photographer who harassed her with more than a casual interest. For years, l have been look- ing for something legal to charge my husband with and I think she has set a precedent. As 1 told him the other day. "You point that lnstamatic at my teeth one more time and I will have you arrested. You are like some kind of a nut with that camera. "Why' can't we be like other families who have pictures of their children in diapen and in their hi_gh school graduation gowns on the same roll?" "And miss sbots 1 I k e these ?'' he asked, tossing me a package of prints. I shuffled through an entire r~ll of pictures showing the kids and me huddled in a semi-cirele in front of a restroom. "Where were these taken ?" I asked. "You know very well where t~y were taken. Niagara Falls." "How can you tell?" ''Your hair is wet," he gig· gled. I don't mind the clicking and dancing around half as much as the humiliation of having an audience. Once in Nova Scotia my husband, Stanley Krame r, galhered our family together and explained he was going to shoot some film of us coming out of a cave. He wanted us all to go inside and at the signal come out scratching our stomachs and yawning llke we had been LAURIE LAMAR Betrothal Revealed Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Lamar of Newport Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Laurie Jeanne Lamar to Miles Merwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Loring C. , Merwin of Bloomington, Ill. Miss Lamar is a graduate or Princeton, N.J. Day School, attended Scripps College and presently is completing her degree in design at UCLA. Her !iance is a graduate of I the American S c h o o I in Madrid, attended Claremont 1 Men's College and now is 1 studying at . Pitzer College where he is working for de-- greH in biology and environ- mental studies. CULTURED PEARLS ARE OUR EXCLUSIVE CONCERN AND ART MURA TA PEARL MAlllNEllS VILLAGE Daft• HarW Del PrlMf• Avenue 7t""4tw»2 (all t..,. ... u . , ....... , AT WIT'S END l've been on my job for lJ years and I enjoy my work, btlt I will never he able to understand the hundreds of women wbo get on a bus and start to bunt ror their money. It's as I! they !bought they \\'e re going to ride free or something. The woman usually has two kids and a shopping bag. Her pocketbook is at the I wanted to put him in a botto f the ba he the line home then, but the kids said m 0 g so ' bolds up Jet's get it over with. Besides for five minutes while she bunts for it. the beach was deserted. When she finally finds her pocketbook At a given cue, we all she starts fishing around for her change emerged, scra~g o u r purse. While .she is doing this she is pusb-stomachs and yawrung, only to . . realize the sightseeing bus bad ed mto the driver by JmpaUent and ex- unloaded and we had so asperated passengers who are trying to cameras trained on our every get her to move. The driver, in the move. meantime, is attempting to drive, watch The other night, he proudly the traffic and let people oil through the got out his al.bums o f rear door. snapshots and relived · some · of our more memorable vaca-When Mrs. AddJebrain at long last tion s. locates her change she drops it into the ''Here's a picture of you in a slot, shoves the kids ahead of her, ste1>5 phone booth near the Lincoln on feet and snakes her way to the very Memorial. Here you are eating back_ and THEN she remembers she a banana on a park bench at Grand Canyon. I love this one. forgot to ask for a transfer. Back she It's your arm hanging out of a comes through the crowd, kid! dragging cab in New York City. behind her -inconveniencing everybody. "Look at this one. It shows 11 you print this letter Ann I prom-you from the rear runrung . ' ' . . from me in your bathing suit tse to frame the column and hang 1t m , in California. And this one. my bus. And I'll bet dozens of other bus You are shouting an obscenity drivers will do the same. Thanks, doll. - into the camera at C.T.A. CHARIJE Yellowstone National Park." DEAR CllARLIE: Here's your , letter He paused, "And will you d if fram •••-1 --• b ever forget this one? This is a -an you e WI.I CO umn ADU ang close-up or you on that deep it in your bus 1 will know about It sea fishing outing we took in because my readen, blus 'em, tell me Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Know everything'. how I can tell?" DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read once in "I know how you can tell,'' I said miserably, "Get your camera. I am going to be sick again." your space or a father who wa.s upset when he came home and !OW1d bis IUUe girl's handa tied to the high chair because she bad betn sucking her thumbs. You told him Iba\ the child should be allowed to suck her thumb - that it represented security. How long should this go on, Ann? I am H and sllll find comfort in tbll!nb-suck- ing. OI course if \QlYODO knew about it I would die. But 1 hate mysell. I !eel so babyish. I even bought the bitter and peppery tasting stuff for sale in the drug store, btlt it didn't help. I also tried putUng a gr • .;.< bis bandage on my thumb at night before going to bed, btlt I must take ii oU in my sleep because in the morning I· wake up with iny thumb in my mouth. When I deprive myself of my thumb I get physically sick. I can't eat or sleep. Of course 1 don't do it in public, only when I am alone in my room, usually when I'm scared, lonely, unhappy, or ex- cited. My thumb seems to calm me. Please don't say I'll outgrow it, Ann. Fourteen is pretty grown up. What should I do? -ROOKED IN LANSING. DEAR HOOKED : WM• yoa are rwty &o 1tve up yoar thumb, you wtU. Granted, it'• 11 bafutJle .. bit, bat It wea't hw1 yoa. U you bven't couldeftd eetunld- lag. I recommend JI. Your .....i !or thlJ kind of "comfortta1" indicates you mJibt bave some problems that aetd to be talk· ed out. CONFlllENTIAL TO FREE AT LAST: Don't bet the rent, honey. It sounds to me as if HE is free but you will be paying for this decision for a long time to come. II be succeeds in talking you into a light housekeeping arrangement, write to me in two years and let me kQow if you still believe the decision was a good one. What's prudish? What's OK? Ir you aren't sure, you need some belp. ll's available in the booklet: "Necldng and Petting -Whit Are the Um.tis?" J\.1all your request &t Ann Landen In care of the DAILY PILOT, eacloling 50 cents In cola and a long, stamped, sell-addressed envelope. KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & IMPORTS 2161 I. c-Hwy. !AT HELIOTROPE> C....lllelM• 171-7J40 W1'r1 hliving a : ,f'Jf!lrf@t I ' ~ ' SALE Don't Mi11 It I -..... 225 E. 17th ST, -COSTA MESA 548-2778 e aAMltAMllllCAllD e e MAITlll CMAllel e "ttSf)~OO. on the Stmf• special zig-mg macfine with st1'8td I SlifdllS We're giving you birthday savings on a quality Singer• machine that does so much! II has5slretch slitchesand 6 Fashion• Discs for decorative stitches,' plus a built-In buttonholer and much morel Carrying case and foot control Included at lhls saving, and our Credit Plen helps you have it now, within your budgetl Reg. $259.95 SALE $117 Orten-JU'f 20. 1012 Lt•rn to sew.Choose from 5 courses In faahlon 1 dressmaking or sewing knl11, lrom $14.50 to $29.50, and get a textbook, Reg. $3.95 or $4.50,) FREEi, 'SINGER s~w1ng centers ' t t SUPER SAVINGS t FOR WET SEAL CUSTOMERS ' ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE MUST GO! ' ' ;:~~: REDUCTIONS ~ 75%s~:Errs ' ' OURENTIRESTOCKOF $500 ' ' SWIM Regularto to ' t SU ITS $35.oo $1 soo t ' t. ' WBT SMLCHARGE t Our Most Popular Item Regular To $16.00 I SMOCKS _ $600to$800 I ' MASTBRCHARGE ' ' S En1H;,.,,sQ1"1eRafsT·,,,,,S,,, ... & f Regular to $13.00 I TEESHIRTS $3 00to$600 t ' B K I RD t ' Halter& RegularStyle Regular to $35.00 ' t LONG DRESSES$13 00 to$18°~ t ALL SALES FINAL STARS Sydney Oman' I.I one of the world'• srnt utrolo-lttl. His column bl one of the DAILY PlLOl"S ""°t t•tura. COSTA MIU-ltlllOI I $"'""""", IOvlh C." ~ltu ..................... ~ (OITA MllA-UDO H•tlle'f' 11'1'111,. Ktrw c..rittr ........................ Kl .. ,.,, HUMTIMeTOM llAC#-hlllttr tt hldl, HVll"'WNn 9ffcll (Mltw No ... .,,_,.,., OllAMOl-21 Sllltwloll IA!, "Tiie Q,.,.. Clr!liw .......................... ......... •AllDIM •••v1-m1 UllttlfNll. 0r8fltll ~ t"'-t• , ...................... . HARVEST ANTIQUES ll'TWllN Mu.A&. DEL.MAil JM4 NIWflOllT IL.YO. con• M.I'•• • o~ EVERYBODY'S LIPS annual summer '4'61214 CLEARANCE 50°/o OFF UP TO SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA. 546-206' LOWER LEVEL. ,SEARS END OF MALL. DIRECTLY ACROU FROM WOOLWORTHS A Singer !21st Birthday Gift for You Scads of Plaids for Back to School Dacron: Polyester Woven Plaids " Special! ., $:£!] Pick thcSC' plaids in Dacron1 PolycMcr- 1hc libtr 1hi11 bcha\·cs beautifully 1n the "'Car inK ... and in 1hc wa$hcr, too. ~4" "'idc. Orlon'& Rayon Woven Plaids Special! 9i~. 50S9 Orloo/SO'lo R1yon in 1 vibrantly colorful blend lhat'1 mach~ wnhablc.44(45.widc. Plus.More Singer Plaids: Woven Miniature Tartans in Dacron 1 and Cotton, 44/45" width • 1.39,., ,.. Wool·Look·Alike Plaids in Dacron' Polyester, 54"width 13,49,.,,., Wool & Wool-Type Lumberjack Pl1ids in Acrylii; & Cotton, 60• width 52,99 rcr rJ . Polyester Warp Knit Plaids, 60" width ~3.99 fllryJ. Acetate·NylOll Malt• Jersey Plaid , 5l/54"widlh 'l.99 Jll'l ,.r.1 ~ ''cry tJXCi.lll fabrk value) <1rc jus1 Pl'' 'of 1he S1n,cr J Zl~t Bitthd•y Sale. Buys that you can l\avt °'' a Slnacr 1..ralh plan dcsi&Md to help flt 1·our bud gel. Not all fabrics•• •U 11ore1 COSTA MISA Bristol l Sunflower South Co .. t PIH• 540-2UJ COSTA M1$A 2JOO H•rbor ll•d. Herbor c • .._+.,. K19-1195 \ • ' ' :13 OMLV P110T from Page 23 • • • Counseling He aloo nolel that such CC>Upleo rnla the full 1pocinim ol odolescenoe and lack the lun of enjoying life. "You're old a !ong, 101111 lime , . • Then'• plenty ol time for lnln'lq:e later." Tile court bu been con- lldered lenient lo granUng Ill cament, for which 60 to 70 )'OUllJ couplu apply each month. A girl ol I~ ii not an un- commoa applicant but the averaae 1ge of lbe girls ls 16 and 17, the Judge said. Many ol lhem are prtgnant. PROBLEM CASE Most of the men, bowevu, ere over 11, graduated from high school, holding joha In in- dustry and the trades and "making •hat t would con- • 1ider 1 lalrly good living." He llld be bu probably only refuted from three to five ap- pllcatlona ol • hund(ed. And these. he said, uienerally may be baaed on their youth together with an element ol lhorl acquaintance and either poor or no econornlc eecurUy.'' In tbil c1tegory be plcturu a girl ol aboul Ii who hal known • young man of 17 from two weeks to a month. She ii lrnmlture and 1100rt becomes pregnant. He ii unemployed but they •till decide to get married. "Thia la the type of case :Which praentl problem1 to ~ court," Judge Dreizen 'Aid. He alltmpts to ellmlnate the !act ol pregnancy In hla con- sld<l"ltlon and determine II the other elements are strong enough !or ma1Tlage. In a From Page 23 • • .Youths I! / 0 ........ IAJHIAMIRICA~O I I CLOSE 11 OUT Short S.lt " Pants & Tops Long Skirts • r. i .... UPTO 50%0ff I• SUMMER And more CLEARANCE SALE :, - ' % OFF LEGAL NO'l'ICB YOUR NEWSPAPERBOY ..15 A t CREDIT MANAGER LEGAL NOTICE - 'Radical' Officials Cool It COTATI (AP) -When thret under-30 candidates won in last April's city council elec- tions, some citizens thought this college town wouJd be swept by radical change. Instead, Cotati i s ex· periencing a quiet revolution. TP,e ~w members oI the coUncil have shown a will· ingqess to compromise with their older colltiagues despite 9ut-;voting them 3-2 on the five-- governing ~Y. "GENERALLY SPEAKING, · they're a good bunch of kids," ~id Herbert Winter, a 47-year- , old furniture dealer and one of the "establishment" council- men. But he added, "They get off in the deep and they don't know what they're doing at times." Annette Lombardi, 25; Geof- frey Dunham, 211, and Stephen .. Laughlin, 24 -all graduates of nearby Sonoma St a t e College -won seats in the election, joining Winter and •Frank Dolinsek, a Cotati nurseryman, on the council. Because she received the most votes, Miss Lombardi was named mayor. Dunham serves as vice-mayor. "If we're revo1ution8ries, ·it's only in a very mild sense," said Dunham. "Don't compare us to Berkeley and Davis. We . were elected by a coalition of younger and older residents on a p18tform that we would keep the city more rural than urban." Observers say Cotati, a small community of 1,600 about SO miles north of San Francisco, has witnessed a renewed interest in locA1 government ~ince the young people were elected.' A RECENT COUNCIL' meeting, for example, drew some 45 persons to hear a teclmical discussion about a prOpostd municipal well. In the past, 10 persons were con· sidered a good turnout for council sessions. sun, hard feelings a re sometimes evidenced by older elements of the community. Winter blames the new council members for the resignations of the Cotati police chief and one of bis four patrolmen. "The present yoting . bloc feels , our poliee department doesn•r have proper rapwrt with the younger · generatioh. They want the policemen to wear Levis on duty. They'd like them to have long .hair and, from wliat I understand, they'd ratber ·they didn't carry a gun," he said. Criticism can also come from radical supporters. AT A RECENT council meeting the younger members went along with a compromise on a strict sign ordinance and dropped efforts to fire City Manager Paul Salfen. "You've got the votes. why don't you do it?" asked Paula Douglas, friend and business partner of the mayor in a bookstore. "Oh, you're a power freak," replied Miss Lombardi. "I want to be everybody's friend. We'll want to get Herbie Winter's vote , •• so we'll go along with him on this." REFLECl'IONS by Reyn Sheffer "Nothing wlll ever be •t· tempted If all objectl'"! must first be overcome .... · Samuel John'°" If an e·xcusc is needed for procrastination. it is surely pl'ovided by the existence of obstacles which lie in . the path of nearly e~ry proJect, no matter hO\Y \Vorthwhile that project may be. We can apend much valuable time discussing, regretting ar bemoaning the road- blocks. In most cases this will mean that \Ve never do actually get started to work. Or we can plan a reaaonabl~ approach, get our ~t und~, 'then m(!('t and overcome each obstacle a~d obj~Uon as we come to it. Surely: if we try to conquer each ~bjectlon in advance, we will acfually attempt little or nothing, fust as Johnson warns us. Any death. creates an emer- gency and often . an emo- tional crU!ls. We are ,always well·preP81'¢ to provide calm Ind considerate help, jOHSFF€R mo!ITU.>.llY LAGUNA BEACH 117 IOUTH COAST HIOHWAY ~· ... SAN CLEMENTE I~ "°RTH IL CAMINO RIAL 412Al100 SAVE MONEY FRIDAY & SATURDAY JULY 28th & 29th ADAMS & BROOKHURST HUNTINGTON BEACH 24 Stores to Serve You Downey Savings JeVaun's Wallpaper The Daisy Patch Magic Mirror Beauty Salon Duds 'n Suds-Wash & Dry Honda Jewelers Bank of America TG&Y Variety Store Center Shoe Repair Von~s Market Pizza · Palace · .. Maria's Artistry in Oils Artistic ·1-Hr. Cleaners -Pitk·A·Pet P-et Shop Mad: Fashions Hair Shack Barber ·shop Your-Beauty Supply · Shoe . Market 2 Pc. WASHABLE KNrr SHORT SETS BIKINIS IROKEN SIZES Value to $11:00 $300 BEAUTIFUL ALL WEATHER COATS itEG. TO $31.00 10o/o ~FF AU NEW MERCHANDISE NOT ON SAL• -WITH COUPON PRl.•SAT ONLY HO LAYAWAYS ' ~------------~ ~ ~~!TE?~~! F~~~~~ /..NKAMERICARD MASTIR CHAI.GI CHECK THE SAMPLE SAVINGS BELOW BIRD CAGES 20°/o OFF GUINEA l/2 PRICE PIGS TH':'vH~ST Pl c A PET PET SHOP Pet Food -Pet S.jipllft -Pet Fumlture 962-8000 . SIDS 599 . & UP SUITS ... ~:~.~.·.~-.. TOPS ·~~~~: $1.99 . C_-4,..,_. $11,99 · TREND 0' FASHION "Look 1t our clothes -others ciol" 962-2540 • FR·EE '3" •45• ···-··-··················· to HAIR DRYER $85 VALUE DROP IN THIS WDK SHOP OUR SPECIALS AND REGISTIR FOR OUR DRAWING, FALSE EYE LASHES WllUo n.,. Last. Many Other Sale Items Tao N,..., ... To MontlH Come 11 and Sllop tho Vokift 968-3922 19C FINAL SUMMER CLEARANCE ARTISTIC CLEANERS Trend O' Fashion Paula's Sewing Bee Deli Shef Swiss Pastry Mr. Ffsfl ·& Chips Sav·On D'ltgs · DRESSES A ff•utiflll •11orlm•nf of poly•1ftt •nd m•ity oth•r w1d11LI• high 9r1d• f•Lric1, Short·l•ng ''''"'t. Meny IN•utiful 1tylti & colori. v~:.~·---· $)00° Volun to ~ftOO $40 ........ ··.£V ·· V•::'..'.o ..... $1500 $60 ........ ~soo DISCOUNT PllCIS DISCOUNTID BLOUSES ~°'"' ...._ '"" w1~ Voll $ 00 wlllft ..,_ '5'-~Yttltr, • 3 u-. ntt-. flt ••lw. UM $15.00 PANT SUITS lr•k•n 1i1•1. M•n'I •"11••· Mertly w•1tl1llle poly••· t•"· ' HOT PANT suns One I 2 pc. ,.,...,_ Se1M with f•<~itft.. I WOMEN'S SANDALS I . 1/"J TO 1/2 OFFi VAlli~:TO $11 _DRESS SHIRTS_ LAUNDERED AND PRESSED 4 99"' ON HANGIRS FOR • ONLY I ' Our Regular Prices to $8.91 -Shoe. Market LOCATIP Nm TO VONS 962-6536 MON.·SAT. 7 ....... p.-. ON SUNDAY 10 ••5 ,.... f6Z·f171 ......... CAPRIS s500 IODY SHll1S Na11• 'lWaMi. At1°t ... J. ors. T...+le I M<Mk hrtt.. VALUUTO •• $1.tl I fashion'• • \ I , • .. OAA.Y PILOT Thuriday, Ju~ 27, 19n I Italian 'fudustry' Really Booming ROME (VP!) -lloceuioll .. DOI, -lllllln lnduJtry It .......... Prollltutlon, llOli<e •l]IOl'll · -te. roblln ....... ., .• blWan a ,_, wlllcb maker II a bigger lndUllry lban the Flat all1dmoblle company. IF PROSTITUTION were erodlcated in Milan, one police ! apert said, the economic im· pad could bring bankruptcy lo t II hairdreasen, 10 boutiques, G ralaaranta, siI nighttlubs, UD laJ! clrlvera and 11 hotels. It Ill ID induatry Impossible lo drive out of business despite a llllll law which clooed 772 brothelt Ind tee h n I ca lly ouilawecf -61utlon In Italy for the flrll time in 20 .... lur!ea. Now, DD'llllts and mcralt lqUads .. poshing for tough ' -legle-lo lt.unQ out • the oldllt. prof! 1alon. presaed amaud doubt, poUce sa id they once counted more than 500 prollitutes standing along tbe II miles ol highway between Moma and Lecco. Aa for lbelr wealth, polloe cited the case of Franca Croc- colloo, a streetwalker killed In a fight in Turin. Her estate Ur eluded two apartments and mere than $172,000. . "Pro!Utution is an unknown. Wldemted and uncontrolled phenomenon," one M i I 1 a police captain said. IT JS UNKNOWN because few people pay close attention to the business of prostitution, underrated because f e w authorities have studied itt implications and uncontrolled because · the law is almost powerless in combating it. The law stipulates mu· and maximum 2,000 lire ($3.CC) and maximum 2,000 lire 3.'4 fines for anyone c a u g h t • Counties 'Split-up' Proposal Shelved · -SACRAMENTO (AP) -A proposal to mab It ...i.t lo split up Ca!Uomta'e btavlly populated counijes haa been rejected by tbe' state Asaembly. 'l11e lower House. voted Cl~ Tuelday to send the measure back to committee for !Urther study -in effect killing it for this year. Sen. H.L. Riohardsoo, the Arcadia Republican w h o authored the bill, • a i d numerous city officials In 11\0 Son Gabriel Valley req..,ted the new Jaw to allow them lo break off from Loa Angeles County. Id He said bla measure wou have permitted dividing the county, with seven mUllon rt.Sldents, into as many as seven counties. The measure, however, would require a minimum population of 750,000 in COW> ties involved in splits. It would have reduced the number of pedtloo tiptllrfll 1o Initiate ' lioW !""'"I)' P'O' ceedinp fl'om 6510 10-pertenl of voters and w0Ul41 have deleted a requltorileot !!Wt the county Bo"l'f of. SU~laorl approve the plan. It also would ~~·-r<duced b'om 65 to . 50 ~t the margin of approval -1Y in a vote of resldeftts1 Jn the old county. Resld<nl$ of the proposed new county s1111 would have to awrove tbt plan by a 65 ~n(·J118?gln. Par-llol eonaldel'ed, ·but lililea to -lbfte law•· .imatng the 111111 law. A fourth 111011Ure II DOW befcrt Parlia-ment eoliclting in a "scandalous" or '---=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ••molesting", manner but no UP1 T..,._, hi court bu yet defined 'wha t the SAN FRANCISCO'S SKID ROW NOW JUST EMPTY FOUNDATIONS AND DUST "To eontinae llnarinc the plienomenoo of proolllutlon aQd lo tolerate II In the name of" dvll lllierty -beeom-... occompllces ID the col- lajloe ol dvilbed -.:· aaid ..,. of ao CbriJllaa -.i. "I"> spooaored the lalolt law, Jaw means by scandalous or Sierra Club Lewsuit1 Have Hilted Convention Complex Construction moleatlng, TllEllE JS NO -for ~lutes, .but tbe pnlldent of the Italian Commlltee for the Moral and Soda! Derenae ·cl Women once pul the figure al mere. than ..,. mllUoo -or -of every II dU-. So police usually ignore atrtetwalkers ralher t h a n make possible lalae arrests • 'If BEN PBOSTITl1l'ION was ouUawed alter a • year-long battle in Parlia- ment, 38,l)O prostitutes Minorities Getting Raw Deal on Tests? SFRene~al Plan Halted teclmlcally lost their jobs and SACRAMENTO (AP) _ the required state licenses lo practice their profession. Blacks, Puerto Ricarus, Mex· The 1958 law cost the ican-Americans and o t h e r When eome I&allam: n· government almost $ 2 2 . 4 mllllon in annual tax and license revenues. GUESS WHAT? 111EIE'l,A IDTY REP.All litOP IN THE AREA, ow • .., II ..ill ....... ..,.,,. Wiii .. IMllll• '" your "°""· lflll ,..., ,.. ..... Mee .. eur twrMlll It low. 2f r••• · . .,., .............. . CAPISTRANO TV & ELECTRONICS · FOK FAIT SERVICE •· CAlt : 493-0652 BE W. cwiry • flll lt11e·of Animal J Ch ""'9ct1 Ind F•~ lor . 1111...-l•Mtll.Pots, lntur-. 1"1 W-r• .Dot F•, flinam' I ..... C...P,..lllCIS, · --. u.1.,..1 ~· HIJ lftd Tick. A.-h•l'f!llll•• ft DELI.VER . YOU llUlt; BE IATISFl!D minority groups are getting a raw deal from IQ tests, say educators who want them ex· pelled from the n a·t Ion's classrooms. The tests are written for the student from the middle-class home who s~ks Engl!sh like the majority of Americans, Dr. Jane Mercer of the University of California's Riverside campus . said in an interview. BECAUSE MANY blacks and Mexican-American students don't speak Anglo- style English, they frequently don't do as well on the group tests and are too often pigeonholed by teachers 8:5 mentally retarded even d they're bright, she said. It works this way, Dr. Mercer explained : 1. Because they dOn't grasp the language wen, minority children chalk up lower scores when the "scholastic aptitude" test It given al the beginning of the school year. Viewing the test results, the teacller con· eludes they will do poorly. he scored only 112 because he had poor coordination and had trouble getting the answers in the right slots. That problem, she added, was eliminated with the more painstaki"g in- dividual test. Average IQ is considered lo be 100. By Douglas SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - U.S. Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas h~re ordered halted all "physical activities" in the city's $.150 11lillion Yerba Buen& renewal project. ASSEMBLYMAN W i II i e Douglas ordered tl!e free,ze Brown Jr., a black Democrat recenUy on ,all construCtlon 1 from San Francisco, bas in· and demolition in the ~ of traduced legislation to ouUaw Market street area pending such group t e s t s in the outcome or a Iawsuit,filed California's 4.5 million-student by the Sierra qub and other public school system. It would conservation groups Which allow continued individual IQ charged the project officials tests. failed to file environmental "Group standardized IQ impact statements required by tests have been consistently the Environmental Law of misused by edbcators and the 1970. results have been disastrous to lm,med,iately affect;ed 15 children," Brown said. "Group sewer relocation in the area standardized IQ tests were not heduled be · A 18 ... tended .. to determine "the in-· sc to ~ ug. · The hearing or the en· nate intelligence of students. vimnmentalists' ., appeal is ex-They were designed t o cted to tak betw · demonstrate the range of IQs pe e · een SlX months to a year. within a large group of The decision aISo has cast students." uncertaii:ity on '225 million in Publishers of the stand· revenue bonds which the city ardized IQ tests say they are planned to sell for the proj- a valuable tool in helping to ect's financing. plan courses and in telling ;:=.:;=======;II teachers where students need THE BE·ST extra work. "The scholastic aptitude Readership po 11 a jll'Ove ENTIRE STOCK OF ROLL ENDS, REMNANTS. SECONDS, INDOOl/OUTDOOI. CARPET . ' ' . 1 OO's • 1 OO's • T 0 CHOOSE FROM: •. 1 OO's -1-00'$: · • I ' • ALL WE HAVE ARE REMNANTS-CASH Ir CARRY L.~r · n.~ ·,r o,.. MH.•Sal. rwf ta.m.to7p.m-o S•llday 10-5 CARPET .FoR· Y.OUR r uv1NG ·Root.ts. v•~s:; · CAMPERS, IOAi:S. KITCMENS, DENS., BEDROOMS, TIAILERS . & RENTALS. Cini TMtLZT m.. l FDUES B.D: WVJA lllDL 111-0990 2. For the rest of the year - again because or language problems -the minority group kids don't do well in subjects such as. history or reading. 209 CALLI DE LOS MOLINOS SAN CLIMENTE-4t2.Q456 toi>.eanuta~· la one of the test, when used with a group, world's most popular comic is an excellent instrument for strips. -Read ft dally in tbe determining what raw DA.ll.Y Pn.oT. · resources the stale Board or1'======='==~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Education has to work with," says Joseph Dionne, vice president of and general manager of the· test-publishing McGraw-Hill Co. Executive Escrow Company 114 S.. 01o -loo C-. C..-4fWU1 Announces The Opening of a Branch Office at 23331 El Toro Rd. El Toro,· Ca. (714) 586-5070 Open Daily:8:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m. or by appointment Introducing: Miki Kuntz Manager "Persohalited Escrow 3. At the end or the school year, teachers feel the test was accurate in judging m. telligence because the minori- ty group chlldren didn't do too well. And they are henceforth regarded as having low IQs. ••it's a self-fulfilling proplr ecy/' Dr. Metter says .. "Jt means that expectations are Jower for children from dH· ferent backgrounds: ''WHEN A TEAmER ex· peels a child to do weU, she gives him more attention and be does better. When she doem~ e:ipect him lo do weU, the chances are greater that be will not," she contended. It's a nationwide problem, involving Puerto Ricans in New York, Mexican- Americans in California and blacks nearly everywhere,. she aaid. But tbe straitjacket IQ classification isn't C9nfined lo minority students; s a y s Patricia Hewitt, Sacrame.nto lobbyist for a state association or school co~elors. She 1old a · state· Senate Education · Committee s he once gave an individual IQ test to a white middle-<lass student that showed 'be had a near-genius IQ of 170. On an earlier group IQ-teJt she said, The rolling hills and green grass are beautiful and horses grazing in the fields are a joy to see . ) THE TESTS HELP lo focus attention on students who are doing poorly, he told the com- mittee. But teachers don't always use the tests the way they are designed lo be used , says Dr. Mercer. She says they are too often simply accepted as the last word on how ' smart ' a child is, period. "It's been part of the training for ao long, and tbe~'s such a mystique about the "IQ test,'' she says. • The IQ tests are also being atlacked In CQurt. Plaintiffs in Ruiz vs. the state Board of Education now before thC Sacramento County Superior Court c o n t en d minority students are deprived of equal protection under the 14th Amendment to· tl)e U.S. Constitution because ijle tests don't treat them fairly. Divorces False . CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) -Forty divorce d<creea issued in this bonier town between 1969 and 1971 were falsified, State Attorney Hee· tor Velez Martinez announced. He said a high ranking U.S. .. licit! made a peroonal m. vestigation that revealed the falsification. · · ' • ' l ' l I . • • . ' • • . • • • Foreign Student .An Important Lad , ALTON, Ill. (AP) -His duamatea knew him u Peter · Gna&I, 111 American Field Service uchange stud<nt, llld 'bis nelghbo!W in W. l!Ollthem lllinolJ community knew him u a "nice boy" who helped carry trl!h cans to the curb oo 1arbage collection day. , Only Mr. and Mrs. Leroy J'.rltz and their children Jtnew when be arrived in Allon in 'September 1971 lo 11ve with them that Ptter'a father was the president of Switzerland. J;'eter .. had sworn them to secrecy as to his VIP status ,before be arrived to begin the echool year. PETER LEFT Alton alter the Independence Day holiday IO return to_ bis home in Berne, Switzerland, and only then did the' Fritz family ad- pll! • that an lntematlonal '""111ary had been living in- cqgnltp with them for nine moot111. Peter almost g a v e Iha 1ecret away himself one day, when a classmate asked h1m what his lather did for a liv· Ing. Peter replied, "My lather is the president of Switzerland, 11 then realized what he had said and laughed. Everyone passed the answer oll as !he ltind ol a joke any high school senior might make. "BE WANTED us to keep It confidential that his dad was the president of Switzerland during 1971," said Ruthie Fritz, 12. "Wbeo be applied to be an exchange student, he asked that be be treated just like everybody else." And he was. He took the same courses as other seniors at Allon High School, including French and calculus ; man~ aged the Ulihting for !he school musical "Brig'~doon;" washed the dishes and fed the dog, and joined In family mµsicala, with bis specialty !he piano. BOUTIQUE ()l"'EANERS ""lllAU a -N• .OWNS llAUTIPUUY CLIANID I PUSllYID Warner-Dale Center Comer of Womer & Sprl ..... ole, Huntington Beoch 842-2050 GUYS & GALS-AVAILABL-E · * FOR DATING 1 * IF YOU ARE. YOU SHOULD PHONE THIS NUMBER-434-0951 &.Ml M9dl llJll~!U).,.. cede AND LISTEN TO THE 24 HOUR RECORDING ,Racing to Finish Two dorymen race along the beach toward the finish line near the end of the National Dorymen's Associa~ lion competition near the Newport Beach pier. OAll..Y l'ILOT SI.Ill l"lloi. '!'he skippers had to go around the pier three ti1ncs before finishing the competition. Lon g Beach dories finished first and second in the races. Bangladesh Area Needs A Dentist Britain's Prime Minister ·Has Job Cut Out for Him NEW DEIJil (AP) LONDON (UPI) -Prime assured Parliament be had in two key jobs could not last Wanted; Dentist for clinic in Minister E<t.ward Heath is up done nothing illegal or im· more than a couple of months. Barisal, 'Bangladesh. No com-to his neck in problems. proper, be was once So Heath still has to find a petition, 00 fees but more than Ulster, Rhodesia, inflation, cocbairman of the Paulson's fu11-time replacement for a million patients. strikes and unemployment are companies and he might be Maudling. .. One man can take care of'' on1y a few of them. called on to testify. This, he One name that has popped Now he bas a n e w said, made it impossible for up is that of Foreign Secrelary a lot of people," said Dr. Bar~ headache-to get his 2-year-old him to remain in the cabinet. Sir AJec Douglas-Home, a ry Siqlmons, a boyish-looking Conservative party govern-Heath thus suddenly faced former prime minister and 35-year-ol<I American w h 0 • ment back on an even keel. the problem of finding a one of the most respected rode · a Russian helicopter to replacement for Maud.ling. men in the Conservative par- the south Barigladesh island or · THIS Wil.L INVOLVE not which all agreed would spark ty. Bhola last month to set up a only a major cabinet reshuffle a 1ull-scale government charity clinic. · in the fall but also finding a shakeup. BUT DOUGLAS-TI0~1E is In the helicopter were 35,000 new deputy prime minister 69 and nearing the age for toothbrushes and $4,000 worth and deputy leader of the AS A PURELY temporary political retirement rather of dental equipment -most of Conservative party. expedient, Heath dwnped the than a poHtical comeback. which he found to be useless As the Sun, a mildly left-home seccetary's chores on "The Tores (Conservatives) because Bhola has· no elec-wing London daily, put it. the shoulders of Robert Carr, cannot go on for ever treating trlclty and his diesel generator "The cabinet is wallowing off. lord president of the council Sir Alec as their personal San- was lost, Simmons wrote in a balance and Mr. Heath will and leader of the council and ta Claus," wrote Walter Ter· Jetter to The Associated Press. have to do something about it leader of the House of Com-ry, political editor of the Lon- before very long." mons. don Daily Mail. "Someone else FINALLY, B 0 W E V E R • The event t h a t suddenly But officials agreed such has to be brought forward and Moss Beach Complex Set ·-SAN JOSE (AP) -The California School Employes AssociaUon will build J $10 nnlllion headquarters complex near the San Francl1co Peninsula town or M o a a Beach. Construction will begin on the project next month, said Richard Bartlett, executive director or the SS,000-member group. The project will include the headquarters building, a con- vention center, motel and restaurant. SWIMMING POOL DAILY I'll.OT MAINTENANCE & SUPPLIES Golden WE.ST ORGAN.IC FE.RTILIZER (IY THE CUBIC YARD) Delivered To Your Home For Your lawn And PlanterNeeds~:::i CALL US FOR ORGANIC· FERTILIZERS· PLANTER SOIL AND DIRT HOURSc 7 .ro 3:30 PH-832-1860 ,.... ~ ... liULUtN WtS T FERTILIZER IN IRVINE II St it ch es byStur1••~ NHtlfepolnt a. "the clinic is finished and in brought cabinet problems to a doubling in brass by one man trained up for high placing." operatio0y and I find 00 head was the abtupt resigna-:1--------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mj shortage of patients," he tion under fire July 18 of ~ ' ~ "> • ""~rewel "' ,cowt.ETE SUPPLIES! OVER 300 COLl>RS OF YARN RUG AVA • PERSIAN LESIONS 6 DOMESTk: YARNS. 310 N . .Avtnida tie £a 6streUa !!!!!! ~-· • ..... ,,_, 492 "570 Ba" -CLOED UT. & IUN. -. " NEXT TO FOUR MUSES N.'S. wrote. Reginald Maulding, home N t e I Simmons said Sweden's secretary, deputy pr J me au ·~· a Save the Children Fund has minister, deputy leader ol the · taken over sp:insorship of his Qmsefvative party and, alter ~ Deeor NAIL KEGS clinic, and be does not want to Heath him&ill, second most close up shop when he returns powerful man in the party and to his home in Athens, Ga. in government. * Redwood lorl * Sea Shefts September. 0 "I need to find a dentist to 'THE LUMBERING, volunteer for two months after amiable but widely respected < J leave," Simmons wrote." Maulding quit after his name Island In the Bay of Bengal court be¢ngs of J 0 h n itr Barrel Furniture * Custom Resin Worlc * Dried Flowen * Ian I. Stools 19" ]( 12" Bhola is an egg-shaped was mentioned in bankruptcy 0 below south-central Poulson, a wealthy Yorkshire ~ Bangladesh and In the middle try's biggest building con-,,/ We ore aware of the incraasl11t d....-for ittms c111tom -· to speclflcatl-pra•ldod by lodlYlchoals. We q•ato prices for ,.di designs upoe rece1Yi"9 scale ftwlngs & ... eral requlremnts. • • ' : architect and one of the coun-9 9 of the country's cyclone alley. tractors. ~ 1' "THIS PLACE is good for Sir Norman Skelhorn, direc--00. one's ego. When you think that tor of prosecutions, ordered a 1 !here is one · dentist here for police probe of the Poulson af-SIA IOOTY, 1276 SO. COAST HIGHWAY-'AGUNA llACH 494-0065 •I every two million people," . ..'.f~air~.~Al'.'.tbo~u~gh:..'.M~a.".u.:J~d~I n~g~'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!•'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!'!"!!~ Simmons ,wrote. J-! Why bring toothbrushes and l dental care to a nation whose I 0 0 Drivers who don't smoke may save as nu1ch as 25°1° with&rmers NOn-Smoker Auto Policy. Chuck Sporro.-Honry Eklzlon-NHmor JOHph 17911 Mognollo, Fountoin Volloy 961-2411 or 54$-1401 ... OR 117111._, f.Y. -Ut·tlOO 17171 lffclt 19"'., S.tt. 'I' H.I. 142o1MI '411 ........ H. I. "J-'111 VISIT US AT 75 million people brush their teeth with sticks or their fingers, standihg In muddy rivers? "I can teach the ltids good d<ntal health and I hope they can stick to It," Simmons said in a Dacca hotel room in- terview in May. He was waiting for Bang I.a d·e s b government approval to begin his project. Eacli year he takes off in the summer to bring denlistry to those who don't have it. HE OBTAINED the ap- proval after a lobbying cam- paign -"They thought they needed other things worse, but I convinced them this is as important as any," he said - then ran into a transportation snag. A visit to Russian of- ficials staying In his hotel In the capital got him a helicopter. Old MacDonald's Farm ;;·· WHERE YOU CAN SEE, PET & TALK TO THE ANIMALS . C>td MecDon1ld'1 Farm h11 hones, pitJt, chicktns, 9.,.ts. clucks turtle•, mule•, doves, roosters, •http cows, botrs, lon9h;nt cettle, turktyt, tebbit\, end lots of fun • Old M1cDon1lcl's..fenn hat c.ontinuou1 Trtintd l1my1rcf Anf .. lftll f.cls A • Pottint Aru, Pooy I Burro Riclo1 ind • Mule--,_,,ff Morry.$a-Round. 81111y1t<I tdlftluion: IOc far Chil· 4r1n, $1 odults. Burro Rld11 IOc, Pony Rides 2lc. Far lnfa<-~ Nlion coll 49MJJJ or 111·18'0. Oo Pt'k1nwD:S ~ ~-. San Diego Frwy. al the Crown Valley 1'kw7. XISSION VIEJO "()·~ 1f;.Jt..\-y FURNITURE Sensational new conecuon of seven dollar wonders, RB exclusive d .. lgns In decorative wrought Iron. The will 1eonce. Three of tile candtn swlvel to any cllrection, an lmusual 2-4• tall sconce. Terrific alone, even better as a pair. The wine rtck. Unusual 2a• tall wan hung wine rack with functional 10' deep bar shelf. The ind tlblo. " graceful acron deolgn 26" tall table with a clear glUI top. The ocn>lled plani.r. Show off 1?'!.r favor· ite greenery In this versatile 36 tall atand. Tho winding 1t1lrc111. Our arttully designed 37" tau display piece for your 1'bjots d'art c., {EACH lDS AltClllS: 6121 W1lshiR Bf¥d. Mltxl1 Mile; 11040 W. Pico Bl¥d.: 884-0 S. Westtm An. AJIAltElll: 16'12 W. Unco&t IWISllll: !010...,. ,.._ CHUU '1Slk 476 llfOldwl1 .CUllEltONT/POlltltlk 23Z t Foothill COYlltA: 945 N. Anisa DOWNl.Y: 9435 t r«ntono n CAIOll:lll N. -111o. --ll.lllDAU: 333 N. Ctalr~ An. WllADA llLS: 10100 Bal>oo BM!. 11t1m'10N l!ACH: 1"31 Stach BM!. l.l llAW: 1720 W. Whittltr t• 1UCt1t 21191 llt 11 I IW. llOlllUl.Y PAii> 41S S. Alilntic 8lid. PA$AOW: llS S. Rosemucl lllWIDll 10,000 Malnoilt SANTA W/TUSTltl: 1703 t lllfl St Ut1lllllJIEl1911. "I:' a, Sltl!l IAT: 15533 S. CntlSMw BM!. TllOUSMO OW: 244 '"'°"""' Dm.Blid. YlllT1llk 3409 T1""11>11 lld. -A.Ltc 2222:1-. N IHOP 1 DAl'IA WDX•WllllMft 1f UWT'lt.t•IA'f\W1' 10 Wftll.t•.,._., ~Ullla.S• 11111 MMIM• nll DICCIM.TOlt IQ'flCC•PMI. ..._.,, CDE!JWLCI -- • • l I • . • • • . • . • ' . l • I • I I l l M ulticolored henscratchings, note.books full of nurnbers, urrange· ments of fluorescent light and tangled t\vine-tbe gro\vn-up art critics couldn't agree whether the Sixth Guggenheim Inten1ational Ex- l1ibition was fearless or fraudulent, a breakthrough or a bore. A 'couple of unbiased 2°year-0lds seemed the only snfe bet for un objective appraisal of the exhibit at Ne'v York's Guggenhein1 ~fuseum. , Uhlike some visitors, Charlie and John refrained from spluttering and scratching their heads. They expressed appreciation of die museun1 itself, with its long, spiral tamps and wide open spaces, Bot they made clear by the speed of their tour that they considered thiy.had'betterjunk at home. Tliis IVetk's PICTURE SJ/OW photographs by Jtny Mosey. Above, time for critics' juice break under 11The Eighth lnve1tlg1llon" by Joseph Koouth. Below, Doneld Judd'• challenging work, untitled, 1971. • \ July DAILY PILOT , ' J' ' , ' Pondering tho profundity of On Kaw1r1'1 1erlH of March dales, black and whlla on canvaL t • • ': .• ·' -:· • ,• ; • • ~ ' ., .. '. • . . .. .. ' • . • ; I .. . . ·: DICK TIACY TUMILEWEEDS FIGMENTS . fiiANCY TURN DOWN YOUR RADIO I DAILY CRoSSWORD : •• by~ .. POWER I ACROSS l ·Umof ... , ... I to lilJ ... for ... ' httr llft -: Eng llsti ' -· 11 Airport code "' ,,,_ 14 llat ... lS """"'~ , ..... ......... 1'111telk ;u a.w-.s :--1',0U: f"ttfhc IOOf-.0. · -=Abar. 2l S.t111U Z2 .... '''"'" ·-''"""""' 2'QaiK n "'"' :JI ·--hUt": -sitn: 2 wwdl !l E..,sirl• ... ,, . ..,._, ,_ .. Ottawa's~ .. 11 .... ,. ..... --JIF-··-··-·-,, __ ... Scd.il ~ .Klaiiid 41 Nlhrits: Slang 42 lus •*1119 11any stops 4J G-tnt ftl turH •S Looli:ed ~ 4' Ind!• 1.,- l"l!Pt of &II· lsh Coh.mb la AS l.• boot 49 litb tht MC!Ulh •hit.,. """"""' W1Cltarl1 5l Gtntlt 5' HouMhold W'lb:t: ~-51 ... , .......... insJK:tion t:I 60Frlndl~ •l Sliwrt CJUntllJ W: -Ca.acbo: ....... ........ •l Thl119 In I• ::;=•Utlt """' l luddllstMnlr: 2 Pest !act ...... 3-~1: ltalr• bout 4 Dfspll)'Mcl 5 COl'ckid llbrlc •"The Lilt ,,_ .. • • 7-KhayyM I C)pmifl!I , Self 10 IC!nd of dog l!All-,_,, 12 Lh' Nker "Ont•lo ''"' U Stx ~: """ 2l Any .tlaliMJ Z5 Ofrict of Sltattrgic Stmcn: Al*. ~Rude sll\lcltn 27'ThtrNIMMs: . ·-21 ,..,le ... .- .)D 11S lll11nts "'-"" .... ~,,..._ ,, ... ,. __ I Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ,. I • • PEANUTS MISS PEACH ! J I ! • PEIKINS \ ly Cllester GOllld ly Tom K. Ryan by Emie BushmiDer I GASOLINE AWY Walt ~lck~ \IAiat'li the trouble. Plnjllls? SALLY IANANAS .GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS OH-!.'liftW ANO-iurre~ l.ASr tll61li:. AllD LOST . !t • i ~ J f •• ly Charles M. Schulz ly Mel l: CNIT M!LP rr F 1.'M 11,if; TYn Vl\olO FOL.PS •Al!l.V T""1dlr, ""ty 27, I 972 ~-- ly Charles 8anottl ly ROCJer · Bollen :C CE>A'JE VP e1i;;HTCJ-NINE . !l»-Lk6 • · •sat I 111oo1M .... dW.1 uve to ..... ,,, CMll'ltlvet wtlll world problema U1 more •w tut we bvt Deir)' Klnlqer." DENNIS THE MENACE I 'I ~ 11' rr llll'S m SX\11 rat A IWA:llT! 1W Ill ••«111Cms 1s.wi a111 UtTMS!" ) I ,• '1 '! I I • DAILV PILOT Thursday, July 27, lm TONIGHT'S TV mGmJGHTS KHJ G 7:30 -"Hannibal." Victor Mature por· .trays tho famed Carthaginian geooral io bis legen· dary march on llome In this 1960 sword and sandal epic. CBS e 9:00 -"The Comedians." Doo't let the tiUe mislead you. This sweaty drama starring Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burton concerns revolution and political intrigue in Haiti. KCET lllJ 9:00 -"Birdbath.'' This powerful psychological drama about a young writer working m a restaurant stars James Farentino and Patty tf Duke. NBC O 10:00 -"The Bobby Darin Amuse-• · ment Company." The former teenybopper idol de- buts as star of his own TV series. Guests are George Burns, Bobby Gentry and Burt Reynolds. l ABC O 10:00 -"Owen Marshall." James Bro-' lin trades his stethoscope for a guitar in a story of an ex-fighter turned rock sin¥Yr charged with aasault with a deadly weapon -bis·fists. V DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 27 l:IOBDBllJlllGD-Wllil-eno-.v...., Iii-• no """'' .,., .... , ·--ill"•-·-... -............... sinp tilt bluea IDft&J of tht oll llllSllfl. l:Oll 8 (I) CIS -ho: (t) (1%") "Jiit C1•rll1a" (dr•) ·11 -fllchtrd Blltton, Dlubllb T1ytor, Alec Guinness. Peltr UsUllOY. A 1roup of ptopl1 comt to 1 Weit Indian isltfld torn b1 revolution and art drawn Into d•nt:erolll Political lntrit:un. Cl 9) m lrwidl "Good Sa1n11f. tan" (R) M AWOL Vittum returnet (Mich1tl C.llln) Is accused of rntJf• d1rin1 • Wit., but Sat Ed Brow• Is convinced th1t ht Is innoctnl 'Don't Stir It!' Comedian Tim Conway becomes the surprise ingre- dient of an old fashioned cocktail for a scene in the Walt Disney comedy "The World's Greatest Alh· lete." The glass is seven !eel tall and bolds 1,245 gallons of fake booze displaced by a plastic ice cube two feet square. The straw is 13 feet tall. 'Present Ten~e' Foursome New Gilroy Playlets Miss the Mark By JACK GA VER NEW YORK (UP() Possibly disenchanted with the Broadway scene. where his last two fuU-lenglh plays dld not succeed, playwright Frank D. Gilroy turned up Tuesday night at the off-Broadway Sheridan Square Playhouse with four short pieces offered under the over-all tiUe of "Present Tense." This isn't going to work either for the 1965 Pulitzer Prize dramatist, who won that and various other awards for "The Subjttt Was Roses." These four items. whi ch come out of the experimental Ensemble Studio Theater, with which Gilroy has been working for some time, are exercises and not substantia l en- tertairunent contributions for the most part. It can't be said that the pro- duction doesn't have ex- .. perienced and likeable acting talent for the four short plays since Lois Smith and Bilf McGuire, two good ones, carry the main burden and are ably supparted by Sarah Cun· ningham. Stanley Beck and Gary Nebiol. And the direction by Curt Dempster is adequate. The last and major item is a play called "Present Tense," in which the characters art a father and mother of the present who apparently seem to fear they are about to get news that their 2G-year"ld son may have died in Vietnam. This is conjecture: it's all pretty mysterious for no ap- parent reason. There is some sharp, OC· casionally amusing dialogue in this one, for Gilroy always has a flair for crisp dialogue in the vernacular, but it really adds ·up to very little. The best item of the four is "So Please Be Kind." which is funny and anchored in basic hwnan foibles. 1 did enjoy this one, but a play~ven a on~ acter-it isn't. It is a sketch that would best be served by being used in a musical revue. This one has a man and woman, married to others, checking into a hotel room for three hours of lovemaking. On the way in, they have passed in the street a man they know is a movie actor, aOO they have that all* tlX>-'human nagging problem of not being able to identify him . So. they, with the aid of a bellhop, use up their stolen time running through a long list of Hollywood names trying to pin down the actor's iden- titv instead of being roma~tic. The first play is a slight piece, virtually a monologue for Miss Smith, on the theme of trust between wife and huS"> band in which she ramble~ on about hints she has received that he has been unfaithfu!· She explains why she doesn t believe them. yet you kOO\V she does. "1'was Brillig" is a waste or time about a writer who gel~ a contract to work with a maJ Or Holly\vood filn1 s.tudio. ~nd t~e effrcl ii has on /us relationship v.'ilh his wife. Charles Cosier designed an<l lighted "Present Tense" for T. ll J. Productions, Inc. ' . He!d Rather Play M11s1e Ask a tO-year--0ld boy what lie would rather do .•. play baseball or p 1 a y the piano ... and chances are that in 99 out of 100 cases he would choose baseball. However, that wasn't the case for young Michael Robert Tausig. Not that he didn't en· joy baaeball, it's just th>t he preferred to tackle a bigger challenge -that grand piano for instance in his parents liv- ing room Learning to play the piano is not exactly earth shaking news, but it is news when a 10- year-old boy teaches himself -and that is exactly what Tausig, musical director for the Ana Modjeska Players summer production "~lls Are Ringing," did. found success, he turned to choral music and by the time he was 13, he was not onl y an accomplished pianist. but also the director of his church choir. Tausig's musical t a I e n l s earned him a scholarship to Whittier College after gradua· tion from Daniel Murphy High School in Los Angeles. During his undergraduate days at Whittier, where he earned a BA degree in music theory and composition, he put his knowledge and love of music to the test. He wrote a concert mass for organ, mixed choir and speaking chorus en· titled. "Mis511 Brevis Pacem," (A Short Mass for Peace). joined the Anaheim "Pops" Chorale and served as director for three years, served as director o[ the Bell Telephone Chorus in Los Angeles and Jast • papular "r-.1usic Under the Stars'" and ' ' Sa l u rd a Y Spatlighl" productions held at the Greek Theater a t Anaheim 's Pearson Park. As musical director ror ''Bells Are Ringing,·• he has rescored the p o P u 1 a r Broadway musical or the late 1050's which w i 11 be per- formed Friday and Saturday. Aug. 4-S, and the following ,1·eekend Thursday through Saturdaf, Aug. 10.12, at Cook's Auditorium, Anaheim High. -.-.. ... __ U Wlil &J...._"Throu&ll 1 ____________ -:-_-============ Shett.rln1 Gllss" (R) Miki 1rr1nfll 111 t11bor1t1 111S1 to prow that 111 ac.cidtnt w1s dellbtrata murd11 Ind trap • murd1r sL1Spect. Gullts art Stecy Htrrfs, Lit Meriwtthtf •tlll Within two years' time, he had not only acquired the knbwledge and technique of the piano, but had also mastered the finer points o[ harmony and c oun~ terpoint. Elated by his new year (his senior year) he c,1,J0~·-~;-.. joined the Ana Modjeska Play- l d• f "Ft PIUI NtWll'lln ·--1:11 D -tc) (10J "TIOI .... (In) ''4-NMCY Kw1n, John Fr1ter, 0.1111is Prlct, Jlmts Fox. Alter her fltht(s dutlt, • Pot;nni111 bNutJ la 11i1t to f1lrltnd •• tht win! of her •!Id~ llelimntlr of • ~NY proper ..... "*lie l(hoo/. ()) CIS ....,. Waller Cronkltt ·--•non,tosMn ill -It "Jill Wah Rudolph -· I ,, r •• --·--a--IDT•11J1ta 11..icar m---•........, Elliot Milllf Mimi Cm Elfiot ptslS, 9:30 fJ (I) U, TlwM S.111 (R) Tramp, Pe10 McCIJ. fB Un VmM lllf'I hc:trdar fn1 t1Jl Nta,....i T1lt'tilio1 ~ "Blrdbtth" Jtmu F1renllno •nd Pat· ty Duka sl1r In lhl KCET prodlldion of L~nl Melli's pow11f11I psycho- loflcal dr1m1, 1bout 1 stn1un111 youn1 writer worllln1 ill 1 Ntw Yo1ll ras!1ur1nt 1s 1 count1tm1n ind • yiaun1 rirl workln1 ht tllt ume pllCI IS I Wlitrm. iIJ-T1 ..... Ci!! Tiit ...... CI!) LI Coant1111 • P1p11 l :I00,..."4111<1< fJ Nm Watt.• John Fullmtr m•-m...,.,,,.. ~ h~ tht tamilr 1lrt<1111, becomes 1111!, 11:30 II) Cti1trJ MM T• 1nd lilll• Dodit Is dlsconsol11t. m um Crlrlln Show "Proltrt" .l:«l(I)DO(j)Qiflm Gueits 111 Rich littlt, Jot nynn, , 1:45 at Al.fllflit stttr.: .,.. Litt ,... Malty Allen, tnd Ceotfl Jeuel. ... • "II•* it: "Sia Tl,.,.. aun.. 11tt w L.,,,. JohR1011. fQlk tultttht wtio llti 111mtd wltll 2:00 8 Mlril: ..,.,._.. (dra) ''3- 1111111 aJ1111r .lth11 Ptul Htmffolld, Ollvtr Reff, .llMH1 SCOH. Friday DXYflDi MOVIES '55-laur1nc1 Klr;ty, LM R1mld. GI -..C111• tt SNrwMll rlf'llll" (1d'f) '50-Jolln Derek. Olfn• l.11111. l:JO 8 °'ClfW~'• Pal'ldlle' (com) 'S! -Alee 'u/111111-. Yvonne DICl'rte. l:lll (I) "Tiit Tio Ill~ (.,.I '57-&n· ry Fancl•. Mthonr 'trklns. 1111 -: (C) -~ .. ~ £tll (ho!) '&S-Cliffof'f [¥1111, Natl WIAlllM. l:IO ti "Oft lJoill• (COO) 'si-loll -MkieJ "'°""· ell S.IM IS l!WA littiq S:IO. (q "It"-°" -("!'fl) '45-11111111 er.-... 0.111 ~ ··- llJOa'relooklll1lortroahle ---he'aJOEIW>D. AT THESE SELECTED THEATERS W•tt DlllltY "NOW YOU SEE HIM, NOW YOU DONT' Al• CG) 11r11r1 StrllMlnd. .,WHATS UP DOC" C1111!, l'rwft I f'M. lurt llepelds IR•qMI Welch Y1I lryMr "FUZZ" _,,,_ Dick Ya• Dyl• "COLD TURKEY" ShowtllM - 7 P.M. Cottt. 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Nlcholas ..... Alexandra .., "1 BYllWll ... M't PITllr ~" GIHE HACllMAN MB.VINDOUGl.U .......... _ '!!!!P!fl!ll!!!!" !..KDAYS6:4~- om1r s1111'1f "CATCH THI IURGLARS" HELD OVER! 2nd BIG WEEK ~o'CA84~ 9:-.r -.-~1'. ~ "* * **"' ':> -NtwYollci>llllyff<ft ·--"" "SENTINELS 0, SILIPKE" • ' .. , ...... (Rl'n """'9 "GOOFATHEI" (I) ..... ,,., ... , .. s..i...,11111 lli;Jl~A ' . I I 1 1 J n ' I 'I ~· ··Lost and a Little Siek ~ ai Big Break The limousine let me ort at a long, awkward silence. Llke A. I kept recalling ao in-brtak In wllh incredible mat-"name actor." The stakea lhe eod of a Western street Prulrock, I asked myself lhe ci<letit shortly before lhat. I ter-of·fectnesa. become hiib ones and failure and I walked to tile portable • • overwhelming questions ." WU oroosing ll61h Street and To face lhe ltlllh was to ad· ls ""loua. But !ht-years u • dressing room trailers. There "!low should I preow!le and Sevenlh Avenue In New York, mll lhat In tile years since col--king actor bad taucl>I me "8S Ben Murphy's -Jones -how obould I begin!" full of orange juice lrom a lege and graduate school, f to att..,,pt'to keep myaetf "off nd ••--~"ed t t lhe f beallh food joint, .. ~... a bad to be classified simplY as tlle spot," and not worry 11 to a ~ was Pete's. His I #VIII'-ou a crew o "'11C1.1 a working actor. bow the per(onna.oce will be By ROGER DA VIS. Q. H°" did you, u an In· dividual and as a working ac- tor, react to a 3ituatlon that combined a tragedy and your biggeat career break ? horse was there with Ben's. faces for an answer. There young couple squared off It's a distinction I have Judled. 'lblt's bow 1 came to Tbe door to Pete's trailer was was no different drummer dlrecUy In my palh. Tbe man cune to respect. Suddenly I tlle set lhat first d a Y • and among us. At !hat moment lhe said, "Hey, you're Roger had to face the problOJDJ of a det«mined to be adequate. open I could see boots and sun came out_ Callfornla is Davis, aren't you!" 1-:=::::..:::::...:.::...:::.:.:=:::...:::...:~:..:.:;:=::::.:..:.:...:..:--'---I clothes that I recognized as that way. Ben came saun-"Yes," l said, pleased with his. tering back. He looked at me the recognition . Then, after a Someone handed me Pete's and tried to smile in spite of long pause, "What have you gunbe.lt -and when I put my everything: "Well, Roger . seen me in?" A. On New Year's Eve, 1971, my "WU'klng actor" status may hive ended : "I was In- formed I would replace the late Pete Duel. The actor in me said "do the job,". b!Jt-to replace 1 talented actor in an establiabed ahow was not going to be easy. That's how I came to, the set two days later. hand down to draw lhe lei's get atarted." Tbe lady replied,. all In- revolver I realized it, too, was Q. 'J'be sudden change of noctnce and candor, 0 0h, Pete's. I remember feeling status must have been emo-nothing. cart and I are trivia Jost and a little sick. tionally disturbing. Was tbe buffs." We are slow to accept reedjustment difll<ult? Frost was rijllt: truth doe• death: John Donne wrote the,1--'--'--------------"-----1 lines 0 Death be not proud" My f1rat jmpressloo v.·as llill' cnly 1 few days has ...--Pete's dealh, wllh all tbe beadltoa, funeral and talk. To everyooe on tbe aet, Hannibal Reyes -or Smith, Ilia alfu -was atlll Pete Duel, Whitmore Set HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Jama Wbllmore wlll heed lhe recuJar cut of Screen c~ ... • new C<medJ series, "Tem- peratures' Rising," which makes its television debut Sept. 12 via ABC. wilh t h a t .-rstandlng. Everyone In lhe cast tried to make things easier. Ben Murphy took a long walk before the first take. The director made a short speecli, ~pep talk . The sun went behind a cloud and we all bad to we.it. It was VONNEGUT! VONNEOUTI J~Happy- 'BmrthdaY, f:fl wanda MnCOM'flltbll) NOW PU.VINO une .. ___ ., HnD om-w ... wm 'UKm WOODSTOCKj ON AWAYS' ---~~~~ ••tn ........_ ........... ""'*"--.... SURF THEATRE-121 ~h $!.-Huntington llMch : 2 ..,_11•1111:11 a 1tzte ..... Sl.Jl......ft. UMH6 .. "BRAVO. BRANDO 'S 'GODFATHER'. ·. . '111 TUl'I FiaT llUl.lY l&TllFY•. Ill COlllEICW. AIUlicAI fll. -•TIE ml lllTAL Am - CWU 8f AIEllCAl lH lftl •11m Wlllll 111£ UllTS .If POl'UUll EITHTAIJll(lf ." -Vinctnl Culby, New Yof11 TifMi '"Tll ... ATIIUl' ll A IPICTICIUI MllE, M • TIIE ,.., lllllTll _..ma IUlll" M1ilhj1 N h~11 .Un ~1 !ilm ~lllUI llcrt ~mil ~ 11 .. 1111 IA! CONTJNUOU$ DAILY 12130 . 3:30 7:00 & 10:00 P.M. (l) N TV ., ..... ..,,... ,_,,,. ....... .......... ~-....... Call ('llA} '7>SUS ----..·~ Barney wanted women in the wocst way. And that's the way,he got them ,_.,..,.... llewa4WICecll,.... .. ............... AlanArkin •• -------Salh.llCM:ee1leer1'1m1D1•11n Paula Pren«•s Aenee'riqlor . , --....... ., .... -......... . ..... ....,_ .... ........ ., ........... ..... ' .,...,._ ..__ re~ ExCLUSIYE ORANGE coum ENGAGmrt MATEDWAIDS IAS~-D p~~~JSD~D "SOMIT•HSI HATIOTIOll" FIRST ARfARUN • RAllD (PG) ,_.ATAK #1 Uf/MIVIN-GfNf HACKMAN Ill "PllME CUT" II) ABC THEATRE#l •ntECITT -1-"7.ean --· ............. _ .. ... __ _ .......... •• ... __ ,. ....... ' LotMi IMCH XHIDU&a ..... P.K. P.11. ·--ttM. ·' J-... u s.t. 2:19 .... ftl. u--. .. 3'M .. . /, : 1 ' '""'"&.O::·-.. , -Oii Y a: ftlDAT - ....... _ ....... ~ ............. .... 11T-. .2 ... ::: ....... .a.-... ,,,..., ........ 11M. ,,.... ... ;:: I:: -= ;;. Al: Smo ,91A.Wn ON m.:SIM .. 1& M.._uarrM.-. ............. 191 IUCI Ttalln • 11U Aft e All IMll• enutle M\111• TICDTI ... 11&.1 AT .tU .......... _. __ ...,. ........... ·--.--.-£ -n • -= :.,-=.-;t:-u: =-:-z,:a~·.-..~.:c----.... -• • .. .,,.. ' lllPOmliJ'• ,....-...... Nna ..., ~ .... ..... ... ...... .. ~ ..... , ,..,, ... , ........ -..., ................. mos.; caca. ........ -- (~" BURT REYNOLDS JACK WESTON \ RAQUEL WELCH THt' Thl#!dlf, Jul) 27. 1972 --Cit / 00+1/ .'I ' • • I I T I.~ -. -,, SIJ/l/U +I I .. -.. , .. ----., S/411/U+I l . -· ., . ----., SM0/11+1 J .. -.. . ----. Si4/JIUM J .. -.. .. -- "TH• CANOID.t.TI"' (.,, , ... "tOOL KANO LU.P Mf'I .. SICY,Aete.ro• ---... "'kllL'W"S Nl•OIS"' "POllTNOY'S COMPU.INT"' (It) -"'CANOV-(X) ""ID 'SVW" --~•,...IHI •lie ,.JUNH* IONNlll• IN• THE GREATEST FIGHTING MACHINE . THE WEST HAS EVER KNOWN Nearly Everyone Listens to . Landers ALSO . ~0 CXllll ST AAS: IDA lUPINO l fN JOHNSON • JIOIT, ,lfSTON 2ND EXCLUSIVE RUN WOODY AUEN ·stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor I I I I H DAILY PILOT Thur1day, July 27, 1972 Western Airlines Warned ·LONG BEACH (AP) Western Airlines, one of the two carriers permitted to serve this city of 360,000, would have to pack up and leave unless it agrees to anti· noise and flight safety reatrle- tions, officials say. The city council has agreed unanimously to order Western to end service at the Long Beach Airport on Aug. 31 unless the airline halts flights ; betw.en 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. and limit flights lo six dally Monday through Thuraday and eight Friday through. SUnday Prison Testimony and holidays. Singer Johnny c·ash, who has given shows in prisons Western In the past has ' across the nation, has appeared before a Senate sub- refused to accept the restric-.committe·e on national penitentiaries which is con-tioos. The only other regular · . carrier, pa c if i c Southwest ducting hearings on the federal prison reorgan1za- lln "'----L~ tion act. Following appearance, Cash paid visit to Air es, .l.Ullt 8~· President Nixon to discuss testimony. City manager John Mansell _:..:..:.:.:.:.:.:.::_:_:..:..:_:..:..::_:_:_:_:..:..:.:.:.: _ _:_ ______ I served a 30-day /termination notice on Westeiii today but said a tease· could be recewed If the airline came to terms. Addict Care 'Flawed' There w,.. no immedlate comment from West.em, which haJI aerved the Long Beach airport for three decades . Op- position to ovemlgbt and ex· tensive daytime flights comes from area residents who ob- jedl to noise and allege planes poee a pot81tlal hazard to their $§,OIJO.~.ooo homes In the airline's flllbt pattern. WASHINGTON (AP) - A General Accounting Office (GAO) study of 'narcotics treatment progra1113 in three California counties has found a major problem to be "the present inadequacy" of the treatment and rehabilitation effort. The study, in two parts, dealt with programs in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Alameda counties. They were made public Wednesday by Rep. Don Edw:mls, (!).Calif.), chairman of a House Judiciary s u bcommittee investigating government narcotics pro- grams. In last year's Kodak' lntemational 'Newspaper Snapshot Awards, Clarence .. Mac" Maki, of Honolulu, Hawaii, won the blacl<-ancJ..white category First Place Award of a trip around the world for two with this shot of two surters competing in the junior Wle n you championshiP:" .. His camera was enclosed in a waterproof box. a trip around the world. If you take pictures, you have a chance to win. Follow these simple rules: 1. The conte1t i1 lfrictly for 1m11t1ur pho. to9r1phtrs (An 1m1te11r i1 dtfined ti on • whose hobby or 1voctlion i1 piclur1-ltlrin9 end who do11 not m1kt any 111b1ltnti1l p1rt of his livin9 through t1liin9 pic lur11 l . J. 8l1clr·1nd-whitt or color plcturt1 t1lr1n tfler July I, 1971 ''' el i9ibl1. No piclur11 m1y be entered bv 1ny t"'plovt of th1 DAILY PILOT or by 1ny ind jwidutl who p1r- 1on•lly ii tn9•9td in the m•nulaclurt, 11le, commtrci1 I fini1hin9 or proft11 io11•l 1i11 of photogrtphic 9oodt. J, Sntp1hot1 m1y bt t1lren wi ~ 1ny m1lrt of ctmer1, on 1ny b11nd of fil m, No trl· worlr or r1touchin9 i1 p•rmilted on ne9•· t ivtt or print1 -no compa1;1, p1clur11, mul- tiple ••po1urts or multipl• p1intip9. 4. Any nwmber of picturt1 m•'I b11 tnlertd. Conle1ltnt'1 n1m1. 1ddrtss ind phone num - ber must bt written clettly an lht b1c k af etch picture. M•il or deli"''' pri11h or tr1n1- ptrtncit1 to: DAILY PI LOT Sn1p1hot Con. te1t Ed itor, P.O. llow 1560, Co1tt M11a CA. •2626. I Entritl c1n be h1fld.dtliw1r1d to 1ny DAILY PILOT office, b11t m111t bt phy1;c 1lly lfl hind in thott office• by dt1dli nt 11th week.I Contest offici1l1 t•••f"I'• the r;ght to ctrry over lite enltitl for fudging fr om Oft• welk to th ne•t incl to exclucle fro m judg. ing 11to9eth•r •ny tfltrits received lift in the fin1I week. S. No bltck•tnd-whilt )lct11rt1 will be .,._ turn•d. Conte1t1nt mu1t be 1ble to furni1h !ht origin1I nt91ti"'•· H requested by the Conte1t Editor. The DAILY PILOT 1s1umts no r•1pon1ibility for ne91ti,..ts or prinh. COLOR PRINTS OR SLIDES WILL BE RE- TURNED ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED IY A STAMPED, SELF-ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. 6. Contesttnh ire permitted to submit ptc. lure• to on ly 011• new1p1per ptrliciptti119 in the Kod1k lntern1tionel Sntpshot Aw1tdt. 7. To be •ligible for t Ioctl grind pri1e, I contett•nt mutt sign • st1tement th1t the pie:· tur•, or 1nolhtt clos1ly simil1t picture of th• 11m• 1ubject or tifu1tion, h11 not been, tnd will not bt entered by him ill 1ny other con- t•1t •nd will 110! be offered for public1tion to 1ny public:tlion not connec.tecf with thi1 Co11te1t. 8. IMPORTANT: Be 1urt you know the n1mt1 111d •ddrt11ts of 1ny rtco9l'lli•ble P'"ont 1ppe1tin9 in your picture. Thi1 is n1ce111ry b1ct111•, in o~•r for It to be entered in the n1tion1I j11d9ln9, you mu1t be tble to get the written consent of 1uclr. ptr• son or per1on1 !or their legel 9'utrdi· int ,in th1 Ctlll of minor1I to ptffftlt use of th1 picture for the purpo11 of illu1h•· tion, edwerli1ln9 or p11blic•tlo11 in eny m111• "''· Snapshot Contest ' Navyman Loses Arm-Not Moxie SAN DIEGO (AP) -Many in the Navy were ready to see capt. Wynn Faster retire six years ago -just because he lost an arm while flying a combat missJon over Norlh Vietnam. his near-fatal fllghLancLtwbe~~ha-d.been hit and Injured ... things were almost eerie -I was detached just like watch- ing a movie and I thought 'this is ridiculous, what am I doing so ch,_,e to this terrible scene?' And then the realiia- tion hils, 'this is happening to you'." once recovered, F o s t e r, from Jerome, AriJ., had to convince the Navy he was capable of continuing his career. subsequent fight to keep his The plane started to roll to career in a reUremenkve in· the left. ler"lew. "Of course, you held the "I WBJ leading f 0 Ur stick with the right hand, SO But, recalls Foster, "I wasn't ready to get out and I told them so." Today, after six years of proving that an officer with an artificial ann can succeed in the Navy, he'll be ready for that retirement. Skybawks in a raid on North almost instinctively J moved Vietnam fuel depot when we the stick to the right. Nothing encountered some very heavy happened. Then I I o o k e d antiaircraft fire just as we down and the reason nothing were letting down,'' b e happened was that I didn 't remembered. He beard a loud have a right arm anymore. blast. My rtght hand was lying down Despite t b a t realization , Foster managed to use his left arm and bis knees t o maneuver the plane a w a Y from danger and back to sea, where he ejected and was picked up by a U.S. destroyer. A doctor on board kept him alive. "Heck, I was shot in the arm, not in the head ; there's nothing . wrong with ~ Y brains," he remembers telbng the officers who wanted to discharge him. "I wasn't ready to get out and J told them so. I cited precedents of officers who had served throughout history with one limb, and the Secretary (4 the Navy let me stay in." The 43-year-old husband and father of three talked about "[ was immediately con-on the instrument console and sclous of the fact that t had a there was nothing in between. physical problem with the "There was blood and gore aircraft," he said. "I wasn't all over the cockpit, but for consckJUJ of the fact that I the first couple of seconds ' MATTRESS With every King or Queen Ortho Pak Fieldcrest No-Iron -King or Queen size Top Sheet• Fieldcrest No-Iron tong or Queen size Atted Bottom Sheet• 2 Aeldcrest Klng or Queen size Piiiow Cases • 2 King or Queen size Bolster Piiiows •King or Queen sfze Maaress Pad• King or Queonllize Matal Frame on Easy-Roll castn Every King or Queen size Includes: Double Bonus Padded Vinyl Hea<l>oard & Quitted Sedopreod. Every Twin or Full size Includes: Headboard il Metal Frame on Easyftott cater&. 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Loi ..... ~' I f I I •o c 7 0 T 2 • • J Ii • 0 v I I -Loss of Limb No De INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Merle 'Bet· tenbausen1 middle son of an auto racing family whose lather was killed lo a crash, st.Ul wants to race again, after losloa 1111 right arm lo an accident a week .,o last SUnday at Michigan lnternaUonal Speedway. uMel Kenyon has shown you can get very succeasfuJ race career going with mOit ot one hand mlasing. So, if Jt 's humanly possible, I'll try to have 1 1uc- ceuful race career with one arm, 11 Bet~ tenhausen 11)'1. Hla rt<OVery from 1hock and losa of Area Trio J oins Field ~At Pocono • MQIJN'I'. POCONO, Pp. -Rich Muther ·of Luuni•Beach droye•his Vivltor Eagle- O!lid77.3b-mph Wedneeday lo .qualily in ~ middle of •the fourth row for llalurday'& f!i6,7l0 Shaefer 500-mile "championship ·auto race· here. Sam Poeey of <;aplstrano Beach will be ec;tly .behind Muther ln the middle of fifth row with Tu.stin's Mike Hiss on inside of the sixth row in his Page Racing Eagle-O[[y. "' LOUISVILLE, Ky. -Marty Riessen came from behind to defeat &b Lutz U, 7-6, ~1 in second-round play Wednesday or the Pro Tennis Cla!s.ic at Louisville. Riwen· scored a lucky &hot to win his match point. In' other games Wednesday, Arthur A!he"dumped Charles Pasarell. 6-4, M; To0Y. l'locbe banded Frank Froehilng a 6- 2, 1~s defeat; and ·John Newcombe beat Fred Stolle 6-Z, tl-4. Second-round play will be completed today .. Newcombe will pla¥ Riessen and Ashe will play Roche iu Friday's quarterfinals. "' IRVINE -Defensive end Steve DeLong, a San Diego Charger mainstay for seven years and the team's most valuable player three years a g o • discovered he was expendable after bead coach Harland Svare began beefing up the front line. DeLong, 21, was traded Wednesday to the Chicago Bears f0< an undisclosed 1973 draft choice. "' San Diego are.a lakes are proving ex· cellent fishing areas with Lake Murray the latest to produce a fine catch. Wednesday the lake yielded a 17-pound, 14-ounce Florlda·strain large mouth bass. The lucky angler was Jim B"ates of Chula Vista who caught the huge bucket~ mouth on a purple plastic worm while fuhing . off Padre Point. Tbe bass me8llured 27\!o inches In le!lilh and had a 25.6-incb girth. The bass has been o!llciall,y weighed and recorded by the Department of Fish and Game and is currently being mounted to be shown to the public at aports shows. . "' CLEMMONS, N.C. -Berkeley's Jim McManus upset defending champion Jaime Flllol, a Davis CUpper from Chile. 6-3, U, ~. to highlight Wednesday's ac- tion in'. the Tanglewood. tennis classic. In other singles matches, OMy Parun of New Zealand defeated Bob McKinley of St: Ann, Mo., 7-3, 6-2, and South Africa's Pat Cramer eliminated France's Wanaro N. GodreJa, M , 6-1. "' NEW YORK-San Diego, a flop as the site of a NaUonal Basketball Asaociation franchise, appeared the leading ~ clidale today for an American Basketball AssociaOon team. ' Angels Clash ' With Rangers Sock. It's what the C&lilornla Angels bave needed all season long and It's what they went !Ooklng for wben they recalled versatile Billy Parker from their 5alt Lake City farm team. Parker was recalled Wednesday along with right-hand pitcher Dave Sells as the cauromlans hope to make the second half of the American League season a reverse of the first. • Clyde Wright, 11-S, takes· the mound tonight at 8 for the Angels a&l'last Teus lefty Mike Paul; 3'2. it'll be the a three-game serle1 at Anaheim between the Western Dlv1alon two''1ottom clilbl-· blood was ao rapid be waa moved out of Intensive care about a day and a half earlier than expected. "I remember lhe whole thlog," Merle says.11Al the start of the race with lull fu<l load the car just didn 't !eel or handle right. So 1 backed way off and was almost at the rear of the field . "As 1 went into the secood turn, It started to get away so I corrected It and then the retU." end stuck and I swung right around and went lnto the wall. .. I hit it hard and somehow, the visor of my helmet ripped oil. I leU It go and Hold That T iger when I looked up there was this big orange ball so I knew there was !Ire. "So I closed my eyes and threw my lelt hand up In front or them to protect 'em. It was getting pretty hot in there and I thought about getting out. "l put my hands up on the side of the car and slarted lifting because I didn't think I was going to hit lhe wall again. Then I aaid lo mysell, "You're going too rut/' so I started tp get back down and then I felt tbls tug oo my right arm. "Finally, the car stopped and I knew II was on fire so I started to get out again. Oakland's. Mike Epstein looks over a different kind of tiger than the one he's hoping to have under control in October. Oakland leads the American League West handsomely and Detroit's Tigers are currently pacing the AL East If both maintain their leads they'll collide in the playoffs for a World Series berth. German Olympic Facility Dr aws Athletes' Criticism MUNICH, Germany ( A P ) Organizers of the biggest and costliest Summer Olympics have exactly one month to so1ve problems uncovered dur· ing five days of test competiUoos last week at the games complex. . Opening ceremonies will be held Aug. 26 for the 11ktay summer games in which MU NICH 1972 10i.IOO athletes from 120 nations will com· pete in Zl sports. The Olympic budget is $612 million, four times that of the 1968 Mexico City Games. "The more breakdowns now, the bet· ter," asserted president Willt Daume of the OlympiC5 Organizing Committee before the stort last Wednesday of the West German Sports Championships. And the Olympic test competitors in track and field, swimming, rowing, gym· nasties, cycling and fencing did pinpoint teclmOllclcal and organlzaUooal prob- lems, most of which appear easUy solvable. Bui c6mplaints about scoreboard malfunctions and mmped living con· cliUooa. In the Olympic v)llage appear minor compared to that posed by the architectural local point of tbe games - the world's biggest roof, draped over the Olympic stadium and two nearby arenas. One newspaper called (be 80,\)00 capacity Olympic Stadium "Germany's biggest frying pan," after athletes COD\· peting In torrid heat complained about erratic air con<Qtion.s apparently caused f,y the roof. Distance stor Harold Norpolh said · a suffocating lack of air on the track near- ly caused him to ahandoo \he 5,000-meter . race, which be won in the slow time of 14 minutes 11.8 seconds. "! foun4 the wnrsi conditions here of my career," the slender 29--year-old said after the race in· humid, IM> degree ·even- ing heat. 1Ang' jumpei's such as Helde Rosendahl also cilmplained of being knocked o!f balance by winds sweeping onto. the field Crom the tent·like stadium roof. Athletes and sweltering spectators - 4-0,000 of them at Sunday's windup events -also lamented the aolar magnliying power of the steel and spun glass roof, which cost an estimated $5Z mllllon - twice as much as the stadium. Heal trapped in the bowl-shaped stadium• pushed field temperatures as high as 95 degrees, causing the artificial track Surface to soften and slowing the timings, sprinters said. Another problem exposed during the trials was that of the hammer throw area. One competitor flung the 16-pound ball onto the track three times , narrowly missing a runner on one occasion. "Tbere is nothing to do bill stop run- ning e'(ents while the hammer com· petition is in progress," one official com· mented. In contrast lo the Olympic Stadiwn, other"' sports instaUations seem to be unimprovable, judging by the few com· plaints beard. For example, the $20 million rowing facility-an artificial lake acooped out of a wheat field and surrounded by forests -drew the praise of American oarsmen who won the West German eights title there. "It's a damn fine facility, just beautl· ful ," commented Paut 1foffman, the cox• swain, .of the lake nine miles north of the main sports codlplex. Tbe Olympic Village, with its strictly segregated women'& compound, opens Its doors to national teama next Tuesday. Village Mficiala hope by then to have completed installation of mulllera on · ventilation and refrigeration systems, which cauaed complalots of nobe durlnl the test competitions. ent I couldn' fllure out why I couldn' ~ mySelf and I looked over to the rlgbl and there was no ann. I said, 10b my God, oh, my God, but then I started caDllll IOt' help. "You know, I don't lhlnk you can get out of one of those cars .with one arm. l know J couldn't. "Anyway, I stayed conscious all the time. I remember beln& put Iii the am· bulance and goln& into the track hospitol and then hack into the ambulance and starting 10< the lmpltal • "Boy, that was a wild rJdt.'' Getting On Bulls Bugs Bullrider , CHJi:YENNE, Wyo. (AP) -"The thing I don't like about this bull riding/' said Myrtis Dightman, buckling on a pair of mean-looking spurs, "is that first you have to get on that damned bull." But getUng aboard dangerous Brahma bulls in more than 80 rodeos this year is the oo!y way Dightman can become the best bullrlder in the world -instead of being just the best black bullrider. •i1 admit it, I'm scared to death every time I get on," he said. "Some people love it. I dread it. · "I ride bulls because I know them. It beats working because there's no 'boss man' except the bull. For a while, I was a rodeo clown and b<Jllligbter. '1Since I've started I've never bad a broken bone. But I figure my time's coming," Dightman said. "This might be my last year.'' Dightruan, 35, of Crockett, Tex., isn't ' the first black cowboy to hit the pro circuit. In 1960, when he started, he was relatively unknown, but talented. Now, he's a real veteran since most riders are in their early 20s. He's been inconsistent, ·finishing third in the 1967 world competition, totaling 16,014 points. He was fourth in 1968, then fell Crom the top five the next two years, and out of the top IS last year. " sut during the Cheyenne Frontier Day!' ROOeo this week he showed signs of regaining his old form. He carefully prepared for a ride, ban- daging, testing and adjusting. Under his jeans he wore a woman's girdle to· help ease an old hip injury. He wrapped his right knee_ and right elbow in elastic baD- dages, and taped his wrists. When his bull came out, Dightman was ready, staying on even when the tlig animal hurled himsell Into the air and then tumbled to the ground. When the bull regaloed his feet, Dightman was spurring. He acored a fairly good 13 points. '!1le judges could have given him a rerlde because the animal fell. , "I figure the oc!ds were with me with the 13 points," he said. "I could have taken a reride and buck· ed oil -or scored lower. When I ride again this go-round, I might score a 70. That'll put me In the money." Thurs4q, Ju~ 27, 1972 DAILY PILOT •• ..... SAN DIEGO CHARGERS WIDE RECEIVER GARY GARRISON. Pros Can't Relax Y oung Players T·hreat Every Year-Garrison By HOWARD L. HANDY Of I"• 01Uy 1"11•1 S111f One would get the impression from reading the prospectus on professional football players that a veteran of six years in the play-for-pay ranks as a starter would be able to relax during the training camp period . ''Not so," says San Diego Chargers wide receiver Gary Garrison who is cur· renUy in camp at UC Irvine with the American Foot ball Conference squad under coach Harland Svare. "Every year it gets tougher and . tougher. You can't relax at aµ1 We are -.tettlng'older. and ·tberar~ bringing in younger players all the time, 41We have to get together with the quarterbacks right away at camp," he says by way of explanation about his wide receiver position. Gary doesn't elaborate but adds that he spends some extra time with bis quarterback before camp ever starts . Chargers signal-caller John Hadl lives in the San Diego area during the off. season along With former Millikan High and Long Beach City College hallha ck turned pro receiver, Garrison. ..We work out a couple of times each week during the last two months before \Ve go to camp," Garrison admitted wben questioned. "\Ve get out and throw the ball around and I can praclicc pallerns while he is studying the way I \Viii run and then let the ball go at the right lime." \\!hat does size have to do wi th a receiver In the pro game? "You can be too small ." Gary admits. "But size is misleading. I feel very com- forta~le playing at 190 pounds (he's listed at 6-l but says he is a half inch taller). ''If you have the feel and can slip into lhe alleys where zones are left open, size really doesn't matter . ''One of the basic needs of >. good! rtc<Jver . Is ·qui~kness. There's a dif- ference between quickness and speed~ ~ lot of guys can run fast but they take two or three extra stepa to get where they are going becauae they rely only on speed. "I try fo figure out where and how the linebackers are going to cover early in a game and then try to slip In behind them." When Garrison came to the Chargers in 1966 off the campus of San Diego State University, he moved right in as a starter on the opposite side from all-time great Lance Alworth. How did he feel playing in Alworth's shadow? Dodgers Begin 2nd Half With Revam ped Infield "I learned a Jot of things from him. He is a great receiver and J didn 't mind playing opposite him at all. I !hink he wili someday be a great coach because he has a lot of patience and he knows tbe game so well ." Garrison may have played tn~ ~the shadow or Alworth for a couple of ~ at San Dlego 'but it didn't bother hlm?1.J1P statistics are impressive. • • • HOUSTON (AP) -Claude Osteen takes the mound this evening in Houston hoping to keep the Los Angeles Dodgera' recent record of line pitching alive. The All-stor break, usually belplul lo teams with good pitchlng staffs, in- Dodfler• Slate All Olmts M K"I (6*) Jiil¥ 21 Oodffn •t Hctvtlon Jlll'f' 21 000.ft'I It Houston JUI'¥ 2' Dodgen 11 HCIUSfllt Jul¥ JD DodOtn .t Allll'lll JulY :n Doctttrs If All1nl• 5:25 "·"'· S:U 11.m, t :ll 11,m. 10:JO 1.m. s 11.m, terrupted the Dodgen' string -but possibly It came at the right time. Despite great pitching by Tommy John In the game before the break, the Dodgers lost. In that game, Philadelphia's Steve Carllon whipped Los Angeles (2-41) by .knocking In the only runs of tbe game himself and hailing the Dodgers on five hits. Still, Los Angeles has won lour of the last six games and hope Osteen, 10-7, can tum back Ken Forsch, 5-5. Tbe Dodgers trail second-place Houston by Z\!o games and CinciMali by l\!o. Tl"I three-game set would jump the Dodgers into set'Ofld ·with three victories. A5 Osteen start& the 11second half" 01 the season, the iolield behind him will be entirely different. In place of season-starter at first , Bill Buckner, golden glove West Parker has resumed the spot. Instead of Jim Lefeb- vre at second manager Walt Alston has chosen Lee Lacy, the r o o k i e phenomenon. At shortstop, lo place of Maury Wills, Bill Russell, recently activated after an Anny stint, takes over. And at third , the newest change finds Bobby Valentine in place of Steve Garvey, who had taken over for Bill Grabarkewitz. Some said this may be the most versatile Dodger infield in history. II also m~y be the most second-guessed. "I can't take Lacy out," said Alston, "because he's been doing too good a job and I can't take Valentine out because he's been hitting." Valentine's average is .281. Russell had a siJ:-game hitting string when he left for two weeks of military duty and his average was climbing, although only .275. Alston said he wanted Russell In the lineup and stressed that he wasn't unhappy with Garvey's play but "it's more a case of feeling that Russell was coming fast when he had to leave." It am0W1ts to a prayer by the manager that the combination Is right and il ao, Houston wUI have tome trouble. He was named lo the AFC all-itat team the past two years and caught U passes tor 889 ya rds and six touchdownS last season. He ranks No. 7 on the list j)( AFC career leading receivers with J68 catches for 5,216 yards and i 1 touchdowns. _. Garrison was the tea m's most valuable player in 1970 and has had 17 games gaining more than 100 yards per tilt. Ducats on Sale For Rams-SD Tickets !or the Los Angeles Rams al)d San Diego Chargers full-scale scrlmmqe session Saturday afternoon (2) on the~t1C· Irvine football field are currently on aa1e al the physical education deparlmeni ot th" school. The final . dress rehearsal tor llot!t teams is being sponsored by the Jtil I booster club ~·ith admission set at q~ adults and $1 for students. ·: Proceeds from the affair will be ilaied- to help finance the education of deserVlifc student.athletes at UCI. For further information, contact tbe PE department at 833-ml between I and 5 daily. Parker. an IQflelder.,.tflelder who was hilling .'61 lqr·Sall W.,.had·18 home nms lot the Paclllo Coast League club with M runs )lotted In. Tbe An&ela' top hiller thlS aeoaon, Olllll~lder Ken Berry at .301, has jllll 21 rbl. Tbe top rbl man on the team1 Bob Oliver~ bu 4r. Sella, 1114 wllh 11 .. .., for Salt Lake, bad a 1.04 earned run • ..,..,-. To make room for the pair, lhe Angels oenl veteraa pitcher Mel ~een, 0-f with a 4.2' 1.r.a., ond lollelder Syd O'Brien, hitting .179, down to Salt Lake. "Callfomla Ls 40.sJ and the recent All· Illar bre.ik couldn't have come at a helter time !or the team which acored juot t'!O nms durln& a lour-game series In NelY York. Only fine pilchlog provided lhe Angels with a 1-41 vlctorY among thrH llefeats. Doetor Raps .Little League Pit~hi ng Tuu, 17~, lrlill the Angela by two pmea In the race to ll•Y out ol the loop e.llor. I ~ 'We've bHn hij«kedl /lelMSe OMS.' • EUGENE, Ore. (AP) -A Buffalo, N.Y. ortllopedlc 11111eon recommended Wednesday . the 'jlOl!tJon of pitcher be eliminated In IJ!lle League baseball, saylog the rlW of elbow joint change are severe enough to warrant the move. "The possibility of S U st a I D I n I permanent elbow restrictions of mollon or an abnormal area at the elbow may dellnllely Item from lhrowlog overhand at an early ap," aid Dr. Jooepb D. Godll'ey, chief of orthopedic surgery at Children '• Hoaplto! In Buffalo. The thrusl of the arm and forearm puts a repetlUous aqueeze or com- pr.,.lon on bone growth plates at the elbows or youngsters, he said. This causes change ln the ll"Owtb center. "I don't believe in wrappln& the kids in cotton, 0 he said, •1b!Jt tlJl8 kind ol preventlon makes sense." Godll'ty apoke 00 the final day of I three-<lay program on Early Care of the Injured Athlete at the University of Oregon. ' Godfrey, who also Is team orthopedist for pro football's Buffalo BUia, said be ''would recilmmend that methOds such as an 'lron MJkt:' pitching machlne, a tet as ln goU, or a toss-up mechanism ht: used to set the ball up to be hit in hoth prac- Uce ffSSions and games." He aid, 11We don't know enouab to 111 • llmltloa pitcherS to two or three ~ per game Is eoougb of 1 aalel)I margin. "Some have nacbod their growth when they~e 13 and 14, and others wm ..... dcoly hit a second growth spurt oQd blosaom In !heir late leoonl. There'1 a dll. lerenco In the bone and pb)'lloloek:ll ages. "Without a real yardstlct, abolillon II \he pitching poaltlon wvuld soero to aller the greatest benellt for the __, DUmbet of people." • \ ' . t I ) " ,, " ' 31 DAILY rlLOT Th""'''' Jul) 27, 1972 Rebs, North Mix Tonight • At Coliseum BY ROGER CARLSON Ot "" 1)1/ly ..... , ll•lf LOS ANGELES -The cream of C&lifomla'a annual crop of college foot· ball prospects are on display tonight wilb ' the 21st annual presentation or the Shrine NOl1b-South game at the Los Angeles CoH;ieuril. Action gets under way at ap- pro'ximately 8:30 following the Shrine qub'1 pregame parade and pageant. Included on the South aggregation are two Orange Coast area 1tandouts. Newport Harbor's Terry Albritton, ticketed for future warfare at Stanford. 'fill open at offensive tackle for the : Sputh. · . 1 • And Westminster High 's Jeff Siemens, ! ajso Stanlord·bound; is billed f .o r ! ci!}ensive comer duty. Siemen! sµ!fered ~ broken little [Inger during practice, forcing him into defensive duty only. f ~h area players were All·CIF choices. ' fJbrittoo checks in at 230 pcunds on a f'4 frame and is considered one of the l t0test College· prospects In the nation. )lie'• also a shotputter of reknown, ~g second in the state and wiooing q,e CJF SS crown two years running. At Newport Harbor High Olympic Poloists To Train The United States Olympic water polo team will conclude training In the Newport Harbor High School pool with two-a-da y workouts beginning Aug. 7 and ruMing through Aug. 15 It was revealed here today by Olympic coach Monte Nitzkowski , a resident of Huntington Beach. The team will work out in the morning from 8:30 to 10:30 and in the afternoon M UNI CH 1972 from 3:30 to 5:30 with all sessions ope n to the general public. Prior to coming to Newport, the 15· playe r squad that is expected to be enlarged following this weekend's AA U tournament at De Anza C.01\egc. will begin drills at De Anza or West Valley College in Northern California Sunday. Nitzkowski and the 15-man sq uad recently returned from Europe where they played 12 games including two tournaments. Area • Ill "It Is really hard lo discuss them in· telligently at this time. A.s ~e g~ ~nto the fina l selection process, 1t is d1ff1cull to rate them. ··Everybody played "'ell and the key thing as far as I ~·a s concerned was the continued improvement of all of our players." . Nitzkowski didn't state which of the players was leading the pack to gain a place on the II-man Olympic team roster. "Mike Martin had eight slitches in his eye when we left here and was out of the ~'ater for eight days. He C<Jntinued to pick up after that and was playing ve~y ,veil in the last three or four games tn Europe," the coach says. "But everything is in such a tight situation right now, it is difricult to pro- vide an evaluation on any Of the kids ." Nitzko\~·ski 1vas referring to Eric Lin· droth of Newport Beach, Dean Willeford of Laguna Beach , Roy Saari of Hunt- ington Harbour and Martin who resides in Newport and ls a graduate of UC Irvine and a member of the NIMA team. NIMA Teams :The South leads in the series, with 12 1 WiQS, five losses and 3 ties in a classic 1 tb.t dates back to 1952. • ~onight's ma jor fireworks figure to i cOme from the South 's quarterback ; tandem of John Sciarra (Bishop AmatJ )&h,d Vince Ferragamo (LA Ban~ing ). •Sciarra may also be used at flanker to ~give the South an added advantage with \his running, passing and catching ability. t 'fie threw 17 TD passes and ran for 16 HOSPITAL VISITED -Orange County'• four .foot- ball players who 'll be competing tonight in the 21 st annual North-South' Shrine grid game at the Me· morial Colisuem took time ou t· recently to visit a young crippled patient at the Shriners Hospital in Los Angeles. From left, Newport Harbor's Terry Albritton, Kennedy's Charlie Judge, Western's Dana Nafziger and Westminster's Jeff Siemens find out what and who they're playing for. "We are right on schedule with our training program," Nitzkowski says. When the team returned home from Europe, it was in contention for the tourn ament championship but Nilzko"•ski still hasn't learned the final outcome. "There was one game left to be played between the Dutch and the Germans when we came home. U the Germans won the final game , we won the tourna· ment but if the Dutch won, they took first place. In Water Polo Tourna1ne nt l others as a senior in leading Amat to a se_cond straight CIF AAAA cham- pjpnship. ' I •Other running threals for South , ch.aches Harry Frum and Bob Hitchcock \aie Kennedy 's Charlie Judse, Carson's ,. Mike McClure, Royal Oak's Mike Vlcino • aAd Barstow's Garland Evans. C 'Pat Kohlman (San Jose Mitty) and Kevin Sneed (Bakersfield West ) figure to (share th~ quarterback duties for the N'Qrth while fullback Jerry Machen (S.2, (2111 iJ the No. 1 running threat.. Siemens Slated ' . For Defense ' LOS ANGELES -The broken finger that has put Westminster High's Jeff Siemens in a defense only situation here 'tonight fn tfie . 21st ' annual Nortt\-SOuth Shrine Gaip~ al the;fdemotial COlileurh will also have ~pnslderable.affect on the Orange County AJl·s.tar game :Aug. 17. Siemens, who was ticketed f o r quarterback ~Uties ' 'for. c0.Ch Bill ,. Boswell's South , team, will be used at defensive safety only. Boswell indicated he'll bring up Santa Aila Valley's Martin VanderRoest as an alternate to assist the quarterback slot. yanderRoest and Corona del ~iar 's Reed Johnson are the remaining can- ' . di<Jates for the all-important quarterback post. ~iemens broke his little finger on his passing hand in practice while tackling Kennedy High running back Charlie Judge. HB, Barons, Chargers Win Tourney Tilts Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Edison were victorious in the firs t round of the Huntington Beach summer basket- ball league tourney Tuesday night. Huntington Beach exploded in the thi rd period to smash La Quinta, 62-45; Fountain Valley downed Villa Park, 56- 42; and Edison had an easy time with Garden Grove, 66-44. Other Tuesday action saw Corona del Mar maintaining its unbeaten record with a 59.55 win over Marina. Doug Rabe (19) and Mark Keeton (15) led the Huntington third quarter blitz when the Oilers outscored La Quinta, 26-6. , .~di59n's. big guns were Dirk Zir.bel (201 a~ "BiJl'Ford t16) while 1'~ount3in Valley · hed1 three'playei's in tto'uble iigures. &im Sepulveda (16), Tim Hill (1 5) and Dan Malane (12) paced Fountain Valley'.s ·Stott Reider-less (broken fin8er) Barons. Con"•'~!. Axe tiC!tl '1"1tflp o ' I Ctrl$QO ' R8nkln ' • ' ' Ho.,,ur K'f'On ' ' . " Teti ' • • ' To!•h Stort by O•·~rttr• Hunl1"'jl llln " L• Qu1n1a " ,_oun11111 V•llty !SO C. Ad~m, 1, 11 pl lp s~11u1~e<1• 'IHI 1 .5 1~ Ro~~k Mal ant • " ? n To1~11 T, Ad1m1 l ' 'D l Store by Ou1rl1rs Foun!81n V>l•tv " Vllll P1rk I " " I • 1 1 2 l 1 n o • 0 1 ' , 0 1 1 1 ' 0 1 8 281017'6 19 11>-66 1~ 12---4' ' • ' • ' • • ' • ' . " • ' ' • 16 10 11 61 " 1'-b~ ' " " • • ' ' ' ' "' ' • ' ' " • 1• ~~ " ?1---~ ... " 13-•1 Racquethall Stars Fearing, Susson Invited To Canadian Nationals Bill Fearing, sports center manager of the Balboa Bay Club, and 17.-year~ld Ma rk Susson finished fifth in the A division doubles of fhe Klondike open racquetball championships in Edmonton, Hassle Over Hair Resitlts in Suit Alberta, Canada last week and subse- quently were invited to participate in the Canadian Nat.ionals later this year. Fearing also finished fifth in the A divisi on singles while Susson was ninth overall. The Balboa Bay Club duo played 36 matches each during ihe grueling com· petiton that also included B division ac- tion in which both competed. Jn the A division, Susson defeated Canada's top player, Bob Crystal, 21-8, 20..21 and 21-5. A high school student who losl his Fearing defe;:itJ?~ the 15th ranked U.S. HWe lost to the Dutc h team in the final three seconds after blowing a penalty shot witli 20 seconds remaining and the score tied, 3-3," the coach recalls. After the 4-3 loss to Holland lhe U.S. squad pla yed its best game of the tr ip against the Germans. ··we had them down, 6-1, at hal ftime ," Nilz;kowski says. "The final score was 7-5." The U.S. also defeated Australia , 8-2, and Spain, 4-2, in the final tournament. Nitzkowski was happy about using all 15 players in a starting role on two teams when the Rumanian and Hungarian teams withdrew at the last min ut e. "From a selection standpoint, it work- ed Out petfect for us," the coach says. How about the four players from the Orange Coast area who made the trip? CM Opeta League CUPEilTINO -Eleven teams In· eluding the NIMA INewport-Jrvine-Mesa Aq uatics) B squad, will compete in a one-- day preliminary tourname nt to de termine six places in the AAU water polo championships which will be held at De Anza College Friday and Sat urday. The preliminary event takes place at the same site today (Thursday). Six other teams have been seeded into the tournament including coach Ed Newland's NIMA A squ ad I seeded No. 2). The host De Anza Aquatics foundation team is seeded No. I \1•ith Phillips 66 of Long Beach rated third. Members of Ne\\'land's A squad include Jack Dickmann . Bruce Black. Bret Bernard, Jim Cruz, James Bradburn, Jay Brower, Pat Glasgow, Terry Sale and Anton Kajlick. The B team is composed of Thomas Boughey, Boyd Philpot, Chip Rowe, Tim Quinn, Keith Wall , Jim Young, Jaso n Wheaton , Phil Streeter. Pat West, Lee Graham and Guy Antley. pl'aCe on the local junior varsity baseball player, Gordo(! Kelley as the highlight of tea m when he refused to cu l his hair has 'his competition: He won the match , 21-7, , sued the team coach and the Garden ·21-19. Grove Unified Sc hool District for $75,000. In the doubles, Susson and Fearing Blackies Widen s Lea d llKio:I• f74J Jiit '"'' t!lllPllp ,, " llf tp C11P1n11'1Qh.lm i 5 2 11 )(rim" 1 ' "' GllCH'llf • • ' • Hlfo:levrar.d ' . ' . P:ont1u1 . ' ' .. . .. • 3 ' 21 P1rktr 1 ' . ' ?t ll1r 1 0 3 1• S1nder1 1 • . " Pl1n1t 3 2 5 • Pttl ' ' ' • lilllff . ' ' ' $abl,.,. 5 10 l 20 Ncwoi~v o o I • Tota l1 232SU1' 9 UfQ!r 0 , 2 2 lol~ls JI 10 2! ~ Htil11me: Bl•tktes, ;1. ''· l11mml1 (ill '! 11 pf to JtmH 2 ) 6 Cerll~le s l s ll W~lker t o 1 1 P1nster l 1 1 ! Lee...,ml1 9 o 1 n Ewlno 31 3 1 Tot1l1 71 9 lt 61 Pacifica lligh School student Da(lny ·Jos.t in the semifinals to Bill Thurman Huff, 16. clai ms in an Orange County and Len Stream.of Hayward , 20..21, 21 -1 6, Blackies has widened its Costa Mesa Superior Court action filed by his father, 20..21. This match ,took J'h hours to com· open summer league basketball "Ie,ad to O. Lynn Huff, tha t the order of coach plete. Jerry Gercb violated his constitutional two full games following its 74-64 decision ·rights. In the B singles that followed the A over the Jets Tuesday night at Orange division action, Mark was sixth and Bill Coast College. Huff, who now attends a priv ate sC hool, fifth. It marked ,the fi rst loss for Fearing In the companion feature it was Wilson states he ~·as placed in an im possible in B competition in three years. He is a besting Laemmle, 7Ht. position when coach Gereb threatened to three-time California state B champion. Blackies rolled behind the 2Q-point pro- resign if he did not cut his hair to the Ron Starkman of the Newport Beach duct ion of Steve Sabins and 19 counters des ired length. Huff's teammates refused Athletic Club and Cota de Caza, also from Jim Sanders in gaining its seventh to allo"' the coach to quit his job . participated in the B division, going to win in eight starts. Huff also names GGUSD Supt. David th r· I . . gl d f . h. f rth The c•·rcu•'t leaders grabbed a !'point r ,,vnlcr, Pacifica High School principal e 1na s in sin es an 1n1s 1ng ou .,. Al Buenafe and athletic director Larry in doubles while teamed with national edge at the half, then canned 19 of 23 free Champion Charlie Brumfield of San lhrows in the second hall to keep the Jets O'Donnell as co-defendants. A $1 million ·i. Diego Out of contention. c!r1im earlier filed by his father was · )iiiiii. iiiiiiiiiii!jjij!iiiiiiiiiiiii!!iji!!iji!!iji!~ denied by district trustees. r ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---;;;;;;;:=~~~;;;;;;;=. Baseball Standings ' . National tea.cue American League East East w L Pel. GB w L Pct. GB P!tt!burgh 55 33 .625 Detroit 51 37. .580 New York 49 33 .563 51\ Baltimore 50 33 .5611 1 St, Louis 45 43 .511 10 Boston 45 41 .523 5 qticago 46 44 .511 10 New York 42 43 .494 71\ Montreal 40 47 .46Q 14 \\ Cleveland 36 51 .411 14 \\ Pjliladefphia 31 57 .352 24 Milwaukee 35 52 .402 151,1 Weil West ClnciMati 55 33 .625 Oakland 56 35 .615 HPuston 55 11 .554 6 Chicago 49 41 .544 61\ o0dger1 47 4% .IS! II\ Minnesota 45 42 .517 9 ' Atlanta 42 49 .462 14\\ Kan1as City 44 45 .494 11 S~n Francisco 41 52 .411 16 \\ Angeli 40 12 .435 16\\ San Diego '33 56 .311 22\\ Texas 37 55 .411 18\\ TH-r.'• Glmtt Chic~~ (Jtnkl111 l-t Incl HllO!Ol'I 1-t l 11 Tllll1v's G11N1 Pllll1de ~11 (A .... Nlldi M Ind Cll~m~lon '·11) ICIPISIS (l!y ($r.t1norU 9·5 Ind Nl ltl!fl 2·•1 .. lrlew Yo•k ll(ootm1n ,_, l »CI MIHICk .. ,, 11 Cllleato !Wood 15-o a»CI BraclltY 10.tJ Plltlllurgh !Brol•1 •·l tlld M-1 S.61 •1. Louis 1C1tv1l111d 11·51 •I Montre11 (l o•r1r 11·51 Detro!! (Lol l<h 11·6 •nd Coltm~n U·U I t Mlfw1uk" (ParSOnl 1-1 and ~Ytrson 2·11 $1n Franclsto (M1rlcll1I •-IOI 11 At11nt1 {Retct l!loslOM /Partin l•IJ ., New York CSIO!ll1myr1 10. t.l!I " ' " Dll90 (Arlin a.11) I I ClnclPIMtl !l ltUngh1m .. Clavel1hd (Tl~row 1·111 11 B1lllmor1 100!»1111 ll·I ! Te11•1 jP•ut ;fo~! I! C1!1lornl1 <Wrlolll 11·Sl " I ~ A""I" (0.1'911 IWI •t liolnton (Fortcn ,_Sl MlllMtoll 11!11~11~ t·lll 11 Otklfr.d !81UI! 2·!1 DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOR ILYD ., COSTA MESA S.rvlco and P•rt• for Alf Imported Cu• Modorn Body Shop for All Cu• 646-9303 Orlltfe CoU!llY'I Weest and MllSI Modern Toyota and Volvo Deale: OVlllllAJ DILIVUY OICtALllTI • DEAN LEWIS '72 TOYOTA CO ROLL A !+ T. & L.l OR $39.30 MO . Full cash price $2,096.30 includ- ing tax & license. Do\vtt payment Js four hundred dollars. $39.30 total monthly payment including interest, tax & license. $35 pay plus balloon payn1ent of $800. Total deferred pay price $2,575.50 A.P.R. 11 r;, On pre-arranged credit. (300785 1. VoLVO "Dean Lewis" We lease mote Volvos in Orange County than any other dealerihip. EXAMPLE SAVINGS : $88 90 MO . • 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA-446-1919 A~idas Basketball Shoes Red-Blue-Green -Gold & White -16.95 A.B.A. Basketball Sh oes Red-White & Blue -13.95 White Superstars -16.95 Pro-Model -17.95 Soccer or All Purpo~e Shoes Brazil -8.95 Supetlite -12.95 La Plata -16.95 Spot Bill All Purpose & Soccer Shoes -9.95·14.95-17.95 Baseball Shoes -9.95-15.95-16.95 Bikes-Parts-Tires-Tubes Racket Stringing OPEi 9 ti I -CLOSED SUNDAY • Wilson-nunlon-Davis- Bancroft Ten"is Rackets Pennsylvania, Wilson-Dunlon Tennis Balls -ye llow or white 7.95 per Doz. Tennis Shorts -5.95 7.95-9.95-11.95 Tennis Shirts -4.95-6.00-8.00 Boys' Tennis Shirts & Shorts 4.95-5.95 Tennis Shoes Men's -8.50-9.50-1 4.95 Ladies' -7.95-9.50·14.95 Tennis 'Dresses -12.95 to 35.00 Handball Gloves -3.95-4.50-5.95-6.50 Raauetball Racq uets 6.95 to 29.95 Table Tennis Paddles & Sets 1 Volley Balls & Nets 538 ~ER, CllSTA MESA -'64&-1 919 ,, • • I Racing Entries f/A,l•ST •.t.cl"~·~·~fl'll•. 1 ntr I d1 ... Cl~li11, l'UrM ttoO, (l•lm• "'M • Scent of me Ul:Obtrt Mtlr) llt 'a:tit. Or~ la.~~,,~~) \\' i:,11~tt.'f~••IWY ~OllWI nf "~Mt-Ii?~,\~~ Jti;~ll lff .... ctttrlft I r1nl( 8~) 111 P::ltme J•i.r IDtn11y C•rdou1I 117 hM'I Wondtr ,..,.,, (Jotln W••dl 11• l•C:2N~ lt.ACI. -AOO Yl•d1 I y .. ,. :W:· It rnlM. Prlct '2100, Cl1iml111 ~.'1o \.r:ofRonald 81111111 111 OO~Go Go \Ktnntlh H•rt1 >IS Go bit Go Rllbert Adtlr 1\1 lur"t YrVP (IUcherd Vtutl\r\I 1 s ~dy L rw:fl ~~ !Larry Wr\thtl 111 IJdY'• lavt wt11 Pt•Mr) 117 ~'''f•llon 111nv Ctrdortl 11• lw lhtf' ( tnry Pt") 117 Hlll:D ltACI! -AGO v11rctt. I Yttr el~1. Cl1lmh\il. P\ll'"M llfOO. Cltlmln1 ~'vi:,fP"O~Wti!r fSl1v1 TrJ41ajr11 119 hit frrl !'ICY <L•rrv Wr!1l!I 11' "l<V !" ol> /f1rry LlPll~m llt urt1r •IWl'I' H.nrv PH 111 Elib1r1 Llml!I (Don•ld nl!Jfll) 11j k Bow CRobfff Ad•lr) 11 Ilk Pit Go fJot WI!'°") 111 0~1•1 C/l•rttr (It-Id B1nk1) llt ,OUllTH llAC• -170 v•rcll. s 'I'll~ ~'! ""' ~·' Cl1lmlntt. Pur" S2200. • tl'l[l'lf OI' • '3000.. Pll E•ol• R'l'J1ld B1nk•l llt ~/lort Roell.ti Jo/In Wit.an) 117 ull Moon M•n (Jo/In K1nl1J 1\r etch Ell {Robert Ad1lrl 117 l"'"' 1Cilllrle$ Smith) llJ k!n1'• R~M [J•rrv Rkh•rd•l 1 OM'"' 1 ( •rry Wrllhl! 117 Tr1,1e Kil it. T1rr'f Llllti1ml 11• 'I'™ 11 er -400 y~rd1. l ., .. , old1. Cl1lmlng, PUl"ll 12100, Cl1lm!ng !rl« UDOO. tie Ulmer LundY. C"'1-L""''· Cord1i.on CCur/'11 Pttntr/ ,•~ Mlnnll Rebel L•rrv Wr thlj II li1111'1 flpr (H1rl1v Ct05b'f 120 Count Of 11onor IJotin w111onl 117 Mr. SIHP !Ch1rl11 Smlt/IJ 117 ROYll'I Reciue11 Ket1ntlh H•rtl 120 MllM$IO'I Mitt Jerry O'dO l:xl Fl•th Alert (John W•rcl) 120 llXTH llACI -.00 y1rd1. 3 l"' Old5 and UJI', Cf•lmlnt . PUrt.t: S IOO. Cl1rm1n1 f!:rlct Sl600. ' ud EYI (Ttrrv LIPhlml 120 trloml:tl (Mlkt ChtmblnO 120 r.IPle A Oeek /J1mt$ orr,rl Ill s ltnt Ground D1nnv Ctr 11l '11 Ton'f'I Pepperoni (Henry 1,e 116 Tlmt To Flrt (L1rrv Wrl1htJ 117 Hus1llne Sol !Alch~rd V1llltln) 117 I'm Early Jtrry Rlchat 1) 117 Mr. P1rr Butler {H•rlt'I' Crolbvl 117 L~&I &.i!l/IY (Steve Tr11111r1J 117 S•VINTH ltACE -170 v1rds. 3 veer Olds tnlf UP. llllOWll!'ICI. PUrM Sl.00. Tori Print (Curtll P.merl 117 Gr1nd1 MvchtchO (H1r11v Crosbvl 111 ldl RUt'I {ROtllld 81nk1l 11, MOCll'l't Coleen (Jlmtl Orty1rl 115 ~Ind River Win Terri LIPhtm) 122 11rll1 fl:ot>trl Ad1 ls tn 11 Ct11rt1 (Jolln Wthonl 115 hill 81r IOtnnv C1rdo11J 117 llOHTH ltACI -lSO Ylfdl. 3 veer cld• 1nd up. Allow•nce. Purr moo. Thi McDonnell Dowl11 SHCll , su11r L•nc1r fl(fiirlf111 Htrll 111 RockY Stlci'I Hink IH1tnrv PIHi 117 Split l" (John WtUOl'l! lll Nocr Cl'l1r11 Ul:cbert Ad1lrJ m Jtl'I Ltd'I' LIKk (Don1ld Al llOn 11t No ReJlrtlnt {Ttrrv Llph1ml 11• Ftl'li'1Y F1rkt1 {Da"ny C1rdo111 11• Ml1s C11in air (J1rrv 11tlch1rch) 11$ l!llti+tr Curll' Pernerl 117 c~ld'J 11 10cn1td Kn!thll 11s HINT ltACI -400 v•rd1. 3 'l'Nr 11.ld1 !"' 'r.· Cltlmlnt. Puru 11100. Cllfm t'IO •r Cl $1600. Mlk Otck'I Pl-fOll'lll'I' C1rdo11J Ill Plcldock Judie IDorllld Alllson) 170 ~ ~~"?111'~~~c1 ... ~~~\ \~ 81i Spv rT1rrv Llohtml 117 Al1mllc1 B~ II C'l:Obtl'I Ad1 lrl 117 1 Jr. { rink Bontl 111 Otvld Ktnntlh Htrtl 117 Btr B &eult (!:dcllt G1r-i1I 111 r H Bir (OONlld 1Cnl1l'llJ 110 Bass Hitting Sand bass struck like lightn-. ing Wednesday on half day ventures out or Newport Beach's Davey's Locker. Limits of sand bass up to five pounds were obtained in 40 minutes at one point. A total of 530 bass were taken by 53 passengers. * F or We dnesday Los Al Results W..MM1y, .llllY ». tm Cl•tr a '''' Pl•ST ltACI -AOCI Y•l'lf1. ! yur t(.cla. Cl11mlnt. l"UrM llli!». Oul>IOMdoo (µptllm\ t,IO •.60 3.40 Joyou' V1ttt11h11 (W11sot11 '·'° a.DO Kk•ov Lu (V1u;h11) •.OO Tf!TI• -20.M • It l•Kll t -0VDldlld8' & 1 -Jl'I'-Vtlet'lllllt, ,.«! MtM. ll!COND ltACI -110 'l't•di, 3 "''' old1 & 110. Cl1lml"111. P1r1rt.t: S2000. Mr. PtrM1n1llly (Ptrl'llt') '-IO 4,20 ) . .0 Trl1h'1 81rred /Ptg1I I.to 4,60 Go Flot1!1 Go !AUl&0nJ ).to Tlmt -.U."4. TMlltD llACI --4CXI y1rd1. 2 yur old1. Ct1lm!119, Purt.t: SllOO. Ptddy Btr• !Wrlthll 5.00 4.60 2."° Miu Dtpth B1r1 IH1rO 29.'° I.to Tars, CM ltp.pre ssive Newport Harbor High's sum· mer basketball forces turned in their most outstanding ef- fort of the year Tuesay_~night Jn nicking Pacifica, 58-56, in Orange Le&gue action. And Costa Mesa was im- pressive to say the least, smashing Sonora, 6(1.22, with the help of a 40-4 spurt during the second and third periods. Coach Dale Hagey o f Newport had only one regular starter in the lineup, yet his Sailors reversed an earlier IS. Angel's Kiii (Ll~ml Tlmt -!1.03. .... •ou•TH •ACE -jtt Ylrdl. '·"''' °* 6 ~ $1trtll"• Al1Wttnt;f, Pur" UIOO. P1WP1rou1 Olltil Girvin County IL!phlm) CletP Tonti> (Ctrdou) Timi -v.1s. 11'1,TH •ACI -300 y1rd1. I Y•I• cld1. AllaW&llCI. Pur11 ,2000, Th• ct~lll1n Emolcl'l'lll W1U1r1 1 n d Reere1llOl'I A11oel1llon Lan; 8111ch N1v1t Sltllon. G&Vtlmtft ILlofltml 3.60 3.00 2.60 Truly Hot ,P111t1 {Acltlr) 3.40 2.60 The Moonshlntr (~Ith) 3.00 Tlmt -~.SO. SIXTH ltAC£ -350 y1rd1. 3 y11r olds, Allowtne:e. Puru 17000. Ml11y Tt (l(nltht) I.Ill 4.20 3.20 Kl"'lll Bird ITret1$urtl l.60 2.60 DtndY Echo (Llphlm) •.IO Tlmt -11.02. No Krtlche~. U •k1cl1 11 -Mluy T1 & I -Kln.t a lrd, 111ld w .ot. SEVENTH. RACE -350 YtrdJ. 3 ye1r Old1 & I.IP· CltlmlJlil. Purt.t: 13200. Tht Asslstenct Le1pu1 al An&llelm. Ht'N Oltmano:I {Knlghl) 7.olll 3 • .0 2.IO Chkk Coolin ((:11'1fa11) 3.00 2,60 Spur City {P ... ntrl 3.00 Tlmt -11.96. SCrtkhed -Fa>CY Don, •tGMTH RACll-J50 yda."3 yr. olds & up. Claulf!ed 1Uow1t'IC1. Pur1e !HOO. Dupe'• Delly (81nk1) 17.IO 6.70 3.20 Uncle Chick CAdtlr) •.OO 3.70 SCDOPI Altblll ILll)h&m) 2.90 Tlmt -17.15. Na acr1lc11H. llllNTM ltACE -350 yards. 3 y~er olds & up. Ctelmlng. PurM $1\IOCI. S&1nt'• e1nto (Ad&lrl 7.00 3 . .0 2.60 Slrt1kv J1m11 (V111ghn l ~ . .O 3.20 Mr. L111r (Wrlghll 3.60 Tlmt -11.12.' SCretched -Kluiou Rtbel, l'm Ser- io, UllCll Edpr, Cl'ltck1doo111, Mr. Ptlt 81r. Thur1d1y1 July 2'1, 1972 Eagles, MD Giese To ps Laguna Scoring Lagunans Down Foe Bag Cao-e W · h 40 · P f V. . 0 it -po in t er ormance Laguna Beach defeated Tustin in overtime, 8-5, In summer water polo com• petition at Costa Mesa Hl.gb School Tuesday evening. 1ctor1es Estancia 'fligh's E a g I es maintained their advantage in Costa Mesa prep summer basketball circles Tuesday night with a 55--42 triumph over Ramona . Mater Dei cleaned house with Santa Ana , roll ing to a 58- 47 victory wh,ile Santa Ana Valley was victorious via the· forfeiture route over Westminster. Estancia 's balanced attack was led by the trio of Scott Gaynor, Todd Collins and Mike Magner. eaci] con- tributing 15 points to tfte win- ner's attack. Mater Oei 's big gun was George Herold, in h i s customary role. Herold crip- pled Santa Ana's chanCE:s With 22 points with eight field goals from short range and six free throws. 111111c11 IUI 1•11 ltlf!IOnt ftttpllp G1ynor 6l115 Pirtle I 0 l l Co!lln1 7 1 1 M1gJW!r • 6 •' > " M~ddet1 0 4 Spheer 1 2 3 • TOlllll 21 l3 t 55 H11t!1mt : E1Mncl•. 21·13. Miler 011 CJ&I un s.1111 A111 ft fl pt Ip (;rotlcl'I 3 0 4 ' Otlanev 1 2 o Herold 1 ' l Gre.n 401 w 1y11nd 2 o ~~"=~r l s o 81llea"ro 2 O o Kemper 2 O O Total' 2.s • 11 H1tfllme: S1nt1 A111. 3'-30. Jeff Giese of University High was the No. 1 score r in Monday's first round action at the Laguna Beach summer basketball league tournament. The Trojan scored 40 points in leading his mates to an 8&- 76 win over Laguna Beach No. 2. Other results i n c l u d e d Mission Viejo over Laguna Beach, 90-52 ; San Clemente over Oceanside. 64-52: and Mission Viejo No. 2. bounced Dana Hills, 61-39. Dlllll Hllll ~)f) n pl 111 Ol'flwn l''' Ellenh!llm 10 !' 01 '!' 1Cr1m1r 01r11n i 0 o' WllMin 4 F1lr I O l To!lls 1' 7 11 39 MIM!afl Viti• Ml. I (UJ .. ~. ·~· Hlrrl• Neufltld Stint /Holley Tl'l11m1t Tot115 ft ft pl Ip , 0 3 ' s 0 t ' 7 I l lS i g : 11 ' J i 11 ;: SCIN lw 0.•rltrs Dini Hiiis 1 IS l 1~ MY No. 2 16 11 12 15--fll pl t• . " ~ ! ~ 11 ; : '' SJ pl '" • • ~ ~~ ~ \~ I 1' 2 • ' " " ~ ~t~ "" Fore..,tn ·-" Herf\jlndat 01rt1n c~• TO!tl9 SI" Cltmt!IHI f'4l " " pl ,, ' • • n 2 I ' J , ' ' 7 ' 0 1 • ' l 2 11 ' 1 ' 11 25 ,, ll ~ Seo,. ltv Qu1rt1tt O<ttni!dl ll 1 U 1'-52 San Cltmtn" 16 'JO \$ 1).......64 Unlw1r1ltv Utl " fl pl '" Witt '11' 1(11lesll111 s, l 1 \l SCOll 0 1 lft Gili.t H 1n ,1 .0 Giver+ ! 2 ' ~:tt1~,. f b ~ 6 ,' H~l!CI' I 0 1 Ta!lls 3l U 14 II L11wn1 leltll Nn 2 \"' lq I pl Ip 8. MC .... ll'U~ I I) • •' s. M<Menus J o ' Greot 2 o j • Ne11 • l 1l WroaM I l II 11 An~erson \II 6 1 26 Ratlll)IJn I O < 10 Tor111~ ll 12 16 16 Sea,. llY Ou11r1•r1 lJi>•veril•v 11 11 n 29-11 L1oun1 No 1 20 11 10 ?>-16 It was Peter Morton who scored the winning tally for the Artists after tanking two goaJ.s dur ing regulation play. He made the goal with two minutes lert in overtime, shooting from 12 feet out. In the same division Servite downed Lowell, 20-3, Kennedy forfeited to Santa Ana Valley and Rancho Alamitos forfeited. to University. Action at Orange Coast College found Estancia II stunning LB Poly, 17-6. as Mark Mccartin whizzed in five goals and Bill Lee almost matched him at fou r. Deep Sea Fish Rep ort WESTMINSTER BOBBY SOX HOSTING ALL STAR TOURNAM ENT MOltltO IAY llrtbt1I -55 11,glers: lt5 r«k coo. lS ll"'IJ, cod, 1~$ 111).tcort. (Vll'l'I L1Ml1t1l -U 1n;l1'1: 13 11l~core, 57 lino cod. 617 rock cod. (Sift Sim-) -67 engltri: 55 llno cod, 710 rock cod. l 11 .. ntiut. IMPl!ltlAL Bl!ACH -!2 1ngler1: 12S blrr1cuc1a, 200 t>.t1s, 10 roc:k cod. 12 m1cker11. HUNTINGTOH IEACK -42 1nt!eri: 3 b1rr1cUd1. 340 1•nd 0111. SEAL IEACH -130 1ngltr$: 500 rock cod, 1,soo bllH, 35 bllrr1cl.ld1. l1r11 -\IS angler.: 17 h1Ubu1. 23 bll"•tud1, 36 b111. OANA WMAR, -19~ anglers: 152 c•Uco beu, 12 blrrtel.ld1, 4 h&llbul, 115 mecktrel. NEWPOltT (Arl'I L1ndl119 ) -167 tn!Jleri : l ,ll5 be5t. A b1rracud11. 1S< r(l(.)c ~ao, 10 m1Ck1rel, 1 ~alltw! (DIVIY'l Loe-tr) -111 11ngler1; 'JO barracuda. 1 bo"l10, l.6S9 ban. 319 roe:~ Ced. 9 hallb<.11, IJI mac~trtl. OCEANSIDE -11S angler~: 12 b1r· July 29 thr11 A119vat J At l :OO P'.M. AMERICAN LITTLE LIA.GUI FIELD r•cUd•, U albacore, 21 bonl!o. 177 oeu .I W•ttmlnittr 3 lla!lbn!, ~ rock cQd, a mac~~·el 1 ~;.;:;;;;:;;;~;;;:;;;;:;;;~:;;::;;;;:; LONG BEACK (91lman1 Pltr) -~I 1n111trs: 4 01rr1cUd1, 910 c1lica. ll•rgt - -'.cl ano1er1 : 6 1>arr1u.cta, 1S bass (Pl1rpol11I L1111llJ1tJ! -n •noler~ s blrr1cud1, 610 calico 1>as1, I whl!e 11~hllss, ?S rock cod. SAN OIEGO· -103 1noler1: I yetlow!elr, 6 oarrecuda, 31S cali(o Dils•. IS rock cod. lt2nd St. L1Mll11t) -6~ •"'llllers : 4 D1r ... cUd1, 910 calko bliss. h•llb<if, 200 uni:! bll11. AT TENT I ON! ALL point loss to Pacifica with pa-, liiiiiiiiiiii ... lii'9~•• .. i!l!IP.i!~f!.,.Pi~iii\ tience, timely shooting and l TENNIS PLAYERS PARAMOUNT SPORTS strong board play . Jim Swick dominated the boards and scored 18 while Dan Nichols and Brian Cokas added 14 and 12. Dave Brockmeyer and Nat Spangler turned in &II-round perfor- mances to aid the Newport upset Hagey called the play of Nichols, "His best ever," and praised his entire unit for its sterling performance. N...,.,i Htl'bcl~ 'W tf Cok11 I o o NlchOl1 '• I 2 Rll'ntr 0 Swick J • 30 !rockmt'flr 2 0 penolr,• I O 5o Toi• 1 2• 10 Sctrt llY Outrt•ri P1clllc1 13 16 10 Ntwiiorl U 11 16 Catll Mffl 4fAI ft Swtln 23 2 SC hr~ I Cummln1 4 5 ~"'' l •, arownlnt Qulnllvtn 1 O Merritt 0 O ~~cm:· l ' To1111 score .., -~' Cosl1 Mt11 ' 11 lf ~r• ' 2 ' 11-56 ,,_ .. ,, ,, ' . ~ 1I . " '' i t J li-tt 5YEAR/50,000 MILE WaRRanty At No Extra Charg e p r & l•~OI 0 ("lo' Pow•< T,.,. WE'VE ·oor IT .ALL J,OGETHER • Ro1d Test• Drain & Refill Fluid • Remove Pin • Visual lnStJICtion • Adjust Binds l Link1g1 • New Pan G11ket • Clea11 S11mp & Sc,.... ••c01H11t1011 Permlttl.,." In tern1tional/ Co1 st-to-Coast @~an TRANSMISSION · 1934 NowPorl Blvd. 645-7570 SANTA ANA 129 E. First St, .......... 55'·10.U LONCi IEACH $50 E, Pecll!e COllll Hwy. 591-1331 WHITTIER 120•1 Whlllier Blvd, , ...... 99-0027 DOWNEY 12141 Llkewocd Blvd ••• M,.1561 MON. THRU FR I. 8 to 6 e SAT. 8 to 1 (after 35 years in Los An geles) A nno unces The Gra rid Opening OF ITS 02 TENNIS SUPER MARKET WED •• THURS •• FRI •• SAT. July 16 thru July 2t 333 E. 17th ST., Costa Mesa (8f'hind The Intf'rnetional House of Pancakes) PHONE 642-6886 TENNIS MOVIES -FUE GIFTS FOR ,AHi DRAWING FOR VALUABLE PRIZES! tno purchase neeessary l , EVERYTHING FOR lHE TENNIS PLAYER Including Exptrt Rutrlng lng & Prtmpt Repair hrvke *That includes even San Diego and Santa I Barbara channels-'Total Television' can find out what's on even on Santa Barbara's Channel you San 3 ' Diego's television the • -In week's channels 6, 8 and 10 Yes, now -and get every the help worth of listings you DAILY PILOT. Wrth Saturday in TV WEEK and in the daily logs in the of our friends at TV WEEK, the DAILY PILOT got it all together. Now readers, especially those in the South Orange Coast area and all others on community cables who can pull In all the signals there are in the Southland, 'Totai Televislon', the most complete newspaper listing of television fare avaUable. offer we ' . . • Every Sunday in TV Week-Every Day in Daily TV Log I • ' ' •• ' " •• • DAILY PILOT o Drama Seen GOP Convention r GAii Too Simple? , WASl!INGTON (UPI) Tb e blic1ns need to eet. up 1 think tank o contrive w1y1 to put some drama and pense into their 1972 national con· tion. Any0oe who watched. the 1958 C<ln· entlon would Jlke something better than e routine show which renominated wight O. Eisenhower by unanimous te. The Democrats. without looking, found me suspense elements fo.r their recent nvention. ]lut by mlsmanagement ol ht schedule they deferred most of the xcitement they offered to hours after time for most ot their television au- ience. How can the usually more sedate epublicans hold an · audience for the ominatlon of President Nixon? AJ ootli Clean.er ompa11ies File ·, vi.dence for Ads WllSl!INGTON (UP!) -Makers of eading toothpastes and denture cleaners ava responded to government in· tructions and filed evidence to back dvertising claims they make for their roducts. The Federal Trade Commission today ade publie the documentation sul>- itl~d by the manufacturers. The FTC no judgment concerning the merit rtfte responses. It previousl,y had asked oi. evidence from auto makers and ap. Jilnce manufactyrers. fOOcumentation was filed with the FTC Y~ Beecham, Inc., Clifton, N . J. Matl..eans); Carter-Wa1l11ce, Inc .• New •Wk' City (Pearl Drops Tooth. Polilh); "te-Palmolive Co., New York gate Dental Cream with MFP, and ltra-B rite); Lever Brothers Co., New ~k'(Pepsodent. Close-Up); the Procter Gimble Co., ,Cinncinati, Ohio (Crest, eern II): Block Drug Co., Inc. Jersey '!/'1 N.J. IPolident Tablets, Dentu• ~eJ; Richardson-Merrell, Inc., New .,k (Kleenite). and Warner-Lambert . Morrit Plains, N.J. (Efferdent Tab- ). l: apoatlea of unity, the Republicam nevtr have cared much about a public showing of family quarrels anyway. One obvious element of suspense would have left unsettled the question of renominating Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. Nixon virtually killed that possibility when he said he did not believe In breaking up a winning com· bination. There have been no major contests ove'r seating GOP convention delegates for 20 years and none is in sight this year. The platfonn committee for the party In power customarily assures everyone that It is free to write its own document before its · members shift a few commas and dutifully sign one coming by a circuitouS route from the White House.· A task force to write a script for a con· vention with drama might devise a sham battle over party reforms , more far reaching than those to be offered and more like those which ~aused a shakeup in the Democratic party. This does 11ot appear to be a seriowi possibility either. The GOP can expect more violent an· tiwar demonstrations than those at the Democratic convention. The Democratic experience of four years ago should assure more security than Chicago, 1968. But if it is dull inside the haJI, the cameras would show exterior scenes quickly if there were signs o f disturbances. In 1956, Harold E. Stassen took a month's leave from his job as a presiden· tial adviser to try to p e r s u a d e Republicans that Nixon should not be renominated for vice president. He argued that Christian A. Herter Jr. would be a stronger candidate. Herter conferred with ' Eisenhower;: the 11econd day of the convention, dropped his campaign and made a seconding speech for Nixon. Since both parties require rollcalls on presidential nomination, Eisenhower received the votes of all 1,32.1 convention delegates. On the vice presidential nomination, a Nebraska delegate reserv- ed 'the right to put forth the name of an unidentified "Joe Smith." The delegate was Terry M. Carpenter, elected to lhe House as a Democrat in 1932 and unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1934 and for the Senate ln 1936. -. .. . ~ . ~o NOT OisTtJlt.S -- Takhtg Sttof.!::e This young lady didn't want to be disturbed while relaxing at a park in Omaha, Neb. recenUy so she attached a little sign to her toe to put the point across. Baja's Governor Big Favorite With Citizens MEXICALI, Mexico !AP) -The familiarity which Baja California's ~ pie feel for Gov. Milton Castellanos Everardo is something U.S. politicians yearn for this election year. Milton is a byword throughout the northwestern Mexico state where the 51- year-(lld Castellanos was chosen governor las~ fall. JN THE PALA CE in Mexicali recently, a little girl looked up at the husky Castellanos and, not knowing who he was, said: ''I see Milton all the time on television and you look just like him." The affection which his people' show dates back beyond the days when Castellanos was named to run the Mex· ican Federal Agricultural Bank in Mex· icali. He took the door off his office and hung a sign instead that said, "Don't an- nounce yourseU, come on in and let's talk." . . Ba~kpa~k Boom Studied '' ' ,· Officials Try t,o Regulate Hardy Hiking Campers By BILL MILLER 'NEW YORK (UP!) -During Branley ·en's record 73-day hike along the ,Q.09-mile Appalachian Trail, be saw t 200 people. at was two years ago. Today it Id be a diCferent ·story. eavy traffic in the Great Smoky untains has made it necessary for al officials to restrict the number of er'n.ight campers on the trail. the White Mountains section of the palachian Trail , it is estimated. a hiker ,sses every 20 seconds during the peak mmer :;eason. THE WEST, a Sierra Club official ys local authorities already have begun count noses" by means or a special lderness permit with an eye toward ure restriction. 1 of which prompts officials in the ckpacking industry to project $49 oeful Wally or .fort Lauder· ale, Fla. took to the roof of doghowe during a recent -hour downpqur that inun- d1tecl the town with lour lnallu of rain. • million ln sales this year, up 15 percent over ,1971. "Principal growth will be In high .. nd equpment sales, with consumers paying as much as 40 percent more for · equip- ment," says Rich Boggs, national sales manager for Himalayan Backpacking Equipment Co. · 1 Backpacking had Its first big year in 1969, with sales topping out at about $25 million. Sales rose to $31 million a year later and to $41.5 million in 1971, a 25 percent increase, industry sources said. "THE GUYS AND GALS who'll be heading into America's hinter·lands this summer are mature backpackers. They tried their legs last year and like it. And they're going back this year with more expensive, lighter and more portable equipment," Boggs added. The backpacker is purchasing high- quality nylon backpacks instead of duck, down sleeping bags instead of fiber-filled units and nylon tents under four pounds in weight. The hiker's load has been· further J)ghtened by the freeze-dried food revolu· tion. These instant package meals can reduced his food poundage as much as 75 · percent, allowing him to stay in the backcountry for longer periods of time. ''Before food and equipment lightened, a backpacker could only carry three to five days or gear .. Now he can stay as much as 10 days to two weeks easily,'' said a source at Paragon Sporting Goods, Inc., here. - LIGHTER GEAR ALSO allows hikers to walk farther because they don't ha ve to work so hard carrying their packs, he said. Equipment is not only improved, it is also more available. lo 1969, 60 percent of sales went to a few specialty stores while mass merchandisers such as Sears, Roebuck & Co. and olht!rs had only a 5 percent market share. Specialty shops are expected to ac· count for 48 percent of sales this year and ma ss merchandisers 25 percent. By 1975, mass merchants are expected to comti;: 40 percent or industry sales, lt ts estimated. 11\IPROVEMENTS IN GEAR have oomblned with grealer svallablUly to In· crease tremendously t r a fl J c on America 11 1~0 hiking trails. Of about 65 million campe:-s, some 20 million have tried backpacking. "It's become the 'In' thing to do, C-OUe~e kids used lo go to lbe beach dur· Ing their vacations, but now they like to go backpackin4," said Stan Murray, a chemical tngmecr who &ervta as cl.airman of the Appalacian Trail C-Ol!ftre~ In his spore time. A wllderneu resource, however, can't accommodate as many people ts a aeaallore and atill retain Ill natural b .. u-ty. The garbage problem hu totlen to bad in some areas, the Great Srrioky Moun- tains for one, that it's become necessary to fly it out with helicopters. SO, WHILE TIIE BACKPACKING in- dustry is enjoying burgeoning sales, tn· vironmental and conservationalist groups are faced with a new problem, Jn the past, their only concern was checking industry's continuing quest for natural resources. Now, they must figure out some way to protect nature from all the people seeking to enjoy it. Effotis to cope with the problem of in· creasing traffic focus on two primary areas : -Ambitious programs are under way to educate hikers on trail etiquette. -Clubs and ot.her groups try to main· tain some sort of natural selection by being honest about the hardships of the trail . THE SIERRA CLUB PUBLISHES a lirochure on wilderness manners, which has national and state park approval. The Appalachian Trail Club also is seek- ing to Jnstruct trail travelers in ways to de-emphasize the impact o( their use on the land. "We encourage a 'pack·it·in, pack-it· out' policy which, when you get right down lo it, is just good sense. Still, the garbage keeps piling up," Murray said. Hiking trails are hard work, and most clubs figure it 's important for them to re- main that way. The Pacific Crest Trail, ln a descri~ tive brochure, is brutally honest in its ad· vice to potential .hikers. "NO ONE UNFAMILIAR with rugged mountain terrain or unable to take care of himself under all conditions should at- tempt to walk this trail," it says. Despite strong attempts to hobble ln· duslrial exploitation of wilderness lands, little success has been encountered. Most sources fully expect construction of the Alaska piepline to begin this sum- mer and in California voters recently defeated the controversial Proposition Nine, which tried to write a number t>f 1tringent ecological controls into the state constitution. Induslry opposition, led by Standard Oil and Pacillc Gas & Electrtc Co., spent an estimated $1 .5 mllllon in an effort to have the blU defeated. SHELDON COLEMAN, CllAIR.l\IAN of the Coleman Co., Inc., believes the boOm Jn outdoor recreation eventually will pressure the ~ovemment into mote aa- gresslv,t consetvaUon tfforl3; How~rd Sexton, a retired Ironworker who at ag• 68 has logged •bout 10,000 hiking miles, lsn1t so sure. "Mlftll of the people I meet on the b·alls complatn about lack of ..,. commodations and places to drive tllllr campus and traU bikes. If they have !heir way, In • few years hiking In the wUdernest wlll be tlliW'nount to o ..,. di)' 1troll tbroUflh thi'llrom," ht stlcL 6 4 2 -5 6 7· 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 • DARY .PILOT CLASSIFIED I ---l~I ---I~ Ge ..... G1n.r1• * * * * * * TAYLOR (0. EXCLUSIVE UNDA ISLE Near new, custom bit. 5 bdrm. home. Design· ed by Herbert Brownell . Most rooms have lovely water view. Lge . family rm. & formal dining room. Many line features. Pier and slip. Good location ••............... $167,000. "Our 27th Y11r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reoltors 211 I' San Jo•quln Hiiis Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N.B.. 644-4910 General . MESA VERDE 5°/o DOWN Move lnto this darUn1 3 bedroom. 2 bath home for a small down payment. Located in one of Costa' M€sa's m0&t desl'ralSle areas. Neat new carpets and custom drape!, wood shutters and Joli af wall~per. Schools are Mesa Verd,e, TeWinkle aod ~tan cia. Priced at 131,000. Call for mott in farmat lon 546-2313. 'O THE RL:AL "'-f :'TATF:RS FOUR BEDROOMS $26,500. Our best Costa Mesa buy! It's all been repainted in· side and out and features 2 full bathroonu and custom abutters, Lota of room for boat or trailer. Bil double a:arage, too! NO DOWN TO VETS! HURRY! • co:Ts . WALLACE REALTORS _ _,,,.,4,.,.4141- (0pon EWll!ntsl * OCEANFRONT * Home. 4 Bdrms., 2 baths, with 40 ft, frontage. This older home has lge. living rm .. lrplc.; dining rm., ex- tra lge. kitch. Dbl. garage plus extra parking. Best area, nr. Newport Harbor Yacht Oub. Easy ta 11bow. $100,000. Call: "673-3663 642-2'l53 Eves. associated BI< Oi< ERS-R EAL TORS 10. J >'lo Bclboo l>]J.]66) TIME BOMB with a short price of $17,900. Take a look at this beauty. Low price also includes washer & dryer. VA r.o down terms and $100 down FHA with total payment of $155. Why rent? Call now for infonnation. !""""! ,. i, I I< f I: ·'• : I I -·· Realtors~ Open Eve&. $49,950 J Bclr. + Family Rm. open beamed ceilings in lam· ily rm, dining nn, wet bar, oversized master bedroom, 2 fireplaces, built·ln range + oven + dishwasher, IWHpi.ig vieW, titk, 540-1720. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa JUST REDU~ED PENINSULA POINT -Fine home on two lots. 5 bedrooms and 5 baths. Great family rodn'I features wet bar. Spanilh ti.le roof and floor • D}Ulive be,qt c~~s • Old World charm. Now $120,000. PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- 642-5200 POOL Huge Swim Pool $35,000 Larr• l&!nll.Y room, 3 bed· nlDMS. >!ta bath>, dlnlnf rooro, · entry hall, 2 fire- place., bullt·ins, dl&hwuher, eJectric aarqe door Ol)tntr, picture book yard. patio, ,..~ bric, 540-17)). TARBELL 21111 Hubor, eo.ta M ... Fred Mac Donald Med1Ulon BulldJna a COntractor 9 1111) NowPoft Blvd. Nowpirt Bech !13-6et Don't Pt "' tile 1!1lp1 '1J.Jt" tt ln clau.ifled. Ship to'6horo l!aultl! w.sn. I General SH:ARP DUPLEX Splendid owner's suite of 2 bdhn.11. with an additional .rental unit to ~r your laxes, inllur., &: more. An immae, home in a tine neia:hbothood. $52,900. IRVINE TERR. Lovely 1maU home, localed among I a r g e , expenalve homes. Ideal for the active couple who want space ·tn the rear far • campers, trailen or ,boats, plus room for a.. pool. Lo~tst price at $49,750. CAMEO SHORES A most exceptional home wlth its htd. A filtered pool, plus some ocean view. The lg:e. mstr. BR. baa Us own aitting qn; w/frplc. Can be ~n anytime. $88,500. 675-3000 m 11.n ,\ 111:.lfll ------ VACANT No down GI Loan available. 5 Bedrooms and family room. Carpets & drapes thruout plus many extras. Owner amdous, must 1ell immedialely. $34,000. NO DOWN GI. Call 540-ll51 · HERITAGE REALTORS $27,950 Assume 5V•1'~ L .. n Paytrtent.s leu than rent. The rear yard has beautiful fruit tree&, covered patio, and BBQ area. 3 Bedrooms, den, built-In range, o v e n , dishwasher, natural brick fireplace, no down terms, Brk, ~1720 TAR BELL 2965 Harbor, Costa l\.tesa SERIOUS SELLER with realistic price for todays market. OUers 3 queen-sized bedrooms and 2 baths • sparkling clean and ready. Assume VA loan with toW ~payments of $188 per month. Large corner Jot with trailer gate. Full price ts pj,950. Submit your down payment to Real ton 545-0f65 . Open Eves. • POOL< TIME • MESA VERDE • 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, living + dining area, fireplace, built-ins, dbl &¥· Tropical back yard w/lovel.)r . pool. Good tenn1. $32, 750. OPEN DAILY, 1500 BAKER CALL ANYTIME 646-3921 or Evo: 67M936 Lachenmyerl ~,, dtor , WATCH TIIE SHIPS No syp.glass needed! Million $$ view ol Lido, Balboa A Cat.Alitll; handllOme houae by the St!I, only $54.500. REAL ESTATE TREASURES 1831 W<tlclilf, NB ~ 5 Blti BDRMS. Sharp, cle.an home with Wire tamlly room located in Newport Beach. SS511XK>. *FULLIR .REAL TY* !H6-081f ~· * NEW LISTING * PRIMI ULIOA LOC. f Furn. apts. Walk 'to 1>11, (my, ~ I: pitt. 1152.IOO IALllOA IAY PltOP. * 642.-7491 * Fut ___ .,_I call • ...,. llMll1t. [ ---l~I -r.Wo I~ Gen1r1t Genera• ... -.. MOUNTAIN VIEW! Spacious 3-bedrooni, 2-bath home in prestige neighborhood of Diamond Bar commands lights and Mt. Baldy view. A rur.al atmos- phere privacy and prox1m1ty to horse coun· try a~d all of southern California ~ake this immaculate home a bu y. Extras include a formal dining room , professior:ial land.s~a~ing with two patios, complete ~1r con~1t1onmg, Old World Kitchen and all-bflck family room, two fireplaces. Priced at $42,500. PAUL BOYD REALTY 524A S. BREA BLVD. BREA -(714) 529-428' G1n1r1I TRIPLEX Most exceptional • custom built. Owners upper unit with about 2'100 sq. ft, has 3 BR. solarium, 2 Ba.. 2 frplc's, highly upgrl\ded cpts & drps. Other 2 U are dellghUul, 2 Br. ea. All cop- per plun'lb., encl. a:ar's., patios, low maint. Designed for max. security & beauty with WJ'QU&ht iron grill courtyard. A delight to behold. South c.oast Real Estate, 545-M24. ( 0 p e n Eves.). $29,950 5 Bedrooms 2 Baths Wonderful family homt>. Con· venienl family room. natural brick fireplace, entry hall, rear living room, dining room, built·ins. brk, 540.1120. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa VISTA DEL LIDO Luxury Apt, On the bay l\1agnif~ent View Slip Available Georg• Wllllamaen R1•ltor 54M.S70 645-1564 General 2-STORY POOL-$20,900 It's true! A eracldlna brick fireplace. Winding staircue to queen size bedrooms. Gourmet kitchen • IN· CLUDES REFRIGERATOR, WASHER AND DRYER! Private patio. Pool with cabana. $200 BUYS IT! call fast for appt, to see • 645-0003 I OKI.\ I L Ol \O\ kL 1 "i)"'> ASSUMABLE VA Anyone can assume this hi&h balance VA loan. No Q\lallfy- ing and no loan point-.. Sparkling 3 bedroom home features all builtln garden kitchen, a large bonus room and enclosed patio. A&Jcin&: $33,500. For details - Call 540.1151 (Open Eves.) • r . HERITAGE . • REALTORS Don't give up the ship! "Llat" it 1n classified. Ship to Shott Results! 64.i.5678. Gen1r1I I I CAPISTRANO COUNTRY ESTATE Nearly new, secluded ranch home; 5 BR.. 50' pool , cust. arch. design. Acreage, many trees, horses O.K. Great family living. $165,000. George Grupe OPEN OAIL Y 2·5 **2106 ·E . BALBOA BLVD. Estate size bayfront lot. 73' Frontage. Marcia Bents 305 LINDO AVE. 5 Bedroom Peninsula home. Bili Bents BEDROOM TALK If 2 bdrms. fill your needs-this is it! Very nice Unlversity Pk. townhouse. Well locat- ed, priced to sell, $29,900. "Chuck" Lewis GREAT VIEW-THREE ARCH BAY Charming 2 BR., DR, patio. BBQ. new kit· chen. Low maint., sprinklers, hardwood floors ••• and more ..• $64 ,500. Bob Yorke DOVER SHORES-BEST VIEW sr,aclous 5 BR., F.R. home. with good floor pan. Fantastic view from L.R., kit., DR & mstr. ~R. Lge. rear yard & pool. $125,000. Charlene Whyte I - · UPPER BAY VIEW Charmin~. customized Ivan Wells; 3 BR., could easily be 4. Oversize family room w f parquet floors . Two story entry & living room. Immaculate. Eileen Hudson LINDA ISLE Elegant-but economical. 4 BR. bayfront designed for happy living. lt's abeauty for only $139,000. Cali to see it today. Jlm Mu!· ler WALK TO BEACH Corona .del Mar, So. Hwy. R·2, ready to budd. unit. 5hai;1>. redecorated 4 BR., 2 Ba. ~unny Y.ellow kitchen. Covered patio. Move-m condition. $59,950. Triona Bergin BEAUTIFUL BIG CANYON Golf course, open space, compit. sec.; el .. gant 4 BR., formal DR., !am. rm., 2 !rpics Call for details. Paul Quick · FIRST TIME OFFERED ln EXCLUSIVE BROADMOOR. A family home w/f BR., Corms! dln. rm. & lam. rm . Ideal CORONA DEL MAR Joe. Communily pool, too. Call Bud Austin • r • Thursd<I, July 17, 1972 DAILY PILOT J.S • Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY' PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS - You Can Sell It, Find It, Tracfe It With a Went Ad • ·The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results -larUo _,,,_ ---I~ I --.. · 1~1 -·-I~ I -"'-l~I _,,,.. I~ General " 0 -PRIVACY COMING SOON in a compact home 2 bedrooms A 2 baths plus seperate guest room and bath, in popular ' .. .. * * WELCOME * * ~ ... ., ,., ., I ,, ·..;.· ~ hA .GUESTA ~ Bayshores, Built around private patio wlth sep&rate play yard in back. Comfortable living, with copper hooded fireplace expensive shuttes and bookshelves. .. i:: I A U~a.t: ttCMf SHINGLES AND SINGLED out fro m the crowd! This duplex has attractive private financing and cu~e--as-can-be renter appeal. A pair of 2, bdrm, 1 bath units with room to add on. Review the Unique Investment Analysis. Listed at $64,500. An xlnt value at BY THE SEA $55,000 968-2929 962-1371 REALTORS SINCE1944 673-4400 PHONE UNl9UE HOMES, CORONA DEL MAI, 675-6000 ELOISE MORRIS Ayres Since 1905 ON TOP OF THE AEAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICEST PEot-LE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES SUNSHINE CORONA DEL MAR. 675'6000 • MESA VERDE. Austin-Smith Gorman ts pleased to announce 1 that ELOISE MORRIS has joined our staff. She has been in the Real Estate field in the Newport Beach area for the last six years with one firm and was named Salesman of the Year for 1971 in the Newport branch for YELLOW ..... 990 • NEWPORT BEACH. 6456500 • CALL us J~!!!!!!!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l lAs bright and cheery 85 a General General Goner•! Genorol I Go 1 General sunny spring day, 3 --M-E0S ·-A--V-E_R_D_E_ • ner• ~....... • bedrooms, 2 bath~· private COLLEGE PARK li11~-,;;,:;;:~'tl~'-;";:;;...,~.;;,;;,,:;:'tlt•~,:;,.;:;;;~'tl~""';;'";;:~jj;;:;:;:...,_t;;, HIS • HERS • THEIRS .;;:;;;::;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::;:;;;;:;;;~I patio, immaculate grounds, 5 BEDROOM that company. · ' Eloise has established a very professional re- putation among her many clients and fellow Realtors. NO DOUBT ABOUT IT WE'VE GOT THE DUPLEX SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY -IN CORONA del MAR 2-Bedroom cottage with large patio separatiDg 2 bedrm. unit over garage, with -remodeling possibilities. Buili! up to see the ocean. Motivated seller asking ...... $69,500. POINTS TO PERFECTION . IN EASTBLUFF SEA HARBOR LIGHTS from this newly 4ec•, orated POPULAR MODEL 4 bedroom, 2 bath, dinin~ room:, f9Ck fireplace, carpets & drapes, built·lll kitchen. Safely fenced-in back yard for the llttfeones: ................... $55,500. ' i'START SMART'' WITH THIS CONDO! IN BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom, 21h bath, builtin kitchen, stone fireplace, FAMILY ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS in· eluding billiards. Fee land and close to every· ·thing. . ................. ~ •....• : ..... ~ $32,500'. • BUT B-E·A·U·T·l·'F·U·L IN THIS •Enchanting TWO STORY 5 bedroom, 3 bath, 2 fireplaces, FAMILY ROo'M, formal din- ing room, NEW carpets and .drapes, island· kitchen, SOMERSET model on FEE land in HARBOR VIEW HOMES ........... $72,500. "SPLISH-.SPLASH" . -. ON THE WATERFRONT· POOL, PIER and SLIP available too. New carpets and drapes, 2 Bedrooms, 2i,.; baths, WET BAR, marble fireplace. Overlook THE WATER from your patio and enjoy. $85,000. -OPEN HOUSE - 13 BR. & FAM.) -723 Cameo Highlands, Corona del Mar. $69,500. Open Friday 1-4 p.m .. ~ NllASlllef/JIS REALTORS 644·7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. llljfl"sa. .... _...,..., ............. ...,"."' .... _.,,..... .,.. 1r .. .. General General I SOLD I r eal tors Ever wish for the 3rd Bath with 2 pools, putting greeps 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 brick fire-$41,950 when Friends and Family and much more. Townhouse places give this Kenkoll are Gathered? Wish no living at Its best. l48,500. Cambridge model home an more tor' this Home has Exceptional terms. Call xtra flair for Calit. living. Just That PLUS a Formal BEAUTIFUL 673-8550. Jumbo bdrms make this a Dinina Room, Fam i ly most livable home. CALL --e Enclosed Courtyard TO SEE· Room, Living Room and 4 · Exceptional p r i v 8i c y ! ! $31,950 Large Bedrooms. If this Panoramic. VIEW! ! Elegant sounds like a Large 3 BR., garden room w/pool.1=7"=:;""''="'='='=~= • Home ... IT IS! Eastside Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. NEW DUPLEX Costa Mesa. NO OOWN TO VETERANS $43,500. Call SP~~'.f:g~.:AR . (;4&.{)55.5, Ev<!!\lngs 64&-9702. Is . fro . .. c·o LW £LL PROPERTIES, INC . REALTORS Harbor Lights the view m this exciting custom 2 bedroom home with a garden swimming pool high on ·a cliff. A Beautiful Island of seclusion on an R-2 lot. BIG CANYON FAIRWAY LOTS Pl\llh new duplex. 3 B<lnns, 11h baths, fireplace, shag cpts, wet bar, inside service porch in each unit. Nice corner lot, view of Sad- dleback. Call today' 546-8640. Open eves, till 9 pm. Newport •I are included in dramatic With beautiful Views views of Bay & ocean from on a secluded lane, with 4 From $52.500 to $80,00J bednns !·-'"· room 2 a mountain like hide-away ., ..... ..,,,. • in Newport Beach, sur-baths, block wall fence and rounded by dozens of trees, beautiful patio, Just 4 years this hillside home with 5 old and in great condition. Bedrooms, spiral staircase Realty C.ompany TWO DUPLEXES Assumable FHA loan with * Spacious Pacesetter * Cuslom Drapes * Shag Throughout * 2200 sq. It. of Enjoyn1cnt * Sprinklers Front and Rear * Close· to Schools and Parks * No Down to G.I. * Call 545-2313. "0 THE REAL '°" ESTATER.S , . . ' 20nALot ONLY $28,500! Wow! Extra large R-1 lot. 2 cream pull hon1es amid park like grounds. Queen size bedrooms. Chef's kitchens in both. l28.50 to buy! llurry · Call 645-0003. IOHl\I I Ol\O\ -. . ' ') ~ & gOurmet kitcben; has an 642..8235. 644-6200 Prime Santa Ana Rental paymts only l217, per month the .quality treatment for I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!'I Loc8tion, Each are Large 2 including taxes and insur- the enlertalners delight, HARD TO FIND Bedroom, 1 Bath. with ance. CALL us lor lurther including a pool, ·$94,400. Garage. Ottered lor SZ!,500 delails, * WATERFRONT * Call now.64&-7171. HARBOR each, with FHA·V4 F'lnanc-546-5880. (Open eves.) NEWPORT SHORES , · · Call •~ ~~ Ev-'--· 2 BR (can be. 3..f) tam. m. HIGHLANDS mg. -· ....... 3 ba'.. ~' cOn<i 155.ooo or d 646-9702. . Priced just right an "I trade for smaller same area. available !or occupancy CAYWOOD . REALTY belore the slart of sc.hool. * 548-l 2f0 * CORNER LOT Large three bedroo·m Large 3 Bdrm home with located on a tree liPed SHORECLIFFS Vacancies -money! ·Renl enclosed patio, near street -quiet inside lot With your house, apt., store We are very proud to have ELOISE join our ever expanding organization and invite all her clients and friends to call her at her ne.w location. AUSTIN-SMITH GORMAN, 2828 East Coast Hwy., Corona de! Mar., Calif. Ph: 644-7270. ·, Gener at ·-MODERN - BEACH HOME $34,500. 3 BR 2 BA "-Fran1e" cot· tage, Use your imagination, others have, and the resuUs are fantastic. Pool & tennis courts inc, Open daily 1-5. 5300 River, N.B, . " General ' 103 LINDA ISLE DR. N.~. 3 BR, 214 BA, 66' lot. 55' bof.t slip. $149.500. 2430 BAYSHORES DR. N.B~ 4 BR. 3 BA, 55' lot. $149,6/Jb. K.L. Hartm an R.E . Inv. 642-5100 64>'268i Balboa Island NE\V bayfront hOme. Pier & income. Open Sal/Sun/\Ved 1-5 337 E. Bayfront, Little Islarid WINTON. Realtor 6'f5.-33.11 B•ll•oe Ponin1ui• , ~~~-~~~~1 FIXER UPPER BEACH HAVEN JUST LISTED _ Best Mesa Ideal 2 BR. Ir family rm., for Verde location! - 3 le ta.mt-couple wantlng privacy. 2Mi Jy. Needs, lots of work but Ba. Near the Potp.t.. make offer noW and Mve! GE11M'""-- Vacant. Cul-Oe-sac, Walk to 1G10 W. Col.at Hwy., N.B. schools. REAL'roRS 642-4623 ~l 546-5880 OPEN EVES OCEANFRONT, 4 BR. 5 Ba. : f_ HERITAGE REALTORS tarn nn., wet bar. elegant 2 story. Ph for appt. 673-6892. everything. VA appraised at little tra11ic. Walk t ol~*"l"M°'M=E'"D'"."P"O"S"'S'"E"'S'"S'".*' Local professional has spent bldg., etc. tbru •Dally Pilot Like to trade? Our Trader's Paradise column is for~! t'Jl,IXXI. · Hur r y·t Call ~armers School and ~ Are you moving to Anaheim? tbouaanda ot dollars to Oaa:Wed Ad. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' : 546-8640. Open ··eves. till 9 11.braey •. Cool patio and m-Here's a nice home to move create what we feel Js one ~Go~,,.-.-.~1 -----General · · 1' :..pm. • · ' , yith&. tirepla~ Up-~ed right into. I.oveJy 3 BR., 1" of the most oubrtanding -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;e;n;e;r•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~"J • fliroug~l ~ for details. ba., Ige. family style kitchen homF_S in ~ area: from the r . C. f;. ~OleS"!'Orfhy w/bft-ins. Spacious corner m11SS1ve bnck entry to ~ & Company lot w/room tor boat & trail· seclnded. rear. yard, you.n er Good financing Owner fall m live with it. See 1t, 640-0020 ~;,.,: · """n ll you don't buy it! MORGAN REAL TY 589•500 Inclnding land. s28,3oo 673-664i 675-6459 CORBl·N 4 Bedrm. + 3 Baths • GRAND OPENING Friday, July 28th, 5-7 P.M~. ~~;:n~~o!:'~ ~~~ • JUST LISTED MARTIN room~ dining room, natural Single story 4 bedroom Pace- Honori111 our Clients wood cabinet" park like setter. Xtra wide lot with REAL TORS 644-7662 DUPLEX yard, Brk. 5!0-l12J len<;ed side yard, great for ROOMS FOR EASTSIDE COME SEE US, w• are as patriotic to our customeri as we camper, boats or whatever. °:.:''kl'::i,1.;, 3 ne°!""sh:~ . Quick J>05S"SSion. VA terms. ANYTHING $38,000. SOUTH COASI' F' bl bd in 1 din carpeting thruout, newly 2955 Har~-. Costa Mesa REAL ESTATE 54.5-8424 ave g erooma cu g decorated, fenced yard: ....,. ' · a huge master bedroom. PLUS 2 Bdnn, l bath • PENINSULA PT. MIN ES TO Lots of walk-in clooets. rented for l125/mo. Owner's 2-Sty. 5 BR., Ocean Blvd. 14 . UT Large family room off the unit vacant and ready for home, 3,COJ Sq. tt. 2 FrpJcs. PARK-LIKE LIVING. 2 BR modem kitchen. Big living I -• $34 500 Vacant -absentee owner deluxe-townhouse condomin-room with a fireplace and ~=/B~·. 646-fi855. ' • asking $87,500, will carry lum ll9,950. 15500 Tustin se2500parate di.ning1 are1 a.T_T.i~ I!!~!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!)!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!\ lst T.O, Village Way at McFadden square oo ..... ..-.... ""' CaU: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. off-ramp. beauty la only Ml,900 in-Bayfront Condo eluding the land! Call 3 Br, 2 Ba, pool, pier & slip. 646-nn. associated Delighllul $19,500 . EMERALD BAY lnutiaculate ! Br + tam.rm. BROKERS-REAL TORS 2c2• w f!.,l b~ro 6'l·J66l :o 1THE REAL '.)i ESTATERS · are to C!Ur flag and country ! We LOVE THEM and will serve them well! GINNY MORRISON REALTORS 1505 Mesa Verde Drive Eost Cool• Mesa, Callfomlo 557-4130 Ocean dde of hwy, View. Must iee! Sl49,000 Ted Hubert & Assoc. 3471 Via Udo 675-$500 Like to trade? Our Trader's By ~er, 3 Br, 2 Ba, trptc, V8.cancles cost money! Rent Paradise coltimn is tor )'OU! w/w crpt, drps, xlnt loc }'Otll' muse apt store 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. Westminster, $26,000 firm .. bldg., etc. ~a~ Pilot Call 642-5678. See to apprec. 846-6910. Classified Ad. . Member of Mulllple Listing Service All your real estate needs, r11id1ntial, commerclal, investments Gonor•I General General Gener•1 General General • WALKER & LEE REALTORS ~ ' ... CA$H FOl.:TOUl HOME* "For lllfo _, 546-1754 oowl $222 TOT AL MO. DOVER SHOlES-$107,000 Over 3200 sq. ft. ot conlfort, luxury, and prestige lft a magnificent Newport Beach setting with an unforgettable VIEW. Four spaclou11 bedrooms, 4 baths, large family room and FORMAL DINING ROOM. Shown by appointment only. SEE CATALINA TIME IOMI with a short price of $17,900. TfLke a loolt at this beauty. Low pMce also Includes \Vasher A: dryer. VA no down terms and $100 down FHA with total payment ot $~. Wby rent? Call now tor information. ' GIANT TWO STORY l • SOLD Subjc<l\, to VA loan at 7% w1th $5000 down or ofter. 1story1hlke root be<uty with• 3 bedrooml plus family room, 2 batho and otone fireplace. Seller ne<do INt oale. ~.500. From this magnificent custom home with Just under 3000 sq. ft. of comfort and Juxuty. Timi ot the view? Take a. dip ln the mammoth heated A filtered swimming pool. Hav~ teenagen? Besides the pool you Cfln probably use the big 3 car praae! $82,500. Shown ONLY through Walker ~ Let. On king size lot in North Co11" Mese. 4 bedrooms y.p&talts and a 20x24 finished separate family room downitalrs. 3 bathl. country kltchen and dining area, plus: carpeta ' drapei in evecy room. At $39,~ -better M?e It nowt New on market. 10,303 HOMES LAST YEAR ' ' WATDFIONT-$250,000 SllV"rlaUve custom mansion with 3,600 1q. IL of happy tamlly U\1lng. The epitome ot tllY care with electronte oven, betuutu1 wet bar, soothing sauna, electric movie scretn, Md th~ best in burglar al&nn t)'lttma. N<> addreaa will be given. Quallt'.ltd buyttl by advance 1ppolntmfnt oJlb'. Fountain Yahy Office 17213 '"'"""'""' 961-3371 Open ....... ,, • EXECUTIYI SPECIAL j. tor thlt superb 3 ~m home nestled among trm and shrubs. Sparkling quality for tlne tnterta1ntng. Lwlh deep pUe carpetJntr with custom matching drape-. all electric kitchen with all the trlmmlnga, fantastic flrepl&ce. What a &how place !or $39,500! Seller is prepared tor GI and FHA terms, now)11 the tJmc. C&lJ 511UOUS SIU.ft with realistic prl~ tor todaya market. Offen 3 queetHliec1 btidoo l'OOnlf and 2 baths -sparkling clean and rta.dy. AAaume VA Jou with total pa.ymentl: of $188 per month. Large comer lot wtth trailer gat<. Full ptle< lo $26,960. Submit your down l'O)'Dl<nt I!> Newport Beach Office -646-.7711 Costa Me1C1 Office 545-040 545-Mtl 2043 W01tctlff Dr. •I lrvlno Open 1-1ng1 2790 H•rllor Blvd., Open Evonlnp • • ' r I~ ( -"'.. )~ I -f•SM I~ I -"',. I~ I -"''* I~ I .-.... I~ I -·-I~ [ iiiiR~iiii""'"..:.iiiira!T 1 1 _,,,_ I~ Costa Mt11. 1;H;un;;;ti;n;g;lo;n;;BH;cc~h~jjj Hun1inglor BNCh lrvlneiiiiiiiim;:~iii Nowport llHch Mobile Homn Loll for S.leiiiiiiili7ilO I Houllt Furnlohecl ~ JC OAll.Y l'ltOT I._ .... Tr:1lned Gold Fish ___ 1;,;;~::=:~~~;--ll ,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;;::;;. \;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;; 1'.-..:.---'----For Sole 115 Coron• del Mir BY owNER 3 BR. 1% BA.1 · Spacious & EXCLUSIVE Terrific 1 * ONE ACRE * Be1u11Uul home on c.mner $25,500 LISTING' Con.tempo Moblleliome Expo . Singles. Jo'anlilies. 2 Br. Car. l;JY flit dottns come to you "il'ith the clap of your bands -lb6 larp pond and watttf:all whJch are the hlal\llabta o1 the b<autlful ~alled front ya.rd ot this Lusk four bedroom home In lot wtroom for boat or trlr, Finished Bonus I BR. i bo. ltle. fiOxlD6 fenced Townhouses * Grend Opening * EuWdc R-2 Zoning, 2 older Fcnecd. "'"' or Unfurn. bay wlndow1, Ult kitchen Room & lndM.1'd 6 · loyt. Ovttslt.e Kid~. On the most excluiive prop-\Ye have 2 and 3 bedroom See Orange County's ne"'·est hOmrs on lot. O~ ot the Rent·A·HOU•• 97'"'430 wfbltns, crptJ, d r p 1 , lar f ll • garolge. ra. mow. t· erty In Univerwlty Park. bee.uUes in two ot the beat '?l furnished model ntoblle few remaining tarae pareell. poohim y1u·t1. 5%'.lf GI Do you hlive a gf! am y. c.hen/family rm. Combo. Beautifully awctnted 3 aubd.lvlilons in Newport home display, Open dally, 9 TerTific buy! Cllll now Lic!o Isla Joan . Submit your ~.do you need a. large All bit-in appll.ancea. Big Bdrm.,2'4 bathaptustaml· Beach. They are In attas am-dusk. Take San Diego 642-1771. __ ., •• temu. $32,500, 598 Stura:t•on f1n11bl..'<l Bonus room ror a closets. Pltnly of cup.. ly rm. 2 Frplcs. Lowly with beautiful gardens and Frew)' to Avery Pkwy exit. $55,900. * WATERFRONi * k.rror 1i1ew HUJs. """°'' evtrY room bu • view of the lov<ly landscaping, and extra doon lead from the grut kitchen artt to )'()Ur own ltn'\lbfrry furn. c.n itts-'1225. Dr ~732.5. pool table or YoW" children bnards. Paflo. W /\Y carp. "-black 8.ggnta'ate PJtlol. All pools, loads or 0 1 h e r 28282 Camino Cap~lrWlO. 5 BR. 6 Ba. home. eaut. ·• 10 play In and leave you jn dnpe,. X1nt lot. $1300 tinted wlndow1, ant.lqued 0 furn. Avail. 1 to 4 monlhl El Toro peace. Would )'OU like to Down. ml~ dlnlng rm. wa.U, recre•tlonal facllJtles, and Laguna Niguel. &11·1900. ~·1"U~21 beginning Aug. ht, at $2500 BR 2 B • A-. .. 1 have a large bright kilchtn, 1, completely carpeted ind. low monthly maintenance NEW 24x60 Si Iver c re 1 t 51 II• per mo. Incl. pier Ir a!lp. 3 " '""• cpll, ... .,... ge 1 ...... • ...... _.. baUll & kitc•·n, e•·., etc. • fees. Some are spltt level Mobile Home. \Vorth over B & B h RHlty PJtlo, 1(1:11. pool·tize lot a arae ,,..ckya.ru .,,... y00r • .,. "' and others are all on one ay eic enclosed by block wall, chlldr('n 10 v.'alk to school? 96• ,,71 ( _ 1 ~'llOJ too many extras to mention. Door. \Vlth convenient loca· $21,IXXI. Will .ell for $16.800. * 675-3000 * I llow about "Ollr house to be _.,.. ..u. ...,.. Gn'at location overlooking Fully lndscp'd, porches. close to xlnt 1 c h o o s, .; tions, good term& and pr!Cfl ~!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!J!!!!!'!~~ I Newport Be1ch m-~·e••, ~.. m a I I . close to a beautiful golf. wide greenbelt • steps to <Mi 500 .,, 000 ha paUO, & util. sheet On a N~ ~ ·-· JIANG!NG TREES from$~, to .-n. • w 1 J dul Reasonable. 8 3 7 _ 1 7 5 3 , course an<l major sOOpp!rig. a re olymplc size pool & reetea· more oould you want? cho~ ot in a new a t OCEAN w. Arch Bch. Hts., \VATERFRONT dlx 3 br. COLWELL 4.94-2ll6 aft S:30 & wk.ends. Jf you do, tlwn th is houte ls 1trnothering lhii house ! tion centre. A A-WST SEE. 225 Huntington Bch Park · 8 Jots, priv. pty. I-towards, dplx. Gar., lndry, dock. ,;;;.:..:=.::::,,:::,:.;.::'-"'"'~I tt perfect hon1e ror you. Ala Should be pruned. Has 3 675-7 • 968-4445. 213: 821-1909 & 937-5855. Avail Sept. 673-7861: (8Ce) Fount11ln Y•ll•V truly reali!'.tic price ol bedroom cottage hidden u -$35,950. Call oow 84Z.2535. from the attttt, heavy Mountain, Desert, ~68:::,:1·.:8384:::;,.:Co=.·-=,-,--,:-;;: <SOPER DIGGIN'Stt 4 BR & shake roof. gas builtin.s ~I Eot.te. I [.8] RHort 174 Walk . Bay or Bch • I Br PROPERTIES INC REALTORS w/dllhwaaher. Many added GM«ll . ________ , mob hm .• 125. UtU pd. Alao O>rona dcl Mar'• moot ouper RUMPUS RM WOODED \II A·3 Bd cabin $'"' h c M • modern extras. Bost beach """ se · · :~Pi~~ 3 ~~!,'.,ha~:;:';:', A truly fme hom• '"" ol ~ ~nKR.. Pr~. ~nUy "Sl!ICE 1946" 1'.0WNHOUSES Cemmry =-Shell $10.950 Rent·A·Hou1•• 979-8430 unart carpeting PLUS 3 many Xtrl fealur". Spot-LOOKING FOR · ~ · 1st Western Bonk Bldg. Seldom available Park Lido Lots/Crypts 156 HOBBY SHOP· $69,000 :;H:::ou::,•::•::•_:U:::n::;:::•;;rn.::._.....:305;;;: tm,, 2 boUi apt., bltu .I: all lessly clean. Has large rear A PICKET FENCE surrounds University Park, Irvine townhouses. park t j k e LAJ..'EFRONT Homes • from fbe goodies includinl over-yd inc block wall fence and A TR DE your tettitory. An old Days 552-7000 Nights grounds &. care.tree spark!· 2 SITES. PACLrlC VRIEW $36,500 slze garage. Patto, too, jUst ="° :ab.URumpU! rm ~s Owner has large custom 4 fashk?ned "culie'' wit h big ing pool. Charming 2 BR., ~:1~0RIAL PA K. ·Codwlns ALPINE Realty $74,500. "•-Jand', a shagbc.nrpel · bedroom, family r oo m , white shutters. All p.s SPECTACULAR unoQstructed 2 Ba., kitchen bltns, patio, • Box 1196, Big Bear Lake Uniy.r.'•ty Reilly • Lrc m kltch right <n1d large covered patio sitti.... builtins. hardwood floors 180• view of entire valley' dbl .,. '~ Com-rc'11I (TI41 866-Thll 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673-6510 cheery. Bedrms arc "rptd on 3.14 AC RDS u:r with new carpets. Perteet 140' front on view side. 4 BR, ' gar. ~ND' Pr~;;.rty 158 Eves (213) 448-5376 too! Price $34.950, Only G 0 R GE 0 US VIEW space & price for small 2 BA exec. home. Turtle tmmaculate 3 BR., 2~ ba. -· LOT in famous Lake Havasu, DUPLEX in Beaut. Cond. By $1, 700, down. Call today. overlooking the mountains family. You name the Rock Hills. 8464931 aft. 6 PM Large living rm. & patio 4 • INCOMES 011 C·ti proper· honle of the "·orld famous Owner. $66,500. Prine. Only. If and desert and still con terms BKR 962-5511 ty, Owner wiU consider 10'1~ 673-4169. • · · ' Turtlerock 4 BR, family frontage on pool area. $32,500 dn & h t' . London Bridge. Located veniently near major sho~ SPANISH FORTRESS -Sit· room & atrium. Nr schools, CALL I!:!\.• ,4,.1414 • elp with inancmg. close to all schools I: city. Co1t1 Mn• 5Sl·5111 ( ::::J 531·5800 ping mall. Will trade for ting IOOm in ma"" 'uite, park. pooll. Prine only. 91\;I' ~ CALL ANYTIME $9000 or will trsdc for Co'ta ---------•!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~~·I ~~aller T~:ntingtos TOn BoSU~h parquet floors with elegant $39,500. Owner. 833-1467 4'1rllle, 646-3928 or Eve; 83$.9068 Mesa or NewPOrt Beach iJl. Super Older GI NO DOWN ~'innmY"!, , carpets, 3 baths, family Lagun1 BHch ••• L TY come prop. 644-4687. room, dlnlng room, Jiving N11r N•wporl Po1t orrlce 2 Lots, secluded $2,450 Home super sharp• bedrm in belt room, library+ den plu.1 4 SECLUDED ---OCE.AN VIEW. Moonridge cabin $15,750 c':'· I_ Lot FountaJn VaUty are a. bedrooms. Divorce • BKR. DUPLEX ~· 000 ..... ,... 11 Ibo 1..... close CHARMER Lakeside cabin .,.,..,, U~ older, 2 Bedroom, Schoo 6: . pp .. ,. are REALTORS 842-4455 ;962-65~:;11::,. -~--..,....,.~-Brand new wood &: glass, =.N:;:::;W:;;P---AC -Call 8664&41 or write: m bath h>mo on hu&< lot : 1~~:':'lli \:e ,1: ·.:::.:::W~H~ILE=~y=o'°'u~=loWNER transfened, 4 bdrm This charming 3 bdrm., 1 huge. Only 186.500. Dav" * E BA~~:J'r:'T H* Spencer Real Estale, P. o. ~--·'d ~-"d ano••-house + family rm., surrounded bath home is nemled in a "-t. ..-1972 day•, Box -B1 .. Bear Lake. VJUJ Vim uK:J-I f Ced n..1 .. $31950 ""&" tu.,.. High rise office bldg. ~ ,. en rear. Priced· at 0 n 1 y comp en • v•-v • · WERE OUT by beautiful tree!, 4. quiet, wooded setting. Best 675-7497 eves. Callt. CAU.. for more delalls ....... · -"''--"--'-''---~-Fee lot • exce.llent terms JS.3,500. Addltkin&l property 962.5523 &: s:i7.5642, COU.INS J..ooking for that "Special" bedrooms. oversized master """' in town at $23,950. BALBOA Coves, N. B . $550.000 Re" I Estate Wanted 184 ((!Joining available a.180. & WATTS ho1ne value, "-'t' listed it! If bedroom, natural b r 1 ck \Vaterfront. Pri. ramp & REALONOMICS Firat time advertised. Call c . & w you don't hWTy we'll sell it fireplace, family room. din-~O 1,.,,. float Modern 3 Br. $n,500. Realtors 67>6700 • PVT pty wants 3 or 4 BR M&-nn to eee. and you won't see it. This ing rm., built.in range, ...,./T 0 ~"'116" Call Owner, 675--0750 for home. Call Harry, 833-1129 home has new carpets oven, dishwasher. Br k, REAL ESTATE appL C-2, 2068-2070 Newport wkdys: eves & wknd! •. O THr Rt.AL "'-1 ·:.;TATLRS . "" MESA VERDE $30,900. Be 1Ure to set thl•! 3 Bed· ri'n-and frlendb' family rm wi'firepll Separate uUUty nn f!;M' mom, and grtat patio tw entertainina. You can't beat the area or the pr1oe. Call tor detall1 979-1050. 9=.r21 HUCiE DEN PLUS 3 bedroom.I. 2 balhl, ~Phtce. patio. Excellent condJtiQn, $32,950. a-McCudle RHltor 'J", 546-7729 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. OWNER trans. Spanish styJ. throughOUt. Locatftl on cor· $26,IXXI. 84f>...004, 2 Lg duplexs, next door, % Blvd., CM, 100'x315'. Princi· 642-2.112 . ed elegant design with 4 ner Jot -~m for boat or REPOSSESSIONS 494-941A90 Glenneyre S~9-0316 blk from ocean beach. pals only, Ph. 642·1121. beautiful Spanish archwaya camper. Priced at $30,900. For information and location -$85,IXXI ea. Agt 673-8563. Condominiums II • I on the 1rnnt exterior master Call 847-"110. o1 tbete FHA & VA home~ MYSTIC HILLS !SEWPORT ESl'ATE & POOL for ule 160 ""'°"'~I . 1;1~!~~~..:,~:: omtaKctASABIAN C::nv~~;.! i=-:·d;,,::g 194Sch.oooub. 5Bkrert..~ ~-Kerry THEv.i:iiiEil.. ';;;;;;;;;;;~iiiiii Roman slep down tub. Tbe rms. L«e. level yard, IOOm ' ' -~ WHEN THEY LEFT :usinoH other 3 bednnr are on the Real Estate 962-6644 for poot Xlnt neighborh:lod, Newport Heights But much as they hated to Qpportunftv 100 other aide, Family nn., din· YOU SAVE BECAUSE IT'S ENJOY cool ocean breeze ~2 close to schools. $49,500. 4 BR. VICTORIAN leave this luscious 3 bdnn., ....;:;::::=:.:.:::"-":....-....;;;.; ing ·rm., luxurious kitchen, DIRTY •••• This fine 3 BR, sty, 4 Br., 3 Ba., tam. rm., * 499-2800 * You must see thi.s customit-21Ai ba Tiburon townhouse, CAPISTRANO Unified School BRK. $30,500. 962-8865. , 1 2 BA~ home needs cleaning 2 yrs. old. Assume VA Jn. R~O: ~ ed masterpiece. 3 yrs old, 3 thl?'y were transferred &. District will accept written OWNER desperate mu 1 t &: pamtln&. Inclod. es blt·lns, $39,500. $25IX) dn By owner ~ ~ ..... tlf"-7 blk to Harbor High they are gone! No \V applications for Broker of Jeave home 4 Bdrm + FIA heat, king me master Princ's only 833-1103 · -.__..._..~Ql 0wner-' Agt U tenns ; desperation priced at Record on the Group Medi· ' bdnn' Loe ted h dy • mao.co.i.srHW'f. 0 en <K-$32.950. Move in no\\'. · Family rm. Many xtra s. a on s a ~n45. 1101.Jn1 WJIM,\. ~ immed. poss. $ 4 9 , 5 o o . 1 . I . cal Insurance Program until teatures such as a complete cul-de-sac stl'ttt: Close to BY owner 2 story 4 BR, 3 """'a......,.c.. ~~. arw1n rea ty inc. August 4, 1972. Anyone wish· separate laundry r 0 0 m , schools & ahopp1ng. Below BA family rm 3 car 3 BR. & Den $36,950 Sant• An• 968-4405 (24 hrs) ing to apply for this position 1amily room + a rumpus market at $Z7,0IXI. All ' S rinkl ' Crpts Unique white brick exter CONDO, Htg Bch. Nr sch! & should call the District Per- gam.e room, pasa thru terma. Call SEYMOUR garad gob.Jin P1 "1d'· .,,000• gated'entry 2 Ba blt·inl' UCE $2500 pool. 3 br, 1% ba, bltins sonnet OUice 496-1215 for a D~ .. -841·12'.ll or rps, s. yro • ...._., . • .• • RED D breakfast bar, dining rm., ~· .1;, FHA assumable loan. Prin. frptc., carp. Yard needs • ele'Ct. Dishwshr, w sh r, preliminary questionnaire. ~~· Brk. $ 3 3, 5 0 0 , 546-4212. only. 962-4236. "WOrk. but a real buy tor the X!:r ~8: ~~ ~:.~ dryer, rebig. Chldn OK. P.lease do oot request a per--~ LUXURY HOME SHANTY • ON-TIIE-RIVER hand.Ylnon. Call' Only 6 yn llCW, convenient FHA-VA. W,500. CJS Real "'"al appoinlmcnt at this OWNEJ'.t muat sell this home. This executive home has 4 for sale. Can be a 3 MISSJON REALTY ~ to frwyr:, major shopping Estate, Ask fDr Chris, time, Preliminary appllca- 4 Bdrm + pool elegant slate spacious bdrms, big family Bedroom home; stove, Laguna Hiiis and Orange County Airport. 548-1168 AM; 548-9659 PM. tions wiU be reviewed & entry hall opens to central rm. Immaculate? Thls trl· fireplace. Needs yard work Has fireplace, sunken tub FOR Sale or Rent-Laguna evaluated on the following fl~ plan, 4 ~ms. huge level features Parquet entry, and 6 woman's touch. BKR. 3 BR, 2 BA, beauL view, and all extn.!I, _Reduced to Bch:, West 9 Condo. 3 BR., 2 criteria: family rm., built-in ranae. hard\vood noors, Jge patio, 962-5511. rugs, dta.pes, refrig, many $30,500. by anxious seller BA. By owner. 644-79l7 l. Technical capability oven, dl.shwaaher, enclosed water softener + other nice I-'~==---~-xtras. 6 mo. old. New eves. 2. Exper in employe benefits paUo. Assume 5%% loan. 10 hav• Xlr"" Prlc·• to ,.u GOV'T. OWNED World. 837-3652, Owner. who may help with Cl's I p 3. Stall BRK $24 900 962-== .. ...... cu closing costs. H•'""", this ncome r-rty 166 4 Ex · rk' • h • ' • .MQV, at only $41,950. Call & see, Repossessed homes. Low Legun11 Niguel one won't last-:"CALL ... _ · per in "'O ing w.t down. Gov FOUR PLEX school districts & other 962-7637, emment pays -""23&537-~'".co"~·s lo ing t can 968-4441. BY OWNER: Ocean view, Ju.VoN i.IO'U .........u." public agencies or private 01rden Grove WALK to BEACH c s cos s. safe easy beach access, 4 & WA'ITS. Select area -quality con-tinns, ~.'lstDE COSTA MESA IF YOU ARE A e 5 BEDROOMS • * Crest Realty BR. 2 BA. tam rm .. carpets C & W struction -lar1rc rooms -~!.<>cation Attractive 3 BR. 1% BA VETERAN·. 2 story, .au elec kit, lorml OWNER drapes, lndscpd. $67,500. beautifully landscaped -3, The best qualilicd applicarts home, hdwd fin,, w/w And 1 k'·· f '"-I din. Z!'xlS' family roomN, 2 TRANSFERRED 496-6334. 2. 1, l, bedrooms. Good in-will be contacted within a crptg .. fpl., lrg lot. Walking o:c> .. '6 or a uouao ~· fireplaces, intercom. "' 3 Bedrm, 1% bath, boat or Lido Isle S.nta An.a Heights vestment -income $7,680 -short time after receipt of dlat. to Westcllff 1hopplng here it 11. The owner will paint, dbl gar, VA ap-camper gate near beach &: fB:Ei5R"OOM HO~ 10% down -price $66,500. application. cent. Just $30,oo:> w/10% pay part of your cloaing pratsal $41,SOO. school. 5% down. Only Now is th• time • • • large lot. Assume FHA :1ta. ~~~ ~ ~ m~ ~Bak,7cry-'--.'-.. =-.. -.-w"h"ls~le-.-r-•~tail dn. Exclusive, H.D. costaonthisfourbedroom, REAL ESTATE by $24,500.Call962-777l. To list your property, We . Johnson. BJcr. 6t6-8362. 2U1 2 bath home just to make a McVAY 961-44S6 RED CARPET REALTORS have qualified customers loan with total pay~ Diviaion 546--1600. Fish&: chips •••••••••• good Pl ti A CM ta.st sale. nus would make ---;:;::"""=~~::.:,;..::= waiting. ments of $201. per Liquor stores ••.••• cocktails aceo a ve., . . tbe TOTAL COST TO YOU FANTASTIC 2 & 3 BEDROOM -Vacao~ LIDO REAL TY month. $25,500. BKR. BY Owner: Bought new about $500. Total sale price "'Aautiful little starter home nr pool. ~ecorated. $500. 33n v· 'd B 546-0814 anytime. •--• t ll NI • Br ~ dn BEVERLY ia L1 o, N .. '!""""'• mUJ It" • ce ~ • ONLY $25,750. CALL NOW. in one of Hut n in gt on .-move m. * 67J..7300 * ~. Reduced S3000. Shag Beach's most wanted areas! JACKS 0 N RE ALTY Ql1)t, hug~ ~s, lots ol Walk to two lovely lakes, * 847-60.13 * ELEGANT I jr.;;;J ~s.Covd.patio.Room.to parka, shopping & SAVE $1,800.0wner leaving . .f bedroom & family room llatlleHomet~ build. ~tl:l'ft", drp1, h&ng1ng REALTORS 842-4455 e q u e 1 tr i an are as. Must sell. Immac 4 br. Nr home wilh 4 baths A 2 fire. '-;;iii;;;;;;iiiiii:;;;; Jamp incl d. Assume F11A Assumable 6% Joan Call us Adams &: Magnolia. Call to places, $92,SOO, ~ 1o&n $198. per mo. total. Huntington 8t11ch for more information on this see. 968-1454. '"'-···-... Mobllt Homes Xlllt terms. 5411-9876. 11 •-2-2535 =c...:.:~c.::..____ '"""""'° ~ Jrt. F r Sal NEAR THE litUc do ·~use! 84 • FOR Sale by Owner, 4 BR, --o • 115 \O ].THE REAL \"'\l ESTATERS: ' r ', I '<Tl •fr• • HOLLAND Bus, SalH ___ 64:.:5-4170 Need Tax Deduction"? CANDLE Shop for sale. By OwneH Unites on 2 lots. Across from Mission in San 1 Bllc to ocean. Newport. Juan Capistrano. For in- Redec. in/out. Completely formation call 493-1411. furn. Summer-Winter ren· taJ "~ ooo 132 45th 10 CANDY vending machines . .,.......,, . , corner Balboa Bl. Look first, then !or rent, $5, month. 545-5180 call to see. ipside. 642-9955. 1 _0_r-'640-'---281"-'6"-. ----- General $110 • QUIET Retreat! Furn Studio. All utU pd, Choice location * $125 ·YEARLY at the Beach! Avail ncnv. Ideal for singles. * $150. MOVE Today! 2 Br. w/ g!l.l'age, stove, rclrig. Child/ pet ok. * $170 . SECLUDED 2 Br on lrg Jot. Crpt /drps, gar. VA· CANT! * $175. BALBOA Island, 2 Br. 2 Ba. AU furn. Avail 9/11. * $225 -OCEAN Breezes! 3 Br. 2 Ba, frplc, bltns, fenced tor kids/pet. LANDLORDS! Do you have a vacancy? We can fill ii. Many desirable tenants on our waiting list Absolutely NO CHARGE, BEACON RENTALS * 645-0111 * LANDLORDS! We Specialize tn Newport Reach • Corona del Mar • &: Laguna. Our Rental Ser- vice i& FREE to· You! Try Nu·V\ew! NU-VIEW RENTALS 6734030 or 4~3248 LE ASE OPTION/OR LEASE 4 BR .. 2 BA., w /w crpts., Irg. cover• ed patio, lovely rural atmosphere. $265. per mo. CALL agt. 54~141 NO\V VACANT. l\fodern, near new, 3 bedrm., 2 bath homt> on quiet cul-de-sac Large ovmized yard. Lease • $275. mo. lmmed. poss. Call 545-8424 S 0 UT H COAST REAL TORS. SPOTLESS! 3 bdrms 2 baths -dining room, family room -one mile from ocean and near Newport Beach. A d u I t s preferred. No pets please. $275.~ mo. Call 546-3688. BRAND new Harbor View home, 3 BR .• rv:ar pool, $425 per month includina gardener. 644-1791. 5 BR, 3 BA, exec. home. in upper bay area. Avail 811. 644-4439. 2 STORY NR. PARK E bonus room &: fam rm. 2800 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 mess 1 Br Mobile home. ·Close to beach. •boP&-&. B ACH: l<I· "· $50.000. 846-9001. Mesa Verde 13-•--s.t•un B • &Chis. 'Mus 3 yr. new home And h 1 •· , 4 .~. ~ """ ' ay « 8le8tiBll1I Busin111 Wanted 210 Balboa l1l1nd """-~;;;_--I FLOWER shop, Org Cnty 2 BR. hse. steps to water. area. $100.000 or more $275/mo. yrly. Avail Sept. w a a uume. Irvine Beach, 7204 Pacific Coast ia: only 1 blk from bedrooms,2baths,built·in.s, ==-=--,--=--=-"'7';';;;;;;;;;;;;;:=:=;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;; 4 BR, Jg Ux24 game room, H l)elghborhood park. 1630 sq. carpet 1 & drapes OWNER must sell Spanish 11 1% ba, bltn kit, crptl, drps, wy, N.B.. Sp. 16 : INCOME HOMES 6-NEW DUPLEXES $48,950 <-NEW TRIPLEXES $67,950 Beaut. new 2 &: 3 BR units. 151 E. Bay St., Costa Mesa. ft. in this big Gold Med. througbouL Lota of room for design. No down, tenns Lull In Your Life? \l.'lter soltener incl. $34,700 r!~-8333 or 536-2350 aft $29,950. Ce: n t U r Y 21, the children in the fenced available or take over ~X· Change your style of living. 557-9194 I -'~"-------- gross. Adams, f 2 1 3 ) Ali;o summer r ~ n t a I fl 345-0735. 675--0077. 835--5511. back yard and in easy walk isting FHA loan \Vi th This 3 bdnn., 2'1~ ba. town· 'TI Levitt modu1ar No.1000. to the beach. Full price monthly payments of $23.i. 4 house in University Parle, Newport Beach 24x46, 2 BR, 2 BA, cor lot. GOLF COURSE VIEW Mesa Verde 4 Br, 2 Ba. wnlly rm, crpt>, drps. Sponilh tile floon, 2 patios. Jmrnac. LOw down. $31500. Owner, ~ Jlllnols. 54&-616(). ~ MESA -Y.erde "T" Plan "V/POOL. 3 Br. 2 Ba cul-de-sac. 1 blk lib & Mesa Verde elem. scbl. $37,900. l.657 Palau Pl By (hvner ~-* $27,451).3 BR·2 BA* LEASE/OPTION AVAIL. Blt·ins, crpts. fpl. 8' blk wall fence, cor lot, assoc park w/pools. Bkr/Owner. 646-9666 642-2221 $29,500. We will take a beclrms., family rm., dining with its park·like setting, FANTASTIC dplx for sale on ~~~l breeze. 0 w n r smaller home tn trade. rm.. built·ins, spa c i o u 1 allows lots of time for leisure Balboa Penin. Huge 3 br ~~-O"=---~ kitcben, archway leads in to and recreation. Yours for owner!I apt w-beauitful new 8 x 42, 2 BR, patio, lndscpd, REALTORS 8C4455 :..:e, Bric, $28,500. ifi red h·11 -~'-7_vd.;.c._6,_~'-·"~'-11'-[-·~_:_Bal_w_oboa-rth ~ :s ~~\val~ It Sure Is Cheoper By owner, $~~.,,..d• Musi • I $55,SOO, Fee Land. Harbor 10x4D PILGRIM. $2,700. To Buy Than Rent ,..u beaut 3 BR, 2 BA, pool REALTY View Homes, Carmel, 3 BR, 525 Fairfax Dr, c .M. C:: .v•\11\l H ;, 111 845-1355; 6<5-0049 Buy this for as little as home. Assume $27.000 GI. Univ. Park Center, Irvine FR, lux. crptg, prem lot. $25,000 full price. nus shal'p with $3000 down. Will carry Call Anytime, 833-0820 sprnklrs., lndscpd, princ on-COSTA Mesa 10x50 mobile 3 Bdrm home ii located on 2nd or consider auto or Ol'fice hours 8 AM to s PM ly. Owner 644-5968. 673-ll66 home. Air-cond. Full patio extra large Jot with pll'nty horse trlr as part down. I '!!~~~~~~~~~·~n~yti~m~e~.======Ll'~""°~PY~·~A~d~lt~p~r~k.~642-~~2505~. or room for pool. cai1 1_846-4834 __ ·~==---i· 817-"110. $23,500. 1-o THEREAL \'.".. ESTATERS ' 'I' •, ' • ~ 4 BR, 2~~ BA, elec kitch, flre- pJ. crpts, drps. Acceu to pool & clubhousl'. Walk to beach, S©lt4l)}tl-/££~S" The Punfe with the Built-In ChucHe BtsT College Pork . ..., •• 3 CHAMPAGNE TASTE FOR REAL ESTATE by Br., 2 Ba., encl. pauo, block BEER BUDGET.,, .3 BR. McVAY 96"4456 :~!P:i.'f t:::.1~:·:~ 2 BA. 28' rotu livi11g room PRIDE OF OWNER- onJy. Call Sl:Pll03, 642.2312, v.:ith fireplact, w a I n u t lnunac. 4 BR, 2 BA, many CORNER Jot 3 BR. 2 BA. trplc., bonu11 rm .. block \\'ail t<.TM..'t'. :n40 Boston \Vay, $3$,500. By owner. 54&-ml Pr1n only! BY owner. 3 br, 2 ha, utalll' nn. din rm. ftplc~ 2 car eu. Cov potio. Ice lncd back ' yd, &1'1-2317. TRANSFERRED • Must Sell ~ Br., 2 Ba. $33.350. • $2811 \lffchigan. 54l)..9347 DY OWN£R-21n llllrnl Pl. 3 BR. 1 BA. $lll,500 Low down. 714,524-~1.L * <;ALL 516-Tm * I l • llR r<J>O•· (l...-3/CAI' pr). Willi Reall)" ' BDRM •olum. cle4o. 2 JdJltt OK, .. ""'"' $110 mo. TIO Sl>allmar, SIHT4L ' panelling & L-ustom built bar xtru11. t'Orner Jot. 19822 Car· for the family who ('njoys n1anl11 Lane. E. of Amok· living. $30,900. • . .All hur-sr. N. of Adains. $32.f'..OO. Terms. Call SEYMOUR Srokrr a47-6334 or 546-6:.'li'. REALTY, 847-1221 o.r 'h MILE FROM BEACH ~2. OLD LOVERS Clu111nlinic. surfing, 15wim· ming! 2 BR and dt1n. Beaut CoodO, lovtty park, Massive custom patio. 20' front entranct. 2 Spac BR, Gourmet kitchen. Sh a g li,t BA, stall ahower, frplc. thruout le: lots of custom New ly decorated, .:itt tones. buUt·lns. Clean. coey and Pool avail. Nothing to do, only 21" ytAfl YoUJli. ready to llve ln. Fum or un· $25,900. By owner. 536-3645. ::: 0wner 962-20&2 for **SHAG-ON** O\VNEI' 1 ·•-·-~ WI of the famous 4 bcltm ~. ~ t!~s, ._.~:~ CA~A\VAY model111n Park l'IXlm dan dining room ltunttngton. Owner says, huge 'tn.a1i~r ~m. re~ "stll "yesterday." $46,000. llvin~ room, c i r c u I a r Brkr. 5.16·5000. driYC\\'ay. No df:m'n. Tmnt The fameJt draw la the Wnt ,1vallablo, Brl<. ll 2. 5 0 0 ' .... lloiiy Pilot O...w..I i6).ll7S. Ad. - ' I • N I L FA PRINT NlJM8El!O tfnERS IN I lHESE SQU.liRES () UNSCltAMBlf AllOVE LEllfRS TO GfT ~NSWU SCRAM·LETS ANSWUS IN' CLASSIFICATION 700 Comple. 8/1, Ph: 642-4837. ~M,.on_•.;.Y_t.,.0....;;L.;,oa_n~-..;2:.;:40 Balboa Pen1n1ule DANA HARBO~ 1 I TD L INCOME HOMES (FEW) s oa ns On the Pt. Oceanfront 2 Br 2 Ba. $275, has everything' Kids. ' 4-Plexes •• $66,950 to $71,950 Duplex •••••••••••••• $52,500 8 Unita ............ $132,500 Alcazar at La O'esta, Dana 6%% INTEREST 2nd TD Loans Renl-A·H•u11 979-8430 Pt, WEBB (Bier.) 6424837 Lowest rates Orange Co. Corona def Mer ** DUPLEX BRAND NEW. Huge dlx owner'a unit. 3 BR., 3 8 A • , Fireplace. bltins, 1800 sq. n. + 3 decks W/vit\V Of bay ocean, & hill!I. \Valk to bch &. lbopplng. I yr lse. $39$. '.P..e!8, required. 675-69oo. *NEWPORT BEACH* "WE BUY TD'S" Luxurious OHlce Bldg. Sattler Mtg. Co. =.ooo Down. Prime Joca •. 642·2171 545-0611 tion. 30,000 Sq. Ft., steel & Serving Harbor area. 21 yrs. maMinary construction. Men-itt Properties 640-0330 (10) 2 BR-Deluxe Bldg •• 6 -old E/lllde C.M. Prin- clpala Oll)y. 642-J.J.21. lndutlrlal Property 161 ....,.. . '1 . . .. Good for one user. 8.124 acres zoned M·l in Orange, Eatt of AnJ:tl Stadium. Easy ac- ce5' to all freeways and wUI abut proposed Orange Fret- Wl.Y and ~ minutes to on and ott nmpe: on Orang• wood. Price $32,500 per acre. For further Worma. llon, pl..,. call Htl Loomis w1th . Eckhoff & Al-., Inc. 5Q.i162J • Eves/Wknds 211: m.mo \VE make loans on property. Also buy TD's. i1cCturt, Bkr. 492-8332 or 492-0424. General --.,.......----Really CIHn Rent1I• 2 BR. $185. Costa Mesa 3 BR. $270. Jo.tesa Vt'rde 4 BR. $270. llunt, Bch. No <:l'large to rt:ntrra. Call today! We'd like to help you Szm • 2 Br. over gar. Stove refrig .. crpt/dl'[>I, pr1.,.cy,' $225 • 2 Br. hse. w/frplc, gar., yrd, Child/pet. 1395 • 3 Br., 3 Ba. trpl. bltD8 3 decks. VIEW! ' ' NU·VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 SllARl' & elean. 3 Bdrm 2 ~th house, top south'• of Hwy. locaUon, $3!lO J>er month. Call Mr. 13.ill 673-8550, AS!;t'Ot, y, find a home. COATS le. ..., ... ~. WALLACE REALTORS, Unrurn 2 Bit 6.t· •. ~i. Coste Me11 962-1454. garage. 2 l1nl chlldrtn ""- $16.5 • South Lag. l Br. Ut.U. No pets. Mu~t hav~ rtrs. j)C!. Oilld/pet ok. $150 mo. + 175 deJ>· 646-5631 $175 ~ E/Sl.de. Attrac. 1 Bt. aftt'r 5 p.m. ..... hse, gar, )'l'd., patkt, pool. 2 BR house, crpll, d.rps p;- $220 • CdM. 2 Br over SN'. $L'i5 mo~ 2 S .;,. 1 'j Quiet A N"fvr-le. children, ii" pct.J. ~ NU-VIEW RENTALS 2077 WalieCl', Apt 8, CM. 67:H030 or -Lona Hairs • &ials • Sluu~ Loh for Seit 111 Coton• def Mu Cpls. Pvt hm $105UUl1'J, _ Renf>.A..Hou11 f1'-14a SAN JUAN CAPISl'RANO LARGE 2 bdtm. I urn $23.1. 3 BR,. 2 BA. ~ 16 Ado • Hane OJt w/flpl<, $:Jii0. per month. pnlio. BBQ• IM&-ID13 dol'. BY OWNER * $9181 .:'f'l.:.iy:;•.:.Call=..;"".:.";;;·.;.173-;;:.;7241=·-.i...;;m-0193::...:;='""""=;__-- , $85 AL It A e SI for ,AL dbl ""' 64. •B ok . AL 3 co m 54 Walk $135 Ren LAR cd Call lrvl <BR 3 B 3 BR Uni Lag 1175 bse. secl 1211 • Leg or Ow SUP 3 fro Go BLU ~ ,, ~.Joly 'ti, 1972 DAILY l'llOT -far-I~ I "-"'-]~I ~•b1wa1ar-Jlt] , ..,~,1,1"-)l!J( ~11bu IDllr-1~ I "*-.1 ' 1""°" lf!J , ,,..._.tor-][t) :..' iiiiiiiiiii~l~~,/' 1~---~1 as .. ~,. Un!Um. 3'S R_,,o 400 lualnota "°"'"' <MS ·: H-Unlum. as Apt.. '""'-361 Apt. Unfurn. MS Apt. lhllllm. :l6S Apt, lhlhlm. ..,. HOUMI Uttfvrn. -Cotta MIM e UNBELIEVABLE! 1 Br dplx, sll fum. AU ulll pd. Stn1 child I: ptl ok. w/yrd. $85. • AlA Ront1l1 e 645-3900 e BUDGET Boot:tcr! 1 Br, stove, crpt/drps, ffl:rig av!. Cbild/pet tint. 1115. ALA Ront1l1 e 645-3900 3 Bl', 2 Ba, den. hlcd yrd, room for boat or trlr. Avail Aug, 1. $230/mo, 979-.2242. e E/SIDE 2 Br. Stove, crpts, drps, gar. Encl yrd tor kids " pet. 1170. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 •Spacious. 3 Br. w111Ai Ba. Stove, crpls/drps, encl yrd. for kitls. $170. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 LARGE 4 BR home, 2 BA, dbl garage. 787 Joann St, see after 5 pm daily. 64s.-0636. 4 Br, crpt/drps, bltns, patios. Nr OCC. Avai1. Now. $280. 54~1507. Fount1ln V1lloy 4 BDRr..1, 2~1 BA, all elec kit., dlshwhr, water pd. Nr. school. $283. mo. 96Z-9924. H11nti'1rton Beach •BELIEVE! 1 Br w/stv, crpts, drps, carport. Child ok. $114. ALA R1ntal1 e 645-3900 e BLOCK to Bch! l Br. all furn. w/carport, aU util pd $130. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 ;;:::.::::.;:.;::::;:..._...:::::;I;:'.::::'"::::::'____ ...... JIOOllS $1.1 wk up w.Jc!t: 113f.1'138 An.lhdm, CM , Nowpott Buch c .. ta -0.ntral 0-al C..ta Mo.. Hunt""'°" Pl wk up ~.._ 2316 GIOWld o ..... near 17th .t. ~=:::,:.:::~=~-l:*r..~ .. wii1.1i01;;;'K":at'u;;p;;::;::* 1-iiiiiiii N•-" B 1 v d • or. Frwy. Parldna. """""""' THE BLUFFS e si::dio.t.ieRApta 1 ' ON BEACH' 543-mO. •tc.ScbWOffl'&n.2651 ONE STORY e TV ....... •--•-A·-• VILLA MARSEILLES NEW NEW NEW a u-AJRS·. Liv. rm ., OFFICE. •-"'" N'i>t--~~ •-SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. VILLA PAULA '"' Like new 3 BR., 2 ba'1.; prlv. e Phone Servlce-lltd Pool Furnlahed & Unfumlohod 2 BR, 2 BA llnl. Fl'. ml bedrm. " bath, "P· entry, Pwt Ofc. It Greybound petlo. Mov .. tn rtady, Im e Children It Pet 110CtJon 2 BR. 1'n Fl'. $3118 no cook • a, 18il/mo. Depot. 537 l't. l150; 736 Ft. Per mont h. 237$ Newport mvd, CM Adult Living J UST FINISHED ADULTS ONLY * 83&-34119, $225 Month. Aaent 646-2414- ", 548-&'155 or 641>-3967 Dishwuher rolor coordlnated appliances FamlllH Wolcom.I Fumlture Avail able NICE room for worldnc man Industrial Rental 450 , ~ '111lt Ad Worth 15 on Rent Plush shag carpet• mirrored wardrobe doors· 00 2 BR, 2 l'ULL BA) carp etHro!>ffdllliwul>« kl ho . u 165 &. \ Indirect lighting in kilcben • breakfast bar • ONLY 1 APT. LEIT heated pool-oaunu-ttnnla w/ tc n pnv •I'•· COSTA MESA ;sf l!i-¥.' Sl35 mo. O.luxe. mobile huge private fenced patlo • plush lanclscap-• Special cabln•t opace rec room«UD vt<wa mo. NI Sh.,wood St .. N.B. 14'0 ' 2880 Sq 11. lli'' horn•. Nice patio, Comp. Ing • brick Bar-be-Ques • large heated pools • Lock p.raa" w/l& ''°' pottoHmplo parldna ROOM with kltch•n, laundry, CABINET MAKERS- ,;, tum. W/W carpet.. Mature & lanai. Air condlUonint. • Bm cell e Lndry a: Patk>t Security Guards. pool Pri'"Ks. F'emale onJ,y. FmERCLASS rea ly couple, no peu. Ponderosa 3101 So. Brlllol St., Senti An• 557.a200 • D/W-Dl@osal . Drapes HUNTINGTON 842-S472. H.B. area. . Nr. Nwpl Frwy " S.D. Frwy. 2414 Vilta Del Oro Mobile Elt. 1991 Newport COLDWELL, BANKER & CO, e Deep 2 color ahaa cpu FIC LUXURY. Pvt, entr. A ha. 293! Grace Ln. Newport Beach Blvd.~. MANAGING AGENT e Special """"'1pooofina PACI Kit. priv No smokers. maid !So. of Balcer, E. ol t alr\'lew ~ 644-Ull ANYTIME $135-mo dlx mob hm w/ e Nr. San Diego Frwy, Har· tu OCEAN AVE .• lt.B. serv. 548-7197; 675-0310. ~l 1-fi) Repre1entaltvt1 Ulen ~ $210 • Lldo lsle waterlront &ereen porch, compl furn, ho!' Blvd A scllOOll. <tt•) ~1487 NICE horn•, quiet strtel, 9 a.m·l2 noon. ! very Jrg.1 Br. UtU. pd. htpool .• adlt cpl, no pets. 4 ,,,A.;.P',;,'-U-111.,u,.r_n.,.._,__3'5_ Apt. Unfum. 365 GAS Heat, Gu Cooking ~10~~ ~ private entrance & bath. (114) 97M434 or f79..Cn1 ' $.235 -3 Br., 2 Ba., frplc., Season 1 2359 New P 0 rt ' B•lboa P•nln1ufe Coste MeH and \VATER -All pe.id. refrig. $65 mo. 548-5/;i(I. Rent•l1 Wanted 460 •tudlo w/gar & patlo. 548-63.'!2. Month to Month $TIO Bo rd 405 - $285 -Nwpt Hghi. 3 Br., 2 BEAUT. FURN. 2 BR 1175 3 BR, 2 BA, I yr lease, lnclds JUST THE FACTS! 622 Hamilton, CM Lagvno S...ch Room & 1 NEEDED Immediately. 3 Ba .. gar., yrd., deck. 3 blks up bicl utU, Hid Pool. Adltz: frpJc, din rm. 3 ba.lconles, 1 Attractive adult c:om-plex for See P.lgr-Mr. A Mrs. Hoban * 2 BR _ New. l blk to ROOM &: boanl plus laundry, BR. homt" on Ea.~tslde C.M. bay! no pets. Aho 2 Br Unf. blck from bay&: ocean. Aug ~2062 beach. View! $240 A up. $150 month. Pref<'l" retired. Pref. Harbor Hi School NU-VIEW RENTALS &lZ-9520. 1st occup. 64Ml61 dya; ~~ ~"!sthout-concern: I '!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J~!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!l!ll [ 49'-3383 or 494--2339. Nice, clean Jt0me. 645-2761. District. Re a z: on a .~ le· 673-4030 or 494-3248 l Br tum. Hamilton/near 675-2306 evts. * 114 baths 11 DELUXE OCEANFRONT apt-Laguna CM: · ~liable 20 yr. res1 ent. S1nt1 An1 Harbor. Lota of privacy tor Corone del ,M.r * Private patio APARTMENTS Sands, 3 BR, &dults, 1 yr Summer Rentals 420 ~6'6-6--,-..,188-· -r.-:-c-::-:==:: 1 sina:le person. $115 per mo. * Pool Air Cond • Frplc'• • 3 Swim· lse. 499-1169 -------,,.-:-'."I B&chelor "·1th 1 .... ·o small dogs 61"~1573. * Large living area with ming PoolJI -\jealth Spa . MH• Verde * * * * * * * * dealrea 1 bdrm. apl. or 3 BEDROOM, $225. per 2 BR. Very clean. Adults. ,. ., fireplace Tennis Courts • Game and -....,,=.,,........,....,,,_.,:"':'.'"" * BRAND NEW * house unfurn. Ph. 646-2335 month. BKR: Ph 546--0814 ~ady people only, no n;O,,_ ---~ _ Start your relaxed way of Billiard Room. DELUXE 2 I: 3 BR, 2 Ba. Condo hom11 w/boat slip aft 6 p.m. anytime. children or petJ. 364 16th ~ lite at-1 BR. From $160 encl. gar. $155 up. Rental Summer, or leases avail. -Y~O~UN~G=-oo-u_pl,_e_w_a-nt,_u-nlurn7"'"'. Condominiums Place, Apt B, CM 645-4285. FAIRWAY VILLA 1 BR. " o.n From 1180 Ole.. 3095 Mace Ave.. 4401 W. Coast Hl•hway 2 to 3 BR. house, no Unfurn. 320 HuntlnQhln BHch ON TEN ACRES MEDITERRANEAN 548-1034. * C1ll: '754820 * cbildren. I cat, will fix up. "';,;;;M;;;;----1.;;::;;;.;;i;;.;;:;;;;:;;;;;;·;;:·;;;·:;;;-Apta, furn./unlum. i..... APARTMENTS N1wport lle•ch BAY VIEW 2 bedroom, 642-9875 eves. Refs. Coll• MHa Ftreplaces I pr!v. patios. 1 VILLAGE .i .. ps 4 oomplttely furnlah·1 ~~~~~~~~~1 ,---,.----,· ILaQUINTA HERMOSA Pools Tennis Conblt'I Didst. __ •·-ta Ana Ave = _5 H-~ Blvd c M PARK NEWPORT -'. Avail J .. -to S.N -2 BR, eoclosed g•~•e, prlv S•••'•h ~·--r 'tate IJv. Lan CdM '"2611 -~ ~ ~· 2400 ~wr " ' ' ~ -•• "~ I~ --_.""" """""'' .. " """ ~ Sea e, .,..... tn4> "7 -APART ENTS pr -nth. Adu1U: --1 •• , .~, ...... patio, $215 per mo. 545-4976 Ina .i. Spacious Apts. Te" MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) Llk S ndl ~ ~ M ... nt.'675-4930. ~., ---·-·· •• or 547-967'3 v.'Ork. ra.ced pool; IWlken cu P•rk· • urrou "I RENTAL OFFICE ---:-""" l\:mmmmmm~-~~I Huntington Be•ch BBQ. Unbellevabla ~ .. QUIET -DELUXE OPEN 10 AM to$ PM On the bay Corona ~I Mar, nr beach :"".:,,,_-..,........,..,.,,_~.1 Only 2 BR. Pool. Some v1ews. 2 A 3 BR APTS 2 Bdrm. untum, clean, 2 kkl• Luxury apartment Uving tJV· 2 Br $150 v.·k; 1 Br S80 wk Announcementa 500 % BR. condo. Adults only. 1 BR. FURN. $175 Near beach. $210 Prv. patiol * Htd Poo11 OK. no pets. St«> mo. T10 e:rlooklng the water. Enjoy Completely furnished 642,3331 ---------1 Incl. refrig, washer, d.rye"r. ALL UTILITIES PAID AGENT 644-4M8 Nr ah<l-'g * Adulb Only Shalimar. 5.1S-4741. $750,000 health spa. 7 swim· Newport.2 Br furn gJps 6-8. J'."TSA Of San CJemente High Years lease $ 2 O o /mo . 1 BR apt, $175. mo. Martinique Apts. Large 2 BR. crpts, drpes ming pools, i lighted ten· ,11 btk bch. 673_91 42. 832.0942 School, \\iehes to express Adams & Brook h u rat , (4 blks s . of San Diego Frwy Avail August l, lease. nia courts. plus miles of k f G 1 213 944-4MQ their thanks to DAJLY 644-5996 or 968-2290~ on Beach, l blk W. on Holt C.a.ll 644-5217 lTlT Santa Ana Ave., C.?i.t. $130548-,; bicycle trails, putting, shul· 7""-:-o;or=ay;;;-;-e-;or=,,.· '-:.::-<I PO..OT for xlnt publicity a 6 P •-·d La ) bcb Mgr. Apt. 113 646-3642 nebo-~ croqu t Junior l'• ** BEAO I APTS. slp.oi 6. plch·-roverage for·~--Condo. furn. or to l 2ll ar11.a1 e ne. PRIME area-2 blks to . 11.1u, e. ... .. .,. .l.Ol'•.i. , .... 3 BR-2 BA-blt1'ns·Xlnl rn4) 347-5441 1-2 Br, 2 Ba. Avail Aug. 7. $175. UTIL. incl .. 2 Br., 1 ~) from $174.50 monthly; al.Jo 1 $125 to $175 \\'kly. Aug/Sept. Unfurn. 325 •• $160. PER MONTH ncl • tio 343 67>-5810 or 67l-<880. cond. Only $229. per ,..::.::..::::;=:.-.,....-..::::1,...,...,"!'!!"'"!'!!"""'""' No pei.. 673--0937, 675-48'13. Ba .. • • pr • pa · and 2-bedroom planll and NewPort S.•ch Sl.45 -$165 Very large 2 bedrm, newly Cabrillo Apl c , 548--2933. 2-story town boules. Elee-Rent•••. to Shire ao [ mo. Agent 962-4471 or __ ....,..._... _ Bachelor &. 1 BR. patios, 2 BR. unturn. crpts, drps, " decorated and new shag tric kitchens. private patiot ---=~,,-~--,.-----546--8103. * * * * * * * * frplc's, priv. g a r a g e • . sundeck, 21,l blks to Beach. <:arpeting. Near Harbor Dan• Point or balconies, arpetlng, dra· WANT Nkle temai. room. '* BRAND NEW * Divided bath I: >ots ()f .1::26::5:.:1mo::::.·.:.673-c;..:.382S;____ Shopping Center. ED ::::=..;..;=;....---:--1 --' .. •. Su:btettanean park· mate to sl~ modem 2 BR. ',•' -RIDDLE n-alt fl!~,. ""uc * Brand New Octan View ,.... .... $135 • 2 BR Duplex, renred. Condo home w/boat &lip closets. Ree hall, pool &. ' AC or ~. 65 3 me with elevaton. Optional apt. 1 bllc. from beach on Auto. tr•nsport1tktrl 525 C n• OK N . t Cotta-ApU. 2 Br From $1 • --·'" A all h~ pet · ew J>8lll · Summer, or Jeues avail. pool tablet, sauna baths. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--· ,2 BR unfurn apt, w/yrd, BR. $225. Collect U toll, maid MVlce. Just north of Balboa Penl11awa. v . . 18754 H. Beach BI v d . 4401 W, O>allt H',...way See for )'OUl'teU! 17301 Crpts, drps. Avd Aug 16. n4: 968-3563. Fuhkm Isled at J'ambol'ft now thru 9/9. at winter WANTED • Woman nde:r to ~. * C•ll: 675-6120 * Keel!Jon Ln. (1 blk W. ot $180. Call Mrs. andSM.JoaqulnHill1Roa.d:. 'r:ates. $97.50. 675--7833eves. ahare driving & expeDJeS k Be ch, 1 blk N of Slater) HARBOR GREENS w i 1 llamt-D ~2450 Tel-'---cn4) 644-1900 w/same. Dr i v i n I to 2 BR. B~ new. Huge bac Du,,lel:e1 Unrum. 350 a . • ays . t411ntln~On Beach ~,,....,,_ tto SHARE home, or ttnl nicety Vfrslnla. Between Aug. '? ._ yrd. $235/mo. incl. wtr. · 842-7848 eves 645-5952. --=rent~ tnfonua n film br's w/kitch priv. 15. 55i-l4l6. Days 714: 645--0550, ask for Corl"na d "I Mir UPPER front 2 BR. Fuml1hed & SPAC. 2 &. 3 Br. apt. $140 up $175 VERSAILLES H.B. area. 962·7520 aft 6 pm1~--~----~ Mr Murrah. overlooking lake park & Unfurnished Pool, cpt/drp, bltna, kids Children Welcome Executive Apartments or all day v.·knd !I'. Person1ls 530 Walle to Beach. Vacant 2 Br. NE\V Du plex-Upper 2 Br, 2 beaut. enclosed patio .& ok overlooking N~rt Beach. GIRL Roommate desperately TIRED OF WORK? $135. Cpt/drp, brin,,; kids? ~~~c~h~i·:~~~~ ~pet. ::,at1~~-~ ~~~. From $120 to $215 mo 2206 College No.··. 642-7035 New F1mi1y Apts. ~tacular view1. Luxury. needed to !hare 2 BR Me. Boftd? Want a couple or Rent-A·House 979-8430 Adul ts. No pets. Refs. 536-2692. Bachelors • 1 Bclrm1 1996 Afaple No. 1.,. 642-3813 2 Bdrm. Color Coord. Models open 9 to 8. On Hos-Main Edinger arae by lit. months of u n Planned 2 •· h F Req'd 1250 ~ -2 BR l150/mo Beam cell pltal Rd, oft Newport Blvd. 557-3902. carefree tun? Can """' aet LARGE 4 BR. ..,..t. enc· . . v 1:>-1;:i-1 1. ''llUNT=-1N-G~TO=N-G~a-r-d,..,-n-1 2 ldrml e 3 Bdrms · · • TENNIS CRT PU1TING ~~ ed comer lot. $300/monlh. 1 BR. DUPLEX. Partly furn. A .. •-. Heil at Bo'--Chica. apts, drps, retrig. Pool. In· GREEN, POOL, BAR...B-Q'• or Superior Ave. STUDENT mother & 2 away during Aug. &: Sept1 Call 545-208'1. $l20/mo. ~1.323. Comp.;:' _ See 11/J or 2 Fu11 8eth1 fant ok. No pets. 313 E. lith am..o PLAY AREA SEACLIFF MANOR Apts. 2 children to find A ah.att hie Tall st r o·n g eltabllshed * "" ~-* ~--~---· -I Pl., CM. "2-9852. . DAY CARE ~ Br. Unfurn $1&5. Pool. nr. OCC w/same. BoMie, bachelor wants to take hap. lrvint J'ft"VJ.'70 what you'tt miJlslng. Fr. Muter -M'V-lvuu.. .... .... ...... , .. """~ 1_. _ 1 30--45 3 BR. 2 Ba., fam. rm. .• $325 2 BR. 2 ba. Q)olee! •••. $300 WE HAVE OTHERS hl~~-cemn-•·-Spac T~·-•----2 BR 3 STORY REC BLDG INC Clpts, drpo, bltM, prb, 557-4337. py, fun w•lna •-on Huntington Be•ch '==-,..-=· ;-:,..---.-:=-: _.. --•"' VWUUV\Ull:. • • •• • .11-1 ... .._ Pla-ntla Ave. SHARE mv ...... __.___. I.--... us tour in ,J•nrt•"" motor-~ liv room w/ps or 2 BA. Vaulted celling, GYM &: PARTY RMS. ..... .,. ~ ...... ._ !Quv.n ...,,..., ._._,, , DELUXE 2 BR. oov patio. $125 -$135. Lge. modem I wood burning fireplace. caraae, poolJI, alr/cond. DESIGNED FOR THE All< about our discount. w/dock, man 31)$1 yn. home. All replln conllden-• New drpo, crpts, bltM, dbl Bl'., redee. Cpt/drpa. Nr. Convenient laundry area 1210., 540-417!/54<1-2048 GROWING FAllllLY 548-2882 or 642-l340. $150/mo. Stral&b~ 675-433L 1111. wrtt. Ooat•ed M No. ("1111 1, I 11 ll tl. l -- -I I 1·1 illo r pr .. lovely private grounds. oceon 2l.O Cb I c ago ti'!. kl~osed c 1 .t. 2 BR. Pool. 1140 Up. SEE FURN. MODELS RICHARD'S/UOO AREA WILL ilhltt 3 BR condo In :.. Deity ~8:' lSO, Water I< gan!ener pd. 53&-2261, 847-5169. aawui. ,......atlon • Fum. Ava!L Chlldren'o sect 6'401 WARNER AVE. New 1ar&e 2,BR. 2 BA. xtra H.B. w/ "1nale over· 21 • ...,= .. -="""===:-I Responsible married c:ouple APT. Poo!Jlde -Spacious ties. Stcurlty £U&rd. ELM GARDENS Apts, 177 nloeo, cptl, drpl, frple. Call 5.1&-381SO. •1iJUT LICENSE!>* !Adults) 1165 no pei.. Bungalow. Pvt. patio, $150. I n.... • II E. 22nd St. Cl\l 64i-361S. (Comer Warner " Edwards) dahwbr. ..,.... $250. mo. ho -•111 -Hindu SptrlQieltet. 842-mG. mo. to right ad u It•. Mode • ..,...n I ' pm. Project of Urb1netics yrly. 673--0844. SHARE C.M. m• •• sprttuo1 Reodfnp gtwn 1165 2 Br. -. ~ 84&-.:_,1c.323.c._~=~-~-l 2700 Potorson W1y, CM .1~3.!"n ~~:.~."':!:'..'· •Quul•pt. _ e -temal• Btwn 45-55, coll,.. ~. JO AM-JOPM. Advice ••• -.-~ bo & •~--·-~ •-• WATERFRONT Apt Large 2 grad, 541M449 btwn 7-9 pm. rJvm on all matton. I CID "-'CE 1946.. S.. alter 6 pm • LRG .. 2 BR. Bungalow nr Har r Blvd Util tree. Furn av al I , $235 Br. w/..,.... Dlnlng area. ... ~· 0~ "A" Llnootn Apt. 4 Gan!eru;, 6 pools. Adami 531 ·~ .,. -Appll•-• utUIU" incl o ~ R~ -· ~P )ICU. lat Western Bank Bldg. ~~~=~~~~~=~1 Saunu. Hot Jacuuil. Ten-Manager __,, ...,.....,.,... ClllLDREN WELCOME -.... ...., ' •r•tael '"" ""' ~ S12 N. El Camino Real • 1 University Park, lrvtne ~-... -· 5'"5025 * 3 BR. 2 Ba. Avail about BRAND NEW FA"ILY $300/mo. 1 an>li Pm• •-San Clement• Doy1 552-7DOO Nights 11•1 nl.! courts.•-·~. 'Ill" Aug. I. 1185 per mo. ht " M fl75.ltllt. GARAGES for ~nt I fw FREE UTILlTJES.Furn 1 BR TOWNHOUSE APTS 2 BR. 2 BA lllobUt Hom<. 1959 l\laple Ave, Mar No. 5 1,,,.,.,.,•9i-~9!36=or=-m-I034=== $365 Aplr'tJnenb Rlnt apt ~ t1eacb. Pool. $US. [ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~=~ 2~~-::: no~= s BEDJWS. + FAMILY, • Yearly ftntal by ltue. * ~~:!.~:.S FOR ~~: ~~ =~~ . 4 BR,. 211 ha ........... !"'" up. 1536-7282. 184 21st St C.111. 546-6985. 2 BA. TENNIS .Cf., $197.50/mo. No dilldr<tt. no SIORAGE. -/mo. ~~ ton. 1 free question ans. 3 BR .. 2 bath> .... $335 -A F ·~ VER,Y Nice 1 Bl'. dplx. WORTII waiting for -but --·a ~~· ..... Avail A u r .15 t b ---2 •·th ••~ pt1. um. -SPACIOUS 2 br, bar, blttns, ruuu• ~" ~ -~~A•-., Apt 6, C.111. over phone. Receive lull llle 3 BR, II~ s ........ -;,;:;...;;.~------Quiet Sep, by pr, Adulu oobody dld! Lot's ol lulkl cpt.·l165 mo. 135 Albert Pl, POOL, BAR-8-Q'• ••~· ~· -ttadlng for 13. w/ad. (213) i ... ·.red h·111 jj.:;ieiijnojiriijajiliiii!iiiiiii over30,nopeto.548-102l alrea<ly have moved tn -Apt B. !\Ir. Whtie, !213) ClllL.,PLAYAREA NEWdUplex,Refrllt-WANTED: Garage· !or SM-1350. Fully Uc. La REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Cail Anytime 83.1-0820 Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM 2 Br, cvport, very quiet & they ce>uldn°t wait for us to 595-4436. DAY CARE CENTER 3 Br., 2 Ba., $125 be. View ,....,_, Indetlnite period. Habra. Call for appt. A private. No peu. Adlts only. linl•h everything at Jam--*'-*~B~EA=llTIFl1L==~1"'",.-2"'s=a. 3 STORY REC. BLD. !NCI. 2 Br .. 2 Ba. $210 lee. No peta C.M.-N.B. -7. PROBLEM Pregnancy eon. Bold N C pt Util pd. Nr. 17th I< Irvine. ~~:.d~ O~~G.~ Contemporary Gan!en Apl1. GYM t. PARTY RMS. ~Balboa Blvd. ~-Office Rania! 440 Gdent, s y m pat b .. tic ew once $l50. 642-0538. ·= Pa"-· f ) I DESIGNED FOR THE LIDO ISLE • 3 BR.,·2 . pre~·~-.. ·-"·-. Abol'-but \\'t!'~ ready now with .....a, r p c. • poo' GROWING FAMlLY •. _.. ... , ......... ......u. .. FURNITURE RENTAL chlldrenor -2135Elden Costa l\lesa. Private patio *CLEAN 2 Br .. I ll Ba. MOI WARNER AVE. IOI Via Anllbeo P.""~~ APCARE. 642-4436. I BR. llZ. -1115. No tho best Adult Apartment .tn 11!»-1170. Call ~63. SEE FURN. MODELS BATH. Adults, ...... R w~ tion .. Adoption r ~I. Ave. See Iller. Apt. 6, or baloony, lln!places, beam BltM, pr, adulu, no pets. 7141753-0719. ~'>" PALM CARDS It SPIRITUAL , * Month to Month 2BR, part!y fin. Nr sl>ops. ceUfnp, walk-ln closet~ 11$. Nr. 1l!th .t. Pomona. (Comer Warner t. F.d'wudl) 2 BR Upper. lli Blocla; to &ll'ILANl(WAJLK !II READINGS. Bl1ncldlorre-· ., Lagun1 Beach * 100% Purcbue Optlno Older cblld OK. 1135. wood paneling, carpeting, 548-6357. Project of Urbanetics tho ocean. Ii hilt to bey. ---. clucHon. loal lleodi Bltll. :1 * Wide Selectkm. . fl!A~ -drapes. =~1•bed i'. Unfum· ,-,=...,-~--,..--,,_-Avail An• ] M'Mi!• h ill .. ttrfl'Ollt oflkts ill,..._... otd a.--•-1 ml -·th • 1 1175 • CHARMING l Br. eo+.·J· ,,_1_ .....,.....,..,, ~,..,..., 2 BR. linfurn. crpts, ...... ....,, • -· · ~mo. Cl'lllltTJ trM. .so,tilstliatt.i f111~bflll!fs _,_., ..,.. ·' "~ ~· le=-~=-,--,--,,..,.== I tshed. A Fabulous rec. build-1-1--..,,. n1.... DUPLEX· Clean! 2 Br., «IV. Yearly. 1:'7':.._~ rtlltct "''°"' "' ot ,ttt. .......... CMit Knott'• Farm. 527-3«1t •·-., No. eDd. Quiet & * ... u--...... ,,.,...; $145 -Nicely furn. 1 Ir 2 BR. ot. I $135 mo. ~t It ..,,t, ~ .....,,., tio N ..__ cpte bit..• v•~ --• '""'" ... OUW"~.-, Trail ·~·"· nl •-w tngwithpool.Bachelor• .,.,..,...,. uk •A-t ... -. pa • ew ... .,., • .. ..., NEWPORT ·•·'--', new Mddmof1rnltalllli1 slllps. _..'""HOLICS •---secluded. era.""'""' ... o y, ...-. BR's from $135. 140 W. Wil· ~i.uv, -.--...•3 • dbl gar, lovely Pr IV• ....wu ~'101111 NllUTY.fM DOU.UJ_A IUJVU ........,...,....,.,._ $215. Lrg. 2 Br. in dplex. New 1l4 -SJti Wilson. CM. 645--4530. eon" (just W. of Newport (Service Mgr). groundi. Water Ir prd4!ner duplex, 3 lllt. 2 BA, frpJc, ~ IJMnoz<""t'ii'i'I Phone 542-7211 <r write crpUdrps. Gar. Bat Vu. £ '!!J * BACHELOR Apt. * Blvd.) Costa Mesa. 2 Br. Adults, no pets. pd. Responsible married sun deck. S3SO mo. fl5.8169. • P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. $250 .21XJ' ocean. Dix 2 Br. __ --$100 month BAY MEADOWS APTS. couple (adults) $1&5. No EXCLUSIVE Beacon Ba,y DESK space available '50 Trevel S. apt. AU features + Pool. . Call MS-2681 EASTSIDE: Woodland St. 387 VI. Bay St. CM 6f6..0073 pets. 842-3276. 1 Bedroom apartment mo. WW prwldt turnftuN A NU-VIEW RENTALS 517 W. 19th. CM ~ L•guna Beach Adulu only -2 BR, crpu, 3 BR. 2 BA, nr. OCC. 2 BR" 3 BR, 2 Ba. Walk 11> rn-lm c:all alter 6 PM at '5mo. Ana-'os-STEAT ~T:L 67M030 or 4~ 2756 N. Main, SA 5'7-0314 .. · , · • • · · • , • drps, bltins, $180/mo: 3 Upstairs. New crpts &. drps. beach. Shag crpta, drp1, 3 br., 2% ba., brand new. anllab&e. lm5 Bll:cb Bl\<d. Grand 3 1'- 1 ~ed Schoo 4 BR 2 Bath fam nn home. LGE furn Pent h 0 u • e · BR. 1% BA, crpts, bltins, $169/per mo. Call 552-9786. blbu, trplc'1, rarga, $Q C1o.e to channel. beaeh 6 Hunttnrton Beach. so-ml 6 ~ h ner. O.Ck w/180~ canyon view, llalboo hl•nd Panoramic view ol vlllagt 1280/mo . Call MR. 1145 ·2BR,mcl.patio.Near Up. 8382 Atlallla. 53&-7442, ahop'a.$350.yrly.&n.7'l0. BAY VIEW OfFICIS crew gu 11 '00'"- fenced yrd. Newl y "ocean. 2 br, den, frplc, FREDERICK, Herltage •hol>'C.13311lalcer, 536-4948. NEW View Apt. KtnpRoad. O.luxe, all'<ondltloood (213) 37a.T23' d-rated. No 8 ma 11 BALBOA Island Ho t.e I . aundeck. Indoor BBQ . Realtors. ~115l. ....,.. ,,~-~~~--ted "~ chll~vdre 494-7007 Suites, •lpt 4. Rm•. Kitch. C94-854J. •·~· Sea Air Apts • $115 Avail. Aug. ht Sbwll adu!L Re......,... ;,:;:-:::"- n. • facil. By Ila/Wk/Mo. m =""=--:---:-=-= LARGE 2 BR. 111 BA, -2 BR-Ill ... Verde. $140. Elec ~ 2 BR, <:rpts, drapeo, btt--· alonomlca, -· ...... ,_ I Walk to Wtr. 2 Br. Den. Frpl, Agate. 675-3613. 2 BR. viewsZrs bullttns, 1;!• CJ)tl, bltns, trplc, pri patio, bltns, encl gar, nr. 1hop'g. lnl, 1 6lk N. of Adam& ott 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc. cloeed-ln oi:Ss ,_. a'llllable '50 b.ltns, utl pd. Kids/pets, ATTRACTIVE winter rental. ~r:::.·499-.J.905. mo. . end garage. 1 blk from Adults. No ·pets. !54M357. Beach, 12M Utlca. 53$o7crJO, patio, b1k to beach. $300 mo. WU1 Jll'fWldt fm'nttllre . Lllt..S-)[g) R1nt-A-Hou10 979-8430 2 BR. 2 BA, II bll< bay.1175 schoolil. 634 Hamilton, C~ta ~$11~11-~LO~VEL="=y,..,~ln-g~l,-a-p,_t-,-for LARGE 2 BR 1 llory 4-i>lox. yearly. f'IS-21!5. at SS-. Al•••llC - mo. !213) 698-3021. N1W110rt BNch ~~ ~"f or l adult. Bltn•. refrlL lOOC Cpl>, clrpa. r/o, ..... Ina!, N-rt thlgllfo avalllble. 222 r-""· Found (frff ad1) 550 Lagun1 Hiii• DELUXE 3 n-n-2 Ba. El Cam•-. "'' ~·. cb11d OK. $135, 847"1l45, Loguna Beach. tN tlll •~ ~-•·Jr '·male cat Balboa Penfnsule .EM. t.1t:n, FRPLC, sunken llv nn., 21----"--~--·~--SPACIOUS 2 br, anartly nn.i..i..i;:., ...... "" u: NEW 3 BR, 2 Bath> $250 mo. ..,...,,_.,=..,.-,,,.-,~~~ Gar. Frplc. Sundeck, ·crpu. n-2 Ba. I bltn SPACIOUS 2 BR A t WALK to llHch OFFICE Spaco, 444 Old wearlna Gea collar, vicinity or sell $1000 d 0 w n . e $45 WK A Up-On Octan Wuh rm. Winter $300 n)O. ~.. w w, • t 7 :· P 2 Br., cpta, drPs. dshwshr dee. Frplc, b!amed ctilina, Newport Blvd .. S blb No. ot Ocean Blvd Corona deJ Owner/Agent, 644-7525. I.A>veiy Bac~t Br ... Roomstil Pd Lease. See now S(XM) Nep. ~ e:':AM~ar. • · Old~:i~~lG 125 6 308 lSfh. 847-3957 :Pe~s:.'i::~l~"vt':1~: ~ 300 Ill· fl '95/~, Mar, m-m7. Maid Servtce-Pool·U tune, N.B. ~;;;:~~~===::.:_=;;;,;;;;;:,;;;;;,::::;:;;;:.!...======== Male Collie A Sbepberd/Mb: ' Nowoort S.acli e Call ~740 e YEARLY nontal. New dplx. 2 -642-378l. MEDICAL Ofc, 8lO 11'1· tt.· & N.B. lie. Vfc. Newport It I br -3 br "75 equlp avail. Fulllon llland: ~·-Dr C.M c 11 I e VACATION Yr. Round • 2 Coron• dal Mir 111~.ii,; =., to~.': Sm AR. GAZEJt'tt.W. Son Clem.nt9 Ideal for lnt-G.P. 111. SU!l: ~--·• • ~ , 1 Br on beach. Klds Qk. Yrly. ·-~n ~ to Balboa Penln Avall -on ·.L. "1' 2 BR, 2 n. new ahac. point, 644-3100. I 1150 • FURN~ •Pt • ·~· · ~.:.....:....oilf<UTJ. . -. romio 7/21 watch on ' 645-3900 mtaurant marl<et liquor 1yrloue.6'13-(J526. · M T•Pel7y.AdMf7C.U.. M drpo. Frplc, notrig, ...,.. •• PROFESSIONAL Suite. ooeanlomtbetween!Otband '! ALA Rentals• store I: other shoPr. con-NEWapt.45thSt.N.8.)ftl"-..,.. Mdrfli..t•tlt•.,.... T balcony, Octan view nr ttady to RO· Ht'll at Bolu 311t, Newport Beaeh, e UDO Lovely - 2 Br, 2 Ba, vcnlences. Beach, 5 mlnutt Jy nontal, $350. mo. 3 BR. 2 Tod-lop -farFtldoy, beech It aboJ>Plne. $190, mo. :,;'ria_H.B. $ 2 7 5 /mo· 673-6811. --.. w/lrplc. cpt/drps, encl pr. walk. 1165/mo. lat & lut + BA, d.,,, fr p I c, --UAiilpad .. IO-117 JJaodon, 49Ul79. , ~O. 2 Cham.,.... oolond $265. $50dep. lyearleue. Ad42u1tu0 wubtr/tlry<r, w/w crpta, r.e:;~f'I~· "<:.uot 1WO ADJOINING OFFICES fml. cock .. -poos Vlc. ALA Rintal1 e 645-3900 preferr<'d. Cail 642· 637-3751 alt 6:30 pm. 2 .._ 31W»o uv.. Apt1., busy corner. Costa 111 .... Garli<ld .l Buahonl t.v. Mike. Eves, 5J$..t622. •WINTER RENTALS e aWotth 33~ &JT• Purn. or Unfum. 370 s100, util'• pd. 64:M560 968-3153.. • HARBOR VIEW HOME -S Bedrm., dining room. $395. mo. REALTOR, 644-7270. furn -• &~ ATodoy 34Md .. "-,, $170 -Channing gpac. • 1, 2, 3. 4. BR. Ruerw Now! Sa.toirt 3S MO!Wf Cotti MeH e DELUXE 1, 2 or 3 room YORKSHIRE TttritT: 10 s g J . No n·S mo k e·r •ABBEY RF.ALTY 60-3850 ~:_.. ~~:;' :1~ ~~!;?.; oWcta. But dell in O.C. ~an old. V1dntt¥~ A GenU•mA11 exec. f r PI a• 2 BDRlll, 2 BA, or 1 BR, I ,.. JI'°' 6'-mfeatiBllU &Q Airport ....._ S!S-2840 Falr Drive, C.?d. 540--0795. pr\v•cy, S. Hwy. 6'1M.!OO. BA-2 bll<I to beach. Yrly 1~t"' ~~.:::'1 ~=· Cotta Mata 1300 •m. 673-4430. l~= :l~ ~~"' ~~=/:~'.Apts. Bu11Ms1 Rental 445 P~'t'°"' ld1ntll7, LOVELY new 5 Br home In *Ii Blk Bay It Beech.11!1. .,_.., •>-73y,.. e 1 BR-llD'n $190, * OFFICE.fOO 11'1 II avl 3 Wet !Mta, eo..t Hlwq. Hori> Vw Rma. Clooe to I A 2 BR. Pool. $140 Up. BR, ba. .t. tt!rta .. $l2S. 2 'iH'°''" ::~ ~~ e 2 BR, 11' BA Untum,S210. -· 800 Sq. Ft. IN-eoror. de! Mu IB-n!L llcblt, bcb • sbo P l. Unflfm avl. Children'•-· ·Br., apt,. $261. 11M100. ,.: .,._ """"" e 2BR,1 BAl'llm $225. DUSl'RIAL SHOP avl Aua. °, Obbse/pool. $Silt) mo/Loe. ELlll GARDENS Aptl, 17T 1~=--:~ ~::!::' Privet• petlol, luah lonot1 .;-;;;,;=;..· -----:s H~~: ,.,,.. .......... E. 22nd SL Cl\I. 64J.384S. . Apt. Unfum. 365 1'Tlwl"' *''° ,........ ..ttln(I. Oorpom, (U paid. -· ~ •ttt SI L 20l!ow; 50.. .,S.:lol AUICK CASH 1'ND trillh tt N port SUPER Harbor View rtnlal 1 Br 1!11140 le •~· poo lol.... ............. ~ .. :J.)J 1 ,,-...,. SI 01 11 Wot 114 E. :itlth St., C.M. 54Ml37 'P · .. •r. hi 3 BR. •baa crpt. 3 _.. Adlu only, ldtal !or-----·---221-... _ 12...... * 1 BR. CPT. DRPS. J'NCD Beach. m.J360 Au !or trom pool II parl<. Oub prlv. bodidon, 1993 Church, Clll 5 NEW units. 401 llanlln•· fl:::-"" ~= ::r.::.,. ~'D. 135 .t. $150. 56-1657. THROUGH A O>ll> Gsrdener. $475. 644.5569. 5!8-9633. Occuponcy early Aug. 2 BR · "'""" I"......, "h •> ~-FOUND whit. rablllt Vic. u~ :i.r. l6Gott..1rt11p:::;:~ WANT AD BLUFFS • Leagc !340. Sell BACH APT. FURN. 1\1 Be. $235 me.· Leue. ._ 210.... .,_ .,_ Huntington '"""" !NIM lleJd oH 0.-o.. '34. 1\1, 2323 EutbluH Dr. NR 17th A IRVINE 54W601 ot ~'1!111. · ""'JI 21C.. SIY~ == NB. '*-7191 Appt. Bia. HI 6621. $110 mo. 645-0963 2 Br. 1\i Bi. potlo, beleoey, .t. i:Z... :i;.,--,..._ 3 BR, Q-ptc, drape•, bllnl, 1 DAILY PILOT , ·~ ~ -·~• ~ ~ ..... -'°' __ ,,.._ bit., lbot>Plnl ctnltt, Sml -· w ·-· ~ .. _ HAR.DOR vmv ROMES-2 A 2 Jilt FURN -lllG. $15 E. ....,. --°'4' on ®Goll '81""-_, pet ot. mi E1111, Apt. I>. P•-Gllum1 11 lllr ,..r o.n or J BR. 13*1. Lat. or Cpts, cfrt>I, bltlno. 1i!'. e !'!!>'.~ ~TT!lat~C. mar.-1n1. '42•1671 Sllnll, SdlaJ'ltott .... -to ..,, 64!1-1\12, Hr Harbor Ctnter. -· ••~ -~ • I • I ' I DAILY PllOf ""' ... _ tufks: •• ![Ill I ... ., ..... ][DJI .__ _, ,rz,_,__,J[Il] ;.I ~,,.....,~, ~llm~IJ: l~I ~"·--~, ..... ~! L .. _ ..... ~;..c_rr_ .. _ .. ;..d_•;..l _w_ .:Oby1Jtllng G on1tnt111 Pointing " Htlp W•m.d, M" F 111 Htllp Wanted.MI F 710 Holp w.-. Ml ,. 711 Htllp Wanttcl. M" F 710 Ht lp Wtnttd, MI F 710 ,. P•po ...... nglng Rt al E1tt lt tarttr l'OUllD Bir eoJdtn mole YOUNG s.t SclJool Open 7 AL'S GARDENING PAINTING It PAPERING A'ITENDANT al Shtll ... <U:ANING IAdr. depefto EXP'D. Dental Qlalrltde Jr Aco>Untant 1!00 New,.. exp<rieoeed, join tlie ''Old Y•Dar'' type doo. Jonr dlyl, MM·7: lOPM. Pro!. tor """-• I m a 11 l!I yn la -..... Lie • lion • Jmtx:Rent·A-Car '" doblo. 2 lla)'ll •·k. I ...... Aulltant. Applicatlonl w1ll F ic --$'!50 OomJ>OftY lh&r• ~ u hair, vielnlty Mainolia A t Aehtrt. ftegiattt now tor la.nthcaptna" -.:Mc-. call ~.Ref• tum. &Q..235&. Laguna Stach. O>lltce 1tu-Udo Isle. &'13-0629. be t&Un btwn 5:30 I T:30 Ste' /O>mm'I lns $700 -.a• do oot blW 1 license. Of&nCt, Cotta Mea.. Picked mt of Sunune:r A Fall. Pl 5f0.&9I eves. Ser.,. t •I ~~~~=c~,;;:..;:,:,;.;1 dent o~r 18. Permanent 2t Clerical pin. ONLY 0t1 Mon., Tuel A Y $625 cl;~ 00 our up 11;y Human< Socloty, Call wldy. >.got 2~"4. -· Newport, CdM. rosta Mna, WALLPAPER HUNG 11n -kly. No l<q holn. Tfttd 01 ltaylnr home! Wed: 7/31, Ill • 811 Ph. Ex';"·=~ $550 $49 them or~. Carpet Servi.:. Do\'fl' Shores, WHt.clut. Call Reboo 646-™9 4!'.M-91Xl.1. Want to lt&M a caretr! 646-1766. ~ r $415 D. B<lse l Bil< unalt !ml FOR Unl<I"" P•n<>nalbed Plumbl111 1'B~AB'='Y~S~l"l~E~R~lor-1-yr-. -,,old RECORDS CLERK, Clerk Typ~t 14l!O 4 Vic. Orange co. JOHN 'S Carpet If Upbollttry Landlcaplng· & full malnt,, boy. Perm po1IUon. Start (Etc., £XP£RIENC£0 ~epUoniat, HB Open Rtal E1ta t1 F~ 7/21/72 . Drl·Shampoo free Scotch· Dou B"""" CunnJnghlm Dralnl uncioaod, 17.so 817. 11oun 10:30 am, 4:30 •-·--• i~cal .... PBX"M ·~ Llconolng Cour,. 546-QM. .suard (Soll R4ttardant1). did, call James C. Elmer, Sewer line to 100' .. S15. pin. Mu1t be avail. all ~~-v.t c ,.., ope .... ,., -"""" Full 1ale1 tralninK pl'Oi?'lm n.gro.,.,. i all color M&:lG62. * 549-2502 * mom. Pl ... ldy or $4. per avail 1"' mature career SAVINGS' & LOAN NEWPORT _ 00 cost. Manlll!•mont op- PUPPV.maJ~ brown, ahort haired. No collar. Vk:. Pammy Lo.. llta. Bcb. 847.,S'IC. YOUNG port B<&(le, mole. bUc. white i.n. Vic. Orange " 161h CM. 645:1496; 673-1050. FOUND male black I: whlte cat re:cmlly operated, on vicinity NOl'lll .l Santa Isabel, ea.ta M: e •a , 64&:4tn, Kitten • White spot on hnt -Yellow em. Vic. Broad A Ntwport on We1tmlrulter, 646-5M7. SIAMESE; kitten, Bluepo1nt, vie. Pottery Shack, on Clen· .. ,.... Laguna. 494-5533- J"ND, BLUEPOINT Siamese male, oullJde Hoag Hospital entran~. 548--0651 Contact Public Relations O. SIJ)cy Terrier Vtc. Saybrook near El Rancho ln Huntlngton Harbor. H.B. brig!ibl hte~~ "••ttlO mlnu,.tt PROFES&ONAL u.e work, e PLUMBING e day.Call645-8711. ~:.ti::'!:i •• ".": P t nonntl Age nc' portun!Ue~ A.II< for Mr& eac wi Ww carpe . pruntna,trtmmlng , lnltall·Remodel·Repair ., TRLER 833 Dover Dr., N. , Jooe1 for Information at Save YoUI' money by aaving _ ... _, IP• I • k I er s. Free Est, Uc, 543-8172 BANK tra!r'lff poaitlona. High tchool 642~3870 su.s581. e tra tri Will clean __ ,,.... • diploma req'd. Apply in per--,....,.,....,.,.~""!!!!!!!!!!•I I R Ito me x p-. La.ndlcaplnc, clean u P · PLUMBING REPAIR aon8:30 AM-9:30AM. Safeco Im-rial Savi .... 1 & IAa.n LAUNDROMAT Oeanup, Tarbel ta n llvine nn., dtnfrc rm. A: Georee &tft...5893 No job too small ExperlencM lnaurance, 11570 Brookhurst, ,.... .... / lm LI 'Ork R tired si. .. -. ball $15. Any rm. $7.50, • * ., ••• ~ p ool Opt•olor 3366 Vla Lldo p t e. te \\ . e R.E. Salesman • .-..y• couch $10. Chair SS. 15 )Tl. SPENCER'S Lawn Srrvice! '"~ * r • Fountain Valley. Equal Newport Beach 673-3130 or semi retired. Good for L~ng Oriented. Sm a 11 •xp. "' what coontJ. not :"° "'· Lawn ca re, tOLE PLUMBING UNITED CALIFORNIA ~0.;.;ppo;;;;;';..· Em::C::p"=Joyer~;_· ..,..,...,,,,.,. cpl. 5'&:6691. CMLSl olllce '""' 101~. method. I do work DU'N-lf anup1. Rea1. 548-521.l. 2t hr. ter'Vice. 66-1161 CLERK typist. Exp in all ofc Equal opportunity mipk>ytr LEGAL Secretary, Newport The rest Is youn. NB. \Vr!te Good rel. 53L"110l. Jone• Le.wn Servke SAVE On Plumblna. Painting, BANK procedurtt. 10 key add EXP. Waltttu. Food I: center. Capable-exper. a.us.Wed Ad No. 429, Daily STEAM Carpet CJeanen, Mow, ~. vacuum. Small, :b'dtallations. })ft estimates. I machine. Accurate SO wpm Cocktalll, App'" ln .,.non, Sa 111 r y commemurate. Pilot. 330 W. Bay, Costa _, at Joy.ut --.. 300 Iaree. clearM:lp. 56-2943. Good -r-. --. 6 Monarch Bay P au elect "-writer. Varied v ,..... 640-0800. Mesa. Ca. 92626. .,..... .,.-. •oco ... ~'" L una Niguel v~ 2..4 pm, 440 Heliotrope, CdM aq. ft. $29.95. 972--0672. AL'S Landscaping. Tree Roofing •Sii ff.l duties. Apply 1741 Placen-Thurs&: Fri only. LIVE-IN, mother's a Ide 1 RECREATION DIRECTOR Ca r penter mnoval. Yard remodeling. ~-,..;.------I 4 273 t1a. C.M. From 1-3 pm. housei. ....... jn .. , 2 children. Ci..., of Fountaln Valley ul 1.... Sot cl -EXP'D. Malnt. Man -part ,......_., .,. "" .,~~ r16 920 Trash hi -~· ""'"P· e T. G•~ D~-. Dool ~-··' ~. Emp~·er CHEF wonttel. Exp, 1 1 _, d LW. Ide. 675-81116. Sa I a r Y: Ill.~" · • ~··--y e 'D ...... i.. -""~a.1 "'"llu '"3 .............. """ .......... .......,. ...~ ren or &ei-v1ces: oco1ec., la ed ~~ .. n ·-,..... '"'"~"'· ••~ ~· Dl=t. I do m~ own work .. r..,..,...,....,..,....,..,....,,. $1000 mo. toll 67S-4241 · Degree R« or " 1 Rough a Ftnlsh Patio Topi • roo P plmb'r, etc., carden'&· L.V.N .. reliable for steady b Id 5 · r Person- " ce -•nt. • 4 • 5 • 971 COMPLETE Lawn le 645-· ~9590. n~-i.1.... •ft. 4 P.M. Blue Bfft. ..~~..,,.,,. posltJO. n AJ-1 for .... ~ e ; yrs. expe · 0 .. ,,;;;.._ v "' ... · • Gardening 1ervice. Haulln& D<l.I ...... ,.. V't'r'VIU4i. • ' "" ,._.' nel Dept., 10200 Slater Ave., 54~~ LEE Roofing Co. Roofing all CLERK TYPIST COMPUTER term In a I GARDEN ER' ex Per . limr. 549-3061. 92108-Ph: (7141 961.:2424. & clean-up. Jim~ types. Recover, r.pnln, o-lor • data -n•-1 Co I I · I ~~ ~-"':elllngt JAPANESE . Gardener thermo roof coatings,. white Opening 1n Newport area, re-r-·-« .. ., uv mp e e ma1n · ".i.w, "uo Machine Oper•tor ·Apply by 8/4/72 . Com Yardwork & 0 & color Uc/bonded since quire• 50 w.p.m. typing &: clerk. Experienced-Ir er. Orange Ave., 21D Pauline Drill Preis & Lathe. Min 1 Acoult1c&I. Ceilings blown p. em-up. 1947. ~ est '42-7222. pleasing personality for ficient in typing &: 10 key. Pl., C.M. Eves. &: Wknds. yr. shOp e..xper. Apply In Restaurant machine applied. Free Free ntimates, 642-3102 public contact. Prevk>us of· Night shift. Applications 641)..:.142. person, SSS Production Pl, estlll)ates. Guar. ~1183. General Services Sew lng/Altera·iion1 fice exper. prilerred. will be accepted thru Mon. G~EN=ERAL=~~O~F~F~ICE=.~0-,.-at 8 -.... --~---..-· _... LOAN July 31.s~. Apply at Tustin "'bforthegolwholik: eo•~ts N.~·-~-c---=-::-=I Cement, Concme JACKSON • The Magician 45 SEWING·DESIGNING R. E. Community Hospital, 14662 :f vartetu-. Pleasant ~al MAID, full tinle, 7-3:30, PATIOS.SIDEWALKS min, of 1Poll binding magic Men/Worn ... Reu. Rates PROCESSOR Newport Ave ~ v -kend rotatioo, expe,. -~ CONTRACTOR for chlldrens parties, $8.11··c.0.:;m.::lnc:· __ _c:Call=-:.846-::.:.14l!O=.:1 COOK ., p Udo oUlce. Co. will train gal who pref. $2.48/hr. + benefits. '"'c.oiz.i,... -Hunt1Jwton Beach area-re· , exper. can type. Start $400. Call Call Max *** 6t4-0687 494-3669. Alteration..-642-5845 -·1-s min. of 2 ,_ exper. Conv. Hosp., 466 Flagship Pat Hall, ••• =•, Coastal Personnel Office, South A FUN PLACE TO WORK HOME Re-~ ~-n-N • t "" 'tu.K"' ~·· .,.,,-vu.N Coast Comm. Hosp. South • CUsn>M CEMENT WORK _... .. ._...,. ... :1. ea., accura e . .w yean exp. in construction, tl.nance, Rd., N.B. 6tz..sote. Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl. at 555 Drives, walks, t>&tiot. ~= = remodel, Tile loan pros:euln& I: accurate COOK • £,t,,, \VJ>rr '""An Adams, C.M. ~~i:ia::;. equal ~=-_,.._,...,...,..--pool decla. Don 64USl4 e · ' • typing. Xln't "'""'benefits. e BLUE DOLPHIN e ==:..:.=-----2 mb<od lahl. black ' H 11 CERAMIC tile ..,, • TEWRS GIRL Friday, :5-15, tor new MAINTENANCE MAN - 1• 2231 w I w b t t e tnarkinp CU~ Concreplan:e, pa.:: au ng remodel. Ftte eat. Small 3355 Via Lido, NB dental ofc. Will train. Send Ofe. bldg., Nwpt Ctr. Gen'I 1122112 vie. Newpor t • • en. TREE A: large p 1 ant · jobs welcome. 536--243;. Full I: Part Time Openlnp CREDIT coiltclions clerk. re:aum!' to: ClauiUed Ad knowledge of plumbing & -Heights. A n • w er• to en. ~1378• removal. R ot o t 1111 n g, ~~~~~~~~~I APPLY IN PERSON full ttme, days, Mon.-Frl., No. 4n, Daily . Pilot. P.O. electrical req'd. Also, lite '·'Baby'" A "Jothua". Call EXPER. contractor. patioll, renovating, Yard cleanups. ; Room 201 occasional wee k ends Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif. janitorial duties. Pleasant , art 5 pm. 645.2985 walks, drives, brick & Move le Haul. Call M&T I rail. I lo.55 No. Main, Santa Ana Previous experience pref P.r-92626. working coOOs. Pd. ins. & Now Hir ing MWARD! Loll 1 yr old alumpstone work. 894-3533. ~W:=.:.14=03·______ . 1 ;ll;••MI U.!.tJ So. Cal ht Nat Bank red. f>t>l'!"'lnnel Offl~. South GIRL delivery driver. l.S-25 vac. Write specifying age, ·male part Siamese cat, v~ PATIOS, walks, drlva. Saw, w EEK END IE v en ing ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;iiii l~Equal~~g0p£!por~.~Em~ploye~~r Coast Comm. HOSP., South yn. Ovttseu Motor Parts, exper. Ir. refs. to Classified Busboys & Dishwashers • Cameo ffilblands, CdM. break, l'l!:rn<>W! & replace Moven-Larp truck, power Job Wanted, Mtll 700 BARMAID. No exper. nee. Laguna. ~Ull. An equal 1990 Harbor Blvd, C.1.1. ad No. 465 e/o/ Daily Pilot, f7M310. concrete. 5C8-.(l668 fOr est. JUt. Dolly, driver &: helper _ $2.50 hr. Apply Vikki's oppor. em~ · GmL Friday, part time, P.O. Box 1560, Costa 1'.tesa, 'REWARD. 7-2t. Nr Brkhl'lt Contractor $15 pe'l' hr. 545-2886. SCRAM•LEJS ~-~:~\Newport Bl, D~~ A1: ~~~~~ good pay, call for appt. Ca MA926261.NTENANCE- t Is Adami. Pepper fem, YARD, pra&e cleanups. Need chairsid I 1 l---*c...:lm:.:.:...,751=1-'*"---- • (lOClrapoo. U" B1k. silvd. JACK T a ula ne-~pafr Remove treea, dirt. ivy, ANSWERS BOB'S Certified for x-~. :r1:n; HAVE opening for mature MECHANIC Apply 3-5 daily IJI E, CoHI Hwy. ljtwport BHch Equat Oppor. Employer · ShaeaY· 962-6()22, ~M addlt. 20 ~i exp. Dr t v e way•, lf&dinl. d 1 b qualW tiom: woman in large oHice. Plastic Mfg. Plant ~ARD: Great Dane Pup-Ue d. Y Way Co. -0036.14 -:;1-,,=2666;:;:·'==-.,..-,-~--:: "HOME OF THE BIG BOY" Cl~~ A~ 468 c/ocaDaily Dutles consist of typing, fil. 2nd Shift • 4:30-1 PY· 5 mo's old, fawn fem. Drafting Si<IPLoADER & dump truck ::.~--H~~ Final -CASHIER Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa ing, 10 key adding machine, Req'1 exper. maintafnlng &: :t0at nr Bushard a-Gartleld, DRAFTING v.'Ofk. Concrete .l uphalt Antique shop: A junk shop Mesa, Calif. 92626, ansY..'t!ring phones etc. Must repairing industrial plant ~ 962-9634 or 968-1294. Any size job. 557.9695 ~~ le b re ak 1 n i · that RAISED its prices. Neat appearing, good char. DENT A L CONT R OL -=I\~~ t°occw:"~~ on ~:~c_oo;:,~~~t'~ ~i Ll.Rl.l Siamese ce.t, vie. 19th Electrical _.,_,~=· ~--~--J b W ed f 702 NO EXPERIENCE NEC. NURSE. Challenging posi-Advancement Opportunities injection A compression ~St. Colt& Mna. 830-3456 YARD I: Garage Oeanup. 0 ant ' emale Many fringe benefits tion with gd. salary &: Excellent company benefits molding. Buie knowledge of . alter 10 am, or &e..5102 ELECTRICAL WORK. AJl Free est. ~ll,)'L Call GOOD TYPIST Intuviews 2 pm-4 pm dally growth potential. Prefer including paid vacation, plant electrical helpful. Cam· : after 11 pm. Reward! kinds. Bi& or small Llc'd &. anytime, Wiii do your typing •t 23952 Avenlda expd. Must be ht g h I Y paid insurance & retirement bro Manufacturing Co. 7fi01 Laguno Hlll1 Now lntervie\Ying SI A MES E cat, vtc. Ins. Free est 546--0211. Hutlng & Air her home, Will rickup ~= motivated, & enthusiastic. program. Costa Mesa area. Clay, Hunt. Bch. 847-3531. : Albemon't Market. 1..quna ELECTRICIAN, licensed, Conditioning and· deliver loci H. 8 ., F.qual Oppor. Employer 644-24.55. Write Oassified ad No. 10 Equal Oppor. Employer. ;Beach. 4M-0367. bonded. Small jobs. maint. AIR COND. CONTRACTOR F .V., West, 75c per pg. "'l::ZZZ~ J DENTAL Asst-Reteptionist, Dally Pilot P. 0 . Box 1500 lt!ALE 18 or over for countr:r BUSBOYS FEML. Bauet, hrnwn, 4 .l repatn:. ~. Call for estimate_ 642-0515 or will work by hour ii exper. only. 23-30. Prefer Costa hiesa, C.alif. 9'1626 help wknds, $1.65 per hr to yra. 1'0iarlle." Vtc BuabardF ,_u_m_1_1u_,.._______ RR Hug&ius-486 Newport, NB _c:.•::l;_I .:14.:;7c....J09=.:.5·;_ ___ 1 BOB'S non-smoker. 644--0880. HELJARC bench weldt:n (2) start. Call 548-~ 5 to 9 1.l Adami. H.B. 968-83511. • REL I ABLE middle-aged .DENTAL, Girl Friday, 25-35 &: machine shop .,,'Orken PM. r.EJWAN ~~ mole Interior Decor•tor Hou1ec:IHning yrs .. for new ofc. \Vlll train. (2). Run aaw, mill, lathe, ,:....--.-,.-,-----r """"'~'"' • HOMES OffiCES MODELS woman, ProL nurse w/11 "HOME OF THE BIG BOY" Manicur11t, expor. Doy Or Nllo Full Or P /Timt tilver It black, Vlclnlly Cop-' . : PROFESSIONAL yr old hoy will live In TRAINEE COOK S.nd roswne lo: Classified etc. Mull be able to work Coll 615-3385 lirtrano Beach. C96-4463. ~-~~e: AIC.,ARWPloEdoTw1C~£Ft~ICN•C:., mw/.eltdherelyr le,""," oh no m e0r. Neat appearing: good char. :~o. ~ ~. ~~~ i:: ::::: :. Ap~y ~~~o;, __ MA_:::::N:...l::C:.U.:.R:.l:...S_T __ Apply In Penon 2400-Ave De La carlota Laguna Hills ---------- I I~ School• I ~ ln1tructlont 575 INTERES'rel> IN A REAL ESTATE CAREER!' (714l 641-IDI Academy ~al Estate • • Contract I: Int. SchQAI 325 Old No. Nwpt BL NB R.E! Education Since 1964 IE AN INVESTIGATOR Recorded Mesaap Tells How Call Toll Y..., 11 J IOM2U232 only 213/764-7581. Call D~tch' _.. References. 832-6713 NO EXPERIENCE NEC. ~Col=il~·~g,~26_26_._____ 17th, Costa Mesa 9 to 3. WANTED F11RNITURE SlrippinPgl ku& 537-1508 ....... 24 Hrs. NEED h_elp at home'!' We !nte~~ewolrlng2 PM• '.'°"PMefiDtsail" DENTAL Asst. ex p er. HOSTESS Wanted: Must be Call Betty, 645-1050 Refinishing. Free c p 'v • "" " chalralde. El Toro-Lag Hills yoong &: a t t r a c t l v e . (At the El Toro oU nunp S.D, Freeway) and Delivery. ~-MESA ClcanJ.na:. Carpets, ~ave ~ides •• C Nurses. • 23952 Avenlda area. Sal Open. 8])...ll30. Restaurant exper. helpful. MATURE adlt to help semi G ...a • windows, f 1 o o r a etc. ouse rs ompanKlns De LaCarlotta * DENTAL A S S 1 S T Apply in penon only, FeU-invalid at home, 2 or 3 alts i;o,..,,.1 Oppor. Emp•-·.r ani1en1ng Relkl/com'L 5 5 7. 6 7 4 2, • Homemakers -Upjobn Laguna Hills clano's Restaurant, 1617) per week. 557-7568 Costa'l !!!!~'l"-~~~"""_!!!!,!!! J OHNSTON &: SON S48-4lll. 547..fi68L Equal oppty employtt =~ 2 ~ 3 ~:ii, Westclitt Dr, NB. Mesa. Sandwich Maker Complete prdenin& service, Prof. Carpet Cleaning I do &bopping, belo in borne, 644-008!. HOUSEKEEPER needed for MATURE peraon ..needed to Short Ordcn: ••-~ta-·" cl""' ups. Also _._ .. A··1a & _._ care also nursing. · 7-10 * D--t Sole1-n * · '==;;=,-.,...-,.,.--,.,.-~ L-~1 m· -·· •-e 5 d •1 AJau ........ ,..UJUU.,. uvu•· • ""'9 .... =DIESEL ...... 2 wks., vacation reliE'f. ua .. ;•• .,.._ ,.,, .. , aya .. ature woman wanted to ~ ~-e -~•• Call ~·tch •¥ •~ ••hrs. AM $4IJ) mo/$3 hr i;o,.._ --··•-r ·-• ,._· lCJI. mecb. need for ...... Sal ••• nM • r '~ .:.a•. :r,.,......,..,, uu iloN"'......., .... · • .-......,.. ~""-:s· --• Sat ........ .._1 .th __ ,..., 1tf.ature judgment A aome w...._ • open. ono-...,...,. "A'Oric at lunch counter pre- DAYWORK. Ge_,_, Oean-Hel" Wanted. M & F 710 ventory in Newport Beach. ..,. .. ~ to 1~P WI 111&1111.. • FRONT-Yard-Lawn Service. ,JUIU. I"' Sal. open. 645--000. exper. helpful Ph: 546--9358. NEWCOMER WEJ..roMlNG: paring 11andwiches, salads, $10 month. Badi;yardJ alao. ing. Reliable. Transporta· _A_B_E_A_U_T-IF_U_,L_l_D-_E_A_, &15-000llKKEEP44 ING-Part&IS-3880tl!ne. =D"R"A.,.-:F"T"s"M~A-N~-.,-~Jr. H 0 U SE KEE PER/Child Hospitality Hostess and short orders. 40 hour Yard cleanup, weed J n K, tion. 543-7006, Sil-9330. 1 need 10 women to train as De 1 i g n e r exp er. care, ll~ln or out, CdM. To Call LOCAI.J..Y on new "'ttk. No Saturday night or hauling. 962..s612. 1 -~Ex-ce_;_,llen~t-Hous"---,.-,.--~-professional beauty consul· Female. To work far an a.c-w 1mech a n 1ca 1 design Teacher couple. &era ex· rc1ident lamilies bringing SUnday work. No 1plit shifts. * LANDSCAPING * by day. Own trans. tants. Hlgb earning potential. count. Call 897-04-a. background " ind e p t b petted. 5 or 6 days. Begin gifts I: civic info. Good pay Clean, modem, lunch count. New lawns, Sprlnklera, decks, * 836-0648 * Executive positions alto BOYS know'l of sailboe.ti for Aug. 1. 64M150. P/time. Must have· happy ~r, Apply Lindberg NutritW>n cleanup: State Uc'd. 536-1225. tel tel Cl I vallabl F · t iew ll ·. . I,. ... ,..;,.,..;;..,..,....., smile, car, typing ability, 1n rear of The Toy World D lcat ean ng a e. or m erv ca Ap 10.14 to deliver papen, perm. position rn engineer· 547-3095. Store on lower level South EXPERT Ja pan e 1 e * WE 00 EVERYTHlliG * 546-1&'15. tn the Dana Point, San Ce-ing dept. Exper. in quality INJECTION Gardener -CDmplete Yard Refs. Free ed. 646-21139 ACCOUNTING CLERK mente are:as. assurance desirable. Opper. MOLDING NURSE.S. pvt. duty. all Coe.st Plaza Shoppizi&: Cen- Senr:lcea ·Cleanups. Free Growth oriented electronic DAILY PILOT for advancement. Send OPERATORS types, all shifts. Lescoulle ter, in Costa Me111. est. 543--2661. Plaster, P•tch, Repair firm bu lmmed. opening 492-4420 resume to R.E.J. Poole,, (Or Trainees) Nurse's Registry, 351 SEAMSTRESS, experienoed EXP. Hawaiian Gardener * PATCH PLASI'ERING for a dependable individual BUSBOY c/o Columbia Yachts, 275 For Plastics Manufacturer, Hospit<il Rd., N.R. 1ingle needle operator: I IGii[=l Complete prdenJn& service All types. Free estimates w/experience in accounts Fri/Sat/Sun Niles Over u. McConnick, Costa Mesa, Swing & gTaveyard shift. 642-9955 or 540-9954 Gypsy of Calif, 548-9495, "'*"Mii"-"" ~ _Kamalanl_-==·=-==16,.., • .,....-Call~ payable, p a yro l l, &: Apply In Penon, Colony Ca.EqualOppor.Employer Mustbeneat&dependable. ==l~ot=erv~iews~-S._5_M'-"'IF_ SECRETARY/typist, part PROFESSIONAL secretarial functions. Varied Kitchen, 3211 Harbor Blvd, M/F. Female pref'd. M111t be able NURSES Aides, exp er. time, 10 to 15 hn. wk. J apanese Gardening Service Painting & responsibilities require a CM, DRAPERY-CARPET Sales. to work Sat. or Sun. pref'd. All shifts. Parle: Lido * Call 64~230 * Add A Room Free Est. * 646-0019 _..;P...:O::P'::;;.';.:h:.ong;:::;l;.:ng,,_ __ capable individual Ca ll CABINET k 'd . Exper. decorator type per-Apply 1 PM .... PM C.Onv. Hosp. 466 F1ag1hip SEC'Y-Girl Friday, Pressure Mrs. Reiutz, at ( 714 > all phue• ~a~= ma:: son. Active store. Extel * Orang850 •wCoastst IBlhPluSt.tlcs * Rd .. N.ll. 6f2...8044. position, !ront ofc t""", ,_..,, ~modelin&, Patlot, Roofa, JOHNSONS' GARDENING H(H PAINTING 892-5531 between g am & 5 draw + comm. 492-2254. e I ts t · 11· ti '~ .. , !Jc, It Bonded. Goodwlo 6 Yard Maintenance, Planting Serving Orange Co. Since '56. pm . ." Ing. Custom •hop,Jorgenseo Coo Off1CE WORK o o '" •• ve. 4 d.,.._10 Son, M6-3708 or 847-8312. Oeanapa 962-2IXl5 Resldentlal * Office Suites =~=~-----1 Furn. Co. 786 Newton W~. DRIVER/DELIVERY MAN ta Mesa, Ca1lf. hr. day, Mon· Thur 1 eeu1 .. -Co ACCOUNTANT for cost ac-Cotta Mesa, 64$-0310. I>roogttulve office furniture We need sharp, skilled Interview11 \Ved-Fri. 7-5:]): Babysitting JIM'S Gardening, complete !e~:iu.s:c Wat~~ing ~ (.'()Ullting position ln Santa co. Excel tncome potential. cletical peaple to go to \\'Ork Vought. Dlv. of Computer ~1::5 '::.'cleanups. Homes E:Xtenar, One Story Ana Manufacturing Ox with Stop by 1931 Newport Blvd., ~ PERSONl'JEl forSome of Ortmge Counties F.quip. Corp., 290 Fischer DAY Nunery, babi!'I to 5 _:::,:::=:=-::!C=----from S2'75. 2 Story from $325. excdlent opportunity for ad-Costa Mesa to fill out ·~ SERiYICfS~ greatest companie1. Ave., C.M. 54().1024, yn. $15 per wk. 646--6'1!13 or HOUSE Hwrtlng! ivatch the All worl< fully .....,.teed vancement; expd In cost ac. CAN'T FIND plication. Must have good NO FEES.EYER!! SECRETARY. Bookke<'!>er .• ~ OPEN HOUSE column. =!:on. F'rft:;:.~ ::;~=!Dito ne:: THE :,.~ remnl &: be boo-::ru ~ to = p .P .$. ~:;, fo~a~~!~~,:i~~ * LlceMed Contractor. ~wlf~.:!,~'\'; ~~''.s..,8: JOB YOU WANT? I iiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I:::!~~ ;: ~ Ptr1.:0:~if~rvlct1 ~~ l:;., Call $:2245, Mo. 91101, • EARN Bookkeeper to TB $550 l12 No. Tower Accounl:ine Otrk: to $475 Union Bank Square * 3 Sec'ys-Constr $650 Advtrti1ing Apncy TRY OURSI Cieri< Typlat to $47; * 4 F/C bkkprs S100 Looking tor sharp girl Friday • $200 plus 488 E. 111h (at ltvlnel CM Orange, eam. * 8 Semtari., l6.IO w/good typing lllcllll. O.•I· 642,1470 547•6446 * Legal Sec'y l600 P ROFE.SSIONAL Painter. Ive writina: helpful. Starting IMMEDIATE PLACEMENT Mk for Jtache:l May * 3 Stenos $500 H o n e I t work, reu. saL. $500. FOR per w· eek JANITORS and waxen, ex-OPTOMETRI~ ._ ''ta t lJz Relnder'1 Agellcy , LI ,..__ ir-• '3& ""'5"' n · 45(K> Campus Dr NB c1.uia., Int,~t. Frtt Co, Paya Fte/Also Fee Jobi · per., for San Clemente area Live in area. Age 40 plus. Fee Paid By Co "~2118 est. Rets. 54!-"2759. ean Bnrbara King 54!l-0&35 e FIGURE CLERK M1ntgtmtnt trolnlng ean S»:1&01. Mull type. ean 0r. Lewis, • Prof.,.lonal Painting NEWPORT for thoM who qu11ify. JANITOR.-malnt, full ti~. Costa Mesa. 548--0555. SECRErARY, for 1 gkl otc. Ioter/exter. Quality work PERSONNELAGENtY Thetlejobo arevartod ltchaJ, M!ll .... clollorprogrom, 5am:lpm, 6 dlyl, sun oft -"'--lm=--"-'----1 Young growing R. E. Rea• 557-7455 38t8 Camplp: Dr., NB Jencinal .... 11 to 21.. Exp helpful, but ft. will PART t e -Tall, neat to development firm, Typing&: PAINTlNG -Hone•t. clean, If you're aood w/numberl Ir tr at n r t & b t ma n, train for put or full time SH reqd. Start Sa1. $500 guarnnteed wurk. Llcellled ADVERTISING SALES con type a little )'Oii may 213: ~ ,....kday1 Con1erv11Uve "°""Ing""'· ~ lilm ~tall;'" Sorry Lfllure Co11Cept1, 1133-2892.. &: Insured. 675--5740. Fonner Yellow Page or maa· quality. (collect) ~Mgr. McDonald's, :m62 no p ea 1 e · SERVICE Station/Sales & * * * * * No Wut\nc * WALLPAPER * When you caJJ "Mae·• 548:1444 64S:lm Trader's Paradise PROF. Palntlng. alao rnofl, az!ne spoce """"'· Malure 114: 838:2893 ev.,/wlmda Beach Blvd, H.8: 644:&!!4. Servlco ..,..,nnel needod !'----------------~'! acc:ous. cell., lnter/exter. mole or fem, O>mmlJaloo e TYPIST CLERK ;~;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0 J PART Tlmo. Young penoo Exper. only. Full l P/time. 5 AC. 2 nn Cabin A bath, STA POWER products, oil, Uc/IM. Frtt est. 64S-5191. only. Call for a.ppt. 6t6-05J6. Good skilla netta. lnlurance Jl!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!..-• J J. C. ,PenMr. Co. w/oeat bandwrltlllg, for Gd. e~ potenttal. Mt~ ll In Chrlltm Voll and traJwnis8io ,L~ I nd maillna. 644:&!91. Verde Shell Servlco, 31ll lines times dollars ~" !6500 a":.r. ;rii ~f,:...,., tor auto, .::..~ t':..,~Free1nt~:xt:;,,.r.::~ ~~" 'j;,,.-.:U,: ';: :=t ~t~.:t .:i: Ex~S.C=ry1..oc&1$6GO F•m- 1 • PRESSMAN Harbor BL, C.M. consider property trade of any equity. Llc'dnns. 53:1-316&. Beautiful Ideas Div. of Oen. lite steno. c.u Lorraine Hu Open1np ror 1 Year mlnlmum exper. SERVICE Station Help, ex. eq, val. DM Momwla, CM. 673-S624 Food:ii nttdt 5 ptOS)lf! to WF.$I'CLlFF on A. B. Dick 360 1:: Itek ptt Full A part time. Hrty. l'RADE UP: Yourcteon '68-~so""'u",2-a-c.:...E:..::CM.;:,,,.,!63'="M"'.I FOR clean 6 o .. t palnUng, teach prot mlllceup ttcb. INTERVIEWING PtrtOMd OFFICE-CASHIERS Comer&. Salary -lncontiw. wap +comm. 990 E. Coast '611 compact cor OI' w...., Inc approx$$ M.15~ dn. Interior, rou. ratu. Call Exec. pos. A\'lll. --\hrU Ftl 9 am.U:30 pm APllCll Call w-8410 l;:;;H;;;wy;;·.,· ,.N,.,.B;::. =-=---1 !or my '12 OOuntey Squire, Low vacancy. Exe. Mgr. F.q Diel<, -ASSEMBLY -Wtllclllt Or., NB run .. Part TkM Darn!ll MUrphy SERVICE Station Soloman ~000 ml, 429 tftllne, air, lllll 1361 M. Want: Leued Com'I PAINT ~Ip, For Sole. ON MJ.2771 Mull have 10 &dd!OW I/time, expor!Oftced, "'" i.; pwr, TTP. 545-2ll65, or Indus!. Bio'. -:',..°y";. ~ ~ Conv. S:.~ wlttW1'1ptxpor. Ns:J:' s°tfnJ,'f:G E"C'd Clethlng machlt10 tnowlodp O.UICK CASH ~c,:.M.";·N,~ =: T!WlE 14 week old I.mate HAVE CM hm ($J.IM oq)-4 I I u• 4450 '-rN• Ex~'ent --~ •• -•- raccoon for Rua;cr 22/10 unlt1, Wilmington ($15M eq) DISCOUNT on ha~ tt rv ne ,.. ... 1..~u -···• wnu. THRCHftff A rune °' lrtah s.tter pup. ,1r1r !11500 cqMllTll !l2900 bey on W.C, Llc/lnl. call NEVER A FEE AT Tl£MPO PACIFIC MUTUAL Olulnl, So. Coast Plaza OUlstandl..r B<nefitt I'\"! SERVICE SlltlOn nee di 557.2447 tq).SUbmit?T,forloraU. The~n547-5846. TEMPO FASJlIONISLAND •xpd. man. Daya. call att 6 Bkr/ownr, 00.2221J646.96&6 : PAG~ REPAIR. Ttmporory Help J= :! C::~1 . TIME fOR "W ~~P;;"' DAIL J P~LOT :;':::;~b~": ,::,' u~': BEAUTIFUL lrg ~ BR; 4 lJketotradot OurTrad<r'1 free e1Uma1e~ ....._ &13-4ln. Au\Slnol M._ l'llUICK CASH T lft~OU GH A Oll. l93 E.11lb St., CJ.I. Ba. Cullom Ex1<. Home on Par&dl,. column ii for yo11! SALES WOMAN * FREE dally bU1 -"" 2A Fllh .... l1lond SERVICE Station attmt.nt niendly Hilll Oeft In Whl~ 5 lloe PAINTING, Int ., ut, ,.,.. Expcr., briib~ .. thlWaltlc. latloo Irr wu1r In .I.co An-THROUCiH A ~Newport IHch " p/rtme ew~ l -k.....: ~=tor~ 1rr5s~ :::i~'.·:'."~~~~ ~;..,:Toti pay. ~;_tDmowloN.wport, F.qualQ-11mlcyEmployor WINT lD ~.=,":'...;.,,~·%ill PAINTING,lnterfor/ull'rlof APPLY IN pflll30N 1'11!!_9!1!.,.___ DAft.Y PILOT * Flnt cl .. palnl...._ Top BAa<Sl"REET rut ........ on i-t t ,_ Need o "Pod"! Plac& u od! 642-5171 Fa< llvit lt<m -lit, 11)' quallcy palotl. 547-4i03S. No. 25FtlhlaD1'1.. N.11. all a..,. -• WANT AD Call -l-------l tlie l'tlwlll PlocW. * * * * * --··--------- j ' • r in b .. . To M 1 M We ve po le qu w or ra Ini d au p pl qu • Bo 9 ,, 9 SI Crt for tor p Hal 18. tak for ce A' In de '"' M Pl F .. 6 • .. 11 I fa • I Thur>d11, Jul1 27, 1972 D41l V I'll OT ][II] ..__[ -"""''-·-..:i:l[Ili~i~il1 [.__"_"""'_ .... __,][fl] [ -I~ ._[ _ .... ~_, ·-· ~]~iii ;-[;;-·;;;;~'"'-;;"""'~]~;;~ [ ,~"You ]fl [ -~t--]~ I T-- --3 Linwo, 2 Tlmn, $2:00 I liiiiiii ~olp W•nlOd, M 1 F 7lD Hain 1 ''"1'''· M ll F 710 Help W•nlod, M & F 710 Furniture 110 Machinory 116 Mloc:oll•,,_• Ill Boats. Power 906 C•mpors, S.le/Ront f» [ llil SEW1"G MACH . OPRS., tx. per, Top Jll..Y·lwlm wear. ·$160 Camput r>r., N.B. 54fl..8425. Shampoo llcert1«1. Designs, 963-J433. airl & asslst&.nt, Sand Crab Hair Hnta:tn 8 c h , Sliver Solderer Expier. In silver aolderina:. small atainlesa stee.I sub- Wemhllts & thin wall tub- ing. Exper, In induction brazing desired but not t:S· sential. ' Culton Indu1trie1 1644 \Vhittier, CM &42·2400 SKILLED TYPIST To learn the mortgage bu&iness. 1\f1n, 00 w.p.m. Must be able to learn. Irvine lndu1 Dist. The lt'fea.its Cll., 833-8340. SUPERVISORS Boat assembly hne. Exper. reqd. Top \1•ages for top supervisors, Islander Yachts tnc. Tl71 \V, 17th St. Costa Mesa TECHNICIAN WAITRESSES Experienced lt.pe deck A Lunch A dinner waltrtssl!'s. ft,eM) equipment, take ~ver cocktail waitreau • ni&ht optraUo~ Of tnUrt ttpatr It hottw. Apply In penon installation center. S&lary 3-5 pm ~1on-F'rl plus, U.S.A. Stereo F.qulp. The De~by Warehouse, 179 .E. 1'7lh St., 1262 S. E. Brtstol told PtJi- Coata. Mesa 645-2442, open •adesl Cost M 11 AM. , & esa, \VAITRESSES & host e 111 **,TELEPHONE Appt needed,experlence Sec y -PART TU.ft, ~9 necessary. Ai)ply Baer·s PM, Corona de\ Mar; Xln t Lair, il501 \V. c.t. Hwy., sal + bonus. Rtq d: ~ Newport aft S p o 1 I s h e d unencumbered ' · bu•lntsa woman wi the gilt \VAITRESS, exper. P/time. of persuasion, 133-3656 or Not under 21. Closed sun. & 67>1089. Ho.lidays. Kramer's Colon~I Sell Kuchen, 19th & Harbor, TELEPHONE Sales: . C.J\·1. Soulhem Orange County s =~,===~== Favorite Newspaper trom WAITRESS, EXPER. your home. Maki!' as much r.tust be over n. No Phone as you need. Generous com-CaUs. Apply In person, Surf mls.sion on each sale. Call & Sirloin, 5930 W, Coast 551~139. H~'Y. Newport Bch. TELLER Commercial Bank Exper. Min. 6 mo·s required Np11,·port Beach Area Call Mr1. Scripps (213) 67~0 Equal Oppor. Employer 1501 TRAINEE ASSEMBLERS IMMEDIATELY No Exper. Necessary VOLT Instant Personnel TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A 642-5678 \VAITERS &/or \Vaitreues, ~xper. 25-40. for dining nn. &-banquet. See Personntt Mgr. Balboa Bay Club, 1221 Vr/. Coast HI\')"., N.B. WAITRESS 11'Bnted 21 and over, exp Mexican food, apply at f.1! Casa, 296 E. 17th SI., Cl\t WAITRESS, 21 or over. Days. Ship Ahoy, Laguna. <!W-2050 WAITRESS wanted, must be over 21. mature v."Oman preferred. Call Galley Cafe. 829 Baysidl!' Dr, N . B. ~uo. \VANTED -Housekeeper, for 1-2 months convR.Je.sct't\Cf'. Ht'lp care l child, Lite hsek~ping. 49-14)176. -Lldo-l'um--1 ... -0----.w-, LARGE modern 5 cr~f;i;PO __ R_T_AllL_E_TV-.-•• -"'-"'-n' DARLING 10 wk old puppy. 15' Glass flat 101/J' HAVASU ......... part Dachthund A Terrier, Beaut. 9 pc. pecan din rm. c:om.preuor $32S. Slnale po11 condition. $29. E I e ct r I c brwn It hlll, Sovu chUdren. C&bover lleeps 6, 'lnc. kltcbm .... ""' lnla.ld pecan oou.. Utt. 3 yrs old. = l5c: coke broom 111. 64&-1525. -12. Bottom Ski Hull water pump, ..... • -. table, nettlnc l"nd tablt1, vendor $T5. partl, shetwa, ROWING MACHINE EX· aide di.nett• with }o\ueaf. 6 tine 1 e c t I o n a t aofa, ~ten. lta:htlne. &: other ERCJSER $10. 64&-0818. KfTI'ENS -Need honlft t.hll toilet TOOm, a beautiful home 1\1.rdv.'OOd droplca.f du'lette equip Reasonable MB-4257 =""~-'-----\\'t-ek! WW deliwrl Tabby Whlle/metalflake r~. 65 hp - . . . Ml II ..., colors wlwhlte paw& A "!ere 010, lllt --uer 11200. away trom home~ Serial ,-. 1"bl•. cuSI oalt student desk ALLEN SYNCROGRAPH, let •n 1 " .. ~ WAS $2195 &: matchlna hutch, 3 original r.tODEL E 1415 HD JlF. Wanted 120 ract•. 1 wks old \\'eaned I: 836·1954. · Oil •0 1 ti Call 6-9119 ---.--...... ---trained. SJT-5003. 3 969 H -·1 NOW $1495 1"' n ngs. ,.,... · DISTRIBUTOR MACHINE. BENTWOOD 1', 1 atteras \..,J"U str. MACLANE Mower $95. Birch 542·1734 eves &: weekends. CHAI RS G ER r.1 AN SHEPHERD. Jnunae! Brand new enitnes. FULL PRICE din rm tbl, round + 2 lvs, 6 female, 2 yrs, nttrls lovina Radio. RDF, auto pilot. Miscellaneous 111 Need at lea.st four tin. or un· homr. ?ttovi""' to , pt. O.pthomert'T', etc. Comp BILL BARRY cl\n $295. 6' ltallan Prov· Un. Btntwood chain. At>-... cocktail tbl. Elm \\'/gla5s * AUCTION * pearance not important, but Sf0...3512 fi•hl.ng l"Qtupt, Ready lo l<>· top $145. Gold leaf twag must be in iood cond. No TO good home. Kittena:. 10 Asking S22,!X»-m&ke offer. PONTIAC·GMC·FIAT lamp w/pedestal table $95, 2 FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. antiques. Free or ~...,. "-'ks old. 1 male. 2 f£ma1e 67~2256· (lat St, at S.A. Frwy.) matched armless ch r I , New & U'~~qLuYaUl2yl!<•-i'tu-. price, Mike. 897-7791 aft. 5. 645--5362. 14' RUf\ABOUT Pcrfert !or am E. 1st St., Sanlt. Ana blue/grm s.;s pr, 545-7978. 1K<.1 '" '" Couple or Guy&: Gal. 3.i hp. ~·lOOO SURPLUS Sal" Oinette Set Dlnina: set1 & china cabinets, LADDERBACK CH A IR .s . l[~l Engine. Slrf'I Tr II i I ,. r , --.~-~=~-cocktail h1.bles commodl"s Need at least four matching I I l '71 Pickup $1795 w / 4 chairs, S 15, · ' hU and SuppiaJ Covl"r, L1tt1ng S n g . Rembrandt lampt, new d•· high, ladderback chain. N .. .. , , hol rl I Datsun Chrome step bum-• Upholstere<I. chair, 112. (.of. ... aug1111yue up stfl)' mu,,, · r--• vans Ir: love seats, Jan. boy Fin. or untin. ~tust ""' liiiiiiiiiiiiiilliii 111 ,~ 00 "'" ~18 s.idt mirrors ronneau rov-1.. I.bl.. ".SO to 110. ..,, se 11.l. .,....,......,., e\'fo'!i. · · ...... .,... recliner bedroom s e t s sturdy. No antiques. Free or radl htAlf' <I ..__ t ans. R.fr'.g•ra~-$100. B .... n 9 ' ' bl · Ph Mil< Poto, General &SO 16' Boston Wh,ler JOO-HP . 0• r. s~,,. r • ''"" ,.. chtst8, like new color TV, realOna e pnce. · e . I only 15,000 miles. <n9BLV), &: 1l AJ\f, 293.l Grace 1.anf', appliances I. much more. at 897-7791 alt S. .*.....,"'°Sht.,.-rry-,,"'.,,.,..,-G°'n>om---,.lng-"'.10 John1an 3 _yri; old. :Xlnt "Bill. \\'lllTLEDGE'S" C.i\1. 919-C4.34. WINDY' AUCTION M I 11 I II a-cond. S257.>-terr1hC' Buy-s M U$ Cl ns rumen "'' yrs in all breeds. fF'ree i\lusl Stll' 673-6220 or unset otors LADD~CK CH.A I RS· pickup). Boardlnr. poodle 673-6Sj2 1970 Harbor Blvd. Nl!ed at least four matching FENDER Super ttwrb a.mp, . 546--2M8 Coa:t• Mes.• 64S..Un high, taddetback cha.in. COME BROWSE AROUND $175. Fender Stratocuter, ~PU_P_P_,._• ____ • --= 16' Giii!!~ ski or fish boat, 65 ·Fin. or un.fin. Must be 2075'11 Newport alvd. $125. Fender Telecaster, Cati 852 1 hro t-.1erc \\'ltrlr. full equipd, aturdy. No antiqun. Free or Behind Tony's Sida:. Mat'\s. $150. 64&-4955. PERS~ kittens, CFA reg., xlnt conn. 51290 or bf-st. reasonable price. Ph. Mike Costa Mesa * 646-8686 Office furniture/ all papers, champ. hnrni:;r. 549-0241. 536-9414. at 897-7791 after 5. NE\Y clothes liale. 50%-70'/o Equip. 124 Shols, S50 & up. Also bltu·k Boats, Sail 909 --BE NTW_OLO-D~--discount on all clothes, at snwke stud st"rvicr . 892-2970. 1 17 , Cl' · n, C Gymnasium. \Ved·Sa.!, 9 am· \Vkend? 2 drawer horlz. Dogs 8S4 Ketc·h hit \VILLARD BOAT Need at least four fin. or un· TRUCK/Camptr Special ·n ·~ Ton G~1C -Sif'rn. PU w/12' Y.·~ekPnder camper. !~!Ill than 11.000 ml. $5895. 962-3513 \l'knd or alt f> pm. Cycles, Bikes, Scooters ns CHAI RS Southrrn Calif. C 0 11 e g e MOVING -Mu11t sell by th.ill 1 . lflJ'lf'r ""'"' 11ui;in~ f 0 _ twood h . A 6 pm. A truck load of T· legal file, $75. Ill 4 dra\ver p URE BRED Lab I \\'ORh:S, 1962. buy, ... S14.500 tn. °"" c aU"S. p-shirt!i, l'l'Venibles, football Exec. desk.I, blk. ba5e, lt. rac ors. r.· F'GL S&S Sloor S23.500 '67 G-85 l\1a tchh~ss Matisse. pea.ranee not important, but J'erseys, muscle shirts, tube beige formlca top, S45 t'a. black. 5 "·ks. 34· FGL r.1 SJ S22 500 SSOO. firm. ·72 Honda 125 SL must be 1n good cond, No No papers S25 ' orl!an oop ' socks, jacketa, scrimm~ Blk. naugh. & chrome side * 540 015·9 *. :w· fGL Cal Sloop , ... 524.000 230 miles. $400. firm . antiques. Ftee or reas. ha! ·~ Blk & ~ s~ =•o g •• 5 3 • aft 5 vestli, sweats, gym shorts, c rs, -.. ea. naug. AU at 3424 Oporto, Nwpt. Bch. ~. : ,,., to : v . prlCf!, Mike, 897·'i791 ' girls P.E, suits, etc. Sizes 2· chrome ofc. recliner, $95. YORKSHIRE Terrier. AKC, DAVID FRASER 6~ private. party. 910 ~. 2 AQUA blue upholstered extra lge. tor kids & adults. 1'1agnetic control pane 1, perfect coloring & &tze. 1662 COLUltfBIA 26 ~lKll. 19n Harbor. Fullerton. Call chain; $25 each. 1 med. desk Some shirts plain, or wllh $150. 675-8881 or S<IS-.7888. Npl. Bl. No. 16, Cl\1. 646-7773 Do 1 C 0 , 1 1.,., 531-5607 Eves. and Sunday. SXI 2 nd t bl ug All up. D<:'all . <l.J · e 11 es, pttan coUege names, etc._ Sample: Pianos/Organs 126 ELEGANT AFGHANS pet & Gtono;1 . Comp spin·rig. Shag BRANO ne"'' blcycl~ Lady's finished, $25 each. 1 white Shor" ~ T •<~, 90c Ra! I Call ...,,, """"'• ·61w...,,, • show puppies & all hN'ccling cpt. 51, O.B. Better than egh Sport. $10. ~r;_~~-Prov. vanity $45. Enter lront door, Southern FREE stock. AU colol"!S. 9fi2-()951i. nr11 • ~9.il:i I 64)...6513 11.lter 5 or 642....fm, Cal if. College Gymnasium, * AKC rf'g-. -G-; ~-,-n KITE No. 32-12' Sailing ~·::•c::t.,.,23J::::C.'-~~-=-- SPANJSH style solid Pecan ~~11~8~wport Blvd., C.i\i. Starting week of August 7 Shorthair Pointer. F'1l'ld Dins::hv 11,•/dollv, 5475. s· '72 HONDA CL 100. 1900 ml . game dining set. Octagonal ORANGE COAST tra ined. 968-93.}4 : .1147-2202. Saihn~ Din.1:;hy·Glrn L. 5alls I Leaving !!tale. $33'.I. 833-7348 · tbl "'11 leaf, 4 chrs., Sl50. OLDER ~'OOd pre-tab HAMMOND STUDIOS lnrl 5•10. 673-4224 alt 6:30 or83.1-SlS6~ve. Blue.green t-.1atc1lase curv· cabin, 12' x 24· $200. Rare GREAT DANE PUPS, 1 ., n••o offers AKC. Must see 10 pn1. '69 Honda CL 125 Scrambler. Pd couch, $50. 531>-V't'tO, or P u I 1 m a n k I t c h e n 4 Adul Ev -•·· CJ see al 621-1 lth St., H.B. unit s -sink _ st 0 v e , t e • ..,.. asses appreciate $90. 639-3409 i\1ARINER 31 comp I et e Xlnt cond. $29!5. • •••••••••••••••••••• \\IOfttAN, nver 65 yrs. No ex- per. nee. P/lime. 1'11n v.•a.ge. Interesting v.'Ork. Varied hrs. Must be free some nites &. some ~·knds. Nr Hoag Ho5p. 8A--8P, 642-9955. FURN: CORNER GRO UP· re ftigerator combination : =:. FEMALE brindle great dane GE~t Retrig., steer l n I * 544-3044 * . b. ING, DINE'ITE SET, COF-$150 ea. 2-12 n sailboa.ts, puppy, 8 months, h11s shot &, v;in~. ~11dy to go, gwy 14, 1971 CL 175 Honda. 13 ?DO. ~ FEE TBLS., BARSTLS. need little work $100. 1-24" : ~;:hop must u.c. sso. 64.2-6625. slir 342, L.R. Privale Pty old. Excel Cond. $475. Call ALL NEW. WILL ACCEPT metal life boat with 2 Call for lnfonn.ation STUD SERVICE-f213) 598--2963 8.19--8607 days BEST OFFER. 552-8586. canopys, E'asy conversion 644-8930 Black Lab, AKC reg. champ-NE\V O'Day 'J'ngling w/Min. '72 HONDA CL-450, S 8 5 O. HOUSEHOLD items. China $350. Mi5Ctllaneou1 items. 2854 E Co H CdM Ion background. 979-3341. ny Soli ng, Li!t S 3 1 0 0 . Good cond.. incl helmet, A CON\IENJ[Hf SHOl'PtNG AN S(W)NG CUIO£ fOR THE I.___ -_ .. _I~ cabinet w/match. din. set. 276~ Santa Isabel, CM. , ast wy., OLD English Shtep Doi;:. Special Price $2000. 645-5000 heavy chain & lock M6-l901 Washer, like new. 1ttisc. Sl'EREO: Un c I a Im e d SQ ORGANS 50 Beaut. male. 11 mos. AKC. eve!!. ext / <123 or leave YAMAHA 125 CC Runs gttat 54()..5615. layaway, Garrard 4 speed Yes, 50 organs on the floor. $350. 545-6588. message w opt"tator. w/Xtra5• S300, Hi comp. UPHOLSTERED arm •hall'· , changer, a i r suspenslon Hammond Wurlitzer otheMl. LIDO 14 with trailer. 11rw head , 115. 892-1372. .. DOBERMAN. AKC. female, E ne\Y beaut. iOld chenille· speaken with mu It i p I e Floor models, discontinued 6 months old. Nonh Rllcing sails. Vf'~: ·n SUZUKI 50. Exctllent CAL ON THE CO. A..a:'· ---!!II " Antiques BOO For an ad In Woman's World Coll Mory Both 642,5678, ox! 330 CARVED sea chest, Inlaid velvel. $90. (was $225.) cross. o v t. r network, model!;, new .l used. Buy or 673-3003 or 494-5048 &15-;iorlO ext. 423. or [f'a\'e cond. Only 1300 mil es. game & chess table!!, lge S1J..6486 Al\1 /FM/MPX radio and rent at most attractive mf'Ssai:;P v.·/operator. S200 494 n7& Sure Flattery! Ad.venturous Cape oak beer cooler, oak kitchen ----· ------,--tape deck. Still brand ne\v. rates. HARLEQUIN Great Danes · o28~.~C~u,~l~J/~B~s7loo_p_,---,flG-.n-gs · cabinet5, Hoosier Cabinets, Gd~!7t~ _ :~u~~~~en :~ Originally $419.97 pay off Wallichs Music City Sa.crifif: ~GenUe. 11 Cruisert. f\tu&t sen. All of· 1971 Su:~· ~~=r cond. ~· l I i I ,i ' ' . 9371 ' ' I« SIZES 10\S-lBlS c " ,, 11f ..,.; .... 11T ... i-... Newl"st venion ol the slanted side seaming that creates miracles ol tla.ttery for the shorter. fuller figure, for day or dinner! Printed Pattern 9371: 1''EW Hair Sizes 10~. l21A. 14\' 16~. 18%. Size 1<1~ (bust 37) te.Jtes 2 yards 45-inch. 8EVENTY·nvE CENTS for ea.ch pa\lern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air l\tall and Special Hand!· ing ; otherwise third-class delivery "111 take three \\.ttks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept .. 23.2 West 18lh St., New York N.Y. 10011. Print NAME. ADORUS w Ith m . •= and snu: NVMBER. SEE 1'\0RE Sprln1 Fashions and cllOON one palU!rn free lrom new Sprlni·Summtr Catalor. All , sties! Only SOc. INSf ANT SEWING BOOK sew today, "·ear tomorrow. 11 . INSTANT FASIUON BOOK -Hundreds a f fashion facts. $1. '9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD many other great new at· aet, twin, etc. Phone for small balance: of. $197.88 or South Coast Plaza 54().2830 mog, o . . fr~ pN"sented. iA v e f-y ' Costa MeM. 645-387<1 ' rivals. The Bizarre An· payments of $8.25 monthly. =~~~~~-~=-* AKC Reg. Silky Territ'r 673--6177. ll·ques, 2500 Newport Blvd., appt. 96Z-572l. USA Stereo E q u l p . 1918 Bush & Lane Cecillan Female Pups. Odorte!'is & _::_:.:..;~c..,'7"-~-,..,,.,. '68 KAWASAKI 175 cc · I ·ht 1 · * Frt'ight damae~. XJn •• 1,,,. HOUSEHOLD furn t n c . Warehouse, 119 E. 17th St., upng Payer Pt a no . Shedless. $~ ea. 830·8.'l..\.1, t C011u uvu. 7243 C.M. Refrig., Med. 13R ·like new. Costa Mesa, 645--2442. Massive, ornate walnut burl C;itamar11ns, & 22' s11ilboat. * 673--?JM * ANTIQUE R bl "-" El Horses 156 Complete. Ne\\' c o n d . -=~,..,..:..;,.c.:;.~=--Antique chest, Secretary, case. e l Ju:"un. ec· '70 350 SL HONDA Anah!.'!0~!.~u~~E Cir. 5.12-74!6. HAYE (4) TICKETS trlfl•d 11150' ~750· * APPAl.OOSA * 1~~:;,.BOARD sailboat _$325_._11<6-_'l623 __ a1t_4_:30_ across from Disneyland, 800 ANTIQUE Victorian bclu t MOVldNG.. sacrifboice, ~ 3 year old ,.tdl-, Centerboard, rudder, aail1. '68 HO,ND'A l&O. xlnt. 5tb " W v U J 1 __ 29 velvet couch, chain. ta es, p t f th M t gran PJAnO, e ny, ., • ...,. ··• ml. 1-• · ,,,ate a, u Y '"'• '"'· · la 96•7057 CMJMft o • os en 54" ~1 registered. $475. Best oUer. 613-6741. """ 30. Thun/Frl/Sat. I PM·IO mps. ~ · SUNDAY, JULY 30th. ~' ' 64~ PM, Sun. 12 noon-6 PM. FINE' Oriental dini!ll room T d f PIANO, good condition, $150. CALL ANYTIME BEAUTIFUL 15' Cl 11. s s • ' .. " .. ' ,, ' ·'~ set, rosewood1 al.so ot' 1r rl • ~r •ny 2314 westmlnsttr• Ave., 540 • 3803 Sailboat. trlri ncl. Excellent 1958 Copenhagen, Denmark oriental fum. <193'.-2«8. perform1nce after Aug. 3 Costa Mesa . cond. $1350. 833-3641 19TI BSA IOO, Now !lame paipt. ,Imma"cµlate . Must eell . ~st oUtt! 644·~. ,, • ' ,. ' .~· ' ' ' ~ ·~, ' .! \•,' f . " ..... ' Christmas pla~. $15 0. 673-0268 1-=-=-CO""~~--* MUST SELL * 494-S54l 14' IVORY 2 piece sectional Wurlit?er Spinet Piano Reg thorobred mare, 5 yr5 SABOT, good condition, RECOND. Appl's. Some nu A;1 w/trelght da.mage. Repos. ~ \Ve deliver A guar. Dunlap's, 1815 Newport I Blvd:., C.M. 548-7780. Jl.lAY'TAG-repatnnan hu washers $35. to $100. Can deliver w/1 yr. ruarn. ~Im. sofa. Excel Cond. Orig Electronic Surplus S:t\e: P.C. Mahogany $300. old. Great hunter, &how St40. $1000/sell $50. 55l~. boatdJ, capacitors, reslstor1,1 __ =~*~673-illl~~~*~--pottnHa.L Xlnt conlorm. Sac * 213 : '798-9241 * DIVANOLA • Makes into coils, transfonnen. wire, ** PORTABLE El~nic $1400. 6f6..2616 alter 5:30. KITE No. 121 with trailer. bed. almost new. Sacrifice equipment, etc. July 29th. Organ. C.OSt $800; aacrifice BOX Stall Special: 2 Mo's Good condition. S4.50. for $5ll. Moving, 642-2807. PRECISION Winding Co. $300. 5'(8!.(218. 9.muner pa.ck.age still avail. 644-1732 SOFA bed ln very nice' con-2247 S. Grand, Santa Ana. Sewing M•chlnet 821 Fairgroand1. 979-9'11 or SNYPE •.• like new, with dition $45. (Wamer & Grand) 540-4101. 1---''-..;;,;;;.;.:.o;;;;__c.,. 962-8679. aJlp. Sa.critice. Phone 645--0940 KOBENA (21 Super 8 movie ~ite. Zig Zag, Console Sew· BEAUT. POA pony, & half 673-9388, PF.CAN colfee & end tables camera. lnslant cartridge tng Machines, $35. Arab fµly. Well trained It Coronado 2s.Gd. Cond. $275. Decorator dinette set loading. Power telephoto * 540-062.1 * gentle. Saddle It. ca.rt. Pvt Party 644.6537 Sll5. 557-3lli. wide angle lens. Ahnost Sporting Goods l30 673-2191. * CORONADO 15 &: Trailer. ~ ::. OVER 200 washers, dryers, M ho •-•-set new. $1S or make ofte'r. nIOROUGHBREO Ge l d N •35 T tiJ t •-f l. • • refrigerators from $39.95. * a gany ~-in 542-1734 eves & weekends. HEAD SKIS & BINDINGS ' 0• ~ • mmac a e. --.\-:..;, -w/dbl bed, $70. Re.trig, $10. Standard. XJnt. Cond. gray, 6 Yfl., 15.3, H, 50Und, or best otter. 846-1950. ~/ ·~ ; 1 _54_>.<>_71!0_. ___ ~--Dining set $15. 64,2.-2398. HANG-on air conditioner for $50 * 644-850S "-ell broke, Ena:/West $615. CORONAOO 2l, very dean, , ~ /J· •. REFRIG.;.. Adm~~ cop. COMFY 7, Sofa car. Excellent condition. TV Radio HIFI 544-5335. jib main, o.b., lite lines, I 'ii: pertone u.8 cu. ft. ..,....,, __ ,. . 120 Also a~qn'fed part! from , , ' Good Rldln9 Horse t II U 96" ~•2 ' .... "~ 842-3841 n""'ls recovenng, ' J961 Olds Stalfon Wagon. Stereo 136 mus M! -0 er, .......,..., · ' * 673-1838 * 1200. ... 545-8791 .. l -.~· -~ 1961 Frig1daire electric Reasonabl~. 53l-3885 after STEREO 1972 Garr a rd Bo1t1, Sllp1/0oc~1 910 I ·•-..... dryer, excellent oond. 8' SOFA & love seat. never 5:30 PM, ask for Lynn equipped with full sized pro. ""A6a 13 used. Both $150. Sewing I I~ WANT Mooring for Lido 14. ~ $75. * 54~3773 mach $2S. Pvt Pty. 968-7910 \VALNlIT fonnica table, 6 fessiona.1 changer, AM/FM 8olltaand · REFRIGERATOR, 15 cu ft 2 chairs $30 Elec dryer $25. stereo receiver, aealed air· Marine f.qulpmetil North Bay for month Aug . 5 GLAMOROUS twnhse furn & Uphol rocker&: ottoman $10. suspension speakers, tape l.iiiiiiliiil••liiil-ilr Call collect • F. Prill, 213-" tra 1 dr, auto defrost, yrs old. 1. ... . Sun ·~~ I' 'HI~ 0 .,71 Your ucket to ve 893-9060 app lances. ,.,oving · """ Floor polir;her $15. 644-6!M9 deck & head phone plug-in lolh, General 900 .JO.J""OJ • everywhere is thl! dashing .~-~~~~~-~ Bolero NB. fi46...1661. alt 5. jacks. Brand new In b:Jx &: ** AVALON mooring. good capt:'? 16 cu ft white refrigerator/ -G-.-r-0-9-0-s~.-1-0----,=12 SUMMER SALE guaranteed, Originally prlc· 14' dbl. Hull a:lau Runabout Joe. nr. Oescan&0 Beach Join the fashion parade. freezer, frost.free, 1 yr old. PERSIAN RUGS ed at $279.95. Ba1&nce S87 40 hp O. B. bir. Exe. $450. Club. $4000. * 673-8760. Fling this pretty cape: with $125. 645-l!Xi2. Gera;t Sele Sat/Sun 20% otf-Jul,y l5th thnJ Jlst cash or small payments. Shakl!'spear elect. OB mtr. ralsed-leal yoke .aerou your NEW. Never used toaster-2241 Avalon, Costa Mesa Call Kerman's l0:30 10 5:30 Lay-away De p t,1="=""=o=""'o-=135_._536-=m<,,,,,,_.,,._ Boats, Speed & Ski 911 1houlders for daytime tra\.-el, broilf't-OVen. Still in bo.'I $20. 17' Frost free refrlg., 6 yrs. Corona del Mar, 675-73<!0 n<l/893--0501. BRITISH Dory 13, 4'l h.p, • .,,. cool nlghtJ. Koll of sport 646--0818. S50. Man's Schwinn, 5 spd Z°"EN=rrn=:-:•-::R"CA""'=c"'ior-"'TV"" Johmon, American trailer, SKI boat 14' glu~ h.p. P t _,,, o-s••• flits bike """ I: 26", 510, 2 sleds, MOVING twin bed $30 l"xtra 0 s .... -" t'GGi:: Mere. Boat cov. traile'r, yarn. a · •""'->· '"' ..... WASH ING mac h In e. ..,...., ' .~,. ' 11.t less than the dl·-·nten Slue na.us, cover. "°""' 11)-I') 15, Back ~ck 15. 2 n,,p "" long twm bed ..... lov• seat ' ~ ' ~1"'". 11250. 646-8539. · Signature. 18 lb capacity ,... ~ P.1ost 73 models in stock Q,.,... 6'IJ rod' • reels, 110 6: $15. $35. Uphol chair $15. Sqr , , ' I ::c=:=---,,,,-,,,--= til Ir SE~'TY·FIVE CENTS "'II:. 96l--0426 a.ft 6 pm. • I . b'-< ,, SS 72 s at drutlc sa .. ~ ... -1 SABOT -Fi"·rgf••• rNo 14' Cusic Sid Boat, I tr , _, Fender amplifier &: elec P cruc ta ""• uo::nches, 1 . . "1"'6• ""' ..,... 11 f6r each pattern -add '25 WHITE washer & dryer Bab Grand S750. ~17_ Fi:-ee color antenna msta.lled 53.ils) $95. Motor l"' HP, Mercury Ma.rk 75, must se ~nts f~ each pat.tern for combination suitable for guitar $75. i\1isc. Y wtlh all oonsol1"1 thru July like new $95. 673-422<1 alt lii$G50iiii' i546:!6<19iiiii,iiiiiiiil Air Ma.ii and Special Han-apt. S.lSO. MS.-l052. * GARAGE SALE + POWERFUL astro.telescope 3li;t. 3 yr. picture tube, 1 yr 6:30 pm . dling; otherwise third-class Refri"'., single b!!d, table w/case & xtra lenses $35. parts & service. Cub 90 ~-~M~~-~-- Motor Homes S.lo/Ront • ' • IC • ' I OPEN ROAD lttOTOR HOMES Ml . bl Garden Grove Blvd. Garden Grove 894-U79 ' Motor Home Rentals Available for dally, weekly or monthly bufL 21 ', 23', • and ~· •II ~ntalntd Mo-l tor Homes, aU equJpt with ! &enl!'rator, root air, and : ma.ny other extraa. All O>achet are 1972 models. \Ve have the all stffi Ami&O alao. Pte11se call 839-9:560. REVCON MOTDRHOME Olds lront "'heel drive. Ulti· mate in luxu ry Ir: .. ttJclency. Only 9.000 rniles. 8J8.0052. -MOTORHOME Lois of 1llorage & llvfn.g space • Exrik>rtr Ji:, f'ul.ly : equip. $235 wk . Only 6c mi. : <I Day wknds avail. 548-2886. : PLUSH Shasta mtr hm tor : rent. lR', slpe: e. Self <!Ont. Air. Pvt. pty, Aft S, ~ ~, 1 h 1 Boats/ arJne [i dellver,y v.1ll ta.kl! three Cameras & radios, used carptting, cloth-rt.mtutt typ ng c a r · plan or terms. ABC Color 904 I 1- weeks or more. Send to E I IOI Ing, baby furniture, sewing 673-9119. TV, 90Zl AUanta:. Hun-Equip. . Transport•lton m Alice Brooks, the DAILY qu pment machine, original oil painl -ALLEN SYNCROGRAPH, tlngtlln Bea.ch, 968-3.129. CHRYSLER Marine ~na:ine. ";jjjjjjjjjjiiiiijiiiiijiiiijiiiij~iiiij~ Rent A Motor Home PILOT, 105, Needlecr3lt C 0 LL ECTOR'S cM1tt1111 · lng11:. SAT &: SUN July 29th MODEL E 1415 HD J7F, lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Compl rebuilt + a spare I for your '/1~1tlon 497-2384. ~pt., Box 163, Old Chelst'a Argus ArgoOrx $15., Kodak &: 30th, 9 to<!, 480 8!'08.dway, DISTRIBlITOR MAotTNE. that ron11:. Shaft ~w etc. Campers, $111/Rent 920 * 13'-4301 * Station, New York, N.Y . Jr. ahc-16 $15., Kodak Costa Mesa. 542-17341!'veaA:weekends. [r-----~--.f, Sl50 or best offer. 540--3427 """"'===="""~=~I 10011. Print N~ Addten, Brownie No. 2 model F PARKING lot sale. Sat, 7,3 APPROX. 50· ch. llnk fnct, FrH to You aft 4:30. ''Carilper Truck'' • 72 LIFETIME MJI., 13• A: Zip, Pattern Number. $25 .. Kodak Retina lb $40. pm TIS ''"• HI"' Bch $60. Ttnl $20. Golf ha""' $10 -=Bo-.-,~,-. ~P'"o_w_o_r--~-= '72 GMC ~ Long Wheel 25'. Air. Jux. It safety equjp., NEEDLECRA.n' '72! ~ All xlnt. \Vanl ~tina Ila ~rythln& "7ro~ A., to z: It $1.50. Medlcine cab e$s.so. 3 Lines,~ Times, $2.00 YU9 Box, 2 tone, olive &; ~·hite. xlnt ratn, Pvt pcy., 961-1391 chtt. knit, etc. Free direc·1 ~613-0=~™~·~-=...,.~o--Proceeds \Vlll go towards 646-0147 ' 13' Boston Whaler, w / 40 super custom lntcrtor, air '69 Dodie ~ ~ Cruilu. t~n":kn~' Maerame Boot. LEICA ~11!h (~~~2 SUm· sending teenagen to a l-=o=ru7G"1"'N"A"'L'""J~A~P""A"'N"""E"s'"'E 2 1-Jale Collie A Cocker HP Johruion, COVl!'r, Trlr, t'Ond., power sl.ttrlng, powtt New motor. air, Uke new. , Ba.ti fancy knots patterns. m!-1', ............ p ........ n CUI!, Chrtslian swnmtt camp. PA~ING Be au 111u 1 Spanlel brothers. Ea. 2 yn. Extru. Xlnt cond. 671-1933. disc brakes, 9SQx16S 8 ply Sleeps 4. Loadaf? 49&-2984. c, ' ong. purchue t"l!te.ipt I: •• 1. J r1 ,_,, .~ from old A ..A home Ill yd • New Joi' Whaler. * tires, dual camper rnimlrs. Trailers. Tr•vel '8 , 11.00. -·~toms pape-(' ,-•-n, MULTI family garage -: •J>llM&e o g iwu .... ., • II"· . ad H 0 . lb ~-•• LAJ11liu ..... 8 -·1-t'')'K r · io, , . s.uspeJWOn ~·I &17 Art of llalrpl.n C1'0' 1937) oeu mint 00U~tor'1 B3by lhingt, recliner ehait, uv. Call 59&-2SI9 alt. pm. "70C" ""'· ...,,J, leal sprtnp. Will handle sell h t ·-.... ;.,.. ._ ' ant\qutg I: toys. 312 * HATCH COVERS ;, BEAlIT. Part Sit.mE'H kit· 67l-7S36; 646-7588 1:11 .. ~ r: e • owr ""' m:,...._ •v item, best oiler over $225. conta!Md camper ~ '" SI oo BuckM\I Rd, Costa ?>.1esa. Sandb1uted, trom S 1 2 . 5 O ten, (looks llke Siamtse) 7 16' 1971 NEWPORT, 9;, · ' m-.J'il!', · · 673-0734 . $3795 Jnstut OOcbtt look .. 1-...c.--------Fri. afttrnoon I; Sat. each. Mlnney's, 2537 \V. wffita old. Weaned a Jobl'llOn fully f Q u Ip p. d I t'..ttm by pletum! Pat-KOBENA <121 SUpcr I movie GAR AG E Sall". Refr1g, Coast fflwa y. N.8. 548-4192. tn.lned. Call &n·m1. sm. 547~; m.4808. Bill BARRY 88.slc fancy knoll, pat· :.~:· =t~t ~al=f! washer, ~r. couch, furn. CARPt:r FOR SALE KJTl'EN, female. w bl t' ~20"'·-s.u~"th-;C..~s"'1.-=CU11,--,°'bl"'"1 "'1or- tems. S100 · e 0 misc items. 5'1).1769 by Carpet ~r. CAil wfbl&.ek paws, t&U A rme. NAvy. No ena. Best oUtr. Fl•t,OMC,Pontl•c llom ...... · 1·.,,..1 Gitt -k wide ana:le ieni. Almost 1 d • "4-2l9!l '"" -k ti CARAGE &. PaUO Sale: U» e MG-0745 e 54().-2086 9 wkJ, Box tra n1 • Aft V"U't • (l.Jlt St. at SA. FN'Y•) .. more than 100 Sitts _ new. "'" or ml\ e o er. 546-5391. 11.00. 542-1734 eves I: wfficends. Tultln Ave, CM. Fri, Sa.t Ir 1..AWN?t10"-'ER $65. O the r 1~===~~--,-10' CL.ASSPA.R., llke new. 2XXI E. lit St., Santa AM Sun. Lots of MIJC. misc, GAl'dtn toola. LOVlNG--Black It crtY lone $225. SM·lOOO Sl~plete .lf&hu Boot .. NU<ONOS Jund er w a I er Household Goods 114 * 5,'i7-31U * hair ldttien, female, 1 wetk& * 675-095' * 1969 Chevy 14,T Camper ti JW, be hob • S()c. camen, $100. Xlnl cond. BRUNSWICK VlP 8' state old. Weaned " traintd. call =21"·"'0ra"""ko-O'a-,'°'""1t""'Exp,.,-<:ni"'"""1te.,..r. Special w ~ We1tway1 teU 11oot of lJ Prfse A(Jbaftl. Call 543-1593.. ALMOST ,New, .Hoover (1") pool table. $550. xlnt 1 =837~~-!003_. -~~-~ 2'75 H.P. Cl'lryl Html. Fasl cont camper. Low ml. Ex- !Oc e 1 0 vacuum, altachmenla 150.. cond. 546-1121. F"R.P.:~ to tood honie-Sml. lonr n_np. $2995. 61)..8945. tru. ~nrr. ~!It Book 1 -16 pattent1. rurn tuN II IOfa bed $45, A mlac. ~4670 NEWPORT BEAOl TENNIS nUxed bml pupa. 1 malell BOAT·motor-car top nck· It 11,ii It. El DnOO e&mptt sec. MATCHING Rd v e 1 vet Jewelry 115 CLUB FAMILY MEM· fem. I wks. 962--0e62. mn.s. Completie p&okap S5."l0. or w/tll62 Ford ~ T. M.-m q.nr ll<l<lli t • chairs, t !or th< price of !. ANTIQUE rlns. 1 Ip rub\<~ BERSHIP. •911:4260. KlTTY , Abandon.d. UI. Now 12311. Aft 5, ~. P.u. w/11'11 lil'ff, Wl!O. 50c. Good c:oM, ~1643. 4 small dlamond1. VllUI!' GAS lltO\-e $1'5. Pov.-er n'I01'-.r well I altertd. Ntfds kind 'is"''""J:>"'. 71rt"1.,.-r"'tw1n-,--.-,.-.""N'"tt11'"'s • SU..:.417 * TENT TRAILER Cycli-'tA Will Appredltel '65 Trovol M.i. Sletps 7, kitchen A add ea · e11blna. Frame completely • rebuilt to CUT)' 3 mot.Qr. eycil!'•. Exit• O@an., S~MSI« Aft. t P.M., S40-31M l<ENSKILL 11' trall•r. w/toilflt A tMWM'. lJb new cond. 1875 54l..c39J. Thur< 3:00. '!'ti 4:00, 11\m, all day. OASIS '&3, ~po L 3 bomor stove ol owo, IO 111 loa box. Elec braktL 16811. ~I~ ~Utt fftt Tod•f'• Uvtnc.. dtill ~--·~ "" TLC -~'" 1cd --------Tr1ll1r1 Utll.... N7 642°5678 U belutllul .,.tt-. IOc. v-OJtt moneyl l!.tnl l500. S.U l<OO or rd oiler. $25. 6U:ll66. !S!J Oranae ' ·-·~· ~-. · ~· ~ • "'· '13 Chev. !l llondo. Air :::::==',,..="';,---I J'Ollt b:laitj ""4t ...,,.. 67S-6396. -''-'.:".;C;.,.>_t_. -----fl\EE c1Uco ltm kittu ta ~---,,,·------cond. Rttrl«' .. stove, many RIVERSIDE U1iJ1tf t • • •••••••••••••••••••• blq., •lc. thnl t 1>oI11 Pllol A good want od 11 a good Ill-S.U tho old 11U11. 8111 Die good-~ ill W. ~tarqtilll, Oall1 P\lot Wu! Adi Ila\~ •xtru. Xlnt OOftL 0011'. -Ill T. all10 -· w. , _________________ ! Clud"'d M. tG-. -tmtnl ... stuI1. Apt I, Son Clem 411-1106. barpins plore. -~'---· ------· -· . t I I I DAl\.Y ~llDT Thursday, July 27, 1'i72 Aue. S.rvtc., Pam Mf Autos Wanted 970 Autos, Imp I rted VOLVO POR.9CHI!: parll • Ill S. trlm. S/wbeel, 1 seat (I-tooth) 2 Nm bars. 71t: 687.246'1. ALLEN SYNCROORAPH MODEL E l415 HD J1F DISTR!Btn'OR MACHINE. ~1734 Eves A weekends. 2 Olrome VW slotted rim• Ir <tirta. 5.61l.t.1.5, Fair cond. S25. !148-5380. '61 VW ~ w/p1nk slip Door • ree.r fenden • makr otter. 5'W417. l _ ..... I ~ REWARD WILL PAY OYER '11 DATSUN 510, ~/FM slf'm>, alr, ta.pe playt?r, radJ#,1 tJre1, mag whll, vinyl top 11985. 67>-'5187. '68 MGB--OT $1700 Ma,a& Otttt. Must Sell Qulck! • ~192 . Keny Blue Book '65 Datsun 1500 SPL 310, new . ___ M_G_B __ _ top Ii-Ure1. runs &-lookl .... * * * * * To)'Ota C<lro11a 1969, :r dr •• ata v.·aaon. • spd., 20,IXX) otlg mi. Xlnt. cond. 1109$. 833-1284 TRIUMPH F I mod I I good. Could use aome work. '68 MGB Roiul1te"r, new or •t• •' c ten, $475 675-2802 &tS--n45. tooneau, good top, lo mJ, xlnt '69 TRIUMPH Sp 1 t fire low mll••tt dome ........ D, 11 PU, Onl ,~ mi cond. $1350. 846-2).&4. RdsU'. 4 ,~ ·ad", tics, lmport1, t rucks or '' a un · Y ..L(llN • •tw?O. MGB GT ~·~ ' ~ Un...., demoNtrator $2 (lXl ~ healtr, (FOU85230L)' Kell,y campers. ·-~•' • ' · Good ~-nd. AM"""'1 radio Call and uk fDr Buyer Poca1 Leasing. 548-ll55. ......, &M-7647r 1u suggested retail $1550 Our DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 1972 Datsun wagon $600. price $1399. Only 21.000 Toke over pymn"' 673-2!10 OPEL miles. DA VE ROSS PON· between 9;30 Ii 3:30-Jan. ---------TlAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., at ,70 OPEL GT Fsir Or. Costa Mesa. 240Z, mo, •Ir, mags. MU>I 546-M17 Price eUective thru seU. 13500. Private party. CompetlUpn Orange, Black July 31, tm 2480 Horbor Blvd. 644--2G47. Bucket Seat. 4 epd dlr, Ex· -,*-'-=T°"R~IU=M~P~H~S~*~ Co1t1 Me11 546.8017 •n DATSUN 1200 cellent condition, Can fl. Antlq .. 1/Cl.auln 953 WE f'AY TOP 1100 cuh, take over. Dayi< nance P'ivate party 1m0-'71 CLOSEOUT 536-4890 eves !)36..4576 204). Call 494-6811aft10 am. SPITFIRES AS LOW AS $2399 ~B~~·,.7:!:J:~ CASH . . FIAT . ~~ORSCHE GSpoT~rt CawARREN,SACVeE·ns$51lflter 111r&a1n •t ms. '° s s ~ -~ a -·"· •. ~ '72 FIAT Orttsard Santa Ana }{gt1 --~can ~ , .... , · XLNT.cond.911-TPorsche, ORANGECOUNTY•s oft Irv~ ' CID. at tea-free ..umatee. Br"1.ld Jle\V 19'72 :::· ud, 1~9. Fully equipt. ~1ust LARGEST 1972 VOLVO LHIO Today at Be1t R1t11 $88.74 Per Mo. O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. tram., dllC brakes. 36 mo. For Lff•l"ll or buyl"ll ·~Ull ltuli& -VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 6460003 '70 Volvo 164 AM/FM radio, air condition· ing, automatic tra 1s, like new, 743BQJ. $2695 AVANTI~slc, '64. Worked GROTH CHEVROLET li<n~l$Nlo9.9J.28DAOWN ' sacrifice this week, Best of· no E, lit, S.A. !147--0764 on by Granatclll Mechanics. 1"· 67>-S850. VOLKSWAGEN' 1 owner. $2400. 673-2456. 'Aiir .... -Manags '10 914 Whlte/blook. APP'"' BUICK '54 Cad. 2 cir. hrdtp, Chnn ll2l1 Beach 81"11. $59,39 PER MO, grp. Chrome whee 1 8 '71 VW Cam!"' Bus, -------- tpoke whl1. Orig. 16 3 Hunttnctcm Beach AM/FM. Cover. $2900. or ·Orange/white top. Shutter '69 BUICK Skylark H.T. CPf-'. Hudson, C.M. 546-9754. 147.6087 JO t.3331 Yes, just $99.00 is the total offer. 552-TI07. windows. Fully equipped. Robins blue/white vinyl J.931 DeSoto. Runs eooct. WE buy an mW• ot clean down payment and only 1959 PORSCHE Kelly Suggested retail $3380. top, V8, auto, P .s.. tilt Needs paint A int. $100 uaed lpOl'll cars. pald for $59.39 is the total monthly MINT CONDmON Our price $2699 (876CIBl wheel, low mi 1 ea g e. '66 Chevy II 2 Dr. automatic trans, radio, heater, TPA906. 1'hl11 is the popular modcl to find, and It's prlct'd rjght o.t on))' $595 ANDERSON (" ' IMPORTS • ·) . . , ". -~572 132 •. '10 Nova S.S. coupe. 350 V8, vinyl top, brown w/belge vinyl bucket seats. Auto- matic (floor shift) l'Onsole. 1' .. actory gauges, power disc brakes. exterior chrome. TOP SHAPE! $1896. MUST SEU.! Will go quick;. Call 531·1218. '70 CHEV Bel Air 4 Dr. VB, P.S .. P.B., factory air, auto. f948BEQ). Kelly suggested retail $2345. Our price $1799. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 24.SO 1-farbor Blvd. at Fajr Dr., Costa Mesa, 546-8017. Price ef{ective thru July 31, 1972. 1970 Chev. C<lncoun Estate, 8 Pass. Sta. \Vgn. Pwr. Steering & brakes, A.i'J:-Fl\I Stereo radio, tilt steer. wW. 990 Auto" Usect -· MERCURY '71 Brough1m ~595 • BIG. ROOMY. '60 Mm:. Thi.s iQllt«iUI car has only P/b, Pis. alr. Nttds "'wk. u,850 milt'I, padded top, S-l25. 64tr8749. power windows, 6 "'11.Y pov.·er •Pllt bench ""· light sen· MUSTANG tine!, clin1ate control, door Jocks, A1't·F'-"t stereo, tilt 4 '66 ?.1ustang. N~ brakes tele. i tloering wheel, cruilie & POSSIBLY engme work. eontrol. (16'Zl73). $350 <1r best offer. 645-803.f. "BILL WIUTU:DGE 'S" OLDSMOBILE Sunset Motors 1970 Harbor Blvd. '&9 OLDS DEL TA 88 Cust. Costa Mesa 645-6677 H.T. Cpe. V-8, auto, P.S., 1967 FORD FAIR.LANE XL-P.B, air cond, vinyl lop. 500 CONVERTIBLE. FULL ·lXHS424) Kelly suggested P\VR-NE\V TOP & TIRES, rt'l:all $2425 Our price $1899 LO r-.trs. VERY CLEAN. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, MUST SEE TO APPREC. 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair s,m OR BEST OFFER. Dr., Costa Mesa 54&-8017, 552-8586. Price eUective thru July 31, '64 FORD Van .Ecoooline, .~'~972_·~~~--:---: good cond. r-.tany xlras. '6.5 f'-85. Fact air, aut<1, $ll50. 646-4838 days, PIS. $645 from orig owner.: 548-6326 eves. 543--0587. --~==---1 '67 Galaxle. 4 DI'. Sed. Under PINTO 37,IX(l mi. New tires. 1 _ O\\'ner. Pvt pty. $ 8 5 0. 'TI Pinto.Metallic green, llOO' 646-4596. . cc. '4·spd, Pirelli, M~. 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 XL. Clean. 645-5434. New paint. Good cond. PONTIAC Clean! $400/be" of!". &ll-3250. 1--~--~---1 '72 LE MANS l!lli3 Fm'd Faidane Wag. B"nd new 1972 Pontiac 2 Good mech. cond. isoo. dr., Le Mans, must .see to 673-3830 or 644-0611. appreciate, Serial No . CUh. No trades. 646-79'1S. or not. Please drive tn for payment including tax, lie· ASKING $1600. 496-521.8 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, (YCM704) Kelly suggested o.,,.. B i 956 ~ ftppralJal. eruie, and all finance charges '63 Porsche, xlnt cond. $2'200 24lK> Harbor Blvd, at Fair retail $2440 Our price $21$ , "II es for 36 months on approved ot best otter. Must sell im· Dr. Costa Mesa. 54&-8017 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. Factory Air, luggage rack, '61 Ford \Vagon $125. '72 new tires & brakes. Panel· ood u o '°'' tags. Runs g . ~. 2027D2P179847. $325 DOWN DUNE Buggy • 1964 engine .. credit The cub price ls mediately! 541-3505. Price ettective thru July 31, 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair ing, Asking $3100. 557-4861. 307 Colleen Pl., C.M. '72 CHEV. mazer. 4 spd.. -.6~7~T~B-i1'd~w-'/-a~ll-e-xh'IS--. ·I blue flake .. radio. roll bar.. $2034.45 including tax and •68 Porsche 912, tangerine. 1972 Dr., Costa Mesa. 546-8017 excellent eonditton f19S. license. Deferred payment AM/FM/SW. Xlnt running '69 FASTBACK. Immaculate. Price effective thru July 31, ' ~· 1773 Crestmont, price is $23.17.64 which in· cond. Many extra!. $3550. Auto, AM/FM. aiJ.:, 30,000 _1972_. ______ _ wagon, Less than 2000 miles. Nt'eds work. Make ()[fer. $85.81 PER MO. C.M. • 3100N W. Coast Hwy., eludes all finance charges, &J0.2254. mi. Sell Blue B <1 <1 k 'TI BUICK Opel, 2 Dr. 4 lCKEI82F181416). Must See. Aft 5 pm, 549-2Q23 DA VE ROSS PONTIAC. USO Yes, just $325 is the t<1tal do,vn payment and <1nly TrvcRt 962 ewport Beach sales tax and license. Aft. wholesale, 644-2199 <l r speed, R&H. 12,500 miles. 6t2·9405 nual percentage rate l.s 9.'76. '62 PORSCHE yellow chrome 641)..ll36. (597DLl l Kelly suggested H3'bo' Blvd. •t Fair De., HORNET --:c-""'""""'"".:::0~-1 $85.81 is the total m<1nth1y 1951 DODGE MAIL TRUCK. WE PAY TOP oou.AR BILL BARRY rims, AM/FM, llSOO. , O retail $1340. Ow P'ice $999. Body 1n Excel. c.oo. Eng. FOR TOP uSED CARS Mz..6791 1 YW Camper DAVE Ross PONTIAC. Costa Mesa. 546-8017. '68 Impala Custom need• \\-Ork. Good ti.rel. U ·your car ts extra clean, FIAT·PONTIAC·GMC '67 PORSCHE. Silver Immaculate. Bubble Top, 2480 Harbor BJvd., at Fair New paint job. Inside panel· eee us first. (l S S 1 Good condition. 5484072 Ready to go, 100% financing Dr., Costa Mesa. 546-8017 COUPE, Fact<1ry Air. (VZU· 549) 11195, dlr. 836-6535. ·• 1n ~ $175 be f st t. at .A. Frwy. ail 0 = ~. o' et o -BAUER BUICK 2000 RENAULT av .A.C. 891-022( Price elfective thru July 31, lee. S.. at 200! Charle St., 2925 Harbor Blvd. E, ll~Woo S..la Ana '68 YW BUG 1972. '71 Chevy Impala C,M. or call 6t6--0388. C<lst.a Mesa !n9-1100 .~~--"C:::."----Renault Demo S•le '68 BUICK Riviera, full '69 Chevy 1/2 Tn Avtos, Imported 970 'TI Fiat 124 Sta. Wgn, .f wltl Semi Annuel 40:::~·ot7e~~:;;~r, $995 power, air, AM/FM stereo, (194CXV) Full Power, dlr. Air Cone!, Low miles, Call 546-8736 aft 10 am 494-6811. SACRIFICE, ·must sell, 'TI· Camaro. Inquire Oakwood Apta, 1700 16th St, Apt G-102, Ne"'POrt Beach. P' kv !~;. ~i.sc. brks. Air cond. x1nt cond. $2450. 846-2194. IC p '59 & '60 Bori:Watd Cpes. and ~n•ng seats. 10,000 mi. Demonstrator '69 VW BUG SaoilJce, Muet Sell, $1388 or parll. 352 Dewn st, Ol'lnge. Like new, 11995. 5411-S583, Cl S I 28,000 mi. Xll'a clean. 4 spd. CADILLAC -· earance ae best otter, 100% Financing SU~ 1970 Flat, 124 Spider, Must sell. $1295orbestoffer. ,70 EL DORADO Avail O.A.C, 897-0224, ALFA ROMEO AM/FM, Real shlU'P. Must This Weekend 846-3285 '&9 F-~ F350, •'·'-body, ·--------·I 88ll68-0crifice2 • $2150. Own er , Excellent condition. Full Iux-wu -· 18 Unbeatable Prices '66 V\V Squareback \Vag<1n ury equlppetl, including fu,11 w/electro hyd dump hoist. Alfa Romeo '72-!-''-'-=--·------ALL 1972 MODELS Good condition. Radio, power & factory air. * 64 OlEVY MONZA * R/H. RUNS GOOD 1175. 267 SHERWOOD ST. NB Xlnt cond. ~.ooo m 1. JAGUAR IN STOCK FOR heater. Good titts. fr"'· 'l<IIAGK. Must be seen to be 642-3686 fcr appt to see. Ask 2000 MM ATE 962-3822 apprelcated. for Wayne. '67 JAGUAR 2+2 coupe. I EDI 'li6 vw $5095 * '58\Ford Rancbero. New Automatic, air conditioning, DELIVERY New 1600 engine '66 Chevelle, SS 396. mags, 4 spd.. more. $950. Call 963-J208. patn4 trane., brim. Inleecep. NOW IN STOCK wire wheel• !UIN52ll INSTANT CREOIT Looks shat'p! 'tar n . haw·• •. $3699. DAVE ROSS PON-APPROVAL -«•1437 •or .. ~c. °' = " For Immediate BANK FINANCING •~ -tuned. $600. 548--4905. TlAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd,, at 'TI BUS, mll5t sell, air cond., sunrf., 7 pass, radi<1. Xlnt mech. cond. Call 496-5334. '70 VW bug, Yellow, black int. Atichelin X tires. Im· mac cond. Alt 6, 645--0445 '69 VW Bus. Mint cond! New tim, eng. Koni shocks. 33,000 mi. $1750. 6f2..S476. mo VJ{ SUNROOF, XLNT COND. $1500. '61 Chevy 1ii Ton P .U. Xlnl, Instant Credit 546-8017 Price effective tbru Dollvery Fair o.. Costa Mesa. COAST new tires, sl>oclal, rnd;o, BANK FINANCING July 3~ 1972 .:=: ~ .... :· ... 1 :: COAST KARMANN GHIA IMPORTS camping trailf!r, $1200. '62 '69 KARMANN Ghia. auto ~54~;r,,,-~ cu It, IMPORTS i:: ~M· ~AZ.~a-MD'™An. lo mi. '68 CHEVY 1' 1on P.U. Short bed, 1t.ep side. 4 speed, 307, J00:>.!200 W p cW est H heavy ~Uty. Good cond. Newport ~ac~ (~4J ~ '72 =~~ A·lllll, •Ide Alla Romeo MAZDA doon on bc:>th sides, &oOd for camper ~Ion. '1100. 6*,5178. 'GO Cbevy P.U. v~. 4 epeEll. 4 glusbelt tire•. Alldng $750. 545--0882. 'ST Chev. 108 Van 3 spd. 283. Great in/out and mech. Of· NOW ON DISPLAY fer/$1690. 6'B--~ Sales Service '48 Ford PU. 4i apd. trans. Parts Body Shop Gd. t1ru. New mtr. Xlnt COAST IMPORTS running aind. $500. 64t>-7596. l lJ00.1200 W. Cout Hwy. '71 FORD van camper, V-8, Newp>rt Beach 642-0406 llllck, beevy duly • .,...... AUSTIN COOPER $2750. 548-2871 eves. -------·- TOW Truck, '66 Chevy, l '62 AUSTm COOPER. T 6 eyl d nd 11750 Best offer. Days, 979-77S5; on, .,g.co •. 962-9157. eves, 548-4749 '69 CHEVY Van, V-8 auto, paneled, crpted. $1700. Must tell now. 673-3926. Auto Lffslng 964 Auto ... air • magi. (#3192) $108 + Tax per mo. 31!1 mo. open end Southern California 1st National Bank Leasing BMW ALL MOOELS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Low Bank Financing Up To 48 Mo. Terms on approved credit SEE US ABOUT Overseas Delivery CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. l~t St .. Sonta Ana Rotary E"llino RX2 $2588 Demo. (S122A.104723)' HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA 17331 Beach Blvd .• Huntington Beach % mile South ot·Warner Phone 84Z-6666 MERCEDES BENZ -MBZ '71 280 SE All extras incl. air cond. (#6160) $6650 or lease Southern California J.000.1200 W. Pacific C.t. Hwy. Newport Beacll <n•i 642-0400 Renault SalH & Service for over a decade iD Onu:lge County Serv. Dept. Open tn a p.m. Monday Jim Slemons Renault 2201 So. Main, S..la An1 1 blk. north of Warner Service Department 546-4114 Sales Department 557.5242 SUBARU * SUBARU * * Call 54()-6094 * '69 VW Pop top camper. Reblt eng. Oean. $21.50. li4i-1716. '66 VW J;rug, yellow, two new tires, very clean, new brakes, sharp. $700. 644--7708 '63 VW Trans. with camper. Compl n'bullt. Very good. S5'l5. 548-5598. '68 VW Panel. $1895 As Low a1 $1599 Like New 675-0745 FRITZ WARREN'S •n VW 411. 4 door, Xlnt Sport Car Center cond. A real bargalnt e ORANGE C 0 U N TY • S _9_79--094""'::-9c:. =-~-- LARGESf •69 VW Bus, 7 pass. 110 E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 Good cond. $1850 TOYOTA * Cail 979-8313 * * 'TI VW panel, low mi. '72 TOYOTA Stereo. Must sell ;mmed. COROLLA l2500. Ev.,, 6l3-7244· $1966 1968 Bug, white, xlnt cond, R/H, $875 or <1ffer. ( + T. & L.J or $39.30 MO. FULL casb price $2,096.30 in· eluding tax & license, Down payment ts four hundred dollars. $39.30 total monthly payment including interest, tax ·a: liceme, 35 pay plus balloon payment of •· Total deferred pay price 12,575.!IO, A.P.R. 11 %, On pre-arranged credi t . (300185), * 545-6328 * 1966 VW, Rblt eng. New brakes, Everything else good too. Clean. 833-3860 1 68 V\V Van, 1600 new/rebuilt engine, Best otter! 548-1517 after Spm * '64 VW. GO. a>ND. * $400. 673-7536; 64$-7588 MUST sell, '69 Bus. Split seat-Excel concl. $1 7 1 S • !148--0342. 163 VW Convertible $625. * 963-2141 ANDERSON I " ' IMPORTS "' ~ ... 557·2132 . '71 Sed. do VIiie $5695 This local beauty has very low mileage • only 14,769 miles, factory air condition· ing, custom ·padded top, power window• and seats, AM·FM stereo. Must 1ee. (133i51), 0'BllL WHJTLEOGE'S'' Sunset Motors 1970 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ~77 YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC , DEALER Lariest selection of Cadll· lacs In Orange County. Sales· Leasing. CHRYSLER * 7 pass sta wgn. Air, pwr. Runs good. $275. 283 Lilac Ln, C.At. 548-52.87, 1956 CHRYSLER. Car needs minor repairs, Hemi eng. pert. $125. 646-4964. CONTINENTAL * 1969 ContinenW, 4 dr. Xlnt cond, $3250. Pvt. ply. 54t>-ll28. '77 Mari< III! Has Everything! $8000 64&-1724 CORVAIR '62 GOLD Corvair, $100. or best <1Her. 546-5420 CORVETTE runs. -=-Nabers '70 CoNette 4 spd-air·lull g Cadillac power. New polygt"" tires. 21,000 mi. $4200. 644-6409. 2600 HARBOR BL., '67 Corvette convert. COSTA MESA ,~ 54().9100 Open Sunday """'• 4 spd, xtras. * 675-4918 * '70 Sad. do Ville $4395 Beautiful low mileage ca. COUGAR with only 34,0T1 miles. AM· --------- FM ~ ..... pow" seals, '69 Cougar XR-7 power windows, tilt & tele Immaculate, V-8, Aut<1 Trans, steering wheel. Priced to P.S., P. Disc Brakes, Air sell. (329EKS). Cond, Vinyl Top, 100% Fin 0'Bn.L \VHl'I1.EDCE.S" Avail O.A.C. 897-0224. Sunset Motors 1970 Harbor Blvd. DODGE Coste Mes• 645-66n '69 ELDORADO '7l Dodge FACTORY Ak, full power Charger 500 (084-CPP)' $3595. Dealer. Immaculate, V-8, Auto Trans, J!36.65.15. PCon.s.d, PV. Disc Brakes, Air , lnyl Top, 100% Fin '69 Cad Sedan de Ville, 39,000 Avail. O.A.C. 897-0224. ml. Orig. own. Xlnt cond. AM/FM atereo IH95. FALCON 546-0'lOL 1------------'65 Falcon, blue, good '66 Blue Coupe 1de Ville Cad. condlOOn. Best otter. Afr-cond. SllXX>. * !)48.121)6 * 962-4750 Brand New 1972 payment including tax HORNETS Hc<rn;e and all finance charges for 36 months on approved credit. The cash price i.! $2993.85 including tax and license. Defen"ed payment price is $3414.16 which inch.Kin all ti.nan« charges, sales tax and license. Annual percentqe rate. js. 9-J6. ·-.•• -··-· .•.. ,,,_ BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT (lst St. at S.A. Frwy) 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558-1000 '71 Grand Prix AT NO EXTRA CHARGE Model J. ~2:a'P cM ha! Specially equlpt can now available in 2 Dr, 4 Dr, and sportabout Wagon models IMMEDIATE DELIVERY cust<lm top, AM -FM sterro, bucket seats & console, fac- lory air coilditi<lning, only 22, 785 miles, power steering and power brakes. (249DCO). ''BD..L WHITI.EDGES" SUNSET MOTORS 111_...a S Lee 1910 Harbor Blvd. YY Q.CU • Costa Mesa 64$-6677 ""*'-Malorl n '69 Bonno Cpo. 547-5826 $2595 1234 So. Main St. Factory air conditioning, Santa Ana power \vindows, tilt steer· GREMUN · Brand Now 1972 GREMLINS over 25 Gremlins in stock all model•, & colon a"'1U- ahle tor IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ing wheel, crul~ control, door locks, padded top, only 27,872 miles. C053CDil . ''BILL WHITI.EDGE'S" Sunset Motors 1970 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 64$..6677 --,72-CATALINA Brand New 1972 Catalina fully factory equipped in- cluding air oond., ps, pb, r_Adio, V~. Int glass, W!IW tires, vinyl lop & much m<1re. Seria l No. 2L57S2C3ll355. $495 DOWN $133.42 PER MO. Yes, just $495.00 ls the total 111. -I s L down payment and <Inly '' Q.IU • ee $133.42 is the total monthly Amllfc:en Motola n 547-5826 1234 So. Main St. Santa Ana JEEP '72 JEEP 4 Wheel Drive, V-8, Power Steering, RadialJs, Conv Top, oft the road tires (only 3700 miles) C566EHW) $3595, dlr, 836-6535. payment including ta x license and all fi~ charges for 36 months on approved credit. The cuh price is $4618.13 including tax and license. Deferred payment price is $5298.U which includes all finance charges, sales tax • and license. Annual r>ercentage rate 111 9. 76. BILL BARRY PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT '69 Ford Bronco, 4WD, {1st St., at S.A. Frwy) air com!., many extras. 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana $1975. 835-1808 dYJ-558-1000 IMPERIAL '69 BONNEVIU.E Sed. Aul., 2022 Business Center Drive · hvine, Calit 92664 n•/833-8620 2131621·0361 135-3171 Visit our new bomel 1st National Bank ;DUil lemi& -TOYOTA WANTED-VW body w/trans axle &: .sunroof in good cond. 64G-1639 aft 5 pm. '67 VW sunroof. AM/FM, clean, $695. P.S., P.B., vinyl t 0 P • '10 Imperial <YY5441> Kelly '""'''.d •n Thunderbird Landau. Full retail $1840 Our price $1399 CHEYROLEJ FORD ~ Tr)t oar lease e.'q>el'fs tor Savino • Satisfaction -Ser· -· WE LEASE ALL POPULAR Jm MAKES AT COMPETI. TIVE RATES. Call Malcolm Reld tor ltn'thtt cletaU.. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Oleta Id.,. 642-00IO Auhll Wanhd 961 & w Busl~~S!~" Drive ROY CARVER, Inc. 714/&\,z.:; Calll.is~.{1367 234 E. 17th SL Costa Mesa 546-4444 CITROEN Citroen Maserati AWARO WINNING LUXUR Y CAR Ro1d & Rallyo Motoro '62 MorcodH 220 4 Door sedao. 365EAE. $195 J 1966 HIU'bor, C.M. 646-9m '71 Toyote Corolla Radio, htalu, law low miles. lUCKZ, $1495 '70 Toyo!• Coroll a Radk>, heater, excelltnt con· dition. 'l928Qr. $1295 644-5687 '67 vw. Xlnt cond. Reblt engine. '70 Townsman Wagen VB, .Automatic, PQWef Steer- ing, (403BHL) 11995, dlr. power, factory air, AM-FM LeBaron DAVE ROSS PONTIAC !tereo radio, Vinyl roof. Immaculate Condition, sacrt. ~80 Harbor Blvd, at Fai; llY87Nl06S<SI 14299. DAVE fice, Must Sell, dlr. 897-0224. 0.., Costa M"8, 54S-8oJ7 ' ROSS PONTIAC. 2480 "'"' LINCOLN ~(!O euecu,. thru July :n. 552-7ll9 bor Blvd., al Fair Dr., Costa ,71 ill W . 1n MUST ,.ll •57 ~-·. ~· Mesa. 54$•8017. Price eUect-* MARK II I '6; * 1970 Firebir<J 350. xlnt eond. ag, A/T, radk>. V ~·~·, -t ~--July :n 19~ $2300 or Be t OU tea ta. Ute yellow. %JOO engJ good cond. $.225. Pb. ve uu u • ''· Silver gray wltb black 5 · er. H<1me s:J6.M35. I• ·-... --top. lllnt cond. Alldnc 6'15-l75.1; bus. S25-fil26 ask m s • .........,, .,.,_;wm, for John. * '68 BUS * '66 C.prlce, 9 "°'" w••, '70 LTD $4500. * 642>9Q62 ~ -'68 Firebir<J 400, air eond., XI.NT CONDmON. Loaded. $750. Imm~cul•te, v~. Aulo 'l'ronl. MA VERJC K au tom, vinyl top . Xlnt C<>nd 644-2420 alt 5 pm Call 846-2059 P.S., P D1ac Brues, Air --------·I 1 owne,. Will ,.ll for $00!. '6.1 vw Bue, teblt eng., MW '66 OM:v· "Caprice'' radial Cond, Vieyl Top,' 100% Ftn MAVERlOC '70. 1 owner. 494-7518. . brakes A tires. s 7 so • tttu.. Ste to appreciate. Avail O.A.C. 8ti.o2U. ~.500 miles. Auto. Xlnt. '6S Pontiac Le Mana 646-not; 567-5441. $1000. 544-W7 '72 Ford Van. radio, he•ter, R&dlals. $1699. 67>-6750. $400 MUST Sell • '66 VW bul. '67 EL CAMmo, new tires, mag wbttl.,· 8500 mlles. MERCURY * 675-3348 * Reblt 1600 ""'Call IJ62.8945. P IS, alr, tonncau covu, lo $2995. sae.-. -.....,..,...----1--iiRAAiM";;Bii;LEi'-'R...--1 •lt"lb anytime, mt, $1SSO. 846-2191. '68 Ford Olstom '&9 MARQUIS I teat wagon. ll~,. '67 B11Co Reblt ""I· (2l 1960 CHEVY Sta. Wl!llS., Gooci condition. $1000. Auto.~, + t 1 n d 0 w :i: 1;1969;;-;Ram:::::·bler:::· ':"::Raallt-~hlrd-~i.;j,'· I •W New paint. 'll>p cood. $100. tor both. ___ *c...:642-=-:7531=...:*:__ · ~eoiOOoi ~ '!.,; · 6 CyJ., auto, rue. little w . ~ .. Jaguar Dnl<r $81$. -~ '66 EL CAMINO. 4 $PD. ae•ted l'l'!all $3065 Our price 1496. !149-2S1$. AuthorindSaleeA-*'l8Squaroback,-patn4 * '63 Clfl:VY, GOOD NEWTIRES.XLNTCOND. 126W DAVE ROSS PON· f·BfRD 600 s. Cout llfchway •ng!ne. Xlra cle&n. $1!50. CONO. $450, or Best oner. I --...:•:,,:::IWM:;:,788:;;..::•,_-TlAC. 2480 HMbor Blvd., at :;;·:::;::-::::---,,--1 Ltauna Btach 5'0-3109 l----,,~=642-.,,..,,.,,12U.,,... __ 1 _5.13-_,;;,,;;;2Slf.:..:..N=ter::.,.:6.:_____ * '57 roRD * . Falt Dr.. Costa Mesa. T·BIRD '66, ore'at1 blue a'j; Dally Pllot Wllll Adi blve VOLVO '64 M.Ubu Wgn. 283 eng. 3 .,... good, $lltl. 546-all7 Price effective thru ps/dbc bn1ku, l>WI' 'win'. barpJns plor<. "'" $42$. nso O>nlc&n ...,....,..,.-;;;60-al=-:=92~-;-July at, 1972. dowe, xlnt medl cond $850 Ullo lo trade? Our Tndtt'a 'II VOLVO, '62 motor, Rd., 11.D. M7-«;U. * ' Ford Ranctioro Hav& ~ >"" Wll1t IO 846-344'. , • Pvadlatcobamn!of<tr)'Olll need• -11 $100 .sett Idle ltema ..,.! c.u v~. 41pd, rib. aoo4 lldl7 Oaslllled •do do U f'llt...WttaroJQsta 5 U..., 5~ tor I bucb. MM513 ltttt S pm -now! l'Ol1d. $880, A*'1JO -·coll HOW~ call 1..., ~ •• ' ' , • San Clemente f;a istrano voi:. 65, NO. 209, 4 SECTIONS, # PAGES I , EDITION , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNl.A. I . N.T. Stoelul THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972 TENC~ • ' .•. ' Rabies F e·ared in Animal A·ttacl\. in Clemente By JACK CHAPPELL Of .... 0.11'1 ''"' '"'" Another small chlld wu attacked and bitten by a wild animal -possibly a rabid fox -early this morning as be lay sleeping at the San Clemente State Park raising posslblllly that the park will be closed. . Nlne·YtllNlld John Mettler of C3noga Padc was· rushed to Mission Community Hoepilal by his father awakened by his son's cries 1t 3 a.m. at the tent grounds. Five puncture wounds in the child's up- per right arm were treated at the hospital and the boy wu given a tetanus shot ·~Y staff. Orange County Health Department of· ficiab aaid today that the child will have to ¥rs:o the "duck-egg" rabies treat- ment of %1 injections. A !Ox was shot about 200 ,yrda from the sfte of the bite by Eugene Junette,.cblef· Ranger for the Ora111e Cout District, about 90 minutes after the biting in- cident. The body of the animal was swi!Uy taken by county animal control person- nel and the bead of the fox was being ex- amined today for rabies by the healtb departmenf today. Dr. Thomas Hamilton, director of Health Services said that regardless of the outcome of the examination, the Met- ! zler chJld wlD have to undergo the rabies treatment. ' The child was unable to identify the animal that bit him as a fox, and there is no guarantee that the dead animal is in racl the one which attacked the child, ranger Junette said, Dr. HJlIIlilton said that without treat- ment, rabies l! fatal. "lf we've got rabid animals there, ob- viously poople are not. safe in tewt.!\, or on the ground: I .don't know about cam- pers," Dr. Hamilton said. Depending UJXln the results of the f) labor:itory tests on the brain of the dead lox , Dr . llamilton said "steps \vOuld be taken." Among those steps. the complete close dov.'?l ol the stat<' park \vould have to be considered, he said. He said that attempts by lhe Park Rangers to keep people from sleeping on the ground were appa rently not \\'Orking. Attempts to trap the loxes in the park are not working, Or. Ha1nilton sa id. "The foxes are pretty smart," he ounc1 man New Eagleton Charges Columnist's Drunk Driving Claim Denied WASHINGTON (AP)" -Columnist Jack Anderson said today he had traced records showing Democratic v i c e presidential nominee Thomas Eagleton had been arrested by Mmouri potke oo drunken driving charges. (In Washington, a spokesman for Eagleton has termed the report "abso- lutely and Oatl,y untrue"). , Eagleton, who is in Hawaii,· cioilld DOI he reached lm-'lately ,. ._....,., but spoktsmtn i.. presldtntlal ,_;- George 8. -aid !bOy'bad Ill) ... formation on the report. " Anderaon made his C h a C,t I cJur. lq his daily -ram on Mutual Broadcasting System. I . The syndicated columnis~ Lt broad- caster said he talked tO a 'Miiiouri of· Coastline Bill By Cai:penter Clears Senate By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tN DllllY ,lltl Steff The outcome of the November general election will apparently detennine the fate of the coastline preservation bill authored by slat• Sen. DenniJ carpenter (R-Newport Beach). Carpenter's bill, designed tO give local government a say in the development of coastal lands, cleared the Senate Wednesday night on a 23-11 vote. The bill now mov.S inti> the Asltmbly Land Use and Planning Committee, chaired by Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R- Lol Angeles). Carpenter's administration usistant, Ricbard Rohrbach. said today the bill will no! be heard in the Assembly until November. But there is another, much toogher, coutat proposal beaded for t b e November ballot called the Coulline Initiative. It would &Ive atrong powm: to the ,state boards. Rohrbach acknot>ledged that pusage ol the initiative would aulomatlcally kill carpenter'• bill. "We are actually very pleased with the timing of this," Rohrbach aald. u1 think this gives people the indication that there (See COASTAL, Pap II oru1e We•tller Continued ho! weather Ill oo the agenda for Friday. with highs In the 90 lnlond. Beach temperatura wlll remain around 'IS •ton& the Orange Coast. Lows GM!. INSmE TGDA1i Nol too long ago, baekpocl<- ing into ui.. ttation'• tmlderncu areal wa1 left to th• hanlf br.,d of ouldoorrmen. Bui In th< Jqtt few w•ari, th• wil<kr-,..., has bHn inundat<d Ulith hlkrr1. Storr Pag• Sf. L.M..... • -. --.-" 1:·:: .... g .......... , ... . l .. Ul18l J I 0 ,.,, -.... ........... ti ""''"'' .. --. := ..... 91 ,. ......... ' --" -.... , ......... ..,, ·-. ,_ .... :=. ..... ..: .... -. ' .. ficial who claimed to have seen photostats of at least six police arrest forms. He said the pbotoslats w e r e shown the official by a Missouri slate trooper. A check of police records in Mis!Ollri by The A!sociated Presa found four rea>rded tralflc violations by Eagleton. The earlielt wmt back tO when EiiletlJo WU J.t yetn old and nonO illy.lvtd dn!Um •driwto,. ~!he!! .. Ilia ~ --...w"' ........ A sgg>ppwn for A'Dderlllll ll1d tater tho ....... ""'1d uot he ldmtlllod but ... "• llJAelllclal i::=' . . Tl.. ~ti-: •lei Ille fll· l!d8i 1'11u 'eonllni>ed lo UI lilol a MJsaourl ~ cieUVered tO hliµ some jlllotootall ol arroat . re<ol'ds oo Eagleton involving charges ranging from dnmken driving and reckless driving down to speeding." Anderson said the_ official recalled that at least two of the arrest!: were for drunken driving and all dated back into the 1960s •• The AndUS(ll aide said the columnist did not have the photoolata and had not """' tbem. Jle,ai.o. aaid it was not cer· taiD wi.ther tbo um•1•ied ~ a(· tidal 11111 bad the -· . Eaglelm revealed '""41y that be volunlUllJ hc!!P'tall!M bh1l!etl qn ~ lot, "'!llDtal fatigue between 111111 and 1-. iul .. tlenied rumon that hehada~~-Eagletori, MlllOUrt's firs t -t e r m (Ste l!MlLETON, Pafe II Space Con~rw;t A-s.sures New ]olJs for Ca ·li·fornia By 811.L STOCKTON A spOkesman for North American said "" ...... ,.,... the cOmpany'1 SeaJ Beach plant would LOS ANGELES -The awarding or t~ get "a sub!tantial portion o[ the jobs muJUbllliOIHlollar space shuttle conlract crealed" by ibe projecl". But be cautioned to North American Rockwell means tbiot that buildup for the five-year shuttle pro- thousands ot '!"dty needed new jobs wll,l , gram woold he gradual. E~rcts u,. Run ~ve the states sagging economy I ' ma· Officials at · McDQnnell Doug I as J0~!°1!fficiai. are uprtsslng delight Astronautics cOmpany In Huntlqton that the Calllornla-bued company won Beach wd they hoped to get jobs from the contract. They are looklnJ tO the !lie. shuttle, too. xbutlle to speed the · labor!o\!I cl!m-of "We were one of tbe major bidders for Pediatrician Benjamin Spoe)< said today be expects the People's Party convention to retain him as its candidate for President rather than· to support Democrat George McGovern. In tils St. Louis hotel, he ·said telling his party's message was "incomparably more difficult" be- cause of the McGovern cal\didacy. the 1tate'1 economy from ~he deplb$ of the overall contract, so obviously we feel unemployment that btsan· ln IN'1 I.Ith we have the expertise to win many of the aerospace cutbacks and reached bottom subcontracts involved with tbe sbutUe " a year ago. ' Natiooal Aero na,u t I c 1 and, Space a company spokesmar. said. He added Administration of.Dclall an o o u a-c e d that North American 's disclosure that 50 Wedlleoday In · WlllldaltOa Illa! llortll · percent of shuttle work will be sub- American, the compaoy thlt bullt the contracted outside the company "was Apollo moon program's command" and good Delfi here." ~ l!>Odules. would gtl ~ ..,.led A SPQkesman !or Philco-Ford in $2.S blllion '-'!"tract to build fi9' 1-ble NeW)'Orl Beach,aaid be d.i,d not expect Top County Planner Loses Capo Construction Appeal shuttle era~ .. y related su\iC'ontracting for the com· Orange County Planning Commissioner Woodrow W. Butterfield Wednesday lost two appeals lrom decisions of his fellow commissioners regarding capistrano Beach construction pennlts. Halltng the dtclaion, Sen. Jolm v. Tun-pany. ney Aid the space shuttle could "create Under the initial paymtnt of '5311 more than 80,000 jobl and add aa much million over two years, North American as ff bi.Won to the 1tate11 economy over will build the first two orbiters -one to the next 19 years." be used for static testing and the other Gov. Ronald Jleagan said be was for horizontal test otghts starting In 11176. "thoroughly delighted" with NASA's Three operatlonel vehicles are tO be Butterfield bad appealed lo the Board of Supervison on use permits granted to John D. Tallant and Mrs. Patricia Y. decision and predicted Callfomla """Id built for manned orbital missions, with pill 11,GOO -jobo u ' a reoulL test lllgllta br4i1nning In 11'11. Coast Escapes Heat, Smog Inland Areas Swelter as Temperature Nears 100 The Onnl• Coul will continue '" ... joy teinperatum bl the mld-'1111 Friday while inlalld areu IUjler from but and -blo-aleN, ... 11111r1orecuten aid today. The ~ Wllllior ~erylt~ tndided • ldcb .., : .. :-.: 'ti 'IS de'""" -«-I .t " depl. Oroqi• CountJ -Deparlment of· ftctala aalil the -W!llllcl be ~ Fri- day wltb """" 111ou! two lo thno IHI. El Ton and MIMlttll Viejo bail lfll>- petallD'a In 'the ...... ,. Tllls WM 11111 fir 1ielow ID IMJmi J11J1 biP of lOS ..,....1 .. .......... a.''°""'~ _ .................. a.... CllttltlJ Servloe were ltvioe LUe and Trabuco Anaheim recorded a high count or .22. C.nyoo, -llmperatura hit the 100 Residenll are advised tO stop smoking. 1j! hn-...--ol the ytar stay inside and avold strenuous activity In the ...,iy Win ..-ded Wedneaclay when an 1lert·la called. wlleil ~ reMlnp Ill La Holr1 reach-, La 0Htbt1 and • Anabtim bad tern -· eol'Al _...,.. .... (..,.,). AJt al!'\1 l'fr&lu~ In the llOo when the, alert took ..... )J Ille llllply'I Alt PO!iulloil plaee, . ' I ' Conirol l>liii1ct (.UCO). ' •• Fair weather !or all o! Southern The alert ,... the loth In the county CalKomll II )!tedlcled lhr9utlh Monday, since 1 ... 11 ..... lllil APa> lowered ii• with <1 lltUe mOmlng ~.llong lhe alert standard 6-.. -tO .21 ppm. cout ,and mounllln artl$r The heallh ~ wu ellled at l :ID Deltrt bot apots Wedneoday were p.m. for an ll'M Jaltmd ol tile San Diqo Palm ~rites and lndlo, botb recordi111 Freeway -la lied 1DD Avtnue. highs ol 113 detrl'"'· The .e l'Mlllllil .. WI t I at l: II p.m. Rl~lde bad _. 21th ""°' alert of the Tbtallrl-1 'tl•t p.m. 1'11111 year 11itll 1.-4I -....U0, and ~IOI ...................... ~ ............. ' • Wolff to build homes In . tbe private Capistrano Beach community. The use permits were required because in each case the proposed dwellings would encroach into sideyard setbacks. Butterfield did not appear at the supervisors' hearinas on the appeal11 but in a letter be 1tated tbal the "intent of the county's Beach, Recreation and Development District was b e I n g jeopardized by the permits." He said 11>- foot easements for public use to the beach !ronling tbe homes should he granted. Ed Martin. Santa Ana attorney representing Tallant, argued that It was unfaJr to rt!qUlre hls client to dedicate • 10.root wide. strip oa 1 SS.foot wide piece ol property. He also iM>ted that even U public access was•granted, the beach area in lront of I • tho Cllpistrario Beacb homeJ was. very narrow and · that no pirking' was available for tbe publlc. Filth blstri<t suP.rv~r ~Id W. Caspers of Jlewport. Beach said that although he 1upported lbe prlnclpl<s of the BRD rone its application wu "not appropriate in tbe1e cases." Assistant PlaMlng Dirtdor Stuart Ballty told supervlsora that Beach ltoad fronl lJll the homes southwest of the 'San- ta re Railway trackJ ... a private Redway and ool opea to trio Jl'lblic. observed. A rwmber of skunks have been captured in the traps. however. . Dr. Ha milton said that small w.il4 animals "normally will bite only ii pro- voked or if they are sick ." Three persons were bitten by a fox Jn mid-July also early in the morning as they lay sleeping on the ground in the . state park. · An all-out hunt for the creature was not successful at that time. The last (See RABIES, Page !I ' Police Nab City Aide In Dispute By TOM BARLEY Of ltte DILtt l"loet Stiff San Juan Capistrano Councihnan J ames Keith Weathers was jailed early today by Orange Cou nty Sheriff's officers \Yho claimed he used a loaded shotgun to prevent their invesligation or an ap- parenl marital dispute. Officers said they were res pondlng to· a call for help from Mra. Ellen Weathen at the home of mutual lrltndo In Mission Viejo when the 3'1·yearoold councilman met them at 'the lrool docir of the house. They Aid DO ahotl were fin!Cl in the brief confn>nlatlon ud they were able to qulck!J. dlaann Weatben. He wu booked io!ci 0ta111e Caointy Jail on 'diarges of assault with 1 deadly weapon. Deputies traced tlie opening or the in- cident to a car rammlng fracas at Dana Marina In which an auto operated by Mrs. Weathers allegedly was rammM by her husband . 1- 0f!icer1 said "an unldentllied male'• was a third party to the Dana Marina in- cident. They re!used to comment further at th.ii stage on his apparent involvement in the dispute. From there, officers said, the action moved to the Mission Viejo home where Mrs. Weathers wiu said to have sought help after the confrontation with her h~ band at the Dana Marina. :•: Deputies said Weathers appeared :to have followed his wife to her friends' house and a further altercation waa. Jn progress when tbey ·•rrlved. Tbey aid tbey rang the btU and were confronted by Weathers and the shotgun. Officers said they also confisca ted a handguh which they believe was in Weathers, possession du ring the Dana Marina incident. 1be arrest of Weathers, \vho lives with his wife and two children at 27341 Ortega Highway, today as tonished San Juan residents. ,.It's juSl the J'M!l astonishing thing I'Ve ever beard," a business associate commented. •1Jim Weathers is just the nicest guy on two feet and it's very dif- ficult to believe he could be involved in this kind or incident." Weathers, who is the manager of capistrano Hardware, 31921 Camino Capistrano. has lived in the community for the past eight years. He was elected to the San Juan C.piJtrano City Council in April o[ this year:. Deputies 11ld. Mrs. Weatbert told them that she and her husb,nd recently separated and were no loQaer living log ether. • Ailing Johnson Leaves Hospital To Go Back Home SAN ANTONIO, Ttx. tUPl) -Jl'or- Preaideot Lyndon B, JolUlloa, boopilllb. ed three days bec1uoe of hanleniJlc of the arteries tO his heart, lelt BronU General Hospital today and ttlunld' by hellcol>t ... to hll ranch. "!Us phy1iclan doocribed his llliJeu u Ina Jlt<'lorta, whlcb hie ~111!•1Dld II an laode ofthM )linl wllhOiil ID ldual- • rt attlt:lt," I t ..... M .... bM said. The 111-)'tlt'Old ~ ... ... companltd bJ bla wile i...., ~ wtien be doParled Ft. Sim u...o • Iha LBJ Rancli II mU.. Dor1h of a. •a' 1 +i Tiit former Pr--•Ibid 1o the 1-111 ....., ..... lor lion atrir "'"'Pl•Wnc " .... ..... -It Illa rmdl. I 2 OAILV PILOT SC Shopping Cente1· Site Of Manhunt ·' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL --': Of tllt Dlll'r !"tit! SllH :shotgun-armed officers sealed off South Coast Plaza earl y today in an ui,cb.i.y.Jnch manhunt, fol lowing th< cap- hir;e of one suspect apotted sprinti ng from 1 window smashed burglary sc.ene. lhvestiga tors said a second man seen ~Ide the atore by Officer Owen Kreza apparenUy escaped, abandoning a car ~t.aining aeveral thousand dollars' W«lh of stolen clothing. ;Newport Beach and Huntington Beach ~~lives were joining the in vestlgation toClay, theorizing it could involve a tum of,. highly·succesaful window 1 ma1 h burglars -recently act.ive in the Harbor Afea. Several Costa Mesa officer• prowled t¥9u&h Sears, Roebuck and Company dlir)ng predawn hours, but failed to find apyone ,hiding. &'""1 were assisted by Huntington BQcb Patrolman Len Oamerow and his partner Ulli, a Gennan shepherd dog, wlJ9 faUed to pick up any trail. .~ Commander Lt. Mike Heotey ~ lllO't unllnrmed officen returned to patio! duty after th< Initial aearch , but C){lt; stood guard at the scene with deteo- tivis Wayne. Harber and George Wilson. "OUicer Kreza. who captured the lone 'ttiapect, was dispatched at 4:.39 a.m. when a allent burgJar alarm was trig· gered at the store. ~arold L. Bri\ton, 22, of 1439 S. Minnie St., Santa Ana, was caught outside In lhe huge parking lot, according to police. ·ldenUfied es a cook at Anaheim Steilum, BriUon wu booked on 1uapiclon ol f>urglary. Detectives are now attempting to determine if he and whoever else wu In thif:otore could be linked to a string of slich hlWm<l-run break-Ina. bile C.Orona de1 Mar women's wear sl)qf> was hi~ twice recently, two weeks to the. 'minute apart. with a $5,000 loss once aliil' $6,000 in goods taken the second tiliie. ')\ ·eimilar incident occurred at a ladies' clothing shop on Balboa !&land. Huntington Beach police also have had at least one identical window-smash bu~lary at H4ntlngtbn Center. !'l"l!l<!d. ii' !pOSt ca!IOS iJ to burl a mil bcl!tfe eta~ tbrotlgh the' glass, s~b clothing from racka snd flee, belftg blocka away within moments. Stores without alarm 1ystemt are porlicularly good targeta and police .have ouggested hanging apparel wlth. books faclJll in olte.rn.te d~ona to 1cymi• mnaah-and-snatcb burglan. COsta Mesa police Were atlll atanding by1-0Dtil Sears' 1:30 a.m. opening to ob- taip an inventory of coodJ recovered in t0day11 latest case. .. FrotttPqeJ, EAGLETON. • • •. Democratic senator, has said he would dnJp off the party'& presidential ticket il relctlon to bis medical history threatens MCGcwem'a chances in November. The AP found that records of the Missouri Highway Patrol 1 b o w e d Eagleton was fined lnr speeding in 1961 ;uid was involved in a one-car accident in 11163. Rt<ords of St. Louis City police listed two speeding tlckeiJ for Eagleton, one when he was 18 years old and lhe second when be was 24. Eagleton was cited on March 11, 1962 for :going 85 miles per hour in a 66-mile an. hour zone near Fulton, Mo. Judge Hugh P. Williamson, who haodl· ed the matter in court, old Eagleton was fined $3S plus court C05ts and "that's all there is to it." Richard Radford, oow a highway patrol lieutenant, wlio caught Eagleton through radar that evening, called it "just a &imple speeding violation" when asked about II today. OUM61 COAIT .. DAILY PILOT 1M Orlnte t:Hel DAILY JllLOT, wlttl ~1(11 1't •tombliled 11M Ntw1-Prtt1, 11 M ll11'111d bY ffle Orenp Co11t Puttll1lllnt Com~ny, $•1»- r•te edlllont er• MIOUtl'lld, Mond1y tllrovell Frld1y, fer CMI• M1t1, Ntwperl •••dt, H11t1lt11tloft l...:.ll/F111111t11n V11i.y, L•Ollfl• lfMll. lrv5M/S.ddl10Kk .....i $1n Cltfl'\lr'l•t '*" J.,.11 C•Pl1tr.no. A alntl• r...i1-1 edltloft k pUbl/llhtd &llwdl'Jf d 1undtYf. Tiie prl!W.IMI t111l:lllillk'lt P11nt It •f JlO Wttf ••r Slre.t, Coste Mu., C.ltttrnt., tH1'. loNtf N. W114 "'"'°*"' •NI PuoU1~ ... J,,k R. C url1v lil(t Pruldtnl el'ld Gel'Jtr•I Ml"f gtr Tho"''' K.,.,a Editor Thomtt A. M11r,hlft• Mtntllnt ldhor Ch1rle1 H. leot Rlch•NI '· Ni ll A•tlt t•nl M•HOhtt ldl!Ot1 s.ci ...... OMc. JOI Nerth El Cemi11e lleel, t261J --Coltt Mu.: sa w.tt leJ Irr-' ~ l .. c.tH Ult H"'lltli ~I'll tfwtth'lt• lhefll: 11PJ ... di'"'""'~ ut-lwc:lu m ,__. A~ Ttl.,._ rno '4Zo4J11 c1...,... .. ._,,.,.,.,.,.,,,. S. C1•••• All D.,eclw•f1: ,.~ 4f2-44JI ~·· 1m. °''"" ee.11 ,1111ua111,,, CfMptllf, He M*t ttll'IM lilwlr1tlfnt, ..ittori.1 -·-°" td¥1f'll""""'" ""''" _., Ill ~ •lfMvt "*''' ...,, lt'lla1'11 • ...,,.,,, ..... lftlllll <M• ........ "" .. c.... """'· cellfllrlM. ~ "' c•trllJt 11..41 _.!YI br N il D.IJ """1111'1'' mfiifa,v ...... , ... llM '""'lfl"'· i 004/T" CHINA .... Pulling Out South Vietnamese soldiers today left the fortress capital they stormed and captured in Quang Tri three days ago. South of the ctty, North Vletnamese overran two key links in the defenses of Hue. Story on Page 4. From Pagel COASTAL MEASURE ••• is an aJternative to the init iative. There is something going through t h e Legislature." Capitol observers have said that carpenter's bill is not likely to clear the Assembly in the event that it is still ali ve after November. "It will have a tough time," Rohrbach conceded. ''The Democrats are in full control over there (in the Assembly). Senator Carpenter is meeting with Moretti (Assembly Speaker Robert Moretti, D-Los Angeles) today. If we're going to have a right, it's a good idea to start talking to the leadership early." The reason the bi!J will not get to the Assembly until November, Rohrbach said, is because of an impending recess of the Legislature. He said the Senate voted Wednesday to recess on Friday and reconvene In November. "But the Assembly doem't want to leaye yet, ao I imagine there'll be a fight over that," Rohrbach said. "But even if they don't recess for a couple of , weeks. it 's not likely the bill will get through committee before the legislators leave." be added. The bill aponaored by carpenter, SB 860, sets up a state Coastal Resources Sea Life Creates Big H eadac1ies At Atom Plant Fish, mussels and barnacles -each quite 1mall -are creating some giant headaches for engineers at the Southern Cslifornia FAtison Nuclear Generating Station at San Onofre. The fish often get trapped In pipes that take water to the reactor core while the mussels and barnacles attach themselves to the inside of the pipes, thus reducing their water carrying efficiency. To solve the problem with the seden- tary organisms, Southern California Edison haa requested th< state Regional Water Quality Control Board In San Diego to be allowed to periodically flush lhe lines with hot water. SCE's request will be heard by the San Diego board Monday. Present re- quirements require water leaving the plant not be more than 20 degrees warmer than the ocean. SCE fee ls lhe water must be hotter to banish the mussels and barnacles. Power company engineers say that two hours of l!lcalding ho\ water flushed through the pipes once every six weeks should reduce the fouling of the Unes. To solve the problem with the fish, SCE engineers have designed gadgets placed in the water lines to create cur- rentJ that fish will not swim through. The fish , using suitable currents. can be directed out of the pipes and back into the ocean. The request for the thermal control of the sea life will apply to Units Zand 3 of the San Onofre plant, regional board ex· ecutive offi cer Dennis O'Leary said. Hot water now is used at Unit 1. the ofiginal rea~tor at the nuclear power generating station. From Pagel RABIES •.. recorded capture of·a rabid fox in Orange County was 1940. however, authorities are worried due to the aggressive behavior shown by the state park animals. A 17-year-old Costa Mesa youth bitten the last time appears to have progressed satisfactorily, Or. Hamilton said. He noted that the youth had no adverse react ion to the series treatment that the health department was aware or. He said that the normal po licy was to provide the rabies vacci ne free and that it be administered by a famil y doctor, The treatment series involves two shots per day for one week. and then one injection a day for another week, a stltuation which we 1•a11 could do without," Dr. Hamilton &aid. Ma~ Killed by Car A Ml)'Wood man was kmed '8rly this mormng when he •tepped lnto the path ol a car In Buena Parle, pollct reported . Victim of the accident, which occurred on Valley Vlew Street, north of Clballero Streel, was Antonio Delatoms, 39. of· llcen reported: Driver of the car was listed by pollct as ll!>nald Schang oll'ar· llllOUDL· Bt Wll oot held. Board to oversee, coastal zone mana1 e- menL The IS members wou ld be ap- pointed by the Governor. with senate confirmation. There would be nine representatives of coastal counties and si.x public members. The board would have final say on ma na gement of lands from the three· mile limit to no more than three miles or less than l ,000 yards inland. The bill sets a deadline of December 1976 for development of a state plan for the coastal zo ne an d it provides that in- terim control be maintained by use of ex· isting local permit ordinances. Rohrbach said today these ordinances already require environmental con- siderations and public hearings before development can proceed. The criteria for planning coastal development are to be adopted no later than July 1974 alter public hearings in each coastal county, under the Carpenter bill. Eighteen months alter that, local agen- cies would submit their coastal elements to the state board for approval and in- corporation into the state plan. Pending adoption of the planning criteria, Carpenter's bill states that loca l agencies can grant permits only if those developments do not reduce public beaches or reereation in the coastal zone and do not restrict or reduce beach ac- ceSl!I. In its original form, the bill ap- proprtated $250,000 to initially fund the program, but Rohrbach said this pOrtion of the.measure wa's droppoo for the time being to facilitate the bill's passagt.t-· ! Carpenter also has introduced a tag-on bill, SB 861, which would provide f200 million for long tenn support of the pro- gram, including land acqui!,tion. Boy, 7, Slain By Playmate, 9 A 9-year~Jd Garden Grove boy ac- cidentally shot and killed a 7-year-old playmate Wednesday afternoon, police reported. . Officers later arrested the parents of the boy who fired the gun on suspicion of child endangering, a felony. The victim of the revol ver shot in the head was James D. Tiller of 12202 Sungrove St., 'son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Tiller. The boy who was playing with the gun. one of many found in the home according to police, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Goodnight of 12662 Allard St., where the fatal shot was flred. Police Lt. Lawrence Hodges said the parents were arrested when they return- ed home from work. Safety Scheduled Course in Rifle A basic rifle safety course will be held beginning 9 a.m. Saturday at . the San Clemente Police Department range on Calle Bahia, behind the golf COW'Se. Sponsored by the San Clemente Peace Officers' Association, the course ls a ctlmbination of Basic Firearms and Hunter Safety Program. Both boys and girls from 10 to 18 years of age are eligi- ble. There is a $2 fee . Application forms will be available from offi cers at the range Saturday. Rifles and ammunition will be furnished by the association. . Instructors are San Clemente police of· ficers who have been ce rtified by the Na- tional Rifle Association. Students who successfully complete the four-week course will be awarded with tbe hwiter safety certificate. Cranston's Son Arrested Again LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robin Cranston, soo of Sen. Alan Cranston, ([). CIUI.) has been arrtsled again. Police said Crenaton, 24, was involved in an auto accident Wednesday. Olflcen arriving on the teene. made a telephone chec k and found that Cran•ton had failed to appear after being cited on 1epar1te occasions for 1paeding, driving without 1 license and having an unreglsttred vehl· cit. a polloe 1poke1man said. lit was hod on JllO,IO boll. Several Thousatad Budget Cut Back For: Capistrano By PATRICK BOYLE Of 1111 O.l!y JIUtt ltttf Faced with a •102,000 problem. San Juan Capistrano city councilmen foun d some solutions \Vednesday night and trimmed several thou sand dollars from the city's proposed budget. The exac t amount of the cuts was not known. One of them entailed an across· the-board two thirds reduction in ex- penditures for travel to conferences and meetings away from the city. The funds are budgeted in many different accounts. lrvne Wins This cut, combined \Vlth new revenues and other smaller cuts, reduced the possible deficit to about $6.5.000. The council Wednesday held the Urst public discussion of the deficit problem -caus- ed by $121.000 in expenditures being left out of the budget proposal. Despite differences in opinion of what should be cut, each voiced the bel ief that the problem must be met head-on and the possibility of a deficit eliminated. "I am no t about to approve a deficit budget," said councilman Ed Chermak. "My intention is to chop personnel, priorities or projects, whatever is necessary." He added that he would pro- pose cut ting no existing employes from the pay rolls, but only holding off on h.ir· ing any new employes. The need to trim programs from the budget, whic h as published shows a $19,000 surplus al the end of the 1972·73 fiscal year, ca,rne with the recent disclos· ure that a street widen ing project and oth· Surgeon Sa ys Pitching Hurts EUGENE, Ore. (UPI ) -.An orthopedic surgeon Is suggesting the ellnlinAtlon of the position of pitcher Jn Little League baseball. ;·No klcl of mine 1\'ould l!VCr p11ch t.ittle League baseball," Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey. chief of ort~oped1,c surgery at Buffalo's Children • Hospital, said \\oednesday. ''1'hc possibilities of .sustaining permanent elbow restrictions of n1Jtion or an abnor mal area at the el bOw n1ay definitely stem from throwing overhand at an early age." he' said. Godfrev said he would rccom· 1nend mCt hods such as a pilthlng machine. a tee as in golf, or a toss· up mechanism be used t~ set up. the ball to hit in both practice sessions and games. N. Viets Reject Peace Off eting By U.S. Team LAFC Okay For Annex er minor expenditures \Yere not refl ected PARIS (AP) -North Vietnam re· BY JACK BROBACK in the prop()Sal. Jn an explanation lo the i'ected today a renewed urgent Americar. DAILY PILOT; city Fina nce Director 01 th• 0.11, l'Uot 11111 p appeal for an immediat e ccase·fire lo au l Lew said the expenditures were not The fledgling city of Irvine Wednesday included because the bill for the work has Vietnam. won Local Agency Format ion Com· not yet been received. Hanoi's chief negoti ator told the IS2nt{ mission approval of an 8,200-acre an· The major project, the widening o( Del session of the Vietnam peace conferenc<: nexation and became the largest com· Obispo Street, is being done by the coun-that a cease.fire can take place "afte: munl.ty m· land are 1·n o ng Co 1 ly and the city will be charged about ·i·t a ra e un y. itOI\ agreement on all the mt 1 ary anr ivuu.000 \vhen it is completed some time .r The annexation, also largest in the Ibis yea r. Lew said that under his cash political ques tions." county's history. boosts Iivine's land area accounting system, the money would not Xuan Thuy scoffed at President Nix· to approximately 26 ,400 acres compared be bu dgeted until the bill was received. on's May 8 ptan , which included a call for to runne rup Anaheim's 23,189. Anahei m However, the need for the expenditu re a cease-fire, saying it contains "nothing includes 36.24 square miles in its boun· some lime in the future is refleeted in new and constructive." (South Viet· both the 1970-71 and 1971-72 city budgets. h •· II d • daries, while Irvine wil1 cover 41 square A namese troops ave now """en pu e ou. ml.les. sked why he::did not tell the city coun-of the Citadel in Quang Tri, see Story. ell about the impending bill until after Page 4). Irvine officials also convinced the the budget was published Lew said "J U.S. Ambassador \Vill iam J. Porte: LAFC th t th · 'I tJOO. h f · did feel that it should be po' inted out.'', a ell' ,, . acre sp ere o 1n-had urged acceptance of the cease·fire. fl uence pro posal was legitimate laying At Wednesday's L'Ouncil meeting, saying: "There seems to be no more Mayor Jim Thorpe cbided the press for h the groundwork for a future city of treating the proposed budget as if it were compelling task for us than t at of en· 400,000 people by the year 2000. Such a ci-final and referring to the cash flow pro-ding the killing and doing so as soon as t · ed b h I · blem as a "defi cit." we can. Cease-fire is the key." Y IS propos Y t e rv1ne company. Porter said an end to the shootlng Ont · ·u· f .. But whether it is a real deficit or a y serious oppos1 on came rom would enhance the prospects for political Sa t An d Saddl ba k V II · paper defi cit makes very little dif-n a a an e c a ey 1n-f negotiation. t ts erence," Thorpe said. "It is something eres '\ tha t will have to be treated with some But Thuy said that if the United States Santa Ana. through deputy city at· time during the year." really wants to negotiate serio usly it torney Charles Liberto, asks that both the 1 should "put an immediate end to the h f · fl d · be n addition to making some cu~ in the sp ere o Jn uence an annexahon mining and blockade of North Viet-, d I ed f proposed budget, the council disc ussed e ay pending outcome o Santa Ana's namese ports, to its bombing raids - I · t d' · h setting up a new fee system whereby awsu1t o 1s1ncorporate t e se ven-d lo d particul arly to those against dikes and h Id eye pers woul pay the city on a per mont o city. uni t or per tract basis. This money wou ld dams ... It should stop all its acts of Ed Olson, president of the Saddleback go help finance the operations of the genocidal war in South Vietnam ." Chamber of Commerce and Bart 1 · d The Commun1'st side clung to the p ann1ng epartment, which the council Spendlove, he ad of the Saddleback Area felt performs the most important func-seven·point plan of the Viet Cong's Coordinating Council, fought a losing bat-lion of the city in light of the grow.th pro-revolutionary gove rn ment . which calls tie for the fa st growing communities blems. for the United States to set a date for located south of the approved annexatio n. City Mana_Jer Don Weidner said such a total and unconditional withdrawal of its In contention was a 1,600-acre section fee would probably be legal and noted the forces and the replacement of the Saigon ~theast of El Toro Marine Corps Air precedent of charging developers on a regime of Nguyen Van Thie u by a coali- Station earmarked by the Irvine Com-percentage basis to pay the engineering tlon government. pany for industrial development. costs to the city. Porter also asked today "why ar· Spendlove and Olson argued that this In fiscal 1971-72, the city charged about rangements cannot be planned now for property adjoined the de veloped popula-$14,200 in engineering service fees to the time when our men will return to tion areas of Saddleback which are much , developers. Of this, $24,000 went to the their count ry?'' closer to the industrial acreage than the consulting firm which does engin~ering He proposed that discussions begin on developed areas of Irvine. work for the city. facilities for the return of American "They are after our future tax base City staff mem bers said they would try prisoners, ha ndling their mail and check· and want planning control of the area ." to come up with some sort of formula to ing thei r physical condition. Spendlove ~harged. "If you approve finance planning prior to the next budget Thu y re plied: "We have repeatedly the se proposals you may f or c e study session, scheduled for 6:30 p.m. stated that had the Nixon Administration premature incorporation of cities in our Friday. responded to the seven·point plan ... area." Councilman Chermak called the plan-American capti ve servic emen would Laguna Beach, represented by pla n-ning fee proposal "refreshing." have returned. among their fam.il ies long ning commission ch'airman Carl Johnson "It will relieve the taxpayez: of part of ago. The continuation of the war by the Jr. sought and received a co mpromise the burden he is assuming now," United States will only further lengthen agreement ~n 1,100 acres in the upper Chermak said . the list of America n prisoners." ~~~~;;=::=;;;;;;::~~ sofa bed sale! nµw. $299. • • · .queen size .. • . ' __ ,,_ . .,._...,.,..,_ ... dual size ·. . t $249. ' • These are very comfort.ible sofa beds for sitting a~d sleeping, e. A wide s,elaction of fabric.i and . colors to chooie from. ' •·Reversible becks and seat cushions. H.J.GARl\ElT fURNITURE ~ PllOFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thurs. l Fri. Ev11. 2215 HA RBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALJf, I .. .. , ' . " . ' • .. ' .. ,• , .· • •' •• •' .. r • '. ' I I I I ' " • :O DAILY PILgT SC TliUl1diJ, Jub 27, 1~72 OVER THE COUNTER :· " FINANCE ·· County Firm Oka ys Buy • • ·' , . • , , ' ,. , •' " •' ' .. OUR OFFICE IN NEWPORT BEACH IS NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU Suite 730 AVCO Financial Center 620 Newpori Center Drive Phone 640-1460 John F. Sanders Man1g1r J. Patrick Blew Account Exacutlvt Stephen G. Enright Account Execullvt Bernard Degherl Ac:~obnt Ex.teutlvt Jon J. Hanousek Acc:ountExecuUve Charles F. Kelsch Account Executlw Joseph S. Kolenlc Accounl Extc41tlvt James L Michael Ac:countExecuUvt David E. Skoaatrom Acccwnt EMcutlYt Richard L Spraker Account Extcuuw Dave W. Sutch AccountE.xec uu ... Ronald A. Wright A~nt Eucutlvt Warren Hartling Account EJc1cutlYI T11k1lng Operations Department Janet S. Buther Heidemarle ~I Jennifer J. Smith NASO Ll1tlng1 for Wodn11d1y, July 16, 1971 MUTUAL FUNDS Bateman Ei~ill Ricltards COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST NEW VOlll( IUJllij-Fallowllll ''' P!'lc: .. Oii 1'-N"°" Y•k IOCll (•CNl"ft: • . . ., " • • -~ '""''" ATTENDANT"t.\INISTERS TO AILING RARE ORYX IN SHEIK'S CORRAL . · Men's Pant .•. Flared & Tradition REG . TO 16.00 NOW 2,50 TO 5,50 Men's Shirts ... Knits, Sport & Dress REG. TO 14.00 NOW 2.00 TO 4.00 Men's Short Sleeve Sweat Shirts REG, TO 5.00 NOW 2,00 TO 2.50 Boys' leans & Shirts REG. TO 10.00 NOW 2.00 ST ARTS TONITE THRU SATURDAY SIDEWALK SALE SATURDAY Plet1• be 1urt of 1i1t1 , , , All Stl11 Mu1t It Finel. looking Forwtrd lo Servin; You. IAHlAMlllCAlD MASTER CHAIGI WISTCLIFF PLAZA 1028 lrvlne, Newport Beach, California 92660, Phono 642-7061 Thursday, July 27, 1972 DAILY Pll OT 111 .:.:::.:~~~~~~~- Arab Sheik Fights · to Save . Oryx; • By HUGH A. MUWGAN ,., 5"Clll ewr .. , • ._, They are most sensitive animal.I. Sometimes at the mere smell cf man, they begin to vomit and die." "Sheik Hamad,'' h1s secretary s al d, "receives many requests for the while Arabian ory1 from zoos and preservation societies all over the world, but he turns them all down. He feels the species would have Uttle chance of surviving outside a desert en- vironment." world, and often leaves his ornate palace in Doha for trips tnto Rub Al Kahll, hoping to find new ways of keeping alive his rare, long homed herd. Proud as he is of showing them off, he may soon close the ranch to all visitors. usuggest~ in a recent letter that perhaps it ls ill old foe, man. who is bringlng the germs that threatened the herd this Ume. It is sad. because now after years, centuries no doubt. of being hunted, they seem. to ge· nuinely like being tourist at~ tractions ." AL ZUBAHAH, Qatar -On a hunting e1~ition in the sandy nolhlngneu of Rub Al Kabli -Saudi Arabia 's "Empty Quarter" -Sheik Qassim Bin Hamad wept when a rare white Arabian oryx in a dying charge deftly skewered the right front tlre of his jeep with Its long, corkscrew horns. LARGE AS COWS, with the same slow, sad eyes, the pale white animal! with the dark blaze down their snout• and the fine, erect. rapier-like horns herded together in the middle of the open, sandy pen. Some of the calves, pinkis}l. buff and without horns, shied a bit and galloped nervously toward the shed against the far wall when a photographer moved amongst them. The adults impassively stood their ground. Two females. still recovering fTOJTI tbe bout with pneumonia, slumped in the stlade of the wall ; a male with a broken leg limped about 11A SURVIVAL expert in England," the secretary said, AFTER HIS conversion by a•-~--------- punctured jeep tire .1n 1964, Sheik Hamid captured a There and then, t h e remorseless hunter turned dedicated conservationist and set about preserving one of nature's largest and loveliest animals. That was seven years ago. It already may have been too late. nearby. number of Jive oryxes but only three lived long enough to reach his ranch in Qatar. The next year he added two more, and the tiny herd began breeding. Until the outbreak of pneumonia, he was averaging eight to 10 calves a year, los-nlE SHEIK, who is Qatar's minister of educatio.n has had occasion to weep again for the elegant, Jong-pronged member of the . antelope family that romantics claim is a direct descendent of the mythoIOglcal unicorn. An epidemic o I pleural pneumonia wiped out eight of the 35 white Arabian oryxes in the herd the sheik had built up as the largest and one of the last in captivity. Two more males died the same week in a butting con- test over the affections of a female, a common end for the love-crazed critters whose horns have Jong been in de. mand in the Arab world as an aphrodisiac. The education minister, a brother of Qatar's prime minister, now devotes much of his personal fortune to preserving desert wild life. ing several male! from the in: evitable Jove quarr~ls but still retaining two of the original oryxes. The sheik belongs to and keeps in contact witli mOst wild fife and fauna preserva· lion societies around the It's been at least four years now since any Bedouin camel caravans or hunting parties came across any of the huge milk white hoofed animals in the vast desert just beyond the borders of Qatar. a new nation jutting intO the Persian Gulf. I TllE SPEClES is virtually extinct in the wild. Along with the 29 white Arabian oryxes at the Phoenix, Ariz.. Zoo, the surviving herd at the sheik's ranch. 90 miles from the capital at Doha, may be the sole survivors anywhere in the ji world. I I When we visited the ranch, ~ his pri vate secretary, Ghazi .· Azzeh. showed us around. ! J ' "Please scrub your boots "· ~. he requ~sted as we aP.. I ~ 1 proacbed the oryx corral, in-' dicating a long brush and a trough of strong disinfectant solution. "In captivity, they are gentle and shy. In the desert1 they'. are brave and. ex· 1 trem~y '4iµi.cult to captqre. ~~~~~~--=~ CHRISTMAS ' CARDS 1/2 OFF IMPRINTING FREE ON 100 CA.IDS 01 MOii OF SAMI DISIGN. MANY TO CHOOSI FIOM. IS•fllf"N1 Ollly) GIFT ITEMS ALSO ON SALE PAPER UNLIMITED WISTCLIFF PLAZA-17"' & llYINl NEWPOIT llACH 548-7921 ! ' HALLI DAY'S SIDEWALK s A L E MEN'S TRADmONAL CLOTWNG 17tti l llYINl AYI. -WESTCLIFF Pl.ilA NlWPOU llACH -PH. M5·07t2 UNBELIEVABLE PRICES! 1 OO'S OF PAIRS • FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK CRAZY REDUCTIONS ••• SATURDAY, JULY 29 ONLY ••• ~ I OPEN 9 A.M. • 5 P .M.J Ladies Mens BOOTS, R.ATS, SANDALS Regular to $39.95 AND DRESS SHOES NOW Reg. to $28. $ .90 c To To $ 90 $ 90 • FLORSHEIM BASS NATURALIZER-UFE STRIDE WEYENBERG-CLARKS COBBLERS-KEDS HUSH PUPPIES KEDS . BASS SLIPPERS • IPLEASE, AlL SALES RNAL-NO EXCHANGES o' REFU~osl "Where Shopping JJ _A Real Pfecoure" 1052 IRVINE WESTCLIFF PLAZA • NEWPORT IEACH • J I I I j I I I l T.u..t,Y, Ju~ 27, 1972 Thursday's CJosing Prices-Complete New York Stoc1c Excha11re List l\'etcl York Sale• Volume •• u111fff ,r... IJll'lirNllMI• IY"r "" . .. .. .. .. .. ljjj' ·m ""'' ""' ... .. "·'ft!.., '"" :r. .............. , I . IMIY .. ,. ., ••••• , IJ:1 In, I to CS.1 ,,.,, ....... M , , taO '... .. .. •••••• " • l l If .• .. ....... ' • • -~ ... '""""" "'" \ • .1~ = t .. "'" ......... :Jr. ' ·I S•lff Ntl t"41t.I Mllll Lew CIHI Ctlf, ............... It•••• ..... ,. .. ~""~ "' ' 11~ -• In! •r,:t '! l,!.; i; 11' ! ~ tl•• l'focn1 ... ~l~ ~ +' ~.!!!! lW, ,.. "'• ~ ~ ~:n CM! 11. ' + "' PJIM l.ttd NI ""N , ~ + PNIMI Wh ,. ~ ~ ~"" ,,.. . \\hi:~ ti" -, ,_ .. , " ,,.\ ~= U-4 ·i~ iE"-lttsl ' -!\t l'o'trOfl ,-JI 1 "-,1, 1~+ ,.. •Jt • •• I 1 -._ Pvtvtlltm Sf 1 '"' ,, .. , '""' \t 11'111 ' ,, " -~ ~ C.11 1 '' "I'! ~~I-\< rrtlltftf 11'111 " -t\ l"wcltftil• S " " l~ JI "'•I"""' .. ' !I· !Ii; -·'" "'"" ""' 411 ... ,. • '" tb-111111 ' 13t.t .. ' i'i'•l•!fOll " J f"t f'~+ \a """ L•rt1 I A••rlc:•W.. Vola- SC DAILY PILOT 11 . • LOS AllGEW -:1 llr Court Judge C I M. Luco bas ~ .. ..,.., trial of Ille 111111 l'wdiltl Co. on <harps ,fl " •••rt• wellhlnl" lit poctsp' ....,_ Hedenlada _llJ ... 's at!()mey !() hive dit - dec:idfd on the -ol . document•. LUCIE Nkl trial leltl-lo , -!() dttmnlne, -othtr t h I o I s. II lllotl1 "lhortwtl&hs" Ille -st tile time ol ~ or If weight •hantles....., .w, 1sss of moisture In 1111.,,..,_ 1 ~ .• 1 " Flnanee Brl f1 + " " + '" -..• + '• -'• + ,,.; " + •• --..... -"l'Mnuts" lo one ., Ill -.ww1 1nC11t popular _... •trlpo. RMd It ""111 11 115 DAILY PILOT. t ! .- -' Natural Menthol'"is why. Salem uses only natural menthol, not the kind made in a laboratoiy. Like our rich, full-flavored · tobaccos, our men- thol is naturally gro\\in. · Then we blend natufal menthol with our superb golden tobaccos. It is a unique blend found in no other cigarette. A blend that gives Salem a taste . that's never harsh or hot ... a taste -as naturally cool and fresh as Springtime. KING, 9 mg."tal''. l4 mg. nicotine. SUPER KING, 20 mg.:1ar;t5 mg. nicotine. a\t. ptr c~ereue. FTC Repon APR.'72. • ' ~---------------------------------------'------------------------------- 1 I I ' . ' • I " Lag1111a Beaeh Today'• Fbud N.Y. Steeks voi:. 65, NO. 209, " SECTIONS, "" PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA THURSDAY, JULY 27, '1972 TEN cet-its .· . . ~. Rabies Feared in Animal A·ttack in Clemente· By JACK CBAPPEIL Of tlle 0.ll't Plltt II•" Another small chlld was attacked and bitten by a wild animal -possibly a rabid fox -early this morning 11 he lay si .. plng at the San Clemente State Park raising possibility that the park will be closed. • Nine-year-old John Metzler of Clnogci Park was rushed to h!lssion Community Hospital by his father awakened by his aon'1 cries at 3 I.DJ. at the tent groundl. Five puncture wounds in the cbild'a up. per right arm were treated at the hospital and the boy ·w" given a tetanUI shot by •taff. ' Orange County Heahh Department of. ficlals said today that the cblld will have to undergo the "duck-t:g(' rabies treat- . ment of 21 injections. A fox w" shot about 200 yrds from the . 1lte of the bite by Eugene Junette, chief Ranger for the OraJlie Coast Distrlcl, about IO minutes after the biting in- cident. The body of the animal was swiftly taken by coonty animal control penon- nel and the bead of the for was beµig ex- amined today for rabies by the health department today. · Dr. Thomas Hamilton, director of Health Servi<es said' that regard!.,. of the outcome of the examination, the Met- zler child will have to undergo the rabies treatment. The child wu unable to identify the animal thlt bit him as a lox, and there ls no guarantee that the dead animal is in fact the one which attacked the child, ranger Jwiette said. Dr. Hamilton said that without treat· ment, rabiel ls fatal. "lf we've pt rabid animals there, olr vioualy peoJ¥ are not sale in tents or on the ground. I don't know about cam· pen," Dr. Hamilton said. Depending upon the results of the f) laboratory tests on the brain of the dead fox, Dr. HamJlton said "ste~ would be ta.ken." Among those steps, the complete close down of the state park would have to be considered, he said. He said that attempts by the Park · Rangers to keep people from sleeping on the ground were apparently not working. Attempt s to trap the foxes in the park are not worki ng, Dr. Hamilton said. "The fo1es are pretty smart," he ~ounc1 man obse rved. A number of skunks hive .betn captured in the traps, however. Dr. Hamilton said that small wild animals "normally will bite only if prr; voked or if they are sick." Three person s were bitten by a fot tn mid·July also early in the morning as they lay sleeping on the ground in the stale park. An all-Out hunt for the creature wa~ not successful at that time. The last (See RABIES, Page 21 New Eagleton Charges Police Nab City Aide In Dispute Columnist's Drunk Driving Claim .Denied W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Columnist Jack Anderson said todll)'. be bad traced ""°"" showing that Sen. 1bomaa Eagleton bad been .,,...led by Missouri police on drunken driving charges. Eagletoo's offle< here denied tbe allega. tion. An aide to the Democratic vice presl~ntiaJ nomlnee. who is campaigning In Hawaii. said Eagleton telephoned from Honolulu to order a denial statement and then ordered the statement rewritten to make it tougher. "He wants a cat.gnrical. alioolute and complete denial of this malicious 1tory1" tbt al.de aaid. The senator wu expected lo read IUCh 1 denial at an upcoming news mnfermce. io HonolUJ.u. Laguna Man Says He Foiled Two Armed Attackers I A Laguna Beach man aaid he foiled two would-be assailants shortly after midnight Wednesday by twice escaping their attempta to immobilize him by tap.. ing his feet and hands and hitting him on the head with a rifle . Police said the man, Michael Peter Foster, 23, of 465, Agate St., told them he was sitting on the beach below Agate Street with Cindy Eileen Grau, 21, of Upland, when two men appeared, pointed a rifle at his head and told him to lie on his stomach . The two then taped his feet and bands, but be aucceeded in bnoaking loose. They then .struck him on the head with the ri-' Ile, but be was able to get to his feet and run up the hill to a residence where police were summoned. During the episode, the rwon did not touch or .speak to Miss Grau, who ~ mained sit,ing on the beach, accordin& to police r.ports. The two bad fled the scene by the time police arrived. A spokesman for Sen. G e o r g e McGov~ the presidential nominee, said be had oo lnlormatioo on the charges. Eagleton, who ls in Hawall, could not be reached immediately for comment, but spokesmen for presidential nominee George S. McGovern said they bad no in- fonnatioa on the report. Ander90D made his c b a r 1 e s dur- ing his dally program on the Mutual Broadcasting System. The sylidicated columnist and broad· caster llid "" lalilad .lo a Mila<wl of... ficial ... daln!oll ,ta ' l!a,vt .... , pbotootats of at liast ali police ams\ fOl'l!'f. -He said the pholQ!tats 11 e r • ...,. 1be officlll b)' • ~ xtat. ":."'~ of ~ ........ la Mlllourl by The A.uociated Press found lour re<orded traffic violations by Eagleton. The earlielt went back ·to when Eagleton waa 11 years old and none involved dnmkm driYing. !'lo tr.ace of the Ander- son docummts could be found. A spoktsrttan for Anderson sald later the source could not be identified but was "a high official in lllissouri.'' The Anderson spokesman said the of. licial "baa · conflnned to ua that a· Milsouri ·policeman, ·deli"!1red to him ,_. ·p11o~i. or ·~ ........... ''!"· !qi-bm>[;i.g ~~~"'ilam: dnmken ,drlYing aDd ~ ... ~-~-........... ' .. ..,,_.U to ,.~, , I • I Andersoq ~the qlliqal.tecalled that at lea1t two ft die otmts were for (lee EAGLITON, ~· I) Space Contract Ass:ures ' New Jobs for Cal·ifornia · 87 BILL STOCKTON "'sc....w...., LOS ANGELE.S -The awardlng of the multibillion-dollar space shuttle contract to North American Rockwell means that tbousanda of badly needed new Jobi wtll give the state'• augtng eco1i9my a ma· jor liftoff. State officials are expressing delight Skateboard Fall Injures Boy, 11 An ll·year.,ld Westininster boy was in critical condition today at South Coast Coaununlty llolpltal, South Lquna, alter IUffering bead injuries when he fell while skat.boarding down a steep Laguna Beach road Wednesday evening. Police said Brian Wittbold, who was apending the day with fi:lends on Temple ire: on ... Jost control., bis wt.board on the hill s1iortly belare 7:311 p.m. •nd fell, striking his bead on the pavemenY. Taken to hospital by ambulance, be wu placed in the intensi ve can unit, wheno he remained unconaclous this momlnJ. that the California·based company won the cootracl. They .tt looking to the shutUe to speed Ute taborloua climb of the state'• economy' from the dePtha of unemployment that· be.gan in lllfl with ~rospace ~tbacb ahd reached bottom a year ago. National A e r o na u t i c s and Space Administration official! a n D 0 u n c e d Wedneaday in Washington thi! North American, the company that •.built the Apollo moon program's command and aervlce modules, would get ti»-coveted $2.11billion contract to build five reusable shuttle craft. . Hallilli the decision, Sen. John V. Tun-ney said the space shuttle cou)d .. create more .than 60,000 jobs and add as much as $4 bllllon to the state's economy over the next 10 years." Gov. Ronald Reagan said he was "thoroughly delighted" ,with NASA's dec)sion and predicled . California would galn-~'1)ew jobS'as .. a relult. · A spok<sman for North American aald tit< company's Seal Beaclt' plant would get "a substantial portion of the jobs created" by the project. But be c,autioned that bulldup for the five-year ahUttle pro- (See SHlJTl'LE,-fap I ) ' . ' , , DAtl y/; ,ILOT St•H ""-i. LAGUNA BEACH . GOT EXAC1 LY WHAT IT .WA!li'ED Council man~lect Carl Johnson J r.·•t LA~e'' ~ / ' Irvine, Laguna ,Cordial / After Hearing ·~n Annex • • ' • I •' ' . -· -'· uLaguna Beach got e13.ct1y what it/riguna at the Wednesday hearjng. wanted and I think the ~ity of Irvine jot He stated the Laguna positfoq that most of w~at Jt Wa~ted, so w~ st!!JJl·ave boundaries should be drawn along 1he very cordial • relattons, 11 =1d guna . . . CouncjWlan-elect 9az"l-Jobn.so ollowing natural contours .or the watershed, ~a~.er the~al Agency Formatio · . lssion than ,along sectional or other artiftcial (1'AFC) ~rlljg op lrvine'.11-FraJl<r An-lines. nexation ~Wednesday. / / lrvine City Couneilman Henry Quigley, Laguna had• req~ I Irvine· pull appearing before a Laguna council back the boundari i.~ P:@posed an--. IJleeting to discuss the matter last 'week, nexation 1and s e ol irlfluence to ts:· . elude ;all ~ ttie• Laguna cany00 wat.r-· bad eJ<pressed ftar , that !be tune-<on· sl)ed &~· ~.mU> the'' Art Colnny. su.ming process of r~-surveylng the area . A. J 1 ""'•a.t of t" bou d rrught exceed deadlmes for approval of '10 , ,,... ""'."".-•~ n ary pro-the anne1at1on. poaed lljolrvine was filed with the LAFC. However, al the Wednesday. hearing, al~&JL.-offic11~ of the f!'W city ha,d the LAFC was given .assurance by both a~ earlier:. after bearing Laguna s cities lhat they will work. together to ~n~. ~ accede to the ~uest, lop. come up with a legal description· of boun- plng 1,1.00 acres otf the a~xalion. daries agreeable to both so the ~nty Johnsoo, wl>o bad formulated the planning body can toke ils final acllon La~ case as chair~ of the planning within a 35-day Ume limit. commlJsiOn, prior to his election to the j'The LAFC," said Johnson today, "ap. city councU Tuesd~y, re Presented parently thought our ref,iuest for boun· * By TOM BARLEY Of !tie a.llY L'ltet Sllff San Juan Capistrano Councilm,an James Keith Weathers was jailed early today by Orange County Sherilf's officers who claimed he used a loaded shotgun to preven~ their investigation of an ap- parenl marital dispute. Officers said they v.·ere responding lo a call for help from ~trs. Ellen Wealhen , · at the borne of mutual friends in Mission . Viejo when tht 3'7·year-old councilman • mel them at the front \loor of the house. They said no shots were fired in the brjef confrontation and tbey were able to ·" qulckly ·disarm w oatbera. He was boolted ,. inlO ar,n,e Caunty Joli on cbargea of ..... u11 wltb a deadly .,.._ · Deputies traced tbe opening of the in- cident to a car ramnW:tg fracas at Dana Marina 1 in wbich an auto operated by Mn. Weathers allegedly was rammed by her huabend. Officers said "an unidentified male" \Vas a third party to the Dana Marina ilr cident. They refused to comment further at this ttage on his apparent involvement in the dispute. From there, officers said, the action moved to the Mission Viejo home where l\1rs. Weathers was said to have sought help after the confrontation with her h~· band at the Dana Marina. ·:· Deputies said Weathers appeared :1& have lollowed his wife to her fr1ehi:!S• houSe and a furl her altercation was in progress when they arri\·ed. They said they rang the bell and were confrOoted by Weathers and the shotgun. . Officers aaid they also confiscated. :a handgun which they believe was in Weather1, possession during the Dana Marina incident. The arrest of Weathers, who lives with his wife and two children at 2734.l Ortega Highway, today astonished San Juan residents. "It's just the moat astonishing thing I've ever heard," a bu.siness associate commented. "Jim Weathers is just the nicest g;uy on two feet and it's very dif· ficult to believe be could be involved in thi.J kind of incident" Weathers, who is the manager of c;,apistrano Hardware, 31921 Camino Capistrano. bas lived in lhe community for the past eight years. J!e was elected to the San Juan Capistrano City CciW!Cil in April of this. year. Weatller LAFC Okays l t ';..in'e Annex , daries drawn .along natural lines was reasonable in view of the , recognized flood hazard to, Laguna Beach, and felt we sh6uld have control o( development 1n this arta." The acllon of the LAFC .excludes alf the Laguna watershed fJ'Om ·both the anneuUon and the of!IC:ial sphere o! in- fluence of the new city. Deputies said 1.-lrs. W~athers told them that she and her husband recently .separated and were no lcnger livin& together. Ailing Johnson Leaves Hospital To Go Back Home · Contl)lued hot weather ls on the agenda for Friday, with hlgha in the to inland. Bach temperatures will nomaln around 7$ along the Orange Cout. Lowa 53-45. INSWE TODA'\' Nol loo long ago, backpack· {ng anto tile natfon'r wtldcrnt.11 arena too! l</1 to th~ ha"!U bre1d o/ outdoorsmen. BHi 1rt th< iut few u•ari, II•• u>ild<r-"'" ""' b.,• inundattd .with hlk..-1. Storu Pag• Jf. L..M...... • ..... .... ClllWtllol • ...... ,.... • ~ ................... . '*'*' t7 0r .... CllllMY u c,....,. 11 ...,.. n..u ........ 11 ~ ............ •" ....... .,... . .,......... . •• ,, 'IMt ~ ... ....... •"..... . ,... ... _.. ,. _... --.. ... ,. .......... . ........ / New f;ity Now Covers Largei t Area ,,.. BY JAClt BllOIAClt ' OI Mit Dlftr PWlt ""' The lledclinc city of Irvine Wedneaday won Local Agency Formation Com· million approval of an l,JOO-acrt ...,. 11Uatloo and be<amo the laraeat 'eot11- munily In land aru in Or•lli• CtXlnty. The llllieutlon, alao t.,...i In the county11.Jllstory, booltl 1mne•1 land aru. to a~~ II• lltna compantl 10 -~·a Ja,t•. Anaheim lncluds :IUI oqiJan mll01 in ill boun- darlas, wltllo Jrvtno wW covtr II aquare miles. Jrvlne olllclala alao convinced the LAl'C lltat theli' .11,11111 acra opltert of ln- lltm .._. .... llaHlmatt laying lhe ~ tor a lttlwa city al ••• people b)' tllt year ... &icb a cl- ty is prop6led by llta)rvine company. o,ii IOrioul oppoaltlon came from S.nta Ana and !laddleback Valley In· ta'nts~ f Santa Ana, tltnulli deputy city at· lomey Qwiea Ubartl>, ..u thal both the a,tim of inllutDCt and annuatlon be delayed ponding \WOme of S.nta Ana'• lawault to dlalllcorpontt the aev<n- monlh old cl~ .J . .. .. E4 Ollpa, pr .,,, .. ~back Chambir of lC4tnraerct and Bart Spendiott, baaf al. the 8"dd11Mc:k Ar<I Coonllnatlnc Oaomcil, fouJbt • lollni bat-u. for the l'aot .,,,.... communlti<1 located ltltlth " the !IPllhved 1111tOUtion. fn conthtttoii ,,. a 1.-...... aectJoo tlOUtheut al ti Toro Narh C..,. Air Slatlon -by the lnlna Com- • in Orange Cou,nty pany !or Industrial de .. l~pm<nt. Spendlove and ·Ol"'n ar~ that this property adjoined the developed· popul•· lion areas of Saddleback which are much ~loser to the industrial acreage than the developed artu of Irvine. "They ano after nur Mure tax base and want .planning control ot the area1'1 Spendlove charged. "If . )'OU approve thtoe· · propolal! · ~ , may f o r c • premature lncorporaUon of cities in our· area." r Laguna Beach, repreitnled by plan- nhig oommisllon chairman Carl Johnaon Jr. soutJlt and rece!Yed a compromise agreemenl on 1,11111 ..,,.. in the upper Laguna C.nyon arta. The LAFC ruled tbal all walenbetl mas dralninc into (See lllVIN'E, hp II "TbiJ 'could al.so have an in.Ouenct on the El Toro Canyon arta," Johnson said today, 11relnforclng the idea that boun- dary lines should he based on naturaf contours." Dog Obedience Class Still Has Openings SAN ANTONIO, TH, (UPI) -Former President J.yndon B. Johnaon, bosDllaliz,. ed three days be<auae of barderilD& o! the arterlH to his heart, left. ...,.. General Hospital today and r<turnod by hellcopter to his ..-. • "Hilt pilyslclan deacrlbod bla 1111-. is · The Laguna· Beach Recreation Dtpar!· angina poctorll. which ha nplt"'ed 11 an episode of ~ pma 111111o1t • -. ment 'feports a' few "'malning openinp heart attack " a bolptlal 1p1D>hU.- ln Its dog.o~lence classes l"Onducted ~l said. 1 ~ 1• 7 p.m. on Wea.lclday evenlnga at Riddle The 13-ytar-old ~ ,,. ... Field , · • . ' companied by bla wUa 1""" Bird. ...,, Fl~~~ructon areof Oheick Alnd T',;.._ · bi · he de!IOrild l!'\ .. llom 111 ales ... tilt L&I ~, owners· t "'°" -.op • Ranch• mllta.•rllretlil a. •119 di<nce School in Fountain Valley. A The lonnerl'rtl'; 4._· t -It ..,titration r .. or l20 wlll'1ie accepted the bospilol .._, ~ ... • :!1.~i;t·J.C!...~,~..-·Depart· ::-~-=~ _,.....;1 • I .! DAJL \i PILOT LB From Page 1 IRVINE ... t.aiuna C.ieyon should be ,.,.rved !or lulurt annexation to that city. IMne tlflclols fll'Md lo lbll 1Upull- 1"'8 u4 both dU.. plan lo prelllll a precise boundary line o! the area lo the c:omml!slon within 3S days. LAFC staff reservations that the new cit~ would not continue the agricultural pruerve status covering all but about 2,800 acres of the annexation were !Uolved whtn Irvine officials firmly stated that they had no intention of lift· Inc lhl rtltl'Vo 1ta1US on 1 h e Irvine Co111pany land• In the merger. Llber:to's argum,nts for Santa Ana w.eEe based on the 1on& disputed "promis· ed land" acreage south or the Marine Corps Htllcopter Station. He seid the at· tomey genoral had approved !Uln1 o! a t1w1ult airiled 1t dltlncoJ'!>Orotlon of the new city. James Erickson, city attorney of Irvine, rebutted this arcument 1t1ting that the 1ttorl)tY 1•ner1I had only g1ntod i;anta Ana tbe 'right lo maintain tbtlr case because thty were nearing the statute of· limitationa. "He aave them no rlll!I 1o oue," Erlcklon charaed. • AnJwerfna · !he Saddleback aw.unents on the 1,800 acres of in· mi.irial property. Erickson said the piesent area of the city devoted to in- dllSfl)', ,U:1e Irvine lndustrlll C-omplex. was . rapidly being depleted of un· ckN.eloped land and lhe company was ljlOedlng development o! the neew 84"-· ','By annQ!na the !ndUJlrial 1cre1ge WtJln conforming to the intent of the KOOx·Nlshet act whlch · creeied l.ocal Agency Formation Commission," argued EriCk&on. "The act said aMexation ahQ1Jld Include the good with !be bad lo ·~e balance. " 'rho lood In thls cue is the !nduatrial Iai>.li, tbl bad the agr!culturol prtRrve aciYge. Jt ls a balanced annexation fr0m1 an economic standpolntt'' Erickson stated. ~lne's approved annexation is dubbed the Frasier Annnatton bec1use it in- clalles Lion Country Safari near the San Dllgo and, Laguna freeways , Frasier was the old lion whlch died recently al tho 1tme~rve. The sph8re of tnnuence 61,000 acra, marking the" ultlm1le boundarlea of Irvine, stretches through the heart of Oringe C<Mmty from tbe crest of tbe Lomas de Sant!aao Mounllln! on the n6l1b to the rldiellna of the San Jooquin Illlll bttwaen Corona de! Mar ond La .... Beach Oil lbe IOlltb. On the weal the line borders Or1nge1 Tultln, Santa Ana, Newport Beach 1na Coat& Meaa. On the eut the bound1ry exteda alona the Irvine Ranch border eoot al El Tor<>. eoutb along the Lagun• ClllYGll Freeway· to the Laguna !Ikea aru, earmarked for a county reflonal Nlt-'!111 then ooutb .a1onc the hlll~" ta !he Ma Joalju!n ridge. · I Prom P9fle 1 RABIES •.• .. rOairdad captun of a rabid fo1 In Orange CoUnty wu· tMO, hOwever, authotitlet are worried due to the aggreaaive behavior abown by the atate park 1nimol1. 'K 1T.,e1N1ld Colt& Meaa youth bitten the1atl tlmt appef!'I to have progr01sed aatfaloctorlly, Or. Himllton aaid. He noted that the youth had no adverse reaction to the ,.r1e, treatment that the belltb d~partment wu aware of. Ht aid IJ!al the normal policy Wll to prl>Ylde Iha rablu vaccine free ond that ii lie adm!nlstered by a family doctor. The treatment series involves two shots per day for one week, and then one lnjecUon a day for onother week, 1 .Utuotlon whlch we "all could do witbou~" Or; Hamilton Hid. KISSING COUPLE . FINED $I.20 ·' LINZ, Austria (UPI) -A young couple waa fined $1.20 for kltslnc In the atreet, police sAid tqday. · · The young policeman whe levied lhe on·the-spot flne aald the two teen-agers "cauied public dltmay by Intensely kiss· tng deb other on a crowded atreet In the heart of the city." OIANel COAST LI DAILY PILOT TM°"'* CMtt 041L.V !'IL.OT, wtlft """Jch It combllltd the H..,...·l'fm, h Pllblltl'ltd by tll• Ot'lllM CM.t Publbhl!'lfl CMIP1n)', StN• rttt «lllloM ire P\lblltfltd, Mll'ld•'f tl'lrou1" l'l'N1y, for CO.lt M"'· Ntwport 1 .. c11, Hllllt!nCltM l1tcl'IJ'l'Oll!llll11 V•Hirv, ltf11"t ltldl, lrvl11t/Stddl11Mck end St" CltrNnlt/ $111-Ju111 C•t1lllrt110. A 1l11;lt r'91entl «llliofl Is Jll,lbH1Md Sth1n:l1y1 tt'ld Sulldtyt. TN prlnclPll p1,1blisl\1"f pllnt Ii ti JJD W..t ltY Irr.et, Colt• M .. , C1lllON1!1, n.a. aoh1rt N. w,,4 Praldfltlt •NI PUblblltt Jeck It. Curl1y \lkt ..... lt9'11 tM C.-.t Ma11111tt Thol'l'ltt K11.,.il EClllOI' TiitMtt A. Mur11hln1 Mat111Jnt l91tw Ch1rl" H. Leet R1cl\•ril '· Nill "-~ M•Mllrw ldti.,. a..---222 hr•1t Av•11v• M1SU1tt M'r•111 P.O. I••'''· f261l 0....-~ M .. : DI Wiit .. , •1rt1t ·=di: a» .. ._,.,. ............. Hwit ••t111 1711J 1'9tA Mllltv•"' IM · * Ntrm II c.mlM a .. 1 Toi,.-ln41 MMIH Qu utfW U."1111 .. '4l•l&11 L..-..... A .......... , 111~1•111 4 ........ ~-~ .... ~. lm en. CMll Mlhflll'll ~ ................. ·~'""""' --., --""'" ::ri .... "'== = _., .... -~MW ... c.etl MMI, = illJ •ttW M.61 • .. IMmfl~• nitllflrt -.... l'Ml!IN'r. I ' UPI 1'•l111P1oi. Expects to Rt1n Pediatrician Benjamin Spock said today he expects the People's Party convention to retain him as its candidate for President rather than to support Democrat George McGovern. In his St. Louis h~te~. h~, said telling his party's message was "Incomparably more diff1cult be- cause of the McGovern candidacy. Inland County Sectors To Be Hot and Smoggy The Orange Coast will continue to en. joy temperatures tn the mld-70s Friday while inland 1rtas suffer fl'om heat and poaslble smog alerta, weather forecasters sald tod1y. The National Weather Service predicted • jligb along the coast o! 75 degrets, with ocean t.emperatures at 70 degrees. Ort.ngf! County Harbor Department cf· ficial1 11id the sea would be choppy Fri· day wllh waves about two to three feet. El Toro 1nd Milslon Viejo had tem- per1turea In the llOI today. Thi• was still far helow an alJ.llme July hllh of 103 degrees In ll!ell. Hottest area• in Oran1e County today. according to the Qrange County Forestry Service were Jrvlne Lake and Trabuco Canyon, where temperatures hit the 100 mark. The °t'<;!avlest smog counts 0£ the year ln the county were recorded Wednesday when ozone readings in La Habra reach- ed .45 parts per million (ppm). An alert was called by the county's Air Pollution From Page 1 EAGLETON. •• drunken driving and all dated back into the 1960s. The Anderson aide said the columnist did not have the photostats and had not seen them. He also said It was not cer· tain whether the unnamed Missouri of- llclai sllll bad the records . Eagleton revealed Tuesday that he had voluntarily hospitalized himself on three occasions for mental fatigue between 1960 and 1968. But h.e denied rumors that he had a drinking problem. Eagleton, ~issouri's I Ir st· term Democratic senator, has said he would drop off the p_arty's presidential ticket if reaction to his medical history threatens McGovern's chances in November. The AP found that records of the Mls!Ourl Highway Patrol s h o w e d Eagleton was fined for speeding in 1962 and was invclved in a one-car accident ln 1963. Records o! St. Uiuls City police !Isled two speeding tickets for Eagleton, cne when he was 18 years old and the second when he was 24. Eagleton was cited on March 11 , 1962 · for going 8S mlles per hour in a 65-mlle an hour :z:one near Fultcn , Mo. Judge Hugh P. Williamson, whe hand!· ed the matter in court , said Eagleton was fined $35 plus court costs and "that'a all lhere iJ to it." Richard Radford, now a hlghwny patrol lieutenant , who caught Eagleton through radar that evening, called It "j~st a simple speeding violation" wllen asked about it today. Two Cycle Accident Victin1s Still Critical Two young people crlllcally Injured In R motorcycle Accident in Scuth Laguna late Tuesday night 1tlll remain In the In~ tenalve care unit at South Coast Com· munlty Ho1pltal. Doug!,. J. Keyworth, 20, of Orange and Ktllen Alarcon, 20. or Tustin IUl- talned m111ive hesd injuries when they pulled out In !ront of a cor near Aliao Circle. Ml11 Alarcon jod1y it lilted In crlUcal condition. Keyw«tb, 1 hespltal of!lclal nid, htt '1lol'lll "very 1l1Jht" iJn. provement. Control District (APCO). The alert was the 10th ln the county since June 12 when the APCD lowered its alert standard from '.~ ppm to .2t> ppm. The health alert was called at 1: 10 p.m. for an area inland of the San Diego Freeway north to Red Hill Avenue. ..,,.. .45 reading was reached at>2:1S p.m. I The alert was cancelled at 4 p.m. when counts dropped below ,20. Anaheim recorded a high count of .22. Residents are advised to atop smoking, stay inside and avoid strenuoUJ activity when an alert is called. . La Habra and Ana~elm bad tem- peratures In the 90s when the alert took place. Fair weather for all of Southern California ls predicted through Monday, with a little morning cloudiness along the coast and mountain areas. Desert hct spots Wednesday were Palm Springs and Indio, both recording highs of 113 degrees. Riverside had its 29th smog alert of the year with a .46 ozone reading and a 104 degree temperature. Coins, Antique Sword Stolen; Sofa Damaged A collection of rare, old coins and a sword from a 11ult of armer were taken and an expensive sofa alashed by burglars who entered the Laguna Beach home of a Weit .. Covlna doctor, police report. Three stained glass window panes were broken to gain entry to the home of Dr. Cslvin Schnelder, 250 High Drive, some time between Sunday and Wednesday, \vhile the physician was at his West Covina residence. The collection of 30 old coins from France, England, Norway and Auati'la was valued at f80(). The $100 antique sword was removed from a suit of armor en a statue in the house, police uJd. The burglars also removed a pair of sliver cufflinks and slashed a velvet- covered Spanish wood sofa, valued at $900. Total loss was estimated at $1,910, according to police. Civic Unit Sets 2 Garage Sales A two-clay garage sale to raise funds for promotion of the South Laguna General Plan will he sponsored this weekend by ihe South Laruna Civic Association. lfou!Ohold and recreational goods, clothing and hundreds o! other donated Items will be on ule In !he Third Hand Shop, 31748 S. Coast Highway, !rom 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Soturd1y and from noon lo 5 p.m. Sunday. Conlrlbullons o! usable Items will bt welcomed and may be delivered to Ute address or will he picked up ~ donora c•ll 499-3608 or 41941170. The Civic Assocl1llon need.I ll1ndl fot leg•I r ... and other coal• lo .upport lta flJhl to curb over-developmant In South Laguno. The Sotnh Laguno Goneral Plan, work of 1 subcommlllet of the assocla· lion. now It under lludy 11 county plan· nina levels. / C•rpeater JtleutWe Coastline Bill Passes Senate Ilf JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 tflle e>eOt I'll•! Stiff The outcome of lhe November general election will apparently determine the fate of the coaa:tline preservation bill authored by atate Sen. Dennis carpenter (R-Newporl Beach ). Carpenter's bill. designed to give local government a say in the development of coastal lands, cleared the Senate Wednesday night en a 23-16 vote. The bill now moves into the Assembly Land Use and PlaMing Committee, chaired by Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R- Lo! Angeles). Carpenter's administration assistant , Richard Rohrbach, said today the bill will not be heard in the Assembly until November. , But there is another, riluch tougher. coastal proposal headed for t h e November ballot called the Coastline Jnitiative. It would give strong powers to ' the state boards. Rohrbach acknowledged that passage of the initiative would automatically kill Carpenter's bill. "We are actually very pleased with the timing of this," Rohrbach said. 0 1 think this gives people the indication that there l.11 an alternative to the initiative. There Is something going through t h e Legislature." Capitol observers have said that Carpenter's bill ii not likely to clear the Assembly in the event that it is still alive after November. "It will have a tough time," Rohrbach conceded. "The Democrats are in full control ever there (in the Assembly). Senator Carpenter is meeting with Moretti (Assembly Speaker Robert Moretti, D-1..os Angeles) today. If we're going to have a fight, it's a good idea to start talking to the leadership early." The reason the bill will not get to the Assembly until November, Rohrbach said, is because er an impending recess of the Legislature. He said the Senate voted Wednesday to recess en Friday and reconvene in November. "But the Assembly doesn't want to leave yet , so I imagine there'll be a fight over that," Rohrbach said. "But even if they don't recess for a couple of weeks, it's not likely the bill wlll get through committee before the legislators leave ," .he added. The bill spons.Q~ed .by Carpenter, SB 860. sets up a state Coastal' Resources Board to oversee coastal wne manage- ment. The 15 members would be ap- pointed by the Governor, with senate confirmation, There would be nine representa tives of coastal counties and six public members. The board would have final !ay on management cf lands from the three- mile limit to no more than three miles or leM than 1,000 yards inland. The bill sels a deadline o! December 1976 for development of a state plan for the ccastal :z:one and it provides that in· terim control be maintained by use of ex- . isting local permit ordinances. Rohrbach said today these ordinances already require environmental con· siderations and public hearings befpre development can proceed. The criteria for planning coastal development are to be adopted no later than July 1974 after public hearings in each coutal ~ty, under the Carpenter bill. Ei&hteen months after that . local agen· cles would submit their coasta.l elements to the state board for approval and in- corpqratJon into the state plan. Pending ' adopticn of the planning criteria, Carpenter 's bill states that local agencies can grant permits only if those developments do not reduce public beaches or recreation In the coastal zone and do not restrict or reduce beach ac· cess. In Its original form, the bill ap- propria ted $250,000 to initially fund the program, but Rohrbach said this portion of the measure Was dropped for the time being to facilitate the bill's passage. Carpenter also has introduced a tag-on bill, SB 861, which would provide $200 milllon for long term support of the pro- gram, lncludinR land acquisition. That bill is still in the Senate Finance Committee, and Mike Neal, Carpenter's local representative, said it probably will remain there until the fate of SB 860 is more clearly known. "'If it looks like the coastline bill is go- ing to go in the Assembly, then the Sena· tor will probably start pushing 681. Otherwise ther~'s no real point in it," he said. Nude Teen Wife Choked to Death; Suspect Hunted Homicide investigators today were pro- bing the strangulation murder of a teenaged Santa Ana wile found spr~wled nude across the bed when her milkman husband returned home from work about noon Wednesday. Tests were being conducted t o delenn!ne II Linda S. Smit, a.of 2919 N. Bristol St., wu sexually awulted before being killed. Her shaken husband. Eric R. Smit, 22. was interrogated at length by police but apparently was unable to ahed any light on the possible identity of the victim's slayer. "There are no suspects as of now,'' a homicide detail spokesman said. Detective Sgt. Ralph Curiale told newsmen there were still no leads as cf this mcming. Coroner's deputies said Mrs. Smit ·was killed sometime between 6:45 a.m. w'hen her husband went to work and 11: 15 a.m. when he returned to find the body. A Santa Ana Fire Department rescue squad was dispatched to the scene, but effort.s to revive the woman failed . Fire Capt. Doug Robertson said no ac- tual wounds could be seen on the victim's body when he and hls crew arrived. He did say two bloodstains were on Mrs. Smit'• neck, but violent strangula· tion usually involves some bleeding from nose, mouth or both, police said. Coroner's deputies at first said postmortem examination failed to con- clusively show strangulation, but more minute studies confirmed the cause of death. Surgeon Says Pitching Hurts EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) -Alt ortboPldic 1urceon 11 1uaaestin1 the elimination of the position of pitcher in Little League: baseball. "No kid of mine would ever pitch Liltle League baseball,'' Dr. Jose~h D. Godfrey, chief of orthopedic surgery at Buffalo's Children's Hospital, said Wednesday. "The possibilities cf sustaining permanent elbow restrictions o·f motion or an abnormal area at the elbow may dctlnltely stem from throwing overhand at an early age." he said. Godfrey said he wculd recom· mend methods such as a pitching machine. a tee as in golf, or a toss· up mechanism be used to set up the ball to hit in both practice sessions and games. From Pagel SHUTTLE. •• gram would be gradual. Officials at McDonnell 0oug1 a s Astronautics Company in Huntington Beach said they hoped to get joba from the shuttle, too. "We were one of the major bidders for the overall contract, so obviously we feel w,e have the expertJse to win many of tbe subcontracts involved with the shuttle," a company spokesmar. said. He added that North American's disclosure that 50 percent of shuttle work will be sub- contracted outside the company ••was good news here." A spokesman for Philco-Ford tn Newport Beach said he did not expect any related subcontracting for the com ... pany. Under the initial payment oi $530 million over two years, North American will build the first two orbiters -one to be used for static testing and the other for hori:z:cntal test flights starting in 1976. Three operational vehicles are to be built for manned orbital missions, with. test flights beginning in 1978. The 120-foot·long craft with a 79-root wing span are. to be In full operation by 1980. They are to be used over and ever again to carry men . satellites and equip- ment into earth orbit and to bring per&0n• nel and materials back to earth. At North American's plants in Downey, gpokesmen said hiring of new employes would begin immediately and that the work force i eventually would swell by 9,000 persons . Los Angeles County's a er o spa c • employmeqt peak came In 1967 when 359,100 persons worked ·ln the industry. That's when the program to land men on the moon was in high gear. the Vietnam war wu at its peak and the airline in- dustry was experiencing tremendous. growth. But by mid-1970, 124.000 aercspace· workers in Los Angeles County had lost their jobs. The award Wednesday was sweet tonic• for such cfficials, who swallcwed a bitter pill last spring when Cape Kennedy, Fla., was chose n as the shuttle launch site. Californians had hoped Vandenberg Air Force Base would be chosen. The base on· the central C8Jifornia coast was tagged,· but only for those missions that require· placing a shuttle in a palar crbit. Such orbits, however, are expected to be re--· quired mostly for military missions, and· the military use of the shuttle isn't cer·· taln. ' · ~sofa bed sale! npw • · .queen size • $299. • •• .. dual, si~e • • • $249. I ' • Ihm ere very comforuble sofa beds for titting and sleeping. ' • A ~l!!e selectlo.n of febllcs and . ~Jors to choo• from. ·• fltYlnlble hicks end sllt cushions. .....,..,.. .... """ H.J.GAR~ETT fURNrfURE ~ PROFESSION/IL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mo1t., Th•rt. I< Fri, ivll. 2215 HARBOR ILVO. C0$TA MESA, CALIF. i I I Saddlebaek ' ~OL:. 65, NO. 209, ~ SECTIONS, # PAGES Irvine ' ' Irvine Mayor William Fischbach aald today be la "ec1tatic'' over the Local AgJllCY Formation Commission (LAFC) approval Wednt8day ol the new city's 11,fOO..acre sphere or influence map and 1,200-acre annexation. Fiachbach, who will be mayor or the largest city in Orange County when final details are worked out, praised Coun- cilman Henry Quigley and City Attorney J~:i Erickson for their "bril1iant presentation.'' Mayor The mayor also credited city stall lnr "superb preparation" o( the necessary background Information used lo the lengthy afternoon presentation lo the LAFC. ' "I also think the lignlficance ol what was accomplished Wedne!day should be impressed on the people ol Irvine for what tbey achieved," the mayor said. "Nailing down our sphere of influence was an enormous victory for good long range plannpig." ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972 'Ecstatic' Over By annexing tbe area southeast or the city, Fischbach said, "we ano protecting and solidifying the city'• future taa -in • the eastern area. The a.nneution allow• our city to plan the industrial development there, rathet than 10me other jurisdiction. "By defining and setUing our own and others' rlgbts in the eastern area, we remove any reuon for contention with Laguna Beach and the Saddleback area," .he added. "Thi~ should make us all bettu neighbors and lrienda," Fischbach said. The mayor's entbUJ!asm over the city's expansion is not dampened by the pros- pect ol having lo lonnallze the houn· dary with Laguna Beach. He said he coiWders the LAFC re- quirement for IrviQe and Laguna Beach to come back in 35 diys with an agreed, formal boundary description, ' • a technicality." "I personally would not want lo Jose Giant the annexatkm by quibbling with Lag un a Beach over a few feet," the mayor said . He indicated the city would probably pay for a mstly on-site survey of the ridgellne boundary, should Laguna of· ficlab demand It. Meanwhile , Irvine associate planner ?.like Harris today praised the selection of the natural boundary. "As a planner I think the choice of Laguna Canyon Watershed was a very logical one." · Harris, who came to the Irvine plan· TEN CENT~ Annex ning depar1ment fro m the county plan· ning staff. said the ridgellne boundary suggested by the LAFC was the first ~uch use of a natural barrier as a city boundary in county history. •· 11 surprised me to hear com· missioners suggest natura l boundaries are va lid ," Harris said . F'or e:.:ample, the hill top boundary elimina tes the need to pun1p sewage back over the ridgeline to central Irvine. city offjcials noted. Action Would Make City Largest in County BY JACK BROBACK Of Hit Delb' ,Iliff Sltff The .fledgling city ol Irvine Wednesday wpn Local Agency Formation Com· mission approval of an 8,~acre an- nexation !\nd became the largest com· JllUnlly In land area In Orange County. 'The annexation, also largest in the county's history! boosts Irvine's land area le approidmate y 26,IOO acres compared te runnerup Anaheim'• 23,189. Anaheim i.cludes !6.2! square miles in its bowl- daries, while ln"ine will cover 41 square miles. Irvloe officials also convinced the LAFC that their 51,~cre sphere of~ fluence proposal was legitimate laying the groundwork for a future city of I00,000 people hy the year "60· Such a ci· ty is ?JrOposed by the Irvine company. Only serious opposition came from Santa Ana and Saddleback Valley ln- tereSts. Santa Ana, through deputy city al· Eagleton Denies Writer's Drunken Driving Charges WASHINGTON (AP) -ColumnJ.t Jock Anderaon said today he .... tnCed record! showing that lien .. 'l'li9mu Eagleton had \"'en arrested by "!l!iO"ri pollce on drilnl<en driving chirres. Eegleton's off~ here denied the allega- tion. . An aide td the Democratic vice presidential nominee, who is campaigning In Hawaii, said Eagleton telephoned from Honolulu to order a denial statement and then ordered the statement rewritten to make it tougher. ''He wants a categorical, absolute and complete denial of this malicious story," the aide said. The senator was expected to read such a denial at an upcoming news conference In Honolulu. . A spokesman for Sen. G e o r g e McGovern, the presidential nominee, said he bad no Information on the charges. Eagleton, who ls in Hawaii, could not be reached immediately for comment, bUt spokesmen for presidential nominee George S. 'McGovern 11id they had no in· formatlon on the report. • Anderson made his c h a r g e s dur- i/ig his daily program ~n lhe Mutual Btoadcasting System. 'TJie syndicated columnist and broad- caster 11id he talked lo a Misaourl of· llcial who· claimed to have seen photostats ol at least six police amst forms. He said the photostats w e r e ihown t11e official by • MissoUrl state IJ'ooper. .., ...... · A check of police records in l~ 1 ~Y The Associated Press loond lour recorded trallic violations by Eagleton. !'be earliest went hack lo wben Eagleton .,.., II years old and none involved ;,tnmken driving. No trace ol the Ander- llOll clocUinen1a could be loond. ' A spokesman for Anderson 11id later ,the source could not be identified but wos "a high olllclal In Missouri." ' The Andel'IOll spobtmaa said 'the of. ticial 11bu conflrmed to m . that • Ill~~ delivm_( lo hl)1I some ~is ol arrut Pds on EqletGa ilWolflnl ehargef rqlDc IJGlll -drlvlaa and r<ekl... drl<!illc do.,.; to speeding." ~ said the olllclid recalled that at least two of the arrest! were for drunken.driving and all dated back into the ll60a. . Tbe Anderson aide said the columni!t did not have the photostats and bad not seen them. He also said it was not cer- tain whether the unnamed Missouri of· ficlal slUl had the record!. Eagleton revealed Tuesday that be bad vol1D1laljly hospitalized himlell on three occasialll for mental Jatigue between 1960 and 1961. But he denied rumors that he bad • drinking pniblem. Eagleton, Missouri's fl rs I· le rm Democratic senator. baa said he would drop off the parly's presidential ticket il reaction lo his medical history threatens McGovern's chances in November. The AP found thai •-rds of the MissoUri , Highway Patrol s b o w e d Eagleton was lined !or speeding in 1962 and was involved in a one-car accident in 11163. Records ol St .. Louis City .pollce listed two speeding tickets !or Eagleton, one wben he wu II years old and the second when be was 24. Eagleton was cited on March 11, 11162 for going 85 miles per hour In a 6&-mile an hour :r.ooe near Fulton, Mo. Jad(e Hllgh P. Williamson, who band!· ed. tbe·matter m court, said Eagleton was fmed $35 plus court costs and "thal's all there is to it." Richard Radford, now a highway patrol lieutenant, wilo caught ,Eagleton thn>ugh nar that evening, called it 11just a simple speedlog violation" when asked about It today. ;Capo Councilman Held ,on Gun Assault Charge ' By TOM BARLEY Olllcm said "an unidentified male" 1 ot .,. DetW '"" stiff was a third party to the Dina Marina in-- San Juaa Capistrano Councilman cidenl. They relUled to commint l\lrther 1 James Kellh Weather• wu jailed early at this stare on his apparent involvement .today by Orange County Sherill'• oH1ctr1 In the·dlspute. .who claimed he used a Jnaded lholgun to From there, officers l'ld, the 1ction prevent their Investigation of an op. moved lo the Mlsalon Viejo home where parent marltsl dispute. 1 Mn. Weathers wu said to have ""ght Off1cm uld they were respcmdlna lo a · help altu the conlrontatlon with her btlo- tall for help from Mrs. Ellen 'Weathers baod at the Dona M*'1na. at the home of mutual friends In 111-Deputltt· said Weathers appeared to Viejo when the 37-Yt&Nlld councilman have followed his 1lj/e to lief lrlenda' met tbeln at lhe !root door of the hoult. house and a further altercation wu In . 'l'be1 uld no lholl were fired In the Pl'Oll'• •wbeno Jbey arTlyed. They,111d • 11r1ef ..,.,,..lalion and Ibey were able to tliey rani the liell and were confronled qulcklJ dlaarm Weathen. He WU hooked ' by,Weathen and the abotiun· 1ato ~ Cowlty Jail on cbarps ol Ofllcel'I uld they aloo canllscaled a , -it will! a daadly weapoa. ~ which they helltve was In . °"""* traced the openlnc of the In-Wealilen, po11esaiOG durlJ!C the Dana , cld9 to a car ralMlin& lracu al Dana llalina lnddeol llarlna In wlaldl an auto operated by 'Ibo amlll ol Weathm, wl1o llVtl wllb Jin. W11tbon allopdlJ wu rammed by hil wUe and two chlldmi at 2'1141 Orlqa ber bulllond. (Ilea WEA Tlllll8, Pap lJ tomey Charle1 Liberto, asks that both the sphere of influence and annei:aUon be delayed pending outcome of Santa Ana's lawsuit to disincorporate the seven· month old city. Ed Olson, president ol the Saddleback Cbamher of Commerce and Bart Spendlove, bead ol the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, looght a losing hat· tie for the fast growing communities localed south of the approved annuatlon. In contention was a liMO-acre section . . Plann,ers Okay 2 'Neighbors' Sharing Plan \ . Lo .. !llJ-lldal t'• '~ ~~ - The llnO fr<lm '*-... .. -· .rather."-1il ~ before Orallt · Ci$dJ Plannk1t ~"tllla '!eek In ..... lkiel1n( I <dfJillllWJ uie pmnll IO allow expailllcll GI the . UnltA!d .: Metbodlal Cllurch o! Laguna Hllll. The church, wbkb II plaMlng to expand its sanctuary, ado mlnistratlve Offices and all purpose areas, needed 2!2 parking apacea. It already bas 1'7 spaces ond knocked oo the donr of the adjacent Temple Judea !or an additional 1115 spaces. In lhe splril ol giving, the Jewish dmom!natlon agreed to share Its parltlng loL "I recommend all Methodist churdles be located n .. t to a Jewish temple," qWpped o n e architect at the meeting. • Commissioners were unanimous In approving the expansion ol the Methodist 'church IJid the sharing ol the parking spaces. Coastline Bill By Carpente.1· Clears Senate By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ftMt DlllY Pllft 119" Tbe outcome of the November general election will apparently determine the late ol the coastline preservation bill authored by stale Sen. DennlJ Carpenter (R-Newporl Beach). Carpenter's bill, designed to giv" local government a say in the development of coastal lands, cleared the Senate Wednesday night on a 23-16 vote. The blll now moves Into the Assem~Jy Land Use and Planninl Committee, chaired by AJsemblyman Paul Priolo (R· Los Angeles~ Clrpenter's admlnlstraUon assistant. Richard . Rohrbach, .!id today the blll will not be beard In 'the Assembly until Novembet. , But there II another, much tougher. coaataJ proposal beaded for t h e November ballot called the Coulline In1U1llve. It would give strong powen to the state bomll. Rohrbach acknowltCJced that passage ol the lnltiativa would automatically kill Carpenter'• bill. "We are IClloally .., pleas<d with the timing d._ this, II Rollrblcb aald, UJ thlnk this &Ives people the h>dlcallon that thern II an altemaUve lo the llllilatlve. There la ~ aoinc throUih I b o utlalature.'' Capitol oblerven ;,have , uld that Carpenttt'a bill ii nol lllltly to clear the AJsembly In ibe event thl\ II II 1tlll alive alter !lovelllber. , "Jt will haft I loucb'llme," Rohrbach conceded. "h Democrats are In lull control over there (In the Auembly). Senator Carpealer II llll<dnc with Moretti (~ Speolctt Robert (Ilea COAl'IUNE, l'lp I) soulbeast of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station earmarked by the Irvine Com- pany for industrial development Spendlove and Olson argued that this property adjoined the developed popull- tlon areas of. Saddleback which are much closer lo the Industrial acreage than Iha developed areas of Irvine. "They are after our future tax base and want plann!Dg control ol the area," Spendlove charged. "If you approve (See IRVINE, Page I) Space Shuttle To Give Boost To State Economy DAILY "II.OT Sllff PllO .. 1' _' "lll!:~ 'I '» -. !JI.VINE COUNCILMAN l'll~SENTS. ANNE)!. llD TO !LAFC : tbS Atfc;Eu:t..:. 'the a~ of 11/e ". _ _._H_•_nrv-'-_o_u_;lg_l•-''f_Alk __ •_• _o._.t_•_A_;p...;p_i_ov_•_l _of~l-,200--~•-~••_•_E_x..;pa_n_sl_o_• __ ;~ -lltullle· c:Onlract ' · · ~a~:.: M~,Sh~p~p.·:i.nir C.e.11:.t.er . jor lllloll. ' · 0 State officials are exprelling delight c b d f · s that the Calllomii-baied company won o· m e or 1 'uspe' ct the contraci. They are lookiqg lo the sbpJUe j o speed the lal>ori<l!u climb of the state's economy from the deptha ol unernplojment that began ln .19fl with aerospace cutbacks and reached bottom a year ago. Natlooal Aero na u t l c I and Space Adminiatratlon dficlals a o no u n c e d Wednesday In Wuhlngton that Norih American, ·the company tbal huill the Apollo moOo · prog'ram's co~d and service modules, would get the coveted $2.6 billiqn contract to build five reusable shuttle craft. Halling the decision, Sen. John V. Tun· · ney said the space 1buttle cou.Jd "create more than I0,000 jobl and add as much as '4 billion to the state's economy over the next 10 years." Gov. Ronald Reagan said he waa "thoroughly dellgbted" with NASA's decision and predlcied Calilomia woold gain 25,000 new jobs as a result. A spokesman for North American said the company's Seal Beach plant would gel "a suhalanUaJ portion of the joha created" by the project. But he cautioned that buildup for the live-year shuttle pr .. rrom would be rradual. Olflclala at McDoonell D o u g I a s As1ronaut1cs COmpany In Huntington Beach uid they hoped to· 1et joha from the •hutile, too. Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM 0.llY ~15'1 t.1•11 Shotgun-arnied officers sealed orr South Coast Plaza early today in an in<J>.by·inch manhunt, following the cap. ture of one suspect spotted sprinting fJ'Olll a w~ smashed bwglary scene. Iilvestlgators said a second man seen . tns~e the store by Officer Owen Kreza apparently escaped', abandoning a car containing ' several tbOu.sand dollars' wOl;'th of ·stolen clothing. Newport Beach and HunUngtpn Beach detectives were' joining the inv;es,Ugation today, theorizing jt could .involve a team of hlghly-succ,essful . window s m a s h burglars recentty active ln the Harbor ·Area,. ' · several 1 Costa; Mesa officers prowled lhroOgh Sears, 'Roebuck and Company during predawn hours, bul !ailed lo !Ind anyone hiding. They were assisted by Huntington Beach Patrolman Len Oamerow and his partner Ulll, a German shepherd dog, who failed to pick up any trail. '11'11tch Commander Lt. Mike Healey said most uniformed officers returned to · ~trol duty alter the Initial search, but one stood guard at the scene with detec- Uvts Wayne Harber and George Wilson. Officer Kreza, who captured the lone suspect, was dispatched al !:39 a.m. when a silenl burglar alarm was. tric· ·Another. Young Camper Attacke,d by Wtld Animal By JACK CHAPPELL . Ranger for the Orange Coast District, Of "" Dllitr ~ ,..., about to minutes after the biting in- Anolher arnall child -attacked and cldent. bitten hy a wild animal -pouibly , a The body <>I the anltru!l was swifdy rabid I~ -early this morning aa bo lay , lalten by county animal control person- sleeplna el tho San Clettlellte State Park nel and the head of.the lox waa being e~· raWng poaglbllity that.the park will be 1 &mined • today lnr rabies by the health closed. , depa~nl today. • Nine-year-old Jolin Metzler ol Canop . Dr. 'l110mu. llaml\lon, direclor ol Park wu t\fahed\ lo •lllllkm COinmllnlty ' Health Servi<eo said that regardless ol · Hoopilll . by .his latbtr awUoned by till . the outcome ol the exA\Dlnalion, the r,tet• IOO'• cries at s 1.m. at tho leilt ...,..ndl. lier child, wlll have to undergo Ille rabi~ Five punctuie ....,.Jn Ille dtlld's UP-· treatment. • • per rlglJt arm were treated at the ' The chlld was 1111able lo ldentlly the hospital and the boy waa llvttH llianua ab1maJ thal bll him 11 a fox, and there Is lhot by stall, . • . no auaranlee that the dead animal Is In Oronge County ·Healtll °"""'-' Gf. fact tho ' me 'l!ftlch attacked the child, flcials uid today that the cllJld will Ill.,. • ,... ..-. aald. to undergo the .,_..., ........ -nr .......... uld that withool treil· mml et 21 In~ -· rabi<o It fetal . A fos -slitil ~ ill7!* IN!m the "If ,,.. .. pt rabid uimals ·there, ob- lllte of the bite by Euatne J-. cldel flloo llABl&. Pqe I) gered at the store. Harold L. Brillon, 22, of 1439 s. Minnie St., Santa Ana, was caught outside in the huge parking lot, according to police. Identified as a cook at Anaheim Stadium, Britton was booked on suspicion ol burglary. Detectives are now attempting to determine if he and whoever else was in the store could be linked to a string of such hit-and -run break-ins . One · Corona del Mar women's wear ,shop was hit twice recently, two weeb1o the minut.e apart, with ~ '5,000i loss once .nnd $61000 in goods taken the second time. A similar incident occurred at a ladies' clothing shop on Balboa Island. Huntington Beach pqlice also have had at least one identical window-smash burglary at Hunt ington Center. The method in most cases is to hurl a milk bottle crate through the glass, snatch clothing from reeks and Oee, being blocks away within moments. Stores without alarm systems are particularly good targets and police have suggested hanging apparel with hooks facing in alternate directions to stymie smash-and-snatch burglars. C:Osta Mesa police were still standing by until Sears' 9:30 a.m. opening to ob- tain an inventory of goods recovered in today's latest case. Cootlnued hot weather Is on the agenda for li'riday. with highs in the 90 inland. Beach temperatures will remain around 75 along the Orange Coast. Lows ~.1 l INSIDE TODAY Not too tong ago, ba<fpack-, fng 1nco &h• Mtior1'1 waldam«as areos ,.... left lo tht hanlu breed of out:doortmen. Bait in lh• to.st /tw rt•rt, IU lrildc.-. ftlU ha.\ bHn inu!Ula~ IOilh hikers. slo1111'•oe 84. l..M..... ... •• "~"'""' <tfttlftef , .... t:.. :: ........... " MltwW ,... • l•lrlll11lr•• tWt -... ..,. .. ._. n .. .. .. .._ . ' =, ... ·: ............. l. --.. -.... =-•n kl • - --. -----. • • ..... _ .. 4f .. ' •• .. , Z DAILY PI LOT 15 . Tlilu~1. July J71 1'7~ To ,.e, or N ot't Irvine Trustees Study Bond Vote ... • Trv\ne Uhl fled School District trustees ... bave scheduled a special meeting •'Wednesday night to decide whether lo ,hold a bond election Nov. •· The aeUoo "'" t1ken Wednesday night at University High School. Trust ee Nonnan Ginsburg was out of town. The ,. special meeting will be at 5 p.m. at , 'University Park Elementary School, 4572 . SandburJ Way. If the election iJ to be coOJOlid1ted , ~th the Nov. 4 1eneral election, it must . be called 90 d»YI prior to that or by Aug. ., 9. :,.·.The remaining four ~mben of the ·.board said they preferred to make the decision with all present. ; ,•·Dive Hitchcock, Orange Co u n I y · Registrar of Voter1, i1 opposed to con· , tolldatlon. He said tt would cost $3,000, about tw:lcl!J as much as a special elec· ·.tion. : .-Trustees were surprised Wednesday ... 1'hen acting , board secretary Fred Koch . :wltom the county departml!int of education • nld those fliures were wrong. . , .. ·From his experience, he said, con· : aolidation "Is a savings to the district. by . ,~about 50 percent." -: ~ Hitchcock had argued in his letter to · ... the county education department that · such a move would detract from a • .smooth 1enl!lral election. · 1< :AllhouJh the Irvine district probably ·. ·.-·1 be able to sell any bonds untD It be- • ··comes offtdal Jan; I, Im, lru•-hive ... 'illd Ibey want to hive the election In ' . :November when voter turn-out ii areat. , ., ~xoch Mid that then m 1 n y more . nqatlve votes also turn out but trustee -, jSbaron Slrcello anawered "Irvine ii dlf .. , .fereiit." : ·" Trult .. s also lea med Wednesday nl1bt · .,1hat the state la wtt11111 to loan the • dtotrlct f/5 ,000 out of a revolvln1 fund . · for 11<w unlfiea dlatrlcts. · f "' Irvine bid requaied •t25,000 oilt of the • ~ fll0,000, but KjlCh u ld the county just • •"folmd out there are eicllt other oucH new . •'lllltrlcta In tho allta In 1ddltlan to the :.NUde Teen Wife Choked ro Death; Suspect Hunted three ln this arta, Irvine, Saddleblck Valley and Tustin . Board chainntn Obar1e1 Boulanger asked Koch lo get the $75,00'.) 100n and the remaining $50,000 later U J>Ollible. In other actions, the bolrd apprnve.d four recommendations 6n kitchen uae to be. sent to the San Joaquin School District board. Sin JoaQuin has been p I a n n.i n c to remo•e all kitchen equipment from L'nJverlitf Park Elementary School tO make Rancho 5"n Joaquin Intermedllte School in Irvine a central hot Juncb kit chen. · 111! Irvine recommendatlont ti~ that ~ancbo be finished for mac\ bar IUVlce onlY. that a hot lunch prO(fam remain 11 El Toro Marine School in ,East Irvine; that the kitchen 1tay al. Unlvenlty Park and a portable . be. le~d for 1pe:clal educa\ion and that a aack lunch program be offered, to all Irvine studenlS. Trustees said they want to wait until l h e y hire a superintendent to decide what type of lunch prOsr•m to bav, . The next regular meeting of the board MU be Aug. 14 at Irvine Elementary School on Sand Canyon Avenue . From Page l RABIES ... viously people are not ufe ln tents or on the ground. I don't know about cam· pen," Dr. Hamilton sa.ld. Dependina upon the result! of the laboratory testJ <1n the brain of the dud fo11:, Dr. Hamllion .said "steps would be taken ." ·· Among those steps, the complete close down of the state park would have to be considered, he said. He said that attempts by the Park Rangers to keep people from sleeping on the ground were apparently not working. Attempts to trap the foxes in the park are not working, Dr. Hamilton aaJd. "The foxes •re pretty smart, 11 he observed. A number ol akuni:s have been captured in the traps, however. Dr. Hamilton aald that small wild animala "normally will bite only U pro- voked or if they are alck." Three persona were bitten by a for in mid.July aJso early in the morning as they lay sleeping on the ground ln the state park . An all.out hW1t for tbe creature was : ;Himldde lavt1U,.tGn today "91'e'\iro-not successful at that time. The last ·1.. · bing the strangulation murder of a recorded capture of a rabid fox ln Orange :··teenaaed Santa Ana wlfe found sprawled Co~ty was 1940, however. a~thoritie.s ~re ,, ·, 111 • worried due to the aggre;ss1ve behavior _ nude acro~s the ·bed when h~r 1~llanan sho\vn by the 'ltate park animals.· · husb&nd n furn ed hOINl.froln work 1bout , A 17·yev1'1d Coota Mesa youth bitten , .. nOon Wedneld•y. 1 \ ' 4 '• 1he last time appears to have proaressed · Tests were belng conducted to aatiSfactorily. Dr . Hamilton said. >·determine 1f Linda s. Smit 18 of 2919 N. H' .not~ that the youth had no adverse .. . ' ' reaction to the series treatment that lhe ,. !Jr~stol St., w11 ae1uaUy assaulttd before health department was aware of. · bemg killed. He said that the normal policy was to . ; . Her shaken husband, Eric R. Smit. 22, provide the rabies vaccine free and that ·,:was lnterrogated at length by police but it be administered by a family doctor. .:~parenUy was unable to abed any light . ·!>" the possible Identity of tbe victim'• .,11yer. "There are no IUIJ)ttta 11 of now," a . homicide detail spokesman said. , Detective Sgt. Ralpb Curlale told 4 • newsmen there were still no leads as of . :"'this morning. Coroner's deputies said Mrs. Smit was killed sometime between &:ts a.m. when her husband Went to work and 11:15 a.m. when he returned to find the body. · . , A Santa Ana Fire Department rescue squad was dispatched to the scene, but . efforts to revive the woman failed. 4, : Fire Capt. Doug Robertson said no ac· '-.. tual wounds could be seen on lhe victim'• body when he and his crew arrived. · . He did aay two bloodstains were on Mrs. Srnlt11 neck, but violent 1trangul1· tion usually tnvolvea some bleed.ins from nose, mouth or both, poilce said. Baseball Clinic Set For Irvine Youngsters A basebaU clinic, free to children enrolled in the Irvine summer recreation progrsm. will be held from l to l p.m. Aug .. 1 to 3 on the Unlverslly Park Elementary School pl1yground. Children age 7 to 12 will be given in- struction In hitting, field.Ins and base running . The city recreation department will aupply balls and bats, but each youth must bring his or her baseball glove, recreation coordinator Brian Clark said. No advance rea:istration is required. E'reaP .. el IRVI NE •.. .. lheH propouls you may f o r c 1 pl'tllllltuno lncorporollon ol cidOI to out IJ'tl." Lapnl Buch, repl'tlllltad by pta ... ~ Cllllllll#lon cba!rmall earl Jobnaon Jr. aouabt ind recelvad a compromllo •ireement on 1,100 ac:ru In tht upper Laguna Canyon 1re1. The LAFC ruled that all waterlihed areas draining Into ·Laguna Canyon should be reserved lot future annetation to that city. Irvine officials agreed to this stlpula· Uon and both cltles plan to present a precile boundary line of the area to the commission wlthin 35 days . LAFC staff reservations that the new city would not continue the agricultural preserve litatus covering all but about 2.000 acres of the annexation were resolved when Irvine officials firmly 1tated that thl!iy had no intention of llft· inf the reserve status on t b e lrvine C.Ompany lands in the merger. Liberto'• arguments for Santa Ana were based on the long dls:puted "promis- ed land" acreage south of the Marine Corp.s Helicopter Station. He said the at· torney generaJ had approved filing of a lawsuit aimed at disincorporaUon of the new city. James Erickson, city attorney of Irvine. · rl!iblltted this argument stating that the attorney general had only granted Santa Ana the right to maintain their case because they were nearing the 1tatute of limitations. "He gave them no right to sue," Erickson charged. Answering the Sad d l•e b a ck argument,, on the 1,&00 acres of in- dustrial property, Erickson said the present area of the city devoted to in· dustry. the Irvine Industrial Complex, was rapidly being depleted of un· developed land and the C1lmpar:iy was speeding developmtnt of the neew acreage. "By annexing the industrial acreage we are confonning . to the intent of the Knox·Ni1bet act. which created Local Agency Formation Commission," argued Erickson. "The act said annexation should include the good with the bad to ensure balance. "The good in this case is the industrial land, the bad the agricultural preserve acreage. It is a balanced annexatlon from an economic standpoint," Erickson stated. Irvine's approved annexation is dubbed the Fras.Jer Annexation because it In- cludes Lion Country Safari near the San Diego and Laguna freew;1ys . Frasier was the old lion which died recently at the game preserve. The sphere of influence 51.000 acres, marking the ultimate boundaries of Irvine, stretches through the heart of Orange CoWlty from the crest of the Lomas de Santiago Mountains on the north to the ridgeline of the San Joaquin Hilla between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach on the south. On. t/'e w"t the li11~ border~ 0,1nge, Tustin, Santi Ana, Newport Beach and Costa Me1ia. On the east the boundary extends along the Irvine Ranch border eut of El Toro, south along the Laguna Canyon Freeway to the Laguna lakes area, eannarked for a county regional park and then south along the hilltops to lhe San Joaquin ridge. From Pagel WEATHERS . • • Highway, today astonished San Juan residents. "It's just the most astonishing thing I've ever heard ," a business as90ciate commented. "Jim Wu.thers la just the nicest guy on two feet and it's very dif4 ficult to believl!J he could be involved in thi1 kind of incident." Weathers, who is the manager of Capistrano Hardware, 31921 Camino Capistrano. has lived in the C1lmmunlty for the past eight years. He was elected to the San Juan capistrano City council in April of this year. . Deputies said Mrs. We1thers told them that 1he and her husband recently separated and were no longer living together. Coroner's deputies at first 11ld postmortem examlnatlon failed to con· elusively show strangulation, but more minute studies conflrmed the cauu of death. FromP .. el • OUN•I C:OAIT IS DAILY PILOT TM Or.,,.. C...t OAIL ... f'ILOT. •1111 ""let! ft ctl..,lttlltld "'-H...,,...Pr-.., Is CNbll ..... b'I' "'• 0<'•"9• CO•tl Pv!lll1111nt Comoany, S..· refl 9dlllont •rl publlsMd, Mond•Y t!H'Out'l Ffldty. lot Colle Mhl , N-riorl ... ch, H1.11tllnt!en 8ffdl/Pout1l1 ln V1ll1y, llfu~1 1 9aech, l""IMISldlll1tbKll er.I S11' (IMleftlt/ lefl J11111 C111ltlrfn0. A 11111!1 r,9111111 edlli9n Is p;ibUtllld Slh.lnll'fl Ind Sund1~ ftll' lll'ki<IPll pulttllfllnf ,.i.111 II •I DI Wfll ltY 11,..1, toll• M.... Ctlilor11lt, flt». a11t.rt N. W1.d f'ruldtm W ltllDl!Jhtr J1clr: a. Curle-.. Vim '"'"""' ..... Gelltnl Mtfll09r Th•"'•• K•••fl .... , n."'.' A. M111tthi11• Mtlltllllf lfJMT Clit dei H. l•o• 1Jcli et4 ,, Nill Aulllflll Mff\11'"9 ffltwt Offk .. ~· MtiM: »t Witt ,,, ,,,.... N-..rt at.tell: »» Ntw,&rt loulWIN U.Wll eH(tl; 2n 1"11'ftl AYelWt Nullll!IPlft letdl: UUJ IMCll tw11¥trf IM ~: at Notfll .. Ctrn!M. ... Toi-11141 '42 .. 111 a .... Alwftll ... '41 .. 671 s.. a.-... ., ......... w Tt""°w OZMH ' ~. "11. °'""' CMtf ...,...,._,.. CMitM"'f. w. M-. ...... ""-'"'--..... , ,,_.....,. .,. -"""~" Mrtln -y .. ,......... .ltW -Ill ,.,. ....... ,, CllWl'llM ...... ....., c._,.....,. ..., • c;.,. ..,,., . ~. -.aw~ W aw• AM """"""' ., ~ U.lS .......... , .Jtll•l'Y ...,,,,.._ DM .....W. COASTLINE .•• Morelli, J>.i.ol Angeles ) today. If we're goin.& to have 1 fight, it '1 a a:ood idea lo start talkina: to the leadership early." The reason the bill will not get to the Assembly until November, Rohrbach said, is because of an impending rece1s of the Legislature. He said the Senate voled Wednesday to recess on Friday and reconvene in November ... But the Assem bly 'doesn't want to leave yet, so l Imagine there'll be a fight over that," Rohrbach said. "But even if they don't recess for a couple of w~ks, it ·s · not tlk:ely ibe blll wlll get through committee before the legislators leave ," he added. The bill sponsored by Carpenter, SB 860, sets up a state Coastal Resourcts Board to oversee coastal !One manage.. ment. The I~ members would be ap- pointed by the Governor, with senate conlinnaHon. Thert would be nine reprl!i!entativea of coastal counties and 111 public members. The board \Vould have final uy on management of lands from the thrff-" mile limit to no more thin thrfe mllu or leu than 1.000 y1rd1 lnJand. The bill sets a deadllne ol Dectmber 1976 for development of a 1t1te pl1n for the coa1tsl zone and II provldOI thlt In· tertm cootrol be maintained by use of u- lltlng local permit ordinances. llohrblch said today the,. ordinances already require environmental con· aiderttlO!ll and public belrfnaa before development can pl'OCftd, Tbt criteria for plannlnc coaatal developmenl art to be adopted no liter !h•n July 11171 alter public hearlnp In e1cb coa1t1! county, under the Clrpenter bill. Eighteen month.I alter that, local ageir cie1 would submit their coa1tal elements to the state board for approval and ln4 corporation into the state plan. Pending adoption of the planning criteria, Carpenter's bill states that loca l agencies can grant perrriits only if those developments do not reduce public beaches or recreation in the coastal zone and do not restrict or reduce beach ac· cess . In Its original torm . the bill ap- proprlsted '250.000 to inlttally fUnd the program, but Rohrbach said this port.Ion of the measure was dropped for the time being to facilita te the bill 's passage. Carpenter also haa Introduced a t1g-on bUI, SB 881, which would provide $200 million for long term support of the pro- gram , lncludin11: lsnd acquisition. Thal btll Is still in the Senate Finance Committee., and Mike Neal, Carpenter'• local representative. said It probobiy will rtmain there until the fate of SB 860 11 more claarly known. "If It looka like the coa1tllne bill 11 p . Ina to p In Ille Assembly, then Iha Sen• l4t will probably atart puahinJ ea.t. Otherwise tbere11 no real point In It, 11 be aaid. Mamie Gets Ch eckup WASHJJl'GTOJI' (APl -Fonner 1'lnt Lody Mamie Eisenhower Is In Welter lleecl Army Hoapital for what 1 1pokemwl dolcrtbed u "'her rqular periodic ob11ttV11ion." DAILY P ILOT lt1H Plltll r" Heat , Smog Pr edic wd For .Coun ty The Orange Coast will continue to en- joy temperatures ln the mld-70s P'rlday while inland areas suffer from heat and possible smog alerts, weather forecasters uid toda y. The National Wea ther Ser v i ce predicted a h1gh along the coast of 75 degrees , with ocean temperatures at 70 degrees. Ort!ngt County ~larbor Department of· ficials sa id the se a wou ld be choppy Fri· day with waves abou t two to three fee l. El Toro and t-.1isslon Viejo had tern· peratures in the 90s today. This was still far below an all·time July high of 1'l3 degrees in 1968. Hottest areas in Orange County today, according to the Orange County Forestry Service were Irvine Lake and Trabuco Canyon, where temperature s hit the 100 mark . LAGUNA BEACH GOT EXACTLY Wl'l AT IT WANTED Councllman-elect Carl Johnson Jr. at LAFC The t-~aviesl' smog counts of the year in the county were recorded \Vednesday "'hen ozo ne readings in La Habra re<1ch· ed .45 parts per million (ppm), An alert was called by the coun ty's Air Poll ution Control Distric t \APCD ). Irvine, Laguna Cordial The alert was the 10th in the county since June 12 v.·hen the APCD lowered its alert standard from .35 ppm 10 .20 ppm . After Hearing on Annex The health alert was called at I· 10 p.m. for an area inland of the San Diego Freeway north to Red Hill Avenue. The .45 reading was reached at 2: 15 p.m. The alert was cancelled at 4 p.m. \l.'hen counts dropped below .2f), ''Laguna Beach got exactly what it wanted and I think the city of Irvine got most of what it wanted, so we still have very cordial relations," said Laguna Councilman-elect Carl Johnson following the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) hearing on Irvine 's Frasier An· nexation Wednesday. Laguna had requested that Irvine pull back the boundaries of its proposed an- nexat.ion and sphere of influence to ex· elude all of the Laguna Canyon water· 11hed that drains into the Art Colony. A formal protest of the boundary pro· posed by Irvine was filed with the LAFC, althcugh officials of the new city had agreed earlier, after hearing Laguna 's arguments. to accede to the request, lop- ping 1,100 acres off the annexation. Johnson. who had formulated the Laguna cas e as chairman of the planning corrunission, prior to his election to the city council Tuesday, re pres e n t e d Laguna at the Wednesday hearing. He stated the Laguna position_ that boundaries should be drawn along the natural contours of the watershed, rather than along sectional or other artificial lines. , Irvine City Councilman Henry Quigley, appearing before a Lag>JRa council Irvine Plans Open House at New Office Irvine city staff are working out details of an open house to welcome the public Aug. 19 to view the new city offices and council chambers in Irvine Town Center. The Saturday event is expected to in· elude displays showing the various ac4 tivities of the citizen advisory com· mittees, council and planning commis- sion. meeting lo discuss the matter last week, had expressed fear that the time-con· auming process of re.surveying the area might exceed deadlines for approval of the annexation. However , at the Wednesday hearing, the LAFC wa s given assurans:e by both cities that they will work together to come up with a legal description of boun4 dar ies agreeable to both so the county planning body can take its final action within a 35-day time limit. "The LA~~c." sa id Johnson today, "a~ parently thought our request for boun· daries drawn along natural lines was reasonable in view of the recognized flood hazard to t.aguna Beach, and felt \A.'C should have control of development in this area ." The action of the LAJ!C excludes all the Laguna watershed from both the annexation and the official sphere of in· nucnce of the new city. "This could also have an influence on the El Toro Canyon area ." Johnson said today, "reinforcing the idea that boun· dary lines should be based on natural contours." • Cranston's Son Arrested Again LOS ANGELES (AP) -Robin Cranston, son of Sen. Alan Cranston. (0- Calif.) has been arrested again. Police said Cranston, 24, wa1 involved in an auto accident Wednesday. Officers arriving on the scene made a telephone check and found that Cranston had f8iled to appear ifter being cited on separate occasions for speeding, driving without a license and having 1n unregistered vehi· cle, a police spokesman said. He was freed on $190.50 bail. Anaheim recorded a high count of .2%. Resident s are advised to litop smoking. stay inside and avoid strenuous activity when an alert is called. La Habra and Anaheim had tem- peratures in the 90s when the alert took place. fajr y,•eather for all of Southern California is predicted through Monday, with a little morning cloudiness along the . ' coas~ and mountain areas. Desert hot spats Wednesday were Palm Springs and Indio, both recording highs of 113 degrees. Riverside had its 29th smog alert of the year with a .4fi ozone reading and a 104 degree temperatu re. Sur ge on Says Pi tc hing Hurts EUGENE, Ore. (U P!) -An orthopedic surgeon i& suggesting the elimination of the position of pitcher In Little League baseball. "No kid of mine would ever pitch Little League baseball ," Dr. Joseph D. Godfrey, chief of orthopedic surgery at Buffalo's Children's Hospital, said Wednesday. "The possibilities of sustaining permanent elbow restrictions of mvtlon or an abnormal area at the elbow may definitely stem from throwing overhand at an early age." he said. Godfrey said he would rccom· mend methods such as a pitching machine , a tee as ln golf, or a toss· up mechanism be used to set up the ball to hit in both practice sessions and games. soj a bed sale! npw • · .queen size $299. • • .. I ' ' . .dual s~ze • i " $249. . ' . • These 1 very comfortable sole beds .. ' ·.for sittin~ ~nd sleeping. • A widt selection of fabrics end c:qlors to choo,11 from. • Reversible bac ks and s11t cushions. I r,~M, H.J.GAR~ETf fU.RNrflJRE c££ PROFESSIONAL INTERI OR DESIGNERS Op•" Men., Tllun, I Fri, Evtl. 221 5 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. \ • • ( Ouniington · Bea~h . Founiain Valley • Today's Fbud N.Y. Stoeks voi:. ~s. NO. 209, • SECTIONS, +4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 27, '1972 TEN CENTS Huntington Scl1ool Hopefuls Criticize Boar~ Four candidates running for the Hun- tingtoo Beach City (elementary) School District Board spoke their minds Wednesday night, criticizing present board policies and urg4tg their own solu· tions to problems faced by tbe district. 11Ml top issues that emerged were parent"volunteer aides rn the classroom, evaJuatlon of teacher performance, and -as the candidates saw it -the present poor atate of communication between board, public, aod teacbera. The 90-minute, sometimes heated meeting was sponsored by the Hun· tington Beach League of Women Voters. Tbe candidates are running in the Aug. 1 special election to fill the seat of resigned trustee Ivan Llciett. About 25 spectators . attended Wednesday night's meeting. The four candidates are: K Dale Bush, 39, an attorney ; Eduardo Da Sliva, 45, an accountant; Roger Garceau, 33, a teacher; and Lewis Kidder, 51, a businessman and Conner teacher. Here ii a summary of what each can- didate saJd in his opening statement. Kidder said (:OmmuniCaUons between the board, teachers, p u b I i c , ad- ministration, and non-teaching Workers are "rather strained. This ls the · responsibility of the board, because they're in control." He also called for more use of federal funds, strong local Dril.11.\" PILOT stMf ,.... HUNTINGTON BEACH POLICE OPEN BICYCLE SAFETiY CENTER AT DEPARTMiNT PISTOL RANGE S1f1ty Coordin1tor1 Ellen Covey Ivor Gltsh1m HHding Up Ambitious Pn>gr1m Safety on Bikes Stressed Hunti1igto11, Police Open 2-Wheel Education Cent.er The Huntington Beach Police Depart· ment is doing more than spinning its wheels about bicycle safety. The department has opened a bicycle safety center at the police pistol range in order to educate the public about the in- creasing need for proper handling of blkes. · . Opened on July 19, the bicycle safety Center is staffed by two bicycle safety coordinators who are launchlng an am~ bltioi.Js program through the cooperation Of the elementary school and other civic m\ianlzations. '"We want to educate people of an ages, not jllSt lbe kids," says Ivor Gitsbam, who heads the program. '1We notice so many adults riding bikes now for ec:lilogica.J and fitneu purposes." j;ltsbam and h~ partner, Ellen Covey, feel that bicycle safety is a m~t in a city where the number of bicyclists is very l\igh. In a survey conducted by the department's explorer Organization, of 1 000 residences in the city 1 it was d1ilcovered that there was one bike for every lwo people. Although their evenf,iat aim is to reach adults as well as youngsters, Gitsham and Covey will be ! concentrating their efforts in the schools. They have already set up a program in conjunction with the Automobile Club to reach all of the city's elementary schools with a safety inspection known as Bicycle Lane. • Bicycle µne is a portable bicycle in- spection trailer., owned by t h e Automobile Club, which has equipment for checking bicycle speedometers, wheel and frame alignment and brakes. "The Automobile Club is very inter· ested in stemming the number of bicy- cle accidents," says Gltsham. "They went out of tbelr way to contact us when they heard -we were setting up a pro- gram." A bicycle safety coloring book has al.jO been designed by Miss Covey, a former journalism student at Cal S t at e FuUerton. ~ The book hU easy to follow cartoons for the very young ljicyC!ers and rby:mes above the pictures fof the older yOWlgSte(S. . The safety learn will be distributing the coloring books and other literature on bicycle safety to youngsters in all of the elementary schools. A massive licensing program will also be a goal of the bicycle safety program. . "A bicycle license is intporti.nt means of identification if a youngster is-.burt in an acrident or if the. bike is found by :M.Jr department alter being stOien," said Gltsham. They hope to have to schools encourage their students to register their bikes and will insist that any youngster who bas a citation purchase a $1 license before be can clear the violation. "We hope that we can cut lbe number of bicycle accidents (62 in the first six morltbs o! this year) by getting to the kids and encouraging poi:ents to spend some time going over bicycle• safety with them," says Gillham. control, and "a chance for the public to expreu itsell'" S[leflldng second, Garcea• said hiJ top priority would be to '4see to the in- dividual needs of studenu" by ·~eacblng concepts for mastery, not for exposure." He also called" for adequate funding or education, Involvement of all levels of the district including lbe public In budget planning, and a comprehensive drug abuse program. Da SUva, the next speaker, criticized lack of communications, but added, "you can't cure it forcibly." He said teacher evaluations, an informed. public, and 90lld planning are "basic elements miss- ing In this district." Bu.sh, the last speaker, said he is run- ning "because I feel each citizen owes something to his corrimunity to keep our American way of Democracy working." Prefacing his remarks by saying that he was "basically satlsr!ed" with the di.strict, he said he would explore im- . provements in the areas or cost redu& lion. better co1nmunica tions, teaching:af basic reading and math skills, and more L>quitable distribution of the cost bf education. Most of the meeting \Yas taken up wilh 11 question-and-.answcr exchange between the audience and candidates. Da Silva and Garceau dominated much of this part of the meeting . Here is a summary of what candidates (See CANDIDATES, Page 11 Battle Plan Readv ~ Guards Set for Trouble By JOHN ZALLER Of 11111 Diii))' Pllet ..... Huntington Beacb lifeguards have drafted a "battle plan" for future beacbfront confrontations with surfers and they are alao considering severe restrictions of surfing rlchts unlesa surfer militancy declines, according to Vincent G. Moorhouse, director of the department ol harbors and beaches. "Each year surfers are more militant when we try to enforce surfing regula- ttoos," Moorhouse said this morning. "But as long as the regulations uist, we're eolng to take whatever steps are necessary to enforce them." He said that unless tensions with surfers ease, surfers mJgbt be restricted from all but LS miles of city beach dur- ing summer months. "This is the last thing I want to do because 90 percent of surfers are very courteous and law abiding." Moorhouse said. "But whenever our people try to clear the water, they take a lot or abuse. We've been having confrontations down there all summer. The one two weeks ago was only the most evident." Under current regulalions, surfers are (See BATTLE, Page%) CategoricaUJ Denied :" ~lunQ;tist Says Eagleton . Was ,()runken Driver W ASlllNGTON (AP) C.lumnlJI Jack Anderson aaid today he bad traced records showing that Sen; Thomas Eagleton bid been arrested by Missouri police on dnmken driving' charges. Eagletoo's office here denied·the allega- tion. An aide to the Democratic vice presidentiill nominee, who is campaigning In.Hawaii, said Eagleton lelepboned from Hooolulu to order a denial stalement and then ordered the statement rewritten to make it tougher. "He wants a categorical, absolute and complete denial of this malicious story," the aide said. The senator was expected to read such a denlal at an upcoming news conference in Honolulu. A ipokesman for Sen. G e o r g e McGovern, the presidenUal nominee , sajd he had no information on the charges. Eagleton, who is in Hawaii, could not be reached immediately tor comment, but spokesmen for presidential nominee George S. McGovern said they bad no in· fonnation on the report. Anderson made his c h a r g e s dur- ing his daily program on the Mutual Broadcasting System. The syndicated columniJll and broad- caster said be talked to • Missouri of- ficial who claimed to have seen (See EAGLETON, Pare %) Trade Deficit Climbs While Economy Booms WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The nation's trade deficit for the first half of the year soared to a record 13.3 billion with oo signs of improvement apparent, the covemment said today. The Commerce Deparunent said the 1ix-inonlh figure resulted a!ler another sizable deficit in international commerce in June, with the value of imports ex· ceedlng merchandise exported by !590.3 million: Thil was worae than the May deficit of $552.4 million and It represented the ninth consecutive month in which the country has turned in a red-ink flgwe in trade. Domeatically, the economic news Is better. The department reported lbat its composite index ol leading buslnesa In· dicators rose o.s percent In Jwie on top of a large upward-revised increase of'l.4 percent In May. , The leading indlcato!I indez, while not the most reliable of government economic barometen, is supposed to· pre.sage broad economic movements. Dwine the economic recovery, the index bas gode strongly upward. Dlll. \" PILOT Sl1ll Pllo" WARNS SURFERS Beech Chief Moorhouse Reds Turn Dou11i 'Vrge1it' Appeal For Cease-fire PARIS (AP J -North Vietnam re- jected today a renewed urg~nt Amer~an appeal for an immediate cease-fire in Vietnam. Hanoi's chief negotiator told the 152nd session or the Vietnam peace confefenCe that a cease-fire can take place "after agreement on all the military and pali\jcal questions .'' Xuan Thuy scoffed al President Nix· on's May 8 plan, which included a call for a cease-fire, saying it contains !.nothing new and constn1ctiYe. ·• (South Viet- namese troops have now been pulled ou t of the Citadel in Quang Tri, see Story. Page 4). U.S. Ambassador Will iam J . Porter bad urged acceptance of the cease-fire. saying: "There seems to be no moi:e compelling task for us than Ulat of e~ ding_ the tilling and doing so as soon as we can. Cease-fire is 'the key.11 - Porter said an end to the shooting would enhance the prospects for political negotiation. -: Another interesting fact was that out of the 11821 bikes rowid in the surveyed homes 53S of them were ridden to school by youilgsters. But only 243 were licensed with lbe police department. Coast Bill Clears Senate The Nixoo Administration has said it believes June coald be the last month of the Jong deterioration In trade figures wbich be(an last year. The nation bid its fll'lt trade deficit In this century In 1971 of $1 billion.' • Countv Cancels • 2nd Park Phase A $111,699 contract for phase two con- structlon at Mlle Square Regional Park ' In Fountain Valley bas been canceled by the Oringe County Board of Superviaora. The Harbors, Beaches and Parks Dlotrict requested cancellallon ol the eo11trlcl 1warded to Goodman and Pelo- quin Inc. of La Habra because of ·-llal amblgulty in lhe contract docUmlntl. II I Coaaty c.unael Adrian Kuyper said the wo11.-bid agreed lo the can- cellallon. New bids will be llOUihl ooon, county oftlcW1 Aid. The phase lwo pn>ject ln-c:Ndeo piallc facllllleJ, playlJ'Oll!l(ls ind ...UlaN. Tile ....,. project will be added lo the ..,,. tbu Ull ocm of the county ~ port now completed. j By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ,... o.1r, Pll•t 11•11 The outcome of the November general election will apparen!!y detenpine the fate of the coastline preservation bill authored by stale Sen. Dennis Carpenter (ll-ftewport Beach). Carpenter's bill, designed to give local government a say in the development of coa>tal lands, cleared the .Senate Wednesday night on a 23-16 vote. The bill now moves Into lbe Assembly Land Use and Planning Committee, chaired by Assemblyman Paul Priolo (1\- Loo AngeleJ). - Carpenter's administrallon assistant, Richard Rohrbacb, llld today the bill Will not )>e beard In the Aasembly UD!ll November. But there II -"tr, much tougher. ~lat ~I beaded !or the November bellot called the Coastline Initiative. It WoUld &Jve llronl powers to the state bolrds. ~ Rohrbach acknowledged lbal passa1e of the Initiative would automatically kill Carpenter's bill. · "We are actually very pleased with the timing of th1s," Rohrbach said. ••r tbJnt this gives people the Indication tbat there ls an alternative to the iniUaUve. There is !Oll1ething going tbroucb t he Legislature.'' Capitol -..ven have 11ld thal Carpenter'• bill Ja 1111 Dlrdy lo clear the Assembly ill1lte mot tltet II ii lli1l alive alter November. 11Jt will have a tough time.'' Rohrbach conceded. "The Democrala are In lull control over tblre (In lbe Asletnbly). Senator Carpnler la 'llteet!Jll with Moretti (~y 8'oDer Rober! Moretti, J>.IAt Angeles) today. u we're going to ltlve a fl&ht , It'• 1 good idea to 1tart talk!Jll lo the ludfnltip early." , The reason lbe bU! will not get lo the Assembly until Novmtber, Rohrbach ,.Id, ii beca111e ol an ilnpendin& no:m nf tbe Leglalature. He Aid the Senate voted Wednesday to recess on Friday and reconvene in November. "But the Assembly doesn't want to leave yet, ao I imagine there'll be a llghl over that," Robrblch said. "But even if they don't ....,... for a couple of weeu, It's not llUly the bill will get through committee befo,.. lbe Jegixlaton leave," Ito IClcW. The bill ....... bJ Cllrpeoter, SB llO, aeta up a state CGoalal ~ ,Board to .-coastal -manag• menl Tbo IS ~ -id be ap- pointeol by the Goferoot, with ..,,. .. conllnnatloo. ,,_ would 'be nine ,..,,_itatlves ot coutal -ilea and "" public membera, · The boud would have llnal 111 on .manaputtnt ol .... -tlte tltree- mil• IJmit to DO Dae titan -mJlel or less lltu l,OIJO yam Inland. The bill -.......... ol 1lecember (letC0~ ..... 11 A trade deficit represenll a losa of compe6tlveness by U.S. Industry as well H a potential loss ol jobs. The administration II depending on a tum around In trade Qgure.s to correct Its long-time balance-of-payments dellclL Last December'• devaluallon of the dollar should' begln having an Impact oo the trade figures later this year, ad· mlnlatraUon econo.nilc officials · have said. Devlluatlon aerved to make lm· portJ more expellllH ~ U.S. e"""1s cheaper In otber'CQU\1lrles, but olllcills say ll will take Ume. for this economic fact lo tum the defidt around. , /\J for the domestic econotll!'. Alst. Se\ttlary ol Commeroe Hmild C. P•- aald the rile In leading Indicators "ls continuing to slgna.I attonc economic es· panolon·ln the months abeaf• or the el&ht lndlcaton available tn the Index tor June, four were favorable, three 111trt unf1vorable, and one was uucbaqed. There are four other in- dicaton lor wblcb flcures will be reJeat. ed Illar. I We•t•er Continued hot weather is on the agenda for Friday, with highs In the 90 Inland. Beach temperatures will remain around 75 along the Orange Coast. Lows 5.1-15. INSmE TOD!\'\' Nol too long OQO, bo<kpack• ing m10 tlle nattdn~, 10U;dtrne~,: .,,.. .,.. I•ft"1o t11<· 11on1v. breed o/ ouldoormen. BUI i~. • the laat few r••ra, lhc wilder' ntu lloa been lnvndotcd IDilh : hik1ra. sior, Pog< 14. :. ~ •, % DAJLV PILOT H . Shopping Cente1· Site Of Manhunt . . .. , . • !•. By ARTBUll It. VINSEL Of .. ~"' ..... tt•ff StiOtiun-armed offlcer1 aealed orf ~ Coast Plaza early today ln an naj>l>Y·lnch manhunt, following the cap- ui'e .. of one SUJpect spotted sprinting from a window 1maahed burglary scene. 1n\'estigator1 said a second man seen ~ the store by Oflicer Owen Kreza ~Uy acaped, abandoning a car lOlltainJng aeveral thousand dollars• fQl'\h of stolen clothing. '?Jewport Beach and Huntington Beach k!~tivu were jolnlng1 the investigation ~ay:, tbeoridng It could involve a team t ' .highJy.1uccessful window 1 m a 1 h ilfM"llll'I recently active in the Harbor ltoa, ··SeVeral Costa Mesa officers prowled brouJb Sears, Roebuck and C.Ompany llJ\ini predawn hoora, but failed to find llll'ilhe hiding. They were assisted by Hunting~n U.eh Patrolman Len Damerow and bis rier UUJ, a Gennan shepherd dog, •Ro~failed to pick up any trail. Watch Commander Lt. Mike Healey 11.id',most uniformed officers returned to iatrol duty alter Ille initial search, bu t ~-Jtood guard at the scene with detec· fvQ "Wayne Harber and George Wilson. ·om.,.,,: Kreza, who captured Ille Jone tlsPect. was di1patched at 4: 39 a.m. .kn a allent burglar alarm was trig• ri(tid at the store. harold L. Britton, 22, of 1439 S. MiMie 'h.. Santa Ana, wu caught outside in the lllJ!.parklng Jot, according to police. .Jd111Ufied as a coo« at Anaheim stadium, Britton was booked on suspicion ~-buraJary. p,tectives are now attempting to ~ne 1f he and whoever else waa in Ibo atore could be linked to a 1tring' of tida.hiWnd·run break-Ins. ~One Corona del Mar women's wear i>P wu hit twice recently, two weeks to lbO minute apart, wltll a $5,000 Joss once IDd ia,ooo In cooda taken the second :IJne.• A limllar incident occurffi! at a ladie.s' tlothini llJOp on Balboa illand. Hunttncton Beach police also have had at leut one identical window-smash burJlary at Huntington Center. The method in IDOlt cases ls to burl a inllk botUe crate through the glass, match c1Qjhln1 !roll\ rackl aJ!d nee. btlng bloCb away within moments. ~uatic Club ,, .. • ' t ' fb Raise ' Funds Vuring Workout .. ·· . Jack and Shirley Babashoff of Fountain VJ11ley are among 17 members of the Hµ(itington Beach AquaUc Club who will 1ta&e a fund-raising workout tonight at t.Iie-Sheraton Beach IM in Huntington Beach to raise money for a trip to Gfdeago. ~ 17 members of the swim club have o'ii qualified for the U.S. Olympic team lli~i!' at Portage Parlt, lll. August 2.f. ,.The team members will stage a workout from 7 to I o'clock and will then ...;..er qul!lltom and algn autographs at tdnclusion of the seuion. . ·"'they leave Saturday at 4 p.m. on a charter flight to Chicago for the Olympic 1r1&Js. ~·1ieading the contingent Is Garden (!rQ.ve's Gary Hall, the Indiana Universi- ty 'ttar who Is regarded as a solid gold medal ca ndidate at the Munich Games. :other members of the team indudt! Steve and Chip Furniss, Bill Wild, Bill Miller. Hess Yntema, Kevin WU!Jams. Peter SpurU!n and Kevin Bodily. Girls quallned for the trials along with Shirley include Peggy Tosdal. Suzy Whitaker, Valerie Lee. Andrea Kalisch. Terri Clarke and Stacey Pletz. The clu b is seeking to raise $5,000 for trav~ expenses to the trials In Illinois. OltAN61 COAST M& DAILY PILOT 1"fl' Ol"ll'!Of C0111t DA.IL'/' '1L0T wlifi wflldl It cOl'ftbtfttd tllt NIWl·Prtu, It publlllled by tM Or•..-coa11 Put1r11h1ntl CCllflpf11y, 3•1M· nll fdltlona •rt Pllblltllfd, Monday l"•owh ~ ..... .,., fOr Colle M... Newriort ftue", Hunllrllllorl 81edl/Ftw1hln V1ll1y, LtOllM IMdt, INIM/$1ddlt1Mdc Ind 31n Clemtnlt/ SM JUM C•pfllr•no. A .1,.11 rw'-1 .nrtlln It PlolblllMd s.tur11rn 11111 Sund,.,.. Tiii ptlnc:JMI .-1W1!11t •llnl II •I U1 Wed .. y ill'MI, Clt!I #MMI, C..litornl1, t2'U. •• ~,,. N. WeN '1nldtnl 11'1111 ""*11.tllr J1clr: •• c .. ri • .., Vkl fl'rtsldWll end C-r11 Mlt'Ml~er 1li1m11 K11•il """' ilio"''' A. Murphi110 M.lnqlnl ldltor ct.,,,_ H. L.01 R!c~1ul P'. Nill Aulll111t AUfltl""9 Edltw1 Terry Co,Jlle '#1111 Of"lllttl C-!y Editor H..,..,,...._.Offk e 17175 l•••h kule.-.,d M.U lftt A44r••n r.O. lea 7tO, t2•41 --lAOUl'll le.cit• 221 ,...., """""' C..le MIN: Ja ~ .. y 11,_.I ~••di: #II HtwMri lou!1Y111'W ... C~ -Nltfh fl Ct,,.IM ft .. T...,t11t 1n4J '41 ... JJ1 --~ 641-1171 ,-,_ _. °""fl c.itr CIMMMltlll -llll '-""""· ma. a...,.. c .. 1 ~1111111r1e ~. "' ..... 1fllfltl, . ftMff•t ..... ...... ,,..,... ., """"'ltlfPltfl'• ""91ft _., ......... wl""Wt ... 111 ... ...... ., _,,.,.. ..... ,_.. ~ _... •N ot c..f1 Hu.. COOfilr"lllf&. .....,..... ... Cl""" lfM -*"' ... NI D.11 lt'lllldll)'I fl'ltl...,, ..,...._ ... .....-i I • Expects to Run Pediatrician Benjamin Spock said today he expects the People's Party convention to retain him as its candidate for President rather than to support Democrat George McGovern. In his St. Louis hotel, be said telling his party's message was "incomparably more difficult" be- cause of the McGovern candidacy. From Page 1 COASTLINE. •• 1976 for development of a state plan for the coastal zone and· it provides that in· terim control be maintained by use of e1- isting local permit ordinances. Rohrbach sai d today these ordinances already requi re environmental coo· sidera.tions and public hearings before development caa proceed. · The criteria for planning coastal development are to be adopted no later than July 1974 after public hearings in e~ coastal county, under Ute Carpenter bilf. I ' M ' • Eighteen months after that, local agen· cies would submit their coastal elements to the state poard for approval and in- corporation iQtp the state plan. Pendil!ll. adoptlOfl of the .. plaqni/lg crite~~~· "Carpenter's bill states that local .agenC1es can grant permits only if those <feVe1opments 1 do not reduce public beaches or recreation in the coastal zone and do not restrict or reduce beach ac- cess . In its otigina1 form , the bill ap- propriated $250,000 to initially fund the program, but Rohrbach said this portion of the measure was dropped for the time being to facilitate the bill's pa.s·sage. ·Carpenter also has introduced a tag-on bill. SB 861, which would provide $200 million for iong term support of the •pro. gram , including land acquisition. That bill is still in the Senate Finance Committee, and Mike Neal, Carpenter's local representative. said It probably will remain there until the fate of SB 860 is more clearly known. "If it looks li ke the coa stline bill ls go. ing to go in the Assembly, then the Sena· tor will probably start pushing . 681. Otherwise there's no real poi nt in it," he said. Nurse Training Gets Big Boost From Foundation A $244,357 grant from Ille W. K. Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., to the Orange County Consortium for Nursing Education was announced to. day . It will provide for coordinated nurse training in Orange County. The consort~um involves nuning pro- grams at Cal State Fullerton, UC t~inf: and Fullerton. Santa Ana and Golden West community colleges. The grant specifically will provide up- per Jevel coU~e cour~s 1 at cal State leading '!G the bachelor's degree. The courSes Will begin itt the tau of 1974. Dr. Robert C. Combs. associate dean of the UCI-Calilo rn ia Qillege of Medicine said the consortium allows n u r s I n g students to begin studies in the two.year colleges and Lransfer without loss of credit to the four-year degree program. UCI's role in the prog ram is to provide graduate level nursing courses. The UCI master plan calls for a gradaate level nursing program in 1976 -timed to coin· cide with the opening of a 350-bed teaching hospital on the UCI campus. That $3S million hospital awaits legislature approval this year of nearly fl mllUon of planning money. The Kellogg grant provides for 10,000 square feet of space at Cal State. 11te space includes classrooms, offices and laboratories for the instructional pro. gram. The consortium also involves 22 Orange and Los Angeles County hospitals which provide clinical experience to nursing student!. From Pqe 1 CANDIDATES • • said oo key issues: EVALUATION OF TEACHERS: Da Silva said there is a law requiring teacher eva1uations and "we're going to evaluate them ." He added that there are some teachers in the district ''who shouldn't be teachers, or U they are, they should be sent back to school to be retrained. Garceau responded thal 8l!hough there are problems, "We have a tremen- dous staff in this district." Llller he ad- ded, "I don't know what a bad teacher is, just like J don 't know what a bad human being is." He safd, while he fivored teacher evaluiitions, otficlals mt.isl be sure that they are fair and "positive." Kidder said lle favors teacher evaluations, but didn't elaborate. Bush didn't comme11t oO th is Issue. PARENT VOLUNTEERS: &sh 83ld he favors the idea, ·but added "the teacher must be. the boss in th~ classroom." He also said someone should have the power ''to get rid'' of a volunteer who didn't work out. said that communications could be Im- proved, adding "Let's not forget that the top priority must always be the educa· lion of our children.'' He also said that he had only been to one school board meeting since be filed candidacy because "In my experience issues are DOt decided at public meetings anyway." Garceau said he found attending board meetings very fru strating. "There is no communication between board members. It's like a morgue." Kidder agreed, saying he remembtred 15 yea rs go when everything was out in the Open . He. said reading newspaper ac- counts of meetings he ltad attended "made me 11.'onder if it was the same me<:ting. Things are pa55ed so quickly you don't know what they are ... Da Sliva said present board meettngs are "a closed shop." He said that every import'ant issue should be opened up for noor discussion that includes membe.rl of the audience. Boy on Tricycle Struck by Auto ' Garceau suggested use of 111 screen· ing board to insure that volunteers are suited lo classroom work. In his ex- perienet as a teacher, he said, most aid~ did work out and Y.'ere very helpful because they freed him from drudgery in order It'> devote his eriergy to teaching. A four·year-ol~ t()t. 11 in satl11f1ctory Kidder said ''we despcr~tely need condition today after he ru struck bY o parent voluntecn.'1 He aJso said , "there ear and lnjured Wedneaday night while are some in the district now who say, ·riding his trlcycl• on Brookhunt Street 'don't make waves, don't get parents in· at 'Continental Dr1ve In Hunllnlton volved.' t say, 'Let's mU:e waves.' " Beach. Da Sliva said "the old idea w" !hat Donald L. Cooper. of 9941 Cornwell women could only help out schools with Drive, Hunt!~ Beech, wos atruct ol hake ules and this kind of thing. J thlnV 1:!0 p.m. by a cir dri•en by Ronold 'If. most or you •re more Intelligent th•• Hall or Westmlnsllr wben he wheeled bis that, and we need you in I.he classroom.'' tricycle into southbound Brookhunt ~· said PTO groups In the district, or• Stroet traffic, accordln& lo police. ool verir succtsstul becaUS< tlley can't The boy:& mother, Mrs. Kam Cooper, get ptst principals to put parents In !lit ·'Ill~ tho to1 wu IWPOOlll to-ill'fl ,... to , dlllroo<D. • put his ttlcycla iii\· !lit prace minutes Birrl'ER CO~tMUNlCATIONS: Bu1b bolore he wu bit 1 few blocks ow1y. ' • • McGovern Stays Heat, Smog Predicwd • With Eagleton For County CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -The chief apokesman for Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern said today there was "concern" in the senator 's 1taff over Thomas Eagleton's medical hlstory but McGovern remains firmly behind his running mate. Richard Dougherty. McGovern's press secretl.ry, met with newsmen after McGovern canceled a press conference. He said that McGovern "felt it 11•ould be pointless" to hold the conference because McGovern felt "he had nothing further to add ." The meeting with new~men was announced Wedne!day. McGovern Wednesday had said in a brief statement "I'm 1,000 percent for Tom Eagleton and I have no int.entioh of dropping him from the ticket." Dougherty said that McGovern had not talked with Eagleton since the "11ssourl senator left here Tue3day for a campa ign trip to Los Angeles, Hawaii, San Fran· cisco and Jefferson City, Mo. Asked what was the general reaction among the staff on the Eagleton disclosure and possible politicaJ impact. Dougherty said "one of concern.'' Asked the precise nature of the concern, Dooghe.rty said only, "I think that's ob- vious." McGovern 's statement Wednesday echoed his endorsement of Eagleton voic- ed Tueoday after McGovern first learned the details of hll running mate's medical From Pqe 1 BATTLE ..• banned from most city beaches from 11 a.m. to S p.m. during summer months. In addition, lifeguards may restrict surfing beyond those hours U the water is crowd· ed with swimmers. Moorhouse 11id the biggest problem i.s trying to get surfers out ol the water at 11 a.m. uTbey push and push and push. There. are some who never take the first warning and who always give out abuse.'' In the confrontation two weeks ago, JUeguards told surfers they could not surf until 8 p.m. because of extremely crowd4 ed conditlona. However, according to Moorhouse, many surfers went into the water anyway. Before po Ii c e and llfeguarfb restored order, they made 14 arrests and .,ere pelted for about 20 minutes with sand and mud from a large crowd. "Next time we'll 'be better prepared." Moorhouse said. •1We Won1r go in there with. just one or twn men.' We want to be efficient and effective in enforcing the law." Noting that there have been two death3 In recent years caused when surfboards struck swimmers, Moorhouse said that "It just isn't safe to allow surfing when the water is full of swimmers. "Surfers don't realize this. They think they have 6ome right or something. But ~Y don't if it conflict!i with someone else's well-being." Lamenting the attitude of surfers , Moorhouse added, "it used to be that lifeguards were good guys. Now they're called beach pigs. I don't know what we can do except poMibly eliminate tbe con- tact by restricting the surfers during the aummer months to just one section of beach where they can always surf." history, which Includes visits. to the hospital in 1960, 1964 and 1966 for nervoua e.r:haustian and faUgue. Eagleton had been under the l(eattrfent of a psychiatrist, and on two Q( lhe oc- casions received electric &hock treat- menl3. ~1cGovern said he was repeating his endorsement of Eagleton 1'to as9re no misunderstanding on m,)' par:t..11• , But es McGovern was composi~ his statement from hls v'acatton cabm at Sylvan Lake near here Wednesday, many of his supporters were voicing corieern about the possible threat to a Democratic victory created by Eagleton staying ,,on as the vice presidential i:andidate. e In Washington, a statement Issued by the 11-fissOur.i senator'• office said more than SS telephone calls from around the country had expressed support ' for Eagleton, while only eight expressed disp leasure or suggested he withdraw as McGovern's ruMing mate. Eagleton hlmse.lf sajd in Honolulu on Wednesday: "If my visceral feeling is that my candidacy is untenable I won't wait for George McGovern. I'll get off myself." That was just what the 42-year-old Missouri senator was encouraged to da by Queens County, New York , Democratic Chairman Matthew Troy, an early McGovern backer . In a telegram to Eagleton Wednesday, Troy uld: ". . • there ls a serious possibility that your pre3ence on the ticket could mean the difference between victory 11nd defeat." Troy ·asked Eagleton to 11voluntarlly resign your nomination and permit our party to put this issue to rest so that the election may be decided on whether Sen. McGovern would make a better can- didate and not on whether you are qualified and capable to serve as vice president." FromPqel EAGLETON. •• photosta ts of at least six police arrest forms. He said the photostats w e r e shown the official by a Missouri state trooper. A check of police rtcord! in Missouri by the Associated Prtss found four recorded traffic violations by Eagleton. 'Ibe earliest went back to when ~gleton was 18 years old and none involved drunken dri~lntl •. No trai:e of tbe Ander- son documents could be found. A spokesman for Anderson said later the source coUld not be identified but was "a high oUicial in Missouri." The Anderson Sf>Okesman said the of· ficial "has confirmed to us that a Missouri policeman delivered to him some photostal3 of arrest records on Eagleton involving charges ranging from drunken driving and reckless driving down to speeding." Anderson sai d the official recalled that at least two of the arrests were for drunken driving and all dated back into Ille 19605. The Anderson aide said the columnist did not have the photostats and bad not seen them. He also said it was not cer- tain whether the unnamed Missouri of· ficial still had the records . . . The Orana:e ca.a.st. wlll continue to en- joy temperature.I ln the mld-70s Friday while inland areis suffer from heat and possible sfi:i(lg lerts, weather forecasters said todll)I. The NaUonal Weather Ser v Ic e predicted a h1l!h along Ille coast of 75 degrees, with ocean temperatures at 70 degrees. ·' Or:mge Cou.oty Harbor Department of· ficials said \be HI would be chopey Fri· day with waves about two to three feet. El Toro and Mission Viejo had tem- peratures )If the 90s today. This was still far below ltn all -time July high of 103 degrees in 1968. Hottest areas in Orange County today . according to the Orange County Foreslry Service were Irvine Lake and Trabuco Canyon, where temperatures hit the 100 mark. The l<'!aviest smog counts of the. year in the county were recorded Wednesda y when owne readings In La Habra reach· ed .45 parts per million (ppm). An alert was called by the county's Air Pollution Contro l District (APCD). The alert was the 10th in the county 'since June 12 when the APCD lowered its alert standard from .35 ppm to .20 ppm. The health alert was called at 1: 10 p.m. for an area inlaod of the San Diego Freeway north to Red Hill Avenue. The .~reading was reached at 2: 15 p.m. The alert was cancelled at 4 p.m. when counts dropped below .20. Anaheim recorded a high count of .22. Resident! are advised to stop smoking, stay jnside and avoid strenuous activity when an alert is called. La Habra and Anaheim had tem· peratures in the 90s when the alert took place. Fair weather for all of Southern California Is predicted through Monday, wiUt a little morning cloudiness along the coast and mountain areas. Desert hot sPots Wednesday were Palm Springs and Indio, both recorclin&: highs of 113 degree5. Riverside had its 29th smog alert (If the year with a .46 ozone reading and a 104 degree temperature. Surgeon Says Pitching Hurts EUG E)'IE, Ore. (UPI) -An orthopedic surgeon is suggesting the elimination of the position of pitcher In Little League baseball. "No kid of mine would ever pitch Little League baseball." Dr. Joseph D. Godf rey, chief of orthopedic surgery at Buffalo's Children's Hospita1, said Wednesday. "The possibilities of sustaining permanent elbow restrictions of mot ion or an abnormal area at the elbow may definitely stem from throwing overhand at an early age." he said. Godfrey sai d he would recom- mend methods such as a pitching machine, a tee as in golf , or a toss- • up mechanism be used to set up the ball to hi t in both practice sessions and games. sofa bed sale! now • · .queen size • • $299. . . ' dual size . . • $249. • These are very comfortable sole beds for sitting and sleeping, • A wide ulection of fabrics and colors to chOOM from. • Reversible becks ind seat cushions. ..r-r!!'°" .l"b I H.J.GARRETT fURNfJURE ~ PROFESSIONAL JNTUIOR DES IGNERS Op1n Mor1., Thurs. l Fr!, Ev ... 2219 H~~IOR llVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. I • • TOIWl4aJ, JuiY 27, 1'72 H DAil y I'll Of ' Space Shuttle to Boost Economy; .. V'IT ........ NASA HAS SELECTED NORTH AMERICAN ROCKWELL CORP. OF DOWNEY TO BUILD SPACE SHUTTLE The Multlbllllon-clollor Controct Wiii Provide Thouunds ef Nndod Jol>o In C11iloml1 Nude Teeii Wife Choked t,o Death; Suspect Hunt;ed LAFC Gives Irvine Okay For Annex of 8,2QQ Acres Homicide invesUgators today were p~ bing the strangulation murder of a teenaged Santa Ana wlfe found sprawled nude acroos the bed when her milkman husband returned home from work about noon Wednesday. Tests were being conducted to determine ii Linda S. Smit, 18, of 2911 N. Bristol St., was suually asuulted before being killed. Her shaken husband, Eric R. Smit, 22, was interrogated at leagtb by police but apparently was unable to shed any light on the possible identity of the victim's alayer. "1bere are no suspect! as of now," 1 homicide detail spokesman said. Detective Sgt. Ralph O!riale told newsmen the.re were still no leads as of this morning. Coroner's depuUe~ said Mrs. Smit was killed sometime between e:45 a.m. when her bWlband wenl Io wwk Ind 11: IS a.m. when be relumed Io find the body. A Santa Ana Fire Department '""'"" squad wu dispatched to the scene, but efforta to revive the woman failed. Fire Capt. Doug Robertson said no •t tual wounds: could be seen on the victim s body when be Ind his crew arrived. He did say two bloodstains were on Mra. Smit's neck, but violent strarlgula· tion usually involves some bleeding from nose, mouth or both, poUce said. C.Oroner1s depuUes at first said postmortem u::amination failed to con-- ciusivdy show strangulatlon, bul more minute studies con!inned the cause of death. BY JACK BROBACK Of tllt DllllY Plllf II.., The Oedgling clly of Irvine Wedne~y won Local Agency Formation Com· mission approval or an 1,200-acre an- nexation and became the largest com· munity in land area in Orange County. The annexation, alJO largest in the county's history.:, boosts Irvine's land area Io appro:<imately :M,400 acres compared to nmnerup Anaheim's 23,119. Anaheim includes 36.24 square miles in its boun- daries, while Irvine will covtr Cl square miles. Irvine off1eials also convinced the LAFC that their 51,000-acre sphere or in-- fluence propo.W was legitimate laying the groundwork for 1 fulure city ol 400,000 people by the year 2000. SUcb a ci· ly is oroposed by the Irvine company. onJY serious opposition 'Came from Santa Ana and Saddleba~k Valley )JI. terests. .. Sanla Ana, through depuly city at· tomey Charles Liberto, aaka that both Ute sphere of influence and aMexation be delayed pending outcome of Santa Ana's lawsuit to dlsincorporlte the seven-- month .old cily. Ed Obon, pmidenl of'the Saddleback Cbalnber of Commerte and Birt Spendlove, bead of the &add!eback Area Coonllnaling Council, fought a losln( ba\. Ue . !Or the fast growing commtmiU.. located south of the approved anneution. In contention wu a 1,800-lcre section southeast of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station earmarked by the Irvine Com· Another Young .Camper Attacked by Wild Animal By JACK CHAPPELL Of #It IMllY Plttt Sllff Another small child was attacked and bitten by a wild animal -,wssibly a rabid fo1 -early this morning as be lay sleeping at the San Clemente Stale Park raising possibility that the park will be closed. Nine-year-<1ld John Metzler of cano1a Park was rushed to Miulon Community Hospital by his father awakened by his son's cries at 3 a.m. at the tent grounds. Five puncture wounds in the child'• up. ~per right arm were treated at the hospital and the boy was given a tetanus shot by staff. Orange County Heallh Depattmenl o" liciala laid today that the chtld will have to undtrgo the 11duck.egg'" rabies treat,.. ment of 21 injectioni. A fox was llhol 1boul 200 )'1'U from the site of lbe bite by E\q(ene Junette, chief Ranger for the Oralli• Cool! Diltrlct, aboul 90 minut.. after tbe blilnl lJt. cident. The body of the animal WU rwlflll' token by county animal conlnll _. ntl llld the bead ol lbe fol WU being U• amlned today for rabl., by the bealth deportm<nt today. Dr. 'nlomal Hamilton, director of Health Servk<I Slid tllat re1arc11 ... of the outcome of the aaminlUoa, the Met· iJer cblld will have lo Undel'IO the rabies · treatment. The child WBI unable lo ldentily the anfmal that bit him 11 a IOI, and there ii no guarantee lbal the dead animal Is In facl tbe cme which attacked the child, ranaer Junette aald. Dr. Hamilton aaid tllat without traal• ment, r1ble1 la fatll. "II wa've pt rabid animals tbere, oi.. vioualy 'people ara not aale In tmll or on the lfOUnd. I don' lmow abouf tam- pen," Dr. Ramllton ald. .. Dtpmdlnl upon the multi of Ille laboratory tats on the !rain of the Had fas, Dr. HomlllOD Slid "alelll waald be taken.n Among those steps, the complete close down of the state park wvuld have lo be considered, be said. He laid thal attempts by lbe Park Ralliers to keep people from '1eeping on the lfOUnd we1'! •PP."J'!'lb' not working. Attempb lo ttap the foxes In tjie park are not worldni, Dr. Hamilloo said. 11'l'ht • fOUI are pretty Smart, II be observed. A aiilber ol skunks have been captured int.le traps, however. Dr. Hamillon said that small wild animala "normally will bite only if pro- voked or II thq'ire Slck.'r · 'lbrtt persons were bilten by a !01 in mid-July alao ,.rly in · thO '1110ming as they lay slaepilll on the ground In the state park. • • An .u.oiit 'h.ii .for lbe cruiure was n0t • Succ.ufu~I iii· thal ·time. The laat recorded coptU of a rabid fox In Orange County was 1 1 wever, authorities are worried due Iott: ,.....ive behavior abown by ,Ille ·pork ..Umab. A 17-)'W-* Mm ,..ui bitten the list Ume appura Io have procr...i Sltisfaclortly, Dr. Hlmlllon said. He noted tbal the yo11th bad no adverse ruction Io the •lea treabnlnt that the health department Wis aware of. He said tllal \be normal policy .... to providt Ibo rablea 'Vaccine Ina and lhal it be adm1nitlered by • famlljr -· The trei-oeries Involves two shots per day for one week, 1nd thtn one Injection a day for another week, a sUtuatlon wbleb •• "all could do wllhout," Dr. llamillon talc!. Beauty Queen Dead CARTAGEN4, 8paln (UPU-A If.yur. old beeuty quetn -ldonlllled loday 11 ono ol the II per10ft1 wbo *"'""<! When • f1olt sank le CWUplll -clurilli the lown'a marine _,,,,.. tlesta Wedmmay. h -Dlonllla Martinez. _, -of Iha ~ lown of Sin Jooe Obrero. • pany for Industrial develoP,ment. Spendlove Ind Olson argued thal this proJ\U\y adjoined the developed popula· tlon areas of Saddleback wblcb are much closer to the industrial acreage than the developed areas of Irvine. "They are after our futurt tax base and want planning control of the area.'' Spendlove charged. "U yo11 approve these proposals you may f o r c e premature incorporation of cities in Our area." Laguna Beach, represented by plan- ning commission· chairman Carl JohnsQn Jr. sought and received a compromise agreement on 1,100 acres in the upper Laguna C8nyon area. The LAFC ruled that all watershed attas draining into Laguna Canyon should be reserved for future aJUlex!ltloa IO that city. I~ olfielall ogretd to lllia llipula- tion ind both cities plan Io _, • precise boundary line of the area to the commission within 35 daya. I.AFC .staff reaervalions that the new cily would ool continue the agricultural preserve status covering all but about 2,000 acres of -the annexation were resolved when Irvine ot&ials firmly slated that they bad no intention of lilt· ing the reserve status on t h e Irvine Company, !Inds in the merger. Liberlo 's arguments for Santa Ana were baaed on the loni disputed "promis- ed land" acreage aouth of the Morine Corpo Helicopler Station. He said the al· lorney general had approved filin( of a lawsuit aimed at dis-incorporation of the new city. James Erickson, city attorney of Irvine, rebutted this argumenl llating that the attorney general had only granted Santa Ana the right Io maintain tfleir case because theY were nearing the statute of limitations. 11Ht gave them no right to sue," Erickson charged. Daughter's P'lea . Brings Couple Together Again VISALIA (AP) -A JO.year-old &irl who pleaded with a judge In a letter lo "please, please, please help a l~year-old keep a mom 'Ind dad" bas received her wish. superior ~ Jud(e Jay Ballantyne said Wedmesday the lh'I'• parenb bad reconsidered their plana for • divoree and have aireed lo 1ive their IJ.year-old marriage another try. Aller the parenb, who were not iden- tilied, ntet briefly in chambers with the jud1e, the mother 1earfully Io I d newamen:· ' · "I didn't know everyone wu so friend· ly. We are movin( back tocetber -it'• so wonderful that people care when Ibey don' even know you. Maybe thll wU1 help a Joi of other people. I really hope IO." Judi" BallantJM said his olfice wu "flooded" with lettm from concerned persona from all over the country aller be made the Jirl'• leller public a week ago. , She had wrillen: "Honorable Sir, my mom and dod It &«tine a divorce • • • Pleaoe doo~ let them pt a divorce . My momma loves 1J11 dad; If you could put him in the holpital be could qui! drink· ing. "Sir, you are a lode• and this Is your job, to di"'""' people. "°"'1 wlMre do -ao tbal ltll1 )ove tbe lmlbando? Ancl bow do you d!vorce a JO.year-old! Can you CUI out my belrl and atop It from hurilnt? Ple.ue, pie .... pleaee 'help a 10.)'Ut..id keep a mom and did." Tbe fatber qnod lo Mel< help for • drinldftc !ll1lblom witb A I c o h o II c 1 ~,II WU lamed . •• Huge Pact to Provide Many ]obs ~ •• . . ily BILL STOCKTON AP .~WffW LOS ANGELES -The awardin( of lbe mu!Ubllllonodollar apace alluttle contracl lo North American Rock'lldl means tbal thousanda ol badly Meded new jobs will * * * Sak Sign To Remain On Building '!be #,t billion space sbutlle contracl awaided lo North American· Rockwdl is nol likdy lo take the "for sale" sip off the flnn's giant "ziggurat" in Laguna NllUel, a spokes~ for NA's AutooeUcs Division in Anabelm said today. '4We would like to get a piece of the 1c- tion," said Ernie Brashear, "but the only thing we could take part in would be on the electronics side and that would be further in the future. ·:we hope Io bid on some of the sul>- cootracts, but the lead division, In this cue the Space Division in Downey, alw~ tabi the position that sister divisions hive to compete for sub- contracts lite any other out.side firm." In any case, be added, there would be 1100 relationship at all" with the pending sale of the millloo-oquare-foot NllUel facility. Negoliltions: for its transfer are sun under way with the gove.niment's General Services Administration. "We have cut down our empJoyes," the spokesman explained, "and there is plen-- ty of space available without it. At this polnl we doo't anticipate any lar1e amOWll of work, but we are tickled Io death the Si>ace Division got the contract becaUJe 1ols of people in Orange County work in the Space Division, both in Downey and at their Seal Beach faclli· ty." "Autonetics is not in the pjcture at the moment/' said Ralph Oakley at tJie Space Division. "We will be building the frame under the prime contract and about SO percent of the dollars will be paid out in subcontracts. Autonelics will have Io bid on those along with other elect.ronics firml. We treat our divisk>ns like any other subeontractor.'' SUbeontracts on the Apollo project, he said, bt!glD tp be let out ooe at a time a few weeks after the ;.rime contract was awarded. Ile etilD\l!ed 11 , 1!lii)lt be "• couple of nlon!bo" befo1'! bido oo elec- troniea !"bconlracts i« thi. space sbuUle would come Into the piclqre. Boy, 7, Slain By P laymate, 9 A 9-ytar~ld Garden Grove hoy ac· cidtntally shot and killed 1 7·year-<>id playmate Wedneaday afte<!XJOll, poli<e reported. Officers later arrested tht parents of the boy who fired the gun on suspicion of chlld enda11ierlng, a felony. The vlcllm of the revolver sbol In the head was J1mes D. Tiller of 12202 SU.grove SI., son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Tiller. The boy who wu playing with the gun, one of many found in the home according to police, is the IOll of Mr. and Mn. Bruce Goodnight of 12U2 Allard SI., where the fatal llhol was fired . Police Lt. La1Vence Hodgea said the parents were arTeSted when they return- ed home from work. give the stale'• sagglnJ economy a ma- jor llflof(, ·~ be l!led for static t..u.ic .... tba ...: for borbontal lelt fllshlo 1tartl111 In Jf71, ThHe operational vebicl" are lo ba bulll for manned orbital mlaaions, witb tesl filgb11 be1Ianinf in 1'71. State officials are expressing ddi1bl tbal the camomia·baaed company won the controcl. They are looking to the shuttle to 1peed lhe laborious climb of the state's economy from the deptba of unemployment tbal began in 1967 with aero1pace cutblcb and reached bottom a year ago. · The UO.foot·long crall with a 19-f~ wing span are to be in fuU operatJon b7.. 1980. They are to be used over and over .... again to carry men, satellites and equtp:• ment Into tarth orbit and to brlna penono\ · Natkmal A e r o na u t i c s and Space Administration officials a n n o u n c e d Wednesday in Washington that North American, the company that built the Apollo moon program's command and service modules, would get the coveted $2.6 billion contnct to build five. reusable shuttle craft. Halling the decision, Sen. John V. Tun· ney·said the space shuttle could "create more than 60,000 jobs and add as. much 11 $4: billion to the state's economy over the next 10 years." Gov. Ronald Reagan said he was "thoroughly delighted" with NASA's decision and predlcled California would iain 25,000 new jobs as a result. A spokesman for North American said the company's Seal Beach plant would get "a substantial portion of the jobs created" by the project. But ht cautioned that buildup for the five-year shuttle pro- gram would be gradual. Officials at McDonnell D o u g 1 a s Astronautics Company in Huntington Beach said they hoped to get Jobi from the shuttlt, too. "We were one of the major bidders for the overall contract, so obviously we feel we have tht expenlse to win many of the subcontracts involved with the sbuttlt," a company spokesmar. said. He added lbal North American's discloaure lbat SO percent of shuttle work will be 1ub- contracted outside the company "was good news here." A spokesman for Philco-Ford in Newport Beach said he did oot expect any related subcontracting for the com~ pany. Under the initial payment of $530 million over two years, North America n will build the first two orbiters -one to nel and materia ls back to earth. ·•• At North American's plants in Downey, spokesmen said hiring of new employ~ would begin immediately and that !lie' work force eventually would swell bf:' 9,000 ptrlON. . . \ Los Angeles County's a e r o s p 1 ~' employment pu.k came in 1967 ~!l 359,100 persons worked in the industry, That's when the program to land men o'rt the moon was ln high gear, the Vietnam; war was at its peak and the airline iti: dustry was experiencing tremendOU:S gro\vth. , But by mid·l910. 124,000 aerospaCe; workers in Los Angeles County had ~. their jobs. The award Wednesday was sweet t«· for such officials, who swallowed a biUer, pill last spring when Cape Kennedy, Fla .. was chosen as the shutUe launch site. . Californians bad hoped Vandenberg Alr; Force But would be chosen. The base the central Californi1 coast was tagg~' but only for those mlask>ns that requb:9 placing a shuttle in a polar orbit. Sue~ orbits, however, are e1pected to be ~ quired mostly for military mi!sions, ~ the military use of the shuttle im't Ctf4' tain. ·:, Also bidding for the contract w~e Lockheed Space and Millile Systems. o~ SUnnyvale, Calli., McDonnell Dou1fu ·111. St. Louis, Mo.: and Grumman Aircraft' lo, Betbpa1e. N.Y. If Lockheed had won, the Sad Fran- cisco area, also hit by aerospace layoffs, would have received a needed shot in the arm. Llkewise, McDoMell Douglas would have conceniNlted a large portk>_..~ of tts ab.utile wort at Southern Californra·. ptantl/ . Capo Councilman Held On Gun Assault Charge By TOM BARLEY Of ........ , .... rift "" San Juan C&pl1trano CotlndlmaJ\ James Keith Weathers was jailed early today by Orange. County Sherlff'1 officers who claimed be used a loaded shotgun Io prevent their investigation of an ai; parenl marllal dispute. Officers said they were re•ponding lo a c'8 for help from Mrs. Ellen Weathers at the home of mutual frlenda In Mission Viejo when the 37-year~ councilman met them al the frool door of the house. They Slid no shots were !ired in tbe brief confrootallon Ind Ibey were able Io quickly disarm Wutben. lie WU booked inlo Orange · Counly Jail on cbarg.. of usault with a deadly weapon. DepuU.. traced the openin( of the i .. cldent to a car ramming fracas at Dana Marini in which an aulo operated by Mrs. Weatbera allt1edlY wu rammed by her husband. Officers said "an unldenlilled maW" WU a, tblrd plrly IO the Ilana Marina in- cident. They refused lo comment fUrther at this 1ta1e on his apparenl lnvolvemenl in the dilpute. From there, officers s1td, the action movecl lo lbe Miallon Viejo home where Mra. Weotben w11 said Io have oougbt help after Ute -.tloo with her lttJ&. .l lllO DU IUDE ti&& band at the Dana Marina. llepuU• said Wutberl 1p~ hava folloWld llil wile to Im -lad a ~ aJtercalfotl WU II! .,...,... -tbly -· 'Ibey sa\lf tlley rang the bell and wwe confronled by Weatben and ti. abolgun. Officers said they also confiscate\! . \: handp which they believe was · in.· Weathers, po61tSSion during the Dana Marina incident. • The arrest of Weathers, who live wil~ his wife and two ¢illdren at 27341 OrteP,' HiJbway, today astonisb<d San Juaa; ruldeots. ·;: 11It11 just the moat astonishing lhj•: I've ever heard," a b.tsiness associate~ commenled. "Jim Weathers is jusl t~ nicest guy on two feet and it's very cnl~ ficult to believe be could be involved . iii thla kind of jncident." Weathers, who is the manager of C.p!Jtrano Hardware, 31921 CamiDO Capistrano, ha• lived In the comm""1lJ for the past ei&bt years: · .-, He wu elected lo the San J~ C.piltrano City Council in April of lltl.s year. .· Deputies said Mrs. Weathers loJd, lbem lhal she and her huaband recen\IJ', itpal'1ted and were no longer livirc' t01ether. •• . JLJ~rnJIMfllr~ * C.US TOM DR APERIES * AT LIVINGSTON'S W1..,,,, I/It lorpc1t and Jincal Corpe! .r. Dropc'1f aclctllon 111'0llobl• Tod1y's Clesire for stlf.erpres- 1ion hos brought with it 1 nMd for cre1tivt im19in1tion ind ••· perti ... Our slcillecl ••perts will be heppy to cr9ete new ide1s for you or corry out your own. a.rt of 1a. they can worlc these transfonn1tioM for you, with pin m-y or big budget fabrics. . Pllll UTIMATSI PHOlll 147.ntl Qpen Da/1'1 'Ill ~-FtlMtp 111 l.1lO • • . " • • • . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • • • .. ' • • • ' ' . ., • . .f; DAILY PILOT Thursda7, July 27, 1912 ~cGovern Plagued by Communications Gaps ByCARLP.LEUBSDORF AP r.111'-I Wl'tltr CUSTER, S.D. (Al') -Questions ibout when, and how much, Sen. Georg• Ms:<Jovmi knew about Sen. Thomas F. E4gleton'1 medical history result, In port f"'m lhe latest In a series ol com- mUlllcaUon1 gaps wilh blJ stall that have ~ lhe DemocraUc pmldtnUal nonjlnee. l\{cGovern aays he knew very 1110• un-lil'.~gleton'a dramatic dlaclosure here TU;iday. !IQME AIDES knew of r e p or II Eagleton had been hospltalued for ex- haustion and one, Gordon Weill, was assi&ued to check Ibis point before th• Missouri. senator wu picked a s McGovern's running mate. Weil 's phone check, press secretary Richard Dougherty Aid Wednesday, pro- duced nothing of substance. McGovern WIS never told aboUI It and that night when he asked Eagleton if there were any problems in his background, he got and nccepted a negative answer. Even after Frank Manklewlci , McGovern's top p,>lltical adviser, con- tacted an Eagleton aide on the matter, $. Viets Losing . ' ' . Citadel to Reds SAIGON (UPI) -SOUtb Vietnamese o!llcen ordered a battered paralroOp balta!IM out of !he heavily defended Quang Tri Citadel today, relinquishing g~ Ibey had fought for three days to se~e. Mllltary apokeamen said 500 fresh rn4'rllles were sent in to relieve the pa.fatroopera but Ibey were not able to liglit lheir 11ay back lnalde !he fortress ddplte a IJerce 1111-bour batUe northeast " 1be JJtb.eentury building. • . e<>MMVNJST TROOPS, in an apparent au,mpt to divert soutli Vietnamese fo!J'<l from Quang Tri, overran two fire baies on the outskirts of Hue about 40 m1les to !he south. Some l!OUl'CeS pnidtcted lhe Communists would try a miiJor •ttac.k against Hue, the ancient lmflorial capital. . '1)o paratroopers sto~ th~ Citadel Jbre; daya-.,and captured part ol the · ls.acre lortl-.be!ora they were slDpped by ""°' dus-in North Vletnameie troops. ~ Saigon CODUNnd apokesman sald !he lll'JI wue sent to an undisclosed area for I pew operatloo. No casualty figures ,..re given. Government spokesmen said they could noC say the city has been recaptured until South Vietnamese troops control the CitlldeL QUANG TRI Province and its capital, Qu!Ull Tri City, fell to the Communists in lrley. South Vietnamese Pr e s Id• n t Nguyen Van 'lllleu promised ID recapture the area by Sept. 19 and lfllt 20,111111 men oorlh from Bue on June 23 to drive the Communists out. ' Sil\Ce !hen, !he.South -Vietnamese have !Del beaVJ r.ommomlsl mtstance In Qu4nl Tri ,Qty and alona lhe 20 mllfl! of . higlnvay '""""' ~ die ... ~:· northern defm.e lllie to Ille ~ caPitaL · * * * U.S. Spokesm(ln Assails· Reports I Of Dike Bombing WASHINGTON (AP) -Some U.S. bombs may have bit dik .. In Norlh Viet· nam, the State Department aays, but they were not bombed purpo!ely and danµ.£e was not extensive. Charles W. Bray, a State Department ,[iOkesman, said Wednesday Ole United Sta!es can auPiiort Ibis claim . with evidence but didn't reveal the evidence. He assailed what he termed 11rather cartluily orchestrated propaganda" that alleg.. U.S. bombing haJ seriously damaged !he dikes. "Various spokesmen, myseU included," Bray said, "have allowed for the fact that in strlklng al mllltary targets which are located in proximity to, or in some cases even on the dikes, some of our bornbl may have hit dikes." llJrt II and when this happened, he sald It IJad only "the most incidental ;;;d minor fmpact on the syistem of Ievw." H< did the dikes bav• not been large!& 'Ibey have also kept up the pressure on Hue, South Vietnam's third largest city located 400 miles north ol Saigon. U. S. SOURCES said Communists cap- tured fire bases Bastogne a n d Checkmate, two vital links in Hue's defense. One source sald BaslDgne baJ changed hands six times since the cur- rent Communist offensive started March 30. The sources said North Vietnamese gunners during the night blasted !he two bases -plus Fire Jlases Birmingham, T- Bone and Lion along the Hue defense line -with more tban 3,000 rounds of 122mm artillery, rockets and mortar sh.U.. Aootber l~(Ound barrage of mortar and recoilless rifle fire hit an element of South Vietnam's 54th Regiment a mile from Bastogne but the infantrymen counterattacked and killed 17 Com· munistl at a cost of two government troops dead and six wounded, the Saigon command said. * * * Copter Disaster Kept From News By 2 Commands SAIGON (AP) -The U.S. and South Vietnamese commands for more than two weeks concealed the bad news about a landing north ol Quang Tri City in which 29 of 31 American helicopters were rij>orted. bit by ground lire and 50 South VietDamue 'marines were killed in one ' I crUb. :0Wcer1 ln·the field did the helicopters landed Jn tbe llliddle ol a pow.nui North Vietnamese force that U.S. B52 strikes were 1Uj>pooed to knock out. But they sald the ~ dropped tbelr bombs hall a . niile off the target. 'A South Vietnamese ccmmander wbo w115 wOund'fl in the operation July 11 said 29 of the 31 U.S. Marine Corps helicopters that brought the South Viet- namese battalion· In were bit by ground fire. He said most of the.m were able to fly out of. the batU. area and pl-esumably made it back to !he 7th Fleet landing ships from which Ibey came. ·.The U.S. Command reported OD the day ol !he landing that one ol !he big CH53 heUcopters was shot down, and liter it said two ol the American crewmen were missing and several were wounded. But not until today did the South Vietnamese command, in response to a query, admit that 50 South Viet· namese marines on board were killed. It was the biggest death toll of any helicopter crash in the Vietnam war. SOUth Vietnamese apokesmen said it was the responslbilily of the U.S. Com- mand lo report lbe casualtiea bec>use they occurred in an American aircraft. But a U.S. apokesman, Lt. Col. Robert A. CaslagnetlD, said It was I h e reaponsiblllty ol the South Vietnamese to "report South VJetnamese casualties to hostile lire in an on-going operation .•. and such Information won1 be released unleu they want to do it.11 McGovern neve r received enough detalJ to take the matter seriously. TIUS SUGGESTS that bis stall bas not always taken su!Ucient care in k.eeplng him informed. And McGovern knows that uJtimately any blame for staff mishaps will fall on him. There were several communications lapses at the recent Democratic National Convention. After McGovern met with relatives of U.S. prisoners of war, a statement was issued in his name that raised for the first time the possibility of maint.alning Gawking, Talking U.S. troops in Thailand If an end to .U,S. involvement failed ID bring tbe prlaontrs borne. One top McGovern aide, Frederick G. Dutton, was astounded when shown the statement. The al$lslant who drafted 14 John Hoium, cooceded it represented an elaboration of McGovern's posJtion. THE NEXT DAY, angry demonstrators filled the senator's hotel lobby to proteot bis statement. McGovern finally spoke to them and Insisted bts Southeast Asian policy hadn't changed. A few days later, be conceded that !he were telling McGovern delegates to vole talk of troops in Thailand was "merely a against Daley. geature," but would have little effect on Earlier that evening, in tbe Soulh !he Norlh Vietnamese. Carolina credenUall. case, McGovern As the convention opened, McGovern floor managers switched a number of was quoted In an Interview IS saying be votes against the pro~ to add11 ~~~ would accept the seating of Mayor women, seeking to avo a _resu 1 Richard J. Daley's regular !Uinols \ could jeopardize his chance• m the ater delegaUon -instead of a cballenglng California vote. , group that Included many McGovern sup-McGovern, who pledged bis support for porten -once he won !he crucial the Soulh Carolina challenge to the Na· California cballenge. Uonal Women Political Caucus, said this week he did not know what was gomg on AT THE SAME Ume, noor managers unW be iaw It on television. Glaucoma? Marijuana Might Help SAN F~CISCO (AP) -An ac· cldental disCovery during research lnto the effects of smoking marijuana sug· gests that pot may be effective in treating glaucoma, a major cause of blindness, researchers say. The ulUmate problem will be to develop a nonintoxicating derivative for use as regular medication in treating glaucoma -an eye disease charac- terized t>y e:rcesstve fluid pressure in the eyel>a111, according ID Dr. Ira M. Frank. an ~tant professor of psychiatry at UC4. 11WE CAN'T HA VE people walking the streets high, because of their glaucoma medicjne," explained Dr. Stephen Szara, a collaborator with Frank. Szara, a National Institute of Mental Health; researcher, addressed the lnfematlonal Congrw on Pharmacology on Wednesday. Police on duly outside Madison Square Garden dur· ing the final performance of the Rolling Stones Wednesday night, had their bands -and eyes - lull. At right, two boys explain to a policeman how they were assaulted and bad their tickets taken away as they tried to enter the concert. At left, another lawman casts an ap~reciative glance at a young lady as.she takes her tickets from her hand· bag. Marijuana's effect in reducing pressure Ieveb within the eye was discovered last November during a UCLA study on how marijuana smoking affected driving ability. Advertisements in the Daily Bruin, UCLA campus newspaper, attracted a flood of volunteers for the pot smoking tests, Frank said. Dad Asks Mercy For Trucker Who Killed Son MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -A lather whose young son was killed in a traffic accident pleaded with a judge not to send a truck driver to jail, because "he can't he'p my son from there. The boy is dead, there is oothlng more we can do." Truck driver Willie Reath, 41, whose own son was killed by a hit-and-run driver two years ago, sobbed Wednesday as William F. Williams added: "I don't hold any vindictive motive or anything against him because, alter all, be has to live with it the same as I do.11 Reath was charged with leaving !he scene of an accident June 9 after his · pickup truck collided with a bicycle rid- den by 13-year<-0ld Robert Williams. Police said Reath returned to the scene within 10 minutes, appearing dazed, and said he had been unable to stop in heavy traffic. Williams, told Criminal Court Judge Alfonso C. Sepe !hat be called Reath !he night (If the accident, moments after identifying his son's body, and told him not to feel bad 0 ••• accidents are ac· cidents and sometimes you can't prevent them." He said Reath replied: '1No sir, I got a S(ln that got killed the same way, but the driver didn't stop. He kept going." After listening to Williams• plea Sepe placed Reath, the lather of eight children, on probation and sent him home. British Longslwremen Cast Vote for Strike The study was carried out with 30 heallhy subjects, aged 21 to 29, who were selected alter a strict psychological and 1 medical screening process. t FRANK SAID !he test r e s n It s • demonstrated that marijuana smoking did not affect visual clearness, color and deplh perception, or peripheral vision. I I . During the intensive eye ellectl LONDON (UPI) -Leaders ol the British dockworkers union today turned down a proposed solution lo the touchy containerization dispute and . voted to start an official strike Friday, com. plicatlng the country's tangled labor situation. ( IN SHORT ... ) The naUon's ports have already been shut down for five days by an unofficial strike protesting !he jailing of live dockers. The meo were freed Wednesday but the basic cause of the dispute -the containeri7.ation problem -wu still unsetued. The Trades Union Congress (TUC), which represents 10 million workers, voted Wednesday to call a one-<lay na· tional strike Monday if the five dockworkers were not freed. Since the men were released, the strike was apparently averted, but some unions: asked the TUC to go ahead with the strike anyway to show organized labor's angry at the government's labor policies. e AMC Recoverg DETROIT (Al') -American Moton Corp., reflecting the strong recovery of both !he firm and the U.S. auto Industry, reported today it earned m.z mllllcn in the first nine months of its fiscal year,· more than tbree times the profit reported in the same period last year. Republican Army bit back at Briu.f. troops who have invaded t b el r slrongbolds. The mllltant ~testant Ulster Dele""" Association sakl It · woilld throw up a blockade today ID stop all fuel oil deliveries to Londonderry's &gslde 1~ Creggan districts, hoping to loree• tbe C.tbollc families to move out of the IRA strongholds. Tlieir Idea was that tbdl Iha army would go in and round up 'the guer- rillas. e Scott Booted SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - David R. Scott haJ been booted from the astronaut corps due to a scheme to make money from stamp covers smua:gled to the moon and back. r Scott, a 40-year~ld Air Force colonel, in turn was named technical assistant to the manager of the Apollo spacecraft program. But officials said Wednesday the job was offered only after it was determined Scott was to be kicted out of !he astronaul corps. · testing, a UCLA opthalmologist, Dr. Robert S. Hepler, determined that mari· juana significantly reduced intraocular - .iilternal eye -pressures. The normal pressure ranges from 10 to 20 millimeters of mercury. In the test group, the average pressure after mart .. juana smoking dropped from 14.3 to 9.2. Hepler followed up with a marijuana test on a paUent with severe glaucoma and a peak pressure level of 56. The 42-year-old woman puffed her mar- ijuana alter standard eye drop drugs bad lowered the pressure level to 29. An' hour later the pressure reading was 17. "PRELIMINARY evidence from one glaucoma patient suggests t b a t pathologically i n c r e a s e d lntraocular pressures can be reduced to normal levels for a few hours by the act. ministration of marijuana," Szara said in a paper on !he project. "Further . experiments are Indicated and are under way to explore the mechanism of action and to verily these findings in a larger number of glaucoma patient!," be added. Wednesday's 7th Chess Game lifnses in 'Draw' North Cool; South Sweats The profit !or the period ended June 30, equivalent to 99 cents per share, was up from $8.3 million, or 32 cents per share, In the first nine months of llacal 19'/L Because of heavy losses in recent years, Including 1 stunning 156.2 million In 1970, AMC paid no federal income tax- es on the current earnings. Under cor- porate· tu law, earnings are eumpt from income taxea unW they exceed !he losses amassed in previous years. REYKJAVIK, Ice!~) -The moves ol lhe aeventh ' ol the Boris Spassty·Bobby Flacber world chess championship. Spassky-W FisclJer.B Jltar~rr:black Nation's Weatlier Picture Shows Split Personality -~ ,., t.7~ '" T .. l.U .. ·" :ll ':!l NATIONAi. WfAlHlt Ulvt(l fOllCAlf t• )AM lit f •ft•)) . 30.00 Sun, Jfloon, Tidu TMUltlOAY Sttond 111111'1 ............ 11tll "''"· ••• Ste6nd low ........... 4:2"p.m. 'l.f ,ltlDAY Flrit tlltft ............. 111901,11'\. « flnl low ............ ,, StUl.11'1. 44 StcfWld "'°" ............ l hot ... m. u 5tcond ~ ...... , ..... l lll,.m. 1.1 t11n 1tl1t1 S:Jf 1,1'1\o ktf 1:• p.l'l'I. e ••lfut Vlolenee BELFAST, Nortliem Ireland (AP) .,... Assassins kWed: two more men in Belfast during the nigh~ and the I r l s b DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtll"1 of tllo Dally Piiot Is '""'"tttd Mol'ldl'/'.fltidtYI " \"" .. not flht YIU!' • ....,. lrY f 1# ''"' .. ull w ....,.. C'OPY "'111 lit ClrOullht .. 'tOllo C.111 arw '41ktn ~Ill .1·:• '""" ' hftrilV ffld IVl'ldt'fl H '°" dt Mt ,_.,.,. '!'OW UIPY tty f 1.m. 141tvNly; ti' I a.m. 11.indtY, ctill tfld • C9llY Wltl .. llr'DWht .. ~ Ci.Ill .,.. ... ., Ol'lfll tt ..... Ttltphonts .wt °'*"' c*"" ...,.., ........ ....., ...,......., HllnttfllfWI letdli fnll w.~i.r ................... , .. lt11 °""*,.. Ct•lllr1 .. lttdl. hi! """' C:.•lltrtl!O, °'"' ll'tlilt. fOlltll ~ ....... """" ........ MOM •"-l:AJ.M. .... 71U1,lft.. .._ __________ _ I. P·KI, P-Qlll 2L P·Rf, S.Kt4 2. Kt.J0!3, P-Qa 22. ~. S.KI ch 3. P-Qf, PxP ' 2.!. K-111, ,P-~ f. KlxP, Kt·K& 24. P-KtJ, P-Ktf 5. Kt.QB!, P.QJU 25. Qll-Kl, Q-Kt$ 6. S.KK15, P·K3 :II. QJQ, lltJQ 7. P·KBf, Q-Kt2 27. R-K2, K·Kt2 a. ~. QxP :II. ·)(1-115, P-Kt2 9. Kt-Kt2, Q-111 29. Kf..B4, Kt-Qf 10. B43; B-K3 ao. Jc_( B4 .qs, a.Bf IL 0-0, P·KIU SI. Kf..Kt7, sR-QBL 12. JI.Rf, KlxP =· P~f, Kt-Kl I~. KlllKt, BIB 33. l!-B3, KlxP 14. P·Klll, P:iJ> 34. Psi', P-Kt5 IS. JI.Kl$, PJ!l 15. JI.Qt, P·RI 11. KlxP ch, K·Bl :Ill. P·U. Kt-Rf 17. KlllB, Kt·BS 17. KM!S, RIKI 18. Kt-QI, 1!41 38. 1\1111, ~R·BI ch 11. KlJP Kt5, Q-KI 39. KIRt2, Kt-BS 20. Q-B4, P•KO 40. Kt-Ka cb, K·KO adjoanltd fl. P-Rf, P·BS 46. Kf..BS ch, K·BI 42. 11-Q, R-87 ch fl. R·Kf, R-Ba cb 43. K·Ktl, • K·Bf 48. K·RZ, Jl.B7 ch 44. Kt-1117 di, KD' 4t. K:XU fS. Il-Q4 ch, K·Klt din In Anglo-Suon cl.-notation, each Ille on the playlna board ls listed • .,. eortflnc to the flral lolUal "' the piece otlglnall, pooled 111 n, wbUe rmb are numbered from 1.a •"1 &om tho pltyer. A rank fl a l'D1! of elabt squares parallel ID the white and black lldet, Fllea are perpondiculor to the ranb. •An oxample of a move In delcrlpUva nolAUon would ba "P-QB4," or pawn to Queen's Blabop lour, with the lnftlel of th• moving piece lollowljl by tbt dulpatlM OI the 1q111re movtd 1o. Tha _,.,bol "Jr' Indicates a capturo The l)'Dlbol "0-0" lndiceta 1 CUU!n ' maneuver. ·~ai" mnns a move bq ~ ed an opponent's ting in cbaclr. 'Iba 17m- bol "M" or mata IW!ll cbectmaio ... the pme ls over. Tba l)'1llhol "Kl" ta us. ed for kn!g!IL I I To w M L Uo m M • 0 po of Co rel na do H ol he en M rel to na to in v in a w c • In ii le to el ~ I ~ <l : DAU.y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Unnecessary and Costly A lltUe llooetertsm never 1iurt any community, but we \lill have to tllce ~ong •excepUon t~ a plan· by our friends u~ n Fullerto to establi~ a permanent· branch of tbe county Superior Court in tbeir city. JudgeJlruce Sumner, presiding judge of the county Superior Court system, calls tbe move a "whim or a special interest group" tbat will cost tbe county a quar· ter of a million dollars a year beginning next year. It is a singular case of bolstering one' city's ego at tbe ex· pense of all the county taxpayers. Judge Sumner is joined In this criticism of tbe Fullerton branch court by the Orange County Grand Jury, the Orange County Bar Association, the California Judicial Council and a majority of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Add to that 99 percent of the county's attorneys and you have a formidable and im· pressive list of opponeuts. The Superior Court1 alf~ady sends one of its judges to Fullerton one day weekly. And what does Ibis judge do? He 'fdisposes of his entire calendar in an average ot 90 minutes .. FUriher, the Superibr Court has, for more than 10 years, oflflred to l!ave any contested trial heard in Fullerton. Not one request has been made so far. Yet If the branch court is formea, a new building will be required, a full time judge would be assigned and · a full array of clerical facilities, district attorney facilities and marriage license headquarters would be necessary. Branch courts just don't work from ' an attorney's viewpoint eith¢. Attorneys traditionally prefer to conduct their court business in one location rather than jump from one courtroom facility to anotber. witb some pledged assistance from Sen. James Whet· more, a north county ;esldent. Judge Sumner says they are being backed by "a special interest group" Identified as Dr. Arnold 0 . Beckman, Fullerton Industrialist, Re- publican party executive Rnbert Beaver and the Fuller- ton News-Tribune. • Briggs got the bill tbrough the Assembly 56-0, but tbe Senate Judiciary Committee turned it down July 18. Undaunted, Briggs said he Is asking Sen. Whetmore to revive discussion before the committee. IC Whetmor gets support from Sen. Dennis Carpenter or Newport Beach, there Is a chance it could be brought baclc to life. The need for the Fullerton couri branch has been thoroughly disproved. It is unnecessary, inconvenient and expensive. The Senate committee should continue to ignore the parochial demands of on e single' Orange County city. The · Right of Clioice Compulsory union membership has lorlg been a fact of life in· the United States. There is increasing evidence that mosJ. Americans don't think it should' be this way. Opinion Research Corp. ·reports that only 18 per- ~nt of the American peopre favor compUlsOry unioniSm -and 62 per cent believe l~gislahon outlawing ir should be passed. ' ·~ \ f 1-Ar1Jlil~ I • DROP OUT! 'THE 5'151EM ~/(JN~! And where does this proposal come from? Chiefly from tbe pen of Fullerton Assemblyman John V. Briggs, Particularly significant is the fact th•t 73 per cent of the nation's Republicans favor such legisl~tion -and with the GOP convention coming up in August, it's ex- tremely likely that a right·to-work plank will be written into President Nixon's 1972 platform. Clearly, most Americans support such a proposal. 'Hey ... welcome to thd club, man.' Clos er Look At McGovern 'Soc ia lism' To the F.d1tor: [ am writing in response to an article written by Al N. Seares, entitled "Anti· McGovern." (Mailbox, July 23) 1m,not writing to defend Sen. McGovern's views, blt merely to criUciu Mr. Seares un- founded ii not ill-thought statements. Dear Gloomy ' Gus It's a shame Senator Eagleton can't loan some of his states of depression on Spiro Agnew. -M.R. Tiils fnturt mi.c1 ~.ctt"' v1irw1, not flleetnt'llY "'°"' of ftHt -·-· $end ·-Ml.PMW fO Gloomy Gu .. DlltY P!IOI. Senator McGovern is called a "radical "McGovern's' conditions for the release of socialist, (a kissing cousin to a our POW's are Jess demanding on the Oxnmunlst), In Mr. Seares's article. N9rth Viethamese than those of Presi· Socialism. u defined by Websttr's die-dent' Nixon. thus reducing the resistance -----------.., of Hanoi. ( ·.'. ) With more analysis and less rhetoric MAILBOX ancl demaaoguery, I thilll< a more ac-• ' , . curafe' picture of the Democratic • preside!!ttal candidate can be made. And • "' .. -, •, .... • .. -"•,•, ... ------·.-..,-.. ""' all candidates for that matter. ~ ...,... _.,., ...::-,......... 111 • .,.,... JEFF GOELITZ ........ .,.. ,..., .................. "' ~ . :i-..:~ .!:. '=: ~ ... -:..! BogcoU Taxes _, ...................... Wffk ... ,... It ,..,..... l'MtfY wtM Mt a. I tllhlf1 t,ionary, ii the public oWnenhip of the means of production. Nowhere in Sen. McGovern'• campaign do I C in d a propo&a i that &eeks to hand over the ownership of the countries major cor· poratians to the public. THE AV'l'llOR of this statement thinks of himlelf u 11an ana1ytlcal reader ol the Congreuional Record, the apeecbes, aod related comments of our presidential candidates dtll'lng recent months." Yet, be cltea no eaamples or his careful study. Instead he uaea rhetoric and namecalling to support his convictions. Speculating that Senator McGovern en- dorses the current visit of Jane Fonda to Hanoi'ls certainly not an analysis of 81J'! of · h1s speeches, as Mr. sea.res says, because McGovern did not make such an endorse~ent. ~m. SEARES a i s 0 feels that McGovern'• chances of negotiating the release of our POW 's is unattainable due to the stubbomess of the North Viet· namese at the Paris peace talks. Sen.' To the Editor: Re: Artide by Mary K. Shell, Page A· 7, Sunday DAILY Pllm concerning tax oo a tax. ,One answer, maybe, I( everyone would agree and apread the. '-ord through the state: Make Septliilber a month to remember! 1. Liquor tax -try not buying for one month (don't drink); 2. Cigarette tax -try not buying for one month (don't smoke); S. Gas tax -Park your car, walk, ride a bike or form a car pool. Aren't 30 daya out of your life (30 days has September) worth a lifetime of tax dollars' out of your pocket? My husband is a chain smoker -and a · drinker. He already bas bought the bike. He says be can do it -bow about you? Please, people who hoard, jgnore the above plea. Stocking up in August for September won't do it. If this works, we can go on from there to all those fraudulent tu:es we've been paying for yem and years. MRS. EDWARD H. CAREY Time for Cynicism? The United States Senate baa, voted ( 114-Z to increase Social Security to :18 mJI. lion cilizens·by 20 percent. Pmldent !li~ on baa recoounended 10 percent. ft goes to the House, where 1 I percent propoaal • rests. ROYCE BRIER ) (t Washington observers say the beneficiaries, having tasted the:Senate's ~ patent fare, 'WOuld'1't like it at all to 1et Jess, and lneezing at 13 mllllon votera !Sn~ heaillly in the capitot It the increase Is adopted; it will •tart w i t h October s checlts. one moolh before the national e It c t i on. If anyone tbinlts the Increase isn't related to the election, be t~ naive, a euphemism ror dumb. BUT TIDS ii the way free socieUea lilte oura work. Sometime& they -k more 111btly, with less CoMpicuOUI jUX· tapoalUon of dates, but they work. , l\Wnbcrs or Congres•, and o r leglslaturea, too, have alwaya leaned tc>nrd device& likely to inlll"' their re- el- , Cynkl call lhil boylng vote&, but let'! not bl craaa. Ltt'I atick with phr.,.. llko "devices likely to m.ure lhclr ~ tlon,.. Jal bruising to our public .......... To llnance the tncrtase. lbc .......... would ralso payroll taxes in 111'7S and 1171. but the rtelplents need not worrt unduly. A majority of them don't have other income and don't suffer a real trauma at inco~ tu time. Besides, they need a raiae, since nobody get.a rich by savings Jrom IOClll oecurity checi<a. The amendment ll 1 rider on 1n act to extend the !450 billion natlooat debt ceJJ. Ing four monlhl. '!be debt Is now fqT billioh, about $2000 for each man, womah aod child. 'I1IJS BRINGS UP tue1, 1 whooping Issue in our day, ud b\ the da)'I ot tho Greeks, Romana, their Europeln ...,. cessors, erid of our ~· forebears . In this centuri' tho Amerluna auffer 1 , tenacloua tu ha11uclnaUon. 'l'boj alt up nighla ponderJna Ille Rt'lolcea they can exact Crom the government, tho 1tatea, counties, cities and vlllages. They demonstrate, exert unceasing p.....ure on their publlc•aervants for new1 mvica. They aeem blind to any relaUon !Jetween the taxes that -be them, and tho '1tritc.S they demand. Tbll begets 1 splnoft hallucination, or at ieaat a paradoa, in bcleaguertd public wvants. Governors, mayors and like wbllc olllcm inllst that ti they can lhll\ rlalng COlll to tbe natJonal aovernment, they~ eave the hornefolkl -y. and make tbn um. Il-lt-Jtork--. and any public GCllcfr whe 11 literate knowllL Light on Jtlitaority Bepre;ent~ti0n ,1 ' . GOP Will Be Whjte, Ciean-Scruhhed WASHINGTON, D. C. -Without reform on quotas, the ReJMJblican con.- veot ion in August will be made up of 30 percent women, a. percent "youth" and 3 percent blacks, according to current estimates. This is not bad for a political part-y that wasn't trying, but it does fall short of the contrived Democratic mix of 36 percent wt1men, 15 percent blacks and !2 percent under 30. The whiter, mater and older Republi- cans will try to make 'I' up in shQ)!mlan.Wp what theyllaCk in po- 1 it i co -sociology . Clean -scntbbed ·youth will be in evidence by the thousands to play a central part in the festivities. THEY WILL not be in ,Miami Beach to hold their elders to strict account. as were the indefatigable and mirthless young in July, but to share in the jubila- tion with many special events to attract 'IV's roving eye. The Republican party will be revealed for what it js, a highly respectable and cheerful family gathering without any bosses, not even a father image, but with a candidate considered qualified ror the (rucHARD W'.JLS~~ t.he very good year Nixon predicted. Or bow hard they work. circumstances Economic analysts agree the econorriy is Conspire to t'hwart their realization of the expanding rapidly. The growth rate has American dream while the rich and · speeded up. profits are rislng, but the /!rivileged get richer and m o r e employm6nt rate hangs around six rivileged. Nobel Peace .Prize., liercent, which is bad news politically in As the fll"St Republican in the history 'lhe Republican convention will know President ~Nixon's ears. He blames his , of presidential electioM to be nominated ' exaclly where it .stands on busing and 1960 defeat on a preelcction unemploy-three Umes, Presideot Nixon suffers aborllon. It will be as vague as the ment rise. 1 from no lack or exposure or fixed idtat Democrats on tu: refonn. It will boast of The • s~· percent unemployment rate about hll1 qualifications for the office. many things, includJni taking out of Viet· can he rat nali zed by the experts, bu\ In this ~eapect, he is to the Republican nam llOO..Ofll troop& placed \here by not by t . affected by unem~loym~n party '\"hat Grover Cleveland _ also Denidcratic praldents. HGpel are risin' The rate st ys at its embarrae1ng lev nominated , three timea -was to the for announcement of a negotilted , se~-to cite one reason, because so many Dem~ J)ff'ty. Cleveland won the ttemenls in Vietnam. TJ>l 118DJO applies to pie are entering the labor market. l'1'0 , µrat tr1 loot ·.., the a_.i and won Amertcan.SOvier co!llljratlon in in-aod a half million people more lhla ·s )pin oi Ille third att«npt. ' fiueneing a Mldtfle ""6 llelUement. , ago now are at work In civilian • j 'In h11breapecl!ld hlltory of prt!ll.dllltial There will he B<linelbiail far tabor, but Youn~ters pnd women are seeking nd elect!~ Eusene JI. ~boom eaya of that ii a delicate sµbject ht a political getting• jo~ at an unprecedented ftnd Cleveland: '1He ..... only' the nect!SSlty of party committed to t~ right-to-work unexpected late. reslstin, clllOOntent; ho did not know how amendment, alld ·aom~ fbr· itt:ae Prospects are thought to be good for to allay It." blacks who believe verys little of what· clo.&fng the gap In unemployment in the they bear Crom the Nixon White House. next year or so, but tbat is no~ fast 1 enough to sbit Ni.zon, aDd thu!· tl can TRB CHICANOS will come in for reasonably bh ezpec&ed lbat he will 'act in special attention since, as the Mexican-some fasbiori t? st~.ulate empl~e!11. American vote, they are in a swing posi-How to do so without ll!O atimular"g 1n- tloo in the key states -Of Texas and nation is a sttiOUI problem. • California. A featured attraction will be J the LaUno treuurer of the lJnited States,'" OUI' OF THIS buic econortic con· Mrs. Romana Acosta Baiiuelos, ap. ditlon rises the malalae G(orge S. pointed by President Nlaon. McGovern and George C. Wallaoe seek to The Nixon convention, however, will be exploit: The general sense shared by so uncomfortable with what la proving to be many people that no matter what tbey do NIXON'S PROBLEM is how to allay the dJacontent he reaclily recognizes as implicit In McGovern's candidacy so that his own considerable achJevements in the. presidency can come shining through. While it may be true that, as McGovern says, Nixon is the great uniter of the DemocraUc party, it ls also true that Ce4f. or McGovern unites many disparate elements in Nixon's favor. The Republicans In Miami will play out that theme, foo. I \ . GM Let. Off H·ook. on ~orvair Recall~ WASllI!ilGTON -Faced with the recall of 235,000 to 400,000 old Corvairs which could cost lawsuits totaling tens of millions of dollars, General Motors bas been let gently off the hook by the Transportation Department. We have evidence, however, that the favorable report on the Corvair not only was rigged but that Doug Toms, the federal auto safety czar who issued it, ne~er even· read it before it was made public. Instead, the re- port and its ac- companying press release were handled in the 10th floor offices of Tran,«portatlon Secretary John Volpe. Words were even put in Toms' mouth that be never spoke. WHAT TOMS said in private about the problem· plagued 1960-Q · Corvatrs was altogether different from what the Transpart1Uon Departmeot quoted him , as saying. "I've driven enough .of these cars and I don't like them either,'' Tom. canfided to the. Corvatr's "nemesis Ralph Nader, 111 fell the rlgbt ir11ide wheel jack up <11 tbe Carvalr . . . I know O>rvalrs niU Oftt and go out or control and people ... problems with them." Both Toms and Nader conOnned this private conversation to my auocl•te Les Whitten. Yel the ofncial press releaae quoted Tomi as aaying that "handling and atabUlty pcrformance or these cars Is at least as g<iod aa tho performance of several contemporary domesUc and foreign vebldea. Tbe Co r v 1 I r performance does not result in an ab- normal potential for lou of control or rolloJer." · TIDS STATEMENT WU manufactured !or Toms, ho acknowledged, and put out by Volpe'• office. Toms saw it for the lint time after it had he<n ~leased. Nol only was the publicity on the report prtpll'ed "' high, but there ·1 evidence the Transportatjon Department tampered with motorist safety in Selling up the Corvalr tests: For instance, the 195.1 Corvaii-was tested but not the t96(Hll~ models. Yet many of the 300 Corvair suits against GM involve fatalities in the older ca_n. New tires were also used on the test cars Instead of the worn tires that bad flgured in many fatal Corvalr roltoven. And, unlike GM, Ford and other te5\1 In tho, 1960s, which produced numerous Corvair rollovers, the new federal tests ~ "automatic pilots"' instead of human test drivers. THESE AUTOMATIC pilots were deaigned by an Institute, which was ellablllhed by 1 flO mlWon grant from GM, lllllOl1' other&, aod 11 lllW funded, in port, with fl mllllon a year film tho auto industry. Tho Tranipartatlon bi-qi '""' fully aware of ihls before the!> c1loae the Higlnny Bafety 8-erdl lllltltule, Unfventty ol MlchlPD, to participate in teall aff«ttng lttl ~. An lnaUtute 1pakeoman ...... to Ill that It Isn't I t .-Truth! By·CAlll, lllBLET JR. 'Even the 1110t1t lndllferent er muat wonder where tho -Js.coming from to aet thlnp rip! ii> our couittry, The IOlut\Oft, thank tbe 1111!1 abovt, 11 at hind. Tax lho tu oolledan twlcO, once becauae they are dU-like you and me, and •rain bocauae they inDlct soch awful mlaery upon U1 llld hide behind tbe skirts of _,i!Dllll ta eacape our righteous lnilignatlen. "If the public offlct,. will lftfrfnQ& m<n'I rlphll, lll<V °*hi lo JlGV Qrtatcr damoqt "'411 OIUr 1'Mft. '' -Lord Holl fft 1702 jMiclol Mllhlg is In 11anybody'1 i\ocket." Flnally, the test 'results were reviewed by three distinguished auto experVJ, handpicked by the deparlltlfpt, who hid no research and testing credenuats in car handling. The tests were '1tal to GM, which would have been compelled to start an immensely costly recall campaign if the Corvalrs had been found uosale. The recall could also~ve used against GM in its mul llar litigation over the C.Orvain:. · · RALPH NADER cJ T.,.;. after the rigged Corvalr reportloed. "There ts a helluva lot of Ucll overtOQN, aome spoken, aome , 1bout this repart. Aren't ~ auppertlq Ille Democrats? Thia Is a lltical yur, you know," Toma said to the nonpartlaan Nader. Both men agree this Is what Toma said. But Toms tnilstfd afterward that he had meant to r~e~ Qnly to tho politics or tbc report'• crliq, Footnote: ~new ~ falls to men- tion even u 1 loo te' ih8t Ccrvalrs of all yeara hive 1 def ve beatin(( syatem design that may· t letlla! carbon monoxide to leak la ~.com· partment. GM, In 1 er, his admitted the fault. I , ROUGHING n ,-tlonal Parks czar G,eorge llartq= rnpoMible for supervising the atlons which do bulineJs In Ille na peru. One at ibo bluest ii operated 1>1 Donald Hummel who baa, •llllOlll ~ Ille conceeatoo In Montana'• Glacier tJlllonai l'lril'. When Hartzog vialted thi l!ark recently, he , pve evidence of bow 1horatogblp he will potke Hummel's oper1Uon by lplndlnc fQW' days in t1!0 coocelSlonalr\'• private -I house. f J . , 00811.Y GOOPS The /.Ir Fora ls almoat I year in rtpalring I foof· ridden mlsalle acklng beacon on A.....ton Island t Atlantic deaplto . ordert flwn w lo "" ii "the hl1hel1 priority. ill .-to polcb ,. tho lnolallatloo, .. ..iiden1i.1 - • reveals "approximately two million dollars ••. have been expended on a sys·tem' that is not producing operational data." 1The cabled orders I r o m ·washlngton stress: "This site should . become operational as soon as possible." . Yet, Maj. Gen. David Jones, in charge of the project. couldn't even 'estimate when the tracking post would be working. . f!M SCRAPS -United Arti.sts' Max Miller r,..i that the Treasury Depart· . ment wu ·Jelling worn out, ground up $1 14 $100 bllla to contractors for pocking oil rip and road conatrucilon. Since a thousand bllla weigh only two PoUnds, Miller rtcured a low POUDdl wollld bo enough to aupply every movie editor in Americ•.rlth • potential f lOO ICl'lp In I pluUc "l'velope. This WOll!d ho an ex· cellent PfOIDOl!on gimmick, ho reu, for Allen Fwit•a·new movie, "'Monq Talb ... But Treasury ~pparently bu men !Nit In road cootrac;1orti and tbe oU lobbf than it doea in moVl• promolert Ind movie critics. The Treasury ofDclall lumed down Miller'• bid t11 JP'OUllds t11at tllo currency ICl'lpt mtpl ftnd their ..., l'nlm the tdllcn into ..m.rfelt bWL DA!LY PIL OT RoWT&N .. WM,'~ ~ l•..U. .l4ilor Albfrt W. Bola Edflorial Pago ~ The tdltorlol -or 11oe IJallo Pllot Sffkll to Worm aml .._. lato-by~ncwtpaptt"'a ol)lnKMil and .. mchtary on topka ot Jat'"'t ... .1.,.in..,,.., by provldlnJ • "'""" tor tllit UJ>1'81kln ot 'our "'*' ,: ODinlono, •t>d by .,......tins lllo ~;~;:: .... pain .. ol t-... ..... ....., __ ,.... o( Ille .... 'l'bum.,y, July '¥/. 19'12 I I r Thursday, July r7, 1972 DAILY PlltlT 5: Restroom I Review Set Killed by Committee Liberated Pentagon Papers Trial Suspended Tax Reform Battle Looms SAN J'RANCJSCO (Al') -The snually ltf!'gated Boord o f Supervisors restroom at City llall has been liberated by Supervisor Diane Fein- stein. Mrs. Feinstein an- nounced Wednesday she had used an urunarked bathroom previously reserved exclusively by male board members. Speaking lor btrstll and SUpervisor Dorothy von Beroldinger, the trium- phant Mrs. Feinstein said, "It's a liberated restroom now. We have equal rights I.here." • LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Pentagon Papers trial is tem- porarily suspended today as three appeals court judges review a defense demand to see wiretap information the government has on a member of the defense team. The 9th Circuit Court of Ap- peals judges took the matter under submission after hear· Ing l 'f.i hours 1of legal arguments at an emergency session Wednesday afternoon. A series of last-minute ef- forts by defense attorneys for Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo won a stay of the trial CALIFORNIA SACRAMENTO (AP) - A rare alliance of rtepublican Gov. Reagan and the Assembly's most p o w e r f u I Democrat struggled to bring a $1.2 bUlion school finance-tax refonn measure back to life today. less than three hours before '---------' opening arguments were to T h e controversial com- promise was defeated by a begin. The rapid-fire legal develop- ments Interrupted tbe appeals judges' attendance at a judicial conference ht nearby Pasadena. U.S. SUpreme C.ourt Justice William 0. Douglas, Teen Drinking Bill Swamped in Senate who presides over the 9lh SACRAMENTO (Al') -A Circuit, also was at the Con-proposed constitutional change No-fault Insur. anc"" Law ference and Wound up hearing to allow 111-year-<>lds lo drink "'r informal arguments for the alcoholic beverages has been delay of trial. Defense attorneys Leonard swamped lj)y a lf.-25 Senate wou1d also, Bradley said, open up topleu-bottomless bars to teenagers. "I don't think young people are prepared to go into some 'of these places," be said. Passage H,opes Revived · ~r.':'~u 1;::e~0;: vo~. proposed ~nsmuuonat with other defense team mem· amendment would end "a 1 paradox" In California law Zoo Rhino Gets Change Of Scenery SACRAMENTO (AP)-Hope The tally was the minimum bers through the night on a which allows persons between bu been revived for enact· required for pa!Sage by the 13-petition for stay. 18 and 21 to vote but doesn't ment of a nc>fault auto in-member C(IJ1lm1ttee, and sent allow them to drink, said Sen. surance law for Celllornla thl! year in tbe wake of approval the bill to another high hurdle Q k H, Alfred Song. by 1 key Senate committee. -the Ftnaooe Committee. Ua e its "The 18-year-<>ld of today is Jn crucial vote Wednesday, 1 'nlere was no immediate in· an adult. Let's not deprive the upper bouae'1 Judiciary' dlcaUon of whether no-fault S hla d him of all the privileges of Committee gave 7.3 approval t might be acted on prior to a OUt n adulthood," the Monterey SAN DIEGO (AP) - A to a no-fault bill authorized by three-mnnth recess which the Park Democrat pleaded. change of scenery was all the Assemblyman Jack Fenton Je~Jat,fre is planning to take LOS ANGELES (AP) -An bt!t'~o~:'n t~~~~~~~~ ~ss~ cld white male rhinoceros at despJte heavy lobbying against beginnijlg Friday night. earthquake has rattled sec-elected to the State Senate yet the San Diego Zoo needed to the measure from tr i a I AU fto..fault bllls approved tions of Los Angeles and Ven-be bl 1 1 11 drink become a new man. lawyers. by theJJudiciary Committee so not a e 0 ega Y a The rhino and his mate ig- Anti-Veto Effort Fails In Senat,e SACRAMENTO (Al') Thne more attempts to over· rlde a governor's veto have failed In tbe Senate. far lhls year have died ln the tura counties, causing no highball at a social function nored each other for years, Finance Committee, their last damage but prompting many with other lawmakers, Song says Dr. Charles Schroeder, obstaCle before they would anxious telephone calls to said. director of the zoo, until the have reached the full Senate. poUce. "This is really a paradox in 12-year~ld male was moved to Wednesday's favorable vote The quake at 5:30 p.m. our law -that people old the zoo's wild animal park came ' after Fenton ·()).:Mon-Wednesday measured 3.8 on enough to vote and fight for about the time 20 young white tebel.IG) am e_n de d the the Richter scale and was oen-the survival of this country rhinos arrived from Africa Aslembly-passed bW j.o clamp tered about 80 milis and was can't legally bUy a drink," he last summer. a ~year lid on Pfemlum centered about 80 miles north added. 11The sight of those beautilu1 rates for personal injury auto of the Los Angeles basin in a If approved by the Senate, teen-aged rhinos interested insUrance. sparsely populated area near the proposal would have been him," Schroeder said in a The seventh vote needed for Gorman, a spokesman for the placed on the November ballot speech Wednesday . "We now pusage was cast by Sen. Univenity of S o u th e r n for a decision by voters. have seven pregnant and two David Roberti ( D. Los Ca 1 if or n j a seismology Sen. Clark Bradley, a San more possibly pregnant. 1Angeles),whohadvotedtokill laboratory said. Jose Republican who opposed "And, now his old mate Fentoa'1 Bill last month but The tragic S o u th e r n the measure, said approval from the 1.00 has gone out But one of the attempt!:, on changed his mind when the Callforni¥ earthquake on Feb. wou1d trigger a jump in there and he is eying her in a Wednesday, came within a ' proposal was reconsidered. 9, 1971, measured 6.5. teenage drunken driving. It different light." 11ngle vote of making 11, and piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim another failed by only two votet, I The legislature has not ov..,. ridden a governor'• veto a1nce 191(1. By a tw .. vote margin, Sen. Waller W. Stiern . (p. Bakti:afje!d) failed to relnstste a $11.5 mllllqn budget Item that would have cut the emount of lulllon and fees charged to students al the University of California. Stiern aald tbe amount should be paid from the general fund, not tbe studenll. The one-vote margin came on an elfort by Sen. George R. MOICOne (]).San Francisco) to raise the salaries of state employes by 71> percent rather than the 5 percent that Gov. Reagan approved. The third attempt, which won only 19 votes toward the required two-thirds majority ol :17 votes, waa In a bill by Sen. Alfred E. Alqu~I (!).San Jose). Tlte bill would have given stele college employes the right to know about derogatory ' Information In their files, and an opportunity to explain II. WE HAYI ''PIOl'U C:ONDITIONERS" ~ naRY OllANT. It.I'll It wu only a relatively few yeara ago that the pro- ceu wu developed. of cool• Ing the air in summertime to make people feel more comfortable. But, we think It takes more than control ot tbe envirOnmcnt to really put a peraon at ease. lb our pharmacy we have developed a process called "'people conditJonen... It ts a combJnatlon of several tn .. gredients -trtendUnest. pro-- fesstonal service, courttlY. ln!onned aa.lespeaple, and a aenulne desl:re to pleuc you and every other customtt. By creating this type ot• at,. mosphere we feel that you will want to rely on us tor your health needl no matter what the tempetatore may I be hWde or out! YOU OR YOUR OOCl'OR CAN PHONE US when )'O<J nHd a delivery. We wUI ci.. u ... prornpUy without extra clwp. A ,...t many people relJ on us tor their hieaJth hffda. Wt welcome requHlt for dellvery aet'vlce and ~-ta. PARK LIDO l'HARMl'CY lf1 H ........ .. Me•put ..... '4#11M ,,. Doi....., SUMMER TRUCKLOAD EVENT! FRIDAY, SATURDAY ancl SUNDAY 1st Quality -Hundreds to Choose from -Bring your Trucks & Trailers 1 GALLON 2 GALLONS 5 GALLONS YOUR CHOICE OF ••• * CITRUS * TROPICALS * ASSORTED JUNIPERS * SHADE TREES * SUN, LQVING SHRUBS * VINES AND MANY MANY MORE K1llog'1 NITROHUMUS i1 a rich compott of natural humut used In lht prepar•· tion of flowtr beds, lawn1 1nd around cover areas be- fore pl1ntln1. K1llo11'1 NITROHUMUS improvt1 both 1011 texture and aeructure. Large Bag only ... 'l39 I Retain Moisture Keep Roots Cool PLANT with. Garden Grove • Newport Beach • Fashion Island Only JCPenney 24 Fashion Island • Newport Center • Newport Beach single vote in an angry hear-eales taxes will be increased, Increase in state support of ing Wednesday by the Senate how much state money local local schools and a tax relier Finance Committee. schools will get nut year end package which Moretti said Both Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti hinted bow much -it any -proir would cut the a v e r a g e strongly that they would not uty tax: relief homeowners .. homeowners property taxes by Jet tbe legislature go on the will receive. $200 a year. three-month recess planned at The Mort:tti-Reagan plan, , The Dills measure would the end of this week U the defeated on a 7-6 Finance give local schools a $900 massive bill is not passed in Committee vote, would in-million a year increase. But .some form. crease state lnoome, sales and the only new revenue it pro- Both Reagan and Moretti business taxes and require poses to pay for that hike 1s a said in separate statements voter approval of most future one-cent per dollar increase in that they "could not conceive" property tax rate increases. the state sales ta~, .estimated of allowing the legislature to The new revenue would be to be worth $595 milhon a year recess until Nov. 8 without:,p;;"iisediii:;;iiloi;,paiiii;y.;f;iori;,aii;;ii$509iii;;iimiiiliilioiin.,;in;ne;i;wi.;iirei;iv;iien;iiu;i;e.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ resolving the complex tax 11 issue. But Reagan refused to say definitely whether he would order a special session on tax- es U the issue remains unresolved. Moretti would not directly answer questions by newsmen on reports he might hold a ~nate-passed recess resolution as ransom for the tax measure. However, Moretti did reveal his strategy for reviving his bill. It would involve amending his bill into the 11th-hour Senate bill which Democratic leaders of the upper house I passed after defeating the Moretti-Reagan compromise in the Finance Committee hearing. Moretti said if that measure by Sen. Ralph Diiis (!). Gardena), ever reaches the Assembly "it will be ex· tensively amended ." Asked if the amendments might be the tatal substitution of his own measure into the Dills bill, Moretti said that is "a possibility." At stake in the dispute ls whether state income and LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! Famous U.S. Women Ski THm Diet During the nan-snow off season the U.S. \Vomen's Al- pine Ski Team members go on the "Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds In two weeks. That's right -20 pounds in 14 days ! The basis of the diet ts chemical tood action and was devised by a famous Colorado physician especially far the U.S. Sid Team. Normal energy Is maintained (very important) while reducing that way. It's a diet that is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay at home. This is honestly a fantastically successful diet. If It weren't, the U.S. Womens' Ski Team wouldn't be permitted to use it! Right? So, give yourseU the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientilic, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to yourseU to try the U.S. Women's Ski Team Diet. That is, of you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks . Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Servlce)-{:ash is O.K. -to: Wormation Resources Co., Dept. 19, P.O. Box 173, Encinitas, callf. 92024, Don't order unless you expect to Jose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do! During Our Annual Anniversary Storewide SALE! On Sale and Selling F mt Savings from $41.50 to $61.50 Now, durtn1 our aernklnnual M La-Z·&oy, .... -or th• flneot rocuntna c1111rs, tots us offer you mor. for your monay. Only t.Z·Boy atves you llllYr effortless recllnlnt -· eholce or ehllr l!yla tor bllored ncllnl n1comfort-1nd • w1rranty 011 mechanism for the llfe of the chllr. Don't uttla for 1nythlns but the authanttc 1.1-Z·Boy Chair. And rilhl now, ygu ean pt onoortht i.a.z.11oy Rocll .. Roclcln Iii-. In your eholct or bolutlful .... ,,.. fobriar, 81 ,_ ll'llnp. Quo.-11't hmlttd 10 pt-. ... ,..rvlllt •rty. $219.50 JOU SAVI Ht.II Start HtWI: Delly, 9:00 to S:JO; M., 9:00 IO 9:00; Sar. t :OO IO 1:30 • ~~~ .. ~·!°!·~~ PHONE 548-5131 .. .. .. .. ' \. Orange Coa·st Today's Flaal N.Y.·Sterlt• "'.Ol. 65, NO. 209, 4 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1972 N TEN CENTS Carpenter's By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot tM Dllll'f Pw.t 11.tf . The outcome of the November 1eneral election wUl apparently determine t~ fate of the coastline preservation bill authored by state Sen. Dennis Carpenter (J\.NeW1'9rt Beach). carpenter's bil~ designed to give local government a say in the developmerit of coast~ lands, cleared the Senate Wednesday night on a 23-UI vote. The bill now moves Into the Assembly Land Use and PlaMlng Committee, chaired by A!semblyman Paul Priolo (J\. Los Angeles ). Carpenter'• ldmlnistrative assistant, Richard Rohrbech, said today the bill will not be beard In the A11tmbly until November. But there 11 another, .m~ tougher, coastal proposal beaded for t h e November ballot called the €oastline Initiative. It would &Ive rll'Oll8 powers to ' the state boards. Rohrbach acknowledged that paasage of the initiative would automatically kUl Carpenter's bill. "We are actually very plessed with the timing of this," Rohrbach said. "I think um gives people the indication that there is an aJtemaUve to the initiative. There ts something going through t h e Legislature." · Capitol observers have said that Carpenter's blll is not likely to clear the Air Cal, PSA Union Proteswd BY L. PETER KRIEG 01 "'-01t1y Pl)ff tllff Two California airlines , AH-west and Western, have flied formal protest& to the proposed merger of P a c i f I c Southwest Airlines and Air Cllifomla, the Cllllornla Public Utilities Commisaion said today. The PUC, which jllll 8Jll10UllCed ap- proval of permanent route authority fOr' Alr California between San Diego, Orange County and Oakland-San J..., still has not scheduled a public bearing date on the merger. Besldea the two airlines, two PSA employe groups also have uked to in- . tervene In the bearing, although they claim they don't oppose the request at thiJ time. "They j\111 want to get their loot In the door' In case oomethlng happens," Slid ' Corole Kretzer, PUC lnlonnatloo officer. The PUC reoenUy tumed dowo a PSA applicaUoa 'to serve San Diego and the 'Won't Withdraw' Eagl,eton Brands New Chnrges •'Damuµb 'l,e Lie: By EDWARD N. INOUYE • HONOLULU (UPI) -Democratic vice presidential candidate Thomas F. Eql .. ton denied today he had ever been ar· mted oo charges of drunken or reckle!3 driving. At a new1 conference, he called cbar1es by syndicated columnist Jack Andmop "a damnable lie." Eagleton 11id be would not withdraw N. Viets Reject Peace Offering By -U.S. Team PARIS (AP) -North Vietnam r .. ~ected today a renewed urgent American appeal for an immediate cease-fire in Vietnam. Hanoi's chief negotiator told the 152nd session of the Vietnam peace conference tjiat a cease-lire can tal<e place "a(ttr agreement on all the military and PQtllical questions." j(uan Thuy acol!ed at President Nix· on'• May I plan, wblcltincluded a call for a cease-fir<, saying lf'contalns "nothing new and constructive." . (South Viet- namese troops have now been pulled out of the Citadel In Quang Tri, see Story, Page 4). U.S. Ambessador William J. Porter bad urged acceptaoce of the ceuH!re, ,/aylng : "There seems to be no moro CQ/llpelllng task for 1» than that ol .,,. dlilg the killing and doing .. u .... u w'e can. Cease-f1re .ii the key." ;·Porter said an end to the lhootlng ~ould enhanc< the prospecla for political negotiation. J . l lrOin Ille t!det he -.. 'tf'itb Sen. Georp },fcGovem . ·Ea&lelc>a Ital! aides gathered In an emergency meeting at bla hotel today alter Qlldicated columnist Jack Ander- soo reported In Waal>lngton that Misaourl traffic records showed Ea1Ieton had been amoted In bis home state en charges ol drunken and reckle!3 driving. lo Walhlniton an Eagleton spokesman branded the charges "abo9Jutely a n d flatly \IDtrue.11 Becaule of the early morning sealon, a scbeiluled bresklaat meeting between Eagleton Ind Hawail Gov. Johll A. Burns was canceled. Claire Ebel, chairman of the Hawaii McGovern·Ea1Jeton Committee, w a s among-those summoned' lo ·the meeting at Eigleton'1 ,hotel.' Shortly alter, the announcement came that the breakfut meeting with Blll'DI WU canceled. OGna1d Horio, Burns' press secretary, said Eagleton bu phoned Bums to a- press hJs regreta '1hat be would have to cancel their ocheduled breaklaat'' Eagleton remained clooeted In hll bot•! and .Was not Immediately avatiable !or comment on the Anderson charges. Anderson said he was told by "a fonner high official from Missouri" that "a Missouri llate · trooper turned over to blm pbotoetata' of the traffic cltatlolll." ''™"' citations, be said, ranged from drunken ml reckless driving to speed- ing," Anderlcn uld. "All of them oc- curred In MJsaourl during the 1"11'.1, to the beot ol bis rocoDectlon." Eagleton dleclooed Tuesday he b a d undergone psychiatric treatment on three occasions for treatment of "ntmMI! es· • haustloD and f1Ugue." He tbto 'said he would not remain on the ticht ii hil ~would bann tMcGovem's White Jlouoe bid. , ~ -ed, t be categorical deala1 II)' ~·a olllce. I two Bay Area cities via Orange County. 1be Air Cal route approval merely makes permanent a temporary action taken nearly a year ago when Air Cal was allowed to begin the service. IronicllllY, it was a hotly contested bat- tle between Air cat and PSA for the route, Miss Kretzer said. u'I'he two carrien fought bitterly for it, •• she said. The PUC, she said, ruled against PSA (SO. AIR CAL, Pip I) Nixon Blasts Viet Policy Opponenfi'· .• r • WASHING'l'Qli (41'~~idOiifNlmi lubed out at crltla of bis Vietnam policy today od llld the Nortll Viet· namese .,..,. prolJIOlinC a "hypocrlUcal double standari" In~ U.S. plaoes were bombing dikes anil dams. The chief executive delivered a spirited defense of U.S. policy in Vietnam at an impromptu news conference in his office. He said the United States was applying great restraint -0 we could rmisb off North Vietnam in an afternoon" -and that hJs policy is geared at gaining,.{ negotiated aettiement. ' Wflile be ~ to give specifics ,On cumnt negotiations, Nixon s a I d j'the chance !or a negotiated aettlemeftt II be~~ ..... ~8;',j~~~=~ supporters of "end the war .. resolutJom. He said "those who say' •end the war' should name their reso!utj&ns 'prolon& the war.'" / , Mesan Elected , Officer of CSEA Delegates to the litb Annual California School 'Employes Assodatloo Con- ferenctl in Sao Jose elected a Harbor Area 1'woman to a second term as sec(itary Wednesday. She is Mrs. Marjorie Haloes, of 1771 l\lonrovia Ave., Costa Mesa, an active member of the CSEA for 14 yesrs. An lntehnediate clerk·typilt for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, Mrs. Haines is In charge of oubetltute teachers' records. She has held many officea witli CSEA Chapter 11 and sefved aa regional representative in addition to wiMing two lenn1 as secretary of the 65,000 member organization. Headquartered in Burlingame, the CSEA II the primary agency represen- ting non-tucblnc school personnel In Calilom!a. Bill Aas.embly in the event that it is still a11ve after November. "It will have a tough time," Rohrbach conceded. "The Democrats are in full control over there (in the Assembly). Senator Carpenter is meeting · with Moretti (Assembly Speaker Robert Moretti, 0-Los Angeles) today. If we're going to have ~ Ugbt, it's 'good idea to start talktna' to the leadership early." The reason the bill will nol get to the Assembly until November, Rohrbach f Passes soid, is because or an Impending recess of the Legislature. He said the Senate voted \V ednesday to recess on Friday and reconvene in November. "But the Assembly doesn 't \Vant to leave yet, so I imagine there'll be a fight over that.'' Rohrba ch !aid. "But even if they don't recess for a couple of \\'eeks," it's not lik ely .the bill will get through committee before the legislutors leave." he added. The bill sponsored by Carpenter, SB Senate 860, sets up a state Coastal Resourcet . Board to oversee coast.al zone manage, ment. The 15 members would be •s>- pOinted by the Govuoor. with senate confirmation. There' would be nine representatives or coastal counties and s:x public members. Th~ board would ha ve' rinal say On n1anagement of lands from the three· mile limit to no more than tfu.ee miles I See CO AS TUNE, Page II "·I port Harbor. Piloting her.circular craft ls Jeanette Lawrence of Balboa. 1 • ' • • • 'J ,qde Deficit Climbs Judge Orders Freeway Action Dismissal Dela)r While Economy Booms WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation'• trade deftcll !or the first hall of the year ......r to a record 13.3 billion with no signs of improvement apparent, the government said today. The Commerce Department said the iix-month figure resulted • alter another siia~le deficit in.international commerce fu June,· wltli the: vallle of !mpi>rt• ex· ,,.eding mercltandise espol'ted by $5V0.3 million. This wu worse than the May deficit of $552.4. nillllon 1lnd it· represented . the ointh CC¥LS:CCUtiVe month in wtiicll the c:Ountiy has tUined In a red-ink figure In irade. : • · . Domes;i~Jy, the e'conomjc news Is bettor. 'll>e .deJ>arlm<:Dt reported that its cohiposi\8 1lm1ex' of lea~g bUsiness in- dicators l'OBe"0.5 percent jn June on top of a large upward-revised increase of t.4 percent in May. The leading indkato!'S Index, whtie not the most reliable of government ecooomic barometers, is supposed to presage broad economic movements. Dwini the economic recovery, the Index bas gone strongly upward . The Nixon Administration ha s .said it believes June could be the last month of the long deterioration in· trade figures· which began last year. The nation bad its fint trade deficit in tbls century in 1971 or 13 billion. . A trade deficit represents a loss o! competitiveness by U.S. Industry as wen as a potential Joss of jobs. The administration Is depending on a " tum around in trade figures to correct its long·time balance-<if~payments defic~t. . ' Last . Decemb;cr'a devaluation of the , dollar should begin having 'an l!11Pact ,on_ the trade figures later thb Year, ad--. ministration economic officials have said . .Devaluation sen.ied. .to make im- ports more expensive a,nd U.S. exports cheaper in other countries, but .officials say it will take time for this ·economic ' !act to tum the deficit arowtd. . . Burning Candle Wax Da~ages Balboa Kitchen Condie wax being 'melteil oo the stove reached its flash point and exploded In names Wednesday, soorchlng the ~tcben area of a Balboa Peninsula home. Newport Fire Department Inspector Art Morton said today Joss was orlly '50 in damage to the range hood and cup- board area. The 11 a.m. incident was at the James H. Foster home, 22a7 16th SL ' A one-month delay was ordered Wednesday in the move by the city of Newport Beach to dismiss a civil actk>n t:led by a local businessman who regalds the freeway election of March 9, 1971, as illegal and, Invalid. • . ··Orarige' Qlunty 18uperior Court' Jud&• Jainel r: 'Juilge delei'ted l!lJ 1'dlQa 0o the m0tlon to Au(. 25. Both sldet 'm' scheduled to lace trial ol the lisue Aug. 1, but no move was made Wedneaday to deferthe trial. · E. H.' Rocieller, wbo heads Rodefl~r lovesflnents of S!lnta Ana, arguet In h15 action that the city acted IDegally when 1\-dra!~ a. measure ""1hJbiting the city l)'om,cori<;lu41ng any agreemint with the '!tale unleu thal agreement had the sup- port of the clty,'s voters~ . He recognlus u legal the now rejected agreement ol OcL 28, 111118, in which tlle city' agreed to adion ihat would bavo paved .tho way b' conatruction ol ·a freeway -ol UP.I* Newport Bay. The lreew11 agreement WU rejectt(I tiy ~ f. I marain by Newport Beach voter• In the March lt71 election. ... Surgeon Says . Pitcliing Hurts Republicans Study 'Zoo' A wave of popularity In borne candle- making has Jed to an Increase In such fires along the Orange Coast during the post year, according to fir< fighters. w ........ EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) -An orthopedic surgeon II ouggelllng the elimination of the J>O'IUon of pitcher In UtUe League ba!tba!L I 1'Nixon 'Supporters Search for Lodgings iii Newport Blazing caodle wax can adhere to Oesh Or other surfaces Uke military napalm due to its consistency, Increasing sever· lty of burns liJjury and structural dam· age. Melting pots should be of the doubl .. • boiler type," says Inspector Mortoo. COnllnued bot weather II on U.. . agenda !or Friday. with hlgha In : the 90 Inland. Beach temperalares will remain around 'IS a1anC the Orange Coast. Lowt ~ : u;':.o~!;{. ~=.!!' ~ D. Godfrey. chief ol o IUfl<l'Y at Bullalo'1 Clllldnn' Horpltal, said Wednnda~" , "'lbe fOOlbUIUes of • penn111ent elboW molloa or an abnormal ...,. at the elbow. may de<dy Item Jrom -tac everband at 1u early ...... • llld. Godlrly Ilk! he nuld ....... -moillodl """' .. a pltdllas -·a tee u In pl!, f!fa- up-lpn be -to •t up the ball to bit .. bolb pracllce -mlpmu. Plllltlcal campaJcm bHe ollen Ileen likened lo a clram, but the Newport Beach efforts ol "'l'lla Committee to Be- llert,,. P!tsldllll" --lnlli a .... 'l'bo· 1oo, a ......, .-Jh ca1• .,;; East Coul HJclnr,.y al MacArthur Boulevard In Corona de! Mar, wblcb lalarod a Gorl1kldMd p-eeW, miy baft to ba -a Newport Harbot bead- qmrter.s lor Ptal It t N!Jm'a rH1ect1on can ... rajecled a ..... for the •cl. a -m Iba die, olftre4 II)' the Ji'Vlllie ~. Mn. T, Dw ltlnrl, a r e a. diairmn fer Ult .-.ntllM, Ilk! thla •• ~ Ille 1-to !mow by Friday er· actly what tllo7'rw ..... 11 do. ''They could do tiio .t two tldnp," said Jamt1 Hewlcker, -all community ~ dlredor. ''llllJ could elthe< · Partltion oll port of the nliting building or they could UJO a rtlocatable building. "They would need a .. eermlt for a relocatable buildlnc," ~ eiptalned. "But they caa' -a trailer -the mutllclpol codo la-quilo daar oo trallera -they're only allinrtd In mobile home para er In conjunctJoa wltll conotnictloa projectl." loll'I. Stewart lndklled lbay would prefer the rolocatabla buildinl to movl,. lnio the 7.on, 11•11, but said UmJnc would be a problem beca111e or the need to gel the uae ,permit. , '!be committee had hoPed to open the beadquarttrJ Aug. 5, · Howev,r, Hewl,clter ouJd th)f morning that ,the planntng cotNDllllon could not bear tlle use J)el'mlt r,quesl •ntO AUi. 17 -ant maybe not until s.pt. 7 -and there II all-day appeal per!Oli alter the approval beloro It takes effect. Mra. Stewart did nol think the probl•m wu tmibly lftvolvacl. "Rllht iloW ll'1 a mauer or rem,. around the pei'mlt1,'• 1be said, and -.s, 1peaklnc ol the lroller ban, "~ you htve a city ,... quiremont • rule or law. then II no (lot ZOO, Pac• I) He explained that, ti it does ovtrbeat and Ignite. douolng It with w1ter II the worst-thiD« to 'do, since the ll>OI~ was wUt be splashed In all ell-. Only •mall quantities ol war easy to bindle should be mtlted at .,. tlnie and the contafuer n.OU a tlgbl-lllllDC tid1 JiO. said. •· U the wax Ignites, be uplal!"', le&\'e the pot oo the stove. carelulb' Jiu! t1\o lid In place to smother llamH and tuni oll the burner. lie said the not tep la to let ii cool down completely before removal and warned that wax should nevar bo Jell uft. ttnded. "ll (t becomes nectlllf1 to ltlvt, turn the heat or!," he added. INSWE TOD~Y Not too long ago, bodtpocJc. Ing into ittt nadon'1 1DitdtrMu areal .,... L<fl to t1't llanlf brerd o/ outdo<>11""n. B111 ill th< to1t "f<VJ llt'1n.MIW wlld<f- mu ho.T brtli n..-..S with; hikers. Story Page 34. · : -.... --. --. _ ...... "· -::: ~ ... Ill\: •• • ! . DAIL V PILOT N Thund1y,Ju~ 27,1'1'11 McGover}\ Stays .. ;.:With Eagleton . ... CUSTER, S.D. (AP) -Th• chlefTom Eagleton and I hav• no intention of •kffmu for Democratic pre.sldeotial candldatt George McGovern ukl today there wu "concern" in lhe senator's ' 1taff over Tbam11 Eagleton'• medical history but McGovern remains firmly behind bl! running mat•. Richard Dougherty, McGovern's press aeCret.ary, met with newsmen after ..MCGovera. carictled a preu conference. H• aald that McGov,..n "f•ll It would be pointless" to hold the conference because McGovern felt ~'he had nothing further to add." The meeting with newt: men was · ONIOUnced Wedneaday. 1 McGovern Wednesday had uid in a brief statement "I'm t,000 percent for ... Police Seal Plaza, Hunt For Burglar , ,. By ARTBUll R. VINSEL ·~ ' °' 1119 ..,, "* .,.,. ·~ offlw1 Mlled off ~ Coast Pilla •arly today In an ;iid.by.lncb manhunt, followin& the cap- tqrt of one auspeot spotted sprintlnl ti<)rll a window 1maahed burglary seen•. . Investigator• said a IW>nd man aeen lhsi4• the store by Officer Owen Kreza apparently escaped, abandonlnc a car containing several thousand dollars' worih of atolen clothing. 'Newport l!Mch and Huntington Beach dMoc:tlftl were joining the Investigation todiy, lheorillng JI could Involve a tum of · lllthlY-lllCCWful window 1 m a• b bUJ'ilara """1tly active In the Harbor Area. Sewnl Colla Mela officen prowled through Searl, Roebuck and Company during pnidawn liour1, but failed to find anyone lddq. They were aaaiated by Huntlnaton Beach Patrolman Len Darnerow and bla partner UIU, 1 Gennan abepberd do(, who failed to pick up any trail. Walth Commander Lt. Mike ,ffNley .. id moll uniformed officm returned to patrol duly after the Initial aearch; but one atood guard at the scene with dtieo- tives Wayne Harber and George Wilson. "'Officer Krtu, who captured the Jone IUJpect, waa dlspa~bed at 4:391 a.m. .. hen 1 1Uent bur1lar alarm w•a trli· airf:1 at the itore. 1 1 ' r .: ftjirold L. Britton, 22, of 1439 8. Mlnnle St., Senta Ana, wu caught outside in the !Ng• parking lo~ accordlna to police. "ldentified as a cook at Anaheim stadium, Britton wu booked on suspicion of burglary. -.Detectives are now attemptini to determine 1f he aftd whoever else wu in the srore could be linked to a string of 1uch hll-and·run break·lns. _:.One Corona deJ Mar women's wear shpp was hlt twice recently, two weeb to tll~ minute apart, with a $5,000 loss on~e 8nd 16,000 In good> taken the ,.cond tline. A similar incident occurred at a ladies' olothlng shop on Balboa lotand. ., Huntinglnn Beach police also have had at least one Identical window-tmaah burglary at Huntington Center. ., 'l,'l1e method In most cases Is to burl a ll!ilk bottle crate through ti\• 11ass. snatch clothing from rackJ and flee, ~g blocka away within moment•. Gas Fumes Fell Six PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Thr" _. were . holpltalized briefly when. ~ fumet leaked Into the air after a lrelgbt train derailed north of here. Two firemen and a railroad worker were sent· to the hospital after lnhalina lwnt1 of mesityl olide, a to:rlc and flammable gas. DAILY PILOT TM Of'8"'9 Cont CAIL. Y PILOT, wltll wt11ct1 It COlrlblntd t11e Ntwt-l"ra1, It J!Ublllflell 1ry !!ta Onl'IM c.oast M tltlllfle CMrlNn'I'. S.0.- ..... •1tO. ere pyblltl'ltd, MO!wlfy fl'lf"OUllll Fr'ldty, flt Cotti M .. , Jrlswport l••tfl, """!'"""'" l1K11/FOllflllln Vt11ty, Urllll'I• e.ctt, lrvlM/Sldilfttc• ...i S.n Cllmtritll It!! J1111t C.pltfniM A &Intl• rttloMI •1tlln It Mlrtlltll $1tlnlys end Sllnd•Y$o TM prlntlPtl publitllffll SJ\tnt If •t lJO Wut llY Strfft, CO.fe M .. , C.tlfornl1, PUM. Robert N. We.4 l"tftldll'lf ~ ""'~ Jeck R. Curley Vk• l'f'tllOtnt 11'111 o.n.r-.1 Marlt§tt Tllom11 kffvil ••Hw Thomas A. Murphl111 Mt Mllrlt Ed!l'Or L P1t1r Kri11 ~ l t tcfl Cl!y l':dlJrw ... h_ JJJ rt t.ulev1nl , l\41tli11 Aildr.,.t P.0.111 1111, 92661 --Ollll ,..., -w.t .., ~ Lltllnl ~: m ,_.. Avtnut lleft ... 1 ---~ Ul1S l..cfl ...,,.....,. ... ~: ....... II<.-.. a.t 1'4,.._ 1n•1 '41-4111 a TM Al:af0 s I .. M&.,. =Clll::• 1'71, °""" C.t P II t•c -,. ,,.. ........... fll•111aa. ........................ "'""' .,,., .... ':~ .......... ...... .......... .,,.... ...... . - -J""'"' -.. c ... ---. ........... .... •-............. ..,,, -*'IMyl """"" .... _. dropping him from the ticket." Dougherty .said that McGovern hid nol talked with Eagleton since the Mi110url senalor left here Tuesday for a campaign tr ip to Los Angeles. Hawaii, San Fran- cisco and Jefferson City, Mo. Asked what was the general reaction among the 1talf on the Eagleton disclosure and possible political impact, Dougherty· said "one of concern." Asked the precise nature of the concern, Dougherty said only, "I think that'• ob- vious." McGovern '• atatement Wednesday e.choed ·his endorsement of Eagleton voic .. ed. Tuesday after McGovern first learned the details of his running mate'• medical hi.story, which includes visits to the hospital in 1960, 1964 and 1966 for nervous exhaustion and fatigue. Eagleton had been under the treatment of a paychlatrist, and on two of the oc· culon1 received electric shock treat· menll. ' McGovern. said he wa1 repeating his endor1emenr of Eagleton "to assure no misunderstanding on my part." Cameras Whir As 8th Chess Ga~e Begins REYKJ~V!l(, Iceland CAP) -Movie cameru roll"' today u American challenger Bobby Fischer entered the Reykjavik Sports Palace 10 minutes late for bl! elghth chess title game, leadln1 world champion Boris Spassky f..1. Fischer plsyed bl! first move -pawn to q(Jeen '• blabop three -and im· medl1tely waited ··~r to referee Lothar Schmid and aaked whether the cameras were on. . SC:hmid walked ofbt.age to a amall booth ln the middle of the auditor ium. to check fhe noise level, and then returned to the atage. He said Fischer had only wanted reassurance the camera there wu not noisy·. . , , Two other cameras at the aide of an upper balcony 152 feet away from the players are soundless. Although Fischer gave Lorne Hassan of the American Broadcasting Co. the go- abead for 'llfmlng Wedne&day night, his tawy:ers. were ~ing with represen- tatfv'8 of Chester Fos, titular righta bolder, only minutes before the scheduled atarl of today's game. The opening game - for buffs, the English opening -was pure cat and mouse : Fischer made a move, Sp&Mky repeated it. The position on the boa.rd was sym· metrical for the first •ix moves, with all four knights out and kinffside bishops free to move. Fischer's choice of a bWlop'a pawn opening indicated he had not found an amwer to Spassky'1 innovation in the fourth game when the challenger used his favorite king's pawn opening end only managed a draw. Spassky's mirror·play was thought designed to irritate Fischer. The symmetry was smashed at the seventh move, aa Fischer for~ a pawn and then a knight exchange. This left his pieces better developed, with the queen well up. Fischer needs 811 points to take the ti- tle from Spassky ; the Russian needs nine to t .. p It. Sea .Life Creat,es Big Headaches At Atom Plant Fisb, mussels and barnacles -each quite small -are creating some giant headaches for epgineers at the Southern Calllcrnl, Edison Nuclear Generating Station at San Onofre. The fish often get trapped in pipes that take water to the reactor core while the mussels and bafjl&Cle! ~ltacb themselves to the Inside of the plpeS: thus reducing their water carrying efficiency. To tolve the problem with the seden- tary organisl'GI, Southern California EdiBon hu requested the state Regional Water Quality COntrol Boerd In San Diego to be allow!'d to periodically flush the Jines with ho~ water. SCE's requeit will be beard by the San Diego board ,Monday. Present re- quirements req,u!re water leaving the plant not be more lhan 20 degrees warmer than tbt-ocean. SCE feels the water must be ·hotter lo banish the- mussels and batnacles. Power company· ~lneers say that two hours of scaldln& bot water flushed through the pipts o,nce every six weeks abould reduce the fouling of the tines. To aolve the problem With the fish, SCE qlneers have deaigned gadg•ts placed In the water line• to crtate cur· rents that flab wUJ not •-throu1h. Tha fish, ualng aultable currents, can be dJrected out OI the plpu and back into tbe ocean. The request fer the thermal control of the aea life will apply to Units 2 and l of the San Onofre plalll. rtalonsl boa rd ex. ecutlye officer llennJa O'Leary slid. Rot Waler .... 11 lllld 11 llblt I, 1Jie Or!iinal reactor ol the oudeai )>wor 1•ner•th11 1taUon. OJ.IL Y I'll.Of lllff 1't11• From PCJe I COASTLINE •. • or less than 1,000 yards ~nland. The bill set! a deadhne of December 1978 for development of a state plan for the coastal ione and it provides that in- terim cont rol be maintained by use of ex· I.sting local permit ordinances. . Rohrbach said today these ordinances already require e~vironm~ntal con· sl(lerations and public hear1ng1 before development can proceed . The crilerla fol\ plaMlng coastal development are to be adopted no later than July 1974 after public hea.i:lngs In each coastal count y, u.nder the Carpenter blll. ' Eighteen months after· that, local agen· clea: would submit their coastal elements to the state board for approva l and in· corporation into the· state plan. . CITY, GOP LEADERS AT ODDS OVER LOCATION, TYPE OF NIXON HEADQUARTERS Sans Gorilla·Garbed Graeter, The Zoo Aw1it1 Those of Elephant Party Pending adoption of the planning criteria; carpenter's bill states that local agencies can grant permits only if those developments do. not reduce public beaches or recreation in the coastal ione anit do not restrict or reduce beach ac· cess. In its original form , the bill ap- propriated $250,000 to initiall y fund the program, but Rohrbach said this po~ of the measure was dropped for the hme being to facilitate the bill's passage. From Page 1 zoo ... point in breaking it.'' She was not aware that use permit ap- plications require public hearings - which mu st be formallf advertised in ad· vance -when she continued speculation. "Well, they (the plaMing commission) have a meeting Aug. 3; since when if a person attends a meeting can't they be beard?" She said afterward that the lead time before the bearing and the appeal period ~terwards may force the committee to turn to use of the 1.oo itself. Besides, if and when they did not get planners' approval for the permit, any Democrat with $75 and the desire to do so could appeal the decision and delay the opening until October. a month before the election. Reinecke Signs Carpenter Bill On School Aid A bill sponsored by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) that enables school districts to accept monetary donations for scholarships and loans has been signed into law by Acting Gov. Ed Reinecke. · The bill )vas 8uthored by Carpenter and CO-liPonsored by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach) at the request of the Newport Mesa Unified School District. 1 , Walter Adrian, director of fiscal plan· ning for the local school system, said the measure had been sought only to simplify e1isting scholarship laws. Prior to the bill's passage. school districts were prohibited from controlling a scholarship fund as part bf the district's budget. , · Adrian said the district's fund was ild· · min iste red by a grou p of private citizens, and board members acting as private citizens, as the Newport•Mesa Unllied School District Memorial Scholarship and Loa;1 Fund. "We received an offer of a sizable donation to the fund. but we returned it because we were unable to administer it in the way the donor wished," be said. Adrian refused to identify the donor or the size of his offer. He e1plained that previously, donations could not be earmarked for a specific purpose. "But under the new law. we wi!J be able to administer the fund as part of the district's budget and set up criteria which will enable donors to direct the use of their donations to a specific area,'' Adrian said. The di stritt's fund has a balance of S3,000. He explained that the money is given to the district high school graduates who are going on to in· stitutions of higher learning based on their scholastic standing and financial need. Ruth McKenney, Authoress, Dies In New York NEW YORK (API -Rutb McKenney, 60, whose New Yorker short stories about "My Sister Eileen" became a best.selling book, a play, a movie and finally a musical, "Wonderful Town." died at Roosevelt Hospital Tuesday ·nigbt after a long illness. ' Althoug h her fame rested mainly on her humorous writing about her Irish relatives, Including "Tbe McKenneys Carry On," "Loud Red Patrick'' snd "AJI About Eileen," she considered more im· portant her serious writings on rabor strife. These included ''Industrial Valley," the: story of an early GoodyW rubber strike in Akron, a proletarian-novel, "Jake Home," and articlei for lhe leftist publication The New Mules. Born In MiJhawa~a, tnd ., she was reared in Cleveland and worked 11 a reporter for the Akron Beacon Joumal before comtna here to work on the New York Post. Mamie Gets Checkup WASHlNGTON CAP ) -Former Fittl Lady Mamie Elaenbower lo In Walter Roed Army Ho1pltal for what 1 •POkmnan dt.ICribed 11 ''hfr regular ~riodlc observation.'' Inland County Sectors To Be Hot and Smoggy Carpenter also has introduced a tag-on bill, SB 861, which would provide $200 million for Jong term support of the pro- gram, includinR land acq uisition .. That hill is still in the Senate Fmance Committee, and Mike Neal. Carpenter's local represenlative, said it probably will remain there until the fate of SB 860 i! The Orange Coast will continue to en· joy temperatures in the mid-70s Friday while inland areas suffer from heat and possible smog alerts, weather forecasters said today. The National Weather Ser v ice predicted a high along the coast of 'TS degrees. with ocean temperatures at 70 degrees. Ormlgt> County Harbor Department of· ficials said the sea would be choppy Fr i· day with waves about two to three feet. El Toro and Mission Viejo had tern· per a tu res in the 90s today. This was still far below an all-time July high of 103 degrees in 1968. Hottest areas in Orange County today, according to the Orange County Forestry Service were Irvine Lake and Trabuco Canyon, where temperatures hit the 100 mark. The l'~aviest smog counts of the year In the county were recorded Wednesday when ozone readings in La Habra reach· ed .45 parts per million (ppm). An alert was called by the county's Air Pollution Con trol District (APCDJ. The alert was the 10th in the county since June 12 when the APCD lowered its alert standard from .35 ppm to .20 ppm . The health alert was called at I: 10 P.m. for an area inland of the San Diego Freeway north: to Red Hill Avenue. The .45 reading was reached at 2: 15 p.m. The alert was canceled at 4 p.m. when counts dropped below .20. From Page 1 AIR CAL ... on two grounds . "The PUC noted that Air Cal is cur- rently offering between six and seven daily round trips and that Orange County opposed PSA's application, stating it does not have terminal space available. "Further. the financial result of PSA's Dying between the two cities, via Orange County, would be an ope rating loss of about $118,000 a year," she said. "Consequently, the PUC said PSA would undoubtedly seek to increase its share or the market with the result that destruttive wing tip to wing tip com· petition would occur in that particular market," she said. It was the finan cial staff of the PUC that opposed the originally·proposed merger of PSA and Air California two years ago. Miss Kretzer said she did not know when the staff reports on the merger proposed July 7 would be completed. more clearly known . ' "If it looks like the coastline bill is go· Ing to go in the Assembly, then th,e Sena· tor will probably start pushing 681. Otherwise there's no real' point in it,'' he .. 1d. Nurse Training Gets Big Boost From Foundation A $244.307 grant from the W. K. Kellogg Foundat ion of Battle Creek, Mich., to the Orange County Consortium for Nursing Edutation was aMounced to- day. It will provide for coordinated nurse training in Orange County. • The consortium involves nursing p~ grams at Cal State Fullerton. UC Irvine and Fullerton, Santa Ana and Golden West commQ.11ity colleges. The grant specifjcalJf...Will provide up- per level college cdlff"ses at Cal State leading to the bachelor's degree. The courses will begin in the fall of 1974. Trio Finish Transatlantic Dr. Robert C. Combs. associate dean of the UCI·Califomia College of .Medicine said the consortium allows n u r a i n g students to begin studies in the tw~ye..ar colleges and trans!er without loss of credit to the four·year degree program. NEWPORT, RI. (AP ) -One West German and two American sailors are the most recent finishers in the single- handed Transatlantic yacht race. No boats were expected to complete the nearly 3,000..mile trip Thursday, ac· cording to a spokeswoma n for the Lon· don Observer. sponsors of the race. Mex , a 35-foot sloop sailed by Claus liehner of West Germany, was first to cross the finish line at Brenton Reef Light Tower Wednesday. but a 24·hour penalty set her back at least two notches in the standings. The spokeswoman said Mex reached Brenton Reef at 12:23 p.m. PDT, but because it arrived late at the race's starting point In Plymouth, Enatand, 24 hours were added to its elapsed time, put.ting Mex in 28th place. The 26th spot went to Blue Gipsy, with Robert Laney-Bum of Daufuskie Island, S.C. at the helm. The 28-foot sloop ar .. rived at Brenton Reef at 12 :30 p.m. POT. Next was another American boat, Trumpeter, which finished at 4:25 p.m. PDT. The 44-foot trimaran was sailed by Philip Weld of Gloucester, Mass. The spokeswoman said 19 boats still are expected at Newport. A total of 29 have reached the finish ine, including Tahiti Bill. which was towed in July 13 after a collision with a Russian trawler near Nantucket Light UCI's role in the program is to provide graduate level nursing courses. The UCI master plan calls for a graduate level nursing program in 1976 -limed to coln· cide with the opening of a 350-btd teaching hospital on the UCI campus. That $3S million hospital awaits legislature approval this year of nearly t I million of planning money. The Kellogg grant provides for 10,000 square feet of space at Cal State. The space includes classroorr.e, offices and laboratories for the instructional pro- gram. The consortium also involves 22 Orange and Los Angeles County hospitals which provide cllnlcal experience to nurstni students. ~sofa bed sale! npw ~ · . queen size • • $299. PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS • • Opa" Mo,,., Thurs, & Fri. Evts. .. dual, size • • • $249. • These ere very comfortlbl1 sofa beds for titting and 1feeplng. • A wide Mlection of fabrics and . colo11 tq choose from; .. • • R1V111lbl1 hicks end snt cushions. ~~tJ! 22111 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. Orange f;oa·st • . YOl. 65, NO. 209, 4 SECTIONS, 4o PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'-ORNIA THIJRSDA Y, JULY 27, '1972 c TEN CENTS Carpenter's Bill Passes Senate By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlN Dllllr ,. • .,,,.. 1be outcome of the November general election wtll apparenUy delennlne the late of the coastline preseivatloo bill authored by stale Sen. Dennis Carpenter (&.Newport Beach). Cirpenter'a bill, designed to give local J~ernment a aay in the development of coa1tal Janda, cleared the senate Wednesday night on a 23-16 vote. Air Cal, PSA Merge Protested BY L PETER KRIEG Of tllt DlllY Plllt ltMf Two C.lifornla airlines, Airwe.rt and Western, bave filed formal irol..tl to the proposed merger of P a c I ft e Southwest Airlines and Air California, the Califotnia Public Utilities Commission said today. The PUC, which just announced ap- proval of permanent route authority for Air caJifornia betw.tn San• Diego, Orange County and Oakland-San J-. atlll bas not scbeduled a public bearing date on the merger. Besides the two airlines, two PSA empJoye groups also have asked to In- tervene in the bearing, altbollgh they claim t,bey don't oppose the reque.rt at th.ls time. "They just want to get their loot In the door in case something happens," said C8.role Kretzer, PUC lnfonnation officer. The PUC reoently turned down a PSA appllcatloo to serve Saa Diego and tbe lw9 Bay Area cities via Orange County. The Air caI route approval me"1t makes pennanent a temporary action taken nearJy a year ago when AJr caI was allowed to begin the service. lrnnlcally, it was a hoUy contested bll· tie between Air Cal and PSA for the route, Miss Kretzer said. "The two carriers fought bitterly lor It," she said. The PUC, she said, ruled against PSA on two ground.s. "The PUC noted that Air caI ii cur- renUy offering between slr: and seven dally round trips and that Orange County oppoled PSA's application, slating it does not 'have terminal space available. "Further, the fmanclal result of PSA'a flying between the two cities, via Orange County, would be an operating los~ of about $118,000 a year," she said. "Consequently, the PUC said PSA would undoubtedly aeek to increase it. sbare of the market with the remit that destructive wing tip ·to wing tip conr petition would occur In that particular market," she said. II was the f-clal staff of the PUC that opposed the orlginal!y-propoaed merger of PSA and Air Calilomla two yean ago. Miss Kretzer said she did not !mow wben the staff reporta on . the merger proposed July 7 would be completed. Trade Deficit Skyrocketing; Hits New High WASIUNGTON (AP) -The nation's trade deliclt for the first ball of the year ooared to a record $3.1 bll)ion with no elgna of improvement apparen~ the sovemment said today. The Commerce Department aald the six-month figure resulted alter another siaal>le deficit In inlemational cammar<e In June , with the value of impartl o:x· ceedlng merchandiJe elljlOrted by IMO.I nillllon. This was worse than the May deficit of $5S2.4 nilllion and It repreaenied the lllOlh .conaecuUve mooth in which the <Olllltr)' has turned in a red-ink figure In trade. , Domestlcally, the t<onomlc newa ii bitter. 'lbe department reported that iii composite index of laadlng bust ... ln- dfj)&ton roae 0.5 percent In June on top fl. a llrge upward-revised lncreasa of U per<'Olll In May. 'IJjo lading Indicators Index, while not the mc.t ttliable of gdvernment .-..le balometers, IJ auppoRCI lo ,..... brood tCOnOmlc movernento. Dartq lbe -1• .......,., the Index 1IU -strongly upward. . • '1111 Nmla oldmlnisll'8tlon hu aald II lieu.,. ,_ could be the 1ut month of ,Iha ... deieri«atlon In tnde ftcurel wldclr ..... 11111 Y'll'. '1111 aatlcm llod lta lint trodi deficit In tlU cen1ur7 In 1171 of .. blllloo. • • ' The bill now movea Into the Aasembly Land Uoe and Planning Committee. chaired by Aasemblyman Paul Priolo (II· Los Angelea): Carpenter's ldminislrallve asalslant, Richard Rohrbach, said today the bill will not be beard in the Aasembly until November. But there ls· another, much tougher. . coastal propoaal beaded for t h e November ballol called the Coastline Initiative. It would give strong powers to the state boards. Rohrbach acknowledged tbat passage of the lnltiatlve would automatically klil Carpenter's J>ill. "We are actually very pleased with the timing of this," Rohrbach said. "I think this gives people the indication that there is an alternaUve to the initiative. Tbere is aometlµng going through t h e Leglslatuil" Capitol observers have said that Carpenter's bill is not likely to clear the Assembly In the even: that II is still-1ive alter November. .. It will bave a tough ijme, '' Rohrbach conceded. "The DeGtocralJ are in lull contml over tbeJo (in the Aasembly). Senator · CUptnter is meeting with Moretti (Assembly Speaker Robert MoA!tU, D-Los Angeles) today. Jf we're going to bave a ll(ht, It's a good idea to start talking to the leadership early." The reason the bill will not gel to the Aasembly until November, Rohrbach said, is because of an impending recess of the Legislature. He said the Senate voted Wednesday to recess on Friday and ~nvene in November. "But the A!sembly doesn 't want to leave yet, so I imaclne there'll be a fight over tbat," Rohrbach said. "But even if they don't recess for a couple of weeks, it's not likely the bill wlll get through committee before the legislators leave,'' be added. The bill sponsored by Clrpenter, SB 860. sets up a state Coastal.Resources Board to oversee coastal zone manaa• ment. The 15 member! would be ap- pointed by the Governor, with lf!Datl confirmation. There would be nJne representaUves of coastal counties and stx public members. The board would have final say on mnnagement of lands from the three- mile limit to no more than three miles (See COASTLINE, Page Z) Manhunt at Plaza Mesa Police Hunt Store Burglar Ul'I TllUl!offl The Water's Fine Jenny Ten Wolde, Miss Holland, Is all smiles as she swims in the pool at the Cerromar Beach Hotel in Dorado, Pureto Rico, where the Miss Universe contest is being held. Jenny is 5-7 and measures 37-26-35. lnfund County ·sectors To Be Hot and Smoggy The Orange Coast will continue to en- joy temperatures In the mld-70s Friday while inland areas suffer from beat and possible smog alerta, weather forecasters aald today. pr:ct_::u::, !:U:. !:,~ vo:;~ degrees, with ocean temperatures at 70 degrees. Onrlg• Coun)Y Harbor Departmenl of· ficlals !81d the sea would be choppy Fri- ~Y '!filh waves about two to three feet. El T""' and Mission Vl<jo baij !em· peratuns in the 90s today. This waa still far belOll' an all-time July high of 103 degrffl in Jt6I. Hot~ areas In Orange County today, accordlnc to the Orange County Forestry ' . Service were Irvine Lake and Trabuco canyon, where temperatures hit the 11111 mark. The 1'~avlest smog counts of the year in the county were recorded Wednesday when ozone readings in La Habra reach- ed .45 perts per million (ppm ), An alert was called by the county's Air PolluUon Control District (APCD). The alert was the 10th In the county since June 12'when the APCD lowered Its alert standard from .35 ppm to ,20 ppm. The health alert waa called 'at I: 10 p.m. for an area inland of the San Diego Freeway north tQ Red Hill Avenue. The .ts reading wa1 reached at 1: 15 p.m. The alert was canceled at 4 p.m. when count. dropped below .20. Anaheim racon!ed a high count of .22. By ARTBUR R. VINSEL Of flle Del# "" ,,.,. Shotgun-armed officers sealed off South Coast Plaza early today in an inch-by-inch manhunt, following the ca~ lure of one suspect spotted sprinting from a window 1muhed burglary actne. Investigators said a second man seen Inside the store by Officer Owen Kreza apparenUy escaped, abandoning a car containing .. aeveral thousand dollars' worth of atolen 'clothing. Nixon Blasts Viet Policy Opponents WASIUNGTON (AP)-President Nixon lashed out at crtUca o( hia Vietnam • JICJllC)'. '";:and ... l~·.the .... -=·· .. -1:i. were boinbjng ~~ The Chief' ueeuU~ dell)'irec! a !!J)liiied defense of U.S. policy in'Vletnam at an impromptu news conference iD his office. He said'the United Staiel was applying great restraint -"we · coul~ finisb off North Vietnam in an afternoon" -and that hia policy is geared at gaining a negotiated settlement. While he declined to give specifics on: current negot1aUons, Nixon said "the chance for a negotiated settlement i1 better now than it ever has been before." Nixon shan>lY criticized congressional supporters of "end the war" resolutions. He . said "those who say 'end the war' should name their resoJution.!I 'prolong the war.' " They are, Nilon said, 11only confusing the enemy at best and prolonging t b e war at worst." FISCHER CRUSHES SPASSKY IN 8TH REYKJAVIK (AP) -Boris Spassky resigned on the 31th move of his eighth chess tiUe game against Bobby Fischer, conceding his fou rth crushing defeat in six games. The challenger from Brooklyn now has a ~3 lead in the championship series. Spassky's pos!Uon rapidly delerlorated. After 15 moves, he had used 90 minutes against Filcher's 35. At the l&th move, an exchange of pieces began which cost Fiscber a bishop and a pawn to Spassky's rook. But Fischer forced the champion Into checl: on the 21st move. In squeezing out, Spasaty lost a pawn. .. Spa.ssky has jll!t folded up, 11 said Fred Cramer, Fiscber11 representative in Iceland. Republicans Study "Zoo' Nixon Support,ers Search for Lodgings in Newport Political campaigns have often been likened to a clrcua, but the Newport Beaoh elforta ol "The Commiliee to Re- tlect The Pruldent" may tum inlO a ""'· The 1.oo, a former driv~in cafe on East Coast Highway at MacArthur Boulevard lo q..... de! Mar, 11111lch lelllured a Goriila-tulled groeier, may bave to bt ~ 8' l'.(eWport Harbor head· quarien lot President Nixon's re-election campalll'- Tbe clly bu rtjecied a nqueat' for the U'IO ol a trailer oa the site, offered by the Irvine ' CGinplny. Mn. T. Duncan Stewart, a rt a chairman for the commlllee, uld this \ . morninl Ille bopea to tnow by Friday ea· actiy what they're loins IO do. "They could do one. ol lwo things," said James Hewlcker, assistant communiiy development director. "They could either partition off part of the utsttng building or they could uae a rtlocatable building. ''They wwid need a uae permit for a relocalable liuilding," ba o:xplaloed. "But they can't uae a trailer -the municipal code' ii quite clear on'trallers -they're only allowed in mo~lle hoine parks or in ccojunctlon with construction projects." Mrs. Stewart Indicated 1beJ would J)rO(er the relocalablt buildln( to moving Into the 7.oo, ltael(, but aaid timing would be a problem becauae of the need to gt! the use pennit. The committee had hoped to open the headquarlen AUJ. $, However, Hewlclctt aald thil morning that the ptaMing commiaaioa could not bear tJie uae pormlt nquoat untll Aug. 17 -and mayba not uotll 5e!11-7 -and there ii a 21-day appeal perlOd alter the approval belorO a takes ollecl. Mn. Slewart did not lbink the problem WU ieniblr lmol..i. "Rlcht u6w lt'a a matter .of p!IU,.-around the permlta," lhe uld, and ;Wdld, .....,, ol the traDer bu. aH yoa line a dly re-qulremen\ 4-nit or In, thn II ao (lot IOO, l'lp II Newport Beach and Huntington Beach detectives were joining the investigation today, theorizing it could Involve a team of highly-successful window s m a s h burglars recenUy active in the Harbor Area. Several Costa Mesa officera prowled through Sears, Roebuck and Company during predawn hours, but failed to find anyone hiding. They were assisted by Huntington Beach Patrolman Len Damerow and his partner Ulll, a Gennan shepherd dog, who faUed to pick up any trail. Watch Commander Lt. Mike Healey sald moat uniformed officers returned to patrol duty alter the Initial search, bul one atood CUard II the acene with -Uves Wayne Harber and George WllJoD. Officer Kreza, who captured the ~ suspect, was dispatched at 4:39 a.m. when a allent burglar alarm was trlg- (See SMASH, Page I) 'Won't Withdraw' Eagleton Brands New Charges 'Damnable Lie' . llY EDWARD N. INOU,YE ol ch;onken. and recl<leu driving. ~µLil (l!f}) -~/.~ i In Waabiqton &!\ Eoclttoa spokesman ~::,~te·~~-ar· branded the char,... "aboolutdy and ....... ...., -. fla(br -·" mted Oii charges of drunken <Ir rae n-·-· of .••• •• -·--driving ---..... tltv ..._.... • At a ~ews conference, he called charges a ec.bedUled breatlut ftJeetlac between by syndicated colwnnlst Jack Anderson Eagleton and Hawall Gov. Jolm A. Bums ••a damnable lie." was canceled. Eagleton !!aid he would not \vilbdra\v Clafre. Ebel, chairman of the Hawaii from the ticket he shares w J t h Sen. l\1cGovern-Eagleton Committee, w a 1 George McGovern. among those summoned to the meeting Eagleton staff aides gathered in an at Ea$1eton's hotel. Shortly after, the emergency meeting at his hotel today announcement came that the breakfast After syndical~ columnist Jack Ander-meeting with Burns w~ canceled. son reported in Washington that l\fissouri Donald Horio, Bums' press secretary, traffic record.s showed Eagleton bad been said Eagleton bas phoned Burns to ex- arrested in his home state on charges press his regrets "that he would have N. Viets Reject Peace Offering By U.S. Team PARIS (AP) -North Vietnam re- jected today a renewed urgent American appeal for an immediate cease-fire in Vietnam. Hanoi's chief negotiator told the 152nd session or the Vietnam peace conference that a cease-fire can take place "after agreefl'ent , on all the ri>llltary and political questions." Xuan Thuy scoffed at President Nix· on's May 8 plan, which included a call for a cease-fire, aaying lt contalnt "nothlnc new and constructive . ., (South Viet- namese troopa bave now been 'pulled out of the Citadel in Quang Tri, lff Slory, Page 4). U.S. Ambassador William J. Porter bad urged acceptance of the ceue-nr., saying : "There seems to be no more compelling task for "' than that of en- ding the killing and doing oo aa IOOli u we can. Cease-fire ii the key." Porter said .an end to the ahootinc would enhance the prospects for political negotiation. Thuy told Porter: "The contlnueol savage bombing attacb qainat the capital or Hanoi and other clUea in North Vleinam ••. have shown that, in aplle of it. professtona of peace, the \Jnlted Staiel ii still lnlenaifying the war and nurturing the Illusion to uaa the force of arms ta retrieve its policy of 'Viet· namlaatlon' from collapee and to force the Vietnamese peoplt to accepl the U.S. arrogant condltlC111.1' · Thuy Insisted that the United States wu continuing lta attaclc against dil<es and daml. "ThO Nixon Administration bu IOUllht tortuously to deny the fact. Thal it ,.,,. not cover up ••• crimes that 'lll'OUM! the indignation of the Vietnamese people and the energeUc coodemnatlon ol world pibllc opinion. ' "The United Stataa clalma to end the war ar<I to diaenpge from Vl<tnam bul 1-can II do wtllie It cootlnues to sup- ~u~, s..tgon regime ol Prealdent to cancel their scheduled breakfast.":· Eagleton remained closeted in his hoie1 and was not immediately available for comment on the Anderson charges. Andenon said he wu told by "a former high official from Missouri" tbat "a l!Uaourt state trooper turned over to him photootalJ of tbe traffic citations." "Theae cltatioos, he aaid, l'llllled lnlll\ drunken and r .. kleaa driving to opeed- lng," Anderson said. 0 AU of them oc- curred In Missouri during the 1960's, !• the beat of his recollection." Eagleton disclosed Tuesday he h a d undergone psychiatrlc treatment on three: occulons for treatment of "nervous ex· haWltlon and fatigue." He then said he would not remain on the ticket if his candidacy w o u Id hann McGovern's Whtie Houae bid. Anderson discounted t h e categorical denial by Eagleton'• office. 111 think if we can 1et the photostat!, lhil would show the! he bad lied and lhtrelore wu dilqualUled ll'<lm serving on the ticket," the. coJumni!t said. "I don~ bellnt' Eagleton, I do believe mt llOUrH." o..a.,. .... ~ Continued hot weather IJ on the agcn~ for Frlclly, with highs In the 911 lnilnd. 8udl temperaturu will remain arwnd 7$ along Iha Orange Cout Lowa IMS. INSmE TODA 't' Nol too loog oqo, bockpco<Jo. lng mto t/lt n~tlon'a ..adtrN11 crtOI ..,.. icJI to the llcnlr breed of OMtdobrmttn. But i11 th• !alt ftW ueaTS, lhe ll>ildn- nlll hes b .. n inundated IOlU. hikers. Storv Pagt 34. -.... Mlltwl ,_,. • M.tlftlll ..,_, t 0r .... o..tY 1S --.... ,.. ..,.... 1'41 , ....... . -.. . -. -----. '• :2 OAILY PILOT c 'Stflff CQltcerta' "McGovern _Stays • With ·Eagleton . • CUSTl!:I\, S.O. !APl -The .cllial 11pokwnan for Democratic presidenUal c•ndidate Gtorge McGovern said today . there waa "concern" ln I.ht senator's st.off ovu 1'bom11 Ea1l•lon'1 medical lil1tory but McGovun rema!M firmly behind his runolng mate. •Richard Dougherty. McGovun's press ecretary, met wit\} newsmen after ·McGovern canceled 1 preu conference. lie said that McGovern "Celt it would be T~intless" lo hold the confarence because McGovern Celt "he had nothing further to add. 11 The meeting wJtb newtmen w11 announced Wednesday. McGovern Wednelday had aa.id In a brief statement "l'm 11000 percent for ., Senate Approves ·Ban on Killing Of Sea Mammals WUl!INGTON tAPl -A 15-year ban ag'ainst killing and importing whales, sea afters, dolphins and other ocean mam· .mats was close to reality today -after t><iJ!g approved II lo I lo · the Senata WOdnesday. ·• -The measure oow goes to a Conference Committee where it wW be re<0nciled with a •lmllar bW approved by tbe House. · ~The Senate voted Ill: exemption from ·~ ban for Alaakal) Esldmos and aul.horlHd the Hcretary of commerce to bale 1peo!al peflllita for ldentlllo and mmmercial ll1hln1 purpose•. · .. Sponiora of !he bill aald !t h a oom· 'Pminise between conaervatlonlstl who "wanted a complete ban and commercial 'tnterests who feared a ban would cost jobs and business. Another exemption was approved for the tuna industry, giving it two years to find waya of calchinc tuna without killln( porpoise& at the same time. The House bill, approved in March, fll· es a five-year moratoriwn on taking any mammals, but would not allect fishin& opertlionl included In an a1rff111tnl wilJI canada, Japan and Russia. It also would establish a commission to study c:on· ",ervation and make 1rant1 to atataa and ,_,1,ncles for rttemb. ' . ~Burglar FoilS . Dogs, Gets Cash · · A bur1lar who apparently walked aoll· IY: 1nd carried a big atick to drive off hi• "1ctlm 'a watchdop eecaped with $t15 in assorted aiin1 frqm a Costa Mesa horn• $ednesday. . · Marylu M. Xoppenbar11er o[ Z!at La· Salle Ave. called police when she found a family room window screen pried and '\he assorted coins missin&. Officer Paul Alexander said the bure;- lar ltft the club in the bedroom befpre .making off with 80 baU dollars, 10 sliver dollars and lllO peMie• from a plagy bank , .Man Killed by Car A Maywnod man was kiDod early thi1 «tlorning when he atepped Into the path of a car in Buena Park, police r-ported. Victim of the 1ccident, which occurred on Valley View Street. north of Caballero Street, w11 Anton}Q Del1torr11, 31, of~ llcm reported. Driver of Iha car waa !isled by police 11 Donal~ Scb1111 of Par· amount. He was not held. OllAN•I COAlf • CM DAILY PILOT TM Dl'tntt C.Jt DAILY ,ILOT, witll ~ b cemblM:d tll• Newr;.,reu, J& ,_lllMlll W tll• or1noe co.st PL/bl!Pllnt ~ny, ._. . ret. ed!lloM ,.._ publltlltd, Monoty ttlf'tlVlll Fl'W1y. 'fbr Cotti Mew. Newp:wt l•dl• Hll!'l!Jn;ton !Ncll/founllll'I v.11.,., U,UM Buell, lrvlntt'S.cklltblck Mid kn '*-'tel 1111 JIM.• C1pllttfnt. A 1l111le N1laMI • .Olllon It JIUbl!.., .. SllUf'dl'll Ind S!.wld1p. The prll!ClSMI PJblltl\ ... JILlt1I ls et la Wat a.y SlrMf, CM .. Mw1 C.llttrnlt, f1'J6, I.•\•" N. w • .J 'r•lfW tlllll PUii!~ J1clr It. c .. ,1.y Vici ,.,_IO ... t tl'MI Gtnwtll MIM'llltff' 111•••• Ktt'lil ..... ntMt• A. M11r~lli11 IAtl\llllW Ulw Chttf .. ~· le•• Ricllttl P. Mtll , AUlltant Mlnlttro Edl!Mi c..11 ... -))0 Wt1t lay Str.tt M1tt1,.. "''''''' ,,o. ••• 11•1, ti•t• --H,.,.,t le,U.: 'l>J N~rt "'1"",_ • """"" INdll at ,_., AWllllM ' tfUl'll ... IOfll hte:ll: 17115 ~ llwlwt~ " .. ,. C.,,_* AS Ntflll II CllfllM 1 .. 1 Ttl-!JUI 641-iHI Ct.WW ...... ,,., 641·1671 ~...... lfr&. Ofll~ C:.t ,.. .... Qimp111-,, Ne Nwt 1Mrr.t. IH111tr11t-. •hwlfl! rr1tltW W MWrtlMNrlfl ..... ,..., .. ~-...,.!!Wt -111 ...... ll'OalMel~t--. ltc:eiW tltt,i ,.. ...... Jill If (•I• M .... .. _,., --.. ·-""' ~' 'if IMll N.lJ 1M119'~1 ,.....,. •1111t11M a .f.S "*"lov. • Tom EaaletoD.and I bava no int.ntlon of dropping him from ,the ticket." Dougherty 1aid that McGovern had not talked with Eagleton aince Ule Mi1touri senator left here Tue1day for I eQnpalgn trip to Loi Anaeles, H1wall1 Ila Fran· cisco and Jefferson City, Mo. Asked what wu the ceneral reaction among th• staff oo the Eacl•ton disclosure and possible political lmPI~ Dougherty said "nne of concem.' Asked the preci!e nature of the concern, Dougherty 1aid only, "l thtnl that'• ob- vious." McGovern's 1tatement Wednesd•Y echoed hi1 endorsement of Ea1lelon volo- ed Tuesday after McGovern firat learned the .details of bi1 running mate'• medical hlatory. which includes viaita to the hospital in 1960, 1961 and 1966 fGt nervoua exhaustion and fa tigue. • Eagleton· bad been under the treatment of a psychiatrist. and on two of the oc· casions received electric shock treat· men ti, McGovern JBid he was repeating hi1 endorsement. of Eagleton "to aasure no mitunder•tandlng on my part." Bl.It as McGovern was C()mposing his statement from his vacation cabin at SylVan Lake near here Wednesday, many of his aupporters were vilicing concern about the pos1lbl1 thrut to 1 Democratic victory created by Eaglei6n ·otayln& on as the vice presidential candidate. In Washington, a statement issued by the Mlsaouri ·senator'• office 11id more than 55 telephone cal11 frooi around the country ·had expresaed support for Eagleton, while only eight expressed d11plu11.1re or 1uggeated he withdraw u McGovern'• ruMlng mate. Eagleton himself sail! in Honolulu an Wedneeday: "ff my visceral feelin& is that my candidacy 11 untenable I won 't wait for Geor11 McGovern. 1111 1et off myself.'' _ Thal wu jut what the 12·yHr-old Missouri senator was encouraged to do by Queens C.Ounty, New Yo r k, Democratic Cbairman Matthew Troy, an early McGovern backer. In a telegram to Eagleton Wednesday, Troy said : ". • . there is a 1uious pos1ibillty that your presence on ,fhe ticket could mean the difference between \'ictory and defeat." Troy asked Eagleton to ''voluntarily resign your nomination and perm.it our party to put thia iasu1 to rest so that the elec;flop may be deeided on whelhu Sen. ;McGovern would make a better can~ didat! and not on whether you are qualified •ncl c1pable to aerv1 as vice president." . Troy wa~ .alao .believed to have telephoned McGo vern at his mountain cabi~'Wedneaday apprialni him of tht te18gram to' Elgteton. · Mayor Rlchlrd J. Daley It a news con· fertnce in 'Chicago 11id Ea1Ielbn "was honest and straig~tlorward" Jn diaclosinf hi• prohlem.s and !bat they do not have "anythillf to ·do with hi• capabilities." Daley also reaffirmed his support for the presidentl1J ticket. When aSked U he believed Eagleton er- red in not revealin& hia medical history belore he waa tagged by McGovern to be his runnin& mate, Daley replied, "That's a .matter for him and MoGovern. 0 Same SO . telegrams arriving a t McGovern's temporary headquarters he.re have run more than 2 to 1 againJt keepin& .E11leton u a running mate. On another front, several McGovern financial backers have been in contact with the aenator11· Washingt,on he1d- quarter1 expressing 11grave concern," as one aide put it, about Eagle.ton's possible nega.tive effect on McGovern'• election chances. In Custer , a McGovern spokesman said the E1gleton revela tion "11 dismaying new~ for the fund-rai1in1 activities ." Nurse Training Gets Big · Boost From Foundation A 1214,3.1! 1rant from the W. X. Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., to the Orange County Consortium loi Nursing Educ1tlon w11 1nnounced to- day. It will provide for coordln1ted nur1e trslnlog In Oranie County. The con!Ortlum .inwlvea nunln1 pro- 1ram1 at Cal· State Fullerton. UC trvtn~ and Fullerton, Sant.I Ana and· Golden West community collelfl:I. Tht IJ'&nt specllical!Y will provldO UP' per level colle~ courses at cal State ludln1 to the ~1Chelor'1 ~•ere•. The course• will bo\ain In the fall of tf14. Or. Robert C; Combl, a110C!at1 dean of Iha UCl.callfai'nla C.ll•1• of .Medicine 11ld the consortium allOwa <1l u r 1 i n ·I 1tudents to betln 1tudiel in lbe twt>year colle&OI and lranaler without lou oC credit lo tht foul'year dqrt1 pro1ram. UCI'a role in·lhl pro1ram Jo lo provide 1r1duat• level.nunl!>& oouraea. The UC! master plan colls far a iradualo level ~uning pro1ra111 in lflf -timed to coin· tide with tbe. °""'i"' of a UO-hed teaching hospital on the UC! campuL Thi! $3.1 milUon hospital await• le1ialatur1 approval thi1 year of nearly $1 million of plannint IT\OllOY· Thi Kellogg aranl provfda far 10,t!llO aquart feet of IJl'OC at Cal St.Ila. The space includes classroom11 offlan md laboratori" for Iba laatructlanal '~ 1r1m. • . The conJOrtlwn alao 1nvo1-.11 Oranaa and Loa AJlle)u County ~tala •blcb provide clitilcal erparleltoe lo nur1in1 atudtnts, f'ront Paff! l COASTLINE. • or Jeu thin 1,000 yards inland. The bill Stll a deadline ol Oece111bet Jfll for development of a 11.tte plan lot the cOlltal 10nt and It provtdea thal to- torlm cootrol be malnt.llne<! by uu of OJ· bting local ptrmlt ordinances. Rohrba ch said today these ordinance! already require envlrorunentaJ coo-- 1idtr1tions and public hearings before development ca~ p~ed . • . ·The criteria for pl•nninc coastal development are to be adopted no later than July 1974 after public hearin~ in each coastal county, under the Cl'rpenter bill • Elshteen monthl alter tha t. loc,1 11en- clea would aubmit thel.r co11tal efemenll to the state board for approval and in· corporation into Lhl· state plan. • , DAILY ,!LOT St•ff P ... lt CITY, GOP LEADERS AT ODDS OVER LOCATION, TYPE. OF NJXON t1EADQUARTEllS Sao1 Gorlll1·Garbed GrMl•r, Th• Zoo Awa lt• Thoaa el Elephant Party Pending adoption of the planning criteria, carpe11ter'1 bill 1tate1 that local agencies can ar1nt permlla only if t~e develnpment1 do not reduce public bea cbes or rec:rea tion in the cpaatal zone and do not restrict or reduce beach ac· cess. From Pqe J ZOO •.. · paint in ,breaking it." She was not aware that use permit ap- pllcation.r require public hei.rfngs - which must be formally adverUaed in 1d· vance -when she ,continued speculation. "Well, they (the plaMing commiuion) h1vi a meeting Aug. 3; since when if a person attends a.meeting can't they be heard?" She said afterward that the lead time be.fore the hearing and the appeal period afterwards may force the commi ttee to turn t.o use ot the Zoo itself. Besides, if and when they did not get plan ners' ap_eroval for the per~it. any Democrat with S75 and the desire to do eo could appeal the decision and delay the opening until October, a month before the election. Reinecke Signs Carpenter Bill 011 School Aid A bill sponsored by State Sen. DeMis Carpenter IR-Newport Beach) that enables school dl1tricts to accept monetary donations for scholarships and loans bas been signed into law by Acting Gov. Ed Reinecke . The bill wa1 authored by Carpenter and co-sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach) at the request of the Newport Mesi Unified School District. Walter. Adrian, director of fiscal plan· ning for the local school 1yatem, 11id the measure had been sought only to 1implify existing scholmhip law1. Prlor to the-bill's paasage, achoo! districts were prohibited from controlling a scholarship fund as part of the di•trlct'a budget. Adrian said the district'1 fund was ad· ministered by a group of private citliens, and board members acting l!I private citizens, as the Newport·Mes1 Unified School District Memorial Scholarship and IAa.1 Fund. "We received an offer of a siuble donation to the fund, but we returned it because we were unable to 1dminlst.er it ln the way the donor wished," he 1aid. Adrian refused to identify the donor or the size of his offer. He ezplained that previously, donations could not be earmarked for a specific purpose. ''But under the new law, we will be able to administer the fund as part of the district'a bu({at!:t and set up criteria which will en"ble donors to direct the U!e of their dona tions t~ a specific area," Adrian said. The district's fund has a balance of ..,,000. He explained that the money is given to the district high school 1r1duates who are going on to in· atitutionJ of hi&her le1min1 based on their scbolutlc atandlng and financ ial need. Freedom Homes \ Meeting Tonight Representatives of the Costa Mesa westside Freedom Homes Improvement Association meet tol\lght to confer with (',ouncilman DOmibic RitCitl and other of- ficiaJS. ~ , Topie-of t e ·T:MI o'clock session scheduled in 'noor . auditorium of th ~ Costa Mes PQllce facility. 99 Fair Drive, will be mef.hoda of bettering the area . ~ 1 Councilman AMI! L. P.lnkley said he a(so,hopes to attflld CIJld discuss solutions to problems in tbe area. encompassing some of Costa Mesa'., first lfirgHcale troct buildina. \ ' Rocky t 1 Place Nixon in llace WASl!INGTON ( l -Gov. Ntlaon A. ll!M:keCeDu of New York will piace President Nixon's name In nomlnaUon for 1 second term 11 lhl Republican Na; tion1l Convention In Miami Beach Mll monllt, tbe White Hou11 llllllOUnc..t to. day. Deputy prw sec~tar,v Ge.raid L. War· r.n uld a report that Nlloa liked llockdeller two weeks .. o to m&kt the opento1 nomlnaUq apei¢, was "ac- curate!' ( 1- Trio Finish Transatlantic In lt11 original form, lhe bill ·~ proprjated $250,000 to initially fund the proetam, but Rohrbach 1aid this portion .of the measure was dro pped for the time being to facilitate the bill's pasaagr:. Carpenter 'llllO has lntroctuced a ta1-on bill, SB 861, which would provide $200 million for long term support of the pro-NEWPORT, R.l. (AP\ -One West German and two American sailors are the mott recent finisher1 in the 1ingle-- h1nded Tran1at11ntlc yacht rac,. No boats were ~xpected to complete the nearly 3,000.mile trip Thursday, ac- cordln1 Ui a spokeswoman far the Lon- don Observer, aponsora of the race. Me•. a 35-foot eloop sailed by Claus Hebner of Wut Germany. wa11 first to cross the finllh line at Brenton Reef Liaht Tower Wednesday, but a 2~hour penalty set her back at least two notches in the standings. The spokeswoman 11id Me:1 reached Top McGovernite Says Eagleton Will Step Down CLEVELAND (UPI) -A Cleveland millioneire and top Ohl<> backer of Sen. Geofie S. McGovern 1aid today he ex- pects Sen. Tho mu F. Eagleton to withdra~ as the Democratic vice presidential nominee. Howard M. Metzenbaum, an unsue- ce11sful candidate for the U.S. Senale in 1970 and an imparrtant behind·the-acenu man in McGovern's Ohio campaign, aa ld the disclosure of Eagleton 'a hospitalizations for psychiatric treatment would be a definite threat to the Delnocr1tic ticket'• ch an c e 1 in November. "Tom Eagleton is 1 great U ,S. s~nator and 1 personal friend ," Metzenbaum said. "But circumstances have definitely made chances of winning much more dif· ficult. Sen . EagJeton has said he doe.!ll't want to be a liability to the ticket, and r think you could go so fir as to say that for that reason. a change will take place voluntarily by Sen. E1gleton." Metzenbaum 1ald , however , that he was not privy to any 1pecial information fmm McGovern's cRmp. "1 have not spo ken with their people in South Dakota or Washington," he said. "And I am not certai n whether I will or not. I've thought about it, but they are getting so much input from throughout the country that I'm not aure they need lt, hear from Howard Metzenbaum. Brenton · Reef at 12 :2.1 p.m. PDT. but because it arrived late at the race's t tarting point in Plymouth, England, 24 houri were added to !ta elapaed time, putting Mex In 28th place. The 28th spot went to Blue Gipsy . with Robert Lancy·Burn of Daufu1kle Island, S.C. at the helm. The 28-foot 1loop IJ'- rlved It Brenton Reef at 12:30 p.m. PDT. Next was another American boat, Trumpeter, which finished et 4:25 p.m. POT. The «-foot trimaran waa sailed by Philip Weld of. Gloucester, Mass. The spokeswoman uld 19 boat.II ttlll are expected at Newport. A total of 29 have reached the finish int, lncludltl,; Tahiti Bill. whlch was towed In July 13 after a eolll1ion with 1 Ru11dan trawler near Nantucket Light. From Pqe J SMASH ••. sered at the atore. Harold L. Britton, 12. ol 1139 S. MIMle St., Santa Ana, w11 caught outside ln the huge parking lot, accordin& to palic1. Identified as a cook at Anaheim Sta diu m, Britton was booked on suspicion ol burglary. Detectives are now attemptlna to determine i1 he and whoever elae waa In the store could be linked to 1 1trln1 of auch hlt·and-run break-ins. One Comna de.I Mar womtn 11 wear 1hop was hit twice recently, two weekl tn the minute apart. with a $5,000 los1 once and $8,000 in goods taken the second time. A similar incident occurred at 1 l1diu' clothing 1hop on Balboa Island. Huntington Beech police also ha ve hid at Je1at one identical wlndow-1m1sh burglary at Huntlngtan Center. The method In most c1aes i11 t.o hurl a milk bottl• cr1t1. through th• slau, snitch clothln1 fram racka and nee, being blocka away within momenta. Mamie Gets Checkup WASHINGTON !APl -Former First Lady M1mle Eisenhower Is in Walter Reed Army Hospital for what a spoke11man described 11 "her regular periodic observation.·• gram , including lan d acquisition. • That bill is still in th! Senate fl'in1nce Committee, and Mike Nell. Carpenter's local representative, uid it probably will remain there until the fate of SB 8&0 1' more clearly known. "If it looks ll ke the coastline bill ia an-- Ing to go in the Assembly, then the Sent• I.or will probably 1t1rt pushinf 681. Otherwise there's no real point in it," he said. Sea Lile Creates Big H eadaclies At Atom Plant' Fish, mussela and barnacles -each quite small -are creating some fiant headaches for engineers 1t the Southern California Edison Nuclear Gtner1tln1 Station at San Onofre . The fisll often get trapped in pipu tl11t lake water to ll'te reactor core while the mussel11 ind barnacles 1tt1ch themaeJves to the inside or the pipes, thu11 reduc:iDJ their water carrying efficiency. To solve the prnblem with the aeden· tary organisms, Southern Califotnia Edison has requested the state Regional Water Quallt y Control Board in San Diego to be allowed to periodic11ly nu1h the lines with hot water. SCE'a requeat will be heard by the San Diego board Mond1y. Present re- quiremtntl require w1ter leavini the plant not be more than 20 degree• w1rmer than the ocean. SCE feels the water must be hotter to banish tht musseh1 and barnacles. Power company engineers 111y that two houri of acaldlng hot w11ter flushed through the pipes once every sit weeka should reduce tht fouling of tht lines. To solve the problem with the fish. SCE engineers ha ve designed gadgetl placed In tht water Jines to create eur· rents that fish will not swim thmu1h. The fish, using suitable ·current.a, ~•n be directed out of the pipes and b1ck into tbe ocean , The request for the thermal control or the sea llfe will Bpply to Units 2 and i flf the S.n Onofre plant, regional board U · ecutlve officer Dennil'I O"Le.11ry 11ld. sofa bed sale! npw ·· . queen size • • • ' dual si"e • • • $249. • These are very com fortable sofa beds for sitting •net tlMp ing. • A •Wide 11lectlon of fabr ics and . collirl to choo• from. • RMrsibli becks ind H•t cu1h ion1. H.J.GAl\~EIT fURNITURE ~ PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DES IGNERS • Open Mon., nurs. A Fri. Ev11. 2111 HA•IO• ILVO. COSTA MESA, CALIF.