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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7 . . Heartbreala at Wailiilii • • • ' Monroe -- Kille• by FBI~ Get Set • • Go! Mailer Thi·nks So Food Costs Soar DAILY PILOT 0 ' ' * * * 1oc * * * • THURSDAY AFTERNOON , JULY 19, 1973 VOL. 64, NO, *• 4 SECTIONS, U ~AGES --------w1mmers: PJaose IJ' Surr aves • • . -~ . ' Plan Unl·eash,es Price on Food He 's Divorced In Name Only • By United Press lnternetlonal prices are in effect through Saturday. GUISLEY, England (UPI) -A court has granted ~1rs. Sybil Bradley a divorce on grounds of an '"irretrievable breakdo"•n" of her marriage to \\falter Bradley. Prices f6r poultry, pork, produce, milk and other perishables went up in many.of the· nation's supermarkets today and the Cost of other items freed by President Nixon's Phase JV program were ex- pected to climb shortly. (See story, Page 4/ ' ~1ost market spokesmen said they · v:ere doublechecking the new Phase IV regulations and that markups should -begin next \Vcek "in full force" -and , "be \Vay up" by next month. In San Antonio, the Associated Milk -P.oducers Inc., the largest milk pro- ducing cooperative in the United States, announced price hikes as high as 10 per- cent in 20 South,vest and Midwest statei;. Wholesale egjl: prices in New York ·jumped 4 to 8 cents a i:l.ozen today . It generally -ta~es a few days ror such an increase ~ blt the reatil.mari:et.. . .. Pork prices were movmg up ~n .some areas, wi.lh the price of a pork 10101~p-• ing rrom 79 to 91 cents a pound m a Detroit supermarket. In Jackson, 1\1-iss., Giant Food Stores raised their prices on about 200-300 "dry" grocery items, such as dog food, Dour and meal. Frying, chickensjumped 5 cents a pound . Spot checks by UPI showed that most housewives were not paying more during weekly marketing. However, lhi.s.wu un;. doubtcdly due to grocery ads whose Orange Coast WeatJter More sunshine Friday, following early lD9fning fog and klw clouds, mostly it the beach areas. Highs in the low 70s at the sand5 rising to near 80 inland. Overnight lows ln the 60s. INSIDE TODAY The po1sangers oj the schoon· er Good Hope have somet1Ung In common -needle prick.I on thetr'"a1"'tnl. But the cndse de-- 1cribed on Page 4 mo11 make thble marks d~ppear. L.M. ltt'• t ,,J\_.....,. ti C•Hfff'• I ,,....._ ~ Cl•KI,,... JI-+' Ml'hJtl ,..,.. " Cllnln n N•11"1111 Ntwt .. lt ~""' ,, OttHI C-'1 11 """" f'ttlltH lt '""" """ :: lfltNI llff• ' Sitdl Mal1lith ,...,, ~ twl ,......... • lllllMC• lW ,.,....... JWI h:.tt ... ~.~ 1 .. !! ._.. __.. .. ,. ~ ... """ '· tt A Huntington, N.Y., housev•ife. Mrs. Katherine l\1ullen, said she shopped Jn t\vo supermarkets and found prices unchanged. "Eggs are the same as last week," she said. So are canned goods, bread and cereals -I didn't see anything higher than usual." A spokesman for the National Associa· ISee PRICES, Page 21 But l\trs. Bradley said she could not bear to see her ex·husband suf· fering. So she has let him remain at home, eating \vith her and their nine children and washing his shirts. "I don't "'ant him to sleep in his truck." she said. MarilynMonroe l(illed By FBI, Writer Thinks NE\V YORK (UPI) -Norman Mailer admitted Wednesday he-lacked evidence to back up his theory that FBI and CIA agents had a reason to kill Marilyn Monroe so as to embarrass the Kennedy family. But the author stuck to the theory anyway. In a small hot room at the Algonquin Hotel packed with 60 newsmen. Mailer read a seven-page statement defending 'his-controversial biography or tl;ie actress whose 1962 death ofUclally was deemed a suicide. When he first started work on the book. Mailer said he liad heard "gossip and assumed Bobby Kennedy had an affair with Marilyn." But interviews and re nee. tion convinced him that was not true. though "they were together a great· deal and they were great friends,'• he said. There was "no '.greater way to em· barrass the Kennedy family" than to kill Miss Monroe, Maller said. The FBI and CIA, he said, were "furious " because President John F. Kennedy tried to limit thei!1 power after the Bay of Pigs in· vas1on. "Right-wing FBI and CIA agents1 •• Mailer said, would have had a "huge motivation" to kill Mi!s Monroe. But he said he had no 11hard evidence" to support hls charge1. Mailer said the autopsy oo P.fus r.tonroe shotted a high concentration of Nembutal -a barbiturate -In her blood, but no evidence of that In ·ber stomach. "Only one Jn \tghl deaths 1rom barbiturates shows IO high a level" of the drug in the bloodstream , he said. 111n such,.cases, a realdue Is found Ip the stomach. "'Mle assumption follows that a s<omach pump may have been appllod •.. or a tethaJ owrdoee was lnjtcted." Ptlailer was paid *50.0M to write the I • book, originally intended to be a prerace for a book of photographs of f\1iss Monroe. Actor Peter LawfOrd. a friend of the actress and Kennedy's in-law, has called the book "vomit." '"TI1ey have characterized my OOoks as a rip-ofr and worse things have been said about it," said Mai1e r. "But I thought it was a good book. One of my best." Throughout the news conference, he exc~nged witticisms with newsmen. But althbugh sweiitcmi'PP'd l'tdht liis ' ra~ ~1ailer refused to discuss his murder theory until aides distributed the prepared statement. "\Ve'll wait fo'r the releases," he" shouled. "I don't care it we all sweat to death in here." Scli1nitz Loses $400 iri Coins Ir former congressman John G. Schmit z were lllill doing his lhing on Capito l HUI, he might be pressing for more law and order legislation today. The Santa Ana College political science Instructor complained to Newport Beacf'I P.tlice Wedoe9(fay that a burglar stole $400 In llilvet dfms 1'.luring' the prOCW of hiJ recent move [rom TUlttn' to Newport Beach. •te .said whoever heJ.sted a 12-<>unce beer can fashioned into a coin bank and containing an estimated HOO In quarters and dimes may have t8ken it In 1ransit. Nothing else was taken fro111 the Schmili reskience at 10 Mission Bay Drive in the --Spyglass Hill ~lion of Corona del Mar, according to police Yacht Hits · Reef, Sinl{s -------o At Wail{iki By ALMON LOCKABEY 01 !ht Dtlt'I' "''-' Sl~ff HONOLULU -One of the racing boats in the Transpacific Yacht Race hit a reef and sank on Waikiki beach a few minutes after she had rinished late \Vcdncsday night. Eagle, a C11I 33 sloo1> skippered by Lar· ry K. Shorett of Corinthian Yacht club, San Francisco. apparently wandered into the wrong channe l near Ha"·aiian Village v:hile coming toward the jetty entrance and hit a reef. She had a large hole in her side and v.•hen the Coast Guard pull· ed her free she sank . Eagle had been following a committee boat but lert on her 01vn when the escort vessel went back to the finish line to pick up another finisher. The grounding oc· curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolulu time. The crew was rescued without serious injury . Eagle had been tabulated as fourth in Class D afler sailing the 2.225--mile race across the Pacific. Only eight of 60 starters remained at sea th1S rri6rni'n4. b1cludihg7 Ot!Ti&m. · 1V'hich is under tow \Vilh a broken rudder. and Vicarious, still sailing with a jury rigged mast. . Four Nc'>'•port Harbor based boats were among the first ten in the overall handicap standings when the unofficia l final results were computed today. Only 13 hours and 35 minutes separa1ed the first and tenth place finishers on han· dicap time despite the slownes.! of !he race on elapsed time. Tifo of the controversial ultra light displacement boats finished among the first ten. including the overall winner, despite heavy lime penalties. Two Newport boats won their respec· live elasse!I and others placed in their clasl!. Al Cassell's 50-foot Brittain Chance-- designed Warrior was the only-Class A boat among lhe: first ten . Gary A-tfers' Cal 39 Blue Streak. Newport Harbor Yacht Qclbl "'was the winner in Cla!s C. Sanderling JV, a O>lumbia 43 e&-skippcred by Bob Poole and Jack John.90n of Bahia Corinthia n Yacht Club placod !oorth In Class C. Two other N~wport yachts, Nalu IV owned by Peter Grant1 NllYC, and skip- pered by llnrvcy Kilpatrick. A1onterey Peninsula Yacht Club, and Starwagon. 11 C•l l3 own«! •nd okippertd by Don lste mANSPAC, Page tl • - l\·o llord F e elh1gs Priscilla rfresl ey, 28. awaiting final divorce decree fro1n sin g· er Elvis Presley, reveals in the Ladies Ho1ne Journal that lherc arc no hard feelings on either side. ~frs. Presley just opened a boutique in Los Angeles. ~· "."!,~ • I '...-.•• • '!··;• 'Poco' Returns After Bou t W1ith Hors e Thieve.~ Bv T0~1 GOR~IAN 0°1 lt..I D.il• ,.It.I ~1•11 The escapades or Poco Ron E. Aar arc O\'er. Hungry and 300 pounds un· dcr\\'Cight, Poco has come home to his llun!ington Beach family. During the pa~t rive months Poco has pa.-sed through the hands of two horse lhievcs. Ulah police and :1 kind old rancher ''who owns a spread As big as the Pooderosa." Poco is a five-year-old regi!ilf'rcd QllOlr1erhene..l!e.w&1 stolollJ\.ob.,)7Jrotn hus stable in l~unting:ton Beach. The best efforts of his owner. 16-yenr-old ~1ichelle Noell, and her parents, A-fr. and 1'.1rs. Louis Noell. 6531 Segovia Circle. pro\'00 rrullless In attempts to loc!lte him. The f11mi1Y p13ced ads in trade magnzincs. giving a full description and l'l picture or tht horse and an ot'fer of a $3SO reward for lnformfllion on the IS« HORSE, Page Ii Beii1g Cited · As .'Hero' 111 Rescues His na1ne is f\·lark Schmidt, not f\-1ark Spitz. but lO a pair of exhausted ocean !l!thers trapped in a treacherous riptide off Ney.·port Beach a couple of weeki ago. he \vas the greatest S\vimrner of all time. ~lark. 11. a Daily Pilot carrier boy and dcdicalcd summertime surfer. helped sa\'C one and possibly both rrom drO\\-ri~ ing in !he June incident at the 22nd Street Beach nrar Newport Pier. He is 1l0"' being nominated to the Na. tiona\ Surf Life Sa\'ing Association S!I a "·orihy candidate for a he roism citation in a leucr rrom ~e\1"J>orl Beach f\1arine Safe ty Director Rohcrt F.. Reed. ~lark. of I JR \'ia Ithaca, Lido Isle, is pleased but docsn"t seem to think he did all that 1nuch. ''It 1s out standing ,'' Reed emphasized in his note to :\'SL.SA Prcs.idcnt Phil Stubbs, stressing ~lark's age. The Ne"·port Elementary School pupil \1·ho delivers papers to 37 cuslo!Tij!rs on Lido Isle each day, in addition to surfing, turned hls board over to the '"'O near- drownl ng victims. lie !hen sy.·am ashore bra\'ing the rip himself, being both a tough little S'>''im- mcr and Jighl enough to ride high in the "'ater. '· J 1\ as just paddling around and these guys started yelling : 'Help.' and I thought tliey 1verc joking,•· recalls !\-lark. He hea ded their way and \l'as told by the dcs perale pair they coold not make it back through the !lurOine and catch a wave to shore. ~lark left them his surfboard as a temporaty life n~lt and 1nadt' the rough· v.•a1cr journey hhnsclf to notify Chief' Reed's lifeguards. . Reed only reccnlly learned of ~1ark11· aclinn. The S>n of Or. llugo Schmidt, a llarbot Area dentisl. f\1ark figures the wboli rescue rni88ion took no more thlln lJ minutes . l H~alSQ offers a theory with an JJ.year. old's candor aboul how the s\\immerS got into trouble. --..They were-older men ... 22 or 23," he S.1id. Chief Reed shid in his commtndaUot leUer he hopes the young surfer som~j 111-ill constde.r ,lol.ning tht Ufeguard depart ment. · - • UAll. 1 l'ILO I s CdMRoute :Work Seen Next Yem· By JO!lN SCllAOE 01 "" o.i1~ "'"" ,..,. Orange Cow1ty Road Commissioner Ted l\1cConvillc SO)'S preli1ninury work on the Corona del ~1ar Freeway through Costa Mesa may resume next year. P..lcConville told members at the Orange Coast Association luncheon \\'cdnesday that enough money may be available in ne"t year's State Depart- ment of TranjportaUon budget to begin initial work on+the route, from the San Diego Frttway overpass at Bristol Street to a point near the UC Irvine campus. \York on the freew ay has been stalled recently for la ck or funds ...... McO:lnville added that route grading at MacArthur Boulevard and University Drive will show the actual alignment of the freeway: Plans are also n1oving ahead ror the development of an area m a s t c r nsportation plan, the com1ni11sioncr Id. the plan will serve as area suggestions ' r the state and coastal commission ans, scheduled for competition in anuary of 1975, he added. , "Some agencies think we should iust L • priority for these plans and then go :,head with them," McConvWe said. "The road department, t h o u g h , eeves that each commwilty should t its own concepts, views and for study in development of an .-.... plan," he said. "We've received a good ~ from coastal communities, and a belJ.er ling on the matter than ever before," added. ~tcCanville said it is important to have lull transportation system plan so the &.y will be able lo receive and ef. ·vely handle fully fWlded federal pro-- ams. Tbe commissioner added that . a study •'under way on traffic ramp controls at hway entrances during rush hours. controls, he said, would restrict oads to long·baul traffic. limiting ts who uae the expressways for ' hauls to surf1ce streell. McConville noted that llx roads have ~ laid out as recreational, nature or ~led urbenscape routes. "We are talking here about a quality road, with no access to private prop-- erty," the commissioner pointed out. He called the routes comparable to the -jcenic routes · like the Mount Vernon farkw1y In Vlr&lnla, whore the winding niodl follow the natural caitoun of the 1and. • 'l1le commluloner llid the It.ate'• ~ ~called J.Jttle Hoover COmm1ssXrl and ltderll Gtrierll ~~ •Adnilnis~ have been putting mum p~ on counties to sell as much of their surplus land as pooslble. • "Gov<rnmental agencies are ba~·.to ,.u 1t a fractiGI\,. of the land's •illt ~u1e'of this J>Mlure," he dectfftd; He aJ50 noted thlt Sllrplus land for m8 now-defunct Pacific Coast Freeway is being sold off when no other county 11se "could be found f0< It From Pagel HORSE .. 1• horse's "'hereabouts. On Ju ly 8 the family gave up and bought J\1idlelle a new horse. Two days later came the phone call the family had been waiting for. "Some yoong cowboy in Utah called and said he saw hlm in a rodeo and recognized him as the stolen horse from the ads we had placed." said J\1rs. Noell. "So he stole it for the reward." Then the story gets confusing. "He said he stole the horse a week earlier from the rodeo, but on the eve- ning of July Fourth he was in an accident. The horse was uninjured, so he tied it up to a tree on a ranch near the Idaho-Utah border. "He didn 't give us h.is name, but told us to call the Tremont.an (Utah) police. I don't know why he waited a week since the accident lo call us, I guess his con- science got to him.'' ' OU.N•I COAST If DAILY PILOT ' TIW Ofll'lfe CH1t DAILY ,ILO"t, """'Wl'llOt ll ~ f'-N-~-It Mllthtoil W ""' Or•• c .. ,, ~lllfl!H (.,,...."'· "Pt· rtlt tdlt""-••• Jlllll/'*'*I, Mellllty ..,....... ...... ,, .... (Ol!t "'""· ... _. l&wctl. Mllfllllltlftft atldl/hwlttlfl Vf!lty, .~.­ aMCll, 1 .... i....StdlfttOtel ...,. .. " chm.1 "" Jvtn Ctpltl•MO. A 111\tlt ... i-1 tdll'°'" t1 ""'II'""' 5tNrda)'& _. S-.ta. fnt .... lr!c!N1 Mo!~lnl 111.1111 II II .ul Wt1! a1y .S•rttt, Ceottt M™• Caiif«llltl, N2' R11t1rt N. Woff l"f•ldtftt -""""IM9" J1,11li R. C11l1y y~ , ... "'"' .... 0.--.1 ~ .... t"-"''' 1e ••• a ·-n."' ... A. 114,,,1ti11• MtNot1111 Miier Cll1rlt1 H. l101 ltichtt4 ·p, Ntll Altllt9!11 "'""""" lfiltrt Ctllt ~! U. w.o...:.,~·~ St•"' ff....,.,i IMCll~ IUJ N ...,....,,,_ ~ltotefil: m "Fr;'-"""'""• ktcll: U111 ......_, M'I ('-""ti •• """" c..... .... Tlltf' PS ln41 '41-4Jll Cla .... Al1ecll:I U '41·1671 t'_C........_ .................... 4•1MH .............. OfAlllt CWlllY Oil llSA:MH ........ c....,,11111. "'"' er..,.. c..i ~ ~,. NI """ ''-'"'· llhottra"""° Mllterltl !Mn." ·---~ ..... _, .. ,..,.., .. """" ...... ..,. "' ....... " ~-· .-. ~ ti.M ,..._ ... w " c.tt ..... C.!llilnlta. ....... lffl .,. ~ ._ .. """'~~tr !NII 11.U _,,.,., lflllltttY ............... .-...... Tl'lul1day, Ju!y li, 1973 Li%, Miekey Meet Two or lhe most famous person.ages in the entertain- ment world -Elizabeth Taylor and ?11ickey Mouse -met at Disneyland as the actress and her chil- dren (from Ien, Maria, Christopher and Liza) tour the Anaheim amusement park. Not shown is Miss Taylor's escort, actor Peter Lawford. • Pilot Families, Airlines · Suing Cotmty Officials MONTROSE, Colo. (AP) -Continental Airlines and the families of two California pilota killed in a plane crash near here filed notice today of claims totaling '6 million against the Montrose County govemmei1l 1be pilots, Robe.rt Walsh or Huntington Beach and James Ford of Thousand Oaks, were killed April 13 "-hen ' small jet belooging to Continental crashed near the Mootrooe County Airport. Continental President Robert Six and his wife, actress Audrey Meadows, bad deplaned here and the craft had laken off again ~ tbe crash dt'c\lrred. Montrose County officials h a v e ltriO.* lhe,cWm JIOtlce lo the coun-ty>i liability Insurance company. The families ot the two pilots arc claiming $2.5 million each and Con· tinentaHI milUon. (.,,_. eJilnil, ~ alleges the crash Could ba,. -caused by foreign ol> jects on the airport runway. John Overholser, county attorney, said the county and the Federal Aviation Administration conducted a n in- vestigation lmm~ately after the crash and foond no evidence of foreign objec ts on the runway. From Pagel TRANSPAC. •• Elliott, NHYC, placed third and fir.th in Class B. Warrior was the winner of Class A and Bob Gran t's 61-foot sloop Robon, NHYC, was third in Class A. Pilot Buried . 30 Years Later Final Rites Hel.d By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ~ o.llY ,.Ii.I ltlff They buried Army Air Corps First Lt. Francis G. "Bud'! McDowell Wednesday with an airman's poem, a short Episcopal service l\Od military rites by servicemen not yet 15om when he died in war 30 years ago . Some 75 persons -many long-ago family friends in their hometown of Riverside -turned out at Pacific Vie\Y Memorial Park in Corona del Mar for what were actually historic rites. Not many more World War 11 casualties can be expected to return home for burial. The short service by the Rev. Edward Allen, Episcopal chaplain at UC Irvine, came 30 years and one week to the day after Lt. McDowell's B-24 Liberator bomb- er crashed in New Guinea. His lbrother, William McDowell. of 432 Ange!ita Drive, Corona del Mar, learned wreekage of the plane his brother piloted had been fowxl, just one week ago when he read a Daily Pilot story or a crewman's burial. He recognized the man 's name from one of his brother's old flight rosters, called his relatives in the Chicago 111., area, and they helped McDowell contact proper Army authorities. "The lost has been found and the homeless ha8 been brought home," UC I Chei.plain Allen said during Wednesday 's rites. The funeral 30 years <::fter the fact of Lt. McDowell's death at the age of 22 ap- peared oo-less moving to those who at- tended and wept as a bugler played taps. "Long since have you received him in· to your flock. . . " reminded the Rev . Allen, as a burial squad of enlisted men from Ft. MacArthur in San Pe<tro held an American Flag over the casket. A squad of riflemen fired a triple salute to Lt. McDowell, winner of the Sliver Star for bringing his bomber back from one mission with four crewmen wounded and three engines shot up. The dramatic 1943 landing at Fenton Field in Australia was filmed by an old Pathe News Service crew and shown to Americans in a wartime newsreel. The later mission from which Lt. McDowell and his crew of nine never retunled was attempted in a strange plane, after their own B-24. the Shady Lady, was damaged in a Japanese attack on their airfield. Border Agents Seize Pot, Lose Two Suspects U.S. border patrolmen seized 150 pounds of marijuana Wednesday after a mile-long chase which ended when the patrolmen found the weed, but lost the suspects. \Vednesday's seizure brought I he \veek's total to more than ball a ton of marijuana -all confiscated as part of the immigration cheek at the San Onofre roadblock since last weekend. seized Sunday during a routine im- migration check. a patrolman said. The agents arrested a 24-year-old resident of Chula Vista . Two more drug arrests·were made last Saturday . Patrolmen seized 657 pounds of ma1~juana from Edua rdo Chavira. 3{1, a J\'\"exican alien legally residing in Los Angeles, and 187 pounds of the drug from a 23-year-old Sar. Pedro resident -again during routine immigration checks .• Jael.:11011 AUegatio•• Papers on 'Grain Firms Falsified " • . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Henry M. Jackson (O.Wa.sh.), said today he had evidence the AgrlculturP. Department kr.ew in advance about last year's $1 billion Soviet grain deal and that big U.S. grain firms falsified their reports to the government on the deal. ' On the eve of a series of hearings by his Senate Permanent Investigations sul>- oommlttee, Jackson said the evidence be Power Cuts Planned as Crisis Move SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Pacific Gas and Electric Company official says if a drastic power shortage occurs the utility plans lo cut off power to selected distribution circuits an hour at a time on a rotating basis. "People woo Id be notified in advance that they would be without power for the periods involved,'' John De Young, a vice president for commercial operations, said Wednesday. "They would be able to make what · preparations were possible to prepare for curtailment .·• De Young was one of several PG&E witnesses on the first of a three-day hearing into the state public .utility com- mission's investigation into the state's I fuel energy shortage and the adequacy of its elec trical supply. A similar two-day session was held in Los Angeles last week and the hearing moves there. •a:ain next week. • De .. Young ... said tbat lf a fuel oil shortage results in a shortage of elec: trical power, PG&E would have no choice but to curtail service for electric customers. He s&id the finn had an involuntary plan 1-eady for more th8n a year. He felated that selected circuits scat- tered througholtl. .. the system would be grouped into bl<Hs and ea$ block woold be ol! about' an hour before curtailing the next me"alld then continuing on a "roll- ing basis." Highest priorily, he said, would ·be given to loads judged most Vital to the ger,eral public's health and safety. De Young explained that most hospitals, fire departments and police st~.tions had standby power sources, but also to be considered "'ould be such things as water pwnping and sewage disposal plans. But he said that in an effort to defer or possibly eliminate the need for such power cut~ffs, tlie company is develOP: ing a voluntary lciad ieduction plan fi# periods of short duralion of capacity. Garbensta11gel Co11test Open.~ efinics and demonstrations are on the calendar for today and Fri· day as highlights of "garbenstangel days" at South Coast Plaza. Gene Tardy, "old pro" of the garbenstangel ~orld, 'fas schedul- ed to demonstrate the Rube Goldberg-style contraptions today at I p.m. and Friday at I and 6:30 p.m. Judging or the 1973 crop ot garbenstangcls, entered in the an- nua l contest co.sponsored by the Daily Pilot and South Coast Plaza 1nerchants, has been scheduled fo r 10 a.m. Saturday at South Coast Plaza . has thus far uncovered on the 1912 deAI could prove that parties to t.he deal hid 'violated federal laws. "\Ye have sy,·orn affidavits at this point that Agriculture ~·as adv~d or the sales'' before they occurred, he told a news conference. The Agriculture Department h a s denied having advance knowledge of the sales, and a General Accounting Office invesligation earlier this month (oond that officials didn't know how much grain the Russians were buying from the American companies. • Jackson further said there was ''stron& evidence" that the U.S. firms trled to keep the sales secret by "falsifying theit reports to the Commodity Exchang~ Authority . . "The evidence out investigation ha' turned up lhus far leads me to conclud~ that the Department of Agriculture ~ and especially the Commodity Exchange Authority -encouraged secrecy in theif dealings with the grain companies and the commodity exchanges." · Information also uncovered by his sut>= committee, Jackson said, provide~ "substantial evidence" that th i: Agriculture Department kept vita.I iO. formation about the failure of tht Russian wheat crop "secret (fror4 American farmers) while in fact issuine misleading reports on overseas COfl! ditions and an anticipated -domest~ surplus." From Pagel PRICES ... • tion. oC Food Chains (NAFC) predlcte4 the -4 to 5 percent jump in prices 1n the coming wee.ks and said consumers coul~ expect to see markups on retall counters next week after processors have time, tj give supermarkets certificates showing bow much of recent overall cost gaiM can be attributed solely to higher cosi.s for raw products. .• George E. Hamilton Jr., president d. the Smithfield Packing Co., .producer ol the famous 1haTIU1, said the company wi\l "definitely raise out prices," but untjl the new regulations were studied he did not know how much. A spckesman for Food Fair, whicb represents 100 Pantry Pride f\.1arkets iii the Philadelphia area, said price ili>- creases "should be immediately evideit in perishable products such as produce, poultry and pork."' Re explained that ur.der the ne\v Phase IV economiC guidelines processors can now rai.Sf; prices to retailers who in tum can rai~ them to conswners. Frederick Hefrud Inc., largest poPk processor in Michigan, today raisid .,.,,polesale prices to Detroit supermarkeCs by 10 cents a pound, and a company of- ficial said they .will raise prices Jttr aoother 10 cents a pound in a week. _ Many other big supermarket chains said they were not maklng immediate price increases but would do so shortly.·. Irish Violence Climbing Again i BELFAST (UPI) -Sporadic shooUng erupted Jt&l'OSS Belfast early today, Ult latest in what the British anny called :a dramatic inc rease in Northern Ir~ violence during the past two days. • Two soldiers were seriously wounded Wednesday in separate incidents, one ., them the explosion of a booby-trappid mine near the town of Cologher and tl\e other a sniper attack in Belfast. : "There has been a dramatic increB.se in incidents, of violence over the past 48 hours," an army spokesman said. :- Chutzpah's victorious enlry into Ala \Vai Yacht Harbor was held up ror more than an hour Tuesday night when a militAry type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons aboard. The craft was caught in one or the giant seas that crashed against the shores of Waikiki Tuesday and Wednes- day. The passengers were rescued by the yacht race committee boats. No one was seriously injured. The seas subsided late \Vl'd.nesday. The race will officially come to a close Friday with the gala trophy presentation dinner at the Jlikai Hotel here. Wednesday's seizure occurred after patrolmen beg11n to check out two men in thei r vehicle at the checkpoint and the driver of the car suddenly sped away, a patrolman said. The patrolmen pursued the vehicle, which they found abandoned with the marijuana inside, one mile north of the cheekpoint. They searched the area for the two suspects, but did not find them. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than~ Boats still at sea today were Nalu II. Jigtime, Contessa Ill. B e v i k a , Woodwynd, Meltemi and Vicarious. Unofficial standings : OVERALL: 1. Chutzpah, eight days. 21 hours, 21 minutes, 50 seconds. 2. Ariana. 9:00:29:45. 3. I mp r o b a b I e 9:01.55: 18. 4. Moon Day 9:05: 10:57, s. Tinsley Light 9:06:27:51, 6. Blue Streak 9:07:09:35, 7. Sandlering IV 9:08:16:07, 8. Panache 9:08:24:33, 9. ~1istrcss If 9: 10:22:54, 10. \Varrior 9: 10:56:59. CLASS A -I. Warrior, 2. Ragtilne. 3. Robon. 4. Min Sette, S. 'Vlndward Passage . CLASS B: t. Improbable, 2 . ..Panache, 3. Nalu IV, 4. Sanderling IV, S. S1arwagon. CLASS C: 1. Blue Streak, 2. J\1istn::ss II, 3. Tenacity. 4, Sirocco, 5. Olympian. CLASS D: I. Chutzpah. 2. Arlana . 3 Tinsley Light , 4. Elglt, 5. L'Allegro. Beautiful Snake Given Contract HOLLYWOOD CUPI) -Th< winner of a movie studio contract Wednesday docs not have good l"g!I. Jn fact. no legs at all. About 175 makts were entered In 11 anakt btauty contest, .sponsored by Unlvuaal Studios. which b promoting a mnvie about snakes. Tulip, • python own<d by Jacky Grundman. won the contest •nd 8 $51).3 • wttk contract. Another 215 pounds of marijuana were Still No Leads To Gun Blasts Huntington Beach police said today they still have no leads in their in· vestigation of the shotgun blasl.!I that hit three homes and two can early Tues· day morning. No one was inj ured in the shootings, although one of tbe blasts hit rooms where childrerr' ·were sleeping and another shot riPped through a room which was vacant only because the JI· year-old occupant was away at camp. Det. Sgt. Monty r<i1cKennon said there "'t.rc no v.·ltnesses to tM shootings which aca.irrcd during the early morning hoon. The blasts came from a 12·gauge shotgun loaded with bird shot, be said. Lon Nol Won't Visit • • COLD WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE ' CUBES! YJitlleut ~ing Tiie Door 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bin atorea ·1b Iba .• •bout 280 cubes: automi)lc lcem1ker re- places Ice 11 You uae It. • Freezer hold• up to 297 Iba. • Convertible 7-0ay Meat Keeper. • Adjustable , tempered gl111 shelves. • Rolla out on wheels for •HY cleaning. • • No defrosting ever WE TAKE TRADE·lt<S < • • l l ' ' r ' a f t ' t ' c [ I ! ' l I ' ( I (J fl tor. an P!'; W! t.O Qi m• ~· m: tr ;., H1 Ca '° th l S< hi l'> .. 'W pl ~ • ' . I ltlut$dAt, J11lf 19, 197J s DAILY PILOT Sailing~ Sailing Over Bounding Main -•.: -·· --.,..-..._ • -. -- ---~ ,,... ----.... -· - 'O' 0 ' • • 0.1IJ ,,IM ........ ,, lll<cll~,.., Draa• WHAT TO DO WHEN THE BOAT FALLS OVER IS DEMONSTRATEO WITH SKILL AND CUNNING BY YOUNG DISTAFF SAILOR ON THE WATERS OF NEWPORT BAY • Day Divorces? Not In This Court By TOi\I BARLEY Of ltut DailY P ilot Siii! DIVORCE COURTS aren't what they were. Gone are the days when a \\'eeping witness compelled to prove adultery or cruelty or both v.•ould pilu on the agony to the disgust of the defendant and the delight Of the scribbling nr\\'S· man. All your Orange County Superior Court judge wants to hear these days is the fact that "irreconcilable differences" exist between you and your spouse and he'll move fast to help you shed your shackles. Provided , of course. that property issues and child custody and suppOrt and spousal support arrangc1ncnts meet with his approval. But the n, that's ahnost always ironed out before you get to court. They call il the day of the 60-sccond divorce and that's often true. J<~rce and easy, he tells his tale, she tells hers, the judge listens and then he grants the divorce. IT f\IAY SOUND kind of casual but then it often is. Some judges like it that way. Some don't but they shrug their shoulders and \\'histle the divo recs through their .J courtroon1s in the manner prescribed by an all·knov•ing BAii.LEY Legislature. Come now April and Osy.•ald of Huntington Beach to offer us a little varia· tion on the unfailing 60-second routine via a judge who thought things had gotten a little too casual in the pla{Ulcd severing of their six·year union. Everything had been going \'Cry n'tcely up to a point in Oswald's testimony. Yes, the six·ycar marriage was no longer a marriage, yes, arrangements had been mJ:ide about a 6-year-old girl and a 4·year-old boy and their support and. yes. a nice sensible arrangement had been reached about .the home and that lot Jn Dana Point. ' Oswald was on the stand and everythlng seemed to be going ve ry nicely, divorce·wise, until he innocenlly revealed that he and April vlere living to- gether at the Hunting ton Beach hon1e. The judge sat bolt upright. ''LIVING TOGETHER? It says here you separated last October. lfoy.• can you seek a clivcrce if you cOme here to court and admit you're li ving to- gelher?" Oswald was acting as his own lawyer but he and April's attorney quickly tried to explain the situation for \vhat they hoped would be an W1derstanding judge. Yes, they had indeed separated, but there had been an illness and it needed one to care for the other for a while. And then they had decided lo try and make a go of it again but still go ahead with the divoree action April filed ea rly this year. The judge had just one question at that point. You guessed it. "\Vhy?" Sli\IPLE, HE LEARNED. IF April and Oswald fOW1d they couldn't gel along after all. they \Vere divorced. If they did get along they could ah1•ays remarry. Either way, it saved the mess and expenes of abandoning the old divorce action and starling another one. I know a judge who told me he 'vould have ordered 90 days in jail for a couple "'ho ca1ne to him in a divorce court \l'ith that kind of confession. An· other judge I kno\v thinks it's the funniest thing he's heard in years. "Save . your divorce for a rainy day? I-Ia ha ha . haY.'. ha\v, haw ... " Our judge handled it my 1vay. No muss, no fuss, no recriminations. no lectures. "OFF CALENDA R." \Vhich 1>uts the ball right in the court of April and Osv.•ald. ri.1aybc they'll work things out and maybe they won't. But they ha\'e learned one thing. You can't save your divorce for a rainy day. 01•a1ige_ Mati ltadieted Coi1ntia11 Facing Cour~ , l11Car Excise TaxFrai1d • An Orange resident "'ho the U.S. Al· tOmey says was importing lu:-.:4ry cars and defrauding the government by ~ying Jess than the required excise tax Was indicted by the federa l grand .iury in U>s Angeles and lodged in lhe Orange County Jail \Vednesday. The excise tax is much higher for cars imported for resale. Handzlik explained. One count against Ivey involves a l!l67 Lamborghini and another a 1967 Ferrari. •code~ By JAN \VORTJ I 01 lh• O•llJ Plkll ll•ft There's a good chance lf>..ycar-0\d Scott 1'~ckholdt of f\1ission Viejo "will go places. \Vhen he gets home .Saturday frotn a month--long "vacation" to San Rafael. he'll be equipped to get places 1nore casi· ly and above all in safety -C\'Cn though he is blind and a hemophiliac. Scott. son of the \\'illia1n l::ckholdts of 24591 Spartan, will get off a plane at Orange County Airport with Hannah. a · 20-inonth-old golden retriever trained as a guide dog for the blind. Hemophilia is a disease in "'hich in· gft'dients to make blood clot arc missing. Thus, even a tinv wound can cause a hc1nophiliac to bleed to death. '"\\'c consider the hemophilia the n1ost serious of Scott's t\VO handicaps," said his 1nother. "And that's why \vc thought the guide dog V.'as a good idea as soon possible .. , Even \\'ilhout the dog, young Scott has led an incredibly active life. He 1vas elected student body president of La Paz Intermediate School last year. lie plays the piano. is an avid football fan, swims and bicycles. Co urt Date Set 111 Ahductio11 Of Area Mari11e A Los Angeles 1nan accused on his ar· rest in San Clemente last ri.1ay 20 of kid· na ping and sexually molesting a young Carr'lft--ffndleton i\1arine has lx>cn ordered to face trial Sept. 17 i11 Orange County Superior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for Joseph Reilly. 40. \l'ho faces charges of sex perversion. assault 11•ith a deadly \1•eapon and kidnaping. · San Clemente polit!c said the ~·larinc told then1 Reilly shoved a knife into his back v.·hile he 1vas v.•aiting for the light 10 change at a c~ty intersection and then forced him to enter the dcfendanrs car. The victim said he \\'<IS forced to enter a Los Angeles n1otcl l\"ith Reilly 11 here he 11·as subjected to several acts of se xual perversion before he \\"as able to escape . Hei!ly is free on Sl,000 bail. Cou11ty Rezo11es • Sa11 J nan Lau<l To CommerciaJ • A 1.000.foot strip of land between Camino Capistrano and the San Diego F'ree1\'ay north of San Juan Capistrano h3f been rezoned from agricultural use lo commercial bv action of the Bonrd of Supervisors \Vednesday. The \1·edge·shapcd parcel extends fron1 south of Cro1rn Valley Parkway to ne;ir the northern limits of . San Juan Capistrano. It \\'as purchased from the State High\\·ay Division as surplus by \\.n iter Popoff. Senior Planner David ri.1oore said the property's best use was office buildings rather than retail stores . Planning Commission approval \rhich \\'as accepted by the supervisors requires that lhe lower 540 feet of the \\•edge be held as open space and that the balance be landscaped. Upheld · Boy NO\\', Scott will have llannah at his side. at ·all 11n1cs. ue·n bL· a freshn1an at i\1ission Viejo High this fall. one step l'loser lo his career goal of becoming a 1>rosccuting attontcy. For the last month. Scott and Hannah ha\"c 11·orked together, learning to navigate through crowds. cope y.•ith safL'- ly hazards, and establish the essential rnaster·serva nt rapport. Scott was in a rlass \\'ith 13 other blind persons. TI1e progra1n is sponsored by Guide T>ogs for the Blind. ·I~ .. who give away the dogs lo each blind person they train. Hannah's specific learning period began long before she and Scott v.·erc 1natched. After being bred by the Guide Dog school. she 'l\'as raised by Dianne Balg1e of Costa ri.1esa as a 4H project. At the age o{ 14 nionths. the dog was sent to the San l~afael school to be trained by an instructor. , For Scott, the training exerci ses in· · volve~ learning how to discipline the dog and give her di rections. He also assumes • lull responsibility for Hannah's care. First step in the 28-day program is to \cad a school instructor around on a leash for practice in handling sudden turns and unexpected reactions. th_e next step is lessons with the <1og. AL first these arc supervised. Later. the students and their dogs are dropped off in downtov.'O San Rafael by themselves and forced to use v.·hat they have learn· ect • 'f'he last week. no Instruction is added unless needed. Dog and master prac1ice doing everything together. T\1·0 responsibilities rest with the dog: 111 ob<.'y the master itnplicitly and at the silnle liine to react to all danger sit ua· tinus 1he n1aster cannot perceive. Each dog is tested in heavy traffic by a 1k·ensed instructor under blindfold before being considered rc·ady to serve a blind 1naslcr. The dogs arc indi vi dually selected ror each blind person :ifler !he first three tlays of observallon by !he training staff 10 assure the best n1a1ch in size and tcrn- pcrainent. Hannah v.•ill be the only pet in the J::rkholdt household. Scott has tv.·o brothers 1 Handy, 18, and Ste\'C, liJ and a sister. Chris. Ii. Gold('n retrievers are considered more suitable for students than the traditional (iern1un shepherd because they are more suited to silti ng long periods of time such as 50-niinute classes. Pla~es~ GUIDE DOG AND MISSION VIEJO BOY IN TRAINING Scott Eckholdt and Ha nnah Ready to Go Places Designer's Collection of ~·· a J ·-~ Thomas F. Ivey, Jr .. 51. of 506 E. Al- mond Sl.. faces t"'O counts of filing false excise tax returns and four counts of inaking false statements to the U.S. treasury Dcpart1nen1. accordin g to Assistant U.S. Attorney J. Lawrence Handzlik. Girl's Dress Wrong Style .Choose from s eve r a I styles and a wi de selec· tion of decorator fab· ncs. Also other sofas & chairs are on sale at re· : Each of the counts deal \Vith foreign Cars J,·cy was allegedly bringing into the Country ror resale but contending that they were for his O\\'tl personal use . ~alru Springs Crash ' . Hurts Collllty Pilot PAl~t SPRINGS (UPI\ -~ pilot lroni 5anttt Ana was Injured Wednesday when his t~·in-engine crashed on approach to Palm Springs airport. Wilber ri.1cCray told authorilic.s ;:in k.ngil'V! quit as he neared tht. runw11y. A ,.,.Ing dippM in10 the sand nipping the plane end over end. CLIFTON. Ariz. (AP) -The Oifton School Board has upheld the action or principal Billy ltfcDowell in refusing to allow a 13-year~d girl to participate. in her e.ighth grade graduation rerernonies because her dress did nol meet stand- ards. · The three--member board voted unanimously Wednesday nighl to support the principal. Edward Stacy, father of Eleanor Stacy, had asked the boerd to explain ~fcDowcll's actions. Tlltl young girl was turned away from pnrtlclpatlng in lhc t.'C.rt!monies because her homemade. yellO\\' dress had yellow print flowers - a \'iolallon of the school dress code. Stacy told the board he believed the barring of his daughter from the ceremonies was a violation of federal and state laws. \Villiam Blair, boo~d chairman. said following the meeting he felt ri.1cDo\\'t'll 1 "did what he had to do and under the circumstances we felt "'e had to -back him up." Blair said the dress code 11·ould be checked to "sec U the people of Clirton feel it needs to be changed or if !he eighth grede graduation ought to be done away W\th." su1cy. v.'ho has n100 ~ s101 .ooo dam11~c I suit ngainsl ~fcDo\\·ell. lold the txwrd he ,1 ''felt thril authority over the \vay children '.f dress did not belong 10 the JX1rents 1 anymore. but lo the Cllfton teachers." duced prices. ... J " I • ·~. • ' -' .. . -.. .. . . . H.J.GARRETT fllR NlTURE PROFESSIONAL INT ERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon. Thurs. & Fri. Eves. 2215 HARBOR BLVD . COSTA MESA, CALIF . ~~ •• '...__..DA.cl.:.LV'-P-'ll.:.DT.:_ ________ T_hu::_":.:d::'•Y.,, ;::_Jul1 lq, 1q73 Schooner bi~es Hope ~ Phase 4's Not Making Anyone Happier ... To Addicts ••• ~ fARIS (AP) -The French schOoner ~goo ltope, with 2<l special passengers ,,Jtioard, has )us-t returned from e four· ~.oiOnth cruise in the \\'est J1Klles. . ll'he passengers visi ted picturesque r .. iStands. went sµear lishing and sumpled some of the night life. At sea they played bridge, read, relax· ed and helped the ere""' or the l~foot S<.1lllng ship. . • \Vhen tht crUise started the passen~ers .,,!re l'maciated and stan'<i vacantly 1nto space for hours oo end. They had tell-tale ll~l\pricks on the inside of 1heir arms. ·-· ,:, ,.J'HEY WERE llAR[)..COR·E ~ug ad- t,.-Okls -selec ted hecaust or their seem- ClPRgty hopclm condition. •,. '"'heir leader on the cruise ""as a ,1 Ji'rench Jesuit priest who doubled as cook. radio operatof and mechanic . ~· ~ 1'hree years ago. the Re\'. f\1ichcl . )aouen, 53, ca1ne up v.·it h the. idea of the """~ --------------~ ::;;c--.-~-----c'. "'For the f I 1· s I two 1·•• o n t I• s ll1e 11 flopped •jlround, just eating 011d ~~ephtg ••• Those 11:ho could s I o 11 d puttered obo11t •• .' rug rehabilitation cruise and since lhen s been in charge of addicts on 1he ood Hope . Yl'hich onct carried cattle ~c~ the Baltic Sea. ]. "Sure you can cure drug addicts in ospitals and clinics," said Father aouen in an interview. ;•Thank God that acilities exist on land. But I think the ea cure ls better. "\Vlth drug addicts, the first thing you ave to do is drag their heads above Eer, figuratively speaking. In . a ital or clinic you can .argue with ese kids until forever and in my opinion fou won't get anywhere. \..:·w 'l1IE KID IS not in physical shape ght, and to struggle over the Jong its not worth it to give him lectures preach to him. t "Bul U he is resuscitated, If he regains ).is taste for life, if he discovers people f.ho can live with him as a buddy without f~terior motives, then be discovers very f ~~ally and very simply what life can ,, On the cruise were 20 addicts 18 to 25 tear~lds, two-thirdi or them men. ~ .o•for lhe first two months they Oopped around, just eating and sleeping," Father Jaouen said. "Those who could stand put- tered about sometimes.·· BY THE nME TIIE ship arrived in the West 1ndies, the-group began to take an interest In things. Of the 60 addicts he has taken on three cruises, Father Jaouen says only two or three have>Nverted ta hard drugs. "Some of the others occasionally make mistakes but ttiey generally kttp straight. . Father Jaouen's first voyage on the Good Hope was privately financed bY the parent! of the addicts he. tt>ok alOOi. Then several government a g e n c i e s beeame interested and backed his next !\VO trips. Russ Recognize Afghru1 Republic NEW DELHI (UPI J -The Soviet Union has recognized the government that seized power in Afghanistan Tue s· dny, overthro,ving the king, the offical Kabul Radio, monttored here. said today. India said it, too, is recognizing the ne\v Afghan republic. Sardar Mohammad Daud, lead.er of the coup and cousin and bmther-in·law of ousted King Mohanuned Zahir Shah, has bren named to four top pasts in the government, an Afhan diplomat here said. \VASHINGTON tUPl ) -Bxctpt. for the President's ecorun.ic advisory council, Ix-cf, Pres.i<h!nt Nlxon'1 price freeie on admitted today, "nobody is going to be food wa1 lifted today and ht and his dUef very happy about what wt did ." advisers acknowledged there will be a· Quick and substantial rise ln what it costs ''TllE PRODUCERS are going to be to feed American families. unhappy "'' didn 't lean one way and con- 1'his wall the element of the nev.· Phase sumers are going to be unhappy \Ve IV e<:onomic plan, unveiled late Wedne,_ didn't lean that way," said Stein. "But day. that will be 1nost 1mmedlately that's the nature of the problem." frll and Herbert L. Stein. chairman of The program also includes a con· ~~~~~--'-·-=-~~~~~~~ free Bucks For 15 minutes in front of the \Vrigley Building in Chicago \Vednesday, lucky pedestrians received $1 bills from ?i.1rs. Gwyneth a.1organ, who said she met a man who asked her to distribute $200 for him. After a brief stay she told the crowd gathered she was ''go· ing !or a sandwich." and never returned. ' Heavy Fighting Lea'ves Casualties Near Saigon SAIGON ( UPll -Government and 1nunist artillery bar'rage. They said Communi st troops battled within 30 miles government lroops inflicted the heavy of Saigon today in heavy fighting that has casualties whe n the Communists follov.·ed left 86 casualties on both sides in a little up the shelling with a ground attack. over 24 hours. the Saigon command said . A command spokes1nan said fighting flared again today with a Comn1unist shelling and ground. attack near lhe Sout h Vietnamese govemmenl's Lai Khe camp 3{} miles north of Saigon. He said six Communists and one government soldier ~'ere killed and one South Viet· namese troop v.·as v.'oundecl Sl:IORTLY BEt'ORE dawn Wednesday the Con1munists opened up with a 41)().. round artillery barrage and launched a ground attack neor Lai Khe. the com- .r;nand said. In the 12 hours that follo..tied , 4i OJmmun ists and three government troops \VCre reported killed, and 28 government soldiers wounded . Communists. the command spokes1nan said. also hit the camp with 122mm shells P.1onday. the closest the big Soviet-built cannon have come to Saigon. SEVERAL OTHER ski rn1ishes broke oul at scattered poinis in the area 1hroughout the day but the command said it had no details. In Saigon. the South· Vietnamese and Viet Cong agreed \Vednesda y to free all prisoners eaCh side holds. starting next Tuesday. Prisoners must go free by July 23 uncler the terms or the June 13 Paris accord reaffirming the Vietnam truce. In Cambodia, Communist fo rces withstood more intensive American bomb- ing Wednesday and maintained what of· ficials described as "heavy pressure '' on Phnom Penh. Cambodian officials said insurgents \ve re fighting lo the north, south and \Vest or the capital. DESPITE THE fighting, Jwo convoy s carrying vital supplies reached Phnom Penh . Radio Kabul said Wednesday lhat Daud 1\as proclaimed president of 1he new republic. The spokesmen said Wcdiiesday's fighting began \vi th a 400..round Com· I Midcontinent Gets Soaked 1 There were no details of th(' U.S. boml>- ing, now in its 134th day since the in· tensified An1crican air \\"ar began. - Tliunderstorms Scattered Over Great Basi1i , Rockies I • 1 1 .. ,,...,,..e••eo ~ 'r.i:i::'f=~ LOI ~l!L'U'-tr...-' uP!wtA1~11010C~f· -Won IJlclllld Ptlk n .. r 90 1111+" °',...,. hlfi'>J ••t ~''"' !11 ,..,. 11(1-PJf' '°' 11 lilt OMCl'Mt 0!{111 '"' ""llfr ..,..,.11111'1 "' M ,..,..._ Mia l'Ds. lo row I01 l!'I !lit s.11 ,...,111n<10 1n.i s~n 0.Mfl ~1u.,.1, 7MS Ofll'tt1 111 -- t•t11 ,..Wl ...... , ••110 099""'1 '" '"'. .,_,,, Al'-'-Wltieo Ir°"" 1~·1) ...,i1tt II\ ,_.., ••t t"QllCIM 111 -.,.,, ·-· LflWI .. ,.. ,..,.. """ 111t ... I" fOlil .. llktM... •G 4S..0 &tl!Qf'te\ ff\ "- -Ml"t WAlM '"IWOIHIA .. I \J ,., ....... 11r.l1'1D----~ ~IAIM l;•~•:;l5N0W f77"';'} '-A ti ~~111 ·~ r1ow V.S. 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Besides most food , the price Veto Threat Fails to Halt Powers Bill freeze impostd June 13 was Uhed im· m<dlately on beallh c.,. fees, .It was the food segment ol the pro- gram that drew the greatest attention, from the President on down. In 11 written statement, Nixon said, '"l''1ere Is no way, "'lth or without controls. Lo prevent a substantial rise In food prices." STEIN ECllOED this today. "My person.al view i!I that we will have a bulge over a period of some months," he said, but llkt Nixon he insisted f.tle price rise would be mUCh Jess in the latter part of the year and continue to level off in 1974. \\'ould rise. althou&h a food chain spakes- ban forecast a 4-S percent jump 1n the next two MOnths . Dunlop also took Issue wilh a sug. gestion lhat the admlnlstratlon waited too Jong to act and said, "It'• wrong to say Americans are p a y I n g a severe price," for this. "We think we moved a' aoon ag we could," said Dunlop. The expeciation Is that by the time housewives do their weekly shopping at the supennarket next week, they will see the effects o! the removal of the freeze on food prices. The Creeie on bee! tuts until Sept. 12. TREASURY SECRETARY Geor1e P. Shultz, a prime architect of the Phase IV policy, stressed today that the removal of. restrictions on beef "\viii absolutely takt place" as promised Sept. 12. \VASHINGTO N tAP ) -The House has ig nored a veto threat by President Nixon and approved a bill that would require presidents to halt within rour months any war commitments they make unless Congress grants approval . THE BILL WAS passed 244. to 170 after Nixon served notice by telegram that "I am Wlalterably opposed to and must veto any bill containing the dangerous and Wl· constitutional restrictions" in it. "It is clear that the big increase in the supply of meat is about a year off because \\'e have this ran the big increase in the crops of com and soybeans -the things that animals eat -and it takes a year for the animals . . . to come to market," Stein said. ''But the \\'hole process that \\'C are engaged in is one of a delicate balance in our interest in restraining the prices and our interest in getting the output out." JOllN T. DUNLOP, chairman of the Cost of Living Council, and Stein both re-- fused to ·predict how much food prices Shultz conceded-that. "yes, as com- pared to pork producers,'' the i:ules do discriminate against beef producers. But he said the President felt that controls could not be lifted all at once in an areas ~ and he wanted to "try to let up fir st in areas where we had the greatest threat of shortages." The Senate could approve its own war powers bill Friday, setting the stage for an early showdov.·n het\\·een Nixon and Congress. Nixon 's telegram '''as read to the House by llepublican leader Gerald R. Ford, who objected to the bill saying it \\·ould let Congtess forct a war halt in 120 days by ''twiddling our thumbs" and doing nothing. "IF \VE DON 'T want a conflict con-. tinued the Congress shoul~ have the courage and the guts to stand up and vote against it ," Ferd said. The bill also came under fire from the House's most outspoken war critics, \Vho contended i t would give presidents authority to 1vage "·ar on their own for 120 days. "I think there arc enough loopholes in this bill to fly sorties of B52s through." sa id Rep. Bella S. Abzug , (0.N.Y.). Nixon specifically cited the bill's t\1·0 major features as the "dangerous and coostitutiona l restra ints" he said he \vould have to veto. R ecovered Nixon Plans to Keep Full Schedule \VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on. pronounced recovered from viral pneumonia and ready to leave his hospital quarters Friday. is planning to carry out as Juli a schedule as possible next 1veek. White House spokesmen said . Nixon hoped to be discharged today from the Bethesda. Md., Naval Hospital but his doctors persuaded him to remain there until Friday morning, when he will fly by helicopter to atrnp David, Md., for a \\'fekend resl Shortly before 8 a.m. the White House issued the following medical report : "The President ate dinner after being \"h,,itcd by Julie and David Eisenhower. He slept throughout the night without dif· ficulty and v.•as still asleep at 7:45 a.m. this morning. ''His temperature has rem a in e d normal. No (urthcr treatment \Vill be re· quired today. The President \\'ill continue to meet \\'ilh his staff and ha ve interval rest periods." At a Glan~e WASliINGTON (AP) -Here, at a glance, are the basic elements of President Nixon 's Phase 4 economic program: GENERAL-The price freeze is lifted immediately on food and health industries. All other sectors or the economy remain frozen until Aug. 12, when new rules becon1e effective. At that time, {>rice increases will require 30-day prenoWication and will be restncted to dollar·for-dollar reflection of actual costs with no added markup in profits. WAGES-The $'eneral 5.5 percent guidelines in effect during Phase 2 and 3 is continued. . EXEMPTIONS-Controls will be lifted Aug. 12 on public utility rates, \vages and prices in lumber and plywood industries and small . businesses with !ewer than 60 employes. FOOD-A llVO·stage program will permit price 'increases only when they reflect an actual dollar-for-dollar increase in the cost of ra"". agriculture products since June 8. Beef prices will remain frozen until Sept. 12 when manufacturers and processors will be allowed to pass on all cost increases on a dollar-for-dollar basis. PETROLEUM-Price ceilings will be imposed Aug. 12 on gaso· line, heating <Jil, diesel fuel and crude oil. RENTS-Rents were not included in the 60-day freeze announced earlier by the President. and remain exempt from controls under Phase 4. Hit-run Suspect Returns Ho1ne; 'Rather Be Shot' ORLANDO. Fla. 0 (API -The mother or the man charged \\•ith the hit-and-run deaths of two Tampa sisters says her son told her he would rather be shot than returned to jail. the Orlando Sentinel Star reports. Raymond A. J\1cl\lahon. \\"ho served lime In the Georgia State Penitentiary for kidnaping a 7·year-old girl in Fulton County in 1959, v.•as charged \Vith first· degree murder \Vednesday in the deaths of Roxanne Caton. 13. and Rabyn Caton . 5. POLICE SAID the older girl was killed instantly ''"hen a vehicle veered into the t\1'0 girls and their brother as they were walking near their home last Saturday. The driver stopped, put the older g1rl in the car and drove off, police said. Her body V.'aS round 36 hours later. A few hours before the body was found , the 5-year'"°ld girl died in a Tampa hospita l. Police said the brother, CUrtis Caton, 12, suffered only minor injuries. Scores of policemen fanned out over the Orlando area today in search of the 31-year-old karate expert and former Bi· ble student. -~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' Good Investment News: \ BU~ DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE Now available for the publi c: fin e jewelry from several large estates at Costa Mesa J ewelry. Save 50%. Estate jewelry Pficed for immediate sale. In vest now for unbelievable 50% savings. Wise investment op)Mlrtunity. Collection includes diamonds. rubies and emeralds. llig invest- ment demand because of increasing value and limited supply . Beautiful selection of ladies and men's_ rings and watches. Elegant necklaces. bracelets a nd pins in gold or platinum. Priced from $200 to $10,000 ... value~ lo $20,000. Oul·Of·Pawn je welry -a great inv estment. Hundreds of preciou s and sc mi -precloo ~ items now available. Prices low as $10 . Make Someone Happy with the perfect gift from Coilta Mesa Jewelry. Make a sound financial investment too. RACITl 'S • 1.:xqui11ilP plalinun1 11ecklaf"t 1rith 156 diantf)nd~. 11mr·xl1n11trl rl1•1111 (J •. ).i l,·11rlfl."J 1·/in1111.·1/ l1t1 !l lx1 !1111llf'.". :<8 bril- /111111~. t1n1I 1/t•l1t11lr 1·/11."I•'/'.~ 11( Ill mur- 'l''ixtr11 / d1n1111J11rls. 7i1/lr/1111rc1· 1:; k11rot x. f.~.IHlll ""'""· /1t'i('f.' l'f:Yl lll'f'ff l11 $s.!/!IJ. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1838 Newport Boulevard. Costa Mesa , California 92627 714 1646-7741 I ' - Store ""Bugged' Caller.s Hear W aterg ate LOS ANGELES (AP) -Telephone a store in suburban Torrance and yoo. can "bug" the Senate Watergate hc3r· ings oo White House bugging. That's what happens to those who are pot on hold by the slorc opcra\or when they call the Akron store. A store sa<*esmnn said Wednesday that transmission wave! rrom a nearriyradio station, which carries the daily Watergate proceedings, are "cutting" into surrounding phone lines and beaming Senate testimony to unsuspecting Callers. Akron manager Dave Ramos said the radio "bug'' has been happening for the last six months and callers usually were treated to radio commercials and news. "Now, they're get)ing Watergale," he said. "Poople think It's kind of nice. Just this morning, a woman told me • she thought we were performing a great service. "And. of course, I told her, '\Ve're glad you 're enjoy- ing it.' " State Wiretapping Cliarges 'Explosive' SACRAMENTO (API A secret legislative in,Yestigation of alleged illegal ,.,.iretapping in California_ is expected to turn up "highly sensitive" evidence, reliable sources say. The four-1nonth investigation is focusing on previously un- disclosed allegations of illegal bugging and theflS of dala. The allegations are described by some sources as ''highly sensitive" and "explosive.'' BLT TllE sources refused Pair Jailed 111 Slaying SAN BERNARDINO IAP l -A San Francisco east bay couple ha s been convi~tcd in California's most r cc e n t marathon trial of sl'COnd- degree murder in a prison guard's slaying during an escape. comment \\lednesday o n whether political or govern- ment ri gures \Vere involved. either as vi c t i ms or perpe trators. "It's no \Vatergate,'' one source said. A consultant tG t h e Assembly Judiciar y sub-- committee on the Rights of Privacy confirmed that the subcommittee is conducting an investigation. . Sources also said numerous witnesses are being sub- poenaed. But they said no one associated \vilh the in- vestigation is authorized to com1ncnt prior to a news con- rerence \vhich will probably be held w h e n subcommittee chairman Charles \V a r r e n returns from vacation next week. ''NO story" makes ONE is getting this until the committee a forma l an- nouncemenl, a commiltee con- sultant said. Smog Curbs OK'd I I Cars Need Controls or Won't Get Lice nse SAN FRANCISCO tAP I - Thousands of 1966-70 car owners wllJ have-to begin thinking about installing an-- .tismog devices as u result of a slate Board ot Air Resources deci:i;ion. creditattoo actions agalflSt '"''0 other devict>S formerly ap- provt.'CI for in.stallatk>n on 1966-- 70 cars. They include a second Air Quality Products dovice - called "Kar Kit" -and a syste1n made by Jo: c h I i n t'ifanulacluring Co. ( smog devices m only 1.6 urban cow11ies because clean air and $1TI&ller numbers or autos ln other areas do oot warrant the installations, said Gene Cone. board inforntation officer. The new modifit..'CI devices :ire rcquirt.'CI lo redu ce nitrogen emissions by -t2 per- cent, be said. CALIFORNIA DAILY PILOT :r Farm Union -· Police Hold 500 ! Ranch Picket£r$ BAKEltS l-'lf~Lll \1\l'I P1ekl'llng by ;111 f"Sti111a1cd 1.000 \Jnilt'd Fnrrn \\'orkers suppor·lt•J'S 111 Kt•ru Count y ranches 1o1as brok,•u up 1o1·1th n1orc thnn .)()(J 11rrt·Sh.od . thr :ihr riff's ofhtC' sa id The bOard has vOled to al>' prove f<>t1r modified pollµt1on control devices for those cars beginning Oct. I "'ith the change of ownership in seven Southern California counties and the nine San Francisco Bay area counties. INSTALLATION of I h c Proceedings against t h e devices, ordered by the board last month . begiry in early August. It will be up to a hear- ing officer to determine "11ethcr the board W3S correct in rc\'crsing its earlier sanc- tion of the IV•o devices because of alleged engine damage that could result fro1n their use. Both manufacturers promise tG fight the reversal. Coastal Panel W 011't Exen1pt New Route Tht'Y 11erc hl•1<.I al thl' t'Otlll· ty p:11J \\1('clnt·sd.:1y on tn· vestii.:at ion (If v1ol<1t1t1A court · orrlers IHrut1ng !ht• nu1nlx·r and loe:111on of p1t·kets 111 th1• l'F\\l'~ dispttll' 111th t h 1· Ti•;unsters L'n1011 01•1·r larrn l:ibor rcpr<'s1·nt ,11 1on Sf\11TJI plL'dgt.od at a t\e"·' t-onfcrcncr here that 1h1 tearn.stl·rs h3\ e "no goons. no 1;u;:1rtls 1n the fields and '.\'•· ba\'C no intention of sencltn..; unv 1n 111 lhl' future. \Ve ht11·1· fuli conOdt11e1~ lhat the !iht·r· 1ff's Qepart1nent "'ill be able lo toutroJ any \•Julcnce." Li nion 's Cash lrn·l'slin!! Tolil ' devices will be inandatory on all cars in these cowiUcs after Jan. I, 1974, at the lime auto license plates are rcnc1o1'ed. The board approved smog- arresting devices 1nanufac- tured by STP Corp., Carter Carburetor· and Contignitron. A device manufactured by Dapa Co . was approved at an earlier meeting . The devices are designed to r e d u e e s m o g-producing nitrogen oxides. A device manufactured by Air Quality Products Inc .. 1o1·as approved for use at owner discretion because ii exceeded the $35 maximum cost sel by the board. THE BOARD also ordered its staff to continue disac- In other business. the OOard accepted staff recom- mendations for new tt;Sf. pr~ ccdures of the devices. saying that previous \ regulations re- quiring the devices to be ()pcra tive :11 60 miles per hour could damage valves. THE NE\V regulations state the devices tnust operate at 55 n1.p.h. Earlier this year, the board had accredited several of ~the smog devices fOr older cars. Board member Allen Lemmon stressed that "devices on cars today will not have to be replaced." The board is requiring the LONG BEACll (AP l L The slate Coastline Con1mission has \•ot.ed to deny a claim of exemption from coastal in- itiative prov1s1011s for a freeway project south of San Diego. The 10-0 vote Wednesday concerned a stretch o f frcc11•uy between Interstate 5 Lost Ruin May Not Be Atla.ntis Rabies Po ssillle With 1 LOS ANGELES (UPI 1 -It may not have been Atlantis that a Cali fornia exp<.'dition found off the Spa nish coast. according to a leader of tht group, but something is thC're. NICASIO !U PI ) -One of the five persons playing a waiting game with rabies has been hospi talized although her physician doesn't believe she has the disease. l\trs, Madeline Kruetcr con1- p!ained of severe headaches, respiratory and throat prob- lems, but Dr. Miles \Vein· berger and other medical authorities said \Vednesday it was possible she was lflere!y having a bac! reaction to rabies inOC\Jlations The Ancien,t l\1cditerranean feels like bad breathing and Res ea r c h Association an-swallowing. ·• her sister-in-law , Penny Chclini. said. nounccd earlier this week. just Symptoms of rabies include after beginning its search for fever. headaches. burning and the mythical ''lost conlincnt." Jin gling sensations around the that it had !ound the ruins of infected area, difficulty in swallowing, breathing spasms. Atlantis beneath th~ wa rers of convulsions and sometimes the Atlantic off Cadi~. Spain. fits and death. Dr. Julian Nava. a Los and lntcrstatr ~ 1n the N<•· t1onal City <1 rl'a. The C(ln1n1ission has co ntrol orer all constn1clion 1o1ithin 1.000 yards of 1he ocean while a plan is bein~ prt'pared for the best use of the <.'Oastlinc. State h i g h w a y rnginecrs testified thal $13 million alread~· has ~n spent on the $52 million free1o,·ay project. J . O. Grasbrrgc.r. ussistant district high"1ay engineer, s.aid a permit "'ould be sought rrom the regional coastline rom- mission. However work would be halted meantime. he added. LA CO~:tr,\ ti\P I -A.bot11 $100 milhon 111 Te:un.'itCr~ llnion pension funds. a sourc~ <'ll'<'R n•prl'Sf"ntR!11t• J;nnt'.s nf 1,,,s1 sca nd:ils. ts 1 nv~letl Smith atrnounced his 11nioll ha s l1·~1tin1;itely in S.111 Diego .\IEAN\VHILE. s1~11t.>d 19 area gro11·1·rs County propert y. says an of· The mass pick1·t1ng and ur· f1l'1at or thl' giant labor rt•sts \\'N.lnrsd:J)' can1e one organization day after Cesar Chnvl'1.. h('ad Th<' n1one\ frorn the Central of the AFL-CI() Far n1 Sta11·s PenSioo Fund is in· \Yorkers Union. chari.;L'<I 1\1.'rn ve~i.t'd 1n lonn!': to La ~ County off i 1.: t a Is with resort ;ind othl·r develop- "systc1natic infringC'rtll'llt of lllt"!Jts. \\'ill i:un Presser of our t'Onstitutional ni::hts" in Cleveland , Oh to s.1id, in an: in· policing the picket s. He askNI tf'rvie1o1· \Vcdnesday ut .l)'lt· the Li .S. attornt·v 10 111· t'lose of tht Teamsters f;X- vesliKalt' for )lO.sS iblr ci1·1I l'Cuti \'e Council's quarterly rights violn11ons. nleellng. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~ '--~~~~~ • C0\09 I HAVT• JUllOU O •'"'"'""'''CUA.It o IAC1 ll!A. I GllM.t 11¥0~10 .. Pl\li .. 110 ltlWIVtUI WE REMOVE DIRT · NOT HIDE IT! • ..0 K l \J'tl!ltC. o otO >IAHlt CotlM.!(AU • 0 0011 U A1l1t1H GOIOI • ICO..OW(AI WALL TO WALL SPECIALISTS • RESIDEKTIAL • INDUSTRIAL • C•RCIAL 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE !MERIC!N 4105 CALLE ABR IL CARPET STEAM CLEANING FREE ESTIMATES 496-0125 Found guilty "11edncsday in San Bernardino C o u n I y Superior Court were Benton Douglas Burt. 30. and wife Andrea Holman Burt, 19, of Hayward . The jury deliberated five days after a three-month trial. The sources. \vho asked not to be Identified. said that a public hearing has been tcn!a- tivcly set for July 30 through Aug. I in Los Angeles. That ls \\here some or all of the al· legedly illegal activifics oc- cured. t\1rs. Kruetcr is one of five Angeles school trustee and co- persons who may have started leader of the expedition, says taking inoculations too late the divers have found roads after C'Xposure to a rabid and columns but said the ruins horse on the ~1ar-Chi ranch in :ire "more likely" to be an· 1\1arin County. so1ne 3Q miles clent Greek. Roman, Etruscan "SllE \VAS gelling s~;d~c'_"_ef~--"~oJ<c~th~w:e:s~t~o~f~S~a~"'...':F~ca~"~t;s~co~. -~o~c~P~h~oe~"~i~ci~a~"~-_____ _'._~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::"'.'.'-':_'.:_'.:_~_"__::_::_:---"".'.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ SAN CLEMENTE • the reasurv The complete record dept. new summer sounds now at special savings! • •• Stereo Albums l 'arlo~S:-1nt.1na ~1.1h.:i:.1 ... h11v~1hn MrL:111i.:hh11 L<JVE l)l::VOTK>N o...;lJRH.Ei"Df:!< -£l-s..---n..i..i.o..- 333· ON EPIC STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES Sty & The Family S1one -Fresh ON COLUMBIA STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES Chicago -vr \ol .... C.0_f ... -Oln..u..- 8-Track Tapes 499 Sanlana -Love. Oevollon & Surrender ON RCA STEREO AL.BUMS & TAPES Elvis Presley -Elvis Nilsson -A L1Hlc Truch or Schml1sson 1n 1he Nigh! ON ATLANTIC STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES J. Geils Band -Btoodshol ON ABC!DUNHILL STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES Jim Croce -Lile & Times ON WARNER BROS. STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES Dooti1e Brothers -The Cap1a1n & Me Tower of Power ON HI/LONDON STE REO ALBUMS &. TAPES A! Green -Call Me All Ad Prices Good One Week Only, July 19th thru July 26th. -' Specials 299 8· Track Tapes Browse through our new selection of lapes on maJor labels of popular arhsts 194 Stereo Albums Pnced lor summer Jis1en1ng enjoyment Large selectio n of lop artists on maior labels • • GUHAOA Hlll5 1800 (tl.'IU.worlh St °''" OAILl t:ao te t :H . SU NDAl 10 te 1 _,, : . J • Specially Priced 8-Track Tape Carrying Cases 2 9 9 Deluxe Model Red flocked inleffOf with chrome dec9r. 1 9 9 A well made ecooom<:al case. Eicte11or-plas!1C r.oatcd, mo1slu1~ resistant rnaterial. ~ Model 9100 Slurdy binder<; & I .. hardware nickel plated I Each case has the capacily lo hold te n cartridges. WOODU.NO Hllll 21500 Victory Blvd. i lVllJfDI l$20 l'y!tr SI . U.HTA AHA North OI South (()6~1 Pia la 10UANCI Stovlveda and Hawthorne IUIHA , .... Btach •nd Orangeltiorix: .,.r LAfCIWOOO C.trson iri! Paramoonl OUNOl G1rden Grove Blvd. and Manchetlt• 0 ! • • DAO.. 't'_ PO..OT EDJTOIDAL P AGE - • Propriety F1lth Di&trict Supervisor Ronald Caspers is in dis· favor with some South Orange County residents for a number or reasons, high among them his adamant ~up­ port or all or Avco Communi ty Developers' Laguna Ni- guel projects before the coastal commission. Caspers' involvement i n the county's independent dealtncs with Avco over the eventual public ownership of part of Salt Creek Beach gave him inside knowledge of the development plans. It also probably had an cf· feet on his thinking. Some environmentalists and homeowners' groups charged that an impending purchase of one Avco lot for a branch of Caspers' Keystone Savings and Loan is a "conflict of interest" and "disqualifies him in this mat- ter." The lot in question wasn't included in th e tracts on which Caspers voted as a South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commissioner. But it could be argued that Avco's overall success would benefit his interests. . Caspers should remember that in public office it is JUSt as necessary to avoid the intpression of impropriety 1s it is the real thing. Abstaining from votin,E!'. would bave been a wise decision. A Balanced Environment California's U.S. Senator Alan Cranston qualifies as someUUng of an environmentalist -amon~ other things, he has fought loJJ.g and hard for legislation regulating offshore oil drilling -.but he's also a practical man. So bis recent remarks on the Senate floor urgini a coalition of environmentalists and labor to "seek ways to improve our environment by creating more jobs, rath· er than by jeopardizing jobs" make sense. Every popular movement has, necessarily, its ex- tremists. And as Cranston noted, the "no growth" poli· cies advocated by some environmentalists could have the backlash effect of reserving the benefits of a clean en· vironment to the already affluent . The livelihoods of men and women must be given Questioned consideration, says the senator, a.long with the virtues of a clean environment. To this end, be proposes that en· virorunental impact statements take into account the ef-~ fects of unemployment and social dislocation that can result Crom too-stringent .growth controls. Regulation of lridustrial development is desirable, but jobs still must be provided. Preservation of open space is desirable, but provision still 1nµst be made to house the less a({luent wage-earner. Environmentalists see worthy goals, but good plan- ning mu st consider the average man's basic need to find a decent job within reasonable range of hls home--along with the benefits of the park or greenbelt or wilderness area for his enjoyment outside wor~g hours. Coordination Needed No fewer than eight public agencies in Orange County are collecting chemical and biological data Qn the ocean. They range from cities, like Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach, to the county Public Health Depart- ment to Southern California Edison Co. They have compiled volumes of figures-often dupli- cate -on heavy metals in some parts. chemical solo· tionS, fish life, plant life1 tidal currents and shifts in sand. Yet one glaring weakness stands out from all this work-none of it is coordinated. There is no one agency controlling or watching the work, and often the variou s '\gencies sq uabble over data ~nd fight for the same funds, rather than cooperate. In compiling a list of who is doing the work the public health department strongly recommended that a coordinator for all ocean studies be established in the county. The item was in the health department's pre- liminary budget ($12,000 to $15,000) but was cut by county s~pervisors_. It would be a small price to pay for the poss ible salvation of such a big ocean. • . \ I I • I I I 'Last Tan go' More Dull Than Dirty Cmagress Ponders Presidential Autlwrity on Tariffs FNEYJ.H~ So many readers have written to in- quire whether l've seen the fjJm . "Last Tango in Paris," that 1 feel obl!ged ~o say a few W-choserl words about 1t. 'I'his despite the fact that I almost never com· ment on films, because I don't un· d<rstand or appreciate the pmtogral'i:!!• medium. But the current In- terest in '11..alt ta. go" is not clnema· tic; it is ""'""1it. lt ts not b tF,.i• the picture !iii b • e n deemed r.t. but because 1t bu be· come a !UCCf!I 1ean- •m• t~oughout the . v.-orid. People wtll l'UMl to see it in order to have seen it, not for its intrinsic merit. J saw it early in the spring, at a private screening, and decided It was not far me. 'The characters did not ,interest me, and their singlem1nded erotic rela· tionship without any love struck me as a bore. No doubt. it may be a directorial and photograhic "masterpiece." but I have always maintained that if a thing isn't v.'Orth doing, it isn't worth doing well . TIIE REASON I didn't pan it in the column is my -disinclination to lend am· mwiition to the moralizers and censors. l\Jy objection to the film Is that it is dull, not th.-.t it is "dirty." It may be "dirty," too. \\'hatever that word means. but I don't think morality should be legislated or immorality suppres.sed by the civil authorities. Anyone or legal age who wants lo see it should be allowed to see it; I think it serves them right to spend all that Dear Gloomy Gus · If ihtegrit) isn't exactly one of tbeir 1 stroogest traits, at least the Watergate attorney witnesses do fol · lo\v Hamlet's dictum: "Speak the speeCb, I pray you ... trippingly on the tongue." J. A. W. Glowny GH C-'I •rt •ullnllTtM .., rNders eMI ... Mf 11eCtu1r11'Y nflf<t .. 'l'MWS· of Ille -l!Mf". kllf YMr Mt •NVf .. G!Mmy G•&. O.lly ,lltf, money and get so little in return. If it of· fends you, don 't go; if you don't like it, walk out. Tell your friends it is rotten, if you think so -but don't try to prevent other people from seeing it if they a.re foolish enough to want to. WBAT I DON'T understand about the , censorious mlnd is its p a r a n o l d overvaluation of the harm to be done by "dirty" movies or books or pictures;- What terrible threat do these people find in sex, or coarse words, or even the scatology that sickened me in one or lv•o scenes of this film? Why are they detennined that nobody else shall be ex· posed to such garbage? I don't find these people rushing around in a frenzy of enforcing the pure food and drug laws. I don't see them policing factories that spew ool cbemical pollutants. I don't see them in the forefront of the save-the-lakes com- mittees. I don't see the m militating against the far greater obscenities of v.·ar and social injustice and bigotry and greed. IT lS SEX alone that stirs them up, as if somehov1 mos! of the rottenness in !he y.•orld were concentrated a few inches belo1v the navel, instead of in the mind and heart. But disoriented sexuality is always a symptom or a larger spiritual malaise in the soci al order; and picketing against a lewd movie makes about as much soose as sv.·abbing a cancerous trachea with a Q-tip. Nixon May Win ~ore Trade Powers WASHINGTON -For all its supposed paralysis the federal government is mov· ing in directions which increase the power of the presidency. The House Ways and Means Com- mittee, and Congress generally. appear to be moving toward giving the President power to raise and lower tariffs and ad· just other trade bar· rien as be requested on April 10. 1973. Historically. this v.'Ollld be an im- portant departure from past policy and 11.'0llld delegate to the · President po\vers once jealously guarded by Congress. (rucHARD WILSO~ that the White }louse would become the dominating partner in the new rela- tionship. NIXON'S proposals are bound to run up against serious opposition in the Senate v.'here the encroachment of ex· ecutive authority is most keenly felt. The Senate is in open revolt against presidential poy,·er and pri~lege which Nixon has so boldly asserted in the Watergate case, the bombing of Cam- bodia. tlw general exercise of war powers, dismantlement of programs authorized by Congretii;, and the im- JX)Undment of funds voted by Congress. Now Congress is being asked to increase the presidential powers in the name of enlarging the executive authority to con· duct in ternational relations. Nixon is also proposing to grant on his own authority most-favored-nation tariff treatment to Russia to carry out the terms of the trade agreement signed in t.1oscow last year. This runs Up against the strongly su pported Jackson Amend· ment which wouh1 deny equal trade treatment to Riissia so long as its emigration policy discriminated against Jews. Nixon's case for a new trade policy is a strong one. lt was recognized as tar back as the first Jo'rankhn. D. Roosevelt Admin.istraton that the delegation to the White House of some authotity tn the trade field was necessary. I~'ll\1ENSE changes since have cruttd a nev.· oompetltive world, with the U.S. at disadvantages it had not dreamed of. 1be trading power of a resurgent Japan and Germany, the opening markets ol Cliina and Russia, Western Europe's Common Market. are new factors which force upon the U.S. a more centralized cmtrol of foreign trade both to get new markets and to protect American businesses and their workers from foreign oompetition. 'Ibe present atmosphere is not the best for an enlargement of presidential authority, but ncverthel~ in the trade field Congress appears in a mood to do so. If the full sense of the President's April proposal \Vere to be 'carried out. the management of America's foreign trade would be taken over by the White House subject lo restraint s by Congress which \\'Ould be awk"•ard to invoke. Time to Convert io Metric System TIIE PRESIDENT could cut tarif!.s, Somehow, it doesn't sound right: "A increase them. grant most·fa~red-nation gram o( prevention is worth a k.ilogr&m treat'!lent to any ~n.try (subject to coo· o( cure." But the old proverb, thus up- gr.es~ional v~to Y.'i,J.h1n three mont~s).\.-dated, may not jar the ears of future ehmmate o_r impose quo~s and other 1m-gene rations of Americans. It is no looger ~port .restra1nt.s. The offioal to whom t~ a question or whether. but only or when President: . m turn, delegated this lhe Unitc:d States will convert to the ~poosibility WO u 1 d be lbe first Amer· metric system of weights and measures 1can rcreign trade czar. that is the standard in yirtually every How Car Congress \\i ll go \\ith the other part of the world. Goodbye, gHI. President is not yet entirely clear, but it firkin and h~shead. Hello, meter, bec- is indicated that the House Ways and tare, and Utt: .. ti.leans Committee has endorsed the idea in general terms with certain additional limits on the presidential authority but not tnOUgh lo bother the \Vhite House. The days or tariff bargaining and trade- orr in Congress would fade into history. The President speaks of a "worling partnership" between the executive and legislative branches on ihe management of trade as a major irmrument of foreign policy. But it is Congress, under his pro- posals. wblch Vl'OUld be delegating its traditional authority and it seems clear IN 1968. Congress directed the Com- merce Department to undertake an ex- tensive study of conversion to the metric system. Three yars later, on July 29. 1971. the department produced a study entitled "A Metric America : A Decision \Vhose Time Has Come." It asserted that, "Eventually the United States will join lhe re!t of the world in the use or the metric system as the predominant com· mon language of measuremmt." In hls 1972 State of the Union message EDITORIAL RESEARCH to Congress, President Nixon de(lared that "\Ve can enhance our competitive position by moving to implement fhe metric system of measurement . . . " The Senate appro \'ed a metric bill later that year, but the legislation never reached the noor of the Hoose. ~1ore than a dozen metric bills have been in- . troduccd in the current session of emwess. THE l\1AJOR selling point of the metric system Is simplicity. All divisions and multiples are in ratios of 10. The ma- jor metric units arc, for length, the meter (39.37 inches ); for weight or mass. the gram (.035 ol an avoirdupois ounce); and, for capacity, the liter (1.08 of a liq· uid quart and •. 908 or a dry quart). Larger or Smaller units are fonned by combini~ prefixes with the major units. Tbe mcst common prefixes in ordinary usage are centi·, or 1/100 of the major unit: de<:i·, or 1110; and kilo-, or 1,000 times the major units. Now consider the complexity \'erging on chaos of the existing system of weights and measures. As frank Kendig observed last .year in Saturday Review, " ... there are 2,240 pounds to a long ton but only 2.000 pounds to a short ton (not to mention the register . ton, the n1easurement too, the wheat ton_. the timber ton, and the English water ton ): 16 ounces lo a poond avoirdupois weight but only 12 ounces ,to a pound troy 11·eight: 43,560 square feet to an acre; fou r gills to a pint; seven fi rkins to a hogshead.'0 But the changem'fl'. when it comes. 11·ill be difficult for those 1\'h:l have grown up in a world of illogical but familiar ow1ces, pounds, pints and inches. ' . U.S. Spends Foreign Funds on Many _Far-out Projects \\" ASH JNGTON -On the foreign ex· changes the ooce-mighty dollar is hcc· ti cally flopping around like a fi sh out of water . but CongreS..'i oonchalantly 1s voling ftlillions of useles..'i boondoggles. Latest instance L• a $4.S milhon bood· lcbag tucked 3\\':IY in tht huge Interior Orpartment appro- rriBlion blll. This juicy cachr is for junkels. stud· \es and \"llriOUS ()th. tr pleasurable ventures abrOad by edu· eators. scientists. "schoh1rs " and sa'''"Y lnlelllgentsia who can wangle Ihde cozy phuns. ' The $4.S million approved f"' tiles< cushy boonCloal<s "'°"' from so-<ailed countupart fUnds -fottign currencit:s owned by the U.S. as a ,...11 ol the sale ol ...-plus food> and other auppllet. Actording to the llotffi .._,, the U.S. own. some $1.5 billion In eounttrp1n funds in 13 t'Ol.Ultries. 'TllES!il FOREIGN curnmcletcannot be u5'd ouUide the countrie.,~ d oriKin. Some U.S. diptomatJc ind ~hfr rpecified t l]>tftleS in these countries are financed with them. Uodl 1170, th3t was ebotll the on b> direct benefit the U.S. derived !rom thelt funds. Then another outlay was added to the list -on the recommendation or the S1n ithsonian Institution. That's where these "scientific and c.-ultural research" boondoggles come In. Congress was persuaded to approve lhe allociilion of S..1.395 million in counterpart funds for such projects. Having gotten 3way \\'ilh that. the next year the 3mount \\1lS raised lo $3.5 million, and Lhis year they really took olf and proposed a S9 million budget. 1'rtpling the 101<1\ at one fell swoop prO\'ed too much . The House Appropria· 11ons Comm11tee b.'ll ked and cut the re- quest in half to $4.S million. But the am· b1tious promorr:rs can hardly shed tears 01•er 1ha1. · THE $4.S ~llWON IS .!ilill a CM- siderabll"' illCrease -JI million mott thao this high-flov.'n boondoggling tvcr got before. It •10 matHe llCOl"H mort projec'U: to ht adMd. and !hat means scores mort: agreeable foreign ·junk~ for lucky cognosoenti who can pull the wires to snare them. And that in turn will mean 11uch reverberatlng profundities 11s a $M,OOO study of the "Changing Structure ol the 1-'amlly ln Serbia in tht Coocext o( Erologlcal. Socio-f..(onomlc :Jnd Re.lated Demographic Olanges >Ince the 19th Century." Or a SS.0.000 "Surve.y or !be \llUd Shttp and Goat Population in Pakistan" -for the avoy.·ed purpose of "tourist develop- ment and game ranching to provide ad· dillonal sources of prolein." FigUring lh~t one out really took roaring ln.Renulty and unrestrained imagination. TllESE ARE by no means unusu&I ex· ampl es. Far from It -as follows : -$25.000 for a study in Polind of the "Interaction of Small Rodent!i ""ilh Human Beings.'' -46.000 for another study in Pobmd or a "Bkx'hemical Investigation of Rana esailenta . a Bisexua l f«>g o( possible Hybrid Origin." Intriguing jus:tillcatlon ror thli unique inquiry is to '1dewmlne wbttber this froe is a hybrid or a seponte species:· -410,000 for the "Study and Qillec:tion rl: Ethnographic MaterialJ Cllaractertstlc of Pr~nt-day We in SOOtan" -a remote Buddhist country in t he Hlmalayan ti.fountains. That really ought 10 shake things up. - -$83,00> for a "dttp anal}1ical study" ol ··eu11ura1 Changes and En'•ironmen1al Ac4lptatlon ol &orly Food-Producers ol Y111osllvia." Thii esoteric undertald.ng b; 10 bt made by nciM! other than Harvard's famed Peabody Museum. As is clearly evident, even august Harvard isn't above partaking ol a lush boo~ doggie. -$5,IXXt for an examination of the "Ecology and Bthavior ol Hool~k Gibbons" -some sort of apes. 'Ibtre is no description of them or the purpoee of 1hls boondoggle. -FolloYl'ing are other animal studies in this year's \ISl ol "scientific and cultural resrordl:" $10,000 for a Harvard study of the "Ecology and Behavior cJ Rhesus ti.lon keys and Langurs: $S;OOO for "Com- par&tive S t u d I e s ol Eltphaots and Prtmtttes;" M.000 for ''Systematic and ~hslvtonl Studies of Flatfishes and Goblold Fishel" -tndlan fish similar to the sole and fiotmdtr: 13.0lltl for ''Clim- pti1ralive Bloenergt:tics ol the House Spirrow" -Blomt:rgeUcs is "eoncemed ~ith what livina things like from their ..,v1ronm.,. lo rtiation to whlt they give back to the environment.'' -And then lbeA ts $111,000 far an ... aminatlon or the .. DIAJ>PWlng Andent Technologies cJ Pallltan -a c:on- timifng boondogte "' •hldl $511,0IO :gs spt'nt last ye1r end '51,000 the )'!IT before. -ISS.000 for a &tudy ol •"11Je C\Jltural, 1-':ct>nomic and Sodal Impact ol Rural Road Cons1ructlon ... Ailhou~h the results of 1bls project art supposedly applicab1' to 3n)' counlr}'. lhe n\oney w111 be sptllt in Yugoslavia -for no given rea5'JO other than the explanatory note: "The prin- cipal investigator la an American whose parents emigrated to ihe U.S. from Yugoslavia and who has spent time in Yugoslavia on scholarshjps." ~.000 for the '10>llect.ion and CJasslfie1llon ol Bunneat: Mosses." There is no clue as to who i.s getting this little gem -on which $3,000 was spent last year. ~.500 for "A Gqrap!Uc>I and E<ologlc>I Sludy ol t!Je Mammals -or Morocco .. -on which '91.000 was t:X· pended last year and 111.000 the >~ar previous. OU.M&I COA.IT DAILY PILOT Rob<rt N. Wttd, Plobluhrr Tllomu Kttoi!, Edjt.ar il<lr!Jaro K rcibicJ. Edltorli!rl'of/I! Editor Thursday, July 19, L97S -410.000 for 11 study of the "Ecology and Behavior of I.he One • llorned. Rhinoceros, an Endangered Species in India." And !M.000 for a study of the · "Habitat Relationships And Distribution of Wild Ungulates in the Glr Forest of 1.ndla." Vale Is conducting this inquiry and spent mono than leo,000 "' It in the past several years. CU"'"1ataa-aro booved animels). , And JO on and on and an for $4.S mlllioft of countt:rpart funda that Is ac- tualb> ,.._.. • ..-y-io I or e l gn currencies tht: U.S. owns In payment for wheat. grain alld Olher commodities and products oold abroad. The tdttortaJ Pili• or the oui, Pilot .eeks to Worm. and sttm\llate "*"' by prnPnllna: on ~ N• d~ commtntar)' on toptca 0( m. tft'al by i)'hdlated ('QlumnJm and ~ by P"Wktinr • fonam for l"f9tllen' v!f'WI and b)' pretentl.nc tills nt .. Pt'r'• opinions and ldeeJ on ................. ,... .. llorlal -or tht 0-ill' PUot -.PPtlr onl¥ bl the ~lforill column at , Che top ot ttic. ~. Opinions rxpt't!lltd by the coJ.. umnl!l.t!I •nd cartooalsl11 and lrntr v.·ri rtn a.rt their own and no~ ment ot ~lr v~w1 by the Dai)y Piiot should be lnfernd. • • QU - - l ' - 1 -:q ''WI roni -:------> N , SA< Twen shopli lo n store! back The Sarra sald W<llll' M payi fine Ai he t Judi he 1 final cool trav Mcf peri pint hosi ") bloo Mel ft I I Re She '''Tho '"'. = I not • 1 1\.f.&ch have d...., breal .net I over to bO cont< wheq \VOTk ·-vocy I The I ally i '"" u ! or nt 1•ec:re 1 i!I tt: I fully I ha\'e , SPltj den Cl Ing b )'Oil? oor pllllll I form/ lion. ISll f ' QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl ··~ i vacaUle1 l was hoping for a summer rom•-btlt11•, I wound up with a aummer cold.'' Never Too Late " TllurMl•Y, July 19, 1973 * DAILY PILOT Brezhnev· Returns Favor Hustler Coffin, f osr, f horough, Gua1onri•f'd Real Estate Solt>' and or 8ro &.r•t l•ct·,,ll' ..... m Wire S..Vlcet BEVERLY HllJ.S -Qoc' Couln, ..... ,... Sovie! ,P1-~B...U.v1 Pllr ol lbc .... 11111 • cowboy lllf'<>11 ~ ....nt U.S. viol~ hll 1tetlved I R •• I I a D ._..In ......... '1'111---...... nl<d lo llil 11<1or ii ~ boa1e by v .. ~ tr L v-. ..i.iant to Ibo Sovtot-11-.itns.n Fr1ndlcQ. ( • I PEOPLE ) Connon, ~t known (or star- ring in the teltviaiGn western series "T'b(. Rltteman," met Btezbnev last month at a par.: tr at the Weatem White House. 1be premier recognized him in the crowd and walked over and gave him a hug. Connors later 1ave the fan two .. 45- callber revolvers and the western hat. * WICHITA, Kan. San lAllJtstra ts the kind of man who'll give you the 1hlrt off hi.s back. ~ has. ... _ TO VISIT U.S. Prince Chlrle1 A new zoning action before the City Commbslon threal- eoed property owned by Sam and aro,used his ire. Appearing before the commission, he- startled Its members by un- butloolq his shirt and handing it to the only female conr mlasioner, Connie Peters. "I'm sure happy to be "You 've taken my propeny, hert," said Dawson 11 his now 1 want to give you my Chi~ Falls residenct. shltt," Sain announced. The tl-yMr-Old Air Fortt * captain aakl he and his \\'Ire PORTSMOUTH, N.H. -The ore going lo New Y0tk City future ruler of the quetn's Thursday mominc to see his TRA INING Piiv"• fr,;r f,., } 'Urr a ANTHONY ICHOOU HAllOI CIMfU ___ ...... C.N .... ~ "' rn•• m-uu 1n1 L t:l PP •I ... _..,,_ ... 1n41no-- la~yer. !\tarvln Karpatkhl, ol navy, Prt1« t'har~•. is the American Civil Llbertle1 ICbeduled to make an unof· ~U~ru~·o~n~. _______ J=========::;~~~~~!!!)!~ flcW Ylltt to Portsmouth dur•I' KUALA LU M P U R . 1\falaysia (AP\ -An undertaker was hned $12 ror trespassing In a holplt1l llld peddling cof, !Ins to patients. In& the city'• ~h ... nlverary celebration next · month. The 24-yeaM>ld Prtnce of Wale1. wbQ Is the heir tO the Brltlah throne. is a lieutenant aboard the frigate HM!! ,_tlnerva, which will mate a cow1a7 c•ll here ln mid,~•&•••· * AU&TJN, Tex. -The Te11s S.pr11111 Court Wedneoday ruled milllonalress C•11•1 Mo111ltt Curt._ and ~fllwll Lane Penn owe ltOU1ton 1t- tomey Pder Forem111 1 quarter ot 1 mlllion dolh1r1 for his def.,_ ol fht couple dur. In& 1 HI1111ion1l 11166 murder lrlAI. -I Ol• lieach: Rf1to11•tt1toSan Sdmes a daya11 PSA. Ir~~ 1111Uffki" state bll'd) ,-·~· 11 Shoplifter Pays Mrs. Garrifon, who married Houlf4tl f'4ctrlc1I contractor Barnett Wadet Garrison in 1971, lPf1 htr nephew were charged with the falal 1tab- bing of her hu1band -Mlrmi banker J1ct1u11 Moslltr -Jn 1984, Raci~ Split Hit CllJCQPV,~ ~~~~I. Mass, CAurt J'4111e Albert Engel ft--Qlpl, °"""'' I. Do.....,, Jected -Uom lhai Grlft41 lht 8111 bomb<!rir charged Rapid> opera1a. 1 dull ochoot wlUi dllob,ylnf 9'dcr to ny After 20 Years GRAND RAPIDS, M i c b , (AP ) -A federal judge has ordered the Gral\d Rapids school ayslem to integrate its staff but rejected arguments that Its atudon! bod)' i• aegregated. PSAglwes rou a lft. • SACRAMENTO (AP) Twenty ytan ago, 1 h e shoplift~ hundreds of dollars in merchapdile from Jooal stores. Now she '• a:lvlng It 111 hack -...,.pt tor 1171. The Re•. Stephen Re1rqat of Sacramento'• Bflh1l Temple said in an Interview the WQJruUI iralked Jnlo hi• olflco "Dis to•• t It e t i ~ ~· t ehanee 1lte ' Jau hatl to eome ., """·'' ' reoenUy and 1sked for his help in ·r~kln.r amends ror her yoUWul stiopllltlng 1pree1. ''Making~ restitution w a s soalithln& ahe had Intended lo dQ f« a long time, but this wu the first chance she has had .to come back. She wanted Fine Paid WiihBlood MENASHA. Wis. (AP) -Scott McPtrltncl , Is paying off'• a In tr1lflc fine with hia. ltre11 blood. Arrested for speeding, he told Winnebago County Judge Jame1 Sitter that he had suffered a recent: financial setback a n d couldn't pay the fine, A traveling sa le1man , McParland, 21, received permission to donate three pints of his blood to a loca.J hospital ln lieu of I.he fine.• "I figure I have more blood than money," said McParland. REFLECTIONS ~. Rcyn Sheffer - I .. The only -It -flt. Int nliNr.Wt 1' ..... ·hliVI 9MU1h l~MW't t• wender whether you ,,. """' or I not • , ,• 1 0.rp atrMfl1 lhliw I ~1achines and computcn have taken over much of the dtee.ry monotonous or back· I breaki~g work of the world and will continue to take I over more. Yet, people seem to be no more hapPY and content t h a n the~ ·~"' I when long h ours t hard "'Ork was the nor and I expected lot of all but the very wealthy. I The happiest people are uau· ally those so busy they have 1 no time to wonder whether I or not they are happy. The 1 ~t of ha.pptneu. Shaw I iii tdllng .ua, Ilea In being fully occupied in work you I have lee.med. ,,to enjoy. • Spare your famll$ the bu'f'. den of maldnir decWom dur. lng bereavement by making you r dealrn k.no\\•n throueh our pre-need arrqement I plana. Alk tor complete In· fonnaUon, without oblip.· t lon • . ~tt,~x,teR t1• SOUTH COAST Hl&HWAY • U&UNA IEACH ..... ,,, SAN Cll!MfNTI ISJ) NOlllTH El CAMINO lllEAL 492.0100 to do It personally," RextQ&t aald. "SHE BAD already made her mind up what she wanted to do with the money ; she just wanted 80l1le assistance In making the restltutiQn," he odd ed. Ha laid the onetime 1hopllfter was middle aged and from out of 1t1tt, but deollned lo alve lurlhet dtlllll to protect her ldenltty. Ruling ln a ruit filed in 1970 by the NAACP, U.S. Diltrid Portland Besieged By Smog PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Oxid.,ntl ln Portland'• air te f Jta 70 ooo U a ri\lltlon QV" lodia, ar-sys m or ' pup s, rivld t.rM Wedntlday on 10 with some oclloo!S ill blaek _c:d•~Y~l'!,lll!!:Y'!:.· _____ !__::::__:__ __ ==----===:=. ---=---,=---==-.=.__:_:___=:__:== 1nd otben: all· white. 1 _ ....... _ ffQwevtr, Engel gave the Orand Rlpk!s school system ·a July rr doadllne to devtlf • plan to desegregate its 1,800 teachers and administrators. He also dismissed from the suit 11 suburbs, which the NAACP had sought to include in a metropo.litan a re a desegregation plan· The ruling came f o u r months alter the end of a three-month trial. Rea. 135.00 FAMOUS TOWNWAY 0 QUALITY SUITS Double knit end wor1ted As Iowas 99.00 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Tho woman wenl t~ 111 the 1tQre1 1he could rtmernbat, paying old debts , Remit said. But some of the vlotlm store• are nO longer In business and she naure. the 11111 owes $171, he adaed. cripl over the Jaert level Wed-r----------,1 ne!ltlaf. leading the Depart- ment of Environmental Quall- tr . to. a!k resident!! to avoid drlflng. especially downtown. •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• SO, a $171 check, with I IUI~ geaUon that it "be d.11penud with as yo.u see nt" has been forwarded to the Sacramento city treasurer by Rexroat. 111E CITY council is con· sklering accepting the money u a contribution to the Sophie Co mst ock Memorill Coounlssion fund to erect a atatue commemorating the Pony Express. Pollution has been bad In Portland for Aeveral days. Wednesday 's alert level can cause eye irritation a n d brealhlng difficulty, especially for_ persons witb chronic lung trouble. Oxidants result f r o m sunlight on vehicle mhaust. The DEQ said auto exhaU1t, not industrial pollution, is respomible for the 1lel't. now 4.99 Dialite Alann-o-Matic AJJ~m1tiCllly ""b Itself ti the ""' timl lj!IJ 24 ltotm-no nee! to pull 1 knob MIJ ni1hll luminous dob m1tl the hou11, ahown by 11111, ...,,t~~•d nummls on 1 !~hied dill. Compl•· mtnll dak or nlpt Sllnd. Looks sm1rt. too, In Its ....icnin CIStl Bi1 J~·H. x &•A"W. Seeing Double? JOHANNESBURG, Sootb Africa (AP) -The sign ov« the door of a 11loon 11ys: "This was not a double door when you came ln. If It Is now, try the one ln the middle ." UTll.llY !HD.YING Stldy .,,... lillhlttl .... '"' ao• a 1a• a o hl1h. Four llltMI 111 edJllSllM1 II 111• lntemla. E.434 HITACHI =o' .,,_,,.. • .,.. $3891 Odtl•t ..... lt" °'"" • ...._. ,,.... °"'* ••• ~Ofl •1 -Prw ll•• tJIMI Odllltllft, ,, • .._ ....... ·~ ,,... OMll ... #I~ llN ,.,., ~ s11•• ll!t Ir 0.. T11 SwtwM -.H ... lllR -fMo M•t r-ert•I P<ti• Ye1 Mnet Heer~I Opon Mond•y-Frid•y 9 •m-9 pm; S1turday 9 •m-6 pm; Sund1y 10 •m-4 pm /: • ••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ......... ~ ........... . ~usLE 8KN1T SPORT COATS 59.00 BIG SAVINGS I/ IN EVERY DEPARTMENT IN EVERY STORE! _ .. ' • . , ''\ • • Reg. 7.50 , 9,50 ' SHORT SLEEVE J'. ', ' DRESS SHIRTS Famous make. Wovens and knits. ' ' Prints. Stripes and patterns. Up ·dated collars. Wash and wear Perma-lrons. 5.99 " ' < NO MAIL OR PHON£ OAD£1$ PWSE.. CHTlll( ST()Q( NOT INCLUl)[O. AU. n1Ms SU8J(C1' TO PltKHt U.LC. ' ' • CHARGE fT: USC YOUR DESMOND'S CHARGE CARD, 8ANKAM£RICARD, MASTCR CHARGE OR AMllllCAH UPA[SS CARD • #l FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER, NEWPORT BEACH "' ,! ... :. , .. ' " ' ·~ > • • '• ,, ' I ,.,,t ' ·- "· ' '" ··.' .. " . ",, " " ' r f 12 oz. GUA llAH1'EED ....... •"<><JU( U (OM~O .... __.._,_., """'~·· ................... . EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLO WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY·BACK GUARANTEE! SpruA~ =~~~;~~y~~~ABL E •PERFECT FOR MA NY · , USES AROUND THE HOUSE E.~AMEL ~i~~l ·OUR 'l98 PRICE '17AL. ' UR PRICE 39c COMP. RETAIL 5.95 SPFclRUM · 2000 VINYl CUSlbM MiX . •FREE CUSTOM MIXING TO ANY ONE OF 2000 PAiNT fttiNNER DUR PRICE c GAL . Standard -Brands Paint & Decorating OUR PRICE 3!~ • • . -• - 7iNCH ROLLER & PAN SET COMP. RETAIL 1.19 OPEN J DAYS & 5 NIGHTS · MONDAY THAU FRIDAY, 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M.-SATURDAYS, 8.A.M. T0.&:30 P.M.-SUNOAYS, 9 A:M. TP ·5':JO P:M. Santo Ano . Lo'.'g hath" ,.L •. S~~.5~;.~~~NRIDELH,, Hunt1n~ton Beach 2~01\0No'aEA~BlVD • TELEPHONE 17141,$48 ... 597 111.i BLKS $;<> OF WILLOW"' ' 6800 WARNER A.VE. EAR GOLDEN WEST 1ELEPH0..E (;u31' 427:::17" TELEPHONIE 1714/ 142..:JUIS "I I ,. ... L llft convenient ~-81-nerS .-W 7 -1ocations in~he--we s F-t -CO!R~F~N~!}msev .. 8635~l!l'-Y ~!H~~g . BLK~•An.o~ROOKHURS:1'----.AT-lAKEWOOD 111..V.O -ULKS.-i--.WACIENOA,-~ TELEPHON E l714j l!IU.1607 ,.. TELE,._OHE 121-31111812 1 T(UPMOHE"C21S) 19.1.eUM • I • I ~· i j I< s s A c p • r a ' ' ·I ' ' ' I I ' Family Clrcu• by Bii Ke-~ .1 •11) ' \ ............ [,~l!.•r•~-_..,.. "t-aMi .. d~~nl <:;ALM DOWN! We don't leave on ! ·· vacation till SATURDAY!'' ,, 't. h. Boyd •. Jealousy Pill Hard to Swallow An anti-jea!OU.!ly pill, that's what some scientists con- tend they're about to come up with. Remarkable, if true. Say you're watching your girlfriend at this cocktail party. She's talking to that handsome character who sells stocks. And unfortunately, she has developed a cunning little characteristic of touching her partner in conversation to punctuate her own remarks. On the arm, on the shoulder, on the chest. Seeing th.is, you pop one anti-jealousy pill, no, make it two, into your mouth rapidly, then turn away in unconcern. Truly a miracle medicine, this. Look back again. Tut, tut, your girlfriend and the fellow seem to be gone. Take anothet pill. Who cares? A federal study of the records in 119 hospital emergency rooms ihdicates that item responsible for the mOst ac- cidents is the roller skate. Presume ~s ezcepts cars. Were you aware that drillers have proved some alfalfa rools go to a depth of 46 feet underground? QUE RIES -Q. ''What's 'Oomph,' dad?" «-fl. Young man, irs past your bedtime. "Oomph" was a press agent's characterization of the sex appeal whi ch in part identified the late movie star Ann Sheridan. She didn't cotton mu ch to "The Oomph Girl" title, though. Still, that ls how she came to be known by us, the young male snickerers, in the beydey of those several stars with big eyes, mouths and bustllnes. Q, "What was thepi"ice in 1900 of sugar, eggs, potatoes and butter? . ' A. Sugar, four ceott-e pOUnd. Eggs, 14 cents a dozen. Poi.toes, 45 centt,a busbo\-:.Bufler, 2t cents a pound. ' ,· .. . ~ . ,;; _.,R:. "Mtlch Is tlwr1nDre)>OPUlar:bame now for newborn batJY..Jirls, J~a~?ll'1, '""f ,,. ~.Julie ~-'}I~ ~r· fie lf.io 10. BEER ~:A!It: ... ~ed fit· ~J.n.rlorce fellow why the beer of n~"""~Y.~.setims "''be heavier, tangier, sharper than the beer of Bav!fia. It's the water .. Munich water is soft, Dortmund water is hard. Neither is best, might mention. As the fellow sata when he kissed the mule, it's a matter of personal tas~. . ' . ' ' One out of e~ six younB'. fellows between the ages of 13 and 18 will ~face some m of juveDile court charge in the next 12 month;!. Amazing statistiC, ~t? .. . .---1• _...., Can you verify ~ .contention that 1K> great creative genius among mortals h8$ been a su~ful teacher? Address mail to L. M. Boild, P.o:"-BO% 1815, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. _ · ' Mini~Bags ·For Bikes . "'· "l;la!l4iesLthln1 y~t for c~rrying your necessities" --· • On ond off ;., 111<oncb -no bel11 Of butkltn. • flcntlc tl•OP to hQid iocl!•I m . or uMI i! 01 o hol>dle. • 2 lofp poc~•ll oll0t"di119 protec· 1;,;in lroto! roin & du11. • Con (On-I too pUtM! ... ith 1hovl- der strop lor lodoe1' i.ftoppi"'il , • Co<>1lr11d1d of ,5 01. NollgOh.,.de ~lovglw.1 modt " ta< y.on of u~. • 8"1ong,6"d!'t'p &41'.i"wid.. :~~ $8.00 ....... ~~ 75' ...... : DiCi;ii ·acc111oa1U· -· · · · · · · · · --· ··· ·· ;v;:, · : P.O.lo11.S16, :~.Ca.91220 : Please i.end me , .. Mint-Bogs & . , • Strops . I'm enclcsing : S ..• Poooge h prepaid . • • ! IC1liforni1 Rt1id t nh Add 6 '4 Stitt T1•I ' ---->,NAME ..... :: ......................... ; ... , ......................... . . .. : ADDRESS ......................................................... . . !CITY .............................. STATE .......... ZIP .. .. ········································-·············-· N. Viet Mine Sweep Ended I JOIN US FOR y SUNDAY BRUNCH hungry tiger , WASHINGTON (APl -The Pent¥gon bu announc«t the end ol U.S. m!nesw .. plng cpttaUom in North Vitt· narnt.1e waters. "Operation End Swe<p is over and everybody ls oul." spokesman Jerry W. 'P'riedhelm told a briefing Wedotesday. He said the 18-shlp naval minesweeping task rorce has left North Vietnamese waters where it has operated off and oo slnce late February. Defense officials h a v e reported the detonation of only one mlne out of tho 11,000 which were dropped by U.S. ~ between ~tay and llecembl/f la" year. Officials have described the mtnerweeping a s precau· tlooary, saying, the devices were preset to deactivate the detonator in a speclflc peri od ol. time after they were laitl. The mintsweeptng. ~ich was reqdired wider the Jan. 27 U.S.-North Vietnamese pe11ce agreement, cost about $18 million, Friedheim said. IT WAS concentrated in the approaches to Haiphong aod seven other North \1ictnamese poru. Communist shipping has bct:n moving in and out ol •laiphong for more than four months, even though tht.-1Min channel "'as not ofOcially declared cleared until June 22 . The United States disclaims responslblllty for mines dro~ ped by U.S. planes in inland waterways in North Vietnanl, including rivers. The United States has sui> plied the North \1ietna1na;e wit h mineswceping equipn'lt'nt Including 10 fiberi.:lass boo1s High Waisted and have trained North \"let· namese seamen 1n rruM-Ciear- ing lechnlquc;. The U . . mlne-<:learing operations in North Vit>t· namese roast.'!! \\'aters were SU!>pPnd<'d for IVi'O n1ontM starting April 19 becalEl' of what the Ptnl.agon callrd th e n "contin ued cease-firu violations , .. in Soo th Viet· nam and Laos.'' 1be work resumed June 19 aft er Dr. llenry A. Kissinger, President Nixon's sccllrity l d- viser, and North VieinAm diplomats reaffirnled th e cease-fire agreement in Paris. R•aTAURA.NT IJ ••• ••••••• 0~1 1 1• ••• .,/_] SUNDOWNER DINNER 1 $2.,5 SHIRTS CUFFED DENIMS 100% Colton aileen ASSORTED TENNIS DRESSES, SHORTS& SWEA E S ,, -ror-dress HE THE GUiil BOYS FIRST fORAU YOUR U.CKTO SCHOOL GEAR loy•' Old·Pathlonecl Shrlnk·to·Flt UYl'r JEANS Sin 0-12. Boys' Hang Ten VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTS Solids ind Strip• P1llem1 * Ntw Styles Arriving Daily! * All Si111 Jn Stock ALSO Hang Ten SHIRTS : Frem i s700 i i Sitts .S.13 We got them alll From Navy, burgundy, light blue, bone, white, brown. 28·38 waist. New Levl11• Cord Cuffs Green, Brown, Slut. Asso rted Sizes s1200.s1300 Levi's' Bell Bottom Cordi light blue, navy, green, tin, 11nd, brown, burgundy. 28-42 waist. Levi's' Nuvo Flor•• •934 •1034 COSTA MESA ....,._TO l A. DiJLV PILOT 9 =-~. +~··~· 2 ... ' ' ~ I DAILY PILOT Thursdar, July 19, 1973 ., ;~Aide Says FDR Had Wiretaps Too ~GTON !UPI) - H. V1uaban, military lo Pmldenl Harry S a:ar_1 Pre1ident D. (loooevelt onltred re tapo placod on the borne epbooes of his clooest aides. "" Vaughan, a major general "*now living in retm!:ment lo suburban Alexandria, Va ., told UPJ he never learned the purl)O!ie of the wiretaps and penooaliy dio<:arded a sheaf of wiretap transcripts after Tnzrnan became President following Roosevell's dealh in April. 1945. "A CtnV days after truman WAGNER CARPET -CLEANING COMPANY EXPERTLY, GENTLY, EFFICIENTLY BRIGHTENS, RESTORES, PROTECTS ANY FARBIC, ANY TYPE Including SHAG SATISFACTION GUARAN·TEED LOWEST PROF. PRICES COMMERCIAL -- -DOMESTIC We CIMn CARPETS RUGS DRAPES UPHOLSTERY RE~AIRS & JANITORIAL SERVICES ARRANGED Pick-Up and Delivery Arranged for All. Items Cle1ned In our Plant Natlonw'4• 15 v .. ,, In luslneu 492-4484 ACTIVITIES took ofrlce someone presenteC! me with a lot of notes on wiretaps they had In op- tion," Vaughan :said in an in- terview. VAUGHAN, NOW 79, recall- ed being handed a stack of let- ter size typescripts about three inches thick -''about two weeks' 8<;t'U1TIUlation, I suess it was" -and Vaughan laid it before Truman in his ofrice. "I didn't go Into it." Vau ghan said. "1 just skipped over two or three pages. It was a k>t of trivia. ~le !Truman) said, 'I'm not in- terested ; t don't have time for that foolishness; tell them to discontinue.' " Vaughan said he simply threw the wiretap records into a wa stebasket without in- specting them further and· ne\'er learned why ttie taps were ordered. He said he oissumcd the FBI conducted the surveillance. VAUGl{AN ADDED that he never told of the incident and so far as he now knows none of the subject of the laps, in- cluding close friends of his own, knew that th.eir personal t e I e phone calls were overheard. One of the top sheets he in- spected happened to be a con- versation of a wife making an appoi 11 tment with her hairdresser, Vaughan said. Vaughan declined to speculate on the rc21son for the Professionelly su perYised cre11ti¥e e cti"ity pro9rems help patients rega in lost sk ills and en gage their minds in 11 wealth of new things to do and think about. lnvolvem11nt in meaningful activities hel ps restore the essential feelings of self. worlh end a desire for participation. Regular act ivities inc:lude birthday pa rties, movies, 91mes, end visits by entertaining groups •s well as the opportunit y to pursue p•rsonal hobbies that ha ve brought /·oy to the patient in the past such •s p•inting, c•rd playing, knitt ing, etc. Re igious services for mosf faiths are . conducted re9ul1rly. ..... _ ... '11",.....,.•,,..---" -'!... Yldton Alw0yt Wekome .. ' Ill ·-· leffrly M..,. CH•olncellt Hos,etcd " ···-c -· l5<IO C••I• Cophhooo, •C -~--=-" ... -~ c.phtre ... leoch .. -~--'""""";:"' _--49,05716 wiretaps even after a reporter Pointed out that World War 11 was in progress and there was perhaps justification for all- out secwity prec11utioru. VAUGHAN, \YJIO I ate r became a centr11l figure in a pubHclzed Tr u m a n ad- ministration ''sandal" over the ··~ percenters'' ' influence ped- dling, said Truman had no use for the "Janles Bond" type of activity being .described in curr(>flt hearing• of the Senate Watergate committee. "I knew mc:itt everything that was going on in the White House ," Aid the aide who handled all Uaison between Truman and FBI dJrector J. Edgar Hoover d u r I n g Truman's entire Ume in office. "¥ far WI l know there never was a tapped telephone in the Wh.ite House," Vaughan sajd. "At least It never came to my attention.'' * . ft Cook With Flair Watergate Style CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) -Recipes to watch the televised Watergate hearings by: -Nixon's Perfectly Clear Consomme -Ellsberg's Leek Soup -Llddy's Clam-Up Chowder -Haldeman's Hot Potato Salad -Martha's Sweet and Sour Tongue '- -McCord's Spilled Beans with Capers -llunt's Hush Puppies THOSE AN O many others make up "The Watergate Cookbook" -subtitled, "Or, \Vho's in the Soup" -a col- lection of 1nenu items com- piled by "The Committee to Write the Cookbook." Actually, the recipes are gen· uine but the names have been changed to prott>Ct the in- gredients. Lolly McDonnell , one or the committee members, said the cookbook went on sale at bookstands this week with a fi;rst •edition run of 10,000 co))les . THE SEV EN authors held a news conference to announce the book and insisted the 100 recipes are ''definite l y unimpeachable." They said they had been having Jun concoct ing meal titles and decided to compile them into a book because they were "convinced of the need !or a touch or humor to offset the intense drama or the bear- ings." The paperback book was published by lhe authors who incorporated themselves into "The New l.ooe Star Press of Massachusets, Inc." They did not say wbelher the name bad anytWng to do \Vith the fact that Massachusetts was the only state that didn't vote for Nixon in the last presidential election. 8 Receive Degrees Eight Orange Coast students have received their bachelors degrees at UC Davis. The following gradua~s are listed : Ronald C. Brown, physiology, Costa Mesa; Mary E. Davis, psychology, Daniel F. Kelsey, renewable natural resources, and Scott C. Sorens on , sociology, Huntington Beach ; .Katheryn A. Seitz, animal science, Laguna B e a c h ; Steven R. Sweetser, veterinary science. Laguna Niguel; Douglas W. James, J r.1 botany, Newport Beach; ana Ke.ith B. Mercer, physiology, San Juan Capistrano. cameras etce era Mo11th Etl d CLEARANC E QUANTITIES MAY BE LIMITE[)---- j lllP@PE .1 SOLID ST A TE ~ STEREO AMPLIFIE~ ...... M•&Mllc Pllono lnpul1 • S.p111tt lh111 .1nd Trtbl• Controh •Stereo Hi1dphont Jae); ~~ •Sophl1Ucatti O'ttrc11111nl Proltc\Of for 011tp111119 9 •T1.1n1l 1tors 1nd A11ocl1t1d Circuits 5 •Rich Walnut·Gralntd Cablntl • Vou nev er heard it 10 1ood. OUR REG. PRICE 219 .90 I SIPU.f@.I AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER • B1l11Ked FIJWhl•I T11nlf'll • Sicnal S!r•nctll T11nln1 Meltr ' • Sttrto Htadphont Jack •FM St•r•o Indicator Ll&ht R230 • llla&Mlic f'tlono Input• e ll lcll Walnut-Grained Cablntl e Stp111ff Bass and Trttllt Cof'ltroh -MINO:,~~i ·· · 'PROJECTOR 'I SANKYO 400 MOVIE CAMERA '...- • 4-l• l !Ml •~lttlllOfl ,_., Ind MMVll llOlll e O'tlf1l11 , 11tr1·brl&flt 1Jv•ll•le"1 Yl twlln4tr • AvtMallc 11p11utt c111111U1d '' lltlll lld·Ult·l•f'I • CllS ... 111 Ulb1-1ll1t11 f/ I.I lffla z .. 111 11r11e l.S It 15111• KEYSTONE 812 MOVIE CA: MERA • llll1td Calc•lttltn e E1tt!Wl1C M •wer e Addltlo11 • MllH l,11c1llon • Sulltac:U ofl • DtYlllOl'I : ....... , ... 73~97 . 89.95 OUR REG . PllCE 119.95 ~ DUI. lE&. PllCE 129 .95 SO. COAST PLAZA·· COSTA MESA •. PftlCES EFFECTIVE·THRU MONDA'Y, JULY 23 ' Praktica LTL WITH F1.8 LENS l CASE e lnltrch1np1b l.e Ptnl.11 Mount Ltns eAuto Eipo1ur1 Control .,. • Throvch thl L1 n1 M111r ln1 • Mllal·Btad• Focal-P l1M: Shvtl•r • t Sic, lo 1/1000 Sic. ~·119·:"97 OUR R . ;11· '-- YASHICA TL· ELECTRO WITH F2 .LENS l CASE e El•cttoalc Mltal Focal PlaM Sh11lltr • Sp11d1 lrom 2 S1c. to 1/1000 Ste. e tnt1rmedl1t1 Rane• of Spttd1 al ln·Bllwttn Stttlncs e1111rro1 Lock e Ovt r·Under E1posure Ind icator • Ultr,..fast Auto Yashlnon 1/1.7 Lint 179.95 ltlf6 . LIST PRICE 260.00 AGFA OPTIMA SOO JSMMCAMERA WITH CASE AGFAMATIC 100 CA MIRA OUTFIT ti.IT INCLUDES; eAGFAMATIC 100 SENSDll C1m111 e Fovr·Fl11h 1111clcvbt eMtttt, Saletr Slrap •Aifttolor CNS Co lor Print f ilm 14.83 OUR RE&. PllCE 19.95 IRllTOL AT SAN DllOO FIWY. -'HOHi t7t.JJ7J MOH.• TUIS, • WID. • THUii, ·SAT. -10 • 6 Fii. 10 • t: SU N. 11 CNto•J t• 5 . · Kissi1ig Naughty BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -A ki>s Is more than Just a kiss in Thailand. Bestowed I n public, it vlolatel the mores of the nation. And op<n hand holding and bussing by local young people have been on the increase. De u pty Prem i er P r a p b e s Charusathien blames it on the example set by American Gls and tbeir Thai girl friends. He said lhe problem ls being tackled by a joint Thai·Americah military authority. Expanded Airpo11 Idea Under Fire I LOS ANGELES (APJ -A credible," said, Mrs. Russell propoaal calling for expanded who represents residents liv- suvice at Los A n g e 1 e s Ing near the alrport. "l think International A J r po r t ls they must have dredged up an "ldloUc, insane and In-old plan." j credible." Councilwoman Pat The report, ossucd by the .Russell has contended. Los AJlielet-based firm of ''The OlllY-WfU' they could do Daniel, Mann1 Ii. Jolvlson and lhis would be to move all of Mendenhall, lw•s tbe n.rst the peopl~ out and make it all phase of a ,1.~ million, thtte- airport Md Wgbway con-year study. It also recom- strucUon," she said after plan-mended construction of. a z:na.. ners for the State Division of jor jet airport In ,the Olino A e r onautics 1"eC9mmended H11ls area of Northeast Oraoge that the airport's passenger Cowity and ~ downgrading capacity be expanded from 22 of the Palrridale Airport. million passengers a year to which is CWTCdtly planned to 59 million. have a 73-mUlion passenger "It's ldiotic, insane and in-capacity. ~~--'---'~~~~~~ 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA _u)li$}tttS roa• -·-' .. ' ··.. . ~ > . • I ' :, ,· 1 . ~ ""· ' • • l .. , - . ~ 1,:cr 546·5527 OPEN DAIL y '9 TO 6:00 SUNOAYS 9 TO S:OO The Charm of FUCHSIAS ... Dwarf AVOC ADO Fcrlt b.c:oml119 • Collforida h¥orl~. "Llttle-cldo" Is ,.,.., for SMOll ,.... lo, coistolMr or ttie: large gont.11. M11c• ht Umaf'ld. Lucky you •.• to live in this area knowing the beauty .and charm of FUCHSIA ! In sturdy redwood baskets, hang them near windows, under trffs, in the patio. Enjoy summer while watching each jewel-like flower open to per.f~tionl Hanging AlNll ... o)o 9 98 S,ECIAL 'RICE • • • • > FIG TRE ES Do1't ••lfloff tM P't ''"· It's •• hi· "'"" .. 1 •• ,.,. ....,. .. wftti ,,.., tr••b. .... ,... ...... _,. __ , •P te two c1ops 1f fruit • .,...,. 9,95 EACH SAVE $4.97 •IG. 7.tS 3 98 NOW O Bush ROSES Grnt ti-to b•'I lllOSES - •ow white I• bloo111 ad ot o Special CJk". MARIGOLDS onHo-Gaow -all ,.,,.... pf1111t foocl. GIEENOL -11-.•lcl IN11. Add to yo1r plaits tr••· .... ,..,.,, ONE 498 •NY 499 OAl, TWO Pony Pak SPECIAL E11~y shlrdy, all 't'"' bl..... Srre.,, cllefthl colon. "" 79• ... GET A 3RD FREEi ,tk Twt . • . , . . T ' I ..a,_ •• Vacation Time? Let AGIO Hone PJ.11t Cam.kif o 11 II Wtltetwell S•pply tile rltltf OIWNltf Of water awd ll•fftHfs .. yo11r house pl•rits • Two Sires 1.. 2" .,. . • • . l ' ...... ----··-- -.. .. -~. • Hybrid Bermuda /)TO LONS Modular GREEN HOUSE ''e"' .... ··-...... tMM ........... rM ytt touflt STOLONS -lodhtdt hi 41Mae, 1.-cts -' wff4s. TIFDWAIP TIFGlllN 5 •• IUIHIL Spedal Prices Thru \V11d., JMIJI 25th COME IN LOOK AROUND WE'RE OPEN EVERY DAY S.ccnhllly trew pluts. ....._ c1ttMfl 1. ,.. ... , ... -··w.. ............ .. _.._ ... GlllNHOUll. 160 cu. fT ••••• See it at ... ' • • I • r . - ;. • p . • • • ; I l Be • cu· ~·Tu : tlu : th1 ; foi : C6 ; Pa : : Is1 : jec • Jal ! H1 : ]ll : dh . ' • : Sh • JL ~ Nt , Hl ~: b~ I TH$ PICK OF 1 .... .Ask 'fOU' daddy a ques.tion .. , .. Idea IBaeked ·). P~lestinian State " • l(er~Struggle? ' f , l • • BE!Rtrr, Lebanon (AP) - l Behind Jordan's decision to · cut diplomatic relations with ': Twllsia is one or the problems ; that has been at the heart of : the Arab-Israeli confrontation ; for more than a quarter or a : century -some form of • Palestinian statehood. l The Palestinian guerrillas, l Israel and King Hussein all re-• • ject the idea, but Egypt and, : lately, T u n i s i a n President ! Habib Bourguiba have been : ' promoting it as part of a Mid- ; die East peace settlement. : Bourguiba took matters a : step farl!ler in an interview " July 6 with the Beirut daily An Nahar. It so angered King ? Hussein 's government that It z. broke diplomatic relations • ., "Kennedys • ~Decorate ~ Gravesite WILKES·BARRE. Pa. (AP ) ~ F1owers from Se.n. and Mrs . Edward Kennedy were placed _90 the gr.ave or hifary Jo :J<apechhe in a small cemetery near here , the fourth an· ~· niversary of ?i.fiss Kopechne ·s· ~ del!tti. ~ Miss Kopechne, who was ~ bor-n Jn riearby Plymouth, "" drowned at Chappaquiddick. ¥ a~"l . when the senator's car in which she was a passenger 'rJlln~ed from a bridge into a ~creek. ~ 'T"ley were rtturning from a party when the fatal accident nc~urred. The senator escaped ~ from the cir but failed in • wiat he said were repeated ~attempts to save the young · wor11an. " She had been a campaign ~ worker and staff secretary for : the late Robert Kenned y. ' . ' \\':ith Tunisia Tuesday night. THE CRUSTY 7G-year-0ld Tunisian said Jordan was an "artificial entity" created by the British. "There is nothing in history called Transjordan ... Jordan is only the name of a river, but Palestine is a historic.1.I matter." Bourguiba said he stood by the remarks when queried by the Jordanian ambassador in Tunis. Jordan has its own plan for a Palestinian state with some degree of autonomy under the Hashemite throne if it gets the \Vest Bank back from Israel . But whether the leaders of the 620,000 Palestinian s Jiving in the occupied area supix>rt the idea has not been ascertained. The guerrilla leaders reject it. AT THE MOJ\lENT, Isra el is in no mood to ~·ithdraw to the frontiers it had before the 1967 war, let alone the ones proix>sed in the 1947 U.N. plan for the partition.' of Palestine ink> Jewish and Arab areas. It was this plan that Egypt prc>- posed as a basis for set· tlement during Security CoWl· cil debate last month. Jn what appeared to be l!rael's official answer to the Egyptian plan, D e I e n s e Minister Moshe Dayan said the Palestirµans could have had a state in 1947 but instead they went to war . "By doing so. they gave up their rights. They buried the idea of a Pafestine state," he continued, adding that the 'Palestinians who fled or were dri ven out Qf what is no\v Israel . would have to find homes 'in Arab C'OWltries. But a growing number of Is· raeli illtellectua5 are saying that Pal~linian nationalism cannot be disregarded even though at the moment it finds expression in the violence of the guerrilla groups. • NEWfORT BEACH, 3110 Newport Blvd. • • •• ! HUNTINGTON BEACA, 9791 Ad ams FOUi'ITAIN VALLEY, 161SS Harbor Blvd . OAJLY PILOT. 'I Tass Blasts Russ Critic *****************r• ** * * * * Farned Scie11tist Decrie£l as Slc11ider-n10 1iger MOSCO\\' (AP) -In an 'I> parent attempt to discredit oh)'lliclst Andrei Sakharov In hi.I own country, the Soviet authorities have published the BCalhlng criticism of the civil rights advocate that was released lasl week lo the foreign press. The article, by the govern· men! news agency, Tass, ac-- cused Sakharov of slandering the Soviet Union in a ·recent interview with S w e d i s h tele vision. The Tass statement was the strongest personal a I t a c k against Sakharov to appear yet and was (Luther evidenct? of a growing olficial campaign to silence him. The scientist is one of the most out!poken domestic critics of t.be Soviet !ystem. SAKHAROV• CHARGED In his interview that the system here stunted Individual in- itiative and that ideological controls created a boring cultural existence. He sug· gested the one-party system be abol~bed. Jn respcme, Tass claimed that the man credited with development or ~ia's ll· Bomb was an "utterly lg· ncrant· person" who grovelled before the capitalist order ... to smear his own country.'' The agemey article Y.'as published in the popular na· lional newspaper. Literary Gazette . under the hcadhnc "Slander Supplier." IN A NEW article, the or- ficial ne\\'S ag('ncy dcrued charges by \\'est Gern1an Nobel laureate Henrich licl\ that Soviet intcllt .. >clual s nrt• persecuted and that t h c Kremlin sctks to prevent in- creased East·\~est contracts. Tass declared. "This is an absolutely distorted picture." The article, 111rittcn by t'O•n· mentator Yuri Komilov, v.·3s in response to an interview the 1972 Nobel literature prize v.·inner ga~·e to th<-\\'t•st German new s paper Frankfurter J\undschau last wed!. ''Ho alleged in that in- len•icv.1." Kornilov said "thal the Soviet Union puts various obsluclc<; ul the !Xllh of developnl(•llt of C\lllur11I C'Oll- 1ac1s bet"''-... '" ~:nst und \\'t'.!ol . th:1t Soviet intclli~r11ti.1a 1~ • 1 s o I a t c d · :lnd C\'Cn * 'pcl"SC<'Ul('d' f<•r nlll:mp!'i to ! * establish contact<.1 v. 1th 111· telhgen1s1a of otht•r coun. 1 * tries ." * * NOTING THAT 15ulls' :i11· * 1i11•ar ant i-Fasc'i.~1 11·ork'i an.' • • deSCr\'C<ll \' ,. l' r v populnr," Tass addt'<I . "\\'hnt is r~grrt-- table . IS th;it lhl' flood or anti-&n1 ... t propa gand a SOnlelin1es s11·t...-.ps reprcM'll tati\·es or the intellige11ts1:i and highly rt'S~lable in· tellectuals al that, "'ho. 11 \\llUld seem. should be able 10 distinguish bet\\'een black ouu.I v.·hite." MERCURY SAVINGS and loan alSOciatiOll BUENA rAllK Mereury Savh'lgl BklO .. VIiie)' View" Unoo~ t• ... KUJITINSTON IE.ACK MefC1Jry Sa~ Bldg,, Edinger stlltldl TUSTIN M8!Cury&w1ogs Bldg .. IMnt 81\ld. at Ntwpotl Avt. LA HAIU ·fULLfflTON Metcury Sa vinos Bldg., lmPtflll Hwy. al Hl1bOr CAllSON Mcrtury SaVlllQS Bldg • Avalon 81~-•I San DletO Ftwy. ******************* Kids Like To · Ask Andy ~-~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--t WALLPAHl 11 STOCI! Choose from dozens of pattems in stock for im mediate delivery :- washable vinyls, flocks and prints! ·Many pre·pasted; all easy to apply! BUYl ROLLS, CiET THE 4TH ROLL FOR •••••••• ·~ • • -· ARMSTRONG CUSTOM EXCELON Hoiwfsome ... 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COLOR ·o "''•'°" TILE • "'"" ·"•i[].:- ' Costa Mesa·· 2221 Harbor Blvd. STORE HOURS, OPEN SUNDAY -11 1.m. · S p.m. THURSOAY , FRIDAY -8 a.m. · 9 p.m. 645 ·1126 MON., TUES., WED., SAT . -8 a.m. · 5,30 p.m. ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING - - • • • .. . Singer Dies Opera singer Salwa Mer· rige-Abrams died early today in Miami with· out regaining conscious- ness from an overdose or pills. which she took after shooting to death her former husband and two children. Crash Kills 43 In France VIZILLE, France (UPI) - A Belgian tourist bus hurtled out of control down a sleep m0W1tain road, smashed through a bridge parapet and plunged 65 feet into a rain· swollen river Wednesday in France's worst road disaster, police said. They said 43 persons were killed and there were six survivors. One of t h e survivors, a 60-y ea r-old woman, was seriously injured. The bus, owned by the Songienne Company of Soignies, crashed at a point where a series of accidents have made the Napolean Road [...__B_RI_EF_s _) infamous ln this Alpine region of southern France. The road, which is on a 14 degree decline over four miles, is plastered with warning sigm carrying the skull and crossbones. # eRaftWaits BRIDGETOWN, Barbados ( ~) -The human guinea pigs aboard the experimental raft Acali waiie<l today for a tug to tow them from the Atlantic into the Caribbean. Tbe 20-by-36-foot raft, car· rying six women and five men for a three-month study in human relations at close quarters, reported Wednesday that it wu 73 miles soulhwt of Barbados. .. e S111pert Held BALTIMORE (AP ) -A 20- year-old Baltimore man was charged today with t h e murder of state legislator James A. Scott, the first of two men whose deaths were linked to the DUrPOrted anti- drug group "Bladt Octobe<." Sherman W. Dobson, was arrested Wednesday night. A .33-caliber revolver found in his northwest Baltimore home is the same type as med in the Scott killing last Friday, ac- cording to Dennls HUI, a police spo kesman. e ve10Seen WASHINGTON (AP ) Senate Republicans say that unless a bill to raise the minim um wage to $2.20 an hour is scaled down, it faces an almost certaln veto by ]Jresident Nixon. A final vote on the measure was set for today arter the Senate on Wednesday rebuffed attempts to substitute the GOP proposal, generally ac· ceptable to the Nixon ad· ministration. for the bill drawn by the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Com- ni lttee. e Kiiier Falls BEffiUT tUPIJ -Two Rl'i rut newspapirs said toda y !'resident llafet Assad of Svria was woundrd in an ;1~sassination attempt led by high-ranking mil itary officials 1~ ho fired on his m()torcade .July IO. The morn in g ne\~1spaper 1:orient-Le J()ur said ,..the at- 1empt to kill Assad was car- ried out by "rebel'' units of the Syrian ctnny "''ho opened fire ot1.a car returning him in a motorcade to DAm89CUS after a vtsft to northern Syria. eKorenTalks SEOUL (UPI) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers assured South Kore.an Preli· dent Park Onmg Hee today that the Unltl'd States backs Park's propo51l for j<llnt ad· _ ntissioo (Jf both South and North Korea to the United Nations, Park's preu spokes- Thursday, J11t1 19, 1973 American Girl Hurt During Jerusalem Born~ Explosion JERUSALEM (UPI ) -A time bomb believed planted by Arab guerrillas exploded in a m>wded outdoor market today, \li'oundlng an II-year-old Ameriam girt and rour other persons in what police said was the first such Incident in Jerusalem in seven mont hs. A spoltesman at Ahaarc Zedek Hospital said rive persoos were wounded - three women, a man 11nd a girl Identified as Cyndi Louis, 11, of Akron, Ohio. The hospital said two Israeli women, aged 44 and 50, were admitted with shock and slight bums but that the girl and the two other \li'ounded persons were released after trea tment ror bums. Miss Louis also suf· fered a sma.11 knee \li'ound. "IT JS CLEAR it must have heed a gueJTilla a t t a e k , although there is no evidence yet," a pc>Uce spokesman said. a gasoline bomb was thrown Several Arab suspects were at a bus ootalde the waJls of rounded up for questioning the city in Arab e a s t after polic:e, troops and seven Jerusalem. No ooe was hurt ambulances arrived on the but the bus was damaged. scene, the spokesman said. "There was 00 panic," said POLltE SAID t o d a y ' s llai1n Zadok, the proprietor of bomb, a primitive device can- the fruit stand where the taining a clock detonator and bomb went off. "My shop explosives packed ln a bottle, wasn't damaged at all. One was planted in the center of woman screamed, but that .-::the==man=:::e::l.=====:::;I v.•as all." Ir POLICE SAID the bomb, planted In a shopping basket wrapped in yellow paper and timed to go oU during the mid· morning shopping crwh, wenl off at IO: 17 a.m. in the ~1achane Yehuda Market, the n1ain outdoor fruit a n d vegetable bazaar in t h e downtown sector of Jewish west Jerusalem. It was the first bombing In Jerusalem since Dec. 10 when DRURY LANE ANTIQUES MOVED .. 110 Aq. Del M•r s..c .......... 4!2·6041 CloMC """"· a T-. · OPEN HOUSI AUG. 4, 2 • 4 P.M. Imperial Bank reaches a new high in savings interest. 4-year savings certificates earn 2Y2 to 4'year 1 savings cert ificates earn 1to2\/2-year savings cert ificates earn Golden Passbook and 90·day to 1-year savings certificates earn Regular savings accounts· earn • • 1·% -o 2 % 0 deposits of $1,000 to $100,000 minimum . deposit $500 minif!1um deposit $500 minimum deposit $500 no minimb deposit ) req~· / 'ii lmperiat Bank · ... where the customer is king MAIN OFFICE: Western at Imperial• (213) 757-8711 INGLEWOOD: Century Blvd. at San Diego Fwy.• (213) 649-4444 SHERMAN OAKS: 14720 Ventura.Blvd.· (213) 788·8700 TORRANCE : Hawthorne at Torran,c~ ·.(213) 370-7426 WESTCHESTER: Sepulveda at Mahchesfer • (213) 670-3610 WEST L,OS ANGELES: 1191 1 W~shire at Westg ale. (213) 478·9731 WILSHIRE VERMONT: 3200 Wilshire Blvd.· (21;J) 487·3200 Orange County . ANAHEIM : Lincoln at Beach · (714) 821,5410 COSTA MESA: Harbor Blvd. atfarr Drive· (7 14) 979·1000 SANTAANA: 17th at Bristol • (714) 835·0151 Extra Banking Hours at all offices. • Soon in Orange, Arcadia arid WesfSan Fernando Valley • Resources over $175 million . Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation llWI said. !--------------------------- • . \ - - \ ' . REG. 56.99 Chrom or Ss e f'3ncJe rs In C I lnonth ~ · ~ s.tafldarcJ h -· ~ 4tf0tt-Prt and/eba . ce . , rs. .. Boys & Girls COASTER BREAK 29.99 .. ,,._ ·-- ).>. , ' EXECUTIVE MODELS ONl Y 1\it -"' ,.,,_,.,. lho ...... !hty ,..,.....,,. .....i.. tt.. J.C. ,...!WY Tift P.,.-t Pl. t.r rht punhoie ti 1hi1 ;,_ Mt •ttWKI CHAllGI wltl ... ioicw....il if Ifie "Mrw ....._. of Iha --ill lho r'"I Mlli"I 119'-!lf iftcllldt"f..,. ,..rt.._ i1 ,.14111lvH.....,,,111111nt wm,. 4 ... ....,, i. flwt 1-. Whwi ltofwnff, • -"'r fltwta OIAIOI wlM M .....,._, ~ .,,., .... -'~"' ~ ...... "' 11.l'Mo (AHllUM HtclHTAGf un lt'Mo) .. theflnl SSOORthtA ....... o.~, .._ .. ,~ JlNHU.U PIKftfTAGl UTI 1~) 19 •"11Jm., OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 SUNDAY 10 TO 7 G I A N A D A e llVllSIDI: e LAKEWOOD: HILLS : 180003520TylerSt. CarM>n St. and Chatsworlh St. e SANTA ANA: Paramount 81vd, '• WOODLAND 3900 South Brls--e IUENA PAIK: HILLS: 21500 VIC· IOI Sf. B' a ( h and tory Blvd. t TOllANCE: OrangethorPt Sepulveda and • ORANGI : =:.-.Hawthorne Garden GrO\I! BIVd. and Ma~ ch!~rer J •• y, th tr k1 IS M m L i 0 : he It c Vv m w as h~ B; p. c w fr A pl sa flt P; fc 6< fc s T ye H . m a< w Y• - . . . • • even1 / You see, we have more services than other banks. Not that yo u'll use them all. You "·on't. But it's nice to know every banking need imaginable is covered. And under one roof. More likely, you'll be into things that make day-to-day living simpler: Like the servi ces we describe below. ·of course, of greatest impoi·tance is how \~·e view the banking relationship. It colors everything we do. Courteous personal service: We feel banking is a person-to-person matter. So we value the human touch. With us, your needs are as individual as you are. That's why personal service has always been im portant at Bank of America. Personal Choice Checking and Savings: We have fo ur checking plans to choose from. Beautiful scenic checks, too. And we offer many different savings plans. For example, our regular savings account gives you in-and-out flexibility. And our three new Investors Passbooks earn you 6Y2o/o annually for a two and one-half year account, 6o/o for one year, 5Y2'7o annual interest for 90 days. $500 minimum deposit. Simplified monthly statement: This statement simplifies balancing yo ur checking account. 'vVe call it theTimesaver® Statement. It can even include a summary of your savings. accounts and other information if you wish. You can tell at a glance where you stand. -oo -• ""' • ""' • r. - \ \ • • ~I ; ' . ' • ~ . "' esc1ssors " • . ; Red Carpet Service: Three ways to finance your car: -, Only Bank of America gives you three differ·el)t ways to finance your car.iAsk your auto dealer about our ~uto-Magic Financing, Our own special system to serve you promptly, save you time. And nobody peers over your shoulder when you transact your bu siness. Most of our offices have it: the rock-bottom monthly payment plan. Or about leasin g. Automatic Transfer Service : Then there's ou r regular auto loan. We've made more of them than any other bank in California. ·see your dealer or local Bank of America. Of course, we make loan s for just about anythin g else you can think of, too. Makes regular savings deposits or loan payments for you automatically, from your Bank of America checking account. Saves time, simplifies things. Especially helpful when you're ill or out of town. I I I I I I I I . --------• ' '• ,. ,;. -'\. , ~ • I' PAY ONLY A '1 Pll PORUPTO · '5000 WORTH Of TRAVILUS CHIQUIS ',Buy any amount of Bank of America Travelers $5,000 ol Travelers Cheques would be$50.00. With Ch~• op to S5,000,pay no more1han a $2.00 lee. th is coupon-goad at any Bank of America office In , ~ Fdr example, the r\onnal 1% charge fcir purchasing Calilorn1a-you would save $-48.00. OFFER l!XPIFtES SEPTEMBER 28. 1913 ·' . ' ~ ---------- \ ' . Yllllf r,,.t order of2111> check$ is lr&•-.wi!h this dl:hlfJOn-when)'OU OE*1 1a new Bank ot America =I cilOcl<Jll!I ~count. vcru111 a1so enjOy th• --of-=~ nmesaver-lltatemenl. Vllld onfy at.Bank of ~ca ottlces In C8111ornla. onty-one co p r-ctmtomer. ' --------' . • I I I I • More offices up and down the state: No other bank can say that. Wherever- you live or shop or wo rk, you'll always find us close by. So you can cash a check whenever you want. Also, we can transfer you r checking and savings atcounts wherever you move in the state -save you time and red tape. BaokAmericard:· For everyday shopp ing convenience, spe cial occasions or emergencies. Good throughout California, the United States and around the world. On e monthly bil l helps you keep track of ex penses. 3 great coupon offers: These coupons represent some real banking values. • Big savings on Bank of America Travelers Cheq ues. • A free Family Financial Planning Kit -first-rate help in planning family goals. • Your first order of ~OU scen ic or other premium checks-free . 1 You can see why we think you should_.,, bank with us. More se rvices mean :· greater scope to meet you r needs. As you grow, we're with you. Every step of the way. Let's get be tte r;:~:· m O F AMERICA for the business of living Bank ol America Otlices: Fountain Valley 17'1 .JO 8rool.:hurs1 S1 f OUfll<1 n Vdl:cy Costa Mesa !148 W 19th S1 (JUS\d MC~d Soulh Coast Town Center ~\.:JOO 81 o.tol 51 Harbor-Adams , 701Aft1norl3l1J C..0'..1l1\1•,",d Irvine Campus 4.~01 Cof"";~u·.O r Irv, no Irvine lnduslrial 1·100 Dove St NCWOOrl 80.lC.h Balboa r 1 ~ l Balboa 81~ A.1 boil Newpc>rt Beaeh 3444 Via liOo Ncwoon Beach Newport Cenler ~-,QO f~t~.·11x..rt Genier Or r~c woor1 Be., .11 Weslclill Pla2a 10161r.,r1n• f1-r· Ne.,.,·r1cir1 U1 1cr, Brookhursl-Adams 10121 Ar:1an1"A~e Hun1ington Bench Beach-Atlanta z ·O<? He i· "u1v'"! I lurl nntor. l~L''1Ct· Hunting Ion-Harbour 316£. /1dm ·-illy Dr tlunt1ngron Oeacn Main and Ellis 1et,.11 1,l,j·ri S! •iun1.ni;;1on Beai:i Springdale-Edinger 1~67 2 Sor1ngda~e St Hunlington 8edch • • • 'I . '" FRONT . NOTA CLEARANCE SALEI 11 "THIS IS NOT JUST A SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE. •. EVERY SINGLE PIECE OF FASHION -SPORTSWEAR -PLAYWEAR DR FAMILY APPAREL MUST BE CLEARED OUT. •• WE ARE TOTALLY RE· "10DELINC OUR FAMILY APPAREL AREAS ANO Will NOT CARRY OVER ONE PIECE OF OUR CURRENT MERCHAN- DISE INTO OUR NEW DEPARTMENT!'! \.adies t>antV '4ose c:!•\ ouR t" R£G. tor q7t \.adies tiantv "os\ OUR R£G. •7 1.78 tO '" lAIJ\ES ORES SES REG. g,q7 to 12.97 1 12 Off v SA~\MC UP 10 O · 0 OFF OURRKUlAll O\S&OUNT PR\&E BARGAIN Allf.YI 11 ORIGINALLY TO '4 NOW $1.50 OR 2/$3 TABLES Mens Dress & Sport Shirts Mens Knrt Shirts Mens Tank Tops Boys Knit Tops Boy_s Sport Shirts Junror Boys Cut-Off Jeans Boys Walk Shorts · Girls Sleepwear ORIGINALLY TO 'S NOW $2TABLIS G!rls Bathing Suits Girls Scooter Skirts Girls Shortall . Girls Pants Girls Jackets Boys Sweat Shirts Boys Knit Tops Boys Pajamas Boys Jackets Boys Dress & Sport Shirts 1 Mens T-Shirts (Package of 31 Mens Hanlon Shirts Mens Tank Tops ORIGINALLY TO 16 NOW $3TABLls l•dles Blouses Girls J1ckets Girls B1thing Suits Boys Denim Jackets Boys NJlon Jackets Meli Dress& Sport Shirts 50 REGULAR DISCOUNT PRICE WAS 2.99. 3.99 1.97. 2.97. 3 97 1.99 . 1.97 1.97 2.29 1.97 : 2.97 1.99 REGULAR DISCOUNT PRICE WAS 2.99. 3.99 2.99 3.99 2.99. 3.99 2.99. 3.99 2.79 . 3.29 2.58. '2.97 2.99. 3.99 2.97 4.99" -5.99 3.97 3.97 - 2.97 . REGULAR DISCOUNT PRICE WAS 3.99 -5.99 4.99 4.99 4.29 ; 4.97 3.97 . 4.97 4.97. 5.97 COSTA MESA 308I IRISTOL ST. ' S.n DittO FtNWIY 11 Bristol • . -,. WE ARf AlSO ClEARl!~~~E'S-OF·A-KIND- soME ODDS 'N' ENDS, SUMMER GCOLOR AND SIZE REMAIN· DISCONTINUED MERCHANDISE MARKED DOWN EVEN MORE DERS -THESE HAVE BEEN THESE ITEMS ARE IN LIMIT· TO CLEAR OUT RIGHT NOW SOLD ON A FIRST COME, FIRST ED SUPPL y AND WILL BE SERVED BASIS!llll \AD\ES Bll\\\N\i SU\lS $ ·UIJ 1 8 1ES SHORTS HORT SETS OUR RIG. 3;99 TO 4.99 s MENS HOSE BOYS HOSE RESULAR sac PAIR ,,, PR. REGULAR 89' PAIR STORE HOURS1 • , {110"·· SAT. )OAMto9PM SU". -10AMto7PM , • _, ,•, ' . ' ' ,, '·' ' ._, . ' • '' ·, . ', • " • ' .. ' . ' I ., 1 'I I I •• I ' • -~ R m Tllom11, I S.llsbllry, Lor!'nt 11.11r.111, c Edw1rd Hine. •~ ..... illln( Mllltf", Lo C1mpMll, ...... Genflf, Mi Shl'>'lu. C AflOelkovlo P911etrlno. ,. Donley, Ci •rAdley, Rk,,.,_d HIMS. JllC Whllli"l.UO ,._ Phllllpa. J '"""""' J~ll. H.W oe J'rmo Otllltl DIV• tr.11111 L1M 1 S.111 Corr11, h C1ndeltl Le Cc11vr1 M1lhli.on, K1t1eloct, WllKlmlln, Glorcl100, Nunn. R11 Lynn, Wit GJHd, lt EdWlrtl Stoerck, $ G1rc!1, S• R1g1fftll, I Well, Can Simm-.. ·~ BUddlftQll, Leroy Prlch•rd, S1111nnt Cr1wford, -· a.arroc11, Poul1ddtlj, 8rooki, M De VrJ'f, S &ootow, 5 wooo. Ru ""' Dr\lr'!lm, r Grlll!!h, F: Rlv1r1, LI '-· LNsure, I Pele<._ Ci B1rntll, ! lillUIO.I .J I j WINC Frederl• partner vestn1e1 Kuhn, J day. WIL~ Dauiel justice SUprem died Tu DE Gary G. 8rl s!lh1tton or: .i,1111, Ju;y Mro. Jovel Marvin G. Oline Brtnl Lindi Su• ' M. Merlin, mlltl'nt l 11n D•vl1, Venk 1nd Mfl. ArlUll'lll. 5111'" Pa(!fic v;~ View M•m Morh.+ary, C --- ARI WESTt U7E . BAI FU Corona Costa ~1 BEi 110 Br( DL I Hantfn~ H Long 8' McCC 8EA 1706 L UGll Ntwpol Pl cou " Wei SMJ1 Hu I I l hiir\d17, J ... , : 1, l•/l DAILY PILOT fa For the Teen Allowed to Settle Board-Has Change of Heart. Fringe Benefit,s Get Board Okay Dl~lhtlon Of Marriage the lloanl of Supervbors. Ronald Caspers of Newport If Clark hnd not asked for Beach voted (or acceptance or reconsideration \Yednesduy, the $61000 both days. attorney Robert \\'al ker said l\tiehael Hoffman Ill of the case would go to tria l \Vcstmlnster was severely in· resulling ln increased lega l jured in a 1971 auto accident fl'Cs and court costs an<l ThOm••· &11111 J.1nc1 M1et1111 ,.."1 on !he San Diego Fret\\'ay thereby r L'<luc1ng the youth's Stlllbllry, Rtllltl Htr'1' •1111 Can1!1nc1 SANTA ANA -Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim had a chanae of heart Wednesday and a proposed Settlement of a medical bill for a crippled teenager or $17 ,262 for S&,000 was approved by a 3-1 vote or Tue.day the board re[uaed the $81000 offer on a 2-2 vot e la whlc;jt Clark was supported by Supervisor Ralph Diedrich of Anaheim. Supervisors David L. Baker of Garden Grove and Lorene • near Sa n Clemente and is trust fund further. ORANGE COUNTY SANTA AN A -Three parts ol a ri.ve-point plan to boo.\t frtn1e benefilS for Orange Counly middle managen1cn1 emplQYes w~rt' {l pproved by !he Board of Supervisors Tuesday, and '"'O others "'ere n1odlfled. A1kv1, GI-Lavon t nO Wl!111m Edw1rd Th M Im d pennancntly paralyz.ed oo his Died.rich, 1tlcklng to his TllE PACKAGE, suggesh'd Hl;9.'.,.M'11~11" I'. •I'd GMl!dtrtll 1·ee en pr1·sone ri ght aide. Stand said If th e COUOly ref us -by Per~nncJ J)irt'c\Or \\'illiarn Mlllt•. Lon ar .. &Cid ltottr Aftdrl'W """'-ed he 1 Id Jloai·d Nix' ·es ll~rt included colll'"e u~ilion campD111. v1c1ar11 W>uiM •1111 wc1QoA 111e county's Cr Ip p I e d t scu cn1en1 state a " E M!imburse menf, a free annu11l ~1r1iv11 M. •lld 11.-.1 ~·i. F F Th £ Chiklrens Servi~ paid the would be 3ve ilablc to Hoff-phv.ical exam ination. a .dt'· Siii ..... Gl.iln Let •l'ld Wllll1 Jr. • t 117 ~· edlcal ,. :;;~1~c.5~= i: ~~ ~~:,:; _ or orgeries, e s .-m bill. The fund man. Fostei· Oiild rerred compens•lion plan. ;in .. ~ • is financed 75 percent by the "Even if lhe youth has ta go additional \\·eek of vacation in OM1w. c.ro1c1 "'""and GlfY 01i. l 1 and ·~ t b '" ·elf as some suggest plact> of ove rtime pay, and a 1rao:1i.y. E1e1110t AJOr-•1'1111 Alwin s a e "4 percen y u1C on v. arc , Hart said the mi d di e management g r o u p of tmployes deaerved addiUonal • fringe bcneCilS beca1.t1e the t cowity expects them I o 4 assun1e the re!lpon&iblllti ea for • n1anaging or admJni1terlng program goals and objectives of the board. • • • Race Driver '! Levels Suit 1 • 1tkt11i•d SANTA ANA -Orange Elaine M. Sawyer, 25, of 1 the county would be better off S , d H•k paid life 1t\Sur 11nc·c policy Hl!'le$. Jlldtlh lYl!fl and Dllt l(ellh County Jail terms have been Anaheim, who also pleaded coon y. tipe11 I e equRl to one ~·ear 'll i;alary SANTA ANA -A hot rod :~~": ~~--:,E.=:~~1Himo ordered for three defendants guilty to reduced charges of 'Ibe youth rc<:eived $19,00l because the stale pays 90 per--ProposL'<i by llart v.·as n11· dri\'t'f "'ho lost both legs and a • • ' • l"ti1111111. JoM '" 111111 •-t11ri.11... indicted by the Grand Jury on forgery, got a 6().day i'ail term from an Insurance company as cent or the welfare costs." lion rt1m hursen1c-n1 up 10 $i;iO h I r h 1~. 11te111111111a 1nd A.INOOr c;u SANTA ANA _An increase and "'hen his car e t t e J1ek. H.i.ti l . •nd Norma11 wi1111 mu1tiple charges of forgery and three years probation. settlemenl of his claim. Of Diedrich argued. but tl11s "·:is r ut bv tht• bo;ird track al Orange c 0 u n t y I 0. 1'r~. l rnn M. •nd Patric• and theft r ho I ced Arr " rr· . d in rat<.'S paid to Orange Couaty t" 1375 ••lh .. ]] .,,·, 1200 IU ... Otl'll•I s rom mes P a esung 0 icei:s s 8 1 this amount, his attorney sug-He said arbitralion nf the ... u U\: lntt>t·nnlion nl Rnre"·ay and '1 D•Y· J.11ncy R. 1nd 01n11y &•uc• for sale through multiple Harbor Area homes were foster parents v.'as not ap-shared with lhl' t1nployr [~~~,~~1:1111 Es::;, ... ;,:i11 so1cmon listings. among a number of county gcsted that the $6,000 be ac-. claim weakened the county's proved by the Board or The add itional i• .. eek of 'aca-sn1ashrd into a guard rall t -• b lh I f 't' nd t ed 1 \rants $5 mil\lon in damages cano.111r11 Superior Court Judge James residences stripped or brand cep l'u Y e co un Y or pay-posi ion a se a prec t'n · tion was disapprov<'d and th <' L• cciuv••· H1r111nd Donald Jcuph ment of '"e money owed lhe T esdny marked lhe ..,00,... Supervisors Tuesday. from !ht> racc"·ay :Ind '"'O co-M1thl100, GI••,. H, •1'111 G1r11d "· Turner handed the stiffest new furnitUre In a racket tha t ui 11 • "" IU supervisors agreed that the so-~T:.:ie~C:~: ~:~~,.:· :_~.;:Y1111 J. term to James \V. Lawson, 28, was cracked with the arrest of Crippled Childrens Services. time the board had rejected County Administrative Of-called administr:itive 1nanage· rk'fendnnts. Gl~•no. e1r11k1 1.. •nd e1111 G. of Anaheim _. 31 90-day the convicted trio. The attorney is to get $4.000 the comproznisc ofrcr which fi cer Robert Thon1as had pro-ntenl etnployes should be paid Kcnnclh J. Logan. 26, of • NUllH, ROll&ld lit •lld Sh•tm•ynl r h h h''eh h 'd I lh "" np ed b Co I . 1'orr'IU1CC. ,,('kS th 0 8 e Lynn, wind• El••nlll".•nd LDllnl• E•rl diagnostic •study in state They said a raid o t c ome w I c sat was css an~ was prov Y un Y posed a 3.6 perccnl jump overtime. G~ The1rn1 Chrlllln1 1nc1 Jam•~ prison to be followed by a one-occupied by Lawson and Bran-percent of the insurance set-Counsel Adrian Kuype r. An \Yo u!d incrC"asc the payincnt damages in An Orange County 5,~:,.~:;11sh1r0ift K•• 100 r11om11 Aleri year incarceration in coun ty non resulted in the recovery of llement and the balance of earlier o!fer of $4.000 set-llART SAID hlS e:;opos~I Superior Court action that ~=~~~~~~;"~".:.~: H~rr jail and three years probation. much of the furniture stolen in $8,000 would be put in a trust tle1neiit for the 1ned\cal bill for a child up 10 6 years froni "'hich would affett a ut 400 nan1C's the r<ict'""ay. th e Na-w~11. etlldJ 1-. ll'!d Doy• w. He sent Brenda E . Brannon, preceding months plus forged fund to pay the youth's future was rejected at the insistence $88 to $92 a month. $110 to $11 4 oounly einploy<'s would ro~t t1on:i l llot Rod Association and s1i;,:on" JCCldr Altrld '"° Kilhrrn 20, of Anahe•m. to county jail checks 8 0 d identification medical expenses and school-of Supervisor Robert Batt in of for those between 7 and 12 and $8'.!.:iOO a year. Thr shrinking the !\·like Sorokin Safety and 11uc1c11no11. D1hll1 Ru1h •nd Jtmu for four months and placed documents in 10 different ing which will contin ue for an Santa Ana. Battin was absent $148 to $154 for those bet"·een of the tuition benefits "'111 HescHrch Fund as co-defen-f p,~;~:rd. 00!\lld 11.ct1trr i nd M1ur1t11 -~h:e~r ~o:n'...:tbr:.:ee::._:y:e:ar~s'....".p~ro:ba:::li:on:·__:_:•:•m::::es:·__:_ ___ __:_ ____ _::ind=•:fi:m:·1e::..'.pe:r:i:od:. ______ :ho:t:h_T:u:e:sd:a:yc_:•:•:d_W_ed:=n:•:sd:a~y~.--t3__:_a_nd__:_l_7.__:_ ________ "_><l~u-ce_1_h_ls_b_1_· _a_ho_u_1_1_1_3_.500_. __ d_an_1_s_. --------$u1&11n• Crawlord, .._ltndl ltl Incl Edward ,_, 11wroc:1r. l wmlla• Mort 11111 cellmc POUl1dde[. Go<Jllr!ldl I nd Hai.him llrook1, Mll«1lm leslk and 8tlly J- Dt VO'f, Slllirll D. lf'td JOl\ll S. &oolcw, SUl&ll Ind Kell/I Lcul1 Wooo, Ruth EU .. n 11111 GrlllQFY HID-0•" Orr.irnm, NIQm! R. Ind WllU1m E. Grlflllh, PhlUp M. llld JU<IY I. Rlvtrl, Llm:ia Jane 1na Rlc1rd0 O. Congdon, Jotn II. Ind Edwl11 W. l M1ur1, 81rbl r1 L. Ind WIUl1m E. Ptle-u, Carm1111 l . tnd lloy Ron•ld e1rMll. Samu.I Er11e11 Jr.and Su~n 1iU11btlh ,.. Otlier Deaths WINCHESTER. Va. (AP J - Frederick ~t. Warburg, 75, a partner in the New York in- vestment banking firm of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., died Tues- day. \VILMINGTON, Del. tAP) - Daalel Wolcott, 63, chief justice ·or lhe De I aw a r e Supre me Court since 1964, died Tuesday. --- Death Nut.Ice• llllNIJ:f:R 1ry G. Brtnltff. A!le-17, ol 10031 Cl)ll.. ltullon Or .. Ho;nn1111ton Beach. 0111 ol ath, JU•V 1,, lP7T. $urvlvll'CI bv nw1htr. ri. Jcivc1 M1ri1n, o• l••~ llL.01u1 ·~1""· 1rvln G. llrtn ljlr, Van Nuyu $ •"r lone 8 r1nlz1r, lh Oi(.'QO" n~lf·l'~lf!', n<1a Su. M1rtl111 half·br91hcr. ll:lch<1rd . Ma rtin. bo!h ol Hunhl\ATon ae1~:1; 1t1rn1I 11r1nc1111r ... 11. Mr. arid Mrl. Pl\11 av!•, Vtnlc11 patttnal g,rn~pl .... ~!~, I'•. nd Mr1. FrlO R1lhm1, Sun Cl!y, rllOfll. s.,-vlce1, frtdty, J11ly 70, 2 PM, tcllk. VlfW Clllil"!. •nlcrmeni. .Ptclllc le-·"' M1morial P•rk. P3cll.c V11w .ortuarv. Director&. E.\IANI It l. Evins. A.es10t<lt ol L•~unt 1rh; dlh! ot de~fll, Jlll't 16, •n rvlved DY wtft. Florenc1; 11tp1on. Hollll ll uck. l.11111111 80t<:ch· hree rn ''" brothtr Ind "'IM lilltrl, Ill of I0\111, Mr•I ll'r¥1ce, were 1•ld leod•V· T ,.,.. Y, 11 AM, M('(Drml(~ l .J'lnd Dtlth •1>111, with Rav. A,11'•1• J. .111.e sl•v. n1m11nltv Prttbvlt< ••n Cl'Nrch, Li>!IU'l'I .ach. olftde!tno. ,.rlvtte tn'"""'""A~I. tCormlck l~un1 AeMh Mll!'tu1ry, JrlCIOO"I. SPllAITI "'•rd F. SD•alt:. Re1ld1nr ot 1921 ward L.1111, Nirwriorl e11ch. 0111 f't 1th, July 11, lt7J_, SurvlYl!d IJw •Tl~, lne; IOlll, Eawi!rd, S1toh1n Ind" k:hltl: dltlQMl•t, Gr1lcM'n ""d Tert tt• 11\tr. Mrs. Anni Spralll ; twc brolhlrl Cf'le 1l11tr 11.oiarv •··~• •ecl!@d 'l'dllfldlY, 1:lh PM, 81111·11,r'ft•('fl ti Mt u rh~otl. R1•• .. •l•~1 •11 ,. ' ll'l:w'1tlld tl)lf1y, Th11nd1y, 10 AM sr. chlm1 C1lhollc f.:i'urc~. 1n•e-mrn1. olld Sh1ph1rO Cemelerv. 11•111.fler"eron unerat Ho1nt. C01t1 Mr 1. D rector•. STANl'OllD "oh S!1nlord R11ld1111 of •lt~'"a11 fi!th1 d1:e Qf dt!llh. Julv 1~. 1t7l. r•lvtd Pv ''"1!1. t"~I~; ··~·. '""'~ oul11nd Leslie di!ughttr, Htltn Oosfffh n or1ndchl~r1n 1 two a r • 8 t • ar>dchlldren. 0$lrv. 1on!11ht, Thul.oav. :10 ,.N' 9el!r· •rptren rorcn~ di M~r h1o.tt. 11.eoulem M~!t. F•ldav, 11 1'A' SI. •ul the A"osllA r~11yo11~ r~···rh, '"A'' s ArlCltlPs. lnterm'"fll, 1-'•I~ Cr"'' mtl!•v l e• A"'l'"l•s. 'lr'"·lll•"""'" ••nl!'l'1l Home, ~r11111 del Mt•, Olrl!C"· "· ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%1 E. 17th St, Costa l\'fesa llJ-4883 • BALnBERGERON FIJNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 6'1:1-9450 Costa Me,a 646·%'14 • BELL BROADWAY MOR11JARY 110 Bro1dwtf. C'osta Me11a LI ""3S . -' DILDAY BROTHERS MORTOARIES 17111 Bench Blvd. Huntin~a Beach IC-1771 %44 R ...... A ... Long U.t1<b lll-m-1141 • ~<cCOR~fiCK LAG UNA BEACH MOR11JARV 1708 t.arun1 Can yon Rd . IM-1115 • PAclFIC VIE\\' MEMORIAL PARK Ctmot<ry M•-.Y ti.1~1 3lel Paclllc Vl<w Drlv• Ntwporl -.,, C.lllenla 14U70tl •• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '1191 llolsa A"'· W~1tmla1ter 19WW • SMITHS' MORTUARY IZ7 Mahl SI. lfunu;~ Bue~ FITS: POLY & STllL BIL TS Peerle11 Quality! 145/1 5.l0/13 '~~·:.:;· 155/1 5.60/13 '!~:~:·QI :g·M 165/13 .... ,,, ·:::::·u L·x·M 155/15 5 .60/15'!~:_:~·u1 :5·11 165/15 !::::i! '!~·t.~;·Q ,.g·M 115/13 f:::':~ '!~~-~.'·U L·X·M SIZE STEEL F 78/14 STEEL G78/14 STEEL M78/1 4 mu G71/1 S STEEL M71/\S STEEL l78/1 s 6.4S114 6.50113 7 .JS/14 7.75/14 8.25/14 8.25/IS 8.SS/14 8.SS/I S G70 /15 !70/14 (70/14 F70/14 f70/\4 F60/15 FITS: 11111 .. 1. lllUfllllt fllUI 195/14 $JJ" 205/14 134" 2l5 /14 136" 165/1 4 .... , ........ .. 6 .00 1& ll l.04 205/15 215 /15 235/15 878/13 E78/14 F78/14 G78/14 '2.00 G78/15 '2.'22 H78/14 205/15 115/14 175/14 19S/14 F71/14 F78/15 COSTA MESA GAlDIN GIOVI , .... ,.,..."""' 3005 HARBOR BLVD. ftOf'll., Wl'llo!l11111t• le°'"" of loht _. """'°'' 1na •roati.nurll (714) 557-8000 17141 il0-l200 LA HAIR.A ltll Whitt"' 11,.., (~rM'I' llf Wlll!lltr .old •••th 674·1••• Ovr c11t•'"''" ,.Hey f1 It tt1tt1r 1erv1 ''"'· II J•t lrt.111 t "1•1t i111 c111ctr11i119 pro· lll1clt tr ''"ic11 r111llltrl4 te y1v, ~le•s• <•It ••r Oirtcl•r ef (0111wmer Alfa ir1, Mr. S. Ar•ftl•11 (Jill 110-171 7 or )91· 1281. H -diaul4 1111 avl 11 your 1i11. • "•1i11 CIMck" "ill tte i11111d 011vri11• • l•llr lll1li•t" '' ttlt •lll•1rli1elll l'oric1. IUIHA PA•K fUL\.llTON JtO l hlc Mft IM. J)ll ""'"' l w<llolt c'""' °' 1,.1ll(Ol11 (I llot~ Morll' ti tr\d Kr.oll! ll1¥.....iot FrMw1vl 17141 126-55~0 171 41 170-0100 ~ $2895 ANY SIZE BELOW SllE f60/14 17141 &)f~)Jl U.S. Cars Ror • DRUM TYPE a !11•••<1 llr•ll• ..... .. ..... lltl4 •1•fl ,.,,.;.,. ' "'''"' a Arc tri t1lll 111 lw1llt 1li1tt D llltlH'Cf lrtt1I t'l•t• ••• 1, a ,r,, 1•i ~''"'"''' ,., ltft •' f;.,,.,, m •1•• ''" ,,, ,,,,,, • . : ' • ' I • • • ! . • -I I • - • • • Worst of Gas _Crisis End ing But AAA Says Traces Lin ge r United Press lnteruatlunal 1'hc Arnerlc;in Auto1nobile Associl1tion SE•ys the worst of the nation's sun1n1er gasoliut! shortage is probably over. !Jut therl· n1a~· be su!lll' lsolaled shortagts unlil autu111n. The A A A a11nounl'eme1;1 roiocidl'd v:ith 1\\'0 other devclopmen1s that pro1niscd lo 1:1ke away sontt: of the urgen- cy fro1n the energy 1.:risis . ·rhe Senate approved tht· trans-Alaska oil pipeline, and the Federal 1'radc Con1- mission filed a (~1mpla1n! against !he nation's i>ight largest oil f1nns, ac{·using 1hc1n of trying lo monopolize the industry and helping create the rue! sh?rtagc. ho1v n1uch e11ch CU!lomer clln buy this week. as 01>posed to 10 perc1111t the 11·eek before. "111e AAA survey , supported h~· in1crviews with inrtustry a11d ~overnm11nt encr~y ex· 111.:rt~. SUl(J.:CSIS that the \\'Orsi of 1 he gasoline supply and distribution problClllS ror SUlll· rnt·r tra vel rnay have passed," the AAA said. ~ Lakes and !he sou ther n coastal states including the Gulf or Mexico. In Washington, the F"rC complained that the country's n1ajor oil firn1s ha v c monopolized lheir industry for the past quarter or a century, forcing motorists to pay in- flated prices to boost their prorlts and in turn. helping create the fue l shortage. "American consumers have been forced to pay subslan· tially higher prices r 0 r petroleum and petroleum prod- ucts tha n lhcy \\·ould have had 10 pay in a con1petitlve ly structured market," the FTC co1nplaint. based on a twcr ycar·long staff study, said. T l1 e 11·f11·!1 t flf tltt! s11tttt11er ga.s s l1t1r·t· ff~JC i!I ("fltltiltg ffl fttl e ttff b11f tl1erc 11111y he f r ftf•e ·fl f sl111r t 11ge 1111f ii f t ll• •.... , .... The actioo gives the cor· .........,__...~ porations 30 days to respond, q uick C le f11111p Janet Bruce, 17, con- serves a lot or energy as well as shoe leather as she roller skates away her duLies of cleaning up bits of lit- ter in an AUanta. Ga. ·amusement park. AAA 11\'DICATEO its V.'CL·klv figures showing ho1v rnan.Y service stations arc tlosin~ early or restricting sales because or the ruel shortage have peaked out and begun to return to norn1al. The association snid 47 per- cent or the stations are operating with norn1al hours and no res trictions on sa les, as compared to 46 percent last week . Ninel percent or the sta- tions are imposing a quota on But the association said but one. company named ~n the local shortages in son1c areas . co~pla1~t, . Standard Oi l of will continue and t' i t e d Cahforn1a. issued a _statement J)enver. Colo . .' whcrt> 98 per-immediate!~, denying th c cent of the city"s fillin g sta-government s charges. lions were closed on Sunday, "There i:s absolutely no as an exan1ple. truth to any charges that we hnvc conspired with others in violation of the antitrust laws." said a S tandard spokesman in San Francisco Tuesday. "\Ve are confident the facts in this case will bear us out." "OTllEll AHEAS of con- siderable inconvenience are Oregon. Kansas, P.1aryland and Utnh," the AAA said. Fa vorable conditions were in· dicalcd around the Great Best Idea Sin.ce s ·hopping Carts ·' Now you can do a week's shopping without forgetting a single itelfl! Use pre-printed shop· ping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. Actvll Lilh A11prGrlm1tely Twit• $irt $how11 AllOYI 140 separate printed items , plus additional spaces you can fill in yourself. Just check 'em off - 34 Staples 21 Vegetables 14 Fruits 6 Bakery Items S Beverages 19 Meat and fish entries 11 Dairy items 20 Miscellaneous T wo-yeor sup ply {I 04 lishj furn· ished in convenient tear-off pad for iust $1.00 (postage prepaid) SEND IN COUPON TODAY AND BECOME A SUPER SHOPPER .. • ••• e •••••• W a •• W •••• I • • • Fiii in t~is coupon,. clip and mail with $1 to: • • Piiot Printing Shopping Lists • •'Post Office 8ox 1560 • • Cost1 Mesa, California: 92626 • • • . ··········· .... . . . ...... ' ....... . -• • • I I • h •t1r• to VN ye•r Zfp Cod. 8 •••••••••••••••••••• DAILY PILOT Additional Savings in Every Departmen BIG AVINGS • reasury family store and supermarke~ SANTA ANA " STORE ONLY UNDER THE SQUIGGLY ROOF 90 ONLY V.L. APPROVED ELECTRIC FIRE STARTER ORIGINA L 2.77 00 NOW POOL SUPPLIES 42 ONLY WADING POOL TE ST KIT Ot"J 1.~1._.. lf(].V 14 ON LY PH CHEMICALS 'IQ.'. 1.66 1.00 20 ONLY WADING POOL LEAF SKIMMERS. 66 Qr!Q 1)Q . 'IOW I . 5 ONLY 35' VACUUM HOS .; 11 ONLY DELUXE LEAF SKIMMERS Orig. 3 i9 -·· NO'tl 11 ONLY ALGAEDYN o Q: ~11eOr1g I !9., ...... . .NOW 15.00 2.66 5.00 8 ONLY 10 FT. TELESCOPING POLE ~ ... '"... .. ... _,,,,. 3.00 ~.~~LY IN.FLAT~BLE SURF -MAT,~~ESS 3,88 30 ONLY • FOLDING ALUMINUM CAMP CHAIRS HURRY FOR THESE ! ORIGINAL 1.97 NOW 288 15 ONLY INSULATED PI CNIC BAG On; ttT ..... . .... NOW 12 ONLY VINYL TABLE COVER S OricJ J 11 ... . .. , ................... -.. ·······•·····-····--······NOIV 160 ONLY ASST. GARDEN GLOVES Or..:i l.?I ............................ , ....................... _ .......•.•.. NOW 74 PAIR -DELUXE METAL PATIO TORCH SET Br ighten-up your Pafio ORIGIN AL 4.97 PAIR NOW • MORE THAN 3000 ITEMS REDUCED! 3.44 2.88 1.00 GIGANTIC TOY CLEARANCE ALL DISCONTINUED TOYS NOW DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW FAL ~ TOY SELECTIONS SAVE NOW! 66 ONLY 10" x 10" CAST IRON HIBACHI ORIGINAL 4.29 88 NOW 11ONLY22" ALUM. KETTLE GRILL 102 ONLY PATIO TORCH FUEL '10.'. 6 ONLY DELUXE WAGON .GRILLS 0-.ci 16.W ' '10.~ 3 ONLY DELUXE GAS GR ILLS '.Q.'.' 4 ONLY GAS GRILL PAT IO MOU NTS ',J,', 3 ONLY GAS GR ILL PATIO MOUNTS OriQ.~Oli 3 ONLY GA S GRILL MOB ILE MOUNT V"9 '.1991 NOW 3 ONLY 5 PC. REDWOOD SET {J•ig. I• 9i . _ . NO\'i 19.88 1.00 21.99 50 .00 15.00 15.00 20.00 60.00 5 ONLY 6' REDWOOD TABLE & BENCH 19 88 O"g :i 911 • . .. ••• •.• • • . , , WOW • :J.~~ .. REDVVOOD END BENCHES"" 7 .88 PR. JO ONLY FOLDING CAMP CHAIR O•,g.J9~. '<Oli 2.88 !! ~~LY DE LUX E PVC TU BL E C~~.~SE 12 .88 .J3 ONLY PVC TUBE CHAIR Q•,G }i 11 °1/Q-IJ 9.88 8 ONLY FOLDING CWl!:lSE LOUNGE 1:. "..00r9 1S ?'i I/ON 1 . 12.88 ::.~,~LY AL.UMINUM DIREC~ORS ,,~~AIR 9.88 2 ONLY DELUXE LAWN SWINGS O•oQ.$1.71 .. ~ow 11 ONLY OSCILLATING SPRINKLERS ... ~c.v 25 ONLY TEFLON PALM GAUNLET Or19.1.11 •.... . .....••.................•. , .• )jO'.'/ 60 ONLY -13 INCH TABLE TOP I BRAZIERS 69.88 5.98 .so ORIG IN AL 1.47 NOW$1 A STORE FULL OF VAlUES CLEARANCE STOREWIDE! SAVE ON SUMMER HOT-WEATHER GOODS • NOW DEEPLY REDUCED FOR SPEEDY CLEARANCE! _,., SANTA ANA STORE ONLY 3900 SOUTH BRISTOL just north of south coa1t plat• • l l • • • • • ] ' I.. R <at '8Y me1 ''SO 1 dus put out T telt abo for1 bill the eng 'I' in EP, Rue aod lies ' gra1 one ,..,, lhel dati 1nis "~ L Lea ste.r po• me< poll jor fed< saic nta! yea pol\ De\ pro1 ho • saic \"Ca fir~ anc for Quit Act perl Lea II poll sai1 re Iii be<:. eco1 - I l - E s I ~ ) - Lea1· Slams EPA Stru1d 011 Smog LEA R, DEVELOPl!:R of the Lear jet· and lhe eight-track stereo. is working on a steam- po .. •:ered auto engine he sa.vs meet s all 1976 federal anti- pollution requirements. \Vith the assistance of a n1a- jor auto com1>any and the fed eral governn1cnt, L ca r said. a stCan1 car could be n1ass-produced \\'ithin three years to meet all the 1976 pollution r cquirment s. Developn1ent or a production protot~·pc fo r the car could, hO\\'evcr. cost SJOO n1illion, he sa id. ''I th ink that 1\•ithin three years' tin1c \\'C would have the first cars roll ing off the line . and l\'C \l/Ould not have to ask for any relief fro1n th e re- Quiremcnts of the Clean Air Act as far as pollution and performance arc concerned,·· Lear ,said: helt ody11cg '\ A NEW REALM INTO HAIR CUTTING JUST OPENED e L•ie1I 91omelric, layer, 1n9le 1r.d rtditl ht ircullin9 !1<~· niqu11 f•om Hollywood, London and New York. e Compl1l1 w11k i nd w1•r f10 ir car• -c4t1rin9 to the 11n1u· out m•I• e nd femef1. I All produch nelurel, 0191nic end biod19radeb!1, e Fret con1ult11ion end •nal~1i1 . IN ADDITION to n1ccting pollution requirenients, Lear said his steam car \\'Ould help relie\'e the gasoline shortage because it has higher fuel economy t h a n combustion FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL 839-4144 HOURS : 10-7 TUES .• SAT. 16131 BROOKHURST ST. GRAND OPENING •SPECIALS• JULY 20th AND 21st MACRAME COLLECTOR 250 FT. ROLLS CRATE 3 PLY JUTE I Reg . SPECIAL 49¢ Reg. SPECIAL 79¢ i 75c $1.09 DECOUPAGE 8 OZ. MOD PODGE Reg. SPECIAL 89~ $1.29 DECOUPAGE PRINTS FROM 25¢ TO $2.70 4,0% OFF SURFBOARD CLOTH 30" WIDE 6 OZ. 40¢ P•r Linial Yard ' CANDLE DYE FLORESCENT DYE PK. Reg. SPECIAL 79¢ $1 .19 CASTING RESINS GALLONS s4 95 Incl. Catalyst MARINE RESINS LAMMATING ~ FINISH GALLONS '4 95 Incl. Catalyst * FREE DEMONSTRATIONS • All Day Saturday * * Door Prizes * Free Coffte & Cake Fri., Sat. SlDll l I SAN OJt;c;Q 1,.\P1 \\'lllla1n Riley Su1herland. ~7. Is 11 keeper at 1he San Oiee;o \\'lld Anlnud Park . lie insist~ ht's not Joseph 1\1. Sutherland. 27. lis!ed by the ~lartne Corps as a deserter. But he ~·as arrested at his ho1ne last month and "con· fined as pi.•r standard pro cedurc 11• i t h apprehend1'<I deserters." l\1arine C :1 111 P.1ichael Kelly sa id. The l\l11rinl' Corps Recruit Depot. 11•h1ch rell'ascd hiln June 11 aher three days· con- finement and a call froni the Legal 1'id Socit>ty. concedes hr • rirgut'd "thal ht 11·us not l .. int't" ('pl Joseuh \I Sutht.•tl:;ind bul a \\'11\larn B Su!h<'t'land Ile also pro- ductd credible r 1 idt'll~ 10 auhs 1;1nti:H1· h1~ cta1n1 ·· 1'1)1llTIO'.\, lingcrpr1111s fiiilt.'<I to 1nr1tt.·h those of the \\'anted tnon . $Uitl Kell~'. \\'ho addL'<l 11onetht•les:1· .. \\'c h<l\'t• 11roor that th is Is tht' A'\'OL 111a11 ." Kelli· said if 111·0 n1,~n Rl'l' 1n- \'OJve<i instt>ad of one. lhC!\' h11d lhl' sa1ne n1o!ht·r. a11end1:ct th!' sarnt> high school in Chicaj:!o ;11ld had !he sunl1' S!'r\ ict' This is the Ortho-Flex, a fabu lous king-size mattress set from Ortho. The gorgeous cover is deep Scroll-Quilted and button-free to give you a smooth sleeping surface. Over the rugged Tempered-Steel innerspring there's a special Urethane ins ulated padding. And it comes complele with datrs 111 !ht' \lanne COrps Thr-IAn<.'t' t.'Orporal 11as d1·clart'<I a dl·~rter ~·eb. 21. ~ n10111h ilfter ra1ll 11(! 10 rl'\)Orl for duty at NQples. Ital\ l\elly s111d. Tht' too kl'cµ('r l'l:l111u1 he 11· 11 s honor'Abl~' dtschar~rd fron1 th e Arni~ as ;i <:Orpor:ll in 1967. Al.TllOliGfl cn1plo~ 11H·tH 11 n d 1nilhnry rt't:()rti, ~ho11· d1(ferrnt d a te ll of hu th nnd differrnt 111vcs. Kt•ll y ~Rid the l\lnrin,. Cr:irp<i t< "pursuing furthrr pt'0<1f of 1denlily through 11 Nln1p111'Hl<Jn of denial records·· bt.>t·ausc ot shnilari11es in th<' rt'\.'Ords Mattress, 2 Box Sp rings, Orlho-Pak & Dou bl e Bonus. l Only the price has been changed -nollT on y to protect your budget. 'TT DAILY PILOT I ctwcked to dale. 11e did no! {!l11~rate. P.1 ea n w h 11 t . \\'llllan1 ~ulhcrlutld's attorney satd he is considering a $1 n1llllon hn1•i1uit against the l\1arlnt Corps because "the ~larlnes .'101 lh<' wrong n1an and refuse 10 admit it.·· Dea n _,a 111 ed CINCINNATI. Ohio (APf - (;crald I •. ~ltDo11·rll, asslJ1Jtant orufl·ssor of arl al Penn Statt- l'nivcrsity. has been appointed c'ct n uf Ci11C'l nneti'5 A r 1 1\caderny Complete with the Orthq:.J1t ORTHO HOTEL \'.'•1h ,-,vrory Qrtno ~rr>Q c r Ql.lc••I" F1eldc• ~· \Jt.-lrt.n Top St1nv1. F1ttnd Oc11,·m Sh,. el & 2 p,nuwc.i~' ~ -· \V•lll • ~erv m.1111.,~1 1el. I': rg rr O•Jt"n -Padded ~ ri.,I He1dboard ANO Ou•lted 8ed5pro1d . QUEENS ... TWINS. or FULLS ... • 2 Bol5ll'f PtllOW5 . M11tt•c1s Pad • M'l!al Fr<1moo11 E•~y·RoU Casters T ·.• •nor Full -HP.Jdboard /\NO Metil F•llml! on E1sy-Rofl C11•tcr1 ORTHO E.ASE OATHO flE.( ORTHO EAS£ OATHQ FLCX Bi1 quet11 sile at a I~ Ste9 uo to bi1 Orttio ._,,,, Clmse l•111 ar !ult at.Clflf ~fiord.Ible p1!ef! Grt~1 low price. li4atlrtSS. &11 and Clll"J'llo•t. M1tlrtss. lloc low pritt. Wi01 Mattr1~. lo1 (i;tl\o QU~•lf, \li'•t~ Mi!1111u , Sl)un1. OrthQ.P~~ *98 & Dooble 8!Jnjjs' Sari111:. Ortho-Pal *139'5 & DD1JbJ1 Bo~U!i' '"'''' '58 OGllble Blll!m! 801 $pf Piii ' 18915 Double /!l)Jl!JS' POSTUAE AESl ORTHO FOR1,1 POSTURE fl(Sl VAT!-iO llOTlL Re~r~able ciu1l1t1 al • rre•! J.!ull1·Du11!~d co.•• er.•• Dtluoe felt•lillf lh'~Jtl.(ol' • 1•.,i ct li)lo•·: 1 ,, Ortllo prrce • lr!Jttress, 801 Ur1t~i>l1t foam. l.b11ies~. k• C~lt!t ll1>1h \l)Httu >«•! C,,,~·tl·••'h M1• ..... ,_,,, '15115 i DMltl IOIMI Spril'lr Orth~P1k 117915 ' Ooltl!e !oooi' 8'• S,· 'I I 17915 Doublt 80"11f t·•'-> £1~· !.?'"'~ 19915 ' [l,·.,lr!J 80111151 Ortho Products are Manufactured by Ortho and Sold Only through Ortho Factory Showrooms FREE DELIVERY THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ORANGE SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD 2445 N. Tustin Ave. lt c1•11 1., .... 0 •• "'' M.11 1 ,h111e 'J 1 ·0SI t FOUNTAIN VALLEY 161l1 Horbor div~. I'''"'' •I ftli119ttl Neri lo 1od1(1 'ho1011 I t•.45 10 I B 11 West Lincoln Ave. ltlwt•n lw,l1d end lroekli ~r1! A•lllWt• J~1t t ell ef ,.,, M~rt ~~0 11• 11 •. 1s•o «ll C1ndlewood Ave. C•ndl1wood Shop1 l t t•O•• lro"' l 1~t•o11d C1,.+1•I '~o~'' •J4.41Jt OPEN DAILY 10·9 •SAT . 10·6 ·SUN. 12·6 •FREE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE· BANKAMERICARD ·MASTER CHARGE I & O"L'I PILOT Girditar1 f 01· Battle A Cambodian governn1ent soldier about to c1nbark on a tough day's fighting lights up a pipeful of n1ari- juana. !J is unit was driven back bv insurJ.(ent guerillas after bl oody battlinu near the capital cit.v ot Phnom Penh. Cl1ess Entl1usiasts F 01~1nh1g Society Two Ne1\·port Beach chess enthusiasts are trying to ·rorm a club "'hic h they hope will eventually lead .to national af· filiation. Peter Coppen, 1621 \Vnr1vick Lane, and Tom TY:aiten. 1950 Port Trin ity Place. arc lrying lo contact persons within the Orange Coast area who are in- terested in "'eekly chess play. The ty,·o hope to run to.urnaments within a club and, if interest is shown. nf- filiate with the United States Chess Fede r a I i o n . the American o!'gnnization con- nected 1\•ith the lntcm<itional Chess Federation. ,,, h i ch sponsored the Fischcr-Spassky \\'Orld championship matches last year. "\VF. llOPE r (' 0 p,1 e. especinlly tcen-11gcrs. u·o11 ld join the club who eventually would \vant to ,play chess on a wider scale." Coppell said. •'\\'e arc interested i n :111yone. rcga,.dlcss of age or present pluying ability." he ;iddcd. Coppcn said he and T\\'ailcn were applying for a co· sponsorship '''ith the City of Ncu·port Heach so 1hey can ha ve free place to play. "If the sponsorship does not ~o through." Coppen noted . •·we can still rent a place to plav a1 a nominal fee." Conpen. an engineer 11·i1h Hughes Aircr:ift Corp. in Ne11·port Beach, present\~· is plal'ing K:uional Federation correspondence matches. 'l\l'ai:en. a promotion n1an for sin insuro:incc con1pa11v. ha-; been plaving chess for 10 yr>'lrs anrl 1vo•1 n di1·i!ion charnpionship in !he South.ern Califo11ia Open matches five ~·cars ago. Wat~h Walte1· Kllrabilln Winding Up I SACRA~IENTO IAP I First it u•as the ~tick<'v ~·louse \\'l'isl\vatch. Then thC Spiro Agn<'w 11·atch. Now it's the. \Valt<'r Karabian '''ristwatch. \Vho? A can1paign commitece for state Assemblyman \Valier Karabian 1 D·i\lontcrcy Park J. announet'd ii is markeling red, \l'hite. and h I u e wrist\1•atches \l'ith a cartoon carlcalurc of the 35-\'car-ot.1 Karabian for S3l.80 e:lch . Asked what he would run ror if enough 11•ritch sale revenues u·ound up in hiS can11X1ign chest. Karabian replied that he didn't know. Buth<' said he didn't plan to run ror a fifth two·ycar tern1 in l he Assembly. ' .I.SA DORE :.::. u 3-7% 0£C ~~~-­ Stude1its Make List A1orf' than 37 pcrcenl of all l•ligible students <H Orange Coast Coll('gC 1nadc t h c !)can's list for academic ex- cellen ce during the spring Sl'llleSICr. Figures released by the Of· ficc of Ad1nlssions ll n d Hccord!'I sho\v that 1 . 7 9 2 srudenrs ochicved a 3.0 ! B 1 or heller average for tu·clvc or 1norc units. Of these. 213 studcnl s. or 11.88 percent of the list. sailL'<l through the scn1cstcr \l'ith straight A averages. Tht• total of 1,792 is the largest ever to n1ake the l~·;_u1's list in the history or acc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Thi rty·four percent or the list, or 619 students, made bet· tcr than· B plus average: 43 percent. or 778, made B plus : :1nd 10 percent, or 182, made Bids i1i 01i LBJ Library Face-lifting straight B's. AUSTIN, Tex. (APJ -Bids \'Vorkmen will rcn1ove and Of the A students, 75 have \Viii be opened Friday for a reset each stone on the ex- n1adc nothing but A's during r 1·r1· . b th L d ter;o, of the complex ll>al their careers at occ. The ace-1 1ng JO on c yn on off to protect tourists rrom ran ing plaster and stone chips. Exterior naws in the $18.7 million complex have been AEC Denies S~lmo1i Loss ' . -· • ADAK, Alaska (A Pl -An Alomlc Energy, Commission scientist has denied tb3t a Nov. 197t underground nuclear test on Amchilka Island caus· ed a disastrous salmon run on Ala!ka's Bristol Bay. • AEC effeeu scienti.!lt Dr ... ~!el ~1erritt made his 1tate- ment during a tour of the: ~·iod-5wcpt island in the Aleu- tian chaJn headed by AEC: chainnan Dr. Oixy Lee Ray. ;. Orange County Fireman's Association Proudly Pcesents TEX BENEKE and his Orchestra Featuring The Music O f GLENN l\fILLEI~ DISNEYLAND HOTEL CONVENTION CENTER FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 9 p.m. -I a.m. ticket h1rormotlot1: 492-2310 or 136·6111 average grade point for the H. Johnson Library. Officials houses the library at the entire I.Jean 's list was 3.46 out estimate the project \.\'ill cost Upiversity of Texas. Outside reported since April 1972. The ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j'I library u•as dedicated l'rlay 22. ~ 1971. of a possible 4.0. $2 1nillion to $3 million. ureas of the library arc fenced A breakdown by cily of thl'.!•------------------...:.-------------------------------------- straight A (4.0) spring sc1ncstcr students: 8ALl0A -Vlr<1H E. Ferqu~. Heidi J. IUl<>11wor!h .Ind K.1ren L. Wood. IALIQ.\ ISLANO -S.lll'f J. ktrr, Mlch•e• J. KlrbV Ind Le~ue A. Klelnleld. C0110NA OEL MAit -C.1t11tdra Btlhnae<. J.111ice C. Benner, Oebar•h C., Mar1t011, ROii.ii<! 0 . Pllf'Til~~r Stephen 8. Prl!l, Kevl11 R. Tool, !>fl.lrOfl L. Trtvfoll. COSTA MESA -LtrrY W. Allen, Rl!Mrt F. AmberllClr, Je1u1 A. An.1Yt, Michael L. """· Rober! c. 81111111. Bllh•nv J, Bl'nriell, K.1lhy C. Bono. ~:l~c~. ~Ud!.'?ohn Lf.n:u1~ra,88~:;i t0i17u•,,~1'tJ~'..'r~ LT.c2"~1~v~~~:1:1 ~: Cro1~n Arll>ur C. 011 Corio, Ltrrv D. O•rnell, J Q!1n V Oeoko. April P. Dodson, Jane! E. Oootre. Pi!rlCil A. E1111er1, Oavld V. Ellio n. All•n W. E.,. nr1. Cllti••n M. Eltehon. c1111rle1 F. Evan1. Dl11ne L. Flin, Kottilc~n f'os•e•, Jo~n A. GAiiis, Ellr,.betli A. Gec•ev, Audre S. Genrich, LJrry J_ Ge11to~I. Gery L. Giibert. Chrl5looher E. Galson. Cliervl 0 . Good"U, Cnerlortc v. C.orden, Pit...,.I• W, Gorcron, Jolin C Gcae. Runeu G•~ner. Chrl1!1n11 J. 1-'~mll!on, Rober! 0. Hlortll, SllVPn E. Klno, M••Y L. 1tlrk1>~trltll.. Ecrwe•d w. Kte1m11n. T1tcmi11 M, K11r>Q, Joy L. KOOIMI, Oonn.1 l . L" 8'11. Olann1 (;. Llnh11rt, Rlctiard L. Madison. Emery G. M1v, Rober! R. McDi!rmo•!, Emm11 F. N.cGreo~r. Jitn L. ~·111eke. Rn1wll G. Moon, Robert S. Morr!l.(ln, ll'oby L. MorrllOll, Ct•lq B. "'""'ur1, Christine A. D'Dl>wd, Merrilee C. Olson, Gr"'! A. 011, Sue L. PrO<ltf, Bd<loer l , RllfcY, Mlcllecl C. ROC!Olek, Oliver P. Roemer JO\e~ P. S1lvo, B•verly G. Schoen!hlll, rc~'...1::: •• i·1v11~~~"lhav1":'.''re~rv ~: Sidell. Nln.s L. Slm"'Ofli. Le~le M. Smlftl, Lindi 0 . Smull, Fr11nk M. Sncwdv. Sv!vlit M. S•uar1, Rlcl>erd J, Tocld. Katl\!"11 S. Tritkt rl. Tll""'as L. WiH;u1one•, Charltl L. W1rrm Jr., Chr11t1n1 M, Wood .Ind Mlrk A. WrlQlll. EL TOllO -Oart>o•a A. 80111. ll'OUHTAtN VALLEY -Al1n1111 J. Brice, M!cll""' A. Chui>.>. Cr.119 L. Conrad. P1trlcla F. Doncv.111, Ron•ld F, Gotcron, Jean A. J"c~>0n. S!eollen T. Jatk1on. Mtrk 0 . J ohn.on, Linda J. Kitlo, Lee E Kelse•, Sleven C.. Mier.els, Ger~ld T. Piper, Edw•rd C. Plrl1, Jr., Ruby M. Schlezl~r, Ellttn M. $ml111, HUNTINGTON llEACH -MA•V J_ Abbi1K11, M1r11rel R. Anderlo11, Timothy G. t1>lell, Rhonda 0 . CdrCl!f'lf\O, Ellie (, Chrlstansen, J11<1/rh A. Corntll. s .. ..iv L. Cowan. Sollv G. Co•, Fr11ncl1 R. DU'!l tn, Jene M. F111Qlll, Str>!lra L. Grove, Wynn E. Ho<nlwro. L"ra!ne M, James, L1n<11 E. Koun1, Mlrlldel T. McGritw. T""' R. McQuald, Rober! II!'. Noe, Sliaun F, ~=~~~ ... 9!1.nb,.;1d ~.·~~,~~~: £J1?::'n 6: Stull. J1nlct M. $ulhert1nd, Lindi M. Torr11, sracv I. Welch, Ja·N• L. 2erv•'· tllVIN~ -Klrft'I A. G11lvln. LAGUNA IEACH -Jim R Heia. LAGUNA NIGUEL -Vktor 0. Brimhall. NEWPOltT BEACH -Sa!lv J, A~..ccnet, Je111 E . Appl~Uy, Donna L. llrt<IO, Rlcn1rd S. Billncrall. Jeri L. Benwn. M.ir~ e. Blaklev. T"""'"s M. (•mtron, OeannA M. (lfttworl.,v, 0on r:. Cotk ROOln R. Custer, Ma riann OUIM. TFIOl'll&I M Dll'IG .. n. Mlthael Eric.an. K11nryn M. G~ano'.M'\, Oennh M. Giln>en. lll••t T. C.011 J1me• B C.rilllat. Recil"" L. H"rr!1. l(rfsUna J . I.It ... Dftn1 ( Kiiroy, Kent L. Little. ''~•~ R. Lynd. Ro,.ald S. Marlin, llichard F. Michael, Tommy L. l '~nt"""'e'w K~llllttn 0. MQQtl~v. Bonnlt l , Ma•ler, (hrls'ln.t M. Xh~r. Kartn o Sp.eyer~. Ron•ld A. S"•ns. Jim E, S!ul!s. Anfte L. Sturae·1ant. T~om"' ( Tru!n Yal•nda l'I. wnu .. m1, llotle•t M. Wood. Lorent L. Wunderllr" SEAL Bll!'ACH -1.\lekf G. Emerton, Jnhn C l(ll'>Qsmore, C1ral A. V/IHl•m•. SOOTH LAGUNA -P11 mel1 0 .• Hearne. • • 1ve ·- . ' I I ' ' . ><~[,'\ •·.• • r ' ' . • a raise ' T\.\E S\.\\R\ .SALE 3~3 e . ,.,~ interest on 4 year certilic1te accounts. $1,000 minimum balance. Deposits at th is rate may be limited by govemmenl1I regulation. interest on 211.i: to 4 year certifi· cale actoonts. $5,000 minimum balance. interesJ on 12 to 23 month certificate accounts. $1,000 minimum balance. lnttr11t 011 90 dty bonut acco1111h $1000 minimum. interest on passbook eecounls. Paid from date of deposit to date of withdrawal. / • pie~ .)o~ u~ a...t noon L.1lcc. ~ d'1~•nc:e. I '\\OIA I\ • Regulations require a penalty on atl ce1tificate accounts wilhdriwn prior to maturity. Western federal accounts are fedf!ratty insured to $20,000 lf!d deposits by the 10th e1rn from the 1st. Corona Del Mar 2744 E. Coast Hwy. I Jim Park, Manager /Telephone: 014) 644 -7255 •effective annual rite with daity CQ!nPound interest. ... and twelve ollices to serve you; 8mrty Hltts • la Habra • Del Amo • Northridge •Sixth & Hill · USC • P111orama City • City ol Or1n1e • Larchmont • Corona Del Mir • lnllewood •Hollywood /Vermont Western Federal Savings & Loan Association M1ln Office: Si•lh & Mill. Downtown Los Anaeles •Telephoner (213) 626·9601 Asstt1'ov1r $340 million. Hufh Evens, Jr., Pr1si<Sent w I. 'N ta~ tru ma ta~ SJ bou1 forg fore it! . If his· !11er.I mg ""° pol h ·¥ regt mac poD a t •de pill w !rib! Ma! cine .., of Whi, syst rech so m~ incr not ordf "I just not own rnai fore ~ N• -poll! ..mo( '""' , j L adv vel hav Cal doo hot1 bus F m• pre Aut me ado,; 74, • and .. are Ve( eco U!'I Ttl119holt La%y Su1nme1· Day Twelve-year-old Gary Jackson of Cordele, Georgia takes a break after unloading half of his.father's truckload~of Sugar Baby watermelons at the farmer's market. The melons are selling for 50 cents each taking advantage of a large bul late melon crop. Smog Controllers Need Controlling Capital News Service on reminding his customers that they must keep tho.se anti·smog devicrs serviced for peak efficiency. Th11rSd11, July 19, l!J7J DAIL.V Pll.OT Jf ,6urs to Drought-stricken Africans· OU~G UGOU, Upper Volta AP) -Tens of thou or tons of food . seed aod m icine from around the world are pouring l n t o · droo t-stricken West Africa in a rac..-e against n1ass st:irva· tloo iiDd death. \l/idespread hunger a n d drastic food shortnges an1ount- ing to n ea r fa1nine still plague the si x v.·orst-hit na· lions south of the Sahara Desert. Son1e 24 n1 i I I i o n persQns li ve in the region .· Reports of death from out· breaks of measles and cholera are increasing in the sun--bak- ed zone, y,·hich runs fron1 Mauritan ia and Sen e g a 1 through J\.lali , Up1ler Volta. Niger and Chad. SO FAR, about 200,000 tons of food has been shipped from abroad, The dust bowl regions Abandootd villages and the scattered careuses of cattle testify to a m"5s migration of people, many of them dete.rt nomads, fleeing south to the lusher coastal areas. While ex.act figures are not availah!e, vast areas or crops have bt•en vl'iped out : n1illions of cattle, goats and sheep have perished ; and thousands of village ~·ells and Jakes -even urban sup1>Hcs -have dried up. Son1e foreign diplomats nre upset by Y.'hat 1hey think is the son1etimes lethargic approach taken by some Afri c an govennnenls in gelling relief programs under way. ''WE COULDN'T do a thing until we were 11ked to help," complai ned one diplomat in in the 81>-Called !'fam ine belt."----------- need about ~.000 ton1 this year. The threat of starvation will grow as the rainy season, now getting under way , cuts off dirt roads linking rural , areas to .1major towns. "The worst is yet to coi:ne ." warns an American Aid of- ficial in Dakar, Senegal. "We have to keep feeding them un- til this year's harvest In the fall ." However, if the rive-year dry spell persists and this year's rains are poor, there will be little or no harvest. REUEF . OFFICIAi.'! say the drqught threatens the Jives of millions and drastically has disrupted rural economies of some of the world's -most in1· Tliat's Son Paperweig INDIANAPOLIS; I n d . (AP) -When workers returned .to a demolition site Tuesday morn Ing , they found that the com-· pany's five-ton wrecking ball was missing. It had been suspended about 200 feet up on a crane's cable, said L-Oran Dowling of Dowling Construction Co. "I can't figure out v.'hat someone would do \Vilh a five-Ion me tal ball ," he said. Stnesal. He says months were malnutrillon are arriving from Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coru:t, other ma)or doilors lnclude the wasted trying to convince abroad. l.iheria and Senegal by rC>Ud Sc.·andinavian ('OllOtries, China authorities that something f\luch or it is being carried and rail to 1he interior. and some of 1he JO nations of should be done. hoin coastal ports l n ~tuch of the food Is coming the European Co m mo n In Mali and Upper Volta, as _ea_m_e_roon __ ._._N_lg:.er_ia_._D_a_ho_m _ _:•Yc.·_f_ro_m __ 111e __ u_n_i1e_d_S_1a_1_.,_._b_u_1_~_t_ar_k_e_1. ______ _ well as Senegal, there also have been rehorts that tribal r--------------------------"-----i considerations are affecting 1 dbtributJon or relief supplies. It is also a matter of class. according to diplomats, v.•ho say the elite in the urban areas are not overly con- cerned about the fate of the rural peasantry. Nevertheles3, as the crisis h-a s g r o wn , Afr ican governments have become more concerned and invol\'ed in relief operations . the broadway adventurers club ,-ul1se•tr11vel ls "1l1ot our lours are all about •first class and deluxe • porterage. tranftl'1, t ips hotels •guaranteed emergency •all flights on scheduled return llighh airlines •bilingual, esorts and •round trip a irfa re include d city hosts 1tfEANWHILE. food supplies •I II L • • b d L _ mostly cereals _ and u si9nt see1n9, roa way cnerge medicine for vaccinations and many meals convenience* to treat dehydration and ._---------------.,.------------..,.,,-....,,--1 Volcano Erupting MOSCOW IUPll -Tho neY.'S agency Tass says that ahe Tyatya volcano on Kunashir, the island nearest Japa.n. has begun erupting for the first tin1e in more than 150 yea rs. '•flame rose above the crater," Tass said. "The volcano is ejecting stones and ash. Residents of nearby set· t l ements h ave b een evacuated." ha wall 8 tlay•, I l1lo11d "l• c ... 11-111 AtrllMI. 0. 1M•lutn • ""''V $1!urllay. P!ua 10*>. I••. ,...,rice -5239 7 nights Honolulu. plu1 l'tarl Harbor Cruise, si9hlt11ln9 , Upgrede 1v1il1bl e. I nic;iht at Ktuti is 'optiontl, plu1 24.50. e 8 days, J !sloo4s, I oighl H;\o , l ni ghts Kon e, I nl9ht Kau111 i, ) nights Honolulu. Up9rtde t vaileble. From .. $32' e 15 ffyt. 4 ltlGwds, I night Hilo , 2 nights Ko nt, 2 ni9hfs Mau i, 2 nigh!s Kaua i, 7 at Honolulu . Upgrade avail. From $401 I "lt M•alCt"' ,.,1,11"... loo mex eo Al\lelll CllMft1,tfl . w.ico~ ~oc~i.11 on 1~•~ 101;• n1uzufln11 8 du~·s. 1 ..... !{ala nights 5199 Euro pt1n plen OR American p11n , from $249. Includes welcome m1rguerit1, villag• sight.seeing tour, trensfers be· tween eirports/hotela, 2 meels • day on the American pla". e Me xico City Gtla, 8 days . 7 nights, from $129, or 4 ~ights Me11ico City, l nights Gutd•· lajarti, from $259, or 4 "ights Mexico •City, 3 nigh ts Puerto Va llarta, from $269. Depart Frid.,ys. SACRA1'.1ENTO -You've OOught a new car ... you can forget about automobile smog: forever ... don 't you believe it! . If a motorist doesn 't keep his emis1lon control equip- ment clean and in good work- ing condition he can be in the spot or emitting more air pollution than ever before. "SPARK Tl~1JNG is pro-~po~·~,~er~is~he~d~n~a~li~on~s~·---~iii;~~ bably the most critical single1j factor in emission control . The agency did not say if there \Vere any causalties or when the eruption began . europe e Jtt Set, 8 days, 7 nig ht,, ) cities, from $269 • Me.-lco Gala, I 5 days, r 4 "ights, 6 cities, .from "" • Mazatlan Gala I Oelu11e I. 8 d1y1, 7 nights, fro m $259 e Mexico Co. lonlol Circle, 14 days , I) nights, 6 c:il ies , from $469. -When state and federal regulations forced automobile manufacturers to install anti- pollution devices, they missed a big bet. They didn't dG an adequate j G b preparing the public [or their use. Walter O. Kooh1er, a con- tributing writer lG Motor Magazine, made the point suc- cinctly: "CAR OWNERS are aware of exhaust emission controls . While the ''arious emission systems are designed t o reduce air pollution, they are so sensi tlve to tuning and maintenance they can actually increase pollution if they are not kept in good v.·orking order. "FNquent checks and ad- justment s are vital ,--but it's not always easy to convince an owner to spend money to maintain extra-cost equipment forced -u p o n him by governmental regulations," Koehler said. Not on ly must this stotY ~ _pounded 'jnto the thinkirig .(lf ·motorist!, but automotive · repail personnel muit be ao1d J\1osl systems incorporate a device to cut off vacuum ad- vance when the engine is idl- ing or excellerating," Koeh- ler's Motor Magazine story says. To control the oxides of nitrogen. another smog in· gredient and perhapS the most in1portant, some forms or vacuun1 spark advance discon- nect (VSAD) have been sug- gested, but key auton1otive fi gures warn agalnat utHUa· tion of the VSAD system. Accord ing to Andy Granateili, STP chainnan, use of VSAD.Js th9rtenlng the life of the vehicle, re,!lucing power output so the car "couldn't ma ke it over the Grapevine,'' and causing more mechanical problems than needed. Mechanics, \vhether in car agencies, independent garages or service stations, would be \vell advised to bone up on and understand the techniques needed to service vehicles equipped witq a!I types of emission. control devices. '· ntERE IS A book . "Emission Conti:-ol Manual," bv Motor Publications now on •the'markel whicl>wl!l glv~'the knoWledgeable_ · mechaillc a~l . the · info""ftnli-n . · ha~le ll\e l~!"!IY jalopy. :; y egas Will Push ••• " Tourist Campaign LAS VEGAS iAPI -An advertising · official for Las vegas resorts says they will have to flood Southern California with advertisements -mainly via radio and out· door billboards -to keep the hotel and motel industry business bri1k. Paul Titus, director of marketing and advertising, presented to the Convention Authority Tuesday his recom- mendations for $876.000 in advertising during fiscal 1973- 74, to keep up with rapid motel ·and hotel growth . ''111E 1SLANDS of 11a\vaii are very similar to Las Vegas," be said, "in that their economy depends on the I healthy growth of tourism. And , like Las Vegas, 11awaii has experienced a giant hotel building boom. In 1967 Hay,•aii had 18,000 rooms with 90 per- cent occupancy. In 1971 the 35,000 room occupancy crash- ed to 58.9 percent." "Tourism rebounded nic~ly last year In th~ lilands," he said. "But lhere may be a lesson here for Las Vegas, for our current construction boom is on· a parallel course."' ProjeCted figures from a study by a tourist promotion representative show there are 28,119 motel and hotel rooms in Las Vegas. In 1974 there will be an estimated 37,166 rooms, or an increase of a 32.2. percent in just one year, ac- cording to the figures. FlloM Fash ion I s l~nd Newport Beach o/fatj#rda MEN'S SHOP REDUCTIONS TO 60°/o SAVE ON FINAL DAYS SLACKS SPORT COATS Special Group ~ Double Knlh w ·-----~ Double Knits R99 · 28.60 ALPACA TWO PLY SWEATERS $24 I REG. J4.50 SWEATERS Imported 2 Ply Cashmere Reg. 37.50 Double Knit 2250 DOUBLE KNIT or WOOL SPORT 11 / ~~1~~~. i' 2 PRICE I Rog. $90. to $110. Reg. $110. to $120. FAMOUS DESIGNER PUlltl SILK II NECKWEAR 495 1 ORLON & POLYISTIR SIZES: Re9. 40 to 48. loitqt 40 to 48 POLO SHIRTS Open Sun. Daily • 10 to 3 . 9 to 5 MEN'S SHOP NEWPORT II.I.CH 1107 JomborH Rd. Phone: 644·0JJO LOCATED AT THE NEWPORTEI INN Us• yRur ll•n•.1.1111r!car11 ·,·r Masi.rChartt Sun., 10 'Ill l p,m.-O•llY' i. S Ample P1r1111111 lllJ. TO Sll.00 SPORT COATS Rtg. to $90. Broken Slus Angelo Correll• NECKWEAR Reg. 6.50 3ss All SWIM WEAR PRICE Reg. 6.95 3ss european ad\'enture London, 8ru1sels, Heide lberg . Innsbruck, Venice, Florence, Rome, Stresa . Le u- sanne, Lucerne and P111 ris. Full sight- seein g, Rhint Steamer Cru ise. Oeptt· tures through October 5t h. e 4 Copltal Swint I ond ,11, 15 d•y•, Lon<lon, Lisbon, Rome or Mtdrid, Parl1. Thurs . thru Dec. 20. From $617 • Gakl Jet Swint. 15 day•, I .cities, from $533 e , .. _, of lurope, 22 d1y1, I l cltlt•. from $151 the goldeu <!lrele 23 days ~·- 5744 Visiting London, Ho ll end , Belg ium , Ger~ meny, Austri111 , Italy. Sw itzerl tnd !Lu- cerne ) 111nd Par is. Oep111rtures through No v. ). • e Tht Grond Tour, 29 dd ys, 16 cities included in the 8 countries vi1ited, fro m $958 e Spain, P011V9GI, Ho. Africa, ll day1 , I l c!te1, from $744 • Sconllln..-la. IS d1y1 , 7 cities, from $951 e llu11la &-ScndlftCl'fla, 22 d•ys, 7 cities, from $106S • world-wide cruises eCarlbbfftl Cnllls .. -faaturln9 Sit. mer Crui1es (Li beritn Reg ist ry) Via Na - tional Air Lines, Includes all meals on sh ip, plus tr1n1fer1 end porterage. Every Fri day, from July 20th. e Mexico -feeturlng Sitmer Crui ses ! Liberian Reg is try ). Includes ell meals on ship. Oepart1i from September 211t. e TSS Foirseoa, 7 days fr om Los An· .9eles, from $280, calling on Puerto Val· larte, Mazttelan. Specitl 8 and 10 d.y e TSS Folrwhtd, I days from Los cruises t ve ilable. Angeles, from $155, Celling at S<1n e TSS Folrseo, 14 days from Los An· Juan, St. Thom11, S1nto Domingo, Port-~s .. from -$560. Mexico---'-end-e-.ntn,HI---~-~ Au-Prin ce. -----~ Amer ic111 . 23 dti ys evail111ble from $920. pac f c, orient ill prlc•• phu S 't. ••• .,.,d ,,,.,;,. orient adventure ftaM 51163 Visit inclu des Tokyo, Kyoto, Taipei, Ba ngkok, Sing apore, Hon g Kong . De- p<1rture1 through November. • Kabuki Kaper, I 5 days, Japan only. from $820 • South Paclflf Adventure, 22 days, from $1J4t • Clrdt Pacific Adventure, 21 days, from $1413 "'"'Mttlllp h1et.-: motif hlv t1 ew1letter1 e q1;1rf1rly tr1¥tlo91111 e bol't11t di1cou"h on fl· peat holidtr-e free fli9ht b•g prior to d1· ptrlur• e dlac11111h Ol't fillfl i nd proceui"CJ· <!Iii• attd mail Broadway Advtnturen Club P.O. 10131911, Los Angeles, CA 900JI W! IHYIT.E COM,AIHSOH: LET" US RUIN YOU 'lllEE (Ol Oll &ROCHUlll OF THI ,OllOWIMO TOUR ·--·-··· ···s· ... -·---. ----.. ----- Name ......... , ...... . Address Ci ty . State ..... Zip ....... . e Phone . . Dept. 618-0CP0-7/12 . ··-.... ---·--·-·--. ~ .... ---... -. ------- Mtml>l•l~lp 11 requlrt!I for lovr partlc1~!1e11, ,.. ••!11111 "<locl Hier• lftNflu••. Out1 U.IO •e• .,. .. r, lndl"lillual l'fltfnbl<ffli•, ll.00 11tr year "di -lllol't.ll mtml>lr of lfnlNOlltle lt 1'1'111Y ll'flflt Ill 111111 11 .. Mflt.llf. •c•1~ ·~ Hill r"lllrtG-Nlll•K• Cl'll<tt••l1 It ,.,,, ln11fw1y Clltfll .l.C(Oliftl. Try Saturday's News Quiz • We Dare You STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ' I I ' I ., .. " . , ' NEW SUMMER HOURS ~ Mon. thru Fri. 10.9 Sar. 1 o.6 Closed Sunday • se11.c-.. •'lo(tlull •T111~~1 modem gM grill CMnnctow gn ~ues off« )IOI.I thil most ~ f'Nhlfes of outdo« eoolo:lnc , .• bfcked by Ill• fln••t In quetity end crafh.meMll!p lhet "-rnede Cllermglow thil luder. N-)'OU ~n enjoy thlt rMI bartleque ftevor without lhtl mMS end ,,_,, of old·lnhioned crian:oel. For ut1• pelio ch.Hrn. acid • Ch1m111ow 111 ligllt. tool RION HARDWARE WESTCLIFF PLAZA 642·1133 . SPECIAL Fo1110111 Hlcllort FanM of Ohio BEEF STICK: SUMMER SAUSAGE llEGULAl S2.5t LI. $239 NOW ... WHOLE STICK S2.2t LI. P'ricn tfftctin thro J11fy Uitd Gre-t rw P'k.iu. Yoc.tlo11, hdt "°"'"'' •tc. Regional Repair Service WE ALSO RE-BOTTOM ALL TYPES OF ADIDAS & TRETORN SHOES Anfhon'!j SHOE SERVICE Westcliff ,.... • 17,. & lnlM • Newpert IHcll ALSO: e CORONA DEL MAt l «>• e. Caa•t H...,. e N~WP'ORT IEACH l<rl Vie Lido e 14 l'AIHION ISLAN D ~ ,.._,, Bftci'I e ,;1 l'ASHION ~UAlll' s.ni. Ant DELICATESSEN USDA CHOICE 9fttf BBQ BEEF RIBS 77 •. • • -~·--tfEW SEIVICE FRESH SEA FOOD HALIBUT STEAKS 1.69 Lb. FllESH LIVE MAINE LOBSTER EVEllY DAY MARKET BASKET WESTCLIFF PLAZA With FREE Extra Glave s ·.-··'.ft BBC IVlllDAI 1. J 6 lOW PI KE ~ Open 9 A.M.--10 P.M. 7 01ys A Wtok •one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9 i~U ~tlUlC}ij)0 ·:__of Newport Beach • Custom Tailor and Shirtmaker t Westcliff Ph1z.1 • Seventeenth and Irvine • 645-107:2 SUMMER CLEARANCE -30°10 to 50°10 OFF _,.,,,, /./UltfYTY DUHW'Y . CHILOA~lll5 ~ 1085 IRVINE -WEST CLIFF PLAZA HOUSEHOLD ' CL::~~NG 5 0 Blari"ets , .·~ Bed Spreads . · -Rugs, jtc. :1 DAY SERVICE ~ MONTGOMERY f!~~~~~~R~ WfSTCLlff1 PWA Mon.• Fri. t-10 S•t. & Sun.· f ·7 lo.U11191'kord Moster Cliorte "CHRIST•S CARDS 1/2 OFF Now Thru Au9. 31 PAPER UNLIMITED 548-7921 Specializing In Blower Cuts MISS .CHARLENE, M,GR., MR. RICK, · MR. ROY ALVARADO, MISS LINDA, MISS GERRI ~R~u~ 17th & lrvjne e Newport Beach e 548-0460 Open Sundo1y For other fine service • • • • DARRELL DEDRICK'S TUX SHOP DR. LOU ROY ELDER, OPTOMETRIST WES CUFF, MEN'S HAIR STYLING WESTCUFF PLAZA SHELL SERVICE She YOOJI! She marr An( situal I DI no I ceivj hope ing 1 Y< nea tj ing ! pea ti mini "tr l 1'11 t andl ,. can~ kid nexl I I artei Mothers· Adoptin9 Slories by ALLISON DEER.R I Ot llloJ o.u, l"lltl Stelt She Is young. under 18, sometlnles as young as 13. She is: unmarried, married. planning to marry. And, nlore and more. "'hatevcr the situatioo, she is keeping her baby . School counselors. p:irents. ar,cncy representatives :.ind adop11vc parents are a,,king: \Vhy~ Thtre is no pat ans~cr but one 1e:1chcr in a schoo.I a.:e mothers prot.'Tam c1lt>d tht availability of abort.ion. "~lany of the girls v.·ho 1night hnve given 'up theii babies for adoµtlon arc ~men BEA AND ERSON , Editor Thursdll', Jt,11)' If, 1f71 P"t 21 Ct'l\1ng abortions instead. r.1os1 or lhos.t \I ho decide to go 1hrough with U'IC pregnancy don 'l want to give up the b<tby. "They exprt'SS \'ery negali\'C fee.lings, most of thc1n, about adop1ion. Although, !)()"'ever. some have the swue strOfli fe<:lings about abortion,'' TREND REVERSED In the past, a majorily gave up their babies. In the past five or six years, the treod has reversed~ \Vhere once 80 pel'- cent relinquished their babies, now the number is closer to ,w perrent. \\'hy this change! "A lot of the girls feel they can handle thl' sit uation -married or Wlmarried." said an adoption ~ency social "·orker. Added a teacher, "Some of these girls 1\·ere not very close to their parents. The pregnancy seems to bring as many families back together as it separates. So the family. "'hich once sent the girl out or state, is eager and \Villing to help sup- port the expected grandchi ld." \Vhat do the girls say'! There are still those v"ho feel adoption is their most practical alternative. But it is not an easy decision. ALTERNATIVES "I feel a baby is better of[ v.·ith a mother and a father 1vbo can give 'him all lhe things l can't. Even though I love my Own bl1by. I wan! \1'hilt is best."'orM! "TOie. Another added, "I'm not married and I "'o.nt my baby to h1t\'t' both a mother Md a father. I would not want my baby to be depend('fll on \\'t>lfare. I (~I the baby "'Ould be too 1nuch rcsponslblHty. r am only 16. ;,I "'·ant most of all for my baby to be hllppy and loved. If adopti,·e parents did not wantio love a baby. they "wJd not go through all lhis hassle." Amther young moth.er explained, "I'm not ready fOC' rnarriage O!" being a mother. I ha\·c loo 111uch living to do \1hile I run single." But 1hesc young \1'on1cn see1n rar out· numbered by those \,·ho found adoption an unacceptable nllemath r. FEELL~GS They expressed sit.Ong feelings. "I wookt only give up the baby if there was no V.'8Y I could keep it or lf there u•cre serioos problems." "Adoption is taking it out on the baby." "I feel lhat if I go through lhe pain lo have the baby, I'm su rely going to keep it." "It depends on the hon1c situation. rr it's bad. and the adopli\'e parents can give the b3by 'vhat his mother can't, then 1naybe adoption is okay." Otle wrote simply, "I don't like il at all." "I v.·on't adopt because' I feel I can give my baby more than anyone else. So Alternative many people at fiNit tned to lt!ll nie 10 get oin aborlion. ~o \lay ' ~u11i· lhcy'rc Rfler adoPlion. \\'hy don 't ll'll!y ac«cpt ~1\.'11 I say?" "I lhink my bib)' and I ca11 1nakc a i;o or ll." LOV~ CllJLDHEN "I couldn't gl\'e n1y b:iby up, lh"ll "11 J)6rl of nlC and I've alwtiy$ loved children." \Vho lnnuences 1hcir decisions'! ~Jost of the unmarrfr·d girls sur\"t'Yl'd ~1d tht>y mad(• tbe <ll'Cisious thc1nwl1l''· Those \\ho plannt'd to ma rry or 11ho nlready had married l1s1ed boyfriends nnd spouses. "There SCCl"l"\4 to be n1ort• pct•r :l('- ceptanct~ of tht: prrgna1n gi rl. C\"11n u1 junior high." a teacher explained But the girls lht.'111sclvcs don't rrC"dit their decision to JX'CI~. 1><1rl'll1~. other pregnant girls. counselors, teachers or agency represcn!ati1·t>s. "[ n1adc my O\\n deci sion," !hey insist Ho11i· far ahead do these young rnothcrs and n101hers·t1>-b<' look? Some admitihey can't think nny f3rther right now th.a finishing high school son1e 11'ay, then get Ing a job. OECJSIO'S "~1y paren~ 11'111 help some. but I think. I can go it alone." One girl explained. "Single paretlls are bef..'Omtng nlOfe noliccabll'. Single pt.'Ople , 1ncn and \\OIUen. ::idopt. There are many divorced people with children. If they can make it. mayhe I <.'Wl, too." \\'hat nboot tho:se "'ho opted for abor· 1100? One girl sun1n1ed up Hu.• feehngs of sc\'l'ral : "01\41~'. so I lnadc a decision th.11 a fc"' pt-oplc think is pretly av;ful. But It was ~I\' ili'<'i~.on . It I hud1i't had a chance to i;1't an 11bort1on. I'd probably have given !he b:lb~' up. .. t honestly \\":t:, not reOldy !Ol" n1ctllt'rhood. I ha\"L•n 't finished high school . I dldn 'I have a job or a chrince to get 01w I ('1}Uldn '1 nave enmcd cooogh 1nont'y to f1<t"1 us hoth. "A lot of pt•ople ha\'c called mt' :i lot ot lh ings because or 11ihat I did But I'm lhc Ork' 1\ho ha:. to li1•c 1rilh il, V1'ha1ever 1 dN;ide. not an1·ooc else " llo"· do thc.sc 11.irls fl'el nlx>ut other girls 1\hO go 1hrough 1hc pregnancy 8nd kt•1..·p their l)abici:." "I ("(luldn'1 do 11. th<>\' have to do 11•h<it !hl'Y feel is right for ihern. II v.on'I Ix' ca:;y. llo\\' ean it he"' Sonll' of 1hcrn ha1·c ;;ottetl n1arric!(..L but \\'ho kno""S \l"hal will h:lpj>t.'11. ··1ri ;J fe\\" years. tht•y rnay find it too mueh of ll hasi;lc llnd give up the baby 1h~·n. I think thHI 11ould be hard on the b.aby. I gues:-they'll have to find that out for 1hcnt~1..·l1·cs." Everyday Cares Rapped, Too 'I couldn't give my baby up . He's part of me and I've ---alwa-ys-lo ved1-- child ren .' • It's Never Too Late ' OE.<\R ANN LANDERS: Since you pull no punches and deal with every con- ctivable as.ri:cct of human behavior. I hope you will print this letlcr as a "'arn· ing lo others. Yesterday I picked up a nice-looking. neatly dres~ young lad who was thumb- ing a rtde al a busy intersection. He ai>- peared to be about 15 years old. Tu·o minutes after he got into the car he said, "If you don't give me a couple or dotlars 1i1 make a scene at the nexl mtersection and swear you tried to molest me." rm a r.;"omlne.nl man in this city and 1 can't "' ord any trouble. so I gave the kid two dollars And lel him out at the next stop llght. I told my story lO friends at lunch this afternoon and one or them had the Iden· I llcal e>:pericncc just la~t 1\·eck Ple:ise pass the word. Ann . Thun1hs d01\1\ on hitch-hi.ken! -NO NAi\tE IN CLEVE· LA~D. OF.AR N.N.: J'\'e been passing lhat v.·vrd 1or a long lime. And no\\' I'd Jlkt to pass another Vi·ord. So long as people like ) ou knuckle u.nder and allow yourselves to be shaken down, this sort of racket \\-Ill nourish. Every pe.rson who come.' across with "A few dollars" makes lhe game juicier. You should have"lold that little creep to gel lost. · DEAR ANN: !\lost or your medical consultants are men. I'll bet on It. So how can thcf undershtnd n \\'Oman·s sexual fee.lings (or lack of them l art er 50? No ntattcr how good n physician is at diagnosls. surgery or treatment . a male simply cannot fully comprehend v.·hat happens to a woman 's sexual appetite after she has gone through the menopause or had a hyi;terectomy . It makes me furious whe:n I read com- ments from physicians who insist a woman sttould be as good as ever ($0l1lC said better) after she has experienced the change of life or bad he.r reproduc- tl\'e organs removed. What do THF:V know~ -~'AITHFUL IV I SC 0 NS l N HEADER It is an oppressively hot sumn1cr c1·cn- ing. The air-conditioned eool of I he building is, a 1\·clcon1c respite. especially for one ~irl, v.•hose baby is a 1rcek overdue. ' They trickle in , ones. and t1\·os. It's a small group and they kno11· each otht'r fron1 other c\'cnings. Inf:1nts1and toddlers arr left dO\\"nst:11rs 1\'ith ~·si!ters and the group moves upstairs ~or their mon1hly r:ip session. They !hare at lcas1 one thing -1hcy arc single 11·omcn 1l'ho have made the decision to keep their ~bie.s . Tbey range from their teens to late 20s. Some are di\'orce<l. some separated. some never married. One kno1,·s only as much about her child's father as the district. attorney's office can tell her. Ooe Pf the group has d('livered since lhc la~t session and brought her three- week-0ld daughter along.· DISCUS.SJON There is no set topic for di scussion. They talk about their children, current feelings about the al>scn1 fathers, how they 'feel about 11•elfare. plans to mo\'e out on their 01\n. and attitudes about don't kno\\' 11hat thcy'rr doing. They all \\ant 10 be mothers, for then1 it's • drearn ." The rap sessions. conducted by • counselor for th.is large f;1mily services agency, arc not intended to solve anything. But lh('y allow these 11i·omen to vent son1e of their feelings. 111-:ASSlJRAl'\CE l'hQsc about lo rlt-liver get some rC<!SSUiance from those who have nlrcady gi\'en birth. They compare notes on their children <ti various ages and !'.ihare advit'e. At limes. !hey soond lik' any groop of young mothen, but at others, they express unusual problems They must think about dating and ho1Y their dating will effect their children. --r-.1y daughter gets very jl•alous whenever anyone comes over. She doesn't \\'ant me to share. my allenlion." Another doesn 'I date. Insisting, "I ha!' n1en ... then retracts her statement in the san1c breath. "I have my dates pick me up after the kids arc in bed." the mother of two nd- ded, "If they nl't'd a 1na!e figure. they have I.heir grandfalher." child-rearing. PLANl"ING FUTURE The talk turns to the future and reel-\\'hat about-marriage? ll"s a possibility ings about being dependent on 11·tlfarc fpr some. but !hey arrn't planning It . -·-"· .. . _,.,, -----~.are.ex.press _,,. -~--~e111 rl!~r:-'J'htr}rrrct ,.,,,1 ·c~noo to Post l)EAR FAITll: Your atsumptklJ that the onl y v.ay a person can know an)1tring is by experi enc ing It flnt-h1Dd Ill fallaclou!I. A ayntc0loglst v.·bo bu treated ban· dreds I maybe lhouAandl) of wosnen it In· finitely more knowledgeable on ftlls su~ j'ct than one lone femait. "'"° Us only hrr o"·n experience to go by. The bal a~lhorttles, of eourse1 art the \\·omen 1hemtel\1ts -not Jmt Oi''E womQn, but large numbtn:. 'J\iil 11 wtH-tt • ;,I hate the thought of it."' admitted ii alone. but it \ron't be easy. one, "but "'hat else can r do? It's the on· ly \1·ay \\·e can make it. I 11·on·1 go to work until the kids arc in school. I don 't .\\·ant someone else to raise then1 . e1"l'n my mother. I \1ant to do 1t n1y \1·ay." Ali of the \\"Oml'n in this single parents rap session arc !il·inj.! 11·ith !heir parents. It is not ideal. ahvays. but 11 is the only u·ay they can 1nakc it. HO~IE LIF'E Only one. the expectant mother. ha s plans to save lu set up :1n apurtinent Oil her 011·n soon. !·fer hon1e life 11·as 8nylhing but stable. Ha1sl'd 111thout a .father. her mother not ofl<'ll home. she \\·as gi\'en the !ask of ra1 s1ng hl~r yoonger brother and sister 1l"hile in clcm('ntary school. But she thinks a won1an can raise a child alone. if sh<.>'s lherr. "Hut ""hilt chance docs a child have if neither parc•nt is there? If he's raised by a babysitter?" she asks. One girl. 1812. has a 2-year-0ld. She feels, "The junior high school kid s Said one. "If you pick a lemon. you pick a lrmon. \\'hethcr )OU'rc married or no! .. • These 11·on1cn feel the sessions i re helpful. Some ha\'C become good friends. It is at least one place 11i·h.ere they can talk about thrir problems. openly, with people \\'ho hal'r a common ground for understanding. They 11ant lo niake it something more, hnw~·\·er. l·~pccially for the younger participants. 1ho<;e inexperienced in chi!rl·re~ring. "It i~n·1 any l'a.~~-thing being 11 n1other." said on1· "And it's surprising hov.' murh you can forget bcl~n babies." Onl' 11·oman !'aid she \1as appalled at !he \l'<IY so me of the l'('ry youn~ 1eenage mothrrs trratt'd th<'ir babies -"not that the~ abuSf'd thcn1 ph\'l!ically or anything. Ir 1s tht:1r alliturlC'. The\' take care of !he baby as if it 1s ju.<;\ an Unpleasant obliga- tion. not because 1hcy lo\·c it." ~See RAPPING, Paf!:e !·II Caution Sign tht d<1etors jlet their lnfor1nation, t-:1·e~· gynecnlo~ist I ha\e t11n!lul1 ed says a Vi·oman's Sf'X llfr should /\'OT be less inlerrstlnii: :.after rnf'nop:iusr or :1 hys1erttton1y. In some ea~e .... mediration is needed to rrpla<'e lht lost r~lroAen. Jfer doctor c:an determine \lhcthrr or not she uettts thl" replactment. The woman "ho says she lo~t all in- leres( in ser after me1opaase or sur5:ery probably dktn't 'have much intcrt!lit In it befor,. DEAR ANN l..ANUERS · I! makes me furiou s when 1>cople "·ho don 't 3i;:rce \\1th your ad\'icc 11T1~r you absolutely ln- ~11l1ing letters \\'h:il i:-the matter with them? Don't thcv rcalizr you SQ('nd a fortu11(' on thl' ionf{-d1s1:ince 1eff'.ptionc r~searching your answer s and that you h;111· 1ht' Jx·,t l'Ont:u·ts 111 the <'OUnlr}"' \V.hy don'! thry understand that yoo <ton! 1n1ec1 yoursrlf 1n10 1>COple's li\'es" They ASK you for ad1i('e Thi~ letter is !fl ll'I you ~now lha1 1\h1le I don't agrf'P 111th l'l't'r~ lhini:: '11u .~ay I rcspe<'t your 11e11·ix11n1 and I th111k you do a splendid JO b. -llA\VAJI DEAll ii.: Thanli!'i for those kind \l"Ords. i\Tran lellers don't bother me. In variably. the peapl' "ho write them arc mad al someone PISC. · E\·cn if drinking i$ the "tn"' thing In your cro"·d. it needn 't cro\\-d you out. Learn the facts frnn1 Ann Lander_..· booklrt, "Boo1c und You For Teenager~ Only." Send 35 cents in L'Oin :uld n long. !((']f·ndrlresscd. :-hnnped cn\"clopc to the Daily Piiot 1vith your ...., flUClil • • I I I . ' l I. ,!Jt DAJLY PILOT ... 111 h, .~iu· {1 I i. I (I 1( t "' \ . ' ~-• ' - ) •• 67J.2990 ,,. - Fun Cooks ·Every Day at Girls Club OHASll!OI ANAHEIM Anaheim Center NEWPORT dEACH Fashion Island e All J•ift fl11•lt e N• lnh•1t91'1l e Ne ••f1111d1I IANllAMlllC.A•D, MASTll CHAIGI, 'AUL. All.AN CHAIS.I Ovens do double duty at the Harbor Area Girls Clu b. In Teen House {at left, left to right) Terri Morgan, Renee Delgado, Rob- in Youmans and Michele Price whip up a cake. At bottom, Mrs. Alma Minter gives a giggly Elena Stewart instruction on how to bake her ceramics project in kiln. Al<ing with excursions, the center offers leif.ODS in da11ce, cooking, acrobatics, crlfts, sewing and music. ' TOMASSO GALLER¥ I Prese1t1 ALBERT R. KELCH Show rtlfll A119. 4 Westerns, Marines, Landscapes Public cordi11ly invited ... 12-5 :30 p.m. Mond1y thru Frid1y-Si1turday until -4 p.m. 1652 Newport Blvd. 642 .. 692% Costa Mesa OUR TURN TO SALE REDUCTIONS 1/3 TO 1/2 ALL ITEMS FROM REGULAR STOCK Wutcllff Pino Only 1778 lrvl-Newport Opell Mo11. & Th11r. Eves. THOMASVILLE furniture 19th Storewide Anniver:Jar'I _... • Understated Grace of Authentic French Styling Provot•liv1 turv11, ri thly de· i1 jltd br•u putl1, the 1olt r1•!ur,.I b9 ~uty of h111d- rubbtd wood ... your T •b- ledu bedroom i1 °the very •I· 1e11te of li11• Fr111ch Provlll• ti1I 1'ylir19. M1mor1blt ft•· lu1~1 include • 9loriou1 1weop of h11dbo11d . , • neYer-•r1din9 pl1y of light 11nd 1h~dow •9•~n1i 1heped dr•we1 fror1h ... 9t1ttfully 1wirlin9 1pron1 111d top1. In h1 r1dtofl'le w1!11ul v1n 1ef1 11ul p1c1n uilid1 . Ar1 out- 1l111din 9 toll 1clior1 l o• b1d- room 1nd dinir19 room . 5 Pc. GROUP SAU :,llCID 5850 1865 HARBOR BLVD. DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -548-5131 OP" Dolly t to I t.JO flidq t to •-cklMd 111~ ' .. • • \ • • T1111rM!ay July }q 1973 DAIL y PILOT zs~ Family Tree Has New Flower By JO Ol.M>N or ._ Deity PW •t.H Brian &fcKentie r e a 11 y messed up the works. He was supposed to be a glrl. The t.mant.b-old son of Kathi and Robert McKeniie of Hun- tington Beach doesn't know yet that i~ he had been a girl. he would have completed a ·r i ·v e · g e n eration mother- daugbter grouping started by Lana Gallina in which each is the first-born of her family . But the 81-year-old matriarch declart!I, "We'll keep him." 1be four older membus of the group gathered recently to reminisce and take turns rock- ing Brian, their pride and joy. With his birth, four of the five are native Caliromians. Lana, who is called "Nana Gallina" by family and friends. was born in Palermo. Italy, and migrated to. New Orleans. Lana's daughter, st er f i McAu1a y; her granddaughter, Rosalind Pettit, and great- granddaughte r, Kathi. all were born in California . KEEPS TRADITION Five generations gather for some fun. Standing are Steffi McAulay (left) and Ros'alind Pettit. Seated are Lana Gallina and Kathi McKeniie with Brian McKen:zie. Mrs. Pettit admits she had to hurry back from Astoria, Ore., where her husband was stationed in the Navy, just so Kathi could be born in the Golden State and keep the family tradition going. Nana Gallina, a Californian for 56 years. li\'ed in Los Angeles and Newhall. where her husband ~d a business of Get Thee in Right Lane, Satan By ERi\lA 80!\1B ECK The other d<1y as a n1otorist crashed a yellow light. ran over my left foot. called me a vile narr.e and , made an obscene gesture as he drove away, I said to 111y husband, "Some people just don't make friends easily." • ' The incident bothered me. \\1here had coinmon courtesy gone? Is there no place in this \11orld n•berc peace and love abide? No place where we arc cognizant of the feelings of others and sensitive to their needs? "Of course there is," said nty husband. "There is the church:" Last Sunday I was heart_. ,t'ened when the usher greeted me at the door. A sweet lilt le old lady squeezed over to 1nake room for me in her pew. A dimpled child offered to had lhe minister pinned to a no-parking sign. I could hear him praying silently, ''ls this the thanks I get for work.iilg Sundays?" A late arrival n•ho had parked on the chjll'ch lawn and trying lo 'get their attention . It was obvious .. whatsoever you do to th~ lea st of your brothers, he will do it unto you in the church parking lot. I saw the stranger who had wished me peace. "Peace be with you." I yelled. He swerved in from of n1e nearly missing my fender. "And the same to you , fell a!" was under attack by the auto-'-=======================! matic sprinkling system \vas j:r shouting, "God is dead .'' A late model car that "'as1 picking up a 107-year-old I woman on crulches at the door and blocking traffic had :i symphony of horns blO\\'ing) behind it. I An irate parishioner \\'ho l 1vas halted momentarily by a Browrtie cop so that the tra!iic could meve in the opposite direction yelled irritably, "So why aren't you in church, Buddy'!" A man with, a nat was goin~ up and down the line of cars knoc king on their windon·s I. OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Supervision at th• Omega Clinic HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00 • CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT COST A MESA ANAHEIM SANTA ANA Futlerlon·L•H•b•• 116t N•w,ort 1U4 W. •t1wv. Utt2Tu1tl11Av1 (714) 870·9347 646-1633 7784!1 547-6329 ,~l~l t.~!~;!~~,: -1 AT WIT'S END •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• share hi s song book \vilh me. :\ "Slfangcr in hack of me leaned over and "'hispered. "Peace be with you." My spirits \Yere so uplifted that I paused on the church steps to breathe deeply and reflect on the goodness of God's people. "Hey, lady," boomed a voice from a car. '·Ir this 'iO J\1ustang belongs to you. MOVE IT! You're blocking traffic.'' The voice brought me back to reality and the church park· ing lot. A 1\·oman I "·as sure I had seen on Roller Derby "'as I making a left turn into three lanes of lr3ffic. I The sweet Hille old lady l\'hll had made room for me in her pew cut out a car that n·as trying to gel into the exit lane A pale blue station 1,1.·agon (Peop1tgauotes) makes nday rl'.ltlDAY in the l1f.)!ijijl!1)I BERN:\ RIJO -BERNARDO BERNARDO ••\t'C 118\'C more o ( them nnd"at lower prlees th8JI anyone h1 the world." i\ .. ,/~ ' Summer SUPER -· I '' '. • • " j-' ) FLOOR SAMPLES AT PRICES YOU MUST SEE TO BELIEVE ' Each fixture, shade or lamp is clearly marked with the LOW, LOW SALE PRICE. Everyone buys 11 tho same low price whether you are a Doctor, Lawyer, Decorator, BU ilde r, Housewife, Ms., Mrs. or Mr. COME IN TODAY & SAVE $$$$ · DINETTE FIXTURES' from I 095.o $25 "DINING FIXTURES from 19's,o $125 Crystal CHANDELIERS from 2995 to$ 500 OUTDOOR LANTERNS from 6s0,o $65 Italian Gold Leaf WALL DECOR LAMPSHADES Wicker-Cane SWAG LAMPS from All Colors WICKER SHADES from 99s,o $11 95 POOL TABLE LITES from 2995to $I 50 Powder & B1th LIGHTING DECOR from OPl:N 6 DAYS A WEEK CLOSEO SUNDAY • ffWeyt, 1 I •·"'· I• I ,,111. making hand·tooled Jealher booU, ,addles and belts. Ill! cu:sto1ners were tile immortals of the si lent movie era, in· eluding To1n !\tlx. •loot Gibson. and Hari Kari . Rudolph Va1en1ino, s h e remembers, bro.u~ht bootles 11ud a sweater as a gift for one or her newborn babies. The four n'o1ncn, 1\·ho hal't.' no relatives outside Ca\iforni:i, clain1 !hat nothing is unusual about tbeir large fanlll)' ex· cept Its latj!en(·s!I:. Last Thanksgiving !\frs. Pet· tit set a table for 38 in the family room of her Fountain Valley home and e.1Ch year when lhey celebrate Nana Gallina's birthday they plan for around 86. They go camping together. eat together. sew together and celebrate all holidays togeth· er. 'f~.ey are active in in· dividual pursuits ns 1rell. ··1 started bowling in 19~9 and just quit last sun1mer," Nana Gallina said proudly. !\frs. Pettit added just as proudly that her son-in-la\V. Rebert, had made the Dean's List at Orange Coast College. where he is studying lo be an clectrOOiagnostic technician. Though the family is of ltallan descent, intennarriagc has made it like a "tlcinz mix· turt," ~fts. Pe11i1 said. Their dinner table ref\tc:ts this dil'ersity. sne comn1entL'<I. They lellll 10,vard Oriental dishes rather tht1n the trHdi· IW:lnal Italian, hut on holklays the rich food er their ancestor$ is pl"C'pared . One trad1t1on11t t a 1n 11 y fnvorlte that is oltcn nskcd fot is sluffed 11rtichokc!I. fl1rs . Pett it nl.!IO b.1kes bread once in d15'..'0\ll'rfd gold," the mot~rs and daughters are happy with !hell' fninlliPs and tht-ir li1'tS 111 Orange County. And Nrint1 Galhn;i is ''<'11' happy with her f'H!\Y grcflt- great-graodson. lx'cilllSl' her drl'Hfll has been to ho vl' five g~'neratlon:> all together at onL1· und have a picture taken lor JX1Sh.·r1t~·. a \\'hile . 1n11king up to 141- loa'Ps" a thnc. I UFFELL'S \\'ON'T DRIFI APART 0o the nve gcneraUorts llkc UPHOLSTERY to be part or such a large wa-Y .. Wettt group of rel::itives. wbqn often n. lest relatives drift aper\ and ltJZ H_.., l h>4. Now. It 1s c. 1lr~n1 comt true.. Knthl kept her end of tl11• br rgaiu b)' provid111g the fin;11 ptrsotl needed for the picturr. and "'e've done our part b~ ha1·ing l)oily P i lot Photographer Pl\trick O'Do11· nell take 1/1(' p1cturr. l·lcre It I~. Nonu Cu llin~ '\'c ho11C you like it r;--· ~ -. ---~· Ir -,\ '~ , •. H~~d••d Cepl•• I I , ... ~·;;;~-~~·,.. : ~ ,z~1 -c8.~!~~7 ~·~ft~ jj beeome enemies inatea d of 1 .__0_•_••_M _____ ,_.,_ .. _,_,_•_,, friends~ 1 .,...~ ....... ~..;;;.....,...,,,;;.;;;;;:~ .... ~ ........... ..;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, The ansn·er definitely is yes. I 1 "I feel sorry for them ." DTER? !\Jrs. !\1eAulay said of pt..'Oflle who canne11 ge t along ~·ilh the;r relaUvcs. "They ju•t don 't 1,1.·ork at it . We h:"1ve our argun1ents .'' "l\·olhing serious," added Nana Gallina. "There is always room for friends.'' said 1.11'. Pettit. "\Ve have a lol of ft'itnds and they usually end uR being one of the famil y.'' 100ugh they let!St' Nana Gallina that "she ~ould have 1 225 E. OUR BIG SHOE SALE IS NOW IN PROGRESS ... DON'T MISS IT! TERRIFIC VALUES THRUOUT THE STORE 17th ST.-COSTA MESA come to Cali fornia earlier and l.._ ___ _._...,_...._S,.4"'8-· .,'.7,.7.._8..,,....._.,._.._.,.,...,. • • l.ANKAMEltlCARO . • MAST ION (1>4AR0!0 . ~~~~~~~~~~ d avis~brown TIUYIMOtl e ITIUO e Alf'Ll.ulCIS e SALIS e SIRYICI e SIMCI I '41 davls • brown 2 YLU ,of'f• & ....... WARUNTT' Hefe's on ea sy way to keep your family '" ice all summer Jong. Now, you will receive a dependable Frig4 · doire Automatic Ice Maker free when you purchase a new Frigidaire 1 QO•/. Frost Proof Custom Imperial refri- gerator freezer. The 15.2 cu. ft . mode{ shown features o . . . -. 4.75 cu. ft. freezer, three ful . ly odiustoble c a n I i I e v e r shelves plus distinctive teak· wood and smoked onyx inter- iOf" trim. See us today, and put your summer on ice. But M.rry, offer expires soon. ' 0 . ' Noh.wally, plumb4ng installofion is erfro. BIG 3 DOOR CONVENIENCE 20 Cu. Ft. REFRIGERATOR • c-.,hllfly ,,.....,...., .,,.. ... ,~ ........ -.... ,538995 .,,.,, ... ,,tml· .... • $519951 • Frtt1t1 1ttr11 "' 11 2.44 lk, • AllljvtttW. c1111tirfrlr shtl•ff • Adiu1t1IJ11 Sh1t11e1 • A44 ... a11l•1Mllc: ke M,.,, • Add." t UIOlfttlk ice "'•ktr ... ff~''' t.1 tlfrt chff't' 1111w tr 111.,. 11 e1tr1 ch.r11 d a·vis~brown · Dotty. 10 •·"'· 1• 6 ''"'· PAlKIN• LOT lllAll arbor Lltesl ._:: -~;·1 1822 1/2 NEWPORT BLVD. _ ........... ~~ !6 Years of l1ttegrl111 & D~abililll ·~ •M" COfTA MESA • NAHOlt AHA I IL TOllO • SADDUIACX YllUY ~T,;;~;;'====== 411 (111 S.'ltfttet10h Sir.ti rl r., ...... II fwy. lN••I lo Sw-011) °'"' , .•. S.hltlll•Y •. , M6·1MA n.a, •.•. S.NrMy •. , 137-3130 COSTA MESA Phone 645·7301 ::::,::""'' ~ · ~·-l_t ._ .. _sH_1o_N_1_sL_A_ND~·································· ·l 1 I , ,i OAILV PILOT tior~scope: Capricorn Emphasizes P-roperty $89.00 MEXICO 9 'DAYS lt•i.a •1141 ¥1.W ""' INll .. lk l11rtt M .. n K_,., H I ll,t1~rifvl llr <-d:lllM9!! "' ... ,..... M1•klll, l111t. .U., Mtt>ll!Olllllt, OW'!'-· N•VllH, C~11 •NI M111lt.a~ TIM11 1110,, lwi"' llM r~a ,., I e1cltlfll '4'1'• •NI l NMlll• 110fit1 Ill tM City tf ._ .. , Ot1Mltt1l1r1, Mtilkl. itt lllC1¥11 .. h i <1111 MClfftlfttlllllMll .... t1ollnf tl'll lrt11•,.rt1tlell I~ '"' Or•)'lltwllf tflll .... ClllMlrH ll·IL ue.n. )-It IJf.ll. 0.lf'I' • .,..hirn. .,.,,._, ,_,...1'1iN11 11111 1\ltll .. i., S.... dlt<ll ., M.0. ,. M11ko 1'111, 711 f111 FtmMMlt It ... , 1111 •~l'ldt. C1Hfet111t tlMI. • " ., FRIDAY JULY 20 plenty of change and chance for travel. Be analytical. Choose qualily. Ronui.ntic in- • • , teresls are apt to be featured. , ; By SYDNEY O~tARR CANCE!t (June 21.July 22 /: :..Gemini enjoys '' p I a yin g Horhe and career m.ay oppose R:icks." Many persons oorn each -Other . ~teans .d-01nest1c_· u{\lder this quix-0tic sign get in-and profe~sional duties could to trouble because innocent conOict. Strive for balance. Do planks build into serious in· what must be done v.·ithout cUlents. Gemloi requires an alienating . faml\y me~ber . 9~tlet for nervous energy .• !a~ru5. Libra persons figure ·~ . 1n IO)portant ~'ays. .i:~lES (Man:h 21-Apr1119): LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): tun.a: cycle. '!loves up .and you Emphasis on ability to reach ...te. 1n p<>Sllion to win. you people with written word. rQate right . moves at. right Know it and get thoughts. L'<ln· 11JTI.~. Be flexible, versaule and cepts on paper. Call and cor· ~1dent. You can ~fford to respond. Defjne meanings, o~ ~ugh at yo.ur o"".n foibles. Do jectives. Utilize illustrations to 'SO. ,and win friends. Sagi.I· make meanings crystal ch~ar. ~tus, Gemini persons are Ln VIRGO /Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Vfc~re. ... Find out how to legally save ~TAUHUS (April 20-May 20 ): on taxes: other expen~itures . took behind scenes. Reh.16e to Check with close associate. If be rushed into decision. You married, discuss money silua- hRv e right to ask questions. ll?n with mate. Y?~ .\l'ill be Ht.-ject what is superficial. Go given more re~pc>ns1b1l1!y .. ~ou after fa c tu a 1 informatioo. can handle It by ut1l1z1ng .Aquarius. Leo and Scorpio lessons learned in recent past. Qflrsons fil{Ure pron'finently. .LIBRA !Sept. 23-~t. 22!: : GEMINI (May 21-June 20'1 : ~ie lo\v. Y.ou make mistake in ;Acecnt is on how you go about J~1dgment if rushed . Take yo~r 'f\laking wishes be c 0 me t1n1c -let oth~rs ma.ke t~e1r realilillS,. There is abundance rnoves .. You ga 1 1n by listening, d opportunity, movement observing. Don t attempt lo be ' your own attorney. Legal prob- speculation. Your hW\Ches are on target. CAPRICORN llX'C. 22-Jan. 191 : Empha sJs is on property, honte, relations with older family 1nen1ber. Find waya of adding to rec reation a l pursuits. Join forces with SugHtaria.n. Look beyond the immediate. Refuse to be discouraged by details. AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 18i: Short jouriiey, special call connected with relative - these are featured. You find From Page 21 lem requires impartiAI ex- pert. Steer clear of e1noliona l ,. Jr,' outbursts. . ,. ~ SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: · New approach to Work, health · :: .. Rapping • It's a hard enough thing to ~die when you're older. ,Jwve been married. and have a• stable hon1e in which to l'.aisc your children, one added. • :·,But each one has made her ~OWD decision to keep the child. ~ 'J1ley are a little older, Rerhaps a little wiser. And ; tliey worry about the young '9fles and their children. ' problems is necessa ry. Give yourself a chance to rebuild, to regain vitality. Avoid ex- tremes. Check diet. nutritional ici;. requirements. Take nothing 1· for granted. No one is giving you something for nothing. SAGI'ITAllIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 \: Favorable lunar aspect coincides now with change, special relationship, dealings with young person. AcCent creative endeavors. 1&f' Fine for spor1s; recreation and ~~. . !t: ,, out things -some key ques· tlons are answered. You are enlarging viewpoint e v e n though process may seem slow. Leo and Scorpio may be involved . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 f: Ideas click to tune of profit. Know it and invest in your own abilities. Don 't pern1it modesty to block progress. Pay and collect. Refuse to sell yourself short. •Gemlni, Vlrgo persons are likely to be in· volved. Golden Altniversary Marked . . We htve managed to PIJfCl'la!.e the stocks ol lluet companies in tilt p.ast four wee•s. Each of these companies was ce1sing the jewelry busineiS ind wanted cash for their merch~nd1.se. We we1.e able to pur.chase ap· • Pf01im1tely SS00.000 worth of f111e 1ewelry. Oriental Ai l Obiecls. and cultured pearl strands al Oist1,ss Por:'s. These items were purchased ftom Tre1Wfe llland and Four Winds lrading Co. in Hong Kong, and Ball· • rich and Kantor ol Btverly Hills. Ouf!ng our one week sale. July 18 th1u July 2S. we intend lo pass these. ~v1ngs on to you 1n the form of discounts from 30 to 60%. [ach of our ,IOl'es will h~ve a fabulous se!ect1on of rare, precious, and sem1·prec1ous stone jewelry, all set in 14 and 18K gold. Each sto1e 1'1'1!1 also have 1n • e•cess of 100 strands of genuine cultured pearls. The Chinese -'rl Cir jecls. which consist of carvings ol lvo1y. Jade. Rose Quartz. and Lapis will be at our Long Stach S!Oft only. Fifty guests attended the buffet dinner given by -¥r. and Mrs. Harley Host· erman in their Costa Mesa home to celebrate their golden wedding anniver· sary. Among those attend- ing were their son, Burton Hosterman; d au g ht e r, Pearl Lex, two grandchil· dren and a great.grand- daughter. The honorees were married-in-J:;os-An· .. geles and have been Costa Mesa residents since 1966. I We truly tiel1eve you will nevtf experience a better opportunity to buy. listed below are but a few ol the items lhal will be Oil ~le. I_ I ' -·--1 • • • DPll·lllBY·SAPPMll[ Many styles w1tll diamond~. !BX gold (M[l.llD·llllT ·SAf'f'Mll( [leRant Sol1tt1rts in all precious stones \· flRE OP.ll·JADE All are llandmade 1n !SK WG llllY ·Ul'f'K!IE ·OP Al Many multi·~tont creation~ 1n sol•d £Old CAl'IEO IY6R1£S -tAIVEO lAll£$-$JIUfF IOTTLCS -IOSE OUAlll -lAPIS Kingl arid Queen~. 81rds, 8.uddhas. liof!.f:l. Chicken~. L•ons. Incense Bur· 'IM:l'i. Otd Mt11. T1Qtrs, -nd lceMs. 500 CULTURED PEARL STRANDS 2/3 OFF Each s!Ole will ha~e ovrr JOO sllallds still on the Oflt1n1I h111\\ 1n 11n1· form, and baroque shapes. pink. whltt. 111d blut 1n colo1. MJfly st1ands ,. Mt already Slrull( with tlasp, More thin half will 5t l1 11om Sl4 to $'10 • ST..\gf ' '· f. SIAM ";t«f1~ v,, '"'Oii ""I.'"'• w•• ~ .......... .:: ......... ~'" (• .. •(;! La~ge Sizes SIZES 36 to 46 Of covrse you con still find summer things ot Ello Nor'tl We pion it 1ha1 way. We know'you ore still looking forward 10 vocations and pool parties and long '-~ week.ends. Who WCi11s '"\ to wear tifed old 1 le.ft.overs? See our 3'eot summer sportswear :ind dresses. Some reduc:td ... some not. Sunday Shopper? Fullertttn & Huntingto11 &each Optn 12 to .5 {( Stmllor To Merchondlse In Sto<k I~ a No~HALF-SJZE SHOP COSTA MESA 1105 NIWf'OIT llYD i North of 11th Stroot) HUNTINGTON BEACH 14 HUNTING-TON CINT!R CN•lt to olli!•r Ires.) FULLEJITON-224 OtatttJI .. Men, ot Oro1u1othorp. & Horbor Mo1,. Tl111,. •• frl. 1 .. t-T .... •WM.· Sot. 10·6 (?IJ ) 1•5·5621 or 121JI 196·1916 $117.00 MEXICO 13 DAYS IF TODAY JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you Jove to eat - you also are fond of music .. ]';!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!ii!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; You get chance for new deal ll In August and opportUDlty to make more money. You can be n\OOdy. You are loyal, at- tached to larnily member ot opposite sex. You feel as if you ha ve not lived up to poten· tial. By October, you will be released from emotional burden. Sagittarius or Gemini person could figure in im- portant manner. A NEW ANO EXCITING PRE-SCHOOL .. HAR,BOR VIEW PRE-SCHOOL 169 1 NEW MotARTHUR BLVD. HARBDR VIEW HILLS EXCELLENCE IN EDUCATION HALF DAY AND FULL DAY PROGRAMS OPININCO SIPTIMIH I 0 544-0926 SAVE 1/3 TO MORE THAN SELECT GROUPS OF LADIES SPORTSWEAR, DRESSES, LINGERIE, SHOES LADIES SPORTSWEAR -LINGERIE 3404 Via Lido -Newport Beach "One of the Lido Shops" • ' FURTHE,R REDUCTIONS . _1200 ._ WOMEN'S. SHOES . ----· ALL SIZES AVAILABLE • BUT NOT IN EVERY STYLE e AIR STEP e ENNA JETTICK e FLORSHEIM. e COBBLERS "' e RISQUE e VALLEY e HUSH PUPPIES e PENALJO ONE GROUP ONE GROUP HANDBAGS 1I2 WOMEN'S SUMMER , s10 CLOGS SANDALS ASST. COLORS OFF MEN'S SHOES CHILDREN'S SHOES FLORSHEIM SHOES BOYS AND GIRLS 51790 TO 52280 STRIDERITE & LAZY BONES VALUES TO $17 VALUES TO 40.95 ENTIRE STOCK 20% 5890 AND ~90 DISCONTINUID SILICTID ·E.T. WRIGHT o l•OKIN snL11 STTLIS SIZES .. SHOES OFF ~ CHILDREN'S s5 WINTHROP Y2 CLOGS EVANS VALUES TO AM BASSADOR 24.00 OFF HUSH PUPPIES Opj,, Monday & Friday nit• 'tll 9:30 p.m. VALUES TO $12 ALL SALES FINAL! ltnk1mtrlc1rd · M1sttrch1ro• Hemphlllo Cherge 54 FASHION ISLAND NIWPORT CENTER -644-4223 Also Alhambra 1 ( I t \ I ! t c I ' ( 1 ' • t Inc omes ;Sliow R ise WASHINGTON IAPJ - 'Personal income of AmericaRl increa11ed sharply In June, lhe Com- 'men:e De~rtn\ent said ·Wednesday. It reported person.II.I in- come increased $8.4 billion in June to a seasonal ad- justed annual rate of $1 .027 billion, an Increase during the month of eight tenths of one percent. The June figures showed personal i n c o 1n e in- . creasing at an annual rate of about 9.6 percent, about equal to the current rate or inflation. Westgate Case Def e11dant Denies P1·ofits 'Scheme' SAN DIEGO (A?\ -rinan- cier C. Arnholt Smith, his \Vt$tgate..California Corp. and !our other defendants in a suit filed by the Seeurities & Ex- change Commission, deny any impropiety in what the agency calls a n1ullimillioo-d0Uar "in· tercompany" network of pro- fits and hidden los.ses. IN A FOR~1 AL reply by one defendant. Beverly Hills real estate man Irving Burg swore that he originated a plan to buy 9,000 acres of land ii) the ~in Jooquin Valley. t "I was unaware that my purchase in part enabled \Vestgate-Califomia Corp. to realize a $5.3 · million in· terco1npany profit," B u r g said. "I simply tried to make the best deal." Oil Firm Chiefs The SEC amend.00 its suit Tuesday to accuse Smith of selling some $.J million in subordinated capital notes of United States National Bank, of v"hich he is the main s!ockholder, during April and l\1ay. Get Subpoenas THE NOTES allegedly were purchased by Smith from the bank In 1972 and sold through First California Co. with the "aid of Coen," referring to M. J. Coen, a Kansas City financier and l ong -time businCss associate of Smith. SAN FRANCISCO I AP \ - The state Public Utilities Commission opened its Northern California hearing into the energy c r u n c h Wednesday by issuing sub- poenas to the presidents of Shell Oil and Texaco Corpora- tion. PUC President Vernon L. Sturgeon said officials of Stan· dard Oil of California, Atlantic Richfield and Union Oil had a.ccepted invitations to appear voluntarily at the hearings. "WE WERE notified Texaco did not plan to participate and tha~J)hell has had trouble in making up its mind," Sturgeon said in opening remarks. "'Well, we'll help them." He said subpoenas were to be issued to both companies Wednesday for the presidents to appear at Friday's session. Sturgeon said the com- mission is attempting to "get to the bottom" of the current fuel supply proble1n and to see I what step may be taken to prevent interruptions in power service in the near future. THE PUC ORDERED a broad investigation into fuel shortages and the ele<:!lrical energy situalion on July 3. Sturgeon said sessions in Los Angeles last wet?k showed lhe problem was deepening and that the Los Angeles Depart· mcnt of \Yater and Power will have exhausted its s torage supplies of oil by ~1arch 1974 and tht::reafter will b e chronically short of oil. The first firm to present testimony at the start of hear~ ing in the state building here was Pacific Gas & Electric Co. l\1ALCOLl\.1 H. Furbush, assistant g,eneral counsel for PG&E. said the utility believes the state is confronted with a '"very serious short range shortage of fuel" for generating electrical energy. MEET The sales were made v.·ithout informing buyers of interests held by Smith in the bank or the fact that it had 211 million in loans outstanding to \Vestgate·California, the SEC alleged. Coen, in his reply Tuesday to the original charges. claim- ed he realized no profits from dealings with \Ve s t g a t c.. California. He said the suit fails to specify what duty Coen owed to the San Diego-based conglomerate of which Smith is chairman. LAST \\'EEK Smilb, a close friend of President Nixon, and Westgate-California filed the ir answers denying the charges. There were other denials Tuesday from U.S. Holding Co., U.S. National Bank and President Philip A. Toft of \Vestgale-Ca Ii forn i a. MARTltA RANdAll AT CAlifoRNiA fEdERAl S~viNqs Learn new ways to beat the high cost of.eating! r_conomist * t-1ome 11 t,1ar1<ets lof p.alp s d p.adio star *T'I an J FREE Skows fuR-WoMEN WEdNESdAy, July 2~ 10:00 8 .ITL Meet Martha Randall 2:00 p.m. Guides to Success In Real Estate 7:30 p.ITL Mr. Blackwell Presents• Famed TV home economist Martha Randall tells you smart. thrifty ways lo stretch your food budget and cut calories and comef'S. A ooe-time persooal appearance. Delightful' Experts give you money-saving i;ps on buying, financing, improving or itwesting in a home and property. Lea~n ho_w to avoid costly mistakes. Questions and answers follow. Fashion, facts, figures and fun wtttt TV personality and~esigner Mr. Blackwell. Bring him your fashion questions. DRAWiNqs-No AdM'issioN ChARGE ·Admittance lo lhe Mr. Blackwell Progral1'I b't ticket OIWy. Tickets llmiled. First come, lirsl served. PICI< yous up at Calllomia F~.al $avlngs.. CAlifoRNiA fEdERAl SAviNGS ..t LAM,,.,..,,..,_· NelioO'a L.w9"11 r....-. 2700 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa Men Welcome ''Ir's A WoMAN's WoRLd '11" • .,___ I ~or l"ltot s11ff "11t"' Buikling Goitag Up Towering 246 feet above the horizon near Big Cao· yon is the skeletal beginning of Irvine Tower fl.4 under construction at Newport Center. The $12.5 million building is due for complcti~n _in April, 19?4. C. L. Peck is the contractor and \\111\1am L. Pereira and Associates are the architects. The 16-story building belongs to the Irvine Company. 'Co1npatible' Irvine . ' Industry Area Cited 'J'he head of the Irvine Com- pany's Industrial Comp I ex sayS the company's ind ustrial planning attracts bu s ine ss because it maintains the same hwnan values as its residen- tial planning. Thomas C. \\'olff Jr .. presi· dent of complex, told an Orange Coast Y~1CA Century Club luncheon this week that the company has been able to attract 1,029 b o sines s es . em ploying 39.000 workers in eight years to the company's industrial acreage. THE CITY OF Irvine has 550 of those businesses and nearly 18.000 or the workers, Wo!U added. "Industries are alwavs the cornerstone of econ 0 m i c growth in any cily, but in Irvine, we ha.ve attempted to make the architecture com· patib\e for the worker," he ad- ded. "We have found that a good architectural design help.$ both the emplo~r a n d tl1e cmploye." \Volff said. "To the employe. a well- desiy:1ed fa cility shov.·s that !he employer cares about his employes." he ndded. "l\1ost people who are hiring tod ay have been impres.sed with the quality of worker thev find in this area." \Vo\ff said . "IT l\fEANS something for a person to live by y,·her~ they y,·ork. and the company is trying hard to set high residential and industrial stan- dards," the industrial chief said. \Volrf said the company oy,ns 3.000 acr~ of industrial land around the Orange Coun- Marine Air Station and another 1~000 in Tustin, with full development for lhe areas expected in 10 years, he ad- ded. Gas Exploration Fund Settle111ent Criticized SACRA.l\fENTO f AP) -The chairman of the State Board or Equalization has attacked a $31.5 million exploration fund for El Paso Natural Gas Co. as a "giveaway settlement" by federal officials. Copies of the Jetter dated July 11 v.·e re releasro Wed· nesday by Bennett. who is a self-described consumer ad· vocate and longtime foe of El Paso Natural Gas. BOARD CllAIRl\I A~ Viill iam Bennett threatened to demand a congressional in- vestigation in a letter to FedcraJ Power Commission chairman Jotu1 N. i\assikas. TllE SE'JTLE~tENT affects payments to El Paso by Pacific Gas & Electric. Pacific Lighting Co., which fn turn supplies Sou1hcrn California Edison and San Di ego Gas and Electric, and Nevada Power Co. 1000 -ORDER !11 Beautiful ff • ' ,.(, Stick-on YOURS • \ LABELS TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Your1elf or • Friend May be u5ed on envelopes •• return address 1abels. Also very handy •• identification labels for marking personal items such 11 books, records, photos, etc. l abels stic k on ql1s1 and may be used for marking home canned foG.d items. All labels ire printed with stylish Vogue type on l ine quality white g ummed p•ptr. .----------------------, I ,~I if! !flit '"'""·'"'.,,,-" ... ii.IS•= I I P'!litl """'"" UMI OI• .. r.o. kl!'* I Cftll "'"" e.Mt. ~ 1 I I I I I I I I I I L -~-~~L~T -~!~T!~~----J § Compan y Ear nings Reported DAILY PILOT J5 OVE R THE COUNTER' NASO Lllllngs for Wedno..i.y, July 18, 1973 • . T~ •110lt1IOM ,.. !11tth 11 , 11'. ~-· C~ 10 11 l•lly (I ll J"' ~·· .... • ~.. lh l''• "l'O 0.-11 • 11 11 •1 1 .. nOi• l ' v , .... "' 1•• .,. 1,, !'•'••''" Co , 10 1111, II l&or..i ...Cltllofl OI ttll L•J fl I '• ll••("' '•YIOt W JI ;• ~1 . t«IWllt.• OHlett. ~O to n·: r., )OJ XII frl.cm t 1 1 . •r• lllct~ •lld °""" i" A'"~ •1 •'''"'""° It It Tift_,. I I ~ Oii\« It ll ~(I Mfll l i •«Oii E• J'• ~ .. T lffl I'• I \ ~ ~-:..::.·'"!.: ~ 2~!o. 1"' Ill"" P1c "'' 11•1 'I"" DC ''• , .. clDW 11••1"'~ t''"" ,..1 1J "119<1 Elt-c ll'• •• 1'-1• ""' ,.._ 10' 'I,... l f r>e CIUOI•· t••l>I' 1< "' >..I lltll v"'" 11'• U'• fr•t1 C.11 (II 11 • ·1-r r ur11 S ... , '~1 00 not !!'("!-O••• 1:v 10 10>, ll•• Pit• • t •o 1111 G•1I" 14 If., " ~ '~ • •1111 rn .. ,l .... "'61"l Ii«~ " lt'• ?I 11 ........ ll 4-l\1 ~l ,,., Octll 11•1 u _,, o< <Qml'f\h !ot•l'll\ W ii 16 lllv•I Ml )/', 21 .... '"'°"' Fii •• , '" c.:-~at to tbt: Dallv Pilot •,',""~·-'",' ®-.~.·, •.·.~.,',", 1~• ll'• Rwd I' • lO'> l1 u .. 1 C•11r IO'• i' ~· l "' ••• "" l1:l :t:l''lloort DI• 11~.1 ~1 ,un-~pl lllo I• l\ttra.iry Savln"S & l.oan ,,~.,.••"'(11';1,,,.1 ~.1;~ "i '• ; •o111 .. , 11 1•·~ 11•. u11Ar1 y., !'• • & ~ ..... '' '111ou•• to u•. ll'•\VS R~ N• ''• ~ A.s3ociation of tl untin~ton ..,,.~..i~!~ ' ~~ .. 11~ Fe ~ • i ,•11100.., F"' 101, 11 us ,,. L 1H1 11, •·· h h ed I Jll'I ll I"' l oil ' M t•' •'' lluc~< P" II 1••' VlllV Fd• 1$ 1 OCllC, llS ftpo1'1 e.amn~S v " !di:l't::,\f,.., \ r,',11'.'llu>I 31ov :iti'1 2P 11Vnv MOOI )\• ~ll Of 3-t cents for the first siJC ACw""1t ll'' Jt, kf•c"' c 1•, is•: ~·o• AO• •'• e r V•uM t<o 1\(o '• Alf• 1'1o I~ t',IHOM .. a f '• tO'• S•l•m Co ... I 1 V4r>Ct 5., t t months or 1973 as co1nnnred Allco lnd 1. u .. 1koo<I" 1!"' ,,,, ~•m111•1 11•, 11._ .., ... lh"-10 ... 11,_, r· "le<! ftt~ Jl 1' lllunt MIQ I , 11 Sthe•r• ,,,, l•'•tV•n $11(-tO.. '(\ v.•ith 24 cents for the oor-... 11..., Tl'I 1,,: 11t! 10.•11 ( 11•. 11·· ~<"°" 111 ~i " v1c1or1 s• " 11 di 'od f I""" ,.__ AllVfl II• •'• S'1 t<y1•rr C 11 • n .. Scott IM 11)1., 11'1 lolk\H Sv1 }l'r ''• r('spon ng pen o ;u.r.. u1e Am •c»""~I 11 ll'• I""• wot 11 lt•, ~"""l c. ••· 1·, 1 v1i1>&I So: 1t. !' • rd f ·ngs A ArTC•f1 J', •'• ""' N11<I 11 21.._ ~cnl)1>1 t< 11._ 1t't Vol ~ 12 I ' previous reco or earn1 . Ami!• lb ,,, , •• 1nl0t•• 1 , ,., scr1o1o 1 , .. ,., w.111 NG 11•. ,,,_. •fl ad"USl.rn('nt for snlif Am Eull" ~'> ~ ilnr!!l (•~ U •i ~f. Wtla 110.. 11•r W••I• Ml 11 If Cl t'r J "t' " AM FlflCl l•I• lo • I Me•< i.n ) • 1l'o Sv M'°r(fl "'• l)I > W11rm" I 1'• I The s i x. m 0 n t h lotn l "•mm ~".'~ .! · •. ~. •• ',",,'m,• , .. ~.· " •• \~murr ,. 11 ""'"° II• '"" ... " -&< ~ I ••· ••• '' \t~n Ur> 19•, JO Wl«den ''• lh represents an increase ol 4!'i AMJr~ \v 1' Ii•' •~ 110.w "' 1~ • 1\, 5,..1,. co 11, ,. , Wt•<tl w1 1>U 1 ... percent over 1972. :::: J~'; r~:: f;;:11 :~~~~c g i°; J: Sflo<..., fl... ''• Wtll,.. M 1J U•t A"'-v •5'• .. • Jf...,.in t, t', Somp..,.. II IJ Wt!C•I Pl !•o I Memiry also posted a Tl("\\" ..,.,._.., '" ~ J~. •. , Jtt ""Fr l , • • • s ... P Toh SI'· )''. w11 P"fl/ tYto 1..,. I I i -AN< ... £ tr, 10•, Jo.I"" M 1J'• 16'• Sttld P•1> !Ohl)'_. Wt•rr f-d JO :IO'• record or Iota assets lU ex-"''! lflCo 'l1, u·,11(11.., \• 1~ 11 , s~"· 1e.1, 11•. wni ..... r 1 1•\• 1• . • "'"'" M•·• 4, ) K•lv•r ( )lo • S••n•ctv I '''• lt'tWll,n!ot J I• l•I• cess of $130 mtlhon, reprts<'lll· Ano Au• 10 11•, (tt<n f~ 1 S' S•d 110'0•1 tp. ,.,, w 1n1 P-T 1)1. '"' • " ~. •·\h or 19 pc rC'f•nt "'"""' Hf l6 111·111.tl!wOd 1&: ,.,:SI~ H ...... ,, ,.. •• Wi•c Plt 1•i.ii I" mg .. I>" \ Ar~lcll • • IK"' (l>l'fl 10' \1 Sl\"I II• ...... '"iWOlld , ,~ 1,.... r-. over )'e.arend 1912 and SI per·"''"' Col• 71., n.., Kt• U.t• 1 , •'• 1•••1t."' s 10 10•. 1 w.,,1a s .. 11• 1 1•• ... All G• ll I• I "''I Kr•h FD IJ 1 h S••o• T..: 11\, u•. W•lol'll w J'~ ~ ... cent over Jw-.e 30. 1972. :~:~ l'.~ 1~ •• 1~~: Kt • c.... , , ,., ,su"'~ ," • ,••1 ,,,..... Cp •:~ .!, l\Alrd W• J)', I! .. l(t••I I~! I• I• Y~"f O 10 I 'I Y•llO F'1 JI..;...,. d llbk..-F• lJ !-''-ll(MS lf\11 l'o ''ISl•bo Fa I lltOI• Co "-1'1> • /tlori1tP L• • ea1c1w11 L 10 01,l"n•r>e "'' 11 'H'• ll•lly Mii u o1 ICOP•• Pr 11 f l Spttial to thf" Dally Pilot g~~,11~~ ~~ .• ~··~~~.,£I•·;''; American ~-1 arine I~ t d . ::~~. ~ Jj Jf·· t:~ .. ~·' 1::: 1;.~ I 0 ;llrt!lt 11rtit•e r\ey,·port ~~ch reported a e •• ,.., \,, •c L<111(e 2so..1~1• _ _ ~-__ --·~ I 8•7 fJ 29 f\ ... ll.,. F ''' •'• L•.,.ltr ( ~'> ,",:,' NEW YONIC lUPll -Ir. I() m • loss 0 Sl ,287,1 or .. Cl •••In (p •It ••• L•iv 8ov ii•, ll •<llvt "i:.c~. "•dfi:I"" 11,. 01( n1.iPir.1 share, on 60 percent hii;:her ::~r•vP~ci !:"-~'.; tr;:i,~~ ~~ ,., "' w..an••o•• •• •uPOll'"'1 11v NASO. , I .__ 8 L Ol' c • I.loo:-Volum• 11<1 A1k ... C,_.. sa les Of $18.2 million Or trn: 11'1t!:. ~t;, 1i; ~,;ti.'.. r~-:;~t ,, : 1 R~"• Or11n 12l,.OO 11>0 II '•+ '• Year ended J\larCh 31. 89 D<m lO lOl. I klfl Cl~• ;•: j r~i IL~:: A"I l:l:~ 1l:: ,;::: ;: ' . Bird !ont 'ti '' loc•'I~ ll it'l l • The Joss resulled prlmar1lv fl(>b Evn• 1"-""Loe"" co }f;; st 0~~~":01,~• ~ 1°"'·!r~' 6.,1•':,,! :• . 1. · 110(>11'1 No :0 ;in1. .-I . lrom a change 1n accoun 1ng e"fl(.o 1 21'" n•. M•d ..... 1••• 10•1 ..,..,,, E •i>r~•· s1 .ooo S1 '1 }t + 1 d ll rlnkt In ''• 101~ M11 Rnv s S'• ttlr!" e ,,,, S0,000 ~• jE for research, development an er°""' ..,, 1t. ,~. M•ll(~• ll1• 1'i•. F•~nt1it. L 1111 •• r.o 1)'' ' to j I' •--\ 1. l "'t°' IS'• 1s>, M1rl r Fri tt'I 701,18'""'"'"' ~1.fOO 4-1'• Iii+\~ start-up expenses. u"' U< mg ...:'•• ''• "'' M1•v 11v ,., , ,,,, cr..u M1"" co •l,100 4't , ~,,_ ~ • • $400,373 in unamortir.ed ex· :~~~~ l,.,1 ~~ ~:: Z;~0~~· ~.,. ~~:: NA!D ""'~-•Od•0.•o,:ioo, •dv•flC•• penses incurred in "'""'or ycaJ"S , .... T ... 'l1' 1•·-Mt«"' Ii'" 11•. 10t al!(u...., m . u"l:l'l•nut<:t tM01 '°'•' I"' 1111 Saw s•, MHtottn " SO lOU. and SI OM 989 in such expenses t" v1Ps 1• 1•" "".,."' tn s1' 11'I--------------• ' l\mp Pl 101} 11•, MtVf' Fr 11'· 11 ... incurred in the List year. ~1111:• • 11:0.. 1''• M1u1-411.< "'• Gniite r •· .... • ~~1-8 . I I l'ltnl Co j>, ••• Mp!\ C.~• 11'• mo '~ ...... ~· Oper.llmg resu !S were a so .. .,.. co >-~,'''·Ml"" Fdll s•. , ·1----·--- d I rl I d b ltlB•l• •1 11 ,11~1 c l ll\7T a verse y a C'Ce ':' 3(h•h1« M"ifu ID" :i.' N-VfP.-(UPl)-1,..IOll-... u,1 . ch I r l~S us 0 • n lltOw~ ••«•• INl1 ,...,, Gtll'led I~ foreign eX ange OSS 0 llfll U A ~1' !! n MO<><e SI ~\'J ~:; mot I •<'II IO!ol 1r. mHI IM1fll ""'..t:•(rnt $103.838. prim a r i I Y at· :::,~,o 1;~~ 1i·1 ~:~;:1"c1 01. u ::.,.,_'e~·~eaua~ 0':e""' ~t:~/r• -" tributablc to the de \·aluation ~,cs~~ ~:;~,:;mi' c~~~ : ... !:":: 01~:~..!':'r:i";~'1::. ~":'.':::, :-:. :Z 01 the U S dollar mwTI P 711• 11'• NII UlllV I'• I'• 0tlce d...:I rt. cutrenl I••• blll !WW•. · " ' ontllll P ,,_.~Ii'• HI .YOIC• 10'• 11'• GAIME•S outi... u•, II'• NI Pa•tlll ,., 1·~ 1 LIO."• H-~ ....... UP "'·' e Keysto11e S &l4 ~;~: .. c: 1!4 1~ ~:,~~"'c0 ,~;~ J?:: ~ =,~i' ctr r::+ l:! ~: ~g lurl Noll II I~ NEnci GE lt'• 1Vo • Pw1:>!01nCo 111< l'ol 4, Up J.5,0 Keystone Savings and Loan an1, 1nt1 2~,;· 2'"' "'' N11 c. ,.~. 1i•1 ~ Sc•n 0~11 co "'t " Vr> 7s.o 1n~ M ? ' Nkoltl I<> I I t Ta .. •w•• In( I'• '•UP U.O Association reports record a,;,' 00•,•, '," •,;•, 1uei.en "' ,.,, lO 1 Cmot••rln '" 1!" 1 1•1 up 2.4.• I Nlfl••n 11 ?llo '911 I ~1-•'1 Sn<TW I "> ~ !\" UD 20.0 growt~ in earnings, ~n ''f, ~ fl;: t;., Nord••• 1••• "'' •a •• ..,., "'11" '' ~' u11 1•:0 recordings and assets during ~or 1n •'• l'' H;n t.t iG 10•• tl>'.a l~ ~,,::1p.~:,'~ 1 :.1~+ 1:: tl: 1l! . . r IS;\'P All JO s Ho•lll CD .,., .. 11 LookOI\ 1rw:r11 ••••. •1 UD I" !he first SIX months 0 1973, O.th J"ll ~·· )I, N<><I• Rt 1'·· l IJ "••II" 1Nlu•1t , .. t •• UD ,, Id \" c K Delu•• c 31 ]T"'o o~~wd ... '"' )''• ,, W'' "' ' ' ' ' Rona Y. aspcrs, eystonc.>011m Cr• 11)'~11hOce•n 0< ""''°'~l!Hot=.arn 1~ 1~ •• ; "~= '1 h · rt!(:! Dl1m HO IO't IO•o Octtn E~ 1 I•~ 16 No5!1\r>+:o .lZI> 16'71 ?'• Vr> '111 C a1nnan, repo Che. f' . ~le~ A~~ r, 7')' Otnar Ml l'~ l .. ll 1~• 11.oill\ 1.0011 If'•• 71, !Jo ·' Earnings for t 1rst six • ., "'" • • · ou11t Lo• '"° • 11 "'"'"~~" p,. .. , 10•.+ 1. u11 1s1 "!ti l · • JI'' Qofi..y IA H ll''t lt Smhf\110 FOOd 7·,, l• VD 1S 0 months of 1973 were $331,664 , 8~~10~" ,{:: 7!;; o0',,,F .... ,o 1~ •h '° N11Ll~•1v co ,.,, 1 v" !" IO 69 h D J l't' JO• c._.1 11 It Jl (mol• Ot•l<m s..... •• Vr> l 1 or , per s are. as conl· 0:;.f b~ ,• 1, • O•mon1 , •·~ 11 .-1wcoc1 O.:nc• 1''•! p , v" lJo '"""'I Mo7500 •116() pero 111 o 1~,· ~.,ovrmv• l'l e'"•2lA1wooo:10cn ul 11'1 1 U11 n• pa • ...,.,o~. ,orq!J. e""11L Jl''•Jl',O"•"NA• 4"''"'''"""""d" 11 •• • .. v111l ' share, in mid 1972 : loa n Ef"",.,~11 11i.:13•'01;1ecro •'· •\.o?JDlgrt<:Dmilt'1 l"; '• uco 11 · El Nox•I 4', S • P8b1T It .0' t 'I l05Elt5 rerordfl\aS\Vl'rC$13 .850.000 ;.SEnfrgv C 1>1 1»Pacc•t 3111.ll!O l FuMll>a Syu 1•-It O~':'i -ti',',': b Eau SI. L 11" ,,., PH Gclm ir~• n, 7 c ... t-d IM 11,_ '• . compared to ~7.225.00CI: assels. Fth•n A , •• , n'> Ptc ,L11tn >-'~ ll"• l RN11.i11111 T«1t ''•- ceed. m '\\' had E•K" In s>. S"'l P1Sa llrd t>;; t>i 4 TtH1 C"'Of"'" l'• '• oowex 1ng.,..,,m1 IOn, El P•ln1 •'• 1•,P•n Dt:OI IJ ll1.• IG•" '"·' '"'" ,,, '• groy,•n by O\'er 13 percent ;is ~.1, L.,.. ''· ,,,. P1u1 lttv n .. i1•1 ~ i\'f,"11'c1nc~' 1,'• • !l'n • · F•rlon El 7' 7''• P111 i.v P Jl'1 .,._ P , '• ~· compared to a 7 percent ~:~ 0~~ 1~! 1~~ ::~''N C5•: :~~ l; : ~:;,.;:~...:l~:'P 71.',_ ;. 0~ A grrowth in n1id 1972. F!tt11•"' n•. 13 "•G1& w 11 ""' 10 11u1111<1s"" 01a 1•,... • 8" ''' e.,..111 If''>'°" p 1 ........ 11 ?1 11 S•tt• &. 9,,.... I •-), II . Special lcl the Daily l'ilot '" T;F I" ti"• 11 p:i,0 Lw '" ,,, l,', ~l!noo,.vT,•~.60 11,:• 1 04~ 1 It! W11F I'• 1'o l"l N 5 >'" ·~ ul11ran , .. .., -" OI Fi1<0 11\C ,,, Iii''> ( IY ~· • II Acct"ltr•!Ot~ 1' .... -'ii °'•' • Do.··11e 11 ,"-' ..... Fr,. felt!> 11~• 17\o :!~~~!" w '!" ':,., 1S AIOOf • Coro I'">-'" Ot " _,._, l'll(kor Ir>, 13~, _.,.,.. 16 !otoullt<ISVt Gt l -" i:or.,u OI 1111 11• Ploe-• lf!d 11'• n1, 11 Coml•• com l'•-'• 1PKl.i Ii tlte D•llY l"llol Frtn-€.I •U lll': Pl•nd Mk 16'; 17 It Monn>t Grwo . 1 ~ ~, DOWNEY r • Fr1n1l1 7(1 10'~ PQClll llro l'o S'\o H Argo P•"Olm I -h -r~amm~s per Frl...., It 13~~ 11,~ Prof Gon 1'0 ''• 10 lt•vne tno"" 1..._ '• Share of SJ 04 for the first six <rlKl'I II ll:l.l. l,.~ Pr<>Qff\ ll'~ 1'•i" C•• Ctrlbbf!•n ,..... '" . ~"11 FOE 1'• I PSN C•r 111.ri 111~ n 0111 Ttcl'lnOIOV l,_ '• months of 1973 established an Fu11 ... .,. ,,,,, u Publ•"' 1'1 ~-.n0ol>ol"'1" Fa> 3"--'•&\\•,•,<JI . . <unl S..• IC 10\~ P\llfl (:1p j J.16 l'l 14 0..e Frf'fl·Orv 1'-'• all-tune record for any like ~l1•v c •1~ 1 Oon1r co ,,,. •~ zs Jutt "'Ill 16wt ~ -" ;,.~ period A ~or f?o~Y Savings & .t! Loan , .•. ssoc1al1on ~~~ti:WUJ. . ..:~..:"''"""'19i On revenues: of SJl.200.310. ..,. •'J: Downey Sav;ngs & Loan show· MUTUAL FUNDS . c. ed net earnings of $1,456 ,298 ~., for the six months ended June .J • -1 .....__, .• • r ,.. 30. This compared !o revenues _..__ • • r 17 497 M9 d ( · ,,....., Vork -Fol· l'AYON & H1" :.lg l.'9 '13 lltvt•I f' •·'"i 0 . ,u.1 an ne earnings low!'"! ls • 11~1 o1 HDWAllD: on..11.. h.11 2~.1 1 1,.,,,1 12.53 of SI 115 761 for lhe six months Dt11 1nd 1.-..i D•I· 1111 .. Fa • . .o 10.42 ·••)JONE: saieoc EQ 1.31 ' • ct\ ort Mul1>&I Gwlfl F ll.1l l•.'I\! 1.11•1 b I li.ll lt /0 S1111t11r 1 U ended June JO 1972. Fu""• IJ qualo<l by lflCmf S ... 1.$4 ~U>I DI l•.~ "·" .)Cnws Fo • .-... ' rM NASO Inc:. SPKH F l.tn 1.,1 l.U>I tu M.~~ 9 Q.I kl'l"s Sp I tr" Ste~ FO 1?.7113.t9 1.11~1 "' 1.11 I l"r 5CVODI!• r· .. , • B"l'~orporut 1•o11 w .. _.,, Etornta 10.11 "·'' t:ws1 111 1.11t 6.,s 1n1r ,.,., 1°' ... Jwlv ll. !tlJ EDIE So 71.60 n . .o t.UU l>• 2.J.IJ i•.h B•l•fl( •• :l( II• Al~ IFC NIOMT Gl!P: Lwll :.2 11.lt 11 • .0 (om 10'.5ifi LOS ANGELES (AP) -ADM1•.t.LTY: Jo'" G• 1.n •-• 1,..,., )J 1.os t..lo $pe,;•J 2f.J1 . . G ..... ri. •.l! • 11 qh Pr J.01 llltl ).I •.o& t.•7 SW L•v ' ... \Vestem Bancorporalion says 1...:om 3111 •.OS "" "''" ,_ .. 1.11 •1>o11o t.oJ t.ts SECV•1t'r iiot . . . lll!U•" 11 4 l'71q••I GI U.J11l.ltpol••~ l.i2 JIS Eq .. uy llc"Jt its consolidated lrK'Ome before Aoviwr • 1S •.il ltut1 Tri ll.1' <n•(~• o us &.6l '"•tt! .-.. 1 . . . Mtl\• FO IOI I.I) ff'ttQ l.rt t.ll <"•r GI" 7.Jt I Oto Ullr F . . securities transact tons rose Aern• •n 1J""' u" E~Y 11 .... 11.4-I .nQm•~ •Jt 6"119 SELE'nio •;:~1 .7· ' ' . !hel' th \I 1Al11lure t .olll ,.OOF1l•lld II• $''1tn • Fa Sil )"1• Arn Sf\ "I I ... percenl in 1rs a o AGE Fa ''' 1.t1 I'm a.,... t.s:t •.n :1:11: G•ou,: · 0_ ,• 1.11 • 1 h. 1· d All1••I• lJ.6) ll.1>11 Ftd Rll o t.23 I , ,,· 5..., a t.fo t.IO t 1s year over 1gures recor • "'1""• Fo u .a 1•.21 FIDELITY LP .. eo• ·"' 1•.ta 1>1 Shit 12.u 11.(1 { he hs · Am<~P F 1 IQ 11' GltOUI'· G.-..,n 6 H 1.01 E"l'pr 1.1' l lb ed or t same mont m Am 0,,.,. 1M 10)1 8..., ai11 '·'' o iro R•.,<~ n •1 h.ee. F111 Fo J.1, '·£ 1972 Arn E.afv •.3' t.11 ~10111 ll S? 17 ~1'1111v Fd l.•6 1.91 s ... 11ne1 t.1J IO. • AM Eltl"ltliSS 0rtt•t I.fl L It tnfv I .;Q t II S..111rv F ll.21 tt The fi nn reportedly the na-,uHos: .. s»<: 1 ot 1.)9 ,'"' c.~o 1 J1 1.0> '"""'"'LD '"'" , . ' . (1~!11 I !2 l.lJ Ot1• 1.12 . '>!I FINI l.2l l<1r1>1" 1 ll If, lion 's largest mult1state bank '"'°"" 1.~1 •.:14 E1tt~ 10 . .0 s~~~~-fom11 J 11 l 1 . . lnv11m a'" '·"° £vfti1 11ll17.60 · .. e.;,11 L 5 N 6 J4 hold1ngcompany,sa1d~londay lo.c1 1.;11.os Ful'>d 11.(.)11i:. c111 D• n.••n.t• P•(t Fa ,:33 101 · f · tock I.II 1.1~ Pu•l1n f 7• 10.10 Mylu tl 51tlEA•SON 'DS ·. that income be ore the securi· •m Grr1t 6.ro 11.'>f S81f"' F '·°' • oe •h.11 II.ii A1111rc 11 s1 ii t t ' . $.17 496 Am l1'11ln •.11 'n l•e"" 7l.&l 7t.!M llD A&a: lflCom Ii 4-1 19 y transac ions was , , Am 1nv11 , 16 4 11 'IM.t.NC1AL At111., '·"' ~ 96 111v .. t ,:2, 10 ~.,A for the first six months of •m Mu• 1 111 t.'7 P'1tOG1tAMI: Am 8~1 J,i» 1.11 s~ °'"" 11 ,111·..., "'l't • 1'mNt Gf l.lJ 1>1 Fifi Ov'I •GI l,GI 8nd <lfD 91010.11 Sltle Fd 6,1 I 1973 TilC income fimired out AMC!otOlt Fin Ina •.J.S l·" -"1"•'" 10..1111 .Ji 11GMA, FuNos· t" . ~· GIOVP : F .. Inc S.64 64 ~ulltn 11'1 9.,IC)I c .. p s~. 16J. in to $1 .63 a share. comparer! c~u111 •s• s.in Yenr J.a~ Jo;e llAGMa FUMOS : 1,.,,,. 10·1111· 1 • FnQ !l'IV 1.63 ~-16 hlFd VI 10.MI 11 ~ C•o•~l J 1l • tl'I lru ,-,, 8 \Vifh $1.40 8 Share during the G•wt~ l.tO 166 Fl•ST lnccm 1./0 9"11 Vtlllur i6a 9 ~ r. . h r h ll'l(l)tn l.l• 1.A IMV£SYO•S: ?.la• ... Ill •~Smrllt 11 10'01 I 1rst s1x mont so 1972, wen Ytl'ltur 116 •os D"t i=a i '.16 s1111~~hln 001 •,IOS8 r'G' 101\S/g 1 he{. d ., 922 2 Wft N11I 119'!101 Gnn Fd 10.1 l l:li\\ASS CO· \o G F i I 1rm ma e. ...... 1 .. 48 . •wrllf1 JM •M ~toe• .. ''I ~·~ Fretm . 111 IS6Sw11 '1~ .. 1l·~1' I \\Id~• F 1.6(11.ll l~! Myl1i IS1 lS7 1na~f 1.a~a 1>-1Sw1n.G } s.o .B lff •XE l'"O•UMGllOUP; Ma~· r 1131117 #15.o I 6 •6.S ro•t ~OUGl4fON : 100 l"l'>(I 1J .!• 10.1• 1\,1,SS FN(l . S~tt." 1i~ 11. 1 Ful'IO A ;.61 SM 101 Fl\d Oll I l Mtl 11771l7,S&P 1 D · S-411 s-ial to thr oa;Jy Pilot Ful'>d a 1.00 7 61 Co!~m 12• 11•1 MIC. IJ.ll 1'.oll) SYAtE" ... r:.n 6.11 .-... Slo<• SIO &"1-0 1S Fu"" 11• S9'JMID ll lll•tl Com i: 0111"1 DALLAS -Braniff lntema· A•e $<1 • 01 '11 Fo" C.• '!o1 5·01 ~i=o n is" JI o; 1, a '10 S.Js . · . BL( Gll'I 11 n U.11 l'OUMDERS l~(D 11 )I U SI '°'~ J It S.U t1onal has reportrd all-time 1111>1G" 11 O? n O? G•ouP: ,, ·.-~•t• iv 170 , 10 11 r: (;, •" s .. 1 . . . lllV•O( 1.)1 113 G-rw1n SJ1 5. l""~ll'lrf 111.Jt l SJSIF '67 ~if htgh. first half net earnings of :::~~ ~~ ~ f1 ;·/, ~flC:;-'u31 1~ tt 1! ~~·a Am s u 1.,. s1.r: ~~ .: !.! ' 1 $11 .059.roo. ""Ual to 55 cenlSll••tOll 11191119 F"S.-11 1,)9:11191~~ ... [,' ',',l'',,',SI STl!AOMA"I ,,.,, . ~'I. lltroerl( l\J'9ll?tF11t1•~a F 1619•1 • .l Am ltlQ *1" 'f: per share. an increase of 40.9 eer~,~. •XI • 1-t FltANICL1N ;\l1r &~G0 ~" 10, "• "''"' FtJ 1 u 1 , r llond!lk • 19 s tJ G•ou,, . M 1 ...... , 1 ).o I percent rom $7 ,848,000, <>qual 10" Fdn '69 10 It DNl( 7 Tl I \l :;:!~G·o j .. ~ llO STl'IM ltOI! f'Oi.i • 39 h I ,.,..., lM l.59 G ... 1~ ~r 751 IJO vv "' 01 •1& 111 ll<ll•nc :l'll•!1' to cents per s are, eame1 iuLLDCK Fr 1~(m 1 •1 1 u ""°"' 1,., •" '&4 C10111 ,0,. 1g_j! in the flrsl six months of 1972 . "~y~1°}~ 11as1 1 °" H~1ft~ s ; ~ 1~ t~ ~~:1 s~~~ '1:0 1f:: 55,'f'"~itou~~ tt 11 ,. The earnings v.·ere after Cdn ~d :no11111 P•• CA11 501 s6•l•1tt 1n.1u •11 •n G .. •11h ~00 ' OlvSflr 3 t6l ~1 R1E<1h l]\l7/N.1,TSl'C FDS: lflCOf'n lll tf; spec ial nonrecun-inl'.l ca iii ta I ,1 .. -..d '9110 11 ~•J LrE~ 11 6• n n l'•l•n< 1 1s 'St ~ ...... 11 111 ~~ NV v .... 101•11161Fa l.'.1 110 ,,. t .l'9 8""" Sr •16 510 Tec~n• 121 ~ gains of $734.000. equal lo .J 111~h..,. • 60 '60 l'UHD~ o~c' o,,•on 3 1~ J '1 Sv<W:•a " 1 11 f.11 ( GFun<! I~'! 10 M G•OuP: P't' ~h • tl •. :I'll TMll A ,,l6 Cf'nts per share, net after tax. c~11 l dn 1c 60 11.111 Comm 1 '.J • ~~ 1~~~.., • ,,, ) 11 l•on111 t : U :_.• { h I r I · C~nl S~~ !l 61 l•.n1 tm1>a< 1 •1 I 11 Sloo:• ~' t t i 1 ll T~w,, ( I •°"' rom f C 53 t 0 SUrp US CC)lll(>-CHAl4NING ll>dut I• 10 16 1116 G•w1" 6 11 I JI ft an C•o I: t I and Id h he FUNDS : Polo! 1 7'l 1 '7 Nl!W £NG L'• ft~vl tQ !O •• ,l/ n1en. wou ave en a ll•lntd 10!.111.110.,,..., ll6 116 E"~"' 11o6 11:io r....,0, " 10 ..,10.." record even u·ithout I h e Bnd I'd '111c 01 GE s-s P :is" Grwll'I 10 tJ 11 •• "'°'" cc. 1 ~1~•1 (om St~ 1 l't l •I Ge" Sii( 6.S) t 11 S•M 1' 1111 l• Xl!lt (I ) M capital gains item. Grw•l'I s .,, )·1'0 OltDUI" SEC : PIEi\ "' '"' ' I~ Un ii Itel I~ ~I} t l~tom 6 1' ll Aoe• F S 6' ~.fl N~u (•I'll 'IJ 'll Vflllu"" ,.$1) SOl!CI 111 1 ,, 1111 F.-.:1 ,,, I.IS Pleuw!ii 'so I solllNtON sr.'v1J '"' • Tra11so111e riru VeMu• is. '-" com s1~ l1.1• 11.1l N•Nron •ii'' u :ii,101ov,,, icr CHAS~ &11;,, Ftm '11 .S Nw p,,, 1J ••I• /J I 8ro 1 '' lJ 111•.el "'e-cl•I I• lllt Ot!ly l"rt"' &f!.T 8~; 1 ,. t 7t ' Ml ~19 zt J0.211 ~"; Wla 11 II 11 M H~ll l~v I S1 t:il " F•R "'°" CP )lb iiSGu~ra n11n:l1~ <lf(11ntv•I U11 C•or 111 •6') SAH ANC I SCO -~"'' 111 .Os 7l'O "AM1t.TOM t;.1,; N.'cd~18, 1~t.:i •l •>""•~'r"•"• 1 1si 1f~t T · Co ~ d ~l>Cl<I S I~ 61J Fw"" •.Cl t.'1 I lllUNOS : ransamer1ca rp. repo. ,c c11em Fd 1o n 11.111 <;""''" •.11 , ll "~' '"'' 111. ·~ ,, 11o1rvm 1 11 '·'' \"" h. he t f' \hall COLONIAL l"e"'"" ~CM b600re~"'1 611 ~l'I 8~0 ra 111 ·~ tg s 1rs re\·cnues ,u,.tls: 1-l•tt~ 1o.t1 1o11..,,.,"'!• 111 1~ '""'a~ 99110 "° aod opcratln" earnings in its conv•• •..J910M"•"' LY 1111 ,,....,Ne•!_./~ 1,'~'11 "1 ron11 "' •1110...-. ~ · F.ovhv J)t ltbl-ltd~ ''° •ur · , · ~·~1' ·~ .. ·m 1111".1' hi!illll'V Jf,,l'>d ..tl7 10.11 ~j I.le PPIEN!o4M FO· ~<'•nt t8l /,u · •: Grw!~ •!M6 . .0H•t1Klf 1111!1tl00 -"'!'1 '1 T•01V~"<lll aMlJ• Net 1nromc from operation:-lflCom •e•IOH!otor1ce 111sl'J11 o0o ,.,.., 1n 1•1 vs.1.A C• no-11.&• . ~I"' 12l 3 lmwl (P f t~ 10 54 o '°"ll t '1 I ~ V$ C•vli 10 (11 1~-'' for th<' SL' n1onth<1 ended Jun<' I wm G 11J1 11 , 1....., C• '°' 110, n., T ... , • 1• , ,.,1v•Lul! LINS F°' 30 10,•led 5'273\ l)OO MMDNWLTM rw: ldAm llXll~oJ1flTC I•• '"!01'> v~r l~t )1l ~· .. , , , . com-•us1 tnc; f\001 6.11 ~.14 "''A'"'' · .. • ... 1 v.1 Ill(. ~ ,1 , ~ ·"th •~474~ I the 1.1.11 · tn 1.J>Ot.,a FAm 701 111 o~ul II•~ 111 1 1' l•• C.•~ '" 1 , pa.o;v ~l .,.1:1, ....... , or I c ,., 1~•111eoon I S1 911101~,., .,. .,, •. , V~I Soo:: ·''' l..SI {. t half ol 1972 T h . s omo ft< '6• .JI !II r ... ,., ~.JO 41 ., Pt /.'•·• ' .... .._ VAMC• 11"5 I · I omll C11 '" J1,111wr11 G llS 1.11 0 .. ,_ '• &ft '"IS•N Dl'ltS amounted to 64 crnts per e,..,11 &d tu • 11 1 ..... co "' 11.t0 1110 "~"" "d , ,. 1 ·~ 1nv~1, · 1 u ,~ · omoFd 1n1n1nvGuld l ll l!J r>~·•· •~·1 10111v~c,,,.., 7fll • share a 10 percent gain ()\'C Ofl(.rct •JO •JO Inv '""i< l.-l! l"I" r.. •...., Sr>f<J 1 l? , ~ • . l~V 1111 II M ll'IY 101 H 1117 1' P•llto1El'I 1'0· IV~llll • ~ t the !'i3 ~Is earned In I~ ..... ljj' )&l INYE T I p'"" f'• • ,, , ... Vtnvrd 1.61 ,,,. 972 'od ... Ml ·~ AO ll/Nf•L • ..,,., .,,. 11 ,, !~M'.\ ve~! ?tl90 '(M samt' I pcrJ , (1111••11 1 1.i1 ~m 1.t7 1•1 P1....,. 11 1t1 ,,,1 v~rtfll 1 iii ,,, ~"\\(_ ll.a 14 n 1D!I IV t 66 l.l! •·~~"" I •l t ,. Vlk!'CI Gr .S.Jrt Ult • D I ,ft • t 10 '°"' '" s," •· I"', """ n ~· 1i 011w.11i1 0, ~" tO'I af.un•~ nr. -y ! "°''NI('' GltOVI": •• , .... 110-"• w .... Mw 1Ctl tllt1 ~vllla l.f l.'1 I S Cll'I t~ """"' ll •! 1' '' W~I°"'! ta 10 11101:'1 Datum Inc. Anaheim-ba.Sld l&~'::",.1 / f.,r0 t;i t ~ "'"' .... ,. ·• r .. •l'LltNOTOM ' __. . ~ ' 'fi'0'' \rl ' •.-1~··1 "''"' """ ·~ ••·1''"'0111"• l"'"'UCer 0 f m1niCOM!Klltr !1 I" t . l0.4-1 s~~· 19 $11 l1Jt "-"'" '" "" E•Dlo• 21 t.1 r.~ phe I · t T .,,. S.ltc t l)tllu"-"'"' ''' ••· lv"! ISi O per\ ra eq u ipment,.,,~., S: ~!! "'''~'' 1 .... ., ........ ,., ••··· M"''" i1n1t 80ftware • controUed ~yio;tems ~..-;1 co 1·~ jr.l"l 111.•1 11 i•) ::::: •. ~1~ 10 ·~ 11 ,. ~~~:~ 1: t;, d -···-timing in ,~l, 1~· 1 ~ crr.!tt.. , 7 1!JO ..... D,· ~w, .. 1~ ll '''m an p,.:._] '"" • _..~ft{IS Po lr>eom '# 0MI'•• .; , • .,., '" Wtlltn l!Ol.IJ t strumentatloo ~uipmenl ••· 1iffi " ' "·fl ''" " l: ....... · • .,. w'~K '• • ~., ' a rtt '· Tttl Sii 11.5' ..... .. •• ,, .~WI•' ·~d J ll "1 nounctcl record ~nd quarter rv L~ u !'\' '"' '""'° . ,, 5 Grw•~ tt'' 11 .. ~"d c.r l.l' . •. I nd II 1flCI" , ' ~ VY l"llnd t" t ,A, ...... Wlt«llll J '6 ~ anti s1JC·mont11., sa e11 :i I~"" \~' I ' .. ~ ·!" ·I i~~ "•. '" .. "''"''~ t.J1 , I M~ • ....,, .lt"f I Ii I . I ' ·•• t '" ""••'"' •"'~odl..-lct.f!d. r1rn ng3. .., ~ G• . 1 it"•" ,,11 ; t1 1.a ... ..• , ... '"" , ..,.. .... n."'' ~ DAILY PILOT 'Assets Up ;\ For Steel '-\ :. Union •• • :•, PITTSBURGH (AP l -The •• United Steelworkers of ' ' America's I a t e s 1 flnancla l J• statement shows the unlon'a z' worth ha! climbed $6 mllllon i:•' ft()m the last audit to $75 ,. million . • The c u r .r f: n t ac<:ountlng, 1: {.__-t-=j;..:.~;z.O 1;z.C~=c__,) • . : ~ prepared by Main Lafrentz & 1 Co., covered the period July I • • lo Dec. 31. 1972, and showed • lhat for the fint time the •' VSW's lolal assets topptd $80 Tra11s o11ic Speedster mUllon. However, $4 million of thnt amount wu slated for current obligations and the union's educational program rese't-vc. e Aeq1dsltlo11 Spe<lal to Jht DaUy Pilot SALT I.AKE CITY -GM Gets 'Want' , Transportation Safety Systems -Inc., Salt Lake City, has ac- quired Modem Alloys Inc. or Stanton, for an undisclosed amount of stock and C8$h, it was announced Tuesday by the two companies. List F1·om Union ;: The operations of Transportation Safely Systems are involved internationally in the plarming and grooving of highway and airport runways. Modern Alloys produces and installs median concrete bar- riers. guard rails aod fencing for hlghway1. e Whittaker LOS ANGELES (AP) Whittaker Corp. h a s an- nounced a further writeoff of $3.6 mllllon against current in- come, due to troubles with W h ittaker Community Development Corp., its bous- ,. ing subsidiary. · • -Tile latest writeoff, an: :~ JlOunced Tuesday, raised to •.• $5.6 million, or rt cents a DETROIT (UPI) The Un!ted Auto Worker! has beg~.n spelling out to General 1'1otors the items It wants in- cluded in new contracts for more than 400,000 hourly workers. UA\Y VICE President Irving Blucstone, head of Jhe union's bargaining team at GM, laid out 22 position papers Tuesday outlining the key economic demands. These included a •·substantial wage increase," modernizing the inflation-pro- tecting cost-of.Jiving provision, establlshment of a profit Shar- ing plan and increased holi· day. Bluestone outlines t b e unicn's non.economic demands Wedne9day while UAW Presi· dent Leonard Woodcock present~ the union's opeolng remark! at Chrysler Corp. Woodcock led the bargaining team to '.Ford Tuesday as con- tract talks begin to replace ex- piring three-year pacts cover- ing more than 700,000 U.S. and Canadian auto workers. OTllER DEMANDS voluntal')! overtime, medical and dental. benefits and im- proved P.f!nsions -will be discussed later this week. "There •, were a few new demands," said George Mor- ris, the GM vice president handling the bargaining. "But the rest are repeats. share, the total amollllt writ· : ; • ten of from Whittaker housing operations since the start of the current fiscal year on Nov. State's 3rd Largest '' 1, 1972. ' .. •• eKaiser OAKLAND Kaiser Gypsum Co. Inc. and Mac "fir1n Tells Earnings : .-Andrews &: P'orbes Co. Tues-day announced that they bave EL SEGUNDO (APt - : , reached an agreement in prin--Ro ck we \I International, ~·. cipJe for the acquisition by California 's hird largest com- ,, ·Kalser Gypsum of th e pany, reports a 35 percent ·' Camden N J HI f gain in third-quarter earnirigs 1• , •• , 1>4per m o " Mac Andrews & Forbes. ru,._. .. Purchllse price of the mill is about $8-~ million. Negotia· tiool regarding final details of the tfaDsactioo. are in prog· ,. e Speide l RENO, Nev. (AP) -Speidel •. ·Newspapers Inc. has an- nounced a nine cent a share quarterly dividend. a one·half cent increase over previous .. " .piarters. The dividend will be payable Sept. 5 to shareholders o( ::· record Aug. 7 . • • .. .. ... .. ... • .. e .Me,,,e r ' 5p<dal to tbt Daily Piiot SAN FRANCISCO -The boards of directors of Wells F'ar~o & Co. and A~antic­ ,Paofic Leasing Inc. have ap- proved an "agreement in prin· elple" lor the merger of the two [inns, it was reported Tueoday • . .==='====. ·•. ' ALLIRCHNS AU AN AIRIORNE MlllACE • .. • .. . " .. ,, •( ,. ,, Bankrupt ' Complete New York Stook List ·-...... r: .. ' • . • I J . -.;«-'r,,; • .. Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List .. Phase 4 Signals Surge in Stocks NEW YORK (AP) -The imptndlu iMOUllce- ment of more t<onomic controls under l'ha~ 4 wu greeted warmly In the heartland of American tapl· 111!Jm Wednesday, brokers said, as the .tock muliet rallied to a rtron& clo5t· shortly betore the re1- of the latest Adminblr1Uoo anU-lnn.Uoil program:.· . "The market view Is that the 1tron1er Pl>lff 4 a and the more viable it loou u ·111 effoi( to con- trol lnflaUon, then the more llkofy it will be to r• lieve fear In the markel of a monetary crunch abni· lar lo t969·70," satd Monte Cordon of Dreyfus Corp. Gordon added further controls would relie•e the . Federal Reserve as the only jjbaaUon° 11atn&t infla.· .. ·1lon . • • Ju~ , 1'7J ' • DAILY PILOT 'Oolll V I'll OT • PlielJC NOl'ICE . ' • • Tllundoy, Ju)Y 19. 1911 PUllUC NOTICE PU11UC NOTICI!: . PUBIJC N<mCE PUBLIC NarJCE PUBLIC NarJCE wrtfl I~ IMI-" ,,,. INffltltrt M "'• 1111111'11 of Swittvl-• ¥1111"11 I• ..... ao•IMt 1119 .. m&. '. ' lft,@[Q)[Q] ~11.&Illft!I ~~ - ·AUSO CREEK -"....-·· -....!: CtAHtV ~ OBIAATMl!NT" ~FU\lfts•T -· ' • ,. ALISO CREEK Olllttf l ... •..u-re ~~TV Pl.~ Dl!:P.4Qn,e.T .-..On.GOO~ftl ClllTil!CT -· ROHALD 'W. CASl"EllS o..lnrwn of ttw 8oanl of SupenollOfl of ~ COunty, C1llfoml1 zc 72-39 I ---' t:.":..!r.""6 zc 72 -39 PUBUC NOTICE PllBIJC NOl'ICB PUlllJC NOl'ICE PUBIJC NOTICE ' " ,. . • 21f3.JJ PUBLIC NarJCE PUBLIC NarJCE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF CALIFOll:NIA J NOES: SUPERVISORS NONE ) u . AISENT: SUPEllVtSORS NONE . >·· COUHTV OF OltANCiE ) IN WITNESS WHEREOF . I llAYe Mr1unto 1tl my !lend 1nd 1fllxed 1t!1 ofllcl91 , ' _ , E '' ~N C ~ CO "" tt"• co • _ , ..... , 0 1111 ol mt ~rd of S11perv(sor1 ol the COllflty ot Or•not. 51111 of Ct llfornlt, ltlli , n•L .. IAM • ~"" , oun., erk I ..C-0 ... er "' ,,. -r a 11111 Clay of J.,,.,, tf1l. _,,.,,;,,J S11perwl1.of1, do Mr.tly cerl"y t!Mlt t i t tl'lllllt r mHllng of Ille !Mrd ol SupervlliOl'"I WILLIAM E ST JOHN • OI Ort l\Q'9 County, cantornl1, lll'ld Of! lt!e 11111 day of July, 1'73. tr.. tor.oelnv County Clerk. •nd ax-(lffltlo c1m Orol~rK• can"lnl'11 ~ 121 'Kllons ,.,. PJHed Ind -®pted by th1 following of the Board of 511perv!sors ol Wiit : Or1no;ie County. Callloml1 AYllS: SUPEltVISOIU ltONALO W. CASPERS. RALPH 8 . CU.RIC, Sy June AlrJ<tnd'1" It. W. flATTIN, OAVID L flAKElt ANO llA~H A. OE1otllCH !SEAL.! °"'"'" ' '·' ' Publl1'*1 0•111111 Co.11 Dl ll't' PllDI, Jul't' It , lt7J ·--------------------------------------------."··· .··.' I .. I!/ Ill ,;.,;:::... -~ \ ALISO CREEK Ot:IM>i~ COl..NTV PL.A~ Ol!:PARThlf:Nt fP.CJ rLODO"t.~~ OllTAIC r -·j= \~·-. --- 1 ' tJJ.1!/ -··- ALISO CREEK - _l_ zc 72-39. -~· (IO..Ujlil[ °""""' ........-~·f.1'111."tt,~ 9C.uoD .,, "'"'"..,, __ .,1111,3' "·- Qll-l llO. •P •'•" t a I ·:;::=c 7 7 / ·-· .. --- r -- zc 72-39 •-m OllAl<.l:ei:llWl'Pf'I.•""""' _,.,......,,mt -.,,~.,--.aa., ..... q -~- / ---.. :· • .. • ----....J : . • 7 J ' l ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' • ' • I .. .. . • . ... , WAS bilious Oemoc breat.b make seek a No• politicc and K the an Hou~ coo ... Kennet Fot should man~• cou1~·1 the DOI A0N KennCt A~w perc!Sn forme1 nallY i pcrcell But' anywa even s nedy v family as.sass the na The recent resppn an '&! other ' no nun MEJ tende r polit1~ in the stake ' Sen. close more ing ot mlnfsl Cami> ~ progr1 -can<Ut has " bid is pr odd H. Hu Seo. whose ~ held o( • on a. rrom All mltt4< bill I< fuelr( ~ :, : . ,i ;, :1 ·1 i, l :1 ' • ' ' ' .. .. • ' ,, ' ' I i ~ ' ' ' l Democrats - Awaiting ..... " 'Fed's Word WASHING TON (UPI) -A line ol am- bitious and increasingly restive Senate Democrats will be wa1tlng with bated breat.b for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy to make the "hard decision." whether to seek the presidency in 1976. No -matter how high thelr individual political fortunes may rise between now and Kennedy's ultimate anoounoement. the ambitions ol past and future White Hou~ uplrants hinge inextricably on the COUl'M ~to be set by the :t0le surviving Kennedy brother. Fot '1here can be little doubt that shoul,d Kennedy decide to run -and many c:ootend be is already running -he coul<\'µpec! little il any opposition from the ooininatlon. A 'N£w LOUIS Harris poll matched Kennedy against Vice President Splro T. A~~ and , gave KelUledy a lead of 50 percent to 42 percent. Matched ag1inst former, Treasury Secretary John B. Con- nallY ~ a GOP nominee, Kennedy led, 49 perceiit to 45 percent. But'the line to the rear is fonning anyway -walling, watching, perhaps even searching, for some sign that Ken- nedy will decide his responsibilities to his family and the children of hi s assassinated brothers rule out a bid for the nation's highest office." The 11-fassa<:husetts senator said in a recent interview he recognized "there'll a reswrisibility to make clear intentions at an i4J'ly time," perhaps giving the other'·hopefuls a clear shot at the 1978 nomln8tion. !\tEANlVWLE, TllE party's other con- tenders are becoming increasingly active polit1~lly, striving to play a major role •. in the Senate's legi.!lative battles and stake out thelr own reputations. Sen. Walter F. Mondale (D-MiM.), a close Kennedy ally, has been accepting more speaking engagements and dlum- ing out press releases Ja,,hing the ad- minfslraUon oo everything from the Cambodian bombing to the anti-poverty .. program. ~uently mentioned as a possible cancUJiate, the young, liberal ~iinnesotan has said that talk of a 1976 presidential bid is "premature," despite enthusiastic prodding from his mentor, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey. ' Seo .. Henry M. Jackson (0-Wash.). whose 1972 campaign for the presidential nomti"liM !ailed In the primaries, has held -center stage in the Senate this year on a: haU dozen different issues ranging fronl the energy crisis to Soviet trade. A1; CHAIRMAN ol the Int~or Com- mltt4e. Jackson won Senate passage or a bill «a set strict mandatory allocation of fuel and he is pressing for more rar- ing legislation to serve the energy '.1f r•tnct>ody 1e11• )Ou drug 1 ... , ~cf.'Cr~J.• "" rd~•rd. lhal wimrbcMly IS lil~lng lhfl!Uf.h hi! hll. : ·' tr '4!mthtJJy 1rlh you !ht iystrm 1 Or ju~lice g.i•r• )OU all !ht f'!;hls of 1 : Un1ltd Slalr\ cu1ltn in lht Unnrd • 1t'lr•. 1tuf1 i hurkh uf b1lnnrv j y.,u )hould gr! 1hr f1c11 •u~igh1. '"fht uuth h thtll drug l.1w1 l ie !uugh 'And 1hcv rnf1>rCt thrm to thr lrn fl . : ' Thr11·, M g11I fr"m ~hr Un11td ~ S1a1c• •nling m 1 Rumt J~il 11gh1 n"'''- : Sht"ll br thrrr f91 11\ '" 1cn mon1lu ' 1w1111ng 1rn1I. With no b~1I, Jllot rvtn ; J chance for u. If 1hr'1 convkicd. 1fo ~rm1n1m11m of lhrtt yc1u. Cu ry1ng , 1\1111" ac1on 1 bonier. fr um one • co-unt ry 10 ano1hrr. 111s~in1 for j uoublt. And you'll &fl 1t . 1 Th1(t 1hr1r I•"'· And thcrt ~no ! ,..ay uound 11. "' • Ov•r 9IX) Un11rd S111n atiient ,re doing llm.J on drug ch111ci tn :ro1rign Jllll l1gh1 no .... Arid nobody : ,,.,.., gr1 1hrm ou1. !'004 flmil)" Or ' f~nch Or IM &m&nt:il llWVtf in'°"'""· ; Nol rh r Un11cd St.it• go•·i:rnmrnt. ' lf )OU'rf pLann•A!I ''"' '" ' E.11r.,pr. 1hr Mtddlr [1\1 or "1tl!h of ; 0111 own bordrr . ..-htt~ olH the • countriti. Oct 1hc f1tl t And gel 1htm ' ,u1i!h1 btfnrr you !tt\t. Ont hc1 wdl tome 1hro11gh lovd and clc1r. When yo11"1t hu111d for d11111 ovc11h1re. you"rr in for •ht haulc of 1011r hfc. l Sweden. PCIUUl>lft or tilt. , fine and/f!f 11p 1116 )'tin . ' I U. S. Emb1uy S111nd,·1gcn 101 Slockholm. Swrdrn Tri 6JIO,/l0 Morocco. Poorn•Ofl. 1 mon1lo lo) yt •ro and ~nt \J.S Embl<\v 2 A~t. de M11U~td1 lt•bal. Moro«e TtL J0l61162 Mtxico. Poornion. 2 10 ~ ytan plus fine. Tr•ffkkint-. 3 10 10 yrus plui fint. llkg•l im!l'l'rt or r~pon of drups. 6 10 15 year• plu• ~nt. Pcnons arrt,1rd on d1ug char gr.• can expttl • minimum off> lo I~ mun!hi p1r-1 .. 1I conftncmcn1. U.S. Emb••~}': Cor. 01nub10 and Pasco dr I• Rrforma .l05Colom1 Cu1uh1t moc Mc•icoCity. Mt•1co Td . ~11.7991 Spain. Prn1hy dcprnd1 on q111nti1y of d1up involved. Lt111h1n j(l(} !ram\ c1nnab11. line 1rtd c•pultion. Morr 1h1n XlO g11m1. minimum of 6 year> on Jiii. U.S. Embauy: Serrano 75 ~l~rtd. Sp••" Tel 216-l~ ltalv, Pni.,,.i.\1on ~l1n1m1.1m )'nn.·4~lil"IH.lm B )"t»n U S. Eml»~I~ V1-i \'. VrnrllJ 119 Romc.1t11~ Tel. 4614 !~K~~,e~.:111n 10 yc1,..·1nd hr1vy lil\t. Pot.sn11on of ~mtU unount for ptrsonal ui.e usu~lly pu11i1hfd by 1 finr 01 hf.hi 1mp111oOnmrn1 11\d t \pul11on U.S. EmNny. 241)1 Cil'O!ovenor Sq1111c W. I . London, Engl1nd Ttt 49'·\lCOO Ntlhtrtlnds. ........ f111t or 6 ll'IOflLlb on pr-. Tnllick111g. mlAlll'lllfll I ytl l'. U.S. Embwy· 101 Lin&< V001ilout ~ HlJUt. NrthcrilMh Ttl. 61-41-1 1 • Greece, PCK""n•on, mmimurn 2 ye1111n /'ii Trall'ic~mg. ma"mum 10 yr an p ui finr U.S. Ell'l ba\\V 91Va11h'>I"5'Jph1a"1 8lvd ArhcnJ. Grcttc Tel 712951 Germany. p.,...,,.~~'°"· jJ,, \tn1rncc cor ~nr Tr~flkk•ng. m,,.,mum) )f~f' plu1 hilt US. F.mb~"~ '-lthlrmtr A•rnu• 53 Bon11·81d Uodr1btrg Ronn. Gtrm1nv Tri. 02129-19'5 Japan, Po•-t"ll'>A. rrr-1'141 dr1en11r-n. 'u•rcndrd •rnltnct •nd r\ru!.,on l1~lhc~1n1. m~"mum ', .. ,_, .LS Emb~·>'· LO-~ A~Asaka I· ch•um• M•n>lr>-Ku lei~\Cl 1rl SBJ.1111 I 1l' l '""''" r"'"" h.rtic~1n~ ) 1(1 I' •·tar• US Emh1•t' Corn ... hr •l Nut"" ~1rr1"•h 8cuu1. Lrb1n•'" l ol.140-800 Jamaica. h•s~"·on. pnwn .. cn1rncr •nd l'ln e. Tr~!ll{k•n!., mM"mum 1 \Clfl •' hud l4tk'f l S Embi).•V 41 Duk• SUt rl K1n1•1r-n. JAm•o<• Tri ~eJll France. Pi-..--n u>f .. , 111ftic~1n1-pnw>n 1t1m nr} mo111li1 10S)tlA1ndftnc C111tom1Cou11 ,.·1111\,... lr•y hravy l'lnt M1n11T1um } to 4 mOfl!hl pu -tr"L COfll'lnt:mcnl lJ S E.mb•"' Z A•~ G1bnd P1r1'1. fr.Mt Ttl Allj'lll MolO llr'llL Pout-11.on. he-ivy ftnt tl\d tipulJion Tr11!1ock1n&-1!'11"m11m 10 ~·n tftd S.000 lw1d1 pounch fine us Embn11 71 ll1y1.ton S11tt1 Tel A"1v. lw111 Ttl ~Il l •;• Switzerland. ........ ... m1 .. mum 2 yran or ~M. Tnllickins. ........ mom 5 yo.,.. ll S Emba}5v: 93195 Jub1laoim""'"' f.lrr n. s ... ~1crl~nd Tr14~0llll Bahamas."'""'''" rn"n•h• w I 't•" I" S. I mi>••W 1\•Jdcrly llu1ld1nl :"'••~lu. }hh"ma• ld l I l8l Canida. Pouc'S1"n. p1I ._.nltnc.t al\J t1pul.uon. l nl'hckinJ.. m1n1mum ~\'far<. ma.,mum hf( us l110b1 .. ~· 100 W~ll1n~1(in S1rrc1 Ou1w1. Canada T•I 236·!)•1 Denmart<. '~'""""· ""' •nd do!rn1,.ln up 10 ~ '""' l,; S Emh4"~ 01~ H~mm~t\k)Old' Allr }~ f'.,rcnlu!rn. Orn m~r• Te l TR 4)(1S Turkey. P~'f'"··n. 1 •<> s ~car<. Tral'hck•ng. 10 )t~1110 hfr, , · U S. Embas•y I 10 AlllU!k Bl~d !\n\111. T11rkt~ l rl lf·6~·00 Iran. Po•1t1t,on. 6' rn(Jnthl 10 ')'~""· Tr1flck1nf. ~r.i oll~11<t 1 !O I~~"' h1td ld'CI< 1..d hnc. Stcond '"'""''· finr 1..d up lo hlr 1\ llar\l lobot'. U 5 Emb1nv 2~ Ave Tak h Jam•hod Trhran. lfln Ttl l~l.12:!091 ,,,,.,_II Clro"ftl"°"'" 4'o On.f A-lftfet< .... llOfl • Tllurtday, July 1~. 1973 OAILV PILOT ., c • -• • ... -, .. -• • ... ~ ••• . ~· .... What a l'ie-avt c.11• ,, ... ,,.., ....... • ... . ~ _..., Residin g 3,119 feet above sea level in a 13-by 13· foot room of g lass on 40-foot s tilts are Ginny and George Poppo!f, whose responsibility it is t11 spot fires in Cleveland National Forest. Paid by t he U.S. Fo restry Service for sca nning the area for 50 m iles £ron1 thei r Santa lltargarita Lookout Station, the P oppoffs maintain, "lt's ju st like can1ping out. It's a good Life." Equipment being used in picture above is lire finder. PUBLIC NOTICE J Few Realize Massive Impact l'ICflTICIUI •us1 .. 1s1 • -.,, ltAMI STATIMlltT I • l"t lollowlfltl Pt""IOflt ·~ ct°"'9 ,.. ll!nlM•~ ·~ o. Of Energy Draii1-Expert AIKHI T E'CTUlllAL Pll00UCTtOfl$y'-• l«IO lr..tM Av•.• H-porl B..c.n. C•r·-~ -.. ~ 1<0 ~'"' Jul\O. IOCl a1a,1111n ,.,,.,.,l • _. !rvln•· (•. t'IXK l •n'IH It. J-.. lt'JO Patll H9wpott, ''"' ~a. r.l N-t a,,,.,, C1. f'HolCI • """" 1"!• IN>l"-n 11 c-uc lld W I ,...... .. '"' 1MrlMrll1lp. \VASHINOTON \AP ) -Few tial and commercial heating abou t 17 billion gallons." Train Ho s11p JIHOQ people realize the enormous units. sai·d. · 1 " 11 •1~1-' "''" """ ""'"" ti. c-,, Cltrti; ot Ori .... C°""'y· Oii J ... r Mo.I...., environmental impact of the Train said cousutners don't I.r1bel home appliances 1•1i. ..,.. nation's a ccelerating use of seem inclined to com;ume less. with the amount of energy it i>11ont~ Ot•"'9• c-1 o.iiy ....:2!~~= energy. the chairman of the "Air conditioner s. v.·ill requ ire, an action now 1.'c'·-'-'-"c'c· c•M='c~:::."":...:'c· c"cn=--~'c'~:·;;?3~;.:;. Council on Environmental dish .. ~:ashers and c I o t he s being im ple mented by the PUBLIC NOTICE ·,.. Quality has told Congress. dryers -all luxury it ems in C<mmerce Department in •-------~---- 1 l'ICTITIOUI •iltlN•SI Russell Train warned that lo the 1950s -are commonplace conjunclion with Train's agcn-NAM• ITAT•M•NT change the trend from an tod ay," Jie said . C)'. .,~,.,, follOwlna I*""'" 11 ,,.. ... ~- energy splurge "to energy con· · · T we Iv c ·c u bic· foot PAtco. 4101 Mor1111111 tt•r o.. .. Hy,.. el · t be . PUBLIC ~OTICE tt1'19-l•Kh servation v.·ould require vast r r1gera ors are now 1ng Auefl v. , .. 1nor MO. 4101 Mornlno alterations in the lifestyle of replaced by 14-cubic·foot units NoT•c• TO coNTitACTOlll sr1' Dr., H11t1nl'l9tOA 9"dl. c..i. """ nd b I f ' CALLING l'Ok l lDI Cirol P. Tr1lrior, 4101 Mclrnlnt Ill ...... most Americans. a Y argcr, rost· ree Stllool Dl,irl(I : OC EAN vi EW SCHOOL Dr .. Hunttnoton •Mell. c111 . .-... refrigcrator-rreeurs that may D1iT11.1cT Tlllt bush .. •• " cono1uctec1 ..,, 111 1,.,.-.21 Train's analysis of the use of &1<1 o..o11r.e;1 ,00 o·e1ot1t '·"'· o1 ""111n d1,1o1111 • $. •nergy and the rel ted conswne over 2.5 times more d•r a1 A<1111111 1,71 C••°' P. Tr11,.... <: a en· Pl•c• al l ld ll~tlJI: Ad!'l'llnl11T"1U0<1 Of· Thh 111temet1I Wll fli.d ... "'"" ,_ •«) vironmental punishment was ....._--------------tk• 111 ,,,. otttrlci. nn w •• ,.... tv c~, .. "' Or•l'IM C-'Y"' J11,... ».,;"" . . h ........ u.. Hunllftlll on ••K PI. C1lllor11\1 lf7l "' given to a 101nt earing on COJlllltner• dota't Prol.-:• hu•u111c111on H•-: Ac1c1111-10 ,.~ Or P·JW.1_ energy conservation held by T.M.R. c111M'OOffl •1•ttd1no, urt: vr1w '"" c°"' o.i1y '11ot.-1 two House committees. During seelll i11rfl11ed to ~(u'::'~i~'::.C11~1(.111~~ Ohlilcl. Ju,.,. 21 •!Id Jiiiy s, n. 1'· im m i.71 the week, a half-dozen COO· con111111e le•• Pll•t Pl1n1 •rt on !lit: Ottltt .. Anll'IOfl.. PUBLIC NOTICE • Ind L1f1V'for<1. Archlltc!1, 2121 Ct"'l>UI gressional committees WerC Drive, lrvlnt. C1!ll0<nl1 Q.6.1 fll'ICTITIOUI •UllN•ll Probing. some as. T"IPl'l of the ~ HOTICI! IS HEkl!llY Cil'IE N thll 1,,. NAM• STAT•M•HT rT~ l bOVt·ntmt'd knool Ol1lrl<! 111 Ora!\Ot! TM toUowl 1 energy crisis. energy than the earlier 111~ C011n•y. ca111orn11, ''""' tiy '"" tl'lt ougn ,.1. "Cl "''°" t 001no w1i11t11 }fe noted tha t the use or dels." 1i!.' .~0-~b'1~1;:1~r.~".;..1::';:!.~r~~.,u;~~·~~ · ..:sr """~Hrcs. ,,. w. 16111 si., 'u"• ·rr · d h , no! •~1..,. 1n .... 111e •!I0""·-'•11<1 tlm• . ..,,,_ 11. Costt Mtv, c~111. •1•21 energy has shot up alarmingly a m suggcstc t ese v.a)'s td bla1 !or roe •w••d o1 1 contr•tt 1or GfldOen "· Evin•, ••n P1., Ori••· to conserve energy· "" etx>Vr arorert. H1m11""'°" 111ch, c1111. '1M4 -30.fold since 1950 and, in Ille . Bid• ohllt DI rectlVtd !n th• plt tt fcltt'I· T~I• W•IMll II (-U<I"" bY ·~ ln- 1 d d dlvldu1I. ast two eca es, at a rate 1111~ •DO••· 1nd wn 11e ~ 1n0 'Gia.id " I! twice that of the population -Convince business lo con· ri:,~:c~~11r~'i:c•'1oud 11 1"" 1-..1114"' rri1, ,,,,...=,,.;.,,"~;'!.with '"" c- grov.·th. struct commercial o r f i cc rn1r1 w1u 11e· • sso.oo d9poolt ,_.,. .. ~,i1.,k of Ora"" covn1y on Jiiiy 11. b ild. h" h I for tMll wl al bid dot'umtttU to U UlgS W IC are C S S gu111nl.e Illa rtturn If! QOOlOd c-lllon """1 "ALTHOUGJI t.IANY people are aware of cnviroomental damages r r 0 m particular energy activities." Train said. ''fev.· realize the degree lo whi ch total energy systems af· feet the en\·ironmen1. "Conver ting fossil a n d nuclear fuels into energy leads to a ir pollution, water pollu- tion. creation or solid wastes, land disruption and aesthetic degradation," Train said. The environment i& damag· ed by car alr poll ution, thermal discha rges to lakes a nd strcan1s and the destruc- tion of n1i l lion~ of acres of land by n1ining. "ENERG\' SYSTE)lS were the largest course of the 264 mill ion tons or pollu1ants emit· led into the ai r in 1970." Train said. Cars and other forms of transportatio~ caused over half. Next biggest poUuten were J>O"'l!rplants and residcn- Official's Wife Gets Her Man wasteful of energv at little or wl!nln 1•n cun d•v• 111..-'"' o>d ooen1n; 1,~~i!~ ~.'~, •°'i..!'' Pli.t. J"' . . . . ·.• dl!f • . ......... .. ' '~ 11"'"11 no increase 1n 1n1tJal cost. eicn told m1111 conf""" • ...., .. •-------~----'----'---' -Find out the consumption •t•r>onllv• t1> !hi conrrec e OllC"ll..,.,..,s. PUBLIC NOTICE . Eecn bod tll•ll bl ICt-nll'd ~ ttt.1----:c==cccC""CCCC,,,~--patterns of the nation's largest tt<urltv rtterr"" 111 lft 11>1 con1r..::1 P•CT1T1ou1 •U1•N•SI d. t f j OOCYmtnlt Ind by 1111 1111 of llf_..i NAM.S STAT•M•NT srec user o energy. n· tubeon!r1.:ror1. ,,.,. lollowll'l9 ...,.'°" ,. 11o1 dustry and shape policies to Tn. D•STR1CT """"" 1r. r~ht to rt·.... "' "1tln1n be • h I !Kl •nY or •II bid• ar la ,..,;,.. •"¥ Ir· &LANl:I NSHIP FLOOll S 193' 11.,._ sure t ey conserve a ong •ttul•dll" or 1n1..,...met111" '" 1n, bl01 or t1111on sr., c11111 Mne. c1111~,,11 ~u with the rest of the rountry. In '"' bl<kllnu. v1u111m M.riln llt'*lMflli>. Ind., •• TPll OISTll.ICT f\,11 lhl.,ml!Wd IN! Owmtr. m So. Ker.,1, Sanll An otne••I P<'•••IUng fllt al i-r dll!'l'I ...... C1ll lQrM1 f77lW •• Pro-. SOl'.d I lfl 1111 1oc1llly I~ wlllch 1t>l1 W11fk It lo Ile Tnlt b!.11lntu 11 ton<luct«I Dy •n 1 -was e P11lormt<1 tor Nett '''N or tvPI' a1 dlvklu11. ,.. recyc!ling with tax incentives If -~-n """"" 111 ~•K111t "" contrkl. Wm. M. 11111-f .. sfl!p , T-r•ltt 1r1 on l•ll 11 tM DIST IUCT Tn!a t11......,.nl "''' llltd With n.. ' necessary.' J? takes 70 percent ofllct loc1ltod 11 7'n Wlrn., Avenue. Ca.mly Cle<~ oA Or•not' COllnl\I on J\llY less ener"'i lo nroduce pulp """""''°" IHCn. c1111orn11 .. Cop( ... rn•Y 11, itn. 5) J' De oblllfled "" reQUMI. " CllP'J of ~ 1'1MU from recycled fi ber than (rom ••1e1 •f\,IH 111 -'~ 11 tr. loo 1!!1. P\lbfl.n..i Orariq• Clll•' Dilly PUo! Ju-. . ood. I T . 'd Tnt tort90!"9 letoed\111 ol ...... dltm ly ''· 11>. Ind AllOY$1 1 • 1"1 1i1~1> v1 rg1n Vt' pu p. ram sa1 • w•oe• 11 blHd upon • --\r19 d•Y · ' and 74 percent Jess to produce 111 .ieht C•> _.,. T,.. ''"for holldir anc1 PUBLIC NOTICE ovrrll-"'or!< 11\aU bt 11 ltllf llrnt Ind srecl from scrap r ather than on•11111 1---,c,-,:Wc,cT-,ou-,-,-,--,---. . • • • 11 "1•11 Ile m1nd1tory upon fl11 CON· U IN SI v1rg1n iron ore, Train said. Tll.ACTOll 10 "'"'am ,,.. contr1cr 11 "' • IT AT•M•NT -Persuade niore people to 1wtrd.c1. 1nd uaon •nv 11Jbcon1rtc•or Tj" loll~ Pf<""'• 1r• doing • unae; h!m. I• ~Y nOI lttt llltn ,,.,, wl<t ~I !lttl 11. take mass transit ratht>r lhan 1t>tcllifll ,,1,, 10 111 ..... r~"'"' 1mployt11 J ' L GAllt OEHt'!ll S, ,5.,, R_.lctc t t k d by tnt•n In !he t•K~H"" of Ille conU•(! Cir., Huntfrioton IHCll. C1UI, '21'1 one-0ccupan cars o wor an Ho bidder m~y wtlhclriw 1111 bid '"' 1 Llovc1 ~1u1r1 ClllMll!, 111. '151 lltnnrlclt on long or short trips. I( hair ~''°" o1 ,.,,.,y.flv• !•11 dav1 '".,. ,.,. c1r .. H11ntll'>Oron &Heh, c1 . .ui1 . • • 0~11 wt '"' tile apenlno ol bld1. Wllll1rn JDlln Toan..-, '551 ll"""ltlt the lnterc1ty air traffic and ,. o•vm..,1 bond •nd • ""°'"'•nte c•r.. H~n11nog1on 1..cn, C•. rJUI on....,,uarter of the intercity -w111 111 reciulrtod prior to n tc:1111on "' Tfllt 1>u•l"'11 11 c.on11uc:tt.1 tior • ._,.-~., ,~. tonlrl~I. The p,y,.,..,,t bond 1/ulll Ile p.trlntt1Mp, car traffic 'A'ere shifltd to 1~ "" '°'"' "" 1or1n 1n n.. contr•tl LIO'W'd i1u1rt Calton , rt1 . · f llOt\lmllfth T!lll tflttrntnl Wt\ FU.cl wlrr. fM COii"· passenger trains and I GoYtrn•nu eoe rd 11 Ckrk 01 Ort nog• C.ounl\I on Jiiiy 11, 1 ail roads operated at a 70 per· ev "''o" H .......... C•t•k 1'7J. . . Publlllled Orlf'Ol COit! O•lly l"Uo! Jutv 1"16111 cent capacity instead or the "· 11• 1•n . n"-'' Pvbn"*' Or•-c1111t 0111y 1"uo1. J ... .- 25 h IY U, 26, l fld Auglnl 2, t, 1t7J 222f·.'l ~ presC'nt · pcret>nl. t ert -·--'---'---= ·- would be an annual savings or __ P_UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 11 billion gallons of fuel-eight ,1CT1T 1ou1 1u11Nts1 f 11 I lllAMll ITAT•MIENT FICTITIOUS •UllNlll percent o a energy used or t he 1o11aW1no Potrton 11 llolnog b!.11l11est N1M• lTATllMIENT · T · Id ,,. t"' 1o11ow1nog """" 11 dolnog b1ii1,..'ll trans pot:tallon. rain sa . WILLIAM II. JtOBI NSON COil· ., 111•c1011.. '9n AndrM SI., Co•I• ""'''· 9A.Sl:ET &AlAAll IMPOll TS, l1S9 d h bl• Cl!U tltU H1•bllr 11.,., .• C.111ol1 Ml<•. Ctllf. 91"' -Pcrsua C t e pu IC 10 w11111,,. l ruc• llctlinoon. ,,n Andros ~nnlfrtod M. It. 1>tan1, l\01 1. shift to smal ler, Ughter t."ftl"S. St .. Co.t• Mtw. c~u•. '1'1' F•tr~I ...... lPK• N ... 111. 5•n•• An.1, • · · T••• t>ull~HI It conduc!td l)y 1n ln· C•!lf, t7)!)1 "If JUSt halt tne 113 m1\hon dllllcli.ii. Th•' bu11ne11 11 conclll(tf'd by an 1,,. .or ~ted On th ad b)' Wllltom 9 llot>t~1cn dlvt<1v11. "° S eAi-~~ e fO, Tfll1 11t~l'fllnl Wilt lllfd \lll!ll !ht Ceufl• Wlfl~llrf(I M. II . OM"' 19-00 were as economical of " c11•t 01 Ot•l'IV• county °" Junt u,, 1111. 1111-M w~1 tli.d ..,.,, 111• cav ... I el b 11 122 .1 1971. 1\1 Cler~ oA Or•nu• Counry on Junt 11. u as .t e sma car m 1 es FUJU 191J. per gallon versus 14 miles per P11"'1~ or11"q9 COi•' 01Hy Pik>1. l'HlM Junt )I 1nd July s, IJ, U. lt7l 200t-7l Publl!lltd ~tf\OI Cooo1I 011ly ~11•1. ·DETROIT (UPI) _ ~rrs. gallon average now) the Ju"" 21 1nc1 July 5, n. ,,, ,,,, 1n1.n I I [)et "t' _average fuel savings would be PUBLIC NOTICE -r -UBLl-C NOTICE Jean Nichols. \vie o ro1 s 1 I h t PUBLIC '"OTICE •ICTITIOUl •UllNt:ll ·---------police commlss oner. as OU. !, NAMI STATIMINT NOTIC• INVITING •101 foxed • ,.~"ld·be th1'•( 300 ---1111 lollo..,lng !)ltton II ~"9 b\i1t,..J1 No• •eh lltrt by lllV9n "1•1 lllt l°"'•d Of ,..,. ... a u n1 ,, 1Tr11\lttt c.l' !f>e Co.11 CommunllY Coll~• r~,·crcd h-'r o•·n purs• l1'lled su ,.•111011 COUllT OP TN• '1'/>RTIH LOVAN ASlOCIA.TES. 0 1<1 011!•1(! ol 01~roq• Counl\", C•ll'or~I•. w II =.v '" ... s'fATI 01" CALll"OllllllA IN CttnpUI O•lv• (1ullf m >. Nrwpet<I fl(tll"t ft81td t>ldt llP to 2:111!1 J.m. l'rl-•• h. I AMO "'Clll TH£ COUNT Y OF OllANO£ &~tcfl, Cal!! ffio8> Idly Joly,,. \111. •! 1111 P11rc1111lng O•P'. "'Ith hammers a111.1 c 1se s. • ,.. . .a111S1 ""'"'" Levin. &1,1 lloyc• Jt1>1d. of u 111 .~1 dl••·1~1 tot11tc1 11 1310 '(rs. Ni'c"·ls. herself a Olt.OIEll fO SHOW CAU i • 1'0 11 CHANGE +rv1"'' C1lll 9)6M "'d~'I"• A""""'·'°''" Ml-'A. C1•l•nt1 ... I• llU " MAME n. .. bl.IUMl l It tiel'IQ Ull\(hK.!l!il 11'1 •n ... n1t11 ""'' .. 1d 91d' wll! bl Pt$1lcly-' I' 'col. In tM Miii ... of lf\t 1,otlttOon "' • ...,lYodll•I DP!ftld '"d n &d •I>'. -former po 1cewoman, wa • MAllY tlttAIETH 90G"'llT FD r M1rt111 U\1611 TOWEL Jtl!,..,1.AL "OA ~ElllOO leci l ' 't -and Othe r Cfll~ QI Hl!'l'le TMI ••••tmenl 111..:1 wllll !ht C.O\lfltv !£PT!:''9(11 f! ltll THllOUQ"i ng UrtllU1" WHElll:AS MAlltY ELt ZABETll c1tr •"'Orlf\1t11Coorty on Juneli.•911 AUGUST l 1, It?( WtTH TWO OP• ' 'terns from a railroad dtpot ' •• OGAll f, f)tltllllfl•r, • l'>l•M)o'I over "WILLllV.I e . !T JOllN. COUHtY llONAf,. 11.ENEW.&LI 1rt oA 111f, ft tl flied I Pt!IHon •llft thl CLEJtl:, ll'J Tlllrtu M Wi•d, O<IPUty •II b·<ll &rt to bt In Ktet<dlf!Ct with scheduled for demolition wMn c,.1~r-~ 11111 coun ter 1n flf"D"' c111no1...,. Plutt 1111 1n1•r1tt:•-· '""' conr1111on1 ,.,. illor>H'f n1-IV MJ>ll.Y ELIZAaETl-4 l"vblll"-<I Otft"9• CMll Dilly P!l'lt !a«IHc1ot;0011 ""'IV> 1•• flllW on n11 •NI She noticed her purse. which ·.~~·T Ill M"'lltY EL I l A IE T H J11rr 11 •f!Cf '"'' I, ,,, lt 1'71 1'7J.'J m• .. ~ MCU>d If! '"' ol!lct 11• .,,. '-""'SllERG· --' P111tfllllno;I Aof!U Of llid Kl'IOol d!•lrlc• h ""d filled 'th old tools IT 1~ 011.oEllEO 1111t •It .,...'°"' In-PUBLIC ''OTICE E•~l'I b""11r mu~' 1110"' t """" nr, Old , s e lltt \II"\ • IHHl.-d If! tM 1-t tnH!tld "''" .. •P I, c11n1.,-,. ("""-· ct rtl•lt<t tllt-C-. Olf !lid PH• ri.tore lftll Cowl lfl Oei11nm1nl ~ .,.. --------.,,.,.., t>nt'ld !'l'l•d• OIYltlll 10 lft.t f!fll•r el !tit 21tft dly al A<.11111•1. lt1l. 11 2 DO ,ICTITIOUS •UltNISt tl°'I CM1• COl"!'l'lunltf C.OlltO• O•tlrltl N~ o'clec• P.M , OI Mid <11v tat"-c'"''· lo NAMI STATIMINT l0t1a o1 Tr~\~11 In 111 ~"'Oii"! flllf It., ll'ly. ""'Y 11'11 Jtll'"°"' 191" <fllnot al n1mt ,,... fOllowlno lllf"llltll 1rt 6111"4 lft•" flvt p.trttfll "'ti Ill lftt tu!'l'I blcl 11 nlng ••arch dov.'TI several \llould "4:1' w 1•1nrl!d .,.,.in"" •• • Qu••I~'" "'" ''' bioOIMf w111 .... ,..,. jtlr1 -tT rs ll'Ullt Hlll OJtOElllD 11'191 • 0 ,. J ~A!HTINO Si t.VICE, 1)1» '"" OTOC>Olld (Of'lritot 'N IM .-ml h streets bcfort she nabbed the c0""', a1 •h11 O•<kr 111 p.,e11"1ed 1,, ,,.. A..-oe1• su11c n1. H"'llOf' a..t t1, r.11. ..... ,rot11 •o n1"'. 111 ,... • .,.,., °" r1ttvr1 11 tty Pilot. 1 ,,__,.., o1 ~·1 .,._ "'"' fftto w(.fl t.er11t~1, llM trOClt'lh ot man • ..-·ho had just 11laggered c1•c1111oon. prl111M 1~ wld toun'"· ,, W••' J1""' ,,..,,n1,.., ,., w. 11, s1 .. ""cflt(-.. 111 bt 1or1•1-. • ., 1n IN.c•M I • Of\Ct Heh -!I, !Of lour W«llS! ... -kl COlll Mf'I. (t lll. t1l1? al I bond. "'t f\11! '"'"' ""'tof ... 01 tit out of II bar with htr purse lfl Pf"!.~ lo IM O•V ti "'d lllt•lng, Dwt•it Wtlllt!'l'I~, '"" s. •1'9111~11. lo•kllM IO Mid KllOOI dltl•lcl, .,..1td. July 11. nn. Ho JS), H\l!'llll'IQ!on I~•'"• C1H1 . .,.,.. No blddtr "'''t' wl!Nr•"' ril l tld tor t his h11 nd. Threatening to Ar· CL.AUOf M UNl!'l\. ll~ld ""~"'-·· u w l2•th SI,, "'IW ol lorlv·l•W l'Sl OIYI '"'' "'4 J\ldft of Ille •1109rlor C0111! l01t•-fl(t. C•lll. dtl• "'' fO' tlll _,,1no tt.trtol. rt•t him. sht demanded and OONAL~ t.•••S M~AllTY Tflll 111111-I• c.ond..CllO O'r • o-at Tiii BDl•d al Tnrlf"" '""'"' ttll -· he . P•• OHie• 111 nu IMl•lntrMIJ. ...lvlt* OI ft!tcll"O l"Y •M •II bid• ol got it IJ.lck. 1 1~n 8 UTI· n 1 ,..,,_ N...-..rt 1o1111v1rtf J•"'~ Mt.Sn•.... .. .... 1~1 aft~ "'"""'11111 or '" was gone She conduct:ed her own l J ' medl.t.ly notl(''ed Detroit"s i"n-""' '"'"' c,u1«111• ~ 11111 "'"-' w11 n1ed w1111 1t11 Cwrr· rorm1nu11 in"'" oio 0, 111.,,. ~lfl!I, U ""WD2 ',',,,c, 11,k ol Ott• C011n!y lo" Jiiiy l~ Sl9""" kOltfMH ! WATSON - . '-"'"'" I« AffllC.1111 Sf<ly , lotrf Of "TM!tft top law enforcement officer, MAllY •L1r."'""' 100AllT , ,.... C)ptol· J111y Jt, un . t·dG pm I Pu"' t11"'<! Ort,...t Cor<•t O~H'f' PU~• Ju f'unllthl'O Ori"°" COii! 0111'1' Pl~t. Ju f'~bll\llld Or~"OI CO.ti 0111¥ P11tit. # her husband John N chols. 111 ''· 1' • ..., "'"'~'' t 1 ttn tm " 1~ 11 u u "nd AUOu1• 1 1t1i 11u '' "' 11 " 1•n 1111?-11 " ! •• :s J .. , .. f "ILOf ·111utsd11y July Jq, 1'1/J New Life Co11tat1 Claurch Cotacert .· .-. Young o ·rganist Lauded TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS > At 77 For Burns KHJ II 7:SO -"The Cockeyed Cowboys of Cali· co County. Dan Blocker an d Mickey Rooney head the cast o! this wacky weste rn fro1n 1969. CBS IJ 9:00 -"Deadfall." Michael Cai ne ., a master jewel thief who plots a robbery wit h part-, ners and then decides to cut them out and do the job alone. 1• NBC D 9:00 -Ironsi de. Myrna Loy guests as a woman 's liberation advocate whon1 Ironside is called upon to protect from a would-be assassin. ltaymond Burr. !ll .............................. ~~~·~J!'.a!: ...... ~, .... ~ ... ,.1118•~ TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening JULY 19 m;l £1 Slit• dt Jot F10111 ffi Movit: (2hr) "The hi!ll In U1• (com) 'JS-Pat O'Brien, 011~11 de H1vil!and. 1:30 m Mel'f Griffin Show ail Or1m1 .. . ... By ~IARY CA~I PBEJ:.L- NE\V YOHJ( IAPl -George Burns has son1e ad vice for young pcopll' starting in sh6\.\.' bu.sine5S: "Stay wilh it. But," he adds. "I think if they don't niakc it by 77, 1hey should go Into sorne other business.'' Burrui, for years best known as straight man for his wife Gracie Allen, al Tl is more or less starting a new career. lie has a record out. "A l\1usical Trip with George Burns," and ·he gave-his-firsrconeerl-as-a singer in New York 's Philharmonic Hall. The record originally came out. with then.current hits of the Beatles and Ro 11 i n g Slones. etc., in 1968. Burns says sales of the reissue prove lhat he was ahead of his time. "TllEN. NOllOOY bought the album except my sister Goldie and I had to buy it buck from her the next week." 'IT'S A NICE LIFE ' Comic George Burns No single segment or our society has done more than our churches to advance the ~use of music and no coo- tribllfinf force as received so tittl e credit for its con· i;iderable efforts in that field of cult ure. &iany or our Orange County ortlsts and musicians oome to the concert stage richl y en-- dowed with Ille polish and ex- perience acquired in church participation, be it choral or instrumental. And It has been this critic's unfailing experience to note a up early. have orange juice prompt and Justly aHirmalive and-ctffee,.smoke a cigar-to_by...chureh.leader_s__aruloificial;t loose up my vocal chords. I go in response lo any request by to my office at 10:30. At 12 I musical and choral organit.a- quit. I go lo the Hillcrest lions seeking a locale for an Country Club for lunch. I sit at offering that may not always a round table with Danny fall squarely v.•ithin t he Thomas, Groucho Marx . guidelines laid do\m by a Georgie Jessel and Jack. \Ve particular fa ith. fight to get on sometimes. "I PLAY bridge until about 4:30. I go home and have a lit- tle sleep until 6. I get up, have a rew martinis. have dinner. go out sometin1es, sing a lot. It's a nice life." ALL OF \VllJt:ll n1ay be a somewhat rambling way of transporting the reader to Santa Ana's ve ry lovely First ~OM BARLEY Music Box Bllpllst Church and magnifi-day t>vening that he is 1norc ccOt recital Sunda,Y night by a than welcome aHmy tin1e at brilliant yow1g organist who ~'irst Baptist and little \11ondci- used that massive Schllcker ln the light of what he gave u~ instrument to n1emorable ef· His great 111omenlS, from feet rO.r an audience that gav,e this critic's seat ca1ne in the him a solid, standing ovation. Uach and Reubkc. Bach got Listening ta young James the full four-square 1reatn1cnt Game r of Ne~rl Beach caP::...__ill.a.rendition-lhat-emphastzed ture the very soul of Bach und every majestic chord in that Julius Reubke in the great glorious prelude . German's Prelude and F'ugue Reubke .. by sharp contrast. in E minor and the latter's offers a shimmering score of Sonata on Psa lm 94. one 004\d raoidly changing tonal colors not help reflecting on the part and Ga rner obviously revelled the church has played ln his in tht> work and delighted in phenomenal pro~ress. the often bewildering changes Jimmy, incredibly only 22. l)f !)ace in that fascinating \vas organi st for the Lutheran score. Church of the r..1aster in ANO A WORD of prHise for our organist's handling of a work that bas long been a rir111 favorite o(_lhis _ critic and Peerless 1..-0uls Vieme pen· ned the work during a stay in London and it is known to-.the Brilon simply as "Big BcQ" - Lhc clock. or course, that ove rlooks the Mother o ( i'arliurl'tl.'nts. Garner used the F'rench title, which escaped 118• hut no 1na11er. He captured the bright effervescence o( the work in a n1onner that 'tOok this "'ritcr back to the da'ys of C.L'()rgc Thalben Ball , pe$aps the greatest organist or. ifte1n all. · James Garner. ladie~· 1ilnd ge11tle1nen. is a splendi~ ex- ample of what is ofteit the church's hidden role in' the making of music and l)lusi- t·ians . There is more need than ever. in days when fi nan· cial support from sectoiilbal should be busy writing (ie(lts has become a mere trickle}~o recognize an attitude that ~­ stantly encourages s.u c: h genius. ... And an audience that go~3o its feet and clapped its h8!s off Sunday night wouJQ.:~y have one cominent to m~....._ a fervent ··Amen.'' ... ~ 1:00 fJ DD llil m IS Gl "'" rn o • ... o h1111111 oo Cmblllf " Cddlt'• r1tht1 0 W1wted Dttd tr Allft ,:00 IJ (jJ C8S TlluradtJ Mowit: (C) (2hr) "Dtldl1ll" (susp) '6S-Mlch- 1el Ciine. Glov.1nl\I R1lll. A masttr tewel thief plots 1 1obMry with part· ners, then becauu al h1! pench1nl for prtcise pl1nnin1. decides to cut out the others 1nd wo1k the job 1lo11e. Things arc different now than when he was young in show business. Burns says. Then. before radiG or TV. a song mighl take three years to bl.'comc a hil and equally as long lo fade away . Money was never his goal. Burns says. ··1 just loved sho\V business." He says Jack Ben- ny is Ille same way, more in- terested in the s m a I I discoveries of daily li re than in money. ·'If he signed a con- tracl for $1 million, it wouldn't interest him. He came io the club one day all excited: he'd found a restaurant that gives fou r pieces of butler \vith a baked pota to. And he doesn't cat butter. Governor Plugging Fisliheck Corona de! l\"lar and served as organist-choirmaster of the Newporl Center U n i t e d Methodist Church before win· ning several degrees in music and taking up his present post as assistant or g an is t · choirmaster at St. John's Episcopal Church in San which was i~cluded a111ong ~,.,,, ~ •11ST !.,,c"" •• several pleasing encores o!- _ fered by our artist. ___ , . , . j•:m,.. CD Tiit FJhrbttrln O)st.r TrM Q) IM Tttm fEM11111poid11lod11 Ul tlirttSWps C:JO (]) tt.il•'• Mtrte1 0 Mowi9: (C) {90) "Ice Pallct:N Concl. (dr1) '60-Richard Burton, Rob1rt Ry1n, C.rolyn Jones. CIJ CIS News W1ll1r Cronkite O Hirt liun WHI TmeJ \f9l Mtrt Gritfl1 Sllow m Andy 1ir1tttt11 111) Sii YMlll Tia&, .. m Urin1 Easr m-• a> hMlt Tht11N m Utdt 1tnui1. 1:00 IJ Cll D II) Nm 8 lowil•& lor 1>111111 CJ ®J m lto111ide "All About An· d111" (Rl Myrn1 Loy auests 1s M· • d1e1 Wooll:OU. 1 women's llber1llon 1dvocate Chief lro"s1d1 i1 called upon to protect l!om 1 llOuid·be l~Sl!.S1n, r6) Run for Vour life 0 (J) a> llun1 Fu "Ch1ins" (R) Caine. usina: the patience and in· sl1ht he learned in China. discovers the inner goodness of i despised wild crimina l. &) Historl1s de Mi mi J P1p1 @m D Show dt Altj1ndro Su1ret !:30 O Kim W1ndere rs ONns €'J Much1tll1 lt1Han1 m eo1111fd1 A person might stay in vaudeville for years. never rea lizing whether he had ta lent or no t, while loclay a recording can come out. sell enough copies so !he artist has enough money lo retire and the 11cxt week disappear so he has to \Yrilc a new song to re· rna1n in the public eye. ··ONE OTHER day he came I-It. \\'OULD N°T want to be in looking all excited. He'd retired. Burns says, or even signed a contract downtown in scmi·relirl'<I. which he deci ded Los Angeles. May be it wa s for he'd try a few yea rs ago. $1 mill ion. He said, "l came "You get old too fast. out of the parking lot, turned "Jack Benny just bought on Wilshire Bouleva rd , and if 530.000 worth of rosin. \Ve're you 'go 'Zl miles an hour, yo u going lo stay around. We're miss every red li ght!" booked... The George Burns and George Burns "and Jack Ben-Gracie Allen Show ran. after 1IJ """' (C) (n~ "T>o ....... (WIS) '54-&Jrt ltnctsler. (j) W!ldlift Tlllttre 10:0001]j.1 m Dtlll MirtiR Show (R) ny ha ve been friends more vaudeville, for 17 years on stne l.lwrenee i~d Chults Nel· than 50 years. llO\Y have lbcy radio. then nine years on TV. a Wfltt'• MJ u .. ? Gtl ltvt l MCJ son Reilly 1uest. st~yl'd friends? Easy. Burn~ Gracie died in 1964. The TV fl) I Drt1111 ti Jit1nflll 0 m (D News says. ··He tells me rin a greilt rerWlS seen these days ho ld up m ~-"'""" I ED Erita 1M Titeonie Crewel em· f'i)Twi~ptlo11t !'inger and I tell hin1 ht>'s a the character Gracie played 0 mm Streets ,, Sin ftlRCis· great violinist.'' so well. Bums says. ··because broidtrY expert £ricl Wilson otters instruction in '11cllin1 Slmpltf'' 1iid Greek cook Thtonit Mir~ pre· p1111 "lir11pltt1s." ct "The Albatross" (R) The sus· Burns recounts a usual Los "'"'5 so believable. The jokes Ptct in the killi111 ol 1 teeR12ed Ang eles day 's routine. ··1 gel sound fresh. e .. en n-0\\'." youth is re!e1sed when the defense ------------------·•iiiiiiiiiiiimm•••••;,, contends his hearinf loss prt't'ented I.• ir)M11MC1 ml Ttfe..ltmst1 Musiul (!>s,..lllRtce' his bein1 m1d1 1w1re of llis ri2Ms. O Mtrie: {2111') "Stant• 111 • Wei I Aftef11H9" (drl) '64--4lim Slrnl&J, 7:lt I) You•& Dr. l lldl11 "A PtrfedlJ Richard Attenborouall He11ttry Boy" .(R) Kild1rt loses 1 el Musitll younr pllltrtt ind suffers lrt- mendous ruilt until h1 ll11dl oul 10:30 0 T1lll l1d: what caused the bo~'s death. @ One Step leJOnd (SJ Ho&•n's ffefHI m Ch111pion1hip .fisllln1 O Tiit Aiw11turtr (II) 'Gene Brad· EE Yklts-t• Conrl1tlt ley's friend becomtt 1 host11e whe11 €Il Acomp1n1l'lt a hu1e c1110 plane loaded with 50 all "ews /Sports tons .ol .~11111! 1rms tlld 1mmuni· l l :OG 8 0 0 (I) m tl) News tlon IS h111eked. . .. (3J CJ)®! fj) Nn'l 1J lllowle: (C) (2hr) .,~ndulo. 0 Ont Step Beyond (Hv) ·~Robtrt Mitchum, G1lbtrt f6) Peny Miso11 Roltnd, Ursula Thieu. Zx.h1ry1 OJ Truttl tr Conse11uencts Scott. ID MDYit: "Vitt Sqlld" (dll) 'S3 Cl) l'tllct Slirlffn _ [dwaul G. Robinson, P1ul1ttt .... 0 MllliM $ Mo•it: (~ (2hrl Goddard. "CocktJed Ctwboys of C1l1Ct Cou11- ty" (wts) '69-0in Blocker. Mickey 11:15 ai) Ci11tr111 ~ Rooney. Ltt'1 Make 1 De1t m niat 1i111 m "'""' flil Action Cllict11t !Dhllin' ll:lO IJ@ CIS LAU: Movie: (C) "M111 on a Strin(' (d11) '72-Christ09llet George. Joel Grey, Jack W11de11, Wil· liam Sch1ller1. 0 @I m Joh11111 Clrson '@ Jbuth Coast Repertory MYSTErtYI DftAMA! EXCITEMENT! "ADRIENNE'S SUMMER" NOW THIU JULY 29 -WED. THRU SUH. I P.M. U11 NEWPORT, COSTA MESA FOR llESIERVATIONS. CALL.-.4'-UU 'Island Holiday' Leaues Balboa Pavilion Dall31 at qa,m, Call (714) 673•SZ4S For Rcseruations, Etc. SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) - The governor of Ne,.,. Mexico appears on televiison in Los Angeles from time 'to ti me In promote the KABC-TV nightly news \Vith weat herman George Fishbeck. Bernardino. TRUE, HE has studied under the likes of th e great Karl Bonawitz and our own Dr. Justin Colya r of Orange Coast College with obvious res ults but he \\'Ould be the first to pay tribute to the churches of all denominations who have helped in n1any Fishbec k enjoyed a larg£ ways to smooth his path to its Following during his first years present pinnacle of artistic as a \veatherman on KOB-1'V perfection. in Albuquerque, and Gov. It was made very clear Sun· Bruce King \\'8S one of hisrlmiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii~i I rans. I \Vhen Fishbeck moved to Los Angeles for his ne\v job. the Los An~e\es station asked Kin!'.l'. to help oromote him. Pence said King has re- ceived t\VO letters from Los Ani;-eles viev.'ers -one good . OnP bad. The first said. ··1 thoue:ht 1·d \\•r ite And tell you ha\v very kind of you it was to let Or. George out of your state ." "SSSS" ... "THE 10'1' WHO CR IED WER~OLP"' The ot her letter, which "'as n't fil ed .And dre\\' no gu-1 ~~~:~::::::~ bcmatorial response, sug-11 gested King take Fishbeck. back. · IPGI t!X CLU 5 1YE HOW PLAYING Lo9u11a Sa. Caost Theatre 0 4-ISU Seal leoch Boy Thfotre 4114"1 Hawpart•Poulo DrifJ In SU.Ull . plUI co/Hit "ON ANY SUNDAY" . MANN THEATRES All tHlATllS COOllO !Y t lfltlG!IATION r-llow PLAYING RESERVED SEATS On S•I! 6,Jo "Cit BJO ffi .. Sat ., Sun. Noon MARLON BRANDO .itL paus ,X ~~.~~~~ Un11t~ ~~l•SI<; MOH. lHRU THURS. 8 P.1!. fRIO lY 1 & 9AS IAIURDAY 1-1 & 9 45 IU N04Y 2-5 & 8 Al l SEATS S4.00 EB The Md11111 F1nli1J lJlenCuey l:~~~iiii:iiii!i!iil~lii!IEGi~i,iiii:i~i!l~~~~;11 0 rn W'lde World of Entertlln· Cklril L•alClllNll 1:00 I) ([l T~• W11ton1 (R) John -Bop rnent "ABC News-At [1SI!" HOW· 2nd Feature-Wolllff' Motrilou !eels responsible when his youni ard K. Smith and H1ny Reasoner "A HEW LEAf0' 1lrt triend decides to e1t1pe htr ht»t 1n informal accou ntin1 of the Plus: Hit with 1 stern mothtr ind Slek news behind the news with 1 te1m 1ctvenlur1 by runn!n1 off lo i tt of ABC News correspondents. m1rried. m To Tell the truth 0 ~ g;) Tht ffe le11 lttdclJ Shew . Join Rivers A11n Mu11ty Jim Croce 12:00 (i1 Mrrsllll Dilloll ind Ille Pol~te1 Sisters 1~e1t. m Alfred Hltcllcod: Presenb 0 I]) a> M~ Sq~ld (II) A dis-12:30 0 Hi1llw9 P1tret tr1u1ht mlft IS drMn to '™;ltJ Q Movie: "ln'fislble Cllosr {mys) killing when 1 nurse steals medlCI · ,4!-Bt!a Lugosi. tion lnlt11dtd for his wile. Kowird m Mlll'it: "Capt.ill fury" (1d'I) Duft and M1rth1 Scoll rues!. '39-laul lu~1s, Y1tl0f Mcl•lltn. m ffep •'• Keren t:OO IJJ DODCIJ •.., Q) lolill l f19111 tttt Dl)'lllplt EE L• ~ ... , )M• l:-4S 1J Morie: (C) "Olnl'fffl Miulo•'" ------------1 (d11) '!14 -'fictor Mature, Piper srtCIAL NOTICE L1urie. Vincent Priu. . 2:00 0:, All.ftlf)lt Show: "TM EN ti St. Wirt." "Mr Son, t111 V1111pi11" -.._.._ ""'-··R•I ' STAO/UM · t:r. t. ~ULl:!.t'..l.Jt!•.:l'.... .. -..... -=.--. $TAOIUM •3 ~ • ' •tU'"..:11 -•.J'" _, ... ~ STADIUM •I :;;, " !..11 \l! '!"_ .... ... "DOLL.RS" IRl "TOM SAWYER" IC>l ... "BIC> J•KE" IPC>l "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" ANO 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES" (R) "Ln THE GOOD TIMIS lOLL" AND "EYIL kHIEYEL" f PGJ All ef to"lrtrt'• P'•tJ11111ni111 on Cltl11· NI 21 (llCtt) frtM IPM 11 1pprtlJ.. 1111t1ly 111klnltllt .-ill M ,, •. 1.,ptlll for the Wattrr•te Ht1tlllp. 3:10 1J Mo•i1: (C) "Wt111tt1 If IN PTt------L-------------1 historit f'11 Mt" ($ci·li) '&S-Wtn· aJ Supu Shew Friday DAYTIME MOVIES t ::SO D (C) "Tilt ltftdw111n" (mus) '55-fitd Aillln, Cyd Cllaf11st. JO:OG Q) "liflt 01 tH l..u:'" (mys} '!II -M1r1 Col"dlJ, M1rl RidilllOlld. 0 "Tm• Rat11tn ltkk Aclll" (HS) '40-Johl Kowtrd. lZ:OO e "111 ''"'" lrt•" (ttim) 'J6 -tll)' Grant . .kltn hnnttt '1trtd ti Oluet" (dr1) ''2 -Buritss Mt rtdlth. tilt" T1t'fQf, 1:00 m ""CMrlt Mtrtlll" !dr1) '55 - D•vtd NM•, M1rp rtt Lli1i.t011. dell Corey,.Keith L1rwn. John Aa:1r. I~ D "hriod of A4j111t1111Ht" (com) '62 -To111 fr111CiCM, Jane FIHldt, lim Hutton. 3:00 CJ) "thrll'IPllM fof C1n11f' (fO"I) ·~onald Colmrn, Cllest• Holm. llO) (C) "Wee,end ft Oi11kkt" (clrt) '6&-kln-Paul Btlmondo, Cltherint Sp11t l :lO 0 "Att1U ol !hf M11111 Mur11•1" (hor) '64-Riclllrd Webb • .IOllft Bur· '"· 4:00 0 (C) '1his Utttt 11 Mlnt" (d11) '59-Rock HudSOn, Jtan Simmons, Dorothy Mdiuif1. 4:l0 CD Seti• ts IMM liltll& ' U.A, ·CUr •lld South Co111t C•M..,.., -TIM~•r SOc tL..," al'C! Goldonqersl -Open 'Ill 2;10 ,.,M. W1rrer1 Ollfl -Clorb LMChm•11 "DllllNGEll " (It) "BOX CAlll: IElll:THA" (111:1 ~ •••h 111 Coler! New M111k1I VnHrftl • "TOM SAWTllt" 10) "llllOTHElll: 0' THl W1"'0" 101 l1t11 hi Ce1et1 Utllm.at. tf T-! "$SSSSI" Y" 1111• 111 "IOY WHO c•••o Wl lll llWOLI"" &1111 hi C ... tl lf'OI MESA THEATRE I fth & Nawport Cont. Sot., Sun. 2 p.M, (!J!l;•l:illl "HITLER' LAST 10 DAYS" Corttfnuous S11itc1a,, 2 p.M. Corona dt l Mar 673-6260 ders • , ·--. · rfS ••1b.Alt4ll<l. .. R:tiges[N • . i1h~~-~~, ... P• ..... IS .... ~i .. ', ! . I , ' ' I ...... 1St0,'( U111t1i ...,,.,. . , ' i«3 ·~ 7:00 and 10 :20 Ak o "IROTHEA OF THE WIND" -1:50 Call Tlteatar for !>1nda, Scfledul• • . THE LUXURIOUS e Eiclusi'e Ar.a Sflowl119 -Lost s11mrnn -w.,. tha flrst thaatra NEW IAL8$A i11 the Harbar Aiff to brl111 yo• THEATRE "Caborat". nit SUIMWI' .. ,, ••• ~ -1-;;;:;;,~;.,,_,..,,,...,.,...I ly pres.nt thl1 Y•ar's lit Co11tefld· 0 THE PEHl~SULA ., for Th• Award Swaepstatln! 673 -4048 COi. WBIA l"ICT\.f£S - a~11·• ' I "lMANDLETlllf ·ro---- _"'_.,. __ o• O•• ..... --Magg1eSi1•a 1 • 'ina111V8ottot11S .:..~~----Pain I~~~~~~ .......... ~~THEWHOU:DAMNTHING ,.., I • -.. AL. ... SNlalil· " ...... -..-...-.. Au.~J,...ll.a ...... 1 Sooth Coast Plaza II e htin feet ... e Jodi l.aMmo11 "UYI THI TIGll" ..... ...., °"" Tlrlat Will .. 0 11 t a, At A....,4 TIMI • U.11 MMfWT 11 Nl\TOI. • "'·lJSl New hcltl11t Stlrfl .. 1, Alall ltlclt "SALT WATER WINE" 7:JC g. 9:45 Eoc:h EM11l11t STARTS WEDNESDAY , "LIQUID SPACE" N, • .,~icfe I •e•"•' •I 1.omon S~. S2!>-l'>26 s ... o •• 11.r..-; C•1>t•1<•n• Dll•••mo• ., . ·.·. l_ .. "A••· .... ,of "'-· ~'7·22,J !ianl• ""• ' ....... , .,., .. f'~•11m•n "••· '!>'!>8·10,:1 ""•'""' ... ~ ...... ~' II•••~ •t..,. ••1·~~,, L__!).DO 'tf,t t.t.IL<>a~ ntllrll:U~·IU fHilllllS! {I.I Oil' "O!IUST 111 2. nsTs Of fUIY 111 :a. U STl • • ) ' 'I .. t alo! . :Wet ' ',e(lt s , ,wjl ·/l\.U !Is ''Tl . 'lbc . hi !!H rou ·1 .1 ,spo .the '?~ , J!:rr ( ... .. ;::~ ·"·-:0."1 ~~.m : we • 1 : du1 • ' . we. •'a .. ' : .•nu ori SUI we Jul I ton M ' Cl< :.·.th' , Sti jla -~ !·~~ .. . •. " .\ .. ·~ 1 .. ~ ,-' ,.; •O :.: n ....... .. ... , .. ' ... :: : ... ·- ' ,., -·' .4.' " ... '. ..; : ,. ' '' . . '. :• I •' ·. ';. . ' .... . . ' ... , . . . .. . .. , .. · .. -. ' •• ·.' ... ' .... ' . ·' :-· .. .. , '• ·~· . '·' .. ... '' ". •,• ·: .... : · .. : ::1 ' ••• ... . ' ··. ,- 2 Y outli Shows Debut ; 'Matchmaker'·On Tonight Orchestra Tow· Set In China , . The summer curtains go up 'al three commllllity theaters alon(( the Orange Coast this '·~kend, and it's all family · ,t9tertainmcnt. Starting things off tonight , ,wiu be the San Clemente Com· , ,nunity Theater which opens ltS ambit ious production of 1'Ttie Matchmaker." Th t , 11i~rnton \Vildcr co rn c d y , Which inspired the rnusical "Hello, Dolly.'' is kicking off a four-week engagement. :· .i:he younger set takes the ,:SpaWght Friday night al both ,.th~ Hu ntington Beach Playhouse, v.•here ' · T h e · ;Emperor's New Clothes opens WEISSIURG , .. . -:-.~weekend stint. and the :;!1'Pntain Valley Community :•!l1ieater, unveiling a two- ' weekend run of ''Peter Pan '' ! The only other stage p~<r • duction on the coast this : ·~ is South Coast ! ,; ' ory's mounting of the : ori drama "Adrienne ·s : Summer," which opened last : weekend and runs through : JL.tly 28. ImADING THE cast for tonight's premiere of "The Mat c hm aker'' in San Clemente are Jan Gordon in ~-.tne title role of Dolly Levi and , Stan Weissburg as her target, ~ace Vandergelder. Other )'llajor roles are assigned to . . . ~-... ·. • .. ' • Intermission Tom Titus Peter Case, Joan Burt, Mark llazor. Carol Gustafson. Ann Keenan and Mardi Brent.. Completing the large San Clernente cast are Kip Conner, Curt Willman, R i-e hard Jli1isener, Peter Shanta, Ray Judson, ?o.tark r.iilon, BoMie Judson and Lousie Schwabe. Directing the comedy i s Richard Andersen, who also staged the theater's last sum· mer show, "Tom Jones." "The r..1atchmaker" will be seen Thursdays throu gh Saturdays at 8:30 in the Cabril lo Playhouse, 202 Aven· ido Ca brillo, San Clemente. 1ieservations 492--0465. * A LARGE cast of children -as yet unannounced by the playhouse -is included in the Huntington Beach production of ''The Emperor's New Clothes ." Stuart Elliot. who staged ''Heaven Can \Vait" earlier in the season, is direc· ting the young people's fan· tasy. Performance times a r e Fridays at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday afternoons at 2 o'clock through Aug. 4 at the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun- tir1gton Beach. Reservations 536-4446. \Vhile the Huntington Beach Playhouse has trouble an· iiouncing one children's cast, the neighboring F o u n t a i n Valley Community Theater has come up with two casts for its musical treatment of "Peter Pan," also opening Friday. Jay Conklin is dirrc- ting the James 1\1. Barrie classic which featurrs a cast of 49. SHARING THE titl e role or Peter Pan are Joel Strauss and David Lane, with Johanna Anderson and Sharon Kennedy doubling as Wendy. Colin Miller and Keith Dunlop alternate as John, K y I c Burson and John Hebert as 11ichael, while Charles O'Con- no r has the role of the villainous captain Hook all to himself. Also in the Fountain Valley company are Nansi Bower, Jennifer lJigginbotham. Earl Cousins, Patti llouston, Sandie Hughes, Deborah Jones, J . Frcildy Ray, Julie Kurth, Dan· ny Rei.ser, Mara Helber. lo.1at- thew Ande r s on, Laura Damrolh, Trisha B u r s o n . Patrick l\1aher, Mich a e 1 Whitehead and Beth Strauss. Also, Shei la Jones. Cindie Hughes, Adrian DcLeon. Chris Himm c lh cber. Darrel Shephard, Randy Peterson, Paul Aughe, Lyle Nickeson. David Opferman. Becki Thomas, Eve Himmelheber, Kristine Blough, Donna Sapp, Robal Carpenter and Laura l\1aher, Christine FoK, Sunday Scheidel, Lisa He I be r . Maureen l\laher. Kim Ridge . Chris Hclb€r, Frederick Rudolph and Ed\vard Opfcrman . A Look at Lincoln ·' ... ; Walter Huston plays Abraham Lincoln in D. VV. Griffith's biographical movie ... ~·~his first '"falkie'' -produced in 1930. The seldom-seen film will be shown ~~::on Playhouse l\1ew York Biography Friday and Sunday at 8 p.1n. on KOCE, Chan· :.: nel 50 . ....... '. '" ,, • ... .. ' , .. ... ,. ... : .. : .. ·-· ~::. .. curtain times arc 7:30 p.m. oo Frjdays, 2:30 and 7:lll oo Saturdays and 2:30 only on Sundays th.is wee.Jcend and neKt at the theater, 18280 ,.1t Buld,y Cirtle. Fountain Valley. Reservations 962-5198 or 847-6570. * TllE ORIGINAL d r a m a "Adrienne's Summer" con· tinues in its second week ot South Coast Repertory with performances \V e d n e s d a y through Sunday. David Emmes and Barry Koron share the directing assignment on the \Vill ian1 ·Lang script; \li'hich features Elizabeth Herbert and Ste\'c DeNaut. Also in lhe SCR cast arc Bill Brady, June WinslO'A'. Rochelle and Susan Savin and Paul Gracey. Curtain time is 8 o'clock at the SCR theater, 1827 Ne'A'J>Ort Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reserva- tions 646-1363. Miss Flack, Gree11 Win Soul Fetes Attd All That Ja~~ James 1.·Ioody (left) and hi s quartet appear tonight at 9:30 on KCET's "Just Jazz" series over Channel 28, while saxophonist Dexter Gordon {right) and !us quar· tet highlight f>"'riday's segment on KOCE. Channel 50 at 9 p.m. ---- Bixby Upgrading His Image LOS ANGELES (API - S)'mphony conductor Eugtnt Orn1andy says that when he takes the Ph 11 ad e I p h I a Orchesira to China this sum· n1cr he "'iii 1>e.rfor n1 a con· <"Crlo written by n Communist 1.'0llllllltlt'e. The 72·ycar-old Ormandy, in Los Angell'S for a se ries of p1.:rfor1nances with the Lo6 .\ng1'lc!> Philharmonic, said \\"Mnt>sdny he received a copy of "The Yellow River Con· certo" nboul a month ago fro1n n1ainland China. "In today's China, at .lea.st in this case. such a piece or music is v.·r111en by a group ratht·r lhan one person," said Ornlandy "Tile composer is J1stt•d as 'the committee of the ('vn1poser's union.' " flrn1andy's tour gt art Ing Sl•pt. 10 y,·ns arranged by presidential adviser Henry A. K1ss1n>:er. All 105 n1cmbers of By JERltY BUCK "ll \Vas n1ature work series, "The ro.t.:igicia11 " for thl' f>hiladclphin Orchestra LOS ANGELES (AP) respcmsibly approached and it NBC .He v.·ill be a st<1gi> ma gi-\1111 n1a.ke the lrip. Sooner or Jater every actor attracted your not·Si>-average ·1 cian ivho lx>cotnt~ in\'ol\·cd in OR!\li\ND'' CALLED the feels his se lection of roles fan 11ilo came up to you on Chinese concerto very •I- th I I d d oihcr people's problc1ns. being limited and yearns for a e s ree an ii a ft'!<'t1ve. lie said ''it sounds like new image. ·congratulations. I'd like to '' It's a d ruin at i c a 19th Century Rus.'iian work . \Vhat happens is that at a see more "Strambaths" on pcr!ormance," he said. "so "l'ronl a popular point of casting session the name of an television.' That's more than it's no longer. 'You know Bill view. it's rc:i!ly for the publi<' actor comes up and someone I'm used to. Usually, it's, a· b h · th "--111 large It has a lot or says, ''Naw, he can't do •·Hey. you. sign thi.s.' " ix y, es e guy "'"" does nH•lod1ous passages and It is drama. He's a comedy actor." After "Steambalh" he went comedy.' It's nice to be refer--if I can use the word - LOS ANGELES (AP ) Bill Bixby figured that y,·as into a movie comedy for the red to :is an actor. I "'ant to 'schmaltz\'.' " Singers Al Green and Roberta happening to him. \Vhcn his upcoming season. It's "Shirts ha\•e the privilege of doing all Ormandy said the solo parts Flack led the list of v.·inners of name would come up. all and Skins," a bizarre rough-kinds of roles ." or "The Yellow ruver Con· Soul and Blues Awards. com-anyone could remember were and-tumble story about six <.'erto" would be played by a Pl.led by the N 1· I A d As he relates these deve[on. a 1ona ca emy his comedy roles in "My bus~men 'A'ho play basket· " Chine se pianist whom Orman- or Soul and Blues. Favorite Martian" and "The ball together. ments Bixby is giving a dy says he has heard on tape The Los Angeles-based Court.ship of Eddie's Father." Then one side hides a private per for n1 a n c e or and praiS()s. group presented its awards But how about Bill Bixby, ·basketball and the other side sorts. His hands fly Ii k r "The Chinese people are so Tuesday night to Green for top the star of "Steambath'!" He has to find it. 1bat doscn't semaphore signa ls. \\ford s poli te they never asked me to male vocalist of the year. ~tlss performed admirably for "The sound like much, but the ABC play their ronce rto. They just Flack Was ed I r I 'I f h k tumble from tus lips at nam o ema e Hollywood Television Theater" n ovie o t e Wee is causing sent it to me to see if 1 liked vocalist. in that scorching dranta about so much talk about town that breathless speed. fi e bounces ii," the conductor said. In its second annual awards the dead. ABC is thinking about a S"equel in his sent. His eyes gloy,• OR:\fAND'' SAID he was presentation ceremony, the and even a series. behind his tinted gla~es . You also sent a copy or a complete group also honored The Ojays "I DIDN'T do 'Steambath' are almost fellrd bv the ballrt called "The Brigade or as top tr1a:.le vocal group; the to shape up my image as 'Ed· IN THE meantime, Bixby is breeze of so much j3wbon· the Fighting \\'omen," a por· Honey Cones, ,as ·the top die's Father,' but to remind taking the biggest step of all ing, but you are caressed by tion of which was performed female vocal group: Barry people I'm an actor," said toward altering his image. He his charm and intrigued by his for President Nixon on his White as the top new male Bixby. will star in his first dramaUc single-minded explosition. visit to ~king last year. vocalist: Zulima as the top,---'---·--------------------..::. ____ :_ _____ .,. ___ :__~:_ __ new female vocalist: Billy Paul as the ne\v male ja,zz vocalist. and Esther Phillips as the new female jazz vocalist· Curtis 'Ptfayfield and Johnny Pate shared honors for the best original score for motion pictures with their music for the movie "Superfly.'' "~fe and ,.1rs. Jones" sung bv Billy Paul "'as named song of the year. The academy presented its album of the year award ((! Stevie \Vonder for "Talking Book." Grimes Role HOLLYWOOD (UPI! Juvenile star G.ary Grimes - ··summer or '42'' -landed a co-starring role with Lee Marvin in "Harry Spikes." For WeeJ-.ender Advertising Phone 6424321 ··Pete N Tillie' HELD O\°EH LEE MARVIN ERNEST BORGNINE IN (PG ) UNITED STATES M•RSHAI "PAT GARRET!' AND BllLY THE KID" •,£"FO:.ct.CA· PM.>i.'$0,' ~c> c "'GM IN THEATRE FOUR PLUS · GEORGE SE GAL IN "LOVING" PilEMIElt INGAOIMENT ·" •• ... . . 1nd ··111E BO! WHO CRIEO WEREWOW " ""'o' '"o"'" """' '.~.:.~~.:":'~!~.~!~.~::.~.~.:.~1 rJ11 ~A~;~R~:~,=~ Plus Lee Marvin &. Gene Hackman "PRIMI CUT" '•j;f ·).?. ••• ~·-:':4ii. i'jt ·tr. ... ~.-,.. .. 1 . . '• '• :- ·~ . ' ·. : .. : ' .·. ... . . '. ·.· ··. ... :.; .· ...... •• ,:t • " ' '•, ,. NOW IT BOTH CINEMAS WltAt DO !OU !AW WH!N THE LONG-RUN A IO'f HALI 40 YOUI ••• ""' • '. COMEDY HIT You "' tovu C a.#-s comes to the Yout a r .. screen Liv Ullmann Gene Kelly IPGl Edward Albr.rt Binnie Barnes 1nclotCW 1 1 ' GOLDIE HAWN tN "IUTillt,LllS Altl NOW IN THlATU THRll t ,: >+&~10~ l lVtl &T Wl~SOOI ''' ,. CIJST• Ill!\& 1•6 ~'1 ·· ..................... . w••t•• ... , ..... GOLD• .. Wl•• } "''llS SOUTM ' ,.,. O!fGO rw~ l'TWtr11t::•0•,:.00•!';.':.: lt1·•••l t CAl° ~6·l'l66 • .... h~·:i ... ~ 0 ..... P,.......,.l!f'.-fl<t WITH l ATUM 0 '..,EAl AS "AOOIE" PLUS · 8URl REYNOLDS ~: I · HILD OYlll · -c:.... --"Pdc'Tl'Tdl ... --·----- I l IN CINlMA ON! UJI D11G0 nit'( Al LA N.l t\JINOfJ 830 6990 I ' • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cl\f \1 \ llVI Ut llAllbOI! Al ADAM~ l 0 \TA Y(\A • 9794141 ' ~ . ' I~ 1t J •.J~ •. {. • • • • • • • • • • • • Cl\I 11\IJ\IH\ HAPtlOi A f AD•MS <.0\lA lr.4(\A • 97q 41°'1 • • • "' '"' r ... l WI !'OI M! .. S!I « C l .. 11.°' IN Tt<l Wf'!'OfM l .. Sll I', t o;t f ,_," .. ;,:.•::>?. o o o ~·-;4ji (<•~i ::(~:4 : ·" ·. . : ... \ t:l\f.\1:\ Cf.VI Ht WISl ••u .. '>•r• .,, t.fll lH .. WI St •••••••••"'"'' W•S•M• .. !!l•r." ••f<Ol Q•'< NI '' HAl!b09. AT ADA,_.S COST A '4(SA • 979 4141 PLUS · JAMES COBURN KRIS KRISTOFFERSON IN "PAT GARAln AND &Ill Y THl KID" I' l lTWf f H ~;!!11e: ;,,6.,•';';: • ." ~Cl ~ ''Cl 1 • NOW AT BOTH .EDWARDS CINEMAS a the most talked J.I ABtLLYJACK ~IPGI , .. ., TOM LAUGHLIN ·DELORES 1AYLOR 2nd At Cintmd West Only Ricnard Thomil ~ "RID SKY At MOANING" 20th 'In IRI I • , DAILY PILOT Thursday, Jul1 19, 1973 For tl1e 'Record • • Births Jllh' s, ,.,., Mr. ena Mn.. befi11le J. Gr11n1, 221 Sien.I SlrNI, COlll MH<I, boy Mr. and Mrs. llkhltd L~rdl, 16-IOl M«dw LAne, Muntlnq!Qn 8eacll. oirl Mr. •ncl Mr1. ltobtrt O.F•dO. 2'S92 VI• C....,...,., Mist.ion Vl•lo, t10v Mr. and Mr1. Ewr1t1 E. 11r111er, Jr., 1152 Lt'tlY L•111, Tu1lln, bDY Mr. •1111 Mr1. Mich.Ml 8. Cole, :n.1 o.r Mer, Apt. EJ !°Oii• Me1t , boy uty A. 1m Or. end Mrl.. G•rv N~IOI!. 11Xlt1 Jon o.v onw, lttinllnoton ,,..,,,, bOV Mr. end M,.._ Hlrold A. Smlltl, »OS Hwftl IUctwnond Sh'Hf, Senll Ane, M~•MI M n. Wllllem A. Bolton, 7•S Sr..t1m.1r. Apt, II. Cool• Meu, boY Mr. and Mr1. John V. Parkw. Intl Sierra C1dli, Irvine, o!rt Mr. encl M". L11llt' D. DaMHle, 10699 E Toro. Fountain Vall•Y• glrl Mr, afld 'Mrs.. MJchllel C. Scot!, 1221 SOutll PO<'Jter, 5•ni. Ana, llov Mr. end Mrs. Otnnl• S. 811111, l'll22 Slonlnciton R.....t, \ouh• Leguna. alrl Jiiiy '· 1t7J Mr. end N,r1. 11,rlt"" 1'""6e, UJ East 51e1'1<1 Sl'"I' <:os11 Nona, g!rl Mr ...... Mr1. l"IMTt L1ng1..-ln. 1111» YI.a.I, Senti Ana, plrl M•. end o¥r1 ... l!lln Oa""!!)pOrl, 11712 Oemlon, Hun!lnotM !laarll, 111rf Mr. ltf'ld ,Mr,. ltlC"""' P•rls. 1 .. 11 lnwrntu Le.,., Huntlng1on !leecll, M'!!" and Mr,, sia .... n Powars, 317 Maonolla ,.OSI~ Me11. p•n Mr. •1111 f.1r1, Rlcllarfl F~lln~r. 6351 111m11r11, Huntlng'Orl !le.c:h. t;ov Marriage Licenses May '· lfl) ATwqoD.SWAN:>ON -Jotm llrv•n1, '4. 111u, ~1ir11f11<11l1, 11u11"''""'" !Nec:tl -81111~ .. ..,, .... I; !VI ~ .. , · •flllCWllf, H....,oU'l\j!Oll .,,,,~''· O\tkftl'UAf.f'ltAu\>c -J11kl<ie L .... :12, IJIW2 Flllr-. -'· 8..a, l1"'1fl11i11uo1 ~1<11 enG Ln.r-~.... 'N. M 1.1<1Ye1anu :..t., ......,,.ngton bucn. LUNO-£LCLES -lilrncin RKSYrd. U, IM2 ~Ill IW Norln Provo, l.Hiln anu ICetrHHn, I,, U.11 Ooroln~ Lan., N-! Bffcll. WOL.SEY4 MITH -Don LH, 3', 19.0. 1~11 St.. NIWJ>Of'I .. wacu ano AP• •I Ellnt«a, 26. 1106 Sn1r1ngkln Ph1cr. Newport Buch.. LEASON-WILKES -Lawrrnu Gltti. ... 2323 £ktft1, AP' • .U. l.o»ra Mew .... w.ndy JQ, 21, 2:Ml £1~1\. ,o,pt. oltE~°'JtT~r-':.. James We111y, n, JQ3I CluWIOllH AOld, L1>111 Mn<! elld Am. n. .tl~'l Narclsws. Coron• tMI ,..,, P EPPE At.. JR.-HOLOlNG -CK ll Le Oon. iu, 1MS1 DIM. Clrcle. Wt•tmlnslar and M•ry lull, \I, \WI O.r1a Clrcl•, We1lmlnattr. DAMATO-VALDEZ -Gerald Mkl\et, 2t, 159.6 Cor11ta Plec1, Co111 Me~• end K.ITlllHrl NOtme. 23. tJOO Flrvlrw Roed. Atll. D-202. Coste MHI. GAZZANO-REYNOLOS -Ed w Ir d Francis. )6.. 11111 Go!Gen.....st St., Apt. H-1, Hunll"!l!On hach 111<1 Wlrllfracl Mlcllala, 19, 6761 O~!IOl'd Orlw, Hllftllng!On Baach. ROUGHTON·LEYOEN -Dun c 1 n Ed~. n. 61175 Roos•wlt, Fresno and Louf11 Hannon. 7•. J."802 Do!'lei'IY PIM:a, C1phtr1no Baech. TIEMAN·THADEN -Rooert Edward. 6', 27lf Wt•"-' Blvd., Lot Angelts 1nd ~. i6J, 711 M1l1blr, Corona dll ,..,.r. LAlllGOON-LOVE -Tllomll J1mes, 21. 252D Wiii LI Palme, ADI. 314. Anal'lelm and KlltllHfl Miry, II, 11053 San Ricardo, Fount1ln veuey. K HNEIDER·P"SAROW -Ge«Qt Altnod, 4 , 19$2 Blltklleath Clrcfa, Wonlmlnsllr ind J1141nl11 Chrlsllnl, 41, 9731 VIII• Pacific. Hunllng!on Ba.ch. ' WIUETS·SHAl•LE -George Ear, J.J WI 1 Lo1 AdOrnosJ L'juna HUis .rid su .. n o~1 I6, Jill Lot AdQHIOI. LaQune Mllil. TOUCHON-HEAllSTER -W 11I1 Im Eowar11. 24. 1aaa Via P•l1rin11, 1rv!t1e 1nd Luanne Fr1nca1, :r.i, llkl VI• Palaflno, lrvlne. Mlt'( lt. 197J 8AQOl(S-t0RK -G.r•td £111tH>r, 27. !.lctl W.SI C•rlton, Senta Ane 11'\d Lindi Kit, 21, 13612 Sullfr Drlvt, We1lmln1llr. llYA:NE·l(OCH -Edward Frat1tl._ 7\. 11362 All• VIII• Clrcl1. Hunllngtan Bel<: and Adrianne Heidi, 19, •t2• End1111 OrlVI, Le Canada. GRANICH.GEVEATS -VI n c e n I SI-. 25. 27' Cambrldlll Wev. N1wporl BH<h and Ol1n1 M1rl1, 26. 1715 Wont lalboe BIWI~ NIWJIOl'I Beach. ~ARAGAU.1.f'ITZGERALO -Georve 81e1"11erd 22. 1654 Tet"r .. St .• Foun· tain v11lav alld Shlron Ann, n. 6711 wa....,., Apl. ll:;~i Huntlnglon B•~cl'I. SUMMIEAVILLE·m.>WA ltD -Mark Edward, 10. 1SJ.1\ WIUl1m1, A111. D· 14, Tustin an L l'ld.t SI.II. 20. 3100 COolldcle AW.J.. Catie MHa. l"OMERtiY-MYi.AS -MlcllH1 let, 2•. 1no WHtdlff Orlv.. N~l)Orl l!INch llld Tarwsa LH, tt. Int Wflldll! Orlw, Nf'WlllW1 !laacfl. PA1G·TAYL011: -0.vld Lucky, 2t. Dissolution Of Marriage f'illd JYM 27 FllP111f1, P9QDY EUi1D11n and. RO(ler Delmar Wl'Otr, RC1$11Jnd J•ne el\d Jonn Rotirrl L<a....,n, R-rll J1t11 Ind LIOn AIVIJ'U, Anoellla lnct Trlno MOllnil, E-rdl alld JOH Arnold, Gaorae H. 11111 H•rrlll I. ~.:iw~C.~1~;,lcj~ :,:;,n ~.s~~ lr.J Fr.wl1r1 Mlch11eJ C. 11\d C•r11I A. M(F1r end, Mlcrt.al J . 11111 Jtrl A. Pal1clos, Jr.rq.r and Marla l.ul~1 lolU~ar, Lawi1 E. Jr and Terry L. scnwao, Glenna J. alld C1h1dlus J. Connor, Pamala Ann ana Jot>n ArTl'lur Newtlrt, J1t1nla L~ 111<1 AU<IUSI L•wrl!ntr Kalnlna, Lvnnrrte end Ge"' Wiiiiam H<tlbllnq, Stil<ltY Ann 11'\d Wllll•m ,_,.. JClflel, Janice Lorralt1e •nd 01~;ci HarDlrJ D1t1nhon, Blat1cflt E. af>d Harry W. MllCl'letl, Robert J. Ind TlwlrtM! Barker, Chrl1lln• Loul11 and !W•Yltt! Art;,ur H1norl, Dl•na Lynn 11'\d Yuklo RoOtrts, Jt<;o~IYn L. 1nd Donald H. Potvin, Sharridl e .... and Raymond Maurie• ,..,.yn.. Victoria F. tnd fredlrlct W. C111ro, Pa1Tlcl1 Marie end Randy Paul llluam~. Ethel Emllla alld Curtis Otto Mfchal1kl, Sandri Lii Ind Ronald W1yne Oorrl1. Maril Aow 111d R-rl S. l org11. Guido Jor11• 100 Friedel LUCI•, Ste111utnle L. 1nd Harold l . Fibre, JHnell1n Con••d 11'\d Milton Ira Tucker, Mer11aret Ann and Loul1 Oe Wevna Jonn10n, L1 ura Ja,.. end Jolln Htnrv Andlrson, Wiiiiam David 11'\d Sally Jeanna • Soolllworfll. R•Ymond R. and Elllt s . Ok1Um1. Mlcl\ffl Ar'"" et1d Sc11uko 8. Prier, Hel"I M. Ind Vlellt'f' H (otleld. June Marie an<I LloWI M. Scllole.-. Rat>erl Gor<lon Ind Janel Grll(t Our1n, AUQUlt C. end MetodY J1 .. n Gr•ss, T1r"' Rase and Rlcn1rd Eugene MUJ1, Flori M. and Jerry M. Lori, Ct.eri Ind Donald LYnt1 Corey, Ethel C1rlot11 and Donald War. '~ L/Qrttfoot, Ellz•Detn "· 11\d Jack LH Butcher, lrtMI J, ~Ml John C.111rlH H11r1D1t1, J11m'S w11111m and Sl'llrleY .... Karr, Ronald Alfrad 111<1 Sll!rtev Ann Oegra"9. L\'dl1 L. an<! Phllllo F• .. nk Slane, Evl Jacqueline Ind Howard Rlcnard Smith. Pllrl~i• Loul.. Ind Pnllll11 wvven, Pon G. and Velma L. M<"~H. Onnald Cllar!ll' and Reb~cc11 J"na Tullar l'•tws, Rudol11h Trov ~nd C1rol Ann 0'""" DI""' J. 11nd C1rl A. C111ullo, Dan!•I E. and Elvira Y. ,,lff J11n1 21 Elder, Jan Mkl>eU1 and Wl1!!1m IJ=:M. Judith A. Ind Rcbfrl l!I. Scott. Sus•n Llnt1 •nd PIUI Jolln . Et Abd, Jo Ann alld All er11t1ln, !11lv• J. and Edwin Eklgene Klnat, Linda Ann •nd Rlcll.Jrd Earl Knorr, Tarry L. alld Mable Ann Lo-•. M•ry J aM 1nd Ra1Pi'1 c•~menl Wiiton, Llovd Eldon at1d Marg~rct L1-1nc1. Gloria Rae an<I L .. v~rnt Turn«, Geor11e E. 111d Virginia t. Lltllk1t1, Sl'lerrl L. ana Raymol'ld L. Mepel, Edt1a E. Ind Eric 5. Davlg, Larry Ray .. tld Oeehl Lyn Cummlno1. Lyndell Ray and Grace MN CLl!'rla, Mllrljo Anne alld Kelvlt1 R. woo1r. PllyHl1 K. and Jamr1 A. Shea~. Barwr1 Della and Tllomts Eeslet"llt10. Jase11n L. 11'\d Donni Jean we1vorr, Ja1>1 and Patrick LltWl!llY" Bake<, Mar]orla Loulll! Ind Wa•rrn wnnam Arrnt11t1, Merlene J. atld Mlcl!eel O. Hales, WUl11m Stewart and Gala JNll· "'~ Roelle, Hel!nd• Carole and ,_, Out1l111. llobart Witn1m and ••• C1y1r, Lynda G. and Fl11yd A. o•er11n, S•llee Jo al'ld Rat1d1ll Steven Ra"'°'"' Ma1'9er1t L1n1llr Grel!lougn tnd Aloer1 Jay 81rn1rcl, Fran~ E. end H1rrlt1 Fllld J11ly t ScnnHclflr, "'"hur W11leca and l.ou•.e 011vlro, Suwl! Jean Ind ROMld Wynn ::.nurtlalt, SMHa .Jnd Ueloss Lee L1vi11a, Ht'll'Y A. •no Pnylli• 0. Llten Lino# J . and 1to1>1rl w. PtonlO!d, Gregory T. Ind Nancy Sus1n Murr•ll, Braa A. •nd Vivian L. LIY, Eol• T"rl and James Wiiiiam TOCld, Lind• M. and Cller1a1 R •tnard ~obarl1on, Bruce Allrn Ind Eli(tDetl'I '"" Corcor1n, Mlcrt1cl R. alld Margaret II Ford, Mtrridrr An11a •tld Jonn O•Vid k Zamora, Cathlrh-. alld Sammv 5. Downing, Wllllem M•rlln 1no Georgia H . B1r111•, Marla alld 11r1r! Po•ll kt, Marian 0. Ind Rocco Frink OclvQharty, Nlcolell and WllUam L. Wohlkrn, Baro.re At1n llld Ch•rlr• H1t1rv 6ulllOOll, Jr .. Ray G. 1nd Su11n A, Sml!h. N•ncv Jc.'ln and Charle' Franklln Woodrool, Rlcrterd 01l1on and M1rv "M' Duno1n, Lyllda Ttrrl end Frederkt Hrnry Wllklt1son. Wllllam Robert 1nd Btwrlv 0.M !lesslt'f', Garald •nd su .. n C1rollt1e wnu1, J0/1<1 Owen and Kar~rvn Louli.e W1lk1r, Elolse C. llld WIUl1m L. Geor119, Bev1r1r, Joan alld CIVd1 Harold Mltlv1ny, Oarv &n• M. 11\d FloVd R. Llndlay, RodMY J. 1nd Normt J. Howard, Forr111 H. al'ld Cart.erlne M. Hiii. Jannller L. INI Cr1Jg L. Tru!UlQ, C1mlll1 Y'fQMI Ind '· I See by Today's Want Ads • SEARS \VASHER & DRY. ER for sail.' kM !han 2 years Ol(L Only $250. • 2'5' F'AIRLJNER. fol.vina- Bri.dge wilh dual controls for sale. ll':t presently docked at slip. • ·70 CuUass Supmnr, Llkc ~'' ~·itti lo m!l~age • lo..,dro, . . CLASSIC CAR WAX REPRESENTATIVE DEMONSTRATION HEIJE ••• , SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1973 10:00 A.M. 'til 3:00 P.M. See Classic Car woio: demon· slroted ond hove all your q uestio'n-s-onsw·ered.-Don't miss it! 26 Inch 8 Point Cross Cut Saw Handy homeowner's model ... you'll find many uses around your home and workshop. Great price, too! 7 Inch Paint Roller Covers Good quality roller covers in mohair, Makes point opp1ico· tio n economical. Use them once then throw out. • Loof<·Here! The . . Savings are at Ker.m's! Famous Classic Car Wax The ultimate name in fine cor wax, , • gives your car a beau· tifut sheen o s it cleans and protects. Absolutely unmatched. · o1£tllOM ...... 11MG•oo .. U.S.M. Thermogrip Electric Glue Gun 2' x4' Pegboard Has Many Good Uses Fealures !rigger control for occurote performance. In- cludes 3 sticks of glue. Model 207. . 4 aa ~~_,/ Handy Polyethylene Sheeting By the Roll 250 sq. ft . lo cover b oots , furn iture, mechanical equip· ment, etc. 10' x 25' ... super wide. It's 1/8'' thick and ready to point. The ideal hong-up for kitchen, garage. 37c Link Style Outdoor Mat Greet your friends and neigh- bors in style with th is clp ssic link mat. Ke eps dirt out of house. PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 25th " " .I Sawhorse Brackets Multi·pUrpose brockets con- nect 2x4's into sawhorses. Five pieces of 2x4 ore all you need . Greot for amateurs and professionals alike. 9/iclcten ~atex ••ouse 2 99 Roll 8 ~· , __,JJ--A::.9 .~·· .. , ~ 3 oo1ioo 77c ~ Long Handle~"~ Barbecue Skewers '\J Set of three barbecue skew· ers with chrome plated 12 inch handles a nd pushdown feature to remove food easier wi thouj burns. Req. 88C 1.79 Glidden Latex Hous·e Paint Great single coot coveroge! Thins a nd clean s-up wilh ordinary soop and water. Ideal for all exterior surfa ces. Many colors! : 1 Redwood Oeto~at1ve \\" fon type lre is • \O support and V\nes. Sono;.,90 ,,,.,,SANTA ANA """'"' COSTA M!IA "· .. . · :[ ... ,. , f'.. '(; " .. • . ! • l Pl mis! Woo An~ thotl viet< In cat< pem "I (the \VhC raci B• sho1 the F E ( s Anc Re< gar An1 def Le< T s Sut v•ei seh tea Tu• c my Do Bu' the } ol :l'hl ..tin, . wil j be Se< Tu St, ! mi! '" on! AU ju! • ' "" ga w• an I ye Gi th• Pt sp pl pl, Ho Wl at ti1 YI ki fr II "' pl m te G "' IS h: B ,.f ll "I I di a In II' u "' " l1l ·, , DAIL V PILOT jl;J Can Ryan Match Vander Meer's No-hit -Feat? Dodgers Face Cards Bucs Take a Tip, . ,. ., Use LA Methods Pl'l"l'SBURGll (AP) -Baseball com· missioner Bowie Kuhn flew into tou'n \Yednesday to watch the red·hol Los Angeles Dodgers chalk-op v.tiat he thought wootd be their eighth straight victory. Instead, he saw the Pittsburgh Pirates catch fire and keep alive their twinkling pennant hopes. "I just wanted to see how this team (the Dodgers) had gone about ruining what 1 thought was going to be my best race ," joked Kuhn. But Willie Stargell and the Pirates showed Kuhn they don't intend to fold in the pennant race. * * * Five Dodgers Earn Berths On All-stars SAN FRANCISCO I API -Sparky Anderson, manager of the Cincinnati Reds. has acknowledged with his All·slar game pitching selections the reason Los Angeles is running far ahead of the defending champion Reds in the National League \Vest race. 1'he Dodgers have the pi tching. "It 's there for the taking," Stargell said after his solo homer gave Pittsburgh a 3-2 victory over the Dodgers. The stumbling Pirates have won just 11 of their last 21 games, but in that period they've climbed from 10~2 to 6~2 games off the pace in the East . · "\Ve ~'on tonight and that's \\·hat 's mos t important." noted Stargell, who went four-for·four and boosted his home July 19 July 20 J11ly 21 July n Dodgers Slate ,\II c;.-. '41 ICP: (Mfl LOS ""°"elH 11 SI. l 0<il1 Los A-I• &I SI. LOul1 LOS AflQeln 1t SI. Loul' lot AngelH If SI. Loull run total to 'l1 \\1th the tie-breaking solo belt off Tommy John in the sixth inning. ··I've always believed that August and September are the crucial months of the season," he added, "and what we have to do now is put together a good streak." The Pirates handed the Dodgers some of their own medicine -pitching and defense -in \Vednesday night's game. Dick Ellis al\o\\'ed seven hits before bowing to ninth inning relief help from Dave Giusti, and the Pirates infield, er- ratic this season, managed some key defCflsive plays. Ellis v.•as relieved bv Giusti after Steve Garvey opened the riinth inning \\'ilh a single. Giusti delivered a pitch that Ron Cey hit sharply to the left of second base. Spindly shortstop Dal f\1axvill speared the rounder and shoveled the ball to sec- ond baseman Rennie Stennett, who made a strong throw for the double play. Ctlly 1'1191 Sl•ff P'IMl1 Starters Claude Osteen, 11-6, and Don Sutton, 12-5, and reliever Jim ·Brewer,... \\'ere among the eight pitchers Anderson selected for the National League '.All-star team that will face the American League Tuesday night in Kansas City. Los Angeles. which had beaten Pittsburgh in 10 of 11 previous games this season, scored its initial run in the fifth on a double by Bill Russell and a single by John. DUANE THOMAS (33) VIEWS SAN DIEGO PRACTICE WITH TEAMMATE RALPH WENZEL . Other Dodgers hurlers, ~nclud.ing Tom- my John, Andy f\1essersmith and Al Oo\\'tting, also have excellent credentials. But there wa sn't room for everybody on the All-star team. The Dodgers tied the score with a run in the sixth on a \\'alk and conseculive singles by \Villie Crawford and Steve Garvey, setting the stage for Stargell's home run. Prefers Outfield Duty I Anderson will announce the remainder of the National League squad Friday. ;"rbe Dodgers have announced that bat- ..ting leader Manny Mota and \Villic Davis will be named to the team. "lt may be hard to believe. but we're still optimistic." noted Stargell, who has helped Pittsburgh to three straight division titles. Designated Hitter Rule Anderson's other All-star pitchers will be Jack Billingham of thri Reds, Tom Seaver of the New York Mets, Wayne Twitchell of Philadelphia, Rick Wise of St. Louis and Dave Giusti. ol ~ttsburgfl. "\'r·e•ve won together in the past," he added, "and there's no reason we can't do it in the future." The Dodgers move to St. Louis tonight to open a four game series with the Cardinals. Al Downing. 7-4, \viii pitch -... agl!ast the Red Birds' Alan Foster, 6-5. Makes Robbie Stronger Seaver was picked to p1ay }n the midsummer baseball classic a seventh straight year. Osteen and Sutton are the only other 1973 selections who have seen .'i.ll-star game action. Anderson chose six right-handers and just two lefties -Osteen and Brewer. The Dodgers' regulars drew little sup- port from fans in the voting for AU-star game starting lineups. The be st showing was Bill Russell 's fifth place finish among the league's shortstops. Big name pitchers left off the team this year include seven-time AH-star Bob Gibson of St. Louis, Ferguson Jenkins or the Chicago Cubs and Steve Carlton of Philadelphia. Sports i11 Brief L~ .......... (ti Pltl1bur9h IJ) -... ,_., ltlftll •br hrbl L.oJ>f't, ti>• ,-._ ' O •O" O Stennett, 1b ' 1 1 1 J0'51>\11. tr ' o 1 o S111911llln. ' ' o 1 o Budlner1 rl ' o O o Oliver. tf 4 o o o Ftr•llftOn, c I 1 0 0 5Jergt0, II ' 1 ' 1 O-awfOr'CI, d ' O 1 O Zilk, rf ' 1 0 O G1rvey. lb ' 0 1 1 RoberlM>rl, lb ' 1 0 0 P&C'lorek, or o o o o Alley, Jb J o o a c;ev. lb ' o o o Ma~vm, n 1 o o II Runell. SS ' I "2 0 Elli,. II l 0 0 0 Jl;llln.o 20!1Gi11stl,P 0000 Davis, Pl1 1 0 0 0 Richert, p I 0 0 G j" Totfl JZ 2 1 1 Tolal :JCl J 1 l ' Los Aneeles OOC 01 1 000 -7 Pl!lsbur911 0)1 0111 00. -J OP-Pl!hburgh 2. LOB-Los A"911'1fS 6, Piiis· burth !. 2S-8. Rot>erlM)(I, S111geU. Ru.s.ell 1. H.R-S1enM!I !. s1aritetl 21. " John L.9·S 6 Rlct>eort 1 Elli W,l·f I Gi11s1i I Sivl'-Glusti '· HBP-bv Ellls. T-1 :~I. A-21.2'8, H R Ell II SO 5 l J 1 j 1 o a o o ) 1 1 2 ' o o o a o Ellis. Ftrtusoti. WP- By lbe Associated Press " Frank Robinson put together a playing streak of 44 games this seasoo, not bad fOI' a man who'll be 38 at the end of ncxl month. Credit the American League's new designated hitter rule because Robbie has been I~ than 100 percent physically much of the season . He's played in 81 of the California Angels' first 91 games, starting only 16 in the outfield . Robinson won't go so far as to say the DH rule has mad\? it possible for him to continue his career but it has affo rded him many more times at bat than he \l·ould ha,·e had \\·hiie recovering from a pulled hamstring muscle and broken toe. "I've always liked the rule but I 11•asn't sure whether rd like it for myse lf." he said. "I think it is here to stay. Il has made me strooger than I nonnally would be if l were playing both ways." Rams . Cut Placekicl\:er; Yet Robinson, the only man to win l\1ost Valuable Player honors in both ma- jor leagues, prefers total involvement in a game -at bat and in the outfield. He said of his DH role, "I have to do it to h'elp the teani. Someone has to do it. It's all right 1vith me." NBA ·Czar Will Retire A product or lhe Los Angeles Rams spring tryout camp, soccer-style placek.icker Julius Visnyei. has been placed on waivers by the team. Visnyei, a 23-year-old nalive of Hungary who lives in North Hol\y~·ood. ~·as one of more than 430 hopefuls \\'ho attended the April tryout camp. He was signed after successfully hit- ting all three field goal tries from 40 yards out. Even though he . had never kicked an American football before. Brian Goodman, a free agent guard from UCLA, left the Rams Cal State (Fullerton) camp Wednesday on his own accord. At the time the Rams signed two other placekickers. They were Hugo Salcedo, a member of the urn U.S. Olympic soccer team who attended UC Riverside, and Ed Gallardo, a fonner Arizona State play~r who failed to make the Rams team m 19611. Kennedy Quits NE\V YORK -\\'alter Kennedy. who has announced his retirement as National Basketball Association eonunissMloer when his_ rontract expires on June 1, 1975, sa)'Sl.he has no intention of being a "lame-duck" C18r in the nei:t two years. • "I won't be a ·1ame-duck, nor will I be a· dead duck,'' the aifable Kennedy said at a news oonfuence Wednesday in 4isclos· lng bis future plans. "J hope to be a live goose." Riessen Win~ feature match at Longv.·ood. In \Vednesd ay matches, third-seeded ~1a rty Riessen ousted Paul Gerken 6-4, 7- 5, and fourth-seeded John Alexander survived a struggle in defeating Brian Gottfried. 7-6. 3-6, &-4. Fifth·seeded Cliff Richey easily whip- ped Anthony Pattison, 6-2. 6-4: sixth-seed- ed Dick Stockton eliminated Nikki Pilic 7-6, 5-7, 6-3, and seventt..seeded Roscoe TaMer doY:ned Graham Stilwell, 6--4, 6-4. Lilly in Lin1ho DALLAS -Veteran Bob Lilly, the Dallas Cowboys' unhappy tackle, will fly back to California with the club's general manager Tex Schramm today, a team · spokesman said. He added, however, that Lilly has not reached a firm decision on whether to play another year in the National Foot~ ball Lea~e. Decker Triu1uphs TURIN. Italy -Rick \Vohlhuter of the United States, world record holder at 8RO yards, outdueled Italy'1 td a r c e 11 o Fiascooaro and \\'Oil the 800-meter race Wednesday as the American men's team trounctd the Italians 143-78 in a track and fltld meet. Wolilhuter, wbooe 1:4.U earlier this year established a world record ror the hall·mile, ralli<!d wllh a ""™""doo' kjck and beat Plasconaro. world record hOlder ~t 800 meters, In 1:4$.3. The ttallap was i Urned 1:45.8. • I He has been out of the lineup more often in the last couple of \\·eeks. "I wasn't tired," Robinson said. "It \\'as just that I wasn't swinging the bat well. l asked Winks for a couple of days off ... " . Said Angels manager Bobby Winkles, "Everybody thinks that just because a guy is the DH he doesn't get tired. But for the DH the game coold be tougher : he coo Id get ment.ally tired." Robinson agreed. "You know it's the only way you are contributing to the club. That's the real mental part. "I doo't know whether il's good or bad to sit back and think about nothing bul hitting." he said. "When you're playing on defen se there are other things to be aware about. They keep you alert." Robinson's bat has been making loud noises lately. His home run Tuesday night was his third in four official al-bats. his 15th of the season and the 5371h of his career. He moved one ahead of ~1ickey Mantle for fifth place among all-time home run hitters. And he had three singles and an RBI Wednesday night. Robinson. "'ho signed a l\\'O year ron- tract with the Aneels for more than Titans Name Coach Roy C. Caldwtll ol Merrill College, whose teams twice won the stale ~ munity college Utlt:, today was named head !nick coa<h al Cal St a t e (Fullerton). ' He ""'""'ed1 Rooa Id L. Wli>:bey, who is returning to a full-Ume ·teaching assign- ment In physical education. FRANK ROBINSON $300.000 after being traded fron1 the Los Angeles Dodgers, started the season 1\'ith 2,641 hits in 19 sell.sons. He said his hit- ting goals ·arc 600 homers and 3.000 hits. llis lifetime batting average at 1he start of the season was .300. \\lould his average !his season be higher than .2~5 if he also playL-d defense? , ··rt's possible," Robbie said. "Jt 's sure not going to be any lo"'·er." , Thon1as Shi11es In Chargers Drill at UCI • Finally. Harland Svare believes Duane Thomas is scrioo s about playing for the San Diego Chargers of the National Foot · ball League. Or n1aybc Thoma s finally believes Svare is serious about treating him like any other player who fails to show up. Or maybe bQth . Neither Thomas nor his roach y.·as saying why, but the unpredictable running back returned to lhe Cbargcrs' preseason camp at UC ln'ine \Vednesday, t\\'O da ys after Svare suspended him for being a day fate . Al the time. the coach said he didn·1 ex:pect to see Thomas again . Afler Thomas returned, S\'are an- nounced that he had been fined an un - disclosed amount bot the suspension had been lihed. "He called 'and \\'e stral\htened it out.·· Sva re said. Asked \\'hat had convincod him Thomas was sincere, Svare said, "That's between Duane and me.'' After passing a physica l cx:am. Thomas was greeted on the practice field by a handshake from quarterback John L'nitas, an apparent sign of acceptance. He then took part in passing drills and made several fine catches. one bringing applause from players on the !'idelincs. Thomas also took ba ckfield practice and dre\\. raves from assistant roach George Dickson. "He looked to me like a guy I'm smart enoogh to leave lhe 'hell alone." Dickson said. "The JXIWer'. And he kept gelling faster each time "·e gave him the foolball " Angels Star Goes Tonight Against Birds C:in Nol.in Ry:u1 do ii? Nobody in bast'hnll hi!tory has ever fa~hionf'd thrre no-h11tc rs in one season and only one' man . Cinci1mati's Johnny Va~r :-.lrtr in 1938. has ever succeeded in lhro"·ing con<;erutivc no-hi tten. Ryan ha!l a chance to accomplish both fl'ats torught a1 Anaheim ~"tadl~ A erowd of 20.000 is expccttd to sit l.11 on the event "'hen Ryan, Jl-11, and snubbed by Americ:m League AU-star mahager Di ck \\.illiams of Oakland for ni'x:l Tuesday·s midsummer classic. duels Baltimore's ~like Cuellar. 6-9. Ryan \1ill also be out to heal ~ 1\'ounds of \\lrdnesday night ~tien the Angels Slate All ._ • ICMf'C 1'11) July It t1nlmore '' C•lltornl• Julv !It e1111more '' C•li!Mnl• .ff July 71 Bllli"'lN'I Al C&lltorn!• July 21 Bttllmort el (1IUornl1 7:" P·"'· 7.H P·"'· t :M P."' l :U P·"'· Angels ble\\. 5--0 and 8-3 \('ads and even· tual\y lost 10-8 to the Cleveland Indians on John Ellis' t\\·o-run !Ith inning homer. Ryan says nnl making the AlJ«ars doesn't disappoint hi1n because he did not expect to make the team. But Angels general manager Harry Dalton thinks it's a crime that Ryan did not make the squad. "If Nolan Ryan isn't an All-star then there's no such thing ," Dalton said. Angels manager Bobby Winkles just thinks it ·s a crime that the Angels can't hold big !rads in !he la te irutin~. Last "'C<'k in Bahilnorc !he Angels car- ried an S-3 lead into the bottom of the ninth \\'llc-n the Orioles staged a rally to tie the game. Rudy ~lay u·as the pitcher of record that night ...,·hen his bullpen could not protect his \'ictory. !\lay \\'as the victim again \Vednesday night v.'hcn the Angels bttllt an 8-3 lead after five innings. "I'd be in sorry shape if I wasn't used to that stuff by now," f\fay said. "I'm sorry it happened but I'm used to it." f\1ay left in !he ~ixlh inning alter e.~­ Huntington Beach High star Jack Urohamer·s t\ro-nm double narrowed the Angels lead to R-5. Dave Sells ga\'c up a run on t\\·o hits and a sacrifice fly in the eighth and tben ~ielded l"·o runs in the ninth a.s t.1e\·eland caughl up. Buddy Bell ignited the niJ1th iMini;: rally with a oneout single and ptncb- hitter Oscar Giimble followed suit. Then Sells \\'ild-pitchcd Bell home and Cha rlie Spikt>S' t\\'O out base hit to center tied lhe game. Sells' "'ild pitch ,.,.:is his third in l\ro games. In De1roit last Snlurday, the 1\ngcls rel iever madC' t1vo errant tosses in the ninth innlng each permitling a run to score as the Angels fell , 2-1. Steve Barber retired six Indians in a ro"' before George Hendrick lopped a two out single in the 11th. Then Ellis. who had four hits and four RB I in Monday 's game against the Angels, cruhed biJ nin1h homer or lhe season. Cleveland pounded out 1$ hits -in- cluding three apiece by Bell and Ellis - as they took the season se ries {rom California. seven ga mes to five. . Cl•Y'lll,,. !lt) Ctflt91'1'1i1 t•l ... ~ .... ..,,, .... 8f!tll, lll ' 1 l I AIO,...r, •• 1 I l I ,.,..,.,,u1~rni. 11~ , It ' 1 Pi"'°"· ct ' 1 2 1 Gt,..lll•.1111 111 1 81fr"l',Pl'I 1000 H-•lt•. cl 6 1 l O McCr&w. U 5 1 I I Ell". t J l l 1 GtU.-;iM<'. Pl1 I t I 0 ~Pi•e" I! 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GROOKLlNE, Mass. -1'ht $60,000 U.S. Pro tennis chan1picmhips continued on a v.'cck·long coUlsion course today wlth young JJmmy Connors JCheduJed 10 meet Ray Moore of South Africa in a ~feanwhfle. Mary Decker, the 14-year- old star trom Garden Groft!, thrilled the parUsan ttallan crowd, spurllng down the stretch and overtaking 1eammate Wendy Koenig for victory In thf: women's 800 meters in 2:03.9. Winners of the Golden Gate Conference crown In 1969 tbrodgh 19721 bis lea.ms were undeJeated in 1969 and 1970 when they were stale titllsts. A single loss in 1971 put lhc team In second place that year in the stale competition. EX-HUNTINGTON BEACH HIGH STAR JACK BROHA MER IS SPILLED BY THE ANGELS' WINSTON LLENAS • • I I l ' I I I I :Jf DAJlY PILOT Tlwrsdly, July 19, 1973 Mustangs Juggernaut Unstoppable ™li:J; ~ETHOO Realtors In Stunner ~t1 1t1~sa continued to roll ln Harbor Area baseball le1gue acUon at Costa Mesa -'Park and picked up a game oo pursing Edl!oo. Recordlng its 11th victory in 12 sames. 8-0 over lluntlnglon Beach, Costa Mesa picked up a p rne In the standings tis Edl.'lon dro1)1>td an S.7 slugfest to f'ountain Valley at Edison. Jn the af1emoon game at <Mita Mesa Park, Corona del ~tar blanked ~stancil~ 3--0. Rustlers . Rebo11ntl. ' Win, 94 The Senik Rustlers bounced back from an upset la!it Sun· day to ~It the El Toro A·larines 9-4 in a Metropolitan Lea gue baseba ll game \llednesday night at El Toro Marine Base. The victory was Seni k's eighth in l2 ga mes Otis sum-. mer, and moved it lo within n game and a hair ol first place La Fonda. The Rustlers atruck for fou r l'tlM in the second inning and three more 1n the fifth to make easy work of the Marines as Klrk EllL9on pick- ed up Ille win. Ellison worked the first five innings, allowed only one run on one rut, and struck out six. Jerry Brown drove in two runs with a single, and Mike Tessier'! single scored two more in the Rustlers' second hWng and Curt Pete rson's two-run single was the big hi t in the three-run filth inning. Brown experienced an ex· eeUent nlgl& at the plate, hit· Ung safely in three of four trips, and deslgnated hltter Jim Sparks went two-for-two for the winners. hlllfl ltnl~f"I It) .. . A, Ir-. 7b 3 1 Whll91ev, 7b I o ••5 c1 • 0 ···~ • u •, '• Miili, E1111ttrO!ft, :lb 1 O P.--. l b ,> ,' ~perkt. dh Rt.ll'IQO, t h I 1 J r. l owri, c • I l(.nf!9111.,, II 4 0 Tnal ... , rl t I "mlp GO E _.., p o o ol•i. :u ' El Toro ..... k_., IMlllP • 010 oao no -• Do'! 030 !OJI -f .... ~ g ' . , , ' ' • • ' , , . l ! ' ' • • • • " . • • • • " , Brian Costell~ stifled liun· llng ton Beach on two hil! and struck out five In five jooings or pitc hing for Costa Mesa, and Ste\•e Sharp cleaned up the final Inning. The game was called iftcr six due to a t>urfcw. John Brown ripped a double and single lo drive in three runs and lead Costa Mm at the plate. His first innin g dou· ble Sl'tlr ed Steve Delany. and a fourth inning single with the ba ses loaded scored two. Bob Stlmmler WIS the only Hunti ngton Beach batter to hit H ....... lo .... ltMMll llt!Milllfl 1"! ~ : . • • ' ' , " , " •• l" ' • • " safely, recording a pair of singles. At Edison, a rour-run sixt h inning rally by Fountain Valley overcame a power blt- tJng pcrfonnance r r 0 m Bdison'a-Jclf Nlcllob. Nichols had a single to ddve in a run in the flnt iM.lng, a triple to score another in the third, and a 360-foot homer to right field with the bases emp- ty In the seventh. To1n Anderson also had a two-run homer for Edison. Trailing 6-4 going Into the bottom of the sixth, Bill Ogden Playoff Hopes Tarnished As Mission Viejo Defeateq J\11ssion Viejo's American Legion baseball team bad its hope3 of making the league·s divisional post-season pla yoffs squashed with a 10-1 defeat at Garden G r ove Wednesday night. In o t h er ga m es , Westminster was nipped 6-~by Buena Park, and S a n Clemente A took a forfeit win from Rancho-Pacifica. San Clemente B won a forfeit vlct<:ry as Tustin was unable to field enough men for a team, and· Fountain Valley's scheduled game wi th Santa Ana was postponed, possibly to be rescheduled on Tuesday. ~fission Viejo needed 10 win ils last three ga mes in suc· cession to secure a finish In the top two of the legion's International League, b u t Wednesday's loss virtually eliminates it from contention. San Clemente Shocked By Mission Viejo Red ~li.Mion Viejo High's sum-. mer teams nearly pu lled off an upset sweep Wednesday night in the Laguna Beach summer basketball league, but fell two points mart of their mark. The Mission Viejo Red upset San Clemente, 60-48, to knock tlie losers out of a tie for first place wilh Q>sta· Mesa. And the Mlssi<>n Viejo Gold, the secood unit. was just nosed out by league-leading Cos-ta Mesa, 33-36. In the other tilt or the night it was the host Artists of Laguna l:leach breezing past University, 64-39. Mission Viejo's tr i u m p h over San Clemente was tri g- gere! by the 25-poinl efforts of Mario O'Brien. O'Brien hit 10 from the field and added five free throws as San Clemente fell six po ints back at the end of the first period and never recovered. Dan Dodd led San Clemente with 15 counters: and Jeff Foreman added 10 to the SC totals. c .. 1. Mt~ Uill C ' '1 •, ~. '1' umm n1 l .S•l•l•• ' 0 4 • .SID~ •011 ~:tfri:n ~ f l j w.itrmell o o I o H1rll11 0 0 10 JICDbl J 0 I 4 Tor.11 11 ' 11 li Ml .. ltft Vltlt Golt lUI 'I"" i, J1fl1rl l O 5 Atl~tl 1 3 1 S ,fOO!j 6 0411 Co• 1 0 02 c ..,,,nl1>11Wm o 1 a • Mturer 1 s o 1 N@I 2 01 ' Tlllt ll 11 10 1 » scwt IY Qvert1n C01t1 ~·r. t 9 1t 19-3' Miii M \lltlt llH Oi l ... , .. 0 ' r1111 Ptn1r- '"' E-rtlOll ,_ ,..,_ TO!all fll ",. ~ J ' J 6 10 J i u 1 ' , 10 ' 0 0 • 1 3 0 s 0 0 2 0 r ' 4 6 ?.1 1) 1560 An overv.'Orked Rich Rom- mel held Garden· Grove in check for five innings, bul gave up two wal ks, five singles and a triple in allowing eight runs in the sixth inning as Garden Grove put the gan1e away. Rommel struck out nine in seven Innings of pitching. The only score for Mission Viejo came when Mark Mof· fitt, Carl · Sandstedt, Tim Taylor and Neal 1.1cCartny walked. Westminster's CUmal Rungo singled in three nms and led a late-inning comebaek which just fell slut In his . team's defeat by Buena Park. MIMI... Vltfe (I J ... Oelumort, Cl·ltl 4 0 ~!~r:,~· JI ~ i Aommeu, P-<f • o Wh.llt , 7b J 1 MOffltl, rl..:J.b.p 2, O Stnd111te11, lb o ~ 1 ,: : • ! • • Ttvlor, II • O McC•nfl.,, 3i..rl 2 0 Toltl1 27 I l et,. ,., J11111f111 g , ' 1 . ' Mlta!Otl Vlt/o OTO mo 00-I 2 ' G. GrlWt' 011 OOll Oll-10 12 I W11tmh11,_r (JJ .. . . ' Accomendo, cl True, 71> 1 .g i i 1 \ ~ g Htle, ff·P Runot. lb Twlta. 11 ICuOleclt/, c $wlf1Qlt. ti L-r. lb ll'lr~~rds. P Houi., rf Tott l1 ~ ' sc-'Y Inn!..., . "' ~ i ' \ l ·1 ~ i ; g ' ' W1s11'1'11nst1r llllffle P•rk ' ' . 100 010 OJG-.J 1 I 011 202 OOK-6 10 1 Uni Dealt 47-41 Loss Barons Tumble, 9-6 $t11 Cltmttltt 141) ft ff r, 'f os 10 ' , 5 ll 2 2 s ' J 0 ' ' 3 0 ' 6 A I 0 f University High dropped a 47-41 basketball decision to Paramount Wednes"day night 'in the Sunny Hills High sum· mer league as the winners spurted to a 29-17 haUUme lead and bung on for the win. Fountain Valley suffered its fow1h straight setback in varsity water polo action Wednes<lay night al Estand a High as Buena Park out- scored the Barons, N . Rhett Price had six goals for th e winning Coyotes who mov- 'ed into a tie for second with the triwnph. ln a battle for fint place, Foothill topped El Dorado lG-3, while Los Amigos moved out or a tie with Foun· lain Valley for the cellar on a ~2 win over Chaffey. In the other game, Wl\son stopped ~1illikan 5'-2 in the battle of the Long Beach schools. DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO GAS SAVERS '61 Coron• 4 Door Fountain Valley was paced by Dan Luttrell and Todd Leeds who each scored a pair. Dana Hunsen and Terry ·Rice each-.srored one goal in lhe losing caure. Foothill 's win moves •th at club to the top of the pack with four wins and no losses wbiJe just a ga me out in second are El Dorado, Buena Park and Long Beach Wilson. In next week's games. Foothill faces · Buena Park (6:30 ), \Vilson meets Los Amigos (7:15). El Dorado challenges Chaifey (8) and Fountain Valley meets lti illi· kan (8:45). 0 l l ~ ~ • 24 .. $UR ly Gllerhlf"I MV R~ 11 11 12 11-tO $tn Cltmtnhl 15 10 10 1)-41 . Ct ld-11 W1!1!1 &rvnlOll Wll Klll Kemo1 f1lco1H1r Ot rcev ·~-~~lnl.11 Gunk It Tottl1 UlllYtnllV CltJ ,..,,,,,., 3 2 ' • l ! ! I o G 1 O o o 1 o 1 o ' 2 0 0 I 0 1 1 d s l ' ' • o o 1 o ' 0 3 • 11 s 211" l .. ,,,. •tHlt {U ) .. ft !If Ip l(ltU411t>ec~ 0 J ' U WrlQI!! 1 4 I 6 AH.., aJlU ICotfllO !21 12 Wlllt ll 2 , 1 l M1r~1 O j'' Atlhbufl 3 1 I T&lt ll 11 16 11 U Seen lry G1trttn UnlYtr1!1" n 10 10 7-:tt Lt11111t llttch t 11 IJ ,,.._... The Trojans ·of University got a 1,_paint ootput from Jeff Giese and good J"fbounding from Scott Kafesjian (13) and Mike Bradjic (nine ), but lack of depth was the deciding fac- tor. University fielded onJy six players with the balance of the squad busy in the Laguna Beach High summer league. Unlwrsllf., 141b IP ~i:rr. , o "1i 1 : Menoid 2 0 ' l(•tn ll•" 1 1 ' 9r"'11k 10 2 J (HVeni.• 1} ' 1; 41 Tolt ll Sc.,-e .. Qurt.r1 Unl~•nltv 10 1 n 12 ~11 P1r•mollfll 1$ 1' 10 I -' Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Baltimore Boston Detroit ~lil"'·aukee Cleveland East DIYlslon w (, 54 43 48 4Q 50 42 49 45 46 i6 35 60 '!''est Division Pct. .557 .545 .543 .521 .500 .368 GB 1 II l'I 31.2 5'~ 18 NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago St. Louis J\1ontreal Pittsburgh Philadelphia New York East Dlvtsion W L 50 '3 49 43 44 47 42 48 42 51 40 50 Wtst Division Pet. .538 .533 .484 .467 .452 .444 GB \\ 5 6'k 8 81\ Av•o. "•'"-• r•dio. 11 .. tff, lltfll Mvt. i'Nl~ .. 4) kland ansas City gels 53 42 52 46 .553 .531 .511 .51 1 .511 .341 2~2 41,'i 41.1 41\ 2'l Dodgers Cincinnati 61 35 53 42 .6.15 .558 .552 .515 .459 .355 71\ 8 1111!1 17 261,!a i $977 '6t Coron• Cou,e lowhl. ,,,..,,. rffl<t. •fr C..,d , •• IYCllnn $1477 '70 Coron• 4 Door 1•1111.. r .. t., llfflH !MOAOOt $1277 70 M1rk II 4 Door lovtt. 1r1111., rH lt, ""llff (1t610CJ $1577 '70 M1rk II Coupt All ... '""'-· ., .. rt .... ,,,.,, ~ -,. .. 1 n,_., l lt ~ ,.. .. flllll!LI $1977 72 Cellc1 :.-rnt; ,..... -... ¥11111 .... $2777 Pi ·nnesota C icago T as 47 45 47 45 48 i 6 3t 60 Wed111td•W't G•"ltl ou~n 6, C~ictto I 1n11not1 l, N-Yori< o etron u , ICtn»• Cltf t llwfuk tt ), TeJll 0 Clevelt nd 10. lo nM lt I fll lnn\1191\ ll•lllmor, J, O•kltnd 1 Ttder't O-Mln-t11 (111Wle¥9fl Jt,I J t i &ot!Oft {Tien! n .. 1 MHW1Ul<tf !LOC.kwoocl 4•J1 et Tt KM IMt rT!tl ... Bl lli"IOl"t fCUl!lt, .... , •I ...... llt 'f•n 11·111 Onlw oemtt .c"'°ulf!d. ,. .... .,,. 0•- C"luto tr N,.,.. Yori<, l Min"""°" •' I O.IO'I 0.lrolt I I Tt~ll Mllwt\11<" t i Kt"'°'' C11v Clh'elend ti 01k111'1d B•lllmo<t t i A!t9th San Francisco Hdustoo Atlanta San Diego 53 '3 51 48 45 53 33 60 WHlll'lfl.,.I Ge,,,... k n Dl••o I, Chlc..o ~ Pl!!1boi .. ll J, DOd•tn 7 Nrw York U, AU1n11 2 CIMlnntll 1, Phlllde-lphf1 l Montre•I 3. Hov111111 1 n o !nn\tlfs) $tn FrtllCiKO •• SI. L.oul1 l TM•''' Oemt1 $•n oi.oo (Gr#lf 5-IU ., (ll!c-.o {Hc*'Dn •·II MO!\tretl (S'-mtn 4-$) '' Clflclnntll !Gr!~ t ltY t.JJ DM,.n IDown/llf 1-tl If $1. lov/1 (FOii.,-.. 51 Onl'f ••"* Khfduled. started r~ountain Valley's win- ning rally with a slngle. Rob 1-lardman doubled in a run , aDd when Bob Patiaon and Ron Shlmajl 1Jngled, the Barons had the b&$CS loaded. A. walk to Joe Valenti forced' In one, Mark Garfield drove: one In wllh a single, and Jeff <..'hurcliwell bit a sacriflce Oy !or the fi na l marker. Church well also had an rbl triple for the wt.Mers. John Franklin and Doug Moll combined to hold' Estan· cla to four hits ln C:Orona del A!ar 's victory. Steve Behrens drove in a run with a first In· ning sJngle, nnd Alan Jahns stole home with all the runs the Sea Kings needed in the first inning. • _._CTI •• r llrll ' ' J 0 ~ ~ , s ~ ; ~ a ~ g g c 3 o o 0,, ~ 1 \ 2 111107 PW!!ltlfl \11Utv UI Mrllrtll Shlmell, 2b 2 2 I 0 H4Hltld, It I ! 0 0 PlTIT WITH FfRM LEIT WRISf A firm left wris t ii a must in putt ins. If you allow your left wrist to start collap1in, before the balJ b on itJ w1y (ilhlltntio n one), the clubface will be turned to the left when it meets the ball, and yo u wiU pull your putts to the left of the target. Hold the putter to t hat the back of your left hand f.aces down tbe. target line, and keep it facing down this line during your back stroke And your through stroke (illustration two). Your putter will then bo facina the target whe n it meets the ball, and a straight putt will result. f 2 .. .. • • ~ r • 3 j ( Vtlt,,11, H 1 O O 1 G1rll•ld, cl l 1 o' o' ~=;:;;;;:;::;;;:;:::;;;;::;:;;;;;;;:;:::::;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:::;:::;;:;:::==:~::"'·~r Jl>f'cl1n. lb 2 o Cllurtflwetl, lb ,1 0 l 2 &rt !,,•rd, c c 1 1 GOLFING PR A CT/CE NOW CAN r A Y OFF LA TER! Arnold t ::.-"3b c J g o,', ,I, .Palmtr'I book.let, "Proc/lce," shows yoM how to prac//ce at ~'"· rl l i homt for power play on your favoritt cour1t , Stnd 20f and a p:m:,~np •• ? ~ 1 o 1t•m1Hd, stlf'flddrrutd tnHlopt to Arnold falmtr, c/o thil z1runtr, pr o 1 o0 •1 L-"c'-"'o:o"'•'•'•'"' ========------------~) Tollll '' I .,_.., '""""'• . ' . 201 003 1--7 10 7 200 02' x-11 I 3 (~ "4 Mir IJ) For Wednesday Alamitos Results Over A&C Tony Ca:te'.s Inside shot with six seconds left propelled Rcct' Carpet Realty to n 64-63 upset victory over A & C Propcrtlei Wednesday night in the Costl · ~lesa Recreation Dept. open summer basketball league at Estancia ffigh, Cate's bucket negated a 20- point effort by A & C's Alike Contreras and the loss drop1 Co111 Mt .. O- C19t 511ndl"tl w l. •• , 1 ' . ~ l, ,i ~\'I '•" ~ 1 ;~· . ' ' A & C to third place, J ~i ~ames oft the pace of Black· "'· In th e other tilt at Estancia \Vednesday Escadrille stayed in contention for the title with a 93-&I romp over Orange Coast College Alumni. Leading Escadrille's outfit was Jim Pa,Yner, Ma r k Ramsey, Walt Simon, Don Newton and Mick Novack. All were in double figures and leading the way was Payne with 20 points. Art Ackennan led the way for Orange Coast Alumni with 20 points on 10 field goals, but Escadrille was in command • from the out.set. Ncqewt, 2b Jollfltol\, 11 Jelln.1, ct &et1rtn1, rt Grt111y, rt Porto. lb l(ahltr, 311 Mo,irpr,y, If Mlult, 11;1.p GulllH!H, lb·ll ll11uch1,.,p, If &. Ml»rt . c F. MoOre, c F r1nklln, p WltklnKI!\, pl! a ... 1n. lb el r II n l ' 1 o o 3 1 1 0 J I 1 0 , 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 J 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 o 1 o 7 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wtcl .... V't ill:U Ulll ' Cle1r • ~ •• 1 Aoc~v T1rr1 Moto IT•11s11r1) '·60 3.00 Rebtt C•ustd Him !Wtrd) 6.0lt Lllll1 Tlny Go (l(nlgh!l Although Cate scored the winning bucket tor Red Carpet Realty, it was Mel Sims who ~-= .. kept the winners In the game Tai.11 '' 3 • 2 e1 r11"1 Lostth, lb 3 0 0 o RMCIOllllo, lb 3 O 0 O H1y11,1• 30 1 0 Mort1111. rl 2 o 2 o Flomln9, rl 1 O o O 0.Y•n, 71> , 0 1 0 Otiben. c s O o o Mrtl<tr,cf 2 0 0 0 McL.•VQh lln, pll l , O O o Leng1111e, II l O 0 0 Tomlln.p 1 0 0 0 Toltll 24 O • 0 ICWe IV l1t11l11t1 • . ' . Cor1111t dt l Mir 200 001 l)...J 4 o E1tern::le COO 000 1)-(t ,,.2 H<1111t1111'9P1 l tKh It) ... ' . ' . ' . M1nsollno, o Ool/gl••· 0 FrNmt n, 20 St!mmltr, cf Ul11n•roll, c Colt men. lll TKrY. lo DllQIT!Or1, rt Vin Tlohlm, U l(lmbllf, 11 R.elQll" , l ottl• ' ... • • • • • • ' . ' 0 ' . ' 0 , 0 ' . ' . ' . • • " . • • • • g g 0 • • • • • ' . CCllll MH• Il l '"~I 2i..11 Vtltn IM, rf Ool1ny, c &rown, JI Shiro. lb D. lltrnl!erdl, 3b Crandell, u t::11~.cll) Ctldwell, rl MeCo.,, c 8r111dl. ll •• r ll rlll l I 2 l t 0 I 1 J 2 I 0 3 1 2 3 4 0 ' 0 4 1 1 I ~ g & ~ •• g I ,i I 0 g ¥ J g 0 1 o 1 a ~ i i i S. fl•rnlltrlf, 1b OeWllde. c P'-'1111, lb Holmts, Ph Tollll :it I lJ 1 Sc•,. '' lnnlMI H"'"!lllQlllll a.ell Casie Mtlt • ......... 122 201-t " . ' 3 ' , FllllST lllAC& -lSO yt rds. 1 yttr olds. c 111m1111. Purie $1900. MOOll FIVff" l lltnk1) SOJl)frson !ICnloh!l 3.60 2.(.0 2.60 7.IO 6.00 uo DlndV't E•[H'tS1 (T,.1tun) Time -11.,1 . AllO ••n -Shl~t M UP, Go Jolie, wtsnewood, Whluo•d 01 Oit. Hk tor1 Pel, Mr. Arr-ay, PCH1 0.. lltr. kr•tchtd -Ch•m111111H1 C~trg1r, 8tfty L" Sid. SS E•-.:te -10.M-l'l)'tf" & J· S!olptnon, Peltl 511.40. SECOMO RACE -JSO y1rds. l y1tr olds & UP. Clt lml119. Pur11 Ui'OCI. Dr1w Pley ! H1 rl) '·'° l.IO J.20 Ctndo Bey Bar /TrN11,H'•l 2.IO 2.olO /u:lla1'9tr CAIChl rdl) ~.20 Tlmt -11.17, Also r1n -Chi P1rr, llustt r Cute !litr, Wilch, Ct'Hk Ctilc, l !Obby Blco. hr, Wiich Ct'Hk .Chic. 91ob0y lllob, No Krt!d1et. THIJllD JllACI -l50 Y•f11$.. l v••r oldJ. AllPWl "Cf. Purst SllOO. EYerftlS ll•r Bob CC.rdolal S.411 2.IO 2.40 W1r Chic's Ecl!o !Alchef11s) 4.00 2.to K•lif Gold IMorri1l J.10 Time -1Ll2. AIM! ten -Mii.i lo1ut1 B1r, Rocktl Glt rf, Mr. Tl!ret $trows, G1! Htl'P'f, M111 Sit< L111nl, No s.c:r11thl~. FOURTH RAC! -l50 Ylrcll. 3 yt1r 0101. Allow•nct. Puru $2000. Oddsme~ef- lH•rt) 10.20 6.00 S.00 II.IC! 6.10 ,_., Chic Pet Go (l<ntohtl Color Mt Pin~ (Trt 11ur•l Tlme -11.n . Also ran -Win A Jtl, Never N111- pl11g, Comln' A"•~ Mt, M•YPrHI, Tile New LOOI<, Aockt tlt L.lmlt1. NO icr1tches. FIFTH llACIE -JSO yards. 2 ve1r olds, Allowanet. PurM $1900, Los Alaniitos Entries •"lr1" ..... TlllltM O'Olat fl(. Hart) "' "' Cleer & le1I. Mldwty 0.ndV !l . Wrlgll!I Jllnt '911 1;45 p.lft. Al» 1Ultlllf.I FIRST llACI! -350 Y••d1. 1 yter Scott McCl11n ID. l(nlgMI old1. Cl11ml111. Pu"e 11100. Cletmlng SEVENTH ltACE -WJ y1rd1. l Prlc1 UOOO. Yffr olds & llP. Altawancf . Pur-. ~. Trutv A Olernond (L. Wri9fll 11 7 TM Soutl! Hiils Klwtnl~.(oYlna Prlm•tieUt (0 . Cer(!Ott) 117 Vtneque (A. Adair) Coal Miii (K. Htfl) 117 NIY Ann !(. Smllnl Mtr..., &er Ml•• ro. ICnlgMl 117 1(!111 &ltd II(. Ha'!) Sht llllfl CM. Cll1mble11\ 111 Aockel To Ml (0. Cardcla) Candy MOOll Jet (J. Drevtr) 117 Mr. Arm1m1ar IA. ll1nk11 Tlnky TOii Dtck {J , We"$ 17'0 Go ChlCkll Ge IS. Treasure) Hlcktry SmOll• {J. Ak nard$) IN Country Carousel CJ. :>M.,crl 117 01nny Ovt (A. ll1nksl 1'!0 EIGHTH RACE -350 v•rd1. 3 Yt er Lio"' Lime (R. A.d1lrJ ll7 olds & up. Claiming, Pur11 $2600. s•COND •Ac• -lSd v•rds. 3 Yt•r CtaJmJng P'lce lSOOO. olds, Cl1 lmll)O. Puri• SllOO. Cl1lml11g llld Wl!o !C. Sm11111 prltt nooo. Steopor Skip (J. M•lsudal l'lrKll•r91 ID. C1rdo1e) 121 Rf!>eol Cl!•rlle (S. Trt'11urt l Alld'f Done It IM. ChembltU) 121 Ctsert S1ndstorm [J. Alch1rd1) Chlcktty Cl'l.lck !J. o .. v•rl 117 AOIChft PtHum {A. ·fl~nk') "Hd 'l'n'Gtll It {J, Alcherdsl llf Pt rr Btr fA. Ad1lr) ll ler1111 O•Mv (K, Hi rt\ 119 RO'fl l $11\fff &1r (L.. Wrlgl!tl Rusty ClebbHleo (L. Wrlghll lit Mooleh Dlt mond !J. DrtyH) DlllllS O.!M.rt11mt ts. Trt e1urt ) 111 L!ghlnh111 Bid /J, W•rd) Time -11.lS. 1. .. I With 22 points. Alto r1n -Oroi:i O'H()Mymoon, Roy1I Bar Lad, Miit Dter!lndi, OIOle't Gem, $h11g.oer. No .cra!cnes. $1XTH RACE -870 y1rd1. J ytar oku & up. Clelm/110. Pu~ l!!OO. G1Derlno 18!ckell Ml Pio (Wr!11hl) Kn!gl!t .-.1111r (Marrl•l Time -46.67. 15.00 7.ICI t.ICI 1.ICI S.00 10.60 Allo ••n -Burrit Angtl, Don Kset, Ill! O'&tr, Ole Mysltry M111, l oP E1ol1. No Kttld111. IS li'Xl d e -l .01Hrlno .. 4-Ml Pit. '•Id ISU.M. Sl!\llNTH llloz.11) l ll'!.r old• B up, A!IPWenct, Pur~ 12IOO. T..e c"·~ CMlc• tAlch.llrdsl 11.ao 6.00 3.60 otde Smoothie (Tret surtl 3.00 2.«I G•ticv's llov <H•rtl 3 . .0 Tim. -46.64. AIMI r1n -For David, Dorotl!y'1 Ptlleo. Cte11y Rock-1, Amerk 1n DrMm . Ho Kretche1. l!l!)HTH RACE -l SO v•rd1. 3 y11r olds. Clt lmlng. Pur~ 11100. Mln1lrtl (Morrls) S.60 4,60 3.60 Miu l!lannon &ar !8enkt) 7.00 t.«t Aoc~tl Hug Ntlt (Alchtrds) 5,¥/ Time -II.SO. AIMI rtn -Flgh!t n Chic, Ct.a~I TPWn, C~ld~f"\l .. ~~.,.,..Jov. Vfl(I• Fly, Vlndlc1~ , 1'Alf111, Scr11tclled ..., Dor .t Ja"M, l(ICef)U Lu, Teko Chl<, Forw11rd P10. •s 1!1tc1'e -l MIMt,.l B a.Miis 1111,, flOll e1r, P'1tcl SH1.U. NINTH RACE -35(1 v1rd1. 3 'ftlr ol di . Clalmlng. Puri• $!100. lledtv11fd (tc.nlghll Ml rkirt ISmllhl Lucky MOii !Wr!ghl} Time -11.30. 33.olO 10.20 6.IO 4 • .ta 3.60 .. ~ Also r;1n -F/111 Oft, Rock Elle L.H, Etglel'• Cute ll1t, Tht Eunuch, Nioka, P111 E"' Sy, Mtnnw's Rocl tt. Scr1tcht.l -JO)'Olll V1lentln1. Llvln Doll, Jim Ooolln, P1tlto Duiltr, .. ~ U l.ua. -;~UM & t• "'""rhll, P11d $\K.•. lltd Ct,.,.1 ltMlfy ("4) " " ,, Ct lt 1 1, Ptn5hlr S • 1 Sims 10 2 l Te vier ' a 1 Hiii 5 l ' l.e'J'l'lml• 2 2 W9lktt O O 1 Tcttl1 '21 I lJ 4 I C P"'"rt1t1 IUI wonnw '1 ~ -; Snook 3 0 2 Ambro~lch 6 2 1 ~~~~~::1 18 g j k on s o o W•lkt' 1 0 I Kt ll1tt1bfrtttr o o 1 Totals JD 3 ll Hell!lm41: A B C, 174 1, Ort11t1 CHll loltl"ltM UO 1 , " • ,: ff • • • • • 0 l!Kedl111t In) Pe'fnt 1'1 ~ Aims,., t o Simon I 1 NO\'tCk 7 0 NIWfon 7 7 McFff 0 0 McCormick ' o Tottls .U l Htll1tm1.' l!:Kedrltt1, 4'·2*. ~ • , • • ' 'i , • • • ' ' .. ' .. i ~ • ' !I • l: 17 .. Highest Course NEW YORK -The highetl golf course in the world is at Gulmarg in Kashmir, India. where the 18-hole layout is at 8,700 feet above sea level. Players have the a dded pleasure of Kash m i r's beau tiful vale as a backdrop. NEWPORT LEASES 2400 West CMlt Hlt•w.., leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 Ll vfn Ootl {J. Wet'd ) 117 Old H-11N d 11(. Hirt) Fitf 2 (A. llenki) 11f NINTH ltloCE -lSO v1rd5. l .,,,,:lp;;;iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;; ........ ;i;;,.,.,.,.:,;,.,.:,..;;iii;iii;iii~ THlltD RACE._ «II) Vf<°dt , J Yt t r ~l~e i:o.lng. Purte $1800. Cl•lmlno ll .,,, ...... ~·-'"w ..... '"' .. " ... ''"" m DON'T DISCARD THOSE Wl!(hln Hour (I(, H1rtl 120 Ttko Chic (J. Rlt llt rdl) 111 Tl"'llo T"l"krleh 10. Ct rdorll 117 Scorpio 111r 10. Morrlt) t!t Amtrl(tn Gent ($, TftlSurt l no Smolcl flockrl (J. Or•v•rl 11' OLD TENNIS 5110Es.11. Plt 'f POiiey !II . ll1nk1) 111 Moor! &enk {0 , l(n!o"tl llt ~ KJptymyloll fJ. or..,trl 117 l!lr"1rn, &ubbl" is. Ttr1e1urr ) 117 W1 repelr .,Ill r..otttom 111 ty,.. el Afill11 lllll T,.""' S11tt1. Cellll(IC!1 !J. lllcl!trdsl 111 Cht rotng Clt'1'4"n tJ. Wtrd) !11 l'OUllTH llloCI -.00 v1rd1. l ve1r Tonto'1 &•v 0 1111 !E. Geri11 11t ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE Olcll .. .,.., Cl•lmlng, PUflt J110l'.I. FlHI Bid !C. Sml/111 llf • WISTCLIFf' PL.Allo . LIDQ . '"'"ION ISL.AHQ . COllONI. OliL MAii Cl t lmlng Prlc1 51600, -~M~~~~'"~''..' ~·~"~'~''c-~""~''~"~--~'~"~"""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~ P1lltd1 8•r !S. Tr111u11) 1n · 0111 llru ldy !R. Adelr) llt AprCf>Ot (E. G1rr1) 119 ICl!dff (0. ICnlghl ) 111 Aurl119 Rockl'I iD. C1f11011J lit Me 01vld (R. 81nk1J Ht Jof>"nl• llt11 (J . llllch1rd1l llt VH•t SY•ltrn IL. Wr!9hl) 172 "''TH lllACI -350 v•rdl. 3 v••• old1. A1tow111Ce. Cenl-~. Pur1e $1200. p.,,." snco, T~t Verlen 0 1!1 Mlch!nn . VtlUI Ado.cl IS. lr111ur1l llt Mtllt1'1 Cl\trQtr I(. Ht rO in Jcwnl ot Lime IJ. Orv••! 117 T•uf'f Hot 1"1nl1 (A. ll1nk1) 111 Ptt ctdlllo CA. A(lelrl 11t MIU Llmlta IJ. M1tttldn) 111 Bem1IO! (0 . KnlgMI 112 f ht M-~hlntr (C, Smlttil llt SIXTH JllAC• -~· y1rd1. J y11t old• • up. l,ltow•nc•. Pu"' 12100. Lltn1 Mias l u11 IJ. Rlch.lr<hl 117 Good Cop., IR. Adelrl 1n Stllltnneh tJ, W1r(l l 111 s -Pend• <C. l ml!hl in l op ltuler CO. Morrl1> in Hat lo Trot IE. O•n •l in LY"" CM lll. l l lllttl lit Gi rvin COUY11y IS. TrH turtl 1n POOL TABLES s395oo ~-..: ond up [!)OWLING CHUCK'S OIUIAIDI n• "'""" t 111t. c.u .... ... ,,., 1'i1 Me. T111lln ·-... _ .... 171 '&S..ftaldooo, Sll.JJ' lndudlfWtax. D6J wt• nmCD-on•Flo,$21.JJ' lmb •c ax. Into ana oul ol.,Plen1y of parking. And the crowds haven 1t found ii yet Your 1raval agent knows the way. •PIA,.._,_, ... M Mt11M Hiii _,,,,, l:OdH1t! o.n1111 Totel1 F ""'' "' - • • 4 • DAILY PILOT 35 Marina, FV Suffe1· Setbacks. Checking Area Women's Golf Results A Blacl: Marks - wu held by members or the Cotta Meta women's Soll club recmtly. lo the touroey strokes were added to the net score each time a goller was in a hazard or three-putted. Ftonkie Dint placed thlnf (3111\~ women's golf club with a grosi 12 in a low ~low ntt toumament last week. while Dot Ptntel took C flight and AM Sullivan were the top Salle ~1e)'61 with a 66, while Third place in A Oight went Alyce H.mblnl 8lld Mark ClaJ1' Ued f« B flllj>t bonors with S71 while SybU Foster woo C flight with a 37. Carole .Rosi was second. with Lila McHugh and bot duo In B fll&ht. Ruth Whlllltr CeCe Coury and He 1 en to Fem Sproul . Monb'11e runncr;Jpo. :i U:at ~:=ell f1nlJhed H Marmaud finl.Vled third with a In B !llihl, Phylll.s Slallord La9una Beach Ill net. • took booon with a lW, while , r:J:..NG BEACH -Orange area prep summer blsketball teams from Foun-~ Valley and Marina are itJ,egated to co n s olation A fig.ht low net boDors went to Mary Ratekin (71) followed by Mary Ann Dyer (72) and Pat Cebo (75). Mlsslo• t'lejo A. low putt$. tournament IJ Marjory Thatdler .,., 0«0nd Diane Stys was the winner elanned tor Tuesday. y,·1th a 35. Zola Bartholomew, ln A flight in a recent low net Virginla Dransby and Sue Lu Orr and Vi Sax1on tied for ' C'Annie Looergan won A flight with a 78 with Frankie Durst finishing seoJlld I 79 l and Betty Brown and Fran Lewis (80) tying , ... third . s ... tca A11a Newport Beach r e s i d e n t Inez Stansbury fired a hole-in· ooe on the par-three second bole at Santa Ana Country Club recentl y. She U.'!ed a five iron on the 119-yard hole. Lou.lie Robinson's '11 took low gross honors in B hight while the low net placers were Marian Schultze, G I or I a Bowden and Michl Uematsu. Dot Morris took low gross hongn in C flight and Jane Feitelsoo took low competition "'ith a 74. Jackie Neal and Dot Penzel followed. tournament of the Laguna Osborne teamed to score a net Ra11cho SJ Beach women 's golr club, net· of 65 and take honors in a best The Rancho San Joaquin ~iue Stevens' 34 won ln C Ung a 60 for the 18 holes. Mag-ball of twosome tournament In women's golf association he ld fUghl y,·hile Charlene Collins. gie Waterman and Helen the regular outing of the a tin whistle tournament Tues· Knv Leutwiler and Elle<:n Drexillwi tied for second wlUt ?\fission Viejo \\'OnlCn's club day. y,·lth Jackie Kroll and Yr8cebum tied for third. bracket play Friday in the Long Beach City College foumey following fU'Sl round ~cks Wednesday night. In B flight, Marian Voss won it with a 76, with Del Gustkey, -with • 79 and Betty Walthall (IO) third. '!be C Flight was captured by Connie Neske (78). Shirley Jackson and Alyce Hubbard tied ror sOO>nd with 84s. Ms. 1'uesday. Carolynn Walbridge tying for In D fl ight. Grncc Wehe was Jn B flight the y,•in.ner was ln second place v.·ere the rirst in A flight with a total of the winner with Bet 1 Y '" Fountain Valley was the vic- 1.iln of a 32--12 outburst in the lourtb quarter by Long Beach Jordan and the latter parlayed it into a 72-56 triumph. ,..Marina got a 22-potnt effort &om Keith Koeller and 16 pc>ints from Bob Losner, but it wasn't enough as Long Beach Wilson rolled, 62-57. El J\' lg11el Jean Abajian with a 70, while,_tw_ooo_m_c _of_l_lo_n_ey:.__Ca_rro_1_1·a_n_d_3'_:po:.__in_<s_. ________ e_1a_k_eioo_r<_"""" __ d_. ___ _ Frances Blake took runne.rup Fountain Valley tries again Friday evening at 6 and Mama follows at 7 with a test against St. Amhony. . St. Anthony lost t 0 Lakewood Wednesday. M1r1M (JJ') '1 ff ,, " ~lc.k ' • ' M!lti' " ' • n Jenkln1 , , ' • ~·' , ' • • 5 • , " Wllc;htr ' ' , ' Sllvol• l o ' ' Tot1l1 . n 11 " " H•lnlme: Ll·WllJOn, JO.lt, • P-i1111 \11ller lU) , ff .. , " Ml(IM ' " Hiii • • , " !i.PPslhtlmlr ' I 5 " l:tdHl•lfl • ' " Gtiillle ' ' ' • To!1l1 " " " u Sc-•Y GNl'ttn FOlillt&ln Vlllt'f 14 11 lt 12 -5'i LB Jon:l111 10 t21l2-n In a better nine tourney TUesde.y, Failyn Brooks won A flight with a 36 1..1. Margaret Kuma~ was se<:ond (33) and Fishing Trip Scheduled 'The Balboa Angling Club wilL hold its final fishing trip for a group of area children July 25 with a half-day e'x· cursion out of the Balboa Pavilion. Approximately 3 0 youngsters will make the cruise, with all expenses being paid by the Balboa Angling Club. 'The boat will take the youngs ters on a nm to the top fishing spots from Newport Harbor to Dana Point and back. In an IF tournament held by women members of the El Niguel Counly Club, Sue Foley won A flight with a 63, follow- ed by Rea Cochran and Jerre Cini (65) and Kay Brady (66). In a previous tin whistle event, Virginia Vistica was the winner with a 35 while Cllarlotte Wood's 32 took sec- ood. Kelly Adams WaJ the willner in C Oigbt With a 33 followed by Bernice Johnston, honors with a 72. In c flight, Catherine Del.Dng topped the field with a 69 followed by f\{ary Louise Yager's 76. In Jl prior fou r·pars event. Gene Griffin took A flight honors with a 45'1: followed by Ida Thome. Virginia Beals In B flight, Carolyn Swartly nabbed No. l hooors with a 66, followed by Nancy Daugherty (67), Gene G81Tick (88) and Unb v· T . h Beverly Hendersoo (69.). eatens ·' le , Ofitg t Joanne Woodward won C flight wit4 a 66. Judy Eriksen was second (67), followed by Mater Dei High's summer nesday and never could get R th K il (69) D basketball team dropped Its back In the game. u e · 0 r 0 th Y seco-• slra'•ht Santa Ana Le d' M t Dei · H t nd B ti H' 1a1 'ti a mg aer m scor· es er a e Y •m· ""llege league test we<1n--•ay In B do 'lcCa he l ~k 'edf f th ....., ~ gwas ren n" ug y me 5UJO" U or our with n'""t as Pacifica handed the 'th 18 In'" d 11 70s.-'6" w1 po i.;, an was I) flight was won by Dorothy Monarchs a 53-43 lacing. McCaughey and Steve Martin· Humphries with a 68 with Mater Dei's quintet returns dale responsible for most of Marvis Lynn placing second to action tonight at Estancia Mater Dei's rebounds. with a 71. Margaret Broz, High in the Costa A~esa Eleanor Barrett and Gertrude Recreation Dept. league with Lewis tied for third with '-a confrontation with Santa An.a Valley. The two share the Mesa Verde loop lead with S-O records. The Monarchs were guilty of Shirley Kinder led the A 13 first haH turnovers on the flight of the f\.fesa Verde way to a J0.18 deficit Wed- McC1uolleV llr9'1'111t Prltitl M1rtllld1l1 O.l1ney ..... Sllmm1r Om Tot1l1 M1'9r Dll IC) H1l1Tim1: P1c1nc1. »11. t1tllfl• •• '11 2 l 0 s 0 0 s 0 J 2 2 • 0 0 J 0 1 0 J ' I 0 1 2 J 0 J • 11 t 22'3 4 -Jy Polyester Cord Tire /. I i l l • • YouRMOST POPULAR SIZE! FOR MID-SIZE CARS: FrTSMNN MOOElSa' . • Torino • Buick Special • Fury • Fairtane • Montego • F-85 • Impala • Monie Carlo • LTD llltbnl Slim f71·14, Gll·U, f71·1~. (l1f.15 1'11nFIOI. U. tu Df J?.lJ"' ll.60~ M11 + Service WHITE SIDEWALLS $3.00 MORE EACH CUSTOM LONG MILER •tough 4-ply polyester cord for long wear and a smooth ride LUBE & OIL CHANGE llCi SILICTION OP. s1zn Siii ,.1CI Stu PllCI , .,.,, ••.•• 21 .ts , ... ,,.1 •• Jt.n 700·1S ..• , Jl.tS 111-16.1 ,. 41.16 110.1• .••• zt.ts ts1.1 6.1 .• 11.11 1S0·1 6 ••.• Jl.11 l t-16.I .. 4t.tl I t-16.I .• I t .II ,.l .T. l .N TO 6.4' Wl'll L,UlalCATI YOUI CAI AMO CMAMOI llfDINI: OIL. ~e lCI IN(LUDIS U~ TO I OUAaTI Olli DUALITY OIL, WHEEL BALANCE 411 149 "'"' W•IOHTS WE HONOR. • • FOR SMALL CARS: """' """'""5 "' LARGE CARS: FO~,.-s"' . . ,,rs. . • otds • T-eird • R1v1era aonneville flTS r •Vega • Pinto • Greff\ I~ • ouster • •La Sabre • u\s • c enturian • MarQ • Maver1cK Camero Dart • Nova • • Mustang HIAYY DUTY SHOCKS 9'~-· ·- DELCO & HI JACKE!t All SHOCKS 34~ BRAKE RELINE~ 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE LINING AND LABOR ·-.ff.:= 2495 • s,.o;w Lew ,,.... tl1. DIKll •UAIAlllTll •••. ..... I ................................ ,_ ........... ... ................ ..._. ... , ••• ,., -..... lllMW ............. -... ,.,... ""'""'"· ..., ...... ,..,...., ... ,,. ..... !NU .................. .......,, ....... ............... poM19n1l11 ....... .me... ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ~.JONES TIR·E SERVICE Phones 646-4421 540.4343 .;w 2049 H~!~~R BLVD. • , COSTA MESA HOURI--~ • 1.11'1. " ........ MOHDAY lflre ,-RIOAY SATURDAY I l.M. MI 11.111 • If you want Goodrich, you'll just have to remember Goodrich. .. ") J A.WEATHERBY MARK XXll S•ml-aulomotk 22 long Rlile with Weaver 4X 1Cap9. Precl1lon bolonc• and eng ineering. REG . 99.50 88 99 .. REMINGTON CENTER FIRE 7MM REG. 152.95 30/06 REG. 139.95 132~~ADL 11995 c. WINCHESTER 30/30 RIMFIRE Top •le<llon corblne wilM REG. 79.95 7·1hot copoclty. Ro 19 pld 4 , 6 9,5 1mooth lever action. D. REMINGTON .22 6·1hot clip f.d, •lock of uncondltioriolly guoronte.d nylon. T 0101 weight only 4-lb•. llDC REG. 49.95 41 95 COME IN AND CHECK OUR PRICES ON UNADVERTISED SALE GUNS! HOPPE'S RIFLE CLEANING KIT REG. 3.29 1'' AU the hardware & occ•tsories to keep 221270/30 colib•r rill•s ond 12/20/240 gou~• shotguns cleonl REMINGTON MOHAWK AMMO P•rformonc• proven ~~~~= CU TIER SNAKE BITE KIT quollty & depe nd- obillty. Remington Mohowk .22 Box of 50. 59'oo• ,t'-, Oo•igood •pe<ili<olly lo• >ho h""'"J '\ I to kffp your cotch once you'v• \ "bog;ed your tro phy '. X 49c BROWNING A com p1et• kil for th• solely of hunter. scout or bockpocker in the out-of-doora. REG. 1.98 149 = ... '---..,..____j FLUORESCENT HUNTER'S HAT Brillion! color for long-range vi•ib1lity in as1ort.d sliei . A mu1t for hunting ! 179 HUNTING BOOTS ~;i~~~o;~'(;,~:!~''.?.~'. ..................... 3895 ~~~~RESCENT HUNTING VEST ........................... 39• HOIST .•...................................................... ,,) 99 CUTIER INSECT REPELLANT SPRAY .................... 120 STORE HOURS : MOH . TH"U Fllll. 10A.M. TOI P.M. LA MIRADA IHOl"l"IHG CINTlJt SAT.• IUN. 10A.M. TO I P.M. ORANGE 11!5 N TUITIN '""-131·1110 TUSTIN SANTA ANA NfWl"OJtT AVI , 3l!1 $ llt1$TOL IT. 1t FIJI.IT IT•Etl 11 M1eA,r!THUJI ~~ 132 ,,,, ,......,. 017·ll1J HOW, 4 STOfllll IN OfllAHOI COUNTY • • Thursd.iy, July l~. }q/J Start Your Engines! WITH DEKE HOULGATE Up u1 Lhe Norlhv.·est they call drag racer Jerry Jtuth lung. He has beaten off every prt•tcndcr 10 the throne 10 date. butl never has thcrt• lx.-cn as serious :1 !hrcat tu his don11nut1on 01 fuel dragster racini.: on hi s l1Um(' ground as ll f.'rrn Pclt·r.-.t•ri. The be:;pcctacll'd 2!~.~1·c,1r-old dr<iR!>1l'r drivt'r, :1 !utl ti1nc professionul for only Th\· la.;1 couple of seasons. is currently k·act-: ing lluth 111 rhe NI IHI\ 11orld C'h:1mp1onship SCflC'S \)()I ll! r:u·e 1nl lhc Northv:c•st. 1'hat hus 10 t·o1nc ;1s a shock to Huth . "'hu h:1s ~·on the title for six st raight ~c;1rs Petersen also s&:ks to nicl't and lx'<1l Hu th unvwht'rc and every11·hcrc ht: t·nn. This ll'C'ekcnd tht• ~ctung 11·1]! ·bt· the l'ro Dragster Assn. rneeL al Or,111,gc Count y Interna tional H;.ce11;1y.I \Vhy are two n1en tn1 vchng n1orc than l.000 nuk•s tu battle on a quarter-n1ile strip or povemcnt , 11·hl'11 thl'y could stay honlt' in Seattle and ha ve it out on a local track'! 1 For one thing. 1he Pl),\ charnp1onst11p 1s one or the mO!>I im-1 portant in fuel dra,::slcr racing, mor(' 1mpor1ant 111 il s nov('I v.·ay lhan winning a n;u1onal lT0\1n Tht• PI JA y,·as cr<•<1lcd !>1r 1c1h· for fuel dragstt•rs ;ind eont1nues to feature rhcn1 •'v1·11 thllU!.(h1 funny c;-irs are no11• !hl' n1orc dur111nnn t cln ss of e11 r HI drag n1c- ing. For 11notht'r. both l'etl'r~t·n and Buth have <.drt.'i1dy won 1hc PDA mt'Cl. Huth in 11Mi7. l'et\·r~n la!.I sun1mcr I ' • Petersen is having the hl'st season or his rarccr. 1'ht' Nllili\ Gatornationals ""·inner thinks his team has "kind of found our o"'n" as he set~ a string t.f victories. track records <ind luv.'I elapsed time n1arks frorn one end or the cuuntry to <inothcr. Campaigning harder th<1n perhaps any racer in the sport al the moo1ent, Petersen trlll'cled to New Jecsey la.-;t v.eekend lo tompete in the NllRA Su 1nml·rnationals 11nd ""'ill he in Ca liforni.1 this Friday and Salurda}'. lit> concedes that it \\'Quid haVt' h1:cnl a lot more ecunonlicat to stay on tour in lhe ~ust. In addition to v.orkln~ hard ror his \VCS points, l'c1rrser1 keeps hoping for another chance to r11ce lluth. This season thc.v ha\'C met l\\'lce and the ''king" h<1s "'On both timt's. "On top of being a very good drag racer," Petersen said or] Ruth, "he's very lucky. It used to he he could outrun inc, hul l now 1 run just a11 good. I ha\'e the experienee and the hacking it takes to be competili\•e. I ··This year on the avera,itt' v.·e're running quicker than ltuth. l'\'e set thret track records. I had him covert'd at Bren1ertonl (Wash.), hut ty,.·o car lengths out fro1n the line n1y ah11ninu111 fuel Une broke. At Edn1onton I Alt a. I I 1net hhn Jn the fin al round .and lost. I had a couple of bad pistons, ond he bent 1ne, 6.16 seconds to li.40." I At Bremerton, Pelt<rsen re\•euled. he u·as trying so hard Iha: be lore bis car up . Despite the danger and the punlsbn1enl the track was Inflicting on the car, be ran as hard as he could until the failu re occurred. So off goes l,etersen, detern1incdly in pursuit of t\\'O goats- to win the \YCS point ehan1pionship. dethroning Ruth. and v.·hen- ever possible to face Ruth in a ract' and beat hhn in pe rson. The record. by the ~'ay. sbov.'s 15 meetings hetwee11 the '"·o of them . Petersen has v.·on three times. Gtrrde11n <•ers Set•1•11tl Cl11111re It "'as 10 years ago. P<1rnelli Jones had just 1\·on 1hi.: In- dianapolis 500 for car owner ,J. C. Agajanian. ln Gardena. 1vhl'r1•I Jones started his raring career. lhc Ind y chan1p was the grca1cs1 1 sports celebrity in the history of the town . \l'hich is othery,•isc notable maiIJIY for its poker rataces. I , A few of us thought it 111ight be a good idea to hal'c the t·i ty ·fathers honor Jones. and "'e approached the n1ayor of Gardena to ask him for a commendation letter recognizing Jones' achieve- ment. He agreed to 11•ri!c the letter. whlch began as fo11011·s: "'In recent months many fine stories have been ""'fillen about Pannela Jones ... " As one can imn~ine . that blev; the letter. \Ve were ne\•c~ able to show it to anybody. \Veil. Gardena grts a second chance this \l'eckend. \\·hen thl' chamber of co111n1ercc and the rest or the 1011·n·..-.1('<!ding cili7:cns 1 , 'turn out to honor the other hair of thal 196.1 1r1n111ng combina- tion. Agajanian .will be feted during one of the races he pron1oll'~. at Ascot Park adjacent to Ga tjlilena on the occa sion of his liO!h l birthday. 1 {\1otables io 1101101• 1'gt1j11t1i1111 City officials \\'ill be joined by Aggie's doubl es partner in tennis. Assemblyman \\'alter Karabian, ""'ho introduced a resolu-1 lion in t.he State Legislature honoring the dean of Indianapolis! car o'4·ners, and by representatives of the United Slates Auto Club and American fl1otorcycle Assn. There will be a lot of good natured kidding, as Agajnnian'sl friends refer to bis principal business (garbage collecllonl as al used food dealer!hip and needle him for knov.'n ptnehants for ! "·earing co~·boy hats, attracting personal publicity and bangin~I onto bis money. But there v.·111 be a serious side, as 11·ell, Ai::ajanion has con- fided pri\•11 tt'ly that he is so l'Oneernt>d about the cost of racilli;(1 he may be ficldin~ his !:1st USAC cha1npionship car. 1 It's an Ea~le, drl\'Cn by rt1ike ~1oslt'}". a young rnan "ho ha ... been badly burnt•d in 1"0 of the last thrt't' races at Indianapolis. A11:ajanian "·orrics ahout the cost to life as v.·ell as his poc·ket- book. A year a~o h(' v.·arntd lh<il race Cilrs cou ld spin around on lhe front s1raighh1v.·uy. fl y up in the air 11t 200 miles an hour and land in the grandstands at Indy. Others scoffed, hu t that's ahnos1 V.'hal h.appened lo Salt "'allher. r Aggie Co11~er11etl Ab1111t St1fe•11 During hi s 26th year as an Indianapolis car o,1·ncr and on l the eve of his night. Agajan1an e:-:pressed his ov. n concern about safety at Tndianapolis. .,._ "T\1•0 of our \\'Orsi problerns have been at the star!," he said. "~tavbe the track i~ a litt le narrO\l"Cr 1han it should be. I hear they · :lre 1hink1ng: of \1·idt·ni nj; it by laking those box sci11s out or !hcrt• and moving tht• rcncf' hack . I \\'OUldn 't 11·;1111 lo :-11 in there m1 <;elf ".\nl11hl'r thing J'd like ro s1·1· ~tr. ~\·nglcr tl·ll ,\l r. llul1n;1n . ·Thank ~nu for 1t·1t111 g 1111' 1.ork ;ill lh<'S<' ~1•11r~ I fl'l1 I ht•l111.•d make !\ ~· ~:1 fer. bt·tl•'r raC('. bui 1t 1s rune 10 S1C')l as1d(' · " Harl;'lnd f('nglt•r. i i . i~ 1ht• chief ~tt:l\'<Jrd. 11hO"I-' rc·spc111si- bility is control11 ng 1ht r;1tt'. 1\n\Oll 1To11,\1) Jl uh11an 1~ !hi· trac\ O\\'lll'r. Ag:)Jr•n1an (JO(',n·r 11·:in1 lh<' sj)l•echvay 1. ront 1nue pl;1c111g 1ht' responsibilit~· of n1nn1 n~ !ht' race in lhe hands of :i n1~n 11ho next i\la y ~·H I t>c :i full decade beyond n1andator~· rl't1remcnt age for a Joi of carc1:rs th<1t 11 rrn't nearl y so important 10 hu- man life. Deep Sea Fish Report MOtlttO l•Y !ll"Q •I -• ' 16 h~O (CA!. ''' """ ""' (l.l •~D<>•! -" .,,,,,.,, l!l ,.,.., '"" I •·~o ~·"<! • ...,,,.,,~1. ~1 ·~·...,o~ SAN SIMEON -I • ~~"' 1 1 '" (Q<t, 1.io rP'~ u"' AYIL• l•Y 1.-ort S•• L 11' • s,....,tithO!Mll -)'. d~'''"" u ·~•"'' ~I t"'I ,.,. i1 11,.., <Oil .-Oil "UIEMfMIE -•1 1"'11~" ' to•tko w.,, 'J'.17 ti!,... '>~" 1, •• rite\ld•, l Ml!llU1 MAlll'IA Ol!l. .,., -11 ~,,~._ •. :Uf fO(• COii S•M Pl!Oll:O (11"" llrffl L•fld1n1 I -.. •rl911•~c 111 (tl(CO l)fU, I '1-tt ••<1111.t. l J'l•l•llUI. 11 1;1Qth1<,. 11 mec'kfffl, 1$0 blllt beM. It) •«> COO" IS,.rttlllllntl f.i..1t1Qi..•; 2 IM"ICll(lf, I 1\111111/1. 79S Clllto ,,..,,, l ... htiu• no rotk cOd NIW"OttT t01W¥"' LK-ffl -"'? .rtalfr•. ' ~"ICUCM 13' l)ot\l!c. Ill l>IK-Mf Wit. 1 .. ror • (""· » "'IK•..-.1. 11·~•! \~ •~(II••• 1'-1~'"'·'(\IO.•, 0\ '""' 1" ,.,,,,, ,.. 111 •ot- ~•MT.I 1•18•""' -,. ·~~'"" I , • ., "''' 1 ""o I)~.-1 ~.1,,.,... I S•t• OllEOO -~l' ·"'<I'"" r'' ~,, ........ 1 ~, "'ll"•n ....... \.,.,, .... , I '"' ·~ ••!l(" 'l•" ,, ,,,,,..,~, l lEDOPfO() -I"' •"'31•>1 1•1 ~·· \<t ,, "' ·~1 ". "'•".a~ ~ ..... 1•'>111 •••• , -'"• J 'N· 1'."I W«A(""" 11 f'l\•t>f!•I If.) 'P'" CoG M.•LllU -~ 1n9!•r< ~· ~AhtO .. ~ •• ! -!le .... "''' , ""''""' \f•l. llACM -)17 •"n'•" ,,•'O ...... o.ll• •• "•hl>ul ••••• -"' onol"'' I~ ~,..,...,., t)O t>on!to, Jll .. ..., ""H· JS ""''11<1' 0 "NA WM,lll' -JOI l'l<ilt" S,.1 ~·''to IN~i. I) IN"-C\141· "' -••I. I ~tll~••il I 111 ... f.o ....... Ill M.OC ~••I' l ~ ...... \ti °"'' "•l•Otlf (()VI' -I '6 l'!Qlt •I I H1 •or• •Ct! 7' C•hCD "'" l"'"lll"L ll•CI' rt ~"'Ill••• I'll • BIG 10 DAYS HURRY - SALE STARTS 8 AM TODAY SIZE A78·13 8 78-13 E78·14 F78·14 G78-14 G78· 15 H78-14 H78· 15 J78-15' L78·15• ·••.,l•i>I• in wn,!flwalt 1>nl1 COAST GENERAL TIRE re· Introductory Special On Generars New Smooth Aiding, 4·Ply Polyester Cord POiy.Jet WHITEWALLS $ 90 for S1ie A78·13 tubeless whitewall. plut Sl.83 Fed. EJ:. Tax •Wide 7·rib tread design to deliver start/stop traction • Wrap-around shoulder fer steering control • 4·Ply polyester cord body for smooth ride and durability Charge it !El am At General Tire REPLACE S REG. LOW SALE FED. EX. TAX PAIR PRICE PAIR PRICE PER TIRE ' 6.00-13 2 for $49.90 2 tor $37 .90 Sl .83 6.50-13 2 for $51 .90 2 tor $39.90 $1 .81 7.0017.35-14 2 for $55.90 2 for $43.90 $2.22 7.50/7.75·14 2 for $57.90 2 fo r $45.90 $2.37 8.00/8.25-14 2 for $63.90 2 for $49.90 $2.53 7.10/8.25-15 $2.60 8.50/8.55-14 2 for $69.90 2 for $55.90 $2.75 7.60/8.55-15 $2.80 8.00/8.85-15 2 lor $73.90 2 for $59.90 $3.01 9.15-15 2 for $77.90 2 for $61.90 $3.13 Bli~locio1•ll1 $2 L111 Pe• Tire llA IN CMECli· s~au•a our 1upo•, 01 .ome """'Of 1,nes <un 1n,..1 au .. ng lh" ~"""'· •8 "''" hono• •nt o•d~•• ol•i •<I no• !O• lulu•• d•h .. •r Al In• •<1-llsed P"CI . COMPARE DON SWEDLUND 'S LOW -LOW PRICES ON STEEL BELTED PROTECTION!! Plu• S1.50 10 SJ 18 F .. &. E• Ta .• e~ch • GENERAL STEELBELT 780 E78x14 ~ • • • • • • • • • f78x14. • • s37e5 H78x15 G78x14 • • • s39e5 J78x1S G78x1S ••. s4095 L78x1S USED TIRES LOT S OF NON-SKID TREAO LEFT ON THESE! AS LOW AS • • s35ss ••• s43e5 • • • s44e5 •. •• :s49e5 GENERAL GRABBER 3-R ING WHITEWALLS Y2 PRICE CLOSEOUT! 4-PL Y POLYESTER CORO-WHILE THEY LAST! • COSTA AtESA General Dual-Steel Radial • Steel Belled Protection Against Punctures •Radial Ply Construction for Responsive Handling • Galibrated.!> For A Smooth Ride. GUARANTEED 40,000 MILES Our Oual·Stee1 Radial will give you 40,000 miles of tread· wear In normal passenger usage on your car. II It doesn't. bring your Guarantee Certificate to an authorized General Tire retailer. We'll give you replacement tire credit or cash refund at our option equal to the percent ol mileage not received, b1s1d on your purchase price ii available, or the current selling price, whichever is to your ad· vantage. Excluded are repairable puoctures; tires used on trucks, commercial, or racing vehicles; tires ~videnc· ing improper care or vehicle maintenance; and Urea branded "blem." ~ MOVE UP TO THE RADIAL AGE TODAY ('-~dl\ 11\ Jl 0 ~"~ . ~ Complete 7f i~\ o:E~~~EUL 1. ••"'" Hrw ._...,.,"" 11111itt "•" 4 .-....1 1. l~ thot osrllH«l •11 •II •Mehl J. laMil INQ• -i•Nll .....,, d•fy lnte f11ld, 4. h11fNCi IHllll• r.hl• .,1h191. 5. T1r1...,. trff en 4 k911• dnr1111. '· •• ,.. "'"' •Mfi Merllll)S. 7. Ad[•1I r.t .... •4 c.~ti tllltlflllCJ 11111 .... I. lM4 .. rt fll'' fttt-'tt!. ALL $ FOR ONLY .•• 95 • FRONT END ALIGNMENT Only ... We ci.orrect Caster, Camber, 1oe-in, 1oe-out to.your car manufacturer's spec1!1cations ... Safety check and acijust your ~teer;n!I! $8~~- C.n mu Slll'l'ICI c~ roll C.t.l:S '11'1111 All COllDl110N1Mi a. TOISIOtl IMS We Feature DELCO SHOCK ABSORBERS G s21's H 78xl 5 78x15 900x15 s26 9s L 78x15 Plu1 Sl 00 10 $1.17 ~.d . E •. r •• ~ •. s259s s2a95 Restore That "New-Car" Ride and Positive Car Control With New Delco Shock Absorbers Today. EXPERT INSTALLATION MOST U.S. CARS COMPLETE CAR CARE SINCE 1959 $ANT" M()M1C A -11 •f'qlf•• :0' c.•llc.9 iflo)1. )I -Ito. l f,.Ul)\lt 1 ~' •tt""'• ..... -ZI • ..., •• ,, s Coll•(O bo>1•, 170 "!f<.~,...l!I. 6! •nc• Cncl I.ONO 11!'.i,CIM l9tl-'°'tr! -•I 1nql''' U l •ncl bl"· 1' -1!0 l'! '°'" cOl'l. 1\0 m11<:•1r•I 11.-.. -11 •nolf•t lll bOftl!n, t ti•'ftc\ldl " •Ind !lit•. I l\f!IOyl (l"tt r ... RI Lift IN"ICwdl. lt• _,,,, IJ c~•·c• bol~\ • 11'1!• <Ml' ''°''""' • "n~ • v•11Tu1,1. -·~ ,..,.,,. •-O ·~"" Tl RE ll Mu. I .,..,,,,. 1t• .-~-I ""'"""' 4 ..,, ···-' . OCl4NllOI -1'• ""'""'' " i>t• '""WI &j~ ..,.... .. JOI •"'P ~·" 1,, .. ·----------------------------------······················--······•iiii.,;;m;.1 "I'"" 1•• IN I "•111nit • • • l 1 l 1 ' k MUTI & JEFF . • • •• .. • .. . • '.· • • FIGMENTS 01-1. <OfOP COll.!'l.AW I*° ! ltXl K~ Tl1E ELASTIC. IN N!:W UNDERWEAR IS Af.'l/AYS A LITTLE' TIE>H AT Fi~T f ...... ,. ,,_ .. ! TODAY'S CBDSSWDID PUZZLE ' • ACROSS 50 Cached 52 Pipe 1 Identical 54 ---coffee 5 Fruit 55 U5e5 up • 10 Speaker's 59 Goal5 ~ milieu 6J On the ' 14 Author sidelines ~ unknown: 64 Serving <o ~ " Aob1. adOfn 15 Soulh Amar. 66 One who • • VIP grows okl 16 Fabled 67 Set upright mons1cr 68 Jn·-·< l 17 Plotting Altogether l secretly 69 Grassy 1reas 19 Al11ska 70 Loci gl<1c1cr 71 Eject w ith 20 Literaryform con1empt 21 Most joyous DOWN 23 Ladv --1 Plant 25 Moisture pouches from above 2 Forest Olt 26 Assente1s 3 Royal or Blanc 30 Put into 4 Put in WOfdS • 34 Baseballer"s 5 Each l storage ) maneuve1 6 Chemical 35 If eve1 p1el1• ! 37 While: Prel1.11 7 Proper's 38 -·· dog partner .. 39 Those about 8 Hermit j to g1adua1a 9 Mint l .t2 1 orn place emplo¥1!e ~ 43 Utihi.es 10 Spanish :O .tf> Scandinavian Saint • nomad 11 Sickness 1 '16 Comme1ce 12 Flower l 48 Be inherently 13 Spanish w present 111ist • • ' t i j • l : 3 ' 2 " 17 lO • " 27 " " 0 .. ' . " " 6J .. " " "' ' .. ]I' 1..f" IS " " " ' " .. .. " . .. " " .. " " ' ,. ' :.,; " " ·-" YestMday's Puule Solved: 18 Overly ptoper 44 Furtive people movers 22 Spanish river 47 ls souy 24 S wpdish monetary unit 26 Assyrian chief god 27 Not far off 28 Quotes 29 Cuts sha1ply 31 Jeweler's unit 32 Eliminate 33 Drugged 36 Contended 40 Election day VIPs .t1 A step torw11 d , • ' ~ ' " " "" ,. " ,\; .. ~ ,. . " " - " 22 .. .. 49 Owing 10 " " !:il High1acking and robbery 53 Fell sun hat 55 Timepteca ''" 56 Rtm 57 Appeal 58 State of agitation 60 P1epositi0n 61 Kind ol show 62 Road sign 65 "The Death of ---" " 12 ll . " " " 32 J3 l7 " <I .. " " .. 71 7. t9,'7J " PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryon A HE ro!J'f Kf:TCH YA by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller fr.A ... V"'-:!) I : - I 6RIN6 THE SALAD, iHE SANDWICHES, ~E PICKLES, 1HE POTATO CHIPS AND THE ROOT ~EER .• ~ ' 6Atf.., I DIDl'\'T EXPECT YOU TO BE BMCK Tt115 EVENING! 1-1e1.J.01 UHO! WHAT't Nfi.W ? '" '\ .. · , .... ' . ..r -. DOOLEY'S WORLD M!ISS' A l """"' MIT" A I.NH ~ -rux5 "Tl> HER J FIAN15 To MAl(J; t M l ~!! ~ SALLY BANANAS G/(,GaN:;. e,!l•lli> y<()R Faces aRo<..JND toR ToOaY's ".PRDS oF IJISP"" ..,..D S<'\aRTNe55. MOON COME IHITH us ON OUR PICNIC) KAYO · 2 ,, MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS I'M 60lt.J610 JMRcH l<lc&Hr UP TO l~ .v.JD AS!t14ERTO i:;c) OUT! 7-f'I by ' • i l I 0 a E>IRD •NlJ.{e HaNO IS ~LL <IND Nice. e<!T !\Pf IF Yoo.J);e GolNG To 1;R1Te a leTreR u111tess IT's a IXJlLfblNT BlRD • " l ,{,. I - ' I .' ,, ., '; Harold Le Doux by Mell Fl~T OF Al-I., l.'D i..nc.~ ro MAK£ o...ie fti1NG- PERF£c.Ti.'f ci.i:~..: .... -TIME ANO AGAIN MIS WEIGMT DESCENDS ON MIS TAPED WQISTS. by Chester Gould 9 -1 0-11-12-13- IS TME T.A.PE TOUGMER TMAN TAACVS CMIN? • Tllur\day, July }q }q7J DAILY PILOT :J by Roger Bradfield ,....._---....-....; by Charles Barsotti ~Fe;;:-o~fl'.~e::--;-f,J~H~o~l~•Ve::-:,~:-:--.::--i GLqss f.{oUSe5 SHcxlD Ee CON51ST6NT ClND r.veaR t;Joooe~ 5R?CT"lCleS. YoU loOK TiReo ... I suPR£.e m'i'f 5 e1Jo<)6H HeavY THINK1NG FoR YoV Toc;:>.;iY. ' by Ferd Johnson • "T!lAT1S LIKE BUNNIES IN TH• BRUSH 5QUIRRELS t-.ITHETREES ~­ BIRDS IN TH< L_t"~:'._) I GIOT 11'. LIKE" UNCLE WILL IE IN TEDDY'S TAVER~. " . l' 1l 8REC:ZES.. '~ .. l.AN~, I \A)lllJT 10 00 OIJl' \OllT~ <IOU TOl11'>1lf- ANO I. llJOij'T .l<CCEPT 'NO'~ AN AN5\IJER ! ~ ! l I by Ro9er Bollen THE GIRLS ',, ~f.1'6"';. "/ '~; . ...: ,. -!5 i-!:J J . .. "I try to like Shakespeare but all he dOf'S i! make me Ytilb I'd llpcnt the money on soml'lhlng else." DENNIS THE MENACE 'l KEPT TELLIN' HER CARl1015 /AAKE \'.<\ fAT, t>N' SHE KEPT LA~IN' ANO l.Alal!N' BUT WE HAVEN'T HAO ~y FOP.TMJWllKS IPfJ.' ' I l l • • .~ ....... '.' .• S00 -)24 ' The Biggest Marketplace on the Oranee Coast A&lfo!1~ • . • • ' • . . 9SO • 990 r ~ & Marine lqyipmcm 900 • 9l4, fmploymcnt . • • • , . . . 100 • 19' , "'•cfut . . . . . . . . . 100 • m DAILY . PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ""1anals. . • • . . • • • • m .. 5'9 .................... ,ll0 ·"9 .... f1tot9 o..wd. . . . . tSO • 199 ........ for Solt • • • • . • 100 • 114 ..., a found . • . • • . • s.so . s1• ' Miii chandiw. ' . . • . • . 800 . M9 You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want AIJ (642-5678] One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ................. 300 •090 ~ Of'rei IMh~ •.. SIS · J99 s..icn cind ltpoif1 •..• 600• '9t '~'°'ion. . . . . . . . 9\5 .... ERR.ORS. Advtrtl1tr1 should check their [ Houltsfor S• fdl dilly & report errors lmmedl1ttly. Tht _ I~ I -"...... I~ I _, .. s .. -----"_1"_ .... __,J~ I _,,,... I~ I _ ........ •DAILY Pll..01 1s1ume1 ll1bllity for the fir1t Incorrect lns.rtion only. General GeFt1r1t ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii General G1ner11 ****** * TAYLOR CO. * IRVINE TERRACE Maenificent view o! bay, ocean & Catalina! Cuslom quality thruout this fine home with 3 large· bedrooms, formal (lining, paneled family rm & 3 baths. Terrific ne~ sauna o,ff master--bath. 3 fireplaces. Beautiful pool In private front courtyard. $185,000. "Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 1111 San 'Joaquln Hlllo Rood ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" l'.jEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General General ·LOAN ASSUMABLE NO POINTS -NO WA ITING . 3 Bedroom. large family room. Convenient Costa l\1esa location near school s & shopping. Full price $29,500 . HARD TO FIND NEW DUPLEX ON BALBOA PENINSULA -A short skip to the bay or ocean. BeautifuJ. ly architecturally designed 3 bedroom and 2 bedroom unit. Landscaped, carpets, drapes, beamed cathedral ceilings, balcony & patios. Before you buy see this fine property at ,97,500. -· ;.-,,, HERITAGE REALTORS" 540-1151 Open Eves. A U"'-'IOOf HJ,ttf ONE OF THE BEST IN MESA VERDE, Four bedrooms, two stories on a 7,500 sq. ft. lot in Mesa Verde -for under $50,000 ! Re- painted inside and out, refinished cabinets and beautiful carpets and tile. Large, pri- vate back yard. Walk to proposed wilder- 11ess park. For only $48,000. UNIQUI HOMES OF MISA YIRDI, S4l-IS,,O A 11.tiAt •f N•Kf lh11mo111 U ~ IVU I: ti()Ml:i REALTORS General oCinJa !JJ/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 4 bdrm., 4'h bath home on lagoon. Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront family room,. billiard room ...... $245,000 For Complete lnform1tlon On. All Homes & Lots, Plnse Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•yside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 General BAY & OCEAN CHEAPER General Gener•! THAN RENT ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;lsparkling 2 bedroom, srep- T\\'O older properties . one on !he bay \\'ith pri\tate dock 1 and bi.--ach . 4 bedroom anti I 111·0 guest rooms -i;ubznit oUc·rs! The olher in the oceanfront arl'a . r.vo 2 bedroom units 'vith the 01\TI· er's instructions b e i n g "Bring n1e oUers!" Ca 11 6Ta-iZl5. BAYCREST BEAUTY ara1e din~ room and laWl· d.-y room, tiled batl> home. O ieerful living room and 1 New Usting kitd1en Y.'llh formica top. 1 A1"ea ot otdt't" cw;tu1n hon1es •' Located in a lush, landscaped, established in clowntO\\'Tl iluntington neighborhood. Outstanding 4 bdrm., 3 ba., Bench. Prin)(' <'Orntt Jot family rm. Sensibly priced at $69,750. '"ith detached garage. Near beach . orlel"'E.'d at $2.J,950 and easy financing avail- able. CORBIN· MARTIN (REALTORS Cell Anytime Call ICl-2535 Nowl Ol'EN TIL 11 • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE/ General General ==------r H ~ plcµwing a ~fol~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not OUR 14TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide BEST BUY IN EASTBLUFF Any home in this lovely area is worth more than the askJng price of this fine 4 bdrm., 2 balh home, wi th lge. enclosed yard. Newly painted inside -owner must move ~oon & will offer early occupancy. '59,500 OPEN DAILY 2·6 • 2010 BAJA THE BLUFFS (640.()163 For diraclions) Bright & cheerful 3 bdrm .. & den, with 2 baths, dining rm. & eating area in kitchen. New carpets & drapes -fine view & close to pool. $59,500 last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport , ~==;:====--'-,.-,,.,....,-,-----­Beach development of condominium homes, i::;; built· in clusters around handsome courtyards. I;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Eight superb models. each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Litec:i kitchen. private enclosed double' garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, Jighted tennis courts. sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and groun ds maintenan<;:e provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! T-wo, Three, and Four ~oom Condominium Homes from$6S,495 ~.t-. ·.New A RARE FIND EXPANDED 3 BEDROOM HQME, 15x38' sparkling pool & waterfall, separate family rm., dbl. detached gar., plus crps., dr ps., thruout, ldscpd for IO\V maint. Owner mov- ing to \Vashington. A1 ust sell. Price only $30,950. THREE BEDROOM + HOBBY ROOM MESA VERDE'S BEST VALUE -at only $31,000. 3 Big Bedrooms, large country style kitchen, dining room and added hobby room. Pi-ide-of-ownersbip area just one block from schools. ~HERITAGE REALTORS 546-5880 Open Eves. CORON I\ DE L MAR .'II.'~\ t A._,I ( 0 11 -.1 ltlL HINAY 644·7270 SEA FOREVER Lovely CUSTOM BUILT spl)t , level hOlne with niany, tnany extr8.1i. B e a u ti f u 1 : bric.k patio and B-B-Q area, 1 full lengU1 SUN DECK ' owrlook!ng 180 d e gr e e VIEW. So nWly things in • ( this 3 bedroom w I t h • ... aggregate stone fireplace, ~ 21,i: bath home that you really must see to appre. • elate. $69,950. J 644-7270 •' '. CORONA DEL MAR ! DELUXE DUPLEX ~ DOUBLE YOUR fo'\JN • O\\'tl ~ this dt>l.uxe duplex, just 3 :!! blocks front Cororm del l\itar ' beach! Both have 3 spacious -i bedroorns, cozy den, 2 • baths, graC'ious but It i n g' kitchen, patio on sun deck! ~: .Lovel,y tree lined street and :-elose to shopping. For a •• HAPPY FUTURE • yours :1 tor . $98.500. ~· 644-7270 ~ BLUFFS ~' CONDOMINIUM ~- Completely upgraded 1\l'O 4 s!Ol'Y, IM?\olActJLATE "'\V" 1 • plan. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, ' briek firepl~, large COWl-: I~'""""::""'""'""'""'""'""~!!!!!""::""'""'""'""'"""" I try kitchen. dose to ; . General General everything • pool, tennis ~ trom Pacific Coast Highway t-ffir.:i'::;;j°'.';('::.__ and Superior Awnue (B<ilboa Blvd.). drive up Superior lo Ticonderoga. and direct ly to Newport Crest lnform111ion Centci: Telephooe· (714) 645-6141 Sales Office open daily 10a.m.losunset CSLI No. 2ll6lt LOCATION • LOCATION Eastsidc Costa l't1csa. Good 3 Bedroom Home v.·ith Run1- pui; Roon1, Cozy brick Fireplace. Co1i1er Honie wi1h a1..-ees:i1 for Boat. R-2 zoned. O>A•ner n1ay assisl v.·ith rinaneing. $32,950. Call 646--0555. HAPPY POOL HOME $35,500 club, shopping & schools. ; lS-1.950. :· 644-7270 :r .... . '""•'•' 644-7662 I-, . · BAL BOA PE NI NSU LA ""'""'"' c.at"' • pre1iaa 111 Ptdflc!".c.1ne.. a G_.;.••_•_r_e_l ______ 1 ~ft,,,,.,'·='="=' ========o: Custom, top quality hon1e G:)"C"-11~H.c;,.,1eo.,...11...._Getoer.ic-r..,1ar: -..=w THE REAL ESTATERS Probably the be11t value in the. 1u'Ca. Luxurious large heated pool next 10 a citrus 1nini..grove. No streets to cross to reach the gra.inn1ar school, nnd walking distance to high school and Orange Coast College. Over sized 2 enr garage \\'ilh room ror \\·orkshop and you name it. Pk'ase phone now for an ap- pointment to view this ex· c1usive property. 546-1313 \\then you list wi!h us, YOUR HOME is ad· ,·e1ti.sed in Home for Living magazine in ' " .. . NEWPORT . HEIGHTS WITH p!uii 2 bedroont apt. abovE'. 4 BEDROOM I ..... , . .,.....,....,..,.,..,.,,.,..,.,,..~ ... ~.~,..., ,,,,.,.,..,,~,•~~-n •. ow..,., i\1any outstanding features. ...i .. -.i •t.o..., ioo"" i-o .......... .,.. _, ··~· -•• -.. ... 11-... .,..., .,,, • 1~ ·' ,;<... "'" NEW LISTING SIC'"" to ocean anrl shon.. ,._..,,..,""'""'".,_,.~..,,-...-~-"""'"'"--..'"''"'"'' "-C I ea n -Cozy-Comfortabk'. '" ,. Ne-.1• carpeting. New paint EASTSIDE HO:'.l.f'E. 3 Bed'rtn. ping. 7',; loan. CALL nov.· in and out. Home is now near \\'<'S'!ellff shops. 10' x for dPlails. 6-l:>i221. unoccupied and available 20· acl1icod-0n kilt"hen, gar. Ontu n1orc than 900 areas . and custome[11 are A VIEW ~rand new home localed in rnoS desired neighbortiood. ;I hug,e bedrooms with v.-aJk. •:in clo8ef3. dining room, Jani· :,ily ror>n1 and rect'e6tion for new O\vner. 4 ikdroon1s, age on alley w/boat & lro.iler ~~21 2 Baths, Fireplace. $26,500. gate. Call u., . Call &16-0555 e ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 646-4543 room, ThL'I custom built l fii~-­home is quality built tllt'oughout. Yoo will enjoy .. ~~~a!~.C:,1;.v! • IA6on11 JUST LISTED! Carmel model , Harbor View Homes. 3 Bd· nns., 2 baths. fam. rm, Decorated light & bright. Corner lot. Good privacy. $68,950. Howard Wells WM. PEREIRA ORIGINAL Rare opportui:-.ity to acquire a \Vm . Pereira design family ho me in Emerald Bayj equip- ped for ultimate in living. 5 BR., den & family, A/C. $350,000. Pal Hug NOW IS THE TIME For all 2ood tennis olavers to 1nove to the Bluffs! 3 Bdrn1., 21h ba. 2·stor y condo de- signed for the 'veekenr) athlete! $69,500 WITH LAND! Toni Escobar NEW BLUFFS LISTING lmmac. 4 bdrm .. 3 ba. "G " plan with moun- ta ins & night lights vie\\'. l.ar ge patio on greenbelt & dining room. ('all Ric h Wray DANA POINT VIEW LOT Spectacula.t har.bor & ocean vista. Large level lot, priced at $1~9.ooo. Gene Vreeland 133-0700 644-1430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. Lachenmyer Realtor MACNAB IRVINE . 'BAYFRONT -ht TIME LISTED Owner moving & leaving many of his ex- pensive fixtures in this 4 BR, 4 bath built by Theuerkauf. Float for 52' yacht. LR w/vaulted ceiling, massive stone FP & motor ized drapes. Bayfront master suite w/sunken tub & atrium. Located in quiet area & fairly priced al $179,500. Tom Tur- ner 642-8235. IZ21) PLEASANT WAY OF LIFE Beautiful 4 BR., 2·story · Irvine area. Steps lo park & pools· tennis. $52,000. Lois Egan 644·6200. (Z44) HARBOR VIEW Across from community pools & clu bhouse. Lo\v maint. landscapin g. Executive 4 BR, 2 bath & exquisite appointments. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (Z22) HOME + INCOME -CdM Ocean view from both homes -3 BR/2 Ba. and 2 BR/2 Ba. + lg. FR. Beautiful pool. 5-car garage. Reduced to $169,5.00. Harrfet Periy M:!-823~. (Z3~) ...,... [Irvine 1 ... ---,--1 IOI Dowr Drfww Mt•l211 1144 --144-NOI . sent to you as refer- rals fron1 our 4i7 af. G~,..,-.,-,-• .,.1-------G""""en-,-,'".1,------1pooL-WESTCLIFF =:=:=:::=::==:=::= --"-h•_'"'c--•-:'c-""-'-u;~·--r ---------l ~'ood and shake e.XIC'rior. 3 * * * $20,500-* * * Harbor View Hills Nice h«lroonl!i, 2 baths, Bruce McCoig 3BR RUMPUS RM • laundry room and pooltahle-NO MORE ' · $3,000 ,Pnce ,,,,. 1"mily room. All ""' 814 W . Bey $25,950. R d t• features for the discriniinat-Balboa 2BR COUNTRY e UC IOR in~ buyer. 01t1y $69,995. You are !he wirmcr or . Cute, immaculate and on a : =-~~ 1~1: I xbo~ :· DUPLEX Fom· bedmom fa b o Io"' PETE BAR REIT TWO FREE TICKETS ocean untl harbor ''i('\\' pool to the pad v.•ith alley aceess. Larg. ; lovely back yard and in ·, good neighborhood I CALL • RIGHT NO\V! $39,950. '''"' yarn wilh '"""" -REALTOR-SOUTHLAND HORSE RANCH & pri vale palio. 3 car garage, 642·5m Home & Garden Show INCOME fa1nily roo1n, laundry roon1, ____ .-.._ __ _ breakfast nook. Fcr land ! ---~~ July 27th thru Aug. 5th $52,500. The 11bsolu1e best buy in SUPER SHARP AN at the M 7 INCOME UNITS J~arbor Vie1v Hil ls at CONDO AHEI C wALKEH & LH $10-l.;m Y.'i!~ the land. Call Beautiful 2 bdr. 1 ba condo CONVENTION R ,...,"-1""'.,.....-,.,,,.,.....-~"""'°...,,.-22 ,; $59,500. Nov." 673-Kiill. located in choice cool, cool, CENTER BRAND NEW 4-PLEX , BEACH DUPLEX OPENTIL 9 ·IT'S FUN TO BE NICfl Hunt in~lon &-ach. A real 800 \V. Katclla, Anaheim Superb new units vacant nnd ·; $79 500 r,. 1 cool price at $23,7:'"10. Don't Please cfUl 642·56i8, ext. 314 wailing for that fin;t o\vner • • • , · hesitate to call Red Carpet, lo claim your tickets. /North to take run tax advantages. , 1797 Ornng(', C.1\1. 642-I7n 1 1 ' Realtors 5-1&-8640 (open County toll free number is Priced to sell at $80,0CKl. • Ontu e1•l'ningi;). j 541J.1220.J Call Red Caniel, Realto1·s t ftl CLASSIFIED will sen it! * * * 546-8640 (open evenings) '''21 COLLEGE PARK G•neral I Ganarel Sener•I i. ~ SL I DE AND SWING I;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ * * * SET \\"ill rc3.J;y go fci· the big park-li ke fC'nCe'd re111· yai·d. I••••••••• I Built-in kitchen, forrnal din. $29,500 in;.: nreri, thr("(' spacious. light bedroo1ns. Doupie cir· 4 Bcdn11, 2 Ba th, sharp cul - dc-sac homC'. L.1r<..,'C COl'Cl'ed pa1io. Look no 111<>1"i• tx-caust' this one's cll'un, 100'. 111chcd gaJ'ag(', largC' cot'tler lot 11·ilh H1"(."e!!S for boat or c·11n1pc1 . Super sharp both in and 0111. 011·ncr i:> trans· rcrn .. "d tn lln\\'<1ii. Solid value 1\1 $31,000. Newport C. F. Colesworthy II REAL TORS 640-0010 (onyllme) 20 STEPS TO THE -BEACH BAR-B-Que :->IC'llk.~ (I II d 11•att'h lhl" surf from th<' REDUCED $1600 Nt>wpor! Heighls. \f c ry Ind1vid1111llst!c TyJM' Honie where You can use your Im- agination. 2 Bed1ooms, 2 Baths. Dining Room and llU,!:':e Fan1ily noom that cOuld hl• lli\tidt'd into 2 Ad· dilionnl Bt'ffruon1s. S-«i,900. Call &Yi n'i."i.""1. 11riv10 C' rit'ck of )'QUr h1n11·~ (~f!' rluple>x. 2 ltll1:•' unil.11 In like> !\('\\' ('(Hltlili11n. Li\'(' in Ollt' unit anrl e>1tloy 1n1'(1Jllf' froni !hf" otttt•r. S90.000. Call Now! I 6#-7171 illage Real [slate HARBOR VIEW HOMES ' PORTOFINO MODEL 3 Br bonus room/sleeping loft, for1t1al dining, lush ca~ting, lots of Spanish tile, cha1·111ing Brick patio w/overbang. Adjacent to park. $89.SOO PALERMO MODEL Like ne\v 4 bedrooms. family room. forrnal di ning, \Vet ba r ; up-grade carpets, floors. Perfect fo r your family. $81,500 DON'T BUY TIL YOU SEE THIS Charming-waterfront home,-3 Br., family rm. with pier & Ooal, enclosed paUo, corner lot, park-like ••l· ting-squeaky clean! $94,500 YOU OWN LAND HA,R.BOR VIEW REALTY B33·07BO HOMES ' ' Buy a Border to Border Bargain Every cl•ssified w•nt •d in the DAILY PILOT appe•rs in every edition 'every d•y. That means your •d will be seen in papers delivered to homes •nd sold from newsracks from border to border •II along the Orange Coast .• all the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All Huntington . ~acJa ·1-Fountaln Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddleback San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A DAILY PILOT Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 YOO CAN CHARGE IT, TOO • 'ihund11. July ii, 1'73 DAILY PILO; 39 l~~rtJEX J I _..... I~ r _ ..... ~--= I~ [ -1 .... I~! ]~~~I~[ ..--!!iiiteciiiii .. ~1 ~~'[-_..... ]~ _,.,. .. I ..,. Eal<•"',. ][ Je ] .;Ge;;;ne;;;;";;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; I ;G;..,.;;;';";;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. IG"°•"ne""-'r•;.;I ____ _ ROWN5 HILLS *TRIPLEX* OCEAN VIEW Cottai Mae Gener ail Hunli"J!G!! _,, A REAL PRIZE INEXPENSIVE ~ IJ'-°" ttnt'd 51~ !n 2 Bil hriLIH . . $21.~ H-lw Ille ............. IN MMlll1r/P'r••llllt ~ .. , IN M.Mlll """'" f'w S•fto , . , 1U &<,.... lw .. Ill ............ IM ,,...,_......., ...... i. .......... 1U ........ ,,........, ............ , .. C_..,., Let\JC""1 . ... .•. IS. c--rcl&I P'"""'1 ... ,,, .. 1M ~lumt ................. . ~WUMla .. lo. ........... 141 ~ ..... _... ............. 11.• ._ ,...,.....,. ............. , u• ..... trMI ,.,...._., . ., .. .. . • Ut l.fb fW .. Ill ................ JN MtM• ... ~1Tr111w r11111 .• 1n .,._,.111, DtMrt. ltnwt •..• 1'4 0.1.,_ Cl. P'~'I' ....... .,. IH °"' ., s11tto P",...,..-ty ........ 1n ·-""' ... ,.., .. 0,....... ..... '" ltNI t 111tt lullMfe ........ 111 •111 1:11111 W.t11llll ........... IM BeautUul 4 bedroom. 2 buth StC'P:S 10 ~cb, Billi»."\ J>t-n!n. horn~ "'Ith •weep 1 n a "Breed A Buner" Wlllll, 3 + Guest $25,950 · r f Ill a.1"''8.}'I rented; rumi1htd. """", • .., am,,c" VlwEl,11 1 0 10 h ,'11· $75.000. l"rtvatt• circular Mneet ol ' ' \\ Call: b1'3-3663 61f>.8531 E\1(1, lint" homC'W. Paint and A\'t' ca.r~ls, warm fin!ph1l'f!, * 6 UNITS * th 0 us and 1 , ~\\~1lng great OOVl'red patio. t-'ull ttvuikb \\-Ith room fur boot. price $36,9&1. Ne\\• Hsllng. Nearly lte\\' 2 BR., 2 bit., 3 bedroonl• Inc I u d Ing llURRYn deluxe unita on oceanfront In BltlOO.! Elec. frplcs.. hldN·v.11.y muter i>Ultc, ht'avy 5hag eafll., bltns: lk'l>IU"ftft• icu1"51 l1u·illt)', aundt'Ck or 0011.'0ll)' v.•/each (h.-n v.1th slfding ghus rtoor unit: 1 txiv'd. t•arporhr plus to 25' i·nt('11alnen pttllo. 1-parkl~ spttce. $3.'iO.(Xkl. Bl'Nlthtalrina: view of 1·/lJ1- Call: 673-3663 &12-2253 Eves. yon Md blue Pat•i.fic, BET- co: rs . WALLACE REALTORS 5414141- Ba~! c06111 1\.1~. Lo\.'t"ly 3 I Bl:. hou~· . . . $11.275 bdr, 111 ba plua f11.mlly ~ .. IM:t\ 011 $1'1>-'r-.ilt' Iola l'OQ(n h~ Jot a n d Zoo.od fill' prof('M, 1.1~ cif"l.'Or.ted Jtbove 1 beyond. BALBOA BAY PROP. Ji~ on thcl miuictt al * $56. 1800 * $34.COO and ownen a~ anx-1,.. urr iot.111 lo RU fast. Ctlll Rt-d ~:A lf1JL l\fi: l.f11.rbor. CA.f'Pt!I R.taltor1 ~ 2:!00 wi. rt. 4 H1 . fni. 1111 .. SUMMER FUN ·. 'nl i:l'lllf' hl\, 2 l'O\'l'd patios. lda.y 01 ew ngi). Try S-l2,j()(). O"'rwr v.an11 CA.'11 HF. YOURS IOda.Y in &.Ibo.I lll1nd ltuil sull' Rrkr Siti-7739 thl!I fantu.ftic vacant pool ----------·[ ~~~--------1 honu•. l Bdnns, 2 bt.lh.J, ISLAND CHARM El Toro 1'00111 fnr 11 bolt1 and rnucti Sll'Pti to bay, ::> br, 'l ba, LA n101v, fdlt..I ll'OUld )'L)U ~liEM" ~-'-'""" __ .. _ __,J 1-1 ""'~( Opo""'!!!!n!!!!E~v!!!!•n!!!!l!!!!n9!!!!1!!!!)"!"" -. ~ SIX CHILDREN associated BROK£R S -RE Al TORS 1e1~ W Bolboe 67J }lit.) TER HURRY! Call &~Olm. IOHl\I LOl,0\ sn\all ph1y mo1n + rc111J1I GUNA REAL only SZl.900. Call quick! unil. Lar. 1u11 dt.."<'k, too~ ~IO\c )~lUr fan1~ly !n10 1h1• f)l\n1·r UJ1:..iowi. CALL F'an1ily honl(' v.·tth old 11'0rid hf>11u1Uul 4-Rll hon1t' 1\i th S.12-9:171. t'harrn. l'int H'™' olfettd. F'Omi;1! Olnl11g lloo1n Md a TRADE YOUR Lots of \1oocl, vaulted 01>en f'anUly HMin. Thi!! honw I· EQUITY bca1n liv. t'lll. 11·/t>e.lt'()ny. df'11lgt'INI for · I'll~)' .li\1n.: FO R 1'HIS l.'Ol'&t'Ott!I s11'ral !\Tove tn AUE. Isl. R('('('ntly \\llh all lht> 00t1\'ont1'1l('f'~ "tiU1''A."1· f''ra~ f'ouo- ren'!Ot'lf'1<"i & in xnl1 cor1<t and locnll'<\ rtt"ttr the in \-tau\ llOnlt>. Loods ot up. l1111ftft1 01'Plf'l\lflll'I' .......... lOO •yt1....u W1ntllll .............. 211 lllVtll-1 0ff'Ottvfllt'I' ..... , Uf ln•nl_.. Wtlltllll .• , ........ , 2)1 M1MY h L .. 11 .............. M ~ W111tHI ............... UO ,...., .... T ... t 0.... .. , , .. , tit ~· .. _•lb ~I~ ~In Nflllllll!J .............. JM H-11<1l11no .............. >05 HollJft l11m. w 1111t11r11. . ...•• Jll C..,.,.mlnlums 111ra. ... • .. .. .. SU co11dom!11lv1111 1H111tr11. • .. ..... lll Colldf. furn •• , 111!111n1 •..•...•• ns Tew.IMU1-flt"'-•• ... ... .. .. .. Ull T•wnllffl• IHll\11'11, ............ ~ T...,,11911 ... !1tr1, er llllfuf'll, •. 3"41 Dllttl••tt twra. . . . . . • . JU Pl.lPl•fl llftfurn. .. .. . .. .. .. . • • . lSO P\lpltirn, l\tm, tr U<1lurn. , • , • JU ""''· furn. .. . . • . • .. • .. .. .. • . . . l.O Apl. Yllh•m .................... >iJ Aph., 111,.... '' 1111111r1, .•...••• no ... ",. ........................ -lll•m I INrll ................ *5 Holtl1, Moltl• .................. 411 Glltll HtlM .................... 4JS Surnft'lfr Ran le I' .............. 420 V1c1tlon lllfflllk .............. 4U lte11t111 19 ~ .................... _ 4lO !)Ir .... 1or lttlll .............. m Olflcl .... ,.1 ......... "." .... ... ll'Cl111trl1I ltutfl .. .. • .. .. ... . • 4JO Storttt ......................... 4" 1te11t1l1 W1nt..i ................ 4'0 Mllctlll,_v• llltnlil" ..... , 4'l .___ ............... _ __,]~ A11nounc...,..,1t . . . . . . . soc Clrd ol Th111lr1/in Mernorl11m JOS LO<Jill H11lc11 .............. SU .___ ..... _...i. __,I~ Alltl 1r..,1,..,.i1tio1 ............ JU .. l<Wtllll ....................•. UO Seel.II Clvh .................... JJJ Tr••tl ..................... S4I , '--I· .... _ ......... ___,l[S] J'ltUlld Orn ads) ~.. . .. ... HO LCKI ... .. .......... HJ in Huntington Beach Super nice 2 story 4 BR honle. Huge cul-Oe-sac lot I hlock from elementary school in FV line school district. $3,700 down 1111d poRSession Aug. Ulh Realtol'S 546-0022 SHARP GI 4 BR & Family room with large yard. (Fahvie\v & Wanter) -newly painted & carpets -15 minutes lo Ncv.·port Beach. O n I y $26,500 -early occupancy! 0 WALl<[H & Lll TRl-PLEX-PRICE OF OWNERSHIP All units in this area s110~·11 pride of ownership. T\\'O bdr, 1 ba in each unit. Partial vii'\\' of golf oout'SC. A N'al pleasure lo o~·n a1 $5•1,000. Cnll Hcd Cn1·pc1, Realtors 516-8640 ( o p l' n l'\'eningsl AltTIST·\\'RITER·RECLUSE \\'(''Ve found a hn1. for you in a fantastic resort location. In fact, there arc two of these honlt'S side by side and I.he prtcl'S arc an un- IX'tievable $11,500 & $12,500 at IO<;f, d\\·n. these won't last. Sparling fnvcst. Corp. 63$-.5662 -ADULT - OCCUPIED CREAM PUFF BRAND NEW LISTING The <"leganee of thi!I hOn\C \\•Ill lakt' your bl'l'l:llh ll.\\'Uy, l!'s a large 4 bcdroon' tJoor pl;m 1\i1h family roon\, roon\ loc a boat, 11p1'lnklcrs fron1 and back, and t'On\. pletcly upgradrd. Only $36,000 • HURRY!! 847-6010 oPEN TIL t . rr'S FUN ro BE ~I THE REAL ESTATERS Don't Call Me A Duplex!! I'1n a roomy 3 Bcdroon1 2 Bach hon1e on ru1 O(ll'n 1'0r- l'K"f' lot \1ith n1anicurl'Cl fl'OTlt yard aod shel1<"red patio. PLUS An C'aS)' to rent inco1nc unit \\·i1h private ('ntra1l(·1•, 110\\' prod u1·1ng S200 ,n10. S89.500 CALL 644-nll HILLTOP HAVEN This vlcw 11.'ili last forover To the \'alley-to the sea High atop a hill \Vherc you'll ah\'ays v.'ant to ho. A tri-levcl ~1editerranean \\'ilh Spanish style f(!(!ling Pril'ed al $125,000 ... l .. { ... HIGH ON A HILL OCEAN VIEW 1-fo\v \\'OUld you Ukc tu 011 n thl" magnifiCf'nt llOntf' th;tt SC'ls on a pr1vatt' strC'\•t 111111 Park·likr irurroundirigs O\'l'r. look111g lhe Padfk-OC't'1m ? You 1night exl)t'('I to J>AY a king's ran.'IOm but you \11.1uld be !>'Urpri."l('(f to leam thnt it '!I only S?l.500. llW't)' and l'<tll 842-25,\j. OPfN TIL g . IT 'S ~UN ro 8f HICE• [.~ *NEWPORT BEACH CHARMING CUSTOM BUILT ... be:i.urlhd honll' ll'ilh J J;111::c bt."'Clroon1~. 2 bath!", 2 f1replat'es, fonnal dining, rf'IR'<lrtg living roon1, Sf'!> .1r:i!(' 1111r n1 faniily room, kiH•hr11 for th\• fan1ily, lovl'- ly laundry 1'00111. Sl'rC'n i1y for $61.9.10. f't't. 400£.17• C.M. OCEAN BLVD. CORONA DEL MAR VIEW $116,<xXI Ov.·ncr. 67~7001 l-:1l1.1U1! biio111'u~ 1·t'l1tr'N. ~nulh~. CALL S42·93'rl. UTILE: ISL.AND cholct• t\011· rrlreci at .only Sll,!l{l). 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH location v.·ith bay \•ie11'. 4 C.'all t0!l~1.y, "'"rt' l'('ady lo llt'•'t" LO. T ll GI B I f "·-I sho1\'! 58f6-f1W '--" · · t;(' )~lf' ' r, oll, pro. '"""nUN . NEW LISTING I :<t.·lli•rs . \\"Iii_ help ftn~. $~1.000. Sho\111 by appt. ''11.L ,,,.., 1 Prine. onl.). 67J..2191 • "'' ' -· ' ' ~,'l lboa Peninsul• * UNIQUEI * E~...:1·l1 ing :I-Hit hnn1<' in IO\'l" ly l~•k•· r o1,·i;t \'1H111o:•" Thi s 1, a \\'1·ll·h111lr ho1nr 1n r,. 1·ctlen1 1'llr11:h1~1n. Ct1l1 us f•Jr 1nlon11a11on ollou\ th" nlru1y f'Xln1s. l~rl""? -Q 11 I,. $·13.500. 5.1\\).-0'rti · 0 '1 lht' Ol..'CliJ\ sick-. :: Lt."l'els, hke l1vuig in a hghtliouM'! 2 Bit.. 3 ba., sundN.-k on thr roof. $55,l)(X). 01\11<.'I' "·iU hl'lp fillllTk't". )!111lael ltlty. 6n.GSSOl .--::::O.I 5(t1 ~:. &!boa, Balboa. * BEACH HOUSET s:=.6.000 HU'\,s r11t1• 2 l;tinn .. shar1>,. r1i,ti(· d(•1'0r . \\'alk to bt.'lll:h. Valuable H.-2 !ul ! --GEMM-- r I~ ... and ubsolut"IY immaeu· ln1truction ~ late! Full carpeted. all -buihins, ptush and rnode111. L-------~ \\'alk 10 theatres. major 5"-l' •his hon1<', lt'i;: n1ost ap· pealing, Call 546-2313 OPE.NnL 9 • ITS FUN 70 BE NICE' Old Spa)lish five bedroon1, 1lcn, (ormal dinin,::' roorn, family room, an overllize lot just steps fi'Olll thl' bf'11ch \1•i1h a fabulous 0t•can vil'\\'. Th(• only siiarlous autht'nt1c Spanish homr v.·ith all of !he charn1 nf old Qirona del Mar. $197 ,500. Schoel~ I 1n11rwtl4n1 ........ us shopping and restaurants. T~etrrltill .. "·'···· 510 B<"au!i!ut 3 bt'droo1n, 2 bath, 9 ,1· THE REAL ESTATERS Strvlct Dlrttelo<'I' ,, ..•.... , .... ~ JD~ Wlnlld, Mall , , . , ... , , . . 700 Jib W11111C1, Ftlllfllt .....•. , • , 711'2 Job$ W111!ecl, Mii" .......... 7H "''' W111lld, M&F ....... , .. no ,__-_ ... •·__,!~ Alltiqlltl ................... .... A1111H•11ca ..................... M2 AllClkHI .. .. . .. .. . .. . . .. • . . . .. . 1114 lvUlllfll M.t1r1111 ............ IN C1milt'1111·51111r11m1n1 ••••.••••. Ht f'11mlllln ...................... 110 Glr_,,. Salt! . . .. . •. . . . . • . . . . . . tn HfuMllllll G-IM'I ........ , .... 111 Jewelry ........................ •u Mldll11ery " ...... " ... " .... ". 116 MIM:tllln-.................. Ill Mltctll1n10U1 W1n1..i . . . . . . . • 120 M1111lc1I ln1trumtflf1 .......... t:iJ Offlcf l'"Ul'llll1ttt/E11ulp. , , .• , ..• 121 P'llllOl/Orw1111 ................ ft6 Slwllll MIC~lltn .............. 121 SllOffirtt Goodl ................ IJO Sllre, 1tnt111r111t, Bir ........ 131 sw.,. ........................ tJ4 TV. RIClll, Hi·FI, Stereo ...... IJt L_.. ... _ .... _..__.__,I~ P'thl, Generll . .. • .. .. .. . .. .. .. tJO C111 .. .. .... .. •• . •• tSJ OOtt .......................... ISi P-lfl'I .. ............ ISS H'"" .................... W Livtll'Kt . . .. .. . .. • .. . • . IS& I~ Gllllfll ...................... tot INll, Mllnl./SlrliCI ....• , . fOJ INll/Mtrl"1 IEt1111lp. , , • , , ••.•• '114 ···"· ... _ .................. "' 1 .. 11, 1t111t/Clllrt1r •..••....• fOI .. is, 1•11 .. .. . . .. · · .. • .. .. • • "' 1111 .. 'SUPllDOCkl ..... , ...... t10 ... n. .,.... & StJ ........... tn ... ts. lhfil .................. t ll ·-I~ AIM>aff ...................... ,. tU C•111111n. S1 .. /Rofll! -•• . . • • • • . nt Cyclll, lllrtl, Sqitert ........ tu IEl.C.lrk C•n .................. tlO Mollllt "''"" ......... " . .. .. '" Mohr Hema .................. '"° Tr1U1n, Tr••tl ................ t4S Trailtin. UIUl!)I .. .. . .. .. • . . .. ''' Avie Slr•lct I P'lrll . . . . . . . t4f .__._ ... _ .... _ .... _~11 ~1 o-ai ........................ "' ""lloltlltt/Cl1s1lc1 .............. tSJ 0-•vttlts .............. , ... ,,. Sporn, Rl(I, ROiif .. , , , • . fSf TnKll.f ...................... N2 VOM ........................ ~ AIM l .. flfll ..... ·· ........ · .. NI ....,.. Sln'kl I P'lrtl .. .. . . .. U. Alllol Wlllfld ............... , .. A11t1t. lmptrtttl . • • • . . . • . . . . . • t111 A\11111, ""' ................. fff Alltls, u... .. . . .. .. .. .. .. . .. . . . m DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S .leading Marketplace for only $37 ,950. CALL 5-6-842~. Sou!hCo Realtors. WAil A MINUTES! And save hOurs, by letting a professional rind your hon1c for you. \\'hy do the wol'k yourself? Just call and tell us what you are looking for and \\·e \\ill find it for YoU Cllll Red Cnrpet, Realtors 645-8000 (open evenings) .-4 BEDROOhf, 2 baths, double garage. $30,000. Best of tern\S. * COh'lMERCIAL ZONE • 2 BR N.'O story older home, oorner lot. $24,500. Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Nev.·[lOrt Blvd., C.~I. 548-7729 DOLL.HOUSE You have to see this cne 10 believe it. Lovely 3 be.Ir, l~~ ba plus family r oom. Tn>es every\Vhere on tlli! choit-e large Eastside lot. Call OO\.\' lo take advantage of this priced to sell home at $34.000. Rt..'(I Carpet. Itcal- lors 546·S&IO {opcn eveningsl CALIFORN IA BEAUTY 67:J.8550 ::::~::;;:=:;~':::':''::=:'. I OPEN Tit t • IT'S FUN ro BE NICE• Let ~T:e!;~~!r~G your ~~' ~ liome for you. Our in-lr ·~ venlolies are as large as our desire is to help you. Absolutely no high pressure sales techniques. We have a largl' staH of professio11al Real Estate salesmen that kno'\v property, take ad- vantage of their free i;ervice and call Red Carpet , RealloN! 5-16-8610 ( o p e 11 evenings) WATERFRONT DUPLEX • $170,000 ir\cludes h\'O boat clocks and adjacenl vacant lot for ad- ditional building -or for just plain privacy. Just listed. C wr,u<£H & LH Rea:ltors 2043 \\'{'.'lll'liff Drive 646-7711 Open eves. OLDIE BUT A GOODIEi "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN near SOUTH COAST PLAZA Super & nice 2000 5CI-fl. "R<"public" 4 BR/FR 2 ~tory home. Huge brick patio and lovely yard. $4200 Down and possession Aug. 151h 0 WALl<EH & Ll E Realtors S.'6·0562 IS YOUR HOME TOO BIG? Crl-t rid of it and save your· .'K'lf all that l101.1sc and yard 11 ork. \Ve ha,·c a super t'lc;m and pre!ty rondo that's a real \\'Orte savC'r. Save S too -ifs only $2:i,9:JO. 847-6010 ~ ...... St. 'f\1TI J.Bft. \\'a!k 10 beach fountain VolWt Ca. 92708 sa9,500 A~t'nt 673·&i00 714 963-5611 LOVEl~V. :-l"E\V EL CAJON. -. e DUPLEX e e ~~~~~!".::====]:~:::~~~~~~==~1 Prolt'1 1 1:s1Qnal hurlScaping. Cost• Mes• ----------s11rinkler11. ·I be.lrooms. 3 KEEP HIM FOR ha1h.s plus honu:rl' mon1. For-$24,250 A PET rnal dining, airy kitchen, Cull' 1-BR. on R·2 mrllf'r Ladies, don't 11rar /11n1 out l'lt"Jlarll ll• faniil>t roorn. Pv·· lot \vith spa("e 10 add another cknng yard \\'Ork, _s..1ve hi~ ~.a-:~· yotU' farnlly. CALL unit. Nice trees. bark and nio\·r rnro this THIS IS.fT' 3 &vtroom, din· CALL '-'-• '"'-1414 hll"\\·1n built T1hurnn "~f111i-· · • ~, bu" rondo. F<-~1UN'S 2 JlR, ing n:.10ni. /i\•ing room, -~ ~~ :? RA, fcirrnl din rm, ta.ni sc·1't'f'rl4'd p.1ll0, laundry. •"•• LTWY....., rm, bit ins & <11r t'Ot\11 , Totul lna&i; of room, IOftds at pa~ · k t>lirrJ: 1tnd loacW of btnd#MP-Nr&r Ktwp••f Peot Offl<• PXlerior maintenance. As · . II • ·~~ r.t\L\ Jn'1;. A al a ~"OOCI price, -~=~====~-I 1.~;r;·reelty inc. CALL9M.-1451>. BY OWNER 968-4405 <l• hrsl 4 BR, 2 BA. corner lot on col·dl'·!ISC , fomu1l DR. l~Un· -HOME ,-GUE-ST-dry rm, play rm & office. Drtve hy 2·16 Shc1v.'00d HOUSE Place, Costa ~fesa. Til4-'n * :\lock . .\ condo, 3 Bil 21i ll,\ CAIL ~3503 for appt. -* Huge gtX'Sl hon1c v.•/61'J> 542.000. Owner v.·111 carry ha & v.·alkin closet 2nct. Principals oniy. * ~1;:,~1 & i,:-a1 s-u.Ql ~""'R"'"E'"A'"L""'o"'"A""'K~oet SWSDISH * r-;r i\hlt> Squai'f' GoJfcou~t-C H FIREPLACE * Lo1\• clo1\n & l'f'OnomicaJ!y OUntry Oftle I I • ~-2 priced at $31 ,!0J . . fK':'tl{'(j behind a wtii'!lt ... fl lJ<; cu e Ut."U.1"111 I . It . bath, :o;hflg t'a.t"JX"I~. fi-esh erw1n ree y inc. picktit fence arwl hUJ:l' tree&. paint. i\:.i.um11 7', loan _ 968-4405 (24 hr1) is 11 dnl'ling made.over $34.950. Central air condition- ing. Shag carpet:lng lhruour. Dining rn1, built ins. Family nn. 3 bedrooms. Only 2 }TS okl. brk 540·1720. Cute 2 bdr. 1 ba fra ml' with loads of paneling and reel brick fireplace. Large R-2 lot in t·hoicc East Costa ~f<'sa plus alley access. Close to all shopping you \\'011·1 need a cRJ" here. Perfectly pricc<I at $..10.000, this one will go fasl. Call Red Carpet, Rea I tors 546-8&!0 27 900 LE DE'RS p COUNTitY 1-:.qATE. jU8t OPENnLg •fT'SFUNTOE£NICE' S ·,. · ,\ ·111 ·Hy 01\11er lovtily 3 rr old til<x·k!'I 10 hl.ou,('h. fabulous. 842--wx>. SJ>anls h style. 4 Br, 2 Ra, l'f'r11.1nic UIC', ~oumiet kit· TARBELL SEE USI [\I: j ~ "'1r .. n1 ily r n1, dtning af'f'a & t·hcn hM evcry latest tea- l , 1/:2 ACRE RANCH u1ll. rm. Uiwllderl thruO'ut. IUN'. {)a.k ..... ....i.,llU!s win-' • I _ \\lxtcr sofl<>1K'r. Sl'lf C"l<"nn-, ......... . V ' f C I 0 .... " dO\\'.'l 1n roz.y BREAKFAST t•r1non a m 1 u "<" · ·1 in,.. oven, sprinklers lront £. ~==-=========~· bed r o o ' i c I d'n ., ltiXli\1 <1pi·11 1u brick patio. 111 n u 1 !: r<"ar, fencr~! <>ardcn art'a, For the right home for you. Complete selectkln fJf homes in the beach a1-ea. HARBOR VIEW HOMES •• ''' m•<IC" , •• ,. 1 e ., Bu11!1n \'>1rner Otlk hutct-s 14 000 =Pa e '" • · " • fenced dog n1n. Out~tandin~ -... • -<'hildrens' "'in~ and guest ___ , I ~ 1·-1 111~t<11n l11'1l·k nooniu:. 'I big N M f ·11 S I f . d '-""'" t u·uour, lop1 ... -..• o hf'droon111 illl')udin" an T\\'0 BEAtrrl ruL 0 Ore ac,1 ly. a er. 1 c e ~·, w11h an ex. h:e cul~e-Mc " 13 500 Bf.-·n JlUl<R isol;lf<"d n1a'<ler 11uit('. Load~ -• • • l I I:. ' JO( •19 !OJ 96&-6822 REALTY 833-0780 4 PLEXES SIDE by side in best pai1 o( Anahe1m Joe., 2-2 bdr. & 2-3 bdr .• owl'ICl·s deluxe unit I.: frplc. Covington bit. only 5 yt'S. old. Inves1, needs niore tax shcltel' v.·hat do you pur- pose. Sparling Invest. Corp. 638-566'1 This home includes a llou!';E!: Agni 645-0303 ;ii;~·~· ... · ... ~· iiiiioiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiil of \OUNTRY \\111tp.:iper and , Trailer l'e nted at $8;} -tJ\C' * LARGE YARD * I REPO dr-signt:r drapes to niatC'h, house ils('Jf ill rented for Thr> n1or4. charmuig f'rOr'M SI~. Honie has Ileen com· 3 Bdrm~. Quiel .slt'N'I $750 DOWN 1\·r·\'f' 1•\'t'r llt''\'ll v.ith an *TRIPLEX * Custon1 prid~f--0\vnership, all new carpels, drapes and paint. Large 0\\1ler unit elegantly lumisht'd, builtin kitchens, closed garages. CAU. 6-12-4354 for details. Pete Barrett Realty -4-Bdrmo--$29·,~75~0- In excellent rondition. Covered patio. 1-fany fruit tree~. 2 baths. Fantily rn1, built-Ins. Rear living rn1. brk M0-17al ple1ely I'l'furbishl'd v.·ith new On<' 01\·nrr hon1e. fine East-2 or 3 HR Townh<lll.'le l~e U:'l'Bf:t.l~.:v,\BLE LOW roppcr plun1bing, elet•frlcal sidf> IOt"!~lion .. $:12,500. run11>us ro-inl rlblf' '1111r, PRICI::!!! HK!t 962-5,;,IJ. \\'itini;: and stucro. CALL :\.1n1 llnanc::1nl{ av;uJ, !>Wirn pool, fl·v.· )I'll. Hurry! l•••••ii-mmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif NO\\'? ... 1~·2 Wt. Too! BALBOA BAY PROP. 5.';i-fll·l-1 f)r 8-12--4-121 P.Dlf'~")IBt:R the "Good Old TARBELL PENINSULA PT. 2 BR .. df:'n, 2 00.. Beam<'d ceil ings, fireplace. super Marp' S67.500 401 SEVILLE 4 BEDROOM· $34,000 Terrific location on quiel tree shaded street. If you ha\'e sonic cnsh. take ad· vantage of the lo1v interesl GI loan that can be assun1- Ni by anyone, Or 1ry 5'~ dO\\·n. CIO!I(' to shopping 11nd free\vays, and only 2 miles tu the beach. C WALl<FR & LEE OPEN SAT. 1-5 Realtor.'l COAST PROP. 673-S410 20.t.1 \rcs1cliff Drive WALl<EH & Ul Hcaltors :H6-00'12 OLD FRAME WITH FAME T"o lxlr, I ba lra1nc home \\'i!h chnrnilnl! red brick llreplaCi' on huge R-2 Jot v.·i1h al1l'y acC'es!I. Ho1v muc::h mo1-e could ~'OU ask for at $..'Xl,!XK)? Oh yes! It 1! on the Ea.<;Uide and you can \\'alk lo shopping. Be fi;.mous and Call Re d Carpet, Jw.alton &&-8080 <open eveniniS) MESA VERDE 646--7711 Open eves. VIEW OF BAY MARINE l.IJvely 4 BR. fan1 rm homt>. VDU won'I Pll8l!i this one by at Lg<' OOrnt'r lu1 11·/r'()l)rt1 for $98,500. neautlful pauoramie , CONTRACTING pool. boat. tr 11 i I(' r . view hon1<'. 3 bclr, ;: ba fan• NC\\'J)Orl ~ach, ~·I n I" st Ax~11mnhll' ;,1, •: \7,\ loan. 111.slic hon1e Call Red pqulpmrnt & ,\\ ntcrfront 01Vflt'r \'lilt help nnance. Carpel, Realton ;)16-8610 localioo. 35 Yr. Qld CfJ1n· $36,500. O \~' n c r / .\ i.: t . (open evMil'l\.'111 . pany, ~pace avail. fcJr bo.'tl 97HT48 AYRES HOME Bitt ~=DY RL TR ~c~u~sT=o=M~C~O~R~N~E~R~ £L C;UON llOME, 11 .B. 67u 161 HOME 400 Yds to he11.eh. Nol fin. SuJlt'r !Ohnrp and only 1 yr ~yet, avaiJ in 1\ug. Takl' OPEN HOUSE n''"" T\.\'O "lo!)" 4 brlr, l ba over my ~ KiOO/Full SAT & SUN 1-5 home on )IU'Jitt corner lot pul'Ctl8*" Pr Ice SS:l.500. SltARP .l READY TO GO! 'A IU\ boat gale. You haVf' lo Days: Sll-9078 I Eves: IR't' this lovely Mme klcatOO 642-81))6 Vacant ~ rcdt'<.'()rated J BR., In Ea.st Cos!a ~tl'AA. Under · fam rm, fotnial dln nn SHARP 3 bedrooni, 1" bath. I wflwau!. l'asy ctre yard prl<."f.11 "' $43.000 c."~I RM Nrwport Bcllch, Back BAy, near pooL In prea:t111:~ are•. Carpet, ftealtOM ~ beaut ~. 2 firepl's, 2-$72.500. ,..tt l11nd. ~19 Port (opl'll e'\"tnirnrii_>=~-- patloll. $43.500-Kinga.ard Ram~te, H11rlxlr Vlf'~·-TRIPLEX R..E. IW2-222"l. 6i:t-<15:Jl or &I~'\, COHONA ot:;L ~I.Alt Any day t1 !he BEST DAY to Il'.!i a breeze .... M?ll 10\Jr 111 2 RR U11U,. U.·h,1..'<C' run an ad! Don'l dela,y, • il efl\!1 \\Ith Pa~. usf' D.1lly I (Jv.11. r·~ Un11. SM.500. ,QJJ fodl.Y M2-5o678. t PUot Clusll:il"d. 60-S678. I O....ner Ai..,.,.nt, &n-4.".i:l9 * '42-7491 * First Pioneer Realty D~a" "'~" k1<1'11 bcdnna Lo I f. I •· ~ I 1 "· 11·('r<· llll);'t' <"notJt:ti to play \'t'Y .il~ISCn: '-'I f(' ,.,.1c. --------. ~ 3 BR. 2 BA hon1c. Kitchen RV O\\'ncr • 2 llr, l~:i Ba, nu 111~ Till'Y lire h .. r,-, All 4 1.11 nl'v.·ly rcm<Xlelcd, 1 a r io;: e pAint., Condo. S7j0 rln, S2'l.i thrm -11rivt11e sundl'.'C·k also. ('l]V('red palio. Fam. Rm. mo. &:13-1103: eve~ 6'12-2.112. Chf'\:k lh1,11 $X> !llj. It. gt>l'll F'irepl11C'f', ~·Iv.· cpl~. d~ .,.,ton Be,.ch ou1 b•'''·N· )'OU buy. CALL - & much n10re. $37.!t.JO. • PATTS • 54~132 WALK Ell SilARP ~lcl'a \'rrrli· hotll<'. PACIFIC SANOS •••• "1 " 11 near nu carpet, nu DEANE HOME 17171 Orne.ti Bl\'d,, H.B . dish\\'RSh<'r, nu \\'3 I" r PHOTO· healer, covered pallo, dog CALL Sfl·1 41~ run. plcaJ;C caJ\ for apt. to GRAPHER'S , .... n1.900. >J6.0.192. DELIGHT CUSTOM 3 BDR~t.. 2 &uh, d1n1n1o; nn, J BE ORM ON R •LOT 20x2·1 family m1. blll\Jll. Only $24.!XXl 3 BR, 2 B \, ·1. •• frJllc, u.-etbar. !\hag Cflll, \.\·11 h tl.'1rk room. lllU.:•' lr11 · · . in 11p.1or l"'l)Od1t10n, drps, landscaper! fcncert, <"IO!fl' to ocran, A ,isle-~I 111 Loiul" or . fr\llt And !(J>rlnklen, 2 pallo~. Only th~ prii"('! \'C~et11 hl<"s. 111, )l;ln1 llunt: $34,950. Call 9i9-97lll. Bch 11n'11. 0111> $21.900. KE\\'POltT llt11. Lot!\ of If ., 1llage Real Estat e 1~. 3 BR. 2 RA house, ,,2 ''JI ( _) .,'IJOJ. tiecdM TLC. Ll'g yn':l'I. t\r 1111 ._ ..,.., ~ f62·4471 ( :::~ J 546..tlOJ s•:hlx Ii ,;;hop<i. $21,COO. hy) .. -_,,.,.,__..,,.._..,.1 •-------!!!!!!~ O\\TICr. Gl2.f.6\6 . FRANC.I~ ~·ounuiln.11 4 • ..:Pt_.\'-ll 1 O\VNER -!BR. 2BA. frplc. Bil·. p;tn.ont" f'C'll't:'RI, 3 un, 1~· ~.,. II f I l """" ...... _ Cp panl d fam rn1 11.•lfpl pluioh · " "' p&l · .. " ...._.., ~!I, d~. blkwnll. Nev.·ly crpts lmrna, 5 ,.6 ·90 o nn1>, Z l_i01th hrnnl' TaJ«> pe.1ntcd. Nr 5Ch0o1J. bull. 847-6384 c. a ' . m:el' 1'11,\ l<1an ru111 $225. Principal!! only. $29,900. · n·1o J}li.><s au ' 646--172:1 ~TODF;L llome Land'1<'11plna, 8-46 iJ:JJ ~r ANXJOUS 1:,00 8QU&re f't. 1 mi, to bch . ...._·::::::::.:; 1t ACRE ~'ilh 2 BDR:'-1 6"'~ loan. Sl0,000 llo-.\'t'I. 1- homti. try SJ7.9:..0. Bier SJ6,(Xll (7141 91)8...3563 ~ 7T.)'!l O\\'NER I Br, nectls v.'Ork, ASSUME 6'C, VA LOA..'i S975 dn, uaume fllA, ·';!•;·?'~~~'I -I BR. 1~ BA. $13,900. ~= $2i6. 8 l 3-l l O 3 • BF-\L,. ~I~ Plan, 1>ra:ttat $19,COO bal. $191 PIT!. tn.(1, I Bit. :l BA, 11ep. lam. ;)37-1901, 519-4369. °"'Tlfairt. BEAClf HOUSE. l BR rm. ~lu11t ~111 Only S.-\2,1,;0, ' 'IXl"R U 3 h 11• 000 By OV.'Ol'.r $,l(l,JOO 0 111\t'r l~n1·lpnl1 on I y , , .. f)pt'f. r , a, · )36-Xl73 o ,., .,_,..,,.~ ,... otL1- C.11 8-12--0691 or "v es:·•~~~~~~~--~-• ~~"--=~•,:.,:·~=~=·-o....-~i 5.~. You 'll find tt ill OaMlfttd Net'd • "l'al\"? 1•1al"C! an ad! t .f4t DAILY PILOT Thllf'Sday, July 19,• !Cf73 "I-( HIM•• for Sale l~I rt.11 [lt&tt, ....... l~I l~I l~I _,,,_ J~I .__ -_ ....... ___,]~! )~ • Huntln:gton htchL -•-'v,_u_n_1_Bo_1_ch ____ ,.Nc:;;•;:;w,;:po;;.r:;;t_Boa=.::::<:;;•;_ ___ 1 cln_<_•,.m...:•c..;..P,;.ropo=.:.rty;,:,._;:;166;;: Mountain, o.s.rt HouHt Furnllhed 300 t'touMt Unfurn.. 305 Houws Unfurn. 305 Condominium• $16,900 MAGNIFICENT VIEW *BRAND New 3 BR. 2>, LAST CHANCE!! ...cR.;.,"°=""------"17:..;41·Go.,_nt.;.r;.;;1_t-"=.;.,:;:;._.:.;,:1 Corono dtl Mor Irvine Unfvrn. ~~ .. 8Rlt\G '\'OUll POOl.T1\BLE Ex('lfing; 1-ontrn1Pl)ni:ry 3 tk.<d· BA. Contio. ""/Roat Slip. 2 * J70 AC * 1----------1 C~~;;;~;;;;;:~;::~l!F~o~u~n~lt~i~n~V~1~ll~tyt_ ___ j lur this beau!. 2 BR conrto, roon1, fanill)' m1, Dret1.m cu .11:ar. All a.pplll\ncn. DELUXE 4-PLEXES • • • • BIG Jrvlnt! Temce home, 3 ~ Bonus nn 3J' :c :.kl'. 2 rnr klll'h<'n. t-'on't'fl ai r ht-atlng. Cn>h1 & d~Sale or Le111l'. Our lender 114)11 hr vnll bold Nr. Rancho .Calif. Judy Shulad• br, 3 ba, fa.m m1, din, hugh 2 BR, 3 bu, den, A/C, •• ~ l BR :l8A hltlns.. frpJc • end. gar., bltlIB, xtra cAb. only 1 yr. old. $-M:i,50CI. brk 213; .,...287 or 213 : the in!rrnr;t rate until J uly '-.. _~'u.rnt'l'ao llot S1Jrlna1. i11 26632 Fr•ino Dr. kitchen, pool, view, $550. l Bit~ ba, alr-cond. ·• sm fncel'yd, db.I gRr. Ul). mo: Jneb;, .......... c-~"" Adlt Ol."' .• t).l.~l. :bl7-111.::i. ISU1, 1iO HUllRY! These niu;a rrexo Stal!' Pant, lfoa.se I id .. ~. & I 3 BR. 2 1:16 ., den ...... s.&75 ::.0.7 =•", 0,. •"kndl & ''"'" f'rtnta •;:._.nl;1f &: step!! to TARBELL tll•luxe u11lts haveo trplc's, no, of h>A')' 19. Frw It Clear. Ml11lon Vi•io ' nc • g ... ui»er · poo 4 BR 2~, be., ale •..•.• $425 (213;'3~138' pool. fl.EI> C..A R pi:; T BLUFFS central llt'al, dish.,.,·l:Lihers, Slicrllk'<>-~111ke Offer. Will You an.> rhe vnnner ot ~n"'c· E~J B" 1 4 Bit., 2 be ••••••••••• $500 • h Realtors~-CllA!lt.1 1'.:R. fo'IXER UP-By 011·nrr. x plrtn, t!'lkl unit 1111· t"111d1tkJn1ng, blt·in5, tllc tll.ke part tradt'. M3-9710 TWO FREE TICKETS "-·· 2 ba.; db · \Ve Ha1•e SUmmtt Rl'ntala Huntington u .. c '"'""'~::..:::::,.::='=~~~ r PER. $58,500. View, 3 art 2 Ni·i.;t 10 t~·nnla. UP1o.Ttldcd +. 001/u;, t:nclo.'IJ guruxcs. eves & >ft•kndi or Yieekda>'• 1o the a-ar. Walk lO atore5 & beach Vi'si"on-1 ' REPOSSESSIONS 00.., 1'1>ic. hnlwd nr" ~H.900. 640-0926. Ideally locaicd near •hop->l>H>'2.\ • SOUTHLAND 1375 mo., yenrty ""'°· For information o.nd location 1''n-nc~ <k•ll~. hri~·k f>.<itlOlJ, SPLENDIFEROUS & ping, itchool!I, frw)'!I. Only Out of St•t• Prop 171 Hom & G ff Sh Bo)'d Realtors 675-5930 NEAR Jknch -3 Bdrm. 11.a. 8J1th. Pool. l~lv. patio. rr11lt'. G11n1ge + carport. 8-17-4074 t'Vf'll & wkf'nds, 962-'644 I· I FHA • V s.inail 2 i.1.y, close Ul. Ow1K'r $&1,500 w/10',:. 00\\'n. • • •r n ow QUAJNT ~ BR. nr bay i. 0 these A homes, ·l!'l7·12Tt "~l·lOZl 1S1:.:u·roull :1 UH. 2 DA Contto. 0l)f'n llou11e Dl\lly 10 to G SAVE vnur children, 1 have July 2?th thru Aull. 5th p1&11<, $?15. 2310 -1st A\.i!, contact • ... Luxuriant a1utlt•n, 2 pools, Q c R .,--· nt the 499-2850/ m KASABIAN REAUTIFUI. o<-can vlev,• lot 1ruM !1"' "1'f't•11!1. Call llt:n!*.ln 11 l.IDAY ,,i\ Di':NS, 12132 ll 10 uc. Jlllrcel loc"&.le<l mi ANAHEIM -="'-"'"0'"'673-4"'-'='---- o ''ly ~3 900 . ., .. S. Hustl'r, Gurtlcn Grove the f ......... , Salmon Riv"r Coita u .. 11 •• • A~. 673·7311. S I' I -·-• CONVENTION -0c<'(l1l\'it•\v H.lty. 67J.-.~:JOO =~-~-~ par 1ng nvestment 11·/a braul!ful vll'w the ron· "-'"-"-":;;;:;:,_ ___ _ B,\\'SllORES Cozy Cullal{l' 2 Corp. 638-5662 tlnenta l divide. A \\'Onderlul CENTER e MESA VERDE : 3 BY owner. Acceplin).: pro-L N ' 1 prl beuclw<i, 2BR, I.BA ............................ f pla<..~ for you and your 800 W. Kab>l.18, Anal••ln• Bed " nlOLion, 1nu~t -11. 4 to 5 aguna 1yue . • • room 1.,.,, bath .. ~ \\'/fl{lhu, y1~J. !)0[1t stg ... SHOPPING CENTER ranul,y to is11end sununeni Please call 642·5678 ext. 314 wi'th gard'ner. lmmed .' BR., din. k fnrn. rnis .• ~ COND0-2 hi', 2 ""· "n '"'If 1~ivn1 to '"~l'<t1Ml. 2 5 9 5 or year around ti~-, while to claim~~ tic'-'-(N•rth bonus nn. Your "·ork is ., ti~ • Elc{:ellcnt tax structure ,,~ "''-.._ v A1J · tTS & 1t·ru11!1 tluh. View. Crcst\!tCW Dr. Opl'll dail)' 1· c-njoyi~ hunting. 1nmina:, Coonfy tDIJ ~ nwn"'--;~ occup. new -lffi· dont'; l'!prinklcr11, p a t lo , 5 with this ..;...t1-. """"' ~-~ blot·k 111111 : lll>l,"!'11.de<I &.ii 10'.0 d"·n, $37.500. S:ll~-l8. I"'-'--.="""===~-100~0 oct'Upied, C.OSta Mesa .~ ..... fishing or Just plain M0-12'JtJ.l maculate. $325 mo. areas. 2 ~1011th.11 o I cJ . RY Ow11(•r .. 1 Hr, 21; Ba on THE BLUFFS Shopping center rclaxing. \Vith the grow'lng * * * Call Mr. Day, 545- 963-28113 large lot, S.19.950. 3 Ult, 21, bll., 11'11! un11 , S150,CIOO 1''\111 pri<..-e ~~: :~y. A1~ .. 0~n~ 61lboa Peninsula 8424, SoulhCo Real- ired hill 3 BR, 2!2 BA, dln rm, cloffe !o ~·uch. 2 car J<tlf. & patio. $2·W/n10. 962-212'1. R~;,\L 1'Y A Con1p1111y \\'ith Vislon Newport 8.!~h ___ _ Univ. P11.1'k Cl't1ter. ll"\'inl' * BRANIJ Nl"IV 3 J!R. 2~$ Call AJ\ylhnf', 5il2·i;i00 BA. Condo. "'/Boal Slip. 2 Office hours Ii A.\I to 8 Pt.·! c;ir ~ru·. All applia.111.-es. (_'rpls & drps. Sii le or Le8.1!1e. 4 BDR. 2 ba. lrlL'll. yd. air 213: 2.87--0023 or 21 3: cond. crpt. newly decor. 287-8723. Ur.QUESTi\ _ !'linta Cruz. 495-o:.52 D1.1lorr~ Plim. 1Huit opt' n HARBOR ....,..... tors l: ~fodl'I, tm SqUllN> ~·1. Miu Verd• Country l-;1't'f'nlli..'it. Owner, vesi:inent for your tut.ure. BAl.BOA PENIN Bayfront --o==~==~-~1ot11•l ll11n1.·. L.:u1<!ll('aplnR. sti7,;.oo, f}IQ.fi.llll. ~1ntl"?'e9ted ~ite Linda 5 BR, 4 BA. Pier, float. MESA VERDE Calif. llomes $295 avail im·l.F='LAJ"'-'=n.""'cia'""'u-,+-V"l~e-w-. ~N"'u 2 med. ~·7306 Br, l Ba, Condo nr pool, 4 IlR, 2 BA, fully cp'ld, drps, t.enni!i & sea. Aval! Aug. bltns, <'f.'nlral air cond., J;'11h $-120/r-.IO. 6-14-2117. I 1111 to bch. $1\.000 111 up Gorgt'OWI 3Bll. 2BA on quiet · 111.U)"~·s, x lilan. SG0.00> hy · tow, ci o neral l)e. Avail J uly 14 & Sept 1. 3 br. 2 ba, owner's pride & d ·~1 soo ( 1 r I I I . 'I . ll\'ff)', Saln1on, Idaho. \VE!(!kly. 673--;,..,.., on quit't L"'i ' ........ Xlnt i.:1·n cs, N , . • 1 L1.l • r "·AA c . DRE.A" O\\'l\C'I'. :\ Bit 3 Ba. nu lasl COM•ANY "',,., .~,, ............. .... children & sm pets OK. S2S5 • mo. 837-9115 or 5-13-1•129. San Juan Cap11trano !JAA-3563 llOUSf:~ IJKR. S::.-"i,:,00, By &-pr. carpel~. rlrnpc.11, pa1io, r-Ranches. Farms, Costa Mua cond. Nu drps, ""'/w l'.l-pl., -:. Huntington Harbour I app! only, :.1~36.-),'1 S.i,OOJ un1k•r n1arkt"L A\'rol ~l~~~fl~1 Groves 180 hlt·ins, tar. f'nc.:I yd nr NE\\' 2 BR. Condomlniwn, . Aug. &IO-IO'JO. FURN. 2 BR house. $100 mo. schls. $335. 5;&0.3368. ' Laguna S.ach \\'ilh pool $l9S. pt.<r nlQ. BEST Watcrfrt't11t Buv in Newport Be1ch ,. -0?'u'-pl~cx" .. '-,",",e"',,-,.~tl~ ... -~--... -673-4400 ** 35 ACRES ** Adults only. 2656 (rear) 3 BR. l BA. Newly pain!ed & ** 4~2251 ** ...., ~· · ... -"'·"" Cl land N rt Blvd C •I I th 1150 -Util Pd. Lrg Bach nr """ Hun!lll£1on Harbour, 2·100 , t.1llt"s I.anion. lteaHor '""""""'"'""'""'""""'" e\'e Nal'l Forest, 2 ewpo ·• · · c ean roughout, n l ce !«'· It. ht)nll', "'Ith dock for Harbor View Homes * 67'.i-8563 * IFIC PROPE TVS trlr11 elect, beautiful canyon,,,:;>1"8-::"'e;"134::.::.·,...._,,.......,---YC8.:_n1. stove & refrig. beach, Fltll l'OOking. Duplexes Furn. 345 i;. :.;• boll! B o 711 PAC R ~·/lots of lg oaks. Less than 1Huntington Beech $225/mo Incl water. First & $2.85 • Channing 2 Br. So. ' 8'16-3711 · >' wnei', ': 3BR 2BA FR & DR I Tahiti Hotel $2000. per acre. O\VC lstl--;,;;..::...;_.;._:.;;.;..;;.;.__ lllSI month rent & deanlfll' L.'.lg\Jna .. fenl'Cd ya.rd. Dbl Newport 8e1ch C · CARMEL N ewport Heights U, prh·C'. c;ooo lnveostmenl TD. Call Now! Dos! Jones ALONE on Jot 1 Br. hse. Also deJ)O!!lt req. Please phone gar. Irvin• HOME and GARDEN and wa)' of lifl'. Realty 4~12 C.M. $80. BallX>a. walk 10 owner-agent, 962-8118. $400 • Lrg 3 BR, 2 Ba, frplc, NPT SHORES: 2 Br, 2 Ba, l;NJOY THE VIEW AND BALCONY, TOO 'f'his 4 bdrm., 21 ~ ba. t~iih!K' \\'ith its family i.'tll)rn , 2 f'ln..-. fiaC'e!I and {'O\!'en.'d pu t!os is ~he only one of its kind ava.ilal.ilc·. It's going for tlil' low, low pril'C of ·$5.J,l:.i(l .. Vision- N H b 'd B h I "'· din rn1_ yanf, gar_ new crpts, &Oil \\'Iller. $300 TOUR WINNER ew e r1 es LOOKING FOR a local. "'aler, ac e or, ulil pd. 4 BDRM, crnco, d~•. oloc · · A F "'"2575 ''" ''" NU-VIEW RENTALS ydy. >liH8fll I BEST CARJ\.fEL IN DEVEL· 140 Acre Island s~luded 21,1. acre parcel gt. ee. ~ · b!tlns, fncd yd & pallo. 1st 1=-=c~~~.,----;;;;;;I Ol:oi\fEN1'! Lot adjactnt lo 2979 Acre lsl11I1d wl!h "''Jtter, elec. horses & Liguni Buch & last + security dep. 673-4030 or ~94-3248 Duplexes Unturn. 350 gi'l'f'nhelt. Hirttra ldsepg. Also building lots, bore! and animals O.K.? U 411~ ml. ofl.:C'-"';;;.:C...::.:.::::.:.___ s:lli/nw. Drive by 24-19 Laguna Nlguel SuPMior tond & <IN.'Or: \\'all. ~larina sites, beaches, ai1d unpaved rond doesn't SUS . Ulil Pd. Bach at beach. Vassar ;;:;;;;;;;';;':::;-:::;::-~l~C~o~r~on~t~d~e~l_:M~l!:,r ___ I llllp(.'I' 1hl'UOU!, l"U.~!ll\ drps & ~ ....... [ holl'ls. Broker. bother you, CRll 8.13-3223. Ideal fur student * 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 sly OOLLHOUSE w/a \'iew, 3 I' d rods, "l'.lis.~ion" entry tilf', ~ ~'4 67>6712 5-~·8796 $8,950 And up, full price. $180 • Util Prl. ckeantront 1 Tuv.•nhousc . Back n., • ., Bdrm., 2 Bath, air/cond. 2 B~ .. 1 ' ba., carp, rps, ,.., 0 LHV Lease-. $325. Ph: 67~no". 6~t~11g4.5 ,E~~~ .. ·eo._ Lease, S215 Oet l'.ltl.1' i>t1ad\>s, outdovr ~......, D CTORS & INVESTORS Real Estate Want.d 184 Br. dl'Ck, vi<"'• ! Pool, garage. S300 mo. v-,,~ •J-V ·~ . tdio~·1·r. ltttmclry 1>ink in gar, ATTENTION $1.00 • 1 BR. house in Crulyon. 8.13-89741833-1653 M•sa Verde t~mplercly plu mbed dark· 20 new tmllB. Costa ?<lcsa. ~' -1 WI LL-Beautiful gardeTt! LRG 2 Br, $140. Also view of n.ioru tor phoi~ri·apt,l.'1', REALTORS miles to beach. AcCf'lerated GUARANTEE TO SELL NU-VIEW RENTALS ocean 3 Br. $235. & 2 Br, L'"dar PlUX'ling & shut1ers. d · · ,,.,., An~" AnA ~"'8 Jk I llB $ 65 Costa Mesa LAltGE hOuse 3 BR, :?BA '> dining & ganie rni. frplc. EASTSIDE -. BR., l'l'PIS, fenced yd. SJIO 111 0 . rlr~s, nr shopp1nf.:'. ~~O pels. . ired hill OPEN 1 to 6 fill' ~,~.. r;~ e prec1at1on opportunity. . YOUR HO~tE . v•~ or "U't',>Ut "'a o 'A'Sl~r. . 1 . EVERY DAY , \! ~'-"!"'~· Sct~~d. in<-'?me s.Yl:!OJ. Price IN 30 DAYS. LAGUNA, fu1TI house' Agl. Ff'e. 97!4430. $385.cm. for details Call Cash advanced. salaried respon!dble adult ThB!AC. College Park 3 Br, 2 OR 644-2541 .~ ~ I 5-18-~~. REi\L e~~'U'7~244 Agent .............. 84i..(,612 Penn~nent. n10. No pets: Ba, frun rn1, frpl, cpts, 1937 Pqrt Trinity Pl. -----· -\VANTED: 3 or 4 BR honie 49Wl10 drps, lrg fncd yrd. $300/per BAYCREST · • SELLER READY-J UNIJS-C:J5 000 \\'/a."5Umable kran. 1 am not 2""'sn"".~"N"'o-nh7c00~'". -.-..,~k-to ~•,.>0_._>lo..5Jl_~2'----- 5-15-318'1. S165/n10. Ph: 548-8518 . 3 Br, 2 B.i. l'rpis & cb-ps, Duplexes, U1111s, patio &. yard rare. Furn. or Unfurn. 355 Nr schls S?l'5. 54.'Xi676. Newport B••ch·---l;,N~e:;w~po;;:;;rt:-:B;;;"::;:c-:h-;::::::;:;-:;I SIGO 2 B J blk'bc h Bal SUr-.fMER, \Vin!er, yto!ll'ly, 3 1· • 1· I REALTY A Company \Vith Vision Univ. Park Center, Iivi~ Call Anytime, 552-7500 OfUcc hours 8 M 1 lo 8 P)l.1 BY Owner · Unlvcnity Park. Hard to Iind Jullianl model, 3 BR. 2 BA. honus room, !P"l*'nbcll, S52,500. Prln· dpala only. 552-8114 aft. 6 or weekend!!. • BY Owner; 4 BR, 2'~ Ba home in Turtle Rock. lm· mac cond. $62,500. 1ncldg land. For appt. 833-8059. L-.una BuCh I • BRING OFFER ~ ' an agent. Catt Mr. Fn>drick Beach. nro. wk 'bl Sept. I;. 3BR' 2622 Sanla Ana St. Lovely lo~ ~m haml? Large (."Onll"r kit, 'l hcdroom 833-1103, eves 642-2312, :l~m8262.=='-.,.------smtmo. Of tenant doea w11h ~tyhsh pat10.area and house with fcnct'd yard, Excellent starterblockor retire-Newport Beach ~=~·7ork Sl60.) Dcp. rcq'd, bi.>autiful Larxtscap1ng , Many zoned R:2, so you can build ml'nl units, 1 from . .._...""' l'Ulllon1 le~~ ayll In ex. a se<..'Ond wiil. Yours for ~1:,ce H~r. al'(" ~~sl n l -------l[i WATERFRONT _ Bee.con 2 BR. Fncd ynrd, gar, off. ('(> ent l'OhwtlOll, OU 0\1'11 the JO\Y pl'i ..... of ~~3 500 __ ,,J • n . A d II hU I · sire<!, adult cple, --ts. H 1 I Asking $83 500 '""' ...., ' · shop'g r~ °"Y· e g u pnvate "" ...... C~~ll ti~ilZ.1. • ' · 644-7270 Sparling Investment . rommunlty. 3 Br, 2 Ba, on $1110. 548-8251, 548-1405. Corp. 638-5661 the beach. Avail Sept lst to • 2 BR, J BA. To\vnhouse. · B I June 15th. All util pd. No $2'l5. Pool, patio, garage, US ness pe!s or chidlren. Call mom· dlsh"•asllt"r. 833-8974. Industrial Property 168 Opportunity 200 ings, 673-385;) for appt -====:..::=='-- 4. ACRES * * * $8(1 -UTIL. pd. C.M. Alone Dana Point Bill Leach on lot l Br. hse, H.B. ----- 1822 Ver.no Pl. BalboR, OCC'Rn w, $125. Ag1. 2 BR, 2 balh, trplc, >A'asher. Fee. 979-8430 dryer. Walk to beach & \Veil localed ro1·ner. Present lrvi'no · h bo Ad I'" I ~· WrNTER -n"' -4 br, 2 ha, ar r u u on )' ~<MJ. income $1400. per nio. Great "' h · r •• ~ mo ·~ '729 potential • \Vil! divide. Ap-'00 are 1 e Wtnnt'T' 0 dock, Newport Island. Avail · ""~ SEA CHALET Sl 25 ft TWO FREE TICKETS ~pt 15 to June 16th. Phone 2 BR. 2 Ba. ocean view GOURMET'S \l.'O\V! Open beams ac-\\'hen you list ~1th us, ::; Mcc::.~u.· Realtor SOUTtoHthLeAND 714 : 6.'G-1350 33851 Diana Dr. DELIGHT centuale thla: Pen!Mula 4 YOUR H0~1E is ad· 1810 Newport Blvd., CJ'd. Newport Shores 839-9976 Br, 3 Ba channer. Floor to vertised in Hon1e for 548-nlt Home & GarMn Show l:.:;::.:!c:.;;.;.:::;::..;:;_ __ Fount1Tn Valley Two 0\-'e?lS, island range and ceiling fireplace, deep shag Living magazine in J uly 27th thru Aug. 5th YEARLY. 3 BR., 2 be.. Sharp -----~'---grill. 2 ~ slnki, 2 warm-carpeting. Huge fa m 11 y more than 900 areas • at the & clean. $400 !\lo/lease 3 BR, 2 BA house, bltns, 1.-ovens. Nu-Tone &: ac· roonl. Sleps to surl or bay. and customcn ~ CHOICE M-1 CORNER ANAHEIM Property House 642-3850 covered patio, 2 car gar, ·~ g t t I South East C-Omer Euclid & kid• OK $~' N I cessories, cupboard1 galore, 1''antastic at S l , 9 5 0. &en o you as re er· CONVENTION Houses Unfurn. 305 " ' .....,;, mo. 0 ee. locking 11ilvcr drawpni lor As.'lu1ne VA loan. Huny! nils fron1 our 477 a.f. Talbert St. f .V. Corn'I. ok CENTER Agent 3'12...4421 G BB & E Us flillat f NMl..S ~i mile from San Diego your flatwear and serving RU L es 0 1 • Fr\\'Y. \Vlll sell at lax 800 \V. Ka rella, Anaheim General 4 BR. 2~2 BA. F'rp\c, crpt'g, dlBhel'I, special 1 in en R It San Clemente llS9l"Sll. apprais_ l\IcConnick, Please call 642.~. ext 314 ---------drapes, blt-lns. $285/ino. drawe-.. ,,., ~·l•I -0 ,, ea ors · ...,,0 · Call """ ~"~=-, .. ....... ..v 645-4..163. 10 cla.in1 your tickets. <North ~~-~~~"~=-----and on. Ju.st part of n :!863 E. Cs!. Hwy., Cill.1 BY O\\'NER. 3 BR. 2 BA, H t ' t •·· h "11peclal" South Cooii! \'IC"' 675-7080 1 yr old, on golf <..Wl'sl', 2 Lots for Sale 170 Count)' toll frre nwnbcr is un 1ng on -c home. Call us, \\!e 'J/ 1d101Y It 1,.,..,.,.,..,_.,.,..,.,.,..,,.. pal.ioll, new c ond I t ton , :c:;c:...,;,.:o...:,:;,: ___ ;,;,.:, I 5-10-tzm.) to you. I! S44 900 496-lCQJ VIEW LOT * * * 2 BR, 1 ba. Beautiful upgrad· ·ed IO\Vnhouse. lncld washer, dryer, dish1vasher, like new, good locatlon~Comm. pool, $225. n10, Ask for Dale PETE BARRETT HARBOR VIEW ~"""c"''-"'~""-'=~-~una Beach. While \1·arer CARPET & Upho l s t e r y HOMES BY Ownt•r, 2 BR. 2 BA. 2 ~ \·ic\\' o! Main Beach and Cleaning-Business:. Net -REALTOR-r-.10118.('Q model. 3 BR, 2 BA, old, 1 ocean vie"'· lnd spd, lY.>aSUine. Gd. neighborhood return over SUXX>. per mo. HoulM 642-5200 by owner. t'ee land. Up. sprk rs. $-16,000, 492-0991. !opo map ind udt'd. Not in Good clientele. Le av l n g *OPEN* For Your ln11>9ction Fri., Sat. & Sun. CLOSE IN Close tn, over1ook:lng the city 1:: beach. Beautiful 2-sty. home v.ith Ix-am cell's., & lofs of 111'00rl J)aJl('l'ing. 3 gl'adcd thruout. Santa Ana Ptup. "20". $19,500. By Ol\'n. area. ltfust sell. $1500. incl. 433 \V. 19th St., Costa J\.lesa MUST SELL! I er. 494-4977 or 642-0010. 1967 1''ord Van & equip. l8M S. Coast 11,vy., Ui.guna l"vw Ol\'ll 2 hoinell~ Priced IO\VNER., Nr. So. ,Coast GSxUO LOT. 1607 Cornwall, <Van optional). 919-561.8. Ix-low nuu'keL 1957 Port Pla_ia. Neiv 2 Br, l'Ai Ba. Ncw·nnrt Beach. ?-Or. shop-NE\V local meta.I furn. manu· _CO~'TA MESA ory-iCE Tr' . IB D 2 S.'l95 dn. Assum!.' GI loan -..., S7a Snlall but Ill('(' furn u111y, N. . ays t 13! , Jl)'innt S.2G2 nio. •3_1103, ping. Owner. 673-0293 facturing. Co. with exper. Ba~ ~ util pd "'""""'""""""""""""" ~703. .E••cs & \1imds' ";}2-!rJO'.\ Mobile Hom•/ Owtl('r nef'ds production or -· · $200 UP. 3 & 4Br. No lease 6+1-2491!. I "' • . admini!itative-Jy mindl?d part. Sl25. Ideally loc 1 BR. stove, required. Othen avail. in I BY 0\\-ner, spnciou1 2 BR Trailer Parks 172 n Ca 'tal · stm t crpts, drps, vacant. BEAOI !louse., A -F r a ni e Condo, S\V, pool, clubhse. ~:rl Pl utvc en $165 _ }'b!er Upi>tt 2 Br, gar, Orng Cly. Call Dcpl of OP"r.• Bcan1, " Br . ., 2 Ba. bel\ul. grnds adlts ~7995 JO'x55' C u s Io m. Bui 11 *. "" "136 -·-* yard for Irids. 1 mo. Free, T r a n s p or t Rt ion • wld1shwasher & <hsposal, ' ' Anderson. 1 Br. I r g . f ......... ~ .................... ...,,..,fS225 • Lovely 3 BR. home. 213/621r3'Jl0 from 9-3 I' 962-4471 ( :;::) 54MIOJ rllage Real E st ~te -. ~· SC . -& 4 BR, 2 BA. fpl t', beamed boa. l"C\\ crpts & redec.. ceilings, crpts, drps, 1 blck $350 • 3, HR, 1va1erlront. Lido beach, b.i!con)', Ol.-ean view, Isle. F r-pl c, bltns, gar, $.125 up. 54H918. $450 . Nt'W Lrg 4 BR, rrplc,l ~~~~~~~~~~I gar. deck, l blk beach! 1; NU-VIEW RENTALS I l[•I 673-4030 or 494-3248 Aplrtmentl for Rent GltACIOUS BA YFRONT \';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~1 Nt"1v 1700 sq. ft. 4 Bdrrn.1 1 O_pf'n bca1;1s. f' an t as t i c Apts. Furn. 360 \llC\\'S. $55()/f\10. YI' l V .l-~------- 673-5719 494-0015. · Balboa Peninsula \VESTCLIFI-' -pool, 3 BR, 2 BA. $375/mo. Jnc. lawn & $35 WE EK & UP pool care. Lease ls! & las! e Sleeping Rooms + M.'C deposit. Avail. 8/1. e llousekeeping Rooms 5411-0053. e Ocean View Apts HARBOit vu Hms, Carmel BALBOA INN Sharp 3 Br, fan1, nr pool, 105 1.1ain Stret!t inc. glllldener, $ 4 5 O . 675-8740 64-H7lll. SHARP CA_R~fEL t.lodel. Harbor REDECORATED View !tomes, 3 BR. 2 BA. fnm rni nr park avail Aug 1 bedrm. apt. 1 blk to OCf!&n 1. $450 ~lO. 641-'7i24 & bay. No pe ts. $175 per -""~"""""""'~===-! n10. Start Sept. 1124 W. BARGAI N BAYFRONT Balhne..l!h·d. 644·•1S!i5 days New 3 Bdrm, 2 Baths, t'.rplc, or 612..£277 eves. vie\\'S. Only $425/nio. Yrly. C d I M 673-5719, 49.t-0615. orona • ar * COUNTRY CLUB LIVING Cost• Mes• Pool. 3 BRJ $350/mo. 25081----------1 University. 642-3645. Casa de Oro POOL, lovely garden, 3 br. 2 ALL UTlLITlES PAID I.la, S.175. + Sec. Depo~it. Co . be! t Z-JOS Universi1 y. &t2-3645. mpa1e . ore you J1?1 Cus!oni designed, ft"atur1ng: TllE ~lulls. New 3 ~R. lush • Spacious kitchen with in-ca~t g: Lease. $550 Mo. clircct lighting Avllll. 1m1ned. 644-7662 Bkr. e Separate tlin'g Rrca BLUFFS {bndo 3 Br charm· • Home-like storage Ing, ne\ver gold crplg, nr • Private patios shop'g. &10-0215, 5335. • Q()S('{I garage '"'storage San Clemente • A!.arhle pu.Uman _ ~ _ _ _ • K1ng·sz Bdrn1s • • Bdrms .. 2 bfl1hs: trplc.: lg£>, recrt"Qtion mom. l\fany e"<· lra'I. An exceptional buy nt $79,500. dhl gar , priv. st. no parking Gla.sscne porch, nu carpel. e Beer Bar G S Frplc, gar ,kids/pet/sngls. v.·kdays . problem. Cable TV & com· 1 ~ 89() \V. 15th St. No. 99 N.B. • reat pot CALL 645--0111 ALONE on lot 1 Br h~. gar. munity pool, nice patio & MobBeu~ t:m::r. • Audio-Visual System1 LAGUNA BEACll OFFICE Al., walk to waler 2 Br , .ard"'' it··---u•·'cd by ~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;,_;;;;;;~,.....;;;~ 1 Mount1in, Desert e Book & Hobby Store ~ .... "' iu Sl65. View of Ocean 3 Br, mature trws. SO. or Co..'lsl Resort 174 e Children's Shop, Ex Loe ..,50 • Va-t~ Yr R·-·nd $~" A t F •=2575 .~=c.:. ____ ...;.:.; H II S •i ~ .. •V" ...,.. ~. g . ee. ,,,,.,... a 2 BR. lop cond, 2 Ba. Only • Pool · Barbequ,<'S · sur· ~Jaturc Adults. Barcelona, rol.l~ecl with plush land· S2"J(l. 492-4944. scap11ljl'. S Arlul1s. Ko Pets. an J~a!'_ Capistrano LARGE 1 BR, $185 NE\V 4 BR, 2 BA, c:pts/drps, 365 \\'. Wilson 642-19Il frplc, 11 ~ mi Dana Point LOWWEEKLYRATES Directiom: l:p Thalia SI. 10 Coast Vtt.'v"; \vatch for signs. ~i~~w American Home Realtor Presents Ii.nest loco.lion 4 BR home, ocean .. '<.:. city \.'U, huge lot. CIC't'('S!! to lx>al'll. inany olfh•I' tJnc-hon1cs ft\•;111. LOTS R·l O\.'Can \."U lot. No. Laguna fl'a.Jllj; a\·ail SW ,T;iO terms. Summer/W inter Rentals 49-1-1001 * 40-1·7'51.~ Hwy. by ™'rlf'r, 5009 Bruce o and Bus. ales furn Studio, nr bc:h. Util pd: Crescent. Call 642-3139 to Mobile Homes l\IO~'T'N home Jobs Peak 64f>.4170 or ~ tl!lO . ~ •• V•'ew 1 Br. Furn Al.ONE on lot 1 Br hse, gar. • too .... -feet 4 t • ........ "t".... Also walk 10 wa ter 2 Br, i<rl'. For Sale 12S ·" Sl:Jun.o<e. • s ory nf Qui -• Lakt'! ViC'\\' furn. $36.000. or U · et '-l"' or sngJ, $165. Vie.,.,· of Oct>an 3 Br, !inn. S93-lJ1.1 or 5:'>2-9110. BEAUTY SHO~. OT. Ov.11er S285 -Channing 2 Br home, S235. Agt. fee. S.'l6-257S. Harbor, SJ(JO. 493--0.157. Executlv• Suites C.2 LOT w /INCOME l!l.~J sq. ft . on NC'\\'J>Ort Blvd., nr ~'alr Dr., C&.<1n i\lc~. SJ,Zlll'q. ft. Ch\•ncr1 Bkr. 6-t2-0000. Condominium• for sale 160 F'OR unlrs, 2 & 3 Br. $55,950, SM,000 d111n. •Hg. Heh, Agn. 5JJ..2212 or 1 t737~. 2 HR Condo In ri.tr111t Verde for &Air hy owner . Very 111\llrp! MT-857:1. lncom• Property 166 •• Condominiums 2080 Newport Blvd. oper, good chen1ele. >..1nt. frpl., stm·e, rebig. Sngls ok:. Acreage for sal• 150 area. 540--05.10. Eves ~ SJ50 . SpracioWI ;i Br home, Irvin• ~182 ocean view. Kids/pet/sngis. Furn. 315 Costa Mesa 642,2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S M·l Lot 30.::00 squar" root ~T-1 IOt ready ror 1tcv('lopn1ent in Costa ~·le~. Off Vii:torill. COnler !Ot. l.A't us discuss the 111an.v possibilities or this lot ,\·ll h you. C-1 Lot l.A'V('i half ncre lot In \\'t-slfninstt•r. Near ~file Square Golf Coul"!I('. H.•·udy for ronstrucUon. Bring yoor plans. 47 Acres Loke View 4i et•.rei in Ri\'erside County ovrrlooking Lake ~tnth<'\\'3. Can be divided in a number of 2.5 M'~ -·-546-1600 T"VES'l'M!:NT 01\~SION mE REAL ESTATERS Investment ALSO SUl\fMER RENTALS 0 I 220 CAIL 494-949! _ff"rlun ty * LANDLORDS * PATENTED auto ncressory. f,~EE RENTAL SERVICE N{'('d financial partner or LANDLORDS' investor. (213) 645-4071. • Mon•y to Loan 240 \Ve Speclalize in Newport .;;:c;;;.:....;~:;;:c:::;. __ :.,;;; I Beach e Corona del Mr.r • 1st TD L & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· oa ns vice _1, FREE lo You! Try Nu·V1e1\•! UP TO 95% NU-VIEW RENTALS 2nd TD Loans ~ Roo;' .-., :::~ . . . clean out the garage Lowest rates Or1n9e Co. . .. turn that junk into cash Sattler Mtg. Co. v.·ith.a Dally Pilot Classified 642-1171 54S-l!611 _, __ - ~rvina: lfarbor area 21 yrs. Th"S. \VE 1-IAVE RENTALS l\1ay \\'C be or setvice in solving Your housing needs 'l1nli"I \·lltl. ---'11.Pul!ur "SINCE 1946" 1st \\'e-stern Ba111c Bldg. University Pm<, !Nine Days SS2-7DDO Nights fast results are Just a phone rali 11."·ay -642-5678' Huntington Beach \\o'OUl.D like lo subl~asc for • rnEE Linr-ns 1 yl', '3 BR, 2 BA. e 1''Ri'.:E Uti!i tit"s Everything is furn. 2 r-.'li. e f'ul! K!tchtn fro1n beach. $300. 963-2414. • l/ea1cd Pool CondominlUml • Ulund11-' Faci!irll's Unfurn. 320 • TV & n~ai<l . scrv 11vall. _ _:::.:;:.::;,::;_ ___ = e Ph011t:' Sl-1'\llC'•' General LARG. 1 IJr, '"'in l:H'!ls, !deal for bachelors. S/pool. COND. for lease 2 BO 1 Ba, Adul!s. $165. 5-1&-96..'l,;f, 1993 pool, new carp. no pets, Church St. mature adults. So. Laguna ~i"'B"'R°'f"u,-n"'• .-,.,.t-~1,....--,. S260 494-0076 a · pno • cnr po , · close lo shops. Adul ts/no NE\\fPORT crest 3BR 2%BA pets. 19-11 Pomona, 0.1. j l plus. Avail Au~.' l:J. BEAUT F'URN. 2 RR, $175. ease S500/600 mo. 5'17 1250 Beam ceil., pool, adults. no pets. &t2-95~. DON'T BORROW 'TIL YOU CALL USI $©1.l~~-~\<.i~S " TRAILERS • Sui!able for Bachelor. No children. No pets. $90-$13l &l&-1809. Huntington 8e1ch Borro1v on your ho1ne eqully for any good 1:11.irpose. Ser\'. ing lm: Angt>les Couiiry for ovt'T 20 years and NO\V ln Oran~ Olunly! SIGNAL P.10RTGAGE CO. (714) 506--0100 4500 C8n1pus Dtlve, N.B. 2ND Trust Dffds PRIVATE fUNDS AVAIL. Any Amount * Coll 675-4494 BKR. NO polnl.11, no J)l'nalUe:111, fret' ~ppralsal, low rates, fMI. lnvC!ltoni TI1rift 6.19-6411. Mortg•tn. Trust Deeds 260 PUT YOUR MONEY TO WORK FOR YOUI Earn 10% lntcrt:11 Ctfl well· aecured 2nd Trust Deeds on Orange ('.ounty re•! estate. SIGNAt~ ~IORTGAGE <':(). m 11 556--0106 4.100 Can1pu1 Dr., N.B. }tJRST or al·lncluatve tnat deed. $.}1.588.IU. 9~$ Int, du 10 )11'8 nn romm<'t'ciaJ blrfl. Discount. 6'73-6'100 That Intriguing Wore/ Game with a Chuckle lditM •r CLAY I, POI.LAN 0 Rt<tm1rtae lett.n of tfl• four Kramblecl word• be-low to form four ai1T1pl• wordL I I ltYKAS I' I I I There's only one troubf• with contact leme.s. What do I RAGT RE · I 1 I' I I I you put on In case of a1:;;? . 0 Compi.t.. tfie chucW!e quoted by fHlln g 11'1 th. "'lul11g word yov de~lop from slep No. 3 bel°"'. • PRINT NUMBERED LflTERS IN > 4 S THESf SQUAl!(S UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEITE RS TO GET' ANSWER SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 314$-,sl(jj RAClfELOR & 1 BR., patios, [l·plc'R priv. glU'ages -Dividecl ba1h .'\.: lots of closets. RC!<'. hull, pool & pool tabl~6, sa•nn btilhll. SCC! for )'OUr.elf. J7301 Keel!IOTI Ln. (1 blk \V. of Beat::h, 1 blk N. of Slater). 84Z-7R48 $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 Pools. 4 G11rrfen11. Souna. Tenn\11. Pr1,111te p a 11 o , Adull.11. Ph; lHG--02.'i9. MEN, sm11JI hcar h holrl. Roonu S21.50 pr·r 1\·k. ApU S95 J)l'r monlh. ~1?.6-70!!6. Lid o Isl• t BR. f'\im. Urtl &. gru·aac Incl. l adult anly. S200 nlO. Yearly, 673~17. :ZBR, 2BA, brick frple, dbl gar, winter rental S.175 plm ulil. 11J..793-0al' ' Newport Beach $35 k tip. I BR., 2 BR It. Bac~lor.. Color TV, maid ilCrv, pool. The A1e81l-, 115 N. Nciv.p:1rt DI .. N.fl. £46.....9681. 5 lineal 5 day1 lor $bucks, ad.Cal~ . t Htl I ~---1~ j .... ........ I~ I .... .... Apts. Furn. 360 N1wport a ... ch t 'UilN. I Rlt, util1, gllT, w;ashcr/dryl"t. $225 mo. NY:pt 11aht1 tH:r4<Wi4 da.yM, &1'1--0229 wk nds 2 BR. 5fcpi;: 10 ocean, lrg ullrli nice, Cliblc 'YV, Cir . ,\vail 9,7~ 617•1 $~ 1110. ·'606 Seaslll'Jr1· Dr .. 67~"'-8:115 San Clemente San C..'li•nJl•n!r llf"~trlcnt flotC'l $79.50 p1r Month QU I~.!'· SECLiH~: ru11l -U\tl · Jiu, 11 M't'\'lt•' \\ rtlkfn,: <11~tarl(;l' to t'\'l'l ,Vlh111~. 11 l l'lt.'I '.\lar S (' Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 1---~~--~---, General BEAUTIFUL 2 BR, 2BA apt-\Va lk to shopping. Two closed ga rages ~250 mo. Agl. 642-43.53. Apt. Unfvm. 36S Apt1 _,,.;..;...;.;.=.;..;.. __ .;..;...:.;;I Fum. or Unfum. 370 Cost• Mesa '-"""-==----1 S.lboa lslond DELUXE APARTMENTS LARGE modem 3 Br. :! B.'l, Air Cond • f'rpl.c's • 3 Sr.'im· tlll'll: erptll, drps. V1u:11111 min& Pools -lie.a.Ith Sp.'1 -nov.·? 'l;.o P¥arl. G7:>-0t~. 'l'c.>nn\11 eoun~ . Gym and 1 ·C;;•;;';°";;;;";;;d;;•;;I ;M;;;;•;';;;;;;;; ll1UW.rd R.ootn I• \ lilt. Fto1n $150 I un. & 0..'lt Ft,l1n $1~ 2 Bil f.t'Onl $210 ':! UR 1\1 nhSC!i Fl'Qu1 $250 MEDITERRANEAN VILLA-GE J J~R. 2 bu. Ot.'t.'Un VIC\\', "alk tu l,1t•,lc h $.'JOO i\lo Cllll. &7J.3ro3 642·2?>'.i i':Vf'."1 associated S ~u;;.m..;.:.me=r-'-R"e"-n;;_t•:cl.:• __ 4'-2:.:0 Industrial R1nt11 B~ACll A111~ I S. :l Hr. furn. 1 frtH. OfllXll;ll~· Con111:1 111•1 I 1\1111' 11Uth' O.:a1·h ~ ... ~h· lly \\'k 01· ~to. lt.il-1_6"_'1 __ NF:"'PORT ht'lll'hfl'Ollt, sl11s 9, 1o,11shlclry~·r, o!O' \I U1dov. I Jul!' ig..,\u~ I l S..'13--tl.Ul. Hl-:ACll ('t)l!R{it> f•lf l,'tll sfo NOW LEASING Huntinvt~ Beach NEW M ·l !J.111 SIJ FL & lJI' ll!'n11ltn11 & 1'1•"1,tnd -97 or 8JJ.Gll9 "'kl.)', 1 HR, :)ouU1 L .. 'lblJl\U 4001 81 RCH , NB • • • R. L. Mourino 6141 W•gn•r .;-14A Huntington Beach '"u an• th1• "1m1 .. r .. r TWO FREE T ICKETS h• !111• SOUTHLAND Home & Gard•n Show •1~2·1ll2, 49J-IU87 ''"' _ _ -.:v;.IO. MIO, ~;i-~, "'I II •~t t"l!l .l11o' 2iH1 tli1 1 \ui.: ,111 V 1c1tion R1nt1ls 425 1 .. th•·1~ol \1.11l HJ I ;: , 111 -----~------\11 M.1ut111:1u,ln_•'t. d i .ilH2 ANAHEIM Bir. &· •r J nl\•·. 1n1•1 II ·: 1~1 2 Ba Cabin "'lfrpll" ,11.,,11 • 1600 sq. ft., $125 1 CON VENTION Aw.:·~·i 11 711-;l.'(J-:t.•i'I l·~"t.1 \l•-..1 hl .~l.111 CENTER •REWARD• I r· .. r H h11i1 1u• .1111 1trt1 ~" ,, 1 11011 11•,t•lill".; h• I' 111111 "I ,, ~u .. I f•1"1 ]. II •I"'• 1 I• I' ••111'!'•\ • Ill· IH .. Ill ''"' 1h 11 I l•I 11 I' j,,1 /\"I' , "'' 11 • • 111. t •I•" ~"l I I•" 1" I ' ... Ill ,•1 1.tlll j 'I 111. ,, !111 ., • •l ll"h•I 1!••111.,/ I " I 1 t< I ( \ "' ' I• I 1 .. 111 · ._ 2kJO Httrliot Bh•I, c :.1 1 · 1 · , . I Re t I w -, d -460 \1~1 I~ h •1· '1 1 .\·1,1h1 111 ' u lr 31• .. \I. -1nurl1 •111 2 In· n I s an . I"' Ii I'. -I • 1'il \I J.i il'iCJ-10 J11pl1 , ll!JI '"II ih•1I; S~· '"'"''1 l>· ••• ~ '1' l OPJ::N EVl::RYDi\Y ~"'""~"'"'"'"'-"'"'"'I \t kt·iMt,t1i s,.;;1 ,1k ·ihi-h:!'.fl NEED 1 1 .. +1111.1101111111 J.;11-. 1,.,111 llout,. f"r1-Tucs J0-6 Costl Mew ('r.11t1T1 !oil 11••• 11111111., r 1-. BROK ERS-REAL TOA:S 102~ W Oalbaa 611-161.J !II! II ilU• ,\ ilH ! 1 I••" ,,11.,, !'I I'! I \"!· ,, 1•1 ! ' \ ' ' HI\ fi 1\ I I~ ., \\('(!, & Tiiurs. 1(}.7 Rentals to Sh•r• 430 I 8 ?~·,~:T. :.1012w.· THIS I ~ ITI TllE .. .::-..,~l'~l f\l,; . . • I PALM MESA APTS. \\ORK!~(; ~ul, t: ,.,.,,~ts I l• •Pon .ulu!r 111.HP 11.,.1~ P''A~"•Qu1·-.~., ,, .. , r ... '"Ht·I II 111 ~Cll;\!l .\111111•1,::l ;u,l1!H'll c. ..,c. • c.• ,,JJ,"UTL'" ·ro N~. BCll. ""' u .. t.' vr ...... au ~ •, ·' lilt'\ 1~• 11 un11un ,,,,, I " l:.J ,. ' C'I ,,___ ... hU\O('lli.11·•. .11111 " " 11 .. k Al f'IL'C. Gold1.Icdalhon, 2br >'URl'·. 0 1' U"'L"U".'' L apt ·uul ~aunn l'f(., 111 Cnrun,t 1h·I \lut' J•11•f1'1 •~ " i>r n» $12' .< -··-0 ln•!·1111.1t1•• l~ .• 111t•r1 l h\no•r a111 1v/pat10, en<:! gar Unt>clievobi." la."!''.<' ,~,. . .> C.ul a;'lr :Z:.:O ;..11 P'.\1 i.:.1r.1;:1• u1ul l11't•p!.11" ~liO 1 • ~ _ I" ,_. ' 111,1,I <' .1111\ h~ Ltil'rl!lfllrl,.: • • ,Ill) 111,.J I H o\,.,11 I·' 1 • ,1 11, ,.1,, n.t. l:L\\ \ltl 1 t•llt , •I l"•ll.11 ·~I 1 .. ,h Un fii101 )ll!<.•lun 11h•11 n.i1110· !•t,)-2 l'lli II /I' 'II 1\ ,.,J' II" ll• ' I 1'1 11 11 storage, · laund. f11.c1J. hog• ·-1. Ja""', •I-·• bit. n ('('p l~·"·'.o"·'--1,·, 11101 1uef"1 lo ·1.,.., ~111! I ,_,...,.., ,_ ._ ,._ ..: -~--II< 't'l \;11 llUillh1•1 ('011!,1<'1 Adltsonty,nopcts.$165nto. 111s,shRs;:c1 pts,drp~.sau.1a ST'IL\ICllT & '"lu,ui:· ni.1!1 ,1 r.1~ . .\0"1fl h) "'f'Pl I. 111 llunun::1un Bt•a t h Polit'• ltl·.\\,\J:Jl 1n.il1 <II.II!. .. !.J ( t I' !t ' \I I " .11 1:.. ('Ill .11 l11d11 .. 1 I 1 " ' I.I< '" ~·' • t ! ' .... ' .. I. 11i :• MOW & EDGE EXPERT & DEPENDABL E Cdll For Prompt, Free Estimate. 534-7187 * Creative Gardening ] Ill l1lo 11 )"I" '.,:Ud> 11 .I. ,1 "''II.: Ii\ •hi lo• u1 ' j \) • I I 1 • •h 1 I, I \, 1llllJ1 .\I ""' ' ' J 'I • I 1 jl I II !°'!•' .,1. I i.. lu,' ' ... ,i ' Exp. J 11' I" I America n Gardner n ,, ' I < 'loq .. ., '""' ' OAIL V PILOl II Plumbing I. J; ~lTIS Pl.\ \IUl:O..'C1 1;, 'I •l~·I• ,\ Hrp.11 ..,, \\'.1 t.•, ht .11<•1-.., 1h r•o•llll'>, lu• '"""'' tl•h\\,1"h'" l"I', 11,hl 1\11(' ,\ 1;1 \ t 'un111l1 tr P lun1Uu1;:. ... fl lt'\ 1'1.l'lt.ll:l\l; llt:l'All: \•1 i" • l••• "~iall • ,.. 1.;2 .... 1:.is ,.. .. 111.: ,\ll.il\t, &l lCJ> .~· :)cl"\'I( 1 ill 11 1 ... ~Ui!ll lhlltit• lnl£_1'\•I• !!H 111 ~'I I!•''' I lj-l \ 1< Remode l & Qopair l~l 11.l 1 .. ;H"i l 'H'l'•ll11\ ,,_ l'.111111111.! Ho H1<><1• 1111_ ,1 t:.•1'-111 l l1<11')ri:; 1 l••''" -I I 11 u! l\1,lrr 111, ,:\•! 1 J, !U~•. <;-JI .\'.\! ~~·~2_' A lteraf1')ns ~~1 1;1 ;t I \"Ill' If proh It Ii. \'11 l, 0 1, llfl~11ll\]\ I< 1 .. " I 1t •n.:-11111 1111lor1ni; " ""1111 .. 1 , l~••i.I' fn>111 11> r , \11111 .. 11.• ,,.1, .. ·1V.n otl r 1<l1 !""' •iiH11t'1~1P ~ll'lody l.11. Jll c.~f. 646-0977, t>lC. Adulls, /l(j pets I •lJ, has 111('(> 2 HI{ l1u1t'>" Ull \l1h1', tl!1 l"1':!'j' ,di II ll<'11ru·111u•nl I :-h.•J\ :0:1 H· 111.11•! •Ill'. 0 16-l~J SJX~l.J-:s 1'~1\JI\\ s1.-~ I._ l~I~~ lu ,.h.Ht', Lull) OK 11. \Xt;l' \(;to: jll,lf,.,,. .. IH '1'fls t:t:r..11 ,,,, 1~1,1\\rl ,\ 11h1 h• fl, ' ... 11 d I ~ •! B kB -------I BEDR'l t --n1 ~''I &l.>-l•IJ1 •• ~1 'hf"1•h1·"I 1''111· .\ •h"k•·•h .. 111 1·,.1, '' ,, 1'1•1• Alter•tt'o n •-642-5845 ac ay More Room-L•ss Money . 1 · ."' • ~ 1'!1""1 111'•11· ()( < "' "1'~a n1,1h'. 1ilu1 k .\. h 1·" 11 11 L'Oro.JL sec a l'C ll garden 2 HEIJH'.\I t ~on1 Sl~J \\O'.\l.\X 111 sli "" (',111tl•• I \ "1d1· ,,n11.i11 .. k· I' 111••1 11/\\!llh' 1!1.lll\•lnd Pll ··h· <;{ ,,, 1·~1. ,•II t• ['\J I' J\11 I I 11 I II .... I )I I'' ,, ,,f 1• >"t1r.1lr 211 VMMI r xp ' l"E\rLYn:dc~'01,111•d:lB1 ,2 rt l' Lk li ' I Unf11n1Ar11s AJa1ltn..111!;)10 1',,ui 111· ()('(; 1!1l/•llO l.'til 1•11 ,111 1!~ t1t"·'J~11 11~11 ,,1 {I l I J:t\1,IJ 111 ,,ll' ,, '" 1 "'' ~ .. 111111! 111.f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~' B l I y l •P 11• v1ng1na tonic loSJj LF ~ · -I' I 1.,11 ,. 1111•11 u1<•1111l ronrr."1 '"' 10,11 1 ..,111 1111.11 • 11,.ou\•f' ·'· ren, P•"' r !'asr-for SHi:l:-i0/~10 , BR 1, . , " , pd :•l:>-(i lli', "1 \:-Wllll:.' •~11c•J1 •~1-011• >1 >-1~, it•t•nl\· I 111,., '~111 ... 1,1 1111~~111<~ "ll''' Su11 711 • [IlJI S:ij0 •111n 1 'Hl , ,. -· '' 'outet•n.:ht,the)rt••tnder------\ •·I•''• J'iJ -----BA. -p1k ~ places, pr1v priccil' l5Glr.tc~anr. Garages for Rent 435 11~\'l:\t : ln1 111 ~11)' 1'111>. 1'01nor1n ,{ \<J1h C\I Tu1 ~11~}1' ... ~,'.',,',~i::·.~,','.',,',','.,\l:1t,,",, ,,,1,1, 1 ,, ,,, ,,,,,,.,,,,,,. E~ymenl Balboa Island 1~'lt1.os & ret: areas. ~V1Ji;on (;, blks froni Ncil JJUt'I Bli r!.l 111 .. rol f,1'.1M' .: .. 1 1 1111 n.•lln1 h l':!-!1'~17 I ~ .. _ vatdcns, on \\1lso11 St , \V, •169SGO F'Olt 1n11tor 11.11111,, ir 111,•r !10111•'. By 111111 "-'t1' J.n.,11 ftlUNll n "1t·i "•1'\u• ll.1ul1111.;"' ( 11•,unq ... YL \RLY tlC\\oll' 2 hr 11·/g.u, 01 l !arbo1·. !\o child./""!. ..--' -----0011, 1·h lb !~ \r•i1 "'•rt l.1u11h 111 I -, •2 ;..;; ~J i•rin~·· .~. 11 111 1<• \i\1_1 _ •· 1• " ,h-+1 111 • 8 ~ NO \V I I 'blk .~ k1111 ti i.•111.111· IHJlk ,\· 11h1 t1 • ~··I '1•' I "1111 . 111· shoris/hch :t:J-3·1'.~i. 228::: Fountain \Vay East 1 vn1 -• •to n1aJor Hhtl L.\I ·,;>;-~1'it;t,, ~·\1'' Yl: 1 nuiili' JJ.ikuii.: f,,1 -~ i'(!Jlrn·. l!nuMHil iialk Vl<" 1 I• 111-.un 11!!. ,•1 111 .. , l I··" ~rat Services f'\'CS & \l'kntb, 646-1 ;·;:; ----~6cl6-~28"4~6C sho1fg, :; i\1111. to hC:'<Lt:h. &11-1061 1 h•iusv 10 1,1,111 Sl':-0-$1 :10 B.il'\l'•"I A ,1, ij\0-~-ll' Iii 1 (•1ll.0 1 \lo' \\1!;;<111 .1. I -~ NEW l &lrl)> 'l)l uni"''-' HA l<'ront apr, xtra lrg closets, SJ"•'L' C , Ill',/"\! ,,,.,.,, -,1,.,_N,-,1 •. ,,. ! 1 • .i11 !l!,•tl~· 1 \I tilli-,j'•' 1 1\0i\1~. H"l~•1 1 ,\II lit"'''· 111 u RBOR GREENS ground floor. tle\\' J)!lll11. ·'"' L, '11 ''1 ·•C:1 111 •11 ' " '"' ,. ,., /"n I ' I t I Yearly. Avail 1\0\\. 1'/.1 h "' ,'\,; li:Jlho' Blvd I•! ----I -' ' • l t ~:'i I I !!11•· l \1~\\\ 11 ,. II< 111.: ' '' ' pl u111!o111.: ~s-lOOO Furn & Uniw'll Fr $130. J<'urn $lJ9 j(); Un fu m ,., •. 1 , L,\flt,f., d.uk "I"'· n1.1lt• 1, 1 1•1 Ill'\ 11,d11t lll" 'il•JJ11t• ~111•1•··~ "" -'I ;~CllJ)l)l1 ;:-.I II•" t.ii\-,J lt1 .., ! ' I! .. I----Ba~h.1, -& 3 Bil's. :\'lodcls $1.JS.50 :>JG-jl l4. t'tJt.k·h-j•)" t1111111•d I r·1 .. l.' I' ' I 1·11 i''" \Jtn"' ilt• 1 '"'''" !l\11110 Capistrano Beillch o 10 ·u1 7 2·00 I ~ . , . 1 111111 ~111 111 1< •• ·' :1 1• · ptn pin. 1 •C,\S..\VICTORIA • !Office Rental 440 1 l 'T""91111 "r.111111.: 01,1111 !"lln .~ ''/./--1 1~ .. , •• ,1 1 r'l p.i11.~1n~1"11,•1 11•1•.\ P e!C'l'SQn \fay, Ci\! nr l iar-l & 2 BR Furn & Unfu111 I Announceme11 ti. •• hhtl'k ll•:1 1 l1rr t' fJ I I •• I' ,) J I I If l.l.-' ,,) 111 .. 1h I 1.d r -~ h lluu11· NE\V 2 Bd1111, 2 l:>alh fluplf':\ OOr Bl\'d. & Adanis C11r•"'IS, Llri'l""S, DI\\', TV i;ii;..1u.::; 1.c1 -:-r 11'1 \1•ll•f\\ l-111 ~I 1\1 ll•'J•lll hl:.1-1:0.l D1sh\\i1ShC'r & refr1~. huge 54' •370 "" ''L "~ • 1 I vnrd Ch!l{it'('fl 01. outdoor -ant Pool, err. ~12:1 \11 c10110 PRESTIGE i'NIJ. ~111,dl <J1.tl,.t11·1111·1,,I • ''10 ' "1l:1111 ' 1 111 \\11(111\\L)!!l,l;\l o t • .,, u.1· Job Wanted, Mile 700 I '.'\I' 11 1\1,111111· .\(nrdcncri 11 1111. ,.,, h.1ni:•· J.!il!'Clcnlni:.' ~•'!'\'I•'• [•II IJ ll I! 11 1'('1\[ I d\1 •111.111 .1)1! 11"-41!l7 , --1 \IL\\ 1,,1,,1,., "r!llOpcdu• .. 1111• •,1t1 1;,hl11Jlorpn •f p:11·1 11111• d\-l'i :s Job W1nted, Fem--;J;l02 pets DK $22:> 49&-9209 s-,-,-,-u-.-.-2-B-R-,-,-Br . 2 Ba SI. a! llurbor, C!\L 6 12 )1~110 I OFFICES Le g a l N t' 510 "It'd I .1.i.1 \'1• l·'.·u· s. ;~ •. '.1,1'.'.i.'' I t s "11:11 '11 111!1 d ... u~1·•111 ll•~·h1n1!., I h111nt'." \Ve Pool, blllns, p lay yard ~~~~~~~~~~~~; I 0 ices Jl;1t"bur 11 1.11111.: 1h•,,1· 11,... 1,do1111·1~ ~h1J1l<'1 ~. 1h•k.., :>;t.l.ll l··ll' ,11 Corona del Mar 1 l99Gi\laplcAvc ..... &t2-3Sl3 1 i''ountain Va!Jl'Y. Bcaull-.1 ll 1 •1 .,ill111 fir,..,1·:1-1 ,1 1 rc·~-l.f1~r.:1~·~;;;-l'1,,,;;--::::; •• ~11.1.,1 .11 1: •.• , ;,~,-71 11 hll •' l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii j ful nC\V bu1ldU1g, ground \11 no•"' n·~11C111~101• fu1 l'HJ~l 1 t / •J•·•I ,,,11 ,1 11 1 11 11ro;1·~. II 2212ColJ~eN'o 1_ .. 6'6-6032 1 I[ ~ llool, ~.000 !>QUate f~'l'!. ,1111 .!rh1 ~ l111t 111.,. ""n [;r t-' · 1 1·")~ 11 ·• '' ltll',\l S~l!\'[1'1· ... 1 11 11 .. u .. ,1.1•1. •f1111pa11101t..,,1 I LRG 1 Br. apt $lZ5 Elderly Rentals ,,-_ \., 11, tlh id,, lr\l•I ~nlall"r , 1 .. • r.•1 rl!'lni~ J· 1 u·n1I i /1'•/'i ;l1:1:n \\ :\ .\ 11)11 .;11~tl11 11 '.·10' ~,~:1· 1 1 _ \l • ' l •II IJ • 11111 .. I 111111!• ~ 1:, 1.111 • J 1•1111• 111""' 1' U ti Ju h n 1 -.::: \\01nan on y, hury, quiet, nr n tees. .N<.' per S(1uarc -..., • l I~ [I -A I l,r•l'11l,t1ll1uul1•1.n•d,,.ll,<> ~ --' ~'-'"-"' ___ 'l"h !111>'·' It"" t•~:-,·,1-, -,lj-(.!J,lll I -. inarkts 19'l2 \Vallace, Apt I I 1001. includes carpel~. I \'u :\l.1t,"JM'll1.1 -" ,\d,11ll!!-, i 1,(1,,f (,ii 111,111 ,11111·1 ii••ir •"I t>k>-L'J;j Job~ Wanted, M & F 704 lllr scr~ ice. Call i\lanlyn Pe<so~i ~l 't'f)\ ';\! • hl.11•k ,\ 1.111 \.rrnlllll 111 l•ilh ,\· f:, dl.ui.j .. l H•t • a u ing til •T'.\1; .111 :11 for 1t "'hile " "' • B. Ci\l 548-6518. Rooms 400 1 dr,.pes, all ut1h111•s. J<Ull · I II(, I H 1: '•1l--.\I'!, i 'o111l1'I', [1>111 .• 1.· 7 1111) .... 1.i H r - ON TEN ACRES \ Dani Point I * • • S!o\all {714) 832-5440. I "ih.·1~·1d r u11 F1•,,1.•l•' \'1, '''"1 r: •• i.u~··b 't.ltl! 1 •• t-1 1:1J J flt· 1·;-..,11;1111.' 11 .. 11 ... 1 n ·l1,.til1· r-..,,1plc 1vill Apts furn./unfurn. Lc~e I R. B. Stevens I I flf (.:(J-!1 '.\[l'«,1 )1:':1-2.liJ:! !ll J,,,. l~1l.u .Hk•1 1.u.-ru1I v;;--1 Tl!\"ill S.: n1 :Hltl" ~1:! l••U";!•ll .. r 101;11~11 !Ot you.( Fireplace / [Hiv. pntlO" I PANO,Rfu\tlC Ocean Vie\\: I 2240nyx. NEW OFFICES !Personals 530, l·11 -.:1h ''ll l \Ji .... 1 .. 11 \1,,11 {, .. 11 1 .. 111 .. l.t • \f f <'111 Ll.t ,J. ~·•ll 1_"-'-'""-"-'---- Pools Tennis Con!nt'I 13kfst I L1-g: ,, l~1 Dpb • ., blln kit., 2 Balboa Isla nd j ,\J,~l'Ul~T I ,,, l:!k '" i111111:-il1 t!.-.. -, ~ l. \1' L11 l)ulf~ 1:•11.01•/ 1 :-l'LIJ~.~T ~l.~12-'\ I M & F 710\ 900 Sea Lan Cdi\I til~-2611 Ba Bld,.: ll'ss than l yr. old. I You ar(' 1h.· \\1 nn1·r 1.1 ! ~" 1. 1-1 ,~q d 1t1 ll ~ri 1i!"'• AVA ILA BLE FOR :.i 1}(x1 t)f><-' 11/hr <·ullur. \ ic ':1 i:;:i '11)\'l'.'\t: h.1u!111i.:. rl• .11lu11 .. H1lp W anted, (l\lacArthur ;U' Coas1 q,. ~~~Y~ d:~. ~c.h49t~~~~bor. TWO FREE TICKETS I (!111~. 1•p1i; 11iu .. 11, ,111 i:ond, DATING !I, r!.11 ,1. <:1 ,J.·1· •1.1 .. Jl(I-'fl'\-f\11\1 .l~•J.!, hlk ~I It• u•. 1'<•1"";1~"11 S1urlt•nts \ ,\ \ ,\ \ ,, A\' le llLl tli! \llll su.i.:I·· nffh'l'~ fnin1 1r1 I f.12-'":ll:.r, .1 1! \1 :o. ·1 111-1.'2\i 11hl. 1nnl1• \If' FJ•r!,•111 \ 1111 , ... t .~ •• -j.>~I . II rHRE:1'.: bedroonl, l wo l I i ·r 11" ·,,_; 11 ·1T' 110 I!). I \ 1 \ , · • - --!1111 •1•11 1 1111 .. r.11 1 " 111· 1• SOUTHLAND !) ~·· 111'1 'S('l \ ' \I '1')\ 1111 ill 1:0,\l!\1: P1:.:1011 \It K••ll.t I 1•• "1.'1·!· (' 1 i/!!J f:t11 ,url'l[.(_)(',\f 11IOl\lll~ .~ !11111'11~ hy ·'' 11~~· \\,,l•tll "p\ Sullr NEED I BDR. APT. tx·droon1, 2'~ BA, frplc, Home&GardenShow 1 '.\'.·,,~~\LJJ1·.~C1 L\!11!~ 1.1.,r;,.1H.;· .... 111.-1y·J.r,ii. 11.lllll'" ii.11 k'J.! l••T l'h·.o'i' ~.'.:11.11 _______ ~1udo•n1 l~11 L:"•111•k 1:1•:1• \l ,,11."1 1(1,"h •Th<'I f"ncloS('tl gn1·ag<, vie \I'. ' • '' ,,,.. I I I I "I I" I' 'I 'i' I I I J I 2'1 .-,,,, -~··' · -v 'i'i' 111 '• \!11 11• 'l''il\1 1 ,\ 11 ~ 11un1lf'o· '·~·-•u "I • .. -~' _ ,,,,,,,,,tllo11101•,!l!ll'l!1"1'.o;• ·,:_::c.:_ _____ ~--,,1 1iu• . 1'1111(] l.I• 1 J.H -1 \111 ~1· )'. 11 ;,;.· 1;·, i1, v C'I FA;'\Ul'"i, 1rn1u1• ''"' '" l'-1'"" 111211' 1,111 1,.-. ~~lti.SI uv Jll l'11u ,\•1.; I :\ 1.1 ij I ··--1.110 I'·· 11 J. -1-,1-',•tt · I QCJ:o:,\Ni ici\i;,•i1 ktobch,2 i E 1(,1111pu .. !11ui.•ln1,•1·~1•t 1u111 '''" ,. -1 1,-11 1,1111 1 I II \I 1 rl'!;flOll adulr ma\r nCl'ds At(AH IM --------I . "11.' -' , ., 1 , 1>1 .. 111; (1 •1 +1•' I ~ 11 .,•..,, I\\ •l J\t'\1,1) .. l.:L•'I ·"~'•oill,• 1 • ,.,:111M"•1 I I Ix' f 131:, !tan 01 u n f u r nl CONVENTION 1 BAY FRONT OFFICES I\ l'.11 J 11 11:-i I ;01 i.!I 111 l l!ll f!J•\ .,,,111•0\ r, 111,," ~,,111, ln1truchon Im' l11i.: :-i ii _J(;i,, 1.1.· '.!1111 '2 111il11 01 •I '.'. ~I 'l•,n11111 ! IN CdM a n1c1 rg I un 11111 .tpt SZ20-$210 1110 Hkr ~9!i-j721 f.....--ln Coron.l ck•I .\l<1l' l'i ('f{'l' CENTER I J'1:1•sllg_e off1c1·~. {•\Cl' k1nk1ni;: ___!__'._ '~ lio\ 11 ~(•1 1 _ (•ill it' 111 "h"pli• 1 d \ ,, 1+111 ( .~' 1 tnu!ui.: -11,.1 1 ·In 1111 •• • 11•" 1, • I• I• ul\' 111)1 ! i;?il l ilJ!C u111t /f1rl.'pl:icc. $170 I . h.il l11.>.1 B.oy 111 \,•11 p111 t l P alm &CardReader .~ X1·•1p<111\\1c;·,-:,11 111111 11.ol' ,\'Id i\..u111ro , , 11, "l..111"'"1 u11 ! J,. . . . , Huntington Beach 800\\ 1,,,11>lla_.>_\11uhcun. I t.>c .. 1 1, V.Jri<Jii·· ~,1 ... ,,.,1,~ I.·• -,.,1.,,,-,,, 1 ,. 11.1> • .,...1110. p1clcrlcaSl'Xln1 j Pk·as.t_•ciiU!~\?.Jti1 1!C'~l 'II SJ.~ ~·"' "JHl'1lu.1t,_1,_1,1111. h1lp 1 n~OL:;\ll luo11 11 '•Hh•l11111d Schools & ·••'i--li~u t 1:11 ,,i,,11 ,1,&l...(>t • ~:~;. ~!~;115~ ~~:. J l'h VILLA YORBA ~ ,-11um y~u~ -11rkci,. 1~u1'.1h ~~,1;:~: ~~1 .,~-U /1~11 •::;:~11 t 1~1~ ~'~~'." :-.;1:1:1;1,: •·:::'.,;1111~~~ :;· ~~·l ~;:11 11;:, 1"" ~'.,1:~~.:"1 :~t '. '', 1 .. ~ instructions 575 '~,\r.:~.1 1 \~ '.,:,;:,: .. \ d1ui P~::.:1• i, I. 'T' 41.' -~-~ Refr19.-UTIL. INCLD J!O-ltM.1 .,1 h . .is ... ::1ou :--;111 po11 t::J\d, ~ l .IJTAI: 11•"111-. ,,.111 ·.i11u1~ >r•·a"iui.: '.'.\·11111, _ _ ..:... ______________ 1 l .. i!&.lDR Unfut11 , 1 -ounl)' Ill! l'ef' nun1l~1· 1,, J<1111lur1al sc1\1~c~ \!unlhl,.,. IJt'"'''''''"·'·''' ''''"''·'·''· f·i.!-'1';.l 1 , ';,•• J • • • • * * iutJOO ViUu"foi oa 111 • • \B.ti"i.ill:ltl I 1;1;:!_ \\,•·l1111n•l•1 \1•·.:r<1l '\l l r..n11:ir ,,.,11-11·111' I""'' 1•1111 1.,.·k. 11:u•• .. 1 ~tl:'llll'.t. \'an l•u _l: ~ Dl'IUX<' • 13p ~ B\ f111"c' ,. ~ " I 1 &S k I " Bl /k ,,, -.) (•,1111u1slt1'~'."l;l•l\:.I. J ''1 .. ~1no••I• l 1t ,, 1•11 lhl•111 ~ SI .111 i. .. u1· 1,,1.-, '" •l ,., • ,,,, \ ,.,1 , ., , ', ~ 1,,:;.~ ur.11·1 ,;".cJ · t.11 ~v { 11 ii p111· P•I * WATERFRON-T * ' ' 011nc1 ~ u111r. 1n !l•"' du-111 !:. 11 r• , ,1.,,.,11,1PI )~un_ , ,,11,1-.rl ::.,ui~ Ss:i ~I'.!.\ I ;c·1 '\•'I• -11 .. 1:.:111 .. R•u1••l 1. 11h111• 11 h1 1;u;~:.1,z; 1111ulln;.: -,~,1j:! plcx, bc>an1. l'lllg:, \I•·\, :\f'a1 714/842-9622 .-.:u1glt', ~\ lU Ul>I. U,ag 111 • 1·11111<' JOC<1t1u11. \ t' I\ p I! 1' I * "'i 'll'] 1 l \I.I' I' • I 1·,~~lo,.--·~ 'f 1['1: 1 luld, .tn l"·l1 l1 l•~I • ,,d .I I • , • 1 I [,u • beach. pano,;i, l11<•1>lt1cc, no 00 -OK 20'16 \lcyc1· Pl. C\1 1 H,.ach L.ugL' ~u111 -l.,;.vo(l !:::p11•1u .. 1 11•,11lini.;,. JO ,1111 llJ ~:'\I) \1111 l\111en 11/hlk l'hu11PIH ' n)"l111J1I IH11ai.·li Hou~ecle•n1ng "·ll1" 11 " "\•1'1 Ii<_,, __ pets, $42;;. lll•J r\Vi11lable S-1 * D RUNS * 612--0732 JhU kuig. S'lj(} n1onlo l'I•' \• 11 ,, ,. on :ill n1alh l' 111.u kin.c .. \'1< B .1 I L· .1 I' I I' I •I HI\ hunu ,\1 ... 11]<1 si I ,\{ ( ·~ Jl ;.; I !'\I ' l'l"I k ra~r Gi :i-b!lO'l Spac 2 & 3 BR, $149 & $199 1 ROOi\IS s:ro \\ k up II kll $,;(/ Bill Grundy. Realtor '' ~ '. LI Can11nu l:f"'1 1, Sao Schon! Chio~ ~! (' \I b 1·t-IG41'.! Ill 0 L: s J:: c L L A :\ li\G • I L!l,1\111111; ~ill I ~ i1 I I b II a I\ * + • • * * Kids ok. Pool. Keel'IOn Ln. 1 3•11 Bayside, N'1it &1ch t • 111c n 1c . l\J<!-~1.i6. ·,11,_:7~, I-s.0 111nl.•)~ uoh H•·h;.hl•. 111.1nur h111ni.: .11 11.:. •l('rk\ ~ s' ', •,",w.,. ,01.,~ach Blvtl, off ~~~ upl 1~g~~ ~~1~:~ t1:i~ I * 675-6161 * I•.' ·~~~I ~Ol :\[) IJ,1!111a11.111. ~111,1 11 61'", .• ','_'~'~'~(·~ s l ~,u Ju 101 htu•I 11lhc1· In C(tf<t A 2 B aet -.:..nu 1,1 , 1 1 .. .,~• ~h·s" ,\,1·1 .. 11·t <1i't'k l R Luxury. Sphl Lc\!r>I · Ci\ .en-~·,, 61-.-? .. %7. 1 : I :LE\! f't'l'i;:n111111 ('on rrrn,1 r, rl1111c~1urw <'<lll.11 ., [5l I Gar<h'n 1\p1 P1 "' ll'ri.u rrl WALK TO BEACH llLM 1 --1 ~--,-11-;i;--;;; OCEAN VIEW 1 1111.·nt, •) 111 fl nth" 1i1 \ ,,. r "'1111.1 ll•"li "· 1,,~,1 Services and R•~r' --Carpet Cleanin g --11111~1 111'1" '/. '"' f'kpr & llJ selling, 01·crlook1n~ c.i11)011 l L ~ "J. Bit C1p1 clri>s l>!t-1ns, 11._.1" g 11;:;11 no d1:111kui'i;. 110 , , , . , f 1 1•11'1i11.~111·) 1•iu11,1•l111i.: ,\l~u-"'Pl I' lh l' .!! t•,:-1,-,. I Floor Care & Windows l.t·1~;~1•1 ~1117;,:~.~~1;:;2--0.'"tl2 & \1.1y, 2 hlk~ lo b1•u1·l1 ;;ai . ::!08 lG!h 5.lli-ii086. ~,nok', Convl'ri•ul lot 1 "'111·l' iou.~-, 1,·"\~·1 ° !.ii:t• 111 t10n .~ HdOpt1ons l'l'f 11'\IP ,,, , hild~· 11,,,.,.1,111 1,.,1 1u 11. 11 .\l.i1nr. '' r1 1:1 ! ~1~ 1 ,1,, ,1 '''''''-' I ,,,1,,,,, ... Bea il l It -" ' 'I t1H•11oan o l<•• :~l"l'Uul l •\l'l '\J'l Gl;t.....11~ · •• • 111Cl',l'OPll'<1n1iun1 :lBH.Closed "arChJldl'en & GIG--OUHl ,.,1 . 11,,.,,-··, ·I'''' '111-•1,\1 1 ,•,l1• · 1 J111·t·.\l>\llt.1.·,,1,,,,,1,,,1 Stove \'('frig rlsh111 ~ • · ------. 1•••l. •1Jll. ypu11..:. G-1 • .. I --I 'I '9 1 :c.1l"\I\~/ l11111lo1'!111rr 1 d. 'T.l ~':29 G7' '9.70 s1nall J*l ;;>k. Sl'hl l tOO~I::-~W 1vk up 1\/k1t ~ ... u 1 \11v,, et\ i\lr 1'ltf.ul.1 11rl t.\l)Ui\ 11 ~11111'111 ,t 1111'' ~~·"'111 ''11 1, '' '1 1'' 1"J 1'11 '1' ' '' I o•I\ 11111 1 I• .irl •••111 ll••lll•' 1,.111u• 111, ttl• f,,. 1111,r,. ,11• o;u~·i-2';).~J~.r-l :i. ,',--,) S'ff-~!13 l\kUP•lfll .'i.(11ilth1•11.~ pt l j 1:1 1-~Jl lQ d\lli,ihl. fui ll'lll;•-111111·' ~111 111•1 1•11.21 J;\J:\ .. 1111'1· •l ':!1 1 •·Id 1.,, tho ol1\',li~ .... 0·1~l 1<'111.1 l\ll'I Ill ('!)II ' L B-s1•r t1011. 2"i!i f'c111llirt Blvd. Pr~r .. -.T!Gi!".! RfX).\I f•_''11~, -'.u~u~! 11"ll "'''1'1 11 !·\ll "•••1 1 1 "" n 111 1 1t•"I~ phl\111111<:> · 11•11 1101 Sf•( J,t,,\,,J:\L, ,J 1p101h -., •ll'H• 11 •t1 1nh 1t1•1 t"111tro1 ,\ ! * 2 BDRi\1'S G11ragc. aguna each CM c,1S-9iT~1. 6·15-.ffltii 11 • -.i.i'I f11 I ~<:Jl 1 •il1w \'t• l~.djill~ 111< 11. I I CUlSE to B~.:A C ll . LAGUNA .. ,,., .. i<I''''" "'' E ll•l' u/1\t(. adJ ,\1rro11 c1 L,\/ifl _.; .llll,v Sti•'l L~I l ,,. \l•ik•·! ui C\! i-,.,,, ,, ,,,-,·, ,,,.,''~1 11 r .. pl11 1 ~iJ' d.•.I .. 111111.111~ l•J11~·11 l•U•l.•l.111 i.11 i1111,.11tll:, Jin!! 1~50/mo. .. " .. .,. rURf\lSHl.:D roo1n '' ith or I lut1·l ~·ull •'las~ \'IC\\. 1.111 .,,,y ,\ I 11•lu1 "I. -,1• .. , _ ---,,,1,11 • ,\ 1~·111 111, ·"'·n< " , .... ,of n> I I ... 1111 o11h1"r~l11n s-. C.111 t.0'-11!! · _ 1'11 '\\"ll"ll 67T 6900 ... ,.. ,11n a 1n c< without kitchen 1>1·1vg" 11·1n<lcd ""111~ all u11l, u11 ·s .. li-l 2 71 1 ·"l·1 M . ••·1•11•· 1 .. ~ ,, u ,. , gardens. Pool & spa. Ocean \Vo1k1ni: t.11tv ?<.1rss1011 V!l'JO ci'1J11 cil"l p.ukinl:" 2 1 ~ 2 :1'"1 111,'.~1 · 01 1r !l ,, 11' Ii ··1 · 1 .11'. 1·111·n 1J;,\J:\' .. I1 I I\\, 111~;;;-;-i10 or111;, a intenance. .:91)1 ('.1111p•1• 111 N• "Pt.Jrt SPACIOUS Z Bf{, 2 BA. views Close to beach & area,!)86..2918 1JuP0111, H.111 i;, [J"\'ln~· .i l&-llil ----__ '11/1'1'd rnll:i1 & R~l\!1 1 ~ ,\· u1 111~111~ • .1tl a::!f'SJJA'.\li' \1.in drop,.d<t•llin~ B••uih 1 11 !l·1"'° ups111n·s npl. 01>l'n Ix-ams, shopping. Lgc.>. 2 BR., 2 ba. BEAUT H.ooni 11 r 1 ,. . s:;J.-322::. I l'fU .1 ;'.'\,\?\ f" Th 1 n k • n -.:I ;; J/i: \'t~ .~"111.__1 1\n • .•. 111•lr'<1,.1r !11>.! :;11+1 ilo ll•l ~ fl<t int. rlf"rl, J•lunih /\ CCl'rt.A rE t~ 1)1~1/hkk~ ~~~,.•,,'"vN0 1:~,·',"'.G·l'°cl,'-',3'. to a pt. w/amen1 lles. S350 ?t!o., b a I .. 0 0 1• ..1,,, •• ,,,11,_.,1 o•-FJC'' SUITF" _ ., , .. , .... ,.. aho1·1ton" f\0011 :11! 1h1• f" 1-1·,q, S! !il?-l!l'~" 1 1 -1 11 .... ,,,.. 1,1~ ..... r .1-. ,.11 111111 ,111.,11,.1 ii' 1• 1~,1·1i\/chl'1 ut"u ,,,._ .,.... partially [urn.., incl. ut11. ._ ,," n '"':" ~ "'. • .. ' • .,, f , 'II JIFF LJNF21 ----,•,\~111111:.• 111 nl\ "11111• .. 1~, .• r ,,,._ "'''""" l"'iature adults. 494-4653 or 1 ocean view. ~ blk bch. Z)()() offtl'l'S, lrg f;{'t rf'1.11·1al 11;• ' 11 '1 . l ~-~ •• ' ~-F~.\l ,\LE: (r.t-ll!r.l L: 1 1:l ' V ,, p,t111;,1111•1 ~·h0oJI rn:u h 1:,11 'l'r11 f'lz' 2 BR, PF.NTHOUSE. New your broker SeaVll'"" Cdi\t crpuonofficr: l)(auliful shag I __!,!_l_s'.....}~1:5.122 ,1l1tl •• 11111.• <1 \J,.,,1 1!1'1 \Lu, e -.1-.. ~,1, e Masonry \\' '''" {'ln•:..111111 \d !1'81, ce1pcls, tlrnpcs.1 Ba Pool. ROO:\J, \\-bath & pri\· l'lllT ccpr'g. Nciiport f in:in<i:_i!I GE!'.,.\\l:1r:111 OFF ,i;,_ hcrp C . .\l....:_C.ill_21f,...J"ll~ ___ B ----S J.)11 11} l'ilut, 1'0 !lox 1·ro $26j/nl0. Ph· 673-?>&iO 1'"AiVfASTIC 2 BR apt in near Lagu11a Beach l h. Si:i I Ct'nlcr lol'.1111111 \\ '' '"'1 7,,-, 11 0 1( i\hk.-. T11r1n c; P (J I' t '\I 1 1;,i.; ,\ i1h1 al!Pr(•<l us1ne ss ervu:e Brick-Block-Stone l '"'' \I• ,,1 C.1hf !126"1 Costa Mesa ~~'.s~a~;U~1 \'~~~''• ~~fc~ 1110 4!l'i-1:zs.l Mi fl., S-i.J() i\10 611 &i.1':'....... !1~~n~1:·~J11 1101 k.•. c.i 11 111.tlt· 1 tit \'11 (' \J / I \\'11.L d'l nll i•h11"'"' of I'll~ .;1» "lm ADMINISTRATIV'E l\tESA \' I I 2 lcadf'd "indo\\ s, lge beamed ROO~I . empl'd day i1ortH:J". FULL SERVICE . ,.. .. -~--#--, --'•\f).;';{)S ,\ l•kk11.: 1h111 111.il h.1l,111r •· Moving ASSISTANT '<'r<l' ccan ceiling. carnn"', "''"' l'1clJ• nnly, rel SW \\k. Westcliff Building Al.CO!lOLIC~ -'11'11')111"11' .. '.'\U S1.1 nll'~,. I\"" 1 -I· 111 tn\ h"•H•' ·.-,1--:1c;o Betlroo1n. :.i Baths. large ·.--•• _ _ • • • . . • l'hon• :112-7::17 "r 11ntt• · •-c", '1' -------J'OO!ns. fircpltH'('. Near trees, steps to pr11 .1!e IX:ach _611!:1~615-816:1 ___ _ C1J1nt;>1 \\C'stcl1fl , fJri' t" & p () r'.<>'li l;?'r: ('n .. 1,i l\lt"•' " r<l.i~I Plant (all ,, Carpel Serv ice • * • s horip i ni:;. $190/mo. \Vlth ocean pool, Adults, no BALBOA Pennisuln. Pn 1.111 1 h"\1t1e Hl\·d .. :1\1'11 port -· -,1-.--.2:l! 1 Chris Woodward 64;,....GGtO !Jl'bs, }l.'iO 1110 on yr s lt•,1sc & 1l_)(J111 + fan1 1111. T\'. ~00 1 l'.J a< h \11· l lv1\ .u·ll SW I NG I NG CCU PL ES t 1 IL;-._ p pi,d" <; " 1 nia.1 1 J! lll '\ " < .u 1~·1 .\ t 11h.,ls!•·1 ~ 11 S V ia Koron FOUR S1'.AS0i\S Al'TS start1ngSepl.lst 49"1--2791 nio 67,:.-4otl9eveF. l-ti_l.l-6101 1 r·a1l LL'llh' l'\ r1 nl. Shf'l•h•·nl \ 11 nf \' Cri<:l'L 111 ..,h,1111p<~1 fn '(' :-..•111·h1 N ewport Beach 1 HR. part furn. $185/nio -------1~"2-\IF ~rcl r ~·~ 111 , :-;1: h .~ 1·:11 1 \r.~, ci11 b1l /fl'i2 L.i 11 .J 1:-.•11 f{.1 111•d.on1,, $pal 2 stv 2 BH, 1 1 ~ 13A, FOR Rrnl run1 Rn1 111 Costa 1 " ' --llt•-.:i t".•.,1.1, ,\ 1,11 1 ,,1111 '•••I •11 • 1h• 1' 1111i. 1 .• r hltn~. 1-r11ts. rlrris. JJriv Yard. Ocean view Frplc. ro._1esa, n1c.·e & qu.•f"t 1_1f'111e ll!IO ,,q fl 111111101'" u·nt ,\ SWINGING SINGLES 1,1.1_,,1,.11," ·' ,,, .. ,,,,,,,,, TWO FREE TICKETS I I N No eh1 ldrcn, no p e I s. 642 1 n i;1dt'. su11 offiet ~ ur s1111't Lo•I 555 t " 1>at10, poo, l'Oll\I. oc. o J-nr1101kg:1n11n -1;il !'11H !.··1h'l:0::11111.1.0-12"f11 111,~:i•h '"'' 11l11tl' <.1t·r~•t• 1 .. 1!11 pets $165 735 Joann St, _673-41~ G H 415 t\1r c:on1!, cpt ~. i!1ps, h.11 -F -·1 -C--1· --' ' SOUTHLAND c r.1 64&-l f il Mesa Verdt uest ome s111k. ltH. locs p 1 k ;..; a mt y ounso 1ng LIJ " 1 11 ,1111 ,11 ._ g 1 r .,, ,1 1 "' 1 , '' '' 111•111< ~ JI s.01 111.: I , "dS-!r.if!G ·~·h·.·11"~1 '•l' :>1,. ,fil, •1.,111• .J , «11.111·.f !I;•"·•, t! uu (:..ti ~ I rips \l'i\I (Ii 1111 Home & G a rden Show NF.:\VLY DECORATED DL.X 2 & 3 B r., 2 Ba. Encl PRIVATE ROOM "ifOHt. OH Ot r rc1: SWINGING-SINGLES Irr n1 ~-. •• 1w1n 1 .. 1111rl !ll~; lo\ II\,.'. Ill]. 11111111.: 111\ \I .J11h !.ollo I II I \111; ) It 2 Br 111/gar, r11rd yrd "'''' $!6' up R·nt··I Ofc for eldl'rlJ', a n1 l> u la to r y 1-.11 h.111 ~11 .\11~ r1n. 'I -1 , 1 • I \\,, I'd Call "' '-... Nf'll'JlOr! & 8.'ly CcntPf (' II r , 0 ·111 I" J -I .,, (I ,. I 11•pal1'1 -r ' 3Q95:r-.lace Ave.516-I034 '!person Nice, [[UICI sut•-.1 •111n10 ~·11n11 .111 1•.,io1\, 1.11r., ~11' ANAHEIM bt\\·n 1 &:.: 636-4120 ., "~' ,.,, 2oj2 Ne1\1K111 Blld. c:-.1 s--.-1 c 5-Js t;r·.1';\1,1'.'\ -.:1"''· .... ,,1, ·' 1 .. 1. l''ll· \~ \\hll ,~fur11 ~ 1~11 2278---C Plac<!ntin A\C. Sl.Jj Newport Beach ::~s.ngs """"· nu '1 ous J2j' Ava11 Aug. 1 Pkg. u1 1l.1 ocia lubs 8 nio,;, h1,»1t1 r•o!l:n 111 1,,, 111,.1 1 11:1 ""1 ~ nn~··lf CONVENTION 2176-EPlacentia/l\e $145 Call~S-.lill __ 6 l6-l2jZorl>ll'!l'21l __ * INTRADATA * _l '~h!l'.11111"1·'-J ul \,,:I \,t ~,.11,I ·.!1../11111 CENTER N'-'\V d•lux• 2 8 ,. 2 8 , oil THE NEW DESI\ space .1\'a1h1hle $j() 1 61.-. llti ,ifl 1· , Carp t ---'"' 1 \\ K ,1, 11 \11 u1• 11 1 ,. .. .. \TACANCY for t•lderly lady ll'Ul d f ------en er {']('('I, pal10, clecl gr, carpet BAY\\'000 APAHT1\IEXTS in he GUf"lit ho1nf' Good rno,. \Pl'O\ I (' Ul11l1U1't' 1 Q u A L I T v n'I a 1 (' h {' ~.T fl I~ r 0 I ~ t' . I t , . --''----------1 r 'I• "' I .dJ 1.11 ,l ,j,, . 'T .1 1 s.: drapc5, adults, no pt•ts. 1n Nc11port Beach arc food ser\ed 6'l&-:tl91 '1t 1 1 "b't'",",~::'.e18·111~ S"h s"',11c'<' 1 •1/PllOTC<) 11 j 11 • .11 · •r~11J1,i1! 1 r ~.1111~ '.\t ,\\', 11.111,~t• 1 fz ,,,.,. \ 1 .. • 1~+n1 .1 .111 Tit I\• r• • -..: • ., 111 $225/nio. 181 Magnolia c r-.1. rc>ady, The sales offtr·c.> 1~ --• fl\«I a e. "1J :>(!;'le \t "l.:1n:e~1 ln <1 i · r:E\\',\f{!l! C",111 ;:,1r,_)!\?.i l ru11•l1, •t•il'l'"' 111f111·~ .~·I ('t•11n•1 h1ll ,,,,. 111.i111tr1 1• &15--'f\6:~ ~lorn & C'vcs. open daily fl\)m 10 A;\I 1u Summer Rentals 420 :1u~ni::!_~ Beach 612~ :21 1 ~C.111 ?\0\1 l•1l' ~ f{ ... t: ~·in,-l/l~"f 1 \'!"It.I:--hun1"' (•Ii Cu•hun "flt'k '.JI• 1~.li' • 2 - 8 R---------6.?.0 P:\1 .\f.1eArthur lil\d -1 CORONA DE L MAR 11lf' 11rol.11<· on I prnsf1f•r1111• l'I• .1~, (ill • 1.1;, n~"t r~12-l!IG1 • • • Cpts, blln~. pool. & &in Joaquin Hills Roail SUMMER RENTALS , .. ,1 1,. 1 111.i11h !I lnl'~ '11:2 ,~ p · & Jndry, 1 .. 111::::. No IX'I'< Sljl) ,. 1, ;=;;-. St 4 ,, 1•01 k ....,. ll''' .J sq 11 u 1111 -11 · 11 .• :.. 1 1 1 s ,.2 ,' 1 .., '•~• Cement, Co1tc rete a1nt1nq \26 i\lnnli• \'1str1. t\;f~r No 5 n ,....,,..,. 'Jc~ps -'n:ini i \\'. 111 1 1 :1tlll,FI~ 6~:1 611Jt 1 ' "'" · ~·.' '-• 1:t:\\',\l(f1• Paperhanging 646-fi..1:i.': OCl•,,\NFRC>1~T ~PJJER l sig('~~ ti_ fr>lin S!,.i/iiJ. 1617 WE-STC-L IFF-NB J 1 .. 111• 111 ,1, !P,\T IOS, 11.11k~ 1h111·~ Sa11. 2 BR. A1l11ll s:-;-IO~'~li---;\Y Bl', 2 .1 .. pac10U>t,l s1t'l.'n\ iii r111111 $\\"1/11k l'l\I,, "'·' I.iii & .-•• , ~ .. j ~Q l ·,-11 -1i:.; I h1•·n1i. rflllll\l' ,\ 11·111.1(• Nn \\.i~11n· "' 1111XJ1•111 V<ar1·•··-' .~, Lo~t~ndFound · -1 •>1u1"11 1l"~r,r,~r .. r,.1 *WALLPAPER* i\1 1-:ADO\\~ /\PTS. :187 \\' I '"' " ) I AIAl)O AliG .. s1<.1r r ,\• Allljll1• J1.i1·k1n~ l'tJI 1:.011111 1.1),1 "'ii l,Jk •l•li,'., J11l~ I, 1~ ll " Cl! ti'"',......,~ r,1st• !u n'1Aln~1ble aclull ~ \\l'"l'"H ll'·'"''T ·\L• .1 ... 11 _,1 .. 2 _;>,_ 1 11 1 1 1 •C.'o•1111111 \\.,1 k • \\111·111• 1. 111 '\!;11 ~1_. __ . 'ru-vu'" Si:li 67:i---ti91i .~ ,i:. • •• "::" • " :.:.111 ntr,.,. • .,.,, , I un• • 1 1~ 11\u.~1 111" I Bkr r,,.,..,~.;(XJ Ol>'ICF' r I l ~~;\\,\J:!I'' ,\fr·, ll12-91~" «•1•llll•'••lil I ···••l•·t1•111: "1l' illl 11 NE\\' 2 HP.. dtp~. 1 r"I ", '"'~ -r ,,.,,, t ( t• I '' I'" Cll\l{.i'1IING 2 BR 2 ba 2 ------• •lftP; " . 1' •' "111' .. ''" '"'. 1'\1\11\1 .. -pool, HHQ, t:"<ir. Aclults, 1\0 c .. :. ;;-ar 1• sonic ~Pts 11 /fpl BALBOA PENINSULA I 1,.-.,_,t "'1·, 111t• 111 :O.l'11f1<•11 Found (free ads) 550 1:1.1<: .\ :.:1.1,' 111'1lr 11c•1 -------1 •" 1'1'111 · ... 1 '1" ' 111•" ,\• • 11,1llt•ncu1i: ~1111',rt It •' lo1111 11t'.1h•d 1\lth 11 •111 111 .:1·"1111.: r: .~ 11 or :,:.11111 .. :1•111, I" IKHkllf' nl! ;ir! 1111111-11.•!11 0· ,u·t11 1lu·s t1r 1ht· •.• ,,.11 .• 111 l'•'l~~r11110.: ,., 1 Tli• 1>1 • ,1•!• nl , r1i ... 1~·1 ... 111 -.. lr1 !1•d 11111 1)1 1 • •l ••n,1t.1.. '"' I '1 t':>Ol1tl• I \• 11111111• I I .• 1 ""\ !'1 q~1·.t1ll l'i1Jl\I'•~ iiU•f~•'l lllJ.! l \I~! • '"'!!'11~ 11\l'•ll lo• t '•ll lfllll l I 1 •I 1''•''"\I ,,.1, 11 ,\, j.!('ll ' I I'' "11rt!111' ) \j•!•!•I ,Ill •11 <lliJ 11,ol I'~ -. )T~ I ·•id ''P•• '"'' 111 1111 •II• 1 •1• 11 •11+> •I ~11Y1ni,:I Ill• 111, l•.o• k~lt11lt\d ,\ \,"I '11;,oJ. :I•• i.tll'Sll ·j 1'1 ,. -•!j 1 101 •f l"f ~UJll<' 1111 ,,tl11\ 1••1111•!llllll' U\ It I'll ,, t1• o~ 11J11t1•11t I DUPLICON CORPORATION A Subsidiary of AB DICK CO. 4321 Birch St. Newport, B e A ch, CA 92660 pet~. J76 \\',Hay. C.M --•• bca•1 _,,., A .. ,,, on Sharp 1 8'>tlrn1 -1 hlk t-" I "·'-"'·-011 l31'0arh1ay c \I . '!rlj)('(I '.ot ho!h f'ool'S '("" I Child Care "'•l'k111,1n•h1p -.:u.11 r 11..· " "' ' S ' ' I -' 9·0 ,,-~ I od1 1111l hl!• ,,r 111\ '''P 2 BR. $1j() Ch!ld ren OK, no Jcusc $28:) To $30) llCl'an .~-ha) . lceps ·1-j "1 i-.~ • _ __ ~Ol.'\D unu~1111I l•11d ID 11" ",....,1 ·1' f \11 l.1;11.it t 11 i• ., pets NO C<ll fl!-'!~ QI' drape;; 6lJ-7932 67;)-5930 $1Zi pet• l\k t\o l>C\S 112.1 I \I rTI r :-:;,ulhoa! \ !f'll'. 20x 10·) loni:: i\'r i\l.ir llll'I ~ f'.11 k llJST lol.i tk .~ \\hit" ( 111 ·'''11111·~ "l''1il\o I t !!lip .... ' -..~;.ilt:lfj ---- 11 fl1\ ''J' l 646-2.l44, 5-1S-8333 \\' RAlh<li1 13Kd 611-l"l:i°}I on Coo.st Hwy, Npt Ekh I j(l111l!f),:,.10-21•n --F11rndll \'1r ''"'" tl<'l ·, 1" 111 1'1111.11 11'1'11111" !'f~r ir 1•~1111 !, f)u!l o•i 1· .. 11, \<!U1'!l•lt1l1\• , ... , s100 ' BAYi'"RONT 11./pnv. beach d s fi.IZ-6277C'ves C I \I (' 11 '"l o.:knl111,. l1,u1•1rt11 .. 11n1\ ,., 1• 1111 t\I 1 1,,1 I LRG 2 BR. 1'~ BA Sh,u! ,• pl"'i o.·,.v; BR.'-BA, ',Y or ___ :___ !_1i·1_n10. a!l ___ ~:\.\--,~ltiO ,BIK fl•n1ul" d11~. 1111\!'11 •" 0~1·1 •·~n._:>-11r-:... 1 .,.,,111,1111, 1:.,,, +Jl iH1·1; ''1' i' 1''11•1 In~ "'"t $~j/lh1 ~ ·" " ..... \ ORT I I l n.r, ,h.!~11, 1,: ii'. I ~'{-carpel, pa110. g:arage Nr. Sfij(}/nio Yrl~' :.LSO 2 BR, N E V P ~ a n_<_ I Business Rental 445 U1'Ced J.fl"T S111r.ll l1lk. p ... n11Ao 1 C ntr •1 •11 -n1 in 1111• • !1 ~ • 0CC Adlls Slli!),j\6--0281 '2 BA, S~OCilni•• Y r ly \\'ate1·fro11t apt~. 1-Bll S11• 1 l ':,ll :~1i-.-.11,~ k11t1·n .Julv 1~111 l'll' Ill o acto r Ii ,\ I l\11111111.:'-'1'\11 1• !Ji, HI.kl• ( .. n-.1r 1(1$6.;ll ------2 Bu 11111 !119--0G.'ll, G4~r11J) \\'h:/2-BR !l1QO 1\k-i'llunth\~ NEW SHOPS F()L'.\IJ 2 up!~il ( 11._11 ~111~ J11111111' "t ( \! -,;, f,1(1() -!~,;;:-------J•, 1-.0111111111 I' 11111• r~ 1• /tt1•' (1.<l ~ 11•!ll,1 i.7(IO : DELU:\J: '2 Br or 10 \\Ii special rail' Durk 1 1 •111.111" 1 ' !• 1 1 i· l'• 1~"n 11 1 .. 11• h 1 )h i\i(f, ,11., , .... 111 • •I•~ \.'.Q.1 1 crpt ~. fq1l1 -uril,('ll l1v n n , l B!\, crpl..,, drps, sauna aiiul .>ltl-li"i'll ll'i• , huiu ,111.•tJ~ ,1111 \'11· :.1;11 \1•rhur 1111 11 It\ IJ/'\T ,1,. 1111• tl<•'-!, .J11lv 1!1h "'1111~! ~d·! :n \r<o r'lip Lu I !.• , 1, "ni• 1..IJ"!I '•':ll'. ~llJ:1/"1" h7.l--'6:l• 1vol, "'1r.U ,~1-,. s1-.' ~<'11rlCuL B1•,11·h 11••-li:(l .11 P_.t•J,,1 ('1111 ... J:t-.ioh 1:-1 '.!•;''JI'/. 'h \\ \ 1.. *PAINTING* ,. '~' :i.1~\I POBr 1!('t:,\:o.;rn11:-;'1 •1,11 1 • .i,\1· 11 \111 •• ~1· 1 .. ·111. I -.i+..ji11 ·i; 1 1·1111,, (11~ si;.IO t;N~'UR'l" J ·" ~ sf GnrdCn I \\ a illlhle Aug: 1st 64.">-4GIJ> ~J'.ll 1nus J\l•M h t n. L1n1quo· ,'.',',' •• ',,,,,~, 1uth ( '.111s1 I h\ I ',' .',.,1.1 1,':,·,:·,,,1"'·l,"1',.,'.',"11, ",',", 1 :f'\\ 1nl V ii-;:j11 ---I·, .1.: ·~; •• 1 .. 1 ~ I•\.\''~ ·~I 7,~'"'"1:· ! f1 d I I !1 -~ ~j(jl A[llS r.·;ol(', !)/\\, j>l'I\' .,,.~-----,, '" S"l' k 'll ~ 1~ ·d.' I I,',, '" 1701J I "°· r. n -, J II • I i..::,.J!{fl J>Htl1i S11i">-t\1ict :;;1-....,.11 YF \l!L\' l liR.~l>a .. Ncw. Ha-S.f•• \II.: .Jli1y!l-!'I.\ 494-8888 1'1'1'1 l 11tt!111.: 1:·1~"" 1•1.1 \,,,, SfJIJl 2--nn s1.·,-, .... j-~11. ht'-;:n1 S.":':J;\iln ~'1·,11 l~.irh .'..'11":_1 1-~·i111 :1 fii:....U:tl i Tl\) 1 1:1.ACK 'hAt:"L:• do.: S1n:i!I T d p . <,•11d1r '""~ I'• 1 \. 1 1:1..~,, Si'~ • . _ 1 , ..__ 1 •1or•. n111 111 .1 r1~n1• ' d -1 ,..J. 1''h"''•··h·1t" r 1l1I•, 1~.~•!ol'!I\ l•JU•r GL-:1!i:iJ I/Ji. \'11 I.I rnrn. \!1••11)11 ra er s ara 1se 1'''11 '11 i,--,·,!,. h 1;0111011 1 11 t"'' --1 liUIL[lll\'<; rroin vc1·011 -.o.:•, IA~t 11ht< •!! fl, \Int Ir,. drps. 61c;..'12.\3 or 6U"i.,.8SS YEAJ{LY. '.l Bl! f.::;;-i 1\i·Ail i l'bi.. 11/1 ,\1"'• 9/1 -1·n1 1011 111"1ntn1in ~tn .i "lc• \'1< .I'' t nl1 ,.:/i_'J.,'l'l l~I \ \\ I' ,\ .:•I luu11::11.1,1 J 1!"' \i~·wi 1 .:-.Tl:,\-iU(~:Jnd-1:1~20.· ,Oct-anll'Otl 'JUB m~,-1 9/11'!Ur,2 lin 51;:, 1\k nu•rlt ldr:cl lt•I ,1n1 "I"' ~:\Tl, Adul1 hlk ln1I 11! 1tlj •••t•r:.,1u1lh0•1•1"••ll Th• I •r•• \l 11 \1~·1 11 ffpl, i\u , 11,;,, thP• I •'O(ICl1Y llot.~~_!_~ 60~!<.l:~l of .;t)(}p ~li)J. <!i'i I" 1 111,, {',\I ( Ii" nes ., 11.111.:.,11•11 '1 li··,;.11, .;, I• I 1 ''~-~~l ~;.l. ~C.'·1'f(J7 3 BR. 2 BA. blln:), ('rpl~, ~1':\\'POltT 8t'ach l HrlOn' 11 1 [),.I ~I.tr ,\1'1• , St' ---''"--'-'-"---P a tios ~ .. ,:, r 1 ·,;,:: 11 ' " 'Ii~ <',n. 3 BR. 2 bo . Dclu\ npt NC'v.'ly tlrps. ~l"·n ()(!('an k ~11-!~eh, "/hall'Ony. ~Ip 2, 1,, ~TOll..\Gl'.:/Shop, ; ti , ,, ~ • • 1 rfll'?\D i -11\. pupp~. ~hrp • --.,,~~ '" ~ilY> dee., no nr1s. sm mo. Npt ..!_K'l , pjO nlO t21JI 439-5672. hick from bc11-ch $1 2J 11·k o H rlol)r, :?'2Q \' ,, \pl n1•'· tilnck :\f"1u \\'.im1•r s. 1 t1' mes l'\TlrJ 1~"' r• 'P·u•"I I 11. ': 11 ''" :-. ' I " •o " \l I '\' ,, • ..,, tu•• lllh!ll" 111 11 phu1n<'l ~11•'._.11~111 "'1 ~t,i'1 lle1ghl;;. 54:J'"839j l BR. C~ to Beach. Sntall 6<~925 1~1 Ole & ~Jar1ne1 ~ :'>Ill<' :1i;:m 111 r _ 1-1. l _ • -.;1 1 'l:t Udo ' ~-13 51 -\l:i\Olll).Con1•.rh· Qu:i1111 1 11 ' •1111 '' ~ .. 1 LARGi'~ -2-sr:enrl garage pr•~ sle 61.J-IQ or KIDS. pelll ,\\('l('Q{llf'. '.! Hn.1 _•J~~~\~I. bl6 .!Ill TIGER IOltl'I\, 9 llPt'k-. ..nl> "' ].,.· 'u l'lif>tiO H··~' l 11h<111~. I '"'II" I ;... aVllil l chlld 6'i3-3..'>22 Corons.lk·l~l nr·l '~l>lli51U 'TIILFACTORY "h,t~!.l1'1P~ 111:1]1', Ill .:..1n11f)',.Z!I .~ dollars •:12!~70 l\1•n l:t .... 1"..1-.11 1•hi:I" ,-.1~ C:tl\ &12-9338. DELUXE 3 SR. "' ~ 5 t I bf'ach. $1~ \\M.•k. !l\1'111, frrit11 S!kJ till'>, In' 1'.1n-;\!('u<ln11 h1rk. II n ftioiJl.1."\6 1~1 ~ \1-1 ••• ,. StUi I 29R-:-11 1 Ba Stud10 Eni·I Nel\'pof1 1'1 bib 10 b{'a('h. J~Plnehl u llllr _ l\'1.\-l~fr! rlC'f'Y \'11111!;(' • .ir, :il)lh S1. FOl.7\0 [}llh('l'lllnn 1~ui~f'hrr I ~:::._~~-~·p.t~~ l ' 1' < 111; 1• t gllr S\:07 .·i01n1o Cpl, 1 In· Yc1u'I)'~ 642--31~: &12-7914. 1 5 nn:-3 Rt\ hnttM' \\/\'l• w c~ \ li ,;j;. ~1ii ti· Ml \.'1.111 Cull '1'i'! liTh '---------------------" • 1, \ ! 1 !! l'l ,..,-r1 ':l'\!; • 1 .. 'I: I !~I h• !n11t olo. rl"J pi'I~. S-12-lPf.l YEAH.LY-:!-,~ de n, 2 ~. llll.y, Hnlhoo PL•n1n. SX-)() 11 k NEWPORT-CENTER t•\i-If \\.t. 'l:li,(\lfl I IJ 111,.~ (l] 11 (,1•111, \1111<•u.-. I n1 \I! "I"• ~ ~1·• "~111111•'1 • NEWPORT NE\\'!.\' 1!eror1ttt'd 2 Ur-. npl. \\'lllk lv tw~. -~ Call I: up. 536-lOAA _ }.r11 Fll<"l\I lflOllHI ·~l'I ·" 111. F~ll 111111' ro1·k~h11 1 r .. r-l111h.r ('htlll! l<\U•li•., \\.111! u\llljll• 1!1n1n.:: t1l·l· dt.1 t 11\1 ,jj) ... ,•!· P er1onn1I Agency $16:tlmo 8~~91 Aft :.i,_!:5-fK)!l.'\ -LAGlJNA, 2 BD I fl II I' r \jU(l Iii :6:IO ~\:11'1'1' r 1 rirr •in r,,11'\ll'\\ r:d ( .• n I l,'""~1 1t'iif•1I n1,,h1tl• horn1• "' l•r1t ... hov! 11"1'1" fo11 1)11• 11 1~ 11t 1'1'\,fl! I· l1lh•l"1-1 ·~ 1•' 833 Dover Or., N .B. • r.t2-11s.q + \ 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. I duplrx. I Bl. tn llt'11f'h un1ll • ft41).-071'.<i • k«1·11, ;11<~ri11e. lnm1P ro rnnrn 1u! 111 lndr111 n1c~ 1 ,\uu ...,.ii 1hr1 11i.:h ,, • ..,ull ~•:r• 642-3870 Da11~llilO! \\13111 ,\(15 llovt 2 HH .. I B.\. Bl1n ariphunct~, -='~ 4, $150 \\'k 1!H·1'669 I'\ l.'U"l \\il!ll 11(1 I~ I .:·~111 'j '1•11 lhr •1ltl ~l!lft r.11\ 11;-r)(•w JJ.11·1~ Ht•J lt•1r '\~':-,l (i/1 111 111-..! 1 'H1.,, 1)111 1~ 1'11•11 I l 1 ·~h!I' I l).'1 n:ain-. p ll•I~ Prtol ~~I I \\'ant ad l'Ci\lll• l1l:l lfiill 1·r11lnlenl 1<111ff ·' !• t.-11 f.i'i 1. • • • U"ll't' PfLOf I~ I l[Il)[ f ••• ,.Ill fr<•••s•••• • < -Wonlod, MIF 710 Help Wanted.MI F 710 APT KANAC.:R, handy, BAiYs1IT1NG fey home. .................. 00 bat-c.u .n • .... -rier, DO op. DCC. 25 unilJI Lqtina NlcUtl, Mabtlm. Adults. 6'6-2280 I~~' ~~·~·"·~l~~~[~L·-~· .. ··~·~'~~l~·~:-""~-·~l~~HI=' ~!0'1~;~mJ~•1 Help Wonted, MIF 710.iotp Wanted, MI F 710 Help Wanted, M & f 710 Holp Wanted, M & p 7111Pfolp Waotod, M1& .. 711 Help Wont..i, M&F 710 ~ W ....... M & F 719 ~~-:~~:.: 3M!~i! •.. Top pay & !iberal wage proeram. Paid health ~~ ~ SALESLADY, .,...d. ror 1>o1, IHSURAllCE SALES -ELECTRO ECHANICAL SSEMBLERS MASTFR Baker urgr-nt. n!q. fQr well et1tAb. t..aa. Bch. Bakery. Pt'trm. pc>a.. ex~u. W,Pbooe-CIRCULATION TRAINEE No txp nr<:., "am while yotJ learn, pa.rt Ume, eYe• Ir wlmck, tuU tlme when IJU&H· ncc1. & dental wurance. 11 paid holidays a year. "-· mo -Blvd., ,.. ,.Ady to w..r. Xlnt l<>ng tum security. CM. ......,,. ront1 • ..,;,29911. REAL ES'IATh Ml.ES ••• . e Work with the best! VARJAN DATA MACHINES, • top quallty company in Mini l'Ompuler Jleld has llf:Vt'ftl.l openlrws for electro- m~:hanlcal uaernblttt. 1st & 2nd .shifts. Rt.-qulred as a minlmu1n o( G moic. re.lated exper. In one of the follow· irw: f.rt•wr.: Co 1n po n e n t preparution &: Mod ~ldrr· mg & a5IK'n1bly of printed ~ircu!I boa.rdS. 0 t h e r dc8irt<I ;i.l'f'n1 or f'xper. are cabling & \Vite 11.'t'lp, e Immediate openings! • Ex<.~llent bcneiiU;! e Grow \\•ilh Ujj~ Apply in pM'31'Jn llr ronluct J. Full!!'r VDM V1rlan O•ta Mac~lnes Irvine 2722 Michelson Dr. 83~2.400. oxt 336 Equal Oppor. Employer Assemblers . Electronics Assemblers Perl!C offers pc r ma n e n t • ~mployment, paid vacations after 6 months, plus one wrek paid tln1e oU at Oiristmas, company pakl ; life, hospitRI. s u r g i cu l , "Something Special" Openln91 In Newport Beach, Cost• Me ... & other C011st•I •re•s. At Security S.nk we offer ''Something Sf* cial'', like fine st•rt- lng 1•l•rie1, • pleas- a n t, contemporary working environment, excellent b • ne fi ts package & plenty of opportunity for a~ vancement. Tellers Note Tellers Proof Oper•torl We would prefer lndl- vidu•l1 with at lt••t 6 months experience In • bank, savings & loan or fin•nce; how- ever, th1re are many related b•ckground skills that could be substituted for •ctual bank txperlence. Please call for appointment 644:0113, oxt, 257 SECURITY PACIFIC BANK I medical and dental benefits. Equal Opportunity Employer Excellent w o r k In g con· M /}>" i ditions and growlh poten· •Hal. lmrne<!late opening!! now ex· ,!st for elcc ironl cs Banking UNION BANK · has an openir¥J for a TELLEll · Ult'mblers with Ont" year ot ' soldering nnd v.'irfng ex~ I pe~mcc. Applicants. must 1 ~ 1ntere!!ted n1 working full Experie~ de!!irablc, plesse time. Permanent l'mploy· apply in penon, Teresa 'ment. \\/alias, 610 NMVport Center Apply at: PER·TEC BUSINESS ~tS ' 17112 Armstrong A venue : Itvtne lnduS'lrial Complex Dr., Newport Beach. .. An Equal Oppor1. Employer ~CR PROOF OPERATOR Experienced Newport Be9.ch regional oft'ice. An equal •PP"'tunity CENTINENLA BANK . l'f;iiiiiiiii'miiiiiplii°"'iiii'iiiiiiiim TI4-6'6--7121. ?i.ir. Hollov.11y 1• An Equal ()pply Empl(J)W ASSEMBLERS BAR MAID. Parl limo lo• URGENTLY NEEDED Grin & Beer It, 436 E. 17th, Costa 1\-1esa. Call bY.1. Regl.!1tf!r today, work tomor· •row! I' NO FEE E\'ER TOPS JN TEf.1PORARlES. . fGuI fMm ASSISTANT MANAGER \\'omen·s Apoarel dlaJn. LANZ 1 f'ashio/l 19\and 64+44ll ASS:N·T bkkpr & front desk. Payroll exp. nee. Con.!ltr. bkgmd pref, Duily job cost. Ing, bfling. C'IC. S500 mo. start. 54&-5511 ATTORNEY r~or active shopping center development finn. Prefer !IOr'rlrone 'vtth comm'! real t"'lale development bkgrnd. .Pblse ce.11 63&9:rl3, or send :~e 10 Newman Prop- Prties, P.O. Box 7667, Long 'Beach, Calif, OOS07. All re- ,p41e8 trl"ft1.ed in strict COil· •fldencx-. AUTO ]!)..6pm !>l8-9!U9 BARTENOER·Eves. $40 per shlfl. ThC" Blue Beet , 642...fu-U before 10:30 a.01. BEAlITY OPERATOR J . C. Penhey Co. 24 Fashion l1l•nd has Opt'ning for fuJI or nart tlmc • .) BEAUTY OPERATOR Xlnt worlqng condition&. Ou!· st.andi~ benefits. Apply in per.ion 10 A..'14. PM. An Equal Opport. Employer BEAUTY . operator. 5 day a ,.,.eek. EiO';t. + benefits. New grad welcome. 0 a y s ~2474 eves. 531-5398, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach area BEAUTICIAN. Full or part time. Paid vncation. Costa Mesa. 540--0550 BOAT BUILDERS Qual'lly Sailboat mantif. ncerls exper. responsible people to 1iH ttiese posjtions : Finish Carpenter1 htin. 1 )T expericn~ Maintenance Man Alt around experience WESTSAIL CORP. )ltANTED Experienced 1626 Pla.Cl'Dtia Ave .. 01 :Service Manager for BOAT •local G.M. Dealuship. , Good pay and porcont· MECHANIC : agt and car. Send resu-and RIGGER , m1 to Classified Ad Experimce nee. Ov.'tt tools. :•J03c/o DAILY PILOT Phone • &>5-3880 : P.O. Box 1560 Costa BOAT repalt.yanfrnan, ex- ' Mesa C• 92626 per. preferred. Shorthair. 1 • • • 64·~15. un Back Bay Dr .. fl"'• N.B. ·' Experienc.ed BOO KEEPER : · Automotive K ·,. BookkMper 1 .• ilc or 00-vy for b:lokkeep. ~C,.11 r>r &ee Miss StM?le Ing office. Exper. in public 1 • Newport Datsun accounti~ preferred. Salary \ 1oo:J w. ~~A~wy .. N.B. ~~~~Iles!! Services !' ~ ~ . ~UTO BOOKKEEPER eo.~ ~~~ J'-Ozi2 anfl'd imnicdlately. Dealer· BOOKKEEPER F/C Ship cxrw:r. llI'l•f. Phone Mr, ISlnit lor App"L $3341 Mike Elt"perlcnc«l. For CoMtruc- 1.fcCarlhy Buick, Beach lion Firm. Nt'\vport Beach. :Blvd. ~l $a.n Ofe@ f'N-y., 3 Days ~ "et-k • ~ wmm1nster. houn. $t·nd Rl'SUJTle on I~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!'!'"~ I 00~ &. gh,-e rr:fer· AtrrO Body inctal men la.•11· £'0C'eS. lJ?Owing Chev. dlr ~kl! t\\."(I \Vrfte ClllS!l.ltied Ad #89$ !experienced m<'t11I men for Druly P11<Jt. P.O. Box .1!£,0, •pmnat"lent poeltion11. Ideal eo:.t11 M~. C'fttll, 92626 !condJtlons In nf'W facllltlet. B 0 0 K KEEPER • ex• See Gtuy T h o m p t o n . perienced • Girl Friday ~HOWARD C h e v r o le I , needed Jor retail bu~. MacArthur &. Jamlm'ee, Irvine oUJce. 83J...3622 ewport Be8f'h, 8.1J...00.55. BUSBOY, Oxik. Must be lJABYSI'M'lNG • 11 t e O\l('r Zl. \V&Jl:e• Acoordirw to :t.ouatkeeplna Room &: 1-xpcr. Apply in person, 1Bofu'd + •lary. Hamburger llamlel, 1545 I 1t !)79-1135 ~· Adam!! Ave, COl'llA MCM. f.,,Vhito 'Elt:Ohant.." overc-Mk for Mr. Hagan. • 1 rumlng your hol111e? Turn SUSY offlt't needs l!iharp ~irl tbtm lnio ''Cuh" ... aall lo handle p!xmet, typUJi, lth«n ~ • DaUy Piklt bookkttptna. Pn:rt tlnie. • dutlllled odl 642-3<90. • MALE OR FEMALE The Daily Pilot has an opening in the circu· lation department for a beginner to manage a small district of boys and girls, delivering, collecting and selling newspapers. Full time, permanent positions with regular raises a nd full fringes including personal use of com· pany auto. Apply in person to Milan Leavitt, Daily Pilot , 330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa. Farmers IR1uraoce Group Ed Lani * MO-J.B:w INSURANCE SALES Loold~ fior aggreulw ac- count ll!Xt'C. 3 yn. exper. Knowt pc.'NOUPI line#, comm. }'lLbub.r& 1narkt'13 to wm-k wfth. ll'\lfn(' or Lido orncn. Cont<•Ct Bill \Va.nnlngton, 979-?471. INSURANCE SF.CY·Fire & Ca1ualty. Small congenial o!Jlce. Ph: 67$-0562. Irvine National Bank Royal Industries, a major manufacturer of nu- clear com])Onents, ls now hiring experienced macbinists in the following categories. AU sh lits. Jig Bore Machinist Profile Machinist NC Drill Machinist Engine Lathe Machinist Grinder Machinist Seamstresses SUCCESS CAREER New or experienced. Join the World'• t&rautt and f.utnt pvwlna ttale ornnlzation Marine with a network of over 300 Upholstery Mfg. omen a.nd become a wan~!I SEAMSrRESSES member ol out Mllllonalre Exp'd in-rd. SMary Open. Club. Multl-mllllon dollar X!J1t Con1pru1y Bcoeft!JI . zd""~ ~· Fre< APPLY IN PERSON ~int aat~~~: 7:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. \Vhat ia your license wortn 1763 Pl•centl• Ave. to you? Cbeclc our monlhl) Coste Mesa bOnUI Pf'Olrlm whlch meMI SE AMS TRESS tor $S$ to you!, Pleue caU upholstery, full or put Vlra;lnla Jones 835-4811. Ume. s.i8-0259 Ru J J e 11 ' s flN ORGANtZATIONl 1---BANK PERSONNEL ,~ Applicatiot11 ~ bcing ac· Help Wanted, M ri. F 710 Help W•nted M & F 710 C'e1>kd for Irv:tne NationaJ -~--~----.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Bank ope-n\n.!f in August at CASHIER Wanted: ApPly Campus & A1acArlhur. Mining Machinist Personnel Department will be open for In· lervlews 8 AM,6 PM Mon·Fri. & a.noon Sat. Other interviewing times can be arranged, RED CARPET '=iiupho...,aiii.ii,.,.ii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•J Realtors 1• s:L~~L tllJ!~~R Secretaries Resale Office needs manager VARIAN DATA l.IACHINES with 2 years of Real Estate has sever! Immediate open· @XJ)eriettee. Newport Beach lngs for secretaries with ex- area. Expanding company. cellent skills (typing 60, CHECKER AUTO PARTS. Dr's Assistant lll E. 19th St., C.M &15-8:&1. CHEF $1200 a mo. The Blue Brei, 107 21.st Place, Newport Bench, 673-9904. aft 4. CLERICAi~ Hyland Laboratorie1 ha1 lmmedi•tt open- ings for skilled lndi- vidu•l1 wanting to as- sociate with • firm offering · top benefits and working environ- ment. • STATISTICAL SECRETARY Involves marketing surveys & analysis, statistical typing. • GENERAL SECRETARY 10 Key -adding meet.- int & dictaphone. • CLERK TYPIST SO wpm. Previous of. flee experience r• quired. Apply In Person Or Call: Oona Leverett (714) 54(1,500, oxt. 250 Hyland laboratories 3300 Hyland Avo. Costa Mesa, Callf. 92626 Equal Oppor. Employer male & female Clerk Typist 111ainr:atn btd & drav.1ng tiles, ctmomer lists, other e._s.. signed clerical duUes. Ac· curacy &: nca~ tmpor· -EDLER INDUSTRIES nm Do\-1'! Street Ne\l.'J)Ort Bead1 CLEANING lady, mature for office suites. NB. 40 hrs wk. exper. & bondable G44-0606 COMMERCIAL TELLER Experienced Part Time CONSUMER LOAN CLERK Exptrienctd Full Time UNITED Young lady ClS-28) to assist In hl?aHh spa. Will train, oo l'Xp. nee. Apply in person any aft or eve. 2930 W. Coaiot Hwy., N.B. DRAPERY SAI..E.S -Neat aggressive man tor growing firm. Great oppty. We will train. Cugjom S h a d e Drapery Shop, 3535 E. C.oa.st · Hwy, CdM. EXPERIENCED ASSEMBLERS Needed lmmedlatolyl VOLT Instant Personnel Temporary Service 3848 Can1pus Dr., Suite lc.i Ne~'P011 Beach 5-l&-4741 EqunJ. Oppor. Employer • EXPER. full time blood drnv.·er. To \l.'Ork in medical Lab. 1\lust be flexible & able to handle responsibility. Typing helpful. Plea5e call bWl. 9-3 pm 640--0140, Mrs. Ann strong EXPERIENCED toreign car counter man Overseas Motor Parts. 1990 Harbor Blvd., CM. Cali 586-2030 for appointment. EXPERIENCED 1'1 TS T operator {legal) m..9900 Ask for Lynne EXXON service s ta t i o n Island salesman. 2 6 5 7 2 Junipero Serra, San Juan Capistrano. *GARDENER* Be your own Boss r~ull or p/tilne in your own area. High inrome. Gu•ranteed Customers No C•sh Down Earn Now, Pav Later 968-0812 General Office Become !Jn.Uved. in the fas- cinating career of escrow. O:impany will teach book. keeping. Salary to $400. 0:1.U Kay \\1lng, 54(1..61E5, Coas!al Personnd Ai.:-ency, 2790 J{ar. bor Blvd., CM . $600 General Office Typing 55 \Vestctiff Penonnel Agrncy 1651 E. EdingC'r, S.A, f ~1ark Ill Center/ "2-S8J6 General Office Lile bkkpg, typing, no short· hand. TAKATA NURSERY 780. Baker, Costa Mesa GENERAL housey,•ork cleaning only. Tues. & Fri'. J\lust have refs & own trans. Aller 6 pm. 644-8148. TELLERS PROOF OPERATORS Exp1rl1nced Only Equn! Opponunlty Employt'r Contact Bob Creii:titon 833-3700 If;: .. ' .,...,. .,,._.,. ' IRYINE PER.50NNEl SERYJCES•AGENCY After 5 Pl\-1 By Appointment Accountant-Degree to $15K Control Engr. SSEE to $12K F/C Bkkpr to S800 Sec'y to Controller to $750 Payrol.1-0:lnstr to $150+ Exec Sc!cretary fo $700 Sec'y/RE Legal to $650 Girl J>"'liday to $650 Mature Sec'y $65(1 Sec/lite shrtnd lo $625 Purch/Scc'y/no sh to $600 Gen'! Ofc to $525 Copy Typist $400 File & 1\tail Clerks $360 CALL TRISH lfOPJaNS JERRI WHlTIEI\fORE 488 E. 17th St. lat 1rvine) Ori Suite 224 642-1470 JACK TN THE BOX Now hiring clean-cut in· divldual to work Morn, Lunches, or grave-yard. During school mo. Apply in ROY AL INDUSTRIES Exe.lien! opportunity lo• •borthand l<Jl ""' who .,.. 2••• E professional growth. Apply looking for the opportunity """" · Dytr Rd., 1n confidence Send resume to use their talent with a (Redhill & Dyer} to tiaaalDed ftd no. 638, e/o growing Orange Countr. S1nt1 ,Ana, C1. Daily Pilo~, p, o. Box 1560, computor company. We o • 540-3210 C.OSta Mesa, Calif. !n626. fer: •• . R.E . SALESMAN *Compet1ttve pay An Equal Opportunity Employer lnv.,tigato tho now approaoh *Excellent benefits ;;:';'P~M_,_l_F_7_10 ~oc••'='1; T:;';"(i~ *Modem facilities -'----'-'-'--"".;..,,;..;.;:. r -· LERY OF HOMES. You MECltANIC -Experienced, PERSONNEL will be glad you did; Call Please Apply ln Penon VW & Porsche repair. ?\-tust 963·56ll for appointment. Mon-Fri 8:30 am-4 pm have own tools. Apply Ll_censed or unlicensed we To The Personnel Dt'pt. Ivan's Foreign Repair 2089 CLERK will train. Harbor Blvd., Costa 'Mesa R.E. SALESMEN Or Contact &15-1.982 Why not work in the hottest B. Kr•fka MOTHER'S helper in new Hyland Labon.toriea has an a r e a H ~ntington 2722Michelson Dr. Irvine home 3 to 4 days per . _,,. 1 ...... 1.. Beach/Fountain Valley. Let I I v11k 9 to 4. 5:>!-1511. imm=ia e o.,... ..... g for an ua train )'OU! Call Phil rv M Individual who will handle NEED J experienced tow truck drivers. Call 492-5818 NEED man with truck for early moming delivery. Call after 5 pm. 55?-mo. NEEDED: *TELLER *NEW ACCOUNTS CLERK * NOTE TELLER Experienced only. 494-0771 company benefit... Position ~~~AJ.~~ E 833-2400, ext. 336 requiresstronggeneralwho 1 -~~~~='~~--will handle company REAL ESTATE benefits. Position requires SALES strong general office skills. Applkanu •hould havo ox-FREE LICENSE SECRETARIES/ c ~ 11 en t communications TRA.I NING TYPISTS skills 1n order to lunctioo Jn . busy. personnel oJflc.e. Free Pla~~ent Service. URGENTLY NEEDED PreVlOu.s experience with Free Training Program. slocli;, proflt sharing and in-Earn while you learn. Al Reglsmr today, work to. surance highly desirable. Sloan (n4) 832-5440. morrow! Excellent benefit package NO FEE EVER. and •tarting salary. Apply RECEPTIONIST TOPS IN TEMPORARIES. or call: . Day or roght, no exp. nee., rf-'.·y ·.l easy, tun job. Will train, no j ·( ID typing or shorthand, elc. DONA LEVERETT (714) 540-5000, ext. 250 Apply in person any aft or rf:. 2112:0.I' ... Dr. person 3-5 pm. ThW'S July N · f 19. 18462 BC'ach Blvd. 1-rn. o exp. nee. min. wage, em. Hyland laboratories eve. at 2930 West Cst Hv.iy., j1lan_ N.B. 1-=;;;:;'------45-65 yrs. Avail varied hrs. JANITORS _ c 0 11 e g e & days. Take & give work !fludmts; supplement your as5lgnments by phone. No income with 3 hrs. janitor sales. ln NB. Call 646-4701 work per night Mon-Fri. I iiiboiltillilOAMiiiil·illOilPilMiiiiiiiiiiiii General cleaning In offices I NURSES close' to your home. Call 542--0373, leaving Your name RNs, LVNs & AIDEs & telephone nun1ber. H05pital Staff Relief 3300 Hyland Aw. Costa 1'.fe.sa, Calif. 92626 An equal opportwtlty employer ltlale/Iemale JANITOR. p/timc. Semi \Vork The Days &: Shifts reUred. No cxper. necess. You Prcler, Good Pay. PER9JNAL lines • light f\.1r. Scane or Mr. Williams, "lo Fees Or Rebates. commercial 3 yrs. exper. SilveN,.oods, 45 Fashion , Good salary plus group RECEPTIONIST for law of. SEC RECEPT . Ucc. LllE' typing & mlse. . . •• . • . duties. Immediate opening. E.stablished electrmnc equip. 642-2330 ment mfgr. company siek:s stlBl"p conscientious gal for reception chJtict, lnvmclng re-sp;>nsibltities & geneni.I office work. Accurate typing skills & front af:fice &ppt"lll'· ance. Apply in per'90l"l GTI Corp.. Dix Engineering Di· visk>n, 1399 Logan Ave., CM. REFINED w o m a n com· panlon/cook needed \veekends lor young, in· capacltated 8.1 yr. old woman. 673-3078. Bal Pen. ROUTE SALESMEN Island. Nwpt. Center. J-tomemakers·Upjohn benefits. Xlnt promotion op. JANITOR • Lite main· 1805 No. Broedway, s.A. pty. \Vortc either Udo or Large National Co. is looking SECRETARY 547-6681 Irvine offices. Contact Bill for permanent stable men. tenance, 6:30-8.30 a,m. 1580 Warmington; 979-7422 • Excellent starting salary. to organl:re &: manage a busy l\lonrovia, Newport Beach. I,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" I PERSON interested In setv· If interested Call:' executlve"s bus!~ mat· J&l2-34UNI072R. SALESMAN.· NUl'l!es i n g apprenticeship in 714: U'4-GJ30 ters. SH & f!~ble hours RN-LVN·AIOE mortuary, Call 673-9400 tor roquired. Medical bade· Earn $20-$40 per week 11-7 & other shifts. Top pvt, ,,,;o"t"ervt='crw,,'a-;p,;p-'t_. ~""' __ 1SAILLOIT seeks exp' d gnxmd desirable. DELMA 'vorking afl er school and 1 , 1 Ir sail u CORP., 18811 florida, Hunt· on Saturday' .""citing new duty pay. lmmed. pay for PHYSICAL Therapist for ae+ seams ressea, M de""Sal~:S· ington Beach. 847·3515 customers for• the Daily (Joor duty. C o u n I Y w id e tive indutralal clinic. Salary 642-6441 Tay or a ~-. Pilot. This Is not a paper lntrvws. ~1on·Fri 9-5. & Jringe benefits. Send * route and dOl's not Include Lescoulie Nurses Registry, resume P.O. 10893, Santa * SALESMEN Sec'y to VP 3a'"l Hospital Rd., NB (Lob-Ana 92711 r:t. ..... deliveries or collecting. by Park Lido B Id g ) • Do you take "Salesmen ..,...,:1 VP needs individual \\le have openings in O.ta 64z_9955• 540-9954.. PIZZA Parlor. 1'1ust be over wanted" ads with a grain oJ who can handle adminfstra. 1'.1csa and South l!Wfliniton 21. Par1 time eves. Al80 bus aalt! Can't say I blame )'Ou. tive duties & make dcctsions. Beech only. Apply now~ NURSE, LVN Part time, 7.3 boy, 16 yrs or over. 962-0027 I followed up a few myself Salary to $650. Call Sally ~96.fl. ~~ &: ~-Jai:S:~t. MGfil POSITlONS OPEN ln the past. The jo_b ~ldom Hart, 54()..Gl}5, <hlstaJ J>H. Center, Costa :r.1 e sa. FOR. lived up to the claim in the sonnei Agency, 2190 Harbor KEYPUNCH Top SU All shifts available Irvine 54l>-4450 17802 Sky Parle NEVER A FEE AT TO.IP() Tempo Temporacy Help 548-5585. • ad. Blvd., CM. • BRANCH. Do yo""'" • favor ,& ~, --,S'°E"C'"R'"E'"T"A"R"'Y"/~-I NURSES Aides, experienced SEC'Y Ptolo~A~ ~ Ua "°"w-kd liklme· EXECUTIVE preferred, 7·3, &: 11-7 shifts. """'" ._._, ""' lntrvws bet. 1.1)..12.. H®-e PROOF mediately, with an eye to Full charge of oilice tunctk>ns !:Uigton Beach Convalescent much more in the future, for company ln Hunt!Jwton H'ospital, H.B. 18811 Florida OPERA TOR I'd like to. talk. to you. If Beach (213) 2.54-8898. St., 847-3515. w·n consider lnexperi need your qualificaoons match SECRE"T'ARY--one giI'l attlce CALIFORNIA BANK 309 M•ln Str .. t Huntington Beach 536-8811 G. I F 'd KTI'OIEN Helper • Mature 1r r1 ay pera:>n, PM shift. Mesa. NURSE'S Aides • We are ill-d.ontact Mr. Wilkes, ~i our requirements, ~ could lite bkkp'g & typlng. creuing our stafl & need be the career you ve been Reliable. ~7llO --·• pl 11 SECURITY looking for. Great k>vel entry position for Verde Co n v a I e s c e n t the individual \\"ho wants to Hospl!al fi61 Center St., earn v.tiile learning. Start Costa M •:.•o-=o" $433. Call Gloria Gray E.'!la, ;.roo-..r.>e». Equal Opportunity Employer 540--6055, Coastal Persormei LADY Bartender, exp'd, CONGENIAL family with Agency, 2790 J.larbor Blvd. attractive & neat. Call career job mother &eeks CM. ' '"""84ii&-il9ii750i;iiboiii;loiire;i;;;i6;iP;iMii ..... relJable, mature woman to ! ' care for girl 10, nft school & GIFT \Vear Mfg'r. leaded LEGAL SEC'Y do housework. Fu.II day dur-g 1 a 8 s -ca nd 1 es-wood FEE PAID ing summer. Flexibility Md planten. Need$ he 1 P · 2 openinp • xlnt companies own transportation a must 979-46.\t & benf'fi111. Salary range Laguna Niguel. 49~U!M GJRL • Ch·er 18, can work $600. $!700, depe~ on ex· COOK wapted: Must know ~~~-stables, 20286 Lag. pcrience. how to Cook breakfast & ....... ..,.,.., Rd. Leg. Bch. A190 ft'c positions. d Inner. Fas I , A Is o HOUSEKEEPER \VANTED HEL'EN SCHAFFER Dishwaaher. Col on! a I Gen tie, i nte II i gent, PERSONNEL AGENCY Kil'cben. 512 \V. 19th St., trustworthy, liVC'·in 4262 Campus Dr._ B-1, N.B. C.1.1. 548-0366. hooitekeeper for goo d COUNTER woman, pa T 1 natum:l (elderly) gentleman time. Apply at Foster In his Baytront home. 1\-1ust Fre< 899 IV 1...._ be capable of managing Cos1:Meflfl · "'"1 St, household &: a competent dri\.tt. fk.L! reqd. Tel. Mrs, DELIVERY OF DA IL Y Davis, Mon, thru Fri, 9 to 5. PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY TO 642-1626. NEWSPAPER CARRIERS. "-"H"'o"'u"'s~E~K~E~E=P~E=R~­IN SAN CLEMENTE AREA. MUST LNE IN Live-in. Nl'wport Beach. Eng. AREA. REQUIRES USE li.<ti spm.king. Own room. OF STATION WAGON OR TV. Small family. 5 day VAN A ND VAL 1 D week. $24011if0. 646-7221. DRIVERS LICENSE. CON-HOUSEKEEPER·non Jive-in, T,\CT HARRY SEELEY, approx 3 to 4 hrs per day. 330 \V. BAY ST;.i CO~A Corona del Mar area. Must MESA OR PH'ON:.; 492-4420 make lunch. J'\tr. Osmond, or 64)...4321 (714 ) 521-2703. DELIVERY -retalJ.nunery, HOUSEKEEPER to care for light ma.lnteM11ce of truck home Md 2 small children, Md delivery tn local 11rca. 18 nms .• t'. 4 )Ts. 5 Oa.)'3 11 Apply at 2221 Falrwll.Y Rd. \\1c. Ch\-n tr:lnS. Turtle Rock Cost.A l.feM. ~a. 833-3517 DELIVERY man -EArly HOUSEKEEPER & CQOk. morning, 2~\ hnl. $23'.I per S70. pt"r \\Wk. 12 noon month + bonus. Ca.II LA 10 8 pm.. Mewt·F'rt. Ntwport Tln1es, 642-4!DI Bch. ll'ff. 0.11 8.fl 6 pm. DENTAL A 1 s I a I ant -642-1292. Chairskte. At leut 6 mo Hoipft•llty Hos tess exp, ll.B. !UN. ~ Service C8-lO am .. S-8 pm). 1 lookl D E N T A L AMlstanL Ex· ~Joom!1' I fintc~~n ~ pericnced, Chi.Ir tide. X. residentl. Sa.let or Advff· Ra Y 1. Spanish helpfUJ, llainir ~per. helpful. Must frifllle b<'nrflts. fl'ls.2383. hav~ ear & typt-wriltt. DENTAL A38i1tant -Oral f17-:itJ9:i, surrcry & X·ra..v c1Cpcrience. IMMEDIATE o~nings for Immedlale optnl3. 644-{;161 new accounr.a teller, please OO~J&STIC I lelp 01.'ml,'f' contact Kmtooo Savings &: Allen Byland Ap.ney, lOS-D lAAn, 4301 Mac A rt h u r E. lfilh St., S.A. 547.()39:'; 81-vd., N.B. 83J...0367, LEGAL Sec.. young. part time, Corp., expererienced. Newport Center. 6-IO--OSOO. LVN for :f.1edical Reduc~ Clinic, lite \\'Ork and pleasant duties. Must be illm & enjoy v.'Qrking v.•ith people. can Joyce al 517-6329 MAID Full time, Lllguna. Lido 31/:ii S. Coast Hwy, Laguna. ~tALE studen1s, 18 or <IV('r, to ~ wknd!ll et Ora11ge Co., Fairgrounds Swap Meet. Apply Sat 10 AM at entrance to S\vap J'\teet, 88 Fair Dr., Cl\1. MALE &: femal<' h e I p "·anted. \\1agt!11 OJX'n. Don's Car \Vash, 510 Ave . Estrella, Sl\n Clen1ente. 1\1AN to \\Wk tul.\ time In rent-1 y!lJ'd, NeRt In appear. \\'/tiellt hRndwri11rta. Will traln. Apply morns, l930 Newport Blvd., CM. MANIC'URJST • 1.fen't Slion, young, eperienced. Call 548-9174. MANAGER TRAINEE Outtwta.ndJna opportunity ro Advnn«i to mJnaatrl11l potl· Hon In JO...OO day11. OUr CUT" ..l:t'nf mnnn(tt1's cam $100l)..$l500 mo. J\lutt hAve dll'('('t 14lrs t'Xpcr1enct. C11l Mr. Nf!Wman 979-522:2 011.lly Pilot Want Adi ha\'I b&rralna plort.. experie11l.""""' pro e. A Interview appointment 104 SERVICE STATION shifts. Good benefits & PACIRC 3 P I I d SI W"'"'S. Apply at 14 4 5 PM, weekdays, 586·3182. ump s an sm --NAT'L BANK Sii.iea w/lube expcr, Full or p/tln1e. Supono• Avo., N.B. AND NOW Aloo mao w/""og lie. & 2 OFFICE GIRLS JO:m Crown Valley Pkwy , some lite mech e>q>er. Ap. NEEDED Laguna Niguel Ame~can Builders .corp .. 1.n ply Arco Station at 17th & Radio telephone di-tch Equal Opportunity employer adctitiog 1o . l_ts, if!dustt1al Irvine. ~..-reel estate diVISKITI is form. ===-:0-,,,-=~-1 Must be 25. able to drive PRESS OPERATOR Ing the residential real SERVICE Station Attendant. YEALpLpOlyWin CpA,..,.B nCO. \Vomen to v.uk for pl.ast1c estate divtston. Full & part time. Apply In molding plant. MS-3370. 70% Commission splits. person, 900 E. Coast Hwy, 186 E. 16th, Costa ME"sa. iiiiiiiii;ii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif50 ';b listing commission Newport Beach. PART tlme female for donut PRINTING All advertising & phones paid. SIX l\.1ature WOQ1en to v.'Ol"'k & sandwich shop. 21 or Management & salts ~~kends at Orange Co. older. 18567 !\.fain, HW11. OFFSET Contact: American Buitden Fairground Swap Meet Bch. Corp. M~. 4500 caml'<IS foodstancls. Permanent posi. PART time help needed. Ap-PRESSMAN Dr. Suite 560 Newport lion. Non.smokers only. ~ Ply In -rson: Me 'N Ed's ~. ' ply Sat. 10 Mf at cti'trmlce .--to Swap 1'1eel, 88 Falt Dr. PERSONNEL 1st SHIFT -.,ARE YOU CM. SKIPPER 1\f~ntaln &: open.le 45', ASSISTANT Exporionco on 1250W LOOKING2 "''"'I orul''"· Apply to with T·Sl two color 1 for money Ralph Clock, Box 1S107. unit. Must be able to 2 for security Santa Ane, Ca. moo. Progt'\.·sslve C'Omputer pt>r· phcrial produrts manuJac· lurer has an in1n1C'diate opening fur a Personnel As. sistant to v.-ork for the Per· S)flnel Managt>r. \\'IH per. lqrm vario"" secretarial and admlnl.s-tralive dutie$. Requires excellent typlfl: and romrnunice.Hon skHls .11.nd at lellSt 2 ~:eel"!I related Pei-. !IOMC\ bnC"kgroond. Some applicant lnt('l"'Vif'\ving and slal'isticul sur.·cy prepara· tlon l.li:.t.irable. Pertee offrrs 1x>rmnncnt em· ploym(!nt. pairl vaearlon!! altt'!r sL" n"IOl'Jth°&, plus one week paid time oH ·al Chris1- m11&, company pakl Lire, hosJjtal, 1t1r'iical, medical, and dent&! benefit!, and ex· ~ salary And work111g coud:itiais. Apply or contact T. Knight (714J 54Q.331() PERT EC maintail\ uniform col ... 3 for a lead program SMAU.. !l.1fgr needs )'OtlllA' I man for "neral wort( Jn. or b•lance and h•ir· 4 or company benefits eluding dnvlng lli;ht truck. line r91lstr•tlon on 5 for prestige selling & &12-2256, l.ton·f>'ri. 9-4. coated lltho l•bels and much more. &'JACK Shop Attendant Jm. be able to setup •nd rm looking for 2 salesl"!lt'n · med. opening tor exp'd print on 40 pound llt• Call 644-0212. for lrKC!Vle\\'. .11nack shop attendant 1n prt , h k W ---~ SALESP£RSON for sales & club. Mu11t be 21 or older. we19 t stoc • • ,.._ •tock 35 10 40 hrs per \\'eek Call 644_.4M far nppt. Tues a craftsm•n who 11 a reta.11' exp prer. but not nee'. ;;;'h;;;l'U=S"u"n.==-.,,,--,-1 self starter with 2-4 Plclcwick Book Shop, So. swtrolBOARD Operator years experience In est. Pina, C.t.f. plus light typing, bldcplf\I &: offset p,..sswork. Ex· SALES clerical \\Ork. l-lt>1p. ln- cellent benefit pack. TROPICA~ FISH :~rm~ci)ositkm~A~ •9• and st•rtlng s•I· Expcr .. or hobbie!lt, full or in pcnon, Tom Stamp F:f. •ry. pen hmc. 642-5622. 535 N. El Camino ft4?al, San Oemente, 492-WT. Apply ln ~ or Ca.II: Oona Leverett (714) 540-M00, Elr:t. 250 HYWID LABORATORIES 3300 Hyland Avo. Co~& M,_, CaHf. 9:&l> Equal Oppor. Employer &tale a li"emak!: TIME FOR TAK!'G app11.,.11on w ''" peritnef'd moidf'rt &; O · QUICK CASH ~ern>d carpcmen:. APPb ln Pl!rton 19131 Dees-t! SA. ERICKSON YACHTS THROUGH A 1~=5*.eoo~I --,,.' .,,-J TELEPHONE ·Sal.et. DAILY PILOT ~~ ~ lnLAJu1.~ areu. F.xJ) d. preferred, but WANT AD 7t~ :A1~r;'n. Call ~lect TRAJNEE for DraP<J'Y Shop. 642 5678 Havol'• o,.,,.,,,. · s.rvto. • 1618 Ohms Way, ~ fi.lesa.. • DAILY PILDT ·13 IITTJ I iii-iliiiii9J[§Jiiiiiiil··I ~I _r ... t_.v .. __.Jj[I[ ~ I~ 111 3 Linet, l Time•, $1.00 l~llooiiiiii,,ii, iiO....iliiii,ii1~1 ;;~900~J ~I ]~ ;;;[ ---· ~![§]~~I~[ _ ... d_ ...... ~ 112 Mlscellaneovs 811 Mf1c:1ll1neou1 111 Sewing MechlMI l~I . , .. • ••• •d ••• Help Wanted, MAF 710 Antlq• -IOO Aaollon<ft Tl~ 1alt1 & aervice c.;:.;.;;i-=:• ____ ..:;:: '-'-I02 G.lr190 SllO Brlle l Ali1iP'lmtt1t 11ervice: * * * FREIGHT DAMAGED lo"''Ull or Pftl"l llml'. $3\:uy C W Gr• FLOOR • \\IAREROUSE pha COf!tnliuk>n. Cu 11 4527....._;1 _:....t.. YR d CLEARANCE 61lo-8022,CoutAuto5''rvire C ~ ""7-"lnM oa \Vashe r 1, dryer,, Cenlet'. or-ona -ar rf"J'rlfreraloni, tr e"' z e-r 1, You...,. the wtnner of v acuum•. T V ' 11o , I ~--------•' TWO FREE TICKETS lalft•runowerw lc CUJ'IM't. URGENn Y souTH"LANo s.ar.~~ 'l ~;'""" H Adama at ?.laa:nolla NEEDED ome & Garden Show 111.1nlingto11 Beach !162-7781 Jwy 270. lhru AUg. '"' ft'REIG~IT Da.magl' Sah• on MOVfNC • l\.tust .. n~ Crib, L'lee. dryer, retrlc, Polaroid, mile.~. S. of Adams off Brooldwrst H.8. 20081 Suburbia l.JJ. Something for ~l')'OOt>. l•welry 115 • GENEROUS • • REWARD• S AN•AtHtheEIM nrw 1-lotpoint &. \Vhlrlpool ecretaries 1·1·!rlic I washers / dr;-t•rs, l · CONVENTION ~~5--0780. For retum or any In· YPiSts, CENTER l\lOVING, u1Uit sell Ken· tonnaUon lead1ng to rl'turn Clerk Typist & 800 \\I. Katti.la, Anaheim 1no~ gas \\'&Sher 4 yn old, of a gold four leaf clovrr R Plea9C call 642-5678, ext. 314 dryer 7 n10. old exet.'llent pin, approx. 2 inchei; In epro Typists 10 rlaini your ticke1s. 1Nor1h cond. S&-7307 or 552-0320 diamelcr, v.ith j ewe 1 e d VOLT ~~1"2201y .',oU h"t.>e number is -Rent Wesher1/0ry•r1 hone-shoe in center; al90, I ......,. i,,'Old locket \V.'ll.! on chainl, nst•nt Personn•I • • • $2. \Vk. Full maint. approx. the size of 11. nickel, *AUCTION* FRIDAY 7 PM JULY 20th Brand Ne\'.' St~ \\'1th Spc<ikcrii, 8 Tn.1ck Ta[I(' Ot.odl.s, Cokll" 'IV'"· S & \\' Por'tttb!Cll, Jbhoom S.•IJI, O\v11.111, Chalf"ll, U:i.n11>S. f\l;it1tl Ofnr'-' ~81<11 1111d Cl11\ir11. F1rt•p1wl, Ll'xal Jo'ilf" Cahlni.•I, Ant l•/111'.~. Gr<~nd Piano, 1\NIJ ~IUCH ~IOHt:~ ! ! WINDY'S AUCTION C0~1E BRO\\'SE AROUND 20751"1 N1'l\\JA>I, Ul\'d. Behind Tony's Bid)(, 1'.latl'"' Costa ~1f'la 111 &16...;6.'16 • B.\RGAll'\ SHOPPt.,ts t • ~ I ·" • "-Id ""ruvi.;ht Lron, gls top tn!He LOOK', &ngt-.-PUrt W.!IO CEIL:\L\N' Shepherd S 'aiu 2:> F klr IN.'r, t,,,,1\i; .uo 11:1", Yt'/8 chrs.. ICM:llrl. chlt11'l', \\'"hhe '.Zig loij:, Wli l II u I fMnale. Supc.r 8~ dog: dwil ''Ollh'WI. Dock\'Ct ~1 •hp IJlk niar!Mc tbl lop. ltu.lh~ \'11.hlni·t ............. , si9.96 H!!lirkn. To Koo..! hon11• -_engine, $600. fl'tH!OL':i tll1onond .,.-atch A· r1n~. Sln~t·r 'G6 Iii"" \'ab '-'hn -~5:1:26 YAl11'fS!o,fE;N -ha\'f' }•'II.Jr ST.1-377'.l. $00.!{; l AIRDALt:S 11ul"t'brt-d. n111SI rotllp&N ~JIL'ited. devintl•Vl AIU:.\ ru£~ Rigelu..., .S.• llQn\·cr \lac \\'/tool~ 619.9';, pl&<'l' 1mn1'-'< . i;:e11tlt<, :1.!nt c1u':I pn'pe.red. $2). ~ ~lohawk, lik•• 11t'"'· IOX13 S.-lilan,y othl't'I to choc»t from, v.Klt'h do.::s. <tn-1·112, e~·l·i.. Boata/Mlrln• 3..\'a, l'OSI 511 !1., 11t-l.l S65 1111 o,"\u1r, over 11 yrs In C?ll 492--1168. E ul Jo'in>plat~ screen & 1ru~· S11'1('('re Sc"' l\t:1.ch I: \lac --~ p . 904 • • · 2 AlJULT. ll('U1<'rl'(I 1111111• 1l1•n1!l. 979-.'JGIR Ill~ Jlarhor f,\fi.-9i\2 eal!i. t, all \\'hltf', o1h<'r St'.\\' S\\'11.ll 11.uto radW, .llrl•t" '70 KE;>.'l!IOHE \I' :i ~ h •· r •. TV Radio HIFi ~1an1rse ouu1dn&s. 1\lle1-.,:1,·. r1nu Unil!'r. Cost $GOO. \1!1! dryCI' 5150. Queen size bed I ' ' ' ~1()....6111 II $39',} 19l-t()j() $100., IOt Scl"Cnata. Sau Stereo 836 -· !It' · '· "'--------------' Cl lAl-lLt:S Kitten, 1~1(~ ;,-up !Xo!tJ{Ult, Ilk<' lk'll, 11·111 ~icn(·t" . SACRIFICE olrl, i1111. t~h h.l be ct1tt' -trail1· for l llP 111 llke l'l•11· OU:-J("AN Ph.1-ft·. d1111ng nn, A Prulfi!j(tt\lt' IUl'l"t'O tape rr-big l'nc>ugh to ha\'r soir1t• d1 l u111_~4':;..:ll..;=1~AA: ____ _ t11blr, n1 CJ b JI<' nuud 1iu'l\·I' 1111h au1011111111: 1'1"'-k'n!J\•. &l+-1ra9 -~!~~·· gold ~· IU·n5. \f'I~. t.:~1·!1 ,\tnlK'' 71, S/10 BEAGLE, 2fl(l C•x-kf'r. Bo•tS, Power · n•rl~ II.nit ltl/lf'll, uK"lutle!I 3 :'o111lr, S \\'kll To ~\~...t hull1l' SC1~\\'INN C'o111in<'nlal, SiJ. l'DC'<"ll'I, '1 .1i1,•rro "l>r.'il.ki·r~. (."alt 96Z-J666 IX) )"OU \\'nnt to ~our lllt' Bay, H.CA \\'hirlpool n.•frig .• $.'i(l. I heo.dphon1~ 15 1n·e·1~ro • \\'11\t'r Mi, filh . Here-la lbt P11r11'.l<i01ue l'o1C'n'O, S -I 0 . I 1' b. I k I II POODLE. fl·rnale, 3 nll)i.. anlli\\"t'r Clcru1 13' .Holill()f1 6-12-6i-l2 :,.l~"ll iuw 1111 b ,....1 11 • 11 old, cht1m1>nsc111· &:. \\hi1 ... \\'hnl1·r· 1,11nplr1L' "'/CO\"<:r 906 Temporary &-r\'lt·c * IO!l-.1202 * inscribed in script. FLA. 3848 Can111us Dr., Sulte 106 \\'ELL Pre se r ve d oakn __ E_"_C_O_N_D=.~AP=P~L~l~N-N-'C_E_S These are deeply tttasured Nl!\\-pon Beach 546..tT41 furniture from. our home. Delivered -guar. Dunl11.p".s family mementos &"the 105! Equal Oppor. E1nplo""r Recently re.finished round 181~ Ne.unn"" C'1 "1°TISO is i~plaoe•bl•. PLE'0 E, 1.,,~~~~~,,,.~~--~!! I table. $185. Square table Sj(). .> •• ,....... " .>,,... ""' I' w Stackrd bookca.<ie $J'J5 . DELUXE GE 'double PLEASE help If you ha\'C "', ",Jpnie1o,.,i. 111 rar11: ',~,"., lrt'e to'-® ho1nr. 8!12-111r.l & •'"l•l'lJl;l' 111t.11 .. r ·10 JohnJ;(ln MOVING-MUST SELL II NESC:O O\'l•no..1'>1i.sse11<', 10lb 1 . !I 1ng r;i. u1· n'lllkl' o er. -; -----· · A'tf ....... "••· '·II & •~ l"i'l•ll S·IG.~ liER.\I .Shl'p. I.al) 1>11r1p1e~. t'11{;:1nr. ~J l'Ond. Sl,200. 'f.V. SG;>, TabJc lrnnt~ S:ZO l~ . ~., ·j '"' . ""'~· · beaut Sll'f' S.-d!ln1, Ake, fn.~· 1>1 1-f~"li!I. Z ~"II caplain'$ ··hf1lrs 5l'O. I KJI~·~ •'C . ates, Sill' · 10 S:d hoinl?, ~77 ·~~L-tf_"O_R_N-'l-A--TM-··l-'"-11 1or SlO each1. Boo>kc11S4· SIO. · l RENT TO OWN t'REE ~IA:'o!L'Sl: ti:rrri::x 1.'l', litl hp \'oh'O. Chry. 250 AITRESSES lteavlly carvffi l\!r. & •tn. OV'f'n/range. Still· u n d·c r any inlormation -642-3.l89 " Eves. k \Ve<'kends. Under 21 k Over 21 European fireside chairs \\'arranty, $250. ~- Apply ht\\11 3 &: 5 pnt Q 111y. $125. An oval cla\VfOOt 14 CU ft. f'rigidaire sto.ndlng CUS'I'Ol\t designed diamond THE SEXTANT library table, needs slight trecU"t. $100. ~~.· ~~1_,~111\.j()(), \Vil! sell R repair, '$95 .. ornately carved 673-6198 ...,.,., ..., .., estaurant Kid<> board \V/dble oval mir· IM' II 81 630 Ne\\'J)Ort Ccnler Dr. l'Ol's $200. Rec 1angu 1 a r SEARS washer & dryer, less 11ce aneous 8 Stand SIO. 2 h\ 111 IA'll!'o l I TV'S & STE EO I " 6 ' I I Miscalllneous R 7 11k.s. od. •all all. . nut ur1\'t"', C'U~lon1 i>la n es1 niatll"C~. goo.:I l'Ond. SIO. Wonted 820 , SlO 5'\&-0010 11o11\ft.J111•lrl .. <.'i 1ttJ>ot Gu a .~ rt Like nl'\\' v.·heel ban'O\\' SIS. I r l & .. Rocking chair $1j. An11qui· 11f~AlJT. IK'althy S \\'k ohl f'fJ'.11~1 • •• 1~1 ~r · CO\l'r miniatuIT iron slO\'I" $60. \\',\~TEU; goorl, uS('i! fnort I kitren . \\'r1111t.,I .S.· ln1i11.-.l. $~•1·'• .~i2-•;,&;-~- Ant.ique t:)'•ler jugi 121 $2:). frt'(.'l<'r in i;.'QOCi \\,1rkini:; No rl?fht Cl1t'Ck •No Deposit Call :tt6-5.t'f20, Cotlrge Pk. I : HOSTON \\"ha\1'r. HliO 3\j-Gi1:: 1'Q!k.I. l":ea~nahlr. G\G-'J!Jll. Fl'l't' J)r!ivcry -Free Repa ir C \l lCO iuuther t'.~G .JohtL~n \()hp, \\/t'll'c ~lart. Newp::irt Bt!&ch (~'ashlon Jsl) t'b t bl , " D than 2 yrs old $250 1 rary a e -... resser . &W-5$s · STEREOS: Sacrillce Stock 640--0322 $40. By appt. 893-3'121 Rcduatlon Sale! ~Ianv com· WAITRESS SCRA E s Building Mater1af1 806 pl<'t<' Stereo & Quad Exper. Lunch & dinn<'r 1 M L T -Systems at ~~ H.~t price!! _!..M-t\\'('('tl 3:?11 &. 6:?i0 J>.~f . ~lonthly ilf'nt:lls Avallabll' ~~kll oh! kitrf'll!I 1\ecd ~-ro.I Full 1u\'l·I'. t'r1·~11 bott<Hll ANTJQU~S -ol\k Bowlront I \\'A.~TED: PORTABLt:: Open Eves. 543-4444 honics. S73-4lSl pain!. ~11tny t•xtr11ll. SI.~. chest, Sliver C/1.Sl('l' SC!, 6 .ELECTR IC T'(PE\VRITER --.----bil-9!!!9. -~~~---pc: 'l'rl'ssrl din. rn1. 75 )'T". 1 ) ~AS . STEREOS· I S . FRF:f_ -Coll!t> -Sht•phertl -. --~ • • • • . old. n1atchlng hull ·h, 2 hand 1 ~I~AY CA H. 61"::_\l·ll_ . ll~l•1 ·tio,: S·~~rt!,::',., to,c,,k n11x j nios old fMHalc. Very 21,.,_lfll.~F.ltc.1,;;.s.o,,s s. Plko 1'tu':. BLUE DOLPHIN • e Surplus.Building Rerelvers/80 \vans $15: 150 335.5 Via Lido, NB ANSWERS MATERIAL · lOl'.il's of NE\V "'11lts $95. Garr a rd ITEi\fS! Doors, lumber, ply-tun1tablf's $35. Speaker \VAITRESS, dinner house ex-1V'OOd, alum &heetin&', mold-!lystems. 2 for the price of pericnce prefC!ITC'd. Must '--,. I -t r 1· H d ho 2 '-"' Jo"'usion -A\\•ful -Shaky -ng, \V n 11, C! c. onc, rotn ;i. f'O. p !K'S OVC!r 1. Appl)'. 843 \V, 19th Garter_ FIGIIT BUILDERS SURPLUS $3. Tape decks$.~. Consoles I . l!·d. . ( . 1NP.l·:n no .... "l'f pri1111•1trta1ns <.: " ........ ""1 J ,,, • frirndly. 67:»-J.Sll 11'l{'llllfl.I\, •'-' '"'11 " ita.rc 1ug a1~pro'I:: ~12 & bH<I nrcktie· ol 1111, 19.\(J.~·i pJe1eStr1't.'O.lr:Qu11dSystc111s ---l\'lll(l~hirld. l'Of\\'l'rt. top, 12x20. Got.IC \\'1th 1hc \VLnd 4,11_0020 ;; · · at 1~ list 11rl\·e!! fl('('e!vrn' 2 ADOB.ABJ.r; kltlcns. gl"UY ~11u11!1•r, lfU"lflarn tr;:1Urr, lan1p. ant1que fll\•sscd i:::b1ss · ·" 8() 11·u11s $75: l.50 \VII.Its ~f.i. \\'/"·hill• pa1\·s. 7 \1ks 0111, S3 • .t95. 612-.G709. a!~ ,shapes, hi,'."d. pa~ntcd Off• F , / I Gamm\ tu11lt'..tbltos $35. Ions:; hair. ~3973 -18-FT_G_R.,A_N_O_Y __ P~·1hs, books ~alo1r, sonl(' ice urniture Sr1eakl'r syi;h•n15. '1 for 1hr HELP! 3'!t a Crowd~ AF· St. Cf.t TI1crc's on1y one trouble 2-106 So. Main St., S.A. from $75. Quad adapten: \VAITRESS "'ilh contact l'enses. \\'hat do f.1011 thru Sat l.0-5 S20. Tenns av a i I a b 1 c . Cockta!I & food, exp., 21, you put on in case of a Il4: 5'16-1032 "893=·""'~-~'~·=~~~--- l~ YTS.: old. ~lany olhf'r Equip." 824 1 pli('(' of <MK', fl'On1 $5. H('fld rF~C'. rrn1 1crrirr n<"t'ds Slxlrta: ~l.-.h1:1111an. 2 °''.">''· lh1ngs. 5.t&-9760 ~ _ ., phol"H'."s $3. Tepe dl"<.'.ks $30. good honi('. 646-64~1 1•ngs, F.u!J) C11u111. for ti9h· D~\f'TING I f~XF.C. Sectetarlal d~k. t1 Consolt'S I Si5 Qu d 1ng. T.S. f1)' Dndge. $11,000. e q u Pinc n I . 11·ith 4'. \ell hand t"i'turn. s...c I adapte~ S~n~ 1 • a1 21·~ l\fonth~ old J'tlont• 831·~ or 495-01.36. part time, 642-8274 FJGHT? Cimeria & FOR SALE WIG Stylist \v/Sales Exp. & Sl\MLL, darling fiat top Equlpm•nt 808 Paper back books 1(}.50C', Following for \Vig Boutique metal and v.'OOd antique records, reel to reel tape ln Huntington Beach. Call trunk. $35. SID-3894 _ NIKON lenses 135 mm 3.SF recorder 3" tape-, Playboy 846-2230 or 847-8808. I $120. 50 mm t.4F $100, 2S 1nagazines Z'x: to $2., and WIG salesgirls & \\rig stylist A .• ~p~p~li~•~n~c~t~•----~8;:02 Y.1de angle 3.5F $135 phone ~l"'C. kite-hen u tens i I 11, Large \\1g Co. needs key -6-15-18'12. chshes and odrls & ends. people.. Cal 006-4455 Ask for GE Micl.'l).\\'8.Ve ovens. Us-2076-A Thurin SL !Bay & Connie ed 1 month. Xlnt cond. Call _F_u_rn_it_u_r_• _____ 8_1-'0 TI1urin), C.~I. \VHO WANTS TO \VORK? 492-4338 aft S:30 A10VING must sell )'ear old n-IOdcl hon1c furn. at 1 !i price, blue & whlte linen fiOfa $450, 4 Ital. Cane Din. chrs to match $130 ea., White cane and glass end tbl $85., %. in. glass corr. tbl w/poli!!hed bras!! base SIZ:i. DRIVE A CAB! 14 CU fL Fl'igidaire upright Manufacturer's Stle! Bikinis, (.'()\-'Cl'-UJ)S, long & short halters, special occa.~· ion dresses. Sat's only 1(}.5. 703 W. 16th St., Costa ~1esa (Corner of 16th & Superior) CHOOSE your hours, work refrig/lreezer. $100. or best for yourself, be your own offer. 673-6198 boss. l\len or \VOmen. Ca n G E R.efri r.in cash be slightly handicapped. · · gerator, ~ · Famlly size. Neat-Clean Appear&nc<'. Im Rochester, Costa l\Iesa Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. Supplement your lnoomf!. Drive a cab 6 hr!! or more a day. Apply In person, YeUow Cab Co., 186 E . 16th St .. Costa Mesa. Need a "Pad"? Place an adt Call 6<2-5673. TIME FOR DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS CALL 642-5678 :l\lirrored din tbl "Pan;ons" I ~~""~""'""'""'""'""'""~ 42" sq. w/18" lea( .$300.-:1 ESTATE Sale; 3 pc sect, din. blue kld·leathe.r wing back 1m. set, wshr & dryer, Br chr. $300. ea. Dbl bed $50. set. hide-a-bed, co r re e 640-0228. tblc11, chrs, shehold linens l\10VJNG-ltide·a·bed, maple kit. utensils, dshs, vacuum'. dtopleat table chrs, coffee BBQ & marry misc. i!em:o;. tbl, end this, lamps, mahog You name it. y,·e have it. poster bed & dresser, Cash o~Jy. #I DeSola Terr, I'(>Cliner ch r s . frost-free Cdl\[ Highlands. July 19-22 refrlg. & other Hems. 10-5. ' 548-1034. U.S. Indy l\tagB. 121 1Sx7. !21 A CONWNIENT SHOPf'ING I.ND SEW1t+G CUl0£ fOR THE EDISON baby chest of 1Sx81h. Fits Dodge, Ply., drnwer!I. White ' ' r 1 o ra 1 Cbrys., Fon:I. 5 BolL Nu b!, F rench Prov'" cost $140. Locks, Caps included. Also new. \VIII !lCli for $51)., Tires (Whls-xlnt .. 640-1559 tires-Fair). $120 642--0433 TRUNDLF. bed, lamp end Eve!!. CAL ON THE GO. For •n 1d In Coll Mary Btlh Woman~s World 642·5678, "'· 330 Ible, 4 bar stools, pr. chairs, SEU. or Trade 283 engilll! marble cOUee tbl, 2 cigaret· diving compressor. \'Olume le tbls, marble cOOw tbl. tank, various 4 v.·heel dri\'e 644-4957 aft 5 pm parts &: sports equipment. MOVED from large home to For outboard motor, dirt Condo, aa.crlrlcing quality hike or v.·hat ever. 536-8667. Easy-Sew! )'.,c 9180 . SlllS ~ lOY.-201(, t '"'1ff,..i .... 1lf,..-r- Find your place In the sun in a, quickie 11k!nl yc11.1 can \\•hip up ln n n1orning 10 "'l'ar Iha! afll'11100n. Choosr slecvcles!I, bell or short .sleeve&. Printt'd Pattc111 9180: J.J:alf Sizes 10'~. 121;, 1412. 161), 18%, 20~). Sltc 1411i (bust 37) takes 21-l yards 45-inch. sEVEN'Tl·ft\'r': CE1'""T8 tor each pattern -add 25 cent.! for each 1mttcrn for Air Mail and Special Handl- ing; otherwise thinl-clau l.de\lvciry will take three "-eeks or more. Send to ~farlan Afartln, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New Yorlt, N.Y. 10011. Prlnl NA~IE. ADDRF..SS with ZIP, 81ZJ; and STYLE }li~IBE.R. SEE ?o.IORE Qu ick Fuhlons e.nd choose one peltft'll free from our Spring.Summer CatJlog. All 1ize1! Onl)i 50c. lN5rANT SEWING BOOK sew today, M8l tomorTOW. $]. INSTANT YA$11I ON BOOK H•1nc.1redi o f fashion flilc t1. St. Macrame is Fun! , king/quet:n bed11n suites, SACRIFICE din rn1 set, sofa & love.seat, A Pana.sonic stereo tape re. lamps, occ. chairs, 832-7267. con::Jer \\1th automatic re- WROUGHT iron dining table, verse. Speaker~. head· 6 matchg Chr!I, fabric phoncs. Lots of tapes. Bst cushions. 16" Leaf. $250. offer. (714l 8·Wi·5~!H. 968-3600 COMPLETE set of auto BAH.ZILAY Hi-Fi cabinet mechanic hand tools + Tenipty); oiled \valnut. 6 pct\'.-er Ne1\1. $3000. invested, f<>et. $50. 6Q..4974 after 2 $1200 or best offer. 5'15-2322 Pl\I aft 6 FORl\IAL dlnlng roon1 set DECORATOR has l&5 )'ards "' i th b r ea kfront. nu lite gold shag plush \Vhlte-Adoptique Collection. carpet, 170 yrds n1sty 644-5969 orange. Remnants ~ l\IOVING must sell -corner or 6-12-2'>...55 group. vacuum c 1 ean c r, ROBERTA'S ORIGINALS relrig. &: much more. Plaques on the ~lall 644-1580 al llunlington Cl'nter 11' COUCJ t & lDVESEAT J uly 19, 20th. 21st. brand Ile\\', both for $150. SOFA, chair, coffee and end Usually home, !ISS-7910. tables. non dryer. lan1ps, DREXEL 42" china closet, books & puzzles, c l c . bcauTifully cnrvcd Italian, 646-9800 almost Ile\\', $275. 644-7344. Al\1/}'l\1 component slcren & MOV ING • 3 rooms of rt>rorder changer S 3 .j • furniture. to sell. Ca JI Telesco()(' $25. GoU t:"lubs anytl.me. 645-1076. $1.00 ea. &W....0228 l,qA&..~ J""Pc. sect. $10. 2 chairs SS 2 bPautiful area r u g s , pr. Cor. tabl~ $10. or a ll for v.wl, 8xl0' & 3x5', l\!us! sec $20. 549-1506 after 3:30. to appreciate. 642-S111 days, Jo~ULL size 90fa bed, lite' cs.;~·~'"'-=c1808=-c'~v~'~'·~~~-~ orangt'!, perfect cond., Sl20. 18' x 4' 5Wim pool, xlnt rond .. l\11mcograph, $20. 531-6:134. filtC!l', cleaning equip. 10 Yr KING size bed w/fremc & ~ l\tll!lt sell. $ l 2 5 · 1110.ltl"f'S!i. Good condition. $100. Call 640-1313 Al\'TJQUE furn. & disht•s & other household i1rn1 s. &15-3871 Aft. 7 P~I Join lhc fun -lean1 to do T\VO tone gold 7' sofa. $75 .. macra.i11c Ille easy, today "'ingback chair, green $Ta. \\'UV! Like nev.•. 548-29-19 Send no-.v lor our popular l ----~~~---­ Ins1ant l\lacra1ne Book! BED Da\'enpoI1, large, good condlUOJ\, $35. Learn basic knots while you ,..._II 96~1618 n1akr belts. chok<'l'S, head-I ~=7~~:,,::::•-,=_:;:;_· ~~ bands, ponchos, wall hang-SlM~10NS Hidc--a-bed. ings! Complete directions for Good condition. $70. or 12 designs, 118 pages, over be!lt offer. 55z...8fim 185 illu~trations. Order your Garage Sale 812 l'tlPY NO\V .. SE\'l;NTY-"1\'t: CF:NTS GARAGE Sale -Din. fun1, for each pattern -add 2j 1oy1, bo)'s clothes Z..S yr, ~nls for each pattern for dre!ise11 si 12. & misc. 7/19 Air !\fail and Special Hand!· & 20. 10201 Sloneybrook Dr., Ing; otherwise ttllrd·class HB delivery y,•ill take three31 c~3l'°'"I -M=07N=TE=R=EY=~ .. -. -So-. •Alt·eeks Bor ~lOrei.._:.,RSenglL~ Laguna -Thurs I Fr1 I Sat, ict_ roo 81 lnc antique radio, color ·rv, BR PILOT. 105, N ecra.ft r 1 ·-r ' Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsra urn, 01.a o m 1 1 c .• Y reasonable!! Station, -New York, N .. 10011. Print N•me.. Addrtl!lt, GAR. Sale: fum, girls toys &: Zip. rattem Nombrct. clothes, do\\'n biigs, ntl!IC. N E E 0 L ECRAFT '72! nll Evelyne Ct., lf.B. Crochet. knlt, etc. Free fl36-7257 d:::a· ~c'.r•rne Book. ANT--,Q-ll-E--V-lct-ro-la-.-,-.alnu--t desk. l'f!fria:. SXI Grttn Buie, fancy knots. pat· Valley, Sh1ter/Loe Jardlnc11 IC'Mll. $1.00. \Veit. 9f3l..-Ojifi I.Want crnchtt Booti: • Learn by pictum! Pat· TRANSFERRED! Lots of te:ms. $1.00. goodies! Evet)'thlna ltt'K'S! Comptete r.sta:ot Gift Book 600'l Shenlyn Dr., llunt. -more than 100 slJte .;lk:o;::h·c_.~-=~~~ $1.00. GARAGE Sale 438 •·em ~al Complete •11 .. • ..,. AV<!. OIM. Fri-! to 7pm, $1.00. Sol. t~pm. Wa11htr, Pftln- 18 llff,f Rltf 8oolcJ11 • 50r'. tin~ le o<ld11 &. enda Book of It Prlae Ars"1"" GARAGE Salf': BI k r I. Stkq;;lll lkNlk ' 16 ""lltm. c.IOthhtfl:, typewrlttt, teys, !&. -,... ' \·nn111hll, 18~1 Loln> Cir. 'IU.,•'11111 lt11IU IJook I • .c1;1.~B~. ~-~~~~~~ &Oc. \VED lhru FR1 2 lamJllc11, Q11111 .. IM Toda.,y'11 IJ\"lpt • ba1ktt1. tumltun-. lols of Ia btauUfUI pe.Uerm. 50c. m~. l-13 .Hill Pl.. Costa BUYING old dolls or doll parts, dating before l~O any type any cond., 543-7366. DRYER, \\'estinghouse c!r('I. f'lne cond. Sact1flcc S IO. &14-n1s ?.IUST sell · Sunbird Back Pack. pcrf. t'Ond. $45/Bst off. 612-3963 Sifl<'r 5 pn1. DIN sci, Lewitt \'ac, & al· tachn1ents. 2 table lamps, ;,1.~77•1 I·----------------M<sa. &t'-<>6111 37:\"60 steel drafting tables r.h~1r, al! \\'ai~ut. ll('HUI ahlf>. l<!l:\-0."J(}l. cnns a\'8.l -• f'AT !'l!l'ENS • If CllAIV\CTEH. Boat \\'/BO/lopping, tool dra"·rr fuush. ?fh~ chairs ~ 1:1b!c· . 615-Sj.19 "Balhoa". Ser\ous\u ! or ~e~i~rin~ d~bccr. ri!.~n; along \\1th .6 couch .• <..:~!11!11·1 * Su~mer Specie! * sa.Je. Gn!at par1y ~1 ror40 • dazor d r A 11 In i:: Htl'S Steve Srruth. 541-Jl.5.) ur «ebu1lt-Pictura Tube proplr! 6T.rj(IJ7 496-T-"S. "7 5" •1" .... c I I 11~1 --. __ _ v.·/tubes, $.10. -12·· p<1radraft ~ • _, or ~ a or "9tt 9fld ~ ·21 CtlAll.ACTl-:R BOAT parallel bar $25; 4 ,II· • EXEC S\VVl chr!I $1 5/tl:J. * :! Y~AR \\'All.ltANTY Jlay lrn 'Orile. ~l uny xlras. : paradrnfl parallel bnr S.10. $("{" chrs $S 24. INsks Installnlion Avai\nblr · * 833-l \.LI * : Call da~·s to in~pect S.M}-()711 $20/!ll. Pi<'ree Ent 867 \V l9 R1re's Trle\'l!l1on S(oi'\'l(.'I" ---·-'---- Clif s.l2-3'IDR. r I •t " h c Pot Gontr I 850 • UPRIGHT frf'czer S I 2 5. ormer v I• i·s:1 , ... ort enter I , • Boats, S•il 909 ' Ch rd $1" 110 P ianos/Organ5 826 1 Ulck·s. nl Bhk<'r :..IG-fr002 csts o m""·e rs "·· :. .. ()... BUNNIES for Snlc cutr $25. Kitchen tablc & .\ chflirs open · :i !6 dayi;l '1 ~. ' ,' KITt: So. l<MX"> · SO\\' $550., ' •m N I ,,, c Free Organ Lessons ,~.,.,,.l{T\I'' ,-.. CE ll!Jlall, n1u~1 Sf'll righl tlll"R\'. \II 11 h I I .w. c"· O\"C)'cat ~ .. ,. of-·:'~ ,-, .. : .1 :N ~ . ~· s2.7:i ca. EH2-l-l56 aft •t::io." ' . a . 11 c e ~ equ P· • fee & 2 e11'J tables $li Vuni· 1 F.J. CO:-iSOLI'. .. Zenith 2·1 · --'rlln.,..•/1o1hltr. Xlnt cond. ty & stool $12. TreuVI<' SC\\" color TV. AH \'Hf & L11i', TAI..J.i.ING Amazon _i;arrnl; 673-M~ ing niachinc. $75. 1\-lisc.. As Long As You Like! t"'!Klnl'l("ls. i\.\I r:-.t .~ietm Y?'Jng. 111.ml", bf'autitul. OK CoLUc>~rn-t_A_>t--P-,-,-,-;-,-,1, USED USABLES, 2;,oo Ne"" radio & l"e<'Ol'tl play c r. v.·ilh dog. Sl!:6. Call 641·6()3'1. du~!«'l pedes1a'1 11terrlna. 9 • Bl d C ~ Non.players & players we]. t ·• port v ., .1•·1. Turs 111111 3l'RUI. 1'0nll"nlJ)()rtl1')1 stylr \\'lnehl's. Lrnidcd \\'/xtraa. ,' Sa l'On1c to attend Tuesday C t 852 1'. night at 7:30 P~1. \Ve ivant {"ah1ne1. in xl11t . oond. Sllf)~ I s $25,000. 846-0061 NORGE r ' I d II('\\' • "'ill 9(!1[ $350. 6-1.\·:i.Ofl. re rig 'v cc P everyone to learn to play . srA~IESE kitt<'n. Ac A . CA.L 25 _ 5 SAIL.Ii Inc. Club freeze $25/gas 4 burner U1e organ! Ali materials l\ CUHTl~Mathell ~!rd. (.'01· Yt-/Mots. Slud st! r". Jlh Sp1naker RDF 6 Jl .P. stove $10/console 1 yr old furnished. or T\ /slcroo/t"ddio/tapc. a\'ail11.hlc. Call s 3 6 _ 7 9 6 2 outhrtl. Top Cond. 15.500 ph piano $250/antiquc dresser Toni Dieterich . !n charge. 5700. Call '16:1516. r\'es. 642-6135. w/mirror $2.>. Sing:er Sev.·. Phone 642-2851 ~~=-------I ing Mach cabin<'t $10/Sear5 D~s 854 CORO~ADO 15' sloo11. lncld11 • ll'xl4' nylon rug/metal 2 COAST MUSIC [I radar k e11:1ras. 3 ITlOlll old, dr Ii! cupboard $20/and Nc\1·pon Blvd. at lliu-bor r,.. to You TOP BRED SILKY nr1J;n. $45,000. N0\11· $40.000. more! 7:13\\'. 19th St Apt o, Costa l\lcsa ~-----.,.-' TERRIER PUPS. !!79-25.112 _______ 1 C.l\l · ORGAN SALE 3 Lines, 2 Tl es $2.00 FOR DISTINGUISHED l•I" SPORTCAT. Ideal lamn>' ~ SJIELF i;teel storage I ' DOG LOVERS ONLY. rn!anlllmn. $1T.1. MUST cabinet $15., GE port. ver. \\'urlitzrr faclOl')' Authorl1rd l1 FHF~C: 1 1, PERFECTION IN A ~F.E! Ph. 673-4669 er \\'/tools $9. S' urtif. rul>bcr Sale on many models. Olh<'l" · Pl. Ill}. P-ctr1 Coi·krr, ~~10-~i. plant $9. 644-oog9 hrands also on salt>, pricf'd Part 11eni:;le. Housebroken. SMALL PACKAGE. 23 .• =.5~..,"'-.. -.-2-..,-.,-,-1,-"""-·I fro1n 5295. Call S48--6IOO CALL FOR ·1 , 1· J tra!le PRE.Columbian Indian nior. AA1 5, 1r<' llCket5. r. tar & pestle $75., glass cab-Wallichs Music City LDNG haired black kittt>n APPOINTMENT ~take Oller. 546-7317. inct $40., 7 Chinese rugs, South Coast Ptaza 540-~~ h,~'. ~a~i~~ & neuter. 552-9667 ISLANDER 24, flbcrglaA, spo!less, 493-6·136. --8 \\1\S old small puppies e PUPPY WOR.LD e 11:enoa & ipinnaker. Evin 3 SltAG aN'a rugs, xlnt ANTIQUE Reed organ Need a gocd hon'lC. Cali Chlhuahu~. Ammcan E!I· OB. $3500. 64~ cond.: 2 green 12xl8 & 9xl2: Estey, 1892 fan ta st l c 67:r.ir...o kln10 1Sp1lzl, Pit Bulls, T· Sail boat. 12' Koralle, 1 blue/11:rec11 li'1:9. history . Sollrl \l"alnul $2,000. Cup Poodlrs, Creal Danf', Fa51. A·l condition. Rt>nsonablt'. Call 962-2510. Consid('r par1 in tracl1•. FREE to good home 212 yr Gcm1an S.h('J)hrrd, Bull Trr. ---~00. 540-6.'IJA BLACK lcnlher buck,. c fi.12-J '.!Sj • .~ni. spap'tl Dac·hshund. Call rlrr, C11ckt11.io. 100 i'oll.\'.t~D K!TF~ 11·/doll\', bont & n1a11, ' DRI\'ER.I\ s<'a! for T-Rird. J~YO:\ l tC"nly ~Uon.v upright S1&-7i;,., PUl)S'. ~ Stud Sct·v i<'r i'ofosl C'01·rrs. Can ·IX' .~el'n i\'o. 634, elf'clrk:. $2j. 1\f11•1· 5 ··all $190. C11ll 546-321i "'ith -Cuddlesome Kittens Br<'t'ds. (JJ>[N EVES : 13\'C. 213-286-JlS.IJ 646-9076 ben!'h. f.10.-7620 ""'""'·~50~n~··c-=~~---Gl.J:OST 13. Like fl(!\V lncld11 SREGOR Al-\C G c r ni n 11 rrailC"r & r11tra.'l. l\1ake of- Shcphrrtls. Beaut. hr ahhy fer. 713-371>-9-120. flUP'!_ -Rare colo~. Te!1llS. LIDO ,-1-. ~--"',~"'-""_"_'°"_· l -:>27-4931. ST50. Call 613-52."ll or n ·e" OAL~L\TIAN . 2 male pups, c'='='':,.,::439-006:::,,:=:.,...--~-FIND YOUR NAME WIN FREE SHOW PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $2 Value Tickets JULY 27 ·AUG. 5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL AIR CON ITIONED SEE i. .. THE ONLY MAJOR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FEATURING FOR THE FIRST TtME ANYWHERE "FLOWER MAGIC OF THE TROPICS".,,,AN ANIMATED FLORAL SPECI ACULAR SEEi. .. THE VERY LATEST INNOVATIONS fOR lHE HOME & GARDEN WITH OVER 135,000 SO. FT. Of Gll!TIRING EXHl&ITS l ll\'er. sin· & dan1 both KITE 6.ll \\'/dolly. champions. Show potential. $400. 80."i -9.t7-.79l8 Call 673-9Ji0 Af,GllAN Pups AKC. Xl nt * 9' SAILBOAT Sl.iuTett, Pedigree. ~lust see these "'l!ight 13:> Iba .. Uberglu:a, be11uti~. tl•rms av a i I . rosl $300. Sell $190. G l-3716 :iJ;.....;zw ~=~7'"'7C=~,..-.,..--IVENn:"RF: Cat. URd ~ ~ AUSTRALIA.!\/ Silky Terrier, limes. $i00. or hes! ofter. 4 n)Os.. fcmall", AKC, 586-7011 or 548--7461 Chanip stod<, $17:>. E\'es: , 6Ta-6116. 161'1 Toron.ado. Nearly nt\\·. -lnrld" jib, main, trall<'r. Pr1 DA~SJ !Ut-.:DS. n11niaturr, Pty. ~1')7~:.126 AKC, i'!hO!s, red; hlack & 11 __ Si-.~1-,.-__ -k--,-1-0 tan. ;>.'l.471'1 IXNll, 1ps ~ 1 1 SILKY. Tf'rr, f<'1n, AKC. -tl x l~ ~1.JP. July 28th lhru champ line. 6 ""ks. $700 ea ,iit'.l2-9-122: bll-611~ alt 7 pin IRJSlf Setter puppy $~. 10 \\'k.~. femnlc. Call 6T'........O.W1 Labor Day, nr BC \'acht Cl uh. al!IO ap1. Gn-3772. GTJ.-:i801 Boat<, Speed A Ski 911 Y 0 fl I( I E S-~t/F. Al\C. TOLl.YCRAJ-"1' IS It SJ>N'•I· Small. 10turdy stock .. Priv. boot 187 lnlerr1•ptcr. Xln1 , pty 6T~291. 893--4092. rl"n] clR11:-y. Nf'w co,·rr, • 'It ,\KC York.shin-Tt'1Tler tr11llrr. 1st $3000. JZCIA lt, Puppie~. Sturl st'I'\' 3\'ilil. fin-774.i _______ I :J\9-~~-·11 or :i.";1..0016 Hi' \\'il~onll fllt!tY1th11n ski IRISll Setter. ~!ale. ~ 11111!(, l'NI!,. iO h11 ~lf'l't'. OB paJl'M"! SIOO 1\/tra1lrr & l'O\'l"r $100'.I. or ·call ~15-11-ti ll"~c ~':! :_!.~'1-!'J.c·"--- . 17 FT. inbonrd ski ho.11 100 D1\L~lATIAN Pu P fl 1 r Ii · lnrh Olds C'ni;:inr. $1700 or purebred. {i~ll h<''' flrfrr. 9112-9829 . . 16' SK I lYt:J.t, 283 ~\v &. BO'."l::R. mah.•'. lS nl()f. hkes Trall<'r, .\Int ('()(1(1, Sl.3'i1 or ch1\<lren. Tnuned. $7:>. Ca.II hr•"'''' iii=-a1GJ lill-7897 --'-. .'"'Q • Horses 856 :1 YR . old 11.hrrJ 01estnutl[ TraMportalion II•] g1•ld1n.: Iii hnndl!, Xln1 --------'· M1uilst1nn ru' Jun1ftr l111nti'r .l••••••••••1I• .1un1p~. l()Y; :'IOunll Nl'l \·a·~·11. t.r ... at <li~po"'111on & Campers, Sele/Rent 920 : f>('rM1nal!t,v S..\O"I or $500 ' '" 1n1•k, .;.·::; Tl\I Qi' &10·1009. ·~ (',\B-Ov<'r: ovrn, slnvr, • l·IORS~:s-:-n~Lriuit•d , !'\~' 1··r 1..-.-... Sips. 2.11.dlti;;, 2 un..: p1pr cnn·nl•. Bo11r<ltn~ $00. _i·t~ J;i:Q. ,,.17-111()1 ! Fr• .. <I .,:rlltn f.· hay, Pon~· Cycles, Blket, 1·idc1'i. 2f0\6 l.aguna C"nrorl Scooter1 925 ltd. 491-29!0. ---'------"'I • ' IWlV PILOT Thursda1, J11lr Jq, 1~73 ........... l[i) [ ,.._..~ ][i) ~' .. _ ...... _ .... ~l§J Autos ror Salt 1§:1 --u. l§l I 1§1 Cycles, Bikes, Scooters 91S Motor Hon1es: -Sale/Rent Trucks 962 1971 f'ORD Ran,icr XLT. 11_. ton tl'UC'k 11.nel U ~ ft. 1\fllfriiQ fibc-f'l?1aM and alum. l'llmJl('l'. Boll1 loaded \\'hh cxh ....i. fu!ly .clf-con- tallll'd. 1..ikC' new t'OOdirion and n11L<rt ht> St'<·n to be •P- prt.'t'liited. 23,000 mill'll. \\11U st'll 111.'J)al'&t(.'. $5,800 or be.sl otter. Autot W11nted 961 Autos, fmported --------1 IMPORTS WANTED Oro.nae County's TOP $ BUY~ BIU. ~IAXJo:Y TOYOTA IMW 970 Auto., lmportoo JAGUAR '70 Aut ... lmpo<tocl TOYOTA 970Auto., UMCI BUICK 990 Autos, Uno FORD • • • H. Fockler 10813 El C•ntro Fount•ln Va lley -You Rf\• tm: "'inn1-r or TWO FR EE TICKETS 10 thf' SOUTH LAND Home & Garden Show July 2i111 1h1·u Aue. 5th nl !h(• ANAHEIM CONllENTION CENTER 800 \\' Kutrll<:1. An;ih1•1n1 P1l?a.~f' c·1dl 642-jij18, ext. 314 to 1,.<t11n1your11~·kf'ht r~onh Counry toll ff'\'(' n1nnbt'r l:s 540-12'JO.' • • • Speedwoy Bike Ricld1·n only 1 ~ Sl'D1'0ll by Danny lk<'kcr, lla111:s qu\4•k t•h.1ng t' hub, nssortc..-1 ~11'0l:k <'IS ;111d i:('ar rhtlO~l'S. lksl 01 l'VC'rytlUllj(. S1200 call Bud Hyd<'r tl! NEWPORT IMPORTS 31W \V. Coils! Hwy., N.B. 641-9405 BICYCLE SALE NE\\' 10 SPEED rr.ALIAN' BICYCU:;S S69.9'1. B<-ach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa Ulvd., 6j5. 7282. Aull1ot'lzed NISHIKI df'alt>r. KA\VAS,\K I !m, dual cliSt', 4 into 1, Yoshi springs; Sl.8:10. Spare!! a\·ail. Days :).11)-1312: Aft. 6, 832-1241. SCH\VJ NN Co11!lnC'1U1! l 0 si')('W, lights, book rack all 11("\\' ~ ro"I $145' ITI52 K~~n_Ln,:__l lB_. ___ _ 't.?1i Sl.iPER Clean Trlun1ph 6:JO, 5 spd 11·ans, 6" ext. tint ("nd. 'M' (.'Xhst. only 1,500 mi. ~1ust sell~ 642....fl>l59. 1911 CZ 380 CC. New piston. Akronts, Konrs. 11 las 1 I c tank. Very t·lean. Ask $650-<>fier. 673--49-14. '7(} HONDA CL,-.150 Just rebu!ll, S5j(), 962-3811 '69 YAMAHA t7J Enduro. Xlnc oond. $375. Call 673-9562 '70 Sporlsh.~r XLH. 7000 nil. Stt To appre<"iale! 508-4262 Seal Bearh ·72 HONDA j()I) 4 cylincll"r. 3,.\00 ml, xlnt coM, $1.000. 64:>-&;15. TOCO 6JIJ> n1ini blke-nCDr nu a steal al $100. P.1ust see to appreciate 4!6--0587 r.rusr S('ll 1970 Honda CB 350, very good cond. $350. Ca ll 644-2370 '70 HONDA CL 450. 5 5pcl, cust. pnt, Helmet. Xlnl. $67.S Jeff 892~97'22 9-6. '71 llONdA 3L 3.)() IU\V n1ilc.-;, Perfect <:ond 111u ... c St.'(' 10 apprt'. $500. 55&-i877 'Ladies SChwlnn-Blke Xlnl tunditlon. f>-L~:~.1 Electric Cars 930 ELECT MARKETER needs \\'Ork. SlOO. Xlnt for old<'r persons Iran'!. 536-8891 ;i{I 6 536.-Clj51. Mobile Home~ 935 12X60 PACEi\1,\KER v.'/CX- lras. Seacllff 1\lob1l Pk. 890 W. l:i, N.B. lntJ 11p. 63. 612-2!1!6 10 ti. ~layfio\ve1· \I /cabana. On Lirio Pcnln .. 100 IL rro1n bay. 644-nll Hfter j P~1. MotOr Homes Sile/Rent 940 GMC Motorhomes zr & 26' Immediate Delivery Orn~(' Co'11. fo:xPlu:sivc Dt·llit'T BILL BARRY 2000 E. tsr Sr .. Santa Ana 558-1000 MOTOR HOMES ,\polio, Ptit<e!ll"lter, B a r o n. J arn001·<'<'. ltoblnhood \Ve-\·e scot 'em a.1 KEN DON MOTOR HOMES 707 N. llarbor, S.A. 554-0033 1973 DiM.'0\-erer and Sundial MoTor llomcs for renr, n1ake fl'tervulions for Summer 00\\'. Phollf' Miss Bennet at Bob Longpf\.' Pon :inl', 892-6651 or 636-2500. • Nl'1v Lu.'<ury LIFETli\IES 23-25', lmn111c. Sips 6 "Com- fort11bly", air, gen, stereo, flVt o\\·nr, 838-0900. Tus1in Tr•llers, Trave• 945 NlMROJ) 70 hardlop ll•nt trailer, dual \vatcr & ('It'(', llySlcn1s. sips to 8, See a t 2811 llnnovcr Dr., C i\l ''"-""" GILES Travel trailer 26' fool 4 11.'hel'I elec. brk.~. air cond. fully self CQil!ained, n1any l'Xtra.s. 979-0189 1966 \\rARD \\'ESTERN TE:\'T TH.AILER ............ $225 SG'J..5915 15' CAi\IPING Trailt'r Gd concl. S350. 545-0015 or -"61 Auto Service, Parts 949 TJRES • 100 J\ssorted sizes & brands. Ne\\' & rt'caps + alignment & brake equip. -Tire shop Y1'1'nt out of business. ~lake offer. 67.1-;"i.';69 2 G70 11" Rood Hug~<'l'S tires, l\founted on 8" Scars ln!t•rn11lio11al Mag11, xlnt t-ond $125. 58fi-6805 V\V 1500 eng ca~ w/nu bearings, also pistons, cyl. rods & oil pump. All for $75. 5-19-1306 ~I UST st'IJ 237 Chev eng., HD clutch. $50. Ca.II 960-1778 aft. 5 A11tos tor s.ite I ~ Antiques:/Cl11s.slc1 953 '47 CHRY New Yorker Cli1ssic. 2nd O\vncr. ~fust sell !his all orig. black beauty. Very fine rood, runs \\'ell, werything v.'Olics. $800. or be11t off. Day or evt's 642-4038 Recrea~ti~o-n-•l~---- Vehicles 956 V\V DUNE BUG Real gas savri! :19 h p manufactured engine. Pur- ple fiake CaJ body. SL Legal Never in sand. Good top, 4 near-new IY i d e tracks. 'Veile front \\'heels, some e)(tta engine parts. $1.850 Invested. Panic Sale! Steal for ,$900 Cash. Private Party. •l!J;l-17~7 Trucks 962 '6.j CHEV. 3, ton PU \I can1per. LoadC'd 11·•C'X· trag, Top rond. $1210/offl'r 64S-~l.J67 OODGEc--ctru-cck~.-,"96.J""".-.1c--,pd-c. no spin dHferential, 6 cyl, runs \\'Cl\. »J{I. 495--52:>9 11·kday~. '69 EL Ci\.l\1 INO SS 396, ntow brakt>s, paint, s h o c k s , clutch, upholstery, immac! 67:'!-4-152 -~~-~-~~·I ·;,\ CHE\'I" CarryAl1·Xln1 cond. $195. 128 Santa lsabl"l, C;\1. 612-l!l!lO. • Phone 549-4348 • 71 SPORTS CUSTOM Super 5l1arp, 4 8fl(I, rad k heater. New 12 x 16.5 littt. $2700. or beJS'\ of(er. • 892-1832 * '72 DODGE P .U .• 1i Ion, air shock!, long bed, V-8, auto, new truck tires, v.·ell l'ICl'Vlc· ed. xln1 L"Ondillon, $2)00. or be-st offer 6n.29S7 % T, chcv P.U. -1956 -Chev Bel Aire t~d eng. & parts. Both for $ 2 O O. 979-1680 Htt 6p1n '6~ F'ORD 11 ¥ Ion, p/s new paint, eng. overhaul('(!, dia. n1onrl 1>l1tte 8 x 12 flatb<.'cl. 615-1691 '71 FO"R"o~n"ru-"°'·hc-ro-. .,,~,-.,"'1.-.1 stick shift. Xlnt cond. $119.l. M9--0128 963 TRUCK & TRAILER 1970 CMJ-~V. I ton 350 VII. 4 liJX"(.'(I, 12 rt Jl'.lllkl', gd tiJ'CS, .l(Jllt 11.lr1niug C011d., t-ouplcd w!1h 16 fr . lo11' boy heavy dut:y -triple 11X"le, strolghr h1t1:h -<'lC<·tric brak~. 4 ft. plyl'.'ood sides • rernoV1:lble. Both sidc-s covc1't'd with vinyl. larp.o;. $3000. 846-549-1.. li.B. aft 5 p.111. '1'1 Jo-ORO &'OllOtinc, 350 ~g atr/oond, t"ust. sea t s'. 17,000 1ni. Must sell-Mast see! Pri ply. 833--Ui04, 963-1168 e\<eSll\'knds. '66 _l:."'CONOWNE. '69 cng, radial !ires, elect. ignition, fo·ranz oil fil ter. dual ban, sora-bcd & exlras. a.1&-;,.172 ·TI OIATJ-~AU Club WRgOii. pis. 8 pass. V-8, auto, 25.000 mi. $.1400. 847-7610 1969 FORD Van l\lags. 979-5618 '66 Dodge Van Must Sell!! * 494-9892 * $600. 18881 Beach Blv '.. H. Beach Pb. R47 ·8555 JUNK cani wanted, Free tov.•ing, title clearance, 24 hn1. 49~-1003 ext 608 \Vt:'LL BUY OR CONSIGN \'OUR CAR DICK CLA \'$ • &46-3243 Autos, Imported 970 BEST AT THE BEACH CADILLAC '70 CONV'T. F'ull Pov.·er. Auto Olmate Con· trol, A~1/Fhl. 912 BIV , $2595, BEACl-1 l~lPORTS, 1200 \\'. Coast Hi\\·ay, Ne"•port. 645--6400 SAAB AT THE BEACH Salt•s·Lcasing. Servic1·-Rcncal~ ALFA ROMEO AT THE BEACH LEASE A 1m BAI/ARIA -GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's '73 BAVARIA Dctno '72 "'°' 'ii 2002 '69 2500 '69 lli()O '61 20CJO CREVIER BMW Sain • Service • Leasing 20S W. 1~ St., Santa Ana 135-3171 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & SALES-SERVICE-LEASING OVF.RSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. 23•1 E. 11U1 St. Costa !\ll"sa ' 5'15-4441 1973 Bavarill11 BM\V, 60CKl 1ni Stick. Fully Equip. Under \1·a1Tanry. Pri. ply. 642-3512. CAPRI ~ NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI Salt's·Lea.oring-S Sc1vice-R~ntals port c."OUpe da'Or. body side mouldin~s. reC"lining frool r.fERCEDES 230SL '65, Ail' seals, contour rear seals 4 Cond., Both Tops, New spc«l transmission, po.A°·cr Rad i 8 Is, B l" c k I' r front disc brake!(, slyle steel Alif/FM/S\V. U J D 5 6 0 , y.·IJeels, bucket seats, radial BEACH 1 ~1.PORTS, 1200 \V. ply tires. !GAECN899742). Coast Hiway, Ne\\· port , OVERSTOCKED! 64""""· IMMEDIATE '11 JAGUAR XJ-6, Loaded, DELIVERY llun'Y !or !his one. (532GBCJ CADILLAC '68 Cpc. DeV, GUSTAFSON Auto Clin1ate Control, Lan- rl'" 11oor, AM/FM/Stereo. Lincoln-Mercury X5.5787, $1895, BEAOI 11\I-16800 Beach at Wanicr PORTS, 1200 \V. Coast Jiuntinglon Beach Hlway, Newport, 6'6-64<Xi 842-8844 * (213) 592.5~ ALFA ROMEO at t he ''Ho of th Viki " BEACH '72 Berina Demos me • ng (2) Never Registered, $.1795 ** 'TI CA,PRI -GAS Autos W•nted 968 ea. SAVER -DELUXE -CON· ---------·1'66 GIULIA SPRINT GT, SOLE RADIO -4 cyl. - Al\t/F'l\.J Radio, TNE-136, radials, clean! $16 9 5. TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID . FOR OR NOTI $1395. Private. 646--5330 '67 SPIDER. Rd s I er, '72 CAPRI 2000 aulo/fuel in- 1 Blaypunct, New Radials, jection, IM:!adeni s.idc pipes 031AKU $16~ mags $3,000 or bes! must '69 SPIDER R d s I e r . sell. 536--6879 bt'lore 3: 30. A.VJ/f"i\I, foUel injection, '72 CAPRl. VS, 4 spd, fully 690!tFR, $2695, equipped, under 10,!m mi. V\V's al the BEACH, Ca.II 5'10--0842 '67 Beetle, Grabber Orange, '72 CAPRI, air, ,.,..,..,i con-Radio, UUN995. 6 """' '68 SUNROO F BEETLE, d ition. low mileage. Call Lemon Ycllov.·. Radio, 962-4644 art 3prn WWM680. DATSUN '69 BEETLE, Ginger ---------~~~~· Vinyl Interior, $ SALE $ •70 BEETLE, G "' " DATSUNS flletall!c, Radio, Vin y I Call or ,c:o1ne in to see NEWPORT .IMPORTS Interior, 437 AVB NEW DEMOS 1973 us. Bf~ACH l i\1.PORTS, 1200 \V. 510's .'.1100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 \\1E PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR '!'OP USED CAM I! your car is extra clean, see us first. RAUER BUlCK 2925 llarbor Blvd. Costa !tleRa 9~2500 TOP CASH for clean Ja1e nlOdel CllJ'3 and trui!ks! Howard Chevrolet i\facA1·thur and Jnn1bo~ Ne1vpo1't Beach 833.-0555 \VE HUY l~·I PORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIOI Dean Lewis Imports: 1H66 Harbor, C.f\il. 646.9303 Coast. Hiway, Newport, Pickup 645--&iOO. 610's -. ilh·arh ]ltnp1111!i t v ... , . .. ,.,_,, -·:~;·\•' ., • ': '"''Jli' ALFA ROMID -SAAB in NEWPORT • • • Pam Winchester 7009 Parsons ;:1 Costa Mesa You are lhc \\'inner or TWO FREE TICKETS tn The SOUTHLAND Home & Garden Show Jl_llY 27th thru Aug. 5th at the ANAHEIM CONllENTION CENTER All i\iodt:ls & Colors to Choose From. . . :'i1'111p11rt D<1h1111 "° ~'< • I'. ' o.I ' I• • • • ...... , .... ' ' • 1 ' I 1973 DATSUNS · ALL MODELS IN STOCK BARWICK IMPORTS 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano 493-3375 or 831-1315 '71 DATSUN 240Z, ~ir, 4-sp:t, mags, orange, 1m· ntaculate! $.1650, 842-8836, "ves. 548-2806 ·n 240Z. 1 owner, nu radials, 1nags, ain /fm stereo tape, auto, air lo nii. $3650. 642-3392/61 J-3008. '63 CHEV. \VANT ED U S E D FIAT $6895 PACE ARROW ' k <~ .,, i··o filAVERTCK I ~ 1011 pa· up, ~uvv. ;,,, ·~· 1·~ 1 PRIVATE J'ARTY Ch1!tl!.1 fiN.l Ads· •· .. ~-.j6_7l! I 61·1-1601 800 \V. Katelin, Anal1ci111 Pll"arie call 642-5678, ext. 314 !O clain1 }"Our tickets. (North Counly toll free number is 540-1220.) • • • '69 .FrAT 124 Sport xlnt cond. $131i 557-3309 Coupe., or TIOGA BASE PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CREVIER BMW S1les-Servic•Le1sin9 208 W. 1st St .• Santa Ana 835-3171 e SAltS .-- e SERVICE • e RENTALS e EXPLOR ER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH l8Ml'1 Beach Blvd. 8tl-8803 JIUNTINGTON BEACJI * RENTALS * IJfeUme, SU!>frk>r, 0 Jll'fl ~d. l..and:lu, Ovt>rlan<l ,ft. \\'lnnebago Molorhoml'!l ROCREATfON llENTAL ANO SERVICE 216 N'. Clara, SA 714.slG-8615 Zl' EXECUTIVE rn o I o r homo for rr:int. f 'ully ~If conl.tnoo. 6'1:J..Zl50 um 20' "'1nM'hlll"" Q..., Seoul Si.JOO. 9611-lOln Vans 963 Vans ' .,, ...... ,.,.,_ •5495 v .1. 1'/T, StO\'t l(f toX,. lloY, 5l(fl'l '-#llOI 1973 Chev. Contempo Sportsm•n Vin tonv•n;on, •••<. ~•rlttt•Jo,, tl"Pl '-$6696 pop rop. ltO(k :::1'U. Ser. 11n40 01/ER SO \/ANS IN STOCK 1973 GMC 1;, Ton Pick-up "uUy lt<lory MtViPHt l!otl., A.T .. lJf v.1, P.S .. P.1 .. llHlo,. o:ltlu•• IMMllntt. Slk, :1t1I $~. •JltlO 1973 GMC ¥ .. Ton Pick-up ",f., P.J.,. P.I .• (lmllt'f' t,.Clll "vl,t. UO V .. , Sil, •1'tJ. Str. IUOU 1973 GMC Spdnl m ,, .... A.T,, P.S .. P,I .. Air ctM., tltl -1 .. ~Irle (JOCI<, ......... l\dltl". ¥kl'fl i.,. s•. :un s3495 S1693 --L BARRY' GMC Motorhome Center 2000 E. 1st St., Sonto Ana 558·l000 • 963 ALFA ROMEO '69 ALFA Spidor. Excellent condition. Lo. mi. $2700, or bes! ofter a;;&-7.\.19 BMW LEASE A '73 BAVARl<\ Demo • Serial •3132993 ror $166.•ll pr.r month OEL or buy for $$.291J. Bob McL11ren, BMW, Inc. 1714) 879-5614 JAGUAR '71 XJ-6 Sedan Sable Bisqu in!erior. loaded, miles, 13154.B\\ll. S6789 low lll,1n1111•; llliihn'• !lll!U I .iQ.l.i ,.!, I & Vi\lJ CLASSIFiED will setl lt! '71 Jaguar V-12 E Type Coupe 8 . R. iJ'et'll, looded, local car (06278WJ, $6666 ~.l1l!~~l 1j~l11!•,,,!llut 111 °'-' . . . . . . MAZDA Loa .. A Rotary bglno MAZDA RX3 Station \Vagon, our most pop1.1lar modd! Ooly $80.11 Moottily MIRACLE MAZDA Zt50 Harbor Blvd. Cosia i\1esa 645-5700 * Mazda '73 Rotuy * $66 MONTH 36 ?..IONTllS OPEN LEASE \\/Ill accept trade-ins .. CAU. ?itl't. FRY 842.£666 ,Hunt. Beach MAZDA 173.11 Beach Bl. 842·6666 BOB LONGPRE MAZDA -SERVICE FIRST- Jst Street at the Santa Ana Frwy, 2001 E. lst Street Santa Ana 558-7871 MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car Trade-ins Coming In Every D11y Ask About Our Unique Used Mercedes L••se Plans House of Imports 6862 Afancheater, Buena Park on the Santa Ana Frwy 523-1250 JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS MERCEDES BENZ AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE Jim Slemons Imports lJOl Quail N ('\Vport Beach 833-9300 ENTER FROM MacARTHUR 1966 MERCEDES 250 SE. Super shape! S u p e r mileage! Soper car! $300) . 675-7751 ** •n Mercedes 280 SE, :xlnt cond., air, full pwr, 61>-S>l6. r.m. '73 280 Sedan. auto, 7 months, 14,00> miles, lite blue. p/w, $7995. 5.32-9178. MG '52 r.1GTD, B.R.G., v.•ith black top, orig con d. thruout. $1050 or best offer. 963-4151 PORSCHE '70 9lJS COUPE. 29~1. Silver. Immaculate. &-iv. record. 83()-3290 SAAB ~-------'66 SAAB, good rurming con- dltion. 2-door. 120, ~250. 963-4847. Call aner 6 TOYOTA '71 TOYOTA MARK II WAGON Auto Trans. (903CQQJ $1999 .•.1~1 ·~\~'.'.'~ •. !.ll11t111" . ... ~ .. . . . ~ *. + + * '71 CORQLLA \Vgn. r/h. rndin.ls. lo mi, xlnt cond. $1595. 847 ·8460. '69 CORONA. Auto, 2 dr, am/fn1, xlnt condition. $800. Cell 536-0035 TOYOTAS 1971 FORD GALAXIE 500 • ., Bu1GV" SPORT WAGON F'ull)' Equl()ped, OOH3241 FOR $1678 2 00t1r Jtardtop IMMl!DIATE '"" V1l '""'"" DELIVERY Cn1is<:-O-n111tic trans. MX JV..\·rr 1111 .. 'i?ting Ill LUX Po\\'Cl' d~c bt'!lkC's CELTCA Tinted '1'indsh1f'ld CORON.A Air L'IJl11ll!lonlng LAND CRU ISER BU ICK SPEx:::JAL J~i\1 radio Color blUl', 1-::Xcelltnt l'Ond. v inyl ~f f\ ... M L111.:! ltadiO, air, VS. Old lady \~heel .co1;i;; - CMn> WUI troin Phlladclphia previous Ne1v 11hih 11.UI tl!'f'.~ TOYOTA 01vn1•r. 1967, 29,()1)() miles. \11'1'.)' s~ t'Ondl11on. $UOO 49,000 tniles. ·• 5~.:i.{]291. • $2095 1966 Harbor, C.?i-1. &16-9303 11.\ E. 20th St. Apt. 14 Costa 8l"e at WE Buy ~lesa. ' DAILY PILOT E:\-IPLOYEE PARKING LOT '69 ~l!ICK . Riviera. Good 330 \\'est Bay, Costa Alesa USED t.'Onchtion. Vmyl top, all ex-or trns. Be.low market pr\ce. Call ~fargarct Greenman Pvt Ply. Contact Hugh 542-4321 TOYOTAS =· 5 4 9-2 6 5 4 or '71 LTD Rrnl. 1''ul1 p\1•r, a/c, ·= IC . . _ Cl . strroo, Vllop. only 21,000 l;l.J BU K R1v1cra -ass1c. nii. Sac. at less than \Vhlso. All 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ltll\an1111,; lll1111n'!i !111'1)11• W;Ni ..... \ '>ll'l'U . .. .. . . . .. '69 TOY OT A Corolla S!a \\'gn. 4 !!pd, Good condllion. Ca!J 96..1-1445 1968 TOYOTA Sia. \Vag., xlnt cond. 4 new tirt>s. 4--spd trll.n!!. Asking S900. 645-7617 Clea.n, dark bro1111 w/sad· $2.395 or nearest offer. die 1111. $995. 494-8760 5:l&-2670. i ------~-~-'11 FORD J\lavl"rick, 4 door Sf'<lan uir cond, au10, r 'h. 1----------1 :12.000 n1i very cleun, $149.S EL DORADOS 1H2-mo CADILLAC 14 TO CHOOSE '69 LTD~.-eoo.00--"'1 -ro~oo"".-=P/c-,. COUPES-CONVERTIBLES P/b, factory air, \'lnyl top. • Sell belOll' lO\V book for illl• DE VILLES ntcdiall' sale. 979-:>163. ·rl TORINO· Squire Station 38 TO CHOOSE \Vagon, 19,000 n1i., like new. t'OUPES $359:'1. 5-19--0~28 SEDANS REAI.J..Y CLEAN? Ford CONVERTIBLES LTD 'GS ne\v tires, pa.int, VOLKSWAGEN r.fanyei.:ccllentrolors brakl'!s, ~9.i Fil'n1 . s:i2-9086 ---------Choice of Interiors !Cloth & leather> '68 FORD Gal. 500. Fsl/bk, PAYMENTS? Factory airconditloning r/h. lac air, p/s, VS, xlnt $65 DOWN $65 MO Full PO\\·er -Choice or: L'Ond. $1000. 640-1800 i\1odel JJII, No. 4185, 48 ~s. Stereo .M.f/F~t radio '6.3 FORD Econoline r.1ust incl. tax, lie, & all carrying Crwse control S('I). $700 or best offer. charges on app. credit. Tru.nk.opcner & more . . 5.'>7-2019 Defen'ed pmt. price: 3153.80 All m immaculate 4;-'0lld_1llon 1967 FORD Gala.'<y. Gd. incl. ta...; & lie. ANNUAL Uui:::est selection 111 cond. $560. fl ER CE NTAGE RATE Orange County * 962-JJ."j';J, * 12.61'1a Nabers Cadillac 1 -.""-,-.0-"-,,~,~o-,-. ~E-,.-,,.-,~,,-"' GARDEN l..V>i WEST w:J} AUTHORIZED DEALER 6 cyl, stick slf\ft, runs great. 26001lJARBOR BL., $100. 675--!F.13 C.'OSTA MESA L.:,11"a='-y"Sq"""u"1rr-'7.ll7'g-n-. -,,~,.-.-,c-"I 540-9100 Opt'n Sunclay plh. am/fm. c l e an . 'TI ELDORAOO. pespCratc $2895.Joffer. 5'16-7249 7600 We1tmlnster Blvd. to· sell. Have bought another MERCURY Westminstl"r car. Coro wltan landau top, 893--T;-,51or638-1880 all P\VI', am/fm radio, nu l----------1 '64 V\V Bll!i. Cpt paneled. nu stt'el belted tires, 30,000 '70 FORD Mercw'Y r.tontego tires shocks brks cltch miles. Best ofler. 545--9-:ll9, 2 dr. Xl~t cond. ~cllo. a/c. custom headliner dash after 6 pni 644--0637 44,CXX!_ mi. Good ta-es. $1800. MS-3697 au 5. '69 CAD FI e et wood 644--lS&l '59 \T\V Bug $325. Runs good, broughan1, f_ully · equip'd. OLDSMOBILE new seat covers, radio etc. while \\'-red Jthr int, vinyl 1----·------ Nee<k clutch. ~·3888 32G4 top, $3300. Laguna, 494-8131 Sates & &>:vice Nebraska Ln., C.l'.-1. ;70 COUPE DeViJI(.', Arv11Fr-.t OLDSMOBILE '69, \VHITE, slick, R/H, new stereo ra~io. U:mdcrl. X!Jtr GMC TRUCKS tires & co1np tuneup, 75,000 L-ond. $36.j() i TI-IJ 673-S6().l HONDA CARS mi Clean Sll50 54:Hi016 days. S olt 6pm · · '68 CADILLAC SDV., fully UNIVERSITY OLD '72 V\V \Vestpila.lla. Pop-top L'Cl'fiP~. vinyl lop, Ill'\\' 2850 Harbor Blvd. camper \v/tent. Like tie\v, nu:hal tires, $1625 or best of-Costa Mesa 540-9640 lo mi, war. 552-7ll'.l fer. 6&2733. OLDS VISTA \VAGON, '72· '70 V\V BUS Lo mi. Xlnt. '59 CHEVY El Camino, 17.000 n1i\t>S. PS/?B, air. cond. 1 owner camping bed SJ,50., in good condition rack, ne\V tires. Dix int. t:rame, Sl.850. ~-&16-{;574 ask for Ed. Corpora.le exec. car, in xlnt 1973 CAMPMOBILE, fully '70 CAD DeVllle. Loo.ded! ~131$41!00. Gall ElL'O. equip, lmmac. cone\. Must $3400. Superb cond. Eves. J; • • sell, wit! sacrifice. 67~7·159. fi46-6833. lTI4 ~ sn-8850 clays. '6 1 OLDS 88. 4 dr, an', $Z-JO. '72 VW Adventure Campc!'r '68 E l Dorado, beaut. L'Ond. 645-2640 or xlnt cond., a/nl, radfals: all extras. Need eash. Sell . 540.fi746 warranty. $3,400. &ID-Ins. for 11.•holesale. 496-1408 * ONE O\VNER, '66 Cutl~"J '70 VW Bug, good cond. Call '6·1 SEDAN OeVllle. Full pwr Supren1e, 4 cir, pslpb, a11' after 6 pm + many extras. Xlnt cond. cond., 540-6027 673-8827 $795. 548-8703 '71 DELTA 88-2Dr, PIS, * * '62 CONVERT. New CAMARO P/B, V/R. >;,000 ml. $2ii95. n10tor & tirea. $400. Good 673--6502 aft 6 PJ\.1 condil:lon. 642-2096. 196? CMIARO 327, auto '70 CUTLASS. Slfpreme. Likr. '63 V\V Transporter Must see trans, good cond. Best ofter. Ne~'. lo ny1leage, loaded. to appreciate, $650. 644-5932 $2150. Call 548-1326 494-0322 '70 CAl\tARO. Like new. '66 Olds 98 Luxury Sedan. '70 V\V Sq. Back. fitichelln 10,000 mi. ne\\' \l.'/\1' tires, Full f>O\\-'C'I'. ~ cond., radial!!, good cond. $1500. VS, p/s, radio. f>.W--0323. $700 or oUl"r. 6!;;..4462 ea11 580-1167 CHEVROLET-PINTO WANTED V\V'S RUNNING OR r.;?1' ,70 CHEVY CAME RO ·12 R~NABOUT, air, radio, 53()-{)94() or 530-4799 G ,.._, . . lux. int .f.: ext. Gold. wide '70 BUG U lo mi I ~n ....,,rJ, vrnyl roof, Air 1rack lires. Xtnt cond. $1725. • ye ow, · Cone! well kept car {873. A"'2 "15 ' rt 6 P'I O"·ner, i.:lnt cond., n1ust i'.U.IEl ~""...., ""' a · ll sell! $1050/olfer 557--07J1 1 ' • $2680 ·72 PINTO Squire. station VW '72 Bug. yellow, rur xlnt \\·agon. 14,000 m1. auto cond. Must sell • $2100. A M I F i\1 s I e r e o 61r7696 S2~5-1&-6937 'TI VW Bus. Custom Camper. Air. Xh1t con(). r.1n ny ex- ltlll,1rq111 ,, 11\111111~; f~Q1'~j/,£.Ulj >-Lil•i.Ul\•I PLYMOUTH tras. $3000 llnn. 96S--O:r.'l3. '69 FURY III. air cond, PIS, '71 V\V Supcrbeetlr, Sunroof, '69 CHEV Impala 4 dr . 1-rr. P/B, vinyl top. $1250. radio, 34,000 miles. ~fusl Pldisc brakes, p/s, air, 300 _..,_,_-22_4' _______ 1 . .. . . . " .. Sell! $1500. 64.>--0SlS hp, lj() C.D;l ., '( 8, '69 PLYMOUTH Fury III. turbo-hy~ •• ! dn~er, s.ince Fully equip. 1 o\vner, lo n1i, VOLVO new. $99J. 552--919J. a beau1y. $1,450. 53&-U19. ---------'66 CH~ELLE. reblt eng, 4 * 19Tl Plyin<ll1lh Satellllc, -E.CONOMY nu lires. cherry cond. 4-dr. pis, p/b, air. auto. • SAFETY PLUS Savings & Comfort In Our Rem11ining 35 NEW VOLi/OS Immediate Delivery ~w.LllN W VOLVO $8001bt-st offer. Call An1,Y, 6-J5-1691 833-2546 . 1965 B,\RRJCUDA, R & II. * '73 1f ONTE Ca.rlo, air, smog dl"vice. delux interior, auton1alic, Pvi p!y. 968--2014 $4,500. • ;m..,7GSQ or :>J0.-4.I02 * t~URY Ill * '67, ~ . brakes, trans. runs good! 64 CHEV . Impala hdtop. $495. lirm. s.l2-.9086 A/C, PIS. P/B, Nev.' . • , paint. f\;Jicheilns Ca 11 · TI PLY . .Fury ~J. 68 Olds 552-93.14 · · F-8.l $6!'15, both in xlnt ·73 NOV. Cus ron<l., 962-4315 • A tom llatch·l--~------- back, Silver, pi s, p/disc PONTIAC b1·ks. air, turOO-hdro. $3,2J0.1----------~2876. 1951 CJ·IEV\' Van. Runs great! Looks good! Good tires $195. 548--0316. LEASE OR BUY 'TI thru '13 Pontiacs DAVE RCSS PONTIAC 1966 He:rbor, C.?tf. 646-9.100 '63 IMPALA, lttr, 327 slick, "'"" ~-~,.,-"~---~990= I air. $375. 514 7th St. HB. usoo 1-Iarbor Blvd .. at Fair Autos, Used * 536-3&'15 * Drive, Costa ftfesa 546-8017 • • • Ken Renwick 1811 Coast Hwy '131 L•gun• Beach You arr the wlnnrr of TWO FREE TICKETS h) !he '69 r.IALIBU. p/8, radio '70 <;ATALINA \Vagon. fully healer, vinyl lop, 11uto. Xlnt f!9Ulpped, air, :oi:lnt con- cnnd. $1475. 968-0.i73 d1lion. $1 ,TJO. 96.1--~U or '68 CHEV NOVA 96.>-7133· '"'°· 5..;_..1ll0 *1970 GR.ANO PRIX '66 MALIBU srn: .. &11· 1~:.1 tJr Ri'J.1600 )( 58 ~1nl rond. $95'.l. 5:'.G-2'~ .-cc-7'C,--~c--c l 'li7 C;\TALI SA 2 rtr. nu til'e!I g, battC'I')'. lo miles. $175. or o[fe1·. 6-16-5277 CHRYSLER SOUTHLAND Home & Garden Show July 27th ttu\I ALJi. Slh . a.t IM '61 CHRYSLER ln1prrlt1I. '61 Ponliac. Xlnt runnin~ ANAHEIM Good 1nn8portalion. $150. cooc:lition. s.100. or bell of. CONVENTION Csll 5'18-2790 fer. Call 5..i7-9U6 \ CENTER CORVEI IE 1964 LE MANS. '"''"I"'. 1417 800 W. Katetla, Anaht!lm W. Bay, N.B. Ple-.,e call 6'12-567S. t:ct. 314 * '69 Corvette conver1. C27 4 -~7!).I to daim your tickotL !North •pd. ~. l.o<ded ll'OO. T·BIRD County toll trte number 111 Call 67-ll81 ~~--------1 5<().l~d DODGE MUST SEll "' * * _ --'67 T·Bh"d. All pc'IV.'f'r. xlnl BUICK '69 IlODGE Coronci:I, Alr Cl'Jlld, low n1ll<'~. 6T.l-1lS3 Cond. Power S I ~ e l" i n g . flr 675-81.19. FOR SALE 89i-l4Zl ---,VE=G~A---'-I 19i1 BUICK Sk;yiark JlO\\'l"r '65 DODGE: Monaco, .~ --------1 !t!~I,.. ~ brnkes, HU cnod. ROOCI 11res..-.a/c, ~. + * 'TI YEO-I\ \\1--1\ C Ort, "·ht'CI, air rond., vinyl lop, $4Stl. 6"6-U.IO ROOct ronditlon, S1600. Phone kl\\• nit, $2400. M7·4690. \Wiiie Elryhant D~A·Une 536-1789 .. • , / I 7 l f f ' • VOL The before \\'edn1 Harm that U qui to Har he dr1 and \1 larvaE \Vee couoc Th over der\.\ Hunl Dll pass thie' 'anc the : Pc qua I hus ef£01 Noel Loui fruit Tt mag a pi !350 hOl'S ol boui T> J f I • e • l ! I -----. .,,... San tle1nenie Capistrano VOL 66, NO. 200, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES r EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • ---t -r I Today's Final N.Y. Stocks THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973 TEN CENTS Water Wiggle·r War Continued • Ill Council ) By JOHN VALTERZA Of '"' 01ll1 ~1111 5!1ll The war of the wigglers resumed before San Clemente city councilmen \\'edncsday as a nurseryman E<.1rl ·'Red'' Harm<in heard city staff members insisl that lhe city \\later suppl y is free of mos- quito larvae. •larmon asserted two \\'eeks ago that he drew a glass. of wat er frorn his laps and \vith the 111atcr cumc live mosquito larvae. \V ednesday's skil'mish before city councilrncn brought forth co1nptaints from 11armon and a neighbor !hat repeated calls to the city water depart- ment about rusty water and other prob- lems brought no help from the city staff. l-farmon said that at one point he finally called city councilmen because city employes would not investigate the situation. The major recent inc ident , l-l armon said. y,•as discovery of a s1agnant pool of 111atcr across El Camino, Real from his place of business -a pool which con- tained Live larvae. The source of the water was a leak in a \\'atcr 1nain along Avenida Junipero, and llarmon hinted that 1he puddle could have been the source of the wigglers that came from his faucet. But city Waler Supt. Gene Borawsky insisted that the leak was due to a bad va lve and that it would have been im- possible for the wigglers to enter into the cily water supply, , Though Harmon has remaine<t ada· mant that the insects appeared through his taps, spokesmen for lhe county Mos· quito Abatement IAstrict have said that it y,wld be -in their words -"im- possible" for live wigglers to come from a tap io lhe city \\'ater system. As lo lhe issue of rust in tbe water sup- ply - a condition which has existed for years in city water systerm -Borawsky said the problem seems to be most acute when residents turn on their taps while cily crews are flushing the \Valer mains of iron compounds which settle to the botto1n of n1ains. "Perhaps we should make sure that no "'ater is dra\lin \li'hile v.•e're flushing the 1nains," he said. Bora11•sky said thal 111 the future he \.l'ould personally respond to all co.sn- pl:aints relating to poor-quail!)' water .• Harmon. y,·hose battles over \\'ater pressur e and water quality have take11 place for the past se\•eral yMrs. wns tar fron1 salistied , how ever. and continued to nay t!Je cily for all o11•ing the situation to \\'Orst'n. The citizen·s concluding presentation asserting 1nisn1anagen1cnl caused J\tayor Clirton l\lyers to y,·ie\d his ga vel. "I 1h1nk this has gone r1:1r enough," '.\lycrs suid sternly. "!"qi not donC' ye1:· II a r 1n o n rl•plicd. ,.r have lhe nan1~ of employea in the dcpar~cnt "'ho ha\'e been told lo keep thei r mouth shut and to do simply what they're told ." Harm<m said, "\\'ould you Rive those nan1es to the ci- t~· manager?" ~tyers queri1.'Cf . -·No , I y,·ould not," llar1non :>aid. "'\\'l•ll. htlw about the n1ayor, then."' said ftlyers. llarmon agreed. ::ind the sparring end· ed. Food Prices Blast Off As Phase 4 Lights 'Fuse .. • ... ;; -· ' ... . ·-' . - • . . ,. ... '· . -. -. DlllJ PilOt 51111 Plteh . . MICHELLE AND POCO REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After S Months, a Horse Thief With a Guilty Conscience Po~o Ba~k Ho1ne Stole1i 1-lorl!e fl£Ls Big Encounters By TOi\1 G0R i\1AN 01 Ille O.Ht Pilot 511!1 The escapades of Poco l~on E. Bar are over. 11ungry and 300 pound s un- derweight . Poco has come \JQme to his Hunti,ngton Beach fan1ily. During the past five months Poco has passed through the hands of two horse. thieves, Utah police and a kind old rancher •·y,·ho owns a spread as big as the Ponderosa ." POCQ is a five-year-old registered quarterhorse. He y,·as stolen F'eb. 17 from hus stable ln J·luntington Beach . The best efforts of his o\vner, 16-year-old Michelle Noell, and her parents, !\Ir. and J\1rs . Louis Noe.II, 6531 Segovia Circle. provt!d fruitl ess in attempts to locate him. fa1nily had been "'ailing for. "Some young cowboy in Utah called and said he sa1v him in a rodeo and recognized hiril as the stolen horse from the ads we had placed." said J\trs. Noell. ··So he stole it for the reward ." Then tt.e story gets confusing. '- ··11e said he stole th e horse i\ wee:k earlier from the rodeo. but on t~e eve- ning of July Fourth he was in an accident. The horse "·as uninjured, so he tied it up to a tree on a ranch nea r the Idaho-Utah border. ''He ilidn"I give us his nan1e. but told us to call the Tremootan !UtahJ police. I don't kno1v why he waited a \\'eek since the accident to call us. I guess his con- science got to him."' In the meantime the ranch owner, tSee llORSE, Page 2J "{::( -{:( * Local Costs To Increase Next Week By the Daily Pilot Starr 1-"'ood prices remained generally un- changed along the Orange Coast today but spokesmen for two major food 1narket chains agreed that prices, especia lly on pork and poultry, will eer· tainly increase by next week . Meanwhile, store managers from Seal Beach , to . San Clemente reported they 1Yere getting a lot of questions from customers as the result of President Nix- on·s Phase 4 action easing the food price freeze . "Shoppers seem to be waiting to get better information on what prices will do."' ' observed San Clemente ~1arket Basket manager Derrlll Rogers . "By the time they find out, it will be too late." ~lain ly, the game today seemed lo be "\\'ait-and-se€" for customers, coastal r11arkets and headquarters of chain stores themselves. Fred Cantrell, vice president of Alpha Beta. said today, "\\'e are still "'ailing for the price regulations before we can determine "·hat action to take, but there 11·ill be increases. in prices." Paul Campbell, a spokesman for Safe,vay Stores, said, ·~we are still a lit- 11e frustrated today and waiting y,•ord from our corporate offices in Oakland . So111e of our buyers have already in- dicated to us their prices will go up, but it \Vill take a cou ple of days to know whi ch prices and how much." Individual market managers at Ralphs and Von's in Huntington Beach said so far they have had no bulletins fron1 cor· porate headquarters warning them of a price increase or to be prepared for one. Bob \Voods, a manager at the Lucky 8lore in Huntington Beach , said • "Nothing: exciting is hf;lppening around here. It will probab ly be the ~iddle or next week before anything happens, after the main office makes a de<!ision."' No major chain stores checked in Hun· lington Beach and Fountain Valley in- dicated a knowledge of when prices will change or bow. Grocery shopping habits remained !See FOOD, Page %1 Phase 4 Hit ' Meany S£Lys Controls to flurt WASHINGTON IUPI) -An,.c 10 Presidenl George Meany denounced the new Phase IV anti-inflation program today as "a further exam p I e of the administration's inequitable economic policies." "It spells more bad news for the housewife and the consumer," 111eany said in a statement. ~leany's attack came as Republicans in Congress praised President Nixon's latest economic controls as tough \\'hile many Democrats joined other leaders of organized labor and busi ness i_a claiming Phase IV \Vould hurt city d \vellers and consumers. (See slory, Page 4.) Meany said, "\Vages r emain under control. as they have ever since Aug. 15, 1971 . 'fhe Cost of Living is continuing up and up. Interest rates are exempt from control and soared once again the very day Phase JV was announced. Profits, never directly or equita· bly controlled, are out of sight." '~ • Se11. Ervin Philosophizes Before Watergate Hearing \\'ASl11NGTON tUP ll -The seeds of \Vatcrgate 11·ere SO\\'ed by men of finan- cial. political and governmental power who "undertook to nulliry the la;Ys of man and the \a1vs of r,oci'' to rea p a "very tempor.iry political advantage," Sen. Sam J. Ervin (0-N.C.), said today. Thus Ervin. the chainnan of the Senate \Vfltergate con1mittec. summed up the evidence collected so far during the two- month-old nationally televised hearings into the scandal that has plagued the Nixon Administration. ··t can't resist the temptation to philosophize just a little bil about the \Vatergale," Ervin said as Frederick C. La Rue y,•rapped up two days of testimony about his involvement in the scandal. LaRue said Nixon's re-election had betn of ''paramount importance'' to him . "The ev idence lhus far indicates. tends to show that men upon whom !ortune has smiled beneficently and y,·ho possessed great financial power, great political po11•er and great governmenta l power un- dertook to nullifv the laws or 1nan and the laws of GOcl for the purpose of gaining what history y,·ill ca ll a 1·ery tem- porary political advantage," Ervin said. Then turn ing to his favorite source book. 1he King James version of the Bi- ble, the silver-haired Ervin said those in- volved in \\'atcrgate had o\·erlooked-ad - mooishment of St. Paul in his epistle to the Galatians: "Be not decci\'ed : God 1s not mocked, for y,·h.1tsocvcr a 111an so~·eth, that shall he also reap." The audience jammed info the marble Senate Caucus Room . hushed as Enlin spoke, broke into prolonged applause as he finished . Ervin banged his gavel for prder. LaRue. a milliona ire ~iississippian Y<'ho has pleaded guilty to conspi racy to obstruct justice in the \\1atergatc covcr- ISee BUGGING, Page ZI Border Agents Seize Marijuana ' But Not Suspcrts The family placed ads in trade magnzines, giving a full description and a picture of the horse and an offer of a $300 reward for information on the horse's \11hereabouts. On July 8 the fan1ily gave up and bought l\1jchelle a new horse. Two days later c;n11e the phone call the Transpac Yacht on Rocks U.S. border patrolmen seized 150 pounds of marijuana Wednesday after a n1ile-long chase which ended when !he patroln1en round the "'eccl , but 1lost the suspecls. \Vednesday's seizure brought I h c v.·eek's tolal to more th3n half a Ion of marijuana -all confiscated as part of the immigration check at the San Onorre roadblock si nce last weekend . Gcutg Sli.ooting· Hurt ;; 3 iii L,4. LOS ANGELES tAP I -Three persons y,·ere wounded early today y,·hen six members of a youth ganJil y,·ent on a shooting spree. police sairl. Officers uld the victim s "·ere an 8-year~ld glrl . a IS-year-old youth and a 21°yei1r-old man. All v.·ere reponed hospitalized. The xooths were taken inlo custody arter ofUce.r.s spoiled lh<'m riding in a cer snatching the deac.riplion of one u~ by lhe gang members. Pot!ce said lhcy found a rifle. a shotgun and two pistol& in lhe. vehlclo. • R£1cer 'Eagle' Be£Lclies, Sinks off Waikiki Beacli By ALi\10N LOCKABEY 01 t11<1 01l1T Pilot! Iliff HONOLULU -One of the raclng boats in lhe Transpacific Yacht Rac e hit a reef and sank on Waikiki beach a few minutes !lfter she had finished late Wednesday night. E3gte. a Cal 33 sloop skippered by Ult· ry K. Shorett of Corlnthlan Yacht club. S..'ln r~rancisco, apparently wandered into the "'rong channel near llawalian VIiiage while coming toward the jetty entrance and hit a reef. She had n larae hole ln her skte and when the Coast OUard pull- ed her free she sank. Eagle had been following a comml!t~ boat but left on htr own "'hen the escort ,·esscl went bnck tu !ht finish liot to pick • up aoother -finisher. The grounding oc- curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolulu time~ crew was rescued without serious injury. Eagle had been tabu1ated as fourth in Class D after s:illlng the 2,22.>mile race across the Paciflc. Only eight of 60 starters remained at sea this momlng, including Defiant, "·hlcb I! under tow with a broken rudder. and Vicarious, still llliling with a jury rigged mast. ' Four Newport llarbor based boats were among the first ten in the oYerall handlup 11Andlngs when I/lo unol!lclal final TlsuJts were computed today. Only 13 hours and 35 mlnuttt separated the first and tenth plate tlnisbers on h<1rt- dicap time despite the slowness of tbe r11Ce on elapted time. Two of. the contn:ivuaial uhra. light d!splat'<ment boat.! finished among the • first ten, includ ing the overall winner, despite heavy time penalties. Two Newport boal.s won their resptt· live classes and ot~rs placed in their class. Al Cassell 's SO.foot Brittain Chance- designed \Varrlor wu the only Class A boat among the nrst t~n. G11.ry J\fytt!' Cal 39 Blue Streak. Newport Harbor Yachl Club. was the winner In Class C. Sanderling tv. ;i Columbia 43 cc;.sklppered by Bob Poole and Jack Johioon of Bahia Corinthian \'acht Club placed fourth in Class C. _ .. Twn other Newport yachts-. ~alu IV owned by Peter Gr:lnt, NHYC, and Aki~ pered by ltarvey KJlpatrick, ~tonterey Peninsula Yacht Club, and Starwagon, a Cal 43 owned •ml sk\wered l>y • Dao IS.. TRANSPAO, PIJe II. \Vednesday·s seizure occurred after patrolmen beglln to check out two men in lheir vehicle at the ·checkpoint and the driver of the car suddenly sped away, a patrolman said. The patN:llmen pursued the \'Ch.icle. which they found abandoned with the marijuana ln.,ide , ont mile north of the chttkpoiilt. They scarthed the area for the two suspect.!. but did not find them. Ano!her 215 pounds of m.irijuenn were seized Sunday during a rouline im- n1igr11tion check. a palrolman said. The ARtnt.s arrested a ~-)'ear-Old resident of Chula Vista. Two more dn1g arrests wete made 'la!lt Saturday. Polrolmcn sciicd 6S7 Pouods or marijuana from Eduardo CJ1av1ra. 30, a ~lexlcan alien leg11Uy residing in Los Angeles. :tnd 187 pounds or the dru g l'rOQ\ a 2S-__year-<>ld S3r. Pedro resident -•sain during routine fmmlsrafion Checlcs. r -....... Other Hikes See11 Soon L1 Nation By Uniltd Press Jnl t r'JlflllOf\111 Prices for poultry , pork. produce, milk and other perishables "'ent up in many of the natiori's supennarkets today and the cost of other Hems freed by President Nixon's Phase IV program were ex· peeled to climb shortly. {See story, Page 4> .\lost market spokesmen said they \\·ere double checking the new Phase JV regulatlons and that markups fhould begin next 1\·eck ··in full force" -and '"be \\'ay up" by next month. In San Antonio, the Associated Milk P.odlJ('ers Inc., the largest milk pro- ducing cooperative in the United States, i'llnounced price hikes as high as 10 per- e(int in 20 South'A·est and ~fidy,·est states. \\'holesale egg prices in New York jumped 4 to 8 cents a rlozcn today . It generally lakes a f~y,· days for such an increase to hit the reatil ma rket . Pork prices 1.1·ere moving up in some ~reas. "'ith the price of a pork loin jump- ing from 79 10 91 cents a pound in a Detroit supermarket In Jackson, h-1iss., Giant Food Stores raised their prices on ahout 200-300 ··dry" grocery items. such as. dog 1.uod . flour and meal. Frying t:h1ckcns Jumped 5 cents a pound. Spot checks by UPI sho"·ed that most house11·ives "·ere not paying nwre during ;veekly marketing. l!oy,·ever, this was un· doobtedly due to grocery ads whose prices are in effect throu gh Saturday. A Huntington. N.Y., housewi!e, Mrr. Katherine ~l ullen. said she shopped in t11·0 supermarkets and found prices unchanged . "Eggs arc the same as )a~ 11·eck." she said. So arc canned goods, bread and cereals -I didn 't see anything higher than usual." . A spokeSqian for the National Associa- 11on of F'O<KI Chains fNAFCI predicted the ~ 10 5 rcrccnt jump in prices in the coming y,·eeks and said consumers could txpect lo see markups on retail counters n~xt \l'C<!k after processors have time lo gh'e supermarkets ce rtificates sho\\1ng hoy,· much of rece nt overall cost gahu ISte PRICES, Paae ZI Orange Ceast Weather ~lore sunshint. Friday, follo"\ng rarly morning fog and low cloulii, !110511)' at the beach oreas. lllghs 1n th loy,· 70s at the sands rising lo near 80 inland. Overnight lov.·s 1n !he 60s. INSWll TODA\' T!ie pas.fnnge rs of the sc1!0011· rr GotKL I-lo~ J1at>t somttl11t1g in con111w11 -11eeclle p1'ick·s ou thrir arnu. But Ille cnti.se de· scribed 011 Pogt 4 moy 111ake tl1ose tnarks cliJappear. ·--··· .... , .-11..UI _., ---SC lfu1shaw Has Doubts B}· JACK BR(>BACK 01 lllt O•llY l"llol 1111! Congressn1an An<lrcy,• J. llinliha\v ~ R· Newport Bc:1Ch 1 has seriously questioned the aecurily of election returns 1f Orange CoWlly contracts wilh (In outside data proce55ing firm to handl e its computer faciUlies. In a letler 10 Ronald W. Casp('rs, chairman or the Uoard of Supervisors, Jliruhaw asked t;1-·o qucstiorui. "If a private l'On1p.any took over the job of computing county records. \\'hat safeguards \\'ould be provided to ensure that the election process would be kept inviolate?'' tie then asked, ''As!uming • breakdown of these safeguards occurred. then (I) \vhat recourse would the coun· )Y have against any contractor who f{liled 1to strictly perform his obllgatioll) tursuant to the contract and (2) \Vhaf tfecoursc would any candid;:ite have :against the contractor?" 1 Himbaw told Caspers he would . ap· .,reciate answers to the questioru before !any decision is mad e to enter into a con- .tract with an outside finn. The Orange County Republican Central Committee expressed similar concern \Vednesday. A fi ve-member election security com- mittee has been. named headed by 'Mrs. ;Janice Boer lo rt-search voting security ~easures in the proposed outside oon- ilract. ! Mrs. Boer said the committee will 1fleel tonight. Other members are Irvine ~~~m:cn eo!~~~el 't1a~.e~I c;:~~~ ~yor To rn Blackman and David Gater, :a l'Omputer expert. : Caspers has made no direct reply to :Hinlhaw's questions but his chief assls- :tant Tom Fuentes said the supervisor :Was satisfil'd with safeguards guaranteed )mder the contract proposed by Com- :J>uter Science Corporation (CSC) of El ·Segundo. • The two investigatiOns stem from the ~rd of Supervisors' announced inten- tion to consider awarding a $26.6 million contract to CSC to operate the county's data processing for tbe next seven years. The supervisors have been debating the advisibility of hiring an outside firm to do the computer work for the post several weeks. Final decision was delayed a week .ago and a blue ribbon commHtee of computer uperts reactivated to study the CSC pro- posal. Originally the committee, after a mooth's study, recommended that the coualy continue to operate with its own data processing department. Supervisors will vote on the GSC con- tract July 31 after hearing the com, mitlt;tt's report. Pilots' Families, Airlines Suing County Officials MONTROSE, Co!o. (AP) -Continental Airlines and the families or two California pilots killed In a plane crash near here flied notice today of claims totaling $6 million against the Montrose County government. The pilots, Robert Walsh or Huntington Beach and James Ford of Thousand Oaks, were killed April 13 when a small jet belonging to Continental crashed near the Montrose County Airport. Continental President Robert Six and his wife, aciress Audrey Meodows, had deplaned here and the craft h~-! taken orr again when the crash occurred. Montrose Counly officials have for\varded the claim nolice 10 the coun- ty'!! liability insurance company. The fami lies of the two pilots are claiming $2.5 million each and Con- tinental $1 1nillion. OIAM61 COAST IC DAILY PILOT 'Tiie 0<-..gt ( .. It OAll..Y Pit.OT, •t"' w.lll(ft II '*'11111'*' !!Ito Nt!Wl·J'tn>. fl -1""'11' W ~ Ot•'!Ot Co111 Pvlll~lftt c.....,..,,, $pp.o r11't M U-1•1 ll\ObllU'ltd, M°'>dly ,.,,.....,. l'tlcl1t. ... C0tt1 Notti, H-• ~tKl'I, H...,tl"VllM lleKl'llPlllo'lt1!n Ylll9'1' U.,111'11 •Mell, l,..IMls.odleN(k Al'ld ~ (.._,ti ~" Jwo11 C•pttr,.,,., A 11no1e '""''°"'' f'dt!'°" It PY1:1•i11Mi11 "'lllnl•~· ...... .....,.,., r11. IN'll\C!,.1 P\IOl!fl'llllt •'-~' 11 et lJO w.,1 l!lty $If"!, COii• Mitt, Cllllo•nlt. ntlri kob1rt N. w,o4 ''"lfftlf '""' "1ttl!l\f• Jtt.l k. Curt,., Viet J're1;o:.,1 -C.-11 M1~evn Th•in•1 Kool'il '""' Thtlfl•• A, Mwphino MMttlflt Edllllt" Cllerl11 H. ltot •1U.1r.I '· Nill ... 11\ll<'lt M-,l"f l!lllOf'1 S911111 C.._ ... Offlq JOI No1th fl C1,...lt1• l•1I: •l6ll Othf Offlc" co,,. Mno1 "'WIN ••r '"•'1 H...,_t 9e0od'I: »H N""'DOrl ,._,lt~l'I Hunlll'lil"" t1110ri 17111 •..ell lwl_..,, 1...-•..ci: t1l '•"' "- r .. .,.... 111•1 ''1-4J11 ~ .............. J.J671 S-C ....... An o.,_,=•1: T•~ 4,Z..,.20 ~· ,.,, o,..... Git" l"llOlltll.ffll M/t«tt;i"' Ho ""'" UO•'tft lll\ltltll""' ,,..,.. .. ~ .._.1,........ lltrt'lft rMullol it ~lll'lt ~ -.111 ..,. ~111(lll-I ,_..~ 11>111 *' Cnt1 M .... 1• ,..ltf! Of UrTltr llM 1!'11'111'1/7'/ ~ -11 u IJ ..... 111..,, tlllll!Wy fNf!llJllM t;aM rlllllW..~ Arab 6un11aa1• From Page l Hostages Seized, FOOD ... unchanged along the Sot.1then1 Orange Coa.Jt today, and ao did superrnarket prices . • Freed Ill Athens A survey of most of the South Coast supermarqta lodly I h O·We d 80 meuureabll IW'J8 in bi,1aJDHI frcsn stioppers trying 10 s1ock up at the Old price before the Increase hit&. DISPUTES MITCHELL Former Aide L1 Rue t'ron1 Page l BUGGING • • • up, 1is1ened inlenUy. He earlier had re- counted funneling $242,000 to 1he seven original \Yatergate defendants, helping devise false stories and concealing evidence from goverrunent pl"03eCUlors. lie al80 said he belleved that Jeb Stuart Magruder, the deputy manager of Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, had prior Knowledge or the June 17, 1972 burglary and bugging at Democratc Na- tional Committee headquarters that touched off the scandal. Following LaRue to the brown felt- drapcd witness table was Robert C. h1ar- dian or San Clemente, like LaRue, once a key deputy to forme r Ally. Gen. John N. r..Iitchell and one "1'ho has been linked to · the CQVerup plot. But 1'1ardian, a former assistant at- torney general, said In an opening state- ment hls onJy role following the June 17 arrests wu that of a lawyer, not a ''political protege." He said learning of the Watergate break-in was "the most shocking experience in my entire legal career." "The facts thus learned thrust me into a situation which I can only compare. in terms of personal anxiety, to being caught in quicksand," he said. The situation became increasingly "in- tolerable , .. in which ultimately my only hope \\'as the selfish one of not becom- ing implicated in the conduct of others \vho I fel t it my duty to serve," ~fardian said. While the morning session was in prog- ress, the White House announced that President Nixon will draft a reply this weekend to the commlttee's requ est !<Jr tapes of conversations with fonner aides Implicated in Watergate. The )Vhite Hoose gave no indication \\'hether Nixon would relinquish the tapes, which be considers presidential documents, or refuse to !tan them over under the doctrine or the constitutional segaration of ,powers. Nixon last week agreed to meet with Ervin to study the committee's request for a number of presidential papers rele- vant to the Watergate inquiry, but the \Vhite House gave no indication when that mettlng would be held. Wlille the senators were hearing the momlng testimony, Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirlca ordered a grand jury empaneled to investigate possible violations of federal campaign laws. Sirica issued the order on a request by specin l \\1alergale prosecutor Archibald Cox. The new grand jury is in addition lo the one that bas been meeting to determine what additional indictments \VIII be returned ln lhe Watergate bug- ging and subsequent covcrup. The new grand jury apparently will in- vestigate such incidents as illegal cor- porate contributions to the 1972 presiden· tial campaign. American Airlines disclos- ed July 6 it had illegally given SS5.IXXI in corporate funds to Nixon's 11!-tlection campaign at the urging of t h e President's personal attorney, llerbert \V. Kalmbach of Newport Beach. Co1npton Boy Killed SONORA. Tex . (AP) -Ed\\'ard Young, 14, ot Compton, \vas killed \Vednesday in a car-truck collision 30 miles v•est of Sonora on U.S. 290. Three other me1nbcrs of Young·s fami· ly suffered injuries. ATHENS (UPI) -An Arab gunman armed with a submac hine gun and hand grcnudes seized 15 persons as hoftaget ln a hotel in the heart of Athens today but released them unharmed in return for guaranteed safe conduct to the ~tlddle East, police said. The hostages included an elderly From Pagel TRANSPAC. • • Elliott. NHYC. plactd thin! and Ofth in Class B. \Yarrklr was the winner of Cius A and Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon, NHYC, was third in Class A. · Chutzpah's victorious entry into Ala Wai Yacht Harlxlr was held up for more than an hour Tuesday nJght when a mllltii.ry type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons aboard. The craft Was caught in one of the giant seas that crashed against the shores of Waikiki Tuesday and We<lnes· day. The passengers were rescu!d by the yacht race committee boats. No one was seriously injured. The seas subsided late Wednesday. The race will ofOcially come to a close Friday with the gala trophy presentation dinner at lhe llifcai Hotel here. Boats still at sea today were Nalu JJ, Jlgtime, Contessa llf. Bev i k a , \Voodwynd, Mel!emi and Vicariou s. Unofficial standings: OVERALL ' I. Cllutzpah, eight day., 21 hours, 21 minutes, 50 secoOO.. 2. Ariana, 9:00:29:45, 3. I mprobable 9:01.55:18, 4. h1oon Day 9:05:10:57, 5. Tinsley Light 9:06:27:51, 6. Blue Streak 9:07:09:35, 7, Sandlering IV 9:08:16:07, 8. Panache 9:08:24:33, 9. htistress II 9:10:22:54, JO. Warrlor 9:10:58:59. CLASS A -1. Warrior, 2. Ragtime, 3. Robon, 4. Mln Sette, 5. Windward Passage. CLASS B: t. Improbable, 2. Panache, 3. Nalu IV, 4. Saaderling IV, S. Starwagon. CLASS C: I. Blue Streak, 2. litistresB II , 3. Tenacity, 4. Sirocco. s. Olympian. CLASS D: 1. Chutzpah, 2. Ariana , 3, Tinsley Light, 4. Eagle, 5. L'Allegro. From Pagel HORSE ••. Reed Niel1ea ("Such a nice man : he reminds me of Ben Cartwright") kept the horse for safekeeping, apparently figuring it was stolen. Meanwhile, the police had contacted Nielsen and the Noe.II family had con- tacted the police. Suddenly everyone knew where .Poco was. So the family drove to Portage, Utah , last Friday to pick him up. 'Ibey return- ed \Vednesday afternoon. And things are returning to normal. Poco was in heaven: A bath, brushing and a bale of bay. ''11e was so hungry," hUche\le said. "He 1o1•as down lo 1,000 pounds. But he's ilome!" La Habra Cycle Crash Kills Man Donald R. Benson, 21, ol LaVerne was fatally injured \Vednesday night in La llabra when his motorcycle y,·ent out ot control and smashed into a curb throwing h.lm into shrubbery. The accident occurred at 10 :45 p.m. at the lntersecton of l\.1acy Street and \Vb.It· Her Boulevard. police reported . Benson v.·as southbound on l\.1acy when he struck the curbing while crossing Whittler. He died at 11:40 p.m. et La Habra Community Hospital. An autoisy is pen· ding lo detennine the cause o death, the Orange County Coroner's Office aides said. Pilot Buried Final Rites Heul 30 Years Later By ARTll UR R. VINSEL 01 t~• Dtltf l'l..i 11•ft They burl11d Arrny Air Corps Firtl Lt. Francis G. "Bud" ~1c[)QweU Wednf!sday wi1h an airman's poem, a short ~:pisco~l .service end militory rites by servictmen not yet born when he died in \\'ar 30 years ago. Son1e 7S persons -1nany tong-agn family friends In their hometown or Riverside -turned out at Pacific View l\.1emorlal Park ln Corona del Mar for what were actually historic rites. Not 1nany more World Wiit 11 cssuallies can be expected to return hon1e for burial. • The abort service by the Rev, Edward Allen, Episcopal chaplain et UC Irvine, came 30 years and one week to the day after LI. McDoweU's 8-U Ubcralor boml> er eratbed in New Gulnea. lfls brother, William Mcl)Qwell. of 432 Angellta Drive, Cllrona del l\.1ar, learned y,·reclcage of the plane his brother piloted had been round , just one week ago when he read a Dally Pilot story of a cn!\\'ltl1.111't burial. He recognized the man's nome from one of his llrother's old rught rn11e ... railed his re.l1tlves In the Chicago JU., area, and they helped l\.fcI>o~'el\ contact proper Army authorities. "The !oat has been found and the homeless has been brought home." UCJ ('hbplain Allen said during \\'edncsday's rites . The funeral 30 years lifter the fact ol LL ~lcDowell's death at the age of 22 a~ pcared no-Its! moving to those who at· tended and we.pt as a bugler played taps. "Long since have you rttelved him in- to your flock. . . " remlndcd the Rev . Allen, as a burial squad of enlisted men from Fl .~acArthur Jn Sen Pedro held an Amerlcnn Flag &ver tht casket. A squad of rtnem(!n flrtd 1 triple Jalute to Lt. t.fcDowell, winner of the Sliver Star for bringing his bomber back frc.m one mission With four ~ewmen wounded and three tnglntt shot up, The dram1tlc 1943 landing at Fenton Field i.n Australi• "A'U filmed by tn old Pathe News Service cn!W and shown to Americans In a wartime newsreel. Thf later ml8sion from which U . McDowell and his crew of nine never returntd was attempted In a st range pl.Arie, arter thtlr own 0..2~. the Shady lAdy, was dam1red tn 1 Japantse •ttack on their alrficld. American , a Greek Orthodox prit~st, three policemen nnd thret children. At one poinl the gwtman had threatened to execute them one by .one-if he-did-ool gain his freedom. At another point he tttreatened -10 blow them au up. The man emerged rrom the Amalia Hotel on Con~Utulion Square at 4:32 p.m. (7:32 a.m. POT) still carrying a hand grenade and \vith his submachine gun slung from his neck. He \vas accompanied by the Libyan and Iraqi ambassadors who had acled as mediators in the negotiations between Greek officials and the man who iden- tified himself as e member of an "anti· Zionist group from occupied Palestlne." 1be incident stemmed from the man's abcrtive aUempt to break into the nearby El Al Israel airline office where bombs thrown by two Arab terrorists killed a Greek child and wounded 14 passengers in November, 1969. The two Arabs received long prison sen tences but were released in the race of new Arab threats. The gunman, who wore a pink sh<>rt- sleeved shirt, had demanded that First Deputy Prime Minister Stylianos Pat- takos rome to the tourist-filled hotel and negotiate in person on safe conduct out ol the country, Paltakos refused although ttie gunman said, ''I will kill everybody If Pattakos doesn't come." Libyan Ambassador Ahmed Ragab Feitur went to the hotel and was follow- ed by Egyptian Charge d'Affaircs Mahmoud Dia el-Din. The Greek govern· ment had given them guarantees of safe cooduct for the gunman who later emerg- ed from the hotel and entered Feilur's black limousine. Officials said they were going to Athens Airport . _ • The hoslllges were unhanned . Police Slaying Trial La,vyer Denies Charges Herman Lee Clouston's lawyer today urged an Orange County Superior Court jury to recoifllze that his client had no idea he was facing a police officer in his home last Sept. 20 when he shot and kill- ed Buena Park detective Darrell "Bud" Cate. Huntlngton Beach al!orney George Shibata also urged the jury to rec,ognize !hat neither officer involved in the plan- ned apprehension of Clouston. 38, bore any klentification when they entered the Anaheim home. Shibata repea ledly lashOO prosecutor Robert Chatterton for the deputy district attorney's condetMation or Clouston as a "cold, calculating killer." "He was confronted in his home by a man who, for all he knew. was a trespasser," Shibata said. "How can you attribute tern1s like cold and calculating to an action that took place in a matter of seconds?" Shibata said he wUI close hls argument to the jury with a plea that the panel wlll recognize Cate's. killing as one of ''justifiable homicide." It Is expected that Judge Everett W. Dickey Ylill deliver instructions later to- day and send the jury orf to determine the guilt or innocence of Clouston on charges of first degree murder and kid- naping. Those charges were filed after Cale. 43, v.·as gunned d-Own in Clouston's home as he sought lo question the defendant on a reported sex offense in t h e neighborhood . U is further alleged that Clouston kid- naped a neighbor and held him hostage du ring a flight from la\vmen in two coun- ties that ended five days later when he was nushed from behind a garbage can in Lynwood. IJPI Ttllllf'IOlo No Hard Feeli1111• Priscilla Presley, 28, awaiting final divorce decree from sing- er Elvis PresJey, reveals in the Ladies Home Journal that there are no hard feelings on either side. Mrs. Presley just opened a boutique in Los Angeles. Jackson Sees Grain Deal Falsification WASHINGTON !UPI) -Sen. Henry 1\.1. Jackson (D-Wash.), said he had evidence the Agriculture Dep trnent kr.ew in advance about last x r's $1 billion Soviet grain deal and tha big U.S. grain firms falsified their reports lo the government on the deal. On the eve of a series or hearings by his Senate Permanent Investigations sub- corrunittee, Jackson said the evidence he has thus far uncovered on the 1972 deal could ,prove that parties lo the deal had violated federal Jaws . "\Ve have s\\·orn affidavits at lllis point tha t Agriculture \\'as advised of lhe sales" before they occurred, he told a news conference. The Agriculture Department has denied having advance kno\vledge of the sales. and a General Accounting Office invesligalion earlier this month found that officials didn't kno\v ho\v much grain the Russians 1o1·ere buying from the American companies. JaCkson further said there was "strong evidence" that the U.S. Jinns tried to keep the sales secret by "falsifying their reports to lbe Commodity Exchange Authorily. CouWn't Be Much Worse SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) r..trs. Arjean Chambers, 38. being held on a charge of altacking her husband with a khife, was ordered released on her ov.·n recognizance \Yednesda y. But she told the judge she ""'anted to stay in jail. Jailers said that when she was returning to a holding cell. she pil- ed up furnilure. a maltress and a blanket and set fire to them, send- ing smoke billo"•ing through rhe courthouse and causing the evacua- rion or several co u r l roo n1 s. Dan1age v.·as cstirnated at $800. l\.1rs. Chambers, red-eyed and coughing when she can1e out or the cell. was charged V.'ith arson and destroying jail properly. AllhoU&h prices hnve not reflected !hi" liftlng of the freeze some customers ore worrit'<I, a manager said. "We're getting a lot of questions today .-ibout what the prices will do," said San Cle1n~11tc Alpha Bela !\.tanager Leon Riley. ··There's nol much \\'C can tell them because we haven't heard anything ye t." he added . ~ Al Albertson's Market in Sa n Clemente, business \vas no more brisk lhsn usual, but curiosity \\•Rs up, said manager George Kolbe. ··So far we haven 't had lo raise. ;:iny pl'ices, even though we \\'ere told recently lhl:ll pork \Vas going to be rationed. Th111 didn't happen and supplies so far have been pretty good," Kolbe said. · In Laguna Beach, independent grocer Larry Barker -part-owner of Acord'i Market -said 1hat his customers art not making a run and that prices arc unchanged. Only a few inquiries had beeo noted, ht:! said. "All \\'e kno1v ~'hat we read in thC p:lpets and that's 11ot enough for us t9 make a.ny decision," he added . At the Safe1vay store in South Laguna, n1anager Larry Callahan said business i' up a little this morning and that he should be receiving information on Phase -4 by tonight. "The people in the main office ar~ probably working on it right now," h~ said. From Page J PRICES ... can be allributed solely to higher cos4 for raw products. · George E. Hamilton Jr., president ot the Smlthtield Packing Co., producer of the famous hams, said the company will ;.definitely raise our prices," but until the new regulations were studied he did not know how much. A spokesman for Food Fair, whic}\ represents 100 Pantry Pride Markets in the Philadelphia area, said price in- creases "should be immediately evident in perishable products such as produce, poultry and pork." He ~xplained thaC ur.der the nC\V Phase IV economic guidelines processors can now raise prices to retailers who in turn can raise them to consumers. Frederick Herrud Inc., largest por k processor In MichJgan, today raised v.·hotesale prices to Detroit supermarket.! by 10 cents a pound. and a company of· flcial said they 1o1•ill raise prices bj another 10 cents a pound in a week. Many other big supermarket chains said they were not making inunediate price increases but would do so shortly. Scli1nitz Loses $400 in Coins If former congressman John Q. Schmitz were still doing his thing on Capitol Hill, he might be pre!sing for more law and order legislation tod ay. · The Santa Ana College political science ins tru ctor complained to Newport Betich JX!lice Wednesday that a burglar stolr?: $400 in silver coins during the process QI his recent move from Tustin to Newport Beach. 1 He sajd whoever heisted 3 12-ounOO beer can fashi oned into a coin bank and containing an estimated $400 in quartets and dimes may have tak.en it in transit. . No!hing else 1vas taken from the Schmitz residence at 10 to.tission Bay Drive in the Spyglass Hill section ot Corona de! Mar, according to. police. · Lou Nol Won't Vi 8it \VASHINGTON (AP ) -Cambodia·s Premier Lon Nol has no plans to visit the United States, the White House says. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1>ult(cU> COLD WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE CUBES! Without Opening Tiie Door 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bin stores 10 lbs., about 260 cubes: automatic lcemaker re- places Ice 11 you use ft. - • Freezer holds up to 297 lbs. • Convertible 7-Day Meat Keeper. • Adjustable, tempered glau shelves . • Rolls out on wheels for euy cleaning . • No defrosting ever ~ WE ~ TAKE 90 DAY CASH Author lud GE SERVICE TUDE·IKS 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa --Phone 543-7788 WITH ... ,,.on• C.llDlt • i ' s d R a v d t b t r I • -~ Incomes Sho'lv Rise WASHINGTON (APJ - Personal i n c om e of Americana increa se d sharply in June, the Co1n- merce Department said Wednesday. It reported personal In- come increased $8.4 billion in June to a seasonal ad- justed annuaJ rate of SL027 billion, an increase during the month of eight tenth.s of one percent. The .June figures showed personal i n t om e in- creasing at an annual rate of about 9.6 percent, 8bout equal to the current rate of inflation. ll' estgate Case Defendant Denie s P1·ofits 'Scheme' SAN DJ ECO (AP) -1'"'1nan- cler C. Arnholt Smith. his \Vestgate-California Corp. and four other defendants in a suit riled by the Secw-ities & Ex· change Comn1ission, deny any • in1propie1y in what the agency calls a multhnillion-dollar "in- tercompany" nelv.'Ork of pr&- fits and hidden losses. IN A FORl\IAL reply by one defendant . Beverly Hills real estate man Irving Burg swore that he originated a plan to buy 9,000 acres of land in Ulc Jian Joaquin Valley, "I was W'laware that my purchase in part enabled Westgate-California Co rp. to realize a SS.3 -n1illion in- tercompany profit," Burg said. "I simply tried to make the best deal." Oil Firm Chiefs The SEC amended its suit Tuesday to accuse Smith of selling son1e $4 milJion in subordinated capital notes of United States National Bank, or which he is the main stockholder, during April and May. Get Subpoenas 111E NOTES allegedly were purchased by Smlth from the bank in 1972 and sold through First California Co. with the "aid of Coen," referring to ~f. J. Coen. a Kahsas City financier and l ong -time business associate of Smith. SAN FRANCISCO i AP I - The state Public Utilities Commission o p e n e d its Northern California hearing into the energy c r u n c h \Vednesday by issuing sub- poenas to the presidents of Shell Oil and Texaco Corpora- tion. PUC President Vernon L. Sturgeon said officials of Stan- dard Oil of California, Atlantic Richfield and Union Oil had accepted invitations to appear voluntarily at lhe hearings. "WE WERE nolificd Texaco did not plan to participate and that Shell has had trouble in making up its mind," Sturg1..>on said in opening ren1arks. "Well. we·n help them." He said subpoenas were to be issued to both con1panies Wednesday for the presidents to appear at Friday's session. Sturgeon said the com- mission is atte1npting to "get to the bollom" of the current fuel supply problem and to see what step may be taken to prevent interrupt ions in power service in the near future. TllE PUC ORDERED a broad investigation into fue1 shortages and the electrical energy situation on July 3. Sturgeon said sessions in Los Angeles last week showed the problem was deepening and that the Los Angeles Depart- ment of Water and Power will have exha'usted its storage supplies of oil by March 1974 and thereafter will be chronically short of oil . The first firn1 to present testimony at the start of hear- ing in the state building here was Pacific Gas & Electric Co. 1\-IALCOLi\I H. Furbush, assistant general counsel for PG&E. said the utility beliCVt!S the state is confronted with a . "very serious short range shortage of fuel" for generating electrica l energy. MEET The sales \Vere made without infor1ning buyers of interests held by Smith in the bank or the fact that it had 20 million in loans outstanding to \Vestgate-Ca \ifomia, the SEC alleged. Coen, in his reply Tuesday to the original charges. claim- ed he realized no profits from dealings with \V e s t g a t e - California. He said the suit fails to specify y,•hat du ty Coen owed to the San Diego-based conglomerate of which Smith is chairman. LAST \VEEK Smith. a close friend of President Nixon, and \Vestgale-California filed their answers denying the charges. There \\'ere other denials Tuesday from U.S. 11olding Co., U.S. National Bank and President Philip A. Toft of \\1 estgatc-Cal i fornia. MARTltA RANdAll AT CAlifoRNiA FEdERAl SAviNGS Learn new ways to beat the high cost of eating! e.co!'lomist *Home t.1 ar1<ets 1or Ralphs d Radio star *"'an J FREE Sltows IOR WoMEN WEdNESdAy,July 25 10:00 a.m. Meet Martha Randall 2:00 p.m. Guides to Success In Real Estate 7:30 p.m. Mr. Blackwell Presents' Famed TV home economist MartM Randall tells you smart, thrifty ways lo stretch your food budget and cut calories and comers, A one-time personal 3wearance. Delightful! Experts give you money-saving tips on buying, financing, improving °' investing in a home clnd property. Learn how to avoid costly mi stakes . Questions and answers follow. Fashion, facts. figures and fun witti TV personality .and designer·Mr. Blackwell. Bring him your fashion questions. ORAwiNqs -No AdMissioN CltARGE • Admiltance lo the Mr. Blackwell Program by tJdcet ~. Tickels limited. Firs! come, first sefVed. Ptck yours up at California Federal Savil"IQG. CAlifoRNiA FEdERAL SAviNGS Md Lll9lt ~hon · Na11on's Uugest ~ .. • 2700 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa • Men W&lcomo ~ "h's A WoMAN's WoRld '71 " '1 , D•lly ~!IOI Stetf " ..... Btiilding Goi•g Up Towering 246 feet abov~ t~e horizon. nea; Big Can· yon is the skeletal beg1nn1ng of Irvine rower #4 under construction at Newport Center. The $12 .5 million building is due for completion in April. 1974. C. L. Peck is the contractor and \\'illiam L. Pereira and Associates are the architects. The 16·story building belongs to the. Irvine Co mpan y. 'Co1npatible' lrvi1ie • Industry Area Cited The head of the Irvine Com· pany's Industrial Comp I ex says the company's industrial planning attracts b u s i n e s s because it maintafns the same human values as its residen- tial planning. Thomas C. \\'olff Jr .. presi- dent of complex, told u Orange Coast Y~fCA Century Club luncheon this week ihat the company has been able to attract t.029bu si nes 1 e s, employing 39,000 \\'Orkers in ei ght years to the company's indu strial acreage. TllE CITY Of Irvine has 550 of those businesses and neal'ly 18,000 of the workers, Wolff added. "Industries are always the cornerstone or e c o n om i c gro\vth in any cit:y, but in Irvine, \ve have attempted to n1ake th e architecture com- patible for the 1•lorker.~ he ad- ded. ''\Ile have found that a good :1rch1tectural design helps both the employer a n d the en1ploye," \\'olff sa id. "l'o the en1ploye. a well- dcsi(":1ed facility shows that the employer cares about his employes," he a<lded. "~1ost people y,·ho are hiring today have been impressed \Vith the quality of u•orker they find in th.is area," Wolff said. "IT !\fEANS something for a person to li ve by \\'here thl'Y \VOrk. and the company is trying hard to se! !Ugh residential and industrial stan- dards," the industrial chier said. \Volff said the co1npany ou•ns 3,000 acres of industrial land around the Orange Coun- l\1arine Air Station and another l,IXXI in Tustin, with full development for the areas expected in 10 years, he ad· rled. (;-as Exploratio11 Fund Settlement Criticized SACRAl\IEt\TO f AP) -The chairman of the State Board of Equalization has attacked a $31 .5 million exploration fund for El Paso Natural Gas Co. as a "giveaway Scttlen1ent" by federal officials. BOARD C II A I R ~t A N \VHl iam Bennett threatened to den1and a congressional in· vestigation in a letter to Federal Power Commission chainnan John N. Nassikas. ORDER YOURS ToPAY! Copies of the letter dated Julv 11 were released \Ved- nesday by Bennett. Y.'ho is a self-d('sc rihed consumer arl- vocate and longtime foe or El Paso Natural Gas. TH)': SfiM1.EMENT afle<ls payments to El Paso by Pacific c:a~ & Electric. Pa c i r i c Lighting Co.. which in turn supplies Soulhern California Edison and San Diego Gas and El cct.ric, and Nevada Power Co. 1000 § Beautiful ' Stick·on \ LABELS Perso"flized • Stylish • Efficient I I I I I I I ' Otder For Yourself or 1 Friend lvtay bf used on envelopes 1s return 1ddres1 l•bels. Also very h1t'ldy •s identification lebels for mar~ing persDn•I item' suc h 1s bookS/rt1cords, photos, etc. L•beli stic:k on gl•11 Jnd m•y be used for m1rk in9 home c:1nn1'4 foc.d items. All libels •re print•d with fylish Vo9ue type on fjn• qu•lity whit• gumnfed p•per. I .. '' Co111pany Earnings Reported I OVER THE COUNTER NASO Liitlngs for Wedneid1y, July 18, 1973 -1~ .. /ell<>O'lt ;>11Gt1n 11 • ;1 • Q~••t Cn )0 11 1111'1 (Ill J I• i1a ouPOll.cl •Y '"" "' , ..... 11.. I•, :IC o ......... 11 !I •l•"""'" tloowol A.Uotlf!IOI' o1 111• Ltl l·o 4, •etnt Cll • 10 I llt~1lll•' k<...,lllK O..l•"·I .tl(~ ~" ''• \0. l.:ly(m l1r!Ot W l l'o •1•, ••I blot '"" ~l••• i~ "'"'"' 1 > 1' 20) 101 Tt!~m l\i I'• Q<IOl.d O~ °"., 11W i" Au•·" tl' • 1~ lil•rmd II I• T l"'"~ ''"" I t Oll'llft <Mlitt• lo•(n (<11at 1~ 11'• ltOlf\ P•C 1710 II~• 11,.,.. DC t 'o ''• •f(l'I oll'lt' •• qi ~~·~ M"'I , : ll:K~ [II j o )lo 1 l•ll 11• 11.ot eio.. lf ••'*'"' , • ...., "• 11 1~ • 11-.;a E1ec 11 , " ! 1 ..... 1. Ml '"' •o ![int.I t... lllKl,. I ..-It.Pf\ ~ )11 1 • 111!1 un•v Ulo Ill• fr•n C•l Ill It •k>tit 60 "'°' ln<IW•1G•t • A·)-1 1~ 10 . ~t· Pl•• I •'•1T•n C.••" 11 h i, •••111 m1rl1,1p, mer•"•<" (" 'U'• ',', ll•vn "" ''" •:S ,,,. OC:•n ll'l It 1JO¥.'" or t"'""'I• ~1•1'1n [fol I) ''' 1 --" rn I ' 'ti S b 0 II rll .'_, •AA ao no• ""Ill F~• ll" 'l' ll:ov1• Mt 1/\, • r . .,.... • ,.• 1 1 tot •• Y 01 -· '"" " 'lto.d £ •l0'1ll !Uni Cnul IQ•o1 • peen ''""•'*"' ICtllll ......... U• Jl. '·. "A"cl 01• 17., U• 'I Un•on \"' 17'• 11'-• Sa · , I u•1111cllqnl 1+.ri.n " • , ..... 1, ,.\en:ury v1ngs c.: .oan i1<1Duai•1•L1 I"""'" lit .. , , Rom ... ft '~" 11'. unA•t 11 • .No ,.,,,,, . , •• , '. I. lil'Ult Co ll'· 1J '• us \l ' NI ,., 1"" Association of llun!in~ton w.o ... Miiv ;;~~~~~~ 'c 1" ,, r~,,, ... t Fn1 10•. ll u~ r\ L 111, n1 B I · J.ilv 11 ''" , •, ~ 1o.1 1>, 1 : R11e~• P" •~ n • univ Fii• IS I !to eac·h, has reporlN t•:JmUlW" ' fl lQ Ai',:.~: •• .,, ' n. t1 11. ... 1 s•ov 10•1 JP unv MOiii 5'• j'• Of 3' (""•llS for the firsl SiX "t""'"' 21•1 ~·, ""'''' C I•> ll • l•Q• '°''h 6'• 6 > V•gM "'" ''• ' '-Al•• Alo II , 19 '1 '""a t • 10 , S•ltM C11 &•. r• rl Vl"l:f S" 6 !" tTIOllUI~ Of 1!173 ll~ (."{)tllptl l'f'd Allco l nd h Ii'•" "vtt 1l'-2• • S~m•n!! II'• 16', V'ln Ov-IC'• I•. · ' •nf'll ltv )J1 l' """' oYIO lO, II ~<~•u ))'> 3'111 Vtn $1>(-t•-10 <A'ith 2-1 cents for the cor-.-.111.0 r~1 11·, 11 .. '"~11 <.. 1~ • i:·, sc11011 rn _s, l > 1v.(1or1 s1 10 11 I "od f I ~ the .. llvn ft• , .. ~ • '""" C 11 • 1'7 • i<Oll Inn 1r>, !!I· VoMO 5~1 l'1 •'• respond ng pen u :111.:;, "'" "'"''1 11 1P. 1n1• w~• u ' , s.;11n•L c. • • ,., v1.-..1 Sc '"-• , • ~ f ' A .. ,l(rll !"" I • '"·'~ t • ..,;I 'fl 1 • "ti ,.. ''' lt VOi S-11 1~ Prev1011s recon1 or earnings, ,...,e1 lb , , , 1~i,,., '1 i "" '"" · ( d• In I f Sp).11 ~ J'"' '>I 'S$ l"!fl (._'fl ' .. S.Cclp10 I I>. 'l 'W••ll NC. IJ'• I a ter a )US lt'll or . Am ln<t 11'.• 1' •Mt<( tn « ·~. St• VUlcl Tlo 17 pl Wt •I• Ml 11 lt 1: • 1 ~,• Sv Mt«" l• l IS t W••mn I I'• I The six . m o n I h total ~;:: ~~·;, 1•• -• :~;"'l1.,.v,,• , ~ ' Svm~•'' Jt JI lw"'° kt l\, •'- I ' ll~ of .. 5 A.Mir{ S ~·· ~ 1~ fl"N A 1 • / 'St•ffi Ug l't'• )I) .... ...,,..,, I•• ro represen s an 1ncrc . • ... Te1t~ ,1 , , •. inti .. co 10,,: 11., Sii•'" co ''• ', w.1111 .,..., 1p .• ,.,, percent over 1972 Arn Weld 11 11 1 1 no M l' .1 5...,,...... •l• ''· w.uno 1,1 u II , -· A.nlle\11' .,,: j,t. • /A'r:e..b , ~·:~;"'°'Oil )l 17 W>l[\t Pl )'I i ~1ercury also pos!rd a 11cu· A.n•tn •n I" • , Je• AuF• )'• , • s ... o T011 ~.I•· w,1 Putll ,,,, 11 . AIMQ>t £ '• 10 Jool~n M 11·~ I•, ~1"11 F'•P I•'' 11·, W•f!r Fcl 10 11)1, record for tolal assets in ex-.-,ps 1...:0 1: 11 ' ..... !.<', s• 111". 11 , SMC'•• 1~" 11 ,.,.,,,.,,,, 1 1t1• , .. , •• ill' A•On M•I 1'• l !Ctl><" C: J • ' ~'•"0<1·; I 11 • lt W•I•~ OI J II 111. ces:s of$!,)\/ m 100, represent· A"o A11• 10 !! Ko••" l • ) • I . St<I RPO'• I•• ..... Wint r>•l I)\, .. ~, ing a gro1\·lh of l!t pem•nt ~~:'id. ur 1:. 1r· ~~"'t"'onn :r· :r· ~:: .. "' t.i: ~ .1!': ~~ ~l'~ :~: :~:: O\'f'r \'ean.-nd 1'172 and 51 per-AHO C"'• ?I ' ))l,lo:t• O~lt •••• Sito• N s 10 10 WO"" !Y 17'. IJ' • '· ' A,11 (h L• I•'• 1' • Ktvt~ Fo ll, I• S••o• l•I'.' II•, II . '.'••10111 W 510 J'o ("('Ill over June 30, 1972. :~l~., ~~: 1~. 1r :'o:•• c,..., 1·1 ''• suoe• "' • •· ·~" cu •'' • e ~larhl<' f,ld. f1al•d Wt II 0 II , tt.1y11 Int I• I• S>"'' CD IQ +C'1 Voll\'I Frr :Jll, )rl 8•~•• F• lJ ll••I """~ Ina l'o •'• SI•~ "'cl l IJJ ... h C11 I\• 1' 8•1<1wfl l I~ 1(11 Knfpe VI I)•' I\ J 8.~llv Mil .. •I '1K<>11t• Pt 21 n 0 ·r Pll I 8nk B•a 11 11•, 1C'Ve11•• '" ~•I Speeial to the a1 Y O s~n• 11~ 11•, '" oc.,,,m El ~ ) American ~lari ne Ltd · I:~~~'~ ~l if'lt:~.:i'" ,;;i .~.;I 10 Itlt1st .:\t•til't" Newport Beach reported a ft••l•n •' 1 10 1.•11(~ 'U'· ~·. _ __ ,_ _ _ ' 8"11nt F "' I • l • ... 1fo ( J6 )I > loss of $1,287.187 or $1.29 a Be~ln Cp & ..... l••V Qg,; lO'· JI" N£W YORO: iUPlf -T""' 10 me•• · he a 1 1•' 11· L-ou~• r>1 11' 1; 1•(r. ... ''oo;~~ ••u•a 111 111~ o re m11~~1 share, on (ii) percent hig r 8~~1 ·"~~ ll ' ~ '.ILl11<•tw H ,1; •'• .,...f'<ln~><Mv •• ·~polle<i bw NASO. I r ,182 "I)" r II ,,,, ,,, ., •• .u.;•·1 ,,., • ,.,iloo:k Vol11m1 l lGAlliMCM sa es o , . n11 ion or ll' ll 1)1> ,,,, 1., ,,, ti"( 110,1 1,, 1 1 11.,,, O•on 11J.«lll 11" 11'•1 ·1• dcd '! CJ 31 ,1, Orm 10 I"' 'o• C•>• , > P~n l •lf l!l,/'>00 • • • o-'• year en i• ar 1 . Blta ~on• 2 1'[" ., }J·' i-1' \.nmc 1n•.i "~' 111.a.xi 114, tl'•-•t The loss resulted 1>rimaril1· 8l>b E""I 1ji.. !~'' t::;11~ Co ~·' ~, Tr•n•tnll G•" !Of 100 " 1•'· + • , , 1100111 Np :10 »• "" ' D••' 110•;111 .-~),l(IO t'' I'• t '' front a change 1n atcount1ng 8••t1Ca l 711 n•' M.a C.•• i. .. 1•'•'""''' E.o""' 11.000 i.11 ~ 1 I d ltln~> tn ti' 10 ' M&! A:nw ! ~·. IC!rin II•"" )0,000 11 il'• for research,deve op1nentan 11ro .. n •r •. : 60..:M.,11c~1 )l'•,)ll•,F•on~Un l ln1 ... 100 1~'• ,l,;-P · I 1. 8ut~bol 11, u» M•rlt rr1 1~1. l'Q•,IB•n••"'•' •l,tOO u io \lo+ I" start.up expenses, IJlC lit mg 11..ct•~ !"• 1 , M••w 11v 11 , 7t'11c111M M•n11 co •1,1tN "" 19 .. + .• rt. .. B11rno St JJ••D'•Mt Cmc t ..0 O'•I $W0,373 in unamo 1ze1i ex· a.,11..,. M lt'• .io•. 1 McQuiw I •·~ 11•. NASO v<>'un>t '"''"• >·'"·XO· •nv•~(• pcnses incu.i 1l::'U • .• •Ill sow ) i•, >,ll'<l••'n 1e i.o l061 .. ~ m p,·, •• "'•'' 1·..., Tto 71''1 1•'· Me<1("1 1~·, 16'•\!09 Ok•·~· ]93. Uf'ICll•nora lW. lot•• and SI 094 989 in such expenses '" v1Ps 11 11•••M••ld 1n ~·, ,., ' • l>mo Pt 1011 11•\1/ooy,r Fr 1llo ll'·1--inCUITt'd 1n the last year. ~~·,: 1r: •::: ~111;~., ~~ ;;~ {Stri•iers t.\c {A)sers Operatmg results were also ntm co 34•, J5'1 Mr,:,, F•b )t.. ~·· __ _ __ II ed h nl fir Ir II f2 lo' 1 c ?I' t1' adverse\\' a cct Y :i cnrh SK M::i'o"• 1~ ll ':i.. ' tl•w YO'• IUPIJ r,,. 11111-1~ 1n1 ( h lo r 16.S 111 ., ......, I"'°""• "'" "<K•• 1,..1 ll•ve o•IMG •~• ore1gn exc ange SS 0 cu11 u ... l1'1 JI """°'' S• 1~ ..... "'""' '"" io.1 '"• m0>• """'° on Pf'<c.11 03 J l Cl•v-10'• 11 Mo•tl1n 2l~, 14''!"' cn•l'lll• on Int O•tr·•,,..·Cc.wiiw SI .838. pr Im a r I y a . Clow C•D 12'• !l'• >,lo10I' Cl 11 . IJ ,,,.,.,, .. (lllOll'<I bY 11>4! NASO ·"·• bl I 1"· • I 1· Coc:aC l• 16'• 16 '• M!.t 0.1• I'• 1'. Nfl •nd w,,..,,_ en•.....,; ,,1 n.r tri ...... ta e O '""' ~,cva ua ion 1~• snr 16', u • NII Cn•S• 1 •'· oiucten<• btlw•m y,.. "''~TW. 1111 111<1 of the U.S. dollar. ::!""',,,,', ', :11', 2l'> Na1 Liflt,. •'• ••· P<'<t .ona ,..., cu.,•n• 1 .. ~, 11111 P<k •. -· 'l'' IS•· Nt Mm(f 10•. ll'o GA11<1e•s CV"Jn• I ., 1&'· NI P11enl ,,, ,,, f lll>etly .. _ ...... '• Up ~·· • ~ lo e S&L '"" CD II'• I& Nff<lhm ••• 10•. 2 AovanMr., Sy 1'•~ 11, UP 0 ... e,,s II t~l<ll R 6'' 7 NewU Co I0\1 ll'o l Monor1 ol Ctll .... 1•. U11 1 ·o C:Jrt Noll II 1! NEno GE 16'1 l6'o • P11bll•nCo Inc 1'0· 10 U<1 2$0 Keystone Savings and Loan 00,·~,. '"•u 11•· 1"• NJ Nat c;. 16'•-16\• ) s, .. , o.i. co '"' ~·, uo 2s:O " •:• ', Nlcolf! In I 9 6 Tau•"'•• Inc t 1,.-'• UP !'•' Association rcport,1; record g:r~ g~~ •, t ~.· Nli!'htn A 19"·1 JO 1 cmu1r.1•n c11 n·.1-,,, uo '·' · I , ' Nlel<~ B ?t'i 19'• I Sttw•r• Sn!I"" 10', I-Ho Uo :IO.O growths in e.:1rn ings. oan "••• Gen IC/· 1~1 NOl'<lll• 1•'• 19"" ~ &a1ne• ,..1,.d 7} ;. • uo 1•.c ·-or·•1·,1gs an·' assels durin" go~:; ?~ 1,;: 's•· N1t·• NtG io" 10•0 ,10 OK1s1on D•'" '"·t 1·, uo iv.o '~"' U U !'> ' • •• >l' No ell Ca ''' 49 1 l•Mll Pt!rOln1 I'' 11• Ua 17.6 I I. . th f 1973 1~ b .-"", ' ,' 11 Lt>(Ucon ln<ro •, • lo Up 17.2 t 1e irst SIX ITIOl'I S 0 , 0e1n1 Intl ~ ' \'.• '1ucl• 11.e 7 .' l 1) H•~tm lndu•!\ ''• ~ ~. Up 11.1 R J·' W C K S1 g••v•e C J7 l11• 01kwd H 61• '"I• Wl!IOll HJ lf'IC I• • 1 uo 161 ona u . aspers, ey one l•m cri 11V1 11,1 Oc••n or »•· lt)J~\1~ Hc>i:io.~"' 1," 7,.. '• uo 1,,1 chairman. reN>rted . 00,•,·~, "jd lD\o l G • Ck••n E• 1 '" 1& Nas1enco .J1b ,,,1 , ''• uo is.a r-• 29 29'~Ck11<1r Ml 1'o ]"Jlli.tftO>!n 1f0!> It'>~ 71, Up 1<1 Earnings for the fi~t six 8~'J, ... Sc ~J;~ !.::; Olhll LQ• e>-o 9 11 AU•rQan pj,,, 2l>'· 1 1•. uco 1}.J "" 66 , Doll e;.., ,,: 1, Ogilvy M 11 lt'lt 19 ~mllMl<I Food 1'o, , Uo L.Jl months of 1973 \\·ere -..I. ,,E~llll 25~16•'°"' Ff'<'r<I N l\~···:10 N1ll li.rtv Ca I '•! 1 uo ,,,, h l't' »' • OPll C~I 17 11 1\ Cmo!• Otslon S • i. '• Uo IJ 1 Or $0.69 per S are, as COm-WltJ~: <'ti'Otmonl 6 1''•21Atwoocl Ck"I:• II'•• I>:, Uo 11~ 1 1 S287500 $060 0 1i,' ~.~o~rmyr ''~ 4'~n .. 1wDOOCkn ul 11•, .. 1 Vg 11• paret 0 . , Or per E~z:'1"La~ lt'' '°" Ove'1 N ... • • 1• Arcn.on P Poll 1'• • '• Uo 11 i share. u1 nlJd 1972 : lo.an El Pato 11•: 1y : or;t•-C•P--'1-o-''~ 15 01am::omo cr1 l••• 1• uo n s E1 N..cel •'• ! Ptb•! Bt 60'161 I lOSE•S recordings were $13 ,850,000 dS Enffl!v c 1 , r , PKc•• n·~ n•:. 1 FlffM!l11<1 !v11 1 ,_ '• ou 1•.o ((!u S& L 11'< 12" P1c G•m 19'• n•, 1 Der!loMe<I !no 1 • -'• ~' ,., compared to $7 ,225.000 : assets, '°""'" " 2,., 21,, Ptc L.im ;i..1, 15•, J ll•d+11on Te<~ 1; •-~ ,!U' -··" ·11· had E•Kll In !lo S'o P•Sa ftrd 81.lo t~4 • T•llY Cor!>'in ] •-~ 4 nov.· ex'--,,_,,.,ng $68 ml ion, c:z P•ln1 ,., 1•. Ptn 0c0t 11 11>0 ~ G~a111 '"'o ''•-'• b 13 I F"alr l.J<t '" Ii'>~ P•u• R.w 1~ 1y, t EIK!tnl' Trn• ,.,.._ '• Oii t.J grown y O\'er percen as FttlOI\ El l't ,.,,, p,.,1ev P 3,, ,.0 1 A11s tfll:Ol'o ~ -• ., g11 t.1 compared to a 7 percent F•'"' '' ,,., 13•, ~111 C•~ 1r. ta : c,.P P"'°""cco 21,.-': &It '·' F•YI Oro µ, ~. P•v H 5.,. 1.,.. I] •":""ii oro -·-'. '·' growth in mid \9i2 Flnorl'lt 17'• I] P•~& W II 11"-10 ll u•IOGSvs .011\ l•o-.. Olf ~ · =s1 80\ln 1t1>10\\ Pp! H&."' 11 72 ll ~"~"'" ftrtw I'• Off Special t<.• !ht Daily Pilot 111 TvFln n•. 1.; P..iro Lw I '• Jl~ tJ Ga1 .. w•YTc' .l:O 1,1. -I 011, l•t W•'" l'o 1'• Pl(N S•v s•, 61, 1) Guardn Mm ,•-'• Of Flsto 11>( ''· 10·~ Pl k I ?1>\ 11 1' Acte4•••1o.. I ·-'• OIJ ' .D .. l(···e11S·•·L Fl.1 Ttlto 11•.11•1p·"'nw ,· ,,,'SAIO<le• (,YO ,,,_ ... Ot ~ •' F!it~Ot 12•, l)'t 1.,..., • 16 "'°"1noSy1 G4 l -1• 0!! , F0(,1t Ot 111, IS'• Plboe• l"d 11.,_ ll'• !7 C:oml•• Com .l •-'• Oii . lptflll 11 1111 Otlly '""°' F•enk El ''• WI'" P!tnd Mk 1''~ 11 le Mon•CM' Grovo t•~ '• Oii • 00\VNEY E · t=r•ntl• ill :Ill'., Pooll Bro 411 S'lo 19 Aroo Ptl•olm I -'• 011 I . -:.am1ngs per Fri•"" 1c 13'• 1•1• Prof GC1lf 2•1 l'o 1'0 Aav,.. lnclu>• "•-'• 011 .4CT Sha'" or $1 •• io' lhe rlrst six Cr/tth " 13l4 IA:, PrOC!••• l l'~ 13>\ 11 c~· (~rJDan" I'--•• 011 I <: ...... • "m' Fd E ,,., I "'SN ,,, ,,,, IP. :no ... TKnno11,1y ,.,_ '• 0'1 months of 1973 established an F~11 ... , H 1314 14 Publ•h• 11~ .,., :o Oov9h11e1 Fl\• J'i-" 011 -, . . Cunk SW 10 !Ol • Putn C•o 4 1-16 4't, 11 Ort Fr•ei·O'" l'o-'• .QU all.time record for any like :;••••v c •'" 1 Q""'' Co 1u •i.. ?S JV'it Mio 1&w1 1 '• Off , • period for Dov•ney Savings & • } L-Oan Association ~~'~v&!t' ,..,..,..,..,..,.,. ... ..,,,,. ... .., .. On revenues of $11.200.3 10. .. · · ~ Downey Sa>;ngs & Loan show-MUTUAL FUNDS ed net earnmgs of $1.456,298 for the six rnonth.s ended June . .... • "-~ n-.... .' '-" .II~~).. •-30. This compared to revenue s • of $7,497,039 and net earnings 1c!{,: 1~or,k 11~"".!i ~~~~'ttJ', ~·:.:'11~1g 2~:f: i!:?~ ~r~i',' F 1~~ ~ of s1.1 15.761 for the six n1onuis ~~~ ·n:.. ''k',?..,,C::~i ~~~ FS 1;·~ :~,~ i..~:,~\g~E1:1.1l •t.1G ~!o~ •• ~0 ~jl ·~'" ended June 30. 1972. ,Fh':n<h•••'o",~ . .o Dv •,~~,, , :S.1'11 6.l.I ... 11.r u1 •~., 11., 1<enu1 fcl 1.16 .... ·-~ 1 O'l 1A.1 "'"" b• 1 .u 'CM .SC:n11s ~P '" Ste• Fd 111113.89 \.11i l "' 1.11 I /'J SlUDOE• l'Dfi e Bt111ct•rpo1·utio11 J11I¥ 11, 191] EO!E So 11.6011.60 \.11U "' l.t.•J 2).l> ft•l•nc. 11.·~I . WH""4•Y Eberslcl 10.1111.16 \.WI K2 )Af 6•5 lt11t Inv 11(16ij l id Aili El'C MGMT G•"': lull lll ll.).t 11.0 Com 10..11 LOS i\.NGELES ! AP) -ADMHll:Alt'I': I E11!v Gr 1.11 l .d \.11~1 !11 / &J I .lo S!>e<it 1'.l1 l't. . . . ~ .. G""tn • ]1 • n EOIV Pt l 01 C11\I )l •.U. •.II Sbcl Lev • .. '' .. \Vestem Bancorporation says tf'ICam J 10 • os Flld Am 1."' '·'' Aoollo '·.o •.11 s•cu•1ry •'os· · lnwrn I .Ii 1'1 1 Eartt Gt 12.J11J.J'l Pol1•1 J.)1 l.ti EouUy l.J.l .l6I ilS COOSOlidated income before A<1vl$t!r 111 • !l Ellun l rl 11.).1 ~n•t•r ~,·.~1 6.6J ln~il •.6f 1·,.. . . . A01n1 Fd I 08 5-al £~ro l.18 •.11 (nl<• C.tn .,. I Q>6 Ullra ,. -seC'UrlllCS transactions rOSC.-et111 In llt.flill \En.,.aw 11 ."-ll.u namr• 6.'.lt 699 IELl'CT•O '•" "' . •t11!ur• 9 fO o oil Faldlo 71• 9 •/ -F 01· 16.4 percent 1n the first half of •GE: Fo •II •911F"' ft11r1 t.J:! •.n ·'"~ cl s.i. !." Am sn. 1.11 1.17 h. r· d .-11,11te ll6S!l~ 1'"'1 lllR• 923 .EX G•OUP: 0oo Fe! ,,10 t.IO t IS yea r O\'er lgun?S recor . Aloha Fd lJ CT u 71\ l'IOELITV . <..o l..,, "·" 16.90 Sol Sii•• 11.11 n.(1 I r h hs · Amt10 F & 1ll ! t11G•OUP· C.r .. in •.•l I.Cl Enltl>' ~Sol 605 t'{ Or ( e Same mon t Ill •m Ovtl 90610.11 8no a.e'b 991 980 llteircn 1)0 1161 Flt! l'O l.11 &OP 19,.,.. Am Eq!v o 19 ; 11 Cto•~I 11:~2 lJ,5''l !D!y Fcl :S.16 5.91 S...un~ t,1J ID if 1"· • AM EX .. JIESS Conlr• 1.•I . il•te lnlv 8 . .C 9.11 Stnlty F ll.11 liU The firm rennrtcd!y the n.1-l'UHOS : Cv SS« IOI 1.Jt'-'"I: LftO I.JS I .OJ SHA•ENLD Git ... : ' 1~ c10•11 167 1 31 Deil i .11 I"'"° ~"" J,n H1•D• 7 ll 111' tion's largest n1ultistate bank '"'""' 1 ss 9 l• Eiie• •o ~ · L1~~•"s· Como l .11 J'.s.;r lnv111n IOj l.IO E•tcol 11,IJ11601 .. • ll'Q~I L I N 6M holdingcornpanv said r..ton<lay soe,1 11 105 Fvno 15.6111 .0I! C~P O• 12.9ll?.9• Paco I'd 1.JJ 1·" . •' . S!OC~ !SS 815 Pu•ltn 9.,410,lC M111~.i . IHE•lllSOH "'0S·' that 1nco1ne before the securt· .,., G,,11 6 Q.l ~ s• s~1,,... F •.c~ • ~1· •" s1 11 s1 •oorc 18 51 ~ l!I I · 537496 Am 1n11n •.18 512 f•on~ D.5.Juo.i o.011.D All: lncom 1i .w lft6 .y tran~actions ..... as ' ...... 1~•11 •16 471 FIH•HCIAL 1'MllA! 6 .. 6'6 '"''" ,·,.1010 534 r I"-n I . lh I "'"' Mui 11~ a.t'/ .. ROGlt AMS: Am 8111 ]~1 J.21SI> Oe•n 12 •617' Or UC lrs SIX ITIOrl S 0 .\mN! Gr 2.J'1 1 54 Fin Ovn •.Oii I 00• Bnd d~O ~ 60 10 11 511\~ Fd 6·97 I "6 1973 The in come ficn1red out AHCNOA Fin Ind •.ll • :i.s -u!lle•n 10 SJ 11.~1 SIGMA FuNDs :" • • e OllOUP : Fl" l"I: 5.l-1 51.<-~tnn In 94910ll C10 S~r 16t i! to SI 63 a share con1pared C•ot•I • S9 s.ro ven1 J.i\~ l.atl~"'GHA FUNDS: Jnv 1c'.J111· . . ' ' . Fnd Inv 763 136 lJll'd V• lOIOll!O C~O!•I l ll •.09 Tn t • y,·11h Sl.4-0 a share during the c;.,w1h 1.«i e.u FIJIST 1ncon1 110 9.St V•n•v• ~·': i 1 (. . l"e<>m 719 1.U INVESTOllS: P•lllf'll !II l&lt Smlln II !O fO 1rst SJX months of 1972. when V•n•u• ~.16 •Os Oil': Fd s:ii. s11\1An Mtn •Ol 1.4'0 Sft l&G• ic~:c," h I, <'~ \V• t11!1 11!9 1l0J G•tn Fd 705 1.1'3 ~ .. JS CO · ~o GenF tS t C IJ'Ol 013de ~J.9'l2,~2. ·~"°"' JU •01 Sloe~ F 1'5 119 Freem ' 711 156 Swo Inv 1:'r,"~ •ud~• F 7661.l71•! l,'U'lll ~'2I U 1n,Jor 11•16'S"'l" G l l't e Brru1iff ~OUGHTOH: 100 F"" llS.1.ICl•'>l.ASS FNCL-s:;,1n 11)1)1711 "' l"D•UM Glt0U"'' M• .. r 11 JI n ., i • 6 1• 6 I!> t=11n<1 A •U s.M IOI Fno .n ~ll MIT 1ir.in16S&P 't 100 1 4f Spec'"al'·lhtDollj•l'•"lol Fune! I I~ 1~1 C~lum 11• 17• MIG ll.111 ••0 ITATIEn~.&1J •11 ... .. Stock )10 O'll 15 F11nd >?• J•• Mil> )J]1 U61 c ' D 011 .. ~ DALLAS B ·rr I 1 ••e sci 001 ••1 f'dn G• •!>i so1 . 0 1 · o"' c1 •M i t.t -ran1 nemR -Bl.CGtn 11n 11t2 POUNOIE•S "c'o )lll•llOlve.il ''ISM l. I h I .• IJI ' ft•t>wn 110'>1109 G•DUP· ·"' 1'1•USt. F'•OQr1 •t• S•? 1ona as rcpor cu a -une B•v•oc I l' 1 n crw111 · 11, 1 111>\•1•• '~ 110 1 JO sr Fr c;., • ~, , 1 h;gh firs I half net earnings of 8•~'~ Q~ s ll 6 10 inc""' 11 "' 1111 ~~~ .. ,~.... 1 ~ j~ 1 ~·J! ~i ~' In( ~ 11 ~ 11 8t•<n ... 1 911 ,,, F 1J.lu&I ~·~ tn . .., $" 6<1 ... •~llO $11059000 equal to 55 cents llff(<)ll 11.19 11 l'il F Soecol !~CJ !19St~ra' :d :o SJ,, Sl SYl'ADMAN l"D$• · · • . l!le"'e' t( 117'Itl1'1 F°""Q ~ 1.6! 9 ,, , " l '' ll" Am •nd ,, •1 1 •1 per share, an increase of 40.9 e ..... ~. • » • se FllANKLIN ~ ~,:~ 11~~ ~19 1t.n. •, 1'(1 Fa 1 it 1 ·" r S1 000 I BOO'l•H!~ 119 ~ 7.l lGllOU"': • M ¥ "~Pl! ! )l I.,) percent rom .848. . cqua 8011 fdn • 6• ID '9 ONT( I It I 'l ":1" G•& • « • 90 StE IN •oE l=DJ• • 39 h d Oro·"" l76l ltGwtn•• 711 81'>,uO,.,r.! •161 16 Btl~nc l'Otiito't to cents ~r .~ are, ean1e ivL<..OCK -"' 1~.... 115 • l• ,,.,,o,., •n •-~ ·~ C•p1n 10 l'! 10 : I hr• . h f 9"21'UHOS · VSG v $ 915\:lM 'lu!Sh•o l•t•l•94Sl<x• lta 1 11 l e 1rst !;IX lllOfll s 0 I 1 . l!lull Fd 1 1 1~ 10 ,_, 1J1111r1• ~ n 111 "'"'' '" 1 90 1 'D us o•'ou .. ~ 1' ti The eaniin"S were aft er co~ Fc1 r.io11;11 t:t .... C:•o 101 561.,nt t""u •13 97l c;.,.,.,,11 ~00 •J-• I> ()Iv ~ .. t ·l M ·~l 11.. Eq•y •.31 .n NAt SIC FOS ; ll>C"1;1m •11 i s...,.,cia\ nonrecurring c·spital N~twd • 9J 10 1111=~1 LIEa 11" n n B•l•n, 111 • 16 Smm.• p 11 0·~ I~ ' NY Vt'! 101•1l l6FdMl<IO 9'8 913 ll<llld Sr •16 J10 TP<~nl ~' gains Of $i34,000. equal 10 4 8rn~m t 60 t 60 FUNDS ll<IC' Oiy0dn J ~ J 91 SY"<ro r ! ~l 1 :1 C Gl'und \0 OS 10 ~, GllOUP: Pct! SO ~ ll 6 70 Tltll A. • ~ cents per share. net after tax. Ceo T'1n 10~ ,,.,, '""'m 1.a • •9 inc°"' •I? s'" r,,,.~, e' l!: :~ r J J r J . Cfnl ~"" \l,62 11.a9, lmgac I •1 !.11 S•otlt 5• 6 6~ 1 )1 Ttowe• c 590 • ron1 tie sa (' n surp us equip-(11AHH iNG I '"<Ju\ " 10 16 11 1i1 G·.~r11 ~ 11 1 n t•&n CAn •'Jt • l I I . 11 h . he FUNDS: Pll~t 171 l<n NEW ENG 1.•· t,,,~t E T ·' n1cn.anl \\fllll .1\e cna Baln<d 10!.J1111C.•1~ 1;3~,96IFnv"• 11:o:i•iltluoor f~ ,go1io,99 rcciird even \\'llhou ! 1 h ~ ~"11 Fd 9111~~GE S·~-" 11,, , G•wT~ 1~•t11i.1 :io1~ CG 7 ~';ll Q<'!1 ~·~ I '1'I • 1 C•~ ""' ~ 6 1 <.d. II,, n ,, /f•'n (I -It ' t:<l ' •1ta 1 g:1ins \tcn1. ""''" \ 17 I /OIGltOU .. SEC :. fJEA ''I ' '• 9 1~ Un•U•rt ~ 91 ~ 11 I' ncom ~I• I JI l>rte• r S ' l~ N..., t •·h• '•1 , •i lPn '"nd li~ )oe<I l 11 117 8•1 F~n I '1 8 6~ ,,tVN!~ ' '-0 ~ <,(1 V11,10N ' t 15 t • TrnllSll••ierif'tJ v""'~' 11o1 1111 com sr• 1111 121f(••t"'~~ 11 ,. ,, ~jQ•ou,. E•V•cE i N .. SE gi~ ~A; 4 ll ..I IJ,. P"t 11'~U13 B•<I S i~ ll ~! "Jll SjtKlll .. , ... D•llT .. il<ll f,!,1i~~ ... 97a 'n ·~ •Xl21!l'll,,'"•"" v.111 11 41 11~ ~.11 '"~ 111 ,,,, S • F•on co 1 J6 111,Gu••t! n 11 n 11106! s (lt'.,.,'V"' Un C101 1.n '-'' .AN f H"°'NCISCO -~~Tr 11 10s 170 HAMILTON GJI"':' 1 ";.i(,"~••• 11 • .,1,10•,•,•,•,•I n 13 131• T · I Co cd l!>e'd SIO 611 Funn •01 •17 ... D l'UlolDS · ransamerca rp. repon Ch•"' Fd 1011 1110 c;,.,... ''J 1>1l'i•1• 1.,, 1•'1411ia Accu"' 11, ,~ h h• fj Jf (0 0 l•l I~«>"' !~ !"°Oft'°"G h)' 61~ OM Fd 18' 1 t e iJ,?hcst rst ha re\·enues ,,u~01: 1 ,..0,""'°' ion1 11 ....,..,,. IL' ?•O tOf'• ., ... •t1 i.1 and operatinn criminrrs tn it' !onv•• •.Jtl01t M••' '-• '" '''Q"'•'!~ 1''•'1•• Conttn( •tl•O ' ., < ,. • oullv lr: l10 H..,C""l 7'1C l&l ~·,\I! \l ... \~Ji •rn:-.. l)!1t' I historv \Intl •9 ., 10 ,, Hi=<Mi~ I '6 0"'~(~NM •D Stltr.c I !J I ·~ ~. ·.' . rwl" 4e,, ''°"'"""'" 16111.11 !"'I!!"'"' 1~1111 1~'V•noo ~·Ill ;";et lnCOm<! (ro m Operat1Qn1i Int!>"' •6t!C ~~Nar•~• 111~:I011 Co r.,., I)! 7•AUS•.\ C• 11 (1111,0• . Vt"lll• l:".:I )JO lmO<"I Co •1>110)1 OCI f'M 171 IH US C.•IS T00/1 11 for the SIX n1ontho; ('Oded June!§"'" G 11 )I 11 ~I 1mo G• IOI '" r·~ ,.... • .. /XI fiALU! l.JHlf F06 · ~ l I led ''2-3J 000 MMOHW'LT ll l"t ldAm 1]:101~"ll0tC' \o< t •!ftl)n V•I Ln• !JJ ~'{· JU oa ""'·' .. com-UST: It'( (IOll 1~611P•··..-· , ... .,.VII'"' ••?w • partd \\'1th S.'t9.4i4.~ for lht ~" • l !l I~ l:::'~m •·jj i'il l :~~:u:'~ ! :~ ; ~ b~T ~~ ~~~ ~ .. ? fi rst h3U of 197'2 Thi s <lf"O or '·19 131 111 '"v11o1 ll. '' '' "'• ..,.,,, 1" •.,. VA1<1C• -· ""'o ca -tS S •1 l•n•trn C. 11! '·F, ... ,.,. ~" 6 •• , .. SAND l•s· runounted 10 6.\ cents per orno eo 1 (I • 11 '"• co r, n.9014 "11;,A irc1 ~ ,, • •n 1 ... ,,, · , il , " O<flO F<I 1 ~ 1 tlil"Y Gu d I IJ I J O'n• •• "'110 1'l VS C°"" I ! " 5hAre, a JO percent gain over. oncra • 0:io 1nv 11'1C!lc 1.11 I•~ r-· ,,,. I~""<' 11 ,\ • Ol\J ,,... 11 111 a 1·· •r 11.ll 1, 11 ""'INF"'"I PO · Vnt1•bll • • ... the 53 C('nts enmed 1n the "''" ew 111 s 1,•0'{,\Ss1.• \ o "" "'" ·" • .. v'""'a , i' ''' 19-1... .,.,.,.,, '" Ml I ., o '" "" 11 '' •··~!V•nl 1090 tGI same 111.pcr(ou. ..,,,.11 111 1111ao..., 1111•1•,.1,.,.,.11 •• 1 ,11 v1.,...,1 1(1 111 ontrv ( 11n ,. "I ·::1· Iv l12 1 11 01~ .. ~~ •••• -· v•-na Q• ,. \~ • ..n O•rt l~ VJ'j11 iU l.13,.,1r-111" l""l•MW•ll'•or .,, Dat•••••· l11c. ""r~iv ii :~1 1ras1.'G111°1.p.,"1 ,..,11,.e •t1·-1w··~ M.i ttt.,11 : t,v W"'Jllt: I ! NO s'~ t-JO "·"""'"' tl •\ 1• •I """'"'° NI 10 11 10 1 llatum Tnc. 1\naheim·ba$4'd ;lst~. P• •. .,, .... r ·· 1• •• ,, .. wELL1 1o1010,. • · ~ • tlt!OU IV•I ~ 10Sl ~w .. ,., f\I • .. CllllOUP: rmdu('rr of minteompuler .. 1!' F •••1au 11:::C:• 1•. ,1 ·,..,.,. ~.. ,. ···! E•iilor '1 ••ff'' ~·he J lp m e 1 1,, T ·~ •tt 5e1Ki f<&)!Ol•"'"Vf"' t•• '"IJv"'' tM ·" rr1p ra equ n, v""' i•.s4 ~or.;1••••v ,: ... ~ ... A • ..,,.. ••••·1J,ooa.n '!·J l ,)t ""fl"'"'' -"I rolled S)'SICtns ~t(l C:P •• , ! Inv"-•• II) {t \ D ..... ~10 '~ •• ",. T(f!n.. l J'J .. • ....... C• IS II \ • I s II ........ ' •• I ''"'' II 1!" and 1>rt'C'is1on t i m Ing In-''" i: 'f d, l'l Grwtt. • 'l ~_,, ... ~l'JS• v·•ht~ 11 • 1 .et •IYl'US ., I'""°"' •·R '·"" '••· "·· '' ·· ""'•lt•n II Ot I .01 s1run1c11talion t1it11p1ncnt Hn· ~"''rd 1 1::111• l"I U' > ., ... ~,v ·'" •1• 1V'fld" 11• •A• · •N rd '"" t1 !' Sf! 11. l•.S.1 " -., • · · •• w.,1 t"'l !l' f1 ' nounc,>d record !ICCOnd quartl'r rvi i..~ 1• 1t 11·1~~11 llfOcl '° ll.36 r'l.""u'" ,~..., 11 -~~'.!1.. Gr ~ ~ and !'.IX·monlh.'1 ~ales find .rd 1~ i':;,\R,;.~ 1•::Jt1' ;;, ::;;:;w~, ,;: .. oe. . LI! M11 n y .... \1, 'd ' MIT ~ ...... r ,._ .. ~· ... ., .. l)tldtf>4 ettm1ng~. "'' G• oo ,, •N""' ei~ 111 t 111 ., __ • .~ ... " ... •·•"'•"•1·~D··· • • • • . -• ... • v " .. •• • .. .. 4 1,1 .. ,u •. r P1lUr SC 'Dial I' Ads 97 % Success Spedal .. tllo Dally PU« SA~TA MONICA E•· tenafl>'e advertising ol che Dial ul" plan tnltialed ~the phone companlet serving the 213 c;alllng area rewlted In 1 V1 peretnt CUJtomer aWartnHI, according to the results ol an Independent '1UV•y r.onducted ( -s~KINr; STOCK ) three days prior to the July 14 ('Onverskm. General Telephone a n d Pacific Telephone u s c d television, radio. newspaptra. bi.11 lnstru. direct mallerr and ptr&OO • to-person cus:tomer coot;icts to tell everyone about Dial "I". Their efforl.s paid off. • Dearlug .'llat.ed LOS ANGELES CAP ! -A federal court bearin~ was Jet Wednesday for a &7-year~ld Los Angeles man accu!led of stealing and c.'OUllterfeitlng more Ulan $1 8 million In seeurttlts. Loo ls GiUleman will appear Friday in the courtroom of U.S. Magistrate V c net la Tiwopu.los on charges he and 15 other persona s t o I e securilles f r o m 1'1anufac· turtrs' Hanover Trust Co. and Merrill, Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and SmUh, both of New York. • lnlormallc• Special to the Dally Piiot C ANOGA PARK Di.lc:ussion.! are under way between Infonnatlcs Inc. and Equitable Life A 1 !I.JI r a n c e Society of the United States that may lead to the ac- questlon of lnfonnatics by Equitable, it was announced 'Thursday by Or. Walter F. Bauer., Pre tide n t of Informatics. More Banks Up Prime Rate to 8 1/2 From Wire Servlcts NEW YORK -Several ma- jor bank& increa!ed their prime interest rate to 81f, per· cent Wednesday. The boost was accompanied by a predic- tion of even higher rates. "I don't believe v.·e <ire v.•itnesi;ing a credit crunch '1!1 yet," Paul Luftlg, president of Franklin National Bank of f'lqhl• tte11u11 Herrick S. ij°~oth, -presi· dent of the Colorado Labor CoUncil. say11 he w 111 continue fight against Af'lrCIO Presi· dent Geo rge ~l eany, who is trying to place the council under trui:· teeship. U.S. Dollnr l1nproves --Sort of LONDON fUPI J -The U.S. dollar improved In late trading Thursday on the European money markets but was still low. \Vest Germany increased its support of the U.S. dollar but neither that J>Or American statements thflt it was sup- porting_ the dollar helped the currency much TIIE DOLLAR opened lower de~pile the joint American Treasury and Federal Reserve Board statement that the U.S. government had been sup- porting the dollar's price on free markets since July 10. Tl rallied slightly during the morning and made some substantial gains by mldaf- ternoon. ln l.ondon, because of an order to banks to surrender one percent of their deposits to a Bank of England holding account, the pound fell sharply against the dollar. At mid· afternoon it took $2.5385 to buy a pound compared w I t h $2.54625 Wednesday night. TllE DOLLAR climbed .91 percent in Brussels during the day, to 35.23 Belgian francs, Hnd •pullcd up to 4.045 French francs In Paris where for lhe first \Vctk it would buy Jess than four francs. • • Controls on Gas Told in Phase 4 WASHINGTON iUPJ) -As part d its Pha.~ IV economic pr>Ucy, I h e administration w edne!K:la y announttd con- trols on guollne and other petro~wn prvductlon. Details wue LO be an- nounced laler. but thelf: were the main reatures : -PETROLEUM P R I C E S remain frottn untll Aug. 12. -Two new sets of ceilings AuwPact To Top Phase IV DETROIT (UPll -Now contructs in the auto industry "°'ill top goYemment guidelines and contain wage and fringe benefit hikes approaching 7 percent, United Auto Workers Prealdent Leonard Woodcock indicated Wedoesday. CO!'lofMENTING s h o r t I y after the announcement or Phase IV, Woodcock aald he had been assured the nei- ibility of Phase Ill would re- main as the union seek! new contracts for more t h a n 700,000 workers at Ford, General ?i-fotors and O!.rysler. Present three-year pact.. ex· pirc Sept. 14. "We find that Phase IV is M>mething that we can liv e with. It won't make any dif- ference in the negotiations frorn v.·hat we anticipated," he said. "But the government's heavy hand in the private sec- tor means that we have to bave a reope.ner clause." PHASE lV guidelines call for wage hikes of no more than S.S percent and fringe benefits of another 9.7 percent -a total 8.2 percent hike. Set- tlements in the oil , trucking, rubber and electrical in- dustries have ranged from 6 to 7 percent and Woodcock said he has been auured the flex- ibility will remain in the latest economic phase. G~f ilow figures ii pays the average worker more than $8 an hour in wages and fringe benefits. A 7 percent increase could mean a total package of 56 cents an hour to the average O~t worker in the first year of the contract. Witli S&H Sta.mps Noiv Occidental New York. said. "But we don't see any downtrend In our credit requests and money still is costing us n lot. We could well see higher prime Japanese Take Look Income Up ,. rates in the near future." A u s M Joining Franklin Nalion.ol'ln t anagemen t raising their rate (ron1 av. per • • cent were FiNlt Nationul Bank " " ... •• of Boston and !\1arine Midland/} and J\tanufactuters llano\'~ (los ANGELES tAP ) Tl"U.'lt. both O! New York. Thiede Japanese retail experts are current rate increase v.·as . b r·lrst National B1tnk of seekmg kn o v.· I edge or J1cago oii 1a·lond<iy.. . American man a gem en t The prime rate is the in-techniques and are trying to le.rest banks charge on loans drum up more in vestment in to major corpora1 e customers. Japan's food and apparel in- Bank of America Thursd~y dustries through a series of announced it ls Increasing its seminar.! in the United States. baae lending rate for large "\\le .Japanese have a bUlliness borrowers to 8 1~ per· specia l knack to copy the be!t. cent from 8 ~4 percent , cf-It has been rather easy for us fectlve immediately. to learn how our counterpnrt AUElCOENS ARE AN AIRIORNE MENACE ..., TIJIY OU.NT, •·'" t•ur many JICQplc v.·~•h nl· h:rJ1IC!I. ju11t th•• th(lu1<:ht of the outdoor11 can hrl11:: "n I\ rrtl\!1~ of d1'P!\d. Ah•h11rn•• industries operate In the United States and F..:urope." S<:hunichi Atsumi , chief con-1 sultant for .Japan Retailing Center, told a s c 111 i n a r \\1edncsd11y. "Now we se<:k your know· how in n1ana,11en1cnt !Jystem3, lnbor·savini.: equipment, real L'Statt' dc\·elopment for retail f a c 11 Hie~. s1and<1rdlzallon 1 I techniques and tht' basic n1crchi111dislnf,I rcqulrcn1ents to 1ncl't our flv<'·year plans for 1- l S~f ANNUAL JtnuRN ON SI0,000 p01\cn can nlt"Rn hu11r11 .,r iurrcrln~. To r•'<htcc '""l~~s· 1 ! · un.• to nllerg"n!I here urc 11 P11•(IM•t & L ... H'1<t~-. Into,,,. v~ld 01111•'~''" '~· s11,n,fld. l 11Y l~Ck ol 1\111 110,0(IO •1 lf!d o• t. l or l Y•J1 1 ll'Oll• oollont. All,C•U••••s cno UHM.! ., fey,• helpful hlnt11. llun\ld v.·cnthrr ond <''•'- nlngs nrf' u11unlly " 111nrr \II~~~~~~~~~~~~~ c:oni tortAhlf' Umt' 8!1. 11 i.:rent II tno.n.)' 1>lant11 d111charlo(r lh••lr \JQllcn In tht• mornlnc: n111I on dl'y dAyl!. Avnh1 v..·11~h that I~ huni.:; nu111hlP n11 d11m11 ni11 tcrlnl ,,·\11 11'1\P pi'll- 0'1 l1•n!t. Ou~lde petii \\'Ill 1\fl<'n C'llf'I")' pollen In 1hrlr eool11 . rt, In ~pile of llll 11r~ca11tlon11, nn 11lll'rs:"iC l'('flCUon f~·c111·11. n-memlx'r thl\l thert' R~ num,.roU!t m<-'l.11t>1nf'• nvn11- .. 1 ,, " I ,,, " ,, . , ah1e thot C1\n of(Pr ri·Hrf. YOU on YO R IJ(lCTC\R CAN' PHONE Uf; wti,.n you need 11 deli\11!1')'. \Vt' will ti"· liver prompUy wi thout r::ctr" c:h1~. A fft!t\L many people rely on u1 for th,.lr hl!alth nr !Mf3, Wet wrltomt l'l"tlllCAll tor delivery 1 r r v I c e 11.nd cfmnrt' aooount•. 'AIJ( LIDO PHA"M.ACY J51 H..,11•1 ..... Htw"'1 IMclit.. '42·15'0 ,,... O.HWffJ' increasing our retail sales live to 10 times." said Atsumi, one of 14 top Japanese retaileri on the barnstonning tour. Atsumi. whose Japan Retail Center represents 900 member companies with a total annual volume estimated at $10 billion , said A1nerican In· vestment in Je1pane:ie soft goods ·!!ales must be a S0-50 joint effort. lniUlllly, the joint firm would be allowed under Japanese speciricatlons to Optn no more than 11 stores. • Extra Costs More Casli for Fighter WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Air Force has agreed to pay an extra $3 million for engines for its .new FI S fighter, giving the contractor a better chance to make a prolit on a trouble-plagued pro- grarn. ONE AIR FORCE source said that without the price inc.rease the costs already incurred by Pratt & Whitney Division of United Aircraft Corp., the manufacturer of the engines, would have put the co mpany In a position where it could "hardly mike a cent of profit." In return. Pratt & Whitn ey has accepted • number of new contract conditions designed to head off potential problems .throughout the FI5 program. which could prove costly to the company 1( Its engine development difficuftjes continue into !he future. ,,. THESE CONDITIONS, the Air Force said Wednesday, Include : -Agreement to suet to the original dt!l lvery schedule, even though the developmenl program is running more than seven months behind schedule. Engines alre•d,Y are being delivered, si1bject to fu- ture modifications, lo supJl<lrt the F15 night test program . -Agreement to wa it until alter a flawed 150- hour endurance test has been repe1ted before claiming to have '111Ct contra ctual reQuJre menll tor moving the engi ne program into the production phase. • • Complete New York Stock List - • • • t • ~ - N1tA Nit { NI C1 "'"' NICI NI Cf .,,. NllO Nil'! Nt!I NltG NI Hi .. ' Neth NII I NPt1 NU ! Net! 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' '"' ... ., " " " ;J ' I n1 " , •.. n l!' ~I ~ ' ""'' ·~ Thu.1d•Y J,ly 1q !cq_n ___ ..;S:::C:_ __ o•JLV PILOT %7 Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Market Victim Of Tape Hoax NEW YORK (AP) -An apparent hoax caused ind killed a ruce rally on \Vall Street Thursday And with 1t went all conceptions that investors are ruled by hard cold logic Shortly after noon the Dow Jones blue chip average showed a sbght advance Then word came from Sen Sam Ervrn, (NC ) that the Whtie House would release the so called Dean tapes The Dow Jumped up 6 points Then Ervin said it was a hoax The Dow (ell back to minus t ' And 1l all happened within baJ( an hour" said John Smith of Fahnestock & Co adding • It was an emotional market • .... l1tt1e• ~_11;.~· .... •"ul\\,'11,~SO-, .. ,'t,~ts'X~t11 t•rfT~ i• 1J oi""',. Al'erqU +~:.,!..~ft I ~ ~ ,, 1 ~ ~ II ''"'"~~ M ·= ... .. ~. 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Ut ~"' senior \;\Ce pres1 enl .. ~ "'""'-,,.... fl JG "-1 J S-16+7 u fl n 0.nl to IJ 11 I I L• 81'"" In t 7 1 7 J PolYtll o S' ,! , S 'I • 1~ • ,v... .a t..:!\11<0l(i ..,, k c:*'M" ttt> 2 ,..., 1 , 1\\--""o.""1~11 1n21• tl~2:.i,+-.~11111¥1t1ao • 11111-o10.n ••• .,,.,.ti !l:G t '-•rM:hft1'1/1 ,', ," '• ',) .... m11rctng ~t.I:~ ~ f 1~ \~ 11: rl'~ ~ ~1:.?'Wtr1~ 1• ,., ~: '1: ~~--tli t:~l~r"',; ,,., ~ 1' '1• '1-:-•• :01~ .d7"o ,, '!, ,.I. ,.' ,.; : ~~:1~,, cl: n I l\ ,, I l' -Re\ lllUC p:1cr:senger miles for f'l«.W VOllK UJl'1J -l'M ta" l tlt\l!LAlr.1 'I i ..&. .\4 C'.11!1 Mtrrln I f t ""UL iO J l 1l • 1 • 1r, • • l1...co .,,.. • • • • 1 •L<1' 2 .. , Ttltnt 51< ' ,,.._ 11 1ri the hrrt half of 1913 Wtte rt!~ r:~:i.!'~,:.v "" Nt w .... ~~itf'',,~ ~··,,4 ' ~ 'tt ~,.= s:C"tm l: 1: i:'t 'In~ --" IK~~._' ii~~ IJ t lfcl--l: t:!!....-tr:· a: ~ ~' .• 1, ~ .,1 •• ,;14: l ,: • .... "~. ~. ,:, .,~ ,t.: _p. .~ • ,l.,'.:ti.~.~ « h h ~re-~ ~! .fOO 000 \15 2 343 800 000 t111t C'-1 Clll Gull Oii • -I\ IM¥rt lnl1 s 1U " t~\ f"!'ft •~ Jt S 10 J J 1 l ··+ l-i l•l'.u•I Ff ,. ;ol• · ~· .,.. I 1 J ~lf'I' ":l: :If.; 11 -1 T') IJJ "+ ~ •-• tl'dll • , 11• 1"' 1•• I"''~ )Ii 10 41• 4'• '\'" ~fA ~o •l, u 1~ ''~ l* a.1 1••,11.• •• '' ~ 10• ic. 1:~-~le11,,.. coro 1 t .: ,' ' for the like period last year, <11111$ HI.'~ 2111!:! 111 ~: :!: l~ Alo.TT , .. T ""'' •'ll tOll ,. = 11 ir:::,::: ~: a 11 I~ l~ 1~ ~ ~,r:: stf'Y li t ,l:1 1l~ ·'·ti J t~r.:c "":i I •t ~~ r.: ,"! ~i ~~.:; ~ ,J 1•J l:l: 1~: i:~+ ,._ l:~:;ew'~ )t ,. '!.: ll I ~;·· ~ till increase of 11 percent ••t•tR AtOC •1 I , .. + \ .. 0f't'' .. Co ti» JU. 1, .,..... 20 1 l'I I 1 1''+ II\ ~-.~ I""" li IS• ' • ,.. l' -~ t'' ""'l 1• I ',,s I) ',' 1)1\.. ~ ...... r::a \ • ' .. 1i: ,. • ,, n 1 Co 10 ll ... I • • ·-• -==-============= .,,,1' llvrn ,. et, ... "Gift ltot I •.000 •I" ... " "'"'""' ... ,. 'I M • .. "~~ .... =s.llec• 1: : l) • 0 .... " ~ ,-.;...; Intl f. ..~.,. :•n I ·~ ' ' 1 11 " • • T~·i. c. I> j I , , • , • S"Ptll 1 .. 100 ti --1~ ---'--'-'=-Ci t J"lpt M t ll U t 14 '+\\Fe.-~" ,. >) ' l? \ 11'' lj>i"-..., fl(lff !-' .. t f fll I' • t &. t .. ~::-: 1 '°': 1l '' 1;.: : I' 1 , fr<'-' ""'' ,> >,~•• 11•-. 1119) - C..rrl..C wt ff I f~ ,.._II P~ , !; 31n•11\.J t 1.. .. 1 Mt.Ct ""11 1'2 to 1"1 ' > ' TF• r>ec"'t' t Kid L"k 1' Ne10YorkS•le•1'olume ~1:"A ~·; ~.to ·,~·,?"t-.~*''1"" 1~'~1Jo 1l !";.:t::i~0 ~.t '!~S 1~ l~: ,:,~1 ~~ .... ~ ,., 5•, ~~ .. 1 jl'lorof~ 1\11 ,~ ;· 6• ;11 S I C 0 '' u...,.. '°"'' l•IMllfl""" ~y .. ,.,. ''''''' •Ullton '" ii 1 11° ,., ~kart\'""•'• rso •n. tl'\o t1 _. tt!lk" •., ' n ) i I' J"SC'.o~ • "" 56 SI. ~ 1;';;:~ ~tn I n, , , •, • 1_ .... ,.. 11""1 tot•' '!···•~•,.... !"'" ... ,j, .. ..,.. aultowd '" ,, '7 11l: 1~) J.\i"+ •" '•rn"' ~ 111 1 ' • • ·~" , -• • • -1•u ·~ H-~ • • ' • • .'! ! '"'0 ~ ·~ • ,.., ·~ I PtWIOltl ... 1 A'lt""""JI-'I " , c 1.11 t • • • t•lu1 4 ttc I l t • ,•, 1. """'•Ci ~ 1 1 • 1 • "'II' °"" ,.. I I ' -.l ···k And =~ -t• «'1:ii lJ~ .: d:: i·!..1t·ml'" 11"'v"°'(r41r " \' tr': ,1 ,11,•., \,. '~ :~ ,It 1; 111 ·r ~ I' I~~~ ~ t=-=SI .:: 1 !~ rs-. 'J lJ~ -,-11.o ;;:-i...;~ .; I ; U ' 1i ' I~~+ 1~~.., ,,...: ; i: ' ' I t1.o ' ~ " v l ll'I I~ It II •.tt tlit1t1,J'1 (""""'" JVt U0 4419 "'"' M\.1-'It 11,.,,._lj J2 ' I ,,~ 7'• 71' 1-'t tsllt,. »o 1 t 16, 10 I A -o 0---ott:dol I :n 110 of' 1rJ'' 11:•+ "1 o1 l\'e1r York 15 lflo•I Aell"" • uAll..i PILOr P\JBLIC NOTIC! P\JBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUllLIC N<rl'ICE PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NCYl1CE O•DPl4'Kt NO. *"1 AM otlOttlAMC• AMaMD*• sacTIOM 1'"1J °" TH• coo1,.1ao HDIHA#Cas 0,. TH• COUNTY ~ OllAM••• CALIPOIUHA wllll !tie l\<lmta ol ffl• rnemtMr• of lh1 lo.rd 01 Supervf'°'1 YO!lf'Q for 111d e{ltlreu 1t11ume.. l"' ... ,. of Svpwvttora Ill !tit County ot °'"'"""'' C1llto:or11l1, do M11ln ......... : CSEAL I SECTK>ff 1. le(tlOll 1'.0U Of l'tl1 CO!llflll:I Onll11..ie. of tlle Covnty ol ATTEST: oi..... ill l!«tiby .,.,....., llr Hdlllf ttltrtt. "SectloNI Ollfrkt MIPt U. U. 2f, WILLIAM E. ST JOH N 11, k.,... »+e, 1c..e,No. l C 7Nfl". Covntr Cten. 1na u-otllelo c11r11 SECTIOH 2. Thll Onllllltf!U illal1 laQ eflf!Cf ltl'ld bf In fllll fwu flllrty Of 1111 80.rO M SUH<vf1<M1 of ,., .. .,. ,,_. Mid •fter lf1, PHM119. I nd befror• tM txpl .. llon of fltlllefl (U) 0••"9• County, C1Ufon1l1 ""' 'eftw !ti. ~ ...... ..,, at>IH bl llUblllMCI lllfl(9 In ,.,_ Ot.,.g1 eo.11 O.lly Ir June Alu.tndff "'*"· • llf'Oll'ICl9Pltl' llllbllsMd Ir! !tit Gountv ol or1no1. 11111 et C1Hhtrn1e, ._,,...,. Dlflutv \· -' ALISO CREEK CIRANGf.: COUNTY PLANNING OEPAQTMi:NT t'~t'l.OOGPl.Alt< OlSfO>t 1 -· ,., f:ll>,,,. .•• ( .. I AU!jiO CREEK - ft0"ALD W, CASPER.$ Cl\elrmt" ot 11'11 lloard of Supenoilo0f1 ol Or11111• Counrr, C...IHornl1 zc 72-39 --., .. -~....-------·ta _,.,, Solft.O~lllaQ• ~ 11.• t"/ll~r......:r. .-;i.- ... zc 72-39 -w· O-•M>t <:DMf" ~ QlWUIHl(IW•#lllC, ... --~ O" "'" ..... ~·.U..11~---~- • P\JBLIC NOTJCE PlJBUC NOTICE ' . " PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NOTICE ' PUBLIC N<Yr!CE STATE OF CALIFORNIA NOES: SUPEllVISORS NONE WILLIAM E. ST JOH" Countr Cltrk. ind ex..,Hlclo Clff'k ot It!• Bo.1'11 ol Svp.rvflors ot Or1ng1 County, C1lllor11l1 By Jun1 Alo1natt ..... , PUBLIC NOTICE w.. AllSENT; SUP~ll\/JSORS NONE COUNTY OJI' ORANGE IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I twv1 ti•r•un!o t.n my l11nd Incl lilltlld Ill• offlcf1I' 1, WILLIAM E. ST JOliH, ~My CIH'll ind n .oHiclo Cl••"-ol me Soe<"d ol N:I f./~ J~o.r~ Su~v11or1 Of fl>I COOJnl)' o1 Or•nve. s11r1 Of C1tUornl1, 11'11$ SY~1_.., 6o hef"eby e•rllly th1t 1! I regul1r ITlO'ltln(I Of !ht llo.rtt Of SUIK!rvl1or1 y, WILLll<M E. ST JOHN ___,, Of Or1no1 County, C1lllornl1, held °" Tht llrh dtr of July, 1973. tl'le fore{K:llng County C!trk 1nd tx-offklo Cletlt Ordln1nq Q1n!llnh19 two 11) HCl!On1 w11 ~Hiid •nd ldopl~ by IM lollowl1111 of ttle Boerd nr SupervliOl"I DI vGlt-: Orlflll! Cou111y, C1llfor"11l1 AYES: SUPERVISORS lll:ONALO W. CA.sPElll:S, RALPH 8. CLARK, By Jun' Alutndtr II. W. llATTIN, OA\/10 L llAKER ANO RALPH A. OE IORICH °"'" (SEALJ PuDJlatlllCI 0••1111" (~st O.lly PHO!, July 19, 1913 lflJQJfQJ[QJ [}"Jl1=A~INI ~©llf:!I~ zc 72 -39 ALISO CREEK OQANGt. COVNTV PL .. N'llNG OEP ... Q I "'£NT --·-· .. ri • ,.,;r .. ,. .--~--·· I I i t)/.!f/ ALISO CREEK /.' -·-·_.,.. -- _J__ ~~· .......r.r (dttN JU...wc;~ ....... ~n.lprll -Of Si.ll'IJWI--.......,, "·'"' 4'0011<-.! lfD,l!tU 7:7 -!; .. / ····-+ _..,... • ,, -,,,., ,,.., .. :: .. . •• '• zc 72-39 ~w· .,,......,__..,.,.fll..ttlJlllt ~-........ ...... ,, --.,, ~r:-•-_., lf,lfl"• a1101......:t "°' ff.-r .,, '::::-'I<'/ 0 .. ' • • 7 7 • ' Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL 66, NO. 200, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COU.NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973 TEN CENTS Race Boat I Hits Reef At Waikiki By ALMON LOCKABEY ot ~ Dtillr l"lltf Std -HONOLULU -One of the racing boats in the.Transpacific Yacht Race tiit a reef and sank on Waikiki beach a Cew minutes after she had finished late \Vednesday night. Eagle, a Cal 33 sloop ski ppered by Lar- ry K. Shorett of Corinthian Yacht club, San Francisco, apparently wandered into the wrong channel near Hawaiian Village while coming toward the jetty entrance and hit a reef. She had a large hole in her side .and when the Coast Guard pull- ed her free she sank. Eagle had been following a committee boat but left on her own when the escort vessel went back to the finish line to pick up another finisher. The grounding oc-- curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolu1u time. The crew was rescued without serious injury. Eagle bad been tabulated as fourth in Class D after sailing the 2,~mile race a.Cross the Pacilic. Only eight or 60 starters remained at sea this morning, including Defiant, which is under tow with a broken rudder, and Vicarious, still w1ing with a jury rigged mast. Foor Newport Harbor baMd boats were atmng the first. ten ln the overall handicap standings wben the unofficial final results were ~ted today. Only 13 hours and 35 minutes separated U'ie Cirst. and tenth pla<:e finishers on han- di~ap time, despite the slowness of the race on elapsed time. Two of the controversial ultra light diSJ)lacement boats finished -among the first ten, including the overall winner, despite heavy time penalties. Two Newport boats won their respec- tive classes and others placed in their class. Al Cassell's 50-loot Brittain Chance- designed Warrior was the only Class A boat amoag the first tea. :Gary Myers' Cal 39 Blue Streak, Newport Harbor Yachl Club, was the winner in Class C. 5anderling IV, a Columbia 43 co-skippered by Bob Poole arid -Ja~ Jobn~n· or Bahla Corinthian. Yacht Club placed fourth in Class C. Two other rNewport yachts, Nalu IV owned by Peter Grant, NHYC, and skip- pered by Harvey Kilpatrick, Monterey Peninsula Yacht Club, and Starwagon, a Cal 43 owned and skip;x:red by Dan Elliott, NHYC, placed third and Cifth in Class ·s. Warrior was the winner of Class A. and Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon, NHYC, was third in Class A. Chutzpah's victoriOus entry into Ala Wai Yacht Harbor was held up for more than an hour Tuesday night when a mili1"ry type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons aboard. 1be craft was caught in one of • the giant seas that crashed against the shores of \Vaikiki Tuesday and Wednes- day. The pa~ngers were rescued by tf.e yacht race committee OOats. No one ~as seriously injured. Tbe seu subslded late \Vednesday. 'The race will officially come to a close Friday with the gala trophy presentation dinoer at the Ilikai Hotel here. Coaat Weather More sunshiDe Friday, following early morning fog and low clouds, mostly at the beach areas. Highs ln the low 70s al the sands rising to near 80 inland. Overnight loYi·s In lhe 608. INSIDE TODAY Tht. paisongers of the sclioon· er Good Hope /lave somttlt.ing in common -ntedlt prlckl on thtir czt'1'n&. But tilt crvf.st de· 1crlbtd Qn Poge <f mau make UtOlt mark• dilappear. ... 1..M. •m '• Co-• ClttlfltM JM4 C•lc• ,, Cte•NW'f ,, ~ ....... II ~ ..... ' ............ IW1 ,.,.... U.Jf ,_.,.....,. ,Ln 11ara1cw1 ,. ' ec e More Meters Too Council t-o Hike Fee for Parking The Laguna Beach City Council said \Vednesday it intend5 to double current parking meter fees and add new meters where there are none now. Councilman Carl John.son brought up the subject. He said lhc increases "'OU!d offset costs involved in building the 349- space Glenneyre Street parking structure and of providing more parking in town . An estimate by the city's Economics Priorities Committee indlcated the city would expect $300,000 in new revenues if the actions are taken. Public Works Director Al Theal said he figures the. city would receive $70,600 after oosts of changing over 828 melers to accept increased fees. 'Ibe addition of 280 oew meters would net the city about '164,000 after costs, Theal said. The council ordered City Attorney Tully Seymour to draw up the necessary paperwork for increasing the fees and putting in the new meters. The matter will be considered formally at a future meeting. The council agreed to seek opinions from businessmen in regard to the increased fees. New parking meters are plaMed for : Nortl\. Coast Higl\way, Aster Street to Myrtle Street; South Coast llighway, Legion Street to Brook Street plus l/z block along lntenectlng streets; Sou•h Coast Highway, Cress Street to Ruby Street plus 1A biock along intersectiug ~; Cliff Drive, Broadway to North Coa!t Highway; Laguna Canyon Road, Pair Find Body Of ,EUler.ly Ma1i From Laguna The body of an elderly Laguna Beach man missing since early June was found Wednesday by two hikers in a brush-filled ravine below Arch Beach Heights. Coroners identified a body found in a .. caD)!Oll-at-the .top o£ yes Place ns that of Earl S. "Dyka" Dys er. 79, of 292 La Brea St., missing since June 6. Funeral services are ding at Shel· fe r Laguna Beach Mor uary. An autopsy is scheduled today to determine the cause of death. Two hikers, George Ripley and Larry Wainwright of Laguna, came pcross the body at about 6 p.m. The remains ap- peared lo be an elderly man. Later, the family identified personal effects found on the body. Dysinger, a former professor at Fullerton Junior College, disappeared from his home without explanation one' morning. \Vben his wife returned fron1 visiting neighbors, the front door was locked and her husband gone. The family im- mediately notified police, \\'ho began rombing the area. Nyes Place is alxiut a mile and a ha!( from Oysinger's home. He had Mteriosclerosis and \\'8S re- quired to take medicine three times a IS.. BODY, Page !t Forest Avenue in Canyon Acres Dri ve. Consideration !I.IS<. will be given lo ex· tending the hours subject lo metering. Presently, enforcement starts at 9 a.m. and goes to 6 p.m. daily. New hours could be 9 a.n1 . to 9 p.m .. or 10 a.m. 10 10 p.1n lo include the festival goers. Counci\n1an Johnson said. Food Prices Taking Off In Phas e 4 By United Press International Prices for poultry, pork. pr0duc1.'. milk and other perishables \Vent up in 1nany of the nation 's supermark ets toda y and the cost of other i~ms freed by President Nixon's Phase IV program "'ere ex- pected to climb shortly. {See story, Page 4) t\lost market spokesmen said thC'y v.·ere double checking the new Phase IV regulations and that markups should begin next '''eek "in full force'' -and "be \l'ay up" by next month. In Sen Antonio, the Associated tili!k P. oducers Inc., the largest milk pro- ducing cooperative in the United States, Pnnounced price hikes as high as JO per- cent in 20 Southwest and ti1idwcst states. \Vholcsa\c egg prices in Ne'Y York jumped 4 to 8 cents a dozen today. It generally takes a few days for such an increase to hit the reatil market. Pork prices '"'ere moving up in sonic areas. with the price of a pork loin jump- ing from 79 to 91 cents a pound in a Detroit supermarket In Jackson, l\liss .. Giant Food Stores raised their prices on about 200-300 "dry" grocery items. such as dog food, flour and meal. frying chickens jumped 5 cents a pound. Spot checks by UPI sho\ved that most . housewives were not paying more during \Veekly nr.irkeling. Ho"·ever. this ''"as un- doubtedly due to grocery ads "·hose prices are in effect through Saturday. A J-Juntington, N. Y .. housewife .• ~·Jrs. Katherine Mullen, said she shopped 1n t,,-o supermarkets and found prices unchanged. '"Eggs are the same as last \veek," she said. So are canned goods. bread and cereals -! didn't sel! anything higher than usual." A spokesman for th~ National Associa- ti?fl of Food (,'ha.ins (NAFCJ predicted the 4 to 5 percent jump in prices in !he coming weeks and said consumers could expect to see markups on retail counters next "·eek after processors hav'c lime to give supermarkets certificates sho\\·ing ho\V much' of recent overall cost gains can be attributed solely 10 higher costs for ra\\' products. George E. llamilton Jr., president or the Sn1ithfield Packing Co .. producer or !he famous hams, said the ~ompa ny "'ill "definitely raise our prices," but until I Set PRfCES. Page 21 -:-7 * * Coast F-ood CostrStead y But Increase See n Soon By lbe Dally Piiot Staff Food prices remained generally un· changed along the Orange Coast today but spokesmen for two rnajor food market chains agreed that prices. especially on pork and poultry, ~·Ill cer- tainly increase by next week. Jl.feanwhile, store managers from Seal Stach to San Clemente reported they were getting a lot or questions from customers as the result of President NIK· on's Phase 4 act.ion easing the food price f~e. "Shoppers seem to be wailing to get beUi!!r tn formaUon on what prices will do,'-' observed SAn Clemente Market Buket managtr Derril! Rogers. "By the Ume they find out, II wilt be too tole." Mainly, the game today ...,med lo be "wait·~" for cu.stomen. coastal markets and hcadquarten of chain stores t~1elvc1. f'1'd Cantrell, vice president of Alpho B(!ta . said today. "\Ve arc still V.'a[tin~ tor the price regulations bcforC' \\'t can determine \Vhat action to take. but lhe rc y,•ill be increases in prices." Paul Campbell, a spokes1n:u1 for Safeway Stores, SRid, "\Ve are still a lit- tle frustrated today and 1waiting \\Orr! from our corporate offices ln Oakland. Some of our buyers have already in· dlC'ated to us their prices will go up, but it will take ' cou ple ·of dHy!i: to know which prices and how much." Individual market managers 1t R.'llph:> and Von's ln Huntington Beach said so far they -hllve had no bulletins from cor· porate headquarters warning them of ::i price increase or to be prepared for one. Bob Woods, a manager al the Lucky store ln Huntington Beach, s a I d . "Nothing exciting is happening around hm. It wlD probably be the middle of ntxl Wttk before anything happens. after !Se• FOOD, Page !I a I 01uv P1iot si.u P~oto NEW ~EADERSHIP FDR LAGUNA BEACH CITY COU NCIL. Outgoing Mayor Boyd, left, and New Mayor Roy Holm New Laguna Mayo r Has Balance d Life Sty le 1.agun<!._ Bc~ich\ tl~\I' nla.vor, floy \\'. f·folm is a 46-ycar-(lfcl business c.•xetutil'C "'ho enjoys both sky <ind scubil diving. !\1ayor llolm \\'as elected by cit~ coun- cihncn to the post \\"c.·dnesday fol!owini.: pcrsonnl"I-polit"y changes in itiated by then ~layor Ch;trl!on Boyd. 'l'hC' new 1n<1yor has been a resJd t"'n! of Laguna Beach for 12 ~'t':ll'S and w::ts elected to the city council in 1968. lie h<is scrvt.'<I as rice n1;iror since the council reorganization 111 August 1972. Holm rC'sides at !;"JC.JO Bluebird t:anyon r>ril·c. lie and his 1r1fc. Betty h<11·e 1wo childrl'n, Toni. Tl. ~' lifeguard and rC'cl'Ol l l'ill Joiti (}lloni Rradua lc ot l 'f' lr\•1nc. and Peggy. ~I. ;i l'C"/ studPnl JIQln1 is a personnel cxccu11vc 11'i1h Bt•cknirin [nstrurncnts, Inc. lie has suir- !l<lr!ed the crt<ltion of !hr, nuun Bc<ith l '~•rk and <1c1tvC'ly opposed h1..:h rise. ~1'1~·01· llolrn tind t:ouncdm<tn Bo yd \1 C'l't.· l'l't'lt::c!cd lo !hr city council 1n the 19-;"2 i,:1t\· 1·k•ct1011. ll oln1 is a fonn rr prt·sid(·1lt or thl' L;1gt111a Beach C1\'it: lA"a g11r lit' holds ;1 b:1rh1·lor of sr1cnrc d!'gr1·e 111 lndustri11I E11ginceru1~ frorn the tll1no1s l11sl11l1t1· of Trrhno!ogy. and h;is ,1!tl'nd1.•d gr<.1tlualf' stud1rs i.11 1 h c L111\ trsit} or Southi:rn t:Jh!orni:i La gu na's Vice P1·i11ci1lal Tal{es Sa11 J ose Pos itio11 Don \l1llrr. \lCL' principal ot La:::u11;1 Be;1ch l\Jgh School . next 1nonth 1\111 )Olrl ous1cd l.ag11n3 Beach schools :i;upl!nn- tcndent '\'ilh:im Cllon1 at the \fount Plcast1nl Elementary tichool Dh.:nct 111 San Jose. \lillcr ll:JS g1\·en a \110 year contrart "' hus111e'\s 1nanagC'r 01 !he 3.600 st udt·llt school dist rict on CJ!o1n ·.~ tL't"Otn- 1neoda1ion t.:Ho1n \\·a~ hirf'<I a s suill!rintcnrlt•nt of the \lount P\i•asant distru:t l:1sl mnnlh after being: fired rn n split vote or 1hc Lagun:1 school hoard in l)ccrn1bcr. ,\li!lt:r 1crmed the ne11' pos1t1on :1 "professional adv ti r1 c e nit~ n l . '·\I\, rl!signatlon ffon1 the L<igunu .Be:Jch l'11111ed ~\'hool !li,1rit! 11:1::. acc·1•p1t·d thi~ \1t'l'k b\' lh1• hoard of l'rluca\\nn lie 111~1 hc~1n 11.nrk ~I 'iou11t l'll'a,;1nt 1\uj'.!. 2fl For lhf• 1>•1~1 111r )+'ilr \. ,\ltltl'r h;,, scr1ed r1' ;1,s1~t<11l\ principal of 1.agun:-i llll!h \111h 1!11(•i'I r1•!ipon~ibillly for ma!h an1! sr1t111 ,. pro!lr1tn1~ Be for~· 101111ni:· !hr Laguna dt\!flt'I :\\11ll•r had "IX:!\! lY.O Yt'<1r:i as J rt1\1~1011 ;1drnin1~tra1or :ind 1110 y~ars :J~ i.I 1f'HCh('r in 1hr Bnr-;(011 l'nifLed SchllOI \)1,.tr1ct. "\\ork1ng 111 l .. "l~1111n Hc;ich h;1~ bt.'<'f1 .1 goo<I t:~per1cnct <ind has prorul!'d ix·r"<lnul ~rOI\ th for n1r." ~!Hlt·r con1· 1111•11!1."d \\'t•dnC'scl av. .. , 11 1~h lhl' d1~tnc1 \l'l'll. II look.~ torn•· as if !he d1 str1ct 1s in for good times 1n 1·ducat1on ," h(' added. ' Thi' 37-,irar -o!d ~lilll'r. hi.~ 111!(' Sh·irr;n . :111d 1110 rhildrt:n plan to n\ove to thi• S<.1n .Jvsc :;r1;a laie th!~ :iur11n1er. Boyd Quits, Cites Tune De1n anded Hy JACK CHAPPELL 01 th• o.u, .. , .. , 11111 Roy \\', lloln1 was el('cled Laguna lk•nch m11yor \Vednesday in a 1ur-prlse t·iry twnrit .~hufne in11ia1t."d by former :O.lavor Ch:irlton P. Bovd. 1\,f't1n~ ;i~ rn:lynr, l~l}'d introduc('d A n·.~0Jutio11 t·all1ni! (or Ill<! nnnun / 1•l<'Clinn hv tht• 1· .. unt1I of Olll' uf 11~ n1cmlX!rs to !h<' l)(}SI of n1!lyur I! Pil~'(.'CI unar11n1ou't.v . Bo\d llk:n l'all- l«I for th(' S{'lt•t'lton uf a Tif\\' 1navor, Viet .\J;i~·or llohn \\'as nom1natt>d for' the post h~ ("(,unril\\'Ornan l'h)Jlis ~\\'l'cncy. Hohn v.·as .:>lcctt.'d bv a unanimou' tk'(:1sion of 1he fL\'c couritilrnrn on n roll l·:~tr \'Oil'. Counc1ln1<1n Peter Os1rander \\';1.' ele<"lrd 1n;1yor pro tempore. r-.t11yor Hulm said he was "pleasant and gr:1teful" at the actions of his ~cllow rounc1l members. lie co n1mended Counc1Jm:1n Boyd for i11s-actions during his year-long tenure a~ r,,1\·o r. not inc 1ha1 the rurn1er n1avor h.1d bee n "i11\'esting an 11nonnous ·amoun t nf llmL·" in hi." Cl\'ll' du11cs. Bu,\'d .~aid he frlt 11 h:ul brtn · 11 pri\ 1lc.I!.<' and :i pll.'3Sure to serve !he council" lie :.;ud h(• ft•l1 during 1hc year he 111'35 mayor. ''The learning ratio hns been µ1..•rfcctly er...:1rmous." and he ll'as pleased 10 "make a tiny contr11>ution 10 a city I .lo\'e v.'ilh all my heart." Boyd said the position of mayor placed a tremendous pressure on the per.son holding the post and that he was ··1·1~l1c1 C'd" ;ii ha1 inj'.! s!el)ped down. Tile pcr.'il'innc/ s11'i rcJi came ill the end 11f ;1 long council agl'nda and the matter itsrlf did not nppear on the agenda, lnsfe.'.ld 11 ll'.'.l.~ introducrd untlcr th(' '"Other'" calt·gory 111 the Cornprehcnsive tJIJ\ t•rnmf'nt F.:n vironn1cnt s cc I ion <.·oord1na1cd by the n13yor , Councihnan Boyd initiated I he <l1scussion by reading a prepared state· mt·n1. He first cited l\'hat he tenned the t'r">uncil actions encouraging positive con· :structivc sugJ(est1ons to the city. .. 1'1 order to be as rcspoosivc lo these rf'<'Oinmcnda1ions as time permits. eacl\ council member a ... sumcs a single area of 1.:oordina1ion respon!.ib1tify 'in addilion lo that as a rncrnbcr of the cily council as a "hule 1 listens lo vr stud ies the ideas pl'csented; and initiates action designed 1<1 !;Oh"e the problem. Th.is sharing o[ tasks 1s permitting \Yide community p.1r11crpa!ion and hl'lping the council to work logclher as a team. "'.\ yc;ir h::is passed since our la st counci l organizal1on meeting. \Vt> can. nrJY•. 1f 11·c choost"'. go further in the dl\'is1011 of our C'CJllrK'll tasks arnong It$ lllf'inhi:r~. \Ve cou ld t11ke turns til being thf' 'th;111·n1an or the board.' 1nayor, of !ht· cnn1munity'<; 'board of dir~lors.' the <·1ty t"'nunci!. \\'e could rotate the job.'' Bol'd ~aid Ill· thrn rrcs<•ntcd :1 r('solution to that "Hert ll calls ror renrAon1z:ition of the (""11nc1l folliJl\Jng l"<lt·h i.:r111•r11/ clf'ttion. r1r in ~i:.'.lr<:. 1~·nh no .C:t."ner;1I c\cction. the nr~t rnunt1I 1n('ct1ng in 1,pnl. Tht· 111trrprc1a1ion nf ~·ording ot the rl'"-Olu11011 1\·a~ ! o rl'qu1 re a "new" 1n.1yor"~ 't•lectl!fn. 1ndicaling lhe in· f'urnb;iot rn:1.111r rould n111 be reelected to 1111· !lO't by ci1v 1.:Q11ncilmcn !•1 Ln i;:una Brach. !he five t•11y co11n- rilm<'n ;1rt• st•lt't'tcd b\' !Ill' clcctor.1tf'. ;,nd thC' l.'011n1.:1 I ·ther1 ~c\l!CI:. one of 1\~ nunlb"r t11 bC' nl:l)'Or Furn1crly. fht· n1ayor ."('r1cd for the 111" \'l':lr~ hctwet'n J:rnt•r:1l 11lections. and \\:-t' c-ligtbk• for re-t·ll'l'1iun to the post. Count·1 !1nt.111 13u)'tl "'as elected mayor f llr)111ng rc~ig11:1 t1orl fron1 the council of !~re ~IAV(>H. Page 21 . -NATO Visit Set For Kissin <rcr 0 RHL:SSELS 1CPl 1 -i\ plnnned vi~il by pre siden!inl ndvi-,cr Henry A Kis~1n­ g1·r to !he 1'\orlh All<1nt1c Trl"aty Or~;1n1- tat1on c:\IAT0 1 ha s hl~n put oH un11I Thl' nutu1nn, :1 N,\TO spoke!iman sa u\ toda 1 Ex-Lag1111a l\Iay o1·: l{e ll y ~ATC! Sccrc!ary Cencrnl Jo~ph l.un~ annount•td \as1 monlh 11\at Klss1ngl·r l'iOtlld COlllC h(.'rc 10 d!5eUSS 1dt:i,s ror hl" "n('w 1\tlan1ic Charter"' y,·ith the i\ATO an1has..~11dnri<1I council . The ~pnke§man !>aid the ambassadors .ind Luns mcl recently Y.'1'h Kissin11,<'r and President Nixon at lhe San Clcn1c1HC' \\'hill'.! \lol1se lie :said Ki:iisingt'r's \'isl\ If> '"hj{t't)' in the ttutumn TIQW •• /liE\\' YORK r1\Pl -.John Rolf~on , Pi.ri.s bureau cht~f for ABC New!', hA~ died In Pnn,,. Did11't Ca11se Resig11a ti o11 Fo11nrr t.ai:un<i l\1·:1ch \l<nor <..'htirl!un- 1--!o\d ,n1rl h1<.. ~i 11pp1n~ d'l\111 fro m th~ 1n.1yor\ pn<il ·half nothing \\hiUl"'l'r 10 do 111\h rC'r('nt <'r1t1ci'rn ~ lt•i·eled ;)\ h1111 by Police tt11cl .IO~<'ph .I Kt'll) further. The former 1nHyor c;R1d the r1f"ptirturt' ol ("JI~ ;\lan<t,t:<'r La\\·rrn<'t' Ro~C' 11 as rtot a consldcr;itlon 1n m~ decision to le.'.1\C the lop post. Boyd \\ho has H>rvt>d a.~ mn~·or (or a 111111' lf''S 1h11n n full ye.'.lr. sald h~ bthcv- l'd nll the C'o11nc1I m"n1bcrs ~hould r.h:-\t't' 1n lhr burd1•n~ or tOc pos111on <ts rnaym-. llC' llfl!c<I thr c1v1c pre~sure.s of th(' 1ob .ire 'e111Jrrnou~ ... KPl\y 1111s 11N!k nnnounct'<I his r1's1~n3· 11on a ~ l.Jguna ·s ch1er or police cffec1i,·e 1\ui,: 15. lte hl<1mcd Boyd for an~· "d1st'nthanlmt·n1" ht• frh in rrRard to la\\ t>.nforccrnent pasit1ons taken by the C'Ol.111<'11. l\c\ly \\;!~ hired hy lh<' Cl!)' or Tuslill pnor 10 hi~ rCS1gnn11on itnnounttment. Councilman Boyd sa~d IM: chnnee In the clty council leadership was done to ro1a1e the posi!lons 10 all the council .mcmbtr~ . He said the change in policy had bceu in the \\'ork5 for ~me UIT\C!. allhough ii CRllllhl council obscrven by surprise - 2 DA.IL\' PI LO T ·" Seeds of Power From Page 1 Good Book Cited FOOD ... the main of Dee makes a decJalon." No major chain store3 checlted in !lun- lington Beach and Fountain VaUey in- dicated a knowledge of wheo prices will ,....,,.or bow. At Senate Probe -~~lhill>Plnl habit> - Uf!.Changed along the Southern Orange Cc>alt today, and so did supermarket pri ces. •' . - , •. ' '. ' \VASl-JJJ\'GTON ll'PI) -The seeds of \Vatcrga!e were SOY!'ed by men of finan- cial. political and govcrn1nental pc>\l'cr 1vho "undertook lo nullify the laws or man <.ind the laws or God" to reap a ··very temporary political advantage," Sen. Sam J. Ervin (0-N.C.), said today. Thus Ervin. the chainnan of the Senate \Yatergate committee, summed up the e1•idenre collec1ed so far during the l\.\'O- month-old nationally televised hearin gs in to the scandal that hns plagued the Ni.xon Administration. ··1 can't resist the temptation lo philosophize just a little bit abou t the \\lalcrgatc," Ervin said as Frederick C. LaRue \\'rapped up tv.·o days of testimony about his involvement in the scandal. LaRue said Nixon's re-cleclion had been of "paramount importance" to him. "The evi dence thus far indicates, tends to sho\\I !hat men upon whom fortune has smiled beneficently and who possessed great financia l powe r, great political '{;:{ '{;:{ '{;:{ 'Tape' Hoax Perpetrated On Ervin MICHELLE ANO POCO REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After 5 Months, a Ho rMt Thief With a Guilty C0n5cience \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate \Vatergate investigation took a bizzare tum today when the chairman announced 1hat he had been told President Nixon would release tapes of his White House conversations. then discovered it was all a hoax . Ba~k Ho111e Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.l. made the announce ment at the start of a com- mitlee session, then took the microphone minutes later to say he had been the vie· tim of a hoax. Stolen 1-Iorse Has Big Encounters "It would have been helpful ir we could have fo1JJ1d a secure telephone ," said Sen. flo wa rd H. Baker Jr. IR·Tenn .), the vice chairman. By T0~1 GOR~1AN ,. 01 1111 D1l1Y l'Jlol \!JU :phe escapades of Poco Ron E. Bar are cl't'<'r. Hllllgry and 300 pounds un· der\veight, Poco has come home to his }{untington Beach family. l>uring the past five months Poco has passed through the hands Of tY .. 0 horse tbleves. Utah poliCe and a kind old rancher ''v.·ho owns a spread as big as the Ponderosa. ·· Poco is a five·year-0\d registered .. • Lagtma Board Trustees Picke(J; -For Committees· Committee <ipJXlintmcnts for th e following year have been announced by l)r. Nonnan J. Browne. \lresidcnt of the Laguna Beach Board or Education. Trustee J'alricia (;i!Jelle \\'BS named IO 1he Orange County Con1n11ttee on School f)istrtct Organi1.alion non11nating d{'lega- tion. The delegauon will select the com- 1nittee, char~t·d \\•ilh appro\ing school Uoundary ch:Jngrs. Bro\vne nanied tun1!.elf and Trus1ee Mtl'hael Sagar 10 the R<'gional Oc· cupational Pro~rnn1 Board of Directors. The program is jointly administered by the Laguna Bc:Jch and Ca pistrano Uni fkod School dis tri rt In pro\'1de vocational training tu high St'hoo! .srutle111s <ind ;_1dulls. Sa~ar and TruslL'C .Jane Boy1! \l'Cfl' S{']eclcd lo st!rve :is the school boan1 rcprescnt<.ltiv ·s in te;.1cher negotiations. 1vhile ~!r s. Gil!cttc and Trustee Gerald Linke 1\·ere nan1ed nc,.;otia!ors \vlth c·lassHied c1nplo) l'S, .-.u(·h n." l·ustodians ;_u1d sccrct;.1ril·S JJrownc also ~a1e appro\'al In Linke !1) cont inue as a 11a1son !u lhl' n1aint£>nancc. operations a111! tr.1nspor ta tion dcp.1rtmeuls. 1'hc hn<lrd \Ot1• ratif\1tl~ Bro\vne's rt.-comn1endal1011s 11·as unan11nous. OltANGE CO.AST DAILY PILOT Tn1 Or•~ C1><>11 O•llY "'LOI, wo'tl wn"n " <Ombl,,.. 1111 "'''"' l>•eu. 11 P\1111!.i.~o or tnt O•Arme C°"\I J>Y~l/.,,lfl<I Comi>&nr Se"'1 '111 H1tl0r>L •rt -1an..i, Mo....,Ar 1nro11Q~ ~'"'•Y· !Or Co"• Mn•, flltwpa•1 !Ir•<~ H~n'•"'l!on le~n1l'"""'~•n v.ii.~. L•OY"• Bt•tn. lr\'onl S~dOt.IMI<~ tM San (lt""'n'fl S•" J""" C1"""""' • 11"gl• 1..,,.,.,,1 flCll!IQn " llUOrtlh.ol S1!wr<t1v• ,..., Sw..OllV• '"' ~'"><11>'1! 1>11bll•hl"° p~n! r1 11 130 ..,.~,. e~f S1r1t•. Coll~ M'"· C:~•·•~'"'"· tl~ll Ro'btd N. W11d <>rnill""' ••Ill PuOl'\lor J•c\ R. Cu•ltv lllc1 Ptno<t"°'I •M G.entrtl M.o,..91r Thom11 11:,, .. a ['flJor The"'•• A Mut phino M~n~o•"'ll l!'•,ln• Ch1tl11 H Looi 1!..c~1 ,.:I p N.olt A.Hll!IM M1 nqu10 ~~·•or1 . L.t•llll• hec.h Offk, lll Fo•11I A~1n.,, Me,lon9 Addrt11: P.O lo• 666, l/16S1 Oti..t Offlc:" '°''' Mt11 l;lll Wn! l•r ~"'" N .... l'Orl llHft tJlJ NtWIOil" ... leYn•<t H""'!ll'lq!Of! lt..:ti 11111 6Nth 60v .... lr<I i." Ct-te JOI Not!!\ El Un\W.C. llilfft , .. ., ... IT141 642-4111 Cflatttttd Ad.,.rtt1ltt 641-5671 L..pH -..C:• All ~: ,,.., .... 414°9466 c_,.rJoll•, l•IJ. O•tnat Cout "<ll>ll1h•"'lf """""¥ N~ 111"'1. t1or11t.. l!l11t1't!>0111, •lttorltt !!Miter or Mf"••ll1tmon11 flt-l't•n ""'¥ bl •ttro.tw..i wr1t10u1 10.C•tl Mt lflllllM ot U,~•19flf ._. S«Ol'lll ci.H 11nt1,. N I" 11 Cll\11 Miii, C1!!10fnl1 ~(.,Ion i,, <•rrlt• n tJ "'°""''Y• IJf' rnell SJ u mlf!lllly, mll1t•rv ~ttl1'1llt!l1 JJ.t.t monltilr ' quartcrhorsc. l-Ie was stolen Feb. 17 rrom hus stable in ~luntington Beach. The best C'fforls of his owner, 16-yeur-old l\tichelle Noell. and her parents. l\tr. und l\lrs. Louis Noel!. 6531 Segovia Circle, proved fruitless in auemp!s to locale hin1. The (amiJr placed ads in tradr 1nagazines, giving a run desc ription and a picture of !he horse and an orfcr of a S350 rev.'ard for information on the horse's v.·hcreabouts. On July 8 the family gave up and bought l\lichelle a new )1orse~ Two days later came the phone call the family had been "'ailing for . "Some young cowboy in Ulah called and said he .saw him in a rodeo and ~ him as the stolen horse from ~we had placed," said Airs. i'ioell. ':'Ee stole it for the rc\\'ard." '"''L'hl!n tt.e story gets confusing. "He said .he stoic the horse a 11•cck c~rlier rrom the rock.'O, but on the eve- nmg of July Fourth he was in an accident. The horse was uninjured. so he lied ii up to a tree on a ranch near the ldaho-L'tah border. '·He didn 't give us his ·name. but !old us I? call the Tremontan ~Utah) police. r don t knO\\' 1l'hy he \\ailed a 1rC'ck since lh~ accident lo call us. I guess his con-Sl'tL'nce got lo hini. ·• , ~ In the n1c.:int1n1c the ranch 011ncr. He>ed Nil'lSt'rl 1 "Sut:h a nit:t' rn:in; he tl'n1inds rnt• of Ben Carl1rright"1 kept t ~c hors~ for sarckeep1ng, :ipparcn1ly figuring JI 1ras stolen. .. i\lean\\h1le, the 1>0hcc had contactl•d \1clsen and the Noell f.:im1ly had con- racred lhf' police. Suddrnlv t'\'Cryont• knc\1' \\hl're Puco 11:is · F1·01n P1111e l MAYOR ... .\1,1yor Hlrhard Golclb<'rg last surnincr Goldbt•r,1,(s rrsi,£nat1n11 fnlloii·rd tilt• r.ct·aH of Councihnan Ed Lorr. the clcc· f1on of Councilman Carl Johnson tu Lorr' 1'a£>a ted ehai r, and rhc appoinl inf"nt 0~ Coun~·1/\\1J!nan S\1'l'Cney lo thC' pantl. .The nf'xt gener;i l cfcc!ion is in April \1 ith the posts of Oiuncih1 on1an Swel'nc1· ~nd rrounc1tman Johnson and J\fayO; ro em Ostrader ar slake. Ervin first said he got v.·ord fron1 Secretary of the Treasury George P. Shultz that the President had ab>rccd lo reJ('aS(' relevant tape recordings. He said he found out later from !he \\'hite Hoose that no such decision had be<!n n1ade. and from Shultz that the sccrelary had not made such a call. "I tbink it's the unanimous opinion of this co111 mittee that this was a right dirty trick," said Ervin . Lagu11a Council Will Recruit , City Manager The Laguna Beach City Council agreed \Vednesday to begin recruiting for a ne\v clt.v manager. The council approved advertising in 111,·o municipal officials' magazines, and ordered rormation of a "blue ribbon" committee to screen applications. Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney and Vice illayor B.oy Holm u·cre designaled ;is coordinators for the seleclion !'rocess. Present City l\lanagcr Lawrence Rose :ind the council "mutually agreed" lo Rose's departure "somet ime this sun1- 1ner." City Hall sources indicate the city 1nanager is expected to leave in early 1\ugust. Quahfica tions for the ne\v city n1a nager were set ns a 1ninin1um or fil'e years experience in cha rge or organiza· tions of at least 100 cmp!oyes in si ze. r1Jo- !'l'11! 111unicipal t>Xpcrience 11·i!h some hus incss cxpcrit1ncc. Educ.:i tion at the graduate level v.·as held desirable, but cou ld be waived in cases where a record nf achievement \vas evident. In recruiting , the council said it would first consider present city of Laguna Beach managerial employes for the post: that it 1vou\d contact the League of Califon1ia Cities for applicants and ad· \'Crtisments would be placed. ~layor Cha rlton Boyd said some ap- plic:111ons had already been received for !he job. Lagi111a Cou11cil Action Th1'.'(t· arl' lhc prinr1p:il action" t;1krn by the Laguna Beach City Counci l Jlll't't1n~ in rl•guf11 r s<•sston \\'ednc~d<1y tlt~ht. ~E\\' lll AVOH -Hoy \\'. lloln1 11n.~ 1•\t'Cll•d nl<lVor bv unanimous vote of lh(' council fullo"1nµ ('tlctctn1ent ot a rc5olu11on c,1Hiilg foi the annual ro!n\Jon of the pOs! ;i1nonR CJI} l'Oun rrl nlcmbcrs. P,\11 1\1:"-G .~lt:TEll~ -Tht• cou11cll ordt•red papcrv.·ork dra \vn up for the J11kin,:.: of p;1rk1ng ITil'!t•r ft·1•s frnn1 Iv ~ .. :us per hour to 20 cenls. and the in· ..,1;111.ttion of nH•trr·~ 111 plilt'•'~ nnt 001\ regulated. It is estimated the sleps will bnng an <1dd1t1on:il $.100.000 to t·11y C'(lffcro;. Rf".CREATIC)\! BUll.Dl\'G :-.:o at·t1on 11·as taken on a suggestion the old l'<'C'rr:it1011 df'par11111·n! hu11thni: h<> l't•raincd on its ~1ain Beach Park site. The <'Ounril 11H:-ro,!d re1t11n1rig lht• h111lrf1n~ "'ould requJrr park redesign. and could pt·rll l'.(rants now funding 50 pcr('('n\ of the 8600.000 dc\'clopment cost ~ l\HCH 111'.:ACll !\E H'ERS -The <'QUncll llgreed to acrep! for maintenance th<' new scv.•er system in Arch RC'ach Hcighl!i nnd allow residents 10 hook up to ihc system. f'inal acccp1ancc of thl' enti re project, hOW_i!ver. is $till pending. 001.l..ARS DEF'ERHED-Jtrqucsts for fund.~. and 1ncans or rai!iing money in lh<' 1973·74 flsc11I re:ir \~rre dC'fcrrrd to a ~f)f'rinl budget session July 28. A111onii; 1tE>n1~ !'o('f for hea.r1n~ lhen tlrf'" a 549.100 rC'<!UE>St bv !he Chamber of Commi"rCe u proposnl for incrrn.o;1ng Sl'11c·r nnct lrn,,h fL'l'~. rOs1 of downtown drainage Im'. provc1ncnl!i, rn~t nf ,\fomlnf,(llidr Oril·e tlrainaizr impmvemcnl!, Gll:~nneyrc Parkin!( slructurr fC'f's, h1rln1: of feder:1lly tundcd en1p\oyes. and allocation or cultural funds. po1ver and great governmental power un· dcrtook to nullify the lay,·s of n1an and the lav.·s of c:od for the purpose or gaining v.·hat history v.·ill call a very tern - porary political ad\'ant;1ge," Ervin said. Then tuming to his favorite source book. the King J ames version of the Bi- ble. the silver·haired Ervin said those in- \'Ol ved in \\'atergate had overlooked ad- monishment or St. Paul in his epistle to the t.ial.::1ri1111s: ''Be not deceived: God is not mocked , for 1vhatsoevcr a 1nan soweth . that shall he also reap." The audience jan1med in10 the n1arblc Senate Caucus ltoom. hushed as i':rvin spoke, broke into prolonged applause as he finished. Ervin banged his gavel for order. L.aRuc, a milliona ire li.1ississippian who has pleaded guil!y to conspiracy to obstruct justice in the Watergate cover- up, listened intently. He earlier had rc- counlcd funneling ~242,000 to the seven orig.inal \Vatergate . defendants. helping devise false stori es and concealing evidence from government prosecutors. He also said he believed that Jeb Stuart Magruder, the deputy n1anager uf Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, had prior Knowledge of the June 17, 1972 burglary and bugging at Democratc Na- lional Qimmittee headquarters that touched off the scandal. Following LaRue to the bro·.vn felt- drapcd witness t3ble was Robert C. r.tar- dian or San Clemente, like LaRuc. once a key deputy to former Atty. Gen. John N. l\1ilchell and one 1\·ho has ~en linked to the coverup plot . But l\1ardian, a former assistant al- lorncy general, said in an opening state- 1nent his on ly role following the June 17 arrests 1vas th:lt of a lawyer, not a "polit ical protege." l~e said learning of lhe Watergate break-in was "the most shocking experience in my entire legal career.'' MISSING MAN DEAD Earl Dy,inger, 79 f'ro11a Page 1 BODY .•. day. Acs:ording to his daughter, Jean Jenning s. the disease made him forgetful or confused. Though an investigation is con tinuing, Laguna Beach Det. Gene Brooks said. "\\le have no reason as yet to suspect foul play. There was no ou tward ap- pearance of it on the body." Dy singer frequently walked to to~vn, Oct. Brooks said. Beautiful S1iake Given Contra.ct llOLL YWOOD (UPI) -The winner of a movie studio contra ct Wednesday does not have good legs. In fact, no legs at all. About 175 snakes were entered in a snake beauty contest, sponsored by Universal Studios, which is promoting a tnovie about snakes. A survey of most of the south Coast supermarkets today s bowed no measurea ble surge in busineu fron1 shoppers trying to stock up at the old price berore the increase hits. Although prices have not reflected the lifting of !he freeze some customers are v•orried, a manager said. "We're getting a lot or questions today about what the prices will do," said San Clemente Alpha Beta J\1anager Leon Riley. "There's not much wt can tf!ll them because we haven't heard anylhing yet," he added. At Albertson's J\larket in Sa n Clemente. business \vas no more brisk. ths n usual, but curiosity \\'as up, sai4 1nanager George Kolbe. "So far v.·e haven't had to raise anY prices, even though we v.·ere. lold rccentli that pork was going to be rationed. Thal didn't happen and supplies so fa r have" been prelty good," Kolbe said. . In Laguna Beach, independent grocet' Larry Barker -part-owner or Acord'' J\.farket -said that his customers ar~ not ma king a run and that prices are unchanged. Only a few inquiries had been· noted, he said. • ·•AU we knov.• what we read in the p::pers and that's nett enough for us 16 ma ke any decision," fie added. At the Safe1vay store in South Laguna; n1anager Larry Callahan said business is up a lit tle this morning and that he should be receiving inrormation on Phase 4 by tonight. • "The people in the main or!ice are probably working on it right now," he· said. From Page 1 PRICES ... the new regulations were studied he did not kno\v how much. • Arab Gunnian Trades A spokesman for Food Fair, which. represents 100 Pantry Pride Markets iri the Philadelphia area, said price in-.. creases "should be immediately evident ir. perishable products such as produce; poultry and pork .'' He explained that ur:der the new Phase IV economic guidelines processors catt-ROW raise prices to retailers who in IWll can raise them to consumers. Hostages for Freedom Frederick lierrucl Inc., largest pork processor in ~·lichigan, today raised ¥tholesalc prices to Delroit supennarket.s by 10 cents a pound. and a company of. fic;ial said they will raise prices by another IO cents a pound in a week . ATHENS (U PI ) -An Arab gun man armed \l'ilh a submachine gwi and hand grenades seized 15 persons as hostages in a hotel in the heart of Athens today but released them unha rmed in return for gua ranteed safe conduct to the Middle East, police said. The hostages included an elder!v American , a Greek Orthodox priest. three policemen and three children. At one point the gunman had threatened to exec ute them one by one if he di d not gain his freedom . At another point he Laguna Lions Officers Elected The Laguna Beach Lions Club recenlly installed a new sla te or officers for the year 1973-74 at a specia l dinner meeting at Ben Brov.'Tl'S Restaurant in South Lagwia. New officers are: i\farv Bond. presi- dent; Tom K. Skelton, first vice presi· dent: J im Montgomery, second vice presi- dent: Lou Zitnik, th ird vice president; Gene \Vilbur. secretary·treasurcr; Ray Newton, president emeritus : Jamo Jamison. lion lamer; and Frank Rogers, tail t\v is1cr. Directors arc Ron Arn1strong . Leon Axelrod. Bill Hansen, Win Kccrl. Bill l\lamn1en, Dave Flournoy :ind Ted Reynolds. threatened to b!o1v them .all up. The man emerged rrom the Amalia 1-Iote! on CQnstitution Square at 4:32 p.m. (7:32 a.m. PDT! still carrying a hand grenade and 1\'ith his sub1nachine gwi slung from his neck. J{c v.'as accom panied by the Libyan and lrnqi ambassadors \1'ho had acted as rnediators in the negDtialions between Greek offi cials and the 1nan \vho idcn· !ified himself as a member of an "anti- Zionist group from occ upied Palestine." The incident stemmed from the man's flbo rti ve allempt to break into the nearby El Al Israel airline office where bombs thro1rn by t\1·0 Arab terrorists killed a Creek child and wounded 14 passengers in November, 1969. The two Arabs received long prison sentences but \\'ere released in !he race of new Arab threats. The gunman. 1l'ho v.·ore a pink short· sleeved shi rt. had demanded that First Deputy Prime J\1inister Stylianos Pat· lakos come to the tourist-fill ed hotel and negotiate in person on sare conduct out of the cowitry. Pattakos reruscd although the gunman said, "l will kill everybody if Pattakos doesn't come." Libyan Ambassador Ahn,ed Ragab feitur v.·ent lo 1he hot el and was follow- ed by Egyptian Charge · d'Affaires Mahrnoud ))ia el-Din. The Greek govern· 1nent had given them gua rantees of safe conduct for !he gunman \vho later e1nerg· ed from the hotel and entered Fcitur 's black limousine . Officials sn id they v.•ere going to Alhens Airport. The hostnges \1·ere unham1ed. Many other ~ig supermarket chains sa~d I.hey \l'ere not making immediatl! price increases but \l'Ould do so shortly .. Coast .Man H11rt In Cycle Crash A Corona de! ~1ar man was injured in a motorcycle accident \Vednesday af· ternoon at Park Avenue and Hiddcii Valley Drive in Laguna Beach. Police said Thomas Noon. 24, of 3191,2 Larkspur. told them he was coming dowb the sweeping curve on the Park Aven~ hill when he was crowded off the road by a car behind him and lost control. He suffered cuts, a broken ankle, and fractured ribs. No citation was issued. He was reported in fair condlti~n today at South Coast Community Hospital. Canadian Leaving SAIGON tAP) Ca n ad i a-n Ambassador Michel Gauvin headed fqr home today after criticizing the Polish and Hungarian members of the Interns · tiona l Commission for Control and Super\·ision. • Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators for Less Than1>ulda,f> 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Authorlztd GE SERVICE COLD WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE CUBES! Without Opening Tiie Doer 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bin stores 10 lbs .. about 290 cubes,: automatic lcem~ker re- places Ice as you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 Iba. • Convertible 7-Day Meat Keeper. • Adjustable, tempered glass shelves. • Rolls out on wheels for HIY clean Ing. • No defroatlng ever WE TAKE TUll>E· IKS 90 DAY CASH 'WITH ... ,,.on• CllDrt Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 • / • ! • 7 7 • • • Saddlebaek Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ·ED ITION VOL. 66, NO. 200, 4 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ' TEN CENTS .Coast Marl{et Operators See lncrea·ses Soon By lbe Daily Pilot Staff Food prices rcn1ained generally un- changed along the Orange Coast today but spokesn1en for l\YO major food market chains agrt-ed that pric~. especially on pork nnd poultry, •viii cer- tainly increase by next ¥.'eek. Meanv•hile, store managers from Seal Beach to San Clen1ente reporlcd they \\'ere getting a Jot ·of questions from custo1ners as the result of President Nix- on's Phase 4 action easing the !ood price freeze. •·shoppers seem 10 be \\'aiting to get better information on \\'hat pr)ces v.•ill do.'' observed San Clen1cnte !\larket Basket n1anagcr Derrill Rogers. "By the time they find out, it \Viii be too late.'' 1\·Iainly. the game today seemed to be "\\"ail-and-sec" for customers. coas~al 1narkets and headquarters of chain sto res thc1nselves. . Irvi11c market officials said today ' ' " • . ' . • . .. ". ... ' .... MICHELLE AND PDCD REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After S Months, a Horse Thief With a Guilty Conscience Poco , Wayward Horse --. -- Finally Horne in Beach B\· TO:\! GOR~1AN ci1 1~1 o,.11y Piiot s1 .. 11 The escapades of Poco !{on E. Bar arc over. }!ungry and :lOO pounds un- der~·eigh1, Poco ha s come home to his llun!ington Beach h1n1ily. During the past five 1nonths Poco has passed through the hancts of two horse thieves, Utah police and a kind old rancher '·\vho O\vns a spread as big as the Ponderosa.'' Poco is a fi\'e-yea r-old regis!ered quarterhorse. lie \Vas stolen Feb. 17 from hus stable in Huntington Beach. The best efforts of his O\\'ner. 16-year-old !\lichelle Noell , and her parents. Mr. and ri1rs, Louis Noell, 6531 Segovia Circle, proved fruitless in altempts to locate hinl. 1'hc fan1ily placed ads in trade Orange Coast Weather J\iore sunshine Friday, following early morning fog and low clouds, mostly at the beach areas. High s in the low 70s at the sands risins to near 80 inland . Overnight low s in the oos. INSIDE TODA\' The pa1i$anr1ers of 1/le sc/10011- rr C:ooo !lope IH1Ve son1tthu1g in co1nn101t -ueedle prick.$ 011 tlieir arm.s. IJ1tt tile cruise de· scribed on l>t1rJt 4 ma!f 111oke tll.ose mar/.:s disappe ar. L.M. ltYtl t Cfliflnll• S C:~1lllH ...... Cfl'llla » '"'"'wtH J1 Ofllll Ntlict1 11 ••1~11"... • E"""1f~ )WI 'lltl!tt tJ·J1 ;r., tti. ••.,. 11.n w..... ,. magazines. giving a full description and ;1 picture of !he horse and ;in of fer of a S:l50 rC\l'ard for !nforn1ation on the horse's \\·hereabouts. On July 8 !he family ~ave up and bought i\lichelle a new horse. T\110 rla'."·s later came the phone call the f:i1nily had been \\•airing for. "Son1e young co1ovboy in Utah called nnd said he sa\v him in a rodeo and recognized him as the stolen horse fron1 the ads \\le had placed," said-~lrs. Noell. .. So he stoic it for the reY.'ard." Then 1t,c slory gets confusing. '·He said he stoic the horse a \reek earlier from the rodeo. but on !he eve· ning of July F'ourlh he was in an accident. The horse \VllS uninjured. so he tied it up to a tree tJn a ranch near the Idaho-Utah border. "He didn't ghc us his name. but told us to call !he Tremontan 1Utah) police. I don·t kno\\' \\hy he "·ailed a \\·eek since the accident to call us. I guess his con- science got to him." In the ryieanUme the rtnlch O\vner, Reed Nielsen ("Such a nice man ; he re1ninds me of Ben Cartwright" I kept the horse for safekeeping, apparenlly figuring it \\'<IS stolen. Mean .... ·hilc , tHe JXllice had contacted Nielsen and the Noell family had con· tacted the police. Suddenly eve ryone ktit'\\' where I)oco was. So the hunily drove to Portage, Utah.· last P'riday to pick him up. They return- ed \Vcdnesday afternoon. And things are returning lo normal. Poco \Ya:!i in heaven: A bath, brushing and a bale of h..1y. "I-le "'as ~o hungry," ri1ichcllc said. "fie \\•as dO\\'n to 1.000 pounds. Dul he's homl''.'' Cauadiau Leaving SA IGON tAP) Ca nadi an An1bassador ~1lchel Gauvin hcad@d for home loday after criticiting the Polish and Jlungarian members of the Jnterna· lional Commission for Control and ~Ul)('r\·ision. housc .... ·ives \.\'ere 1naking 110 rush to beat price increases markets say will not go inlo effect until next \.\'eek. Pou lt ry, pork. eggs, produce and milk remained at the same prices today they \\'ere yesterday before Phase 111 price freeze requiremen!s \\'ere lifted. a spokesman for the \\'alnut Village Sa feway Market said. The manager suggested inquiry about price policies be directed to the regiona l office. The regional office spokesn1an '{:;: * u ·Price declined to speculate y.·hen and how prices \\'ill affect local m3rkels. The L"ni\'ersity Park Alp ha Beta ~larket expects ne\v price lists oo Aton. day. Those lists \.\"ill reflect new prices .... ·hich are expected to increase. rred Cantrell, vice president of Alpha Beta. said today, "\Ve are still \\'ailing for the price regula 1ions before we can determine \\"hat action to take, bul there will be increases in prices." Paul Campbell , a spokesman for ;':{ * Safe\\·ay Stores, said, "\\'e ~re still a li t- tle frustrated today and \\'aiting Y.Ord fron1 our corporate offil'es in Oakland. So1ne or our buyers ha\·e al ready in· dicated to us !heir prices will go up, but it \\'Il l take a couple of days to knO\V \.\'hich prices and how much." Individual mMket managers nt ll:ilpt~ ~nd Von's in Hwtlington Beach said so far !hey ha\·e had oo bulletios fro1n l'Or- porate headquarters \\'arning the1n of a price increase or to be pn!parl'd for one * Bob \\'oods. a n1anager at the Lucky !>tort' 1n Huntington Beach, 1 a id , ":\vthing ext1llng is happening aroW'ld herr. It \\'ill probably l>e the middle of O('X\ l'l'C('k before nnylhing happMs, after !he main office 111akes a decision." i\o 1najor chain stores <"hecked In Jlun· 1ing1on Beach and Fountain Valley in· d1catcd a knoY.'ledgc o( "'hen prices will rhnngc or ho\1'. lirocery shopping habils remained tSrc roou, Page 21 .1 .• ~ . '. of Food Climbs I 11creases Expected to Be 'in Full Force ' Soon By United Press Intern ational Prices for poultry. pork. produce. mil k and other perishables l'l'Cnt up in many of 1he nation's supermarkets today and the cost of other items freed by Prcsidcnl Nixon's Phase IV prog-ram were ('X· pectcd to cli mb shortly. (Sec sto ry , Page 41 tllost 1narkct spokesmen said !hey were double checking lhe new Phase TV regulations and that markups should begin next "·eek "in full force" -and '·be \\ay up" by next month . Jn San Antonio. the Associated !\!ilk P.oducers Inc .. the largest miJk pro- ducing coopcrati\'e in the United States, ;innouncccl price hikes as high as IO 1)('r- ccnl in 20 South\\·est :ind ritidwcst states. \\'holesale egg prices in NC\\' York Review Set On Low Cost Ilousing Pla11 Hv GEORGE Lt:IOAL . Ot l~I O"lly ,.ilfl Sl"lf [r\·ine Planning Commissioners tonight 11·ill revie\v a modified proposa l to en· rourag(' development of 1011· and n1odcra1c cost housing. In a 7:10 studv session in city hall. the con11nissi on \Vil! hea r Councih\•oman r;abricllc Pryor. planning staff and rcprcsenlativcs of th(' Irvine Company discuss \\•ays of adding lo1l'cr cost homes to the fr\'inc housing markel. City associate planner ~1('1 Roop notes there arc presently a fc:.v condominiun1 units avai lable in Irvine at 1!_ cost of S2~.000 1rhi l£' oth<'r resales generally comn1nnd prices higher than $30.000. Person~ buying homes priced at S.10.000 generally 1nust earn at leas! $1.060 net per month to qualify for a 7.75 percent loan. assuming S12 per month community association dues and S60 a n1onth taxes and a payn1enl of $203 to cover principal an d inteerst on a 95 percent conventional loan. Loan rates re cen tly available ran ged up to 8.25 percent for conventional financ- ing. increasing slightly 1hc monthly pay- n1cnt and thus the income level necessary for a fa mily to buy into Ir\'ine. In a nic rno !o the commission. Hoop notes. "for a 'veil balanced city to attain il s full potenllaJ it 1nust provide for the housing needs of all groups \.\'ithin the communily. In fact, it is required by slate la\\' ... he said. State law requires that cities· general plans "shall make adequate provision for the housing needs of all economic segments of the con1- n1unit y." "The ·con1munity' of Irvine consists of the road department cmploye \.\'ho repairs lhe city's streets, the clerk at the Alpha Beta, the marine stationed at El Toro, the student at t:C Irvine, the elementary school teacher, the secretary in !he offi ces, the bank presi dent, t~e (Se< HOUSING, Pagl %1 Gang Shooti1i g Hurts 3 in LA. f,OS Al'IGELES (AP ) -Thre< persons were wounded early IO<lay when six n1embers of a youth gang went on a shooting sprc<:, police s11irl. Officers said !ht victims \vere an a.year-old girl, a !~year-old youth end 1 21-year"(lld man . All were rtported holpitaJized. The youths were taken into custody after officers spotled them riding In a . car matching the description-or one used rby the gang memben. Police said lhey found a rlOe, a sho1gun and two pistols in the vehicle. jumped 4. to 8 cents a rlo:ien today. It generally takes a few d;1ys for such an increase to hi t the rcatil rnarket, Pork prices \1·ere mo\'ing up in some areas. \\'ith the price of a pork loin jump- ing from 79 to 91 cents a pound in a l:>etroit supermarket. In Jackson, ~tiss .. Giant Food Stores raised their prices on about 200-300 "d ry" grocery items. such as dog food , flour and meal. l-~rying chickens jumped 5 cents a pound. Spot checks by UPI shol'l'ed that most house.,.,·i vcs were not p:lying more during \\'eekly marketing. Ho\.\·evcr . thi~ \\'as un- dou btedly due to groce ry ads \\'hose prices are in effect lhrough Saturday. A Hunling!on. N. Y .• hou sc"'ife. ~1rs . Katherine ~lull('n. said she shoppC'd in ll\o supern1arkets and found prices Phase unchanged. "Eggs are the same ns last 1reek," she sa id. So arc cannM goods. bread and ccrrats -I didn't sec anything higher lhan usual ." A spokesman for the National Associa- tion or Food Chains (i'\AFC I predicted the 4 to 5 percent jump in prices in the coniing \\'eeks and said consumers could e:tpcct to sec markups on retail counters next \reek after processors ha\'e time lo give su permarkets certificates sho l'l·ing how. much of recent overall cost gains can be attributed solely lo higher costs for ra""' products. George E. Hamilton Jr., president or the Smilhfield Pac king Co., producer of lhl' famous hams, said :he company will ..defin itely raise our prices." but until 1he ne\\' regulations \.\'('re studied he did llot kno\\' ho1v much . 4 Hit Meany Says Controls to Hurt W.\SHINGTON IUPI ) AFL-CIO President George Meany denounced the new Phase IV anti·lnflation program today as "a further ex a 111p1 c of the ad1ninistration's ine<1uitable econo1nic policies.'' "I t spells more bad news for the housewife and the consun1cr," l\leany said in a statement. l\1eany's attack came as Hepublican s in Congress praised President Nixon's latest economic con1rols as tough \\1hilc many Den1orrats joined other leaders or organized labor and busi ness in claiming JJhase IV \vould hurt city d1,·ellc-rs and consun1ers. fSec 1 story: Page 4.J ~·feany said. '·\Vages re1n ain under con trol. as they ha ve e\'er si nce .-\ug. 15, 1971 . The Cost of Li\'in ~ is continuing up and up. Interest rates are exempt from control and soared once a ~ai n the ve ry day Phase JV Was announced. Profits, never Uirectly or equita· bly controlled, are out of sight.'' ' T1·a11spacif ic Race Boat Hits W ail(il(i Reef , Sinl\:s r By AL~ION LOCKABEY 01 lft1 D11l1 "1191 Sffff l!Or\OLULU -One of the racing boats in !he Transpacific Yacht Race hit a reef and sank on \Vaikiki beach a fey.• minutes after she had fin ished late \\'eJnesday night. Eagle. a Cal 33 sloop skippered by Lar- ry K. Shorett of Corinthian Yacht club. Sa n Francisco. apparently wandered into the \Vrong channel nea r Hawaiian Village \\'hile coming to"'ard the jetty entrance and hit a reef. She had a large hole in her side and \\'hen the Coast Guard pull- ed her free she sank . Eagle had been following a committ ee boat bl.It left on her O"'" when the escort vessel went back to the fin ish line to pick up another fini.!!her. The grounding oc· curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolul u time. The crel'I' was rescued without serious injury. Eagle had been tabulated as fourth in Class D after sailing the 2.22~mile race across lhe Pacific. Only eight of 60 starters rema ined at sea this tnoming, including Defiant. \.\:hich is wider tow with a brok('n nidder. and Vicarious, still sailing '"'ith a jury riitged mast. Four NewJXlrt Harbor based boats were among the first ten in !be overall handica p stand ings when the unofficial final results were computed today. Only 13 hours and 35 minutes separated the fi rst and tenth ph1ce fini5hers on han· dica p lime despite lhe 1lowness of the race on ela~ time. Two of the controversial ultra light d~sptacement boats flnl,hed among !.he fin:t le.n. including the overall winner, despite heavy time penaltie.t. T'110 Newport boots won their re~pec· live classes and others placed in their c1 .... Al cassell'!I 50-foot Brlllain Chanet- • designed \Varr1or y.·as !he only Class ,\ boat among the first ten. Gary rilycr.~· Cal 39 Blue StreJk. (See TRAt\SPAC, Page 2f ' lr1>i11e rrh1rlpnl Elizabeth Gra(fis of Ncwporl Beach has been appointed a principal or the Culverdale Ele-- 1nentary School, which Irvine Unified School District ornclals hope will op<n in the 1973-74 rear. She has served as admln· 1strator of schools in Placentia and Santa Ana and has taught kindergarten through college level classes. A spokesman for Food Fair. \1·hich reprrsents 100 Pantry Pride tllarkctii in the Philadelphia area, suid price in - ('rcaSC's "should be 1mn1cdiatcl)' e\'ident 1r perishable products such as produce. pcullry and 1xirk ... Jlr ex.plained that urder !he HC\\' Phase IV economic guidelines processors can now raise priets to retailers \.\'ho in turn can raise them to consumers. Frederick Herrud Inc., largest pork processor in Michigan, today raised \\'holesalc prices to Detroit supermarkets by 10 cents a pound. and a company of- fic ial said they "'ill raise prices by ;1110thcr 10 cents a pound in a ,,·eek. ~Jany other big supermarket chains said they \\'ere not making immediate price increases but \.\'OUld do so shortly. Saddleback Dwellers Quiz L.A.F'C Official Hy J 1\;\' \\'ORTH DI 1~1 D•llJ ,1191 Sltll Saddlrback V;illey residents 14·orried fhat their unincorporated area \.\"ill be an- nexed piecemeal by neighboring cilits !hrrw QUr~11on~ like darts \\'cdnesday ni ght at nich:ird 1'um('r. execuli\'e of- ficer of the I.ocal Agency Formation Cornmission ILAFC1. L1\FC is 11 county\~>lde agency v.hich determines sphere~ of innu('ncc of local govcrnmm1al agencies tanything from a cily to a ~e .... ·er di.~trict l and acts on an· nexation and incorporation proposals. Tunlt'r spoke at the monthly meeting of the S:uldleback Arca Coordinating Countil tSACC1 11·hJch has suhmiltro a reque5t IO I.AFC for a ··tiolding sphert" of tnlluence pcndin,g a decision oo 11 hell1er lo forn1 a munic ipal advisory twncil for the Vallev. Thr> n1unic1 pnl advisory council I ~fAC) rs a J\C'\I' go\'crnrncnl option: A middle g_round bct_l'l·een unorganized unincorpora- !Lon and e1lyhood. Heprf'senlative s to the ~!AC, elcctl'd by the ar('a's residcnt.!l, \1ould be ;1 leg;illy rccogn1z('d advisory body to lhe Bo.,rd of Supervisors. "l_lo\1' do 11·e k_no\1'. 11·hether a muni cipal advisory council 1\·11J reall v protect us from_ encroachm('nt ?" Co l. Ralph Porter. prl'siden1 of the ~fission V i e j 0 llo1neo\vncrs nskcd . "\Ve'vc ne\'cr been ;ihJc lo get a li rn1 ans~·er." l\1rncr s::1d the :\L\C appet.rs to be a good s1;ir1 towa rd 1ncorpora1 ion \Vhich /Ste nl'R..\'ER, Page 2t ' Ta1Je Release Pl1011e Call A Hoax--Ervin \\'ASlll~GTON 1AP ) -The Senate \Vatcrga1e. inves1iga1ion took a bizzare 1urn today \1·hen the chairman announced that he had been told President Nixon \1'ould release tnpes of his White House t0nversnlions. !hen discovered it y.·as all a hoax. Sen . Sr1n1 ,J. Ervin .Ir. (0-:\'.C ), made the announcement nt the stHrl or a com- mi11rc session. 'then took !he microphone n1inu1es Inte r to S.1)' he had been the \'iC· tim of a hoox "ft \\'OUld ho.ve been helpful if y.·r could ha\'e found a secure telephone." said Sen. lfo\1·ard II. Baker Jr. \R·Tenn.). the vice chAirma11. ' Ervin first $8ld he got \.\'Ord rrom Sccrcli\ry of the Treasury George P. Shultz that !he President Md o~reed to relea.!le relevant tape recordings. He said he found out laler from lbt While House that no suc.h detis.ion had been made, And from Sh ultz that the: ~!Ar)' had not made such a call. "I think ll's the unanimous opinion ol 1his committee tha t this was a right dirty 1rlck." said Ervin • Jt V"-U• 1 .. ILL! I CdMRoute Work Seen Next Yea1· ·-c • By JOHN SCHADE Of Tllf Dlllf f'li.t tt1" Orange County Ro:~d C<l1nrniss1011cr Ted !\!cConville says preliminary \\'Ork on the Corona del !\far Fretvtay through G>sta Mesa may resume next year. !\ft'Olnville told me1n~rs at the Orange Coast Association luncheon \\fednesday that enough money may be a\·ailable in next yea~ State Depart- mffit of Transportation budget to begin initial ~·ork on the route, from the San Diego Freeway ov1rpa~ a.t Bristol Street lo a point near the UC Irvine campus. 'Vork on the freeway has be4!n stalled rrcently for lack of funds . P..fcCooville added that route grading at ~lacArthur Boulevard and University Ori\'e will show the actual alignment of Ille frtt~·ay. Plans are also moving ahead for the development or an area m a s t e r transportation plan, the commissioner said. The plan wi ll serve as area suggest ions fGr the stale and coastal oommission plans, scheduled for competltlon in January of 1975, he added. "Some agencies think we should just set a priority for these plans and then go ahead with them," l\1cConville said. "The road departinenl , I hough . believes that each community should present its 'Own concepts, views and needs for study in development of an overall plan," he sald.. "We've received a good response from !he coastal conununities. and a be tter teelihg on the matter than ever before,'' he added. McConvtlle said it is imj)Ol'"tant to have a full transPortation system plan so the: county will be able to receive and ef· fectJ vely handle fully funded federal pro- gr&!l18. The commissioner added that a wtudy is under way on traffic ramp controla at freeway entrances during rush hours. Such controls. he said, would restrict the roads to loog-haul traffic, llm.ltlng motorists who use the expressways for short hauls to surface streets. McConville noted that six roads have been lald out as recreational, nature or so-called urbanscape routes. "We are talking here about a quality road, with no access to private prop- erty," the commissioner pointed out. He called the routes contparable to the scenic routes like lhe Mount Vem<ln Parkway in Virginia. where the winding roads follow the natural Contours of the land. 1be commissioner said the state's so- called Little HooVer Comm.lssioo and federal General Servitts Administration have been putting much pressure <ln counties to sell as much of their surplus land .. possible. Awards Donated In Irvine's 2nd Fislii1ig Derb y Diamond Bar's Sport.s Village and Davey 's Locker have contributed top awards for the Second Irvine All City I-~ishing Derby to be held from 8 a.m. to! p.m. Saturday at Bonita Canyon Reservoir, Irvine. ' Froome Gayle. city re c reation coordinator said the derby is (ree to all l.rvine residents. · Prizes ~·ill be a\•;arded in each of the lhree divisions: pre-teen, teenage and adult. SPorts Village has contributed a $20 gilt certificate and Davey's Locker, Newport Beach has provided haU-<lay boat passes. Participants are to provide their O\Vll equipment. bait and picnic lunch. · Irvine Company Ranch security ()f· ricers "'ill guide residents to off street parking near the reservoir which i~ located off Bonita Canyon Road, east of MacArthur Boulevard. OIANel COAST 11 DAILY PILOT TM Or-tM .. o ... IL v ~•LOT' ""'"' wllkft h CMnbln./ "'' HIWl,.,l>t .. ,, If ..,el~ •• ,.... °'-, ... , "'*ltll"" ~~ •. , __ •1!• .OU..,,,. f rl ""'1i.t!M, ~f ........... Fdll•f , t6r Coll• #flt, ,.,...,_, IN<", "fut1r1.,._ lredlf"-r.irl VIiie'!'. l ••- I M<", tnMtlS~k -Ifft Cl--/ ~.. Jl>tl'\ ''""''-· ,. 1!"'" '"*"'' "'lllOll It M iii.Md lflw1d11i '"" Sllfldl f!, '~' .,,~..,, .w111"1,,. "''"' 11 "' no .,....,, ftf St ... t, C•Tt M.... C1lllern11, thJil. Rob•rl N, w.,4 "'"~ .... "'w61 ....... Jee• II;, c~''•r 'lllu ,,._...,_, t!'lll Glllfl•I M.,..,.., Th_,, IC•••il llfi .... Th•"'•• A. M11r phi~• Mt .... lftt E•I* Ch 1r41t H. Leo1 Jl ich1r4 '· NtU A•lltt..i Ml .... 1"11 llllW• °""" Ct1!1 Mt~•· UO W•t1 11, $!• .. I Nt~I lff(~I nu NtWl*'I •• Y .. Yl ft l"im' a •• ,~: m -~.,,,,, .. ..iv• H""tllio!oto lt1(~: HVI lffdl kvltvtrt 1111 C~: JU Ht'"' fl C.1'tlM lltt•t ,.,.,..,.. cn•1 64J-4lJ1 CS.WW "~ .... 641·1671 S.. C ....... Al tr.,aot .... : f•I•,•••• 4tZ-44JI CM!r,lfltf, !fl). °"""'" twtr fl'!MI"'""" Cltrl'lllMf, "'9 -1wl .. , 11'91"t t11M, Wl"'111 IMltfr " ffWf!'l'"-11 ..... WI INY " f"""""1C.. •1""'11 IMtltl ..,.. "'~ . ..,. ~ ~· .....,..,, ltqiN d i ..... , ... N ill II Ctltt MIN, C"•ll!Wftle, "'"°"'"'"" n (,,, .. , n .. _IM,1 llf Tllflll U.U "*'"'If/ mlHttl'I' attl"9t'ltfl4 u .. _,....,., 111u1sd11, Julr 19. 1973 Li::, Mickey Meet Two of the n1ost fa1nous personages in the ~nlertain· ment world -Elizabelh Taylor and l\lickey !\louse -met ·at Disneyland as the actress and her chil- clren !frorn left. l\Iaria, Christopher and Liza) tour the .l\.nahcin1 amusement park. Not shown is f\,1i ss Taylor's escort. ac tor Peter La wford. E'ron1 Page 1 TURNER ... ultimately is the only defense against an· nexation. The cities ot Laguna 'Beach and San Juan Capistrano recently proposed ex- tension of the ir spheres of influence which would between them gobble up most of the Saddleback Valley. The 100-square-mile area. with a population of some 70,000, contains the communities of Laguna Hills, !\tission Viejo, El Toro, Lake Forest. and Laguna Niguel. One group of questions.was led by Ear! Carraway. a Lake Forest resident who ran w1successfully for U.S. represen- tative in the last prirnary against the eventual \Vinner Cong. Andrew Hinsha\v (R·Newport Beach). Carraway expressed concern that SACC was not moving fast enough toward a muni cipal advisory council . Originally planned lo be in the \\'Orks by September, the MAC process has been slowed by snags in gelling guidelines for i~ operation approved by !he Board of ~andLAFC. ISAcc leaders also have hesitaled lo petition for an election until represen- tatives of homeowners groups in the area had an adequate opportunHY to reJc!, SACC president \Yard Thompson said. Carraway said he and a group of 25 VaUey residents hope to file in- corporation papers soon. He said they v.·ould do so as a means to keeping any encroaching municipalltles from ;111- nexing them. "\Ye are opposed to incorporation. Thio;; \rould be one way to keep anyone else from incorixirating," Cnrraway said. Turner agreed with Carraway that the first group to file incorixiration proposals and maps has legal precedence. But he said the next steps for cityhood must be pursued \1·i thin 70 days. so that fi ling alone docs not ind cf in it e I y safeguard an area. Turner said LAFC men1bers are begin· ning lo feel that !hey have been in- fluenced more by pressure from the cities to approl'c annexation and in- corporation proposals lhan they sl1ould have. Fro"' Page 1 1'RANSPAC. • • Ne11•port Harbor Yacht Club. was the winner in Class C. Sanderling JV, a Columbia 43 c~skippered by Bob Poole ;:ind ,Jack Johnron of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club placed fourth in Class C. Two other Newport yacht s. Nalu lV 01vned by Peter Grant. NHYC, and skip- pered by 1-larvey Kilpatrick, !\·lon~erey Peninsula Yacht Club, and Starwagon. a Cnl 43 owned and skippered by Dan Elliott. NHYC, placed third and fifth in Class B. \Varrior v.•as the \\'inner of Class A and Bob Grant's 61·fool sloop Robon. Nl-IYC. \VJS thi rd in Class A. Chutzpah 's victorious entry into Ala \Vai )'acl)t Harbor was held UJl for 1nore than an hour Tuesday night wlien a tnilit:'lry type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 perso ns aboard. The craft l\'aS ca ught in one of the giant seas that crashed against lhe shores of \\'aikiki Tuesday and \\1ednes· day. The passengers ~·ei;oe rescued by ire yacht race committee boats. No one ''•as seriously injured. The seas subsided la te \Vcdnesday. l ;.ro111 Pr1ge 1 1-IOUSING ... l'ngincer in the industrial complex. and n1any others:· Hoop said. Fe"' 1~rsons employed in the c:1tegories l~oop lists earn saltirics nl•I· l ing thctn Sl.060 a n1onth I $12,700 a year 1 after laxes. the a1nount neccled to buy a $30,000 home. observers note_. ) In an attempt to lo1ver th~rice of :1 new home. il'lrs. l'r~·or suggested waiving c11y liccnSl.' fees. park dL"Clication fees or land rcquircn1enis. and ehmination of a variety or costly interior amenities as a \1ay developers might 1nix "budget" hon1es in 11c1v tr.1cts. lr\tnc Con1pan~1 response to the idra suggests son1c of the ideas 1night be used. Ho1vcvcr, a dct<iiled analysis of ~lrs. Pair Find Body Of Elderly Mcui Fro1n Laguna The body or an elderly Laguna Beach man missing since early June ~·as found Wednesday by tl~'O hikers in a brush-filled ravine below Arch Beach lleights. Coroners identified a body found in a canyon at the top of !\'yes Place 3.s that of Earl S. '·Dyka" Dysinger, 79, of 292 La Brea St., miss ing since June 6. Funeral services are pending at Shef- 1cr Laguna Beach A·Iortuary. An autopsy 1s scheduled toda y to determine the cause of death . T11·0 liikcrs. George Ripley and Larry \\'airnvright of Laguna , came across the txxly at about 6 p.1n. The remains ap- peared to be an elderly man. Later. the family identified personal effects found on the body. Dysinger. a former professor at Fullerton Junior College, disappeared from his hon1e \Vithout explanation one 1norning. Police Slaying Trial La\vyer Denies Chargeli' Herman Lee Clouston's la1vyer today urged <-'n Orange County Supe'rior Court jury to recognize that his client had no idea he \\'as facing a police officer in his home last Sept. 20 \\'hen he shot and kill· ed Buena Park detective Darrell "Bud" Cate. Huntington Beach attorney George Shibata also urged Ahe jury to recognize that neither officer involved in the plan- ned Rpprehension 0£1 Clouston, 38, bore any identification ~·hen they entered the Anaheim h<Jn1e. Shi bata repeatedly lashed prosecutor Robert Chat terton for [he deputy dis1rict attorne.v·s condemna tion ol Clouston as a "COid. calculating killer." Seeds of Potver Good Book Cited At Senate Probe • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The seeds of \Vatergate were sowed by men or finan· cial. political and govern1nental po~·er who "undertook to nuUify lhe laws of man and the laws of God" to reap a ''\'Cry temixirary political advantage," Sen. Sam J. Entin (0-N.C.), said today. Thus Ervin . the chainnan of the Senate \Vatergate committee, summed up the evidence collected so tar during the t1vo- 1nonth-old nationally televised hearings into the scandal thiit has plagued the Nixon Administration. "I caq't resist the templalion to philosophize just a little bit about the Watergate," Ervin said as Frederick C. LaRue wrapped up two days of testimony about his Involvement ht the scandal. LaRue said Nixon's re-election had been of "paramount importance" to him. "The evidence thus fa r indicates, tends lo sho'v that men upon whom fortune has smiled beneficently and who possessed great financial power, great political power and great governmental power un· dertook to nullify the Jaws o! man and the laws of God for the purpose of gaining what history will call a very tern· From Page J FOOD ... unchanged along the Sot.lthem Orange Coast today, and so did supermarket prices. A survey or most ol lb e South Coast supermarkets today s h o wed no measureable surge in business from shoppers tryini to stock up at the old price before the increase hits. Although prices have not reflected the lifting of the freeze some customers are \vorrled , a manager said. "We're getting a lot <lf questions today aOOut what the prices will do," said San Clemente Alpha Bela ~tanager Leon Riley. "There's not much we can tell the m because we haven't heard anything yet," he added. At Albertson's Market in San Clemen te, business was no more brisk th&n usual, but curiosity 'A'as up, said manager George Kolbe. "So far we haven't had to raise any prices. even though \Ve were !old recently • that pork \Vas going to be rationed. That didn't happen and supplies so far have been pre Uy good," Kolbe said. In Laguna Beach, independent grocer Larry Barker -part-0wner of Acord's A-iarket -said that his customers are not making a run and that prices are unchanged. Only a few inquiries had been noled, he said. "All we know "'1lal 'A'e read in the papers and that's not enough for us to mllke any decision ," he added. At the Safe1vay store In South Laguna, n1anager Larry Callahan said business is up a little this morning and that h~ should be receiving infonnation on Pl'iase 4 by tonight. "The people in the main office are probably working on it right now," he i:.aid. YMCA Caravan Signups to End Signups ,,·ill end !\1ooday for a Sad- dleback Y~1CA caravan trip lo be plan· ned by the participants. Boys in the seventh. eighth, or ninth grades are eligible fo r the trip, scheduled for Aug. 23 to 30. A minimum of 10 are needed and must sign up early to begin planning their itinerary. 111. maxln1um fee of $50 has been set by the YMCA. but the cost could be less if the participants so choose. A $10 dcixisil is required to reserve a place. ~tore information may be ob!alned by calling the Y at 830-9622. porary political advantage .'' Ervin said. Then turning to his favorite source book. the King Jan1es version of the Bi- ble. the sil ver-haired Ervin said tho&e ;n- volved in Watergate had overlooked ad- monishment or St. Paul in his epistle to the Ga latians: "Be not deceived: God is not mocked, for l\'ha1socver a mau so~·eth, that shall he also reap." The audienct: jammed into the marble Senate Caucus Room, hushed as Ervin sixikc, broke into prolonged applause a~ he finished. Ervin banged his gavel for order. Jackson Sees Grain Deal Falsification \VASHI NGTON (UPI) -Sen. Henr)i !\1. Jackson (0-Wash.), said today he had. evidence the Agriculture Departmenl kr.ew in advance about last year's f t billion Soviet graid deal and that big U.S. grain firms falsified their reports to tht0 ' government on the deal. On the eve of a series or hearings by his Senate Pennanent Investiga tions sub-· committee, Jackson said the evidence he. has thus far uncovered on the 1972 deal could prove that parties to the deal had. violated federal laws. "We have sworn affidavits at this point that Agriculture was advised of the sales" before they occurred, he told a- ne~·s conference. __ The Agriculture Department has. denied having advance knowledge of tilt sales, and a General Accounting Office investigation earlier this month found that officials didn't know how much grain the Russians were buying from tbe American companies. . Jackson further said there was "strong evidence" that the U.S. finns tried to keep the sales secret by "falsifying their reixirts to the Commodity Exchang_t Authority. "The evidence our investigation has turned up thus far leads me to conclude that the Department of Agriculture - and especially the Commodity Exchange Authority -encouraged secrecy in their dealings 'A·ith the grain companies and the commodity exchanges." Wormatioo also uncovered by his sub- committee, Jackson said, provided "substantial evidence" that t he Agriculture Department kept vital iJl.. ronnatlon about the failure of the Russian wheat crop "secret (frori:i American farmers) whlle in.fact issuint misleading reports oo overseas coit- ditions and an anticipated domestit surplus.'' Scli1nitz Loses $400 in Coins If former congressman John G. Schmitz \Vere still doing his thing oh Capitol Hill, he might be pressing for more law and order legislation today. • The Santa Ana College political science instructor complained to Newport Beach police Wednesday that a burglar stole S400 in silver coins during the process or his recent n1ove from Tu stin to Newpott Beach. lie said \Vhoever heisted a 12-ounce beer can fashioned into a coin bank antl containing an estimated $400 in quarters and dimes may have taken it in transit. · Nothing else 11·as tnken from the Schn1itz residence at IO ~lission Bay Drive in the Spyglass Hill section o( Corona de! !\-tar, according t-0 police. "\\'e. are beginning to lake a closer look at the California code and requiring citizens to do the sainc." he said. "\Ye are asking them more and n1ore to prO\'C th;i;t they are really serious about pr~ viding services for the areas they \\'ant hi annex." Repeatedly question«! as to \~'he!her :i !\!AO "·ill really ~ given legal recogni- tion by LAFC and protect the Saddlcb<1ck Valley from being annexed by a city, 'l'llraer said . "I didn't come down here to cncouage the development or a l\fAO. t can't guarantee you that it will protect you. But what is your alternative? Pryor's proposal 1n·cparcd by Ed Akins or the Irvin{' (•0111µ.:iny s 11 g g CS I S "frt'cdom frotn densll\" and ~11c restric- tion s·· is all the romp:.iny needs from the t'11y to i11lersperse in Ill'"' trRCls "ex- l'eU1i\e or cfficicn('y" homt•s ar a lo11•cr tost. 1\luns ~uggcsrs the fess cosily units be clus1crs of to11•nhon1es sca!lcrcd !11rougllt \"llla gcs. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1)uA(a.f> Irvine Planners Slate, Director, Aide Interviews irvine: planning commissioners ~tonday "'Ill inlerview candidates for both a plan· ning director and his assis1ant. A board or planning professionals \\"J IJ have screened applicants by the end of !his week in preparation for the ronl· mission interviews 1\londay. :i clly spokesman said. On Tuesday, c11j counc1lmc11 will 111- tervicw tlflplicant.s. T1n1ts of inlervic"·s have yet to be drtermined, City ~1anager \\'illiam Woollen Jr. said. The successful planning director choice will replace Bruct Warren who has Jtfr Irvine after leu than 11ix n1oolhs' service to take the top job In !he San l)iei;o Ccunty planning dep11rtm cnt. ~ "\\'c :ind the ruy .:ire 111 ;1 Uenuliful posi tion lo give lhis :i try." Akins \l'rotc company Executive Vice President Ray- 111ond I.. \\';i!son last ~lay. "\Ve could put !he clusters in many of our devclopml'nts :It original planning st11gc. not calling undue attention to Ille prOJeCI "The s<1uar<' loolagc and limitt.-d 111- l('rior <1ppcal ,,·ould hr!\l keep ·ovtr 11t111!ifi1,rs· (fX'Qplt• 11ho cou ld afford n1or<' cspcn.sivc housing ~ frnn1 buying and ~thus) lin1it purchas1· to those looking for fH'I('('. ··The clu~tt'r \\OUld prov1d1• its 011 11 :1rch1tcttural uppcnl," ,\ ktns t.-oncluded. /Jara provided ~y lhc cotnpany sho11·ed !h:l! "i1111t1.f.( all <'ii~· fets ranged fron1 a :..u 111g:. of SI .!100 :11 lour uuits 1>Cr acre to only $1 .306 at 16 units per :lC're. Thal 's a ~prend of only $500 nnd not nearly <is !<1J.:n1ficanl ;1<; the const ruction savings .;hown for both ~1nglc familv :iltuchcd .inn dr-1aeh1·rl hn1ne~ 11/lcn 'density IS <1JI011t'd IO lllCTf';;t.~C 1\ 25 pPrcrnt <!e(TPOSc 1n the cost of nn J.100 squnre foot tlc1:ichcd home 1s po.~s1- bh· 1f tht•y :ire :tllO\\'t•tl to be built at a dcn'ltty of 8 unus per ocrt'. Th11t drops lo I $24.300 !he mnrkcl C'OSI ol ldcntlcal units bu1ll at four per acre and sold for S.11.:iocl . Author lied GE SERVICE COLD WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE CUBES! Without Opening Tiie Deor 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bln 1tore1 10 Iba .. about 260 cubea; automatic lcemaker re- plac11 Ice H you use It. • Freezer holda up to 297 Iba. • Convertible 7-Dey Meat Keeper. • Adjuotable. tempered gleao shelves. • Rolla out on wheals for usy clean Ing. • No defro1tlng ever WE TAKE TRADE·IKS 90 DAY CASH 'WITH A'"Oftl CllDIT Councilmen decided that plannini.: department workloads dictated !ht nerd to fill both the director :ind assistant planning director posts at onct. l.c~' uran1;1t1c are the savings chArtrd I for attacht'd uni!s. Assuming I JOO square foot bome5 built eighl to !ht' acre might sell for ~25,MWi, rlouhling the dt•nslty lo 16 111111" tll'r acrl! results 1n n per 1m lt savlnjit of 19 pcrrr111 . Thnl's $4.954 {'be11prr rnro1n1n~ !hi.• !.JOO Sf]Uarl' foot hon1{' r111ght ~II fur $2\l.6.12. ,\I.in~· dnta sug· 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548·7788 • ,c:tst~ I I ·. VOl Food Chang but s marke especi talnly Mee Beach were custo p I w \Vat cial, who man "ve Sen. Th " 1at evid Tll<l into Nix ,. bee " to Du~1ingion Be~eh Fountain Valley . ' Totlny's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 200, ~ SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973 TEN CENTS Co11st Marl{et Operators See lncrea·ses Soon t By tbe Daily Pilot Staff food prices remained generally un· changed along the Orange Coast today but spokesmen for two major food market chains agreed that prices, especially on pork and poultry, \Ii' ill cer- tainly increase by next week. Meanwhile, store managers from Seal Beach to San Clemente reported they were getting a lot of questions from customers as 'he result of President Nix- Philosophy In Order For Ervin \V,ASHINGTON (UPI) -The seeds of \Vatergclte were so,ved by men of finan- cial, political and governmental power who "undertook to nullify the law s o{ man and the Jaws of God" to reap a "very temporary political advantage,'' Sen. Sam J. Ervin (l).N.C.J, said today. Thus Ervin, the chairman of the Senate \Vatergate comtnittee. summed up the evidence collected so rar during the t\vo- month-Qld nalionally televised hearings into the scandal that has plagued the Nixon Administration. •·1 can ·t resist the temptation to philosophize just a little bit about th e \Yaterga te." Ervin said as Frederick C. ~ue wrapped up two days of testimony about his involvement in !he scandal. LaRue said Nixon's re-election had been of "paramount importance" to him. "The evidence thus far indicates, tends to sho\v that men upon whom fortune has smiled beneficently and who possessed great financia l pov.•er, great political power and great govern me?tal power un- dertook to nullify the Jaws or man and the lav.'s of God for the purpose or gi_ining v.•hat history will call a very tem- porary political advantage," Ervin said. Then turning to his favorite source book, the King James version of the Bi· ble, the silver-haired Ervin said those in- \'Olved in \Vatergalc h:i.d overlooked ad- monishment of St. Paul in his epistle lo the Galatians: '·Be not deceived: God is not mocked. for \1·hatsocver a man soweth, that shall he also reap." Tttc audience jn1nmed into the ma rble S~nate Caucus Room, hushed as Ervin •P9ke. broke into prolonged applause as he finished. Ervin banged his gavel for order. , LaRue, a millionaire ri.1ississippian v.·ho bas pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obslrucLjustice in lhe \Vatergate covcr- up, listened intently, He earlier had re- counled funfleljng $242.000 to the seven otiginal \Vatergate defendants, helping de\'isc false !:ilories and concealing e\>idence from government prosecutors. lie also said he believed that Jeb Stuart l\1agruder, the deputy manager of Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, had prior Knowledge of the June 17, 1972 bnrglary and bugging at Democratc Na- tional Comn1iltec headquarters that touched orr the scandal. Following LaRue to the brow·n felt · draped witne ss table v.·as Robert C. Mar- Wan of San Clemente, like La.Rue, once a key deputy to fonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and one Y:bo has been linked to the coverup·plot. But Mardian, a former assistant at· tomey general, said in an opening state- ment his onfy role following the June 17 arrests was that of a lawyer, not a "political protege." l-le said learning of the Watergate break-in was "the most shocking experience in my entire legal career." "The facts thus learned thrust me into a situation which I can only compare, in terms of personal anxiety, to being caught in quicksand." be said. The situation became increasingly ''in· tolerable ... in "'hich ultimately my only (See BUGGING, Page %) Stn1nps Being ' ·Sold by Mnil The Huntington Beach Post Of· lice is ·now selling stamps through , tbe mail. "The program has been tested thoroughly and has bee.n validattd as one much needed by shut-ins, the elderly, night w o r 'k e r s , housewives with small chllren and otben who find it dlfncuJt to vl$it the post office pcnonally to purchase stamps," said Postmaster Otan L. Ward. Customers may pay for the stamps bJ check. he said. Jn formati o n on stamp aswortments and cost is available by calling the past offiet. 842-S6J1. on·s Phase 4 action easing the food price freeze . "Shoppers seem lo be \\'Biting to get better information on \vhat prices will do," observed San Clemente ~iarkct Basket manager Derrill l~ogers. "By the ti111e they find out, it will be too late." Mainly, the game today seemed to be ''wait-and-see" for· customers, coastal markets and headquarters of chain stores themselves. Irvine market officials said today hou,se\1•ivcs \\'Crc making no rush to ~at price incrCases markets say 1rill not go inlo effect until next \\'l't!k. Pou lt ry, 1>0rk. eggs, produce and milk rctnained at the same prices today they ,,·ere ycsterduy before Pha se Ill price freeze requirements \\·ere lifted, a spokesman for the Walnut \1illagc Safr\\·ay ri.1arket said. The n1anager suggested inquiry about price policies be directed to the regional office. The regional office spokes111an decli nt.-d to speculate when and ho.,.,· prices \\•ill af!ect local markets. 1'1)(" University Park Alpha Bela f\\arket expects ne.,.,, price hsls on liton- t!;1y . Those lists \1·ill reflect ne1v prices \1hich arc expected lo increase. Fred Cantrell, vice presid<'nt of Alpha Beta. ~aid today, "\Ile arc still wailing for the price regulations beJore we can cl('tcrntine what action to take, but there .,.,·ill be increases in prlces." l'au l Campbell, a spokesman for * -A· * Costs Saf('V.'BY Stores. said, "\\'e 3rc stil l a ht· tie frustrated today and wa1tin.1t "·ord fron1 our l'Orpornle offices 1n Oakland. Some of our buyers ha,·e al ready in- dicntl•d 10 us the ir prices 1vi l! go up, but it "'ill take a couple or days to kno11· "•hich prices and how n1uch." Individual m3rket managers at Halph.; antl \'on's in lfuntington Beach said so f;ir they ha\'e had no bulletins from e<>r· porate headquarters "'arning thenl of n pri ce increase or lo be prepared for one. * Oob \\'oods. a rn:inagc·r at the Lucky ~tore Ill !IU1H1n~tt111 ri\•nch. Sn 1 d , "'.\'.01hing t''<l·1ttnjl 1s h:1ppt·11111g aroun1I hi.'r(· It \\'lll prol>11l>ly be th1.: n1tdd\t> of ncxt \\t'(•\.. lwfnrl' anything hllppcn<.:, after thr 1n:1in nfl1ec nliikC ~ a ct1'1'1"1un." No m11jo r l'h:t1n ~tur't''i l'heckt"il 111 llu n- lini;ton Bl·ach and Fountain \'allc~· in· chcuted a kno" ledge of \\ h1·n pric,•s "'Ill change or hu1\·, liroccry shopping-habi!~ rrmaincd tSec FOOi>. Pagt= !I ,., on Way Up Phase 4 Unleashes P1·ices on Food ' , . -~ • -· .. ·~ '<. ..... -· . .. o.i1y Piiot StaU P~OIO MICHELLE AND PDCD REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After S Months, a Horse Thief With a Guilty Conscience Po~o Ba~k Ho1ne Stole1i Horse H£1s Big E11 counters 8}' 1'01\T GORrtTAN 01 lh• O.lltr Pll•I s1111 The escapades of Poco Ron E. Bar are O\'er. Hungry and 300 pounds un- der.veighl, Poco has come home to his Huntington Beach fa111i\y . During the past five months Poco has passed through the hands of t\\'O horse thieves, Utah police and a kind old rancher "\1'ho owns a spread as bi g as the Ponderosa." Poco is a fiv~year-old registered quarterhorse. He 11·as stole n Feb. 17 rron1 his stable in Huntington Beach. The best efforts ot his ov.'nCI"'; 16·year-old Michelle Noell, and her parents, ritr. and ri.lrs. Louis Noell, 6531 Segovia Ci rcle. proved fruitless in attempts to locate him. The family placed ads in trade magazines, giving a full description and a picture of the horse and an offer of a $350 reward for information on the horse 's "'hereabouts. On July 8 the famil.v gave up and bought i\fichellc <I 11c,1· hor se. T\\'O days later ca::ic the phone call the fn1nily had been \\'ailing for. "Some young cov.·boy in t:tah called nnd said he sa1v hin1 in a rodeo and recognized him as the stolen hor se fronl the ads 1\·e had placed,'' saici :i.trs. Noell "So he stole it for the reward.·· Then the story gets confusin g. ··He said he stole the horse a \1·eck earlier from th e rodeo. but on the eve- ning of Jul y Fourth he \las 1n aq accident. The horse \ras w1injured. so he tied it up to a tree on a ranch near the Jdaho-l:tah !>ord er . ·'He didn't give us his nan1c, but told us to call the Tremontan f Utah l police. I don't knov.• \1•hy he 1\'aitcd a \\'eek since !he accident to call us. I guess his e-0n- science got to him .'' Jn the meantime the ranch 01rncr, {See llORSE. Page !I By United Press International Prices for poultry, pork, produce. milk and other perishables \vent up in many of the nation 's supermarkets today and the cost of other items freed by President Nixon's Phase IV program were ex- pected to climb shortly. (See story, Page 4) 1\tost n1arket spokesmen said they \\'ere double checking the ne\V Phase IV regulations and that markups sf1ould bt·gin next \l'CCk ''in full force" -and "'be \\·ay up'' by next month . Jn San Antonio. the Associated J\lilk P.oduecrs Inc .• the largest mil k pro-- ~ll..,ring coopc ra1ive in the United States, :irinounced price hikes as high as 10 per· 1.'ent in 20 South\1·cst and J\1id.,.,·est states. \\'holesa!c egg prices in Ne1v \'ork jumped 4 to 8 cents a rJoze n today. It generally takes a few days for such an increase to hit the reatil market. J>ork prices \\'ere moving up in sorne areas. with the price or a pork Join jump- ing frorn 79 !G 91 ccnls a pound in a Detroit supcnnarkeL In Jackson. J\liss., Gia nt Food Stores raised their prices on about 21)().300 "dry " grocery items. such ns dog food . flour and meal. fr~'ing chickens jumped 5 cents a pound. Spot checks by t:PI sho1\·ed that most housc11·i\'es \1·cre not pa ying more during weekly mar keti ng. HO\\'Cvcr, this \1·as un· dou btedly due to grocery ads "·hose prices are. in cf!ecl through Saturday. A IIuntington. N.Y .. housewife. ~·!rs. Katherine i\lullcn, said she sho1>pcrl in t110 supermarkets and found pri ces unchanged. ''Eggs are the same as last \reek," she saiC:. So arc caMed goods, bread and cereals -I didn't see ::inything higher than usual. .. A spokesman for !he /\'ational Associa· lion nf Food Chains 1NAFC~ predicted the 4 .to 5 percent jump in priees in the coming 1\·ecks and said consun1 crs could "Xpect to sec 1narkups on retail counters next 1rcck after prot.:essors h<.1vc tinlc to Va ll ey \Vi ii Adjust l'wo ~peed Li111ils Based on a traffic engineering study of speed limits. the Fountain Valley city council has agreed to lower the limit on Los Jard1ncs East and \Vest and raise it on Busha rd Street. The !in1it on all of Los Jardincs v.·ill be redutt'd fro1n 35 n1ph to 25 n1ph. B'ushard between Toucan Avenue and El Camino Avenue .,.,.ill go up (ron1 25 n1ph to 30 n1ph . 1'he nev.· spt!ed limits '4'ill go into effect :m days after fina l ap1)roval or the la1v. Tha vote 1s set for the Aug. 7 rouncll lllCCling. Transpac Yacht on Rocks Racer 'Eagle' Bea ch.es, Si 1iks off Waikiki Beaclr By ALMON LOCKABEY Of lftt Dill)' l"llot Stiff llONOLULU -One of the racing boat!i in the Transpacific Yacht Race hit a reef and sank on \Valkik11leach a few mtnutes 3fter she had finlsbed late Wednesday night. Eagle. a C.,I 33 aloop skippcrl'd by Lar- ry K. Shorett of Corlnth1an Y11cht club, Sen Francisco, appareoUy wa~ intO the wrong chanl'll!I near ltoW"afian VUlage while coming toward the jetty entrance and hit a reef, She had a lar11e hol!! In her side and when the Const Guard pull· r.d her free she sank. Eagle had been follov.•ing a committee boat but left on her nwn whrn !he eS('()r1 vtssel went back to the finish fine to pick up another nnisher. Tht> grounding oc- curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolulu t11nc The crew 1\·as rescued without serious injury. Eagle had been tabulated as fourth in Class D after sailing the 2,225-mile race across the Pacific. Only eight of 60 starters rema ined at sea this morning, including Dcfianl, which ls under tow with a brGkcn n1dder. B:nd Vic<irious, still sailing with a jury rigged maiit. Four Newrort llorbor based boals were among the first ten in the ovcr:ill h<indicap standings when the unofficial final results were compuled today Only 13 hours and 35 minutes scp;irat~ the first And tenth place fin1!lher!I on h;in. dicap time de!lpite 'the slo•·nes!f or the race on elapsed time 'TWo or the controveNiial ultra ll~h1 d·splacemcnt boats finished an1ong the first ten, including the overall winner, despite heavy time penalties. Tv.·o Nc\\'pnrt boats won their respec· live classes and othe rs placed in their class. Al Casscll's 50-foot Brillain Chanct- designed \Varrior v.·as the only Class A boat among !he first ten, Gary f.f yers' Cal 39 Blue Streak, i\'£'v.port Hart>Q£. '1acht Club, '4·as the \vinncr in Cl& C. S;inde.rling IV, n Colun1bi.1 43 co-skippered by Roh Poole And Jack John~n of Rahia Corinthian Yacht Club plnced rnurth in Class C. 1'\'0 other Newport yachts. Nalu IV owned by Pet£'r Grant. NHYC, and skip. pcrcd by fh1n·cy l\11patrlck. ~1onterey tSte TRANSPAC. Pait !I gi\'e supermarkets certificates shov.'ing ho1v much of recent overall rost gains can be attributed solely 10 higher costs for ra1v products. c;eorge E. Han1illon Jr., presiden t of the Smithfield Packing Co., produ«r or the fan1ous hams, said :he rompany v.·ill "definitely ra i!>e our pri ces," but un til the ne1v regulations v.·crc studied he did not kno1\' how much. A spokesm;in for J.~ood Fair. ,,·hic h represents 100 Pantry Pride i\larkets in the Philadelphia area. sa id price in· creases "should be-.immedi ately evident Phase i1~ p<>nsh:lblf' produc1s such a~ produrC'. fX!Ultry and pork." lie C.'<plau1cd that ur:der the nc1r Pha:ie IV economic guidelines processors can no\•: r11ise prices to retailers 11·ho in turn can rai~c them to consumers. Frrderick Herrud Inc .. largest pork processor in i\fi chigan. today raisrd v.·holesale prices to Detroit !>UIX'rn1arke1s by 10 C('nts a pound , and a compan.v of- ficial said thry \I ill raise pri<'l'S by another 10 rrnts ;,1 pound 111 a \\'C'ck. ~lany othC'r b11: sup..·nnark('t chains !iaid thC'y 11cre nol 111ak1ng ilnmcdi;lte price increase5 but 11Guld do so shortly. 4 llit Meany Sny·s Control~ to Hurt • \V ,\SHINGTON IUPI) ,\Fl..-CIO President George 1-leany denouncecl the new Jlhase IV anti-inflation 1frogram today as ··a further c x a tn p I c of !he adminislrfllion':-; 1ncqui1ablc ccono1nic policies." "It spells 1nore bad news for the houscv.•ifc and the consun1 cr1" ri1eany sa id in a statement. · 1'1eany's attack can1c as Hepu blicans in ('ongress praised President Nixon's latest econon1it eonti·ols as touj!h \\'hilc many De1nocrats joined other leaders of organi7.ed labor :.incl business in c:lain1ing Pba~c JV \\'Ould hurt city d\\·e!lers and con<;u1ners. ~See story. l'age 4.) ~Ieany said. ··\Vagc s remain under ron1 rol. as they have ever since 1\ug. 15, 1971 . The t~ost of Jj\ing i~ continuing 11p and up. In terest rates are exen1pt fro n1 conii·ol ancl ~oared onc·c again the very clay Phase IV was announced. Profits. never directly or equita· bly controlled. are out of sighl. ·• Hea1·t Attacl\: l(ills Hiker From Ht111ti.t1gto11 Beacl1 /\ li·ycar-old fluntington Beach routh 11 ho had reportedly made s1m1lar outin~s collapsed and du~ i\londay v:hile h1k1ng in 113-d egrcc heat on the floor of Death Vi.!l!ey . Inyo County Coroner non T~lmage !O· day confirnu~ th;:ll Gary Brenizer died of cardiac arr('81 caused by high bpdy temperature and exertion. Talmage refused to release the address of the dead youth, but ofrici<ils al Echson fligh School today confirmed 1hat Brenizer graduated this June. Funeral services have been sla ted for 2 p 111 . Friday at Pacific View i\icmorial Chaµcl in Corona de! ~lar with the Re v. Lawrence Fruhling officiating. The teenager leaves his mother. Joyl:C ~lnrt1n of lluntington Beach; his fa lh<'r. :'\lar,·in Brenizer, of \1an Nuy s: a si!:ler, D1llnc BrcnizC>r, of San Diego. ;ind ~r~tcr and hrothc:r l.111da and Richard ~lart1 11 <lf 1 luntinglon Bt·itch One of his forrncr instructors ai F:d 1~on l'rn1c1nber.; Urcnizcr for hi s nh1ht1r:-1n l1 ln1 making li e said the youth bcca1nc 1cry involved thrnu~h m:1\s n1ed1n classes offered at the high !JChool STOCK VOLV tll E LIST IN ER ROR Due to an t:rror in traru;misslon . the New York Stock Exchanac clos- ing list Is published today with some incorrect volumt'.S for SC\'etal stocks. The error rrsultcd 1n volume flR:· urcs not bc1nA u~atr.d 1n a nurn - bcr of 1n1tanC('" It has bccu rcmcd1rd nnd the eorrect fi,1?urt•s will run for tomorrow 's cd1rions of the Daily Piiot Ttdrn:t.(:(' s;i id 1hat Bfl'n1zcrr \\JS ap- parcnrty h1k1ng 111 th•· Snit Fl;Jt Jr<:a with ;1 f1 tl·nd T1111 Ccipl1.•t1. 211. of S<inta Ana \1 h<•n he bcran1(' dizzy and cnllapscd. T:1lnu1ge s111d ht· 11as told that the: ~OU!h 11 Js h1k1ng 111 th(' 113-degr<'t" tcn1pcrnt111·es 11 J!hou1 :1 hat or shirt. C:1plelt ;:ipp;ireni h· lt·ft hi s con1panion 11 11h 11 h<.1! \\<ts l<'ft of !heir t"·o quarts of 11 a1t·r nn<I \1ent for help. \\'hen he return- ed . Bn,ni 1.~·r was dc;1d. Talrn;..gc s:iid he understand .. that both h1kf·rs had n1ad<: othi.'r hiking expeditions in llea!h \"alley durin g the summer. Orange Coast .\1 or1· .~un~h1nr Frida) folJov.inf: 1 arJ\ rnornu1g fog ttnd 1011· c loud~. 1110 .. ily it! the bl'at h arc;u;, 1!1gh5 111 !h~· l(i\1 ii):; :H the :;ands r1:iini; ·o nr<ir 80 1nl:1nd. Uvcnught low.~ tn !ht• 00:;. l~SUl E 'fODAY Tlie pas.~1111gcr.~ of tJ1r srl1orn1· r r Goorl Ilupe harr somc1 J1n1 g nt rnm"'lon -1tfedlt pricki ou 11tc1r ar1ns 11111 Ilic c:r111se clc· srriherl 011 POfJC -I niay make t lu;i.~e rnr:rl:s d1sappPnr . L M l•1d c:1111...... l Clllllll•d Jl·U ( .... ltl JI Creu•llf"• JI Dtllll '''-'i<•J lJ E"'N•l•t l"I•• ' '"'"''.'""'lftl JO-ll "·"-• 11-n , ... n.. lttc"11 ll. 11 "'""'··· ~ - """" LIM,•1 11 -~·•1 , .. )1 M• ... u.I -vl0d1 I• /'tlll•u'l.tl JI0-1 I. 11 Or•'"• tou111, U lllO•ll J).M SIMI Mt~•ll )4,tJ Tt!t~+I-J1t ,~ .. , ... , Jt.11 w_...., ~ .. , l'f.14 Wltld N-1 '·It ' • Pink Line Gets Okay In a st range turn or events. the State Public Utilities C<>rntlllssion \Vcdnesdn,v authorized 1hc Pin k Bus Linc to expand its serviet• to include 1!1:1rbor Boulevard The line's 011•ncrs. l\.1ichael and Paul K;idletz announced earlier this "'eek that the llne' y,·ould go out or business Friday if it did not get financial help from the Orange County Transit District. The brothers have offered ser1•ice dur. 1ng I.he summer for the 113s1 1wo years on lieach Boulevard fl"(Jln La Habra lo Hun-- linglOn Beach. The transit district has auempted 10 buy out the private line as required by J:i.w but negotiations have bogged dov.•n. The PliC decision 1\·as based on the Pink Linc's ability to attract young pe<r- ple and thus eliminate hitchhiking and use of private vehicles. The commission's finding referred to "a possible injunction" against the transit district's operation of its Harbor Boulevard line from La llabra to Ne~')X>l't Beach. But the commission did not seenl to be av.·are that the in junction had · been refused by a Superior C.ourt )udgc last Y.'eek. The PUC's decision v.•ould put the two lines in direct competition on Harbor Boulevard despi te the large differential in fares. The district charges 50 cents a round trip and the Pink Line $2. The Pink. bus line owneri; said Tuesday that they would need a subsidy from tile transit district to be able lo maintain operation of their five buses on Beach Boulevard for the remainder of the sum- mer, They cited operating losses. Jackson Accuses False Dealing In Grain Pact WASHINGTON (tfPI) -Sen. i{enry M. Jackson (0-Wash.), said today he had evidence the Agriculture Department krew in advance about last year's $1 billion Soviet grain deal and that big U.S. grain firms falsified their reports to the government on the deal. On the e\'e of a series of hearings by his Senate Permanent Invest igations sub- committee. Jackson sa id the evidence be bas thus far uncovered' on the 19"n deal coold prove that parties to lhe deal had violated reder al 1a .. ·s. . "\Ve have s"•om affidavits at this poinl that Agriculture was advised of the sales" before they occurred, he told a news conference. The AgrlcuJturl! Department h a ~ denied having advance knowledge of the sales, and a General Accounting Ofrlce investigation earlier this month foun d that officials didn't know how much grain the Ru ssians were buying from the American companies. Jackson further said the re was "strong evidence" that the U.S.' firms tried to keep the sales secret by "falsifying tbeir reports to the Conunocl.Hy Exchange Authority . "The evidence our investigation has turned up thus rar leads me to conclude that t.he Department of Agriculture - and especially the Commodity Exchange Authority -encouraged secrecy in their dealings \11ilh the grain co1npanies and the commodity exchanges." Information also uncovered by his sulr committee. Jackson said, provided ··substantial evidence" thnt the • Agriculture Depar1n1ent kept vital in- formation about the failure of !he Russian wheat crop .. secret (from American farmers} v.·hile in fact issuing mi sleading reports on overseas con· ditions and an anlicipated domestic surplus.'' Lon No l \Vou 't Vi8it \\'ASHINGTON ti\P) -Cambodia 's Premier Lon Nol has no plans to visit the J;nited Stales . the \~llitc House says. OlAH•t COAST "' DAILY PILOT Tn1 O••ro;t Colll D,fr,ILY PILOT wll!I wlllcll " (Clmlli,..., lfOC Ho Wt·PflH, II .... o.11"'-f llY '"' Or1no1 (0111 Pl/tlll1"l"I c--·· S-· •Ile fCl1!-1 •f t M!IU>fll, M-IY lt.l'OUllfl Fr~1y, lor Coo i. M•••, W.....,,ott lt•cll. Hun•lng!.., 8t•t"/l'DUr1111n Volley, L~""" l•adl. lrvlntl ~ol<l4ll111Kll aM &111 ci.-11111 S&n Ju1n (11pl1t•1,..., A 1l<>Olt '"!OM! t(l<!IOO. " WblOJnld S'111rd•yf '"" S\H'llUYt, Tn1 p•mcli>al pu1>1!1nln0 ""'"' 11 t! 1)1 W•1I 11, 11'tt•. C .. 11 Mt11, Ctlt!Offtlt, .,_H Ro\11rl N. w,,4 rrnllllflt 11111 "~""""''' J1,k Ill. Cu•ltv V«t "'filCtflt 1M C.tflet•I M1,,1ter Tho"''' Kt t vil EOIHlr Tho..,11 /lo,, Murph'"' M411<1gH!1 lid•IQ• Ch1rl1t H. Lao1 Rlth•ul '· N11!1 ... Ulttllll MtlWltlfot l-41'°'1 ''""' c ... ;u, "'"'' Q>r•"ll'I c ..... 1, l!tlior H•llfl ..... .._. OHk. I '115 l 11th l 1wl1v11'4 M1i1!119 Adlir1111 ,,0. l•J 7tO. tJMI °""'°"""' i._...e•tt"' m ,.., .. , ,._ Cn .. M ... : lll Wtll ltr ilfHI H..,._, ••ac"~ nn Ntwll'Ofl 1w ..... ,.. '"' cr.o.-•11 ., Noori •• C,.l'l'llnl llMI T.i.,ti ... 17141 641 .. Jl1 Cl-ifJe.4 Aft9ftlmt Ml·1611 ,.,,_ .,..,,,. Ot•"f• c-r c..-lhtt 140·11JO COftr"•"'· 1t11. Or•• eo.-• '°'*'""~ tom1Nnr. M• ~ • ..,IH, 111~1.,111tM, ... lrorlll ,,..,,_, If ld¥t•ll1-ll l'lftllfl INr tt rt~M ... ll'IOUI 1111Cl1I ..,.. ll'lllllon ..i c...,f"111 •-'· S-untl 1111, -119' Mid II Cnll ""-• C1tlfot!ll1 tv""1'1fllltfl .., ctrrlt~ "*'"'"'l .., ,,.,.11 u \J -'"1~1 lfllll,. dfill ... t ..... ,, .. -1111¥ This is ti' ar An anguished ~a1n~di~n fa~her. tries. to co'!lfort his weeping daugh· ter after learning hts wife died 1n a fire wh1ch destroyed their ho1ne following a rebel attack on Phnom Basset. ----- Marilyn Monroe J(illed By FBI, Writer Thinks NEW YORK (UPI) -Norman Mailer admltted Wednesday he Jacked evidence to back up his theory that FBI and CJA agents had a reason to klll Marllyn Monroe so as to embarrass the Kennedy family. But the autho r stuck to the theory anyway. Jn a small hot room at the Algonquin Hotel packed with 60 newsmen, Mailer read a seven-page statement defending his con~roverslal biography of the actress whose 1962 death officially was deemed a suicide. \\'hen he first started work on the book , !\faller s~dd he had heard "gossip and assumed Bobby Kennedy tu,d an affair with Marilyn." But interviews and reflec. tion convinced him that was not I rue. though "they \\'ere together a great deal and they were great friends," he said. There was 0 no greater way to em- barrass the Kennedy family " than to kill !\tiss Monroe, Mailer said. The FBI and CIA, he said, were "furious" because President John F. Kenned,y tried to Un1il their power after the Bay of Pigs in· \'Uion. '"Right-wing FBI and CIA agents," ~taller said, would have had a ''huge motivation" !o kill Miss Monroe. But he said he had no "hard evidence" to support his charges. Mailer said the autopsy on !\1iss 1'-1onroe showed a high concentration of Nembutal - a barbiturate -in hrr blood, but no evidence of that in her stomach. "Only one In eight deaths from barbiturates shows so high a level'' of the drug in the bloodstream, he said. ·•rn such cases, a residue is found 1n the stomach. "The assumplion follo\l.os that a stomach pump may have been applied •.. or a lethal overdose was injected ." ~tailer wa s paid $50.000 to write the book. originally intended to be a preface for a book or photographs of ~fiss "'Ionroc. Actor Peler Lawford, a friend of the actress and Ken.nedy's ln·law, has called the book "vomit." Sivim T earn Sets Water Program A water ballrl. ''It Never Rains 1n Southern California." "'ill be presented F'riday night at Huntington Beach lligh School by the sy nchronized swim team or the Huntington Beach Aquatics Club. The show starts at 8:30 p.m, in thl' school pool. Admission is 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for children under 12. '11le synchroniied swim team is com- posed of 28 girls ranging in age from i;even to 16. under the direction of Leslie \\1annrr. The team competes in AAU meets throughout the year. Tryout., ror the synchronized swim !Pam are currenlly being held from I 1).m.to 3 p.m .• ~1onday through Thursdav (until Aug. 161 al the 11unlington Beach campus. Still No Leads To Gtm Blasts ftuntington Beach paTice said today they 1tlll have no lead!i in their in· vcstlgation of !ht i;hotgun b!:i!ts th111 hll three hom rs 11nd two cars e:irly Tues· day morning . No one v.·a~ injurrd 1n the shootings. although one of the blasts hit rooms where childrC'n \\'ere slet!ping nnd another shot ripped rhroui.:h a room \\·hich was VAcant only OOcause thr JJ. ye11r-old OCC\Jpant W8$ away al camp. Det. Sg1. ~lonty fl.lcKennon 1Rid· tht!re v..·ere no witnes.,es lo tht! shooti ngs which accurred during the early momln~ hours. The blast~ camr frorn a 12·'1auge shotgun loaded with bird shot. he said "111ey have characterized my books as a rip-o(f and worse things have been said about it," said Mailer. ''But I thought it \vas a good book. One of my ~" Throughout the news confere e, he exchanged witticisms with newsme . But alt~ough sweat dripped from his face, ~1a1ler refused to dl.scuss his murder theory until aides distributed the prepared statement. "\Ve'll wait for the releases," he s!.outed. "I don't care lf we ell sweat 10 death in here." From Page 1 BUGGING • • • hope was the seUish one of not becom- ing implicated in the conduct of others \V~ J felt it my duty to serve," ~fardian said. \VhiJe the morning session was in Pl"Ofl'· ress, the White House announced that President Nixon will draft a reply this weekend to the committee's request for l3pes of conversations with former aides implicated in Watergate. The White House gave no indication \vhether Nixon v.·ould relinquish the tapes, which he considers presidential documents. or refuse to turn them over under the doctrine of the constitutional separation or powers. Nixon last week agreed to meet with Ervin to study the committee's request for a number of presidential papers rele- vant to the \Vatergate inquiry, but the White House ga.ve no indication when that meeting v;ould be held. While the senators were hearing the morning testimony, Chief U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica ordered a grand jury empaneled to investigate possible violations of federal campaign laws. Slrica issued the order on a request by special 'Vatergate prosecutor Archibald Cox. The new grand jury Is in addition to the one that has been meeting to determine what additional indictments v.·ill be returned in the Watergate bug- ging and subs~uent coverup. The new grand jury apparently v.·i ll in· \·estigate such incidents as illegal cor- porate contributions to the 1972 pres\den· linl campaign. American Airlines disclos- ed July 6 it had illegally given $55,Cnl in corporate funds to Nixon's re-election campaign at the urging or t h e President's per.ional attorney, Herbert \\1. Kalmbach of Ne\\'port Beach. Front Pflfle l FOOD ... unchanged along the Southern Orange ~st today, and so did supermarket prices. A survey of 1nosl of the South Coast ~upermarkets todav showed no n1easureable surge 'in business fr()m shoppers trying to stock up at the old prir{' before 1hc incrc;ise hits. Although pr\('Cs have not reflected the Hf!in,t; of thC' freeze some customers are worried. a manager said. .. \re·re getting a. lot ()f questions today ;ibout 11·hat the prices "'i!I do." said San Clemente Alpha Beta hlanager Leon Riley ... There's not much v .. e can tell !hem because v.·e haven't heard anything yet," he addrd. At Albt'rtson·s ?o.farket in San Clemente, business v.·as no more brisk Hi.on usual. but roriosily was up, fiaid n1ana.ser Gtorge Kolbt. "Sa far \\'C haven't had 10 raise any prices. even lhouRh we v.•tre told recently that pork "'as going to be: rationed. That didn 't happen and supplles 50 fer h11.\·e been pretty good ," Kolbe said. In LAguna OeJJch. Independent grocer t..arry Barker -part-O"-'Oer of Acord 's fl..tarket -said that his cus1omer3 are not making a run and that prices art j unch&nAed. Only a few Inquiries had btcn I noted, he said~ •• ..r Grant Aids • Huntingwn Land Suit A federal grant o( $272.873 has been a"•arded to Huntington Be11ch 10 case the pain of a lawsuit the city lost over land purchases for the 11cy,• central park. F'Joyd "'Bud '' Belsito. executive assi~· lant to the city <idministrator. said !he city was notified of the grant Wednesday by the Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). "It's a significant grant." Belsito said. ''Because we thought excess HUD fUild S y,·ouJd not be used after federal re\'t'JJUe sha ring was adopted.'' When the city began i1s central park planning in 1969, RUD granted $2.3 million for a 50-50 share of the cost of ac· quiring the park Jru1d. The original agreement, says Belsito. Included a clause in which HUD agreed to also share the additional costs if any of the condemnation procedures were challenged In court. Four pie<:cs of property did wind up in court, and a jury awarded the property ov.ners $545.000 more than the ci1y wanted to pay. The newest HUD grant brings the federal total for th e central park to $2,573,000. Huntington Beach recently received $225,000 from county govern- ment to help pay for the big park. According to city officials, the total cost of acquiring 178 central park acres "·as $4.102,175. The city already owned 72 acres before the park project began . A development contract of $'l.4 million 11•as awarded to Valley Crest Landscap- ing: which is now building the park. From Pagel TRANSPAC. • • Penln!Ula Ya cht Club, and Starwagon, a Cal 43 owned and skippered by Dan Elliott, NlfYC, placed third and fifth in Class B. Warrior \\"as the winner of Class A and Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon, NHYC, was third in Class A. 'Chutzpah 's victorious entry into Ala \Val Yacht Harbor was held up for more than an hour Tuesday night when a mili!Ary type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons aboard . The craft was caught in one. of the giant seas that crashed against the shores of Waikiki Tuesday and Weclnes· day. The passengers were rescued by . fhe yacht race committee boats. No one was seriously injured. The seas subsided late Wednesday. The race will officially come to a close Friday with the gala trophy presentation dinner at the Ilikai Hotel here. From Pa9e 1 HORSE ... Reed Nielsen ("Such a nice man; he reminds me of Ben Cartwright") kept the horse for safekeeplng, apparently figuring it was stolen. Meanwhile, the police had Contacted Nielsen and the Noell family had con- tacted the police. Suddenly everyone knew where Poco v.·as. So the family drove to Portage, Uta.h, last Friday to pick him up. 'Mley return- ed Wednesday aHernoon. And things are returning to normal. Poeo was in heaven: A bath, brushing and a b.1le of hay. "He v.·as so hungry,'' lY!ichelle said. "lie \ras dov.·n to J,000 pounds. But he's home!" !\tau Dies of Blast PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Highway p.'llrol1nan Alan fl Hansen, 34, died lo-- day in a Phoeniic hospital of burns suf- fered in the July 5 propane blast in Kingman . }{is death was the 12th caused by the explosion. Redevelop11aent Plata City-owne.d Area Gets Appraisal .. • By 'fEltH Y COVILLE 01 llHo ~Ur l"Ull Stitt The sale price of city-01\·ned pro~r!y in downtO\\'n lluntinglon Beach v.·ill be established scv~ral rnonth.s before a massive redevelopment pion is created. City t'Ouncilmen have agreW to hire appraiser Cedric \Vhlle to establish the value of the cily-conlrolled parcel' which !lhould fall under the proposed rt-d evelop- ment projccl. City Administ rator l)al'id Rowlands said today this is part of the compron1ise with do\vnto"11 property 01\·ners so both sides don't fight over 111 sale price aflt>r redeve.lop1nrot start s. Rowlands said he expects the land ap· praisal 10 be finished within t"·o months. Kenneth Ca rlson , president of the engineering firm of Voorheis, Trindle 't'lnd Nelson (VTN ), said last ,.,.eek it wilt take nine months to a yea r to create the doYo11town redeve lopment master plan. Under terms of a peace settlement between the city and downtown property owners, VTN has been given the authori· ty to tTeale a plan for future develop- ment do\lilltoYoTI. Carlson said VTN will spend $300,000 to $500,000 of its own money to write t~ plan, but will have control over the development process. He said anywhere from tv.·o to 15 VTN staff members will work on the ·plan· ning stage. and during development the VTN crew might be as big as 50 engineers and othe.r staff members . Essentially, the redevelopment project Trustees Slate Prog1·ess Report • On Care Center A progress repari on a proposed day care center for the Fountain Valley School District will be given to trustees when they meet tonight at 7:30 The project will be up for approval by the county Board of Supervisors within two weeks, said Dr. Robert Sanchis, assistant superintendent for instruction . Plans call for the center to provide educational programs for as many as 30 children whose parents are being trained or retrained for employment, Sanchis said. ' The facility , to be located at Lamb School, would provide all-day care for three and four-year-olds and afternoon supervision Ior schoOI children up to 14 years old. Cost of the $91 ,460 project \l·ould be shared by federal, state and county funds , Sanchls said. The meeting will be held in 1he district's education center, Number One Lighthouse Lane. Pinelvood Race Slated Saturday The annual p1ntv.•ood derby. sponsored by the 11untington Beach Recreation Department, will be held at 1 p.m., Saturday, in the city gym. Recreation officials say about 200 pinewood derby kits (small, \\·ooden model cars) have been ~Id 10 youngsters at the city's 40 summer playgrounds. There is no estimate on how many will compete Saturday. Pinewood derby builders will compete in two age brackets, 11·14, and those under IL Trophies go lo flrsl place win· ners ribbons for second through Sth place in each bracket. The city gym is at 16th Street and Paln1 Avenue, next to D ...,, ye r ln\ermedlate School. will cover five downtown , oceanlrode l:>JoCks·and the cil}' pier. Carlson s.11id IHb< plan could cover a larger ;1rea~ Jf.. desirable. VTN has hope s of establishinK maj0-• hotels downtown and attracting a stri~ of interna1ional restaurants. T h .ei responsibility for coord inating develol_k men! and financing has been given 10: VTN. "I lhink 11 has such polentia\ I don 't tniod taking on that responsibility ," Carlson said today. "This is some of the: choices! property in Orange County." The city has agreed 10 provide parkirig for lhe plan t1nd 10 sell city-owned parcels to major properly owners Bob Terry, ~1artha ·Bol t and George. Ingraham. as v.'ell as VTN. If necessarv and feasible , lhe city might also build a convcnlion center. The property owners. led by Bob Te:f· ry, have agreed to drop thei r $8.5 milliM inverse conden1nation suit agains t the cl· ty. if tfie council adopts the VTN master p!an. Thllt lllwsuit stemmed from the lark or development downtown while the city ,,·as crealing its now defunct ''Top of tbe Pier" plan. 'Tape' Hoax Perpetrated On Ervin · . WASHINGTON (AP) -The S.nal• Watergate investigation took a bizzare tum today when the chairman announced that he had been told President Nixon ~ould release tapes of his White }-louse conversations, then discovered it was all a hoax. Sen. SaEJ J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.). ma4C the announcement at the start of a conf. mittee session, then took the microphone. minutes later to say be had been the vic- tim of a hoax. "It would have been helpful if we could have found a secure telephone," said Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. (R·TeM.), the viee chairman. Ervin first said he got word from Secretary of the Treasury George P . Shultz that the President had agreed t9 release relevant tape recordings. , He said he found out later from the• White House that no such decision ha4 been made, and from Shu ltz that the; secretary had not made such a cal!. ~- Pilots' Families, Airlines Suing County· Officials ' '. 'j\.fONTROSE, Colo. (APl -ContinentaJ.' Airlines and the fa milies o{ twa California pilots killed in a plane crasli near here filed notice today of claim.i totaling $6 million against the ~1ontrosi County government . :· The pilots, Robert Walsh of HuntingtOO Beach and James ford of Thousand Oaks, ,,·ere killed April 13 v.·hen a small jet belonging to Continental crashed near the Montrose County Airport. • Continental President Robert Six ani his y,rife , actress Audrey i1eadows, haQ deplaned here and the craft ha ·'. taken oU again v.1hen the crash occurred. ~ Montrose County officials h a v e forwarded the claim notice to the coun~ ty's liability insurance company. • The families of the tv.·o pilots ar~ claiming $2.5 million each and Con- tinental $1 million. ' Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For less Than1>u/l(a,f> 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. COLD WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE CUBES! Witllaut Opening Tiie Door ' 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA ' Aut.,orlud GE SERVICE REFRIGERATOR FREEZER , • Ice bin stores 10 lbs., about 260 cubes; au1om1tlc Jcemaker re- places Ice tt you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 lbs . • Convertible 7-0ey Meet Keeper. • Adfustable, tempered gl11s shelve1 . • Rolla out on wheels for 111y clunlng. • No delro1tlng ever WE TAKE Tn.AOE· IKS 90 DAY CASH 'WITH Af'll•OYll Clr~IT , Downtown Costa ~sa -Phone 5-48-7788 • • ( j I • 4 DAILV PllD~ 1Schooner Gives Hop e Phase 4's Not Making Anyone Happier , ' ... ,To Addicts •"· \\lt\SIUNCTON fU PI ) -Exc~pt for bee f. President X1xoo '!li price rreczc on food ·v.1as /!Ired today and he nnd hi! cbict advisers acknowledaed there \Viii be a Quick and substantial rise Jn "'hat ii cos1s to feed Ameri can families. the Presidt'nl's econ1ruc advisory council. admitred today. "nobody Is going to be very happy about u•hat we did." ~·· PARIS 1AP1 -·rhc French !$Chooner ..:t Go¢ Hopr.. \~l1h 20 special pusscngers ''aboard. ha~ j_ust returned ti:om a four- ' 'month cruise 1n the \\'es t Indies. ·.' The p::isseng crs "isitcd picturesque islands. Y.-t~nt spearfi shing and sa1nplcd .. 0me or lhc night life. 'nlis was the element ol the new Phase IV economil' plan. unveiled late \Vednes- day. that will be most Immediately felt and Herbert L. Stein. chairman of "TllE PRODUCERS are going to be unhappy we dldn'l leart one .,..·ay and con- sumers are going to be unhappy we didn 't lean that v.•ay." said Stein. "But tha!'s the nature of 1he proble m.•· 1'he program also includes a con· ~ Al sea they played bridge. re11d . relax· cd and helped the crew of the l21)..foot sailing ship. • \\'hen 1h<' cruise started the passcngcrs \,·ere rmaciat!!d and stared vacantly into • .. space for hours OQ e_nd. They _had tell-tale • .1Jinpricks on !he tris1de of their arms. "'· TIIEY \\'ERE llARD·CORf: drug ad· ". diets -selected because of their seem· ,.~ ingly hopelsss condition. . 1 ':'heir leader on the cnuse v.'as a '' Vrench Jesuit priest who doubled as cook, radio operator and mechanic .. '' Thret years ago. the Rev . J\11chel ' ,Jaouen, 53. cnme up with the idea of the • . -.~ 1 'For tl1e f i 1• x t t1vo :; "' o 11 I h s tl1 e 11 tloppe d , 11ro1u1d, jn•t eatl11g a11d "slee pl11g . • • Tllo•e 11:ho <.'0 11ld •I u 1111 puttere d ubo1ct •.• ' f has been in charge of addicts on the Good Hope. which once carried cattle 'across the Baltic Sea. t "Sure you can cure drug addicts in f hospitals and clinics.·• said Father t Jaouen in an interview. ··Thank God that 1 facilities exist on land. But I think the :sea cure is bettor. : ··With drug addicts. the first thing you hiave to do is drag their heads above ~vater. figuratively speaking. In a :hospital or clinic you can argue \vith ~these kids until f9rever and in my opinion ?you won't get anywhere . • \_ ;'IF THE KID IS not in physical shape lo fight. and to struggle over the Jong '1aul. its not worth it to give him lectures :and preach to him. • "But if he is resuscitated, if he regains ltii s taste ror life, if he discovers people ~vho can live ~·ith him as a buddy "'ilhout uJterior motives. then he discovers very haturally and very simply what life can be." On the cruise w~e 20 addicts 18 to 2,i ,Yl'ar-0ld~. two-thirds of them men. "For the firsl t"·o months they llopped around. just c;iting and sleeping."' fathf'r .laouen said, "Those who could sland pul· tercd about sometimes."' BY TflE Tl!\1E THE ship arrived in the \Vcsl Indies. the group began 10 take an inlcreit Iu. things. Of tht *1' addicts he has taken on three cruises, Father Jaoucn sayi. only ll.l.'O or three have reverted to hard drugs. "Some ol the others occasionally".nuikc mistakes bu!. they geoeralty keep straight. Falhcr ~Jaouen·s first voyage oo the Good Hope wa5 privately financed by the parents or the. addicts ,he took along. Then se\•eraJ government a g e n c i c s became interested and backed his next l\\'O trips. Russ Recog nize Afghan R epublic NE\V DELHI I UJ)I) -The Soviet l 'nion has recognized the government that seized po\\·er in Afghanistan Tues· day, overthro\ving the king. the offical Kabul Radio. monitored here. said today. India said it, too . is recognizing the Ile\\' Afghan repu blic. Free Btieks For 15 1ninutes in front of !he \Vrigley Building in Chicago \Vednesday. lucky pedeslrians received Sl bills rrom lifrs. Gwyneth ~Jorgan. who sald she met a man who asked her to distribute $200 for him. :\fter a brief stay she told the crowd gathered she Y.'3S "go- ing for a sa nduii('h." and ne\•er returned. Heavy Fighting leaves Casualties Near Saigon SA1GON ! L1PI t -(io\·ernn1ent and n1unist artillery barrage. They said Ccrrununist troops battled u•lthin 30 miles govemment troops infli cted the heavy of Saigon today in heavy fighting that has casualties "'hen the Communists follov.·ed left 80 casualties on both sides in a little up the shelling with a ground attack. O\•er 2-4 hours. the Sai~on comnwnd said . A command spokesman said fighting narcd again toda y \l'ith a Communist shelling and ground attack near the South Vietnamese government's Lai Khe camp 30 miles north of Saigon. He said six Communi sts and one go,·ernment soldier 11'C're killed and one South Viet· namese rroop 1\·as .,..·oundcd. SHOHTLY BEFORE da\\'11 Wednesday the Communists opened up with a 400- round art illery barrage and launched .t ground atlack near Lai Khc, the CO•TI· mand said. In the 12 hours that followed. ~i Communists and three govern ment tr oops \vere reported killed. and 28 governme nt soldiers 1vounded. SEVERAL OTHER skirmishes broke. out at scattered points in the area throughout the day but the command said it had no details. In Saigon. the South Vietnamese and Viet Cong agreed \Vcdnesday to free all prisoners each side holds. starting next Tuesday. Prisoners must go free by July 23 under the terms of the June 13 Paris accord reaffirming the Vietnam truce. In Cambodia . Communist force s 1virhstood more intensive American bomb- ing \Vednesday and maintained ~·hat of. ficials described as "heavy pressure·• on Phnon1 Penh. Cambodian officials said insurgen ts 1verc fig.p.!ing lo !he north, south and \Vest of the capital. Sardar Mohammad Daud, lender of thl' coup and cousin and brother-in-law of ousted King Mohammed Zahir Shah. ha.'J been named lo four top posts in th~ governn1cnt, an Athan diploma! here sai d. Rad io Kabul said \Vednesday that Oaud \\'as proclaimed president of the new republic. Communists. the command spokesman said, al so hit the camp \1'ith 122mm shells l\londay, the closest the big Soviet-bui!t . cannon have come lo Saigon. DESPITE TllE fighting, t11·0 convoys c11rrying 1rifal supplies reached Phnom · Penh . There were no details of the U.S. bomb- ing, now in its 134th day since the in· tensified American air 11·ar began. The spokesmen sa1a \Vednesday's fighting began 11·1!h a 400-round Com· Midcontinent Gets Soaked Tliunclerstor1n s Scattered Ove r Great Basin, Rockies fl~ lhotlla Prl • nt 1r IO ag1•n OlllH ll·gl\~ _l rt Prtdittl'<I 11' !Ill UD Ill'• f¢J 11 ,,. U.~l••t1 w(lfl lh<t wet~r '.mDt<11ur1 el .,. <1111r"'· mlG ~' to ~"' "°' fn ,.,. S1111 Ftrn""(l0 ~nd i •11 Y111t-1.i ~11t,~1, 1JiJ ClfO"•tC• t~ mo)Un. •1ln rttor!t 1no ••·\10 el~rtt• In Int dCN,ft ""~'""°" w!""'t "°"" 1\-li mil•\ ~n hll\I• ••t •-IM'ttfcl 1n -0,11•1 ••e•• l-1 ""'" ' • ltOIT" ,,. • + .. fo.111~1 !lf'(l1""'' I& 4)-f.O 1!t""""' In ,,. _,.r.,. WA•M '"IWOflll4..,_ \j .. .,._ l l GIHD-----, ••• ,,. G!~ --,ji .. ow ~ '--"'' l.i.G!J~'lo ·-, ILQW IJ.S. S11mn1•r11 ly Tiit d.1-l•lfll ''''' l"l>undl'lllK'!'l'lt dumptd Mt vv ,,1.,, l!'lro 'iM•ll of t11• mldCllf!ltllt f'I! IO<:l•v llnd 1\1! ttA!!t•ld ftcl10<11 w!ll\ l\lgll .. 1..01 •11d l••oe 11•11. Ht•\ly •f •nl IWlmPf(f •• ,, t tnlr•I K•n•••· t~rrernt ••tl•rll Nfbtt1~.t llld .-.11ern low"f IMllK't <It•"· Fl•t ll !IOOCl+llQ 1)((11'1'11 •II P•rl1 11 r ll"r!l>t•Sl('f"ll 1( • .,,., • ''"" to ""' •fltl>tt of •••II O••.,tf'INI ,.,..._ fl••h n1 K1111•1 frft"' lot~ \"eon~•v to t~•lv lcxl•Y Ovt• "" 1~ct1 tell In " ont·,.our ~rloa M To11<1~• T~un11e«to11,., P-n>uced t01 n,11e.per. hOV• winds di '-orlo1~. '-nD .. •no 1,n. inch ";ul ~t Chlll/~IO. 101,1lhfdll or l:!oc.,f51tr. Minn Olh,., lhu~~er1torm' "'''" wlo~lv 1c11l!frad over !hf Grf~! 8 ~1ln, lh~ r<".ntr,11 ;ond 1ovtt1ern qoc~ltl, wt'ltrn Tt~as arid !~ Gull CO••' I (lw wl\t re. mo11 01 Ill~ n~tlon •n- lo"t't<l ••Ir 1~lt1. Howtvt•, "••v lkll~ ~...:i Qm~ l~g ~'l>U(!~a ~·~•• ''°"' .v.;c.,,qan end CllinOI\ 10 .. l~b•mJ •M 1ell!N ov@r 1ht! 4J)l)lollclllotn1 •no l lOf"\I I)" Plclllt (NII. l1Ll!\J~l[1JJ DELIVERY SERVICE llelrvery ol tne D•fy ~~I is gwran1eed MeaUf.frU,. ~ 1• .. "'1 Utt ,_ ,.rt,,S:JIJJ..ullllllrwunwt lit tr"ltl fl Jll. Cab "' !Art .cl 1:JI ,... Slllr*7 w .,,,. If ,. •• rtclitl ,_ c.,,. 'r I l._ ~WUr. • I ,_. SnhJ, tJ1 IM a c.,, lilt • •-r•I II ,. cm•• t;iu .i1 11, • lelelf(lr1f1 ... , .... """ •ui 142.4J11 kllnftlf llftr~t• kid Jlf Wtlta.IJ!tt 1~0·1221 SB Clr!Mnlt. C.St1• tw S. "" c,,,illr,., 0111.1 ,._ Sot!~ l,l(tM, litllfll I.flit! 491·4'28 llnuotion or co111rols on wa&e increases 10 about 5.5 pert'(!nt and stlpulates that a business Urm can raise: oortrun priCea PHASE 4 EFFECT ON GAS, AUTO INUDUSTRY, Paa-26 only so much as production cost.a in· crease. BesJdes most food, the price Veto Threat Fails to Halt · Powers Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -The House has ignored a veto threat by President Nixon and approved a bill that would require presidents to halt within four months any war commitments ·they make unless Congress grants approval. THE BlU.. \VAS passed 244 to 170 after Nixon served notice by telegram that "I an1· unalterably opliWed to and must veto any bill containing the dangerous and un· constitutional restrictions" in it. The Senate could approve its 0\\'11 war powers bill Friday, setting the stage for an early showdown bet~·een Nixon and Congress. Nixon 's telegram v.·as read to the House by Republican leader Gerald R. Ford. who objected to the bill saying it "'ould Jet Congress force a war halt in 120 days by "twiddling our thumbs" and doing nothing. ··IF WE DON'T want a conflict con- tinued the Congress should have the courage and the guts to stand up and \'Ole against it." Ford said. The bill also came under fire from !he House's most outspoken 1var critics, \vho contended i t would give presidents authority to "'age \rar on their o~'ll for 120 days. "I think the re are enough loopholes in this bill to fl y sorties of B52s through." said Rep. Bell;:i S. Abzug , (0 -N.Y.). Nixon specifically cited the bill 's t\\"O niajor features as th e "dangerous and constitutional rest raints" he said he \1·ould have to veto. Recovered Nixon Plans to Keep Full Scheditle · \VAS HTNGTON (AP) -President Ni~· on. pronounced recovered from viral 1n1eumonia and,. ready to leave his hospita l quarters Friday, is planning to carry out as full a schedule as passible next 1veek, \\lhile House spokesmen said. Nixon hoped to be discharged today from the Bethesda, Md., Naval Hospital but his doctors persuaded him to remain there until Friday morning. 1vhen he will fly by helicopter to Camp David, Md., !or a \\'Cekend rest. Shortly before 8 a.m. the White House issued 1he following medical report: '"The President ate dinner aher being l'i!.itcd by Julie and David Eiscnho\'ier. lie slept throughout the night without dif· ficulty and was still asleep at 7:45 a.m. this moming. ··His temperature has r em a in e d nor1nal. No further treatment will be re- quired today. The President will continue 10 meet \rith his staff and have interval rest periods.·• freeze Imposed June 13 was lifted Im· mediately on he1lth care fees. It \\'Os the food segment of the pro- gram that drew the greatest attention, from the President oo down. In a written statement, Nixon said, "Thlre is no way, with or without tontrols, to prevtnl a substantial rise In food prices. u STEIN ECHOED this-today. "My personal view is that we \\'ill have a bulge over a period of some months," he said, but li ke Nixon he insisied the price rise \\'OUld be mlK'h Jess in the latter part of the year and continue to level oft in 1974. "It is clear that the big increase in the supply of meat is about a year off because \.\'e have this fall the big increase in the crops of com and soybeans -the things that animals eat -and it takes a year tor the animals . . . lo come to market," Stein said. "But the whole process that 1\'e are engaged in is one of a delicate balance in our interest in restraining the prices and our interest in getting the output out." JOHN T. DUNLOP, chairman ol the Cost of Living Council, and Stein both re- fused to predict how much food prices v.vuld rise , all hough a food chain 1poke1Y ban forecast a 4-5 pel"Ct'nt jump in the next two mornhs . Dunlop also to0k ii.Sue with a WC· eeslion that the adminit:tration waittd too long to act and sald, "It's wrOl'I&' to say Americans are p a y 1 n I a severe price," tor this. "We think w~ moved as to04\ as wt could,'' said Dunlop. ~· The expectation is that by the lime housewives do their weekly shopping at the su permarket next week, they will see the effects or the removal of the freeze on Jood prices. The freeze on beef lasts until Sept. 12. TREASURY SECRETARY George P. Shultz, a prime architect of the Phase IV policy, stressed today that the removal ol restrictions on beef "will absolutely lake place" as promised Sept. 12. Shultz conceded that, "yes, as com- pared to pork producers," the rules do discriminate against beef producers. But he said the President felt that controls could not be lilted all at once in all areas and he wanted to "try to let up first in areas where \Ve had lhe greatest threat of shortages." At a Glan~e WASHINGTON (AP) -Here, at a glance, are lhe basic elements of President Nixon's Phase 4 economic program: GENERAL-The price freeze is lifted immediat~ on food and health industries. All other sectors of the economy remain frozen until Aug. 12, when new rules become effective. At that time, price increases will require 30.day prenotification and will be restncted to dollar-for-dollar reflection of actual costs with no added markup in profits. WAGES-The ~eneral 5.5 percent guidelines Jn effect during Phase 2 and 3 is continued. EXEMPTIONS-Controls will be lifted Aug. 12 on public ulilily trates. wages and prices in lumber and plywood industries and small businesses with fe\ver than 60 employes. FOOD-A two-sta ge program will per1nit price increases only when they reflect an actual dollar-for-dollar increase in the cost or raw agriculture products since June 8. Beef prices will re1nain frozen until Sept. 12 when manufacturers and processors will be anowed to pass on all cost inc-teases.,;on a dollar-for-dollar basis. . PETROLEUM-Price ceilings will be imposed Aug. 12 on gaso· hne. heating oil , diesel fuel and crude oil. RENTS-Rents y.•ere not included in the 60-day freeze announced earlier by the President. and ren1ai11 exempt fro1n controls under Phase 4. Hit-1·L111 .Su spect Returns Ho1ne; 'Rather Be Shot' ORLANDO. Fl;:i. (AP I -The 1nother of the man charged with the hit-and-run deaths or t.,..·o Tampa sisters says her son told her he would rather be shot than returned lo jail. the Orlando Sentinel Star reports. , Raymortd A. !\lc~1ahon. \\'ho served time in the Georgia State Penitentiary for kidnaping a 7·year-old girl in Fulton County in 1959, "'as charged \\'ilh first- degrce murder \Vednesday in the deaths of Roxanne Caton . 13. and Rabyn C<iton. 5. POLICE SA ID the older girl "'as killed instantly when a vehicle veered into the l\~·o girls and their brother as they were \\'a!king near their home last Saturday. The driver stopped. put the older girl in the car and drove off, police said. Her body \\'as found 36 hours later. A few hours before the body was found, the S.year-o!d girl died in a Tampa hospital . Police said the bro ther. Qui.is Ca100. 12. SJJffered only minor injuries. Scores of policemen fanned out over the Orlando area to<lay in search of the 31-year-old karate expert and former Bi· ble student. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Good Investment News: BUY DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE Now available fo r the public: fine jewelry from several large estates at Costa Mesa Jewelry. Save 503 . Estate jewel ry priced for immediate sale. Invest now for unbelievable 50% savings. Wise inves tment opportunity. Collection includ es diamo nds, rubies and emeralds. Hig invest- ment demand because of increasing value and limited suppl y. Beautiful selection of ladies and men 's. rings and watches. ~~legant necklaces. hracelets and pins in gold nr platinum . Pricer! from $200 to $10,000 ... values to $20,000. Out -of-Pawn jewelry-a great investment. Hundreds of precious and semi -precious items now available. Prices low as $10. Make So meone Happy with the perfect gift from Costa Mesa Jewelry. Make a sound financial investment too. RAC l'l'l 'S E'xq1lisite platinunt neckla~e wi t h 156 diamondR. l'enr·xho1>1.'d rlrr111 (J •• ;.; kf11vrlsJ r·hained '1!! .!i llflyuetff !l. ,"{,'< bri(- l11t1i l~. ftllrl 1(c:(1r11h: r/11.~tt'I'!< of ~fJ ~11ar­l/fti~r11t t/in11111111/J<. 1f1t11bc 111•1•1: f.i l.v11·a1.~. $I.''. IJIHJ 1·nl 11e. l'ritt r1:1/ 1u"&f to $~'.!I.II.!. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1838 Newport Boulevard. Costa Mcs~I. California 92fi27 714 /646-7741 I • ' •' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, N<D. 200, 4 SECTl<;lNS, 56 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973 N TEN CENTS ' . ( Sailing~ Sailing Over Bounding Main Ol!lf '1 ~1 'n•teo by llith•'' O••-• WHAT TO DO WHEN THE BOAT FALLS OVER IS DEMONSTRATED WITH SKILL AND CUNN ING BY YOUNG DISTAFF SAILOR ON THE WATERS OF NEWPORT BAY ____ , ---------------- Transpac Yacht Hits Reef, Sinks Boy~ II~ Saves 2 Bathers His name is !\1ark Schmidt. not l\1ark Spitz, bu\ to a pair of exhausted ocean bathers trapped in a treacherous riptide off Newport Beach a couple of weeks aBP, he was the greatest swimmer of all time. !\lark, 11 , a Daily Pilot carrier boy and dedicated summertime surfer, helped save one and possibly bolh from drown· ing in the June incident at the 22nd Street Beach near Ne.,..•port Pier. He is now being nominated to the Na- tional Surf Life Saving Association as a \\'Orthy candidate for a heroism cit.<;1.lion CdM Free,vay Construction Seen in 197 4· Bv JOHN SCHADE 0°1 lh• D•llY Pllet Slaff Orange County Road Commissioner Ted l\lcConville says preliminary \\·ork on the Corona de! ~1ar Freey.•ay through Costa Mesa may resume next year. McConville told· · members • at the Orange Coast Association luncheon \Vednesday that enough money may be available in next year's State Depart· ment of Transpor!ation budge~ .JO begin initial ,,·ork on the route. from the San Diego Free\vay overpass at Bristol Street to a point near the UC Irvine campus. \Vork on the free\voy has been stalled recently for lack of funds. McConville added that route grading at MacArthur Boulevard and University Drive 'viii show the actual alignment of the freeway. Plans are also moving ahead for the development of an area m a s t e r transportation plan~ the commissioner said. The plan will serve as area suggestions for the state and coastal commission plans, scheduled for competition in January of 1975, he added. "Some agencies think \\'e should just ~t a priority for these p\ans and then go ahead with them," 1'IcConvil\e said. ... The road department, t h o u g h , btlieves that each community should present its own concepts, views and needs for studf in development of an overall plan," he said. "We.'ve received a good response from the coastal communities, and a better fee ling on the matter than ever before," he added. rvtcConville sa id it is ilnporlant lo have a full transportation system plan so the cOllnty \1•ill be able to rcct!lve and ef· fectively handle fully funded federal pr!> grams. The comm issioner added that a study (Sot CdM ROUTE. Page Ii STOCK VOLUME LIST IN ERROR Due 10 an error in 1ransmi55ioo1 the New York Slock Exchange clot- lng ll5t is published today with some Incorrect volumes for several stocks. The error resulted in volume fig· ures not being updated In a num- ber of Instances. It h1ts been rem«licd and lhe correct figures wUJ run for tomorrow's editions of the Doily Pilot . in a letter from Ne\\'JXlrt Beach r.·larine Safety Director Robert F.. Reed. r.1ark, of 118 Via Ithaca. Lido Isle. is pleased but doesn't seem lo think he did all that much. "It is outstanding." Reed emphasized in his note to r\SLSA President Phil Stubbs, stressing r.1ark's age. The Newport Elementary School pupil 'vho delivers papers to 37 customers on Lido Isle each day, in addition to surfing, turned his board over to the t"'·o near- drO\\"lling victims. He then swam ashore braving the rip • Erv·i1a 'Takeia i••' himself. being both a tough little sv.·1nl· mer and light enough to ride high in the water. '"I v.·as just paddling around and these guys slarted yelling: 'Help.' and I thought tliey \\'ere joking,'' recalls f\lark. He headed !heir y;a y and was told by the desperate pair they could not make it back through the surfline and catch a "'ave to shore. f\1ark left them bis surfboard as a temporary life·raft and made the rough· water journey himself to notify Chief Reed's lifegu;irds. ' Scandal Probe Hoaxed By Phony Call On Tapes Y.'ASHTNGTON· (A.P) -A. hoax telephone call today led the chairman of the Senate Watergate committee to an· nounce that President Nixon was v.•illing ·hr release--tape recOrdings" of his \Vhite House conversations when in fact no such decision has been made. An ,embarrassed Sen. Sam J . Ervin Jr. (l).N.C.), conceded that he had been taken in by the hoax, after announ cing lo the televised Senate inquiry that the con· troversy over release of the tapes had been resolved. Ervin said he got a mld-<lay telephone call from a man who identified himself as Secretary of the Treasury George P. Shultz, and who said the President was prepared to release tapes the panel is seeking. He said he assumed it \vas the real Shultz, but it u.•asn't. Ervin said he found !hat out later, after the White House said it kne\v not hing of such a decision. he 11·as invoking executive privilege lo bar Secret Service testimony about the tape recordings. \Vith Ervin's announcement made and duly praised by the chairman and by Baker, the investigating committee resumed its questioning of former cam· paign aide Frederick C. LaRue. But not for long. . ~linutes later, Ervin v.'as back v;ith ar.other announcement. "It appears that a hoax has been perpetrated upon the committee, at lea st upon the chainn~n of the committee,~' he said. Ervin said he got the real Shultz on the telephone. The secretary said he hadn 't called. that "\\'hoever did it 11•as somebody else." The incident 11•as the more curious in · that, as Baker noted. the fake call came in on a confidential telephone in the Se nate aimmittee room. ... Beed only rccen lly leamed of f\1ark 's action. The son of Dr . llugo Schmid!. a Harbor Area dentist. ~lark rigures the v.·hole rescue mission took no more than 10 minutes. He also offers a theory with an 1 l·year· old's candor about hov,. the swimmers got into trouble. .. They \ven~ older men .. 22 or 23,"' he said. Chief Reed said 1n his commendation letter he hopes the young surfer someday ,1·i1J consider joining the lifeguard depart· ntCnL Food Prices Stay Stable • Along Coast By the Daily Pilot Staff Food prices remained generally un· changed along the Orange Coast tcxlay but spokesn1en for two major food market chains agreed that prices, especially on pork and poultry, \\.'ill cer· tainl y increase by next week. l\1eanwhile, store managers from Seal Beach to San Clemente reported they ":ere gelling a lot of questions from customers as the result of President Nix· on's Phase 4 aclion easing the food price freeze. ··shoppers seem to be waiting to get better information on 1o,rhal prices will do," observed San Clemente i\-larket Basket manager Derril! Roge rs ... By the tin1e they fin d out , it will be too late." r.lainly, the garne today see1ncd to be '"w ait·and-see" for customers, coastal markets and headquarters of chain stores themselves. "\\'e\·c never noticed any geographic trend before but this could be a possibili· !Sec FOOD, Page%) 'Ille real Strultz then told Ervin he was not the man who telephoned. II \'llS a bizzarre turn in a hearing about bugging. ,; ... Some people think !he telephone is the instrument ol the devil anyhoy.·," Ervin said. Pilot Buried "I th.ink it's the unanimous opinion or this committee that this \Vas a right dirty trick," Ervin added, using a phrase often repeated at the hearings about 1972 cam· paign tactics. "JI ~'OUld have been helpful lf. "'e could have found a secure te lephone." said Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. IR·Tenn.). the vice chairman. The whole sequence was slrange. si nce \Vhite House · Press Secretary Rotlald L. Ziegler had announced earlier In the day that Nixon Y.'OUld rrame a reply to the committee request for the tapes this 'i\'eekeod at Camp David, ?i.fd. Nonetheless, when Ervin reconvened the Watergate hearings, he did so with an announcement that NJ1on already had decided to release the tapes. He called It "a very wise dedslon on !he part of lhc President.'' But it "'-asn't so. The hoax caller who successfully posed· as Shultz said the President had decided to supply tope recordings.,or his 0~11 - versation5 with past ...com mittee wit~ nes~!I. The caller nlso told Ervin lhnl Nixon 11·0t1ld meet with hlm nc;ict week. The relay of such a message lhrough Shultz "·ould "'8ve been logical , since Nlxon had the~secretary of the treasury send the committee word Tuesday that Final Rites Held 30 Years Luter By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 I" O.lly Plltt Sttfl They buried Army Air Corps First Lt. Francis G. "Bud" McDowell Wednesday with an ainnan's poem. a short Episcopal service and military rites by servicemen not yet born when he died in v.·ar 30 years ago. Some 75 persons -many long·a go family friends in their hometown of Riverside -turned out at Pacific View 1'femorial Park in Corona de\ Ma r for y.•hat were actually historic rites. Not many more World War II casua.Jtles can be expected to relum home ror burial. The short service by tht Rev, Edward All<n, Episcopal chaplain at UC Irvine. came 30 years and one wetk to the day after LL AtcDowefl't B-24 Liberator born~ er crashed in New Guinea. His brother, \VIJllam 1'fcDowe11, of 432 Angelita Drive, Corona dcl ~far, leamed wreckage or the plane his brother piloted had betn found. just one week ago 1vhen he read a D::tlly Pilot stol')' or a crev.111an 's burial " lie rte()gniied the man 's na me from Ont' O( bis brother'$ Old ttJ~ht rosters, called his relatives in the Chicago Ill., ' a1-.i:e1. and 1hcy helped i\tcDoy,·clJ contact proper Army f!Ulhorities. "The lost has Oeen found :ind the homeless has been brought horn~:· t:C I Chaplain Allen said during \Vednesdav·s ritH. . The funt>ral 30 years <>ftcr the fact of Lt. McDo1,·clt's death at the age of 22 ap- peared no.less moving to those who at- tended and wept as a bugler pla yed taps. '"!Ang since have you received him in· to your flock . . . " reminded the Rev. Allen. as a burial squad of enlisted men from Fl. ttlacArthur in San Pedro held an American Flag over the casket. A squad of rinemen fired a triple ~a\ute to. Li . f\icDowell , winner of the Sliver Star for bringing his bomber back frcm one mission "''ith four crewmen 111·ounded and three engines shot up. Tht:! dramatic 1943 landing at Fenton f'!eld in Australia \li'as-filmed by an old Pathe News Scrvicf crew and shown 10 AnlCrlcans In a wartinlc newsreel. The later mi ssion from which t.t. l\lcDowell and his creY.' or nine nel'cr rf'turncd y.·as attempted in n strange plane. after !heir OY.'n S.24, the Shady Lady , was ~maged in a Japanese attack on their airfield. 'THEY WERE OLDER MEN ' Lifesaver Schmidt, 11 Heavily Arn1ed Vietnam V cteran Gives Up i11 CdM A youth claiming to suffer aftcr-crlrcts of Vietnam conlbat duty surrende red h1s tv.·o rifles ;ind a pi stol and \\'as hos pitaliz· ed \Vednesd:iy . <1f1cr hcing talked out of a sho\1·do1vn by a i\cv.·port Beach police li eutena11t. Thl' 19-yca r-o!d man ··•as admitted 10 Orange County ~lcdical Cen ter fo r psychiatric evaluation follo\1 ing the Corona del ;..1 ar confront.1tion handled hy Lt. (;ary Peterson . Investigators sa id Lt. Peterson -a f\·larine Corps Reserve officer -spoke through a bedroom v.·1ndo1v v.·1111 the. you lh . \\"ho \\'as armed and asscrtedl y had suicidal plans. They 111·ere sent to his address :ifl('r hQlline volunteers at the Orange Count y Cri sis Center. a suicide.prevention hureau . traced his anguished telephone call arid notified pohcc. Eagle Sloop Ha s Gasl1 By AL,\IOS LOCKABEV t!OXOL ULU -One of the racing boa ts in the Transpacific Yacht Race hit a rttf and sank on \Vaikikl beach a few minu tes ::ifter she had " finished late \Vednesday night. Eagle. a Coil 11 sloop skippered by La r- ry K. Shorett ·of Corinrhian Yacht club. San Francisco, arparently wandered into the. Y:rong ~hanncl nrar lfa~·aiian Village Y.'h1le coming toward the jetty entrance .ind hii a reef. She had a la rge hole in her side and 1~·hrn the Coast Guard pull- ed her free she sank . Eagle: had been foll owing a committer boa! but lefl on her ov.'n y.·hen the escort vessel y.•ent back lo the finish line to pick up another fini sher. The grounding oc· curred at 8:40 p.m. 11onolulu timt. The creY.' ~·as rescued wilhout serious injury. Eagle had been tabulated as fourth in Class D after sailing the 2.22~mile race across the Pacific. Only eight of 60 sta rters remained at sea_ th is morning. including Defiant, 1rh1ch is under to1\• \\'ith a·broRen rudder, a.nd Vicarious, still sailing y.·ith a jury r1J?ged mast. Four Newport !!arbor based boat'I \l"ere among the first ten in the overall handicap standings v.·hen 10& unofficial final resu tis were computed today .. Only 13 hours and 35 minute s separated the first and lenth place fini shers on han- dicap time de spite the slowness of the race on elapsed time. T1.1·0 of the controversial ultra light d·~placemen t bo::its finished 1:1mong !he first ten, including the overall winner, despite heavy time penalties. . Ty,·o Ne1vport boats won their respcc- l 1\'C classes and others placed in their class-. Al Cassell's 51).foot Rrill a1n Chancr· de!.igned \\'arrior was the only Class A boat among the first ten . Ciary ~lyers' Cal 39 Blue St reak, :'\cy.·port Harbor Yacht Club. was the v.·inner in Class C. Sanderling JV. a Columbia 43 co-skippertd by Sob Poole and Jack Jbhnoon of Bahia Corinthian !See TRANSPAC, Pogt 2~ Pa1rolman Tom Stey.·ar1 said !he man repeatedly mentioned su icide during the incident, in y.·hich he had t1vo rifles ready and a pistol that fired pellets under the 1 pillow in his bedroom. Orange Coast rJuring the ramhlin~ dialogue \\·ith J,t. Peterson. the youth ch1im1~d he had been a member of an Hndt'rv.·atcr lkmoh11on · Team tUDT t sta11oned 1n Souihl-:ist A'\1a lie :ilso told 1hem he reacts \\Jlh p:i111r to C\"C!l the sound of a car back-firing lo· day. beca u!'t it reminds him of !he ~un· fire and explosive bl asts encoun tered 111 the service. lnvcsligators y.·ho placed him in a police car lo be taken to Orange County f\ledical Center ror sludy and lft'atment Mid en route he suddenlv btoltt!\'ed he hiid betn captured by tfte Viet Cong. They said during the ride he kept screaming his name rank and seri-al number, as PO\Vs are tnught to do 1f laken into custody by the enemy. l\ew Profei;s or Hired OAKLAND tUPI J -Author .Jessica f\litford, listed th ree ye11rs ai:o by the !louse Internal Sc<-urity Cornmhltt as an undesirable cnmpus spe11ktr. will btco1nc a socioloR)' prolesllOf' al San Jose State t.:nivcrs1ty in Septe.mbcr ' Weather • :\lore sun shine }'riday, folloY.·1n~ earl)' moming fog aod low clouds. moslly at the beach areas. Highs '"· the lo"' 70s a1 the sands rising !o near 80 inland. 01'ernight IOY.'S in 1he 60s. INSIDE TODAY The pos.~anger.~ of tl1e sc1'0011 - er Good llopt liai:e someliu ug i11 c-01nn1an ~ r1tedle pricks 011 [heir arms. Ou! the cruise dt· scribed on Page 4 may rnakc tllose rnarks disappear. ~.M • ...,. t A•11 "''°""' JI C1hi.tlll1 I "'9•111 •n (11\llflH Jl-41 Mvl.11 '•!WI 14 C6'"l(t JI N1Ji.\'11 H.w\ 4, IJ (,Ml..,.. II Ot"t llM c ... 111Y II 0 .. 111 NfllC." I~ 11'9111 ll·M t•l .. r!11 •• ,, • 11ttll Mlri!Rlt M-JI 1"11!,t1tlolf0>•11! >f·ll l, .. '1'111911 • ,,11111(.t tt-t1 '""'"' »JI l'•r lllf 11.Clft 11. U WOf!"M't loltWI 1f.,t4 M~ )( ~Wiii N .... I t. II • • .. • • le UAIL.'r PILOl No ffarcf Feelings Priscilla Presley, 28, awaiting final divorce decree from sing· er Elvis Presley, reveals in the Ladies Home Jouroal that there are no hard feelings on either side. Mrs. Presley just opened a boutique in Los An geles. From Pqe 1 TRANSPAC. •• Yachl Club placed fourth in Class C. Two other Newport yachts, Nalu IV owned by Peler Grlnl, NllYC, and ski!>' pered by Harvey Kilpat rick, Monterey Peninsula Yacht Club, and Starwe.gon, a Cal 43 owned and skippered by Dan Elliott, NllYC, placed third and fifth in Class B. Warrior was the winner or Class A and Bob Grant's 61-foot sloop Robon, NHYC, was third in Cla!>"S A. • Chutzpah's victorious etttry into Ala Wai Yacht Harbor was held up for more than an hour Tuesday night when a mill t.vy type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons aboard. The craft was caught in one of the giant seas that crashed against the shores ()f Waikiki Tuesday and Wednes· day. The passengers "'ere rescued by tt>e yacht race committee boats. No one was seriously injured. The seas subsided late Wednesday. The race will offici ally come to a close Friday with the gala trophy presentation dinner al the Ilikai flotel here. Coast Man Hurt In Cycle Crash A Corona de! i\far man was injured in a motorcycle accident Wednesday af- ternoon at Park Avenpe and Hidden Va11ey Drive In Laguna Beach. Police said Thomas Noon, 24, of 319'1. Larkspur, told them he was coming down the sweepi ng curve on the Park Avenue hill when he was crowded off the road by a car behind him and lost control. He suffered cuts, a broken ankle, and fractured ribs. No citation was issued. He was reported in fair condition today at South Coast Community Hospital. Marine Chopper Falls, Kills 5 J\tARIET'TA. Ga . (AP ) -A lluey UH! Marine Corps helicopter was ending a 90- minute tr:tining flight when "'ilnesscs said it seemed lo CQme apart in the overcast sky. All five ?tlarines aboard were kllled. The main body and motor sliced lhrough a thic~ grove of trees and un- de rbhish. landing upside down less than SO yards from the home of 74-yea r-old Viola Tov.•ery. "f knew it wa s a hcliCQpter and I knew It was falling,'" r-.·lrs. Towery said \l/ednesday as salvage equipment moved past he r home 2S miles northY.'CSt of the Georgia -Alabn1na line. OIANGl COAST N DAILY PILOT TP>I Or1no1 (Mf/ D,11 ll 'f Pl~OT, "''"' Wll~P> " to<rlbi,.., IP>t NtWJ l'rtu, II ~I~ llY ""' D••11111 c w,1 P11bl.,111..., c-~11v kf>• "" .o.r-. ''' _,",...,· "'-•, '""°""" F•>01y, ta, Cait1 M ... 1, Nt..-1>9•1 BtM;ll, M1111l!llfllll" 0'1th/1"011111 .. 11 Vtl~~. lft ""I (1"'(11, lrvlnt /$-rt'to.iic• <te<f 5•11 (lt..,.Mtl S..11 J.,.11 C1pltTrlllO " \<110.. f!-QI0111l Klihan " P11llli1fttd S.!1>«1111 MWl ~vflll~y1. f~e prlllC•O.OI PllOllo"l"I plfn! tt fl lit) Wo,! I • .. i""'• Cot•• Mt11. C111•0•111t'. ''°;6. R1b11t N. Wt1d l'rui<ftfl! •l'ICI P111•!1ftr< ,.....-J1~• R. C11rl1~ 'll"t:I "rnNl ... I lril G9M•I! ,,.,.,,,..,, Tll1m11 IC11•il E<lllv< T1l1•1i.1 A. M11•p!I;,., M•Mtlne Cflr.i• L. P1t1t Kri•t Nt'w-1 ••'<II (llY <11 .. r """" .... Offlc:1 JJJJ N1wp1rt l1.,l1Yt r4 M1iliP19 Ai411111 P.O. l tr lt7S, 92••l °"" OHk" (tJI• MHI' l» Wfll ••'f S11tt1 L .. -ltO.Cft; JD ~Ol'•t ,11__, +1illlll"fllll lltldl: 1111, IH<fl ttvt..1N1 J.o,. Clt"*11t l MJ Nortll l!I Cl~ 11:111 Tel.,._... C7l41 64Z·4JZI Cl""lflH A•••rtllfttt 64Z·5671 '~"'""'· lf/J, Or•• '°"" "<ol:ltl111i..e (lfl'lp.t"'· "'• ...... , ... 111. ltl"'1!•111tlll. Mllflrltl ll'lllttf ~ ~ ... , ......... ~!! ........ ""'' IM •WO<lllAll w!!Nul •Pf(.1.11 '"' fl'lll~lon " toov•lofit Q-.. ll(llM (Jl<t 111l1M ,..,. 11 C11f1 Mf~. C11!,.,11le. klotcrtrt1i... b, c•rrlfr n .•J "11!111'11'1'1 _,, fl'll~ tJ IS """''"!•! mlllltfY •tllN!le"' U U fl'll!'lf111,, .CdM Unit,s Bid Denied By Panel Two duplexes proposed Side by side In Corona de! r-.1ar were turned dov.'Tl this week in the developer's absence by the Sooth Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commissio1 _ meeting in Long Beach. Four otht!r Nc1,~1µort Beach projects "·ere approved. flarold Sproul failed to show up for the public hearing oo his proposed duplexes at 617-619 Poinsettia Ave., although a neighbor opposing them 1,1·as there. Confusion increased when Co.inmission Executive Direclor Melvin Carpe nter recommended approval, it two parking spares per unit "'ere provided. Carpenter's \.\1ritlen report, which reoommended denial, said "this area ia rapidly approaching Balboa Peninsula and Balboa Island in its density and traf· fie problems," Sproul's project would have a density of 35 dwelling units per acre. When questioned by the commission, Carpenter said he changed his recorrt· mendation "based on the commission's attitude last week •• _ I thought I'd lost the battle on the density problem." The Orange-Los Angeles county com- mission last week approved a number of Nen'J)Orl Beach duplexes over Carpen- ler·s recommendation for denial, Vt'ith the eond1tion 2 to I parking be provided. "You should be for s om el hi n g regardless of how we \'Ole," Commi s- sioner Judy Rosener of Newport Beach admonished Carpenter. . Dick May of 615 Poinsettia Ave. argued that street parking in tbe area is already limit<d. He objected to the proPoSed demolition of a single-family home on one of the lots. A few commissioners wanted to delay actioo until Sproul was present, but the remainder said it lvas his respcnsibility to be there. The permit was denied 3 to 9. Approved by the coastline commission were : -Addition of an X•ray therapy room to Hoag Memorial Hospital, 301 t Blvd., Newport Beach. -Construction of 18 ngle-!amily homes in The Irvine Com y's~mon- tary Bay project on Baysi Dr e. The commission pn!viously app sub- division of 61 Jots for the water-oriented project. Located between Jamboree Road and Harbor Island Drive, the project has a density of. nine wtits an acre. -An 18,<m-square-foot expansion to in· elude a ballroom and meeting facilities at tbe Newporter Inn, 1107 Jamboree Road. eortunisslon 'Planners aJked that all drainage water be run through a clarifier to eliminate petroleum from the parking lot before it goes into Upper Newport Bay. Ne"'P(lrter rnn representative Edward Nigro objected and com- missioners said it would be an unfair burden on one applicant. , --Construclion of a fou r-unit con- dominium on two lots with 2 to 1 parking and three guest parking spaces at Adams Street and Balboa Boulevard by Donald Haskin. ' Carpenter had recommended denial because the project is 30 dwelling units per acre, but he \\'BS overruled. Fire Message Not Alarming A malfunctioning en1ergency "'ater flow alarm at Newport Beach's ne\\'IY opened \Valerfront cafe the Cannery sent firenien rac- ing fro1n a nearby station to in- vestigate early today . The picturesque restaurant at 3010 l..n(ayette Ave., was in no danger, however, and no water d<in1agcd the $1.3 million structure or its furnishings. F'iren1en utilized a tool used since time immemorial to fix the faulty <1\arm. One bangl'd it Y•ith his fist and shut it off. • • l1·vi11e Prl11c-lpol Elizabeth Graffis of Newport Beach has been appointed a principal of the Culverdale Ele- mentary Scbool, which Irvine Unified School District officials hope will open in the 1973.74 year. She has served as adrnin· istrator of schools in PlacenJia and Santa Ana and has taught kindergarten through college level classes, Jackson Sees Grain Deal Falsification \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Henry ?-.1. Jackson (D-Wash.), said today lie had evidence the Agriculture Department kr.ew in advance about last year's $1 billion Soviet grain deal and that big U.S. grain firms falsified their reports to the government on the deal. On the eve of a series of hea rin gs by his Senate Pennanent Investigations sub- committee, Jackson said the evidence he has thus far uncovered on the 1972 deal could prove that parties to the deal had violated federal la ws. "\Ve have sworn affidavits at this point at Agriculture was advised of the s2 es" before they occurred. he told a ne\\'S conference. . The f.griculture Departmcn~ has denied having advance knowledge or the sales, and a General Accounting Office investigation earlier this month found that officials didn 't know how much grain the Russians were buying from the American companies. Jackson further said there was "strong evidence" that the U.S. firms tried to keep the sales secret by "falsifying thair reports to the Commodity Exchange Authority. • "The evidence our investigation has turne<t. up tflus far leads me tq conclude that the Department of Agriculture - and especia!ly the Commodity Exchange Authority -encouraged secrecy in their dealings \vith the grain companies and the commodity exchanges." Information also uncovered by his sul>- committee. Jackson said, provided "substantial evidence"' that the Agriculture Department kept vital in- formation about the failure of the Russian wheat crop "secret (from American farmers) \\"hile in fact issuing mi ::leading reports on O\·erscas con- ditions and an anticipated domestic surplus." Burgla1·s Steal Valuable Tools A supp!:Y of tools and equipment \VOrth nearly $2.000 has been stolen in 1he burglary of a concrete company vehicle parked at 11 Ne"'IXJr! Beach cons truction sile. Ezekiel J. Perez. job fo reman tor the R. G. Job Company, reported the loss to Officer Bob Parker \llednesday after it \l'as discovered v•hen CQnslruct ion cre\\'S showed up !or '''ork . The trailer break-in occurred at a [ !!arbor View Homes tracl being built just off Ne\\"J)Ort Hills Drive East. police said. The loss included a generator. cemC'nl · .finis hing po1,ver and hand too Is . carpenter's levels and other items. Marilyn Monroe Killed By FBI, Writer Thirtks 1\F.\V YORK l lPI) -Nonnan f\.tailcr adrnHted \\'ednesday he lacked evidence to back up h!s theory 1hat Ffll and CIA agents had a reason to kll! "larllyn l\tonroe so as to embarrass the KeMed\f family. But the author stuck to thC theory anyway. In a small hot room at the Algonquin lfotcl packed "ith 60 ne1A·smcn, ~1ailer read a seven-page statement defending his conrroverslal biography of the actress •·hose 1962 death offi cially was detmed a suicide. \Yhcn he first starttd work on tht book, J\falle.r said he had hesrd "gossip and assumed Bobby KeMedy had an nffair '\\'ilh l\farllyn." But interviews and renec- lion convinced him that was not lruc . lhough "they ,,·ere togethtr A great deal and !hey were great friends ." he said . 11le.re was "no greater way to enl. barrass the Kennedy famlly" than to kltl ~flss i\tonroe, tlfoiler snid. The FBI and CIA. ~ said, wert "furious" hccau.!c President John F. Kennedy tried to limit their power aftc1 the Bay of Pigs In · vasion. "Rlght·wing F'BI and ClA agents," ~laile r said, "·ould have had a "huge nlotivatlon" ~o kill t-.·tiss ~fonroe. But he said he had no "hard e\'idcnce " to support his rharges. ~1aller said the autopsy on Miss (\-1onroe sho"·ed n high con cent r:ition of r-;embuta\ -a barbiturate -in her blood , but no evidence of lhat in her stomach. "Only one in eight deaths from barbiturates sho'A'S so high a level " of the drug in the bloodstrea1n, he $Aid. "In such cases, a residue is found In the stomach. "Thr Assumption follov.•s thnt a slOmach pump m11y hn,·e bcfn applled . .. Dr a le1ha1 overdose wa.s injected, '1 ~lll!ler was paid $50,000 to write tho book , origJnolly intended to be 1 prefac.-e for a book of photographs or ~t lss f..fr.nrot. Actor Peter Lawford . ., friend of !he nclress and Kennedy's in-law, has cDtled the book "vomit." "They hao-e charac1crizrd my book ' as a rip.off and wor!le things have betn said about It," said f..fai1er . "But 1 thought it ..-.·as a good book. One of my bcsi.·• From Page 1 FOOD ... ty," Frink Prior, m1nagtr ol the Thrlf- timart store. 2701 Harbor Blvd .. Coe:ta f..leaa said. "1 certainly OOpe not ," he ~aid. adding "you know the area is highJy compclitlve and no grooer wants to raise prleea." ''I've never nolicOO any trends before which affect. market prices here ," said 8111 Salzman, manager of the Stater Brothers market at 2180 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. A-fan11ger Bob Clark of the Safeway market of JOOO Bayside Drive, Newport Beach, suggested consulting the com- pany's district office for information. "Nobody Is really sure what is going on 1,1·Hh these prices," he said. Cn rl Zinkl, manager of the Pantry food market, Jl70 W. Baker, Costa Mesa1 said any price trends or changes will come dO\\'Tl from the district level but none have been received ··\Ve arc not closely tied to trends at the store level: we are only a little spoke in the wheel," he explained. "Eventually maybe 1he Eastern prices \\'ill reach us but right now our pri ces wi ll be the same until we get a directive to change them," said Nonn Davis, manager of the Market Basket store, 3100 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport Be!lch. Irvine market officials said today housewives were making no rush to beat price Increases markets say will not go into effect until next week. Poultry, park, eggs, produce and milk remained at the same prices today they v.·ere yesterday before Phase DI price freeze requirements were lifted, a spokesman for the Walnut Village Safeway Market said. The manager suggested inqui ry about price policies be directed to the regional office. The regional office spoke~an declined to speculate u1hen and ho1v prices 11•ill affect local markets. The University Park Alpha Beta r-.1arket expects ne\V price lists on l\.1on- day. Those lists will reflect new prices \1·hich are expected to increase. Fred Cantrell, vice president o! Alpha Beta. said today, "We are still waiting for the price regulations before n'e ca n determine what action to take, bu! there will be increases in prices." Paul Campbell, a spokesman for Safeway Stores, said, "We are still a lit- tle fru strated today and waiting 'A'Ord from our corporate offices in Oakland. Some of our buyers have already in· dicated to us their prices will go up. but it will take a couple of days to kno1,v '11hich prices and how much." Individual market managers at Ralpru and Von 's in Hun tington Beach said so far they have had no bulletins from cor- porat e hea dquarters warning them of a price increase or to be prepared for one. Border Agents Seize Ma1ijuana But Not Suspects U.S. border patrolmen sei7.ed 150 pounds of marijuana \Vednesday after a n1ile-long chase \Vhich ·ended when the patrolmen found the weed, but lost the suspects. . Wednesday's seizure brought "'t'h e \\'eek's total to more than half a ton or marijuana -all confiscated as part or the imm igration check at the San Onofre roadb lock since last weekend. Wednesday's seizure occurred after patrolmen began to check out two men in their vehicle at the checkpoint and the driver of the car suddenly sped away. a patrolman said. The patrolmen pursued the vehicle, "'hich they round abandoned wi th the marijuana inside, one mile north of th~ checkpoint. They searched the area for the two suspects, but did not find them. Another 215 pounds of marijuana "·ere seized Sunday during a routine im· migration check, a patrolman said. The agents arrested a 24-year-old resident of Chula Vista. Two nlore ctrug arrests were made last Saturday. Patrolmen seized 657 pounds of mari juana from Eduardo Chavira. 30. a r-.1exic an alien legally residing in Los Angeles. and 187 pounds of the drug from a 23-year-old Sar. Pedro resident -again during routine immigration checks. ,. -· > ' . ......... -:~· MICHELLE AND POCO REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After 5 Months,• Horse Thief With •Guilty Conscience Po~o Ba~k Home Stole1i Horse Has Big Encounters By TO~! GOR~IAN 01 l~t Ot llr PilGI 51i1U The escapades of Poco Ron E. Bar are over. Hungry and :ioo pounds un- der111eight, Poco has come home lo his Huntington Beach fan1ily. During the past five months Poco has passed through the hands of 111·0 horse thieve s. Utah police and a kind old rancher "who owns a spread as big as the Pondcrosa ." l'oco is a five-year-old registered quarterh<lrse. He \\'<IS stolen Feb. 17 £ron1 his stable in Hu ntington Beach. The best efforts or bis o"·ner, 16-year-old Michelle Noell, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Noell, 653 l Sego\'ia Circle. proved fruitless in atle1npts to locate hln1. The family placed ads in trade magazines. giving a full description and a picture of the horse ;1pd an offer of ;i $350 re\.\•ard for i11forffiation on th(' horse·s \vhereabouts. On July 8 the family gave up and OOught Michelle a new horse. T"'O days later ca!':le the phone call the fan1i\y had been 1,11aiting for. "Some young CO'A'boy in Utah called and said he sa\.\· hin1 in a rodeo and recognized him as the stolen horse from the ads n•e had placed,'' said tlfrs. l\'oell. "So he stole it for the reward.'' Then ttie story gets confusing. "He said he stole the horse a \\'eek earlier from the rodeo , but on the (!Ve- ning of July fourth he was in an accident. The horse \Vas uninjured, so he tied il up to a tree on a ranch near the Jdaho--Utah border. "He didn't give us his name, but told us to call the Trcmontan (Utah ) police. I don 't knO\V \\1hy he \Vaited a week since !he accident to cal! us. I guess his con- science got l-0 hin1." In the meant!n1e the ranch owner. Reed Nielsen ("Such a nice man : he reminds me nf Ben Cnrl\\'righl") kept the horse for safekeeping. apparently • figuring it \1'as stolen. _ Mean\'.·hile. lhe police had contacted Nielsen and the Noell family had coii- tacted the Poli ce. Suddenly everyone kne\Y n·here Poco was. So the family drove to Portage. Utah, last Friday lo pi ck him up. They return- ed \\lcdnesday afternoon. And things are returning tO normal. Poco 'A·as in heaven : A bath. brushing and a bale of hay. f'roua Page 1 CdMROUTE ..... is under way on traffic ramp controls ai freeway entrances during rush hours. ".. Such controls. he said. \\'OUld restrict the roads to lonk-haul traffic. lin1itinj motorists who use the expressways for short hauls to surface streets. • Mcconville noted lhat six roads ha...f; been laid out as recreational , nature or so-called urbanscape routes. : '·\\'e arc 1alking here about a <1ua!it7 road. \\'ilh no access to private PTOP.!' erty.·' the commissioner pointed out. ' l·le called the routes comparable to the scenic routes like the "1ount \lernciu Park\\1ay in Virginia . where the \\·indi~ roads follO\Y the natural CQntours of I~ land. · The commissioner said the slate's sO. called Lit!le l·loo\'cr Commission aOO federal General Services Administratioh have been pulling n1uch pressure on counties to sell as much or their surplU'S land as possible. • ··Gove mn1enta( agencies are having lb sell at a fr action of the land's valti£ because of !his pressure," he declared.· He also noted that surplus land for th}! no1\·-dcfunct Pacific Coa!'t Freeway i~ bt.!ing sold off when no other county u~ l'OUld bC' found for it. '. Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Thanl>tUttaP ., .. Authorlted GE SERVICE COLD · WATER! CRUSHED ICE! ICE cu~~S! Without Opening The Door 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • lco bin stores 10 lbs .. about 260 cubes: automatic lcemaker re· places Ice ea you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 lbs. • Convertible 7-Day Meat Keeper. • Adjustable, tempered glass shelves. • Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning. • No defrosting ever WE TAKIE TClAc:»I:! • IKS 90 DAY CASH WITH APPIOYID CllDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548·77BR ' ' ' Orange Co~st EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL. 66, NO. 200, 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1973 c TEN CENT S Mesans ·Announce 'Quiet' Space Bonds Drive By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of rt. Oally f'llot Stiff A citizens group organized to promote passage of a $3.9 million bond election for the preservation of open space in Costa A1esa today announced i t s strategy: a "quiet campaign" designed to b'ring out the •·yes" voters. "Our game plan is not to saturate everyone but lo reach all those people \vho will respond fa\·orably and who recognize the need for open space." said ----------------- 11.trs. Joan Afargcl, member of the Citizens for Open Space. "We're not out killing ourselves to con- vi'nce those who are adamantly against us," she revealed to members of the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART) this morning. The bond election has been called for Sept. It to determine whether a l\VO- thirds majority of voters will appro\'e the ;icquisition of 7tl acres of land for public purposes. -·'. • . . ' ,. "i:,;, •• • ..... . 'i ·' Dally Piiot 5111! Pllol• -MICHELLE AND POCO REUNITED IN HUNTINGTON BEACH After S Months, a Horse Thief With a Guilty Conscience Po~o Ba~k Dome Stole1 i Horse Has Big E1tcounters By TOJ\t GORJ\.t.AN Of Tiie D1il1 Pilot Sl1U The escapades of Poco Ron E. Bar arc over. Hungry and 300 pounds un· derweight. Poco has come home to his Hun tington Beach family . During the past five months Poco has passed throui!h the hands or lwo horse thieves, Utah police and a kin~ old rancher "Who owns a spread as big as the Ponderosa." Poco is a five-year-old registered quarterhorsc. He \\1as stolen Feb. 17 from bis stable in Huntinglon Beach . The best effor ts ot his O\vncr, l&-year-0ld Michelle Noell , and her parents, hir. and ~Irs. Louis Noell. 6531 Segovia Circle, proved fruitless in attempts to locate him. The family placed ads in trade magazines. giving a full description :ind a picture of the horse and an offer of :.. $350 re\\'ard for information on the horse's \\•he reabout s. ··He said he stole the horse a \\'eek earlier from the rodeo, but on the e\'1!- ning of July Fourth he \vas in an accident. The horse was uninjured, so he tied it up to a tree on a ranch near the' Idaho-Utah border. "He didn't give us his name, but told us to call the Tremontan (Utah) police. I don't know why he waited a week since !he accident to call us, I guess his ct1n· science got to him." In the meantime the ranch 01.vner, Reed Nielsen (''Such a nice man; he .reminds me of Ben Cartwright") kept 1 the horse for safekeeping, apparently figuring it \Vas stolen. ' l\1eanwhilc, the po lice had ('1)1ltacted Nielsen and the Noell family had con· !acted the police. Suddenly everyone kncv• where Poco "'as. So the family drove to Portage. U!ah. l:i~t F"riday 10 pick hinl up. They return- ed \\'cdncsday afternoon. Included in the package are several su rplus school sites and 25 acres or private property scattered through various parts of the city. The overall $3.9 million figure reOects $1.2 million for development. l\frs. Margel, one of three panelists ap- pearing at the CllART breakfast meeting, said her group is planning to send a survey to local vote~s to dc1erminc \\'hcther they arc for open space or aga inst it. PriCe l[ the ans,,·er is ··yes," she said. ''\Ve plan to give them a litt le push." former Costa t.1e sa City Councilman \\'illi:im St. Cli:iir questioned the ad· ,·15ability of taking more land off the Costa ~lesa lax roll s. St Clair s.1id 25 percent of a11 the prop- erty in Costa Mesa is already in public ol\nership and not producing taxes. If n1ore is addrd hr lx>licves "\1·c "'111 •)\"Crt ax ourselves and 11c 1\on 't be alJll' 10 provide for·our 0"11 needs because of <111 this green spac<'," Another question raisrd during tht> session concerned the location of the 25 acres of private land. The location of that l:.ind has ne"er been n1ade public. Comminee Chairman Vaughn Reddin g responded by explaining that the pre<:iSt" loc:it ion of the smaller piCC\'s of 1>nv1t11· property is being kepi se<:rct ''bccau~t' \ll' \\'Ouldn 't \\'an! 1he1r pr1rc to soar" Th1' parct'ls "111 be used to n1akc up \\·hnt nrl! d1•stnbed as acreage defi· fll'nCn•s 1n lhrl'l' Coo!:i r..tr.'1.A park zones. 7.ont' 1 on the t'llst sidr. 7.onc I on !ht> \l'CSt sidt'. and 7.onc 6 north or the Sanla Ana Country ·cJuh. ~lrs. j\largol nddetl thilt th<' $1 2 milhon d(·velopnlent fund 11ould allov.• for only "min1n1a1 dc1•rlopm('11f' of the prop· t•rties. !'he su1d t11y officials h<ll t pllod,t:l.'d lh:it an~· df\'<'lnpmrnt \\"OUld 1ake- 1nto con~id11rnt1011 1h1· dl•s1rcs or 1ur· ruu11d1n~ ll<'l"hborhood~ of Food Climbs Increases Expected to Be 'in Full Force' Soon By United Press Intern ational Prices for poultry, pork, produce, milk ando0ther perishables went up in many of 1hc nation's superma rkets todav and the cost of other items freed by ·Preside nt Nixon's Phase IV program "'ere ex- pected to climb shortly. (Sec story. Page 41 • l\1ost n1arket spokesmen said they were double checking the. ne1v Phase IV regulations and that n1arkups should begin next '"eek ''in full force" -and Man Wounded qyring Fight In Front Yard A man \\·ho" stepped outside of a house to aid his friend in a fronl yard scuffle U'ith two others "'as shot "'hen he tried to intervene, Costa ~lesa police reported today. The \Vednesday nighl shooting at 2094 Orange Ave. le ft \Villian1 J. Holton. 27, \Yith a bullet in his left arm. Hollon was in surgery today at Orange County r..1edical Center and was reported in good ('()ndition. Police have a dragnet oUt today for t11•0 Orange County men they believe fled after having started the fight in which the gun discharged. They ar""e identified as Frank W. "\Vild J\.fouse" Rundle, 29, a fonncr member of the Hessians motorcycle gang, and Grant Tony Paul Swiggs, 21. Rundle in 1968 was convicted of at - tempting to kill former Golden Gloves Champion Robert H. Glazier, of Costa f\lesa, over an argument invol\'ing a pool game. Glazier's life \\'as saved "'hen the slug ricocheted off a finger and em· bedded itself in the left hand. Police said the incident \Vednesday nighl was provoked when the t\\'O men drove up to the Orange Ave. address and engaged David J . \Vilson, 27, in a fight. Holton who had been staying with \\'ilson for a few days heard the com· motion outside and went to investigate when the shot was tired. Rundle formerl y lived in Costa Mesa but his present whereabouts are not known. The fonner Hessian leader is believed out on parole from his one to 10 year (See SHOOTING, Page !) Ne w P rofesso r Hi red OAKLAND fUPll -Author Jessica r..litford. !isled three years ago by the !louse Internal Security Committee aS an undesirable campus speaker. 1Yill become a sociolo gy professor :it S11n Jose State l,;niversity in September ''be \\•ay up'' by next month . In San Antonio, the Associated hlilk P. oducers Inc.. the largest milk pro- ducing coopcrati\'e in the United States, announced price hikes as high as 10 per- cent in 20 South1\·cst and h!id"'est states. \Vhol<'salc egg prices in t'\e"' York jumped 4 to 8 cents a <fozen today. It generally take s a f('1V days for such an increase In hit the re<itil n1:irkel. Pork prices \Vere moving up in son1e areas. \Vi!h the price of a pork loin jump· Phase Ing from 79 10 91 cents a pound in a Detroit supermarket. In Jackson. 1'1iss., Giant Food Stores raised their pricts on about 200-300 "dry " grocery Hems. such as dog food. flour and meal. frying C'hickens 1umpcd 5 cents a pound. Spot checks by CPl sh-0\\·ed th at mo:.t hou.s<'11'i \'cs 1i.·ere not paying more during 11cckly n1:irketing. llO\\"ever, this \\·as un · c1011btcdly <lul' lo grocery ad s \\·ho~e prices are in effect through Suturday. A ~luntington. N.\'., house\\'ife. i\lr s. 4 Hit Meany Say s Controls to Hurt WASHI NGTON !UPI) -AFL-C IO P<esident Ge<>rge Meany denounced the new Phase IV anti-inflation program lbday as "a further exam p I e of the administration's inequitable economic policies." "It spells more bad news for the houseWife and the consu1ner.'' l\1eanv said in a statement. · ~.Yea ny's altack came as Republicans in Congress praised President Nixon's latest econon1i c controls as tough \\1hile many Democrats joined other leaders of organized labor and business in clain1ing Phase IV \l'ould hu rt city d\\·ellers and consumers. (See story, Page 4.) l\1eany said . ''\Vages remain under control. as they have ever since Aug. 15, 197 1. The Cost of l~iving is continuing up and up. Interest rates are exempt fron1 control and soared once again the very day Phase IV was announced. Profits, never directly or equita- bly controlled. are out of. sight." - • Ervita 'Take•• i••' Sca11dal P1·obe Hoaxed By Pl1011y Call On Tape s \VASH INGTON (AP ) -1 A hoax telephone call today led the chainnan of the Senate \\latergate committee to an· noonce that President Nixon '\\'as \Villing to release tape recordings of his While House conversations Yl'hen in fact no such deci sion has been made. An embarrassed Sen. Satn J. Ervin Jr. (D·N.C.\. conceded tha t he had been taken in by thc 'hoax. after announcing to the televised Scna!c inqui ry lhat the con· troversy over release of the tapes had been rcsol\'erl. r:r\'ln said he got a mid-day tclephon<' <'all from il mnn \l'ho 1dcntified hi1n51:lf ;1s S('t:rl'l3ry or thr Treasury George P Shul\7,. ;ind \\ho sa id 1he Presidl'nt \\:lS prC'parcd 10 rcll'll'-<' tapes 1he panel 1.s Sf!f'king He said he assumed it v.·as the real Shultz. but it ,,·asn't. Ervin said he found that out later, after the \Vhite House said it knew nothing of such a decision. The real Shultz then told Ervin he y,·as not the man who telephoned. IL 11•as a bizzarre tum in a hearing aboul bugging. " ... Some people think the telcphonr i~ the intitrument ol the devil an)1lov.•."' Ervin said. "I think It's the unani1nous opinion of this comm ittee that this "'as a right dirty 1nck."' Ervin added. using a phrase of1rn rl'pealcd :it the hearings about l9i2 canl· pa1,::n 1actics. "It \\'Ould ha\·e been helpful if \IC C'ould ha\'c round a secure tell'phone ." s.r11d Sen 1to11ard JI. Baker Jr. 1 R-Tenn .1, thr \'1cc ;ha1 rman . Katherine l\lullen. sa id she shopped In l\\'O supern1arke1 s and found prices unchanged. "Eggs are the same as last "'C('k ," she said. So arc canned goods. bread and ce reals -I didn't see an\'thing higher than usual." A spokl':.1nan for lhe National Associa· 1L1~n r.f Food C'halns •NAFCI prcdicled 1he -I to 5 percent jurnp in prices in th~ cn1l1111:; "'ef'k s nnd said consumf'rs could rxpl'<'t to see rnarkups on retail counters !Set FOOD, Pagt ?, CdM Freeway Co11struction Seen in 1974· · By JOHN SCllAOE Of lflt OMlr 1"1191 Sl9ff Oran,;c Counly Ho.ad Commission<'r Ted i\feCon\·iJ!r s<iys preliminary "·ork on the Corona dct :\lar Free1\'ay through Costa l\lesa may resume next year. '.\IcConville told ml'mbers at the Orange Coast Assoc1.:nlon luncheon \\"ednesday !hat enough mooey may be f1vailab!e in next year's Slate Depart· ment of Transportation budget lo begin initial \\·ork on the route. from the San Diego rreev.·ay overpass at Bristol Street lo a point near the UC Irvine campus. \\"ork on the frcewav has been stalled recently for lack of fuitds. h1cConville added that route irading at i\lacArthur Boulevard and University Drive \viii sho,.,. the :ictual alignment o! the frec"·av. Plans arC also moving ahead lor lhe dc\'elopmcnt of an area master transpor1at1on plan, lhc commissioner ~aid Thf" plan \\ 111 serve as drca ~uggeslions for the state and roas!al commission pl<Jns. scheduled for competition 1n January of 1975. he added . ··Some agencies think \1·e should just st't a priority for theS<' plans and then go ahead "'ith them," l\1cConville said. ··The road department, t hough . believes lhat each commwiity should present its own concepts, viev.·s and needs for study in de\'clopment of an overall plan ," he said. "We've received a good response from the coastal communities, and a better feeling on the maller than C\'er before," he added . ~tcConville said 11 i.~ im porta'll. to ha ve a lull lrunsportdt1on system plan ~ the county \1ill he able to rccei\'C' and cf- fccti\'cly hundle full y funded federal pro- grams. · The co1nn11 <:.s1onrr alfdetl thut a s1u1h· (Set Cd.\I ltOlJTt:. Pa.ii;e 21 Ora n ge Coast On July 8 the family 1.1:a,•e up and bought Michelle a ne"' horse. Two days later ca::ie the phone call the fatnily had been 'i\'aiting for. "Some youhg cowboy in Utah called and said be saw him in a rodeo and recognized him as the stolen horse from the ads ~·e had placed," said Mn. Noell. Transpac Yacht on Rocks The "hole sequence '.l'::tS stran ge. since \\"hite House Press SccretHry Ronald I •. ZieRler had announcC!d earlier in the day that Nixon v.wld frame a reply to the committee request for the 1a¢s this \1•ee kend at C1mp David, 1'.fd. Weather "So he stole it for the rewanl." Then the story gets confusing. \~ STO CK VOL UME .LI ST IN ERROil Due to an r:rror In 1ransmisslon. 1he New York Stor:k Exchangl! clos· ing list is published todriy "'ilh some incorrect volu mes for SC\>'W3I s1ocks. The error resulted in volume fi~· ures not being updated In a num· her of in.~tanccs. It has been r mM!ed and the correct ri1turcs wiU run for tomorrow'$ editions o! the Daily Pilot. \ Racer 'Eag le' B eaches, Sinks off Waikiki B each By ALMON LOCKABEY Of fflt 0-1fy Piiaf Si.ff i'IONOLULU -One of the racing boat~ in the Transpacific Yach t Race hit a reef ;ind sRnk on \VRlklkl beach a fe\V minutes after she had finished late Wednesday night. Eagle. a Ca l 33 sloop skippered by Lar· ry K. Shorett of Corinthian Yacht club. &Jn franclsco. apparenlly wandered into ~ ~''rong channtl near llawallan Vlnage while coming toward 1he jetty entra~e and hit a reef, She had a ltlrRe hole in her side and "'hen the Const C':uard pull· ed Mr free she sank. Eagle had been follow1ng a commitlj!e boat but left on her own when the el6>rt vt'SSel went back to the finish line to pick up another finisher. The grounding oc- curred at 8:40 p.m. Honolulu lime. The crew was rescued without serious injury. Eagle had been tabulated as fourth in Class J) after sailing lhc 2.225-milc race Deross the Pacific. Only eight of 60 starters remained al sea this morning, inc.lud!ng Den.ant. 1vhich ls under tov.1 with a broke.n rudder, and Vicarious. still sailing with a jury rigged mast. Four Newport Harbor based bi'lat.ll were among t~ first ten In U'le: O\'C.tlll handicap standings when the unofflcial finAl rc!t11lts were computed today, Only 13 hours and 3S minutes separa1ed the nrst and tenth place finishers on han· dlcap time despite tht slowness or the ract on elapsed time. Two of the controversial ultrOll hgnt \ d!splacement boats finished among the first ten, including lhc overall winner, despite heavy time penalties. Tu·o Newport bo:ils v.·on their respec· t11·c classes ;ind othCrs placed 1n their class Al C.:asscll's 50-loot Brn1~1n Ch:ince· dcslj.l:ned \\'arrior was the only Class A bo<lt amonj! lhe first ten Gary ~lyers' Cal 39 Blue Stre.:ik. ;'-:c\1 port Harbor Yacht Club. was the 1i.1nnrr in CIAss C. Sanderling IV. a Coh1111b1;t 43 co-skippered by Bob Poole :tnd Jllt'k John~n of Bahia Corinthinn Y:icht C.:lu~ placed fourth in Glas' C. Two other Newpor1 yacht s. N~lu IV o .... ·ned by J>eter Gr:1n1, Nl~YC, and ski~ pcred by lfarvey Kil1>3trick , ~lonterey !Ste TRAN PA'G. Page ?I Nonetheless. v.tien Ervin recon\'ened the Watergate hearings. he did so y,•i\h an announcement thal Nixon already had decided lo release lhe tapes. He called it "a very "'ise decisioa on lhc part of the President.'' Bui it l\·asn't so. The hoax caller who succe~sfully pos<'d as Shullz said lhe President had de<:idcd 10 supply tape recordings of his o~n con· \er~:ilions y,·ith pas1 C01nm1ttee \\"it· llt"tSCS. The callrr also lo1d Er. in lhat ~u.on 1rould met'! \l'llh him ntxt week Tht rt"lay of such a mC'S'l.l'IJtC lhrooi::h Shultz \\'Ould have betn l~icnl, sioce .\ixon had the secretary or the lrea~ury ~rnd !he romm11tee \1ord Tuesd;iy' !hat hr y,·as 1n\'oklng executive privilege to bar Secret Service testimony !lbout the I-Ope recordings. \\'1th Ervin·s announcement made and IS.. TRICK, Pl(e II ~lore sunshine Friday, following tarly morning rog and lo"' clouds, mostly at the beach areas. llighs in the low 70s Rt the sands rising l(I near 80 In land . Overnight l<iv.·s in the 60s. I NS IDE 1'0DA"\' Tli~ pa.,.,auocr,f of tlie sr/10011 · rr Gnr¥1 Jlope l!a11t sor11eri,111a 111 f(J»11no11 -11ecrllr pricks n11 tl1t1r urm~. lhit t/1e eruue rJ,.. ~rribrtl <nr Pag(' 4 rnay nra kf" 1'10.~t nu1rk• disappear. l M, ••r• f ( .. ,..,.... \ Cl1ulf1H lt.-1 (enuc1 tr Cnu-• J' 0Hlfl N9tlt:et IS ltlhlfi.t Pitt • l.11t"11lfl1•.,Mll )t.)I •MtM.t fl·Jf ,.,, ttlt •Kn II. )J "--ti •~~ Ltllttfl JI ,,., .. 1.. ,..J, ""v'"' """"' " Hlti ..... 1 ..,.., t, ll Ottll9t <WRlr U lH<h 1l•M SllCA Mtlktl'I 26<11 t ..... ,.... • n...1.... :M-11 W ....... 1 """' •M w.,, .. """" .. ,, -~---- • , ~ DAILY PILOT Sailing!# Sailing o.,er Bounding Main --- .; __ ,. -. o.11'1' Pllet ,111101 ~W lllt~•' Ort kt WHAT TO DO WHEN THE BOAT FALLS OVER IS DEMONSTRATED WITH SKILL AND CUNNING BY YOUNG DISTAFF SAILOR ON THE WATERS OF NEWPORT BAY • Coast Food Cost Steady But Increase Seen Soon By the Daily J>ilot. Stair Food prices rema ined s ene rally un· changed along the Orange Coast today but spokesmen for two major food market chaJns agreed that prices, especially on pork and poultry, will cer. tainly increase by ne:xt \\'ef:k. A1eanwhile, slore managers from Seal Beach to San Clemente reported !hey were gettlng a lot or questions from customen as the result of President Nii:· on's Phase 4 action easing the food price freeze. "Shoppers seem to be wailing to get better information on what prices will do,'' observed San Clemente T\1arket Basket manager Derrlll Rogers. "By the time they find out, It will be too late.'' ' Afainly , the game today seemed to be ''wait-and-see" for customers, t.'Oastal markets and headquarters of chain stores themselves. "We've never noticed any ge-0graphic trend before but this could be a possibili· ly," Frank Prior, manager of the Thrif· limart store, 2701 Harbor Blvd., Costa h1esa said. "I cert ainly hope not.'' he said. adding "you know the area is highly competitive and no grocer wants to raise prices." "I've never noticed any trends before. which af!ecl market prices here," said Bill Salzman, manager of the Stater Brothers market al 2180 Newport Blvd .. Costa fi.1esa. - Manager Bob Clark of the Safeway market of 1000 Bayside Drive. Ne\lo'J)Ort Beach, suggested consulting the com· pany's district ofrit.-e for information. "Nobody is really sure what is going on v.•i1h these prices," he said. Qlrl Zinkl, manager of the Pantry food market, 1170 W. Baker, Costa hlesa, said any price !rends or changes will come do'A-'11 from lhe district level but none have been received. "\Ve are not closely tied to trends at the store level: \Ve are only a little spoke in the v.·heel," he explained'. "Eventually maybe the Eastern prices will reach us but right now our prices will be the same until we get a directh·e to change them ," said Norm Davis. manager of the t.1arkel Basket store. 3100 \V. Balboa Blvd .. f.;e\\·port Be:ach. Irvine market officials said today housev.1ves "·ere making no rush to beat price increases markets say ~·ill not go into effect until next ~·eek. Poultry. pork, eggs. produce and milk remained at the same prices today they were yesterday before Phase 111 price fre<!te requirements ,,·ere lifted. a spokesman for the \Va\l\llt Village Safe~·ay ~1arkel said. determine \\'llJll action to take, but the.re v.'i!\ be increases in prices." Paul Campbell. a spokesman for Sale\\•ay Stores. said, "\\'e are still a lit- lie frustrated roday and waiting word fron1 our corporate offi ces in Oakland. Some of our buyers have already in· ditated to us their prices "''ill go up, but it will lake a couple of days to know \.\•hich prices and how much." Individual market man.agers at Ralphs and Von 's in fluntington Beach said so far they have had no buUecins from cor- porate headquarters v.·arning them of a price increase or to be prepared for one. Bob Woods, a manager at the Lucky store in Huntington Beach, s a i d , "Nothing exciting ls happening around here. It will probably be the middle of next ·week. before anything happenS, after lhe 1nain·officc makes a decision." No major chain stores checked in Hun- tington Beach and Fountain Valley in· dicated a knowledge of when prices will change or how. Grocery shopping habits remained unchanged along the Southern Orange Cf.'ast toda y, and ~ did supermarket prices. A survey ot most of the South Coast supermarkets today sh o "' e d no n1casureablc surge in business from shoppers lrying to stock up at the old prire before the increase hits. Although prices have not reflc<:lcd the lifting of the freeze some customers are \\'Onied. a man.ager said. •·We're getting a lot of questions today about what the prices will do," said San Clemente Alpha Beta ~ianager ~on Riley. "There's not much \ve can le/I· them because we haven't heard anything yel.'' he added. At Albet.tson's ~1arket in San Clemente. hltsjness \Vas no more brisk than usual, but curiosity u·as up, said n1anager George Kolbe. "So far \VC haven 't had to raise any prices, even though v.•e were told recently that pork was going to be rationed. That didn't happen and supplies so far have been pretty good," Kolbe said. In Laguna Beach. independent grocer Larry Barker -part-o"'ller of Acord's i\·larket -said that his custon1ers arc not making a run and that prices arc unchanged. Only a few inquiries had been noted, he said. ·,:( ·:.: ~· Fron• Page 1 FOOD ... The n1nnager suggested inquiry about price Policies be directed to the regional office. The regional office spokesman declined to speculate when and ho\v prices will affect local markets. The University Park Alpha Be:ta Market expects new price lists on Mon- day. Those lists will reflect new prices \\"hich arc expectt'd to increase. ~ next u·eek after processors ha\·e time to gi\'c supc.rmarkcls certificates sho\ving ho1v much or recent overall cosl ~ains can be attributed solely to higher cosls for raw products. Fred Cantrell, vice president of Alpha Beta. said today, ''\Ve are still waitin~ for the price regulations before ~·e can ORAN&l COAST CM DAILY PILOT Th• Or....,. CN1t 0.AILY PILOt. w1!11 wll+cn II eotnfll .... ""' ltl•Wl·"'"I, JI pyOl/illed' ty lhl Ore,. Go•ll PllbloVOifll (0"'41eny. s.,,.. .. ~ "'111on. ••• Plll>ll•""· -~ '"""""'n Frkl•r. lo• Coll• ""'"· Nrlfl'Or! II~. H11t1tlnotofl t1e1<1t11<-.1•ln v111r1. L- 8Md!, lr~IM/S1dd~k ONI k" C'-"-"I Son Ju•n C'l•ltlr-. ... I"'"!' '""kin.II .. m1o11 •l .,..blll""9 ktwt'!llyt •"" SYnclor1. '"• ,.1nc11111 ""bllttilrlt •I•"' ;, ., no o11111 t1y '""'· C1>111 '°''"' C1ll'9t11i., tl•1'1 Rolt.rt N, W11d "•110knt ,,.,. "lltlhM'lt• J•c• A. C111l1v Vici "'llld~I 111d Gtl\ffl f M'""""" Tho"''' IC11otil Etlltot ThoM•I A. M11•p)of~• M-.lfto ~cll'- Cl..o, I 11 H. l.101 11.ich••' P, N1H ANlt1111! Ml"'t•ftt E,! ... , CMts ..... Otfk1 JJO W111 It~ Strt•I Mo!U111A4drou:·P.O.101 •s•o, '2t.lt. Otttor OHk" "'""'*' loKll:•H)J N"""'9ft S...llWltf l'9llM •Mell. m ,or,,.1 ,.,_ ......,"'°" .... fl>J 1111J IN<l'I hslllWtf a... C'-M! llOt """"' El Co"liftt llMI Toi ...... 17141 64J-4JJI C~ A4"ttfdtt 64J.S671 c.,..rltf!\ lf1l. °''"" eo.11 "lltl•tll.,. c:.rMionV, No -'*"""' lllwW.t...., flll!,.,lft -•ltf' f# llllWrllt-11 ......... _, .... r~ Wl!llOvl -19) ""' '"'-...,. tf dP'lltltlll ........... George E. Hamilton Jr., pre sident of !he Smithfield Packing Co., producer or lhe famous hams, said the company will "definitely raise our prices," but until !he ne\\' regulations "·ere studied he did not kno"' how much . A spokesman for Food Fair. \\·hich rrprescnts JOO Pantry Pride ~1arkets in the Philade lphia area. said price in- <"r("ascs "should be iinmediately evident 1n perishable products such as produce, poultry and pork." ~tc explained that urder the new Phase IV economic guidelines prOC'essors can now raise priers to retailers \Vho in tum can rai se · them to consumers . Frf'derick Herrud lllC .. largest pork processor in ~lichigan, today rnised \\'holesnle prices: to Detroit supermarkets by ro cents a pound. and a company of • f\cial said they l\'ill raise prices by another JO cents :i pound in a \veck . ;\Jany oth~r big supermarket chains sa id they 1rere not making immedialc price 1ncrl'a.scs but "'Ot!ld do so shor!ly. TONIGIQ' "AflRJf;NNE •S SUMMER " -SQuth Coast Repertory 1'heater, Uirough Sun. 8 p.m. - FRIDAY, .JULY 20 CONCERT IN THE PARK -OCC Jezi. CouUln 't Be Mucli Worse SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) 1'.1rs. i\rjean Charnbcrs, 38, being held on a charge of attaCking her husband "·ith a knife , \\'as ordered released on her own recognizance \!Jednesday. But she told lhe judge she wantt'd to stay in jail. Jailers said that v.·hen she v.·as returning to a holding cell, she pil· ed up furniture, a mattress and a blanket and set fire to them, send· •Jng smoke billowing through the courthouse and causing the evacua· lion of several courtrooms. Damage was estimated at $800. t-.1rs. Chambers. red-.eyed and coughing \\'hen she came out of the cell. was charged \\'ith arson and destroying jail property. Sclimitz Loses $400 in Coins If former congressman John G. Schmitz were still doing his thing on Capi tol Hill, he might be pressing for more law and order legislation today. The Santa Ana College f>oliUCal science instructor complained to Newport Beach police Wednesday that a burglar stole $400 in silver coins during the process of his recent move from Tustin to Nc~·port Beach. He said whoever heisted a 12-ounce beer can fashioned into a coin bank and containing an eslimated 5400 in quarters a'nd dimes may have taken it in transit. Nothing else was taken from the Schmitz residence at IO ~1ission Bay Drive in the Spyglass Hill section of Corona d~ Mar, according lo police. Veteran Groups Get Coimty Lease A five-year lease v.•i t.h veterans groups . on the Orange County-owned Costa Mesa Veterans Memorial Hall at 565 W. l61h St. has been approved by the county Board of Supervisors. Three veterans organizations American Legion. VF"\V and' An1vets - have agreed to provide $4.000 for the needed $13,000 v.·ort h of renovation to the st ructure. The county \.l'ill pay the balance . .. A veterans ' spokesman said the three organizations \\'OUld raise funds to pay 1he S4 .000 rrom ren tals of the building to civic groups. County to Widen Placentia A venue \\'idcning and improvement of Placen· tia Avenue in Costa ~fesa and Newport Beach at an esUmated cost of $402,000 has been approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The roadwork. which will be paid for on a ro.so basis by the cities :ind the counly from gasoline tax funds, extends from Production Place in Ne1\'J)Ort Beach 10 \\'esl 19th Slreet in Costa ~1esa . The projrci "'ill consist of \\1idcning to fou r lanes and repaving. From Page 1 1'RANSPAC. • • l'Pn insula Yacht Club. and Starwagon. a Cnl ~3 owned and skippered by Dan I Elliott. NHYC, placed third and fifth in Class B. \Varrior \\'as the \\'inner of Class A and Rob Grant's 61·foot sloop ltobon, NHYC , ''':ts third in Class A. Chutzpah's victorious entry in lo Ala \\'ai Yacht Harbor was held up for more than an hour Tuesday night \1·hen ii n1ilit'lry type landing craft broached and sank at the entrance with 13 persons 1 aboard. The crJft was caught in one of 1· the giant seas that crashed Rgainst the ~horcs of \V;iikiki Tuesday and \Vednes· day. The p.1ssengers \\'t rc rescued by ire yacht rue com1ni11ee boats. No Onl'. was seriously injured. The seas subsided lnte Wednesday. The race will ofncially come to n close Friday \\'ith the gala trophy presentation dinner at lhc Illka l l~otcl here. ABC Ne"•sman Dies ~ CIMI ,.., ... Hid fi (•II M ... , (OllfWl!lo •. ~...... .., ''""' Q.41 -"!l~J "" ft\Oll ~··· flMl!lfll,, "'lllfllr, ... ,~..,.. tt ... """"".,..· En.,em!Jle. Co!!la ~1esa Park, 8 p.m. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -fairgrooncl.t, 8.15 p.m. NEW YORK iAP ) -John Rolfson, Pr.Ms bureau chief for ABC News, has died in Paris, • Se~. Ervin Philosophizes }'ron1 Page J SHOOTING ... Before Watergate Hearing prison conviction for the 1968 shooting v.·hich was pictured by police as a mas,s reprisal by the Hessians for an earlier bra\\·\ during \Yhich the boxer knocked' dow n a member of the club. \VASl!lt\GTON fliPi'~ -'fhe seeds of \Vaterga1c 11·ere S0\1'cd by men of finan- cial, political and governmental power who •·undertook 10 nullify the lav.·s of man and the laws of God'' to reap a "very temporary political advantage,'' Sen. Sam J. Ervin (D-N.C.), said today. Thus Er\'in, the diairman of the Senalc \\':itcrgate commillec. summed up the evidence collected so far during the tv.·n- month-old nationally te1evised hearings into the scandal that has pfagued the Nixon Administration. "I can't resist the temptation to philosophize just a little bit about the Watergate," Ervin said as fo'rederick C. LaRue wrapped up two days of testimony about his involvement in the scandal. LaRuc said Nixon's re-election had been of "paramount importance" to him. "The evidence thus far indi cates, tends to show that men upon whom fortune has smiled beneficently and who possessed great financial power, great political power and great governmental power un- dertook to nullify the la~·s of man and the laws of God for the purpose of gaining ""'hat history \Viii call a very tem- porary political advantage." Ervin said. Then turning to his favorite source book, the King James version of the Bi- ble. the silver·haired Ervin said those in- \'Olved in 'Vatergate had overlooked ad- monishment of St. Paul in his epistle to the Galalians: "Be not deceived: God is not mocked, for v.-·hatsoever a man .soweth, that shall he also reap." · The audience jammed into the marble Senate Caucus Room, hushed as Ervin spoke, broke into prolonged applause as Second Man Held In Rape of Girl 111 Irvine Grove Police hav e arrested a second man in connection v.•ith the alleged rape of a 14- year-o ld Costa Mesa girl \Vednesday in a remote Irvine orange grove. Taken into custody \4'as ~fichael David \Vhite. 22. a roofer. Police allege be was one of t11·0 men 11•ho participated in the rape. Charles filed against \Vhlte, 3613 Timber St .. Santa Ana, include suspicion of kidnap. rape and forcible intercourse. Similar charges have been entered for the other suspect, Robert Joseph Kolar, 19, of 2118 Elden Ave., Costa fi.-lesa. Both arc held without bail. Police claim the two men offered the girl a ride home from a party but took her to the grove near Barranca and Jer- frey Roads instead. The girl escaped from her assailants and flagged down a motorist on the San Oiego Freeway. according to police. he finished. Ervin banged his gavel for order. , LaRue, a millionaire Mississippian who . has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct justice in the Watergate cover- up, Listened intently. He earlier had re- counted f~eliqg $242.ooo to the seven origin.ii Waterg11te derendants, helpirig devise false stories and concealing evidence from government prosecutors. He also said he believed that Jeb Stuart ~fagruder; the deputy manager of Nixon's 1972 re-election ca mpaign, had prior Knowledge 0£ the June 17, 1972 burglary and bugging at Democratc Na- tional ConimJttee headquarters that touched off the scandal. Following LaRue to the brown felt- draped witness table was Robert C. ~far. dian of San Clemente, like LaRue, once a ·key depuly to fonner Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and one who has been linked to the coverup plot. But Merdian, a former assistant al· torney general, said in an opening state- ment his only role following the June 17 arrests was that of a lawyer, not a "political protege." He said ·ieaming of the Watergate break·in v.·as "the most shocking experience in my entire legal career." "The facts thus learned thrust me into a sUuation which 1 can only compare. in terms of personal anliety, to being caught in quicksand." he said. The ~ituation became increasingly "in- tolerable ... in which ultimately my only hope was the selfish one of not becom· ing implicated in the conduct of others \vho I felt it my duty to serve," Mardian said. While the morning session was in prog· ress, the \Vhite ,Jiouse announced that f'resklent Nixon will draft a reply this weekend to the committee's request for tapes of conversations wi~ Conner aides implicated in Watergate. The White House gave no indication whether Nixon would relinquish the tapes, which he cons.iders presidential documents. or refuse to turn them over under the doctrine of lhe constitutional separation of powers. FOOD STAMP BAN IN STRIKES OK'D \VASHINGTON (A P) -The liousc \'O\cd 213 to 203 today to ban food stamps for strikers. The action ca1ne as the House accepted an amendment by Rep. William L. Dickinson (R·Ala .l. to !he massive farn1 and food stamp legislation. Dickinson contended that the issuance of food stamps to strikers "destroys lhe balance 11ecessary to maintain a true col- lective bargaining system" and "limits lhe amount of food stamps "'hich can be issued to the low·inoome families the program v.·as designed to aid." The shoaling of Glazier was carried owl by an estimated 15 to 20 Hessian's who i9· vaded the boxer's apartment after fin1t cutting the outside telephone wires. Police said the cyclisls slashed Glazier's face with a chain and clubbed him over the head with a baseball b(( before he was shot. · Fro1n Page 1 UJMROUTE • • • is under way on traffic rnmp controls a( freeway entrances during rush hours. Such controls. he said, \\'o uld restrict the roads to long-haul traffic, limiting motoris!s who use the expressways for short hauls to surface streets. hfcConviI!e noted that si x-roads hav-e- been laid out as recreational, nature <It' so-called urbanscape routes. "We are talking here about a qua\it~ road, with no access to private prop- erty," the commissioner eointed out . He called the routes comparable to the scenic routes like the ~1ount Vernon Parkway in Virginia, where the windillg roads follow the natural rontours of the land. The commissioner said the stale's s1>- called Little Hoover Commiss ion and federal General _Servic.es Adrninist.ration:- have been putting much pressure on counties to sell as much of !heir surplus: land as possible. "Governmental agencies are having 1~· sell at a fr!lction of the land's vali.iQl because of this pressure," he declared. ~ He also noted that surplus land for the.. now-defunct P,acific Coast frce\vay i6 being sold off when~no o.ther county use:· could be found !or it. From Page 1 TRICK ... duly praised by the chairman and bY. Baker. the in\"estigali ng committee resumed its questionin~ of former cam:. paig.n aide Frederick C. LaHuc . • But not for long. . ~1inutes later, Ervin was back 1vit~ ar.other announcement. ··it appears that a hoax has bcco perpctra1cd upon the co1nmillc~. al leasJ upon the chairman of the committee," he said. Ervin said he got the real Shultz on the telephone. The secretary said he hadn'{ called, that "1,·hocver did it v.'aS somebody else . ., The incident \vas the more curious ii\ that. as Baker noted, the fake call came in oo a confidential telephone in the Senate committee room. 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