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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-31 - Orange Coast Pilot" San ., ... , ' . µ ... ·..: ... ~.1.:!.!o.. ... !, • - ' ' ' '(. Cl~n1:en·te 1Joy., ' --·-..... ··: -.. ·.Cleared of Murder Bap ' ,. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 31, 1973 VOL. "' l'OIO. J1t. :I llCTIONl, D ,.AGll ·e···w· ··-. ' -' •" ;• •' ·-· ... . ' - ~fullertota Man, 21 ~-1~ Polic·e Identify' )!-·-t:~Seal .'Beach . Rody .~ :r .. ' By JO~NNE REYNOLDS Of .... Dllh' ...... lltlf ; :,Seal Beach police 'said today they have iaeMtified. the· dead man fouhd ·in their ci-· ty M0008y morning as·21-year-old Rotmie r ...... e Wiebe of. Fullerton. ""'?"''! ' • ' ~.:JW.ebe, tf.ey said, was strangled to :df!ath 'and his body dumped in ice plant . ~gSide·. tbe SeVenth Slreet · on ramp to 'tile ·SoUthbound San Diego Freeway. · ;There was no identification on Wiebe's •¥Y but o{fic;ers 'Said they ·were able .to make-an identification because he was ·!l&ted ·as ,a· mlssing ·_person With the Los :'/o)atniloJ! .Police Department. t~rtured and. sexually mutilated body is also unidentified. . John Doe 52 is the· murder victim who led Police .to· believe 1ha,t ther~ may· be• a link between th&murder.s. His tiftcked .up body was found wrapped in green plastic sclcks in -sev~ -loc,atk>Mr -along -the · Tenninal Island Freeway and in a trash bin in .Sumet·Beacb., Clemente Y outlt Cleared of All ·Murder Charges : : ·Police would not comment on the ;~ibility .that Wiebe's murder may be !l!l\k'11 "Id 'ihe =lied'· mutilation •murders whlch occurred in the Seal L1!~adl-Long Beach area between ~mber aild April. ·1 . A 15-year-oJd . san Cle'mente boy was •: Investigators also declined to release cleared of murder charges late Monday i:any information on the condition of the by an Orange County Superior Court ;,:te8d man!s.body, other than to note it judge who ruled that the youngster acted ~ clothed with one sock and both shoes in sell defense \Vhen he shot and Killed ~D)i~~~'s body was found ·near .the spot his mother's male companion last June ·i wbere·the first of~ ao-caUed mutilation 17. '!.murder victims was found in.December. David Moberly returned to-his home at l · That victim was EdWard Darilet Moore, 217 Aven.ida Rosa immediately atfer the -·' • • .... 1 <0 -· 1es in • . , . -~· .. UPI T1i.1'111tol FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF ·STAFF H. R, HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGATE PROBERS Testifies That President Nixon Asked Him to listen to T1pes and Report on Their Contents .... , ~. a Camp Pendleton Marine. verdict was announced, cleared of all Jn II -' F ff Id N • ' Three additional munlers have been allegations med against him aner the · ' ._,,avy og a cman: lXOll " linked in the bizarre case. The second killing of George Twiddy, 38, of Newbury waS was discovered Feb. 6 alongside the Park. . 85 B z · d K ·zled R d H ·:retmma11>1an11Freeway1n Long Bead•.· Judge Raymo1,fviiicent, actfni ror the · e· 1· .1>11ie l ecftleste e "Jba[.victim is unidentified and is listed coonty's · juvenile court In 'what is , !(/ (, es.John Doe "NoJ 16 by the Los Angeles normally an adult trial courtroom, police. dismis.sed the petition filed against the Repo1·t on Tap· es •"\'h<'. thin! victim whose munler ma~ boy after hearing one week of testimony. I B J c h . ba\re ~e'-1:"1::!4i~t t~sa::s'!~ Press .and public, were barr~ ,from the ·n ·. ·oston et ras \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Fonner \\"hitc ·~ -i.'.!_!'t'!ff. t.::!".:;..k,.. n-~ .. -~ • """' courtroom. .throughout the tnjll. And House ch1'ef of staff H. R. HaJ•-man of ~~n:-1i1 -zrr-Mnnpm·,~·· ·~ ra~ers-on·ootb-sit!BJ ·were~·mer .. eo·i'.0t ·~~ ... J:-::--.-.:,~-----·· ---····-·----·-·· : vc ~ --. ...-to--dlSCUSS-the-.court action with .. ~ Newport Beach testified today that . President Nixon asked him to listen to · Pl Q ll F• newsi:nen-. .BQSTON .(AP) ...... ·A Delta Airlines DC9 Reports from the scene said numerous Nixon's Watergate tapes and report back .,, aneS Ue I.re Police reports 1.mied before the gag · t · 90 • ~' board hed vehicles drove to the crash site to collect on their cont,nts . • ~ ' · order was imposed Indicated that the Je c8:1'!mg pe!'°ns a. eras bodies from the debris and mud. Some · ; SAN DIEGO (AP) -A bru~ fi;_e · ~ hRY \sbo.t ~)' ~P. u~,:'flJesj · ard 4is1ntegt;1ted P(f landmg at Logan bi4! beotMne tni ed '•nlofbe mud lfeldeman said he reported to Nixon ··~·about t,otMJ ·1~tt ~~· tdpl'ttt ""tM iiliH arm~rth1~t1ve•t>Ult~lY1'-om-~~ ·1~ih'~1 :,.'ifi;d}i1Jn•l\eW91Jo"g't0ai1. :.\l.C . es· ' r : ' through a White liousc lawyer that the wels Mounf.a)n.' a,t Ple norlbeaat e<tge .'>'>._,_1; 'ber,,Iifle..lall.owlng ,a E.aUJer'.s~ n ...... __E-i.00:1i•.t..~.,-·.had. r.eports .• 85 ""fSO""' A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said ------h 1..,.,. b ~"'" .... ·1 '-.:! :ou JQt.,,..,. r-'>-the -plane, scheduled·to leave Burlington H.R. HALDEMAN-of San Diego, ~rore firemen e~.. Y squabble at~ moberly home over dirty died. at g a.m., made an unscl!eduled stop at 'Nixon's S.O.B.' Story, Page 4 _ che!'"ie&l~pp1ng planes could quell It. laund!>'· Only two survivors were reported in-the municipal airport in Manchester, '$ fire =r~:;t hs=~~n :~~~; t O=~ ~ boy u~ a r~le g~ven ilially by Massachusetts Gener a I N.H. , tapes lpdicated John W. Dean III ~·as chllayds pl · g with matches beof • ..! hooting as 8 g a ew ays Hospital. ~ -He said he did not know the reason for "inaccurate" in testlfytng he disieussed a ren ay1n . ' · 017. 1.1:~ s . · . An ayewitness 'saJd the twin-engine Water~ate coverup with the President . Twiddy was dead When they amv~ at plane crashed on ,a runway about 1.000 the New Hampshire stop. -fn his "secorld day in the witness chair BEEReAN RA£E -- ··~woiltii Tiirnm . the ~e and the youngster was picked reet from the ed~iof the water at the ~ surviv.or a~ ~f~chusetts General 1 aJ. the . natiooally·televjscd Sen a I e 11p ·at San"CJemente Pier· shortly-after · wst· ai:tpott thatt·juts ·into Boston Holip1tal was 1dent1fied as Leopold Waterga&e he'll>'fings, Haldeman , who .,.... ~king...a..t~cphqne c~ .to polioe".' Harbor. , Ol~inard. 20. of ~1~rshfield. Vt. A ..ackno~ledged he ran a "tight sllip" at ----:...--~---•· ·---,,_ __ -Sla[e-pbliCe sa1a;~1t-2~-umt .. lhf!:-·-ho6~i-'PQkesman said he .ha~ ~-.1-ire Whtte House. appearOO u~rtain jet struck a seawfill at the approach to degree bums over 80 percent of h!S '?OOY· .about many de&ails of the \Vatergate Worn' an Booked the airport. A state police spokesman The other survivor was ldentifi~ by .case. Whereas'1005t sailboat races are "bor-said there was a ~oceak in the 2 ~·foot the hospital as Ross E. Brown. 3T. of ...... · UnliJl,e Nixoo.'1 olbcr top aide. John D. ,ing Tu watch and difficult to photograph," high wall; indicatffill: the craft's landing Looisvitle. Ky. The spokesman ~ ' ~lidnluio: irl)o v.·~s expansive ;ind ... ~~~!=' Pilot Chi!L=:eL-Ll n • . J!!K~. ~k·MA '-• ..... IBJ:>'!i!:'llll!.~iillllrif· '' ' . b\llf"'1 hl>tilii•e'is. Hal.i.,,,.,., with a ~,J'~"TI'. ~-7-~.:"I""".' Ml 1r1p· Jj\• • . , -.~~~lf,~~1efts"O.Iltl 1 · '~1'Wlfe reported' irr · gefltle voice, spbke haltingly at limes and ~-P. . .!M ·~~-~ ~ . -... ~ •-' ....:~.of1bc,Jdles..;..ftttWn_all ewer .lhe ctitica condition. offered generally brief replles. ,petition. EL MONTE (AP) -A 11:y,.r..td l'WIWOy. ~ , The craft was ldeoillied from the ail' Haldeman dlspui.d John N. ~Utcbell ;. Payne hU been in the thick of it over woman has1>een booked for invtttigidon ae·aid the ptane;.arrt$lg on a Olght line's Atlanta headquarters as Delta and Dean and testified that he was kept <lloo years I wllli "big bolts crashing ol possessing about 1.5 million am-f~ Burllnglon, \It., ... med lo have n;r: 713. In the' dark th .... gbout tm about While \=' 0f~ '~s2~=~>;!;dl~~ ~tamine pills for sale, 1au~~ies Wd. di~ntegrJl£ jn,impact. fi I had =· ~genk and a 1crew of House tnvol~emcnt In the .'~~tergate for ... yeral nnblications of that "dingy" pills had a stttet va Ue ~7/#J. e •. ·wic: argest. portibn of the plane 1ve, acco mg to a spo e!man rom the break-In an other potent1a y em-,.~ In a statement Monday, po1\ct said he could see was a .lo.loot iPortion of the airline in Boston. barrassing activities. ®fi.rtl:n. 001., regatta he'll sto:>t, they arrested Mn. Virginia f\odriguei of fuselage. _ j, The cruh occurred on the Birds Island Speaking in an ~vcn \'O\ce, flashing a OJ La Puente•acter orlicerT stopped her ·car State police sold a.:temPortl'Y' morgue Flat& area of the airport. frequent grin, llald~man -once coo- because the Bt!ercJnk is worth the J)llin. Tor a traffic. vk>lalion and d~·ered the: was ~ up at tbe fire statk>n al the A wilncss at the scene said the only sidcred the sccood .TT'I05t powerful man in f!boy. be gets ,.. c · pillt In a' shopping bag. . airport. I !Set BOSTON, Page II IS.. HALDERMAN. P1ge II ' . ,. .... ' , I • Airplane Crashes h1 Comity ' ~ Engine trouble was blamed today for the death of a 47-year~ld Newpart Beach man whose private plane plummeted to the grOWld Monday afternoon and burst into names in a vacant Buena Park field. Killed in the crash was Ev;m Koppe, a resident of 1400 'Santanella_l'C.rracc in the Irvine Terrace seclion of Corona de! Mar. He was the sole occupant or the t"'·in-rogine Cessna 310 • Koppe radioed Fullerton Airport that he was experiencing mechanical trouble but reportedly declined the tower's offer to mobilize emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, Its right engine malfunctioning severely, went into a steep bank. stalled and plunged into the ground near Beach Boulevard and ~lalvem Road. No one else was injured by the crash which was officially logged at 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said witnesses reported the plane's right engine was running so slowly thal they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the v•rcckage but were driven back by flames. Police said a monwnental traffic jam resulted when they blocked off streets to aid firemen fighting the bla1.e. It took fire cre"·s approximately tv.·o hours to bring the fuel -fed fire under control. Koppe. belie\'ed to be the owner of the plane. brought the craft V.'ithin one mile of the Fullerton Airport runv.·ay before he lost conlrol. A Bank or America building \\'3S just a few hundred feet a"·ay from v.•here the plane crashed . Orange Coast Weather I Orange Coast skies will be cloudy . during the night and • ea rly morn- ing hours, with hazy sunshine 1()- morrov.• morning. llighs will be in lhe low 70s, wilh the low in the 60s . INSmE TODA. Y Proclnimi11g rl1ot l1t has that indescribable "knowledge -at1 d 1rilh a snowOOl/i 11g 1novement behi11d him -Gur" i\faharaj Ji, IS, ·it embarkillQ cm ll is ihird ''ptact-" toUT"' 1n the United States. See Ge orge Cornell's story, Page 14. r L.M. ttYf 11 Ctll'-""• I Clntlfl...S 'l't•Jt c-k• u Cnll---" I' PNlll Hollr.t 1 , .. ,.,i .. ,... ' •11ttf'ltllllfttllf ,,. 'lll•IK• 1\•lJ l'ot "'9 •Ktl'ti , """""" ,, AM l.""'°"l IJ ,, ' -" """tu•I I'•• It H1!1111•I N... • or...-c_.., ' IYWll 'Mtw lt '"'" 11·t• llKll ~rltt'-12-IJ T11t\tl1'9tl 11 ll'IMI'" tl WH!'llr 4 W.,n<1111'• 1'11•• IS-16 Wtl'M N9W• 4 I • :f, UAILY flt LO I s lutSday, July 31, llJ73 Seeond Man H e ld ........ ,,..1 Police Arrest HALDEMAN • • • the government -lb....., whlle tlle events that Mitchell called 11Whlte Heme homn" we~ enumeral<d. Ile said 11\11 Ill ol them ..caped bis attention anW tblJ spring. Festival Laguna Beach police today arrested a man in connection with a knife-point ;irm· ed robbery oL festival visitor' and Jn what was termed ''frosting on the c:ikc" nabbed a bllrglary suspect while pursu- ing the suspected robbf>r. Eugene David Din gey. 22. of Orovllle was booked on suspicion ol anned rob- bery into Laguna Beach J&il th1s mom- ing. Danlel L. RodNuez, 21, ol La Verne was booked for afieged possession of st.oleb. property ln an asserted crime wltt!at<d 10 Ille robbery. Police Sgt. David Avers related the events· in the unique Art Colony heist and capture. A Ue'A"POrt Beach man. Frank Rick Cowley : 22, and a female companion were leaving the Sawdu.st 1'~estival when tbey were approached by a man who first engaged tbem In conversatloo," Avers sald . The OOtJple then walked to their car, at which time Ille man grabbed C.Owley. pulled out. a switchblade knife, and said "give me your wallet," Sgt. Avers said. Cowley turned over tits wallet and the man ran. Yelling for help, Cowley and four odler p<r90llS chased him, lost him, but ~ made coot.act, chased him and lost him. The secood time the suspect was observed, be was shlrUess and several tatoos-one reading "Harley Davidsoa"- on his arms, chest and shoulders were seen. The suspect also was wearing a distinct hand-tooled belt with "Harley Davidson" y,·orked into the leather, Avers said. Cowley told officers his w a 11 et c:on· tained the usual idenlificalon and credit cards, an unknown amoW\l oC money and a A1exican peso. Although the robber outran them , the victim and witnesses were able to give police a good description of the assailant., Avers said. Police began searching and Oct. Cliff Brazilian Makes License Error In Dope Caper SAO PAULO, Braz.ii (U PI) -The way polke told II, lrineu Manuel Cequlnato did almost everything right in planning one big narcotics caper. Using the confusion or carn1val season in Rio de JMeiro to divert attenUon, POlice said, Cequinato planned to drive lo Paraaµ;IY, buy all tho mar1Juana he could llnd,•1 bai:gain prtC.. and thiiloell high at home·to camivaJ.~lebrants. _ He bought a big new-car for the tr1p. police said, purchased $70,000 worth of marijuana and successfu1ly made it back across the border into Brull. 'lllen, a policeman stopped hl3 car for rooline check -Cequinato had forgol- ten to put liceme plates oo the car. Sexy Movie l\:lotel Raided; 4 Arrested Suspect Nye subsequently observed Rodriguez holdlng a peck.age of some kind and trot- ting down Forest Avenue. Nye ordered him to stop and flodriguei "picked up speed and tbrew away the en- cu mbering aruclec," Sgt. Avers said. Nye apprehended Rodriguez and obS{'rv· ed the encumbering articles to have been a terrarium in a glaJs bottle. "It b:Yke on conlact with the roadway,' Sgt. Avers explained. Police believe the terrarium was taken from the Sawdust Festival. Nothing more was seen ol lhe suspect in the robbery until Patrolman David Emory spotted Dingey on Forest Avenue this morning at about 6:30 o'clock . Emory follo\li'ed the man to the 300 block of Forest Avenue and observed that he was wearing a belt of the type described as being worn by the robber and otherwise fit the description given ofDcers. Dingey was taken lnto custody without incident. No property and no weapon were recovered , Sgt. Avers said. Farewell Ceremonies Haldeman lestllled that be lbtened to tapea o! Ille s.,it. 15 and M"1'dl 21 meetings that ho and Dean bad with Nb:· on -n>eetings at which DeM contends a cover up was diJeussed. llaledman lesUfied he li!lened to Ille March 21 tape in an anteroom of hi.& of· !Ice In mid-April. He said ho dld not be- lieve it was before Nixon's April 17 at.at. ment "but I'm not sure." Nixon said April 17 that h6 bad leAmfld of "major developments" March 21 and ordered a new iOqutry into the case. Haldeman resigned April :JJ wtth hllh praise from NI.Ibo. Haldeman ta.kl that although be bad no koowledge o! the \Vaterga~perati@ or i_ta coverup. "I felt it was very damaging to the office ot the presidency lbal anybody in the seMtive position I wu in should be distracted at all -and I bad been distracted for some lime." Haldeman testllied that he listened to the· lape o! lbe Sepl. IS meeting during the week of July 9 -he wasn't certaiC •as to the date -after he returned 19: Washington from his California hom'e;: The tape Was delivered to him at an Of.- flee he maintained in the Executive or.: fice Building, aod be took it home that night and listened to it alone. From Page I BOSTON .•. Canada has officially ended its six-month participa· tion in South Vietnam peacekeeping efforts, and its 249-member delegation prepares borne from Tan Son Nhut Airport. to deplane for "I'm aot sure whether I did or whether the President did in a message to me," Haldeman answered to a question about who initialed the request for the tapes .. "It ended up that I should listen to the tapes and give him a report on the con- tents. ·parts of the craft still intact were the rudder and stabilizer, the t\li'O engines and two pices of wing. The crash site was believed to be in the area of the Oct. 4, 1960 crash of an Eastern Air Lines jet into Boston Harbor with the loss of 62 lives. There were 10 survivors of the accident, which occurred as the craft was taking o!f. Authorities said starlings pulled into the plane's jet engines caused that crash. Logan Airport, which bills itseU as the world 's eighth largest, sits on a large landfill area. lt is the second largest airport in the country for overseas departures. One of the first men to the scene of today's crash. Fire Lt. Robert Alexander, said be and 10 men carried one survivor from the craft. . He described the man as middle-aged. He said be was conscious when carried out and said to the rescuers, "Please help me. I can't feel my leg,." Alexander seid the watches of persons fouod in the craft were stopped at U:05 a.m. In Washington, the N a t I on 1 l Transportation Safety Board said it wa.s sending a 10..member investigating team to the scene. The board said the team would be headed by boanl member Isabel Burgess. rrrround Beef? Mullin Took 'Earthquake :~:~e:~ ~~!~ 1:~!~r- Mullin killed 13 persons as human "telepaUilcally instructed" to commit the sacrifices to prevent an earthquake killings. v.•hich would destroy California, his Mu1lin pleaded innocent and lnnocent defense attorney said Monday. by reason of insanity to the slayings of 10 "I will show that my client is mad -persons killed in a three-week period this · stark raving mad," public defender year in the Santa Cruz area . James Jackson said in opening remarks ffe has not been charged with the three at Mullin's Lr_ial on 10 counts of murder. other killings he admits to committing. Jackson said that Mullin firmly believ-Prosecutor Art Danner an assistant ed that an earthquake which would have district attorney made a' brief opening sent California sliding into the Pacific statement and sitowed jurors pictures of Ocean was averted only because of his the 10 victims. intervention in ~ffering human sacrifices. "Each time Herbert W. Mullin killed, He said Mullin, 26, a college dropout he killed with premeditation a 0 d deliberation," said Danner, who 8!ked Boy Held.in Arson SACRAMENTO (AP) -A IS.year-old Mendocino COmty Xouth has be'!\ lal<en Into custody for t~Uon ol 'IS comits of setting forest fires in the CoveJo area, the jury to bring in JO ftrst-degree murcler convtcUoos. Jackson said MuDin stomped and stabbed a Roman catbollc priest to death last year in a C<flfessional because he received a telepathic message to kill the cleric arter going to the church to pray on All Souls' Day. l\.1ullin has not been charged with the priest's killing in nearby IA>s Gatos. Seven witnesses were called to the Lucky Lion Country- stand after the opening statements, in- cluding the mother of one victim who described UM: discovery or the bodies of her daugti.er and son-in-law. Animals Eat Horsemeat Man Jailed Over By MARCI DODSON Selling of Son O! ft'l.1 Dlllr "lift Sllil Car Kills Alieri Escaping From Border Patrol A Mexican citizen apparently at- tempting to avoid the San Onofre border patrol checkpoint was killed Monday when he dashed across the San Diego Freeway and was struck by a car. Juan Herrera Alvarez (if the state of Zacatecas, Mexico, was killed instanUy when he darted west across the freeway ana was hit by a southbound vehicle driven by William E. Carter of 25371 Romera Place, El Toro, a high"'llY patrolman said. "There was a suggestion of listening to other tapes but I did not do so," Hakleman said. "They were meetinp at whi~ I was not present at all. I made my aecision myself that it would not be appropriate ..... He said he took notes, told no one, and turned the notes over to Nixon. "I r~rted the general contents - 1 let's saf'l confirmed to the President via •White RMise Special J'.',ounsel J . Fred. Buzhardt by telepho'ile call f r o m California that from my recollections of those aotes, that itr. Dean was m.. accurate (about the meetings) and our recollection was accurate," Haldeman said. Alvarez and another J\1exlcan had l departed early in the day from a smug· gler's car and were attempting to sneak around the cbeclrpolnt when the accident occurred, said a border patrolman. Newport Woman Hem by Police On Voodoo Rap The two had paused at the center divider of the freeway when Alvarez decided to make a run for the other side through the SP6f'O traffic, according to a highway patrolman. Monday's fatality was one of a series of recent similar accidents at the border check. Last spring four persons Were killed in two similar Incidents as they at- tempted, with the aid of alien smugglers; to skirt the immigration check. Officials tenned the practice of run- ning across the hazardou.9 freewa y lanes as commonplace when smugglers err and make the trip north when the cbeckpolnt is in operation. .Generally, if the driver is an alien, himself, all the occupants of the car , leave the vehicle at the roadside and try to cross the freeway and walk widetecled upcoast along the beachfroot. A woman who tried to break down the door oi a Newport Beach b::lme with an firoo bar MOIXiay was held for psychiatric ,· observation when police .found 25 voodoo dolls and the decomposing remains of a small animal in the overnight bag she carried. The five-foot, one-inch, 110..pound woman WO carried a ballpeen hammer in her pocket and a purse conlaining old com cobs and other refuse during the in- cident, investigators said. · Officer Bob Hardy said police were summooed to lbe borne in the 2MlO block of Broad Street in response to a disturbance. Investigation of the d i s tr a u g h t woman's odd assortment of baggage also included discovery of. various pil¥. needles and rocks. KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) -Last Humans aren't the only oaes to be fac- week Richard Welsbach changed hi s ed with rising meat costs. The park officials do purchase some beef ror the animals, but it is of a quality below the USDA-checked beet which hol15Cwives buy in the stores, Dredge said. SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) -John Sdluster of Syracuse was sentenced to a year in the Onondaga County Peniten- tiary Monday for trying to sell his &-year- old soo for $50. Occasionally, Y.'hen the driver of the smuggling car is a U.S. cltizen, he orders his human cargo from the auto and successfully negotiates the roadblock alone. 'The items were booked in an evidence locker for safekeeping, 't\'hile the woman herself was admitted to the psychiatric ward o! Orange Coonty Medical Oenler for care. motel from G-rated to X-rated by show· I~ adu1t fllms in each of the 25 rooms 11-fanagethrs of,!-ionhCountry Safari said . vi3 closed circuit television. This week he filooday at 1•11ey ave had to budget Other foods the feeders buy with their $200,000-plus annual food budget include ay fot the-giraffes-and o t-b e r vegetarians and some fruits for the primates, be said. was arr.ssted. . larger sums towar~ feed for tbe.,,~nlmals, •---"-'Police descended on Sir Wa1gnrn~'re not g~tting alarmed, ·said"tn Monday night, inspecting each room and official for the drive-through preserve. allowing patrons to leave. However, "Obviously, the economic situation is Weisbach. his "''i!c and two employes <iffecting us, but only to a small extent 1'ere arrested. 1'here's been a marginal effect on the LA l\fau Selected \VASHlNGTON (APl -President Nix- on intends to bring Will iam Keith Brehm, a U>s Angeles corporate executive, back to the Pentagon to be assistant secretary of Defense for manpower and reserves, the \Vhite ~rouse said l\tond ay. ( OU.NGI COAST DAILY PILOT ™ Oflf'>OI Conl OAILV P'ILOT, wlltl wtilcn la '°""°ff'l«I lft1 Ntw .. P'rtu. II "*11~ lrl' ,,,,. °''""' Coa1t P'ubU,,. ... CO"'""' !tpo ffll .Oil~ t tt Pllblbro.a, Ml<ldey 111'*""' ,,w.y. IO• Co.It .111..... HtwPOrl et1Cfl. Huntl.,glon 9t1dUF01111!lll'I V1H1y, L*ll...,.. e .. dl. lrvlnt1SeddlitblUI Mid ... .., '""""'"' S•"' Ju.., C1pl11r1ne. A 11,,..,11 '"!0<1•1 .;"Ion Is p1JDll1lllcl 51tU"""Y' 1...0 SY"dt~. tPll prlft(f(l91 plJDlllfl"'9 , ..... " ti »I W.11 l t Y l11HI, Colle M.,.., ClllfOt.,11, f)t)t, R1b1 rt N. W11o:I ...... "" .... P'lltllltnlf J1dr. R. C11rl1v \/lot ,., .. ~I trw:I GIMrll MtMt'tf Tho"''' l(,,.,a EO!lor Th1111oa It.. M11.,1hint Mlnttlllt E41Uf' Ch•rl11 H. lo•• Jric~enl '· Ntft i\»Jllt"'I Mtnet"'9 l••ll'l Cu lt M111 ; JJll Wnl l•Y Slrtl1 ... """°"' .Mdl, :ms ... ....., ........... l....-letefl; tn !<oral A- H\fllf ....... 'l-'11 11171 kldl "°"""'"" Slfl C*Mfolli m """' •• Ctml"' 1 ... 1 Ttl ...... 171 41 MJ-4121 a.ww At1 ... 1i.a.t •41-1•1• ,._ ttnt•I A"'" ~ .. ""'9M lt<ldo 491-4421 ,,_ ..... °'""' c...-, c.m""""'" 140-122f c;...,,.-i1, ltrl. °''""" c.." ,....u,11wit , ...... 11,, .... -1!9flft, l""'trl!ltft6. ld(Wlll IMfltr ., .,,..11,_11 l\Of'llll 11111 bit ,.,....llCllll "llllolll IHClll ,_,. mlttl111 of '""'""' •-•· ....... tl!IM Mtf'" "\II t l (otlt ,_...., (111....,.,lt. ~.. w (t rti.r U.61 """'"'l'I ~ 1!1111 U,lf l!ltflln"l'I mlll!l!t "9~!1t!oa UM "*'4fllr. f over-all picture. but it is not substantial.·• said \Villiam W. Dredge, executive vice presidC'nl. The main reason the park officials have not been faced \vith budgetary prrb· !ems as serious as thoEie being faced by housewives is that the scores of carnivores eat a different kind of meat, explained Dredge. The v:ist majority of the meat the feeders purchase for the animals is horsemeat. "Of course. that is not to say that ou r prices have not been increasing. But it's not as If our cosl8 were rising two or lhree times as much as before. We've been seeing a five percent, eight perant, and sometimes as much as an 11 percent increase. "But it's not getting out of hand , shall we say." "But we've been having no dUficulties in gelling supplies and we don't an- ticipate any problems in the near fu· ture." And even though prices may rise , Dredge admitted, park officials see no reason to increase admission fees to the \li'ildlife preserve. But hasn't the "average house"·ife" be been complaining that he can longer feed her fam ily with the present economic situation? 1 "\Vcll, indeed we can afford to keep our family here fed ," ansv.·ered Dredge. "But our budgets here have been rising, too . \\le just have been sure to budget carefully and analyze our costs.•· Jn addition, the park officials deal with volume purchases, be said. "~y volume buying, we avoid many of lhe problems of the housewife who buys food for her family week to "''eek." Shortage Nears uick of Beef See 1i Tliis W eeke1id " By United Press lntern•tion1I The Adminstralion calls It "scare talk," but meat packers warn lhat they are caught in a squeeze between the retail price ceiling and the cost or cattle that will cause a nationwide shortage of beef -be- ginning possibly as soon as this weekend. ''Area supermarkets are facing a drastic shortage of beef, which could lead to the disappearance of some cuts from store meat cases, and in some cases -no beef at all," Lyle Everingham, president of lhc nationwide Kroger Food Stores, said in Cincinnati. But the administration rearfirmed Monday that the price ceiling would not be lifled until Sept. 12. Ee<>nomists expect bee! prices, whic h have a lready risen by more than 60 percent In six months. to lurch up,vard agaln after the freeze Is lifted. On the West Coast, It was learned that some cattle American ran chers are withholding from the U.S. market during the price freeze are being bought by Japanese. His passengers, however, have to fend for themselves. Schuster, 37, was sentenced after pteadllfg gu111y -to a<!Wgebf"-en--Escapers Sentenced dangering the welfare of a child. Police said he entered a number o! FORSYTH, Mont. (UPI) -Two jail local bars June 30 and o(fered to sell the escapers were sentenced to death Mon· boy because he needed money and the day for the Sept. 28, 1972, fatal shooting boy needed a good home. of a jeweler during a robbery. All For The Family- Suheon1mittee Eyed UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -The General Assembly committee on 11· temational terrorism repo rted Monday it was considering crcaling a subcommittee to define "international terrorism." WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THING? WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTlCS DRAMATICALLY? WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE? WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT? -• -CARPETING FROM ALDEN 'S, THAT'S WHAT! (IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) -- ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 Plac1111tla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mao. T1w Thvn., t to 5:]0 -Fii., t le t -SAT., t:JO le 5 • . - ' , Fifty l lhe Chi off for be1ng < Fran'. stable new Su "The Ferd Jl calls. "\.Viii just' sit ed me make i ning of ·career, "I WI stop " week,'' 'Ibe ~ steamj SAC! 'lax ad! .!ilvesti1 taxes. Th• 'jected day tm of the •-heir f1 .rhait ~hough friend i'Jcal <> Benni the ba! plex at ..mUlion and r~ million The "shrou Withe there i the pr1 fair sl whethe Pf som But D WA Adm.in "defin later 1 speodi and C '3.7 m The peodit Mt Pe At Cm Mar1no per ma The have qua rte rep lac con<r< house fiC<(I medic Two plellor Ocean are I unlll. A I compl The ., .~ flave ' In So< constr THIS IS PORTION OF FIRST MOON MULLINS STRIP THAT FERD JOHNSON WORKED ON On 1 Hot Summer D1y in Chicago, An Asp Iri ng C1rtoonist Gets His lnltl1I Assignment Tursday, Juty 31, iq73 s DAIL V PILOT :J 011ly ''"' $1111 ""'" FERD llN HAT) AND SON, TOM, CHUCKLE OVER IDEA FOR COMIC STRIP _Moon Mullins ind Fri1nd1 'Live' in• Second--1tory Studio in1 Co~ona del Mar ue~s Spent 50 Years With Moo·n Mullins By GEORGE LEIOAL 01 Ille Dally 1'1111 S11tt Filty years ago Monday, hanging around the Chicago Tribune art department paid oU for a 17-year-old kid who dreamed of be1ng a cartoonist. Frank Willard, one of the Tribune's stable of cartoonists, was launching a new Swulay rotor comic page. "They were full pages in those days," Ferd Johnson, 67, of Corona de! Mar re-calls. • ' "\_Vj.llard eventually got tired of me just sitting there watching him and hand· ed me a page and told me to color it, make myself useful. That was the begin- ning of Moon Mullins and my cartooning ·career. "I wrote my dad and told him he could stop sending money. 1 was in at $15 a week," Johnson said. The Sunday page Johnson colored that steamy July day in the Windy City even· tuallv ran in scores or cities on a follO'A'· ing November Sunday. Since the strip began, the lime from cartoooist's drawing board to newspaper publication has shortened. And, Moon· Mullins long ago began run- ning not only Sundays but daily as"Well . Fortunately for Ferd, his Wife Doris gave birth to a son Tom about 40 years ago. Tom, is an artist, too. with responsibilities to an educational rilm concern beckoning him to Los Angeles three days a week. On Sundays, Ferd and Tom dream up concepts the pair will spend the week working into the finished comics. The dreams consist o( rough sketches, some surprisingly detailed in their facial expressions. · The sketches are laid out in rough strip fashioo and balloon di a Io g u e ap- proximating the final comic page humor appears on the sketches, None is more than eight inches squar~ HWldreds of the rough versions of \he strips are piled about the cramped. sec-- ond floor studio overlooking a stucco "-'hite building and alley in Corona de! 1'--lar. Ferd and Tom welcome vi.sitors, apologizing for the confusion, noting it is better lhi.s week than last, "before our wives came to visit and said it was time to neaten up a bit ," Ferd adds. There is an order to the confusion. The ""'astebasket serves as a file for strip ideas whose time for completion i.s yet to come. "Sometimes we'll kick an idea around for months. I never throw them away, After a while the word or expression "'hich makes a joke work comes to us and the idea gets useQ," Ferd explains. The :inished strips begin with pencil sketches. Ferd then inks in the facial ex· pressions or the turn of a shoulder or arm which adds meaning to the character. Nixon Tax Probe Rejected State R efuses to Look Into San Clemente Assessme1it By BILL STALL SACRAMENTO (AP) -California's ~at: administration board bas refused to .tilvestigate President Nixon's property f;1Xes. The State Board of Equalization re- . jected a proposal by its chairman Mon· day that it determine whether the owners or the Western White House _are paying l:heir fair share of property taxes. · -Chairman \Villiam M. Bennett said he ..,hought Nixon and a wealthy industrialist friend were getting a tax break from '->cal officials. BeMett called for the state probe on the basis of reports that the ~acre com· plex at San Clemente is assessed at $1.37 _million this year. The original sale price and reported improvements total $2.33 million. The assessment or the property was ''shrouded in mystery,'' said Bennett. Without a state investigation, he said, there is no way to detennine "whether the property owner there is paying his fair share of taxes -J don't care whether it's Mr. Nixon or Mr. Abplanalp 91' some secret list of contributors.'' "' But Bennett got no SUPJX>rt from his three fellow Democrats or the single Republican member of the board. If any investigation is done, said board member George R, Reilly of San Fran- cisco, a Democrat, it should be done by Orange County officials. He said a board investigation without a request from Orange County would be improper . "That is their job," Reilly said. "Th.at is their problem." BeMelt replied, "I don 't think anyone from Orange County is going to ask. us to look at San Clemente." The ~nta Ana Register repol1ed this mo th that the Western White House estate, owned by Nixon and industrialist Robert Abplanalp, had been undertaxed by $25,000 to $55,000 over the past three years. Orange County officials denied that property is under-assessed or un- dertued. White House aide Ronald Ziegler said, "We have absolutely nothing to do with tax assessments the tax assessors should assess. That's their job." BeMett agreed with a board attorney that the board could not step in and in· crease the assessment on its own, but he said the board bad power to send its in- * * * * * * New Gover1iment Data Due on Nixon Houses WASHINGTON (UPI) Administration officials say a new "definitive" statement to be mlide public later this week will place government spending on President Nixon's Florida and California homes at $3.5 million to $3. 7 million. The new report on government ex- penditures on lhe NiXbn properties at San ' Marines Getting Permane1it Look. At Pendleto1i C&mp Pendleton, the nation's largest r-.tarine base. is laking on a solid, permanent look. The temporary ~ood barracks which have served as living and working quarters since World War II are being replaced with brick and mortar. Modern, concrete buildingl' at Camp Onofre now house a dining hall, noncommissioned of· ficers club, Marine Corps exchange and a medlcal facility. Two hundred homes are nearing com- pletion on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocetn sooth of San Clemente. Nearby are 148 nearly finished mobile home units. A new S2 million bachelor enlisted complex will open this fall . The bachelor enlisted men·s quarters 11t the San Mateo and Las Pulgas camps fmve cost more than $5 million lo build. In South ~1esa, a $2-mllllon club is under conrtruction. Clemente, Calif., and Key Biscayne, Fla .. is being prepared by the General Services Administration (GSA). The New York Times reported Sunday the total could reach $10 million or more. Administralion officials said there was "no way" the total could be that high. But they conceded lhe estimate will be much higher than $1.9 million stated In a GSA report June 21. There were indications the White .House, at the time the new report is issued, would clarify the President's transaction with New York industrialist Robe.rt H. Abplanalp in the sale or 20 acres of the San Clemente estate. An invesbnent company set up by Abplanalp pald $1.2 mllllon for all the property except 5.9 acres, which Nixon retained. Under the settlement, Nixon's outstanding loan from Abplanalp totaling $625,000 was then canceled. It will be the third time the ad- ministration has attempted lo add up outlays for projects at the presidenllal compounds, which it maintains were re- quested by the ~t Service. On May 25, the White Howe said an estimated $39,000 had been spent on the C.lilornia property. The new report also iJ u:pected to mention security installatk>ns at the home ol Julie and David Elsenbower in nearby Maryland and on Grand Cay in the Bahamu, an Island owned by Abplanalp, which Nixon has visited 21 times as President. The home where lhe Elsenhowen live is owned by Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo, a close friend of the President. Officials said the announcement l\'Ould be "definlflvt:" and that GS A Administrator Arthur J. Sampson would provide polnl-by·polnt tnformaUon on the ooLla}'S. vestigators to San Clemente to personally inspect and appraise the property. "I lhink you're going to find something there that may surprise you." said Be.n· nett. Bennett said he sent an aide to Orange CoW1tY to inspect the assessor's records on tbe San Clemente · estate, but county officials ' refused to show him the files and referred him to Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's form er . personal attorney, or 'Vhite House aide Leonard Garment. Kalmbach could not be reached and Bennett said he told the inspector to gi\'e up. "You're not dealing "'ith a host of angels," Bennett told the board. "~1r. Kalmbach~t this lransaclion together." Bennett said he would pursue the issue at next month's board meeting unless Orange County officials have laken some action. .- "The assessor is being blind to those improvements that have in fact enhancrd the value of that property," he said in an ir:terview afterward. "Mr. Abplanalp, private citizen, is the beneficia ry of this assessor or Orange County.'' Orange County ASS('ssor Jack Vallerga sa id the assessment of the San Clemente property, for tax purposes. "'as decreas- ed this year because of the impaet of J>roposition 20 approved by Californla voters last fall. That measure restricts ne1v development along the state's coastline. "I have decreased the value of the prop- rty this year reflecting t 'hat impact and I'm sure the record \\'ill shov• that J have property c\·aluated this property," VaUerga said this past week. Sorr11, Clift Clifford Irving. who authored a bogus biography of Howard J-fugbes. has been denied a shorter prison term by the U.S. Parole Board. Irving, 42, is serving a two-year. six·monlh term in Danbury, Conn. "He screws his face into exactly the expressions hr is dra\r1ng," Tom testifies. If so, one needs only to add a narrow brimmed fedora lo the myriad faces of the ~1oon r..1ullins strip to imagine how Ferd looks while at work. Tl's roughly the way he has looked while at work since he drC\\' Texas Sli1n for Capt. Patterson. founder of the Tribune Syndicate cartooning stable. \\'hen !hat strip began, the Corry, Pa .. i:iali\'C had llC\'Cr seen a ranch. Neither had Capt. Patterson. Ferd r.:-cal!s. After the strip h~1d run ,...pbout l\\'O years, Patterson. \·isited a 'ranch. \\'as thrown fron1 his horse . \\'hen he got back he "'as so mad he bounced the strip. 1-•tcr. co\.\'boys and demand (or '''cstcrn Am eric:1na and hun1or returned Texas S!irn to the con1ic pages and Ferd dre-A· it for i!s entire 18-~·ear. life . The strip began -A'hen Ferd v•as iust 19 -J comparative youngster next to the car- tooning greats who then shart'd orru.·c space in the Tribune building. Among them were Chester Gould . creator of "Dick Tracy." Others 'A'ere Sid Smith, Fran k King, Carry Orr and Harold Gray creator of a strip about an W1fortunate little bov. ··Orphan Otto." · Capt. Patterson thought a story nbo11l a linle girl "'ould have more appeal. so Gray chanf.:cd the stri p lo '"Li ttle Orphan Annie:· Johnson s:ud. The halc}on da.\S of l"<1rtoon1nJ.! ar,_.. over. The Tribune TO'A'Cf no longer housts the comics syndicate creative team. Johnson 1novcd to Corona 1ll'I :\!nr f1\·l' years ago after scout ing n·rorts fro1n sons sixikc well of thl' clunatl'. For a time the strip originated frorn a studio.in Beverly Hills. F1nal l,\·. Ar<1ndpa. a part- \llTil' <irl cri!u: and teache r to To1n's lx1)"S. llvu1-:. Br;1dy, Christopher and Broo~l'. dl't:!dl'ti to lllO\"c closer. Ferd cla1n1s th;.it :ll 6, Dous sho'A·s pron1isc. To n1:ike 1t Hl 1hc ca rtoon strip business he'll nl'<'<I ideas, Ferd suggests. "ldl·as arc the big th ing. If you can draw a l1ulr bit and ha\·e funn}' ideas, you can n1akt-11.'' Ill' agrC'<.'S ho\\"e\-t'r. that comprtit1on is kcl'nt'r now· 1han cvf'r hcfort.' as syn· dtcatl'S choose to try a new strip may~ onrc ('Vl'ry othl'r ~·t·ar. !\!any of these l'Ollll' froni established name cartoonists The da~s 'A'ht•n a \\"Ould be cartoonist l"Otdd h.1ng :1round a ne\\"spapt;r office .111d launch his career coloring comics 11rnt out 1-l'ith rye shades and Al Capone. 11hcn artists scattered to studios across !he country using the U.S. inail, not copy boys to send in strips. Bt>sidrs. Totn's mothC'r, Doris Johnson, l'olors !\loon \lullins· Sunday outings. MANAGEMENT AUTHORITIES LEAD UCI EXECUTIVE PROGRAM DISCUSSIONS UCLA Professor Anthony Ra ia Outline$ Manager's Role in Planning Process UC I Gets 'T11itio11' Executives Back in School F'orly government and business ex- ecutives re('(!ntly paid $9::.0 apiece to tel! each other how to run their offices. They paid the money to t:C Irvine and then proceeded to "educate" then1sel\'£'S by sharing managcn1ent experiences in 18 Wednesday evening sessions. At fir st blush. CCl's f.li:ccuri\·e Program sounds like the S\\•indle of the century -getting studrnls to pay the university to al!O\\" them lo teach themselves. Yet. for the first 40. the experience was so meaningful, the group has formt'd l:CI Executive Association to perpetuate the rclntionship \\'ith fellow Ex c c u ti v e Prograrn "classmates" "as well as the rel!l!ionship \\ ith the university.·· Ja y Haas. 43. marketing execuii\·e of \!o"<rin Jnr .. an Irvine rlectronics flrn1. heads the newly formed association . "For 18 '>''eeks beginning in .January. '\'ednesday night "'as the high point of mv week ." llaas said . iie credits !h•' 1n,ol\'rment of hi~h leve l corpora!(' and go1·ernn1ent manal-(t'· ment, the discussions and 1hr d1scuss1on sessions \1'1th 1~·ad1ng r~per1s and recogni1cd <;Uthorit1cs in mana;?C'mrnt philosophy Thcsr included I'(' t c r Drucker. Harold Koontz. Sheldon Da\·1s Grorge Steiner and Anthony Raia Haas also suggests the emphasis on th1· • "behavioral science approach t o management" was ano!her rrason ihl' first UCI Executive Program "as of 1.uch interest. "The personalities of people in the '>''Ork force ere changing, the old school o( the boss as someone who orders subordinates around Is rapidly losing ground. "The new successful breed of manager is one who recogn izes lhe potenti;il value and lhe CC)ntributlon each individu11I can ma ke," lla11s said ... It isn't the in· divldual's job to put his h1lent& forward . but it's management's job to discover I FOUNDING PRESIDENT Irv ine Executive Haas \\fl~'> tu ~t use a perc;on ·s 1al• nts th" L"r Berkeley electronic cn~1n1·<-rin~ ~rJd said. Of the IR sessions. ll<i<i~ C!'t1matcd, "froot one-third to one-half !hr t1n1e \\'311 spent trying to hr!p 1nanflJ.:l'rS learn how to "get the best out o( pcop!t'.'' The benefit of "l:ipp1nJ,1 thi~ hrr!'IOfore unreto~niz{'(I and unusrd r1'i.o11rCf'" for business is obvious It can mc11n "greater productivity J><'r ind1vldua l. '' J Jaas said. "It can also mean a hoppll'r \\'Orker. t>tcausc hi!S real -AOrlh is rrco$!;nrzed and rH<'Ctlvely used ,"' he add!!, noting that for him th is aspect "'as of the i;rcatcst > .. iµ_n 1f1(•;inc1·. lnc:ri·usrd produc1!\1ty also benefits thf' I lillHllUOll ~ ;!~ a \lholl'. · 1:l:'l-;1U:.l· l;1IJOr 1s the 1nosl <.'Oslly par1 1fl 1110<;1 bu:;1nr·:.s1:s." Haas notes. a small •..,.11n 1n produ1 I 1\ uy can be translated in- tf1 ;1 comb1nar1on or higher 11rof1ts andlor lri11,.,. prli •·<; (1r;111j.!" l'nl1rf' Chu•f r-.tc-rle V. !Juncan 1s 1 r•-..-.un r ril th1· ru·\\ I\ torrned as'ioct.•· 1!111) J[,. tP~!s .1pj1l1<'illl~tl or !hr ITIOSI ;id- '· .111• • d 111:1:1;i:.:1·1nt•n1 1 r ch n i q u r s .i. ,utilblc 1s 11nportr1nt to <1n inst1tut1on -.11pritu-1t'<l by taxes, Baas adds. <:t'{Jt l!t' F :'-:urn". 1-oun1~· prrsonnel d··l'l·lopmc·nt ~pt.·tialist · Rohcrt I .. S;inpsnn. Housing '"1d l'rb:in f)rvclop- 1nen1 1nsunni:; uffirr d1rcl"IOr. and CC I 1 icr chanct•Hor John C. Jloy "·ere Olhrr ptihli<" :ii.:"n,·1 1f'p1,.:,cnt.att1l's in the firs! l Cl Ex1·1·u11\ 1• l 'rogram. The n1ajonty of the cla~s \\3S dr3'An frnn1 industry. They r(•presentL-d land dev<·lopn1l•nt. mn- struction. ,tt•rospace . <'l£'1etron1cs and small bus1nt·:.s 111cl ud1ng JX•1sonnel and 1nt1nagemcnt consulting a_!!<•n1·1<'s. .John JJ ~pt·~1r. t Cl d•·vclupn1ent and :1lumni aH;111"> director l><'h<'\l'3 1he rx- c·<'11t1\ ,. progr.1111 1x111crncd ;1 f t er !\1rn1l:1rl ! ~urt (·'l\bll C'rtorl~ :1! L:~LA. ht•n• 111" ho:h !111 • ;i1npu!'I :lJld thr tuhlnt'~:. lH•IUllLlnrl~ 6 .. l l11r p111,:1.1u1 1" ;,11 out~ro111h or our l'f'I l1\d<1.'l/'1,1l .\~.'hfJ:l!t>s ·• Spear noted Tt1c 1d• ;1 ']•I ·•Iii.! lnJtll that group of btl!>Lncs. ... mtn 11ho lx·ncf11 d1rec1ly from th•·lr 11sAA·1;1111,n "1th thr un1\·ers1ty as a support 01 g;1nizallon. "The ~~xecut1ve Program in IUfT\ ha., spcnsored a ue"' group to allow th~ part1cip11nts to rrm:iin ln,•olvl"<i with both the ongoing r..;ecu1t\·e prof.!rilm classes, the un1v('rs1t\ anrl r111Trnl lrrnd! in niana~C'mcnt 0SC1('ntr In return business lcadershqJ pro\ ides l'CJ an "rver·uir dated welisprin~ of currtnt lhlnklng t\l share 'A'llh faculty :111d others." Spear S<Jld. ! • I ' .f DAILY PILOT Tu.;..,., Jvl1 31, IW3 Spacewalk Delayed ·-Bntil Saturday' Letting Old George Do It POUSl'ERS DEPT. -Up al Cal State Fullerton. studen t:i: in potilical science and environmental studies have gone out in an effort to learn "'hat Orange Coun- tians think about our way of life. v'ou mlght conclude we're not terribly pleas- ed. Preliminary resulls of tho poll-taking suggest that the number ooe priority among Orange Oxmtl.ans is to stop pollu- tion, then reduce unemployment, then aid the poor. We figure the govemnent ought to do most or these things. The citizens t~lves don't participate really, other than casting an occasional vote in elect.ions. J The 6Ul'Vey unHertaken by Cal State Fullertoo was under the directi.oo. ol. Bar· ry E. Gerber. an assistant professor of political science. Students examine at- titudes of residents in a cros.wectim of economjc and cultural levels in 1,000 households. Of that nwnber, 632 responses were utilil.ed for the tabulation. NOW, I HAVEN'T the foggiest notion ol what questions Prof. Gerber's ~ put to the folks oot there but the preliminary results just released are interesting. Thirty percent of the Orange O>untians polled said that elimination of pollution should be our number one priority. And along those lines ' . -Nearly 88 percent said they would be willing to separate out their own trash. -About 66 percent aren't willing to pay a fee to have that trash separated. -Almost BS percent said the govern- ment should require industry to eliminate pollution. -Near the same number said the go""""1ellt lsn~ doing enoogb 10 clean up the envirorvnent -Just over 55 percent said they'd 'ride a bicycle to work il they could. -And 64 pe<eent Indicated they'd use public transponation rather than their o-wn autos to travel tO work if they could. APJ'ER AIL THIS comes the kicker 1ine, wherein the students apparently asked tbe housebolden if they beloog to any orgaoiz.atioos which are flgbting for a cleaner Orange County environment Of those polled, nearly 00 percent sald they don't belong to or participate in any such outfits. As a matter of fact, 67 per- cent admitted they don 't do anything in community affairs except cast that vote now aIMI then. And as for casting that vote, some 60 peroent of the Orange Qiuntians polled sald they thought that lawmakers ought to be respmsible for solving en- vironmental problems. NINETY PERCENT said a need !or urban city planning exists arxi 46 percent said that current urban planning in their oommlUlities is inadequate. Severity per- cent favor tax dollars being used for deveJoping a mass rapid transit system. - Well, with all those percentages rat- tling around, you might w81lt to nitpick or argue with how Prof. Gerber and his youngsters operated thcir poll. That a- side, it still leaves you with a sort of melancholy picture about life in good old Orange County, long considered the stronghold of individuaJ enterprise. Wha t the Cal State, Fullerton. poll seems to be saying is. ''Gee, we've got a problem with the envi ronment. l~thould be fu:ed. Let's have the govern ent do lt. ) ·'Don't bolher me." Rescued at Last Cave explorer Mike Mooneyham, 19, bolds puppy he had just plucked from bottom o! 91).(oot shaft in Nashville, Tenn. The pup, owned by Rusty Garney, 15, CTe!t) had slipped through bole and was I.rapped for more than 24 hours . Insurgents Slip Through - Phnofu Penh's Perimeter PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - Communist-led insurgents s l l p p e d through Pb!IOrn Penh's defense perimeler today and fought government troops on two sides of the capital The insurgents were two miles inside the government defense pcoitioos aIMI ooly five miles from this city of three million as U.S. warplanes Oew over the capital constantly. Laird Def ends ,Bombing, Not Faked Reports WASHINGTON (UPI) -Melvin R. Laird vigorously defended today secret bombing of areas or neutral Cambodia in 1918-70 as essential to save American 1iV'es but said the Pentagon committed a snafu in giving Coogius doctored reports. Laird, who as defense secretary pro- posed the bombing and sald be got Presi· dent Nixon 's authorization, ins.isled it was neces&Bry both to reduce American casualties at the lime and expedite U.S. withdrawal . LAIRD, NOW A counselor to President Nixon, said the raids on so-called sanctuaTy areas for North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were made secretly because of diplomatic sensitivities. Cam- bodia was proclaiming itself neutral at the time. But U.S. officials say Prince Nonxlom Sihanouk. gave tacit approval for lhe bombing provided they were not publicly reported. Since the Vietnam cease-fire, U.S. bombers have attacked Conununisl forces menacing Cambodia, now under the Lon Nol regime that deposed Sihanouk and tilled toward the United States. 1be drumrol.l of heavy explosions characteristic of bombs from B52 bombers was beard in Pmom Penh. To the southeast of the capital, three government s o 1 d i e r s were reported wouoded in a firefight at the sprawling village of ROOos Angyanh, between the Bas.we aIMI Mekong rivers. TO THE NORTl!WEST, a squadrm of armored personnel carriers moved in to reinforce a govemmmt outpost that came urxler attack in the village of Kap Srau Toch. Field officers in Kap Srau Toc.b said In- surgent units are attempting to slip within rocket range al. ~ Penh's Pocbenlollg airport to threaten the capital's principal transportatioo link. Sixteen government soldiers were wounded and a civilian killed in a misdirected U.S. bombing raid Mooday near the village of Setbo, 14 miles south <i Phnom Penh, according to f i e I d reports. Monday night insurgept forces came to within four miles o& Phnom Penh's southern o u t s k i r t s along the govemmeot's defense line there. Fighting was reported during the ~-gh within two miles of Takbmau. and gwernment communique said villages south of the town were hit by fire. Many people have fled their homes along the thickly settled road between Takhmau and Phnom Penh. Other fighting was reported both north and south of PMom Penh, but details and casualties were not announced. On tbe south, the battlefronts were at the village of Prate.ah Lang, where a government annored force is trying to outflank the insurgent advance from the southwest; at Wat Sleng, on Highway 3 nine miles from the capital: arid at Prek Ho, six miles south of the city. Northwest of Pbnom Penh, fighting erupted at the village or Kap Srauthom. U.S. 852 bombing missioos continued around the clocl<, pounding at insurgent concentrations and supply r o u t e s . American fighter-bombers continued to give close support to govenunent ground ron:es. Uncerwinty On Campaign Reform Seen WASHINGTON (AP) -An uncertain future lies ahead in the House for a Watergate-spawned campaign reform bill passed by the Senale. The bill , intended to curb "big-money influence'' in electioos, would sharply limit campaign contnl>utioos and cam- paign speiiding and establish an in- dependent enforcement agency. \\'hile !he Senate was passing the bill ( IN SHORT .•• ) 82-to-8 Monday, the House balked at even considering a bill to open the way for congressional pay raises in trus noo-elec- t.ion year. The vote in tbe Hoose was 237 to 156 against taking up the pay bill whidl the Senate passed July 9 with no debate or roll call vote. e 'Big Brothe r' F e ared WASHINGTON (AP) - A government advisory committee today recommended new safeguards to protect Americans from "Big Brother'' misuse of com- puterized infonnation about their lives. The report strongly advised curbing the growing use of Social Security nwnbers for personal Jdentification and proposed legislative restraints to protect individuals from unwarranted invasion of privacy. e Stennis D ischarged WASHINGTON (UPJJ -Sen. Jolm C. Stennis (D-Miss.), wounded seriously in a Washington street holdup last Jan. 30, was fonnally discharged from WaJter Reed Anny Medical Center Monday but he will not resume his full duties in the Senate for several weeks. Stennis, 72, had been able to leave the hospital for brief periods during his treatment e T llZ S•oop Charged WASHINGTON (UPI) -John D. Ebrlidunan has charged that an ex- amination of ''many, many" income tax returns was started by an assistant of John F. Kennedy sil days alter Kennedy me President. Showers Linger Over East Efil.\ic' ~an produced a 1970 coo- l record at the Senate W a le hearings on Monday which said the K aide, Carmine Bellino, "called on the commissioner of intemal revenue and undertook inspection of I Pleasant Conditions Ove r Most of U.S.-Not Te xas TetnJH!rnture• I"~ WtllfilN 6 1M ,. A.IDanv Hftll L-l'r. N • A.!1•"'' " n 11.~ ..... iltld m • '"'"' " .. 8"'1110 " " c ... rtnton " • !Er' • " -" n -" _ .. .. " .... ., N -" " •• ....... " " •• ,_ "" " ...... ~ .. • JK~vlll1 • " .4 11:-..S (ltv " " Lal y'l:c'i ... • e:::: K. " " -" "'"' • " .. M ..... " " ·" ~~ " .. ·" • .. .. " " " e....:.. .,. N N . " " .. I'll~• ... § ,.,,,, . N -· .. a()ff. .. • " N " her•'"""'-;: .. Sf. lOUlt 1l •• aft ~111 C11V .; ~ Ill rltfldlCO 1111 ' Csllfornla ~ CAL WUTHlll: M lttr.d lftunOtr.,.....,I In m:r.; ...., On.I 'r-J •re the ttlll Oft ~ .-... ot"""'I• c.on!lllW It "" m Id •x=r. Mtrhfr 1111Wlll!Ollt 1Wf111t11 Ctllfom 1. ... I I WfAlllllWWICll()l:IC.t.Sl11hMIS1 •-t •1) ,, >MO w ............ _ ~ ....... ( 1101 . .... ~ ,,.,.,., ....... ~SlllOWlll llOW v.s.s ....... ,.......,. ..... """""'"""'"" ll"""td ' Coatal Wea tller MclJfty tMffl'lf lofty, .L'-'1 ¥1rlelH wl• """' ...., ........ .,. hOvt"t .,.. cor!'ll"" """""'' ,. to 1• kflOh 111 ... _.,... tod.fly !IN ~,. Hltfl '°"" ""' 7'h.. C..'1.i """""'""'" ,.,._ N-orn t) to 11. LflltNI ....,.._. """' ,...... "'-a to 11, w1i.r i.nt-,..,~ '1. Su•, Jlfoo•, Tide• TVIMIAT kond f119'1'1 • ,, , , , , 11 :llt 11·'"· I , I S«erid low S:CO p.m. 1.J WIOMISDAY ,,,., 111011 lt:U 1,m. S,J "'"' tow· 5 SS t.m. t', S«MI Mtlt ll;Sol "'"" S4cOl'llll ..., • s:• 11.m. 1,l S.... t'hU •:llS I .fl\. Sith 1:15 p.lfl. "-""""a:u 1.m.. s.ts t·ot 1 """ I m&ny, many tax returns." · Bellino now is chief Investigator for the Senate Watergate Committee. e Campe r Stahl>ed De a,. SPECULATOR, N. Y. (UPI) -Police using bloodhounds and b e Ii co p t e rs searced a wooded area in the Miron-- clack lt1ountains today for a gunman wbo stabbed to death a teen-age camper Ued to a tree and then threatened be would "kill again." DAIL T l'ILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DetMry of 1ht DlilJ Pflol 11 ..,.Mtttcl ........,.,.....,, ti .,.. • "" ....... ,.,.,, ., s ........ " ...... -Gtflf ... .,..,,...., .. ~c•""'.,.. .... _. ,, ....... S.~ Mil ._.,I H "" .... "°"'9 ,.... """' .,. . ...... .........,., ... . ,.., .. ..... ,. i•• .... C#f .............. .. JW, c.111 .,. t .. • •II lt 1.-. Tt~hontt ... Dr .... ,_.., .. ,_ ••••••• ~ " ..... " ............ ••KJi ...., Wnl......W., ... , ....... 12:11 S.. C"-'t, <••If"-._.... .... 'NI c...i.lr-,, ~ ....... ».1111 L ...... ~ Nlfwl ,,.. 4'MOI Astronauts Believed Getting Over Illness HOUSTON (UPI) -Tbe first spacewalk o! the Stylah 2 missloo was delayed again today, thb time unUI Saturday, to give the astronaub time to catd:J up on lauiDI wort and overcome their motion sickne&s with rest, square meab and eun:be. The three spacemep, apparently feel · ing better alter a tluft.day bout with the space sickness, made ~ ln ac- tivating their space station and even bad time to observe two minnows coofused by the lack of gravity in the ship's aquar- ium. Mission commander Alan L. Bean had predicted earlier that a relaxed schedule for the nezt few days would give him, Owen K. Garri .. t aIMI Jack R. Lousma time to regain their strength and gE:;t ready for the spacewalk and the rest or the two-month flight. GROUND CONTROU.ERS decided rest was the number one consideration. The spacewalk originally was set for to- day and the astronauts' first day off was advanced to Friday from Saturday under a revised plan sent to the crewmen by radio-teleprinter before they awoke. There was no early word from the astronauts on bow they felt today, but they were busy moving about the big space station installing a replacement tape rec.order, working with a troublesome dehumidifier and booking up a bicycle exerciser. It was such move- ment that led to stomach queasiness and nausea during their first three days of flight. GARRIOTT, WHO had to take two an· tinausea pills Monday , felt well enough to open a cao containing a small aquarium and to observe two confused o/, inch min· nows in synthetic sea water. The idea of that unusual experiment was to see what disorientat.ipn fish experience when ex- posed to weightlessness. "We've got a couple of minnows at the moment that are just swimming all over the placo," be reported. "Both these fellows are really swimming full1 speed. As a matter of fact , they seem. to be completely disoriented ••• "111EY'RE AIL swimming In small circ.les so they'll apparenUy think they're climbing or something due to tbe Zero G gravity and they're pitching down to overcome that. And they're rswimming in very tight circles." G~ott, who bolds a PhD in electric.al Girl in British Scandal Admits Charges, Fined LONDON (AP) -fiorma Levy, the call girl at the center ol the sex scandal that rocked the British government, pleaded guilty to three counts of in- fluencing prostitutes aIMI was lined 1562 today. The magistrate, John Phipps, sald the tllree charges resulted from Mrs. Levy agreeing to m a n a g e a friend's "organization" for a couple of weeks. The charges had no bearing on the government scandal. h-trs. Levy, 26, was identified as the prostitute photographed in bed with Lord Lambton, then the British air force minister. He resigned. The Lambton in- vestigation forced the r<Signat;on of Lord Jellicoe, government leader in the House of Lords. He admitted dealings with t?all girls. Both Lambton and Jellicoe sald tht!y were not blackmailed. Botb said there were no security leaks as a result ol. their relations with call girls. Mrs. Levy's lawyer, Robert Gibbons, told the court that despite the charges admitted by his client "she is not the head or even the member of any gang of swindlers or blackmailers." Red .>lJeeting engineering, said be abO could see development ln some of ~ 50 1l'llnnow eggs in the 6 by 6 inch aquarium. They are espeeted to hatch nm wm. "You can see the embryo Inside a number of them just by eye wtUlout put- ting a magnifying gla'8 oo them," be reported . The minnows, commonly called "mummichog minnows" were caught In tbe Atlantic Ocean off Beaufort, N.C. Haldeman- ' An S.O.B. For Nixon' By United Press International When you talk about loyalty to a presi- dent, you talk about Harry Robbins Haldeman of Newport Beach. "Every President needs his s.o.b., and I'm Nixon's," Bob Haldeman was fond of saying. ' . His detractors, and they seemed legion. complained that he was loo pluperfect an s.o.b. His supporters. and they often seemed few, said that if Haldeman didn't exist Ni.xoo would have had to invent hhn. BUT HAWEMAN cared oot fOl' bis detractors nor his supporters. He saw as bis job to protect the President, to shield him from the favor-seekers and the power-brokers (the pests). Detractors and supporters alike sald be did that job well. Those who liked him sald bis was a necessary function if the President was Mt to get bogged down in minutiae. Those who disliked him said he was too successful , that Haldeman caused~IJ to operate out of an ivory tower and run the country '\S a benevolent pa · ~1'> didn't trust bis dtildren. HALDE~IAN, 46, onc:e the s~l ' man in the White HOtt.WJ next to the President, has lo II en victim to the Watergate scandal. On April 30, with deepest regret aIMI with public laudings for their loyaJty and ability, Nixon ac- cepted the resignatioo.s of Ha1deman and his UCLA 1'00llllD8'le, John Ebrticbman. "Hans" and "Fritz " as Haldeman and Ehrliclunan ...... railed -but ""' to their faces -were Nixm's chiel of. staff and chief domestic adviser respectively. 'Ibey tmdered their resignations follow- ing a rash of published reports lhat they ma,y have been involved In the planning .and cover-up ot the Watergate bugging. THERE WERE few sorrowful ex- pressions, in the White Hou.se or on Capitol Hill when the news b r o t e. Crewcut, formidable-looking HaJdeman had won a reputation for the ruthless u- ercise of power and unquestioning loyaJty to Nix<n His protectJve shield around the President became known as the "8'rin Wall." He managed the President's time, personally cleared everyone who wanted to see the President -even Cabinet of- ficials -and control.led all a:m· municatkwls to the Oval Office. With the President's acquiesoence, be ruled supreme and delivered the bad news that Nixon did mt want to persooally handle -such as firing 2,000 ~level govenunent officials the day after the landslide election. Haldeman had served the President since they began an association in the 1956 campaign when Nixon sought re- election for vice president Calls Monitored NEW YORK (AP) -CBS News said Monday it acquired documents indicating that the U.S. Army is monitoring the telephone calls of news correspondeU and civilians in West ~nnany. ... _ Angela Davis talks with girl survivor of Son My hamlet In South Viet- nam. Miss Davis Is In East Berlin to attend 10th FesUval o! Youth and <'1udents ~pnnl:ored bv Cf'lm munl"f "''"Ou,.- 1 \ •• OA!l Y PILOT Chavez Sees Loss He Sliuns Nudity, Backs It Acid-bath Slayl•lfl Ending Movement A lot of people need you. DELANO CAP) -Cesar Chavez, his attempt t o organize farm labor lhrtaten· ed at Its birthplace, says the loss of the current battle "'ith Delano table grape growers would "be the end of an Im· New System Will Fight Raging Fh·e EUREKA CUPll-The U.S. Forest Service has turned to an experimental sprinkler system in an attempt to stop a surging forest fire that is too hot and dangerous for humans to fight at close range. Now five daya old, the blaze in Klamath National Forest, ( BRIEFS ) has swept over 4',800 acres in mountainou! territory , destroying 73 million board feet of timber worth $16 ' million. e Bugs on Campus LOS ANGELES (APJ - Campus police in the Los Angeles Community College system have carried out il- legal electronic surveillance, according to testimony taken by a state Assembly sub- committee. On Monday, campus police officer Jacqueline Jones, who ; says Bhe was su.1pended for similar testimony in a civil suit, outlined eavesdropping at Los Angeles Trade I Tech College before the .Msembly judiciary subcommittee on e BART Still SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Bay Area Rapid Transit trains will not be rolling again until Monday, even though a ten· tative settlement in t h e district's labor dispute has been announced, o£ficiala say. 1be te~ of the proposed settlement, reached I a t e Saturday, have not been an- nounced, but union leaders predicted it would win ap- proval from rank-and-file members. e Tramlt Sult LOS ANGELES CAP) Mayor Tom Bradley. City Councilman Edmund Edelman and the ·ctty of Riverside have filed suit lo permit highway trust funds to be used in build- ing rapid transit systems. ln announcing the action :P.1onday, Bradley said, "\Ve"re going after money i n Washington , ln Sacramento and through this means - anywhere we can -to help star l different modes of· transportation." He said Los Angeles and other cities cou1d not afford to v.•ait on a proposed con- stitutiooal amendment af- fecting the highway fund. e Gianelli quit• SACRAMENTO (AP) William R. Gianelli resigned Monday after more than six stormy years as California's water development chief. During that time. the pep- pery, ~!oot-7 Gianelli guided the $3 billion State Water Proj- ect to completion and battled conservalioni.!ts. Gov. Ronald Reagan said he accepted Gianelli's resignation as director of water resources with regret. I portant and unique mov~ ment." Cha<M Of'dortd his Uolted Farm W<:>rkers Union members ori strike and began a boycott Qf table grapes ~1.on· day as negotlatlons w I t h growers broke d0\\'11 on new ..contracts. The crisis could be lhe most severe in Chavei' eight-year drive which began here to band field v:orkers together into an agricultufal union. UFW's most famous and sym- bolic contracts were those signed ~·ith 29 Delano growers three years ago. BUT THE UNION 'S membership, which once num- bered 40,0CX>, has slipped to 6,500 still working in the fields SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -A 3$-year-old p I a n o tuner announced ~1ooday he Is organizing a drive to gather signatures for a ballot petition to make topless and bottomless entertainment legal in San l'Tancisco. "I don't like to see censorship of any kiod ex· cept for national securl· ty ," said David Carlstroem, who also an· oounced bis candidacy for the city's Board o r Supervisors. But, Carlstroem said he doesn't like the nudity featured in North Beach night clubs. "I don't waste my lime going there," he said. with expiration of the con-'-----------' tracts here. State Bar To Oarify Position SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A unles.s rranted a oew trial by lngl y, lntelllgently ind ,·o\w1· II u ngar\.an-born physician's Santa Clara O>unty. He Md wily; that I n e fr e c t I v c third bid to oJerturn his 00& bee('\rrned ~'D on similar rtpresentaUon or co u n s ~1 vicOon ror the 1962 acid-beth pleb b)..f trial court and the deflied him :i f::iir trial. and slaying ol hi.s 25-yeaNlold wife Califomia Supreme Court in that massive.pr t ju d I c I a I 1-1 publicity had nt.ade it inl· at their san Jose hooeymooo ... The hy I possible lo get a f<ilr tri al. apartment has been rejected. P slclan l c aimed dur-Sv.·e\gert held the re "'as no Or. Ger.a de Kaplany's COO· Ing his trlal hls righi.s had evidence or information in the tenlions that he waa deprived been violated because the first t"·o days of trlnl to raise of his COf\S\llutlonal rights court had failed to haJd a any doubt about de l\aplany'5 du..ina bis !91! trlal and oon-hearlng on bis competency to competence 10 stand trial or ..... "" stand irtal; be had not en· change his plea extept one ex· vlctlon were ool !UbstanUated tered a plea Qf guilty know· cited outburst. by the evidence, U.S. Di.strictlliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.;,iiiiiiiiiiiiiijiil I Court Judge William T. Sv.-eigert ruled :P.1onady. lie bad taken the case under sut>- miss.ioo after a fi\•e-<l.ay hear· lng earlier this month. De Kap I any, 47 , had told the · judge he v.·as "rmotionall y drained, ph)·sicn\l y exhausted. mentally dazed " \\·hen he stood before the trh~l court ·and pleaded guilt~· l\\'O day5 after his trial began Jan. 14 , 1963. HE RELATED he had not meant to kill his bride the night oIAug. 28, 1961 but only to frighten her after being told she was having an affair 'l\"ith a former lover. After his plea, was sentenced to a ll!e term. I JOIN us FOR I I SUNDAY \\ BRUNCH ~' I hungry tiger A••TAURANT ~1 •••• , ........ ,.,,. ••• 111 SUNDOWNER DINNER (/ ' $2.tS ;=::'1fiii 51111.-l'lllar. 4-6:30 P"' And. •hey need you righ• oow1 Tum• • \ftol netd for qualified people of all ages ii> the dynamic medical and dental 6elckl Learn It right! Southnn California College or MfClicaJ &. Dental Careers offers excellent courses for MEDICAL ASSISTANTS -DENTAL TECHNICIANS -MEDICAL RECEPTIONISTS -and - DENTAL ASSISTANTS. You get superb pro- fessional lnstructlon for an e:xdtlng future tn he:.alth care! Learn it fa st! These are 'no-nonsense.' courses. Crammed with critical lnformatid n. You"re taught quickly. Effldently. And. you go to worl< -last! CAU 635·3450 Do it right noM You"ll ~ rntM"C lnb-mat~ -...t -,aa'I llliKowr juil how many~ rc-.ally do need yoi.a! PIACEMf.NT ASSIST1\i .... CE FOH GRADUATES AT NO l"~XTRA COST! ACCRt:OITEU MEMBER. NATIONAL /\SSOCIATION OF TKADE & TECtlNICAL SOIOOLS. _.\LI. PROGHAMS APPROVED FOH \IETf.AANS. SOU!liERN CAllFORNIA COi I ffiE OF MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS 1717 SOIJTll BROOKHURST,ANAHEIM 635-3450 And the T@msters Union has vowed to challenge Chavez for representation of Delano workers just as it has in other parts of California. T h e teamsters have signed 51 con- tracts so far this year with growers whose workers had been represented by t h e UFW. Because of the losses to the teamsters, 01.avez was bhmt in describing the importance of the Delano contracts to a rally of supporters before the pacts expired. • jury round him san• and h• Nearly Evei·yone SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In his petition for habeas JSJ 1. COAST The prcsldeol of lhe Slate Bar oorpus, de Kaplany asked lhal HWY .• '7l-55l4 Listens to Landers of Californ~ has scbedWed a ~he~be~r~e~leased~~from~~cus~tod~y:!__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~illllll!~~~~-~~~~~'.~~'._:~~~~~~--~ news conference Wednesday in/- "If we lose here, this will be the end of an important and unique niovement among !arm workers and rural people," Chavez said. Opposing s ide s gave divergent views of the strike's impact on its first day. UFW SPOKESMEN said about 2,000 pickets marched at the vineyards, while growers contended µtat many still were working. The current work force io area vineyards, which hasn't reached the peak of harvest yet, is estimated at 4,000 to 5,000. "It looks good; the spirit is high and workers are respond- ing," said the Rev. John Banks, a UFW spokesman. "Whole crews are coming out. A crew is composed of 50 peo- ple, and that's a big chunk." But John Giumarra , California's largest tab I e grape grower and spokesman for'the group here, contended: .. we·re in full operation. The grapes are being harvested." Los AngeJes to "make some r e marks conce rnin g Watergate involvement and the State Bar Association." Announcement of the 11 a.m. news conference came Monday at the end of a day in which the Bar Association board of governors agreed to keep silent and' Jet Bar Presi- dent Leonard S. Janofsky of Los Angeles make any public comment, said Lionel B. Benas of OakJand, a board member. Janofsky said a report in Sunday's San Francisco Ex- aminer that the board had voted 11·2, Friday to in· vestigate President Nixon and five other California licensed attorneys for possible disciplinary action because of Watergate was "absolutely absurd." JANOFSKY HAS declined further comment since bis original statement Sunday, In addition to the President, Cali!omia law Ucenses are held by John Ehrlichman, Herbert Kalmbach, Donald H. Segretti, Gordon Strachan and Robert G. Mardian . ENROLL NOW -FALL SEMESTER HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS All·DayClanea Kindergarten thru 8th Grade School Starts Tuesday, Sepl.4 • Registration Fee Only SlO FREE! Schoof desks loaned tor home use. On 11q11stw1 will provlda 11cll stvd111t 1 •esk h1 m1y 111 at •ome wMlt attending Hes .. • Modem c1rrtc11l11m • Highest 1c1d1mlc standards • All filths welcome • Ooor·ID·door bus s11'Yic1 • Belore and 1R1r school care • Rttdlng (with phonlc1)1 writing, 1rllhm1tlc, re1dln11s, ulf·dlsdpffns 1mph1stzff • Schoo111nttorm1 to red11ca clothlng costs • RlllDnl~t hlltltl In Founlain Valley: 16835 Brookhurst Streett 71.f.1126"12 Free Personal Chee • For e to celebrate the opening of our Newport Beach office Save up lo $24 a year!• When you open a Checking Account for $100 or more at our New- port Beach oHice on or before August 31, 1973, and maintain If your minimurr balance falls below $100, your account wiR to wri te as many checks as you want each monlh and never have to pay a monchly service charge. cuscomers up to $24 a year and some customers ol other banks even more. Our two drive-up teller windows mean fast service without even leaving your car. Or vvhcn you come into the bank, there's a large parkirlg area for our custo mers. -------------·-----------0 lnlo and out of. Plenty of parking. And the crowds haven't found It yet Your travol agent knOWll the~· .......... ,.. ..... . • ~I Drive-up window ban king hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mo nday· Thursday. 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m. Friday<. • ' ' Regular banking hours 10 a.m. lo 3 p.m. Monday-Thursday. 10 a.m. 10 6 p.m. Fridays. The Bank of California ®' easy. 1401 Dove Street, Newporc Place, Newport Beach, California 92660 (714) 833-3511 Warren P. Thompson, Vi ce President and Manager 1 •••••..re r ,...... .....,,.o..,c.. I I • • D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Economic For aln1ost four decades the Social Security Act has provided a measure of comfort and financial support for lhe nation's elderly, and reassurance for those approach· ing retiren1ent. 'fhe need for sucb provision is unde- niable. But snowballing statistics indicate an urgency to seek new ways to finance $0<.·jal Security. No longe~ a 1nodest, self-supporting progran1. it has become an in- creasing burden on younger wage-earne.rs. a.l~e.ady hav- ing problems keeping themselves and thetr families afloat in the sea of inflation. Increases in benefits to keep pace with living costs, and increases in the number of beneficiaries -to in· elude farmers, domestic workers, Self-employed persons, widows and others not covered under the original act - have resulted in a staggering annual outlay. In 1947 there were approximately 22 workers for every beneficiary. By 1967 there were only 3.1 ~orkers paying into the pro~ran1 for e\'ery person .d~awi!lg hen· efits. Benefit payments soared from $1 b1ll1on 1n 1950 to $11 billion in 1960 and to $56 billion this year. And the trend must inevitably continue. Jn the early days, onJy a small part or a worker's annual wage was sub1ect to the then modest Social Se- curity payroll tax, but in recent years the rate has been stepped up repeatedly in an eff?rt to keep abreast of the n1ount1 ng demands for benefits. By 1970. the first $7 ,800 of a worker's annual wage wa!i taxed al the rate of 4.8 percent. for max imum an· nual payment of $374. By 1972. the firs! $9,000 of wages was taxed at the rate of 5.2 percent, for a maximum payment or $468, This year, ~he .worker pays a 5.85.per· cent Social Securitv tax on his first $10,800 or earnings, up to a 1naximum of $631 . Next year the same tax rate (barring further chang· es) will apply to the first $12,600 of earnings. bringing the annual payment to $737 -double the 1970 amount. E1nployers. of course, pay a matching SociaJ Secur- ity tax for each worker. But still the reve.nue can~ot keep pace with demands. And current Social Security Nightmare reserves amount to only about $37 billion, or the equiva- lent of nine months' payments. further complicating the picture ls a "booster clause" which automatically steps up benefit payments with each 3 ~rcent fise in the consumer price index. The Soc1al security set-up at this point is an econo- mist's nightmare. Io the words of one concerned Con· gressman, 1'The payroll tax has been stretched almost to the breaking point as a source of revenue to pay Social Security benefits ... refonn is Jong overdue." If the present generation of contributing workers is to enjoy any guarantee of receiving benefits in Later years, the time for drastic overhauling of the machinery is right now. I Chance to Help Lillie brothers can be pretty pesty at limes, but al- most any youngster will agree that a big brother is nice to have around. For a fatherless boy, a big brother can make just about all the difference in the world. But not too many fatherless boys have real big brothers to give them the advice and companionship they need in their growing years. That's where Big Brother..s of Orange County can step into the picture. A Big Brother can be aJmost like a real brother. or a father, or both, to a lonely boy who needs a man to talk to. Some Big Brothers are fathers themselves. Some are as you ng as 18. They need only be willing to spend a few hours a week in a one-to-on& relationship with a boy who needs a grown-up friend. The need is especially great in summer, when school is out and there are so. many things to do -if only there were someone to go aJong. Volunteers 18 and over are urged to contact Big Brothers of Orange County, 150 Yorba St, Tustin, phone 544-7773, and share this worthwhile experience. OUT OF JOINT A Distorted Public View Of 'Justice' 1J"hite House Staffers Laud Fi1•11a Stand ~YDNEY J. HARRIS) \Ve think we have a passion for justice, \rhen the most we have is a passion for vengeance. Consider how punitive th e public is tov.·ard v.·rong-doers .• and ho\v indifferent the public is 11:hen 1t turns out that the \vrong-doers were more sinned against than sinning . If a suspect is pul- led and pummelled into a police station on suspicion of a violent crime, and a confession is 'vrung oul of him by dubious means. ! the public thinks he had it coming. and then some. There is no limit to Y.'hal y.·c y.·ould like to do to a villain of that stripe. But suppose, os happens from time to lime. that the villain is not a villa in at ~II. and the stripe was pul there by lhe police or prosecutors or unreliable witnesses. And that he was a victim of mis taken identity or coincidence or ex- .' cessive official zeal to apprehend somebody -and he is subsequently declared totally innocent. \"OU WOULD think, \VOUldn't you, that the public's righteous inger against him v.·ould transfer itself to the ~rsons and lhe process that treated him ' so badly, and that may have violated all sorts of la\\'S ln extorting hi s spurious confession ? You might think so, but you would be ,,qong. People just shrug and call it the rub of the green. \\'hen it transpires that the defend ant iii clean. but the prosecution is dirty (or. v.·hat C'Omcs to the sa me thing. willfully nl'gligentl. :iii\ or a sudden public Senator Dear Gloo1n v • Gus John Ehrlichman seems concerned about the drinking habits of S<>me or our elected officials. Ho'v about appointed officials who get drunk \Vith po"•er? -G.P. Gltomr Gut -11 1r1 1u1Ho1I"" 'rt rNder$ Ind N Ml MCIH•IU11r rwll«I .... w"w• of the --·· S."4 rwr ,... -Wt le GIMfftr a.. .. lhollr !"lie!. righteousness dissolves: into a mood of bland tolerance, "These things will hap- pen," people murmur soothingly, and go on their way. Yet this is when I get maddest of all. It is understandable, if not excusable, that some half-witted or psychopathic ch(lfacter should violate the law; it is in- excusable that the very men sworn to uphold it shou ld subvert it by withholding or fabricating evidence, by beating out P confession. or by sloppy and indifferent work . WHEN PEOPLE who are entrusted "'ith the law break the law. it is to my mind a hundred times more criminal lhan when a criminal breaks the law. \\1hen men languish in jail for months, or wmetimes years. and then it is found that someone else committed the crime lo which they ··~nt~sed·' -why shouldn't the extorlers of such con· fessions be made to serve the same time themselves? They are far more danjl'erous lo the ruJe or law than the im· becilic. and usually self·destructivc, criminal types. But it is the sin ister figure of the abstract Criminal that we fear, not the figures or officialdom, who feel lhey can operate outside the law withoul eliciting public indi gnation or retaliation, beyond :i mild tap on the v.'Tist. Our professed desire for "\a\\' and order" is really a public hysteria for .. order," at y..·hatever cost to the tintitalion.s of the law. Tackles The Tape Play: A Desperate Gamble WASHINGTON -President Nixon 's refusal to give his tape recordings to anybody, an absolute victory for White House hanl·liners, c o n s t i t u t e s a desperate gamble : to win back the American people by thumbing his nose at Republican politicians, Congress and his own special prosecu- tor. The stunning final· ity of Mr. Nixon's refusal to supply ev- idence undercuts his last significant Re- publican support in C.Ongress. But their defection was fully disCOWlted by trium- phant hard-liners on the \Yhite House staff. "Thank God," one such stafrer told us. "The President has finally as- serted himself and the people will fol· low him." That meanS the \Vhite House has returned ru11 circle to the atmosphere which originally c o n t r i b u t e d to Watergate. Rebuffed liy Congress, the President early in his administration felt forced to operate on his 0~11 -an autonomy tragically perverted by the multiple Watergate horrors. Once the scandal broke, a shaken l\lr. Nixon moved toward greater cooperation with O:lngress and Republican politicians. But Monday's refusal oC the tapes means the President has: reverted to seeking public approbration by exuding toughness. THE REVERSION has been vigorously promoted by young middle-lev e l presidential aides. v.·ho abhorred ~tr. Nixon's concessions the last three n10nths -particularly bowing to bipartisan pressure tor a s p e c i a I prosecutor. They have contended J\fr. Nixon's rapid decline in the polls was caused by such concessions and that the American people will suppart him only v.·hen he exhibits strength. These contentions were gradually ac· [...__EV_AN_s_·_NO_¥_:AK__.J_ cepted by Gen. Alexander Hilig, the President's new chieC of s ta f r ~·ho became convinced weeks ago that the \\'atergate crisis was produced by a coalition-it not a coMpiracy-of poll· ticians and journalists intent on Mr. Nixon's ruin. That, in turn , matched the attitude habitually taken by Mr. Nixon in time or crisis. THE DECISION is final, not debatable and not subject to appeal by softer-line advisers. i·we have to accept it as ii ls," one gloomy senior \Vhite lfouse staffer told us. Such critics can only hope for reemergence of !\1r. Nixon's natural voter constituency despite still more de- fections among what Nixon aides call ''the sophisticates .'' But that disaffection comprises con- 7apes nothing, who· ordered the pizza?" Soviet Emigration I gress.ional Republicans -including some House party leaders -who until now had steadfast'1 defended the President. While expect ind' Mr. Nixon would deny the tapes to Sen. Sam Ervin's Watergate committee, these Republicans assumed selected tapes would be supplied under tight limitations to speci~l prosecutor Archibald C.Ox. They were stunned by the President's blanket :denial, rearing the country will decide he has much to hide. Shnilarly, 'Cox expected loog negotia· tion over the tapes, asswning incorrectly the White House wanted to avoid a cm· frontation at all costs. WHAT B0111 Cex and congressional Republicans fai led to realize ¥.'ClS the total reversion to defiance or the ,Political establishment in search of mass support. Thus, presidential aides now deride Ca.x as a Iiarvard professor without a con· stituency. What has happened is typically reflected in the transformation of Ten· nessee Sen. Howard Baker's role as the Ervin committee's senior Republican. Baker, consef\lative and Ni.s:onite, began as a cautious defender of Mr. Nix- on's position -helping tbe White House by opposing, though unsuccessfully, limited immunity ror deposed presJden- tial counsel John W. Dean Ill. But White House aides began complaining that ~aker did not fight hard enough against Dean's immunity and was altogether too chummy with Chairman Ervin, RUft.fORS of presidential disapproval v.·ere bluntly confirmed to Baker two v.•eeks ago. While Baker stood at his etbow, Ervin telephoned the President to ask for a ~meeting between an three of them. Mr. Nixon replied he would see Ervin (an agreement reneged last Moo- day) but not Baker. Since then, Baker has been appalled by de<pening insi- dential intransigence. 'Mle hard line taken by the President offends bis champions. Harsh attacks on Baker leaked out of the White House ir· ritate his rellow conservatives on Capitol LI.ill, Sen. Edward Gurney of Florida, un- til now the staunchest Nixonite on the Ervin committee, is upset over denial 0£ the tapes. Having thus alienated even his own political supporters, President Nixon gambles that American public opinion will regard his refusal as a defiant ex· erciSl: of courage rather than a shrouded admission of guilt. Bot Mr. Nixon's hard line \irtually cut off any escape by other route1. U the gamble for public support fails. e .. -en his own aides admit, the President may have played his last canL Elderly, Sick, Feeble Gouged by Drug Prices The United Stat.es is the only Industrial 'nation in the world which doesn't, in some way, control the prices or medicinal drugs. Result : The greedy pharinaceutical finns ha\le taken ad- vantage or the government's laissez-faire attitude to gouge the sick, feeble and elderly. amount can be purdiased in C.anada ror 19.15. Jackson's Trade Deal A me1id1n ent Sparks Russia.ii Reactio1i This profiteering at the expense of the suffering has been the sub}ect or a coo· tinuing investigalion by Sen. Gaylord Nelson ([).Wis.) lh'ho has just finished contrasting drug prices in Canada and the United States. He ¥.iU soon present to the Senate these findings : THE GIANT drug firms are able to gouge their American customers because the U.S. government has no mrehanism for controlling drug prices. Th e pharrnaceulical companies are Cree. therefore, to charge 'A'hatever the market will bear. \\'ASfflN GTON -The Kremlin is straining hard lo pull the rug out Crom under Sen. Jl('nry Jackson's ··most· favored·nalion " arncntlment to the pend· ing (ar·reaching trade bfll. Strikingly ind icative or !\losro\V's cx- cep1ional effofl s to und crnuru: the po1\1erful C<>ngres· i1onal support ,.of Jackson's crtJcial -vrovis1on \\•as the ,sudden decision to ~il !he. emlgra- Uon of Dr . Lron!d 'I'arassuk, intema· fionaUy knov..Tl mu- seum authori1y. This abrupt "re- 1tase" "·as a <:1lmplete and dramatic re· Yersal or previous harsh rebuffs and treaiment. ~ IRsl April, Tar11s!>uk, then curator o( European·Amcrican Arms an•! Armor or the ramed llermllagc tduseum 1n Len· lngrad, and his wife, a well-known artist. were fired from their joM 11nd ,angrily informed by Soviet immlitration outhoritl~. "You "'Iii never be allowed to leave RuMia .'' But a fe\!r days ago , wholly oul of the blue and without a word of e.xplanation, lhl!I seemingly lrrei;oc.able r-dict "'as re>dnded. TARASSUK was nolified ho and his • (ROBERT S.AllEN) fam ily could depart Immediately without payment or punitive charges, lie. his 1vife. two s-rna ll children and hi s aged and ai ling molher arc now in Vienna en route to Israe l. This extraordinary~ersal 1!1 directly due lo the Kremlin 's gra\'e rooC<'m over the decisive congressional backing for Sen. Jackson's amendment -barring most -fnvored·nation status and U.S. credits and investment guarantees to ooun1ries 1hat "dtn)' their citizens the right or opportunities to emigrate by Im· posing lhe payment of more than nomiMl taxes, fets or other charges." A."' of now. this amtndment Is certain to be incorporated tn the: sweeping traM: bill being formulat ed by the House Ways and Means Cornmlttee. NOT ONL V Is a clear bipartisan ma· jority of the Committee on record as favoring the provision, but Chairman Wiibur J\1llls. D.-Ark ., lu:y inOucnce in drafting the momen1owi legislation. has publicly endorsed It. Dedar<'d the hlgll- powered veterlln legislator; "From my experience with !he Russians. I don't care what they say when we are about to get Into a pool I together It's what they do to me while I'm in the pool that I want to be suro about." Not only is the Soviet anxiously over B barrel oo the Jackson amendment in the \\'ttys and !\teans Committee, but even more so In the. Senate and House. JN BOTH chambers the potent \Vashington state Sen a tor has overwhelming support : n Senators (I I more than tv.·o-thlrds) are signed up as co-!!ponsors of his provision ; in the House, 284 are co.spon.sors -66 more than a majority. Thus. rtgardless of what the Ways and ~leans Committee does, J a c k s o n ' s amendment is certain to be approved by 1he lloust and Senate when Ibey consider the trade bill -which now appears very Ukely before fall, at the earllest. It Is thls ovenvhelming ranlc-and-Cile backlng that i!! deeply worrying the Krtmlln and led to the 8brupt relea.st ol Dr. Tar8ssuk and his family. Decisively accentuating that concern was 8 personal letltr sen. Jackson wrote Communist parly be& Leonid Brezhnev In April after the Iron curtain was Irately slammed down on the Tarassuks. t"ORCEF'lJU. V mincing no words In urging Brethn('V to "recognize Dr. Tarassuk's rtgbt to aecept the in\italions of other cowrtrles," Jackscxi declared: ••Jt ls difficult to bclicve that the Soviet government would ctMxlse to extinguish r11ther than share with the international community the talents of these and other lndividual5 who have woo and would surely t0nlinue to win international ad- mirnUon not only for the:mselves but for their nation or origin, Such an attitude C<>uld not rail lo cast a pall over the ex- panded East-West cultural exchanges that ~ many of us, In bOth our country nnd yours. have looked forward to for 50 long.'' Jackson 's letter has never been an- swercd-thut is, not directly. Also, during Brezhnev's official visit to \Vashington last mooth, the t'A·o did not meet. When a group of Hou.w: and Senate leaders were lnvlted 10 lunch 'Aith Brezhnev, JacUon 'A'l'IS pointedly not in· eluded -not to his lllrpMse. BUT OURi.G tht Kremlin ruler's stay, he learned first-hand of Jackson's personal and polltical influence on Capitol Hill and oYerwhclming backing for his amf!ndment. Sever11l wttks arter Brezhnev returned to Moseow, he Dnally responded to Jackson's letter -indirectly but highly slgnlOcanlly. Suddenly and without any fanfare, the Tarassuks v.·ere given permis!loo to leave RllSSla aflcr their long and attm- lngly hopeJeg.."i !itrugle -an u~ mistakllble backdo\lfn under S e n • Jackson's unyieJding Ptes.irure. -DRUGGISTS on the U.S. side of the St. Mary River must pay the Upjohn Company 12 times more for Orinase. a drug u>ed by dlab<Iics, than it costs for the sanw drug on the Canadian side. In Sault St. Marie, ~nch., drugglsi. pay $82.68 for 1,000 half-milligram capsules. In Sault St Marie, Canada, druggists pay only $6.63 for the same quantity. -Jn the same sister cltlM. the ~lderly pay 18 tlml'S more for Butuolldln, an an - tlanhrltls drug, on the American side than OD the Canadian side. --OLD PEOPLE who need tht drug Hydrodfurll for their high blood pmsure are 90liked 15 times mott tor It on the U.S. ~de of tht border. Merck, Sh8rp & llohme charg .. U.S. druggists $71 for 1,000 50-miUlgrams, which are availabfe in Canada for only 14.63. -An · antilnfecUve drug c 111 e d Furadantlm ts marketed tn Piflchipn by Eaton Laboratories f0< 1111.81 for 1,000 100.mllligram capsules. Tbe s • m e Quo~ Artb ,.,0'"-11• S.P . civic lc•der 1nrl ftl· lloul exec. tf Boy Sc.wb-''ln Scouling we are •wart of Inner cilv probl"m.~ anti teaching more relevant thinp; for e.J.• an.ple, how to treat R rat bile Instead nf a rattlesn.ake bite, and how to read a city map." But in Canada, the government has a compulsory licensing system fOf' drug patents. If the drug prnducer.s charge e:x· cessive prices, the canadian government simply licenses othar C«npanies to han- dle the product. 'Ibis hos clfecUvcly held down drug prices. , ' OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robfn.N. Wttd, Pv.l>Urlltr Thornat Ktn1il, Editor Barbero Kreibich .Ediroriol Poge Editor '?'he edltori~ . PIP lt the Daily Ptlot -lttb to JnJonn ud stlmulate rudma by ~ on thit pqe diVtt81e•C'Ol'Mlentary'an IOpics of \n. lft'Ht by S)lndlcated columnists and ca.ttoonbts, by pnMdlna 11. forum fC(' m1den' vHiwa and b)I JftM'lltlrc thls M"IVl:pe.ptr'• optrli<IM and kt.!., on cum.1rt t()Jricl. fht> editorial optnkn; of the Dall.)' Nlot appeu onJ.y tn the editorial column at tM hip ol the Pl&'f', Opinions ~ by the td. ummm and nrtoonl&t.1 and \eutt writft'll att tMlr own and l'ID mdonfo. · mrnt o( their vi"11 by tlMt Da1b Pilot lhoukl be lnmTfd. Tuesday, July 3t, 1973 • • • 111rsaay, Jutw :31 147) DAILY PILOf 7 Other Deatlis Anaheim Gets Computer HAMS PACIFIC PALISADES CAP! -WWlam F. Slegtl, 63, senior vice chalnnan of the board of Security Pacific N a t i o n a I Bank, dJed P.tonday at his home here. NEW YOR Y (UPI I -Roy Shuman, a television u.nd stage actor who starred in the aoap opera "As the World Turns," died A1ooday In a hospital after suffering a heart attack. He was 48. Shuman played the role or Dr. Michael Shea until the character was murdered and written out of the serial five yean ago. Death Notices IATTISTA Vloll'f C.roll,,_ &•nllt•. llOI S. F•li;vltw. S•nte A/WI . O•M ot °"'"· J111v 21, ltn. S""°l...d llY 1llttrs, Cetl'«ll'>t PKO••, Edilfl Voli» end Nencv ltlllle. ,..,.,,_1. M•U ... , c•l-lled T~y. IG AM, SI, John tM 81<>11'1 C•ll10Uc (hllrcfl. 81111-8~ funer1I Home, C0\11 Mfla. Olrwc:Nl!'l. OlllNOlt:I llvbY Fwn Ortt111l•r. Ag.ct 62; rt1ldenl ol M11llon vi.lo. D.11• of 0.1111, J111v :ic, tm. S.Urvlwd Dy daugt11er, Mrl. Marv AM SMdwkk. Minion Vlelo1 mother. Core 81ruon, Torrence; ttv• 1l~ters. GI-Mn Oily, St. Louh .. Mo.1 Vlvl1n Stov•U, Florid•! a.rnMllM Wl !t r .. Ml»OUrlr two1Mr, ll:otierl B•nloOl'I. Tor• r•nce; .,,, 11r•nd-dtU11ll1WI tlV'f nl9UI •nd nefltWWS. Prlvtlt ...-Vl'9S ~ hlld wllll Lnt.,-men1 In !leli.vll!e. llllrioh. Sl'lltt· fer L111;1una 8ttell MorUNl•Y· O!rtctor1. •STl!I' 1C1tlt K1tlllnn E11t11. Aoe t'.I/ rnldtnl of Ltgun.1 Hllll forrnll1Y ol l!lilfi'Olld. D•lt ot oe1111, JUfv n. 1973. Survlvto DY ~. MYIA G. £11"', of Wt1! Vlrv_lnlt l two dtllllll~r1. Mr" CMrloflt Dlcktn0n. Ml11lon Vltloi ~ ~rlorlt lr.1lnt. Ltl;IUlll !lt1cll1 t tlf 11r.,.cklllldr111; iw.nrv grMH1rt n«.ll ldre<11 -orr1t· or1ttoQrt ndclllMl 1 two sl111n 1nd lll•H br'oltlel"I. Services, TlllH'td•y· 2 PM.· S~· H-1' LAOun1 !lttcll CMPll. nl.,mtnl ..,u Ile In Mtn1n111uro. Wfll Vlrt!nlt. $1\efl« L.tOllM Bttcll Morlu1ry, O!rlCfon .. JONl!S Altrld II:. J-Ar. 70, ot 2)11 westmln•I« """"·· Cot t Mn.I. 011 .. of dNlh. July 79, 1m. Surilwd tiv i.on, 4Jlt'tl R. JOMt; l11!1n, Mt1. Ec!M HualltS •nd Mn. Cort Cooper: fl"t 11rtndchlldren; Two gre1t.gr1nd<llltdr•n. 5¥V!CIJS will be held ti Ille R-Funerl l Hornt. PIYrMUlll. P•nn•'(lv1nl1. WHlcllH , .... Pt! Morlu1ry, Ma-48f, Forw1rdln11 Olrw<;l«t. SAHl!R Flor9f>CI E. Sa...... AQe J<I, of U07 SNlhort Drlvr, Nt"Nl)Orf Bttcll. O"t of dttllll, July 26, 1913. SurvlWd by lwo dlUllll~r1. Mr1i. G4ol'111 A. COJC i nd Mrs. Wl!U•m Benton: IOI'\, Htl'TY L. SaMn :list«, Mrl. M. J. 0'6oy111 9111111 11r•ndclllldr1n1 lllree 11r111.grandclllkllritn. Servi'" wltl bt hlld In PhOtnlx, Arlioi>•. ti the "· L. Moon MorhNr'I'· W•1•cllt1 Cll•Ptl Mor!U•l'Y• 6olb-A811, forwardlt111 Director" WOOD Atttiur II'. WOOd. Aat 63. of ll:ist Goldenrod AV'f., Fount1ln V1l!1v. Oat• of dl!•lll July 19, 197l. Survived bv wilt, Mlobfii two $OM, Ger11d 111<1 Lvl•J .tl'lrtt brO!l19rS, Cl\lrlH, Donlld •nd ll:1yrnond Wood: tllrM 11••ndi0mi fol.Ir 11nino· ~oqllllrl. Gr1¥Hldt S1r\lk91, Tt>IJrldlv, J •JO PM LIWftC:rtSI Mem«l•I P1rk. ff9d· dillQ, l"lllforn!1. ,..._ F1mltv <:olonl11 Funeral Home, Olr9(1or•. WOOD 8ert1'11 C. Wood. AQt 79, of l?ll 89111" Avt .• Cotlt MHti. Otll of dHl'll, Jutv \l, 1911. Si.trvlved bV d1uallter, P1v11M w n111m1. cos•• M.u: "°"' Jllhft Wood, "' M•ttoon· llUPIOl1: brother, C. P. OIHllttr, Clint Tt•tl: -IJfllldClllld. S«v!CH •!Id lnt.,.inent _,, llt!d In M•"OOfl· llllnot1. Mltchtll·Jfrdan Funtrll ~. Olrtcton. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY C%'1 E. 1'1tb St., Costa l\otesa HI 41181 • .BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del l\olar 173-9'58 Costa l\lr:sa 641-%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, C.Osta Mesa LI .g.3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS ANAHEIM -1'lbe city o( Anaheim bas approved a plan to operate a computer service wider a joint poftts agr~ ment with tS other Sootbern California cities. L 11>e plan calls for movtng a computer now housed in the San Gabriel Valley to tbe northeast lndustriaLarea or Anaheim. Total annual cost of the Airport At Chino Weighetl f ANAHEIM -Anaheim of· £icials have indicated a con· tinued interest in the proposed Chino Hills Airport. City coun· cilmen asked Robert Davis, assistant city manager to keep them inform e d on developments in connection with the facility. Mayor Jack Dutton, who has frequenUy expressed interest in the $300 million project p~ for 25,000 acres on the county line north of Brea and Yorba Linda, moved that Davis be named as a com- mittee of one to sit in with of- fials of 1the Chino Hills Airport Comple'X Inc. and see what their plans are and bow they may affect Anaheim. Last !\fay, Reg Wood, Santa Ana Realtor and prime mover in the Chino Hills complex, in- vited Anaheim to participate 1"'ith other cities in a joint po"'ers plan t.o finance the project. In a recent report by the State Division of Aeronautics, Chino Hills was named as one of two airport sites i n Southern California for development into m a j o r facilities, The report said the jetport could handle a n esti mated 26 million passengers by 1990. The Orange County Board of Supervisors has gone o n recor,d as opposing the Chino Hills lplan. They \Vant the area turned into a wildlife preserve. Countian Killed DULUTH, Minn. (AP) - Gary W. Hall, 31, Fullerton, Calif., was killed when the car be was driving crashed along U.S. 53 Monday. optralion Is Hllmated at 1543.000 Of which Arulbclrn would pay 1310,000. Member cities would have tenninalr 1tl the facility rented for $150 e moath for transmit· ting and r eceiving in· forma tioo. "The intent of the agree. ment is to reduce the cost of the data processing function and in the future a reduction ORANGE COUNTY J V.S. Agents Pot Bur1i Grove In GARDEN GROVE -The world's largest pot party took place recently in Garden Grove. Marijuana, a I m o s t three tons of it, was burned in specially designed ovens at S e c u r i t y Environmental Systems, Inc. The finn specializes in the destruction by fire of con- traband, secret business files and old records no longer useful but taking up space. The ~t burned had been seized by U.S. Cu s toms Service agents and eight armed guards stood by to be certain the job was dooe with- out interference. The special design of the t"·o furnaces used prevents srmke from escaping to the air and adding to smog con- ditions. Most of the contraband burned was seized at border slatklns but almost a ton of it made headlines recently Y.'hen agents raided a ship in Los Angeles Harbor. Coastal Zoning Board Lists Next Meetings ln lhe high cost of developing new system." said Robert D~vis, a53istant city manager, Davis said Anaht'im would poy more than other ciUes because tt would use the coin· putens more than the othtn. 1be d ty budget for data pr:ocesslng in 1973-74 i s $6.Ss,ooo which inc!udt>S city emp~yes who are now engag· ed in managing the city's computer systems. The rompuwr use Vt'Ou.ld \.n- cludl' utllily billing, payroll. gCMral accounting, police in- form11t)()n on crime stati~11cs and library circulation, Da\ is said. Orange County c i t I e s participating in the nev.· joint agreement are Oran gt.>. La Habar. Westminster a n d (,'ypress. ' ·( Tipsy Tale Scliools w See Problern SA~'TA ANA -The pr0:blem of the drinking driver - complete with a film entitled "Ninety-Nine Bottles of Bttr" -will be presented in West Orange County elen1entary schools this fall . The educallonal effort aim- ed at fourth-through-eighth grade students is part or the Orange County Department ol Mental Health's Alcohol and Traffic Safety Project. It is being coordinated by ~1elvin T. Schroeder, former director of safety and driver education for the Los Angeles City Unified sChool District. The program also will ii\· volvc high school d r i v e r education classes and "'ill be avallable to all schools on re- quest. The 16mm film tells the story of four young alcoholics. their problems and their at· tempts to solve them . Only \Vest Ora~e County school districts y,·ill participate in the initial p r o g ram . Schroeder said he exi:«ts '' to be expanded later to include all of Orange County. THE CASTAWAY ~-RESTAURANT • Now Has ISLAND LUAU Ewtty Wednesday, 6 to 10 p.m. DurlnCJ August OUR ISLAND LUAU HAS .•• tf A complimentary Lai for everyone e Isla nd delights from our tropical salad bar e All yo~ can eat e A Luau dinner platter --- .: . , with Five Island Treats ... Island treats like ; e Tiki Teriyaki steak e Sweet and Sour Pork e Island Shrimp with Hawaiian Sauce e Castaway Polynesian Kabobs e B·B-9 Luau Chicken LIVE HAWJIAN ENTERTAINMENT Make Wednesday'' Speclol With hlcrnd Luo1o1 ISLAND FOOD AND FUN Onty SS.25 r.f.PMSOll Coll For ReHncrti11t15 ~f641f5 Ccutlnfay Restourcrnt 25001 Dono Dr., Daito Poh1t • Spiral Sllr.,d 1Vhole or llall "So Good ... l' \VIII l'launt You 'Tll tis Corie." IPl!CIAL 1'Mli WI.I.IC l """" ,,..... A.-"'• W1tMI I CORRIOA ""0 """ HD SJ 89 I w1HE F•o~'-'_·_··_··_·_· ___ , • Ready to Serve with Honey 'n Spice Gl11e e Spiral Sl iced From Top to Bottom • We Packagt and Ship from Coast to Coast e Full Service D•licatesr.en • Imported Cheer.es and Wines e Catering - --A Specia lity l700 I . Coo5t H5'"1woy, c-4el Mor -67l·f000 l Olo(• Wt•t II S (,tw11, llt•lt.,,.,11 '1"1'°12~s.~1<~0Mll11nr, 01 1•1114:A,;;11e1;---j'JS·24il c7'J.t Coast 'Pederal'm Qffer • 73Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Att lol\kletter The Insiders Club: A neo.v way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nea rly every· thing you need from the finest ctosed·door show· rooms at substafltial sav· ings -appliances, furn i- ture, stereo equrprnE:nt, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. Th e Insiders Club 4 yP,i• cc•t•t• ,1o ... , 'I.I)()() tnU1Hf\\;f\\ 6.75 %·6.98% JO ""'n111 C• rlt!o(~' , l~.OUO m.11.mun1 6.50%-6.72 % On Y"'J' '' •l•l•r 1tc), l \ OOtl ""non•u•J' lf'1•n 1lt)' nn .1H rrrtn .. -1t,. .•tCOunt~ W•\'1'11.•wn pr1. r !; mJ!U•tl)) 5.25%·5.39 % on~··~'"'i:·•n11 1""'i'1,·!Y ~. nu """'rnu•n ,.,, ,.,murn 11~ .. h<ll!~. A•/ 1Mcrr1li c"mp.._.,"<J!°d d J"J· also provides big dis- counts on tic kets to sport- ing and enlertainment events .. , plus a v1hole list of tree services: safe • deposit bo~l!s. money or· ders, travefr:rs checks, and no!ary services. Membership require · ment !or savers-$1,0CXJ 1ninimum balance. Coast borro\vers no\•1 receive as- sociate memberships en· l1tt 1ng them to all outside r eferral services. Ask at any Coast office. MA IN orr1C£ 9H16-t"ll •1211) 6~3·13':11 WILSHIR£ OrF1CC J'lJJ WolY\llt!! BIYd, • fll]) J88.1Z65 L.A. CIVIC CCNTCll OfflC[ :>nu & 6rwa .. .:i1 • !:'l Jj b2&-l IOZ OIAMOND a.A.II OFFICC 3:'~ 'io. D .. •mcno 6tr 61YCf. • lfl4j :i95-1~~5 [AST LOS ANGCLCS orr1cc IJ!.O Sr!. ~c.10 ~I.• 12131 :'ob-4~10 HUNTINGTON llE:ACH orncc ''1 11u11t ot1~100 Genter • !71 4) ll'l7·l047 LA MIAAOA orr1cc 1'>2:>7 It< l<'r•i'l!1~ Utva. • t 714) 527·6/~L LONG llCACH orr1<:c J ra & Locu~t • 1213) 437·7481 ORANoc orncc 2 C•ty Blvd, u~t • (7141639·9b71 l'ANOllAMA c1n OrFt<:c 84~0 Vitti Nu~s RlvCl .• 121)) 11'12·1171 SAN GAflAICL orr1cc 117 SV l>.ll"••AYt •(:!13)2!7·9941 SAN PCDllO orr1cc !Vtn &. f'.ot+lo<: • l;'l]l 831·2341 SANTA MONICA orr1<:c ·111:1 W1J•.n,.,. 6lvCI. • t2JJ) 393-0746 TARZAN.A. OFFICE l87:il Vrn!u•il Rtvel • {2 1J),34s.161"4 TUSTIN OFFICC 530 C Fir51 SI .• (714) 832-6810 WCST COVINA orr1ec £.1Mldnr,I Stionoon& Cf'ntcr • 1213) J.)\.:!ZOI 11o .. ill NO"llllft C11110111lfl ASSETS O\IER ONE BILLION DOLLARS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. Baatlngtoa Beacb UZ.7771 LONG BEACH A schedule of the next 14 meetings of the South Coast Regiona l ?.one Conservation Commission has been issued by Executive Director Melvin Carpenter. -Sept. 17: 9:30 a.m. W Il l~~'""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~"._~~~-~~..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ p.m.. somewhere near Los --• %.« Redondo Ave. Lon& Btacb %1:1-133-1115 Angeles International Airport , ------------------------------------------------------• permits. • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 170& Laguna Canyon Rd. 411-9115 • PACWICVIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemr:tuy Mortuary Chapel 3500 Paclnc View Drive Newport Beach. California M4·Z'IGO • PEEK FAMILY COWNIAL FUNERAL HOME 7891 Boin Ave. Westminster 8t3-lSZ5 • S~RTHS' MORTUARY 1%1 Main St. Huntln(ton Beach 53&-"3! It is subject to change, All meetings begin at 9 a.m . wtless otherwise stated. Cul· off time will be 11 p.m. at the latest, Commission Chairman Donald Bright said. Long Beach &!SSions are in Harbor District headquarters at 9'l5 llarbor Plaza Drive. The list now includes: -Aug. 6: Long Beach, permits. -Aug. 20: Golden \Vest College in Huntington Beach, permits . -Sept. 4, Long Beach, pennits. -Sept . 6: 3 p.m. to II p.m., an undisclosed site in North Orange County, planning. -Sept. 24 : 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., somev,ihere in Redondo · Beach, planning. 1 -Oct. t and 15 : Long Beach, permits. ; ....!. Oct. 29: 3 p.m. to It p.m., Long Beach, planning. -Nov. 5 and 12: Long Beach, permits. -Nov. 19: 3 p,m. to II p.m., somewhere in San Clemente, plannin g, -Dec . 3 and 10: Long Beach, permits. The Orange-Los Angeles Counties commission has authority within 1,000 yards of nlean high Lide line. It also is supposed to help develop a coastal n1a ster plan by 1976, according to Property 20 a~· proved by voters last fall. ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT? medical • weight lin doro's uni;ue program is o safe and ~rocticol method for the entire family to lose weight ond learn how to maintain proper weight ... under the strict supervis ion of Medico I Doctor~. reduction Call for informttion Monday thru Friday 8 A.m. to 6 P.M. LINDORA .... MEDICAL CllNICf COST A Mu.t. Aclcoon ot M1to Vlfdo 557·11'3 NEWPORT IUCH 404 w .. 1m1 .. 1 ... 645-3740 NEWPORT BEACH CARDEil CROVE LOllC BEACH 645-3740 5)4-2051 426-6549 I(.,,.., ......... ... PASADENA 796-2614 ORAllCE 538-2395 ,.,Jllfl.C.i..,....... .... .......... Wt WOODLAND HILLS SHERMAN OAMS WIST COVINA FULURTON LA HABRA 694-1029 l47-S647 719 -7103 962-3438 170-9501 ""··-·""'"• MM>eelll .. c. ...... y,., Dyl ,,,1 ........ 111 .. ... _ .... COSTA MlSA 557-1193 SANTA MONICA 121-451) POMOllA 62)-1 655 SAii IERllA•DINO 886-4718 ..,,,..,..11,.d M"d•col lld9 E. LOllCi BEACH 597-0171 l" Alto1 M1dl(ot Ct1>lt• , .•.. , ....... ""'""' .. "'' CERRITOS 924-5741 H~lf••" M•lloc•t14t RIVUISIDE 717-8250 • M1dK11I $.q1111r• MISSI Oii HILLS 365-11)8 ~11''-"' Mtthr:ol 11119. DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMMA UP WITH TELEPROMPTER! II lrt l[t $ WITH CLEAR RECEPTION OUR ANTENNA IS 350 FEET HIGH WITH MORE CHANNELS CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO WITH NEWPORT'S OWN WITH LOCAL PROGRAMS INCLUDING SPORTING EVENTS WITH UHF CHANNELS II II l[t no ~ TELEPROMPTER is the larvnt cable television organization in the world. • Lii We have the most up-to-date technical facilities . ' Now you can get rid of your ugly antenn1 land mal<e Newport even more beautiful)· and get a better picture at the same time -Plus you'll save money! Offer good in cable areas only. FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY , OUR INSTALLATION CHARGE IS FREE. DIAL 641-3160 " • DAILY PILOT Tllftday, July 31, 1~73 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOl'lCB PUBLIC ISOT!CJ! PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JOSEPH MULROY Graduate Wins Grant ~ 5IMW ANO. Solll 8emMGIM. 'YAY•M•MT O• WITMO•AWAL l'ICTl'TIOOI SUllMlll •...., PICTITHWS Mltt ... 6 -~ING~laAMPIM - C•!llonll• n•1 11ll0 ~ ... llllfd. ,.OM PAUMMSMtf' OPllU.TOI• MM\9 STATIMlll'T •ICTITtOllS 1us1..-u • ....._.._. • ..... lfATIMlifT n. 0.... T4'11111 •••••••••• tern-c .11,.,,111., toSGll opt .._.1 \IMOI• ••C::YITIOUI ~ folloWlflll:' ........ It .... ""9Jftfu "'""'' "AT•MMIT ... tolloWIM Ptf"Mll\ i.. 0011111 IMINU TOTAL INCOM• •••.••••.••••. c-.,._ 11\111 .. f'Kl:llrnt c.ll#oini. tll.'.111 -.i11111•1• MA.Ml ••1 i ' Tiit IOllOWIN l'l"'WI 1, .ooll'G butt .... , c::. TOT .. L, NIT •IOINNllfO •AU.MC• •ttlllOI StrW,eotit .... 1(;11110r..i. YN lwtlowi,.,. ,.,_ lw•)lflN r-11 SILYlltAOO 115<1.i i:CT ll ONI C::l l ll T. V, ll'ACTI. nJOI Mellfl11a, LllOllflt AMO INCOM• •..• ·• ·• ... '.: .... Jl,!fWI ntMI l)M w, ''"'*I .... ..,...y, LOI • ,.,.... •• !Mo•'-~ the N •lntrltll• ltS.$11AltCH, Jin p~ A~ •• Cott• lt(TAIL Ml!•CHANTI ( •• 0 IT wni.. ca!IL ~ 0. •XPINOITU••s oUID OTHll OUTOO A.11911 .. , c.1~. ~ »II .... tafll -··1•111 llflCltr '"' fl<llllwt i....-lnet.1 ~. c.i .. P. p .... tl)I ~ .-... M50CIATlbN -0.ANO• C:OUHT'I' H_., J. O'•·• 1230t Modin•. cu••l!NY lfXP£Nll l lt ... .San ()ltOO C,ajl~f .,llOr l?to ,..,... M n~ J COL.LECY ION J>IVISIOM. Id i"•tl • Ut11o1111 HMi.. (.alJI. tM.U '°" AOMIHll TUTIOH M11!oMt .......... CIW!a Ylt1t. c.~....,,1., THI!! MOUSE" OF WAX AMO COt.Olt. W1yM All• ,,.,,.,., 11n ,..,.(, kYtl'lfMf'lltl l trMI. .knl• "'111 . Tlllli IMI ....... ~-"' ell .... HI. c.t~I.. ........ , ••• ,. 1»00 ')r;urw• A.....,... N«lt'I. $Mn11, 11" P-. C~ll Mftl. C:•, ""'.. A .... Coirt Mt11.o C•I. tx1' CallfOl"fll1. "IClll& M """"""tr•lllMI ••••·············• ...,. W•tlll118fon; .. 1 I-*" A>1-... HE.. T,,. ll(llllMll ~-,..,... '1•1•1Mf11 Thlt M l-i. ~Mil 1W 1111 11>-b~ C1'dll ~. t111;., I • . l4elw'Y J . O'lrillll UO .. C'llMlflold s.1.n. "' •• ....... W~IOfl; li)f Wiile.i• 11.0..S, lot -Pt•""'""'9 w .. 1!14oci Ofl Ft O. 21, dlvlowJ. C:1U!Of"lll1 Co<IOt•llM. Tflllf 11....,,_I .... 11"'4 Wlltl ttw C-II Mmilllltrl'*' • ...... • •··• ,,,,-... NW C111IOll. IOQI; '11 W. Hlll""1 1'7) Ill "" COt.lfllV of Or...... W•'l"lll AIHJI SI....., • TPlh Wtil!Mt J1 COlldUCfiM IW I CCII'• 'Y a.... llf Or'Mt9 C-'Y 1111 Jiiiy t, ltn 110. 0-. ~ ef ......... lnl'IOft • 1t°"4i'. L~lll· WC.lltl•fl 4910; )000 1'101! N-•Id Add1Kt of 1t1<1 l'trWI Tlll1 ti•'-' WH lllM "'111'1 t1W C-Wlllol'I. • · ~' TOTA&. ACMlNllTllATIOM ...... • 1.&MI 1ut.11!1t Bt¥11. N.I., CM!lon. (Miio 4410t1 Wl!f'ldr .... lfll: ty Cltrk of Ort"il CMlty Oft ~ It, OAVIO GltllNI' LILLY PIMI.,_ cir-C:-1 Olltr •11ot, Ju-100. IHl'f•UCYI~ ... ---41D OUltr r..ooo. Lo11h>1lll,, Klf!O.OC:kY l:dw.,. ,,_ktl Olltlwlltf', l1CJI ,...,.. • TNt II•~ W.t Jti.d wlll'I IM' c-.,. 10. ''· M. M, fm 21•·1> flO. Cerll!klNd " .. ,... .,. .... ,_, 1 IM.m "2lt1 2101 s. Y*'-9•• •NO. POftll•~. ..."'' Lud•. f -l•lfl Vttl•v. c •. n10t ~ ty Olt1I. " Of~ CWnly *' Jllty •• ,,,,, 211. l'Tlllclptlt' • Slilr* ....... ... • Mlchl,..,. 490$31 l'OI Soull'I C•ll>(Wt1. 'o" 51tllld. Ectw1ra F. Du"••lc• l'utlllloMCI Or•"'tt c111u Otli't l'I~ • .i.. PIUH pUBIJC N-CE tll. ~·~ s.i.ri. .......... Jl .. m WIVl'lt, lnclltt!tl 11.U Gl't S""' ~ W., P·nMI ty 17, 2A, )1, ~ AUIUlt 1, 1•1) ftfll..)') f'vellt"'"' Or• ... CN11 0.llY .. llol, Ju-VU 211 T~rt ........ .. .... l 4.0tt lf:l'IOIVl!lt , ,.,.,....lffl S.Ollll'IO•!t Pl•lf, ""'4)1kllld (l(MOI Cotll Dilly PllOI. ly II). 17, 24 )1. 1m 212J.1) 211. OINr C .... ~ ...... rltlf Porl W•r"· lndl .... ; tl'.IOCI Ft01'CO. July 24, )I •ncl A\IO'll'1 ,, U, 1'11 ns.-n .... i. ., l111tnKI'°" ........ ..... ~·,op ,.,1, .. ,,., CMHIO• P11k. Ctlltorn•• t1lCll 1 PIJ8UC NOTICE PUBUC NOTJl"ll' ,u•1•1ot1 c::ou•T o• T... DI. Cllnlli.I ... ._,,.. tf 1 ... 1noc11on 1m N. Mo\11'1"1"' A>1tnv.. Orli.rla, PUBLI~ NOTICE ""¥ ITAT• ~ e.t.U IOllllllA ll'Olt 1111, lr'lllr...c'!lon Aldll .... ........ °''"' C•lltornl• ,,, .. ' 12IOO WG$11r11U AvHlut. 1-' TMI cou .. •r.~p OIU.llO• 221. Off'lef Clli.tlll .. ""''--··. CoOl--•o ..,_,1 -0~ N, IUP••IOll COU•T OP TNI • 6'Jtl 11 llutn1~Jlon ............... 1,111,110 ....,_,,., ,_,, 11\ STATE 01' CALI FOllNIA '01lt I tf t 1 .. T tb01k G,loM l llKbl-....... Pffl114> C&!ltor111 nn11 PICTl'TIOIJI •tn1NESI THI COUHTY o• Oil.ING>• NOTICll TO c • D Ott NOTICll 0,. M•.UIMO 0,. ,.,ITION "" .. !.. •...................... M '21 llCIO 0••-' 8oul•>11rd. l• Ml\<I. MAM• I TATIMINY N-. .. n 111 SUPl•IOlt COWlltf Oll-:1'1111 PO• PllOIATll Oft Wl\.L. ANO JC), Ollllr' -· .. . • ,,. ... • C•llf0tt1I• t»lll 2'21 •. .,,., SllHI. ''" fo1i-1,. "'""'' •r• Clalng 1!!1l•!t of HILOA-E McCOllMICK. IYAYI o• CALIPO•.· .... ,• .. o• COOKIL A.110 · PO• Llf!TTI •• *· °'"" E•~· DI IMtnicrlon .... ,.,·~~ TM:lmlo W•olll"'flonl 1'300 hi A>1t t111<1 ........ Ole Md ' TMI! COUNTY OP Tl.ITAMIMTA.a'r TO tAI,. IHST •UCYIOH ............ -- Sor.Ill!. k•ltlt, W•J!'lflOIOl'l l 4010 MIUEN'.:1 PA•IC'MAZDA, 7015 l(nOft ~1cti 1$ HE•fl Y DIVEN 11111 ...... 1~ .. •• pu.N E"''' Of ELIV.llETH _D. FAILING, «.O.~i:.A~l~:!:lf.'l:,_DI t11loi'lvlll• ..... LOll<lvUle. l(.,ituo;-y • lllfM' l"wlt C1lllort1I• ~ :kllwelo W•l-tl' 1'111• flltd tttr.ln I Pt'll!lon • fatll1 ot ·MAY AL ........ M .,., , Dk•tNd. u1.m CJCl1 .st Raul• 46.. Totow1. H..., Jtt"'t "~:"''MA1t lNO ii.IC IO!t Knol1 !Cir P•-1• of Wlll IN tor l1tu•r1C• of Dtc•1Md. NOTICE II NE•EIY GIVEN 11\ff HNI•'"-""""' ······•···•·•···•• ~1'12t 900 E•1ltr11 lllW .. Cl•rk1>1lllt. I"' A,,_ ~ "'""..(~Ulofl'll• fOt)O Ltlltrt Tn t•'""''"" to., 1"1!111-r, H0T1CE IS Ht:•f.BY CMJlllN 11 .... DOIUI MAlttll Wi!'AW• hit l'llld ftti!'tltl c20. w::.·~~!'= DI " .......... 17,IJt t~t~ .. :.1•1nc1:! ~l •o::.., » Dl:i:; ,,,_1, MIMll 11 toncllk!N llY • COi'· ~:'i',:::,.to ,;:.111~, tllht~ .... '~'11;:~: ~;.."':'::11 ~Mltl~ ..:vi:ori:r· (I~ -oZ~ :,,:",:°" uti;:.n;i::~;:~c::: .no. Olllw Ii:~ ot ~·Ill S-kt • 4S11 lllOllW•Y lou1tv11Jt. klll'll'lr<ky ~; )td p0r • bf ' f6r A Wiid C1<1<'°"'1 1rt rtQUlttd ta !!It llMm. to wtiktl it......,. tor fllr1W p1r~1,n. TOTAL NEAi.TH lflt\llCES ...... 11t,.W .... -'.t, "" Sl'"1, Huntlfl9l'Oll, Wnl JIM M~~=· ..!:~no. Prnk!Hlt U ";'t'n'.n:,'~oou:: f\ll~ '=fl e:'rtr0om ":; with IN lllCHUfY llOllClltt'•• Ill lhtl offlc• ft/'14 tnal 11'1111 .... fnc1 pl.ce !If llHrlflll llM ~· o:;:~iJ~';!;"..':T fW l)p9r•llclll •• l.J01"* VlfOlt1l•1 l7s .,..Ill Sir_, E .. 0.-ltklot. Tiii ~·t~t w•• 111 .. wllfl llM C-· ofo.rtfMl'll Ha. ; ~ uld court, •11 100 o1 1111 cltrk Of 11M "!\' lf'l:td e-1, fl<' M,... f\11 """ Mt fur All(llllt 7, 1t73. ti "°-Oll\ff' E~ tor Ocotr•lllMI .... 1»-* i:~:.e~ .:::11. 'f~1 t~ .. !'::-~ .... =: "' C1~k. OI Or•no;r• COlllllY on J11ly ,,, ~~f. ~-:::,.~~~.~"'· In "" cnv .. ~::~ ~ufto.r11~ •I=~~ ·~·-:o: ~" Ol1111u1:"'=.,·7IO~~ TO TAL DPEllATION OF PLANT •• 2.w.m N-Yori(. .. _ Yor~ 10C2'1J U2S s . nn. '1•HI 0•1td Jvty n ltn °'hit 111or111y,. JOHN c . Nol:. CALL, noo Clf'lltf' Drlv• Wnl, 111 llM Clfy ol S.11!1 1DC. MAINYl!NANCI! OF PL.ANT I Wt,11'1..:lge Av.,,11<1. K1l•mtlOCI. Mkl!lg1n CL"•KI! ANO LI Al:Y WILLIAM E:'sT JOHN. Wllllllr• ,•~,.~v1,•<.,,.l,0vl1! ... , !'°·, ',,.'* A111, C•lllar"l8. 710. CltUlf ... S•ltrlet tor '11M4 lf001 1 1.io1 H Po!11I I011lr11n::I, lllllmott, " ..UI"""' ltfwl Counly Cltr11 AllClflt" '""'"' • .,c,. I Q1lld JulV 20, \ffl MlllllMll'\Q ·••• •···· ••·•••·••·•• 'o\AfYl•M :1m: '°°1 E•tl 31 $1""', 1fl. ~lMH:IYWMd. C• '16'l O•lllfl-SI Cll~ & 0.'ril Olt ct OI b11$l,,.11 of IM ulllllftlOntd In •II · WILLIAM I!. ST JQHN, 1,~·. o'"', •. -, ,,...!..!', .. , qlll~0,,!_._, ...... ,1:f'~: lll•t11POIL" INll•r.. ~mi 6'00 Mtyntld .. • '"'"' In ' • m11tw•· P911•111ino 11 1111 ·""'' ol u lll c-iy Cttrli. ... ... ..-~ tbr ,.,... .,__ '" •NO. Ml'f'fl•ld litl;llti, Ol\lo "1l •i 14001 T1h Ulll 1~~.f1)f I U fl<jlfl ,towtf' Sffwl dt<: .. ..,t, wllllln tour mon!ll• tt1•r IM Cell..,.., C.._.. a C•~ TOTAL MAINT£HANCE Tt>111Vr•ph Ii.NO, Dtltoll. Mkh1t111 .,.,.; PuOllo.hed Or•no;r.e CN$I Oilly Piiat July LH Aflltl", C•. ,..11 llul l>\lllllC•llfll ot ll1h n.o!Jtt. IW 9""'1'11 , ..... S'-1 01' PLANT ...................... l.GJll• ~ Cr1wlord•vUlt illOlld, FllCll•11tl>(llh, >t lt •llll A""Utl 7, 14. 1'7J fWJ.fi Tflt (llJJ UJ.1lf7 DlltdHJ'~1G'H"J'",'orCH O! ........ C•llf· ,,.. 900, ,',',x. ~l!_~H,,AR,~!_.S '" ••• lndl•n• 412:U: ~ H0'11111•1d lltNd. ' -w • A"-Y'i ftf'J h l1"-1' ,. • • Tt11 (IU) HJ.IM6 ...... ..., "'"' • .. •" •" •" > -. Mftll• .Hfl.Ot'l l•, Onlia ~1)11 "'" P .. tl .. blllhlel Or "" (NII D•lly l"tlot J ul"( f x.curor of tl!I Wm ""WM'YI ltf: , .. all!Nf' 11J. P•nnt1'!9"I Fund ......... ......... I, t Ito.cl. P•rrnt Ht!Qhts. ()lllo ·11~!1.~!ll'O PUBUC NOTICE ~4 ~5 J1 1t13. 2211.n af 1111 •bow nt!Tlld llttedtflt Pllbll~ er-. c.o.11 Dt llV Piiot. Ju-n1. Pvllllc E,,.ioy-Rtllr-t ...... W,.ltl Gfltftfltld RN4. 04tk P•r11, ll'llC!>'Olll . • ' IOIOt (. MC""-•v 2•. 25. ll. IT1l v1 ... n m Old ...... $utv1Wr1, Olt.IZl!lll'f 42'7; lH«I """ Dylct A .. -. W•""'· not Wlllhl,.. .,,,.,, Slllll.. •fld Hllllh •n-tne:• .. m..- N rt II bo MltNo•n _,.,, :1310 s.cor ltOld Yolfdo, Pl(TtTIOUS •usi11•1s PUBLIC NOTICE &M. Afl9tlt1, C•IH.•tolll , PUBUC NOTICE Ill. ert'IPOY-lr1M1r111e• TllCMr• A recent ('~·po ar r ()tllo ~J 1!3' U.S. H:,::•r-N~. JI N.. MA.Ml ITATEM•NY . Ytlc •UU) ... ,11 . •ncl ln1truclloNI •Id. .. .. .... ....., 11igh School graduate has_been ~=-~~:!'M1c11 1:1 = ~.a •• :"" followlno P9•-1• Oolno;t' b!,lllntu .. ""' ""..::~: o~~Nll D•lt'I' 'p11o1, Ju-HOTIC• INYITlllO ••DI m: =m!.i"M":r:!'. Otl!M .. Ul.lll awarded a $500 scholarship by Clffn1tivll 0.1 .... llll~rnor .. Mt~l•nd . SCOTT'i DETECTIVE AGENCY. .=:~~:.:rg.,t~~o~~o;~. IY 1(1,, 17, u. 31, lt1l l lU-73 ;NGtlcl il l'llf.i)y olwn ""' '"" SO.rd ot IMlruellon Ald9' .................. . the Shearson •rammill ·Foun· J12'l41 \S'JOO Ob Toltdo ROid. SO..lllO•I•. 17ln WtYl'lt AVtl\11'1, ltvlnt. C1U1or11I• ITAYE OF CALl,OAMIA •Ott Tn.rti-ol 1111 COit! Comll'lll!'llly Cell~· Ill. ~:::.~~:::r~1r:::.An ~lcl>INn alt$; ,,,, Btlrlmo,. Nit. P1w,, nt.t<t TM• COUNTY 0 , OltAMO• PUP,IJC NOTICE 01itr1et Of O~lf'IO' c_.1y, c..u1orn11, w 11 datlon of New York, ••lllll'ICM'•· M•rylt.ncl :n1211 •100 GI. L .. Hln•V ShOOlr, l1S71 W1ynt Nt. ,.:...1ua ' . . •t<:•IWI _..., bldl UP to 11 :00 ....... 1.io. Wor1i:.~·· C0"'41tnMllon lntlll'tncit ' 74,C"J J h "uJ-y son Of Mr Nottl'Mlm Boulr1trcl, N. 01,,..ltd, Otila AYlflllt, lr>1I,.., C•!Uar"fl tt&t<t E.llllt of WILLIAM H. EKlll!:RG, •Ito NOTICI 0 ,. ,ILIHO APPLICATIOM ,Oil itOMS41y AllQVll 15, lf7J, •I ~~· ttO. Oltltf' ''111 .. ClllC .... RG"e's' "'" "' l 2,!!·J1',2 1 osep j\"j •v.. . .W07~1 21.U Yol'I( ROid. Lul,..,vlll• T~I, b<nlfltSI ,, cond<Kl'id lly •n ,,,. ~-•• w. M. EKI ERG •rid ., c::M.\MO• 6" O,fllC• LOCATION pu1thttlll0 4..,.,tllltf1t of w ld """"' TOTAL l"IXEO MA ........ ';n, nnd h1rs. Jack ~t. Mul roy. of Tlmonlllm. MO. 11on1 JllG C•..,..,111' dlllldutl. -' WI LLIAM HOWARD !'ICllE•G. 0..1M<I. Notice It IM(Rbv ,111 ...... ttlal1· Pll'-"' ta dlttl'ld lot"" •I n 10 Adlmt,.Avt 7""· ig~~L,~~PWLICAl~~ ~ .. ev~~~~0:,. . L Rotd. At111 ArbOI', MlcNo•n 4911141 21(11 L" H. SllOOll. NOTICE IS HEll.::!IY GIYeN lo , ... lllt·provlslOM al tSd.1' of "'NI• I nd Co.I• MtNI, C1!1flr'lll•, ., wlln.h llM 1739 Candlestick a n e , w1i..'h Ay,i11u.. T~,, H•ule, l"Cll1 ri. This 111tt-wn filed wltll ,,,. crtdUori o1 ii.. ·-n•!Tlld dlctdl<ll r119Yiltio'" of lllt F,tdtr•J S•vi'lll• •NI 111c1·0Mr1 w111111 Jll'blltl't ~ •fld retd ~~P~~.~ T:!C's",Jo~.,,ION SEll.Vlet:S Nev,·port Beach will use the t710l; 6716 Gltll l uffloe Mall. Glffl l u•nlt. c-1w C!trk ot Or•• Counry ~fl July 1•. !Mt •f~Wll N Ylll9 d1lm1 -otlMI 11141 LO.ft Sl'tltm. ,,... Gltftd•l1 F'ldtr•I S.>1· '"'' OFFICE m. C\tM" ... Slllrlfl OI . . ' ¥.lrv1111d 110.1 1 llSt S. RtVllOld1 RNd, ltll .nld d 1 1rt rtciultlod 'T lilt tlwm, lllP 1f1C1 LOtn At.toel•ton, Glt!l'ld•i.. PUllCHAS& OF TWO 111 1111m scholarship this fall to study TllNa. Ofilo qfiit ; 3$101 Euclid ........ 111. . P•161'S wltll !tit iU fY 'o'OIJChlrl, fl 1111 ollk t C•llfomL• ...... ftlfd II\ •Pi>ac•llon tor: ,TRAILERS. • P\lllll Tr•M90fl•llon ........... .. . J · ,. t USC Wfllol/al'ID't, Ollla +IOt'I 30tCICI Orclltrd Pul>lllhld OrftlOI COil! Otlty •1101, Ju-of !tit dirk of ,,,. 111DY4! "'llltfd cOlffT, or ,_...,llolloll lo <'*'11 tM lvc:tt!Oll of Ill An llklt' ,,. tg 0. l1t KCW'd•1te• w•llt 190• Oltltf' EllP'Mll for P1,tpil ..... -mus1ca composi ion a · L••t RoK, F••ml"IJla11 T-.n10. Mltn. ty 11, u. 11. trod 1.uo11111. 1tn 2201.n 1o prtsenl """"· w11n ""' MC.fl.UfY Offki 'Wlllcfl ·Is _ loc•ltd ,, soo ttw IMtnictlOnt •fld COl'ldllla111 •nd T••mPGO'll•loll ... , ................ ·---Mulroy a m i d .term l!O!t l IOOC T9419rltlh ROid. T1ylor. ->IOUClll'1, to lllt lllldl<'1IOMd ,, "" lllffk t NfWO(ll"f c ... 1,, on... E•1t, H.wport SPf(lflc•llon• WlllCll .,. -on II ... 111d TOTAL PUPIL 701 · ' Mklllg1n aU01 1502 $. llratdwtv. of lllr 1norMY1. VIRTUE AND S.C.i;tfCK, ~ C•llforp i. to « In 11M lmrn•cllll• m•V ri. ~ In 1111 otl\ce OI lllt TltANSPOli.YAYION •..•.• , ·•·•·••·· .tM. graduate of Newport Harbor, E-t11. w1.nLl'IOton "2011 ,Y..!l 20s. 10101 PUBlJC N011CE •NC •• 1611 wntt1111 .0r1 ... , Sult• 100. w1c;11111y o1 m.' s.oulhttu c.or_. et Purcllt•lfll Aotnt • .. Id 9tt.ool di•'"•"'•· YOYAL ct1•1tENT £XP l!NSE OF 1f has been enrolled at Orange s.E. W11hlng!on SI.. Porl'-l'ld O<'fllOll w.....-i llKll. C•l!IOl'fll• '2WJ Wllltll It NtwPDrt c"''"' Ori~• E11t •ncl Nt'll'POl'I EKl'I Ill_. mll'tt 'i"l:.11:11.. II I Old~ ' ED\ICATIQH . . . ....•. ••••• .•..•.•••..•••. :H.Jf1,.( t1111. Ille p.ll(t 01 M l"'u ot 1119 1111CMAlotlfCI lt1 C::Hltor Or!vt, N"""pOrl BeKll, C1lltom4)1:, e1Vo1.r1 t llldt;, ctn I or too. l"oog · ll!~VICEf I OI Food$« , .... Coast College since January. Ylll pr()l)trly to "" ,,.,, .. tITT' .. I• flOW PIC'l'ITIOUI •USIN••• Ill m11ttr1 "'"'"lno to !tit "''''of MW Tiw •P9ll«ll.Oll "'' """' ~t'ffl"td 10 1'4f:• bOnt modi PIY•""' ,,,_,,,. ~ .. ",' 1°! m,,. .. o\t!!',",.!!-·' ~ ., ....... Slrvk•' .... . . . J h toclltd 11: 1~100 Soi.Ill! K1"9tlrl Orlv1, NA.Ml ITATIMll.NT 0.<1<1e111, within lol/f' mllllll'!\ 1'n1r Ulf 1t1t Olllc;t o1 thll $111)1rVIMN"I AOflll ol thll fl* Cotll C::omlnlllllty C s 'c ~7: ,.... "' rvuu While tn high schoo . e was a G1rd1<1•. c1111oni11 f0Mt1 *41S s. TfWI to11ow1r11·1 '"''°"' '"' 11o1.,. 11 .. 1 JK1bllc•''°" o1 t11ls notk•. -nlcl ea.rd, locttl'd •I IN,.F"6t.r•I H°""' 11!)11'11 of Trlr•'"' 111 111 .mDlllll "':i.,"1 . ri1. ~J;:~L~~-:Ys:~:~ES"::·. •-f the ChOtalle and WMIM<kl• Avt-. 1Ctl1m•100. Ml~hlOlfl l>Ullnltl '" D•lfd, July•• 1'73 ~II 8o)lllc al $0!1 Fr•1tel1Co, 1.DS Artgf!ff\ ttlal'I fly,i l*f'l:tfll ·{~) of ll'MI tum d •• mem~r 0 • offOCl1: 2t01 N, Polt1l loultvlrd, 11•11\mGrt , AGA,E APPtllCATO•!, JOS 11th St., SU E EKIERG llflncll •1s So,,,111 Flow.f SfTftl, \°" 'ii.eutr•nlff fntl! 11'11 blddtf' will tnltr lt1!0 1100. COMMUNITY SERVICES Madrigal BS welJ 8S pJaylng 10 M•rvl.,><1 2122'1; 4'002 E•ll 31 51rffl, 1.,. Apt, I , Nvntl,..,., hKl't, e •. tt•41 E•Klllr111 af 1t1<1 Will 01 tht Afl\leles, C•Uforlllt. Anv W SOll mll' llf IM OrOl)OMli Contract 11,·~ .. -, .. _• ;'' IUO. ~~1_!.~,1!l~• ... l•r~k:! ..... , ....... Jl6,ll4 al•n•polil, lridl"" olli2261 6'00 M•yllf'ld OOl'l•ld H, Gllblrl, !oO$ l&rh SI., Apt. ellOW fllrnt(I OK1.t9nt cetmmllflk •llorta. ll'IC!ud!llO Orltlt In fl>IOI' 1w•rdtd him. In 11'19 •'f«I "' ""' 0 .........,,_." ..., local rock grou ps. Ro.d, M~y!ltola H•lt11!1. (Miit 4..111'1 U001 &. HunllflOIOl't fl;tKfl. C•. nl4t. l•TU• AND SCHICK, IHC. l)r' In Pl'otttl al ... ICI 1ppllc1tlon •I ,,,. tfller 11110 MCI! contflt l, IM roc:Ndl or 11t0. g:,~l;:";:.,of., ...... - ------c-c=-=:::------J,Ttlfo;i'lpll Rotd, O.lro!I, MldolO•t1 4'7l'll John I(, M"JIOllM' "60 N. Anntndo l y; J--" C. Oltll •lorest lct ot!lc1 of 1111 Su111r>1llOJ'V Aoerrt the Clltck wlU Ill forfeltlld.. or .::. lhl11f•: TOTAL COMMUNITY 611» Cr•wll!rd•Vlll• ROid. lrodltNPoll•, /lpt, 2•. Ar1tlwlm, C• 92106 1•U Wntc\lff Ort ... , lvttf:. w!ltlln 1G CS•~ (ot wlll!Ot1 )I) d•yl ~I ..,_ al I llond, 11'11 f\.111 IU'!:i I~ W S PUBLIC NOTICE l"Cll•~I olli224: ~«IO Nort11!111ct 11.a.d. Tnl• IMn.L,,... 11 cOflClutt .. llY 1 o-•.i N-ptort tffcll. c"u, nMI vlct it tlltt w111'1111 "" 11r11 10 d,.,._ torlel!~ to Mid w-1, •• ••,,•· ••• "' 'Eli.VICES ........... .. --------------1M~t Halt h!1, ()llJO 4"11)11 "" ,.,.,1 P•r!Mrll>IP. '"' f'1 0 .. n.nw sl1ll no;r ll>•t ,,.,,,... """ II l!f«ltd to No blddtr""" wt .... r• ... ""' • 1200. CA.Pl AL OUTLAY ltatd. Pt trn• HtlOlll1 Ollla *4130; 71110 000\lld N. Gllbtrt Atlonln• fir e&ICVlr\1 tvrlllsll ldallltlnll liitorrntlloili 1l1•r 11'19 pwloCI Of lorty·llvt (ISi d1yt tfltr. tllt I 12.IO. lml)fOvtfnlnt af Sl!t>1 •• NOTICE TO C•l!DITOJl$ C:.•IK"'litld RNd, Oal! P•rk, ,...lclllo1n, Thll 1111"""'1 Wit 111 .. wl!tl ttit COllll-f'ubllll>ld Or•~ COlll D1U1 P iiot, Ju-.UI• of lllll publltillon. l"M t OPllH of d•I• Ill for 1111 optf!lllO ll'MlfMf, • 12KI. l ulld lng1 ··•········•············· " Unif•rrl'I C-IMfti.I c ... _ Mltlllv1t1 atWJ, :1310 s.cor Ftotd, Yol-. · P·t6'11 •PPlk•l!Ofl •nd 1u corrull\lll«!IOM lt1 privlltte of r•lld1ng tnr ttld •ff Did• or 1 .. • ........,1 ....... •• ..... .... ln,14 Tlt ANSFE•S IN IULIC ""'' JlhCI VI'! Ov-• •~t-. W•rrtfl, ""Cltrk of Or•no-~ounty on Julw '· lt71. 1., 111, 17, 24 31, 1m 211-.n '"' tornrnunk•lkl!ll lllollld Ill fll .. Thll Tiit Bolrcl of Ynnttn ,_,...,, Ille !HO. ~. ~· ?\ 1111• •v1k·Trt11•!tn ()tllo ~1 IDO u S. HlOhw•Y Ho. 31 N , p\lhltl.htol Or•• cont Dilly ,.llot, Ju-PUBUC NO'l'ICE !•var or lt1 prolfll tht1eot ,,. ,.,a1111111 lo w1lw Inf lrr'°"""rlll" Ot In ~2~: F1:6 Ser'-.' 1~ ......... . 0 •l1 llloM lloldlng c1a1,..1 119&1n11 tM G""'""'90CI IMl•ftt _.Ul; )4.110.. Ford ry IQ. 17, :U; 31, 1m 1121·1'3 1or ll)SPe<llall bV tM ptrwi •I llM for!t\tlltltt 1n •rrt bid«~""" llliUlng. 'T2ofAf!1 !!PrfAr-·0~,,"Ti.AY .... •• :rJ:: • t htrtln•tt., n•mtd t:Mt.all an Rotll. Wnllallcl. MlclllO•fl 4tlll1 f.K11 llortMlll Olllct o1 llW SllPll"'i$Mv A!llfll. NORMAN f., WA'50N .. ....., .. "' ··•· "II trort Hitt CUl'flng' lllfOrl IN Cl .. nlll!I~ Orlv•• a.ltllTl(ll't , Ml.ry 111<1 N C£ NOYICI! YO c••DITOllS Gletldtll flll«tl SIVll'IOI •nd LO.fl • SlefY, to.rd of T111t!H1 TOTAL EXPENOITURES ••• • .......... 17Ml.llO • ltct•ani or'" oc ri.I 1 2113• 15200 Dix Tlltdo ltatd. kult\ollt, ' PUBUC 0TJ SUPElllOlt COUltT OP fM• AM«l•llon, Gltlld•1t, C•ll!Oflll•. qptn: Attoutf 15. ltl'l -\l :Ol •.m· OTHER OUTGO ' "" 1 frtt1tltf' dllc:rtbtCI <1# ' ton-Mlcllllllll. 411tS; '510 81lllmor1 M1t. Pl~I. STATE OF CALll'MlffA POii Pllblhlltcl Ortl!Qt C06ll 01U1 Piiot, ,.,'tllllhed Onlnu-Coest 01111 f'llOI Ju-, l;IOQ. OEBT SJ:llVICE '"''1'° Btlllmor• MlfYl•lld 11mi coo GI TH E COUNTY 01' ORANOI JUI" JI, 19Tl ~n ly 31 ·1..i Airvusl 7, lt1J JSNl !Ml. Anriutl 11.tptVlftlfll DOI ,Actount • 'lllel •• htrebY Olvtll ~·t • butlc Norll'lttrfl • loulrl••• H., OltNI ... Olllo . ........ ' Mo. ,..,..,. • • ti ,,.,. S<llOOI aulldt <. '''*' II tblUt to"' lftldl, tl!I ~rne• UO'rOJ 2145 York RN4, Lu!Mrvlllt· ••CTITIOllS •U11N•11 E51•1• or FRANCIS MAJtlON IUJlll• PUBLIC NOTICE " PUBtJC N011CE Appol'tlonnwnt " • • ... ...... "°""' IN trans"'°" •rt MMC CO P.: Tl monlum. Md. t1Dn: IUO C1rptnlt< MAMI STATIMINT · IANK, 1li.o ktlOW" •• F. M. IUll.BANK, HOG. OUTGOt"G TllANSF£•S ~E ANO LICENSE. LTD~ L a. .. •NII Allll Al-Mld!IQ11'1. •IO.CJ 2'01 Yhll followlng ptf'WI It Oolng butl..._H Dt<::f•>t<! 1.QI T11!llal\ ST, LYO. •ncl L .. LEAST, LiO.t tl\t W•~tll AYHlllt 'Ttrr1 H•UI• 111cll•n• ,,. NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN ta l'M ANNUAL PINA~IAL AND llUD01[1' "ll'ORT 10'/ Oltltl' Tu;tlon .. • ....... to-'J.4 I OlllllllSI "'"'" ol llM """'ltrort 47111131 •71• GIHI '11urrllt MIU. c:.iff lurnlt, . NEWCOM As! 0 c I .. y E J . 1 .... trtdltc.r• ol ll'MI •bo<rtt n•,,,.. cMc:tdtnl t•udtt:l llt'"" 'llu' Yfft' ......... " JVIY ,, """ -&lllllllei JlllM,., 1•741 1441. T••ns .. ,. lSIO OcN ruldl flOld. OctAfllldl, '-ltr~llncl 21061; ~ s . •t'lf'IOlll• llCllCI. Wttldllf 0.1 .... N..wport •••ell ,,,.,•II ptf\Ol\I n.v!no ei.1 ... , IO•lfl•I 1119 . N~-UlllftiM kllMI Dillrid·Or.t• c-ty. C..ltlfffll• l!UI lnltt'!Und Tr•mler. , • Yott. 111121 14100 Soult! Klngt i.y, Toltdo. Ciiio 06Ui :Ul01 Euelldl A...,..ue, Altn M, Re.dy, 0."'111 Ptrl...,, ltlO 1•ld oe<:eel~I ••• rt<w•rl!'d lo flit them. I NOTICli 0, AOOPYtoN ANO Y•AMIMmM. . l.ut. OtMr Tr•t11ltr1 ........ .. dtfl1, C1Ulor"I• '°'''· 1000 Purtltfl, WHl-hb'I', 01110 4..il)t4; lOIOO Ottll•ft Slt1ll•1JO Orlwt. NIWP«I ltlC/\. wll~ I ... f'IKHSl,Y VOUd>trl. Ill"" Ofllct All Kllon 111111 llt ,..,,..,.on !Ills ,.,, dl.orlno ,~,, or I UlllOrlud ipec:la! TOTAL OUYGOIHG • alt. MlcllllJ'll an7: 1"'6 Wltlllfl!l:r L•k• Road. F1r"1lfl(llon Yown11'11p, Mich Thi• 1111tlt1tt• 11 11111119 cClllducltd by • ol lne cit•• of tl'le IOOY41 tnllfltd coutt, ot meet•ll05 ol Ille 11')v•rnlflQ llOln::I.. • . TRANSFERS ........ . ;• -· S! LDjll1, Milsourl ~IOll ~ ~~ IOOO Ttl11Vrtpll •....;, T•vlor, Umlltd 01..-.n1;1. to lll'tWlll Ill.,,.., With l'l'le ntCt lU tl' To '"' Coun!y S..,,ptrintH\llelll ol Sdloals: ~ 6 UBTOYAL .. . . . • ... . '' ht Ptrk •N4· T,_.,,., Olkl. Mlcni '" •tlO; 1502 s lll'Otdw•¥· Al•t1 M, ll;Mdy . llOllChtrl, IO lllt unoer1loned ., '"" offltt •• TENTMIYe ANNUAL FINANCIAi. AND llUDGET ltEPOAT. Tlllt rtporl II IJPIOIST•••UTIO •l!JllltVE •• "' lM ""' K II I JI . II I • JI JDtnl1 tl:MO; "33 No HlfOl<'l":r~~ E....,~I WiilllflOl'OI\ "2071 Mtll :ios. lCllCll Yhls 1l•lt m_,I filed wl!ll tht County 01 Ills A!lornevs 8utla<1, G111IC1lt1, her.t11 llltd by lllt IJO'o'f t11l,.g llolrd Of 11>1 llCllOOl lll•lrlcl, oll/S 1 TOTAL EXPENDITURES AHO d, Olkl•nd, C1lltornl• f~21 1 1§0 • SE Wilhlll9'°" St .. Portland. 0rlQOll Cttrk of 0f•fl9t CO\lft"" Oft Jutv .. ltTJ Dy Thomson 111<1 NelJOt1, Ut1IOl'I 111"~ ' Cl.tit of mNllllO Ju"' S. ltll SlgrMd Jolw> '6. Nie rcrt erv OTHEll. OUTGO , ,, ••....•.• 7'.lWl• ...... ....... ....,,, 2.1'4Sn -.......... ..... , 417,SIS ......... Q,'4 75 .. 1 l.Dt.m ,,_ "'"'' ,.,,,.. """' 1.1'4.1.fl JJO,l~I )I •• ,,, """' ....... 16471t 2'.t'6Al2 ..'74 "' '"" '"" ., ... '10.0I .. ..,. ,, .. )5 I • I II II I I( )I l l.:121,m ~l'IO 11. .. 1, lunr\'t'lltlt, C•l!for11l1 ·~.I t 1Jl1! nz: S H•rtl« llvd , Anil'Mllm, ThtfHI M W•id, O.puly Coun"" Cltrli. lullalng, 610 Newport C•11ler D,lvt , Suilt O PUBLICATION ANNUAL FtHANCIAL ANO iUOGEl' •& ... 11.T. Tll9 IO>ltrnlno •• INOIHG lAU.kCE, JUN& )I [, Cont•• C°'ll Blvd., PleH111I H • C•lllornl• .,.0,1 11SS N. Ar~u Avtnue. • •U.21 Numtwr ISIO. N"'"port l t1cll. C•llfor'11!1 -rd, Tlll>1lllO INdt·OA • .lf?l, 111<:11 rr1hlorlt . t<ldUlons, •nd cNno;rei C11ll In <:ourtty YrH tllfY .................. Ull,)71 '-"3.2K lort1l1 956611 Ito E El C•11'11fl0. RMI, co~l,., C•lllorni. '1122; S'33 w .i.llw"OI" f'ubllthlld Or•ne• C06•1 D•llY •llot. Ju• tt66t-wflkll Is 1111 pl1c1 of blnlnrn ot •• 11 d"'1Tlt 11k-ry, !Mndlne publlullon, l)llt>llc tittrilltl •nd n1t11 *11llon, R"'ol"1"11 C•th Fulld ... .... •. • .. ..... 10.COO 10,ooe • ... II Pr•llClfC'O, C..llfornl•,.!~· l~I': 11-.d., LOI An!llf..,, Clllfoml• 9001'1 ...,. 1Y \~, \1, 14 31, Im 2121-13 Ille uneserslQned'ln •II t111!1e11 Ptrl•lllllllJ l'l«etlY rt1vr111 !ti• r•Porf. • M "'~II At"counh R~v1blt ' .. •• ......... · · 312,209 0.AOS " trY A,,_, N"'eA, C.I """ '1 OtlllOI Show ltffd S1f1 8trntrdlll0. to 1!>t tll•lt 01 u ld dK .. tnl w!lllln lour Tiit l)llbllc llNrlfl(I °" ftlfl rll)Ort Wiii Ill 1'llkl 411 Cl'Y al CO.ti ft• .....,..,., Slot'n . . • . • • • , , · ··•. · • · · · · · • '37..0S )3t,M Ir 11trl1I •atd, S111 C•rlol. C:•lllorl'll•,1 Ct lllotnl• n«ll: 21uO Mtwthotflf lllW., PUBLIC NOTICE mMtlls •flt< 1,,. fl ttl puOllUtlon of thl1 Qlembera. n F1lr DtlW, WT•~ Clll AVOW! 7, !'73, •I 7:JD .. clock f'M . Prtl)lld Ellptmt •... • .••.•••••.•• ·••• 1.a,1• ltUlt .. I CMorr1 ,.,,_, Lll'IV llMC . Torr•11e• C•llfornl• t0$(llj 11200 •01Cat llolkt Sltned....,,........ R. L.Nh/Aul1l1t11 ~.,.., GENl!•AL •••e•v•. JUH•,., ft74 ,,,, ..• II.. II. 1111 1 forl'll•J nn $. M•rbor 11...CS ' A111:r,::-e1Yd ' C~• P•rk. Clllfoml• t1)11J: '72! 011td Jwtv 16, lffl 1. •••01 s•A.H o .. OISY•KT Pnflil .., .... ....,...,, ... "' °"* 1a. ....... TOTAL CIAl•INT ASSITS •.•.••••••••• J,.(il.tlt J.tl)5,7if ,• foml• '21Di1 ~. w..,. ,, ........ , '"' Ro111n:; l•u• .. Cllll'Oll lllvd., Pte:Olrnt, C.Hlomlt ,_,,, ••• ,.,,,.... RAY MONO UIVING lll•IANIC a. AVlllAGI OAU.Y ATT•MOAJIC& n n . ,~.,. L-. C\11(1111 l l•llllllltt .•••• • • ..•••• 2,1.a.m 2,Mf,"2 .. Anotltt. c111........ I •1»11 1m N "''°''"""'A-, Onitrlo, I'... ... .. EKKutor of,,.. Wiil ol • 1tn·n 1t • ..,. MIT INOIM• ULANtl¥ ............ ),Jl2,tSS ~m <~ .. ~. 11\lftlllQ-llrnt, C•l1fortlttl ~lO! 1•111 C1tUornl1 917.l; ):Ill trtttol Slrwl, CO.I• NAM• ITATl:M.lrJIT !he •llow lll mtd clectd•11I ·~ Aclutl ·~ • '·TOTAL •X••NotTu•n. OTNI!• h KJ119slrt 0r1.... 0 . , •• ".:i· r,\ftl C~lfot•lt niMl 12'00 Wtodf'\111 Thi loli-tno llfl'IClll It dollllll M inni •U•TON, GAULOlfll Kll'leltfVtrllft ••••. ,.. . .•.• .~ •• l.se:ti ' 1.564 ' , ... I . O'\ITOO AM,D UN01n•1at/TID •ISEIVI:. !of11/l r u.u """' Rottertlll ., E ...... ..,;. CowMy, Cllllornlt «00 1 1m w II ' ••• ,,,, YNOMSON .I.NO 111:Lso111 G,_, 1-3 ........ :: ..... _.. ... 5.11) •.f14 .... PL.US NIT IMOlfllO •ALAMCI ........ 31.m.m M.801.M ........... Ullfornlt tolm: ms 1-l~I HlOllWt'I'. Lat ... 1 ... C•lltoml• GLAM..IN£ .. u,. 0 A CE...... ' Unloirl ..... '"'''""'' ' Gtldu .. ... •. .•. ... .. .... S.11' !.7if SM2 ' . IOtltO INTC•l!IT APID ••01MPTICMt ,.,..0 '1Plc •1¥11 .. Lot A ....... C•lifomlt tCIOUi •ISO N, 81t(lulipfll A'f'fl'lllf, Fr*1\0, '1150 lllutt>ell Av•., Faun11111 V1ti.1, "' M"""°" (......, Dt'lw, Gr~,_, .. , ......... , .... •,14 '-lf• )'Ii.SU CK!• Mat llt-l•ry ktMolt Oll"1d •1 !, 11050 ~~· ,.,,_/ :l.,.,,l<;e, Cillfornl• fl716r :JISf ROSo1tr1n1 strMt, Col. nJf,111 • Solll N"""ltl' ISi&. Gr•lla +12 .. . '• t , •• •, ••• f,4'f 1.7t7 f.071 Ot>fnANCllMO' •OMD•D fMllliTIOtcSU • ·ornl• f15M; 1 I Moor~ ~,,_~ 5.111 DlllllO. C•lllor"I' "1110; J1100 G..0.l-Erk IOUetfl. 11 350 11Ulbtll Aw1., N-rt Bttdl. C.11""111• ft'61 Sum. Sell., Spec. Ed., Cont, IEd. .... l."'6 1$ 1.MQ OF OllT•ICY, ti J-JI ...................... 4.1'1Alll 4.4U.aot JOll , Ctlllarrlla t$121. :U0C Aidt mont ~·,.,_ ·~ ~. C•lllorlli• Foun1•lt1 V•lltl'· C1I, '711ll , .. , 4710 640-1•70 Tor11 . .... : .• , .• r •••..•••. 'U,500 · U.1a 27,1'1 Mlnu) t mounl ol llolllls rtoeern«I ...•. ''" M.ooD l't.000 , S1cr1,...n10. C1J1 toml1 tteol ; •ru f10ol1 / IMCI fft Honil ·-·Chui• Yltl•; Thl1 bU1lnetl ll l".Ol>d<K1ed llY 1n In-AllorMy1 tor 1!1KUIOO' IUMMAllY O• CU•JllNT OllY•ICT TAJll RIQUUll!M•HYS ,Oil U7l-74 OVTSTANOING' tlOHDED 01(0Elf'E~IESS .. "'12.000 40tl,o)O in RHO. S1cr1-IO, C11ltorl'll• C•lllor"I• ttcno. lhl ptO()trty to bt dlvldutl. Publlsl'MICI Ore~ Can.I Otll'f •Ito! July (19 IM .. rlYtd ~ ll'IY.,. rllt·...:ur .. r1lll A. llOINfllll(O UU.NCl!1 JULY 1 11 2:llXI 11th St"". Siii f'rl~~ tri"tltf'l'fd ""Y "9 ..,..,1111 doterlllld •1 Erk li:lllfffl · 17, 14, 31 •fld A\lllUll 7, itn 2211·1l '• • ~t Tl• Ttll Cati! In C911b1, Trt1w ry .............. .... ..1. '°""11 f411Xll tt5' Pllrtt 5trMI, II-•II lnvtll!OIY l;OllllJflng of llf'Ol'IOOrtflh Thi• 1t•ltmtnl Wll flltd With ll>f COUft· fl T•ut •111 It.Ill NET BEGjN'NING 8ALANtJ:: .............. ,ro,'777 a. c.i11or111•1 ~ C•ll~• .f"'"'11· .-a1, ~ pl•ylrl( f~'• ~ ty Cl trli. ol Or1119• County on July 16. 1t73 PUBLIC NOTICE "VMD AND f'U•POse •. It--',.. L.lmll C::tlftll'ftd '· INCOME ,,.,111ld, C11llOf'fll•: 1151 N. A.IUM td ,,.,.. blitnk ··~ •fld "''''" H • 1'·167'1 G...or•I Fund· ................................ UAV.illt . '°·SY ATE INCOMI! '"'' covt .... C•1lfor11I• •1m; m ~IH,lftd lrldl f!•IV,_ •nd rltli:.I of ~11111J1htd Or•r!lll (a.11 Dilly PUCll, JU· """1111 rt~.,,..,..,t on ~I ot Sl61e kl>ol:t1 67. T•• pl;tll~ Su~llcint ~ 'II• Sllaw Rold. $111 hmtrd\l'IO. , ..... tr•Mllnln-.., 17, 24 .. J\, •nd Auo1111 7, ltn 220l-7l NOTICE OP TllUST!'l!'S SALe Bulldlno Fund APPOrllonnWll. CIK1• MDI ... • '111.701 .2ffS 61.l·•oni~. ln>11f!IOrY' . 'ot"l' "1«111 :n2'1 M~ llvd.. Tllot 1r.,.111r will Ill!.• pit<;• •I lhll of· UNOE• Ol!IO O, T•UIT Allnual r..,.Y'll'lltll all tcOOll!lf ol Sltlt Sc:l'loctl &1.1 Pn»trl'f Rtlltl ........ : ........ . t1te•. c 1u1orn11 !05m: ms L1lll'tl Ile:" of HofllfO'lll'I; NJ11tf, Sdlw•rl• •rid PUBLIC NOTICE "" :lt>M au11c11ng F\lfld ~1kllllnltl1, HfWllOrt kKn . 43."1 .0111 Yotll SI•• tncomt ................. . -llW., PIC.Olrnt. c.11rorn11,•1ll1,.1 ColWI 2ttO ... ,., NtlloMI llulldlno;t'. LOAM MO. ltllft ComrnunUy-SWVlct• IO. LOCAL INCOM!'• '·'" '""' ... ... l 1li!OI $1rMI, Coll• Mftl, Ct IFOrn o.trOlt, Mldl'9111 Q . Al'""" OOOd• nottc• II htrft>Y lll'l'M ""' Sl!RltANO COlll Mew •···•••••••·•••··••·•••···••··•• ·"'' II. Ol1trlcl T1KI( ~~~.n~"':!:: :S~";'!:K,.;: :rC:n':!~:."'~~~:t_ ~"ll"t•': !~~: P'.C!!.'•'~.,',"'M'•"••,s• ~~':.i"',e~!:;~11ot1c~M~~_: ':.,:,.:.. :~ .. '~. :::::::::::::.;::::::::::::::. .~ 11.1 ~~.!t n~:.~.~ol!! ..... .,,.,. "· Sill Olaoo. C•llktml• '2110: 114CI cir. Cl< titer A.119111! ,,, 1"3. ...... ~... (HI« tr 1111 « 1utllll!UI .. I I MIJClmlHTI C.-11 PurllOM T•~ R•I• ....... 1t,n1Alll .... to t.d» 11.t DIUrlci T,1xn ; Sfioc...-d Ron, -I Avtnue, Cllul• Vls11. C..Ulonilt: 0 •0"' Julw 16. 1.-n TN fl)llowlng pe1JOn l• Ooll'lll 11U1lneu 11 ' rui " TOTAL GENEllAL FUND TAX AA TES reql.fl1ed lo bll11tet ludpl ,, ... :r 11 11 11 •·-S<•lllt · ,,_ O , PUrl!Jllll 10 tl!I Hid of trvll .-...ClllH by , J"A . l Alll'orl Avemt "''"• ' HA NO LEMAN COMPANY 1• THE PAl(MWORI( PILLOW. •?J SOii! Don•ld L H•dman, 111 unm•rrled m•n: Cos!• Mt.n ..... ................ .. ..,.. 11.2 U1111C111~ Roll ................ ,. '2,f1J 1J,101a11 1 20t1 14111 AVll'lut N.E.. l y llrl111 S{lotl St , N--I BMch, CtlU. t2'611 •nd Dot!t !d L. M•r•m111, II IJlllrdll" al Mlwoorf llffdl ... , ••• : ....... -.......... t.•92 • 11.) p,lur Y""I' ,..llt$ .. ,..>........ :Kt.On rwvt, W•1lllflOIOnl 1$16 Whlpplt ROid. 111 Allll>OrllM ,Agtllt lon"I' II E""trom llOI N""'ll'Ort IN tllllt of Ttrrl Lynt1 H•flmlll, 1 ArN "C" ........... 1 .... ~ ............. , •"15S '6. ln!e,_.I •. .,.... .... ......... ",1SI .• C•nlon, Orllo U7'111; '21 W. Ho!...,.• 1•:n« · • C 11 minor. Jll'l'lff H•rlm1n, a minor, •nd £d· Bttnd '·ln1tr•sl •rid prl11Cl~I HYfl'ltnlt It. Oltltr -H....,.. PrOP. ~ant1lt ••. , .... 4' I. L1n,1119, Mlthl;1n "8910; 3(l(l() Publltll .. OtlflOI CNS! D•llY PllOI Jufy ~~Dr., W .. N'twp«t l et<:h, 1 I. di• M•rlmi "', mll\OI' Ind ""=Drcted Ftb. Cosla Mnt ........ ,..... •I0.'74 .1'21 . To!ll Lacel lllCOrnt : .. .,;' .... -,, C ,ICll "Uc lllV'Cl. H.E., C•t1l1111, Ohio .U70S1 31 , 1tn 7lt0·7J 1'hlt M !"tll ll carrducltd &y tn lt1· 11, 1970 In tioo1t f'l!t PllO'I 62 of OlllClll • ·N""'1>orl IM<ll, ....... ~ ... '., J........ 11U7S ,G).17 TOT.t.L INC:°""• .. ' ........ -............. IOl,G1• Quiet l _, Loultlllllt, kt11Neky '' "''' ~di In 1111 offlCI . of th• Countr N""110fl H.trllOI' HIQll ........ .• ............ t4.J21 ,1114 C, TOTAL, H•t -••OtHltlNO IALAN(E 'f I; 1101 s. TMfllr•ph ROid. PMllK PUBLIC NOTICE v 8on11I• a ff!Ollr'llln f1111:ora.r of 01111111 Counl'f, C:alltorlllf, Nawpor1-Mtst ... · .... J;.. : ........ ,.... '26,1"1 :164.S ANO INCoM1! ........ .. ............. m.au ''"'fl .eo531 JOI SOUlll CIJlloul'I. Fort '"'' ............ ,·w., llltd .;.f!lh lht c-. •nd l'Urllllfll ta .... Nolle• al Dll•vll •fld • ANALYSIS 0, o•N••AL. PUNO TAXES l.XEMPT PltOM, Oil 0. EX~t:NOtTU••s ANO OTMI• OUTGO ri-e. lndllll'Ml l Mn Gay $trMI S.W.. O C I J IV l EI K!lall to Sill ttwreunder' 1-dlld April 5U&JICT TO, SPECIAL TMC: lt.ITI L'MITI U(IO, OEBT Sl!llVIC'E ·~lllt. T1<111H-1 Savlhll•I• ,11u. P~lJI;o~A:~:-.1:,.1:/' ty Cl•rli. 01 r1t'l(l1 oun Y oo v I. 11 , 1m , Fn 11c>a1c lOU11Mo••o11al 1.tld Of Cllhl MIM H"""'1--" 1350. aonc1 .... rnllflllll ................ )ff,CIOO r WAYl'lt. ll'ldl•flll 11.'JOO Ro-.tCll • I .... lt73. '""' lltll l Rt<:Ofllt, w111 SELL CM Auoull 14, ......... ..,._, ...,.,...1 RllplYmtftl \)60. llolld lnltrtlt ..................... , 16t.SlS t~•rG C•l'IOO• P•rlr. C..lllomlt fl:JQ3: TN f low flO I*'-•rt 1'73 ti 11:00 ,,..,., •I tfM Nor111 FrDOll ·-·~.. .... ~... Tal•I Diii! Slr\'kt .. ... Sll.Sll N, ' MOU01l•l11 ..,.,.,..,., Ofll•rlo. tio./IJllll( II' Pllttllt"'4 Or.1fl!ll CN1! Dtlly PllCll, Ju-Enlntic:I I lllt Or C StM1 .ki.M Slllot klllll TOTAL •XP•NDl'TUllEI ANO 0'nl8 91111: UIOCI WOOdtvlf A-. TENNfS CLUB VILLAS • 110 E•ll Ir 11, 24 )1, •nd ·~' 1, 1•n 220t·l'l Cour'lllcMnt, tic., ... , ;:;rCMtoc:;.:t~ .......... ...... • .. ....., ,.,. OTMI• OUTGO ....................... Sll.51J "'V· C1lilonil1 f07tl: •ISO N. 17111 l ffM1 1• Coo.El• ~ n::...i ~ 1 Or!vt Wttl lonntt1Y WH I 1111 s1r .. 1. .. A,....._, •;; JllwMMtlf '· ENOING 'IAUNCI, JUlll JI ~-·-Av•' F•esn.o. Calllornl• nn•; IOH. I'll •11 • ·"'. PUBLIC NOTICE S.nl• An•, C•llf«f111, I I P\IDNt l ucllcsn. lttstrlcfe<:I O.lt1te•, July 1, 1tn ............ -20.lll'' 1,.W4 Ctill In CO\lft'Y ,, .. wry ...... " .• 3'0.SX ''"'" ..... ... ,, .... .. .... 11 llll 'Ii ..... """ , ..... "' 4'$,17, n1.121 Gron'"""' lloulr1•rC1. L• Mts•, Miu, tl61J ro 1111 ~lglltsl blOdtr tor ci sll llMY•Dlt .i Y•x R«t!Pl1, ltn ·1l . .• , .......... WIJm • tf,917 '·TOTAL IJcPl!MOITU••s, OTNI• OUTGO, or"lt t<'1•l 1 :1'121 S. »Ill St, .. !, ThlJ.bu1lnns It !Mino CCllldUd~ bY I IM 11.,.. al •ale tn l•wfvl morirt OI lllt SuOtoltf, rn ll'k ltd IMllllC•·pl~ l111:arnt .•••.• 621,:IOf 7'.Sll A"O NIT INOlllO l 'AL.AHCI ..•... .. 11',0SJ ll'l.l61 m1, W8tlllll011111: IUI» hi Awtt1\l'fl LlniUtd ~~flt1f!f'~ M Hahlt!n Ill l'JCTITIOUS •USIN•ll Unlll!'d Sl•tnl all rl!Jlll. rlllt , Ind ln ltrett, AttUo&I p penu, 1'1l-7J ......... ,-; .. • ... IW.13' 5'.tk iOl'f,P INTl!aSST ANO •SOll.M"IOf4 •UNO '· se111lt, w. I h I fl 0 t 0 11: ol)IQ I bY ........... . ' ' . NAM£ STATEMENT (onYolytCS to •nd flOW lwld llV II under ••Id Rntrlclcd b•lallCt , June :JO. lf1). . .. . . .. ' 11,fl1 N"'"'1 lllCll •""""""' kflHI l»ttrltl ,,tvl11t RNll, LOUl$Villt, K"'tucky T I Ill tUlf!Orl~ ~~ "" C IV Tiit lollowl11g 1>9rt0n ll dol"'ll bullneH GHCI lt1 IN prc»tftv 1llulled In .n!a Ettlmaled lax receipts on Ul'llt<!llftd roll, lt 7J.74 . 71,i.51 S..11 OUTSTAN01N4 iONDllO INOllTSDNISS •: tS6 Route olli. TOIOW•· New Jtf'ttV c ~I a:'~tmtfll c IV w J t 'l1~~r.J •I' Cou11ly •lldr S!ai. cleKr!bld •• lallow1· 5ub!al•I, nstrltltd lllllnt• lllui 11\COml ' ...... 11.ul 17.11' OP DISY•tcT, •I ,,_" ..................... 1,Tt0.000 1.UO#IO ~ '1 'IOO E•tll'" 111\'d., Cltr-1vll!1, I"· ltlk t ;/nf~ JO~~ cti'uNT~ CL,ER I< . SPECTA lOR llESEA•CHfYHE l"IETE L111a1 Otse ptla11 . Amounl lludge!td lor e~ptlllllluft lnd/Or Mlt1US •mounl ol lloftcl1 rtdftrned ..... ·· lto.IOO U$,GOO 1 HlXI; 1323 U.S. 11.JM<I 52 S .. WI LAM · 0. ! '. PIYl MAN COMPANY llt lS!ll Sltftl Plrtel : Lot 12 111 Olock 111 ot "!iK· ~•Mftr, 1t1J.14 ,,· .•... ,, ..... • •..•..• UJ,2ll •I.all OUYSTANOING BONDED INDESTEONES$ .... 1,.U0.000 1,:W.000 y•ll,, lridltllt .0'11$: u:: Ol•I• lly ltllV J. 8t•D•1~• ou Y· ,_16tn N-OOl'I llt•ch Cellto'.mli '2'40 ' !!on a , NtwJ>Orl Intl!" In lhf Cl"" ol Maximum •rnoUf!l IO.be flllWtd In lllt tumrn•ry A, •t:01HNIN0 •ALAHC2, JULY 1 -v. L011l1Ylll1, Ke111ue1iy 118 : 3rd P 11 htd 0 C 1 0 11 PH 1 Ptt•r J°'t!Mi 'Plltrnln 11, ssth SlrMI NIWl!Ofl lffcll. Covntv;,. O••llO• Siii• of currflll dl•trlcl ta• rtc111lrtmenl for lf1J.7• C8tll 111 Courtrv r1•sU1Y . ... 1'5.0.1 ~ "'' I. "" Sll'ffl, HUl'lllllO!on, WM! ) 1 11~ s ll lld r;r1111 t 7o.1i, 19;; V 1119°1j H_,,ort leicll Ct "'6o ' Of C•llfor'l\lt, ,1 ""'°"""on, mto ff\ttlOI to ri. Otrlvtd Dy 11¥1 Ott 1119 1ec11rl!I rill , ... j,Of,7(11 4J,"7 HET BEGINNING BALAN CE llOMt l'S.O.l \11!11 J75 Mtlfl Slr<!fl I: .. Oflk R~ u ¥ 4. • U!llll ' • . Tiiis Mint •• j1 cinJuctCci by •t1 11>-""=Ol'Otd 11'1 l ook t , p19e 27, OIHlllAL. ,UNO • l , IHC::Ot,tl 1ue1, T.15 Wit! ollill> Slretl, N..., al It I · MIK'911•-MtPS. ~t of 11ld C""'""" I o.t.llWll I CMlrllln S 'II. SfATI!! l"(OME ~ Hew YOl'k 100lrl : "'' .P•1k AvHIUf, PUBLIC NOTICE " ..,. ;.,,., J Plflmt" °''"" Coun,,.,. 1'11·1! ltn·7S 1tn.i. 17. Y111 Atlltl SlltlY41!111- H. York. Ntw York 1oon1 .U'5 s . fhll Ital~! Wit flied witll ""Ccsufl. P•rcfl l ' 81Qlt1t1lllg II lht Nor1hwtsl . • ' .... ,~, Aoc""'I ltdt'tl •1.1 l uslntH 111..e..torv nedOt Avenut, IC•l•rntlOO. MlclllOlll l'IC:TIYIOUI IU NIJS Iv Cltfk ot O•tl'ID• County on July f, 1t1J, Ctr'Mt ol LOI n In Block, .. o1 '"SectlOll A. •l!GINNING IAU.HC•, JULY I •7.7 Pf'OPt"!y Rtlltl ... , r ; '"°' N. Polnl lloul...,trd. B•Ulrnort, NAMI! ITATI! &HY ·-UIM 8 , N-1 8t1tll". ln !'he Cl"" ot C•~ !11 Counl)' TtlOIV'fY ...... , ......... t,Jll,211 4.t23.2" TO!ll Sttl• lftCO"" ....... .. t'lt"CI 11m 1 6002 Elil JI Slrfff, 111-YM lallawtng Ptt•Orb •r• aoono P111>1ltl'lt!I Ori~ CNll DtllY Piiot, Ju-H,_-1 lffCll. COllnty 01 Or•llO•· Sllll Revolwlllg C.tll fullll ........ ;. I0.000 ICl.GCICI to. lOCAt INCOME ,go1,,, lrtdl•lla ollilli: 6'00 M•'(fltld IM/1lt1tti ti ty IQ 11 l• )I '"' 21M-J:S of Ct llfornl•, •• .-on • m111 Acoounll RtctfV•l>I• ,..,\ ...... ........... Jlf,wt f»M l 11. D!1lrlcl T•Kn 1. M11l!tld Ht!Oll!J, 01110 441141 U001 TH E SHOE HUY. 7300 M1rbor 1 1\l'Cl., ' ' ' ' llw...ol' rtcoreltd 111 l aclt " p..,_ 27 ~tor~ .. .... .... . .... ... ........... Jlll,.1/J »t..04 II.I Oitlrkl ,.JI •• Sfiocured Jlon, l'•pll ll:a.d. Dtlra/t, Mlclli9111 "'7J.'l Co<!• Me.n. C•lll, "'u . Ml.C:tllll!IOlll M.191. RkOtdt of .. lei P,...,.ld Esptn1• ..... T..... .............. JO,I• lMAIG ttoc;t/'nd . .... . .......... ,,.,,,. ~· Cr.wlordsvlllt Ro.td, 1,,.,1•"8rohs. 5'iv·Ot1 Sl'loli, Ill(, 1 Ci ll!orlll• (Of• PUBLIC N~C£ Or.,,.. COll!lty! M'llllng IN n tt TOTAL CUllRENY A51£T5 ............ ,. S,.15..1,21t S,t0$,15t 1'1.1 Ol1lrlcl Tin., Sfioctlf'ld Roll, I'll tA1.U; MOO Nortt'rlltld •*· pOr•!lon, 1300 M•rtor' Blvd .• Coil• Mtu . Horll'Mlrly •IOl'll lh• "°"""''" pro-' Letl: CiHTfO\I Li.OI U!ltt llicl req\l'lrtd la tll!lfl(t ludotf ' .... ll K II ~ 1e tlelyh!S, Ciiio 6'131~ '611 Pe•1I Cil!!. tt6H . IMotnM Of !ht Wt iltrly lln1 of ••Id Clltf'Tld lncomt .. .} .. < • 2,IQ,215 3..llt,9111 11.2'UnlKlll' .. Roll , ....... ,....... 21 .... ~ L Pa•rn• Htiolltl, Ohio ~•l:JO; 21110 Tiii bU l I ,, t onclvci..f oy • (Ill' PU.LI( HOTIC• l ot 12 lo .,. 11'1,..,MCllon with tne NET eEG1NNING IAU.NCE ........... 1.1n.1.«J 3.Jl2.f1S 11.l Prior y .. ,,. T•llH •• 10,0.. .,11111d 11,08\f, Olk P••lc, MIChl!Jtll. ,t fl '"'' . • '~· Nar!h lr>1lllt PrKIH L•rid Ut<! Plltfl wa1 .... ,., 11;o11 licit 1111• ol the Patl!k Adj111!1ntftl1 to Accout1l1 R&tt1u•DI• ........ +11.51• +)S,114 11 ll w ll ... ln!trtll .. ....... .......... 1,llt •r )11 411 V•" l)ykt A~trl ..... w~rr~fl. PO'• 0 $ -Otl Sllol ! ' .. ,a ~" 1t1wlta<1rnt nr111 lmJ"ICI rtporl f(lf O<t•fl 111 N......port B•Y II ller1l111U~· AdlUl!l"t'ltftll to Cuntfl! LlltMllllts ... . ..• _,,~,s +1•.'10 . x ~II x Jt. O!htr -Hwy. P•I», Refile!, •••. SJO 1101n tlO'IJ: '310 S.Cor ll<MO. TaltdO. v.1'~!t1'1 SPll•:eo:::. ·v.P. 1•IC1 pl•n h1>1t tlfttl coml)l•I ... S1ld _pltfl dtKrllltd1 lhtnct E11terly •lont llld AOJUSTEO Nl'T 81!GIHNING I AL.ANCa " 2,11J,ffl J,365.nt 3,4 S.m Tolll l !Ktl ln(omoi ....... .... .... nl,511 ,. '3.606: 1130 U.S. MIO"'*'YY No. 31 N.. T~! I I I Wtll Ill-" wllft "'-COUii· l>f'°"°"' rt11d•"11,1, comrnerc11I, tdue1· ora1111ry llllJll llClt line to 111 lnltr1td lD11 •• IHCOMI •· • TOTAL INCOMI .... ... .. .......... :ntJ1t ,.,W(l!lo'J, lndl'"" ollU:I; Ju)!) Ford 1 ci': 11tc)~';,gt County all Julv n H 7' llantl -111Kt •rid 111\d llNI lw Int will! Ille Nor ...... rly pro1¢nglllon of lllt 10. l"EDERAL INCOME RECEIVE O ., C. TOTAL, Nl!Y l lOINN ING BAU.NCI !, W1•H•""• .... 1cN~•t1 4111S! 2S0l V tr o ' f':HfM t rN o1 1119 CllY 01 1,..1,,. llwnlted ~ E111trty 11"' of Mid Loi 12; tt>tnct 1"11.0M l"EDEllAL SOURCES ANO INCOMa ...... , ........... ..ot,IH n\t•a~ Drl~f. BallllnO!'I, M•rvl•"CI p !)II lled Ortno-Coell Dally PllOI Cul~tr 01lv1, MOUllM ~tr•wtY. Jtll•ry SOllflltrlY 110ng ••Id Norllltf'I'¥ pro-ti, Mtl!l"11t11C1 tncl'OP':AllM ........ (4NI O. EJllPINOIYllll•S ANO OTNlll OUTOO (/ lHOCI 01• Toledo ROICI. Soulftv•le, J Iv 2t I JI 81\d Auoirsl 7 1• ltn ms-n •NII •I'd Hick• ('4\'l'Ofl WMll. lonll•!lon of "" E11lwly u .... of u ld IO. FEOE•AL INCOME •&GEIVEO 1300. OEBY SERVICE 1lg•t1 .,.,, 6S10 B•l!lrnell't N•! Pl~t. UY . • • A r>ulll k n.1rlnt win be lltld DOI tlllt Loi' n la '"" Nortl>et,tw<'ly C«O'ltf DI F•OM STATE SOURCES 1lJO.. 8oncl Redtn>Pllon ltll.000 more, JMryllfld 711;'1; •100 GI --N 1)11<1 ll't' 1111 City OI lrvl11t 1"11111111111 Com• uld Loi 11; lhetoc• Wt~ltrty •lono tM 11. N•lloro•I Del.,u ·E'lflK.ltlclll Ad ...... ,,,Ut ll60. Bond lnltft:ll .... .... .... .• J41ll ""'" l~>11rcl. H Olmsltd, Of!lo PUBUC OTICE minion •I 1;31 I'·"'· on Tlloondll')'. A\IDlltl Norlllfrly !!nt of Nici Lot 11 la tllt po1111 2t. Voc•tlo111I EdU<:tllon Atl ............ 16MI IOI.ISO 11.'41e Total Otbl 'Strvkt . .......... 1"-'U 11 11.U Yllr1I ltOllf Lu!htrvlll• '· 1tn In !M PIMVlll'IO CommlHlon tl••'· -&!' llf0'!11111oo!g. Y*"-0<tln••Y 11~ liell l!ne II. Ellfnlrlll" IN .__.,.,. TOTAL EXPINOITU•ll ANO 11'11\lf'tl, Md. JIO't'l ; 31SO Cltptnlf"' PICYITIOUI •uSIHlt:I Int •oom. T"""" Ctftltr fl11lldlno. ,.®1 of "" PKlflc Ocutl Ill N"""'*'1 111¥ Elluttlltn Ac! .. •. .; •..• : •• ~. 1Sl.'3D 2J1.l.Sl 1.0.71$ OTMli .. OUTGO • r t. Anti A•-· Mlct1io•t1 •1~; 2'01 NA.Mt: ITATaMENT C•rnfloll'I Ot1.,.., IMnt, Ct llfornl•. lltrllM"°"' re"'79d It 11 11t1c1ll)lll ., TOTAL' PaOl•AL INCOME L ENDING •AU.N(8, 'UNI Jf 1sh Avtr111<1, Tur~ HIUlt, lno11t1• TM IOI~ Mr-b ~Ill bvsl11t11 l'Dr l)lrllcultn, pl>ont mJ&Ci, Of' U ll lollawt: l119tnl'IL111 •t , point IOI 111t RECEIYEO l'ltOM C.111 In C-1\o Yr11~ury .. ...... U5.16l •1 '111 Gian &\ll"fllt Mill, Gltn lurnf1> •i ; 11 11'11 o111c• al Ille City of lt\'lflf PtlllfllllQ HOr'l""'l\O ll•olol'IOtllon of !hi WMlt rlv STi'IYE SOURCES .. .......... W ,710 UJ.C2 :ln,ltS NET ENOINO IAL.AHCE ..... .• .... 1UM3 ,...,. "'" •.Nl . ... 111 •'I II 24.GJl .... ..... .. ,.,,..,. :IM,JJI ,..., .. ·1l111d 210.11 'SS' s. Rrtrralds RClfCI, YICTO•r• TRAOIN() COMPAN Y. o..,.rlll'ltl'll, Towt1 Ce"''' l olldln(I, 4'0! 11 .... of E!o~tttnlll Strttf •• itld Elth· XI. Fl:DEltAL. INCOME llEC:E IVl!!I) '·TOTAL •x•11trtDITU•11s, OTlll!lt OUYOO, dlo Olllo Ol\141 3J101 Eudld ,_.,.."IH, JOt(t C•p1I L•"'· CO.II Mts.1, Ct ll l, C•mpu1 Ortw , l"'lflf, C•llfornl•. 1-111 ,l,"I It l•fd Olll •ncl 1t1own Ul)l)rt FttDM COUNTY SOU•CES ANO N•T IHOIHO IAU.NCE "' , • ....... t11"21 1110~b•. Oll!a oUOtt ; JOtGO Orch1rll '2126 JEJll L, WILSO N t map of Skllon 8, Ntwport BHCh. 32. AU l:rntf(lflltV E~yrntnt IOHO INTPIST ANO lllDIMPTN>M l'UNO ' Roftd. 1'1rmlf1DIOt> TOWt1~hl11, Mien. V!clor!• Mtltll'•· :»ti) C.prl l t flt. A11l\Ut1I Sttrtl•fY It TIM •Karotd In llOOk 4, Pt0• 11. At1 Fullll1 ... .... .. ...... •l.lto ~• • .ot .......... , N•ttlfr URIMI Nltll kllRI Dt•lrkt 11 IOOO Tt!tO••P~ Ila.II, T,y!ar. Colli Mi ii• C1llf. '24~· lrvl,,. Pl1....,\f'g Commlislo~ Ml•ttl!ftt1~• M•pa. lt«onh ol u ld .ii. STA.YE INCOME OUTtTANOIN• IONDIO IMO•tYIDNl!SS 1l(N11 481"; 1!0\! S. l•ot11we>1. t~I' 11111111• .. b 1>tlng condll(lftl bV •~ PUbllthtCI OlaflOt CO.•I Di lly Pilot, 0.11110• Covnly, 1<1lcl 110lt1t ot 11i9!1111lno 11. Prlnc:IPtl APPOrl lorilT'tnt • DP DISY•ICY, ti JV!ll >II ............... l,IJ5.000 •tit. W-V.llllJIM "'°2J M•ll :ios. 101Q1 Tnolv!du•I. Jvly )I, 1tn U....tl btll'IQ "·" '"' N«ll'ltf'IY ol ,... 41,l l•Jlc Eocnllullon Aid •....•• '. ),)U,7$0 3,)l,,74 ),lld.VS SUBTOTAL ·-.... • .••.•••••.••• •.13J.OOO W~\11I0'1Qlon 51., l'ortl1t1d, OlfOOfl VICTORIA METZGAR Soutlle•H t'""' Of Lot 11 lt1 l lOCk 21• •1.r I Oue•llOnllly H1tldl«1Cf*I . . Jll,1.. lSt,nt :lll.2«1 Mh\111 lmoll!'ll ol balld1 rfodoHmtd .•..•.•..•.• , Ml.ool 1. T~• 1111m1 •nd llu•lflfl1 ~Od'''' ot 11111 \111tfl'>tflt fllld wHfl "" coun1>1 "UBLIC NOTICE 01 u la Si'ttlOfl t i 111d tr.m w ld polfll ''·' Mtnlltly Gltltd .. ... .. ,, lQ.f)O 1S1.1s1 111,SOO OUTS'tANDIHO llONOED IND£llTEOHESI •••• •mAOt "frf'l1!er11 11 Ille NAH O~IMAN COM• C1tr• o1 Or•rioe C-f\' Oii J uly 2). lllJ, .-OI 11tOlt111l1111 1 ttdl•I Hite W.rt Narlll •1.t l!dvetllllt MMl•llY R1ltnN!d .. 6'.IOO "2,D4 •.oc> A. i l OINMIMt •AU.NC•, JllLY 1 ,. .... •70 Etll WOOODf'ldOf, Ottrolt, ly ""Y J. e•1;1!H1, DIP11ty COUllly ,,. ... 4" E•1l1 IVMl1'1Q tlltr>ct •1.t Pllp!Cllly H•ndlcl pptd .. .. ... '"'''1 •U,1J1 "'°·"' .. Cnn In Covntv TrMIV1¥ ......... . >IQtn •l'M. k l1r 11 11 .,,_..,to 11'11 Cllrli.. NOl•C• lO ,,,.,,... Hortli-S,.,ly 1long • tllf.,. cont•,_. la ''·• Yrllnl~ Mtnl .. y .. llf'dtd , Jl.l.fl Sl.11$ .... 160 N!Y 8EGfN1oitNO I ALAHCE ,. •••. .••.•• -..n 11tt .. ••Id lr•l'IS!lrll'I "'"'II.ad'"" '·Htfl "" Nor1!>f.llll efld ........... r .. lw ol I I.I '''""""".,. N•nd"-PPtd l'llPll:I•, • .:I.Ml )',ollif u.arill •• INC.OM• wlllQ ..,...,.! 111/i.ll'ltll 11•mn •ncl Id• Publ!"""' D<•"Ot CNtt D•llY Piiot July SUP•••o• cou•T O' THI .... ,7 ""'I l!voo.lvh Ill tn: dlllfrf'tCt IM •J. $11'{1•1 PurllOM ApPorllonmtnf •• STA.Tl!! fMC(IM I! lll w!ltllr! 11t•ft ye•rt l•1I 1>111 : ti, JI •rid Ai;ouit 1. 1 .. U1J 1116-73 IT•YI Off CALl•O•lllA '0 A 11,J.4 IHI to • POlnt from '#l'llcll 1 rtdl•I U I OrWtf' Tr•l11u•11 .. • .. • ',\,. •• lM.124 llt.tol 1«1.00G •1. TU R .. ltl Sutllltrlllortl 1tl11tts NtrnM: N-. -TH• COUllTY OP o•AHOI 11,,. """ North no JI' ... £111; U.J Allew-IOI' Tr-l)Ol'l'•llon tS.tm 114710 1.U.OOI •1.1't\ollnn1 lnvt1'!orT •• 1t!,...u Adldrtff•t : PUBIJC NOTIC•' •,• o'•'"'• 1 GOOO llltfltl w.,terty 1'°"9 • w.-.. ~•.,. ill. SPKlll.AllllWll1ten 11.2 ttttCi'tl',,., ••lltl .. IO 0<11nllcM ttOW. oc.tl/llldt, N..., ,;:, E•l•IW !If MA J I M.• MAN, to 111t SOulll"•NI hevl"' • rMllA ef 4),2.AHOWfrf'tCI 11111" IM!rucUorllll • TOlll St1f9 111Cotnl ,, •• , ,1 ••••••.• ' 11sn1 14100 kv111 K-1111. c.c:....... tM.J7 fttl, ll'lrOlllll .... •re dlllfflt'I al '~•loft .. .. . t .VS '·'°' t.n. fCI, LOCAL INCOME '"" It AO I ..... ""'~· C..llfonll• l'02'9J 10» Pur1!1t1, NOflC• INVITlMG l lDS NOTICI: ti Ht!llEllY OIVEN le 11'11 111.IJ !wt to • po1111 lnl!l'I w!ll(ll 1 ll.$ AllC)OfllDOllnlllll !or M•ndielMlld 11. Dl•lrkl Tl~f\ r; oll, Mltl'llOfll 4'"1; I'°' W~1lll010l01'1 NOTICt IS HERE8Y GIVEN 111•1 lllf trtdHorl .,i !tit AOOYI t11mtd Cl<l<tdell! r1dlal !Int t1e1r1 Sovtll 1r 10' :IQ" Wtit: Mlnort tor Whilom No Sl•I• t i.I DlllrkJ Y•11u, SKureor:I Roll, ~ut. $1, Loul•. Ml\MI0•1 13101 1 soo N ........ ,, ol 1 •~•1ttl " , ...... ,:1111nt1t11 V•llt• lh•I •II llt'tall' h•llLllG cl1lm1 ~lt15t !llt lhtnc• North 71' .... to'' w..,. :IS,1, '"' Slltcl•I EclWflllon l"tcHlti._ fac.!Wd . .. .. .. " oU P1rl\ ·~· Tl'loUUl'lt Olk\ S.CllOOI Ol1l1;c1 OI' 0••119f County C1. Wiii ,,1(1 dKtat"I •ff' re<iulrt\I to !lit n..m. to !hll NDrlllHil torrwtr 01 LOI 4 kl iald tit A~1U1bl1 .. •..•.. .• '6,lJt lt,lt7 211),000 11 1 Olllrkt l 11111. !.Kur .. ltoll, 11Jrnl1 "*' 133 No. ~tmbe'Ot°' ft<:llVt s.e•lt'd Did• up lo,""' ()ft IM 15111 w'llh '"' fll(•H•'Y VOll(htr1. 111 ll'lt olllt• SIOC~ 1111 lhtn<.'f Nor!h "" "' :JO'' 1).1 E•rlr Childhood £d11Catton 100.o.JS ~It .. to 11111<'1(:1 &udglt .. II d, 0•-l•lld. C•llfcl!'"I• t4'71; \Kl e. El ••Y °' Auouit lttl ., lflf OlflCt of 5•ld ol I"' Cl ..... lr: of ll'l'•l:oov9 t111!1!t'(J COU•I."' Wt11 •long lf'll! Norlhtrly llM of ll ld •J.tO!hllr AISJI .. .. • f,10I ...... 11.?:IJMIClll'td •011 ...... !ll>o •••I. SllllllTY•lt, C.llfornl1 tt[IN; llCheo.'tl dl1l1oct PUn: ... 111111 dt~rlmtt1! •I IO P•••tOll l!\trYI< wt!)'> the M>t•O•ry Lot •• 100 IHI to ll'MI Nwl~wnl COl"llff ''· T•JI Rtllfl Slll!Vl"tlo111 11.J PO'lor Y .. rl' YtWt:I .. I • 11 I •t.t17 ' ' Conlrl Cot!• 11...,., P;IN,,t11 Hiil, which 11,,,. uld blels .,..m Ill Cl9f'I •fld -"'11'1, to 1111 ~ •• ll'MI olllc• ot w1d Loi ., '1.1 111...,.11 1n......i..y .••••••• ••• ,..,,., '11..oO ll 11 • • 16. 11\ftf'MI •• • ...•• , ,. •. lorfllt f!,Ull; 1111 11 El C1mlt11 •ut, ,.tel for,,,. lnU•!l•llotl of C•l'1)fltnt. ol 111 Yrv1t OIPlrf""flt, Slolll Ind S9fl"CI Al(A 1112 ••Y Awnw. JWw"port 17,2 p,..ll"fly Rf'lltt , ,. ....... IJO,tall -..011 ll ll ~ • n. Ot11w -H.....,. p~ R.,l•i. =..n "''•flCllCo. C•llforhl• ..... sm All Oki\ ••• 10 bt I" KC«d•nct wLlll Str1111. LOI •...i•. C•UIOrl'lll, P.O. •ox lffcll. C•lllOMI• ... "Mllttlltnewt ~... • • w.n. Yottl loul lllCarnt .. ·•· • "~ ""~ Ntwl/11;, C1Utothltl ll1t 'Pf(lflc•llon 1IOVt oro nt-t In IM PYIVl•llflO 20f7, T1rmln1t A_., l111 A119tln. Slid ult wlll bt ........ l)U1 wl"-1 It. OIMI' • . .. , , , ......... •• :100 JM TOTAL !NCOMI ... , , , , .. , .. ""'' lt.1.U "' -1)1 ... rtll'llt .~. "" Ctr1<9. C1hlor"l•1 .. rtrntrll (If ltw Fount1lt1 V81fl't Scllool C1Utor11l1 tOOJ.4, 'NN<fl ,, 1111 pile• (If (-Ml OI w«Tilfth', ....... (I( IMC'lll.O. TOTM. STATE IN~E 1An.M .... ,,.,,s l.»t.1111 c. TOTAL. flilT lftlMMIN• IAU.NCa Cllerry Av.MN, LOfl9 l..cfl, Dl1lrltt, H-I L'911""0VM ,.._, Dlllll'lfN DI lllt ~/fflfd 11'1 tll t't!llt"1 ,...rc11119 tlNt-, POUnJlol'I w -70. COUNTY INCOMll , AHO INCOfllLI ., ;., ,... .. 1Jlt,M itof'M•1 tt22°S. M•rtior ll lvd .. A11tllt!rn, F-1•!11 V1Hty. C& • .,,., -l•llllno to 11\t ftlllt of .... --~. tvmbl'llltll, hi lffll'V ""' lnclllfllMll'ltU 1l. "Mllcel~ FllftlhM ........ -.... ..... J.l,IG SMIOI D. IX ... lllOIT\11t•1 ANO onn• OllTM forl'll• nlQ'J; t4) w. Jtfftf'wi l lW.. '" """ ol '"' lo.tit 61 Jn111 .. 1 wtltlhl ,.,,.,, ll'IO'llllll '"""""' first PllOl6'1· tf(UI' .. lly ... 1c1 Otold, ~, ..... ,,,. "" n. Dllllr' . = . . ..... .... l...U. M.ut .k.000 Dill. Dt'iT 11111\llCI • """"'"'" C::•l1forr>I• fOll111 l.,. JlolUM '""''111'1 V•llt¥ khoOI Dt•lrk.I. "°". , .... iwttu. ftld IJ!ptflM of "" ""'"' fncl of "" TOTAL COUNTY INCOME •••• ..... ,.,.... 1ie,m 111.000 l:bO ..... •tlltfnoltDl'I .......... • •• --cl, ll11r'll"°'pie. C•trlor!!ll t•101 !till •00tr i'lllOM, Oii .. Jull' f1, lt7) 1Tlltl1 f"'llf ~ Mid OMdi, ,.,...ll'lt!Ot .. LOCAL INCOME IM, IClllll lnl'tt'ttl .... ,.,, 101.Q ' 111 Kl11p""1 Drive, c; •rd •" 1 , c11or11 of "" l04lt'll s1cu•11y PAClfl!C' """""°"· Mtll '"''-' ,, ~ 11. D11trk1 Tix" '°''' Dlflt 11..,1c. .... •• ,.,,.. ""111•, '"' Wtt• ROMCr-•1w .. LOt "1MllMll Or .. Clllll Di lly PHot. HAYIONAL a.AHW: ,.,.,..i ........ "" Wflltlld 111'ir1Clci-i DI "" I I.I kotur.cll Roll. t'IC:tl...S II ' '°'"" ..... 11101TV•lt AMO ,...., Ctltlorl\11 f00'22; JStS I!. Olyrni!lc Jiiiy fl, tlMI August 1, im n.n '" •ll'ftlc• I. S\l'fn l'IOI• .Mtlll'td lly Mid llttdl to-wit ll'ICll<'tltll " ' ........ l•.Jlt.on 11.tos.11, 11 • 11 ll OTHI• °"''° . ''""' . ... 11.llS ,, .... 11 J. II ..... '"''' "·"' ... "'"" '''"" -m.ns m..,. "' ... •.. u. ..... Ct lllor"lt '°'111 11bso Viet ~rnldtrll •lld Tl'V\l OHltlt' 1.u .m.J1 Wiii! """"'" ''"""°" ''°'" Jtn. 11.I S<tcvref •on. l'f'llUlltdl ,. • • •• IMOIN• ... u. .. c•. 'UNI • lf!Olll A""™', Rlvtrtldt, C1llfort1l• I l1tc:llt« of lllt WHI DI rllt 20 1t7l •t otO>IJdtd It\ Hid ftot•• b!llMC• lllldofl ... "".I I ll ' e, I' I 11.(dJiOt C.111111 c.ur.IT TNolt!ll'Y • ,,. ..... ., 4SJ.111 -...S "' ,,n Moorptfk A"""'"', s.11 JOM. Kids Ll'ke To '*'°"" .n•fl'IM d«tdotnt b.1tc1: Jul\O 11, 1t n. . 11.2 U11M<vrfel 11.011 • .. ... ~.~ ... 1.ttt.m 2.a4,m tMoUlll NET EN0 1trto 1ALAHCE ..... .... 151,111 ....,. t0mr1 ""') "°° Ardtn W•V· . WALTI• ,., f(ll N tM SlltJIANO ll:K OHVI YAHCI' II.) "'Ill' Y•••'• ,.... •• ...... • ..... I ~ .... P. YOTAI. •Xf'INDIYU••s. Oltt•• OVTOO, r1nwn'9. C.111-1111 tMOlt ~U Plarlt1 N0WAlt0 •• IMl•M••o COMPAH'f 11 Ml(ll Tr\11fM I.I. S•lft ' "'4CI lfl:'T'! MOINO •AUlfC• .......... f,tlt,M l.tir,IU ,. -· S°"'trntnlO, C:•l!fof!lll t"111 t100 t Q SWiii S"111f lll"ftl lh WAYH ( H. IMYl11WI U.2 k it al Etllllll'!Mnl •nd &ullfllln • 2,17r t.1ft 1.J1» •OMO INT•ll•IT AJID •aOl.woTNMf l'llJIO ,, ' ltrttt. Jtll l"r111C!K,. (aUlor11l1 L .. Antttn. C•llf, .. ,. A\11.,.,..lrtO Olllttr' IS. ll:tr1t•!• •lld Lffltl, l'l(l'Jll ' .. ...,........... Unifi .. kMl1 """"' .. .... '""' '"'°' - 1,011 ... t C<"' 1A,f SJ 60,..Sl .. ,,. 1.n1.11• .......,4 ...... """ ""' ...... 1,m,n1 ...... t.tOO,Ml m•u .s1,m ..... 1.m.0:1 """' )I •• I ..... ~ ....... " .... ..... JI,,., IS,J1' "'·"' 216.lll l.l~t,54 "'·"' ltt.J.M ...... ,loll ......... -..... ""' ,.. .... U),W' 4lt.1N """ ~.1.a 1:n.10 ll,71J "'"" 1.110..011 is,a:u.•23 ....... "'"" on.sos 3'.l».Sll l,.4'11.2lJ ))',IOJ,751 ..... ..... ..... ...... ...... JI IC I 'I IC I I • JI. )I x • ll ll l<. 0),'14 ...,. '""' 11,JU m "'"" "'""' w .•31 ,,., .. 14'.t~ Jll.tlO ..... .. .., ...... 167,ISI 167~ • • 11 • • ll 'I JC :r; II I )I .. 'I. ,, ... ,5 '""' S.011 11::! 210,M "'"" 11S.OQI 0.111 111A11 117 .. 11 lU.71• 1•1 ,21• ,, .. ,, .. ... ...... 11 •• ll I'• II• • ••• •••• .,,,, .. ~ .... M,IU 26.•17 ... 1'5,™ ,...,.. ,...,.. -,, ..... , .... ,,,..,. olft.ttt ....... ,,., .. ' •1 SUof Pltra S1rttt, ltk.hrnond, A k 'A."nd flt.,._., 1n11 u..,.., Putlil.,... N.....,, H.,.bllr HI" ~ "Ml!Ull•l'llOUI Fl#llll1" 21.m 16.IM 11,aae OVTSTAMOINO iOfllO•o INOSITIOMlll fW'fll•r ~'° c1n1omt• A .. • flu •, S J At""""" fW •ucwtw "'"*' '""" o.ny •not. NfW!lllr1 kKll. -. lrittrftl , Jtu.3' JOl,r• m.ooo °' 011T•KT, t1 ,... JI • 1U11.-n .--f ~ Cl"'9nllt l 1151 fll, ,.,_ ' ,.~1..,_. OtM'Ot COii! 0 11/y ~Hot, Caf)IWl'l(1 J\1111 24,, 31 MW ......,.., 1, It. Da. .... ... • ....... , .. • 1,JJr 7,m 9.000j-"--'C0,"""-''-""-'-"''-"';:;;-:7,c.;,c-;C;-:',;f"O::=;;;---':===----- ':-..... ~ C.llfl:lnl/• •t1!2i "' J\111 JI .,.. AlltUW ,, ,., JI, 1t1l ns1.n lt7J n'2·7J TOTAL LOCAL INCOME .......... .l2.KUI u.i».lll Jt.ol4A11 (Contln* top ... 9) I • • ........................... ······--Ol,IT5TANOtMO ~DID .. 09'1Tl"C*IU ••. U.-.- A. ............ ~ .. "'"""' 1 •·•···•·•••• c.. "'c:...t\I 'T',_., ................. . Mlf llOIHNIMO 1AU.HC1! .............. tAm L_. ' ti, IT!-Te" ...CO.I "· ., .. blMt ...... 11 ..... - Q,I ~ "'-""" ............ . 61.l ""9Wty •.u.t ................. . Tot'4 1'-1• lftCOIN ., .............. ,. ._ U)CAl. INCDMI. 11. Dktrkt T•-11.1 Dlstrlcl Tl ... lilalrld ..._ """ ..... '""' rtittl.... .. '"' , ........ ,....._ ''·' Dllfr'lct , ..... ~ ..... rtqlllrld to •i.iia ,_. ..•.• 11 11 •.a fl.! U..tcwed llelt •.•••••..••• , ..•• , IUMI 11,, Pflor v_.., T•-.............. a.m .... " ... "' ' •. " "'" ............ '11,llJA "· Ollltt -Hwy, l'rotJ. Rf!llllt ••.. , ••• 1,:m Tot1I LOut ""-.••.••...•••... ,. . lJl.ttJ TOTAL INCOMI • .. . . • • . • , ,, ..... " tn,1• C.1'J:1w~~\·~~~-~ ~· ........ ~uo.m 0 , lJU'lltOtTV•ll ANO OTMI• OUT'MI lao. DEBT SEA\llCt: 1»1. llo!!d R~ion ••• . • ........ , .,,_~ '*·&one! ..,..,. .. , .. .. ........... l,021.l0t Tot .. 010t SCMc1 ................. 1..313.Jllf TOTAL lltPIMOtTU•ll AlllD OTHI• OUT-.0 . .• . . . . .••.••••.•••••• ~ I , INDINO •AU.NC._ Jutfl » Calf! ill County TrM-)' . .•. ............ """''' Hl.T EHt>IHC BALAHCE .. • ..•.••.•• t71,U2 p, T~Al. aX,INDITUllll, OTNlll OUTeO, AND NIT IMDINO •ALAMCI .•.• .... UJM:11 •UILDtMe ''*D A. aJ•INNINO U.U.JitCI, JULY 1 C.it In C°AMll'/' Tre.,i.ry .... . ............ . t-~ta In U.S. lloNk, -. •..•..•.••.• TOTAL CUllllENT ~ETS ............... . UM Current Ll.iillltln .... • ............. . NET AJEGINNING 8ALAHCI .•.•..••..•••. 10,l!:tm ACllvttmen/1 10 Curr sit Li.911HH!ts ... .. .. . •. «IO AOJUSTEO NET BEGINNING IAU.HCI! .. JO,t!U1' I. NtCOMI • 10. CQUNTI' IN COME n. °""" . . . ........... . IO. LOCAL INCOME "· °""" ............................... . TOTAL INCOMI' .. . . .. . . .. ....... .. (,TOTAL. NIT •IOIHNIHO SltL.ANCI ANO INCOMI .... ........ • ......... t0,""'"1 D. llXl'INDtTUlllS .AMO OTNlll OUT .. 1200, CAPITAL OUTLAY l:tJO. Sllea .. • .. ... .. .. ........ ., •• JM.1tt n..o. 1mpn1 .... men1 or Sit• , . . .. . . . . . . . 11,t• l:UO. l11Hd l1191 , ........................ >.:tiM.41i l2'0. Eql/lp!Mlll 1261. Boelt1 .................. . 12ff. 01h« Equlpmml • .. .. .. • .. ~ Tot11 Cloltll Ovtl.ly .. • ........... 401M51 TOTAL IXl'l!NDITUlllS .AND OTNllt OUTQJO .. ... • • ................ 7 ..... L INOINO IALANCI, JUNI » <:a.ti In C-tv TrMWfV .. . • .. ............ 2.112.17' l""ftlmMl'I In U.S. 8on1b.. 9ft. • , ..••..•.•• 4000.0 TOTAL CURRENT A.$.SETS ,,.,, ......... 6.IA17t L.a11 CW"r.11 Ulttllltll!I ................. ., . ..... Nl!T t:NDlNG IALANCI!! .. .. •. ,.,. l.111;m '· TOTAL. ._lll'INOIT\11111, Oflllll OUTH . AND NIT INOINO •.AL.UICI ...... 1UMM'I , ITATI I(~ l•I~ •u• A. llOlfllN!fllO IALAfllCI, JULY 1 C1111 11'1 Cour11Y T rMW'Y ....... ~ ........ .. Nl!T (IE.GINNING BALANCE ............ .. I . INCOMa 40. ST.All! INCOME ~ Apportlonmttlt tor Sdlocl4 ,ac;IHtl• • • ( .. ) IO. LOCAL INCOME '6. 1 .. i. •• 1 • • .. .................... . It. Orr.« .. .. .................... . Tol•I Local fncorM ................. . TOTAL INCOMI .. •. . ...... · .. ., · ........ • C. TOTAL, NIT IPll(INtMe·aAl.AHCt: AND INCOMa• • .).. . •• ,,, ... . ........ · • ....... .. •· INOtNG IALAfllCI, Jtlflll • • • . a •• "' ... •• c.111 1r1 counrv T,_r .................. •• NET ENDING llALANCE ............ ,... lDI ,, ~NT:.~:x==·~:MtD ~~......... !1111 CAPEnll.IA ,_D/ACC8VMT Now .. 1tM-~ldllltlillllrtct A. INtNNING U.LANCI, JULY 1 Osll In 8/A, (QI.II ,,,,_ ' ................. . Aecounts ltkOftllllltt ...................... . ator" ............................... . TOTAL CUllltENT ASSETS ................. . Lew. Currtnt Llaobllltln ................... . NET 8EG1NNING 9AL..ANCI! ............ , AdlUSllMl'lll kt Currllfll Li.9bllll* ......... . ADJUSTED NET BEGINNING IALANCE •• •• lfllCOMll 31). FEDERAL tHCOMI! 11.ECEIVED ,llOM STATIC SOli'KES 21 MSLP, SPIC"'1 M iii!; • •IWkfMt Pl'llfll'-........................... IS5.m '°' LOCAL INCOME ........ k4 Food Servk9 S. ............... · M. lnNrat ............................ . -... n. Oll'Mr , ... •• .. .. .... ..... •• ...... •• ••• 11,AlS Tot.i loCll l/ICOl'nl ... ·· · ..... · · •• ....... '°""' TOTAL INCOMI .. . . . .. • , ................ lMl .. 0 C. TOTAL. fll.-T 111.INNlfllO aALAltCI! 1 AND INCOMll . .. .. ........... , •••• l..-n2 D. DttaNDrTVlt.IS ANO OTNlll 0VTeo toll. FOOD SER.VICES t21. CllMJ!led Sal4r._ at ,... Stl'vie.t , _., tlO. ,ood . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. • . •• . . • ... ., ... "'· 011191' l!Xp9ft-........... •••••· ... ..."' Toltl POillll Service .................... 1 .... .2M UNOISTltllUTIO llllSlllY9 ................ •XX X TOTAL llXl"INOITUlllS ANO OTNlll: OUT.. .... . ................... 1.-.. II, INDINO aAL..UtC .. JU.• • c.sn 1n a1A. c.m11 fMM "o.,.t•lllif'' ulh ......................... . ACOlllri. Jt-.::•l•abh ....................... . ,..... .... . ........................ . TOTAL CUJl:Jl:ENT ASSETS ................ . ltl.o CUl'T91!1 Lltlllllt... • ................. .. NET ENDING IALANCI! ..... . .... ...... ..... ..... """ (1,"'21 '·TOTAL IX,..NOJTUlll oliND NIT llNDINO IAU.NCI • , . . . ... .. .......... 1M0.112 l'lltlfllllted Or1111;1• c-1 0.lty l'llof, Jutv , •• lt73 PUBIJC NOTICE ••• If •. ,,.. 7,;1111 1$1.Jll .. L!1t-* ....... -111.-........ ........ . ....... • ' .. ... "'" -a::., .. '.,, .. .... ...... .... .... ..... (1.4M). 17,.#2} ....... f17,751 "' n.~ ....... 1,114611 1,W,Ml -""" """' ........ • a'lf • ~ .... ....,, ...... 111,Mlll ..... {0,M) •••• Ii ••• •••• •••• ..... """' ..... "'"" r.in::: l,IJtN il..t --.... ~""-~~:: ... =-q.-. ... ~-............... ...... ·~=--~,, .,. ·•·:::::. n A .WJl PU JO ' ~~.~~.:.'.'.. . .• "''~~ ·'' ........ ,. .............. . '1. T!"!\~ .............. . Ril ....... ~· ••. ,............ M,m U.t,,.,........., ......, ... ...... ...... .... . •tn .. -.. -~ ~--"~"................. .. TQTA&, 111.\Ta -.o1111I ............. .._,..Ail ... ..,.,.,,,,_. . . °' ................. -TU ••........ ""' 1t. !'Ml...,_, ........ '. ............... jt.4i • TOTM. COUtf1Y'Wtc:Clllola ..... ."...... ~ IL~ tNGOMf . · IM. Dllfrkt iT~ • . •J-= ~ .............. 1U12Mf ..... l«vnil··-....,... "' l\llltttl · , .. , • . . . • . • .. . . .. . a 11 • I •t.J """ ,. _... .•.. ....... •»• .... .... ~ ............... 41t11• ......... . .. kl ,. If •• ,,....,., ... "'""'-.. :s,.aJ .... °""' St!~ . . . ....... " .. . .. . • .................... ~ 'l'Mltc,......,..... ,. ................ , ... , U,.. .... ~--' ............................... ... v. ·-. J...r.. P .l .AIWtl • ~ · ......... ....... •-.... ~MIW:lll< .... ~(Elf. . -,_, .. •··•·················· ...,., J"71.IG ft.Obi« •· .:c·'!'... " .............. U.t41 TOTA .L~L tNCOMt ............ lt.m.fJO "313.ln TOTAL ~I la.lta.UU\19 fJf' 2IOM7 llltlfllNJ ... IM..UICI)," ... .. • ...... .JO,ltt,.,. a.on.lM TOTAl. N.-r· ...... N1f19,IM,.UICI ANO ·llKDMl-L;.i.·· .. !l~ ,, ••••••••••••• n1.w.n1 • II • • 0. lllHMDn'Vll:••.AM;OTtfll OUTDO l.0'2.JM CUllJl:ENT ll!Xll.ENSE IOO. .AOMINl$TR..ATtoN , "''""' " flQ. CertlfkM• S1lv1" . ., ~!loll .••... tit. O..l.ftlo:lS1l1ri. fll l.dmi~;.1r1H011 . . .. • .. . .... •., ~ ,,., °"""' l?iQI"'" 11·.Adml,,lltn!IM '. . -. TOT.AL.ADMINISTllATION ........ ar,IJt :JOO. tNSUlOCTKlf'l -. • 2i0. c«flflc119d·Siil1,lts at lcafnld1'cll · 211. 4'rlf1cl,..b' ,...,..... :. . ••• . ... .. ..,.,_. flt. ·~u!Hrx' '*,.. .... ...... , .... , 2'1..'.TMdltrt'· ltrlw*" ........... t.lltA,. :r14~~Sltllrle --~~~·"":=' ".iNtiiiCtW.:."'" 1:1n..a: 221rl~ ,........ lU,M m. <Mhtn • ti• If • ·--~ .. , .................. , .. .. Ull.'1' ................................... 1...,, . , ... 0.-• .......................... Jt,Uf ... -ottMr •• ~ ... hnlnold'IM •.•• 1'IS.2Jt I • TO'UJ,. •TllKTMMi ............ !!-""* & HULlH :M'""ICI:$. • -~~.~ ................ ,. .. ., '--~r...-..i·~.. .............. ~ --°*"9" I--. ., ...... "' s.vk'I .• I.HA toT.N. titALl)t tSERVtctS ...... *'*» .... OH:ltAtlON Of'.P\,M(T . ; ..... Q&ull*t' $ll9rkio ,., OMnllM " 1'4.ttt .Qlh9r ....... fw ·Otw•""' ....••• . ' TOTA.L. .. OPEIAT!Olf-Of' l"LANT .. ~1" ,._ ~HtJ.aN.trlfCElc>P. l'LNtT • . ~ ==~~ ... ~............... ltUD 7JO, •9'!1•c.i-it of l!~I .. .. .. .. 11'J.l1P 7to. OtNr--~-"" Mllftt-flC.t • • Cl.tn TOTAL M.AINTIEMANCli . .. =o; !'1~···············""" . ,. ~ .. \ :;:..~.: .. : ..... : .......... . . --.=· ....... , ........... . m.~& ~····· :I . ...... ....... • )1,'51 """ ... ... 111,IG ,...., (11.MOI •••• 117.M) ' 171,IOO ...... "" ..... -1.1..- = ..... 1,1~ -..... -...... ..... 1,110 .,,. .......... ~. _,,,,., .,;:~~T~'"" ~ :Mf .~ r~ . ........ .nt.'Jlo ·• ::·~=..: Otllerl .. &SIS ak~M~·M!o;...;.· GMooit;tltiil IE~ .............. ,. -.~t•:~l'IM . .. tMuftra ................. ,..... ..,,, • l -..o.w.,fl!mc. C1\1r1i41. ............ .... , .TQ.lA;flfXEO-CHNIGES ........ l ..... IJ f&llTOTM,.....:..."1...K.t.IM..I TO tEAOtllltS' · ~llV LWll'MTIOfl ..... .. .......•. 17.»S.Jll '°°" l'Ul'IL TaAlls;,;oaTATIOM PRYtcU U).. ClalllfW S.r"' , _, hplt 1'.r~lllft ...................... DIM4 $90. =-~:-~-~...... ....... "'°" "°"'" l'itvn'*'il ,,..,. ~ ScflMI· ~ ....... .••••. .• .•• ~· . T6TA&:. 'Nl'&L. • T"""5"0llT.AT.IOH ~r ................ 732 TOTM.. CUUINT liXl'ENft 0#-= 1klo,·;·;;i.;·w;;·~······· .... '7~1.2'9 ~---.if ... ""-. wMr ... .... tm.51 ............................. 131,'77' • ........!J4!e·.1~Ei'.''".................... 1a..m ·~~,.,,....,_ic. ... .... '*' ~':9'1 :e~-=-............ .. 100: c.r1 ~ ....... ., 11'L . S...:W": ........... . ·~ .............. ,.,..,. , .... :-:: :m~ "'-............ 1:.wr l'OTM. COlclWWMTY llAVICIS , IM,~ ~.CAP'llTAL OUTLAY' ·isl~--~~ .. :~~ .. :::::'.'.'.:: .!.~ !~~;~~::::::: § TOTAL l!!XPJNC>ITUHS ................ MAMM t4. OUT~ TAAJtM'llll.I. i 140.'T\Mlon • ANNUAL ,IMAltCIAL MD • .....,. I ,..,. • \;Of, Ollllf Tlll!Jofl . • . ... .. ..... l.t.$01 " ....... "'°' u... kMoil ...,...._...., c..tJ,. CtllflniN 1 .. \.·ln ......... t......,.. ....... . (.,..._ 1w 1111 P'lletl Y-= "1ltr 1, "12. -..... ,_ .. ~ i.wt..T'*Wftn 1. fllOTICI 0' ADOPTION MO llAJt$Mtl'TAL. ' t'OTAL OUTGOlltO AM Ktlon shtH i,. tllr.111 on .. '5 APOff cturt.11 ,....., tr ..nr..riJ:9111 iPICWI . TIUHPIEllS' ..................... .... rnwtings ol IJit IOftf'illnSI bDtr6. SUIT#t~ ' ,.... ...... . ............... • .,._. T1 WM C-ty Svpwlnttncl'"' or SCNett: VllOllTa..uJJ~ ltlll9YI .............. Ii X It a a. TENTATIVI!: ANNUAL flHANCIAL AMO IUClllET ·~ '"'-TOf.AL..'.Elll'S!INMT\19ES ANO · ' .. llwetiv nlod bT IJit ........,.. .. ,., .. IM .ctiOol """1d. OTHtll OU'feo •••.• : .................. ....... Oii• of mMlln8' JlllMi ». ltn _.,.. Ject s.: ""9r~· 8. ltlo..e·~a; NW8.a · a, ,U8l1CATK>N ANNUAL 'INANCIAL. AND IUOCKT •l!,_T. T... · c.itl tn 'ei:.Mif T"'-"Y ................. , t.137• .... bOM'4. 111¥ .... m.o. "" .._ :at. 1m. ~ ,........ ............ Md ............. ·Q!eit ,.... •• .................... ~ cMf1111S n It ~ ~· ~ ,,....._ ,.._. llelftnt lftll 111111 ·-~Ill u:J. 'IMclil'(41 Clltl ··••··•• UltACe ~Ion, ,.,.,...,. ,..,_ Ille r9PQf1, ~ ,.......... ......... ... ..... ......... kl..,, TIN 1JUt11k ~ °" W. ropOrl wlll Ill MN .. Mlwltl4lew ...0. HWI "-If... ........ ................. ...,I. Str!ool. 190$ M.lhl strMt, IWntlrq!M ._,., c. ... -lwrPtf. ~: Im .. 1:• ... ..,,... •• ?1!1-!.'!...• .. 1tH ••..•.• Ii •'• O'Cloc* P.M. . · TeTAL tft. """'• ..................... b litMd J9dl. S.. ..,.,.,_,....,., &.-= . . .................... l.Jlil,Tlf L .._.. .. Sl'AN Of' OlnlllCT .. ,.. ...... ti.,.. IL...._ N.IT I '"'ft• ". .. , ........... ,,,,., ~ 1. AVlllAOI O.All.Y ATTINO.ANCI ... TOT.Ml lll!.!_ftfl ,..,...10UTM lfn.11 .im-n ,.,.,, . NtO 11Wo.-.1111U1n nwava, At._, M1"I ...... f"t,.UI ft81' •tMO .... Al.AllCI ............... , .2>,1M;Dli Gt-adel f.12 AH ~ ......... l,olU 1,11) l.7U OUTSTMfOIM ....... ,.....,.IDlllfS Grl!lft f.12 ll~r .. lS,11$ 16MS H.lSI 0' DtlTalCT ... , .... • .................... 11 ... 00t:I TCl!el • . . 16~ 1'.451 · 1t.Tl7 MlfMa M1bu!1t fl ._, ~ .. , ........ ,, 1"5'.000 SUMMAllY 0,. CUJl:MfllT DllTllCT TAJI alOV .. aMllllTS flOPl "7J.J4 OUTST.ANOJNO liQH~D 'PIDEITl!Df41!5S .. it):lt,«lt A-.t TU :u A. IHllMIW U.UMCL JULY 1 .' PUNO AND P'\lltl'OSI :..:.--: ~= C~ C..,:~~.".f'::.;:ff1H:-:ll!AH<:e··;:::::::::;.: 1,115.,;, Gtntr1I Fund " ................... , • U.toSASJ I. ...C .. """rr•Tf \~I Corrticii•• m.-.t ,.....,Ing lo ,. '"'-...... _.111q111t:1 11fety .......................... U.U0 •10"" ,toOO ~. T111 ....... ~ellllofc9 C-lty .s.rvk.11 .... .............. ......... ltt,tt1 tuS/ln.r .'2tO tr.I.....,_. ,.,,_IOfr ............. . TOTAL .... .. ................ •••• t'9ASI R.3,.,...., llt;Nff .............. .. ••n 11te dll!Tkl U1M !IN t111 fllr DOlll Ed. T ..... $....: lflotfill ................. . Codi tKttllol lll11 ll'lll 15511. ir.. to11I IO. L~ ~ ., !IN""", .. , • ..,. .i.." -~ to.lo. • 11. Olttnd ·"-Mutrnum Gto!ortl ~ T .. ltfM , ...... M.00'-!AO l.•I• 11.1 Dlllfkl T*MI. s.c.r9d 11:111, 6-11 F-.ll °"""""' Tu llll" ..... .ntt ,........ · ... ;. .. .. .. ...... UIJ',tn TOTAL GENEltAL !'UNO TAX llATl!S ... , !.JG' ·11.1 Dllolrll;f •"""'-,_... .... ' IOfld inm .. 1 Ind~ ...,._,. ........ 1.-i.no .271 ,........ .. ....._...,... ...... • .,.,. ANALYSIS D" OINHAL l'VfllO TAXP IXSMl'T "OM. .. fl.JU---.... .................. IJl..af SUt.llCT TO. S,ICIAL TAX UTa:UMm •Ill,,...,~,_ .............. •r• c.rr.ttt• ~ .... tn"-'~ .. -. . ., ..... :................. Ill/NI ,_.__ ......... "· 'OllMl--*'Y .. """ ...,... .......... 461 ll:WiiiiliiU... ....... • T..., l.li:af illditN ,,,,,, .. ,.,, ...... t.-.-:t..-:.::::. ~ 111 c.Ma!= C. :r:: .• ~.,,aii9iAUKi··· ...... u.t.Hl ~ tNillllce, JlllY 1, 1'72 ............. 7.D 1~..... ....:i: D, .~ .. ·'-MIC!!~._:-· .• '·;~· ... .:...~., ... t.UolAI T•• llloc-.. 1t72·1J ........ .... ...... -.. 1-... "''"• -•-Sl*llDl1I. rstrktft Miine• plus inaMM .... 7.ill 2,111.NO n..m 1a DEIT •«VKE ' Adlllf "l*IH· 1'12·7) .. . ................ ,.m l.1J4)tlf '"'2T1 . ,,,.,,..,,,; .......................... 1 .... .-•nlfkftd ~ J-io, 1rn ............ 11.-..: 1t.sn '*' ._.. ,....,,.._ .................... ..,.,,,. l!:'"ll'llffid tu ......ip11 on ~ TOTAl. I~ Mta ron. ltn-1• .. .. .... . .. .... ...•..•• ...,. m OT1M111 .........• : ................... ~"' ~·..::::-.. lNl.=1::=:: ,... ...... ".146 ~:':i·r-a:nt.1f~ ....... ,, . ., 1-tr..,_., ltn-7• , . . . . . .. .. . . . . .• ..... .. • ,.,.,_, ~ '· 1'9TAL I 9"tlla *"90, ' • MUtmum .~ to 11o llll9rtd 111 "'-,,.... ,..,. ...... . a ............ t.iu.--~ry of cvrr4111 •lffl1c:I '911 ~-A. ...... -.--.1\11.Y 1 ;;;:;m.,. to"' WrtwO lt1 W1<Y • c.!c' ........ OlWIW'rT~ .............. .. CW! fM MCUl'al roll • ,. ,,..... . ..... , ......a llttrl TOTAl.'WMt'""ASSE'fl ............... . HNnAL ,UllO L19t ~I:..,...._ • ,., ............... . C...... 1 ~ 1 C... Nll!T ·llG ........ Ml.Arte!. ............ ..... 1m.n ·m>n ''"'"' .. LOCAL '4NceM•· ": .-.... ...... ...... M.< ..... Iv' A. 11 .... NI ... •.ALMICI, .NLY I Citic !ft C:-ty l-V ................... . ......... C.tll ,. •• . •··· ............. " lllWlll'llW!l'I kl u.s. lonlll ............... ' .. ~JI: ......................... . ,.,... ... ~ ...................... .. TOTAL CUllllllNT MSSTS ........... . ~: CWl'«ll Li.9bllll .. .... ~ ""'*"' ..... 1 .................... .. Nt:T IEGINNl.0 UiLANal ..... , ........ USUtt --. -.......... ........ --Mlw~ -·~ L~ ......... #illllfi AOJUSTEO NtT lt:CllNMMfG IMNK& •• ~ I tllCOMa ' • ~ ·; ..... 'l!DIEllM. INCOMI HCl:MO 'It.OM FllOl!ltAL IOUltCl!S 11. ~ ... ()Mntltill .......... 1W.JK "· OtfW .. ..... ...... •••••••• • TOTAL "IDEAAL IHCOMI llEQIYIO FlllOM l"'EMJl:AL IOUI Cl!S ........ "7..»l a. 'IOf!IU.l. !NCOMI llU:IVl!!D 'ROM STATI! SOUltti:S JI, N1f11Nt ~ l!clllntto.. Ad • ..... tMf H. Yocetllll"' ~ Ad ......... .. .•• 11Mh JI. .. ..,,......,., .... ._...,., II! ... ,. Ad ...................... .... ,,. Oll'W " .. " • .. .. • • • . • .. • • .. .... TOlAL J'evf.ltM. tHCXJMI •!ClNID FllOM &l.AT8 toUIKU ...... ., .... a ,IDEllAL ...C:OMI HaN'l:D 4ltaOM CQUNTI' ~Ctf .. Ml ."""""""' "'"" ....... I~·-.. . Ad ,..,. ...... .................. .. . .. °""' .. . ............... .. TOTAL •t:De"4tAL IMCOMI lllClllYIO 'llOM COUHfY IOUltCft ,... 11 ... & FWDl•M. INCOMa ltfCIM!O ,llQllt LOCAL SOUllUI .. °""' ., .. ... ... ........ .. 1"'1 TOTAL 'IOllltM.•IN(Olllll RICIN'ID r110M LOC:M. IOUltClS .............. 1M1 ti STATll INCOME ti. MrldiMI """"'"'""""'*""'' •I.I""* E_....•tlOn Afilll .•• ,..,.,. U.11Mf 11.t fflle8~ ....... ..,.. ...... n.- '1.> Mtn""" Gitt.I ... ........ • ... .... ·-..... ...... ... -..,,. o.m -...... ...... . . au s.i. lll'"Ulftlfi· .n11 .~llflnt• ..... . "-· T ~~ ..... , .......... . -~ ··~·~ ..... -: .............. . '== m~ ...i.....~.~ ......... .. .,,, c. '"""~ ..... W;M(ll ••• ~Mt .. =•"ifiiiHe'•·..n.. . ..,....... ~ 1At.P't *' ADM•llTllATIOM . •' ...... -. ... _ r.c»IT = . . •' .... ........ 'Tot111• ............. . .,,. W.A ~r. .. ~ ........ . ....... ~ .... . ' C:....111 C#llr•'f,_..., .................. .. .... -= UHlll'llM ................... . 1•,IW NITI' I • lllJl:Ulil"Ca ·~ ,,,. ......... .. .. '· ftTAL ¢0 I I i~...,.. ...., ••MllT"'&I 11 • 2 .......... .. .... ..... _ ............. ~,...,, .li.: c... •·Cl!l!f.:~' ................... . ..... .__ ................................ . • 'I fDTM. COAilQlCffT,.,....,.. •• -.......... .. '...,. .............. :AIC:I .......... .. .......... !! • mJlt • ~ .... l'TM#llEU .......... 'T,....,.. ............. .. Tlllll ........ T,...... ••••...•••.• tin.al ,..., ..... ._ .................. .. ,..,...,,..,.... lidl' .. .... -...... ~-................. . at sae,,_11_...,... WTee 1-.,°'""M.' OU'l\.AY ' • . -~·i·······"··· =~ .. '""'"""" .. ~~ . .,;.:~ ....... -...•... -.:;.. .............................. . • ...... :e ., - , .... ~ ..... -- " ...... -..... . 1 ... lfl ...... 1f.tu,1't .......... ' ~.ll: ......... ·~ "'"" . .-...... , ...,,. ..... 11.l ... ::: ...... -· ~ill • ii'11'11 • ...... -...... ..... ..,,. ;..., ..... ,...,., ·-1t,~m -..... -1.111 ....,,, _.,. '" .... 1'6,2tl ...,,. """' ..... t14m '""' .. ::i:;: 11.u..- """ IA1"'17 !,.cll',ot . ... . ........ tt.IP,I~ lf.7211.00ll ....... 11~ ......... ........ """" ...... ,...., ,,,.. ..... ""' t.nt.n• ........ _... ,,._ -........ . " 1,'11,,. , ....... .. .. ... ..... .. ...... " ..... ...... ~.· - = -• Tllndlr. Jutr 31, 1973 '. OAJLY PILOT ' I !'ml.IC NOTIClll PUBlJC NO'llCE PUBLIC NOTICE r-~-.~i£?W~. •n····· .. ·· ll'.:I r.c-.. . .......... . " t=. ':';£~ ' ......... .. ..... .;:::,,. ... '"° ......... . • 1.TATW'NICOMI' ........ L.& 1 1 •WSCM1t~ .. ....... _ .. ~~ ............... . 10..._....... Tr~ ....... , . m.-i ••• .. .. .. .. ............. . ::.:.! =~q!.•·~~ .. ~~ ........ . ... XNllonvrn ...... '""'" OUT'90 7,.aJ.... 1-. CA'""'" OUTLAY • . • .•• .::-.~J:r .. , ......... "' ........ , ,... CMll i1'1 {;;ty TrMra -··~ .... _. •• Jt.000 ,, w:~~ru..or.~~~. ~~.~~ . .,; .. ,. I A. Dl .... NIN• aA~ 'UL Y I c.111 111 So. curt. hi '"'· ..,. • • • • ... '"°=:':!;!" t i... . • .. • '. " .... H.... Q ... (I,..... IC.'t ........ ltvto ... .....,,, ~ ••IDft'llfll •• ._.._ 1.11...,... ........ , ............................. . --~ tt*"""• .... ..... .. ...... .. ~~ .. CUii~1Mf" .uie"ii .. .' .. ' .. .':: ': .' ':. L* ~ Utlloll-.... . ............. . MI T IEG•NNtO SALANCI! .... .. •••• --...,iwnr-.. ,. Muunb ._....... .... .. Mft,9"-ft lio """"" ~1141 ...... , • AOJUSTID Nfl lf:Gt~IHO IAJ.AHCS . -.-L...COMI ...... ..... N.lMr,SIJ .... ...., ' a f._OEllAL NKOMI! 11.ECt'IVl!D fllOM !."CATI! SOUlt(IES n. NSL', ltledil Mltk • l~I ltrolt ............. . ... STATE INCOME • :fil~::t~=: ................. . ........ ....... .... _,. '""' tt."61 ... kt ~ ~vk• S..lft ....... .. t»."1 N...lnl«MI ..... .......... .............. 1.1$4 "· °"*' ... , ........................ . ,,... t1191 L.laol ~ ..................... . ....... ...... • TOTAL ~ ............. , ..... .. = =:.:~ ... ~~~~ .. ~LANC·~·~·~·•• MM2I n...-a, UNMNTIHllS MO ,OTNIA OUTOO • 1i06. ,.lll~D CMAltGIS 121. l'\tllk 2"""°"-Jl:lltlr-1 .... IS.ttt 11J..lh tQD. POOD SfftVIClS 113 m. er;:":..~~-~······ t:Ja. Fdod .. . ................ " .. ........ . "'· Olh« f•P«ll• . ... . . .. • TOlll ,. ... S«•kft ............. .. ...... "'"" .,,.n n.1n 61l,1M "'"" TOT.AL lllPINOITVICI AMO O'nlla OVTOO • . .. .. . . 1M43') L tNIMMe aAU.MC .. ''"'' • I~ O~ Ill $0.. CaiM.. hi Mil. llnll 11u.n "Opltl1~ C1a11 .. .. .. • • .. .. . . • ..... :..ru 1.s&.116 "~ u"1 (lncWM ltQNl'IUl1tl~1 M.toA.nt C1t ..... i.; l!:Qulllf'*ll ll-'4C-I •-1 ................ . ..._,, 11.lnll ................ . a.m SIOor ............................... .. , TOTAL CUllltfNT ASSETS ........... , ~ L._ °"""" UoblllfMt • .. . .. ...... ,'. . • , .. Mt NET t:NOllM) IA1..ANCE .......... ., ... . '"""' ,, TOT.AL VlN#CHT\llllS AIJO. NIT · . IN..... IAL.AMCI .. .. • . .. .. . . .. ... ""'21 ma t'\11111-.ed 0r...e1 "COiet o.nv ,.r ..... JllfJ l l. 1m ··-...... l.WM1 M.ltl ....... ..... ..... 111,t,M ~· ... ,,..... .... _,. ,....,, ... .... ,...,. "" P>.m ''""' lU,'9 .... ..... ,...,., .. ,,, "'·"' 1•,m ....... ... . ...,. . .... ,. .. ". ,,, ... "'" ...... 11.111 ....... J11.M1 ,.,,..., . """' ""'" lU,IU t .ltt ffU l O StS,JIO J.Jll &a. OWllllllf ....... ..., <>Pwl""' . ::: -:a~i~T~11,t.Nr" •fff ,., ,..,....,..., A~.,,.._. . . .. ......... 111.m ,._ It.~ II '-t:*'' 1"-"'I ,._ f:rAL. ~t:""ANC1""""'-" •• nu'1 °" ftl..AHT .... _ ........ _,..._ ..... _,._. -'11110 CH.Alt0f$ '11, """""'' l"¥NI ...... . 111. .... --"' fOwocl • ' .... .. a1. l'\IMlc: ,......,... •11w-1 .. 'I:= '"'" m. °"' ,..., ,.,.,._.., 01tt11o1111y wx1 ......_ .....,._, .• . ...•.. lit..-.,,, ,,....,,.... '--'tt, TM<Mt1 .... -.ir.tleolll A-.... ID. I!:~! ~ftq, ... u O!Mn •• IA~llf'lwrtM., ... trcoOIGMi Aki.. . . . . •• UM"'4!i0¥lfwM lltwf'ln( .. Alt o~ c1.1u111W , ............ ... w.rt.n.I" """*"''loll ~ ........ . .... °"""' •i.al CM.... . . tOT,AL •UU!O CHA•GI.• T0'1'AL A.ft~ICAILI TD ...... '""' ·-...... UUJ• Tt .ACH .. lltl' SAL..Alt.Y COMl'Ul'A1t0H 11 .. h .. MIO. l'U,.IL t""NlftO•TATION SEll.YICEI sac~...._ .. ._.. Tt-,..,t•tllfl ..................... ~I Tr_,..,111W. TOtAL l'UftlL llAHSl"O•TATIOH ........ . TOTA.I. CUll.11.I MT Ul"ENll!:. OP l!:OUUTIOH ..... .. 10.Ul.t U ... f OOO IEll.VICl!S tJO.. Cll1i'tlell kl.INto If FOllll S-. 9'11, 0...... E•'*°'"' at FOOd ~­'"· °"""' ll!:ti:l*\M'I TOT AL l'OOD $ElllVICES 1100. CCMMUNITY s.E•VCCICS 112'. Cllulflal ...,._ o1 ~ly Slrvk:e. •• I I• Otl.r EJ!l*'llf ol C--lty S... . . . .. . TOTAL COMMUNITY SElllVICEi .. llOf. CAftlTAL OVT!..AY "'°· lfl'IP'-ol lilts ,. .. .. 11'0. l wlWlnOI ................... . ,,.,1!.....,._t .. .. " .... . .... ... ..... 110.t il "'""' liiil . ._.. .•••. , .. lll M I lM. OllMf' E'IUl-1 ....... D.~I TOTAL CAl'ITAL OUTLAY ••.• t».310 TOTAL IX,..NOITUll•I ........... 10,n,,,.., OT Hl!ll OUTGO IM. o••t ~ElllllCE IMO. A,_1 lit_.,......, Ol't M;-1 of Stilt k.._ •ullfl"I ..,._i..,.._, . . . '.... ...... ''-* 1• OUTGOING Tllt.IJIUEllll I-xi. l'uitltn let. Oft'itt" Tullloll , ..... Tr_, .. , ~ ... 14'1t. O!fl.r ,,.,.,..,.. . •. .• 11 TOTAL DUTG-OING T•ANS,£1111. , 4Mt &Ull!TOTAL .. .... .... .. .. . .... I • .. • , •• -u•1>11T1t.1eU111D Jl:lllllllVI: •.•••• . •••• ..._ TOTI.lo IXl'l•DITU•I& AJIO • •.••. 11.6fl,l.ll ....... 1.1n.m I.IOI OTNEll OUTGO .. •• .. • U• •\• e, l"DWe IAUNCI:, '""' » ... ........ it.IOO -C111! In C_,ty Tl"MIUIY tl"""vlrll (.Mii f'wrod A~llll .......... .. . .• ... •• •• ... • '2.141 ,,,.,. ,,,.,, ·~" l'r-lf ~ ................. .. ••Niii.AL ••11•v•. 'UMI .. HJ4 114.W . ... ''""" '"""" ' u· c c I,,,. 1tl•7U .• , , .. .. .• ...... • ._ 1 • PUB c NOTl E P\1BU NOTICE TOTAL CUllllllNT AJllTS ...... .. •• 1,>tt.217 ""''"'""',,NANCI.Ai, AND a uoel'T lllP'Oft'T Len c ..... ,...,, Ll•bllllltl .. •. • ..... 171.W -.. • .. --- '- ..... ....-... Mn INDING IALANCI , .... , . .. 121.ftll -• .........,.,.. ,., TOTAL EX,..fllOITUtllS. 01'1<1111 -...... ,., ... ..... -•••• ,,...,. .. ..., tl'll.16l .... .... ....... 11.1-.... ....,. . ... " 42.107 ..... ....... Uf,UI 11,7ll.t7• ISi.Pi ,.. .. ..... • Ii •• 1,ctl,IU .... ... ... """' ,. .... 4 • I a 1,117,111 """' ....... ltl,171 1. lllOTICI °' ADOf"TN* AMO Tt.ANSMtn,t,L OUTOO ANO UNl>lll'lllUTIO •ISIJl:VI, UJ.:il) A11 -.;tlon .ntll II l.lilc411 CW! ll!ls r~ d\lrll'if ngultr Ir .UIJiorll«I niecllll ll't.UI NllT INot .... UL.A.MCI .• 11,116f,5n U..411.i:M ~ ...... ptr'lllne l!Olr•. IOllD JNT•llllT AND 11.IO&Ml'TtOfll Ft.IMO 111f .. Tl IJit C-'V~illlwl"'-lt et Sdooolt: .AMDI .... IONHO lfllOCITIDMlll ~ . "i!:!Tt:=..:c~l=~LofA~=:!'1r~~.l"OJt1'. Tfllll r9ClllJ1 It Of' DllTllCT, IJ "-................... 6.tUMO '·"1: Ii Ii I I O.• of, ~1118 .Mle II, 1t1l Sltinld JefNf II, (:4....W/S.:r.tMy Ptus llnNnl of 9olldl MIO "" "· "" '" •• ,"""'... , ... _ J\1rl" ... l'V'LKATKIM A.HffU4L FINANCIAL .AHO BUDGET Atfl'Olil:T. The f0\'tml119 M~.:T=I Of"tian.. .,.,..iM,d".' ....... ~::: , ·::.·ooo fit.- Mli9rlf, .-...~ on J.ty a. 1m lucll r...itior.. ICldllltftt. lflll dllflMt OIJTSTA.NOING IOHDE'D INOEITEON£» .. 6."1... J.o22Mt JJUlJ ••:II dtMll nw ... ,.,, pondlf'll pullllClfllln. "111ilc .,..,..,. n :lllnal ldoplllft, A. llOINNINO aALANCI. JULY 1 Ut.011 ~-.:.~'::: :C-:it ""°"' wm i. lltld 11 .oc-v""" ktcool oiork t, ~ ~l!~,7;NTG ... ,1A(...NCE ............ "· .-m -259 7'12·W.C-,,. .......... H1111llng1'0n 1411(;11 on""""'" ltn. 11 1:» Cl"dodt l'.M. L INCOMI s.oiit s. MAH.,........, otmua ...:*'...;.."7:~t:= "· !,~'\~~ J:C~~1on1 L AYI ...... DIUl.Y AnlHO.AMCI t1.I lrnlMu 1 .. ~10tv •.-itn-n tt7>n 1Jn.1t 61•2 p~ Jtt11o1 -,...,, .. .... :111.126 !.Wl.W ~• ,..... ,....., Tot11 s1111 1ncom1 . • , , , , •. w....rGl'1411 ...................... 1.lSI I.An 1,412 10. LOCAL INCOME Jl),111 ~ 1.J ............... 4'1t •.3!6 i.m '''· District T1•n Gl"ilda +6 .. . .................. •.Ill U7' 5.ot7 II.I D+.lrlct T•••• r:: ... ,, 'Gr'°41 , ......................... 2,fl t l.003 l.Otll racrl~tcl .• ,. . ..... UJ.DI SPIC-ff.,Sc.ln'I, SCI\. ..... .. ...... "2 7Jt 115 11,1 o;,.1rld , T .. es. urtcl llloU, TO!it .. .,. ·· ~ • i... • • .. lt.21t lt,.116 lt.• r-11'111 kl blllnc:• 111'11911 .. 11 .. • • SUMMAM' DP Wlllll•NT TU 11.tOUlllaMllfn "" ,,,,.,. 11.2 U_..., .. Roll ..•. l0,1111 114 .. ......., ty....., Al IN_.. ,...) T" 11.J Prior YNl'I' Tu"° .... ..... 25.I07 :-;: .... :::. ... Inter"! • . .. .. , .. tMJ1 ... ... fl\NllD 4"0 PUllfPOSI _...,,.,. G-.1 Fllllil . • • . . . . .. • . .. . .. • • .. • ....... . ~ Uflitl C ....... TOT:· .. ~~'1~::~7.'~'.~.:::: .... filja A1w.-1 ~'l'ft'*tt ... ~I of Slllf kllool '.-;;;;;~-~~ ... ~,.... "11111.........,. .............. .. ty..,... .......................... . TOTAL ................................ . .... ltltorwt llld prllW;lpM pt}'mll'lh ••. 11.a ""'. '""' "'"'" ._ ..... ,.,.. --~ s..-.. ~ ... lll"lricfoat -.ianc.. Jiii)' 1, tm: ....... . ·=·-A-=IMl•I ,..., . T•• 11-.:: .. pu, 1m-n .. . . ................... . su11111111, ,.,,.Sdlll ...._ .....,. 1ncotM ......... .. 7>llll0 Ac:IUll ......-, lf72.71 ......... , ..................... . " ..... ll .. !flclal ~. ,,_ io. 1t7J ...................... .. 1 -l!•ll!Nttll ... rtctlllll •"' --· t'Oll, ltn-14 .... .. swtot1I, '"lrkted Nllnt9 e: lncul7le ............... . 1:=;~,-:~.~1 ...... , ................. . Ml•I--1 to b9 ......... Ill. flll Wl'i'Nl'Wiry 1tl9I .i wrrtnti<llltrkl 1111 ~h tor n7:W4 MiU5' to lNI Olr/'lsd tiv ""V 111 tlN tttvttd ron . . .. ...... .. • •1Nlll.AL 'UMO tt.Oll aiiw-I nl.1tt 1m·n ....... ·-IJ,SCM7 A. llDrNNINe U.UNCI, JULY I call'I kl c-.., Trt1_,. ................ .. 2161,.., RWOl'llng C-" Funlf ....... , ............... . Account• ltltll••btl • . • .. . .. • • .. .......... . Slor.. .. ................... .. ntA» l'rlCl'+d ·~ .. . . ................ " .,,,IJI at.•1.-....... TOTAL ·CUii.it.ENT A!SE'TS ............... . ..... , c.....rit u.t!Alti. .... ~I-................ . NET IKtlfHrNG U.LAHCt' . .... . .. ... M0.m Acrt11t"'*'b "' AcQMlh IJtec:thrrllJft ........ +u:i.111 AdJwtmlnb fll c-t ~ · .. · · ·· +c.sll ADJOSTeo NET •lGINNING BALANCE .. 1,.053.0# ......... M.-It. 'IDEllAL INCOMI! lll!CEIYED FlllOM fEOlltAL M>lilllCU "''""' 1,907 ,,,,. .... 1,m ,t01 Ii ••.• • • Ii ll I a Ii• • It •• ·-~II ........ .. ~..,, ~ .... ... """ ,. ' ........ 11.~ 1A11 Oper1tlon .. , .. , VM1 :io. f f orl!AAL INCOME 11.ECEIYEO FltOM STATE $0011.Cl!S 21. N1"°"61 Otl4nfl Hvc1tlcllc .Ac! .... "-Eltm4rlt1ry 1!"111 ~ Educ.lllon Act 2'. °"'" .. .. . .................... . TOTAL f EOl!IAL INCOME Rl!:Cl!IVIEO FROM ,p_.,. 11121 STA.TE 50011.C!S .... . .......... I.MAU 31. lllE~l!ltAL lllKOME llll!CEIVEO fltOM COU NTY SOUll.CES Jl All E-'Vtf'ICY ElftP6oll-' Ad Furicb ..... ... ···· C. l'l!:[)fllAL INCOMS ltECEIVEO 'fllOM LOCAL 90Ult(E$ .... Ot1llr .. .. •·fl'AT.-INCOMI ,I, l't'llctl,,.i ~t ..... •1.1 lallt E ..... 111t1111n Aid ........ 1.1-1,15' tl.2 IEdtattoM"r ~PPOll .•. , DI.IOI '1.J ~ Olfllid .. . .... ... VMO 61.t 1e-..... Mlntll)' ""''"" ... ' ~ •t.J ,..,,....., .... ~ .. ··••• '4.M4 '1-' Trllnatlle ............ ••tl!'dtd •. .• ".s» tl.1 T,1111fioGff114 ...... """ """"'' • ».Ml at. SfiONI l'wl'ltt Aolllt'tior-t '1J ......,_,. 1Dr ,,.,.._,ltloli .. •• JIU A~ ... •t.ts U.t ~ fir' lf'lsrrvcttonel T ....... Mon .. .. ....... . &J.f ""*' IMw1•1r lor K#ld~ MIMn 1w Wl'lolfl No 51111 Spocltl ~tlof'I F.clllli• .... AW"""' .. . .. . • .. . .. • .. • • 14.20' Q . T111 It ..... ~119M 67;1 ~ """"*V ... .. ... ... .. -.DI '1,2 Property •t11tt • ' . . . . • ....... •• ta.1'24 n: °"""' .. . . . . . . . .. .. . . . .. . . .. . . • TOT.Al. ST.-.TI! tNCOMl! ............ 40Mt 10. COVHTY "INCOME i 11 EctUOff'llllDf'I Aid Olbft Tu ....... .. 11.1:"'11ct11.111u11 F"""" ......••...... 1'.~' .... .... . .............. .. TOTAl. COUMT'Y INCOME ....... . IO. LOCAL llKCME II. lllbtrid T1 .. 01.1 kc"'al l1oll, rlCllval H '"''' ,,.,. .... '"'" llldlclftd , .... •• .. •• . .. ....... J.2HM1 11.1 S«"'*I lllolt, ~ .. bl1-•~ ................. 11 ••11. ''·' ~ "°" .......... ,... '"·"' •I.I Prior YMr"I T••• ... ... . .. .• . lll.lff Q. Ar•wldl' Tins U.1 S«llf"ld lllOll ............. lMSMl ll.! ljf'ltl(Vo'td lioll .... .. .. .. .. .. • ~l.»7 W l'f'lor Y"r"I Tl"' ....... ,., 11MJ ........ 1U ..... at £ ............ .,,,, Sl.tpO(lfl • ... u. ........ 11111 ......... e:tttpl ''MIM .. "• Ubl J'.Wdl"' ..... 1.1. ... ..,...,.., .. .. • . . .. .. . . .. • .. . . . . . .. . • #An lt.:otlilr" ···· ·-/~'!:~1.: ........ · J.I~ 'TOTM.• LOCM. nrKQllll! .......... J.SM.t1J ·~-tJt.~"~··· ...........•. ,. •• • . T9T,M. ......... 1. • ..................... lust ' I T9T'iLo *f ~---ML.UK.I 1.WI ..... lllCOMI .... ...... .. .•. 11 .... ""2 1#,D .. d,.....OfTVll:IS' AND .,..... OUTM 1.lfolr.Zll CUll.:ltl.N'T VtH:Nl.E --......... -. ...... = 108. AOMINm 1tA T IOlf ...... I Ml.. c...tifkltld Stitt" .. at A•r'l'llnh!fttlotl • . . •..•• ••• .. ... 0..llfltt ...... tf ""~ .t 'Mmlni.ti~'.. '::l: TOTAL .AOMIMISTlllAT~ ., .. ~' a IMITltUCTIDH • llt. """~~ .. bUnlCf1-,11. ~· a....rltt ... . ... . •. ...,. m. •••• ,.......,,... ................... 1.M.MI HI.I.~....,.... •·······,..,.,... tl .... ONIJ ~ ......... " • "'"'Ktt. ·.... . ......... ........ ,._ Cllttlf"lil .....,.. " ... ....... 2111.~...,.. ...... .. m :a....a-lfltcl.....,..., "' in.trctllrl .. '. tit. T....... .. .. ...... . -°""-'..... ........ .. ...... .. ""'°"*' ·~ tf lritlnldlilfl 'TOTAi.. tNITltUCT~ ••••.• ...... -· .... ...., ...... ,..,.,.. 1Ml.1N eo. HIAL.TI<I llltVtaS ,..,.,.,. . ' 4'1t. C1rltflc.ltW S.Wltt If Htltltll ,...,._.,. ~ . .. . . . . . . ' ...... ... OMr-I..., _, Httflti 5trW.t , TOTAL WUt.lM MllVKll IOt. O~llATION f1' fl\..AMT I 15'J 4 ,...,., 151,:171 ..... 10,17' n.on ...... 11 ... ,_, lt,,.11 ..... l,ln.,JO) '"'" .... "'-"' """ 1.ltt.211 ....... .... .. .. ....,, _....,. ..... .. ... UUM 1,t1J ....... "''' a.t«l,1'Dt Jl7,JOO ..... '""' "'·"' ...... ..... 11.JlO ..... ~ .... ....... • Ii Ii. ttf..tl2 """' , .. , .. ,,.. ....,,, ...... "' .... .... • ..J.= ..... 11.IW.- '"""'" - '""' ..... .... ''""' -...... .. ... ..... """' ........ ..... ~ C. TOTAL, Mn OIGINNINO •ALA.MCI ·°""" ANO INCOMI .... .... ....... .. .... l,l•l.Ht .OjQO D. lllllNotTU•IS ANO OTNlll OUTOO .ot;o 1-. OEIT SERVICE ..a1n U50. Bond 111-...,,toon .. :a.uoo 1360. Bond ... Mf"hl ................. ))f,2$1 Tolll OIOI ilrWu . . ... , 12oUU TOTAL IXftl.NOITUllltl AMD C~ OTNlll OUTGO .. . .. ........ " • .. 1'4.1s:I "'"*'" I , INOIMG IAL..AfllCI, JUflll )I C.WI In County Tr11sury .. t1 ,2n t t,H2 '""' """ -'""' II, TOTM. llll'llllDITUll.11. OTttt:ll OUTOO AMO NIT INOING IAL.AN(I .. . .. . .... .. ... .. .. .. . • . . t,1'1.1'1 , IUILIHN• ,UfllD A. ll•tfllNIN• IALAMCI, JULY I ~ 111 C-tv Tl"M..,,V · ........... . . ...... ~11 11act1v1bl1 . . .. .. . .. . . • . . . .. .. TOTA.L CUJl:l1ENT MSi.TS ....... : ....... . L.u Currtnt Lll()illllef NET llll!:GIMN\MG IALANC& .... ........ "7.M f'2~1t I , INCOM• 10. COUNTY 1"°COME Ct1t11M S 1'. Oll>tr •. 1'11-11 IO. LOCAL INCOME ........ N.S.la m 1•.1 5'11 of !kind• ............... llU.000 1,ltl,113 kl S.11 ot Und """ tulldlflft " 10.000 "· 011'>1• &161 Tot1I LOUii lncomt 115,,'1 TOTAL lfllCOMt . .. ...... , " ..... .1.:t,& C. TOTAL, NCl llGINNINO IAL.AMCI 1.J71,t41 AND IMCOMI ...... .. ... , .. • .... l.»MIOI D. lllll'INDITU•ll It.ND Oflllll OUTOO •Sl.JOt UOI. CAPITAL OUTLAY •••• • • • • ,,..., lDO.. Sltn ..•... .. ... ,. .. , ••• lHO. 1,...wemtnl ti' Silta .... • •• 1250. lkotlOl"I• • .... • . • • .. . \HO. l!:qulp'ntfll 11". a-Equ1_.i ......... , Tl'lal ~·I °"'"'~ ....... .. not. DE.IT :&EllYK.E Jl1'11 .• .,.,_,. or $left k'-4 luhlll .... l'wwl Aid llY WllT"'I iC1 1t>i Stele Tr_., Ovi ti Pr1<.1Ms from 5'11 of llofldl l«lO. OUTGOING lltANs.FElllS l""1U 1.;o. lrMlt...,.I 1 .. 1. lnllrlu<ld Tr-lff1 Tot•I Oi.llllQll'l9 Tr1nsltr1 ..... TOTAL IXl'INOITUJl:l.l .ANO H4.'1) OTNlll OUTGO .. .. .. .. ..... I . 1.NDINO tA.LANC•, JUN• • Cftt\ ln Counly TrH1ury • A<.~11 •-!v1lll1 . . . . .. . ....... . fJ,1oO TOTAL CURR.ENT ASSETS . . F, TOTAL alll'l.NDITUlllS, ontlJt OUTGO ANO Nil I NOINO ...... ...... -•.m 46,CI tALAJtC• .. .. . , .. •• 1,mMI SlATI SCHOOL IUILOIN• ,UNO A. lfOIJffUMO •AL.ANCI, 'ULY I •.Nl.ln C•lll In County TrMllUl'Y .•.• •••• , .J1'AOO NET IEGINNING IALANCE •.• """" D1.JllJ »MO L INCOMI J1.1t0 "'· STAll!: INCOME ....... '4 APPOrtlor'lmMI 1w t.c'-1 F•d ltlttf . 55,:IOO TOIM Stttt 1_... 41.902 • LOCAL INCOME ..... """' ... lnl.,ftl ......... . *'· Ott.er .. • • . ..... ,. •. .. •• .. lo!ll LOCll lrlcomo ...... .. to. !"COMING TRANs.FERS tl. lntlrlvNI ,,.,,if.,,. TOTAL INCOM._ . . .. .. • (. TOTAL, NIT 11.0INNINO 8ALIJtC!. ANO INCOMa •..•• »• D. •lll'l•DITUlllS .ANO OTNllll OUTGO 100. MAINTENANC.E Of l'LANT • Ii •• • • • • UDO. CAPllAL OUTLAY ltlll. Slit! llC. 1"""°"-1 111 Stl~ ".::.:::::: 1250. tulcotnol .. . • IMO. EQUiPfl'lftl "'-"' "'·"' ''"" ""' n•• ...... ..... ••• 12 ...13' 12.000 !Ml. 1oo1u .. .. . ........ ,.,.. 1'A1 ILOOO llM. Ottwr 1!_.;pmom ..... . ll,JOO tol1I C_.,111 Ovtlty . ... ...... 7U,Jd ti.JOO TOTAL 1Jf,.IN04TUll.IS .AND .. m~·~=~~-=c•:·1uN ................. 1"-'• ~ c-tv ,,.._.., . . .... .. 11.l10 • • •I "·TOTAL Jfl'INl>ITUJl:IS .ANO NIT lfllDI ... 8ALA#C.I .. . • . . , ... .. .. • ..... f,.tl.S.IWI CA,ITIJl:IA ACCOUMT t•..112 A. 110 .. MINO IALAMCI, JULY I I0.000 C11'1 In U.$. hi N11'I., HuftllnQ'!Ot'I l..C.11 "Opll"1tln9" c•tt. .. Ac~t1 ll1<el•lblt TOTAL CURlllEHt ASSET$ I.rt& c...,...,., Ll1D1Utles •. NET IE.GINNING &Al..ANCE .. Alljut'-h to ~ 11.K .... lblt M lllll"""b to Cur<Mt Lllb!Ull• . . AOJUnEO "ET lllECINNHtG IAL..AHCI! .. SMllt I. tlolCOMI a, Fl'OflM.: fMCOME lll!C,IVEO f'IOM STATI sou•cir.s tt. NM.I', '4*'-1 Miik & l'""'*fut ""9f-.......... . TOTAL "IDEllAL INCOME llECErv&o flllOM lTATI SOUllCES • . to. S1A1E IHCOMI!: 0.Sootdtl ~" iUJ foal Stn>kl ...... Ill. LOCAL INCOME • .. Slits ....__ ''°" S..vtq kin •.. ., Mt ... °""' it,tlJ Tot .. lot-' 1-. .. .... Slt.IM TOTAL llKOMI .• .. .. .. , C. tOTAL, NIT ll•lNNIMe IALAMCI i.m ..,.. '"" "·"' ..... ... ...... '"" rtl..UI m.m AJID lt!ClOM• .. .. • . ,. •• .. .. WA61 ..._,., 0. 1-.11: ... flllHTWll AMO,OTlllll WHO lJl,)d fDO. '°°() KllYICU 1.-.. -~ ......... .. ·'-...,..,.. ............. . -... ":." ' ... "' .. .. ;"-,.,....... .............. . ... , ·-s.-.ic.. .. .. •• .. TOTAL IXNNotTUllill. .U.O W1.IU OTNlll OVTN .•.•• , ............ . 1',lilP L INDIH IAl.AJl(I, JUtl:I • :n.-CM!! In U.S. flltffoMI '**• Hllllll"lll:ifl I.Aldi wi.n• "Ofiiol'lflnt" t •tfl .. . t)Jt.M A(U\111" ·~ • ... • .... T01'A.1. C'Ull:alwt AJS!TI • l.etl C..-rtflt Lllllillllo& .• "-"' ''""' ...., """' .,, .. ..... ...... ..... .. •. ...... SI.lit Nil INOIHO IALAMCI! .• • ... II, TOTAL 8"~Ull$ AJtO NltT .,,.... l&Ot&O IA I ...... . -.C.S ..... ..,,.. Or.,,.. 11 0.ily llllot, J!iMy JI, "1~ • •• ""' ...,. ,. ... J'l ,J14 '""' .)t.1 .. "' , ..... , ....... ......... ..... 3.ft,IM I"''" """'" '""" .,...., ....,. . "'"" '" ''""' 1,1$2,12' ,...,, ..... "'"" "'"" ....... -· ..... ....... 11'l,t1., 1117,Tlt) ., .. ..... 1).111 7",11$ .., .... 1U.11J ""' ....... ,,...,. '""' 16J,11J . ..... ... ... U1 ..... .. ...... Ml,* .. .. "'"" """' ....... -.,., ... "'"" !i -...... • ••• lJI, ... "'"" '::::! .... ... .. ...... -, ... 1..,, ,.__,,, .... ..... ..... ,......,., ...... "' ...... ... ... ...,,. "'"' .. .... .... -...... l,S.000 .,. .. ...... ..... • ••• •••• •••• II I a II ....... PM> ...... ..... "' """' '7l.t14 ...,..... "'"" ....... .... ''""' "'"" •lt.141 •11,1•1 •12.1•1 ...... ·~­---..... - .... .... ·-.... ..... .... """ ..... ""' .... "'"' '""' ...... """ 10,Sle 15,•• -5.111 ,, .... , ,., .. • ••• X •I II ""' ... ... ...... ...... 42.tll ...... ..... ...... ... ...... - • •" • TutSUJ, Julr s1. 1m PUBUC NOl'ICS .... M~~~:·~tofll •••.••••..•• .... a&n1 ....,..r-::~]PIJBU~~c;NaftcB~:;;;~~==:::;&"~~=·~uc-;NOrlCl:_:.::-:~:~7i=~PUBUii:;:c:NO~~Tl::CB~;;-o;;;~;.-:P:VBUC:--NOTl-· __ cs_--:: •1 .. ==.::.... .. ~ .... 1.:l._.l,.... ,.,,. ur IMf .. i::rM..·ttA1a·~i .. ::;::::::::: .. .:: ,...,...:: ... ri.: <L ~_. ........ "' -~., ••1• ~ •°""'lb,....~H .. tlfl--.. lft .!! • 11.COUNTV tMCOMI _, .. ._. ... Iii ........ ,. ...... 1MJS ·- ...• ,,1,.011~~~~ ... , •YIClt , ••• ,, 1M1 -• .,._ n. J....,. Ollfttee Ta .................. LCl'4olilt t.rn.. ~ , .... " .... •···•····-..................... 1"'11:1 ....... .,,.. ..-..... 11 I!..,...•'*' AW Off"9 Tu •••••••• ...,,. ,,::-"' ........... ,.., a.tt ..... 1 •••• M~ u.m ._.... .... a.. ............ ..,°"'"""" .. ,,,m UM.> ,,... n.. .. ,.. __ -......... ............ SJU QIU ,.... ~ o r ~ Tu-..... ................ ,!IOI tfO, ~Al~T:..og:-~KJ;; :::: ~': :-;: ... Lol.OJ~:TY INCOM•· .......... 1.--1.:r•.n4 SMMOt .!.. !i'?..t"!.~~ .=.::T.~ .. : .. ·:: , ... _.., s.._: 7't. MAINTt:NAMC• OP' flt.ANT 11. oi.:°trld T•~-MAL'f'NI CW •IWIUL PVlf9 TUIU UPI"',. ... Oii ta Clt.iflMlli.rlte for M•""-~. 17.41' Ub Ltfit 1•.1 llQllrtlll ttoll •·•••••··•·••·••·•-f,,1M,1Jr ,,......,, 1 • s • SUIJICT TO. lf'ICUIL TU UTI L&MITI rtit. ~ ._....,... • "'•""-11ao .. '·* ....., lt.ool t 1.11tc1.H"• ........................ • • • ... •, • • ,, •• en ....... ....,._1 TOT,t.l. M.AIN11NAJtt(I 0 1111 11~ UMKllfW .... ••·"•••·•••••··•• 1&.IW .... tu,lDI _. ....... ti tot. ,1)1,:~~o'.i'i ....................... W M 17Ml 1 .. UI k ~-:.. ,..._ y,.,., T....., ••••...•.•..•• J6M17 1n.nt Ul..000 , .. Ill JdMI Ill. ~ llllWlll •• •• . •• ............ ... It.lilt 1""" a. U.t 0..... &el• ................ , ·•••·• Pl.Hf 111.-.... :=..= Ill......,__, "" ................... 1.112 • • • • • • • • u ........ 1114 t..M.. •.• .............. M» 7,"1111 UCID t:•1"""• ... ,...... .. WMlal!W""" "7W41 .............. u 1a ID: """'.,. ':..'. ~r:4..!. •.,•!!!'.!'-',,... ... . 11.m lll.llJ nAOO , .. ,, •'~.,,.. .............................. , m• _,,4 tao.ooe lkililoll ... ,~ ~.,..C ~ . , .......... , .......... u 11 H111 -• ., .. _.., " ,._ == .......,_ fW 1 I/Id/tr ., ..... , ~· ...... ID.S:V .... •IWI l1Mr11'1(1 •••• •••••••• ,... 6.1't 7,M 17.1 Adlllt t:dlle.ln.i ................ ~ ..... ,.,,.. MWWI ltnOl#lt to Ill In~ 1111 lfll.........,,, ff Qlf"l'Wll 1~1. 5:1ftti11Y-ll'llllAIKI, T.U.I ,7,2 ,._..!din! $tvdtl'll1 ••••••.••.• , UO..., ~ IO.IOO Clltrkl fl ll ~""*'ltl tor "1>14 to M dtrivtll itY levy l'tcTKtOul•Vll•lt' 111CtfllfnlCllONIAi..1 ............ ..,..,. 41,IU 4n tt.Ottw ............................ 1-UU tA»t 41.0ll)Mtflt..wr-'ttO ..•..• , .••••. , •. ,, ........................... IM.n.t .- IT.-MIOT U'f, ·~ ~MwtfK1. An Othln .. llAO 11,(11 14000 TOTAL LOCAL. INCOMl ............ t.AN.G 1'.7ttM 11.tn,12) \ elQUL PVND •• tll. U~ll l""Wlfl(.t, fO, IN COMING 1flAHlil'EAl ""'" 1tn.)4 ·-Tioe ,.....,.,.. ,...._ .,1 .,.. 111t 1r1.oetr•llf Aid• .•.••.•.••••.•.• ao n 0111w Tllltlon •• : ............... »4m ......, -.-Ac.1'111 ~Y'i• '"'•""Y 1"1'J11UTI , 1>4. u_.,....., IMW.Mt, All TOTAL INCOMINO TRNdl'EJI' •••• »41D ... ...,, ....... •••flUUM• ••u.Nc1. NL.Y t ,., '#tollfdftl D!'IW. N...-t II.ell. 01""' 0-lfltd f """'1M'I ........ 1,1,. 11GO TOTAL. INCOMI ......................... 1e.w.-1 n,Jt1.J1t W.•.»~ ~II Ill (oi,Mlry 1rMllltf ............................. . ( .... •.o.wor•m ..... ,c..,..,...1101t C.TOTAL.NIT•••tMMIM•aAU.NCI .....evt"'CMll,und ·······················-········· ~II-• ..., ....... Pll. D .. ,., .... =..ur, ..... CM;.M'"··:::::::::::: I~~ '~= ,t-=: .. :::.Mt;=~tAMi:t'Ontiii'OVT.0 ""''12.nf-'ll IMU.'11 J'l.lfl.M L.!?:T~~-L~: .. ~J,1:S!!l~~··,;.;u.;.;;·:::::::: -,,_·-·-"~:="',·" •.• · ?"" ... , TOTAL ,OtlO CHAlllGll •• ·•••• 101.Mf ll<l.fl4 • ..,. CUllllll lENT IJll''t!N1£ •• _ .... UST,1 0 Nn aEGllfNINO I.A.LANCE ........... . •• ,. t•TOTAL A,f>\.KA•L.I 10 TLt.CHl•I' 100, AOlllllNISTJtATM)N H~ • .,~ •t""-"' ·~· ..,_,.,. LAll:Y 1,,1MITA1ION .................. 1.llJ.tG 1.1n.n1 1.111,GSJ ·~ Cwtlfkll,,.. k'l•rlft ............ ld.711 ,.... IS't.014 lo. ,EOE•AL llllCOMll! 1111(1~0 ,.OM T .. t --,. ...., • .....,.i L-L-• __,_, .... l't1tt1l li\C 1111, CllHltlld Wt•~ ..•. .......... Slt.41• ~4 2'0,W J'IEDIEltAl. ~lllCIE$ PUIUC NOTICE """""~~ •· ,..,.._ 'f,'~f>\.tCA•Ll"lO'l1i.'CHllis<'···"· '1.tu Ito. r-o•••'•'~,.,,,·,.--·,,............. .a.-"'"' ttt,110 .,,_ !~A~111;:1.na1 ~""' ................... . CO TJiolt .,...,.,.. _ fn9ll .ttl'I IM C4ufo.ftAL.AllY COM,UTATtON •• •••.•• • .••• , , 1,11U'1 1.o12A1 ,,.... ........ 4ltA17 aa J.1l,ot •1. ''lftcltllf ~lftellt '""~r: • .::-:tr:.°"· ~.Jlri • 0...... '-"' -Jl/ftf ... -,Ul"IL 111ANl,.O•TATIOH se:av1ce:• l,IOtMt 700· ~·~Tc~~ S.l•r.. ''·' ... t!'qUll!Ufllrt Aki .................. . ''"°°" Ols!Tk'I: H E w, 0. T. MI s A ,. m. Clfulfltd iel1r\ft • 'lll'W 211. l"l"lrlc..... "~ ...... .. . . ..,,. ....... 10..no •1.s £Mltllneltr _......,le: ............ : •••••• UNlil'llO SCHOCt.. I til'tt Tra..tl*l•tltn ,, ••.. ···•··•·••·••· IJ,$71 14"2 IM2f ,U. $W:el'\olt«e' S.ltri. ..•.•••.•• V1.t0l MAIO! 01.414 'l-' "'-""""' Glfltlll ....................... . •1111 0..01/M! 11·• l'deitlt •"' Oil !'ht Pvtill"""' Orfftlt c.-Otlly,. I•, Jll-~ 0111., l .llMf'I .. f« 1'1,11111 111 T-.;fMl"1' .... ri.t ....••..• 1.Jtl,111 t.M.m •.11t.JDO '..4 Edueltlle Mlnll..., JlttwMlll •·•-···•······ .,, .. , _ •uo'usT 1..-· · "'11. M. ,,, .,.. ~ 1. im !lll0-7J ''--'''IM ...................... '-'" Mn 4,eao tl4. on-c.rt1nc•t1111 &tlwla .... t,CIOt.US I Ml.tu 1.1u.«11 •11.1 ~ Hltlllli:loold ................ . -' ••a. TOTAL ,U,.IL -CO ''" .......... IA T-'-·"'"'-__ ,, ·--P'IKI '1-.,.. M 111111-: IU7 pf_.n1 1.ltAMSl"().ltTATK)tf 4""' Ill • ._ •-'"''P ""I ,. ••..•••• ,, •• Avlf!Yt Cati•,.,..... . .............. ,,..... M.$2:1 ,....,, n1. '"''""'''°"''Aki• ............ :JIM.Id 4",.,,, .W,714 Q. :l.1 T,....,.tlllt H~ "llfl'llJ ..•....• ,~iHfttlfle1tktl · H•-; Ll1-1""'911 PUBLIC N0!1CZ '%'AL cu11111ENT 1x ,EHse OI' m.. °""" ........................... LM.IM a..u...11 2,f1U.A1t .. ~ ~ AppwtilllVNflf ~~·•11"1' ~ -"-""-a. v-liOTtee.., """", IALe :,.,11~~.111v'iCeS ········ .. ···· ......... ,,,,,,,,,, 1.1s..w 1,1H.on I =..g;;: =-•·:::·:::::::::::::::: i.S:::: '~ ,,:::J •t.1.=:.,J,''::,"\n;.t·~";:::::::;::: '1ICt pt··"'.,.. 111'1 l'llt1 1d1 ,ttclfttt• T.I. ... ,,,... ... ... , •. c .. 111fled S.L.rl• •' il'OOd "'· •.•• L'11 Utt ),210 ' 'TOTAL IM$TlllUCT IOM ............ n ,Nt.01 1427t,JU ''.oa.27' ..,_ SOKlll ""'""K'91 A-. C-1• ~ °" AUMM .. lfn. ,, 11 A.M.. 1 ' MMUNl1Y SE ii.ViCES ClO. HEALTH SEltYICES '1.1 =t.rwrwlrfl for nw e1-11ry NOTl(t tS Ht •EIY OIYIM tl\11 ""'SO\JnttaM CAl..IPICMUOA l'lfllST HA· ll». O•HIUtd s.lerl• Of 4111. CHllll<.lttd Slllrllti ··········••·· ~ 4'.29 A11J "'1 k llMdlnf ,.,..,,., .. .. ·• •······ ....... ,...,.,.. k""9I Olrirkt" °'"""' TIOMAL 9.UllL ............... 1,,. ' C~ltr llrYk• ............. •,155 427• ,,,IJ 4l0. Cl11tffled S.t•r... ........... ..... 1~ 10.rn lt,nl .... ...,._,... IMtrvctlooMI T.iwl11oft .. .. c~. (111tor111 .. Ktlllf .., .,.. .,,,...... A-l1tl• .. .., .......... Trwllf '"" OtllW Ex~ • 490. Otller EQllfl-. . . ... . • ...••••• ' )Of •m 11556 ™ ......,.,._, .... He!ldkl,.. Mlf!On ltl C\1¥9"111'11 ... ,,., ,,,.,..,,.,.,... ,~ 111111« '"' ~ ,. Ollrrll " Tn1n (""""""ty ..... . ····-····· ••.• 11.0I» 10TAl. HEl.L l H SEltVICl!.S ••.••• .,~, tl..ul 1u..-. tor Wllol'n No ..... sr.dll l dllUtlotl " .. "OISTIUCT/' win rectlft ..... Wt ... 1'911 Ok--'· tm ,~ .. TOTAL. COMMUNITY tl•VICI$. of,7S,, '·"' 16,tlf eao. OPll!lt.ATION Of' f'L.ANT ""1111Ht I"' AWU.* ................... . '* ..,. ~ 1111 .._ .,,..,. "-· _.. __.... IL """ " ......... 11•16. 111 ' CA,rTAI. OUTLAY 620. Cleulfled llllrllt ................ .. ... , UUJ1 ,.... TOTAL STATI!. INCOME ................... . .. .... ,.,. ""...w4I.,. Clllll'lct,.,. ... ..,, .... ,,., •Ofltd9• •-·In 11'0. lh1!1dlng• ......................... 11.0Jt ,... i).otl ,,.., Oltltf' IE•Ofnl• .................... uun .os.m 74 ,1" IO. LOCAi. INCDMI: fM nw. ,,..oi-=t. !lllo llfl'kf " ft1t CIUllf't ,......., ff 1*-E•1,11pn'o911I TOTAL OPEAATlON OF 11'1..AHT •• 1,194.m t,271,ZW 1,#1,M1 II, Dllrrlrlct Ta• l lctl ~n .. rKll'IM tll t11tpl1e1 lffn· ~ (""""', ....... (Mlfwfill!I WlLL ,,.,. Otlllr l!qul,,._t ••.••••••• ""' to,fll MOO 700. MAIHTeHAHCf: OF "LANT 11.1 S1e11rM llloll. r.ttlvld., wnc.tld •..•..•• "tlld ........ •fod .,,., .... #«IN ll'Mll fEl.1. AT l'UfLIC .AVCTION 'JO TO T01 AL CAl"l1 AL OUTLA'I' •• ".. If, .. , .... t6,41j 720. 01plflld "'''.. . •• . • .. . •• ••• •••• !50"°7 8f,m maA :t; ~ fl:aO, tifQ\11•11111 .. beMnarr l\ldoft •••• ll ll .-Nici'/ , .. d •IM •I ltrrl ......... , ..... MIOHl:IT ••ON• ,.Ott CAIH ,....,,.... TAL e"'t!NOITUlt.E$ .................. f,'21$7 l,Ul,HI 1,:iol.!21 T.IO. ·~·of EqulpfMlll •.•.••• : "'"' nm 1.0.•lt ~ ltd! ......................... _ """ tllll pl1e1. 11 "-........ hwtlll ~ et 1111 OTHl:u~UTOO no. Dllllf' IEXPl!llltft . . . .. .. .•. "..... 211,m Ul.111 2'41,f47 ... ) Prior Y•r1 TIUI ..................... "' ,:-;,:111: -_uo~o: t~':"i: :"i;:' ~...:: r.::,. ~-:::: 1A ldt. Of~~:. TJtAHllllllllll& ~:?l~i ~'-~~.~.~~~~~ .. ~: ......... 5'S,4t ift.42' ,.,,l4' ::: ~' .. :::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~ IM ~" Ill tlOld <11'1111119'1 ,, ,. CM< C-'• Dtlw w• {,.,_ly '°' °"".,. 1U'llon ••··· .. ..••...••. 1l,WI lf,QS l\,5Dtt IOO. l'IJtEO CHAltGE:$ T TAL LOCAL INCOME .................... .. wltl!l11 II dlY'l lftw ti. Md """'"' ...... w. ltTll Sll'-'I 111 ... Cll'f' • '9flt9 AM, SUSTml. in ·· ·· · • · · • · · · · · · •·· .......... , II II a I • • • 11 1.11).721 111. AM\ll'Y J'Ulld . , .•••. , , • . . •.• ..• . . • • 227,731 '74.llf 40.000 fQ. INCOMIHG 1•ANSftl!'•s Cl('fl bl' mwf '*""""" .,,.. ... (Ill.., .... '" """'· mi. .... ....., ... ~ U#ot ,. •D ••••llrl• ............ '. II •• a • • • • ,,.,.,. 112 .... .,.,,,._, FvnC .. ..... •. . . •.• .•• • l.'20 -n. Otllff' Tlllllon -.............................. . ,..,_i ... ,. tl\f COfltf'.et OIC-lll'MlltL .....,.. .. """' -,... .,, It ---M1f TOTAL f:.IC,ENOITUltll AHO Ill. ,.utlll< IE~ ltltl•-1 . .. m ,tl3 :mm mt..ft) "· Otllw tncomir.o Tr11\Chrrn . ' ................. . lldl MC.,....._ .a:..,.....IM 11'1INDMrrf9'1rwt Ill !flt......,,., itlllltld 111 OTHllll OO'JGO ., .• ,, · ·················• 1,SU,ffl IJn.7" 1.511.SlJ Ill. 01c1 Aft, l\lrvl'IOr .. Dtwblllty Ind l OTAL IHCOMINi; 1111ANSflflS •.••..•.••.• IKUl'lfY ,...,,... i. 111 rt.. WIWK'I .... (wnf't 1ft111 ,,.,_ "91(rl ... •1 I. llfOtNe IM..AlfC•, JUM9 • "-111t lllSl!f'llKt .. , . , •• . ..... ••••• t 1t,m JU,.J11 2fOAOO TOTAL INCOMl •• , • , . • . •• .. , • , , , , , .• , •••• ~ .... .,., "" lllt " ,,.,..... l .... lllTl'Wd .... *'"" "'"" CltY. C.1J1o Ill '-"" 1fNIUfY ..•.. .. .•••.•.•••• ,..... 11'.lll as1. ll!lllf-Clrm. Tdln.. c. TOTAL. MIT •••nOllN• IAUNCI AlllO HKOM• • ~IC..,.._ .....,..,. e.cti. CWllty. Of ..... it.le Jt_.,,,lflt c..tfl ll'lllld ...................... SOI 5111 .. lft1tr. AINI .•.. ···········••••·• 311-"t -.m J7l,ll'O D. IJt ... fll'DlTV•ll AND OTM•• OUTOO • ~. ,.,_ M. .... ~ °"""· "'".,,.,.,.. .. ,,.,...,,..... Ill ~ flllCtlvnl• ........................ ,..,. la.»1 m ln-NKI...., Ofhw .....•.••..••• VO.Ml QlhJ SI..... CU•lllE-NT lX,.lNSE ~ J'KHlllft. Mllll'-'-' ,,,_.. 0...•· .... IJI , ..... " 41 IMMhol " ll't.,..W ~ .... •.•. .. .......... UtO ''"' SlJ. UM1••11111ol Ina. l11ttr. Aid• •••• 1.m 14000 100. AOMINl$Tft.ATION ttoftt. wll """' wlHI ,,... ,.,... '"" Mhc:lllb u11c .,,_,IA w.. tMtt' Ill 1111o :=a•1.•Acl. 1~'11. J.,u:• SI. 1'74 •.•.•. • 1 • • • • • • u... u...,,,...,_, ,,,.. OtMt ua. ~"'llleltld "'"'-" Adfl'!lnl"rwtlfn ...... ,_,.,, Ill ........ 1M 11W •I 1t11 ~ ........ fll .., CWl!fro 111t•1,., ASS •·•·•··••·••••·• IM.114 2'16,al IOO Clauffltrrll .................... ., .... ,...., 126,000 120. Ll111fttd S.i.rlls of Admlrllt~ ••.• ,, •• ...... lf;lttr111V1 Offk• L"""""" l~ Tllrrt ....... ...,._ .,,. ..... ctl'!WMll L-111 ~""""' LllllMttle ....•..• , . •• . • . . • . •• 2\,71'1 nMI 140. w.r1!1M11'1 '°""*"Mllorl ltO. OIMr" ~ fll ....,,...,,ltitr"1llcrrtrr •• ., ••.••• f'lfV ktloDI. ...... , m 5-tt D'll .... ftlft, """"•"' ........ ,,..,ry Mn •lfDttft UUJitC• ................ S»..... ltllJOI '°° ·--· ,.. ....................... JD.06J n,fM ,,.. -INSTT.~T!,L~OMIWtlTUTIOH .•..•••.•..•..•.•• Slreft. Coif•......_ .. Joi• A.M.. ~ ~ ,...,. • .,...,.,,... .. 1111 ,, TOTAL IXP9MOt1'U•lt. O'T1411t lfD. OfNt' 11'1.'1..t O.rvet ... ..........• t».ltO Wl,lllO 1!LC10 ..-""'' -v" 2. ltn. , .. ,.,..,, ~ '""""'"' a.ell. ovreo AND U•OllT•t•U11D TOTAL J'IXEO CK.IJl:GES •...•••• IAR.IU tMIM4 '.yuot 214. Cer!Hk•tld Sll•rlet of l111tnlclloll Tlllo Ofl'D:ICT ........... ""'r1tM .. ,. c.11,...,... .... • ,. •••• .,. •• P'l.UI •IT •WDlM• SUIT01AL Al'P1..t(AIL.E TO TEACHE•S' 211. ,.r1nclptls' Sll•r1• ................... .. fKt lr'r/ tr 111 116'9 eir .. .,, • .,. lll'f Ir· Tlllo Vllllwllllf'M Trwtlt ,._.,,_ 111., IALAllKI ,...... .... .. •• . ............ l,ot.m 1""'1J'lll 1,Sl...OIS SALA•Y LIMITATIOH ....................... 16.Ul"1• llM1,1U 22.sN,JU 111. ,.........ltor1' s.!1rln ................... : ,.....,rll!w fl#' lllforrftllllll'll lfl .rt llllfl • ll•lllltlY fW 911Y h""*"'Wll-•TM..,.., IOtllO f#Tll•IT &•O ••DIMl"TIO• llllUfllD Z. L.ftl L-"9rR"*ll t« f'tl!ll 1. 211 TNdien" Slllrlft .................... . '" fM "'*""'' ...... 11111..,.., '-*' ~111'1. II OUT1TAfll'Dtlf• •o.tot• llfHtTIOtllll Eqvlpmtr<! .. ··•····· ...•. •········••··•· 6tl.1U '1M76 •1421' !U. Otlltr Clrllnalld S.l1rils., 'Jiit DISTllllCT N1 .""""" .... 11111111 • .._.,,,.,..... 0, 01n•1n, .. '-........................ '"'* ...... rDTAL APP\.ICAILE 1D TlACHEJIS' 1111t1lldl1W1 .. . • •...••.•.•• -.i P<1Vtlllllf riff lllf Pl' •m ~ Seid Mii w"1 .. fNft, WI 'll'lttMNI MlflUI ffNUlll ff.,,,...... tfllltl'l*f .... ........ 4itADO .. .OCO SALAllY COMf'UTATION •....• . ........... tS.t4f,12' lt,oll,HI 21,f740P2 U0. CllJllfllld S.1111• l'I lMlfllCllll'I r11 rt.. loCIUty 1rt wtllc;ll llMI wk It .... <IWflfllt .. w-.t,...,.,, ·--.,I~. OUTSTANOtNG •ONOIO INOf.ITlOHISS •• •.coe .-.oot ._ SlUOEHT TUNSPOJITATIOH l21. lmtrvctloMI Aldt9 ................... . ~!Md w Md! cnl'I w ..,,... "',..., .. ,.. """' ...-slOfto ., -A. lt•tw•1Mt SALANC9, JULY 1 no 0 111111«1 .s..11nes n .15' •1 .100 .io,m m otli9r Clftslflld !.ll•rla lllf 1ns1n1e1i1111 .• -·-II 1111611111M911Klllt1M Cfftll'Kt. ~Mw. .. """ l9llrr '-"11111"1 ,..,,_. Cl611 ill C-1~ TtMl!Wf .... ...•..•.•• ztAI! ol0,4.IO jfO: 01,,... f XJlftl*•• ..•• ::::::::::·::::: 1.u.i :9,SU .&J,,111 .?!!-. 0T~!__b0olr.1..,s ···_-_·,·.·.-.·.·,·.-.-.·.--_·.·.·,·.·.·.·,·,·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·.-.·.·_· ""'"' '''" 1r•"" ..... , l"1 '1"'*1111 !,Ml ""'" " """ --_ .. ..., .... Hl.1 ••GINNING IAU.NCIE .•.• ••• .•.•• 41.s.t aun .io..ua TOTAL STUOEN'T ... '""" Avtfll,M, Cotl• .... ClllPI• _., ....... OMrrl "'Trvd. ,....,l P7,ffUf, ~ i.... .. llfCOM• TltANSP0•1A1 tON ••·•·•••·•·•••·• n .n• 6t,7lS •>.sol 2f0. OIMr EXPft\US ., IMlflltflOll ............. . t•IMll Ofl ,......,. A ~ If W-''"' "'"" ..,.._ M ,,...... 111 Mid' ...... M. STAT• JN(DMI! _ TOTAL CUJIJIEHT EXPENSE OJ' TOTAL INST•UCTION ..................... . atltll ... p1111tslf •I .::_J•..... lllVlllC .. If MY· .......... --"'•hi ''· TJ• ... ltf .....,,,1.,,. • e ouCATJ0"4 •.••. ,, ..••••••.••.••••.••••••.• t•An.o.12 11,7S..f"lt n.111.... .cio. HEALTH SEii.ViCE$ T,,,_ fcn9ol"' .,... ti "° dlMI Ollt of T"'9f, ..... ~.,.. _,.... ',I llllllltlt I~ ···········•·· f'2 U .111 'I 11 toO. FOOD Sl!"llVtCES 410. Certlflc11ed s.ltri. ff .._.lllt , _ _. ... . ...... N ...... ~ t wwtil!f Rr If Ill 'Ill Trwt• 11111 If ... ..,,... Cl'llttll ·~.) """'"1 •llllwl .................. SOii 4.01 x 1 'I • '10. C.nltlc1lld S11tn. •··············• 1,CI t..it 7.octCI flO. Cla11.tfl..S S111rlft of H .. 1111 ""'°"'* ... . 1111111 I•) l!Ollf&. rtle tw ~ •1111 "\:Id Olllilll fll TtWI. ..W 0... 1iltlt Sl1I• lltailTlt ••••····. ......... 9f'2 UM JI • • • m . Cl1t1Hltrrll .S.lerlta ••••••.•..•.••... , S!,7t4 14,J.ll 21,310 "90. Oltllf EXllfll$1S of H•111'1 .SlrvlCI •.•••.•••• _._ wwt. 1M11M11 ..... !WM lflillll .......,., W11tr .....,.,:.: •• LOCAL. tHCOMI! tto. ~ E•pen1e1 TOTAL HEALTH Sf.•YICIEI ••••••••.•..•• ~.:·h ... IMllll.rorr ~ "" CON·~~ ~,.:;:..::::~1:.-.:• '1• :.r'~.J::,,_, .. .,,. ...i. m. T~';'lL E:=-'s1i1'\iK:ii .. :::: ri::!: ~r ,:;::: '°°· ~:'~!~:J:.0:.~~N~ Oper•llon ........... . TUCTOlt lo ....... llMrr contrtcf II. 0..•"'1 I ,........ ......................... ao.m a,a JI ll I. JI 1100. CDMMUHITY I Ell:YICE-1 "°· Ol!'lfl' IE• ... ltl ,.., OPlnltlorl ............. . ._.,,,, 111111 ..... tfl'f Mticolltl' ..... wr111Wf1 Ntl'Ctli If~""" 9'9Cfl ... II ti.I DtltrlCI Tlli•. hclll'9CI ltolt, HIO. Cirrrfllk:1i.J s.ttrlft ••·••··••··• 111.717 ,.... ...... T01At.. Ol'ElllATIOH OF Pl.AMT ........ .. ...... lt/m, ti '*1 110t '-• tllloft Wit MN tlll Tlllo ....... ~ c..-. teltl lfttlc1 '""'tlll It llfllnC.I S1,1111119f , ••• XI IX X ll 1 11 I 11». C'9Mltlld S.l1r.. .............. '""'~ a.105 1'4'20 7111. MAINTINAHCE-DF l'L.ANT --""" ''"' " '" -"!Mfl ""......,.If Olfllllll tl'lf *""" le hit to Ill 11.J ~ •ott . ..... .......... l,ljfl 1,111 s.1• nto. Otll« t:•plfll" .......... , .....• m.-1 1t1.-. 471,fN 7l0. CllM"lld lll1rlts for Mtln~narr ••••..••• , _., "*"' 111 nw uKVl\on"""' c.nffKf. ,,......... Ill IM ~ ........ ltte , .. , 11.J l"rlor .,..,.,. T••• ··•······••··· 1.025 311 j}J TOT.Al. COMMUNITY SEA\llCES . sa.m 1$2.IM . 1.50UN 1». ll""6t(t11111!1 of ECllllP!Ml'll .. ··•·•····•·••• ... llllldt( """ ... 11'111, ... M• Md.., •• ...,.,,~-.·'!!:.. .. ,'""'•' .... ·•····· ................. llJ m 1'2 1200. CAPITAL OUTLAY "°· o"""' 11!'.Xpll'ltft ""M•l111-nc. ......... . "" " ..... .... ..... ... ~, ""' . .... ...... '"" 1,521 " " t.6•4 '·"' .. ... .. .. " " ,.,11rri11 • flrl't-41W (45) 111..,. 1nlt" lf'lt Dlhl loUT • ,..,,., Otlrrl l.•t lt ltlttmt ................ 1•.JIO d AU 4,41 l'UI. lm~I ti lltft •MS :u,M 1:J011S l01Al. MAIN1lNANCE:. Oil' Ill.ANT .... .. ....... ""t1t1.,.,.i1111 •..... •ou tte•N CALlll'Ol:N1A TOTAL IMCOM• •• .... ........... J.S,102 51).17't •.at 1251. 8\lllcllllf .............. ~:-.:· .. :::: ...., f'Z:LS14 s~ IOD. J'IJIE O CMA.llGE-S ..:...~',.::-.. ·:ltf'· .. :'7:; ~:·!r.~=A&. I.A.Nit. c. ':111T:'i:C~~·~~~.·~· •• ~~.~N~~......... 16A11 11.IJO M ,n l .·~.·· !!*" ·····,·.::..:.;.;;·· .. ··1;.·····""··· ,,""',.... 14.lolO '"· Ann11lty Fund ................................ ... IN c.ntrtd. Tltt '9Yll'lllll.llOfMJ tNll M Ir • .., M. ,.,.._ 0. .llC,.PDtTVllll ANO OTM•Jt OUT.. •• ' "''"1' 1111 ,...~.. '· ·' ·'' ·.'. · · • ~1"'1 l.OSI'"" •tt. ,..,,...n_,I FUIW '' ....• ·' · · · · · · · • · · • · · · · •• · • • lil I' ... .... I ... -t Vkt ,.,...""' '"' OEIT •••voe• 10TAI. CAPITAL. OUT " ...... 1.1".oM 1.6141'4 •.w.111 t21. PuDllc Employ-lllellr-1 .. . ....••.. 7'0 Ill IM fwm fl IC • 1 , 51 TOTAL. EXf'EHOITUJll!S OTHElt OUTGO .••. 1tAQIM1 21,1.t,nt JO,J~.~ID ttJ, Oki ,,,t, Sunttwr1, Dlwl>ltlly •1111 9Dt\11Mt!IL. Autlirrlf'fl .. lltMNrt ·~IJ ,SO. SOl'ld ltllll1'ftllllon ............. .,. .6).«IO 40,ootl 40,000 ICIO. OUTGOIHG TlllANSFE•S H•llll ln1w1net •• ••••..•• . ............. .tf Gewrf'rl~ ... ,, , 1:N0. 9ond 11\IH' .. I .................... 4.00I .... -J(IO l \llllon Il l. ErnpjcryHS 111111"'1Kt, TUdl.,.I •1111 l y H.,._, l'llflw' hli'ltMof .......,, M•""' NIWI •.U Tofsl Dfbl l.-vkl • , ....... ., • , ~ G,o!CO olO..WO • ·-........_ ,.-... ••.oo• --,,.... 1111-~"'-·0 •••-~"' Atlrrnl t.,,,tll'lld w'1tl h Or•• C...t 0111'1 1a. CUTGOIJtO TltANSFE•S 1-· "mtr "'' · ··· ········ ..., ..,.,._ ''""'"",. -~ ·························· PWfllllllf Ill ""' Or•• c .. tt Ofll't" ,IM!I, H..,,..., t•c~ C•ll"""i.. Jul't" 11. ''°"· lfl'"'" 10 s...I IN<h 110lAL DU1GO ING .... , ~ ~msrrlo'l-•~tr;"'i:.':r!'~ A,,HlnOlll•I-~---.······· ,.,lfl J..., u,,,., , .. ,.,, ms.,,,.,"·,,,, 11.r-n E•-t•ry Sdtocrrl Dt1lrkl ltANSFE-llS .•..•••••.••..•• .. tl,413 110.000 .... • ..... TOTAt•1·•~==u·liiiS·,; .. 0 ····.. 41.1n t~•i:ifl:~.UTi:O .. ii"e:srm··:::::::::::::::;:: ; ; ; ; ~!:t_:: uc. ~i ·.~~..-:;.:n·ok ······ ..... - ___ PUBL1 __ 7:c::::NoOTl::-=C=E=-::-:::-:-:::::-::::::oPIJIUC=-;;;:;:;=:;NOl'ICB:--------1 OTMI• OU'ffO ................. •·••• 4',CtCt .,..,., '4,f)I TOTAL •XHNDfTVlll•S AND .... ~'='~·· Ec~t!Ori ''1nwt~•·:::.--.-•• ·_· I POI Ne IAU.lfCI JUW• SI OTMI• OUTGO .................... , lt.etl.1$1: J\,!Q,1') '1..Ul.Mt -·.,......-_,.. Al*MU.U. •111&11c:LM. M• t\fMST" 11"9:1" • Ct"" Ill CW!tr l~ :12.Ul e.45lt 4 I , INDINO IAU.NCI, JUHi • ltO. O#ltr' Fht-' Clll'911 · ••-···•················ "' " "' ..... s.I ~ ...... Dllllftd ...... c..ty, ~ NET l:HOIMG •ALAHCI '·········•··· Ce ... ill County 1rHIWf .................. 4UUf1 .. ,11... TOTAL J'lXEO CHAflGl!S •.•..••.••••.....• 1, ..ortc• °" AOOPT•M _.... TJtAMIMtnal..,. ~---•• ,, ,OTAL D.'9MDfT'W:es. OTMli:·-··· ··· .».n1 .o,a • .... 11v1nG c.111 FllM ••.•...•.•.. ,........ 1• s.ooo s.ono TOTAL "'l"l.~eLE TO TEACHElllS' All ICtlOl'I IMM M ltlr.eri M fl! .. ,....,. IM ·--W Ill« tvTM, AMONtT llfDINO SAU.NCI .... ''-"' llUlO •~.til A<l-lt ltec.elv~• ·····•·················· JOU)f m::: :0.'1.~~ILC~l~~~ATJ0H.$f_Jl\it(!:'S ''"''''···· tl,J~ ,, :'c!:rv"'.::W:1:r=:'...:.in Nilltltld °'"" ... ""' 0.11\' f'llol. '"''' '1. lt73 rm.73 ~ii.':1111c.!:::.SMt;·.:::::::::::::::::::::: =:m SJO. CIHSl(kd ~"' PllOll T,.,.por1.11on •• •• TlNTA1'1Yi ANNUAL ,INAHCIAL AMO •UDGlT ••ro•T. T'rrlb ""'"It OllllllAl. lllESEllYll!'., IUNI •• 1'74 •.•• J; x . x • • • • lU,(IDO SfO. Diiier ~,.,. ll'Wll T"""*"'"°" , ••• ...,..., tllM "' t111 toYtn1lnll •tlll ~ 1'11 "'*" •lsttlc.1. PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE TOTAL. cu••s.NT ASS•Ts ....••....•.•••• 1,lQ.131 4."1.221 ltoAlll TOTAL ,.U,.tL TltANSPOlllTATION ...... .. Olis 111f ,,,_..,,. Mtf L 1f7j 11"*' Mini M. Or-lwl._.ry L.t31 C\11'",.llt LLlblUtlei .• , .............. , •• 1,SU,1'2 1,7M,7d TOTAL CUAlllCiHT E-Jt,.ENSE OF liOUCATIOM ···• •l.750' .. ,.UILICATION AHNUAL il'INAN(IAL. AllO IVOOE1 tte,.OllT. 1Jloe __..,i111 lflT IMDINe IAUNCI .................. J.llZ.451' J.HWJ 120.400 -FOOO SlJIYICE$ ' ... , •• ,,,.,,.,. """' .,, J.ill ll, ms. wdl rwltlellt. ... 1n-. "'' ~ 1111. TOTAL IXP'•NDITU•ISl OTNIE• m . Cl•lllflfd S.l1rte11 .. "* .................. . 01 .. It ............. ry, ,.,.. "' "*ktfl ..... '""' ""'""' ..... 111111 ~ CAL1,oa111A COllWllNIT'f' CIM.l.llelt OUTGO, ANO UNDISHl•UTlO 1100. COMMUNITY SE•Vt(E$ ,,.,..., rtiwt14""' ,...rt. AlllNUAL lllllNAMCIAI. AND tlJDOIT •IPO•T flllt:lllVI, ,LUS NIT llfOINO ,,..'. U "-~·,,f.......,","'0'"'u·'~YI~~.~.~.~ •••.••••. • •.•..•....•• Tht ID\IOllC ,,,_,lftl on 11'1 .. hfi"'! wll 1M MW ti J.M. McOtlllJlo kNtll "' 1. MOne• 01111 ADOP1'ION AMO TUNIMJT1','1. IALANCI •.•... .. . • . . • •• . . ....••. , ••. ··, .• tt.f'Jt.211 2116;4'5"11 Sl.611.Mf _'I-..., , ..,., M!Wtl J, 1'13,, 11 •1• .. clldt ,..l<A 1. 111NTATIV£ AHNUl.L l'INAH(IAL AHO IUOl#IT •E,OllT. tJloit r.,.m b S ... CIAI. llllllVa PUMO Slflllill Mfn M. errr..•11Knt1,., ,,,.,..i.y flllld .. , ""' oo~•rnlna lloet'I "'It'll c-t Cllmfm,ll'llf'f CDllfO• ot1trl<I .... ••OINNIN• IALAMCl, JULY 1 ll«L"il!X!f,,.._t Of Sil9' .................. .. t. ••AO• tll'AM OP DllT•lt'I' ,,.... et ...... .,_ t. ........ Dlh 11 !Mellftrl JUn1 20, lt)I SlgMrrd Nor"'ln E. W.IMn/S«r.tiry C..11 111 Counry Tr•wry ..,..... ............. 11.fft 1....W 12.SO. lullafnos · .................................. . 1. AYlllM• UILY ATTllfPANCI ti. P\.lll.ICATIOH AHN UAL il'INANCIAI.. .\HD IUOGET •EPOllT. Tiie 00V""ln0 ~count1 llllQlv1bl1 ..••..•....•...•..••.. .• oWlt,ltS )I)"°" I~. E11,1lp<M11I wn-n 1,,.,. 1m141 .,..,.., "'"" l'l'llMI• Ofl Jllftf 11. 1•n 1111:11,..,..r.,,,..,,,1cld11111111. •lld cllinon •• To111 c..,,,...,, A111111 ······c·············-·· 4J..lt4 ,..,m n 1· look• ................................ . Atl'MI AcfMf ........ II llllafnlrr -Stry, Olftdlt19 pWl1Ctllan, pWll' llMr!ng •1111 f1MI idl!llllon. 1. .. 1 CUl'r~ U.blH!ltrrS •.......••..• · ·•··• l55.1'1 113,t6of l:Nt. °"''"' t!tllllptl'lllll •• · · • · · · · · · · ·• · •• ··• K ....... rtln ................... .•.• 10" ft tterltrr't rft\11'._ till""°". Ntl lao!Mlfll •1lff!Ct ..• .,,_ .............. »USS N,153 TOTAL C'Af'l7.f.L OUTLAY ···-····•·····•· Grldlt 14 ..... ........ ........ .•• ... SCI 3H 111• pvblk "'-~ 1111 fllls ,...,, wn1 tit Mfd II Celilf c_,,., College M r:llmMlll to A<COllnlll llKlllV•bll .... -i..m _ _,_, •1·•·11----·· a I I ' ;;~~:~ oEJl .. ENOITUlllEl •••••.•••••..••••••••••••••• Grfllifl .... • .•.•.••••.•••.•... '' .. ' sn ,,, m 0!11. Hq., 1311 Mimi Aw .. CO.M ,,,,_ Ill Allllrrnl 1, 1973 •• fitlll UJ l'ctDl:k Ad Ulll"l'llnls to Curr ... 1 L11blll111's •• '. •. . • +l.tJJ -4.>d a x • • 1300. OEST $1!.llVICI! Gt-11111 ,.. ......................... :Mt a :tSI ,,M. Slt/llcJ Horrn111 E. W.t..,,/s.trwl1ry Ad "''" ,. .. •111l1111lng 111.nct .......... 211.0Jt n .lol.S 21""' ue • ......_. ••Yf'lltl'll M ~ t/f lp1:: ~-~u-~~ ~ .:·:··:.:·:.: 1,1~ 1.t~ ,l/s '·av.•••• DAILY AfT.#OANC• U7J.74· •• in.c=1A ···•··• ...•••...• .................. 500.llOI! Sl•tt JdlDol llllNiftl ~llorAlllllr ... . • .,.,...., ... cv•lllU'T DllTllCT TU •twt~ ,. .. ltJJ.}41 tm•n lfJ"S.1t 1'1).N ,. .. _ ADA ~. STATE INCOME IJlll). Otll« • .• • ........................... . (ti .. ..,..,.."' ICwy • .. ...,..•I Arr.I ,.,,_, ...... tlld l'IWIM letlml!t 64. FtclU!Ms A~I ........... , 461,1!1 21W,N4 l,CS.114 TOTAL Df:IT lf•YK£ ................. . A-' Tn Tl• 11.f'N 20.IOI 20.lfl L ... TOTAL ITATIE INGOME ••••• ,........ "1.nt -l«O. OVTGOING TRANSFERS " ... •Ti -. .... .... I. ••&CHI "'Alf Ofl OISTllllC1'. Or!IOll II •1-I 14 70. COUNTY INCOME -IGQ. Tllllkrrn-. -• ....,.. LJ.n C......... C..JI ~ CtlltM l*trk:I .. 11. Jlllllor Clllfleoe Tllltlon Tiii .......... Al• 1D..us -.100 !<Qt. Oll'ltf 1v111o:! ....................... . ...... CV•llelllT DtsnlCT TU •IOUnlPlmfT l'ot 1t1>-N tO. INCOMING TJIAHSFllllS IUl"IOTAl. ............................................. ll lt a ll ...... 1.U 1.J2J! Ti tit,_,.,...., fiftMI .... ...,., ,_ ff. '"'°""""' Trfflilwe ..... .••.•.....• ,1,14' 127.'83 2SS.tlOI UNOfST•1sUT1D 1t•llln'm ....... _ ................. ic • 11 • 1,00M Tll Tia To!ll I~ Treri1 .. rt. , ............ , '1.1'4 22'1Ml US.000:..,. 1 01Al. EJtPE-NDITUlllS AMO OTHI• OUTGO •••• N.44 ,,_. MIO ~l"OS· ._.. '""""' ................................ . ,,,,,.i-GMwlt ,.~ Tt• ............. . ~ T•• .. i. .... ············ ......... . TOTAL OINlUL FutilO 'JAX itATI!• •••.•.•• ••lflllAL PUW9 -· ....... ... llOIMWIMO 1au..c•. JULY I Clrrlll Ill COllftff Tr .. 1ury ............ · · · ••• ltwot¥lllf Cl"" F\llf'lll ........... · ......... . ~ ft_t(tlVltll .,;. , , , ••,,, ••• , • , , • •.,. p'Wr1:1. l~r::rf.Ni .AiSi>fi'' ::: : : : : : :::: :: t.•1: C""""I Llelllllfl• tfld o.twr'ld ""'-• . . . • . . . . .............. . NET IEOIHNIMC> IAl.AHCI ............. . ACllWlmellil It A.«ourll'I ltilnh'tblt . ·• .. Allki""*"fa to C\ll'"rllll U.•1111111 •.•••• ADJUS1£0 Nl!T •EGINMINO IALA#C• •• •• IMCDMI 10. FEDlll:.At. fMCOM~ Jtl!'Cl!IYl!O l'll:OM l'l!OlltAL sou•c•1 11. ""'"''-· 111111 o,..r.tltlll .....•..•• ... °"""' ......... ' ....................... . TOTAL PIOlfll:AL IHCOMIE ltEC!.IVIO FltOM •lOl:llAl SOU llCliS ..•.... .. .............. , 20. l'EOlll:.Al. INCOMl flllCl:IYl!:O FllOM 5TA11 SOUK!.I JI. M1llollel D11wtM l!C11ettllll Ad ••.• U. £~ OPC*1\11111y Act ........ .. n. £"'"""'',., fnd hc911d1ry Ed'l>UllOll Ac! . . . ............ •·••• '101AL. l'IDEllAL HKOMl llECEl\IEO J'AOM ITATll 50\JlllCES .•• , ••..••••••...•.•••••• .e._ STATE INCOME 41. "'lrtdP91 Awert'-1 41.1 hlik EOWtllufMfl AMI 61.2 EClllC.llllMflf Hllldk t""" ••• , •I.I ,.lly1kl ll\' HlftdltfPP'd •....• U. Spltlll Alllw-'3.S ...,_,,~ f9r HIM"'""" Miiiott tw Vl'lllllt lilt 11111 ~Ill Edl:C'.ltllfl FKHttl" '"' AVlll.... .. ........... . 6),1 £""' Cnl~ ld\ltttltfl .....• U . T•• ltllllff ~llOlll ''·' . .,.-. .. ,,....,,..,., ............. . ., .a ,~ •t1llf . . . . . . ........ . 4'. 0'Mh.cell-t ,.,,.....,~ . ., .... ., ...• •t. OIJloer' ".. " .•• • •.••••.•••••••• - ....... +IS.lft +m - "'" "' •.m ,..., ...... ....,, .... .. ...... ...... 101AI.. STAT! INCOM I!! ... • •.•.• SH,114 10. COUNTY INCOME 11, l41111t11110t; A\4 Oftl,fl 1•• ....... . )l. .. M!1,1111-... ll'llt'illlt'" • , ...... . n. °"'•' .... .. .. .. .. ... . TOTAL COUNTY INCOMI ••.• ; •••• 1,717 to. LOCAL INCOME 11. Ollfrkl '••It 11.1 ll<vr-4 Jt1ll, rK11¥M It llMll<llM . . .. . .. ........ 6.J7.a ti.I IK.,,.. !loll. ,._.,..,.," .. lift(. tWOl'I ................. x •• 11.t ~ Jltffl .................. ..,., ti-I PTW Yflll'01 T••• . ••. •.. •• . . •• ",Iii u. At'tlwhlt .,. •• ._ IP. I kVrfll •Oii . , .. , .... , . ., , . . . 13.2 lmM(1,11'W11 llltll • ' ........ .. 12-1 ,,..,. y .. , .. ''"'" . . • ....• 14 S•'-..., SI .. ti E1111...-1 11111 ~1" •• ti, llftt1i, 11111 l.M-, 111<.ft)I l#.fS1 '"" . .... • "'Mlt(efltinevt fllllft" . . • •.. ,. .. 4.d ..... '"'"""' ........ .• •.• •• ., 11,211 IL "Mllcllttn«lolt Fundi" . , ...... .. IOI "· °"*' . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . 'n,JT1 TD'JA&. l.OCAl. llfCCIMt .......... ff!AIO TOTAL IMCOM• ..•...••••. • ........... l..al.»t C. 701',U, MIT SfflMMnttl ML.Mttli a.o llfCOMI -•••. ,.... ··-······••· 1..oJ,111' 0. 0"IUlotTUah AllD 01'M•• OVTeo cu••l NT •• ,..HSI lCL ADMINISTltATtOM ,, .. ~ ........... ~ .. ,. ······-··········· ..... no. °"'""' ...... . ~'"""" ......... •········ ""Ollm' ........ .,. ............. . TOTAL AOMtNllT'U'NOlf •••• -. tNSTIUCTM>N ,,._ ~led ........ " INl1wtltll ..... ... .... 211. l"rlllc~· E .. .. P.crt !ll T..o'ltn' .......... lst.M 11._ O!ttef c.flf ... llltf ... .,, lftirrlM NOll •• •••• •• .... ,..,. 1». Clttllflt:d .. ..,._ Ill lntlrwllon 221-1._!l'lt~I Aid• •• ....... )1,1 .. 2:11. cm1tW C1111!fttl 11 .. ,r. " ... tl'Vdlll! ... ···········•··• :DI. T.,..,., •···· ··•······ ....... . ,... OfliloW' ttoltt • • • • . .. • . . . . • . ....... - m. OIMr' I.~"'~ ·····• ...... .... '"" ..... ""::: .... ..... ... ..,. """ ...... ...l.UI ..... "'"" . .. .... ...... -...... .... . ... . .... '"'" "' ...... . .. •.n• ..,., ,, .. .,, •••• ...... ..... .. 11.ttt "' , ..... ""'" 1,mn• 1.Ml.M -..... .... -.r.::i ...... ... ... ..... .... ,,.,. '""' 2.»31 Tn• a"' • .,_ TOTAi.. INCOME •..••• , •.••••...•••.... 1.167,13' 1.!M,122 S.tH.Jl4 .. •NO .... ULMte&.JIHI•• f'U•POS• • ..,.,.. Llflllt (....,.,.. C. TOTAL, M•T Sl•tNlONe IALANC9 C..111 W. CWitY' Tt•MllY ............................ 12,UI c...... a OENEllAL FUNO. TOTAL ll EQOlltlMENTI •• f,t»AJ; .f141 A,,.."o ...'!4,',°",,', OUT .• _. .. , ••.•••..••....•••..•••• l .US.174 1-I0'"'7 '-'1'.vt ,R...,.._..,. "''"' ,...,. .............................. J.000 1f7J.74 GENElllAL FUND-AV1HOltlllEO lrrUJUMVM . ..,... U lllllUI. lllllRYI, .. Uflll a.,. lfH ••. , •• , ...•••• a lil 1 x ...... :OENEJIAL ,.UltPOSES 1110. Itta • . .. .• , .... , ••. •.••. ... . .•• ,,,. TOTAi. Cll':•INT AISliTI ••••.••••••....••.••.• , . •• IU» 1 An ,\lfllllllll, Enlwlv• 11 9olld 111t .. •t 11.io. 1111 tlnP!"evement • . . . . .. ••••• .• 2'tj,,j0! tOJlt '"1" Uw Cwrwit u.llilllli. · · ·• · ·••· ·· ·· ...... · ·····..... 105,N 179.IJrl -s .ltlld"""'*' ................ , ... J,lt1.ocD .SM .SlllO IHO. IU11dl1tg1 .......................... Jl1'17 a .Mt .t.70Mn lflT INot ... •ALAtKI ............................ ltl.»t) SD0 GEHE•AL FUMO • AUTltOA lllO Ml.XIMUMI . l'Mt. Oll\tr EQlflllmtnl .......... , .... t«IAl12 W.SO 1.at.IM I'. TOTAL •JtPINOltulllU, OTMla OU1'M n.sJI l'ICIAL ,.UllPOSIES 1oltl C1plt11 OoJllly ................ l.SS1.o11 1.1~ ,,fl1.7lt AWD UNOlfTilllU'ftD ••SlltYL ll'LUI 2,,. (.or1'1etlv1Mte•-IE•rtl>Olll•t 161 ... y ..•.••.•.. 1,211.111 SO.it .1000 TOTAL EXPEHOITUll:ES ANO MIT IMOIMt IALAHC:• ···•·• ·••· •····•·•·•·· 1.161 u•.Jtt 0trrrrr·n1,1111![ l«Vlclt ............................. 60t.$41 $0.0S .osoo OTHEfl OUTC>O ...................... 1'"1A21 l,1'2,.C2 ,,,11,m IOlfD ·i=·~Dktt,!.."""=:' '""D SUITOTA ................................... 1.121,115 .UOO I , •MOIHO IAUMCI. IUNI • IO. LOCAL IN(:OME "·"' c1111-lty CClll!tl CaiutnKllOfl AU .•• ''''..... tuMI .01'1 C••"' In County r , .. ,.,,.., •.••.•... '.. •• . . •• . • l)Aff J4',W 11. Oltfrlci TIX• SUI TOT AL ...................... " .... "".... •.. '134,641 .D1•1 Accounl1 ltKt'IYatrrl• .•••.....•. " ....... ". 6G.1ts ICM.O<M II.I Ollrrtrlci TlkM. s.:.r-111 ltoU, 1 I I • TDTAL ..... .. ,... .• •• ....... . .... 2..t•1..m .nt1 Tofil Curr.nt Atte-ts ........................ .u3.lt• M .f'Jti IQlllrW 11111 ••• I( .t.fll'Al.'1'111 0, OINl•AL. ,UNO TAX •••utalMlllllTt Liit Cur""ll L.llblHlles ..................... US.1•1 t»."4 , .. nee hclttl ••............ I. a x lf'l.KIO C.,,ICff\lf Net Ending lslMICe .. ....... .......... ...l.!13 SU,9'$ t6. l11!tt•I ·••••• .................... .' •.••..•.•• M•-II'. TOTAL lllC ... NDITU•IS ANO NllT lo!1I L.CICll ll\Ctll'MI ......................... . 11r111.,n1 CAM111"'1rr INDINO IAUHCli ••.. .. 1"55.17, 1.:w.-1 •.n1m c. TOTAL. NIT ...... ,,, ... SAU.NC• S11of1 Sff'vlcft CAl'ITl•IA ACCOUNT ANO IJtCOM• • .................... , ••••••••..• , .• 21).115 A. SIOlNNINO SALAMCI, 'UlY 1 •• •lllDINO IAUNCI, 'UNI. l,ODI 11111\Ce, ...,1rtctM •• .• ••. .. .•.•• .•. . • . •. . • . •• 1"·" JttellllQ from T•~• ....................... lfl).73 Tthot 1V•ll1bl1 •.•••••••••.••••••••••....••..•• tm.la ,..,.._.., ""°'' .............. ,,, ... , .......... ltn-n IM 8119"'1, rftfrlcllll .......•..•.•..••.•••••••• ....n l t!ltl'llled UMK!lftd 1•1 rK.ipls •• , • , .. , .... 1'7J.7• lelltn1ifll tolll 1v1ll1tll• ...................... ltl>-14 tllCIO.led .,.1111111111r"flr•ntltrt ••••.•..••.•.. lf1).74 Ol1lrkt 1-KUl'ld llX rtci~lrft'lltllll , ............... , l.lfl • ., 1.1n.m 11$.1115 1.011.411 114,tl4 l.1JO.l12 2,>51,141 1.JU.21S ,.,,,,. c.,,,, 111 un11m s1•tes N•t1111111 em. ~. ;:n,L "'a~'::,rlU:':Lrroiifi:iri ·0• UT'oo" ",' •• · · .. • •••• nf,111 Colho M .. 1 t:M..il1 "Oper1lln9"' u1fl ............... ............ 6e 70,l.C.1 AftO NIT IMDINO •ALANCI: ................ . 12411' AcCOUOITI •tc.iw1t111 . ....................... J;,Jt( J,IX\: H ' IUIL.O" .. 'Ufll'O w.a ii.,,... .... ... .................... ....... ,... 3.122 •• I COM• u 2,1n 1ol•I c.,,,..,.,, Altlh ........................ sm 25,lfr IQ. L.OCAL IN(:OME IOl,131 Les• Curr111I LlaDl\lllft • . • . , , .• , , .. • .... , 2.114 l•.J!t "'-:•11"11 IOt,UI HE"T 1 11!'.GINNING llAL.AHCE ......... ,., l .nt 2,t411 t.lSI 4. I• Of llllldl ........................... . c-Alllu1lm..-rrt1 to C11fflfll Ll1bllll1" ••... , , • -I 1; x x x 14.J S.N ol Lu'ld Ind •lllldl'10i •.••. , , , ••.•• , ..... .... , ....... tfflttf ADJUSTEO NET llEGINNtNG llAUNCll! .• !,xii 2.t• t ,m U. 1111-1 ..................................... . C•i""t~ 10. LOCAL INCOME Tot1I LOC'.lt lllCOl'l'll " .•.•.•.•. , ••••. , ....... . Ac! 14. s.,i. TOTAL tlfCOM• ............................. . ·-,,ooo l•t1ncc, r•lrl<IN •••••.• ,.,, ....... , ••.•. 1·1·'2 •1ee11141 ,,..,, T111et , ....................... , 1f77.n T11.i 1velL1t111 •...•.••.••..•.•..••..•...•.•... lfJJ.11 1HA2S l•..,..., K t\191 .....••. , .. , •..• , . , ....... , ..... 1'7:J.JJ "'°°' •et.lie•. '"lrtcflrrlll ........................... ~72 MOO Eetlmli. __..., ta11 rtcl'lpts •.••• , ...... 1t7J.7• ... ,. .... ldlt'lllhrrll tolsl 1v1lllbltrr . . . .. • ....... ltl>-74 .,,,....,... ~pelldlf\lrll/f'rlnlfwt .............. lt1).14 Dh lrltt ltcflfM It• f"ICl\ll~I ......... lt7J.14 ebllltAI. p.ufll'D ,_, 1m.n ·-If • .1 • A, IHl#lttN• ULAlfCe, JUt.Y I •I I• ~!ft CoYllty 1 ... l lUfJ . ·····•·•••···••• ISll 11.IYOl'v""O C•tfl il'lllld ....................... . "'·"' ... . .. .... I .I I • -... ~ .... . ... 1a:ooit .. ""'' ....... l,»0.511 1.514.0lt ...... .... ...... .... m ... 11 ... ""' .... .... ..... At~b ·-"~'bl• •.. -·· ............... . "•lf'lltl I XPflll l .......................... . °"""' evrr ... 1 1.1111s .... ., .......... .. TOTAL (UllJIENT ASSETS ....... , , •• l-: Cur,..,.,l l.Llbll11111 f, Qilttrr-' I~ . Hl 1' ll lEG INN~~ I AV.MCI! ............. 4,24 Alll ••1uttrn.nb lo ACClllll'ltl RKlivet111 . . . . . +l'O.~ Ad Ul"""'lt le Curr .. I Lllbllllf~ •• .. +1,Jll AOJUSTED Nl 1 •I EGIHHIN G tAl.ANCE •• 4171.tM I , IMCOMI 10. l'EDlltAL INCOMl "lllDM l"EO&ltAL SOUllCES 11. Y""'9n1• 10\:cltlt;t •••••••.•••.•.•• u. '"""°'"" ~11y """' •.••.•.•.. It. ., . . • •. , •••••••••••••• T Al. l'l!Ol!llAL tNCOMI 1 • 1111 ~ ~1. ~==:L.,.~11cr• •••••••• ST An lllCf.$ Zl. H1 qitltntt I d. AC'! •• • ••••••• tt. M O.wlfOp. .. 'frfl. AO • , • , .• 14. Yott'1o1141 Ed. Ac! ... ., ....... . "· 011\tf' .. . . . . .• • •. . • ••• .. TOTAL ll'EOEllAl. INCOMl lll!Cl!IYIED l'llOM STATE $0UJIClS .. , .• . ... 3l. ll'l!Df.llAL IMCOot.lt FltOM COUNTY toUltCIS '1. I~ EONIW;l'Ml'll Ad , •• •• ,,, Otlltf • . . . .. .... •••·•···••• 111,l't• "'"" , ..... '"" """ TOTAL l'l!ot:llAL !MCOMl lllCllVI O J'JIOM COUHT'f' IOU•CIS .••.. , . • ,. • ,., • " ... "' .. ,IMlllAI.. IMC'OMl ,.OM LOCAL. aoua(l"I . .,,, -~~Ac! •·······•·• .. ... ow.-. . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .. . . .• """'' =~i~~-~-~···· •· ... n4'(1 ... tlATI tltCOMI "· ""1Mlfl' A,., .............. "' 61.1 IHk. t .-1111"'°" Aid 11111 ,.,,,._Ill ~ " 61.1 Pfly.ktll\' H11!dktllflllllf • &l. Sp«lel Al:lewtll<a IJ.I AlllM n<t t.r l11ttrrr.rr<l1~I ......... ,..,.. TV ••• , • .•..•. •.IS. ..... ... •• .,. ec.. ... ,.,.. & svu ....... . &1. 'f11 ...... ~r.i. "" ..._ -.... .. ........ '""' ,,, '"""""' , •• lllellll ••. •••••••• 141.m ···-- .. .. S,llS S.215 ••• S,JIJ ,_, ''"'" ...... UA1• ....... ... ... ...... '""" """' ""' '""' "'' n.- ..... , ..... ...... ......... lllMJ f,IQ '""' '""' ..... '"··· IM.(,... S.rvk• Sl\ft •.••... .•.•• t:I0,1U ltt.$6,3 l)S,,ll(tCI c. TOTAi., MIT •••tNMfN• aAl..AlfCI' 41i.1n "· 0 """ ·•·••·····• ··•····•··• 93 ., lJS.OOG ~:.!>,J:::::=~1 AMfioTit1a·ouiGo·· .. •·•••• .. •••·• ' 'r.:l~: tO. INC~llN~~~l:m'E'1tS····•··· .....•..• llll.1)1 l:t!,!ltl 11011, CAl"ITAL OUTLAY j!J,5tl TOTAL INCOME .. .. .. •..•... ........ llll.D I.., 113D. $Ifft ................................... . Jf.ltO C. TOTAL HeT 81•tNNINO IALAlfC• 12e. l1t11M0••111111I If I lla ..................... . tfJ,27) .I.MD INCOM• ............... , ........ 1D.IH IMMI )U,)3' ltJG,. e.ilrrdlnlt •· .............................. , t.W.ttl D. •X,•lllDIT\lllllS Totsl Clpll .. <>un11 .......................... . m4'I JOl. MAIHTEHAl<IC£ Oil' pt.ANT TOTAi. IXHNDITU•CI UO nu. ·~ l1f Equlllf'*lf ... "... 1,2171 ru l.000 OTMI• OUTeo • . .. .......................... . fOO, FOOO Sf.•YICES I. •lfOIMO tALAMCl, 'UNI • t tO. C:'"4fk:•Mlf ""''" of F'°" ""°· . _ _ c1111 If; County TrQsu,., • . .. ..................... . '20. Cl111lflfll S.l1tl9 • '·TOTAL IJtP9•DfTUltl!S, OTNI• OUTGO FG011 51rvkq ................. .•••• ",111 5'..a1 n.oot AND MIT llfDINe Ul.Att<• ., ................. . .. 111.ISt no, Feed .. •. .. .................. ... '2.S. Qat U.000 tTA1'• SCMOOf. IUll.Dlfll't f'UllO S.OCIO .,..0111t1E•oeni.1t ••....••...••....•.• 10,159 f,ltl tlOIA.•letNMttte&AL-UICl,IUlY1 MtlAll Tottl il'oolf krvk" ................. lK.$11 111,411 111'.Joo C•11! In CO!Jnry Tf'fflllf'f ......................... .. 110 464 TO.,AL IX,INOl1'Ullll!I ANO I •• ~~81!GINNING IAL.ANC& ........... , ........... . • OTMlll OUTGO ............... , •····· • l~,nt U6.2DI IM,SQO ~ STAT!! INC-E ' • .. 1 220 I . •NDIHO SALAHCI, 'UNI )II -. ......, 1 ·,~·145 C.11'1 I" tJ~lttd Stttts NelioMI 1111!11:, IM. AllP(llrllomMllt foo' SCl'lfoli '•dlltl• ., ....... . , • C.lf Mftl ~ to. INCOMING TlllANSl'(lllS • x ~ • .,, •• x 5,212,t71 09ff1llllO Cll~ , • . • • •• , •• . 1 • ., , 6'° '°,f4 U :1J1 "· ft1l1nc• !rotn Ol1trkt 0y Account• RKalv•bl• ........ ......•.• . 2.Jf4 1,ltt ' '"'°" ol rtors•nl111!1111 .••..• , ••...••••..•• ~:J: C~~~int ·;.,;~,. ·: .. :: .. :····:::;:::·:::· :::;: J;;.'r 1i·f: c. ;~:.c ~=~\1HNiMO'•Ai.AlfcS ............... . Lft1 Cur""'! t-Nblllfl91 •. ...... ........ W4 UJ Jt ' ANO INCOMI • ., ................................ . -·-P. TOT·~ •• , ........ ·.·.-,,V'•ll--AN .. D••·.... ........ l,t4 t.IJI IS.Pt UDO. CA,ITAL OUTLAY ,,_..p IJ(I fnlt, '""' • • , ,. . , ,. , •• •••, • "'"" ,,., • ••• ••• IM.JllO lflT INOIW• •ALAMC'l .............. 1""1' tlU4'1 lu,.1)1 124 :;r.:...--.i ef S"-' .................... . >0>-1 Jli'vb41t!ttd 0r""19 CCNtl 0.11}' ''lot Jlll't" ft. tt12 ltl .. 7) lUO. 1111"ps • .. • .... • •· ...................... . ,.,.. TOTAL lllC,.lllOtTV•ll AND 1.0'5.no PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE •. :ro~:. ~~•: '"•· ..... · ··· ··· · · · ··· ········· II'. ~tL"'1=:7DJ,,r.:f.""...tD 'Ntf .................. . ,:: 1------,c.c,cvc•c<-•o•c•c•cNC=,.c,-.. ,-,,0-1-ucoo~o"•-1c1c,..=-,------1 IENOIN• ULANC• • , ·u,..-TiiiA ··;,c(Gf;;n.····· #f.000 tnlfle UftlfttMI ~ Otllrkt 0...... """1• CllfftN'lll1 s , IMCOMI il.OOl I. WOT/Cm 01' .t.OOfli'TIOfll' A#O TJIA#SMITTAL JO. FE0£1Ut.. INCOMll! lll ECEIVlO FllOM An •ctlofl tllell bf llklft on !till rlPO'f dllflnt l'fV\J(Jf W IVfllor'lllllll ljllC.111 STATll!'. SOUllGES .,., .. T• ~=..;i ,~..,,:: :-~1 •· foc'j.'~·N=r M•• .. •r11k1t11 "'°"r•m.i •• •• TENTATIVE ANN UAL Fl!'fAHCIAL "-HO auOGn ••PO•T. TJ1o!1 ffCIOrl ..... .., ..... , ..... - It ""'*' f!Md bf 1111 ~lllO bDlrl If the M;Nd dlstn&.--'4.1 Fled 1-.. -... ,. -Orrlllt " """""" ,,_ " ,,,, $lfMrrf .... ,.. Clny/Setn .. • . ' ..................... . b. •uetlCATtOH ANNUAi. ;,KAHCIAL ANO I UOGlT •l =T. TM ~~~:::~ ~~O:.\ ......... tALiNC'i:''''''"'''• ······· ... ~!_..;_~:;;:,:.~.;;,..:'.!'.it::=-::.,::::-,,::.:;-,:: o. :::_~:f!u'r.1 ·MD0111ii'OlnM················· • ..-T ,.,. ..... ....., l"flll(ll'T, ,_ MAINTINAHCW OI' P\.ANt ~n ~ -...... ,"'._f!'11 .. ~-""' M ..... It ~~1c:Nlt, no, ~II fff ,.,..,.,._. ............... . -,..."'Pll' • ,......., ,..... M ...,..,.,.. 4 1~1! •.M. 9(11), •000 ll•Y)CI$ 107.161 I. ....... fP.ul Of' oinatCT PNM.,...·"=*' A.. :fltcnlll"J' m, OMIMclll S.W... cl,.....,._ ......... . &. A¥11111Aff tMl\.Y ATT'INOAl'KI ..... t1. tJS. ...... ·•.·• ......... ,, ........................ , ttn-n ""' 0..... ~ .. . ...................... , """' ltr>l4 11111 l"ood """'-....... •••••••·•••••••••••••• ~="::" · ·:::::.:::::·:·'.::::::: MMt ~ 7 L m:.~::;-; ....................... . ... .... • ,,m,,.. ~=::: :::.::::::··: ... :::·:·:.-.... ~:: ::'1"4('t!C:.. .. .. . ...................... . 01"" •·n .•..•....••• .......... 1'.tM sior. • •. . ••••• " • •••• :· ' ::···::······::::·., su•rr.ll':., 0111 C:U'i:iti "T DitT111C:T'T.u 11ovr1t•Mllf"tl '" =" ~A~=~'~J1111~~TI •. ::··.:::··•·· •• .•• ::::·· i " h lflrlVM '71wy Ill""' ....... _ .... ) MIT I HDllfO IALAHCI ...... ,.., .......... . Tu Tl:rrt I'. TOTAL IX .. INDITUllllS A.MD JllT ll IC l • l'UlfD A•O -·1roSI • ,.._ .... 111'"' ••OI•• IAl.AlllC:• • ••• • ··• • • ....... ,. • ..... ........ UWt c....,., fluelllilleC or.no. C..1.1 O.rtr l"flof, JVlp fl, lt71 ..... ...... Otntr•I 111111'111 ........... , ••• ••••••· .......... ..,,..,,,, 1.'40t I ,...., -.... 1'01, ... ''''"'' .... ... .. ... ...... ..... -...... . ... ..... -..... ""' I • XX ,,t)4.'15 '''"" .... '""' 7,!0J.41 110,0CO 410,000 """' ,......,, io.ssi.n• ,,..,. UQ,lU .. .. ~ 2'5.121 . .... ~ \HMS 4222.0lt OM,m lM,320 .JOl.&U "·"' ..... •1.1" ......... l<l.IJll ...., . .... '""' .....,. ....,,, 1lS.o27 """' .... OM..,. ...... 211.t7• •••• """ ..... 1«1,llCIO ,, .... m ""' 4 f74 "'"" ,,125,on e.1.JT.ut .. ... m.,.. ,,., .. ..... , ... .... 10$,tll ....... 2)1,lol.S .. ... y .... 1.CU.1'5 f,e.11,MO 1JJ,JJ7 ...... """' . ...... t.NIJ'?1 S5S.n1 10.517,111 ..... """' ....., ...... '"·"' ....... 1..021,411 1.m..os 1.0Jl..US l,o,21"'7S ,._ -'""" 11.0U"411 11..CSl.lfO J,l'°,716 , ...... ,_ .. 1 .. ,,. &.1"'"1'l'6 ........ 11 • ..,.,,.. 121.114 IJ'l.014 2,.0,,0f,I ........ ..,,...., .... ,,. ·--...... . ..... ·- ... ... """' """' . ... ,, ... ·-.:!: """" :::: .... 12,JOI . .. . ... m ... """ • ; • I • ' ' • • DAILY PIL01 1 l 1QU!ENIE 1977 Deadline OVER THE _ . • TOM GUT'S TV ffiGffiJGHTS KIU D 7:30 -"The wt Time I Saw Archie." Robert Mltcllum pla)>s the UUe role and Jack Webb ls h1s buddy In tllls 1961 comedy about the biggest goof oU ln the Air Force. ' NBC G 8:00 -"Tbe Alamo.'' Tbe first of two parta of Ibis historical epic culmlnating in the fa- mous Texas hxllle. John WayJMl, Richard Widmark, Laurence Harvey, Richard Boon~-. ABC 0 11:30 -Comedy Concert. Various styles of comedy are displayed by Pat Paulsen, Hen- ny Youngman, Jackie Vernon1 Stanley Myron Ha.a· delman and Carl Ballantine, among others. TV DAILY LOG "In terms o[ Olgbt, distance. it stinks! .. it's a great sboL In terms of Tuesday Evening JULY 31 '12 -JQ,nrui Pettet. Vic Monow, ~--------------------~ ftt:W. NOTICE AU nGCltAMMINI 1& lllbfttt " "-•r• '"' J., ,,.. ,.,.._ hr COWflll tf tM Wl\lfptt - 1:30 (I) H'lln'• Htron 1 D Merit: (C) (90) "'Mtw Awfiir Abeut All111" (SUSP) '7o-Antllonr PeBins, Jullt Hufls, Join Htckttl. ([l CIS Jim Willer Cton•itt. 0ffm111111 WlH Tmel (l§l lll1rw Griffin Show tD Wy lilrlffllh GD at Y~r Yin1 '" !l!lM'l"'1 CiJ"""' m Dutrt Tlltttr1 mum.11:uu1. 7"°1J CD Dm-1111w11111 ,., Doll111 @ Mlllt: (C) (ZM) "••t1r1 tf the S11111" (adv) '66 -Yul Bl)'ll11tr, Robert Fuller. (I) Wlfi W l.IMtm CJ WW'1 "1 U111? 181 ""'"' Ii) I Dru• 11 Jt11111t1 fl) SllllPltfHtlll Mu~ m.n.. ftllldl Clltf B)MlllllCI Gl!)Y1 Drtt11 Ylwlr ' EE Spetd lacer Ann Solhtm, Jama GrtlOl'J, llm· ly G1rl1nd, A dr1m1 bUld GI'! 1 tru1 stQlJ 1boul • JOURI nun who 1, torn ~twHl'I tbt dUptr11t r111i· ty of Mr secul•r job 11 1 Juvenllt prob1tlon officer ind tht aplrltu1I vows Shi hid dedlcltid lttr Hit to. JI Mel'I Crilf111 a- G Dn1111 9:00 @ RU11 lor Ytur Uft m Dr•ptt fl)_ ... __ mr 1n1111t1tN1 ,.,,__ III ..... !.,.... •'3CllJ (l)CIS T--(<) (90) "Tiii w ..... Hutu" (II') (d11) '72 -Barb1ra Eden, Stuart Wllit· min, Robert V1111hn. A WNttllJ woman b driven to tht bf\nt of 1 brutdown by tht. fear lhlt tn In· te1n1tion1 r jewel tflilf •nd mu/\1trtr it on lier trail. QNns Q)Ctt Sm•rt @D Mucbch1 ltllilnt m FQtln1 Mu1ct11t l .. OOD ®lalKIC -"But k This Progreur· A look •t tile lldt· nologic.al revolu!iln of this ctntury -from the stindpoinl of how it ht• tffected the wa1 "' liw, WOr\ think, xt ind feel. omm•-oo Twillpt l.ont 0 (]) !!) Mam11 WtlbJ M.D. "I'm R11lty Tryini' (R) The l•llltr ol 1 13-year-old bar lfith mini1111t bftin dySfu11tUon 1urmtu Ills son's pioblem whtn he refuses to belim tti• boy his 1ny kind ol b11i1 cl•m•1e. G1ry CoUins, Eltlnt Dmy, Sttn Ktlly and Scott G1rrrtt guat. 0 .... , ('°) "llft ,,... -· (clra)~1rtes Dinner. 0:30 0 T11k lack (i}OMM1p~ ID Trut .Mwtlturt f.lJ YMI• en Ceafllcte 7:30 IJ lobbr loldabtro ._ Vicki ED Ennln1 It Popt ltwr1nct tnd Bobby Rusnll 1uut. @El Los Dils ftlka (I) Ht11n'1 HtlMI m Ken/Spoib CJ Pollet S..r1Hn (R) Gtorrt Ct11- klris llltSIS II •n ax-con on parole 11:00 II 0 0 €t1 m m"rn wtlo is 1ssl1ned by Dr. LoW to II Ont Sttp leJ'OM dr1¥1 tht llltdittl van tlltt btcomes tJJ f1J ~ UJ""' tht 1et-tway vthlcle tor 1 robbtl)'. @ PtrfJ M11ot1 0 Help Tiry N•lcllbor m Tnrill II' CotlS111ut11ctS Cl) Thb 11 Yfft Uft Gl Movie: (t) "Tlle LIM HIM'" CJ Mlllltll $ Mrtlt: (21ir) 4'h I.alt (wes) '54-klel McCrtt. TI .. I Sn Artllll" (com) '61 -tl:lO 1J (JJ CIS Lat. Mrtlt: (C) "1111 lobtrt Mltcbllflt,.JIC.k_Wt". F'Kt-or ftar'"-(drt) '7l=Riclrdo ID GI = Sq!,ltm Mont11t11n, Elinbeth Asllley, Jtdi: Warden. ID °!'"'"1 0 ®I m Johnny Caf'Ml'I fll Cfftwildltn; 0 Morie: "'11le CMoJ" (WIS) '54 m StllM1 Up I Rd 0.r -William Conrtd, John Dehner. fB ClllMdy . 0 (]) Wldt Wend If EntlrtHl- '1) Thi Ad411111 f11111ly 111111 "Comedy Concert" Ptt· Ptul- l:OO D (I) Mtllllt (R) M111d1 tnd Wtl· sen, Htnny Youn1man, Jae kit Vtr· ter rtmemkr their ltDmtJ courtshlp non, Slappy Whitt, Pal Henry, Stlrt- lo11r y11rs 1ariler. .on, Slappy White, Pat Henry, 0 ®) m NIC Tuts41J MtYle: (C) Sttnle~ Myron Handel"!'"· Ctrl (211r) "'0$ltrrUon lid lrtllltf" (dra) B1U1ntine and Corbett Mo~lca 1r1 67--Htll Connery D1nld1 Blancl'li 1monr tllost who, tach tn Nm, ~dolfa Celi. ' ' makt t solo 1pp11rtnct dlaplayln1 IJ Movie: khl) .. forty.Ninth p1q\. tit• m1ny different ityles of ct1medy. M" (clrt) ·.fl-Eric Portman. m Tt Ttll Utt Td 0 (I) aJ Tt11ptr1Nre1 ltlain1 (R) U:OO (II Mtrshtt DillM Noltnd llts lo boos! the confidence &:J MDVII: "Lndl Hour" (com) '62 of 1n Insecure l11te1n whllt dl1po-_ Sltlrley ~nne f ield, Robert 1ln1 thllr mutu11 p1Utnt, 1 !1k1. Steplleni. CD AltM HltthOKt Prtltnb m Allred: Hltdtcoct htstllb Ill Thi Urrto11tlltblts fB Lt Se11011 Jovtn U:JO m MO'l'lt: (C) "M·M·M 13" (dr1) &l) Flri111 UIM '65-Pitr Antt!I. Gerard Bltin. 111 'I E.dllicit dt Enh.tnta GI:) V1ritty I l11tnim 1'10 (])00CIJ •m 0 Hl,,...11 P1ttef L. M. Qoyd Russia Divorce Rate Highest· The famous Calamity Jane of the Old West dressed like a man .. Client asks if she was romantically inclined toward women. Hardly. Her first 11 husbands were shot to death . But nof her twellth. He just lit out one night, didn't come back. Incidentally, Calamity Jane was a brunette. Why Doris Day was picked to star in that movie ii.bout her remains a mystery. Notions during the commercials •.. Suppose John Erhlichman would accept a guest shot on "Mission im- possible"? ... Still think Cleb Laine Is the best blues singer ever .•. Who was it described Disneyland as the greatest people trap ever built by a mouse? .•. Looks as though Peter Falk is just fiat out incapable or play- il)g an unsympathetic character . . • \Vhat will restore faith in the execu- tive branch? A good woman in the presidency, I think. ELEVATOR -Young lady, never get on an elevator alone with a man you don't knO\\'. No, doesn't matter what he looks like. Just don't do it. Say you push the button, the doors slide open, and some fellow springs up to hold the door !or you. One Milton Lederman of the President's Council on Physical Fitness is the author of the foregoing advice. What do you thing of it'! JoJUng, no'! Q. "What country has the highest divorce rate?" A. That was the Soviet Union at· last report. With 273 per 1,000. It's 216 per 1,000 in the U.S. Q. "How ~any acres before it can be called a farm?" A. At least three. Or so the federales decreed for many years. However, smaller tracts that have produced a large dollar volume also have been considered farms . Q. "When walking to the table in a snazzy restaurant, who goes first, the man or the girl'!" A. Depends. I! led by a hostess or waiter, the girl goes firsl If not, the man. So say the social sages. Q. "\vlbt proportion of the typical lady doctor 's pa· tients are men?" A. Maybe three out of 10. ' THE HARD FACTS -Pollsters say the average teen· age girl during summer vacation eats nine times a day . . . Ou rLanguage man says "shampoo" comes from the Hindu word "capo" meaning "massage.".; .. A sufficient number of babies are born worldwide in any 36 houn to equal the population of Alaska. When caught in a trap, it's said a lynx will jumQ once to get loose , but only once. Not tha t it gives up. exactly. At lea st the animal experts don't th ink so. Just too proud to struggle. Earliest of the beauty contests were in old Rome. Love-- liest of. the ladies competed. First prize was the honor of posing for the goddess depicted on the current coin. In every 100 treated oysters, there. will be about three cultured peals, the Japanese expert! report. Some business experts insist their studies prove that less than five percent of all lhe papers filed by most com· panies aren't worth keeping. Address mail to L. /.I. Boyd, P.O. Bo:t 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. B. 3 G. N COUNTER 1g 1ve11 ew NASO Ll1tl091 for Mo.ldoy, Jul~, 30, 1973 Polli1tion Delay WASIUNG'T'ON !UPI\ The Environmental Protection Agency has ~iven the Ri R Threj!: auto makers untll 1977 I(>. tum out caNi that \VIII 1net't the full federa l pollution stand· ards -the Sf'cond such dcl:1v granted this year. ROBERT W. f"ftl , ac11ng F:PA 1:1dmin1strator. said ~1on­ day the exten:i;i<>n f o r 'missions of nitrogl'n oxldes - \lt'h.ich ~ said 'o•:ould not J>O!\e ''a significant problem" "'ith respect to air quality \1·a:i granted be t'au se t he techno logy would not h e available for the companies to produei! 1976 model t·ars that 1rould meet the fede ral !)Land· ards for nilrogrn o':ides. In April, the EPA granled a sin1ila r one year delay -also to 1976 -on carbon monoxici(.' and hvdrocarbon standards for 1975 tl\Qdel cars. TllE 19'i0 Clean Air Act originnlly requi red that 1976 cars give orf 90 percent less nitrogen oxides and other pollutants. ' Congress also al\ov.'ed the EPA to suspend that deadline for one vear if it determined , among Other things, that the automobile companies did not have the technology to meet the deadline. As a result, Fri approved the request of General ~1oton:, Ford and Qu-ysler to put off the nitrogen oxide standard for or.e year, to 19TT. AT THE SA.i,fE time, Fri did say 1976 model cars would have to meet an interim stand· ard for nitrogen oxide pollu· lion of 2.0 grams per mile. Had Fri not granted the el:· tension, the engines would have been forced to em.it 0.4 grams per mile. The current federal standard is 3.1 grams per JmiJe. Fri told a nev.•s conference: "No one -manufacturer or supplier or anyone else - presented evidence at our bearing that the standard oould be met in 1976 ..• My technical staff independently confirms this conclusion. "SrNfE I DO not lhink technology is available. l believe substantial disruption "'ould occur if l denied the ex- tension . . . The impact or a Hotel Sale By Denny's Has Okay Special to the Dally Pilot L.A 1-IJRADA-Denny·s Inc. has agreed to sell the Grand Hotel, Anaheim, t o a subsidiary of Holders Capital Corp. based in Santa ~lonica. ~folders Capital is engaged in management and marketing for hotel and recreational facilities. It owns a majority interest in and operates the DuPoot Plaza Hotel i n Washington and O\vns a hotel marketing and reservations company. DENNY'S WILL receive cash and Mies for the book value of the hotel, which is a~ proximately $il .37 m i 11 ion . Consummation of the agree- ment is scheduled for Sep- tember. The hotel has 240 rooms. ll v.·as acquired by IJ,!nny's in Dccen1ber 1969. FINANCE .,, .... _ .. _ SUPERVISOR JAMES A. MUTUAL FUNDS Hayes of Los Angeles County 1·8.l~l"'"UUO...,'S;>m .. ••----- noted the new \Ian Camp can· "'-York -Fol E•iil1 G• J.M 1.0. Jeflva FCI i1.1411.,, lllnfrl 11.i,s ... nery is plaMed in a coastal 11>w1ng 1. • 1111 o1 EATON & JH1n !"' • 10 1111 li'K EQ a.• t~ bid lo'ld IWltCI 11d· HOll'AID· JH111 19 I SI f,7J ~lrt1r U1 I:' zone. ~'' Ot1 ..,.u1111t e6ln "" • , 65 10 16 JO'lf\Stn '' 11 i..•1 <~• Fd • ,, .s f vndl ·~ CIUDIW Ov (;"""" F u 6J J," l(IYITOfll•· ""'' Jp t.u '·" "Any new construction or '"-NAS '"'· t~ l" '·!' c 1111 s,•, 111s 1t . .i 1cuoo11 •011 h • OO · MOOMI ~CM(l1 F ,4 I. 1 (111! 1'.t021.M lnlr Inv 11.07,,.oJ t at magrut e 1n a coastal Julv 30 'T,n S•<K Fe1 13.1)t ,,_,1 cu11 B• 1• n,, ,'.!! ,e!!!nc. •,•,·.•,, '•'"". ·u nd ''"" At.It EOtrslel ~.42 11 ,1 Cu1! 1(1 ~ _,. O.t> area WI CQml' u er very ADMlltALTZ· Ei;1E ~ .,.. .• n.11 ~Ull 1(2 •.16 4.J! 5-•· l01S l0.~S ti ght scrutiny ." Hayes said in Grwt11 i.11 "'s 'ei1v~l~ 1.'M'~'n c~:: ~· n.lt ~15 frrcu~•v '-'5 i.e I ho • Jncom llO '·Ii Eatv Pr j 'U 3Q (..,.! J 1:11 1::: ,11 ITT [fttr* a le ep ne interview. ,,_n '·?', •·•~ "nd ,.,.. :., 1.:u tu11 S4 ;40 U2 ""~ ..... ~1 Iii 1 Ad~lM• '· '· E11r-1 GI 11 )I ll.19 APOllO* ' .. !.l.i llr• ft. 00;) l THE U"!ON h A.m• Fd I.SI t. g 11un 'frt l•.M P011r1 3'1J 1 01 I LICTID Pot·. I' I OpcS I 0 Af.~.-In 1~ :f ';·fl m•ro 1.09 4,'1 Knltt r • 21 •II Am $P!r 1.)5 i.JJ ad lb o. D · A.w un · · Nf'gY 11.10 11 10 l(n•r GIP! 71! I~ Oco Fd t.h t 1'7 persU e e ~n I e g 0 :i~~I Fd ii~ 1!~ l'elrl'ld 1.70 l.•1 Lndmr~ 1 y 110 Sp/ Snr1 ll.12 ll.11 Regional Coast C.Ommission to A1.:.W '," n .lS ",, ~:d \._. ;::: t .IJ L.,,. l<d 1 '° s . .o ~11 ... 1 t.n 10.11 ltfntlll ft. 1 tt !.U 1 · Lll:lC GIOUP1 ~t•v ft. ll.IJ U DI reject the project sa id Sieve Am D'i" I:.. 10 s. l"l!>l!LITY c11 L~r n" ,,_.., '"All!HLD 01• , • Am Eatv 1) (I) Ol:OUP: Grwtt'! 4.10 1.12 !omu .1.3' l 61 Edney, the union's president. AM e:xP1r1s ~'"' M0 • ,•,-"' t75 ll!•v<" 1Jnn10 """Al' l:n ·~ PUND'S: ti>ll "U.10 LllJ!V I'd !,I! !... It! Fd '5 1,J1 Van C3mp Spokesmen have C•D'ltl 1.11 I." <lfl1s'1-',", 1 L<~ fl'!lv tJI f.!I M•rbr 1.~ I 11 lttellf!'I ~I ll f,JI V '"'-9 -51 LIN: C~D •I U I . ., Lte~I t I.I! 1.n said the San Diego plant n1ay n"'''" 101 111 " 1t~ t inn rn<:1 JJO "•e• Fd '·" ,_,, Sp«I 11 n •• ue• .,.. LOOMll IHl!AJti 1"011 employ as many as l,600 . but sroc-110 1 •1 •a"t 11.111 ' 19 SAYLl!i: ADC1r' 1.10 20.•• ''" Gr!ll S.1'11 6.!S F11nd 16.0lllS(I Ctp o~ 1l .. 1'1ll7 l'lCon. 1.0llll.., that only abolrt 180 would be ,.,..1,,.1n sn s .~ P!11i'un, l"',,1021 Mu•v•t ,,,,,1,.u 1n,..11 t..i 1o·JI ·• [. o. Pedro Am lnv1! •.91 1.92 1em (61 LOID Ala• SP! ONn 11'n ll.71 ITIOV\.-u rom V<Oll • Am Mul •.n t.119 rtnd 2'~121.93 Affll1t 16! 1.11 110. f.d 7"1t i to Bankr11ptcy Petitions Disclosed AmNI Gr 1.13 , ... Jl'OIAM(IAL Arn l!lu• 1't) J,, '°""' l"Uiilos.' AHCMO• "1001tAMI: l!lnd Ott> 9 ~3 10 1• (tD ~.,, 7 .. i 11 010\J'' Fin Ovn • 11 •.11 t uTPllll'n 10:•111'1i11 Inv 10' .. 1(11 Ct1>ltt ''l ''l Fin Ind •.•• •.41 L\/IP!n In tolO lO'n l •ll ,.,., •'n ,,.. Inv 11 ~.s Fin Inc s .•• S.t-1 M.AON.t. ,IJ .. Oi:" ...... ,Ur !">t 10'1' Grwth 1.20 •·" Virnt 1.11 •.11 c1111~1 lt5 •71 Smith a 1 ·ss 1o'u tr>eom 7.15 1.1• htFd V• 11.5' ,,,,7 tN:om 1:n t:n Stl l&Gr l!'.os 1fos Virntur t.12 t.•S l"llST Pllg•m 1.60 t «I IP G«IF 'I ~ 01·~ WI 11111 11 Q 1J,61 IHVISTOIS~ M1.,M11 1bt ,·., $wst In• ·~ o:I A•t•on l !S •.11 ~l~c Fd S SI ,,1; MAI S C.O· . Sw Inv G 1'..IJ 1 Oil A\/dl~ F t .:W t.11 rln Fd ) J.0 ~ 11 Freorm • l.tl t .SI Sowr In II.JI lj .t.Xt: 1oc~ F 1 • I I• ll'l(!n F t 11 'Ol S0toetr1 1.lD ... HOUGHTON: h! M11ITI ISi &.SI Mt•~ F 1\Mlill S&P lnO J 22 (~ F11nd A 1 7' S.17 FOIUM OIOUP1 IM&s°S FNCL· STATI! tN 'o• F"'nd 8 l.Qll 1.10 IW F"<I 111'1111 ... IT 11..,n •• ~°"" Fd •· P : s1ocM s.t~ '"" 1ot F"" e 11 ~ 111 _,., "' '·"' 1 '° A•I Sci •JI 4.51 Colll"' 9 '' t ~ l~!G IJ.101',,, ""Ir S.• in lllLC Gil> tl 10 11 ,, n FllNI I ii • 1e MIO 1).U ,,,.. •11'1 J.n s ,, l1C11on 11.Sj 11.!'l FOn Gr • 1) 1 It MFO ll.M It.ti S5r r'r Gr 4 10 •.IQ I Yr« 7 • 7.f! FOUHOl•s l.4(0 ,, 11 U.5' ' r:r Int '·" t " ~-fol) . h :vrk or 6 ill I II OIOUI>· •All•I Iv 1.11 l.11 SIU• Sir 1l.t1 .. 11 • 1ic 0\1·mg persons av e llHC~ ,..1 .... t.•• G"""' · 11, s u :1111••· 11.11 11 u JTeAoM.t.111 ,.01, f')dbank ptcy Lil' wl!hl!le1con lt llll.ll lni;cm 1!111ll\10!tt A,.. l-!S&.01 AmltlCI l.ll S!I l!) Mwk: "Ju•• ;11r (drt) '42- Anl Sheridan, l:JO 8 (I) KlwMI f!W.0 (R) A lftvtl 1r1nt oper1 tlnr 1amblinr Jun~•ts bi sl1ht 11 1 lftrnini to hl1 p1r1ntr to sio, comPtlln1 for 1amblin1 buJlnw Jn HtwtH. 145 IJ Mrtlt: "LM Htppf' (cotn) '50 -Vtrt Ellen, Tht M1n1 B1oth1q, 1.-00 m A1\.Ni1ht Slltr. "lflfn 1• till Aftlnioon,.. "CltllerlH th Crtlf"' No Disneyland ie ru pe ions l''IM' ic 11111111, M•u,1 •zi1~a;...,crov Fd 10'611.• "'"'"d 1.1t '·'' federal court at Santa Ana · .... i..t11r 1).1 •.•, s'*1 10.•111t1 MSB ~<t •••'''''s'l'l"••I '·'' 1,1 • l ancblk 1•1 !.Jt foun>:J F t.°' t to Mii llnG 10 1111 10 l'EIN 101! l'OS · &ATES Retbefl o .. r 1 1 11 ur1 n I c.r f<dn t lt 10.11 l'IANllC LUf · •,o.1F Fd I 1'11 1-l1 IBll~nc j'-0 }!~d m1n1Qer. IJt hi St .. S.tl l!ltecn. 8,_., ).)6 lM GIOUP: Mii' Gret 1.N> 4.9' 111111 0_., 10 61 L•llllliritt u.tn. 11111$ l ll'S. , ...... .., •ULLOCIC ONTC • 01 ,,,, /,lllD ...... , '·" !.)I ••"•" -IS.U IJ i.. Ptttt EUIOfl l'UNOS: Gwt!I Sr I 12 ,.SI MUOm In t..n fM I OIOUP· GJ!AHm . Ht'llllt Cltlr1 Mie'!l~y ~ull Fd l.)1 14 SI Fr lnc:m 1.'M .111 ........ 5,.,., It ,, 11 •! O.....in i11 111 o mm•oc 1 .. ..., """' (<) (tO} "flit Wllllt11d Null" (R) (dr1) J:lO 1J M"'9: "WMw W1i1Ht E.r (sci-fl) '56 -Huih M1rtowt, Ntncy Gates. 8ritisl1 Pla1i Historical Coniplex Wednesday 1:00m "''"'" stripes 111 .. ._... (cltl) 'SS-Alda R11, Dick Yort. LO N DO N (AP I DAYTIME MOVIES Di5neyland with a difference l :JO U "Tllt Stlrtflin" (•dY) '55 -ha •-B 't . ·1h th John W•rn•. Nlt•lit Wood, ;... s come o.v n a1n w1 e 1 launching of a giant ltisure l'.30 D (C) "W.,,.uri (wu) ·~1-Ed· J:llD (()IC! "Mapllbnt Sntl'" Part 1 complex ca lled ?.-1 e r r i e l'IOnd alr\tn Dun H11tr (wet) 60-Yul 8ryflner. ' · England. Jl:OO CJ) "Apilst All flip" (•lh) 'SJ Iii ''llue;a '" LMra" (dra) '66-Tnstead of ~llckey lt1ouse: Errol flynn, M111m n CTHtrt.. "'' Clltr1tt. Muy Petell. Tom Btll. and Snow White and the Seven 8 "Jtdptt" 1111)1) '62-Wl!lllm J:JO D "'Dutwu If '*1 fllb" {Wa) J)y,•arfs visitors will be H11tn1I~ B•ttr McDon1fd, '52-0.11 Robtrtlo!t. Anne lutw. treated' to a "livbig pageant of U.'0011 .. "''*' tt Htlfttldt" <wn> 4:001J (C) '"011• Dlyyllll" <tdv> '57 British history -wam and 'SO-Jlmm1 Ull1an. '\ICIJ If ••· -com.n Wildt Dtbn P1pt. all " ........ (lllt'I) 043-Barbtr1 StM· ' · "ICl. MkJl11I O'Sllta. 4:311 Cil S.• • lOAM lbtJlr TJIE a.L\N be bind the $2$0 KOCE, CHANNEL M Orange County's UllF television station. KOCE-TV, has scl!eduled th< following apecial pn11Jrtms laday. Detllled listings of Channel 50's programs are carried In I.be Dally Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. ' I • million scheme 111 Eric Morley. chairman of Metta, Britain's larg,st entertainme nt organization. "Disneyland Is a v e r y 15UCC<1Sf\11 children's play. ground," he sa I d. "But ?.1errle England will be. something that contributes to the roltural ttcth1Ues of the c:ounlry. 11 ls disguised educa· Uon." When It opens In lt77, Aler· ric Ensland could be Ille largt!t leisure oomplel: In Europe and the orpii:izers ex· pect lt to attract several mil· Hon visitors in the first year. It is anticipated that about half 3 million of them wlll be from overseas. MERRIE ENGLAND will be located 80 miles from London at Cannock in the heart of the industrial ~t i d I a n d s. on reclaimed lalld thal u>ed lo be a coal mine. Betv.·ecn now and 1977 British aaftsmen will be mn· 5tnlctlng, among oLhtt things. reproductions ol lbe original Lon<lon Bridge, th< leg..ctary castle ci Camelo~ the Globe 'lbealre wtiere Shakespeare's plays ftrt first Jt&ged t11nd a Merrie England tom or r ow pavilion. When !he mmplex Is k>cated. the organizers say It will provide employment for more lhan 2,000 tncludlng a number of Britain's out-of· 1''0rk actors who will re-crealc !he more memorable e\'ents from Britain's past. SHAKESPEARE h J m s e I f "·111 be on hand at the Globe and Klng Charles II will be seen regularly stl'olling do"'n Drury Lllne buying oranges 8Jld making assignations with ?\"ell Gwyn. Jn addition. there "·l 11 be pigeon racing. lui"1k- lng, square dancing. knighu of armor and a herd of gC'nulnc English CO""S relC'aSing mllk Into genuine \\'oodcn buektts with the help of milkmaids. There v.i\l abo be mountains o( souvenirs. medieval Mn- qoets with "comely serving v.-enches," and pictJed onions, which fo r some reason will be so ld in red·1potte.d handkerchiefs. TIIOSE WHO find the whole cxJ'.!ff'lcncc a httle too much v.·ill be able to sleep It all off in a series of 'ipeci.ally pro- \'lded motels. A~ i\torlcy put it hopefully: "\\It a.re going 10 ma ke n lot or money Olli of this.,. 11165 s""'in9ion i>lec• Nt.,.'.p.,,., 1,tc,; !n f d .1111.lJ us9~ s. t .5610..,,M1111 f •t 1 11 111 l11Con. l'I "' , ' v W .13 1,0. U!lhlil S.11 ! 1.2 Nt'! lnd11 IC 16 10 I Slt!rnit 1 ! l Ll~bHll•IJ Jl,O?'/. ,, .. a ll!O tOIWd I .in 10.tl Ile. CID '·" ,_,, ... ,,.,. ll!C l"OSt 'rect>nl I I INTERCOMMUNITY COIJNSELING NY ...... n:n U.lS lh E(l1¥ '·" '·" 1!111.ltn~ • t i 'IO 1Vftero I" , .. , '!J, SERVICES. INC., f.lw -ll&Oln It OI.,..., im•m !'" t ,t) F~t LIE:" li,1)6 'l·'' B-Sr • ,S S 7' !MP Al> I ti t I• pie V111ev C•m1> 11w ~-n 11 Slffr• G ft.1,1nd I "11.ll fdMI dD .n .11 n1v1d~ l l.4 1.N ...,pr o 111 "' v ... 11ev Rtn c n p t Tttna9e 111 frl" .1o1 1?!0 llUND1 .lllfCI> i>r~51k ~!t &.n7o--r c •11 llt'Nl~llltllon 1)63 LOO•n """' Cotll "'' Snt 1l.t6 u.n GllOUP. t~cr.m • 1~ , 11 Tr1n C1p 15' tj:J Miii . t111!i111111 t1~'6}, t •M1S n~'/,~!NO f:;; ;~ :·1~ ~!Ot~ Sr ll't 1'1 +••vi E~ IG '411t:'4 W .'61, R11tr11 Pt!tr Elll:ll!. fll'nc:d. lG.M 11 'I lnd~s. Ir 11 '13 11· I NSW'l'ol!Nct t~ J.ll 7~G Ill.~ ll.lf LEEOS. llCt•~• JM "· O!'PblltOfl DI· &"' F< !·" f"I PHl!I J.14 1.1J f11vltv 111i11r, 10fll (./ • •~ ttc,r, "" SI W•v. it.Pt. 8, S.11 °"' S!~ .n ,4J P.TI....., 7.7l I.) G o ·, ,,· Un.fl" C.7.f 81~c11. Lltbllll l 110.'67, tlMI• $1!l0, rwlPI ''' , .. f ,.S P 37S1llSI Si~:'"' ll l;!ll! lll'lffutld' :~l~Oc •tit•" "l\t'IPI ~om 6 1 ·'° n ~ ~6' 6.U NfA /~! tl01000 U!OO"f Sl!I V ·61 Md.ULAY. l!:lmtf Wiii.Kt . mttl CUI· ' l ll 'r1 ttOUI" tlCt N , ... I , h J'u G•Oui>-ICI 11r, tm O•lty Avt .. F-ttll'I Vtllty. H'Ar'lf l.U. t.l ;::'•F~ j :; 1+:; N:'rw1~ n t 9' I 'I 8td ~ i~ 11 03 lj .11 LltbUillt$ ,,,,,,., •1Mh 11.100 ,,,.,.. i0trOH: (om S!-11,., 1 ?-"'""'" ,, 10 I!"° Nt!I ··~ l.tc 10 Ii Elllo11 l'lld l!I~• I ~"'~"' Fll.M 4 )~ •6' N°' Pe•' ll~71S.10 IJn CICI (11 It) MCAIJlAY. it.ffl. l-N"'1!1, dtltlh Fron Cl ,: 1:03 '"'" ,,;,, '1 ..llll l' "~ Wld n ~' n, "• ...... ,,"'•I 1113 14 ot 11 lllOYt, i~f r 1 J. .~ u••d 23 o0 I: N1(l'll•• 11 It l .It l'fl l"UND$• MUELLER '*"' J. lfb' N""'°"I llK1 ,.1 f .4' NAMILTOH t.11 : ~lt~l lv!r lj,. U.'9 A«um 1 <I 1.)0 Ot•lqf\, ll'ld\11ltlll dtilO"t•, ~~~1 Clw'l' Ft! l .11 \1 11 Fl/!'ld •!' •St Oc•t!>O 11! (Jl l!I"" l"d !''1 1.)6 l11tndt ro on..... MIHIQO'I VlllO COLOIOAL G....,,11 1 ! ''' ~.. 'u 7.W Cont a .. I .QI I! O! Ll1oll;1111 U•? \}6 '•II''' 111.011 ,~ND!: ll'CO"' I tS In~ Ntlt Id ,, •• 11 ,, C'ont ll'lt to 10·,, MUELLER. b,,,.., Sn1r11y , t..i:rtt,ty _..,. t 1110~ Mtrl_, 11 '111 1• "' WIU 1~ \l,16.U l"C'otol lj ~ 'l '' df,ltili as •DOV" DUO¥ ) .., l·n H•rl L"' I}\ '°11 P,.ENNM f CI. $~!'"" JS 11 NATION ril11Mltl re•I '!tltle 11"11 10 10 l 81 HfdMCI I'' 19' 00 •Im l "11,. "•-I.Qi ,.,, , • • Grw111 11~ ~"' .,...,., ro Oet """ 1"' 1 11 V~"" r. 11~11 ~ 'elenVC!'l'lfn, tit •~11l(lt Dtlwt. f-1, ll'l(O'f' •JIOl lMtrl>G& .11 lfO l"lfl Tn"' II\ 1'9 l•~ t:~l! lOfllOll N""'1PO'I 8tt(l'I, UtOlllll•\ \12.)JO, ~"" 1:-)l't.,OtrK~ 11n~t'.:OtC St< l'lUll OIV•tur LINI l"DJ •sw1 11.)(10. 1:1 .. r .. "-" '""1~ j ,,.,,, G 11.11 n 11 '"'"'' c11 t '1 10 '' p,,,,,., ' '~ , 11 v11 L'>e s n • 0~ ODETTE, lt1lpll PrarJt, Dt'Cld\IC'rlot< MOHVl'LTH tmp G• 11" 111 PtlJ\ lt•v to~ IOI V•! 1~, 1'IJ'" •NI cOl'ltrolltt, llS!J G•ilfllll Clrcl•, Muno U!T1 u '~ 'l"'"" 13 It ll., PO••~I f \ ., ~fl l •w I':•~ 7 u 7 l't' 11"9""1 l!ltKI\. Lllbll!l1t1 ,1 •• ..0. ••i.ell A.... 1 11 1, ll'I(_ 01l ~M •,·?! P• ""'"" 'II t !l VII '"' J" ) 7• U lll "'''"' Pfllil>' C 111 ,.tl'ld l"Am O f! I>'"" ';'1 !•I 111 YAH'I 'oo ! " I s.~ J -~ lg: Int-'•1111• d ~,, 1.0 l•NCll!!lltS· c.,,..:,.;,, 1..;," A.rl1 Cfre•t. ~~:;:;, := 11 .1.i if. \~...;,,ve~ :fl 1 ;; ;!::' s+r, 1~ ll 1~ d i"'""' · 1 1' In 8tKl\.Ulltlllllf•UJo42'1,lu.tllSU.2'IO, -.. t.lljn•(f 1" 1 ::9~);~• .. ~•I• FO• Jw~-?,1 :;; rtlent£11W!, arw:rd t6l lfl ftW G<lld 1¥. !>Ion f1' ,,, 1t1 V"'<lrtoit ... ~&t 00.U. IMIM• Sedillo. ~t11. on~ '"" 1~ \t 1J1' l"~ 1r1c 11 '11 u » 11 .,.. I'll ll tO lj·'° v..,..d h l ft) ftlllll •1 lobo\1, 'Ii" ow flv r • '•irr II I.. ,.. v..,, 1°"' 'l' flOEMLING. Jol'lfl Cllri" wl" ::~~Hln 'ra" 'l'"rnv\',l!L 01•n"ll,0 ,'1\:?0,U ~•,•ffll t rr Ill ~1•9'ft 1"'71 ("""""' L•<W, .-ilr C \l II. .,..,,,, 1:11 ! !fl 0LI 0 w• "(I Gr '«1 f,I! ,..""""'""' e..-. Llacillltt" 11n.s,., _ J..111 r •Ill' '"' 1.n 1)1 '••rl! JtOWl!1 W111s1,,.. J 11 ! •1wtl •.!Of. '"""" A IC l'fltlpt -'61v •. 1 ''°'\-fi '!f 1.1:' G••ll'I 110.1i ~ w,,., Mw •P 111 ROEHLING. Ol•ne "°"'"· ~i.. •tft.. .... , 'r~v,r G•PI Git~~,, ~: l:c·· 11 ~lot.I :i:::t.,:o rJJ'' II dtt•11t •1 .-.. "tif:-1 NO t 10 1 I' "'<l ~<I t ~1 '"' ~lltOIJ,, WAltltJllGEl ,OMWll\C.,cllClk.Skl~ · •nt•161! IC Pr •i1 '"""rcv!d• tin ,,.. ll•e.lei< .,, .. , ... Ht..,1110<1 St., Co•!• MIM Lltblll!ltt w F tl'tl .IO M111v•l t'°"li7' .. ..,~ r.t '" 1?! 1~1 !D1111.lt J20 UI •tMIJ Sl,OTJ, "1tf'tt !ll!Ofl l!t l 1 i " tit<• 7'1" • ' ,.., .. ~Ii> t0 .. 11 ~ Mot1n 11 1' 11" WALiVl:QEI c. 1 l! tr I fl t E • ~ ... ~. 'i' '!·'' v.~~.v : 1.\ 19 r ;;;~;,;~ ~~~~ I~~" 'rt "°"'""'-· $11\.,-Hlm!llQll St., CM•• , 111111~Rtt )0. '"' ·~"··· 10\'f!!tO Wth!~ 11n11u MeM. Ll•blltll" 110.1)1, 101!1 11.-, rt.!t ~fl 10.IO 10 ll I I \• • .,,,,,i•y • 1" '•~ ~··•I•• P 11 !' rlfftrff Ehk;1!l, i•YflUI ~fll" G-')91~ 1.7! •6e r:.,. 11 .-11 t) W\~, 1'91 VOVHG, 4t•l1d A., ll!OfPllfr, TU~\ rvf fl'd 1 I"~ ,.,.,..,.., • • i' r,•,.!fl ., ,1 U I' Wtll ll'tl Ill b l (1111 &t<tt•• LA0\1111 Ml o v I I ~~ ,d 4, Tr•I VI l )j '"' t 0.. 8 •1 IN\ Id G• I > '" t1111C1t11,, u,u:J.;, •\ith M • .Oi. ,,,.,., rvr Lv 1 '! · r ru ~~ l) 1 u l' 1~v M 01 •• •· "'"!•(...,, N 'l! ElliOll. II IMTn · j 'th•l ,.~., '111'1\o "I··~ F •n 111ls• 'll'fl!,. )410 .. VOVHG. l>1mell J••'I, tt.tultlt'lf I'll c ... 1 I~ I .• IW rllf'd JJl I 1' VovMI 10" 11 •I '""''-ol1fi,,......, . 111•1 (lft'M, •t•!I• 11 ·~ &Ii! """' ). :i IP Gw"~ t !) tt1 111~, .. ,. r r '' I 11 t-vn1v~!l•lt11. I ' ' \ - • J2 DAILY PILOT 5 Tundo1, Jut1 l~. 1973 New mid IJsed Small Cat·s Hot Item, Snapped Up When Orbf'I• la-MMilllll' 14n'IC• BOSl'ON -All or a sudden the small car in tho Unlled States is at a prcmlum. It can- not be bought readily anywhcrt. old or new. Buyers want to econoinlze at a Ume ol ,iUlatiOQ -ond thty fl.re W)Ct~tuln O\ler g:isobne shppu... · Eramples abound. A Boston woman s e e ki I o g something small found her o p t i o n s strictly llmited. SllE llAD considered an American ~lotors Cremlln. but those dealers she \·islted had uonc. E\'rolually she set- tled for a Chevy Vega -one or just tv.·o remaining on the sho\\TOOm floor. f'.1orcover, while she v.·as cmnpleting the purchase another buyer come in and "snapped up the other." In contrast she could have picked tip any number of larger models , at a solidly dis- counted price. Natior11vide. dealers com- plain of too-large an inventory of big cars, and frequently of no inventory at all of the smaller models. CO~t~IE1''TS a \vould • be small-car owner : "The deale r said he \\'Ollld phone me jus~ as soon as he got one in. That " was weeks ago. I'm still waiting." The situation is the same among used cars. 0 n e businessman seeking a small second car for his wife has searched used-car lots for weeks without success. "You came six months too late," one d6ler told him. "Early tbis year T could have sold you any number of Toyotas, Datsuns, Pintos, you name it. and given you a good price, too." Now the dealer says be can't get any. CLASSITIED ADS are prov- ing ol. little help. Fe\\·er cars are listed these days, "and If you don't phone up the mo- ,ment tht papers hi.t the streets you're out of luck,'' a frustrated buyer comments. Increasingly, it seems, pec:r pie are taking a pencil and paper and doing some simple calculations. 'The.., savings of owning a four.CJ.tinder sub-~ct. they diScover. can be impressive. Detroit is reported to be priva tely concerned at !he swing away from profitable OUR PAGER RENTS FOR $1650 pl•• ... PER MONTH (unlimited p19e5l HOW ABOUT YOURS? No Deposit Required On Approved Cr•dit ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE "' 401 SO. SANTA FE ST. SANTA ANA 17141 83S-330S ''"" L"tVM letell, Minion Viti•, Ot!HI ... lflt, 5•11 Ck-ITlltrthl, San J- C1,.ttr1~. El T..,., (IN litll I~• ' ' .. , .. 3223 I I huger cars, although 1ttac W. \Varden. General Moton: vlcc- president in charge o I msrkc!lng, suggests the cur· rent situation gives an ex· aggerated iOOa of the swing to smaller cars. Sal~ for the current year of all types of vehicles, he points oot. have risen 14.7 percent. Luxury and regular tars, he says, have been holding lhuir own, while "the smaller car accounts for Uie Increa se in the market." Dl!:PARTf\IENT OF Tr!lnSportation figures for l!rt2 put the per-mile cost of operaling a standard car at 13.6 cents. This i n c I u d e s <lepreciaUon, maintenance, gasoline, insurance. etc, By comparison, a com pact costs 10.8 cents and a subcotnpact 9.4 cents. Doing, say 15,000 miles a year. a small-car owner makes an armua l sav- ings of $630 using these figures over his neighbor with the standard model. Then there is gasoline. Take Lbe same l\•lo cars for com- par i so n . A recent E n v i ronmental Protection Agency test saw a 4,000-pound Torino, loaded with optionals, onals. get only 8.5 miles lo the gallon. ~finus ai r conditioning and "sensibly driven," a service-department official or a local Ford dealershlp insists, "you'll get 15 miles to the gallon." In contrast, the little Pinto scores at better than 25 miles to the galloo. JN THE EPA test Jap.1n'S 2.000.pound Datsun proved the most economical. It got better than 28 miles to the gallon. The record of the bigger Detroit models was generally classified as "dismal" by most commentators, Also pushing small·ca r purchases is the fear of a gas- short future and increased fuel prices. Al least three years of restricted supplies, perhaps more. is the general feeling in the industry. Costs, too, will rise lo 50 cents. maybe even 60 cents, it is suggested. Says a V\Y owner of the present situatioo , "I don't like it, but I'm not all that \\-'Or· ried, either. I drive into a gas statioo and pull up under a sign v•hich says 'l\iaximwn purchase 10 gallons.' 1hen eveo If I'm empty and r fill up the tank right lo the cap. the p u m p gauge still ret1ds no more than nine gallons." AMONG SM AL L·C AR manufacturers Volkswagen bas t>Qgun to stress gas shortagdS in its advertising. A TV commercial now shows a famil y leaving on vacation ln their large. family car, then !urning back and taking !heir VW bug so that they can be sure to reach their destination. ... "No doubt about it," says Robert \Vhitham, vice-- president of Vo I k sw a gen Brookline near here, "the gas short.age has been good to us." Despite currency revalua- tions \\1hich have cut some competitive edge from im- ports. V\V sales are on the upswing. U1rits Bought By Mesans J\lr. and ~trs. Edward Lacey or Cos!a l\lesa have atquire<I 88 induslrial units In S!lnta Ana (or $1,400.000. The transaction 1~·as ar· ranged by Dennis Fredstrom of Ronson Realty and lnvestmenls, Fullerton. The recently constrocted in- dustrial units, loc:itcd between \Vnlnut and Chestnut.. off Gr;1nd A1·enue. were fin'anced by l\tariners Savings and Loan Association. Lacey is presidmt o f Universial Electronics. I See by Today's Want Ads • A .JF.\\'EL 3nll)llS:; t•ar~ 111 Th111 'ii Opel 1900 4 1loor l'lf'dan. fl ha~ 17,000 mile.•, Is ~i 11utom1ul1', anti iJ ~lllng lnr Sl •kX). e PEOJ'ILE LOVER: That'" th!• Sibrti11n llu5kry. She'11 1 yror old. e COi\1PLF:fEL Y l"f'nni~hNI Sal:ot Mtilboat ror 1'1ilt'. Tt'11 •?M2 ond ('Ofl1CS 11-ilh """· • a Family Needs a Friend ... : .. Sylvia Porter Do high food cause down on the quantity and • you to quality cut of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the fina·ncial pages of the DAI LY PILOT. Yes, Sylvia Porter can be a friend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated column , "Money's Worth," features im- portant ideas which can relieve your concern over mon etary matters. For ex- ample, she will t ell you how to save a considerable percentage of your gro - cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let a Sylv ia pages friend Porter of the drop can ' '" you tonight. the on vi sit you DAILY PILOT from delivered rig~t to your home. You will get your money's worth from Sylvia Po rter's col- umn and all the other special features the financial· pages of th e THE ON E THAT MEANS BUSINESS ' ' '" Complete New York Stock List ,• • July Monday's Closing Prices-Wmplete New York Stock Exchange List l 0-day Rally Ends; Dow 'Off 3 Points NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market edged lower Monday, ending a lo.day rally The Dow Jones average o! 30 Industrials closed o!! 2 94 at 933 77 Analysts attnbuted the decline mostly to proflt takJng, saymg that the market was npe for a correc. tion after the two-week climb which pushed the Dow up some 50 points • It \tas a perfectly normal consolidation of a very substantial advance" asid Newton Z1nder ana· lyst With E F Hulton & Co • The market was o!! a handful of points earlier 1n the session but showed some finning near the close ' 1'73 s DAJLY PILOT Stltl "' P l 111111 "loll Lew t.•11 c.r..g " ---'" ' ·-.. ,. ·-.. "" ,., ,., ·-, •• r " "' ·~- Spt('lal 10 tbe [)ally Pilot LOS A" ELES O< c dC'n1..1l Pctroleuin Corpora lion sinnounCl>d it a~uircd ilP- proximately 24 000 acres of pho~ph le rock reserves in fl"rthcrn f lorldri 'fhc rcscnes looatt'd lr1 llamllton and C-Olumbta coun lits fire ridJaccni to Qc. cldt'ntal " f'x 1st1ng 5u\\annce II \Cr 1>ho phatc 1ock mnle and cht>mit'al complex •nd "('re 1cqulrcd from Owtns lll1no1S Inc and ~fonsanto Co • c .. rnnl ion I OS A'GE!,ES IAP) Board~ of d1r~t'tor5 of Cama tJon Co or Los Angeles and llerff Jonts Co o r ln.- dlanapolis \\i ll be a~ed lo ap.- prove a merger of Herff Jones into carnation The companies annoiuneco that agret'ment 1n principle for lhe merger had bttn rtacbed Appro\al for Her!! Jones stotlholdcrs ii lso will be required 'The tran!aclion will Involve. llln ~~change or 1toc:IC. worua $32 mi!lloo • • • Jlf DAILY PILOT r...,.,, Jul, 31, 1973 j Teenage Guru Hailed as 'Greatest' CHILDREN'S ··SH.OES By GEORGE W. CORNELL ~ ............ Wfi ... NEW YOIIK .;;. An ap- ~tJy snowballing move- meut -in wets, operations and fervent yowi.g crowds -is bUllding up around a t..,,·age guru from India and his prom. be ol "the knowledge-.'' JU!t> what "the ·ICnowledge" ls. however, is hard to pin down, either in listening to Guru Maharaj Ji, a lad of JS, or questioning devotees. 111M mE greatest thing," says Grace Wallace, 27, a brunette secretary working in the guru'• secoocJ.Ooor office here. ''But it can't be connoed to the limitatloo$ o/ -di er explanations. It can ooJy be experienced." However it is characterized, the lure of that nebulous "the knowledge" preaclled by the youth!u.I Maharaj Ji -which means "king or kings" -bas put him astride a busy, spreading enterprise in this country in which he's starting "Mommy, will you tell Jeffy to sto p bump ing me while I'm crayoning?'' II ... COLLEGE PHARMACY .... ••Ir Dr. •I M11'11W Kids Like To Ask Andy ~ ••• • • • • I • • ••• • • • • THIS SUMMER ...... ~ • • rus third "peace" tolU'. "I'm JlWt a humble servant of God trying to provide the knowledge," he says. When interviewers try to get It defined, he often turm to ii· Justrations of tbe.-dilflcully. "IT'S LU<E trying to ex· plain the word , 'pinch'," he says. "You can say, 'well. it hurts'. But that doesn 't ex- plain a 'pinch'. If you fall on your knee, it hurts. But it's 1M>t a 'pinch'.',' A short, black-haired youngster. Maharaj JI spent most of his week's New York visil at a spacious. ranch-style Long Island home l n Westbury, N. )'., donated to him by a !ollo\\'er. At times, he received groups of disciples. Tbey woold kneel silenUy before him as he sat on a cushioned couch. Jfe also was the central attraction for a big rally Saturday night at the Louis Armstrong Stadium in Flushing f\1eadow Park in Queens. rtE 1iREPRESENTS divini- ty," says Cnristopher Ullman, 24, a publications official or the movement. called the "Divine Light Mission," which claims six million followers Y.'Orld-widc. 40.000 in the United States. It has branches in 30 U.S. cities. a monthly magazine, "And It Is Divine," with 90,000 circulation, a b I w e e k I y newspaper, "Divine Tunes," with 60,000 circulation, and U.S. headquarters in Denver, Colo. The organization also has a public relations organization. a dance ensemble, a theatrical troupe, a food cooperative, a film-production agency, an aviation service, a wholesale firm dealing in electronics and office equipment. TWO FULL -LENGTH documentary filJM have been issued, "Satguru Has Come," and "Who Is Guru Maharaj Ji," plus a long-playing album and a paperback book of the same name the latter being issued by Bantam Books in October. It's by former radical ac- tlvlst Rennle Davis, now a disciple ol the guru . The Maharaj Ji is to bold rallies at major centers In Boston, Detroit, Cb i c a s o , Atlanta and Kansas Cily on hls two-month tour, and a three-day celebration Nov. a.10 in HoustOA's Astrodome. "ACTUALLY l'~l the big- gest busin~man -I've got big business in spreading the lcnOwledge," the guru says. "I'm offering my voluntary services to give p e o p I e peace." He is termed a "perfect l31ter -one who teaches - perfect truth -a title in- herited at lhe age ol a from his le.te father who had rOUQd. ed the movement in 1960· in India. "1 got blissed out ju.st listen- ing to him," says Ullman, ex· plaining his ;teps toward ~•d'Je knowledge," which.he aays ht attained at 4 a.m. Feb. 28 in Chicago. "ffe really opened my third eye and I saw something so in- credibly beautiful I definitely could see, taste and feel sorrlething, .. he added. Politician 'Fed Vp '; Will Work From Wire Services "Politician who's fed up seeks honest employment in community, in!ergi-oUp' rela- tions or labor fields." ·With that advertisement in the New York Times , Assemblyman Sfymour Posner announced he was available for a change in jobs. He said io an interview he UPI TMIMF• was "fed up" with the ON 'PEACE ' TOUR ./ declining image or politica and Guru Maharaj Ji of being "accused and blamed for everything from t b e Watergate scandal to garbage in lhe streets of my district." * P u I i t z e r Prize-winning playwright Arthur f\llller has been api>ointed adjunct pro- fessor-in-residence to t b e University of MI chi gan' s O~ANDING IACK-TO-SCHOOL V WES .. Unbeliewab·le· . . Pr.ice.s ·· l FIN•L DAYS Buster Brown • • Child . Life • ,. Keels ••.• Clogs And Mawr ·Others Several Hundred Pairs Regularly ·10 $18 • ' 00 $ · · to .-00 PLEASE, ALL SALES FINAL-NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS 35 Fashion Island e Newport Beach e 644-2464 Bel'nardino Jntegl'ation 0l'del'ed theater area. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Author of such critic.ally ac-1· SAN BERNARDINO (AP I -Declaring the so-called Wakefield antibusing iniliative unconstitutional, a Superior Court judge has ordered the city's schools to devise an a~­ tendance plan for the 1974-75 sChool year to eliminate racial segregation . claimed hits as "Death of a Salesman," "A View From the Bridge" and "The Crucible," Miller will return to his alma ( PEOPLE ) • • • Los-E-, The order, drafted last week by Judge Paul Egly of :-R-ock-Siar----i~f~:;. was made public mater to conduct informal seminars with the theater students an4 to advise the faculty.: - * • • :WEIGHT CALIFORNIA VOTERS ap-Given year proved the anti-busing in· • itiative, Prop. 21. 1 as t Sen. Barry Goldwater says the main interest of the con- servationist Sierra Club is flexing its political muscles. STARTS THURSDAY, • • • Probation MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. (AP ) -Jerry Garcia, lead guitarist of the Grateful Dead rock • e No UP TO • group, has been placed on one- • Contr•cts • • e No 58 l~s. • • Exe rein • e No IN • • • • • • • • • • Ampheta~ mines 40 DAYS UNDER MEDICAL SUPERVISION •r--............................................................ ...... • • • • Welcome Unions and All Health Group Insurances . ,_ ................... _... ............... ____ -' =· C~LL FOR AN APPOINTMENT ill • Hours 9 e.m. to 7 p.m. • year conditional probation on charges of possession o f • narcotics . • Garcia, ,30, or Marin County, • had pleaded innocent to the • charge . • JUDGE H ERMAN • Belopolsky said Monday that .. under the conditional pro- • bation he Would entertain a motion for dismi~I of the • charges at the end of the one- • year period if Garcia followed • the terms of the probation. • Belopotsky ordered Garcia to report lo a New York •• psychiatrist every two • months. He also ordered that reports of each visit to the • psychlatrisl be sent to a coun- • ty probation officer. • GARCIA WAS .arrested • March 'P afler police SloJ?ped his car for speeding In Mount • Laurel Township. Police said • they found marijuana and oo- • caine in t~e automobile. • The performer's lawyer, • Francis J . Hartman, sub- mitted to the court a state- • ment by Dr. Herbert Smokier, :•OMEGA CLINIC• aNewYorkpoychiatr~t.that • Garcia was not addicted to • any drug. Hartman described Garcia as a family man and a •. Costa Mesa 1869 Newport 6'r1633 • creative individual. • • ANAHllM ,, ... w. ldwy SANTA ANA 'to-• Garcia was brought lo the hlMmt1·LtiHabr• • hearing in a helicopter from 17141 t70·fl47 pa \Valk.ins Glen, N.Y., where his (Jil l •t7-17tt r. group had been performing at • 77Ml41 • 1Jt21 Tdtl11 Awe. 547 .. JJt 750 w ...... It,. tl-4. • a mammoth rock music ••••• ·• •••• •.. • festival over the weekend. • I e •••I• I• .. UNDER WHAT CIRCUMSTANCES MUST A FEDERAL ESTATE TAX NOTICE BE FILED? by EUGENE O. BERGERON Wltetl • c ...... ., mklnt ., .... U111Nd s~ '"'" • 9ros• esteote Nl-4 .. •""* ef UO,IOO.H • .t fH 4ctte of ffettri, • pt'9flflllll0fl' 1t•tke •• '-'"' 704 1111wtt M fl~ wlttl tM Dhtrkt DIN<fer el l11m...t a.-.. lly tt.e lll•IY -. .. nflff ••H11ter ., ._,.,,.,.,. ef "'-.. ,.,,_ If •11 er.c•tot ., odMl1tlmer.r dffl ltOf 'JHllfy withl• tw• ...n. ...... riMt .-Cffeflt's dffttt. o Hrite -Jt ff flt.4 lly .,., pertOI l1t ~,_ .. er It~ ..... ~ ... '"9PH"f -~ h1 tM ~, •• ''°" "tet.. ,.. Hfk9 ..t M fllH wtHtltt hire ......, flfm t"-Mceda11t'1 ...,., •rc.,t tflM, If • .._..., ., ....,~ 'JMllW wlnlll Mell "''°' ttrie aetke fMY M fl'M wfttlltt ,... • .....-.ttff Ith .... '"'""-•• ,...,,.. ...... 1 ..• ...,. .... ,.,,... lffllfh "'"' ........... •cHeM'• '"""' ... ,.. , 1 n.1.,......,.w1n.__ ... .., ..... ......_ Baltz-Bergeron Ftrneral Hotne costA MESA 2 LOCATIONS co•ONA dtl MAR 646.2.424 67l·'4SO November. It effectively ban- ned busing of school children to achieve racial integration. The order, while Jess strin- gent than anticipated, will require some busing in the city by the start or U1c up- coming school year. ~1ost of the seven board of education members already indicated that they will appeal any order that requires man- datory busing. THE DECISION stems Crom a suit filed 16 months ago by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which charged the dislrict maintains a segregated school system. and thereby denies 10 named black children the right to an equal educational opportunity. The judge later found the case to be a class action ·and it was expanded to include all black and Mexican-American children. IN MAKING his ruling, the judge foJloy,•ed closely a notice of intended decision he handed down last May. Too Early For Heist Coldwater (R-Ariz.) said he has resigned as a member of the club in a dispute over a bill he is sponsoring to enlarge Grand Canyon National Park. President N'txon will meet Thursday with President Bernard Bongo or GaOOn, the \Vhite House announced. Bongo. who has headed the African nation since 1967, is in the United States lo receive an honorary degree from Du- quesne University. * l\tn. Henry Ford II has been appointed as a member of the board or trustees ot the in- ternationally known National hfusic Camp and Interlochen Arts Academy . W. Clement Stone o f Chicago. board chairman of the camp groups, said t\.1rs. r~ord "has a strong interest in the arts, including paintings. graphics and the ballet and has shown concern for im- aginatiVe and effective cultural education.'' * A 21-year~ld Arizona State University student has been named Miss lndian America. Maxine llenrletta Norris, a Pat)ago Indian from Casa Granl:le , Ariz. was presented a scholarsh.ip among o t h e r awards. The contest was held at Sheridan, \Vyo. * Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, widow of the late president, AUGUST 2nd, ,:30 A.M. FABULOUS FASHIONS •SWIMWEAR •PANT SUITS • SPORTS WEAR • LONG SHIRTS •DRESSES (long and short) •SHOES •ACCESS ORIES UP TO AND MORE! CREDIT CARDS WELCOMI Newport Beoch-3424 Vic lido end Bolboo Boy Club Anaheim-Disneyland Hotel and Royal Inn Hotel .. • CAGNES SUR MER, France (AP) -Two bank holdup men arrived too early for the crime. Inside the new building they found only a man laying carpet. arrived In Paris on a private•1-------::-:::---::--------------------- vi~~'.h~l:;.~mw~I'% ~i!st Cli.a.Uenge tlie News Quiz The bank ''as not to open for many days . or honor today at a luncheon ~~:'1r~n.us Amba"'8dor ••• on Saturday's Fa mily 'Page • DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMM UP WITH TE·LEPROMPTER! 11 z . r'm WITH MORE CHANNELS ~ II r 61 ~ 10 · Ir CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO V IJ g NEWS SERVICE no ti TELEPROMPTER is)M l1rffft cable i.levldon orgeniz1tion in tht world.. • Wt tvw thl most up.to-datt ftlehnicll ftcllittes, Now you can tet rkt of your ugly 1nttnn1 (tnd mtkt Newport Mn mort blM1tiful) and Ott a b41tttf pielurt It tht lllnt time -Plus you'll MYI money! Off• good 1n cable ••only. DIAL 641 -1160 [1111 INSTALLATION FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, 1 • " ~ snowings Really 'Big · ' A Dog's Life Excuses Unleashed DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a man, nearly 50, and have been married !or more than 23 years. \Ve have two grown children and a dog. I have learned a lot about wamen .from watching our dog. He has a curious way of burying a bone wbe'n he. tires o( It so another dog can 't have it. Some women do the same thing. They don't want a man but they keep him legally buried. ' Looking back over the years th ere has always been something that interfered with our sex life. Three nights a week a child would be in bed between us -with an earache, or afraid of the dark. 'Fhe other four nights we CouJdn·t make love because "the kids might hear us." Qosing the door was out of the question because they might call out and we c<>uldn1 hear THEM. My wife had a hysterectomy two years -ago and says she is "sexually dead." I spoke with her doctor about it and he claims there is no reason why she should be. What does a man do when he is far from dead and resents being treated like an old bone? -ALIVE AND KICKING DEAR ALIVE: Read this column to your wile. Tell her you wrote U. Ask her ' to llne up a counselor for the two of you Utroagb her gynecologist. Ir sbe reruses, gel counseling yourself. I predict you'll 11aw 1 btt&er life, either with her or witbou& her. ' DEAR ANN : I hate to contradict you •but you're \yl'Of'lg. You refused to believe !hat 75 percent·or the rooldents In Seattle ire '{Ude to salespeople. I don 't know ii.boot Seattle, but at least half the buying Public in Kansa s City, Ato .• treat sales clerk.a like slaves. I baV"t won awards for excellence and am considered top.ootch by my co- "1>fken. l 've also been reported to the manager because J tumed my back oo a customer alter she bad been yelling at me for five minutes. -My motto i!. "The customer ls rarely right -but don't let him lmoW IL" - IGIITING ALSO DEAR A~: I've been In KUiias Qty tna1y Umeg and I disagree wffh JOCll' survey," but a pen:on wltb a motto Uke )'0111'1 fJ bound to come up with a reading illfferent rrom mtnt. ! I DEAR ANN LANDERS: f"or seVtll tolid. miserable. rotten years r had a I serious drinking problem, but re!use<l to admit it. I felt lousy most of the lime and blamed everybody around me. I keptJtmning to doctors telling them everything but the truth. Finally, [ ran out of excuses and raced up to it. I was a drunk. Yes -that beautlltilly dressed Mrs. So-and-SO~ wife of one of the town's most successful men -the mother of those attractive children a n ordinary, everyday drunk. (How fine the line between "social drinker" and boozer!) I was feeling unusually low when I re~d a-letter from another -drunk wtto-- said she couldn't possibly go to AA because she was afraid of the klS.1 of dignity. You asked her if it was more dignified to pass out at parties, vomit in the powder room and be hungover the next day in front of her children. That answer made me go t~ AA. I read it six months ago and haven't had a drop since. I not only feel like a new person, I A¥ a new person. Thanks for the shove, 4ear lady. I am -REBORN IN STI LOUIS DEAR R. IN s.L: Wtlcomt lo the world Or the living! I hope othen wW take the cue from you as yoa toot it frtm anotbtr reader. Heart i e 1 t con· gral\llations. Are your parents too strict? Hard to reach? Ann Landen' booklet, "Bugged by Parents? How to Get More Freedom, .. could help you bridge the generation gap. Send 50 cents In coin with your request and a Ioog, atamped, sell-addressed envelope lo the Daily Pilot. Don 'l flunk your chemillry test. Love is more than one set of glands calling to another. U you bave trouble making a distinctlon you need Ann'• -let, "Lo•e or Sex and How lo Tell the Dillerence." Send a long, self·addcwed. attmped envelope with ~r request and 3S centa in coin to the Daily Pifot. , . Trigere shows a black and white . 1ersey gown with full skirt (left.) and Jean Patou d esi gns wool crepe in a maxi-length. Complied From tbe Wire St:rvlcn While Orange1 Coast residents im· patiently await the anival or surmy, hot summer days, fashion designers around the world are unveilng their creations for fall and winter. The controversial hemline, again, is a biG question mark. Some are speculating with the midi- length for both daytime and evenl11;g ensembles, while olhers favor streel length for evening wear. P.1ost have marked the line at the knee for daytime, and ankle-to-floor length for dressier occasioos where the return to elegance is predominant. One of the trends cited ls big -big coats, big skirts, big sweai.ers, big capes. In a word : big -as in tent coats. Sleeves are v.•ider and shoulders broader. Sv.·eater jackets are moving up the fashion ladder in every possible varia- tion from P.1exican shav.·I collared sweaters to knits that stretch to coat- length. In the New York showings, the classic pantsuit at>ounded. The newest look is the wide topper jacket over slim, unpleated plants that look like stovepipes. The short evening dress in basic black i9 predicted to be a wiMer. The designs bare one « both shoulders. Jn Rome. styles closely followed the same trend -boxy tent coats, \\'ide skirts, cardigan jackets and evening wear in an lengths. But f.iila Schoen of Milan touched off an uproar from protectors or endangered fur-bearing animals when he displayed a battle jacket and street-length coat of ja- guar. ~lario Goracci. secretary.general of the National Association of Italian Fashion walked out of the show. He said 1 the designer broke · the unwritten agreement to exclude such furs. Paris designers offered some ideas for what to do with an old mink jacket er coat. Pierre Cardin cut up mink into patch pockets for wool coats, while Andre Courreges used mink patch pockets and collars. Courreges also sewed tufts of mink on short puffed sleeves on evening gowns. Dior showed mink shopping bags. Cardin's models wore square mink handbags with mink straps. Jean·Louis Scherrer and Cardin tipped ends of long scarves with fox or mink. Yves Saint Laurent trimmed leather coats with fur collars and cuffs, and Givenchy used fur collars and cuffs to trim evening gowns. A favorite color combi nation of Valentino is pink and grey. Here in chiffon , it's drap ed over one shoulder, criss-crosses it across the bodice and lets it flow in a full skirt. BEA ANDERSON, Editor T11"41.,., J11I• n, nn '"' n Lanvin's head designer, Jules-Francois Crahay shows maxi coats and dresses which swish around the ankles (above). Christian Dior's knee-length coat of broadtail with mink trim follows the "big" trend. His mannequin's hat is a veil with rose. . - I ' ' T1i1esday, July 31, 1973 Day Ca~e: A Futu ·re Service · of the School l • • By JO OLSON OI ltle Dally Jl'ltot Sl1" After more than a two-year· •alt, a dream may be rutfllled tn Fountain Valley th Is September. PendlJ11 approval by tbc Orange Cow1ty Board of Supmlsors and the Orongo County Welfare Department of a fowttaln Valley Schoo l ])Jatrict propcul, day care will be offerM In a public school ror lhe first Ume in Orange County. Abo in the Fountain Valley pac kage are a preschool pro- gram and an after-school recreation program f o r children of working mothers who have no place else to go alter sohool. Accordlng to Dr. Michael Brick, Fowitaln Valley School MRS . HENNING District Superintendent, a survey v"as m~de by h.lntself and members of the school board of the needs for da y care in the school dls:trlct. Thty found that or 380 families (all receiving aid) they surveyed, 90 ~rcent were one-parent families and 80 percent ol thetn were unemployed. 1-~ovR NEEDS "further, we found four basic needs," Dr. Brlck said. "Child supervision was an overriding need. This poses a real threat to the family in· tegrity,'' Other needs he cited were vocational training a n d employment for the mothers and health care for tbe children. Also Jacking was MRS. McCLURE guidanct for both children and adulc.s, The proposed program, Dr. Bric k said, would really only be Hble to deal with two of lfle 'nueds -supervision Hnd health care. Part of the delay in up- proval has been the switch in adntlnlstratlon of day care from the Sta te Dep:artment of Welfare to the Depar tment of Education, Dr. Brick noted. The Fountaln Valley proposal was first submitted in April of 197'.!. As envisioned by the school board and Dr. Brick, the pro- gram would accommodate 20 J..and-4-ycer-old children for all-day preschool and another 20 for after-school care. "We would start at the formative stage,'' Dr. Brick MRS. McKNIGHT ' said. "Children often ex· ~rieoce failure at an early age. The prl-S:chool would be preparation for school and a way to care for the children. NOT CUSTODIAL ''The word · cu st o d i a I ' bothers me," he adde d . "?t1any times day cure is deecrlbed as 'custodlul.' " Fountain Valley's program would include tutoring and cross-tutor ing, v.•here older children help younger ones, because "tutoring has a lot to do with building a good self. concept and self-image." It would be. he explained, a "shift in funding from welfare to day care." Th.is would be the first in Orange County to be a publicly supported day care program. MRS. KLEMPNER san Dl<go, he no!ed, ha! betn olfe:rlng such care slnce World War II. Tbere, more than 1400 children are iD day care programs throuah the San Diego City School system. Why II Orange Cowity lack- tnc in such day care? Prlmarlly becauat It ... 11 money, Or. Brick aald. FOIJl)o tain Valley'• progra.m wW cost $90,000 for the calendar year, or I~ l'<r child. At llve days per week, 52 weeks per year, thfl averages out to ap- proximately '1 per hour per child. LIMITS PLACED There are stipulatiom ln the program, which is only for motheJ'a on aid. A! outlined by !he State De!>artrnent of Social \VeUare, pare_nts w b o s e children are in the proaram must agree to accept or maln- taio employmen( or tralnlna; and fttt will be charged ac- cordl111 to a alldlnll 1CBle. For a single par with an annual tnoome of or lea, lte ubdemourllbed they do poorly In sohoot. • Then a behavior palte:m seta lo, be explained . .iwe•re U)1ng to tr'"k those Wll<rley eyct._ and 1lve a chlld every pouible opporUmlty. lhtra will be no ch rge. For BVILD JNDIVIDVALS '1n(jle parenta with Income ""nil• Jeo<b Into an .,.. that of between $3600 and r Is a conceni _ that we're year, there will be a 14 trying to influence these per hour cost. eo wmecessarily. Just Why doe• the dlstrlct feel so 4_ppoeite is true -we're alrongly that publicly SUP' Jrylnf'to build individuals." ported day care is an euentlal Pare:nts wflb children at the for tbe community? center would form an advfsory Lack of day care breeds a council and three of the pro- "vicious cycle," Dr. Brick ject parents would be said. A sick child creates a employed as teacher aides. burden on tbe mother and in Abo ailpulated would be a tum it is hard on the other t b re e -hour parent ef. children. She may be unable to fectlveness training class - earn enough to feed her which each parent would be cblldren propertly and Jl they required to attepd. Your Horoscope Tomorrow U the okay II tilvcn. the .,..._ !er ...id be opeood In sip. tember at Lamb S<hool. "If YO!J had a choice, wbfie would you rtaUy llko tb bafe your money inva~t" Or. Brick aaiked. 11J>ay care has • dlrecl effect on tho ttomo 11¥ the cbltdren'• quality· ol tllf. This is the l.ssue more than anything. "That quality ol lile ts In the home. You can see whert the money goes. u WiU it be a one-shot, ooetly e•periment? "Once It gets !tarted. lt's there. It's not going to go away. But we've lost ·a whole year," Dr. Brick said. '"Ille unfortunate thing Is Uiat lt'1 OD a small scale. We're going to have lo prove ii ... Virgo: Intuition ts on Target WEDNESDAY AUG\JST I By SYDNEY O~WIR My research, based on em· pirical observations, indicates more twins ate born under Gemini than under anY other zodiacal sign -that more feft- handed perSOns are Gemini and the same is true o( am- bidextrous persons. I would suspect that more bilingual in· dlvidual3 are Gemini, too. ferences. Strive for hannony oo domestic front. B e diplomatic. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Collect what you need and be discriminating. Choose quali- ty. Vlrgo, Pisces persons could figure prominently. Accent is oo money pos!eSSiom. See in light of reality. Fantasies could be expeMive. Guard valuables. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22): SAG11TARIVS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): You get what you go after -key is to kno\\· what you should seek. This is time Cf sell-discovery. Recognize limitations -and potential. One in position of authority will flash green light at crucial time. ' I Impossible to live with - moods change swiftly and you often confuse even you. Jn October, you wiU be going places, having more fun and you will be rid of emotional burden. You draw to you persons born under Leo and Aql18riu1. You have deep feel- ing tor children but you might never admit it.~ Rx Specialty Couples Wed in Summer Rites ARIES (March 21-/\pril 19): Those who depend on you are in picture. You will have to be versatile, willing to stretch a point. Nothing now is apt to be cut-and-dried. Flexibility is essential . Sagittarius, Gtmln! persons figure prominenUy. You can deal from position of strength. Cycle is such that your judgment, Intuition are on target. Accept resPonsibil· ily. Know that you will be re- warded !or efforts. Be inde- pendent in thought, action. You're a winner! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Good lunar aspect now coincides with education. travel, philosophical concepts. You reach beyond the im· mediate. You perceive outline of fUture. Listen to yourself! Prestige should rise if you so permit. AQUARIVS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Money of others figures prominently. Mate, business partner may be holding trump card. Be aware of details. Check between the lines and fine print. Take nothing for granted. Tear down in. order to rebuild. Patience is necessary. How many doctors specialize in gastroenterology - a specialty dev~ digestive disorders? For every 100,000 Americans there is one physicia n specially concerned w i th digestive diseases, I.he Na - tional He.Blth E.ducation Com· miUee sa ys. KLEMPNER-DA VIS Paul Mark Klempner and his bride, the £ormer Patricia ElaJne Davis, who were mar· ried in St. Anne's Catholic <llmr<ll,Seal Beach will make their home in Costa Mesa. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Davis of Brea and Mr. and l'l~rs. Jack A. Klempaer of Stal Beach. Attendants were Sue Merris and Neil Swaigler. , The bride is a graduat~ or Vent\lra Hi gh School and California State University. Fullerton where she was hea'd cheerleader, commissioner of raDJes and secretary of the Associated Students. She also ' was a member· of Beta Psi Omega. Her husband is a graduate of Marina High School, Hun· tington Beach and California State University, Long Beach. McCLURE-BARNETT Belly Gene Barneu and James G. ft1cClure exchanged nuptial vows and rings in the First Uniled ft1 e I hod is t Church, Costa Mesa. ' Their parents are 1\1r. and Mrs. Gene H. Barnett of Costa l'lfesa and !tfr. and 1\trs. R. fl. 1'.fcClure o{ Costa l\fesa. Hn<iat attendants were 'l'l-1lss Karla Esch, maid of honor; 1'1rs. Cathy Marshall, Miss Susan Paplham and Patty Buote, bridesmaids, a n d PameJa Kerbyson, flower girJ. Robert McClure was the best man; Joe Burke, Scott McCw'dy and John Reneker were 'ushers, and Eric Kerbyson was the ring bearer. The qe::i.ylyweds, \\'ho will reside llf La Mesa, are graduates of Costa Mesa High School. She rs a graduate ot Barnes Hospital School o! Nursing in St. Louis, and he attended Orange C o a s t College. HENNING-TOMLINSON Janice Tomlinson an d Jonathan •lenning were mar· ried in the Costa ?t1esa Four Square Church with the Rev. H. B. Jacobs officiating. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tomlinson of Huntington Beach and Mrs. Dorothy Hen- ning of Santa Ana. Attendants were Mr. and Mrs . Allen Brewer, Lynne Hammill, Debbie Cartmel. Nancy Burdick, Gary Durica. Craig tlenning and .Keith Doyle. The bride is ·a gra duate of Edison High School. Hun- tington Beach and he is a graduate of Estancia •Ugh School, Costa Mesa. She is a student at G o I d e n West College and he is enrolled at Orange Coast College. They will reside in Huntington Beach. McKNIGHT-DOWNING The garden of ?\'Ir. and Mrs. George F. Oov.'ning's San Clemente home was the set- ting for the marriage ceremony linking l h e i r daughter, Patricia Ann Dov.·n· ing and Kenneth L e c A1cK.night of San Diego. Miss Laurie Schlegel was the maid ' or ho no r, bridesmaids were the Misses Jeannette Jones, C a r o I i n e Horton. Karen Casey a n d Nina Davis; best man was Robert 1'.1cKnight, and ushers were .lohn Baum, Stuart Leisk, Jon \Vilson and Irvin Downing. Officiant was the Rev. Albert Jenkins. The newlyweds, who will reside in San Diego, graduated in the last class at Cal- Weslern Can1pus of the United Stales International Universi- ty. San Die go. The bridegroom, \vho also attended Pierce College. is the son of P.1r. and T\·lrs. Robert hJcKn ighl of \Vesllake. TAURVS (April 20-May 20): Good lunar aspect Coincides now with romantic interests, creative pursuits. C b a n g e , travel and a variety of ex- periences are featured. Aqoariu, Leo and Scorpio persons are likely to be in- volved. Young person ex- presses views in direct man- ner. IJBRA (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 22): Look behind the scenes . Nothing is being handed you on silver platter. Ask ques- tions. Dig into files. Check records. Get cooperation of Among doctors t r e a t i n g digestive disorders, f e w e r Utan 1000 had been certified special organi~on. Keep PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): promise to qne confined to Lie low. Do more listening home, hospital. Aries is in· than talking. Spotlight is on as of 1966 as specialists in volved. circum.!tantiaJ evidence. Bind· digestive ailments. ing agreement is in effect. The rest or the doctor s SCORPIO (Oct. ~Nov; 21 ): Don't break rules. Observe treating digestive problems in· Accent is on friends, desires, d th · f t• Th. · n .. an ga er m onna ion. ts is elude general practiti"""rs, u1e way you capitalize on 't d f Ge lo.I "'"" GE!\11NI (May 21.-June 20): special abilities. This could be ~~-an -see im~. 1 ::; ' radiologists and even som~ Stick to familiar ground. lime for payoff, for prolils ac--go persons are invo v"""1\' 1 ~ doctors who are hospita1 ad· Leave speculation to others. crued from investing in your IF TODA y IS VO"Uft ministrators. Get appraisals. Discover own talents. concepts, ideas. BffiTHDAV ybu are creative. values. Be aware of what prop-Take step forward . Stop look· dynamic, independent and erty is worth. Older persons ing backward . s e I f ·ce nt e r e d . You are.-----------~y make demands . Be original, attractive and can· be receptive but don't give up 1 ~ I .......... - principles. 1 ---:::;;~;~-:--1ai;;;:;::::::;:;;;;;;t~;;:~:;~I ~ ~ ~ CANCER <Jwie 2t-Ju1y 22 >: /"IL . ~~ f MAD ~,ot.S Emphasis is on movement, ~ l &OS" quick trips, special messages. FRANCIS-1 3 FUii Service " HUNTINGTON Relalives and neighbors are locations in llA.CH likely to be in picture, more so ') ORR p .~ Huntington Beach ------- lhan usual. Reconcile <lit-'9 el ~ PRESCRIPTIONS SI D:~:LK e Clll/'91 Attocmh a Dell'l'trin ft-ldoy & Lii •• rwflll ~o•r pr..-1 Fl NE STATIONERY · TY Boatman's Clean Reputation Sinks CHRISTMAS CA.RDS 10 '11. OFF l'enon11l1-' -Hltllnt 0...Ulty -WI"" ll'1'1'1sl911• Jl'l'ft(ri(Jlticlnt Softirday nr 1tt. Jfrfff . ... . .. . SJUstJ Huntlnt"°"' HI"'"' . . .......,. •rMlllllKll a H1m111on tlJ.U!2 . ' 1 ... """'' ,, ll'Mldlllnr tnlltlll• '""" c..11 Mtl.& Ind N'""'*1 ~ . DltlJ' lMo l'"rld1y tn f P.M. 9,, .. ,,, By ERMA DOMBECK A 19-year"ld authoress, Joyce Maynard (in her new hook, "Looking Back" I reflected that during her lifeti me she had logged 5,000 hours: in front of the television set. AT WIT'S END seal balanced on the head- board and the man is saying, "Okay, so there's a seal on the bed. So what!" I've never pretended to be a "It could happen,'' sajd Vera defensively. "Whatya mean it could hap- pen?" "Well . maybe not through the wall. but I've seen some weirdos at my door before." "Next t.h.ing you know you 'll begi n to believe that a little biscuit hops out of the tube and changes into a litUe three- inch person who giggles when you punch him in th e stomach.'' "Well, just because you've never seen one doesn't mean it couldn't happen .. , "What's the matter with all of you?" I asked, throwing down my cards, "1 suppose you're going to defend the commercial where the man is .. -... -... ··"~ piloting a boat through your toilet tank and telling you ·~~t :.~·;.~':1.~11~~;';~, ,1....-Jl/J/IJ'/ J/JJ/l/ II//// /fll//--.. full minute. Then l\1arilyn asked, "How big is the boat?" Vera interrupted, '' J u s t because we can't see a Marin3 in there ... " If school doesn't start pretty soon, we'll all be In a home. This nel ther surprised nor Impressed me. Sometimes I feel the action on that lltUe tube is monitoring my heartbeat and that when Dick Van Dyke goes off for good, that will be the end of my life. stable person. That is '4-'hy I i ;:=================::;:===~======::c==~ Jean heavily on the strength of lf there is anything that is shocking it Is the w a y housewives have generally come to accept commercials that depict them in the home. 'Ibere was a time when we questioned large hairy anns coming out of our \\'ashers, men in white raincoaL'i who descend ed from the air with others. A group of us v.•as watching the tube lntennil· tentJy the other day betwee n an attempt at pla yWg cards. "Is lhat the silliest thing you've ever seen?" I giggled. "Imagine, a man walking through your 'vall and offering to clean them." leakproof sandwich bags, or ., ~torey Amslerdam runningl--~~-------1 around your sto11'13Ch "'ith a UffELL'S 'bucket of antacid and a mop. Shock has turned "' apathy UPHOLSTERY and resignation... It is like the Whell '•• Wnt old 'Iburber cartoon of the TN a.t man and his wife in bed with ~ 1912 H•bor It.ti. Cott• M ... -541-1219 I Golden Needle's I S~t °' tk 1(/ed 111aloo it tvith SEERSUCKERS! VAiues ap to 13.tt yd. NOW $2.77 or le 1 ~ Gold en 'needle FABRIC S IOUTH COltlf JLAlA • C:AllOUllL 41VIL CM't• IV(,,.._ I t""°'VS Good Investment News: BUY DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, · SAVE A FOllTUNE . Now available ror the public: fine jewelry fronl ~cveral larf.t'C estates at Costa ~tc~a ,Jewelry. Have50%. E,c;t;ttc jc\vclry priccfl for immediate salc. lnvc!it now for unbelievable 50°k savings. Wise investment opportunity. Collection includes diamonds, rubies and emerald~. 1liig invest- ment demand bl.'Causc o( incrca.-;ing value and limit.cd .sup1>ly. Beautiful ~lection or ladies and mcn·s. rings and \vatchcs. ~:JcganL necklacci.. hraccl ts and pi ns in }!Old or platinum. Jl ric1•d rrorn $200 to $10,000 .•. values to $t0.0W. Oul·Of·l1awn jewelry -a i::rraL in\'C8lmcnt . Jl und rcds of prcciouR and ~cm 1 -r.i recious items now available. !'rices IO\V as $111. J\o1ak~ Somt.'Onc lfappJ v•ilh 1.hC' pcrlect girt from Co sta i\1esa J ewelry. ~1akc a sound financial invcl'llmC'nL too. nACITI'S E:tqui•il,. pfnlit111m ,.,.r:ltlnr:~ u:ilh /,}, dia111nnd~. l'r'f1N1l111111d rlm11 IJ .. i.~ k,,,.,..,~J .J1n111f'll hp Jl l111·1~rll~. l'tl l•ril- f1u,.1.,, n,.d 1{rl1rolc rfiu/1•ni, nf -'" tlll'lr~ •/H'"' r11/ 1l111111<11'rlA. 1llf11IA "'~r /!i l·11rot.-. f, 11 ,1/lfll n1/u~. J~rtt"f, rNINrlJd W lx,:1fl!. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 18a8 Newport lklulrvard , t'n:11ta ri.lc~. t:nlirorniit n·.lfl27 71 l/litli-77-ll CHEESE OF THE WEEK SMOKY BAR Regul• 20c $2.09 Lb. ·OFF N 0 w offer god July 31 thru Aug. 5 A superior blend of chedd1r ind Swi11 chNH. This ew1rd•wfnnlng chHM 11 Hickory Smoked to giva It the distinctive fl avor. You c1n nt it all, bKauM It Is rlndfe11. Com• In and taste btfort you buy. I AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS OUR ANCES11JRS MIGllA1l:P HERE F110M ASIA ?!HOW? WHl'N? Mun & JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY NOW THERE'S A HOBO WITH CLASS .... o;::._ UH ••• ·~.C.C!? ,.,, L-------1 ..._..,..,,.,, ·-~···~ _, .,,_ ,,...__, MATCHING LUGGAGE by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller TODAY'S CBDSSWDBD PUZZLE· PEA NUTS ACROSS 4.C l!llu ter'a , . ll1m · . (~ "8111 ttf" 45 Dot on a ~ Comlft1r.c\al domino 11labllallment '4.IS L•i>r.ch1M111 t W11hlnglon &and , "'ounlain 47 °'Tlte 1!11U1 1,4 Not !11111d ,o!St. 11 A~abllin dlltrlct 11.Holi y. f11th'ltr 17 Comic Kln11 ~~ 11 Aut11or · s Kln~•M:Y ' -•' • 11 li:ni.11d .. r aouro• t.~20 Ot11k 1plc ?.! po1111 l';( 22 "TMNt Ood '~ ----J' ·2• ,,..d Aatfiir., tor ' on1 21~ J ,.,,,,.,.. 27 ·.Wading bird f -.2t _ c1k• · 30 Ballet 1i., 33 Making f. -· .. ~ ... tJ-great 87"'1'lllM 49 D1rlv1d from .. 11c 53 Flowe~ part: 2 word• 57 F/Jfld QUI 55. 01cr1a11 In worth st Actor_ NO'l'lllo gt 81111 Girder. 12 P•lty penion: ·~llng 83 1111 of f1r1 14 MLlile&a ·1ymboJ es c111rr1119e1 88 8bltpnffl 87 Proce9d1 DOWN 1 PetM1Mnt 2 Kll'ld ol l!lf 3 ~lttl "'""''"': Arc1111o 4 SIUbbom 5 8t1UOfllf: Abbr. 1 Half: Pran .. 1 l:11v11 out a Excltabl9 9 Turkish moun11rn 10 F_.11811/'top of P1rl1 11 .Gr~d)' 12 Arlrona city 13 W••••t'.a r•ed 21. First pvblJc 1pp11r1nc• 23 P~nn•nl 25 Cut.of ll'l••t ""---••r 30 Pike'•- 31 4,84(1 1qu1r1 y1rd1 32 C•rd 111m• 33 Engrossed 34 ai.ok: PO•I ~s·common conlrac~ 38 Blbllc.11 rul•r JT Ahowlng 1t11 . ., 40 P1/m1 42 Sollwllf'I ... -43 Coln of Cypn1s -45 Doc11111"ent1 -471Me11vrlng . davlc• 48 Rescued 60, Fclrbldde11 for uae 5 1 Eniiged 52 Patti of be1k1 ~3 81rlk•s 64 He dlld: l•"" 55 S.A1111r. monkrf '55 £long1t•d 80 Repent MISS PEACH f'u T UJC:. E". l..AW YER5 of AM~fi!1CA, fl"I[€,.. Ho,.E c=== .,e=::1 \.( ~.' . DICK TRACY WHA1' S~!A l.D ! DO I~ M'I C.1.I ENT IS. ~VEtl! iA.L.L.EO &EFD"E A $ENAl& COMWrTf•? DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS 1~1"i HA~ GO'ITA 84: 1l1 6 .. lonP-.Y '-""Y ~ li~li. •""'<I SAt>- 50 5,111>- ~oo·ve ~Ellfl1 BEL1eveo DAILY PILOT J7 by Charles Barsotti Tiie M>'Sf INC Re DI BL y BoR1111G .lo B JN H 15ToRY. .. .. .. by Gus Arriola by Ferd JohMon 'SOME• ,..,.......,_, "TIMES I .JUST f+\T6 MysecF' .FOi< flt/ BIG l<\OUTH- by Roqer Bollen l./ou'VC. 00T ME AU.. ~ltOHG, TOOTS! HIJ<'-"I, 'ioJ ~EVER HAVE BELIEV!:D I~ T~ATIN6 \(()MBl AS EQOAL'6 ! - 1HAT we DE"-E"VE EQlJl>L CQIJSID!:RATIOIJ A~D RESPECT! •• HAI<!<</, .• t,QJ)'E A MAJ.E CHAUVl~IST ! ' . by Charles M. Schulz ,..,..--....-.------. WH'<·DOH'r 'IWfO HQ\\E?! ' ... ''• . by Harold Le Doux 1'"1N& YOW< KNliTING-, by Mell by Chester Gould I f • , . • THE GIRLS ..,· . ---- v ...... I \ I • I 3 OAJLV PILOT Tutsda1,' Jul~ 31, 1973 Stop Bonds to Beat the Giants, . Says Lopes Bibby Says He Needed More Work OAKLAND (AP) -Jim Bibby. who began 'his baseball career with the Angels' Nolan Ryan as a New York farmhand, is the latest no-hit pitcher to get away from the ri1e1s. The big right-hander lhrew the first no- hitter in rbe Te1as Rangers: brief history A-1onday night, striking out 13 Oak.land A's in a &-0 victory over the world cham· pions. .. I'm a fastball pitcher," he said later. "If my breaking pitch is ba!Cway decent, I'm going to win some games up here.·: By "up here," he means the maJor leagues. The 28-year-old hurler had ap- peared in only a handful of big league games before the St. Loois Cardinals traded him to Texas June 6 for two minor leaguers. "Whitey Herzog has given me the chance to pitch. With the Cards and Afets I dldn'I gel thal chance," said Bibby, who got a $5,00> raise from hla big league minimum salary ot $15,000 u an im- mediate reward for his no-hitter. Texas ' owner Bob Short was here for the game, with his checkbook. John Battles Houston After ' LA Wins, 5-2 ... LOS ANGELES (AP) _; The key to beatln< Ille San Francisco Gil\llts. In the opinion of Los Angeles etcOOd baseman Dave Lopes, is to keep Bobby Bonds ott · the bases. 'Mle Dodgers did iuSt that and were able to win t~i> of the three games of the ctiticaJ series with their arch rivals, I~ eluding ?tfonday night's 5-2 victory behind the four-hit pitching of Claude Osteen. "No question. the key to ua winning t\\'O ot these games was keeping Bonds of! base,'' said Lopes, a leadoff man Dodgers Slate .. An ._.. M K,; CMt) Jury 31 LIPI Anotlft ti .._,.., Aug. I Lo-Angeln t i .._ton AUii. 2 l.,o. An1191U 11 Hollltol'I • Auq. J LOI Angela •I S•n Fr•rocl1eo AUii. 4 Loi ..,,,..._ 11 SM frtntllCP 111111. 5 l.OI Ant•lta ., S.n FrtM:IKO S:l) '·"" S:,5 p.,m. S::U p.fn. 1:15 p.m. 12:l0 11.rn. 12:10 p.m. himself. "He can beat you so many ways ... with his.feet, his arm and ·his bat." But Bonds was restricted to just ooe hit tn the series -a home nm Saturday night -and struck out six times, .in- cluding three times against Osteen. Bibby has become the hardest-working member of manager Henog's pitching staff, with 10 starts and three relief ap- pearances in his eight weeb as a Ranger. His 5-4 record also includes vic- tories on a one-.hltter and a two-bitter. THE DODGERS' DAVE LOPES TOUCHES PLATE WHILE SAN FRANCISCO'S DAVE RADER SEES BALL BOUNCE AWAY. LA woN.' s'.r'"°' Lopes triggered the Dodgers' win, driy.. ing in two of the runs witfl. hJs third hom- er and a run-scoring single whJdJ toucbecf off a three-run raJly in the third inning. The A's were quick to compare Bibby 's fastbaU with that thrown by Ryan , the California Angels' pitcher who bas two nc>-b.itten this season. "He's cbe. That's the !int time I've seen Bibby and I hope it's the last," said Sal Dando, who struck out once and drew oae of the six walks Issued. "Ryan and I started oot together, in 1965 on a rookie league team," Bibby recalled Monday night. Bibby was 2-3 that season for l\farion ol the Appalachian League and Ryan was U for tbe Afets' f a r m club. Both displayed the wi ldnes!i that would even- tually make the Mets give up on them. ''The Meta brought me up twice, in the 1969 and 1971 seasons, but I never got in- to a game with them," said Bibby, \Vho had two good se8..90n.1 "ith their Tidewater farm team ol. the Interna-tiooal League. I Bibby was traded to St. Louis after the 1971 lelSOO. Ryan was deal{ to Calilornia at the $ltne time and wm. J9 games for the Angels last aea.son. while Bibby was si:i:endlng ~ of his time back in the rrunon lga1n. The Dl>hitter gave the Rangers, last in the-American League West, their eighth victory in 10 games and .cut the A's first place lead to .001 over Ramu Clly. Bilil>y got all the l'Ull.'I he needed In Ille first innlng when Loog Beach's Jeff Bur- roughs and Bill Sudak.is hit consecutive 400-foot home runs oU Vida Blue, 9-7. Burroughs' blast, his 17th of the season, was his second grand slam in five days. There w.,.. abo some good fielding plays, thoogb nothing tbat could be class. ed as spectacular. HUBBY THE LOSER .tfS WI.FE'S UMPIRE YUBA CITY, Calif. -Josie Cross: managed a IJttle League ,baseball team to a champioOship with an IIJ.l record. She blamed her husband for the team's lone loss. He umpired the game. Mrs. Cross said she made her husband Dale walk home after the Jos,, and asked league officials not to allow him to work any more ol her team's games. Cross. who finished his fifth season as a Little League umpire last \\·eek, said, "After five years, havlng t.he 106ing team ge_t <>!1 you doesn't bother you. Except, this tune, I have to live Y.ith the losing manager.'' • International Flavor Added To Swim Meet R.v llA NK WESCll 01 "'' Otlty 1"11ot 51•ft Represenlalives from eight foreign countries ..,.·ill add an international flavor to the Los Angeles Invitational S\Ylm meet commencing Thursday at lhe !\1argueri1e Recreational Center s11·imming pool in J\lissiion Viejo. The flags of Brazil, Canada. Ecuador, l\1exico, New Zealand, the Nelhcrlancb. Japan. and Peru, will bq flying at the meet. , From Brazil. there's Carlos Azevedo, a 17-year..old South America and Brazilian champion in the 200 and 400-meter in- dividual medley. Azevedo , '"'ho \Vas a men1ber of the Brazilian Olympic coit- tingent to Munich , has times of .2: !5.0 for the 200 individual medley and 4:15.t for the 400. He will also compete in the 200- ~eter breaststroke, where his qualifying time was 2:39.6. Karen LeGreslcy, Can.ndian national record holder in the 1500 meter fret.-stvlc (18:25.2) and 1650 freestyle \.\'ill also ·be competing in the 200 and 400 mclcr free-styles. A strong contender in the 200 meter butterlly will be J~rge Delgado, a l~ year-old South American record holder in the. event .,.,;th a time of 2:05.4 this seas- on..He has qualified to enter the 400 free- style wi~ a time of <1 :09.74, and will also compete m the 400 meter individual med-ley~ a 4:49.$ clocking earlier this year. Pans Troyo Barriga, ooe of Mexico·s top five swimffi.ers. has been training with the Mesa Verde clu b of Costa Mesa ~or the meet, and is expected to compete m the backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle. New Zealand 200..indlvlduat medley reoord holder Sue Jlunter who has cloek· ed 2:30.6. will also be on hand and car- ries a mai-k of 5:15.J into the 400 n1eter medley. Japan's Taba!hi flonda, a 21-year-oJd veteran of l\1unich who was a contender in the Olympic 100 and 200-meler backstroke brings times ol 59.8 and 2;11.l for the distances to the mecL The Netherlands, meanwhile, sends a four-member squad led by Eurapean 100 meter backstroke champion t:nithe Brigitha. Miss Brigilha's backstroke lime Halos Send Their Clyde Against Rangers' Clyde David Clyde, tbe IS.year-old schoolboy who ha.a: Te1u !Ungerr management smiling' despite what appears to be another last place finish in baseball's American U?ague West, faces another Clyde tonight at Anaheim Stadium. It's Oyde Wrighl who •111 be trying lo Angels Slate •• o--. • llMl"t cnt1 Jvty 11 TtM•t •I Celllwlll• A~. I T1111tJ t i C•fj"lorllit •• A119. 2 "fn• ti Ctl !omit ..... • E""" ·~Nloml• Allf, ' ltrod t"I ti ilflm!t ~ kM!tt !=I~ 1:U p.l"ft, 1:» p.m. S1JS p.fr'I. l :U p.m. ''" p.m. J:M "''"' right the Calllomla Angels bauerecl ship which bu Oounde<ed lho past month Md now ';ltands 71., gamee behind Ookland aod Kanras City In llftli place, JUJI • notch above the Rangers. Grun• time Is a p.m. Oyde, David !hat Is. 1 I g n • d ror a reported 1100.000 when he grftduated from high school IHI J WlC and Im- mediately became Ille ..... uon ol the club which bu had llUle to cltoor abool In th• home ...... he hN p!ldlod, he has added more than 17,000 fans to the average 12,000 attending en.ch Rangers game. In his last o u t i n g he. allowed rhe Angels just fi ve hits while the Rangers cruised to an 8-0 win to ~'eep a doubleheader. His record is 2-J. ft was by far Clyde's most impressive major league win . Wright will be trying for his ninth "·in against 14 lcwes for the Angels who a month ago were in fin;t place but are now four games under .500. An added negative note Is that OUl- fielder Vada Pinso11 will be out of the llneup live to seven days alter su!lertng a. sUgbt shoulder separation arter crashing \rito the wall in the first game of SUnday's doublcl>tttder in Kansas City. Piruon. 34. was hilling .2~1 wllh seven home mns and 39 rbl. But al l is not going ihe wl'Of1g way for the Angels. AnOther Ranger, Jim BlbQy, brother or fonner UCLA basltclball IUlr Henry Bl~ by, pil<hed his n<>hlllcr Mondny nlihl before the Rangers arrived ln Anaheim. Wlth a Hiile fuck, tie n1a.v not facc thr Angels In the lhree-game series. ' Sports in Brief Czech.oslnvakian Stars Undergo Fitness Tests VfENNA -\\,imbledon champion Jan Kodes and another top Czechosloyakian player. Jiri Hrebec, are scheduled to undergo fitness tests on \Vednesday 10 determine whelher they coo.Id compete against Italy in Davis Cup play. CTK. the Czech n~ws agency announced l\1~day. Non-playing team captain ~ntonin Bolardt said 4:odes, woo did not participate in Cieehoslovakia's recent in- ternational championships becauS€' of a neck injury. has been unable to reswne training. llrebec. ''•ilh a painful shoulder Hil- ment, practiced only lightly complaining of difficulty in serving. ·'It is by no means possible to un- derestimate the Italians," said Bolardt, "particularly in the situation in which \\'C have found ourselves." e U11i1os S pored San Diego Olarges c o a c h says he may spare his new 40-year-old quarterback, Johnny Unitas. from the onslaught of defeMive linemen in preseason games. The Chargers open at home Saturday night against the New York Giants. But Harland Svare said ?.fooday that Unitas may be held off until the regular Na· tional Football League season. "[want him there in September," said Svare. "If there's any question about his physical condition for Saturday night, he \.\'Oll't go. There's lots of tin1c. I know l"ll haVe lo fight hin1 on lhis, but that's the way It's going to be." e O. J. Ret11r11s NfAGARA FALLS -After a week's layoff because of a \•iral infection, star rllnnlng back 0. J. Simpson oC the Buf· Calo Bills finally suited up a n d participated in a full practice session !\fonday. The National Football League's leading rusher last season spent five days in a .Buffalo hospital. suffering from what he called a "combination of stuff.'' e 1Uor111l1011 Te1111is Tu·o collegians and former high school chums .,.,·ere catching up on their sleep today in Anaheim after claiming a "'orld record for continuous tennis playing -i5 hours \Vith some food and drink but no sleep. Jim Carroll and Douglas Nassif, bolh R ams A1m otmce Starting Back s Veteran running back Larry Smith, 'vho started only three games last year. , has been named to the starting backfield for the Los Angeles Rams exhibition opener against Dallas Friday night in the. Coliseum. Also named by coach Chuck Knox were Jim Bertelsen, who Started. the last seven kames in 1972, and quarterback John Jtadl, ""no was expected 10 be the club·s number one signal caller alter the departure of Roman Gabriel. 21. and form er Loara High students, end- ed a match at I p.m. Monday \vhich began al JO a.rn. Friday. They ap- parently had broken the mark of 73 hours 25 minutes listed in the GuiMess Book of \Vorld Records. Nassif from Pepperdine College and Carroll from Eastern Washington aCe and drank while volleying. They held their marathon on the courts of Loara High School in Anaheim. e Dixon Uses JHcl< llEL.SlNKI -Olympic bronze medalist Rod Dixon o! New Zealand used a strong finishing kick to nip racing stars Ben Jip- cho of Kenya and America's Dave Wottle in the l,500-meter run during an in· lernational track meet here t-.tonday. Dixon's time \.\'as 3:37.5. against 3:37.8 for Jipcho and 3:38.0 for Wottle and John \\lalker of Ne'" Zealand. In the shot put American Al Feuerbach captured the event with a heave of 67-3. HaQJlu Sittonen of Finland, "With a tos,, of BS~ indies came with seven inches of the world javelin record held by K1aus \\'olfennaM ol '\'est Germany. e Lake rs 11t Dome Los Angeles Laker fans \vho can't get lo home games on Friday. Sunday, Tues- day or \\'cdnesday nights next season \.\·on 't see the team play. The U.kers have announced a 41-game home schedule for 1973-74. The.re are 17 games each on Friday and Sunday, live 011 Tuesday. and two on Wednesday. There are none on Saturday, Monday or Thursday. Net Favorit~ Easily Advance In Louisville LOUISVILLE (AP) -Top-seeded Arthur Ashe of Miami was to take on Australian John BarUett and second seeded Tom Okker of The Netherland.1 faced Lito Alvarez of Argentina this afternoon in the second day of the annual Pro Classic at the Louisville T e n n i s Center. The play marked the first actiofl by the lop seeds in the tournament that saw five seeded players aavance easily in first. round action Monday. Clark Graebner ot New York, seeded eighth, moved into the 6eCOnd round of the week-long tourney, taking out Woody Blocker of Dallas 6-1 , 6-1, while third· seeded Nikki Pilic ol Yugoslavia ripped Jim Ward of Tuscaloosa, Ala., 6-3, 6-2. Fourth-seeded I\fanuel Orantes of Spain dumped Australian Terry Moore 6-3, 6-1, "'nd fifth-seeded Marty Riessen of Chicago defeated Terry' Ryan of Australia 6-1, 6-2. John Newcombe of Australia won by default from Canadian Peter Burwash. Vitas Gerulaitis of New York, winner of the Nationa l Junior Clay Court Tournament in Louisville last year, made .his successful pro debut w:ilh a 6-4, 6-1 defeat of Jim Mcl\1anus of Berkeley, to make the second round. Also in the non-seeded r a n k s, Australian Phil Dent rallied to defeat Bob Kreiss of Los Angeles 3-6, M , i-2 after being down 3-6, 1-4. "I just started keeping the ball in play better," Dent said. "It was so hot out there I think I got an ulcer." Ashe. a native of Richmond, Va., won Louisville's Classic last year. Okker, who finished second to Ashe Jn tournament action at \Vashlngton, D.C., Sunday, cap- lW'ed the championship In 1971. 11'le Ram.'i also announced 1'.fonday th.it they had relt'!ased rookie !rec agents Ed Walker, a wide receiver from Compton College : Terry Logut, a place kicker from Cnl Slalc (Long B<ach), and Waynr Bradley, a ..rety from Arizona Stale. Disgr11iatled E'a ia s Erupt Joe Ferguson al.so homered, his 15th, and Gary Matthews hit his seventh home run for San Francisco. Tbe win jumped the Dodgers ' lead over second place Cincinnati to five games while the Giants fell seven games behind. Tonight the Dod1ers are in Houston, Tonuny John, 10.5, opposing lbe A.strm' Dave Roberts, 10-8. San Franc.iaoo Is Idle today, then b egi n s a two-game set Wednesday night In San Diego. "This rivalry probably isn't what it was when the clubs were in New York," said 1..-0pes, who grew up in Provid~. R.I., "But it's stlll the Dodgers and Giants. It was that way in the minors. Most all the same guys were there, In Albuquerque and Phoenix, and it was always the biggest series, for us to beat Phoenix." Osteen, if1 winning his 12th game tn 17 decisions, struck out five jnclurting the side in the first inning. "I came oot ci tbe chute awfully strong," he said, "But I wasn't kidding myself. These still are the Giants. "I got some extra rest after the All- star game and I felt a lot stronger." Lopes, Manny Mota and Willie Davis drove jn runs in the Dodgers' three-run third but San Francisco got two of them back in the fourth. Garry Maddox doubl.t ed and later scored on an infield out by · Ed Goodson. Matthews then homered. Bui Los Angeles rebounded when Lopes homered with one out in the third and Ferguson homered in the eighth. Of Lopes' three homers, two have beerf, against San Francisco and Ferguson has hit lour ci bis 15 agaimt the Glanls. S.11 ,l'Nd_ (21 Lw ......_ 111 .. ,,.,.,. ...,,.,., Bonds, rt Fuerttes, 1b Mtddo1t. cf MCCOYe'(, lb ......... MtttlWws. JI Speiotr, SS Dv.Rtdll'", c 8ry1nt, P Arnold, ~ Moffit!, p Totals 4 000lol)el,"l'b •212 4 0 1 0 Mol1, It 3 1 I t · 4 11 tP1dor"11<,ll 0000 4000W.Dllvl1.d •011 4001F~...on,e 4111 J111G.rv1V.lb •O o t~ lOOICty,lb 4 000' 3 0 I 0 W.Crtwfonf, rt 2 0 I O lOt O Ruuell,14 :11 11 lO O OOl.tM!.P 2 1 1 1· 0 0 0 0 :n l ' t lo1111 » I 1 r 000 20D GOO -2 OOl 010 OIJC -I IE -Rus1e1r. Soelfl'. LOI -Sin ,~,uo '· LQI. An;el .. ~ 28 -Mott, M~. Hit -Mlttl'llW5 (7), L.optot (3), ,.,._ (IJ). s -°'"""' . 11" H Ir I ll •• Ml Bry•nt IL.lMI ' ' • ' 2 T '"'°~ Molfllt ' l 1 1 0 1 · t.3 ~!Mn !W,IJJ) t 4 2 2 1 I~ WP -Brv•nt. "Time -1:06. A.ntnde11tt ft.tu. • Dave Brown, a rookie lrtc--;igent center from the University , of South c r n California. left camp of his own accord, the club said. A chair Ille& inlo the ring as Chicago bolting fans erupt afler lcatured bout between Jimmy Carter nnd Rock OiFazio was halted in the first round. Car- tor not only was hit with the chair, but lost the fight for hltUng D!Fazlo whlle he was on canvu - .Intelligence Dargan's Top Asset B1 HANK ll'ESCll Of .,. 0.11, """' 1••" Olarlle Dargan fit! ri&hl In· to everyone's image of an JV)' League football player - which be'U be once the fall rolls around. But presently Dargan is fil- ling right Into the wide :receiver and defensive s11;fety spot.! on the South team for the upcoming Orange County All·atar football game Aug.. 9 at Orange Coast College. '. Dargan, a 6-1. 100-pound end and defensive back out of San Clemente High, i.! ticketed on .. an athlellc scholarship to Dartmouth for the coming season, and when he atarts talking about his football philosophy the rt11som for his choosli!g tile Ivy Lfague iiehool become obvious. .. I gu"' you'd say my bfst asset u a rootball player is my intelligence," D a r g a n says. •11 c;an pick up plays and read defenses qu.lckly, and I usually adjust very weU to dif- ferent situations. .. Fo0tball is one or the big things in my Hfe, but I'm also lo0king Jorward IO what they CAii 'the D1rtmouch ex· perience', the first six months are prelCJ cauaht up with toot· ball but 1fttr that you get a real chance to do Olbu things." Dargan, a two.year starter at San Clemente impressed a a linebacker u a Junior, and then waa hla team's leading reclever as well u a defensive back last season. • Although not blessed v.•ith great 1pc!ed (4.7 for the 40 yard duh), he nevertheless .got open for four touchdown puses and was named to the All-Crestview League team. .Versatile Ex-Loara Ace A Sleeper for North Team By STEVE BRAND Of .,.. DlllY ruot lt•tt \Vhen lhe North coaches picked l.oara High's Gary *ewart for the Orange County North-South AU-star football game Aug. 9. they figured to fiave one of the !op defensive backs around. Instead, they may have !Jrnded a super sleeper at tight eod. . "At M and 21~ we ltnew Gary liked to hit," says North roach Jim Everett or Western High, "but we didn't figure llim to be nearly the talented tight end he has proven to be.'' " Stewart says he i s n ' t s.urprised. "Our No. l quarterback at Loara was injured in the first game and I don't remember seeing the ball much after that," he says. "It was frustrating." In all he grabbed o£f 25 passes but for just one touchdown. For a top high school hurdler who also ran on the team's 440 relay quartet and filled as a quarter-miler, it figured he'd break more orten. "I averaged about 10 yards a catch and the touchdown y,•as 45 or 50 yards," he says, Taylor Leads .Tritons Past MV Five,. 5 7 -55 ·ball league lollowing a 57·55 victOTY over Mission Vlejo Red Monday night. "but when you aren't used to geUlng the ball, you just don't break for a touchdown every lime." Stewart can hardly wait to play. "I've wanted to be on a team with a good quarterback just to see how well I could do," he says. "And tbey don 't come any better than Bob Acosta (Western) and !\iark Herms (Servite). I gueM the only problem iJ that in coach Everett's system, the tight end doesn't get too many passes.'' The way Everett praised the play ot Stewart in recent prac- tice sessiom, that plan could change, too. "With his speed, size and those good hands, v.·e won't be afraid to throw the ball his way," says Everett. "He's a good blocker , especially when he teams with Kevin Stephenson (All.CJFer from Servite), so you might say we won't hesl!ate to run his way , either. Since jMing Ibo Soutll camp for practlcts last w e e k , Dargan bas impressed coach Dave Holland to the point where Holland thinD Dargan will play both ways. "He seemed to 1et better as the week went along." ltolland saya. "Re'U play quite a bit on defense for us. He's catching on very well." Dargan says he prefer! to play wide receiver, but enjoys the idea ol doing the hilting ln- st,ad of being hit. And the idea of playing with Orange County 's othtr top playen is another thing he llkH. Escadrille Loses Shot At First Black.ies bas clinched no worse than a He fo r the Costa .. ••rt bas a p:ld.dfttton all of us," Darcan says. "You're not rully fi&blin& foe-• poolllon. you IDlow <!Vtrybody el,. Is sood and II you ha .. 1 problem you can '" '° tbem ror help. .. One pn>bl•m that all the South will have is North quarterback Bob Acosta. A problem he's lookln,g forward to solving. "A lot ol guy's en the team have played against blm and are looking for a n o t b e r chaooe," Dargan says. ·•rve only attn him from the stands. and tt'll bf a real expuiwce to play against him." CHARLIE DARGAN Three-day ~feet Top Area Stars In MV Swimfest l\fesa Recreation Dept. open Kurt Krumpbob.. Shirley Clara Swim Club. He is a and Jack Babashoff, Peggy graduate of Corona de! 1'1ar summer basketball I e a·g u e Tosdal, Steve and Bruce High and is a !ludent at championship following Mon-Furniss, Da vid Baron, Valerie UCLA. day 's action at Estancia High. Lee and Susit Whitaker are ~Slllt~shof1 of Fountain EscadriUe, the last team among the many Orange Coas1 f ~.~!!Y and her brother Jack with a shot at overtaking area swimmers competing in swim for Darr's Huntington Blaclties \\'3.S knocked off b the . three-day .Los Angeles Beach squad. Shirley won a ' Y lnVJtatlooaJ swun meet at gold medal at the Olympic Nads, ~· an~ falls three 1'1ission Viejo's ,._larguerite Games and will oompete in games behind with three lefi"t Center beginning 'Mluraday. seven individual events plus oo the agenda for Blackles. . The . 15th ~ual event will three relay races. In the companion feature it have mtemaUonaJ fla,•or but She is entered In 14 evenu was ~an~e Coast College the .biggest i n f I u x of but will prob.ably limit her alwnru taking the measure of participants Is from t he competition to the f 0 u r Arby's Army, 90-76, . Orange C.Oast area's three frees1}'1e t\'enls, both medley Nads had s~x players 1n dou· swimming clubs -Huntington races and the 100 meter ble fig~res m. u P sett Ing Beach Aquatics under coach breaststroke. Escadrille, while the Orange Flip Darr· ,._1ission Viejo Miss Lee v:ill swim the 100 Coast College Alumni victory Nadadores ' under J\t a r k and 200 free along with the JOO was led by Craig Jo"alconer, Schubert; and coach Bill and 200 butterfly and the relay Buddy Confer and Bart Car· Jewell's NIMA squad. races for Huntington Beach rldo. Krumphob:, world record while Miss Whitaker is seeded Falconer scored 30, Confer holder in the too-meter free-second in the nation in the UlC} 25 and Carrido 22. style, will represent the Santa butterfly. Ste will also go Jn HNI ,tll ~ • • : t ' . • • " . '{ ' • l ' ' " -(( -(( * the individual medlty race<. ~~ the breaststroke and tht 100 1g KMIOUf~ylVINTI free . 21 ID 1.m. -Prtilm•n••I' NII tKtt. 10 1 o.m. -F!Nll In f».m•ttr 14 l•Hll)'ll . 100 ,.,.,.., t>tt•ll•OO.~. ~· TundlY, "'~ JI, 1'173 llAILY PILOT ,lf 9 lflesa Miscue• Mustrutgs, 10-6 Doubl's by Art Sotct. ,._1ark Duffy and Morgan Abbott. comblntd with ntne Costa 1.!e.sa errors. proved C.Ost.a M.,. llillh's champions« the Ii a r b o r A r e a-HuntingtOn lk!:acb aummtr b a s e b a I l leaiiue were not unbeatable in the final nigh< ol action 11 Tell'inltle Part. Ntwpon llarbor's Sailors bllllled a.ta 1(-IH_ with five UDffl1led nms aidine the attack Ii! 1 special playoll game mtaninglen to the final standinp. , .... IMw l•l .. • T•;i;:• h-• • • ffi .•. ,, ' • •ow. e • • -· " ' • 'P Ill • ' i.d'eu. i.. ' ' tQI .. cl ' ' o, "'"""'"'· 311 ' ' '"'-. • • S.l:T'·"' • • Ir•~· I ' • .... ' • .....1 ....... " • • l'MI~. 11-211-ID ' • TOIM• " . .. ..,..,. "~ , .. } .. . l't\ltKllh,ll l • ~111, ' l "'°"'"· •·11 • ' sr.c•. lb • ' • •-"•· c • • "100~, 11 ' ' v .. ..,..11 ' • 1to1>11•t1Dt1, d ' • gv~tr. rl ' • "'"'°· (I ' • H1~i.·1. 11 1 ' T1>1111 ..'f. • l<W9fWI lll't • Cot11 o1MM OM t)O h• HW!lt H.,W 111 llO •-lo latllldll It) .. ' ' ' ' . } i . ' . ' ' ' ' . • • " . c-1 d9I Mir UJ JOl'N11on. •1 ""'''· lb·lo /110n1, lb-JD F. MDOrt. c Mall. D Nog1w1, ?D WllllnUll'I. ID M\lrofly, If Gt'tt+IV, II • ,!Mor.• " F•ll'I( KO, rf 1 .. vcNmo, cf .. . ' . ' . . ' ' . ' . ' . ~ : • • ' . ' . ' . ' . • ... ' • • • • • ' ' • ' ' • ' • ' ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • ... ' • • • • l • l ' • ' • • ' • • • I • ' • • ' • • • • • ' • ... ! ' • ' ' ' I ! ' • ' ' • • ' ' " • • •• ' • • • • • ' ' • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • " ' ,,_..,,....,.. , .. ' I . M<IOI'•· el T"111 ' IE1f.r1tel1 no UO 0 -I l_f I (at'"• cltl Mer 000 M>I 0 -t 3 ( In day!lme aC1lon 1 1 Te\Vlnkle Park , Est an c I• lb&lk-d Corona dtl ,_far, 1-l. Costa ,._tt-sa had a tf!W utn base hits of 1?$ own, but two trlplts and three rbi by Davt ll<mhan!t and doubi<w b) Steve Teregis and Daryl Q-ao. dall \\'tren't ntarly enough to oltset the nine Mesa mi.cues. EManda 's ftnal victory "" locted up In the fifth mq when the winners smxlced Olli ,,,,.. balf hlta (lncJudlna Buddy l.onon's cloublo) for four runs. Lonon. Jim Jlares and l\e,•ill J...anidalt ~h picbid up two rbi for Esancl1. Marl: Deven'1 leadoll lripJ< aparUd a two.run ootbu:nit in the lourth Inning !or E>oaocb .co elttnd its mal'JJfn io U heloro tho fatal fifth ended MY poM!blllttet ror Corooa dll 1'tar. Corona dtl M•r'• Alen JaMs tCOrcd twict after mn- ing fftfl passu. Fred Mc.ue: and Ken No1awa produced dw rbls. Vikings, Tars Post Polo Wins l\farina posttd Its fifth straight wattr polo victory and Ne-A'J)Ort Harbor bnlllfJd 10 Ill filth win in ab: outtnp in prep summer league ectlan Monday niibt. .,San Clemente's Tr I ton s qualified for the tournament championship game 'Vednes· day night In the Laguna J!each High summer basket- The victory moves San Clemente into the cham- pionship test against Mission Viejo Gold v,.ith the tipoff slat- ed for 6: IS. "We plan lo platoon. so he's not penciled in to play defense." "That's all right with me." .says Stewart. ''While I like defense, I love to catch the ball. A tight end is classified as a lineman and receiver. I like the receiver part." fK1dl111t_!tol11 PIYM ' I NOVIC~ • 0 Senders 7 a .. • • ' 11 tntlltf lnclv. mMI. I nd a ITM1tr m"'l•y • ·~•)'. 11 " " . ....... 10 1.m. -Prellm1n1rv he•I ,.,,,, I p.m. -Fln1I In 200-mt!tr DoY•\trny, 100 "'"" -•llilroo.1, XI0-,...1l!'f trw, 4GO ""'" Ina. m.d. fl».ITl9ftr Ir~• Alamitos E11tries ?.farlna captured a forfeit dfdslon lnim Mission Vlojo la tbo CAita Mm lllgh lequo, running I t 1 leagu&-IMiftnc mark to ~. Newport loafld • 6·2 vlC1ory over Anaheim ln EstAncia High loop play. Newport rolled to Ill vldory behind h\'o 1 o a I s eadt by P.llke DuBrotl and Mart Kal8rian. In other 1amea. Estancia ftll to Garden anw •• 6-1; Westminster toet to Mira Co6ta, J&-3; and LU.ewood-- trlpped Downey. 10.5. GWC Five Falls, 77-70 ·wmrnER -Golden West College's summer basketball .team closed out Its activity in the Rio Hondo league !'llonday night y,·ith a n-70 loss 10 Santa Ana College. •Coach Dick Strick I in' s Golden West quintet trailed all the way as Santa Ana's taller quintet dominated both ends of I.be court In the rebounding department. Gary Andrews led Golden West in scoring with 20 points while Val Popov netted 17. BWC's overall record in league play is 1·7. Gllllltl WMI 011 ""'''' •_.. t1,l0 p~~WI 7 ! ' " S)O'Nlr1 ' l ' Q rler s a 10 lll)lwr 1 016 AVtlscn ' 0 1 I To!1lt :U 6 10 70 it-11llllmt : S•"'' An•. JJ.,J,J. DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO GAS SAVERS '66 N1v1 SS v.1, •uJO•lr1H11.. ltJH, powfr illf, tXOOHfl $977 '69 Coron• Coup• A11t.. '''"'·• r1•11, 1tr cw .. tr IYClllllll $1477 '70 Corona 4 Door Av ... tf•n~ r.•19. lltlllr IMtAOOl $1277 70 M1rk II 4 Door A111t. tr--. tfflt, ... lff 1n•IOCI $1577 '70 Mark II Ceups .... ,.. l!lllL. •llrt'I '"· ....... Wllfft .. r!MHtl tfrtt. 11f nflll.. , .. 11 UKllU $1977 $3277 San Clemente guard Dave Taylor was the dillerence for the Tritons Monday evening as he connected from the field for the winilers' last six pointa in edging MissiOll Viejo. He hit from outside, then on a drive and finally on a jumper from the free throw line to ice the test after Mission Viejo had jumped to a 37-30 halftime lead. l\1~ion Vie)o led until the final three minutes when Taylor and 6-7 Ted Kalota teamed up to pvertake Mission Viejo's No. 1 'unit. Stewart was recruited more for his track ability than foot- ball, since he ran 14.6 for the 13:1 high hurdles, 19.7 for the 180 lows and clocked a 50.1 in the 440. But he plans to attend Fullertoil College because of il.'I football prowess. Mc:Ftt 1 J lltmM!V 1 ' s1111nenblch 1 a To••b lS ID H1ttHm1: Nldt. ~I. occ Al•ri: '"J " ' ' ' ' . .. ' • • ' . " " AFW• Arwtl' /11) ~ ·. HvtclllM f 111111 J 0 An<ltNOn 4 2 l)'tkowskl S I O. Trotter II I J. Trvntr 7 2 TOl1!i lS 6 Htllllme: OCC Alumnl, U-G. Hicks 7th in Elims ' • ' " ' ' .. .. .. lr ' • ' ' ' ' " ' n • • " " ~ ~ • ' • " ' .. ' " ' .. ' " " " Sin 0.-lt (S7) ft ft ,, '' Oodd •S 3 \J $1avro 1 O 1 ' Kil!otl S 7 ' 17 T1Vlor J l 1 13 DttllilTIOl't 2 0 • ~ llobtrls , 0 , ( Toltb 11 II 12 S7 MIMlto!Vlt l• llM IMJ ln•ayne Hicks of Mission Viejo is nine pins out of fifth place and a passible shot at a finalist berth in the West Coast Match Game Elimina- tions at Kona Lanes of Cost.a Mesa after the first of four ,._1onday night blocks for the top 16 bowlers In the prestige tournament. Fred Bfmal or Tustin sullered a first gam. Joss to Bob Ramirez of • Anaheim but before the night was ended, Bernal retained his lead by 17 Httd~ O'l ritn Pin~ M•vrtr Hov•I '''" 1"rot.11 .. ""'' ' ' , 11 • ' l" 1 ' 10 o o 6 a ' 0 l I i 1 f • pins . 201susf 1<;91"1 .... G-•"""1 Si n Cltmrn!f IS IS U 1'-57 The fonnat changed on l\fonday and six-week leader Hicks opened the evening in seventh place and after win- ning three or four match games for 150 bonus pins, \\'as still nine pins back ol fifth place Lee Tayklr of San Diego. MV Aed 1S 11 10 t-$S Baseball Standings A~IERICAN LEAGUE East Division II' L New York 59 48 Baltimore 54 45 Boston 54 48 Detroit 54 48 !\1ilwaukee 50 SI Cle veland 38 87 Wut Division Oakland 58 47 Kansas City 59 48 fllinnesota· 53 .. Chicago 52 52 Angels 49 53 Texas 39 63 M1MtY'1 Olf!'IK tnlc1~0 t, MlnnelO'll 1 0.1r1111 4, llllHINll't J llo1IO!I •. Ntw York l Teir11 6. 01k•11'1d o Only t•met K MdVltd. T ... ty'IO.- Pct. . 551 .545 .529 .529 .495 .382 .55% .551 .520 .500 .480 .382 GB 21/: 2'h 8 20 3\\ 51> 7\1 17~¥ Tt •l l IClvd• t.J1 " ........ , !wtl"11 1·10 81/llfl"Mlr• fll1!mlt' ,,4) 11 Cltl'll•l'll ~T!dro"' •·•l Oe1ro!I ll'•rrr ,.10 .-'Id Co•tm•n 1141 11 Mil· ..,.u11:11 ICo!bOr'n IH •lld $11Jort 7.a), ' N-Y..t IDobtooft ~1 11 1 .. ton 11..11 11·!1. IC-• Ctt'I' CSollllorff 1.WI 11 Clllclto IS1t11t .. , MJn~HDI• fl h>lwtfl \).ti 11 Oekllflll {Moltuntn 1~•1 WtfttMm 01- Ml-11 I I 0.kJI .... Tu:n 11 IMM t(1t1M1 CllV t i Clllct to Dtfroll 11 Mllwl \lll;M 11111.,1ou• 11 Cll'Wlll'll ff .. YOrll ti ... IOI\ NATIONAL LEAGUE St. Louis Chicago Pitlsburgh J\1ontreal Philadelpttia New York East Division II' L 55 48 54 f!O 50 51 50 52 48 ,. 44 56 West Division Dodgen Cincinnati San Francisco Houston Atlanta San Diego 56 39 8l 44 59 46 54 53 48 6'I 35 69 MfMtY'I 0t- 0Htlf'I J, S.n Fr•~ltce 1 Chltnl J, SI. l oul1 I Pct. .534 .5 19 .495 .4911 .4£l .. ~ GB .629 .Sii S .562 7 .505 13 .444 .337 WOl'llrtlt 1.J, New York °''· lnct ....... 10 111-•M• PhUl<le!l>hl• l , l"!ttlbvrtll 0 .At111111 1, H0\111111'1 , Only ••mtt t(he(fulod. ™..,... ··-DM•erl IJof'ln ID..S) 11 lioutton /Rebtrtt 10.11 Chlc•tD tJtn11;l111 9'f tnd Our1 2 .. 1 '' ""'111011• ton!• CTwlld\tH N tl\if l.onbof'I ,_n, t (Jndnn1tt INormtn M •l'lcl O'l'lll'\lllv 11041 •I Allflflll !Morton M •ncl Nlflt,.. 1$.1). 2 $1. t.oult IFOJU1r 1•4) tt Monltffl, M<M•llY ... "lttt119f"ttl 111111 f;f) 11 Ntw Yitrk Cl(~ .. ,., Stn Fr1ndk t !Wltlo\I0,.1 '-$) II Sift °'"' tGrtll .. tu W ....... Y'I Otm• $1, L01,1l1 11 MOnlrtel, 2 Pl111.burt11 t i N-Yori!. ! Ch!Qfe 11 l"llUldelDlll l Ct!w.1-tl ti Atta"'I °""""' 11 ... llOfl St ft flrltftdtCO •I S... Oltff rd1y, ,. .. ,, ... ,,. Kt 1.m. -Ptlllmlntry ht.ill ,.,..,~ I •.m. -Flflall In 1~r frft, 100-mtfff Ir•, :IOlkN!I< W<k1trokt. 21»1'1Wlw llr111btrellt, olOl>tnllw free till)'. (Ordlor 11'1 t"llllll 1w llrMll - wornlfl'I COfltollllOl'I, WOft'left'I 11111!0. mtn'I cOfllOl1l1on, m«1"1 1111111, I Mftli..t. a.1cfl '"'"™' 1W-•1 llltrlMI Shlnr, llMll'IOfl -.COO frtt. 2DO kid. rnldlt)', IOD llrH1t, 20ll ''"' 4lO I/Id, meOl1y, Thr" rl'41y1. v1l1r!1 1. .. -100 fly, 200 11v. 200 frtt, 100 trtt. ThTM rtll'f'S, $utl• w11111ter -100 ny, 200 r...,., mtdlt)', 100 Dr111!, 400 l!WJ, rn.QlfY, 100 f<IOI, 100 Drllll. ThtH r I I I )' I tb1<k1tre>111 on mtdl...,). MICIY Pl1tr -100 brlt"' 200 1M't111. M"'llY relly. Det>tllt Molt -400 trH, m lrH, l • .SOO lr11. Two rll•Y•· Kttll H1mlll -20D lrff, 100 1111. Ttrr Cl1l111 -100 I ncl 200 lr11. 0 1-Utsl'IOl/I -100 t>ack, X10 11\d. m~. Jo Atwt l"f1('t lOO t!WJ• )00 becblrOkt, 200 11Wl CIO lllCI. nMCll•J· ltl410 only -c onnlt G1ur11r, ull• Jtll1y, Ol1n111 Alllscn, (lllCly ("'r1n. Mtn't l•tf1ft S!ev1 ~ .. rnl11 -2Cll 11\d olCIO 1...,.. IN'dl1y, 1'Qll baek. ThrlOI ,.11n. lrvct Furnl11 -200 1ncr 400 Ir•, l'OO lllCI. mte1l1y, XD bec......,.Olll rtlt y. Ktvln Wllll1m1 -100 11\d lQO !lt"tlJI. Ont rel1y. J~ll Wh!ll -JC0 t nd 700 llrHJI. Ont ........ Kt Yln IOdlly -100 1fld 200 btcll.. Ont rtll'o'. Jeck l1b11r.ott -lOO, ')Cl). a t nd 1,500 1111. TllrN rll•Y•· 51m Fr•nklln -100 1nc1 XII) fl y, ICIO i ncl XIO beck. Tllrtt rt11y1. Jtll Jton1t -lOll blCk, 100 fly, Ont rt11v. KlnrlV W1U1 -100 I nd XIO fl)', 200 ''"· Two r1t1Y1. 1111 MUI.,. -lOll fly, 100, :ll)O •ncl olCIO ...... 200 IM. mtdttv. ThrH .. , ..... ,, l"t11r S1>11rt tm -100 fly, 100 Incl 100 frff. Thr11 ttllYI. M1-t Kelty -100 Ill(-. TWO tt ll 'o'S. l lll Klno1bvf"1' -IGQ Ind JOO lr11. Tht" rtll)'t. lruc1 S<llo4" -1(11;1 lfl(l )(II) bttk. Ont rtll't'. Jt1ndv K1!tx11 -«XI tre<1, «Cl htG. medl1Y. Ori• ••l•v. C•rl<lol Atevl<fQ l<m•l"eM<H -XlO i nd 400 Ind. m1cllt y, 10!) 11y, 200 bt1••'· lJ:"' G•'31 1\lf\11t1d11<1 -~ • .00. l, ''i:TiJ;; ~., ........ " CWtmtn'1 f;11fl'IMI Ptaov T01o<11! -Ito 1r><1 ?«! 1ly , too Mid l'OO lr11. Tl1re<1 rtt1y1. Vlcrorl1 1111hn1•<1 -100 1/IO 100 w ck. Orlt ,,1 • .,.. l{a1f!y M--•IXI Incl l,JOO lr11. lhtH rel•Yt. Amy "'°"" -I.SOC ffll. Tll•H ......... At11y1 onlv -D11nnt F•1n•1Jn. Doi· 111 Gr11nl11r. J1nt1 Grttnft t •, I K..kY IAcCt lllt'IV. Ml •V M<Cl rttiy, Jlf\fl Ml111f'. Mt•it O'Go•m1n. sr~1nJe lttCnk~t. 0 1"""' Totoft t, Mier.tit lw•myb . !Min'• l11lr1t1) O•vld l1t1lf1 -100 t nd 1'00 llrtt 1'1l•Ol<t. • John Otn!IOll -1,500 trte. l hr" r•~1,f.;, ~Ill -!IXI blCk. Tiit .. '148',:-:,.y Grlfflrr.. -100 •r'ld '°° ~''"'""''· °"' 1'911)'. "' O.r1td HK l l -lCCI •rid llft••fttro-•. Ont ••I'" Tlylot H-1 -200 llrfftl. ThrH rlllVL loll J~ -ffW) INdt. TlltH '1451,,"11.;..,, O'Gor"''" -1'00 buk. °"' r•~r~. S\lt1'Y -XIO btff"· TrltH '1~'11~li1g WU<11t -TOO l ft<I 100 bt~•t1. T~·H r•t1y1, ltlll)'I onty -t lll llOl-1, (hlrl" 11e~1t. I('" l)tnlMlft, Cttl• lrow,,, IC)'lt EllO••n. JOh<o '--11!",_~~·rv s.todcl••d. .. _,.,,.1N1--A~ttcl Tim """.:i~;&o ~r1:l '*kl"'"•· f.0.lkt y,,....,., -100 11'14 200 Ill'•••'· 11-J:rm •e111--~ _, 200 w ... 11. lllel10 '"Iv -M•rll 0-W. Mlk• 00b<'O!I, JIMlll Wfwt!Ofl, Fisl1 Report MllNTIN•TON llit.CH -l& t"Oltt1• 1 ,.,Kkt<fl. I -t!O. 100 11110: IN!tt. 61 btr•tcud•. to rock cod. NIW~T !Art't L.-1~1 -fl l 'llll••t: I bl"l<~I, tf bol'l!lo. II l•ncl 11414. J wlllt. -N tJ, I ytllowftll, 71 r0t-coo. 10.....,•1 lldtrl -H1 '"""'; ,, .. ,,.(Yd,, 151 botlllo. ttt ..-btu. IOS roct Uld. JI mK~.,·•I. DANA WMAA~ -111 '"lllf"I: ~ll ~"8 bttt. 1' o..rn(\ldf, Ul W!lta. IOI roct <Of, tt w11ri. -1111t. ''"'" .... ,.., -,. •"9lt<'t: , Q Mfl<I l!Mt, J4 blP~, t WW(,.,.,, } 119111111. 1.,.. -flS ....,..,.: l W · Pk\IOM, 'n llOnlte. 11 MM NM. I """" ... bl>&&. , ""'""'· Clf•r & "•rt. ""' hit 71•1 ,,m. .. U,IT •A<I -lJO VltfOt. 2 ye1r ol<1•. Cl•lm.11141, P11tM •1600. Clt l"Ji"" Prk • UDCCI. '" m m '" "' "' '" "' '" , ....... Lions, MD Bag Wins '" '" "' '" '" "' ... '" ". "' Westminster and 1'1aler Del High School summer league basketball teams swept past Warren and Bolsa Grande f\fonday night ln cage play on t\\'O fronts. The Lions of \\'eslminstcr outdid Warren in the final night of compeliHon in th~ Long Beach \Vilson LeAgue. 76-73, to clinch a lie for seco nd place ~·ith Wilson behind champion Verbum Dei. !\fat.er Dei downed bots.a Grande in the Santa An a College circuit, 40-33, for Its ninth win In 12 tr1e-'. Leading Pi.1ater Del's attack v.·as Bren· don ~fcCaughey with 13 points . DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOISll "'' rtfl•lr 1NI ........... 1H 1?1'" .. M l• ....... Tm.ti 1"- ANfH0Nf'S SHOl SlRVICI • WlnCLI'' ..U.lA 8 \.100 e .. A.Mtott 1)\1.tlO. eo.Oflol Ei•l. Ml• '-feanwhlle. 1t Cotti M- lllgh, Ed'-1 caplured a lorlell dfdsloo from BolA Grande; Troy edged s.r.1to J. t: ind Loi AWnllol topped Rancho Alamllol, 6-S. Estancia '1 Steve W ya t t st0red his tesm'• only pl In the third quarter to tie the score with C.roen Gm-., but the "'lnnera scored five times in the nnal period to eut to the win. And in Westminster'• lou, • 1'.fike ~1ullady, Joo Rlmtley and Tom Burrows scored for the Uons. Los A lamit.os Results ..... Mlolol[•Y Cllilt A ""' ,.lllllT llllC• -CIO "•?'dt. ) yt1r llld•. i:111 ... 1nr. ""'" ,,... Ton'l'I lier {ol!NJ•) 7.ot l.<IO l .00 F1v1 '"" (lrH111tll •.60 l.~ Dtotk I -!H•rtl 1 .0 Tl"'' -:Jl)n. Al10 '"" -r.,.1 en. J""'°"" V•I•"'· t!IOt . !l(lll t . O~k•-· Gt1"'1 <'.O. l"tH Em Iv. Sa:!•'• t vck. ti IXA(TA -1 .. T-'1 ltr .... .. l yl Jtv, ••Ill MJ.6'1. l'!CO~O lllACI -400 y1td1, t Ytt t OIOt. All-lllCt . Pur .. lltlC. Ctt kwtt !Ortv1tl 1•-1<1 ,.40 3.M lttblt Cllll"' H'IM (.\dl lt\ 1.tl '"° J0'"111lt lllt1' 111/lkl) :U0 Tl"'' -:xt.n , Aho •• ,. -M•n Fer Now. ''lit Stt• Lii "'· Ott• C:6PV, P~IV C~t. c;o JoClt. [It¥ II!; Girt. Mtvtdl F1'o'I'· TMl•O •.t.CI: -170 )'10nh. 3 ¥ .. , oe11> a. 110. c1~1"'r.,.. Pur1• nooo. l'ufl ,,,,_ Mlfl !ltH1Ul't ) t .IO S.16 S.00 C1!ifof'ni1 5..-.cfl fS mi!IO) 4.10 l IO M!OW1v Dl ndY IPllJI) f 00 Tr ... , -.. ~. ~ho "" ClrH n IJp, lll<ll' "-'"· I ll 0'1•• N 1(10\0'1 lllltl'lll. MJ •It. "0\ISTM llACI -CIO yttO.. J Y••• 1110• AIWll'let. P11r" tllOO. Al'1 AHlll IDr'VWl •.ID 3.00 f ... Ai~ Cooltd IMvtn l t.• l.•~ TOii l -11l1 t1r IC1rdM1l 2.M Tl..,_ XI.,., A\O r1~ -Oullln' Mop, OM t oid l •O.d (ArOl't Ottl!TI. P"°'ot'• ""'-llUO (Co•(foll l L1nly't JI! (5m!I~) Pll Y P(>lllY lllflktl Timi -11.6'. .... ....... ... ... .. .1110 ,.., -Ohl Otf1 Gttotlllf. C1!1$ti P1•-••· lor! O!dll, Mitt PIS Pit. I'm A.11 Oldl• Too, Mluy lllockll, •1eMTH •.&c:• -JJll y .... 3.,.., Ol<lt t. uo. Cl1lml111. l'ot Pill!• • M1rn.. ,.llttl 120Cti1, My f•~H V1110y !K11l9111l T•11ly M .... 1 ("•t•) $Pltl(IV i UIY !l l<!0.111 Tllftl -11.1'. »Ml, ..... ........ .... .11M r1n -WI • P•trw;_., ~ '''" MIV11tritl'I. To II• Wlrll i...n. 0111Hlc1t1 Oft. C•~•. St SXA.CTA -~.,. T11n W .... & .. T,...., Mii,... ,.W IUtM. MINTM flolC• -a v•"'•· , .,..... old• a. \IO. Cl1lmtnr. """"' tlt!IG. Wlf Q:lc , .... fl(Nflltl 17.to I.• ... ~~. SM4'1' l"•IJll ..... 4M Nooor1 11111n 1~•"1 1. .. Time -l t JI, .1.1~ r•n -Jt0t•l11S llloc~. lit..,. 1.\.CCw , IMI M11. A.Ifft ~ l•r1,vtt..,.. ,.,,..., SW. MIU. Dtrl'll Wl/cft • ti l:XA(TA -t.Wlr Clll1 TW a .. "''· ,,..,.., ,.i, n11.Jt. icllll~li iJ; -ol~lluclt­ Cullom Tailor and Shirtm.aktr • \l{,,tfll#I rt.1.1 • !tntlMHntll •Ni hvkw o ~!-1012 • I •• " H DAILY-PILOT ' T""'"· .hlti 31, 1973 'Follies,' 'Dre11111' Story Edlto,r at 24· · Colleges Open Black Writer Takes 'Sanford~ Job By JERRY BOOK written for television before. chance to exerclJe it. P..1y "It's about poor people. In fad, he had not even phUoeophy ls when you get the They are not revohtt.lonaries. Summer Theater LOS ANGELES (AP) -r A thought ol It. ball, run. And don't fumble. They live a day IO day ex· lol of Il1111"• Adell's friends -.a And " ~· fumble, , ........ ver. lstence as junkmen in the -""' His flrat play, "One: lUIC u. ~.,-.... v lrom the New York theater Don't be mecllocre." black ghetto. Most things in sent him scrip•• after he was Two of Us," was being staged 1 • II don't m k { "" last June by Joseph Papp'& "Sanford and Son" was peop es ves a e ~&~~ ~tosZn" ~l~~y.for Public Theater In New York adapted from the · English social cotnment. Most of the Orange coast College and Golden West COiiege, arch rivals on the athletic field, engage in another kind of com.petillon this week -the battk! for the box office. ENTERTAINMENT and the New York Times ran series "Steptoe and Son" and uniqueness is incidental. He sent them an back and his picture in a Sunday edi· in its first season relied en-"The show does not com- Intermission Tom Titus "they got mad," he says. tio lirely 00 scripts from the meht that they llve this wa v Ih.mga, who at 24 is one of n. British version. llunga•s -rirst because they are black. But the. youngest story editors in ILUNGA, WllO was sup-script -and others from you rt,an assume that. The the bus:iness and the fU'st porting himself as an actor, black writers -marked its show i:loesn't harp on that. It's black, said: got a call the next day from tum toward expressing the a comedy, but if you can Both lnstitutions are opening their annual swnmer drama product.ion Wednesday night , and both will be .running night· ly through Saturday. For OCC. it's the 18th annual swnmer show; ewe began its summer Kid Shows •·t have submitted at least Aaron Ruben, producer of black experience. sneak in some social commeni "Santo~ and Son." .Ruben that's rm· e." 30 ideas to the show and writ-'" ten to date eight scripts. was looking for black writers. ll.UNGA BRIDLES a t l---------- R • I llunga said, "It was like criticism that "Sanford and featured in a bolero number. tr • Everything isn't acceptab e. k bee Moreland, Mick Stonehenge. CS 3JD1Dg Most people are writing in 'the Horatio Alger. I went from Son" isn't trulyfiblllaedc ~use1 h Curtain is 8:30 at the OCC auditorium, 2701 Fa i r view Road , Costa fl.1esa. TickeUi are available at the door. B I · Beth rags to finer rags." it is not 1 w 1 Susanna Q.$ 1 n g , dark. They don't know the uH · " H Broderick , Carolyn Shea, Todd show. Even writers who've "People say, wow, you m~t "redemptive s enng. e Williams, Danny Bu 11 a rd, Violence had oonrerences with the p~ be a greater writer to have so d00ef~. "I think1 th,Sanblror: Wayne Mayberry, Jon a ducer are turned down. much success," he saJd. "It's a .-JUii 15 a part 0 e ac theater program just last year. lt'1 doubtful that the tv.·o schools will be competing for the same audiences, however. Orange Coast is presenting the ultra-mode rn musiclal "Follies." while. Golden West t1 staging Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Bergland and Heather Ceiley. mostly luck. Aaron just hap-experience. Redd Foxx and GOLDENW~T College has The playhouse is located at WASHINGTON (UPI) "mE MISTAKE most~ pened to see my picture. 'San· Demond Wilson are very a large cast of present and 2110 1'1ain St. in 1-luntlngton Television, which increasingly ple make is that they sit down ford and Son' just happened to, _<_•_re_r_u1_io_,.. __ 1ha_l_i_l _is_. __ former students for it s Beach. has the finger pointed as it as and say I'm writing for a be on. A Jot of people have i· ''Midsummer Night's Dream " an influence in creating comedy and they throw in all talent, but they don't "get the under the direction of Cha rles BACKSTAGE -Peter violent behavior among kinds of things. They make it•,-----------! The two college shows com- prise halt the theatrical ac- tivity on local stages this week. The San Clemente Com- munity '11leater is heading into its third weekend with "The Mitchell. A highlight of the Church, a Corona del h-1ar ac-chi ldren, ivill have chansc to a farce. They sacrifice reality show will be the irn-tor who's been pl ying his trade present some mini-altema-for comedy. They shouldn't do pressionistic set designed by professionally with South tives early next year. thaL We do enough of that Robin Huber which features Coast Repertory and o.ther ''The models -a child finds in arowid the conference table.'' dramatic lighting, electronic theaters from Los Angeles to a majority of his TV ex-He said he had thought music, wind and fog effects. San Diego (where he just periences depicts physically about writing since the days GWC alumnus Pet e r finished doing the lead in violent behavior as a workable when he was Adell Stevenson ' ''LIQUID SPACE'' Conway and the college's cur-''Blythe Spirit" with Ann and socially accept ab I e and living in Memphis. But he rent leading lady , Renata . ?i1lller ), leaves with his family method of dealing with con-quit college to become an ac- Florin, take the principal roles Wednesday. for "the old co.un-fiict," according to Ben T. tor and a few years ago in the show, along with Dan try" of England for an in-Logan, coordinator of the pro-adopted an African name. In Baerg, Don Hayes, Janet definite stay .... "Ir I can't ject. the C.Ongolese fashion, Ilu.gga GouJd, Roland Barajas and make a name for myself over "We believe TV can also is the family name. IY DALE DAVIS Frank Pendle. there," he says, "I'll probably p-·••t posithie models of Before he sold his first A SUIFING ODYSSIY Shakespeare's comedy be ba k" ,,._.., 1:00 .& 10:00•Eocti l h'11l1MJ c ... · dealing with conflict," he ad-script to "Sanford and Son"l:~~~~~~~~~~~I classic will be perfonned at The Fountain Valley Com-ded. thi~ past season he had never 8:30 on Wednesday. Thursday munHy Theater i.s Jookirlg torf llmiiiiiiiill~l~~H~~!~llll and Saturday evenings, with directors for its 1973-74 season an earlier curtain at 7:30 on . . . . scheduled are three Friday, at the G\VC Com-children's shows. an adult one- munity Theater . 15744 Golden act and an adult-teen pro- West Street, Huntin gton duction .... app li cants ,, . Beach. Tickets are on sale at 1 Cl k B M~tchmaker w~lle the the college bookstore or at the shou d contact ar urso.n, children's production ''The dooc 10225 Nightingale Ave., Foun- Emperor's New Clothes" is , • tain Valley .... closlng out three weekends at RESUMING ITS engage-lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; t~ H u n t In gt o n Beach ment at the San Clemente • Playhouse. Community ThC'ater on Thurs· IPG) . day will be "The Malch-JOBN FERZACCA is direc-k ,, the Th 0 r n t 0 n EXCLUSIVE ting ~ange ~t ~l!~ge's Wud::• comedy which inspired producti~ . of Foll.1es, an the musical ''Hello, Dolly." award-winning musical by Richard Andersen directs a James GoldJ_nan and Stei;>hen cast headed by Jan Gordon Soodbeim ~•th a score ,Jam-and Stanley Weissburg. p,acked11 with songs. Its a others in the large company today . look at tbe Zi.egfeld-are Peter Case, Joan Burt , type 8U'~ of yesteryear• Mark Razor. Carol Gustafson, gathered ID a t.'OOdemned Ann Keenan, Curt Wellman, Broa.ctway ~ater for a Kip Conner, Mardi Brent and nostalgic reuruon. Bonnie Judson. Performances Heading .the OCC ~ast are are given Thursday through Doyle Mcteumey, cball'Dl&n of Saturday at 8:30 in the Saddleback College's fine arts Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 depertment. and BI an c be Avenida Cab r i I Io, San MJckelsnn, a veteran com-CJemente. R e s er v a I i on s . murU,ty theater actress, as t.wo 494-0465. onellme lovers whose meeting• threatens their current mar· TllE FINAL curtain comes this weekend for ' ' Th e Emperor's New Clo thes," the annual s u m m er children's show at the Huntington Bea Playhouse. Stuart Elliot is directing t h e production. which pfays Friday at 7:30 and Saturday at 2 o'clock. riages. Pat Manusov and J ames Shlrtey portray their spouses, with Beverly Dvorett and Irwin E. Lawton taking major supporting roles. Flashbacks to an earlier era spotlight Barbara Dvorett, RJck Goldon, Lori Furtner and Dave Dunlap, while Robert Engman an~ Julie Garvin are Among the cast members are Chris Guiver, M a r k 0.-l":>IJ'l:o-_,,_f'f•-- tX C LUS I Vt CIOr1' LIKl'lfMfl 2H Feot1re--Joh11 CamMllH "IOX CAR IERTHA" Ill MESA THEATRE Co11t. Sot,. S1111. 2 p.m. "LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE" JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER AL AIR CON ITIONED ... "BOSTON STRANGLER" f PGJ "FRIENDS OF EDD IE COYLE" .. 0 "LADY SINGS THE ILUES" IRI "Ln THE GOOD TIMU I OLL" ••• "EYIL I NIEYIL" IP•J "Jt~'il S ("ltKISf Sl 'l't'K'ilAK- j'"·?~: :::~~!(" · ... ·· j ' ' : ....... ;:.~·."::~~ "-.... : .................. .,_., ... ,. --.. -· . .. ' . MAGGIE SMITH TIMOTHY IOTIOMS "LOVE & PAIN & THE WHOLE DAMN THING" plus JACK LEMMON loth ht Caler CR} United Al't11r1 416 N. a..oadwoy, 5011to A11a 542-4737 Adults 0 111, HELD OVER! "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" IXJ Mkk Jotter "PERFORMANCE" 'YOU Sedion' There's something for YOU in the "YOU Section" of the DAILY PILOT every Su nday. Check its personal appeal for you and yours. 7:00 aBd 10:20 Abo "IROTHER Of THE WIND" -1:50 Call n..ot.r hf S .. llda.,-ScNd11Je U.A. c11, •ncl s.11111 CNst CIM~I -TMfdlr 50(. (Lldlel Ind G9lcle1La9tn) :_ Opu 'Ill 1:to P.M. Nftr M~1k1ll Cll1Hlt HOim ''TOM • S~" "WMO 5AIO YOO CAN'T RI Oll A lllAINIOW" l otl'I ColOr IGl NIW Htlflht1 Of Ttn'lrl "L•Gl!ND OP H•LL HOUSll" -plui- ·~"' IOSTOH STRANGLER" 81111 CDltr(,0) ''TNE HAlltltAD EKPERIMEHT" "IE'IEllYTHIMG YOO WANTEO TO KNOW AaOOT S•>t" R...-1 Welcl'I • "TH• LAST 01' SHll!LA" ''THIE~ WHG CAMI! TO OIHNIEllH 1•111 111 Cti.r (PO) ltlll 111 C•IDr (RI 2M Wiil.i "SSSSSSSS" 21111, Wlo;,I N1w Mnk4111 "TOM SAWYER" "IROTHER Of' THE WINO" lGI • Tiii l.tllhNlt 91 T.,.._rl "IO'Y WHO CRl•O WER•WOLP'" .. .., 111 CMw IPGI • MANN THEATRES ALL THUTllS COOllD aT RIFllGll ATION NOW PLAYING RESERVED SEATS Dn S•le 6030 'Iii MO F1i., Sat.. Sun. Noon MARLON BRANDO .itL tpans , X ~::,,':';:':i~ llno!fd _.~l•sl~ llON. IHRU ;HURl. 8 P.M. fRIOIY 1 & 9,45 SATURDAY 2-7 & 9'45 SUNDAY J.5 & 8 All SIAlS S4.00 arf·• ' I "LIVEAND lETDIE" il'9:«> ..,....._ 'f· a:.'::i~wf~ ii••~:: TECHNICOLOR"' ~-~ .. _ .. .., .. -.., ........ .......... - •• "SILVER FOX" South Coast Plaza 11 l!OWAAOS ~ l \t\t \I t'l~+l "'-'•O' &' •Co .. \ '• V! ' •'? &l .' "'"""" ''°•w•1 ' " ol l •..,.,, SI. ~1~·J~l• l•n<ol" A••· ..... •' """" •11~010 OHt Y OllYI IH l.MOWIHG! DAY Of THE JACKA l 11'GI + 'fl'Alfll u n11a'u • OIOl IUINm POE 'N' TILL IE til'&f Son D••ia I wr , I C•P"l••n• " 011 ••mp ., 4 • BAnLE FOR THE PLANET Of THE APES !•1 , ......... , b~ ... • .. B••rh Bl•d. A ... , ltcu l l•d. l/1·1162 l•"'-"'" ••• w••I n• llinon ~11-1113 , ........ . ............ , Ch•~"••n ••• ~~8 1011 ' ...... d. ""'" ~.·1 'l'llO JA.MIS (OIUll'I • ltl '1l• C.Ul LAST Of SHEILA !PG1 •lVS t •T.ul O'HW THl[f WHO CAME TO DIN Nl R- -.,., Ol'l'"o 1 111 I W1C. ll JOOOto . ' !"" 10!' AntACTIOI+ J,: A u.;IG~ l~l>f.W!E$ 1A~l.Oll "llll'" JACK • ........ ", ...... , ..... "'. 1 SEEi ... THE ONlY MAJOll fLOWER ANO GAID(N SHOW IN SOUTHER N CALIFORNIA flATUllNG fOI THE fllST TIME ANTWHE•E "A.OWfR MAGIC OF THI TIOPICS~ •••• AN ANIMATID flOll:AL SP'KTACVlAI • STARTS wtON.,OAY tow"o' C•NIMA CINTIO • -' · • ....... · "OKLAHOMA CRUDE" AUGUST 1 ot•t&OI I T .10.IMS COST.I MISI · · • · "' · •• 1 • SEEi. .. THI VO:Y LATEST INNOVAHONS IOI: TH( HOM( l OAIDlN WITH OVll 13J,OOO so. JT. Of GUTIHING IXHllflS SHOW HOUIS. S·U P.M. W~clay• N-n '-M. S.tvrffr• Noon·• P. M. Sunday• AD ULTS t2.00 • JUNIORS 11.00 ((hifftr111111111., t2 frff •ilh ,.,.ntt.) .~. _,,., .. ,.,.., .. ''*"'""'~!'. t .. "1 ........ """'~ "IMPllOI Of TH( NORTH• . ·-. • • \.. J , .-...... -..... ' o w.1qo'> ! l\i \11, I I\ If~ !"OWAROS ( l\t \I\< ~\l•R . . . . .. . ' .. ~··· ....... \ . ". ,.,,,., l'4 TMIAm TWO .........,. ... _.,, _,,..c.-. ........ ,. GENE llN3C/lllNI f?ii''b S4/IRfD(CIW .,_,,..o -JND ltG flATUIU A,f aOfH CINI A llOl.OI( MAri lmlAPWU Ulllfll MICUM mnu tllWo\Rt AilUT - ... .:· '~· .• " ,. .-,• .. .- •• ' -I I 1 I .. •' ,. ,• .· .•· .. .. .. . ' ,• ' . ' r t • ' . . ... . .. . , • lLMWJJ, July J l , }q73 DAILY PILOT J _ _,,, ______ ·--------~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ ~ewport~s Annual Fun!) Fury • , • . -. • RACING SAILBOATS BEATING DOWNWIND TO THEIR MARK TAKE ON MAGICAL APPEARANCE AS SUMMER SUN SETS BEHIND THEM HIGH WINDS, CLOSE QUARTERS, ANXIOUS MOMENTS Beer~an~s Best Thrill a Minute for Race Pliotog Pho tography is a po1.1ular hob by even among professional pho- tographers. 'l'he Daily Pilot's Chjef Photographer Lee Payne, fo r instance, when not shooting newspaper photos has amused himself for the past doze n -years by photographing the Beercan Regatta, the annual sailboat racing series held every Thursday evening through- out the summer in Newport Harbor. "Because they are spread out all over the ocean , most sailboat races are boring to watch and difficult to photog raph ," Payne says. "Especially for those of us afflicted wi th seasick ness. The B'eercan , on the other hand, involves dozens of big boa ts crashin g about with in the narrow confines of the bay, usually with a ni ce sunset in the back· ground. "It's a perfect photographic subject and can be easily covered from a number oi locations. yet the action is fa.~t enough and chal- lenging enough that over the years, I have managed to n1 iss more good shots than I have captured," he added . ~ The results of Payne's efforts have appeared in a n mber of publications including the current July issue of \\"estways agazine, and we herewith present a sampling of his fa vo rit e Beercan photo- graphs. A llEERCAN RUN DOWN NEWPORT HARBOR MEANS AN INEVITABLE RA CE AGAINS T THE BALBOA FER RY SAILING THE BEERCAN MEANS MANY TRAFFIC JAMS ; ~, ••••• SOO ·S'M ~ ••••••• ,qso.990 The Biggest Marketplace on the Oranae Coast ,.,.... Hanlll .. s.. . . . w . M9 '-sonah· . . . . . . . ~ . m · Sfi fn~ .• ,, .. ,, 700 ·799 rinanca .•...•..• 209-299 ..._for 5* •• ,,. ,lOO·n.t DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS • ,.,. ord ~. . • • . . &50 • 199 1ita1 f11a1t G.i.ol. • , • . ISO • t99 LC11t & FalJnd • , • , , , • S.SO • SM Met'Chand«MI .••••••• BOO · 149 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval ...... ' ' .• ' ' ' • ' •• 300 · 499 Schooh ~ 1rntruc1ion ••• 575 • m s-ices ond ~~ • • •• 000 • 699 T1onspor1otlon. • • , • • • • 915 • 949 ::.R~.~~ .. A::::-~,o~i~'!...d\':::i,.t~~ [ -·•«.Solo ]lie ] [ -"1"5"" ]l ie] I _..... ]~[~·"Siio I~ ,[_-__ ........ _.;1~1 ie.;.;][;;;-;;;;'"; .... ;;;;;l~l ;ie;;,J [ -"'"-I~ DAILY PIL01 INUmH ll1blllty for th1 lint • incorrtct insertion only.~~~~~~~~~I ;:.G;:.•:;••:;r;:.•;;.l ______ ;:.G;:.•;;,••.:.r.:•c.• _____ 1;G:;•:;no~re.:.lc_ _____ G;..•.:.•.;;•;..r.;;•.:.I ------General Generai General ':' * * 12 APARTMENTS * * * * t\.lany allernativ(.>6 to' finan· Chli and ownership. * TAYLOR Co * e ~lay Tr"ade Do\\'n fOI:' smaller units. e e t\.lay Trade tor Land '"ilable for 3 to 5 units. Genera l READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30,490 A new concept In Homt Ownership by Ayres Con1truction Company You Own the Lind ind the Home Not a Condominium or Co-op No Monthly 1Minten1nce Fee 4 Beautiful Exteriors All with S BR, 2 BA, lge lam rm, lovely living rm, ktch. with range & oven, gar- bage disposal, dishwasher, sep/futl 2 car gar. Occupancy prior to-start of school. Moclel1 at corner of Ad•ms & Florida l block W. of Buch Blvd. in Huntington Beach AYRES SINCE 1905 536-1«5 Hyoll!_e~a ~t-~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of Juxur~ comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun·Litec kitchen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming poo~ lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiositrsee Newport Crest today! HIGH ON A HILL-$125,000 Brand New! Ready for you to occupy. See this large 4 BR home in Spyglass today ! Fam rm, formal DR & huge rumpus rm. Circular stairway, Lge. entry & 3 car gar. Inc. land. BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Perfection throughout! Beautiful landscap- ing on estate-like site makes an attractive setting for this 3 bdrm (incl 2 ms tr stes) home. Fam rm & formal DR. Lavish furnish- ings incl. Pool & jacuzzi. $199,500 IRVINE TERRACE-$189,SOO Beautiful view of lights, oce~n & Catalina. Call today to see this lovely 4 BR (2 m~tr stes) home. FR, dining area, den w/wet bar, 4>,; baths, pool & 3-car garage. Approx 4200 sq. ft. of living area. LUXURY AND QUALITYl-$225,000 A jacuzzi large enough for the entire family & a great covered patio for entertaining. 5 Bdrins, FR, Ige DR, 41h baths & 3-car gar. Air-cond thruout. Abundant marble. Finest constr. Land incl. Dover Shores. LINDA ISLE-$245,000 Courtyard entrance to this fine quality-built bayfront home. Abundant de! Pisa tile makes a minimum maintenance. Pier/slip up to 65' boat. 4 BR, FR, DR & billiard rm. Gen1ral General I ·~:.:;::;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;,,;;;;;;;;·;;,--;,;·,,;;:,;;·;;;;; Two, Three, and Four Bedroom Condominium Homes I• from $62,995 !~~.~ .New orl-~ U'L OLE RED HOUSE ON BIG 71 'x140' LOT, R·2. Two bedrooms plus guest room, Eastside Costa Mesa. Better Hurry-Asking only $23,950. CALL 540.1151. LOAN ASSUMABLE NO POINTS -NO WAITING. 3 Bedroom, large family room. Convenient Costa Mesa location near schools & shopping. Full price $29,500. CALL 540.1151 . ~-.$."" HERITAGE REALTORS 60 YEAR OLD 540-1151 Open £ves. MESA VERDE- General General g 'rest , OUYE TREE Seven year young home - Four bedrooms -,.,.,_'O be.ths. Bean1ed cathedral ceiling5 grace both living and family rooms of this MediteITanean ch.armer. A fonnal dining room, all electric kitchen, pantry, huge clOM?ts plus a CO\o'ered patio and beauti(ully lan<bcapcd and sprinklered Jot are a few ol the many ertra.s. Just '40.500. Move fast. Call 962-8851. $37 I 900 Jrl"1*fCrul ilc•pratmof PaclfkM.C.,!Jw:. Verrle, meaning green, is ~ .... -flobMH.G.-ontCerpoo-••loft.~naalConrractcw. --· SOME OF THE BEST IN CORONA DEL MAR Duplexes under construction amid tower- ing pine trees with mountain views just a walk from the beach. Two, 3 and 4 bedroom units with numerous decks and patios, mas- sive fireplaces and all wood siding exteriors. Priced from $122.000. just righl for t h i s i=.I~ - beautifuUy landst'aped fa1nit =.,-, •. .!;.''i:':",:.1::!"!=::.:~M .. :;:t~':':"",'.!.",t:;~;.,':;:~i:'~ UNl9UE HOMES Of CORONA DEL MAR. 675.6000 Lhtl1t1 of L_rlft11 Ewl119 ly hon1e Y•ilh rolorlul --""''""''"~--..... ... ..-.,.i-_.~.._ • ..__ planter ~ are1L<1 and fruit tre<-s. Close to schools,l~-~~----~~-~------1 Ulllo.Jl()US: tf()US:\£: lib•""' '"" •oopp;ng. m,1 G~;;••;;•;;r•;;l;;.;;;;.;;;;.;;;;,;;;;;G;;;•;,;;";;;•';;•l====;;;I r"lll L ,._L~ be<lrooms, 2 baths, garage 1. REALTORS d~r o~~r aOO large l"ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lii!iiiii!i!!i!iii!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l l "'"'""' patio. -CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA I~ NEWPORT BEACH General General ========= You'll (ind it in Cl<iSsified l General General I I INSPIRING BAY VIEW Outstanding two-story home; pier & slip. 6 BR., 4 ba. Superb mstr. suite w/sa una & large pvt. sundeck. $325,000. Gary Knox FOR THE HOUSE GOURMET A lavish 4 BR family home, complete with fountain, rose garden, ocean view & decora- tor touch! $135,000. Fee. 3619 SURFVIEW. L. Burns FOUR EXCELLENT BUYS 2 Great homes, Emerald Bay. $275,000 $350,000. S BR. remodeled model home plus brand new apt. $145,000. 3 BR. cottage CdM $69,500. Pat Hug BAYSHORES -PRIVATE AREA '49,500 and up, will settle you in this de- lightful area w/2 private bay beaches & boating facilities. Call Mary Harvey to see fine homes. EASTBLUFF VIEW HOME The most beautiful 3 BR., meticulously car· ed for home In this popu lar neighborhood. Discriminating buyers rejoice -$76,900. Call Bob Yorke LITTLE ISLAND BAYFRONT Pier & •lif.. 4 BR., 41'.i ba .. din . rm .. chart rm., Childs wing incl. 2 BR. & liv. rm. w/ fpl. Planned for future apt. 4 Yr" new. $249,WO. K. Raulston W.0700 ,...._ Coldwell, Banker ~ 550 Nowport C1nt1r Dr., N.B. 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 2V2 Baths. Formal Dining Room~. Pool, Sauna & Tennis Courts. RESERVATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE SALE OR LEASE SPECIAL PRICES NOW!! I J.}nJa .!J6fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Real Estate Consultants Linda Isle Waterfront 1525 Superior -Suite 3 Newport Beech 1714 ) 645-3230 General General Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with \'iew of main channel. Soft colors, rich v.'ood panel· ing & 3 frplcs .. give a warm intimate feel· ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath, sitting area, view decks ......... $295,000. SPITIIN' DISTANCE to lhe ocean from this IO\'ely four bech'OOn1, thrt'e b111h home. A forn1al dining area complin1ents the J a r g e rooms. All conwnlences, in· eluding \\'Gier so rt en er. sprinkl<'r, electric gltl'agc door opener, and super storage area an10ng the many plus features. Only $48, /;)() -Act Nov•? Call 96~1. Artist-Writer· Recluse \Ve\"C foond a home for )'Otl In a (antastic: resort IOC'n· tion. In fact, there arc h\'fl of U.ese horn!!$ side by side and the prices arc an Uribelievable $11,500 & $12,500 at 10% down these ,,.,,,,·1 last! Sparling lnv11tm1nt Corp., 833-3544 * * * Mrs. Kerk Lesk 29091 Paseo de Ocaso Laguna Nigutl You are 1he 11·111nrr of 2 ti{·kcts to 1he RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAILEY General CIRCUS 1;:..;==----- AN'il~EIM NEED A CONVENTION SMALLER HOME? CENTER WANT A POOL FOR OPENING NIGHT WITH NO AUGUST 13 Pi<>se onll &42-567ll. <XI 33.1 UPKEEP? ro clain1 your tickets. {Nort? Try the convtiniencc and case County toll free number is o[ condon1inium living. Gel 540-12'20.I rid of a11 that OOuse and * * * yard \\'Ork. We have a c:lean EASTSIDE CUTIE BIG. BIG lot, room tn build. and pretty 3 bedroom condo ltiat is a real "'Ork savt'2'. A $ saver too -It's nnly $23,500. tnqulre for (urther details. 847-0010. cutest home ""~'ve had in 0Pffl17t t . rrs FVN ro 8E Nt;EJ :;;::'" !~~:;~~· 1 ' ' ~ ·~WALLACE c; REALTORS 522,SOO -546-4141- (0ptn Evtnlngs, f or this Im nl a cu I at c. I :;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;~[ UPSfradcd 3 bedroom~. 2 A molt ctu\nning 3 bedroom. bat!t.,., only :J miles trom IM Beautifully dc(.'()M\fed. Love-~ beach. Seller "'ill pay loan DREAM HOME !r811:f1:v~ ~~t! EMERALD BAY ~. !: 1 ft'U~ ~:Si.~~~ catt'('I on pool M~. quiet cul· BHt bey, best view, lllJ'Rt'lll or yt')ll may wanl lo aaume ~·sac Jot. F"cw minut('l!C ~If.acre lot in Emerald the exbtlna: loan at only trom the Bcac:h, Offct'td at Bay. Como see 11 -Op..n 5~ ~. $29.500. An exC'f'llf'nt value. f"\-'eJ'Y chay. $87.500. 1127 Call tod!l)'! 8'2·25.l5. Erntftkt Bay, La run a ,,..._.;; •1:11-__ , ""'" '"" '" '"" '° .. NIC('~ PETE BARR En ~®. -REALTOR-Ri>A11ot'!I 642-5200 aH.1 \Ve5t<·l1 r ':::=:=::::=:=:=~~1 ·~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~-~~~~~~~;t6'6-~17l~1~l~0~1"f!2.'1E~~~''~·-,,-;:~ • • 1•.f a "l'ad"' Plan-11n lt<I: Cll'L~~1f\rd .s , .• ti42·567' , _______ _ Walker&Lee •••l •• ,.,, General ... _. ... .-·"AMERICAN·· ... '·HOME ' • •• ~IA!TtJll ,.• .......... Presenls Fi.nest l.oc:ntlon 4 BR bon1e, ocean &: city vu, huge Jot, beach frontage , many otht-r fine homes avail. OCEAN VU LOT No. <>od. Plans avail.;, $44,/JO. Summer/Winter Kentels 49ti1011 y4941513 "GREAT" DUPLEX HURRY!! This \\'On't last king! Like nt>w -ne11r Big Corona Beach -Both unll.~ h-vc 2 berlrootns and one bath - E."'<ctilent condition -Prinle locaUon -Best buy in Corona <tel '-1nr duplext:s. 119.!00. 67.l-8550. VA REPO * Huntl119ton Buch * $1 ,lm 00\\'n, 5.')00 Cl'l'SI, 3 BR, 2 BA & bonus mom. V1u.•u1. Doo't miM this one! Century 21, Gl"l'tn TleaJty 8-17-3111. EV'-""· 642..f.~. A UNl()(JI: 1-0tf ONE OF THE BEST IN CULVERDALE These always sell fa st! Especially when O\vners have purchased and want action. This 3-bedroom is cute, clever and includes quick access to the community pool and ten· nis club. Offered at $39,500. • UNIQUE HOMO OF NEWPORT llACH, •45·6500 A Ulttitt of Morge Elhnare General Geheral OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide CAMEO HIGHLANDS Conveniently located, yet quieter than a los- er's locker room. Exceptionally clean 3 bdrm. and family rm. home with vie \V of ]¥,th ocean and canyon. An xlnt value at $69,500. THE BLUFF~ONDO If you haven't seen this lovely 4 bdrm., 2 bath home, with al l its amenities, at $59,500 -you're missing something! * BAYCREST * On a Budget Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family horPl! on a lge .. well located lot. Owner is leaving town & has priced the home for quick sale. $69, 750. CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662 General General A FEW COBWEBS-· BUT THE PRICE OCEAN VIEW Cottage + GUEST Under $30,000 Is NICE Channing beach ronagc overlooking the blue Pacific. and so is this great !loo~lan 3 big bedrooms including and the lovely-landscaping. 1 hide·a-.. vay master suite, Both house ancl yard n~ed a guest facility and captain's little clean up, but you 11 be· den. Party room and huge \1'1'.ll rew,arded ~Y the low entertainer's Patio. TAKE pnce O( JUSt $31.500 and t1_le ADVA.lllTAGE. Ca1! 6-15-0303. t>xtra bonus -the seller \\'111 help pay your costs! Call IXl\v because an offer like this doesn't last. 847-0010. JORI . .\ I L OISO\ " 1?£AlTOR<o THE REAL ESTATE RS 'General MACNAB IRVINE NORTH BAY HOME 2-story 5 BR, FR, fonnal DR. Wet bar. Pool. jacuzzi. $72,000. Lois Egan 644-6200. (B31) BAYCREST Sparkling 3 BR/FR. Room !or boat -pet play yard . $74,500. Cookie Allison 642-8235 (828) IRVINE TERRACE Glamorous cu stom view ho1ne, incl. many valuable antiques .,vtl'l!!its of furniture. Pool , lg. terrace for entertaining. 4 BR or 3 & den. $325,000 fee. Elaine SvedC<ln 642- 8235. (B22) [Irvine J -b·• ...... -1.,c.m_ I OI Doftr Drlve 142•12SS IM4 MlcArthur au-1200 e May carry 2nd Trust °""'· All Units furnished. Good Rent Schedule. Heated and filtered pool. $172,800. ca!I anylin1e. 646-(655. ·CUL-DE-SAC EASTSJDE COSTA M.E.SA. This is a large hornc which y;ill allow you to rcAUy use yo1u· imaginntion. Over 2300 sq. fl. Zoned R-2. It now has 2 8Wroon1s plus guest quarters. Large Back Yard. '44,950. c.an ~ for details. VIEW 1.2 Acre Estate 6 plus Guest $64,500 IRON GATE ENTRY and long private drive to mag. niticent Spanish estate. Pri- vate courtyard entry. 6 bed- rooms including hide-a·\vay master suite, guest facility with private enrrance and servants' quarters. Elegant living roon1 v.·ith garden palio. Cantina kitchen. Fiesta pa11y room 'vith hand la.id <:£ramie tile and ceiling high fireplace. 60' obselva- tion deck overlooking miles or scenic coas1line and BLUE PAC1F1C. Ca 1 I &&5-0303. HlKISI L Ol.SO\ '" R£AlTVR.} $14,000. NO MORE This home includes a hou5€ trailer -rented at $160. The home itwlf is rented for $150. Home has new cooper plumbing, electrical \1•iri and stucco. R-2 lot too! Don't Call Me A Duplex!! I'm a roomy 3 Bedroom 2 Bath hon1e on an open cor. ner lot with manicured front yard and sheltered patio. PLUS An easy to rent income uni! \vith private entrance, now producing $2Q'.l/mo. 189.""" CALL 644.7211 VIEW· $79 ,500 Custon1 huilt 2 story family hume in excellent Newport Beach location. Quiet area \\'ifh country atn1osphere. Less than a mile from the beach. Walker &Lee -111.1.L llTAll Real tori; 2(MJ \\'t'Stcliff Ori\'C 646-m I Open eves SPANISH VILLA Spacioos immaculate. l\ingsi1.c bedrooms. Master suite. Huge living room. Im· n1ense fnn1ily room with \\'l"t bar. Gounnet kitchen. Double pool size yard Oll quiet cul-de-sac lot. Bo«t and camper gate. If yoo hllve been looking for the best, this is it . Of(erod at $48.!:KKI. can 84Z-m5. ()PEN TIL 11 • IT'S FUN 70 BE. NICEf 1 11~111\ll LIVE IN IRVINE'S RANCH On trvtne'g Rllll<'.h. 4 br, J )1!&r old. An offering no ooo CAn REFUSE! S3900 do\\-1'. Walker&Lee 11111,~ llTll,fl MARINE CONTRACTING NtM'POrt Beach. r In e a,I cq Llpmen ._ walerfroqt k>c:ation. 35 Yr. old eom· Pl">'· Space avaO. lor boil .Wit-In. Newpott ... ch, C.lltorni. t 2tlS ~~~BILL GRUNDY RLTR = 675-'161 [ .... ·-· .. ~ ... -... "'" ""' --5 T~ T~ ... ... .... .... ••• .... ... ·-"'" ·~ -... OM ... Off\ , .. , ... ·~ M~ [ [ ... ... '"' "' [ ~ I L '" Tb• ... ,. "' ,. •• [ •• •• .. •• i: •• ... '" "' MO MO M> .. " .. " I Sti .. " [ .. <> ~ " "' u [ • • •• ~ •• • ~ [ • c ' • ' ' T T • [ • • l ' 1 ' • ' ' I • I • • • ' r ' ' [~1~) [ -.. ..... l~I ---I[~ [ _,,, .. l~l _ ..... [ ..--.1wu. l[ejci. .;..:.."°='•::.'----- BALBOA PENINSULA Ctwom, top qu.a.ht)' home plus 2 bedroom apt, above. ~Jany OUl$1anding ff':aturet. SteJ)tl to ocean and shop. pi.ng. 7'i;. l<mn, CAU. ncrw tor dl•tails, S.l$. 7221. .......................... 1 .. MfiMW/~hHt "-, Ut M9Mll ..._. Ptf S... . , IU "' ...... .., ..... ·•·•···•···• l.M .. ..,..,...... ................... ll1 ,.,.._ ...................... IM C--""' Lttt/C"""' ... .. ... IM ~, ,.,.,_., ....... ,IM ~W.-.., Wit ........ UI ~.VUnll'I w" .. ... . . . lU HwtBt. M _ _. ......•... 1"4 ·--.. ,...,.,. .... ". . . .. . . . "' 11!11Lllttrkl ""'l'Mf , .. . .. . ... 1M Llttl ftl' S.llt " .. .. • • Ut MM!ll ....,../Tr•lltt P•••1 . 112 Mwftl•lll. DtMrf, ••Mr1 . .. . 114 or.... C.. P....-i1Y • . . . . • . . . . 114 CWt· .t St•tt """"" . . . . . . . 111 •~ ,._ o"'w" . ... llO 1 .. 1 •1t•lll •ttM11f41 .. , UJ ... 1 E1tttt W111• ..... ,.. , ... ,[.__ ----,---" _I~ ......... °""'1•""'1 .......... -llltiMM W1t1telll ............ 111 111,,_1_. O,,.,,.,.lty . . , nt lol..,.,l_I WMNd ........... llO "'9Mf .. L .. n • .. .. • . 14111 ~ w..,,.. ............... Uf ~ Tnnl Dee11 •..... 2't l'---· .. _···-~l[ ... J HffHI ,.m•ilMll .. . .. . .. . .. JllCI H-• Wftfllnl. • . . ' .. • , • . . JU "°""" l11m. ti 1H1ll1t11, • ., , llO c.rt1191r1lnl111M lvni •... , ...•. , JlS Cflldemllllv!IK 1111tvrn. . . . . • . . m Qlftde. 111r11 . .,. llftf1rn •....•... m T.....,_,. htm. . . . . . • • . . . . • . uo T.wn!IWM 11111f11m ............. 1l$ ~21 ~nJ \\lestctUt Or., N.B. HOME & INCOME * Newpo<t Height• * S11anish 3 BR., 2 ba. Nl:'Wly re1nod. Extra lg. lot. Besl Mf'"ij;:ht3 location. $58.500. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 * General EASTS I DE BIG FAMILY HOUSE \Valk 10 d..-m<"ntary and jr. tugh fron1 th\$ £t•11tl'OO-' !appt'1X. 2500 !l<J. ft.I 4 or~ bfodroom 4 bn1hroom hon1r \\Ith f&tnlly room. ronver- i!bll;' drn. romlnl d!1"1in11:. h111·k patio 11dth Kt•~ fire r init tind 11\l'i" CO x 130 lo!, S11uatl'li on a IO\'t ly lrl-f' lined cul~-f.:&C Ml'C<t.'t. $.11,tSO Call 644-7211 t!:R BAR HARBOit 4 Br & den + fan1. room honl<'. Ne-.1Jy dcrorated &: a j~·\\·l'I to li\'e in. Vacant ,t.r ready for lx'cupe.ncy Aug. Jrrl. Full price ... $3B,950 (Diive By 1059 Cheyenne) Newport General 14114ti# ~-,?lltid. ~ REALTORS CORO NA.OlL MAR lll.'!l lA"'l f.OA~t •11(.•~WAw 644·7270 ROOM.TO ROAM t:~a:ltL~i\'e IOC'llllon in a QUIET AREA. Lots of T\\'0-~TORY, 4 Bedroo1n, 211 baths. firep l ace.. SUNDECK oU laree master pa~ts ~ .... ·ay suite. Large brick patio. Sha\\.' t~ day and bring offer. $52,500. 644-7270 1lbol, Penlntula 2 BR., ? be. •• conv. rll'-n Qwi'.'I t11IN'l'I bcr....i't'n ocean & 00.Y $67-'00 COAST Prop. ColllfO P•rk 6TJ.~110 COLI.EC~~ Park hon~ by (m.'IX!r. 3 Bi·. din nn & f11m m1 f"on tbo l'l? lil'lng rm. \\'/fllh'. 11_. ba. nu d1Sh\\'llSrn.•r, lrg pa t I o \\ UHQ, fln15hr<I g a r . \V/blJr. t"l"f'llh palnl in &· out, fl'.'nced yard v.• f !\ pr1nklf-l' tronl/n'.!ar. >ilnt movt>-ln cond, S.TT.900 SIK'l\\·n by appt on I y . 5-Wl-1~5i Coron• del M,ar SAY NO MORE!! • Corona Ui.l;hlancts • 3 Brrlroon1s 2 Baths • Fan1 ily lloon1 • 65 x 100 co rnt•r lot • $59.!'!00 CALL 644-nll lmtl SOUTH OF HWY. OVr'NER sparkl111.1: .& Bd . iii Ba plus larp 14 :c 1l ft. 1''iu11lly roont v.· t\n•pl:u·t'. huilt1111, fom '<I air, full)' ca~tC'd .ft. drl'P'~ l:lll,'\~ ft'~I yard. C'lo&e in lo 111·hools. i·hurcti'~ and P-ho~ pin~ art'as. Only $29,900. S.'Ul-1 157 * MESA VERDE * 3 BR. 1''.1mtly rm. 2 Bllillui $3.'.i.:.OO -10', c\ol.l·n £Xl"t'Uffit opc-ning for T<111 Sa!t'!m1cn BALBOA BAY PROP. * 5~8800 * East Bluff H0;>1tE \\"anlt'd Eastblufl. 4BR, 1-·R, DR. pf\'!. pool. Call P. Oyer ~5Sj() "'kdays, 673-~ v.11.l:'nds or alt 1ip1n El Toro LAGUNA REAL 11~ Glru111·~1~· !-o't. Lll \.!)li.l ~19-0316 -OCEAN VUE STATE ~IO\'C" your famil\I into 1hl1' 11t.~i1utilul 4-BR honl<' v.ith Fnnnal Dining Roon1 and a •-:!ii=Ji:ii======I~ Fw11ilv Jtoo1u. This home Vi iii Supo·1·U B1-i:·h1 tec't <l•·i;ia::nNI hon1.-. ]AA dr!:l'\'f' \'IC"\\". 4000 ill II. 6 Br •2 r11n~1er 11u11rf.•. ~Sn. f~11u1t d1niftl.:. f:uu 1·n1, i;:an!ru balh, hui::e '====~:::::====:! k1tl"'hi•11. $10-1.00'1. P1irn: nn-tl' ly. Q,1·nr "'ill ht'IP f!nnn•.'('. ,.,.., ... ..., tum. er 11nl11m .•. :MO Dttplun fvnt. ... . . . .. .. . .. . .. :Ml ouPt•n unt11111. .. .. .. . . . . .. • l50 DllPM•tt. fum .. tr 11nl11rn ••... lU Aptl. lvm. • ................... llO ""'· """'"'" ...... ....... ..... .us NEW TRIPLEXES 11 and DUPLEXES FoiNi•w ENJOY HAPPY OAYS and enjoy this lovely homt': ne\\' carpc·t~ and drapes , family 1-00111 or fom1al ctin- ini;:-room, but \\"ha! a value this 3 bedroon1, 21~ balh. nrcp!ace home is! Large patio for your entertaining pleru;ures. All yours for only $31,450 . }lert!"s 'UlC nl 1hc OC11cr buys in a rlu11lcx in old Corona drl ~tar. 2 Bdnns. each. TIC\\'\y p.ilnted outside. l"I('\\' carpels 1n front unit: frplrs. in each. Short \lo"alk to brach. lmmed. posses. on front unit. Takr 1 look! MORGAN REAL TY desigrM..'CI ror c11sy li\in,i: v.ith all the t'On\'eniences anrl localed 111.·nr the in1· portnn! shopping 1·cntf'r11. Now priced at only S~\,900, Call today. "·e·f\' ready to shO\v? 586--0221 THE LARGEST "'" ?.>'II D'" 0>"" d•lly" -l!!.\--8:{21"~~~-~-~ BEDROOMS Ht:"\LT WL'L D•w•n Vt<>W Lot ~. lllrll. er lllllvrn ......... 11'11 ... Im ........................ 400 ·-.... r11 ................ ..,, Helelt. Mete!$ ................. 01 in COSTA MESA ~111 644-7270 NEW LISTING! t:xciti~ 3-BR home in lo\·e- ly Lake Forest \'il!age. This j, a \\'<'ll·buil! hOme in l"'X- ct'llt>nl ron<lition. Call us for information 11bout the mnny f':<tra.'I. Priee':' -o n I )' $4J,:;.oo. 5..%--0222 SUMMER FUN IN TOWN 1.oi C \N BE YOU><· oo Only $13,900 1j1~s luntasllt' ,~c~n!a)~~ ~auuful honll'. con1pl\·t~ly ()N>fln\'l1•Yo' ltlt)•. 673-8.lOO G-t Ht"" .................... OS SUITllMI' II Ml lb .............. 410 OPEN DAILY (onytimo) hon1e. J Bdrn1.;; :? h;11hs UPSirlldC'd. 1-'ll"'t'plaa:>, h1-1o v.utlMI 11..i.11 .............. ru •1t11l•ll ti SllaR , .• . . •• . .. . . • • ut l)ar,... f9r ••I .............. us Placentia at Wilson l1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!! Orange County Apartment E.iccluslve Agent 547-0791 673-6642 67>6459 rooin f~r a hoal' anri nni<"I; 1·a rp1•ts, \'11sin1n ~lrniK·s. Lake Fore1t n1,11'C' and v.·nulci )UU l'o.•11,.\"1' bu1tt1n Bar-B-Q. pl.1n play· -, For Sale -By Owner "HARBOR VIEW MONACO" Office llent•I .................. .... 1nM$tri•I 111111•1 .... . . . . ... . .. 451 Stor ........................... fSJ •1t11t11S W1111t11 ................ ... MllC:e41-.....vS 1t ... 111t ........ 4'65 CORNER DUPLE.X Shon \\alk to the hf'1u+. 2 ~iroom:!I rocti Nc\1 ly painted "'h'rior r-.;("11· l'pls rlrps front un1\ Frnl·rd ~-ant~ Tmn1~~d1atr possess1on' 1 I , '$29 900 c II ·k' hou~ . ..\ n'al b;>auty al only !..AKE fronl c.~111<'r 101. 4 Br. o l ) •· · 11 qui< · S3t50CI! 3 Ra. trnnis .t: ~\\"u11111lrn:. U\\'TlC'r anx101a. C .\LL 1, 1 '' •l-k •d'-inn b-12-!nTI 1, 11:_ \, c_u , , .... ~""' .. TR.ADE YOUR S1,1,000 ...... ~m or .~m7 EQUITY '62-4471 ( ~.;:} 546-1101 Lido 1110 FOR 11 IIS go~f'OUS Jliplrd.l l.,..,.., ... ~~~ ... .;.;..;.;.;1;::.::"-:'fiii5.oo~;---1 ~nu·i·a..'>f' F'r.u1<•1i.:1·an ~·oun-1' fr ..;p( ,511 • * $285,000 * lain 110111.:-. Lo.1d.i nf up 1~. '),n' 1j 1 _, 1 J I b('(I Pn'sli1.,•1ous Viti Lld11 Sord grad 1~. CALI. 1{~2-9.171 . m;~.· 2 li.il!~~~r('.n:Tllk; \\"lltf'r front ll<'ln1e. J br. 3 Bedroom + Den -nu Clll"pel - 2 car garage. Close 10 school and shops. Nice neighborhood. Kid size yard -$27,500 Prill{', on I y. 54~5196, fi..6-8157 ~enings. GOOD starter home. Clean 3 BR, }t~ ha.; carpeting like J'ICll'. lg. yard. Fortin Co., Rltrs 612-5000 Enjoy the (l('('an breezes nnd greenbelt li\'ing in this enchanting community. This delightful 2 bedroom and den is full upgraded 11 ith custon1 d~rator's drapes and Lilf's. 'The patio is a t1'\K" delight. Nicely lancMcapc>d - l ,[ _______ _,lr&:'l Jots of fruit t~! tlurry for _ Ptrsonils -~ u1is one at only $65.500. AulO tr•111,.or1•ITM ............ SU QUICK CASH ~~~; 11SFUN TOl3£NICfl When you list with us, YOUR HOME is <1dvertised in Home for Living maga· zine in more than 900 areas -and cus- tomers are wnt to you as referrals from our over 500 affiliates of NMLS. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 67>6459 SP\"GLAS.~ Hill 's Best \'u ~e""' 4BR. 21 ~ba.. Sep. dinin1: P.n1 . 2;) Carmel Bay Dr. By ov.11rr. PLAY BALL!! Qr Croqu1'I -IOls of roon1 for fan1l!y fun anrl ganli.'S in lhis park-hkc yard. ~-our tar,;:e bech-ooms. formal din- ing roon1 a nr\ lan1ily room. All Un,; for S·ll.900. C 1\ L '... COL\\.E:U.. t"Jll::il -586-0W. 3 B~DR~M 1 BATt:' 01 ,.1• J-JI.\ loan , and SZ'lS. l\11 , t'\IJ(llllll ur!111ut' f,r.aiurc llUGt. 1..0r. US£' yoor Lll. nl" p.1\"J( ;11!. 1hU-OUI . Ii:. t .. sl1p \ land sellel'll \\'Iii help finnnl'I"-MO.I '.,\· or ~j".85J\ ins:-. Principals ool)'. CALL S4'"'17L '" ' ' EXECUTIVE ~ '\:'' E~Ji.1t3"'tmenl< ES~~·~.= I~ _1_1_~A_~-o:T"':""""1~-~-~-[.g' ~ ' c "WANTED" ~ East Coast High\\·ay Corona del i\Tar DUPl.EX:.COrner Lot Xlnl oond. 3BR. 2BA. + 111'1V 2BR, lB,\. 500 Poinsettia, open 1-5. COZY 1 Br, house on nice R-2, lot $4-1.SC(l. by O"'"!ler. bl:\.-4169 -~---. . · -~ Sfll}n\rJ~s,!r:·~~,~·~n 1arae Irvine l\lf. 1 1in. & ''""· open 1 ;;;;;:;;;,;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~J b1·nn1i;, \n teri--s:Ting !pk Nn.r MIRRORED WALL l.1(k> 1rnn1<1 1•! Four..:! Cl'" i lll) SM "'' '" SIX CHILDREN $17,000· Costa Mew POOL LIDO REALTY rvfl•'i"l:< U11• pridf' of O\\T1(•r-l.Tn \'ia [.lrio. N"pl Jkal.'h st111i 111 !!us ·I l:illrrn. hr1r11f' * 673-7300 * IL,.-... -,:-~·-:"-.~-~-. _I[~) L SOUT~NCOAST Tl1t•lri<•L . .. . ..... * Super 4. ~r~;~ honie tv.·o fireplacrs -"·et bar - paneling, tile floors -21, baths -great family l10me! 15 months old! 54500 doo·n. NO MORE Clean, 3 b1'/den & \\'Orkslmp in rrar. Lnts o1 pr1\ -;.· \\'itn c-hain--link fc1tc·e arounr\ this t·ham11n~ horn£'! Easy financing. Realtors :HG--0022 CHARMING CAPE COD If you'rt' looki n~ f()r an 11n· usual homf' 1n l:'ast Cos1a :\IeS!l \l"l' have 11! Thi.;,; IO\cly l>l'O 1;1nry hon'I(' L'i a stone·~ thl'O\I· from the Santa Ana Couun-y Oub. 'You dt'\:ide SIX BLOCKS TO BEACH Spanii;h "llOlL'!r Of Glt11i!<"', :I yr. old U!. C:UC-s1:\. Ynunc \av.)'('r must st•ll unn1Nll.'il"· ly for di\'Ort'e p11X'l"c.hni.::-. All ~a~ g;utj..,., kLll'hf'n .,,.;," patio ~'!·thru. For· Tn:tl d1n1ng, cath"t.lml ct"il- \\Uh l!S \\IU!f• fu'f'pltH'f', 1ts 1-~~-'o-==~=---1 i'l•lr.-y ctll01'(<(I ~ru:'. thruoul ,\ Rf;At. Ctlr!E~ By 0\\111'1'. 1ml 11.~ gr(•;1t gT'l't'111w-lt loo:11-2 Hit 1'1 RA . ('llt:lnS"'I t1nn. S:1i .:i.(l 11\l:I. land. JIR11fl. 1\-l l'()nrl ~.900 Vision-1 ~•c.:n-c::""""°'----1 Mission Viejo [-... -I~ Str'lkl DlrKllll"Y .............. 60ll JOO Wl"llCI, Mall .... . ....... 111 Je~ W1nltd, F1~l1 .......... 702 Join; W1nted, M&I' . . • .. .. • .. 704 Hei, Wl"ltd, M&I" .. . • . ... .. 111 "llL-_-____,J[§J Ant1qu11 . . • . • . . ........... toO Appt,i•ncn . . . • . . • . . .. . . . . . • . . . to2 Ailcfllll" ...•.. ......... ....... toe l11lldlt11 M•ltf'llll ............ 116 C•mwiu a Eq11lpm ... 1 .......... IOI l'11m1tvr• ....... ··············-tit G1r•t• Sele .................. IU H-held Gttdl .... · ......... 114 Jt.,,..IY . . . . . . . .. ••• . . . . . . . .. . . US "'9chlntrY ..................... 11' MIKellln-.................. Ill M\Kt/11-111 W1nllll • . . . . . . • l:H Mu•k•I '"11rv1T1et1t1 .......... m Offkl F11ml111R/E41111lp •.......• 11:4 Pl1nol/Ortllll ................ 11:' SIWllll MldliMI .............. l2f S110r1l119 Gilodt . · ••· · · • ........ IJI Store. •n"ur•nt, l•r .••...•• IJ2 , .. ,. ..... ······· ............ .,. TV, 111.Mlit, H;.l'I, Stortt ...... 1>4 L_ ... _. ""'-,----"___,!~ "-"· 0-11 .................. IJO C.111'1 ............ , • .. .... IS2 Do9t ...................... IJ4 FINI ..•.. ,. .. IU Htnft .......... IW Llw11todt . . . . . • • ISi ,.__-_11oo_1.,.._· -~-"'-' _,II tt I o ....... , .. ........ . ........... ,. INtl, M•lnt.{S•rvkt . . . . . . . . H1 •oet1/M1r1n1 Eq11lp, •.....•... t04 8t•t1, PIWtr ................ · '°' 1 .. 11, 119'11/Clllrltr ....•....• t'OI 8ottl, S.tl •... , .............. tit 81•11. Sllpt/Doc:kl ............ tll INll. S"'4 & Ski ............ '11 lfft1, Stet•.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . tu ,___r"_""'°'_''';_,. __,Ji lli! Airer.rt ...................... tlS C.mpers. S1lel•1t111 . . . . . . . .• . f20 Cytln., 111111, Scttt•rt ........ m lillltlrk C•rt ...... · .. · · ....... tJI Mftlte "-................ tu Mtttf" ... _ .. . . • . . . . . . . • . . .. • ·~ Tr•r11n, Tr..,tl ................ t•s Tr•llll"I, Ulillty • . . . ........ tl1 Avll Strvk• & P•rh . . . • . . ttt IL--....,_,,,_ .. ___,!§] ~· ........................ "' ~/Cla11k1 .............. tsl °"" '"'let .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . tM s,.om. •1<•· ••ch .... , . .. . . tit T~I ....................... t4J V1n1 .•.• • • • · · .. · • · · •• · · · · · · · t4J AwM LNJlfttl .................. t6t .l11 .. S1n'lc:I I ,tr1t ·~··· ··• t6' A11tot W•"tM .... • • •. · · · • · · · • '" Alltn, lmJllrtM • .. ... . .. . . • • tJO olll10S, H.W ....... · ...... • ... tM .lllltf, UtM ............... · ... · m The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 Walker & Lee H ;r, to "'' 3 bedroom<, "'" or 4. As a. special bonus, Elegant Mansion Old Farm Tract Drhghl fu l 3 bdrm, bonus rm, Hlf;:'S. ma~,: 1 \" t' nnor tl'I ffii red h·111 Uniq"'" 2 :.~.:'.:. Sat ~ \Wi $un 1'.!·:i pm. 5~1. Newport Beach Walker &Lee .......... ~· ~";'~"~'~'~'~'iii;;;i~ I this outstand1ni;:-home is Io-li c<ttt>d on an R4 lot. All this forn1l din & lrg lront 1111. cr ll1111{ ad o he llN'plac:t•. REALTY Tlus t\10-sto1;.' gem is ~et Shim111i.>ruJK heal•"! !!v.1m-i\ Cf)ntpan)' \\'11h \'iirion anwng a ii:roup of real fine n1ing pool ,,.,·ith loads of i;n1, .. !'ark Cl'nh'r. rr.,.tnc. ANXIOUS ----- Realtors 546-.()0'!2 llll:Al r•TAfl FOR FUN-MINDED 'FAMILY 4 9fcitwms, faini!y room for ping pong or pool. Separate study for hobbies or reading. Dark room, great inforn1al cn1et1a.inn1ent area, se\\ing room, view of ocean. access to private beach and fee Janel. Priced at $98,500. 6 j3.S,')5(]. OPfN Tit g • ITS FUN r:> BE NICE' THE REAL ESTATE RS * 6 UNITS* Nearly ne1v 2 BR.. 2 ba .• deluxe unlts on ocean[ron\ in Balboa! E!cc. frplcs .. hea\':O.' sh<q.": carp., bltns; sundeck or balcony \\'/each uni1; 7 cov"d, carport~ plus 1-park- ing space. $330.000. call: Gn-.3663, 642-22::'>3 Eves. associated BROKERS-REALTORS 102'l W llolboo b1~·l6bl NO NO DN GI SELLER .,.,·ill pay rill <:ost5. 3 large BR, 2 baths. plus rozy fireplace & a 9Xl4 rlen. Home on 50X135 It. lot nl'ar Los An1igos lli School! Call /IO\\' 5-16-0022 Walker &Lee lllAl llTAfl GAS SAVER Bicycle 1n Li11\e C01'\lnn, \\'Blk to shopping -('njoy "living·· in a spal'klus 3 bedroom, 2 ba1h "borne" \,itJ1 lllt'" ad- \•antage of income f1'\lm the other 3 bedroom unit. 0\\'Tler "'ill ronsick-r trading up - 11.~nR" $82.500. C. F. Colsewol1hy Realtors 640-0020 ACCOMMODATE A GROWING for S39,00'.>. Call Toduy! 5--16-2313. OPfN nL g • IT'S FUii TO BE NIC£1 FAMILY ~i 4 BEDR()())I, 3 BATH Large n\ru;tcr Bdrm \vilh .l THE REAL ESTATE RS hnn1es v.·h_rre all 011i·m:rs drcking. Could ht• R pAla1-e! Call ,\n)tinl('. 5.:.:?·ml l..O\"f'ly, like "''"'· foo1' bed· s h o 1\· pr1ck'-of-<X1·ncrsh1p. Sacr1f1C'<' for fa.-l ~nle I'll Q [fii·," hoot•' '"' tn g ]'\!" " > 1--- it"s iwnr F. \'. I Ii, and you I ''~"'~·~900::;,: ~B~ro~k~':'~96~"~:.!-~'~51~1iiiii !;:";";:~;;"~·:':~" ;;';:":~"';':;'! 'non\ .... ·1th 1'lll"' l ft ""C'' ·~ d1•finite!y should l'<'1' • it .-~ fM\t\lrN 11:<1 iwnkl"'n llvlm: before you buv ano1thl'r. BY 011'1lt"r -t.in1vers1ty Pnrk. N0111. f(11•n111I dln!ng area. Price<! 'a1 S39.999 1i·-n11n. !hnYt to Cine! Jullard niod•·I. rtith,•drlll ('t•iHni;tl'i. Roman 1()'; ctn. Sec it. you'll like 3 BR, 2 BA . bonus r11nr11. Jount111n. l:k:n.u!llully 1and- lt! nUrrorcd \\'artlrobe situated '--'---'-'""""""""""""' for privacy 316 sq ft bonus ---------- roon1 for hohbics & ga1nes. Patio kitchen is a \\·oman's dream "'ith richly grained cabinrts, spacious pantry, & double O\'en!'.. Qui e 1 cul-<lc-sac, convenient to schools, shopping & free1\<1ys. CALL t'OR C01\l- J>LETE DETAILS. SUPER-STAR 10°/o DOWN l' 1llage Real Estate }..'r('('t1hcl1. s:'i2,500. Prin· R-f11)f'tl w1Lh Alurnp block .cipals only. 55:?-8114 aft. 6 pb1.nr.•1""C Rnd 111a!Ut'l' plant~ 01' Wt'f'kf'nr!s . and 11•1·1'!!. The O\\'Nt:::R * B'I" Ov."Tler, 4 BR, 2':r Ha . :'-11.JST SELL -lm Pert fan1ily roon\ hoTTH.• in Tur1l1• f'lr1rtil1C•· • 0()"•n 2-*i p.m. 546-5880 Open Evos ... ~HERITAGE •""• REALTORS INVESTMENT Brand new 4-plex: 3 BR. & 2 Ba. OeltL'<:C units. Three 2-BR. ea. \1'/patio, bit-ins, cpls./drps. Sharp Spanish n1or ir. Costa i\tf'sa, nr. Nc\\·port Hcighls. $110.000. E..\'et'Ul'flt locallon -Chru111ing 3 bedroon1 -Family Room · :\Ioele! oond11ion -Close to shopping -:\IO\'(! in UO\\• - \\'ai;n Fireplaef' -TltSlefully decor11ted -l.arjte sparkling kitl·hen -EICC"tric built·ins · Spnnklf'r -Fimced back yard -Only $3.3,900. 646-7l n. Ol'f:N TIL g • rrs rim TO BE /#Cf' [~: THE REAL ESTATERS PLEASE DON'T ~ CALL 0 646-1414 ~ @~ Ne•r Newport Po,1 orfice I 1 SHARP GI '" 11 ' I •1 BR & family roon1 \~·ith '::::':::::::::'::"::"::"::"::"":" l\liss SCf'in~ 1his SZ°J,!'ffl it hcd1'00n1 on 1hc f'a~lsirle of Cos1a l\leAA. If you've n1iss- ed ex<'Cp1ional buy~ bf.fore. call this: niinute -&16-T171. OPEN TIL fl • rTS FUN TO 8E N/CEI THE REAL ESTATERS lari;c yard. (F'airvie\V & \Yanwrl -11(.'wly painled .~ carpels -15 rnillules to J1;"e11i·port Beach. 0 n I y $26.500 -e R.rly occupancy'. Walker &Lee fllAl lllATI 546-0562 OLDIE B"'"u~T~-1 A GOODIE ! Cute 2 bdr, 1 ba frame \\"i1h loflds of panclin~ and red b1ick fireplace. Large R-2 lot in ehoice East Co!<ta 1\Jesa plu:. alley aet·el<s. Cloi:;c tri iUI shopping you won'l m•cd a car hl'rc. Per!f'ctly p1"il·ed at $30,00'.I. this ooo v.·ill £O fast. Call Red Carpel. llealtors ~ -ADULT - OCCUPIED ... and ahsolutely 1n11nacu- lal t·~ tUIJ cal'J)('!cd, 1111 builtins, plush and :nodeo rn. \\'alk lo lhcatrl'S. major shopping and rcstauranls. Bcauliful 3 Dedroon1, 2 bnlh, for only s:rT.!J50. CALL ~24, SoothCo Realrors. l\·lrs;i. Del l\1ar $\1im Pool ~·antal\tic 3BR, 2 Ra . 11'/sunkC!n living rn1. \\'i:t11 to 1va1I o\'l'I' hrcl1\·d. drp:i . beaut kll<'h. \\lJOdf'rful pool 36x1S fLJlly equip, cabana w111yt bur. :1.11·11 bath . ~tany Xll"'Jll . l.iving nl 11 11 be!I!. Ju.~! Sll,:iOO. Broker, 586-51Jl SEE US! Attentiot1 Investors! Fo• the ri•ht home lo• you. EASTSIDE Complete selection ot homes t2S,950 in the br-ach are11i. ~ HARBOR VIEW HOMES 3 BR. 2 BA. hu~ R-2 lot. TY \\'ill 1\1...'C.'Onmdate ~ un11~. REAL \\'ha! a 11r:1J! ! Call Br~tt. 531·5IOD I r.::1 531·5800 FIREPLACE & WINE A roaring flagstone hroplace in this livinJ?: room \1ith a bottle ol 11i·1nf' & a lx'ar 1i1R~ Blke lo heach from this dulch clean Roy11.l homl.' . Fealurcs <& BR. 1 1~ BA. family IU'lm. riming ~m area & builtins. Pool-s11.c tot & boat rloor thru garage. Fu!\ pM<.'<' S.1£.000. larwin realty inc. 968-4405 (24 hrl) BY THE SEA ~:k . S62.~: lnrlrlg lanri. \\\'!tn .. s.tar. C'"..•U £;;-,.7225, S<'abury rharrnrr. 4 Bd11n, 2 fnr appt . SX.:--..;;(ll9 BA. 54"p. n1<1..~!{'r Bdr111 suite, C'O\"l'1'l"rl p11.rio. th<> Laguna 8each .,.,ho!r 11i·1d1h ul 1hP h•iusc. G<ln:eous drapl'~. f1repla.l"C. \\'OODS OJ\rE, 3 BR, !)('n all The exl~'8.'! &· s~rkling hortlf' v.'OOd p..1nelffi l.1\' rrn clean. $3.'l,9.iO_ f~ll ~~1('('. 11-frplC'. SN'ludcd hr i <" k CALL ;,.Cr-Ola.s patio. 11·nrkshop, 111)1<' gar. Only $79,500 f"1\.\JILY 110~1E .,,.. 3 BR, 2 ha~. -+ TV Fam rm. frplc, !\i('(' nC'ii;:hborhoo<l, y;,rd h.1,; sprUJklcrs. $-17 .950. WESTCLIFF BY OWNER f) \NA ro1r.;Tn 1 I. l t "'OT a fixrr upl:k'r~ All _ 1hl11 :=======;::::J 1 1 . .1 ' 1 1 1.' ~'· "~ 1 hPyurirul l1<1n11· needs 1" 11i WANT A lc\rl, ~ BH, 1 ~ ))l1,:;; rent•'!.! ln\·1nQ; f11n11ly tq rl!O\'e In by ONLY $26,500 yard, good {'Olli!. $;);).000, .r:1 rt nf ,;rh•10l r•• ~lorincr'11;. BIG HOUSE? En"~n nr N••\1prlrt IH~h. ~ !IOI\" ahoot 4 hr. 3 ln1. lorm;il 3 BH 2 Ht\, l ll\llf' hl hcn('h, 1.fVE IN ONE. J"t•nt the Br: .. 1 Jl,\. !'Pp din nn, hu2'.e tlin. rm. f<un. r:n. bonus !)21')(). Sil · f!. cul·dl··SllC lot. o!ht•r. hranri n~•11' dupl1'X in rt'(' r111, nr11' "pl~h sh11.g" .,,, • O"IS.1"" prnfl"'ssionallv c·in· p:•l"k ltke !«'Ill~. 2 HH. 2 t'lll'[X'tlll''. 2f1X'I phlll 111:,. ft. • " · '" · ' · h;is rlf'n, •·ach u111t. " landscapt'ti lot'.' lntt'~f'Sted? • PATTI • nf lh<' ).:(l()C"I Hfr In Newport. • .Am • .., frpln>. gri•111 vir\\'S. sru\C'lflllS Q•i i••l 11 t r c r I . qule! ~~~~!~ d,.rk, ~hn11 \.\'alk 10 bt>rtC'h. n f' 1 :;: h h n r h n f\11, $65,lnl WALKER Slj7,000. OPE:-./ HOUSt::: SAT & SUN J1.t.1.1u~11 J';l':"l Ikarh Bl\'fl., 1113. . . -C;ill f•l'I' llPfil. 646-9100 lil'il &ai·h Bh rt, l!.G. CALL 8-12-1.fl l( L..\P.G~. drr11na1Lc O(•f'f<rl \llC""'l,....,,.-,.;,;,,,.,,.,,...,.,,.,.I c,\LL ,.q2_111~ ___ Int n\'t•rlook111i:; L r1 i.: u u a -W-ALK TO BEACH l•"""""""".,..._,-~_._,._ ... _._•i--* 4-PLEX * l.W-uf'h, ''"s1ly huilduhlt· nn _.. . . ST LISTED I" RR 2, h , . \ 1 1:1•n1lr s!Opf'. Tol'n 1uap 1111•1 ... Tf.,"\;>;:J.-.. l'C>OJ~<;. CT.UB JU "/! "t 1,?-..n 11 · 0,tnbrrs _,1P,: 111 prin·. Not 1•ff<'t'l•'{I h)' \"1•1;.·1·l .. a11 ::BR.1·1• hath11. · "' P • "'"' 11'1· ·· IC' ~r ·"' l 20 121 "'""" r an1il nn h""lf' bltns {..o\'Ciy 4 Rrlh'1'1C1111 '.\: f111ll11Y I pallrJ + Till<'(' l -hdiin. Pl'•)l)flSI ltlll • .. ,.rr. • Y . • •: ~·· · 11ith la1~l' :i11rt1<'"t1\'t' pc_•1I. unrrs. SSJ,000. LINGO REAL ESTATE tnrp., rh uf)f"'I. ~1t .. 5{XI. Sharp l·111<isf'·1pin~. lf><ll ;u •-GEM 31 706 s. Coa~t lh\·y. CAYWOOD REAL TY c1•ss & !runt "k1tch1•11 . Prt<'l'fl r .SO. La~na. 4~1 :;97 * S48.-1290 * only S?.8.950. t~ x ~ e 11 e n t 1610 \\'. Coru.1 lh1j' .. N.R. 1110 Glt>nlle)'t'C ~t . BR \~I ':-.. ., BR 211, tcrn1s. Ca.II ~I 4 6 -j :;I g 0. JlE;\I.TOHS &12-4623 LAi;:-unB Beach. <19-~ *B \ ( .. · t,. r~l~I si· 2 H£'rltage Realtors. Open -S ' · 1•nt · w • 1p. t:::vc!. ..REP05S6SSION. Beach Area Home ~:-~11 ~ ~~~irp~\l~11;~1~;111a;:: 5 BEDROOMS -or 1nt•1rm:it1n11 a~d location l)r-\irio11s 4 h<lrm-I_m1-iy 21'.:: :!Mi-00'!1 or 2 l 3 : ol ll~<'~C t 11,, k /A home~. <1!.'f'An VlM\'. !)Hlln" 1111 'l'l--1\~.,, SinJllt' story. Prin1,.. Flluntain 1" .. ,,.,. 1tr1•1101 ldti·hen. f·an_1<ly nn::T""'~~·,;··,..-" ---.,~:o·· O:-l' ~.~i~ry :l~~~~iot~~rcn:~~ I~~ Kf\SA [:~AN <:rt'plru·••. Rrar ~l\'1t_1~ r1n . \\'ATEP.f'P.C1~T :! Br, 2 R:1. 1ra1ler. ""~111nr 6', VA loan R •11I Estate 962-6644 !~~; f!<JCJl'S. $3l 9.ll. hrk f;1m rn1. Ha" 111i·r ,\• n~1 . 1111h n1onthly payn1cnts or ·T" ARBE S12'l.~llfl. ronuu. lot in S240. I AYRES-LA CUESTA LL Bf1Hlf\Jt. S·IH.:.ro ~C'""'POrl VJLLAG~ Rl·'.AL f:STATl-'. t:1. CAJOI' :\.IODEI. * OCEAN Vl-EW* f'tt>r Rf'n~l y, li'Ll·1'r>~.--- IN\'"ESTP.-\F:NT OIVlSIOi"\ 4:1J l rl~ 111 l'w·Hlll \:'\•11 lrn· !1111,:1., Of'('an \l('w 1\\•. r m. SAl.t RY O\\~t:H !ltil-451;7 1.~h...,.I yrt. 11v;ul ir1 • l~~-T~kc 11•/frpl; din Hl'<'a. 2 BR, <lf'n JI a r bn r V i 1• "' II om@ OVM' ~.v t•iii·1.'0i\ S-1~ t_ull 1" guest r n1, \lo/1v ••nrp, P1\l.EH;\lO. " Br. 211 1}.ll, J>Ul\'.hU.'K' ~P •.I(' c $.1~·:ioo: thruouL C4'n1rnl k i t . many rx1r11". lt111nflc. ~" REPO $7SO DOWN 2 or 3 BR TO\\'Jlhousc, hg~ n11npus JY!Qlll tlhlr i;::ar. S\\"1n1 pool. ff'\.\' left. llun-y~ 968-ilT1 or 8-12-+t:?'I First P ioneer Realty ?ay.;:. :t}:,.!:l(l,l( £\i."'!1. \1·/rnn;:t· n\·c•u, d!i.h11i·shr. lo!, c11l-OP-AA<'. i;M-7Z'.O. 6'12-~. ~· !his onr' S53.SOO. $26 9SO '.hss1on Realty 49\-1)731 C Pl .BLUFFS> n . k ' -- ---..i\~ ll\'rrlnn ins;: ,,.,'!(' BP.JS(; \'Ot;H ll{JOl.TABI.£ ~PECT1,CUl.AR ON'an vif'I\' Rav j .RH .. i'L\ $73 500 fnr lh1~ hei:iut; 2 P.~ {'<)ncio, v.f11hll<" "'lllf'r. 212 yr fJl<I Bki-.' :1ir,..;-,o:l2" · ' ' Bonu~ nn 20 x 20. l c;1r .111p;11·1t1u~ I ~r. 3 ho 1ff'n 1--"""'"=::..====~ encl. gar., blt1n11. x1r..1 1•al). ll••!!anl d"f"'1r. By ~\\TN'r: l~AP..l\OP. \'l" l>fll!TOt"INO 133-4780 "'0 ""16 H · B h -~=~ =~--I v...,...,.,. unt1n9ton eac THE BLUFFS ~~"""'""":""""'"""'~I ::.:==;:;c.=.c;_-lno·lii. 5hai;:-"rpt~. Adlt 0t•r ~1.100. 669 B o l iio na, .. + hr. l•)IHL!I m1. :\1:1 ba., Fronoi i;:rr.·nbf'lr & ~'"I"" 10 tf~i f)UI. 1awl1n'o( rl 1'" or & Front rim·. \'I(""'. End unit ?.IA.KE a deal on I\ ?.lesa 1.JIQliEST A -S.'lnta Cruz, .,,,. Verde ~ Bdrn1, fan1lly, lgr 1\fodel, 2720 Squarc Ft, pJOI. Ht:D CA H. Pt: T BF'.Aliltt"UJ, locatklfl h!IS'?!· nlfrr. 61 l-bl93 or Rt'!"tlhlr!'I ~11?.ti. SOl'TII LAGUNA. l hlock 9ff\-l ii\,'~"-------> l Br. 211 Ba . ..,:;,(Q) In<'. hlll 1n ~., boo ~ ?.lode\ llomf'. Lan<lscapinll'.. ·-~-~-~~-~-~:-~~-:-~~-~-~-~-~-~~I land. 42'1 Vista Parada r'· .o-.,Nn:. I ga • ~Q """' . • 64()-068 gold 5basr Cflll. \\"atcr 1 ml to heh, ...,,\Nol 1n ltp Won't Ust Langi 7. JOOftnr, pvt sklf' pat Jo wndt11, P f.500. I 7 J 4 • No. Calif. Ranchito 5.93 J\crts. 470' on H11i-y -496' on R1vl'r -ll(ll"ld fishing - hunling -rttn'BC. ~10. f'ull prlct. i:,:;o On, bAI $4.9. per mo. You get lhf' dttd. Bkr 673-6712 il 54S-i796 f' n A~C1SCA."i r ount81n.'I, 10 beach. """'ly rernodelN'I Bt.U•·rs !'Al.E on. LEAS~ spirai staln:-3~. J Br, ~ Bs. 2 lldr-m. family rm. iaJ"ll<' Cnorio, li l'lf' GM'n Belt. 27":.)() sq. ft. J rn m 11 t' '. dt'ck v.·/~lln vtC\lo'. Cues1 Dolo~ t'fld ~lrwlrl . 3 Br. ~"'I 1 AMlunablt' (;! \0ttn. fi',. lip!. $62.500 firm. By O\\'llt'T. Ba. l11t !•~tlOl'!. _()004, ~ priced to 8Cll by o\lo-ncr al Ca.!\ "99-1204. \\'ould cnn-mo. or $&.'l.;iXJ. 61 :J-22T7 1 $! ,900. S17-1l.18-'. ~\cll'r :!1Un11ner rl"nt11bt al!IO QO:,\Nf'RONT 11 0 ~t E . FRANCISCAN ~~ountutn Ry BEAlJTIF'UL o..e.an vi('\\' Ill\ Clt'nn. q1111lnt cornf'r lot. 2 tht" ~R. 21.~J:t ~A Cr\•«.! Only $13.,900 ~H . ~ $ 1 19,r.0 0. C&l1 Beautiful 3 bdrm with ct>n-B•lbo• lsl1nd garden. dinlni; dcdo:. Clea.n 96S-rJ6.1 tral air cond. Gas BBQ. Kit-home. 18.19 llllnouii. 51~ BY Ov.·1icr -2 BR. "-'/\\' cpts chen bulll~INL PM t Io . ISLAND CHARM EASTSIDE CUSTOM & drps boat door, 11.11 elcc Catp!IJI, dral)tl. S:U.500 bric Slf'ft' to bay, 5 br, 2 00 , B • BR J 0 • I kit. $2'l ,900. 9641 Pollack. 540-1120. small pla.y room + rental Y owner ;) · .__, Km ~~l--0807 TARBELL unit. L.ar. sun d4ck. too! Old m1, ht'd\1'd fh•11, 2 beaut 0:::-------\\"Utld charm. F1m timt' of ora nitt tl'l'Cs. ~.900. 2021 MODEL llomf' l.AOO~api!IJ.l, SUNSHINE SPECIAL tcrNI. Lot.s or ,1-ood. \':hilled Al!-.o A1•c. r.ct&.~26:="'---1:,00 scruun• r i. l ml. 10 bch. ' B ' B II /" "" ___ _. 6"~ lo11 n, $10.00l'l t10 .... 11. • r, o. 011'!<" w :c ..,, °'"'" beAm liv. r n1 . You don't nn:u " ii;un lo Rumpus rm.. nt.'C'd1 1SOnu' "/ba.lrony. R r <' c n 1 1 y "Ora11i· f'Mt" "·i,en Y"'tl .t="'=·"'°::::.~11~1~4-' ~""'""~'.\.163~"'"'~- pain &nd tix!11. Bui piict'd rTmOrlelcd &. In xln1 t.-onrl. plact un ad in lhe 011.lly The ll\Jllet=I dMl\lo In lhe \Vc,,t. t11tht 11.l tz.OCIO. Sll6,COO. Ownt'r. 67>-761){. PUol \l/11 nt ,\d1! C:all now ... a 01tlly PUOl CliiPif\ed CENTURY 21 642-lnl" _ _::21::.3.:T::i•P9='""------&1H611.=="------c•"•l.c:w-5618=:.=;..·· ---- LIU'lt''. 5BR. ~'. upgnided. ~:invie"' Rh;.'-STI--.11.'"i(IO ~l.1-=5.19:::::='"------4 mU'<I 1tt 10 11pp!'('"cilatl! 2 C()ND0-2 br, 2 Im. on ~oil ()11~11"1:1"1: nf'11r tl'le 01.-ean blk1' lrom <K'C'3n. J)ay!I <'1'8 & tf'nnl• clull. \"if'\\·. :\lllt•JI! I.arr.on, ·nt11ltor <191-11 ~.Aft 6 9~J lil 1in. d\\'l'l, $37,500. &1--0638. •b7)..l':l.i6l• il'iabree:ze •... ~II YQ1.1r Don't briVf! up tkr iihip! R,\ \'FRONT • lan:e beaqh. items \\'llh ('!\!!(', U!ll! Daily .. List" lt in cla.saillM, !;hip $.12,SC(I LA"R3C llJN'I('(! $006. Pllo\. Ouslf1'-<!. 642-5678. IG Shore RnultA! 612-5678. "mo=. c:•":::~e-71c:02=" -----' \ ~~ DAILY P!LOT I~ I l~ I 1~11 -][j] I liiiiiii' iiiiiiiiiiiliiml I · ---l~I ~-_,.,_-~!~I -... - r Dee-lightful Duplex , ' ~ lmmaculaU?! It 3 BR, 2 BA :.._ l,l.nlu. _Jpk. new epls, bltns, ; 1undeck~~ S1ep11 to penimula aurf! ! O"'·ncr ~· tnt. financing -subtnit <1n f'Ji:chlulge -horne or !Un in- comet C.U now $$7 ,~! ! ! call 6'>-8<00 "MARINER'S DELIGHT'' fANTASTJC! <.."harm ri.1ckl'<I 4 Br, 3 Ba !ii.'ll shnnty. Oi>f·n bea.rns. :-hag crpting, t\1-'0 massive fireplattS. Arnplf' perld~. Stroll lo ~ach or be.y. \Von't last at $81,9j(), ASSumable loan. GRUBB & ELLIS Realtors 2863 E. C'S\. lhvy., Cd~f 675-7080 BEACH DUPLEX 1 & 3 Bdro1 units. one block from beact\,. Net"ds paint & fix up. Best huy on tilt' beach. $69.~. 1797 Orange, c.~I. 642-tm ~21 DOVER SHORES 5 Bedroom, ·I Bath, living l"l'.JOm, diW~ room & dE'n. Supt:'l' pool_ Automatic gar- • age, spr1nJdeh Ir lighting. " Sl.39.000. By Owner, 64.)-8273 Principala oniy. • . • * OCEANFRONT * 4 F'urnishM units. Owners' unit \v/sundN"k. T\\'O (!bl. garages. A raN' find at $125,cnJ BALBOA BAY PROP. . * 673-7420 * IMAGINATION • $165,000 for 60' dt-ep \vatM' • bayfront. 3 Br., 3 BA, + guest. p\C'r & slip. Ca.U Dt'ni9on Assoc:, 673-7311. . • Sent• An• Income P roperty 166 Mortg...,, _OO_C_T_O_R_S_&_,__IN_V.,.ES_T_O-RS T r ust DMds 260 Houses Unfurn. 305 tiouse• Unfutn. JOS HoUMt Unfurn. 305 Apts. Furn. :WO Apt. Unfurn. 365 TREES TREES L..i:1ri;:e :1 Uedroon1 11 l 111 aepa.rutu den, la~· Pl"l\'Mle lot in 1>uper ncb:hborhood. Vtc8nl , tm1ucdlatc. pout'55'°'1. rted~ 10 IC'll -152.000. G inny Morrison, Rltr. .. :>57-4130 '* [ ............. I ~ ATTENTION :m l'lt\Y unit$. Colla t<iteaa. :-.~ mile• ,o br1;1ch. Accelerated t1 l' pN'citihon op1iortunlfy. &hcd. tneome s:>t.000. 'Price $385,IXXI. for detail• Call CJS REAL £STATE 5-ll<-11U8 10 UNITS $130.000 NICE COSTA MESA • AREA PUT YOUR MONEY TO WORK FOR YOUI Earn 10% lnh'N'•I t.n well· M'Cuted 2nd Tl'usl Deedl on Orqe r.oun1y rt•al estale. SICNAL ~10RTCAGE ro. (TI4) 556-0106 4.1iOO Campus Dr., N.B. -to.- Hunllng,on a..ch Costa Mesa • a . ·--H~-·-·•-• • LANDLORDS! $200 UP. ' • <Br. No 1,.,. THE BLUFFS Casa "'• Oro required. <>then avail. In 4 Bdrm.11, trplc, 2 pe1.lio!I '°' We Speelallte In Nt'\\'PQr1 Orn,v Cly, CA.II Dept or 1 . Cn!(':nbcit. .S 4 5 o. n:io'. ALL lJI'llJTIES PAID Beach • Corona del MU' • T r n n , p o r ta t Io n . ~ ev~1• Compare bP-fore YoU rent &: l.quna. Our Rotnt.IJ Ser-213/620-:010 from 9 - 3 3 BOR~t 2 Ba. hom Custom deirlaned, ffflturing: \•le.:-l.1 !~REE lo You~ Try wkday1. N "II.-·Sht'Jre $325. e, • Spacious kitchen wtth In· Nu-Vlcv.·' Irvine ~-Call ~ ~r direct llgbtlng NU-VIEW RENTALS I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~-~-----1 • s...,.1e dln·g aroa 67:!-4030 or 494·l24R 1 • Houses Furn. or • lbne-llke 11tora&c 3 BR., 114 00 ........... $:!.flO Unfurn. 310 • Private pa.tios Balboa f1ltnd Co1t1 MeN DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond -F'rplc'1 . 3 Swim· mln& Pools • Health Spa • Tt'nnls Courts • (;ym and BIU!ard Room. 1 BR. From SlSO 1 BR & Den From $190 2 BR from S210 Mobil e Homes For Sal• 111<'\Jme Slli.056. Dkr. 6~5f.OO or ~ 3 Wt, 2 bra ............. Si175 • Oosed pr-age w/.11nr11gt"' I ..... CllAlt.\flNG & eozy furn. 5 BR., 2~ baths ........ $375 General e Marble puUman . 1'l:J 2BR, trplr , Uule Balboa 4 BR, ~' ba, bonus nn. $400 I • Klng-u Bdrms 2 BR. Twnhses From $250 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii;;;J J~land. \\'intrr rental. Sept 4 BR, 21,i baths········~ Cd~f 3 BR 2 be. I F\i e -PooJ • ~beques • liUr· J 1 ti _ June 15. Cilll \\'kends. 2 BR, 2 be., den, A/C .• S275 $500 Mo/).ee.rfy'. v ew, m . rounded y.·11h plush lend· 2400 lfarbor Bl\"d., c.~f. 300 673-Zl93. 3 BR. 2 ba., den •••••• $455 p-; .. Pt 3 BR 2 ba u I scaplng. fTI ·li 557-8120 •·\"E'S 6"6·25.:C,.I Hau1es Furnished 125 12Xfi0 mohtl<' l...in1l'. A\\11lng, i;klrtinl{, c'(~J!Cr, like fll'W, l~ner. ~:H·llfr !\loblle 1,ark. 890 \V. J:)th Sp 63, NCl'l'pC111 &acli. &12-2816 2 BR, 2 BA. By 01\'0(.'r. 20x50 1v/pon•h, pallo & shr•d11. Jn ll:1y11\dt' Villa;:c. N. li. Sl'.{,5()(}. Ph: 6:l9-212fi. ~WPORT-B~ New 2 BR. l BA li\'lnK i-n1. Adult park \\'/prlvRle beach $16,500 54()..Jl)i2 ~IOBILr: home rwar ht.·arh son1(' fun1llUl"1:' .IO\\' SIJo.:tt'e rental, $4.150. 536-7743 l\10BU,..E Hon1e, T.l' bayfront. Sll,500. R<'nt SSO n10. Call 64~1516. LIDO \Vatl'rlront Park. 2 Er, E:.x1)(1ndo. Vk>w, patio, pool. lmmac. Only S·l500. GT:>-8220 --------1 lndu5trial Property 168 G eneral ----~---~ * M-1 * 123'x15fl' ,..,., i."ti•••rll\l \Vay *LEASE M-1 * 10.5A'I ~11""" Feel RIVIERA REALTY 1411 Bro'*'""'"'v. r 11.1:. 642·7007 645-5609 Eves. LEASE-OR. SALE Rl'"ndy A~!);I 101h, 10.500 sq. r•. ·l\1-1 bl 1lklirlll In ooOI \\'~t.sirlr C:\I Rlqo yllt'd & flff!CI' 111~vo. \Vaj ~l..,;o4,., EO RI DOLE REAL TY 646-1811 CHOICE M-l CORNF.P. &luth En~! Cornr.r Ell<'lirl & TalbcTt St., r .v. eom·i. ok 1; niile rrom San DiPgo Frwy. \\'ill scll 11t I ax ll!N'M. apprai¥. 1.fcCom1iC'k, 645-4363. • • • Charles South 230 Vlctorie 'B Sen Clem1nt1 \'ou are thl' winnl'r of 2 T!ckf'T!li to 011'.' RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS al the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER FOR OPENING NIGHT AUGUST 13 Please call 642-5678, ext 3:t1 to C'lain1 your ticlcets. fN011h County tol.l free number is 5'1(}.1220.) * • + Lots for Sal" 1~1 --~-~-~~ LG. Ba.v frnt w/pfrr. Aval! rron1 Au.e;. 5th $j()Q. \l"k. Corona dol Mar 4 BR, 2~• ba., a.le ••...• $42S $37S'Mo!fear1y.' , n . LARAduClts. No Pets;,~ OPEN F:VERYOAY 4 DR., 2 1>1.1 ............. S500 E 1 BR, Sl.-.5 !lours: 1'"1·i·Tues 10--6 BRAND NEW V• • 365 W. Wi1110n 642-19TI \\\'(.!, & Thurs. lD-7 ISlon-LOW WEEKLY RATES 2 HR, ""dio + patio. newly Spacious three bedroom, h1·0 8 E:11:ecutlve Suites df'COrate<I, shag ept, pa.nell-~ory homes South of red h·111 2080 Newport Blvd. ing, lg, q11le1. Adulb only. l ligh way locations. Also C t M Jmnled. occupy, Nr ha\'e ,-l'ry sharp I\\' o OS 11 esa Baker/Bristol. ~la nag e r bcdroon1 apartn1ent -steP11 ..... ~.,'"""' Newport Beach STUD64I02.S2&6111 BR'S ,55='"'=7-=mG~~~=,...,.=c: ((1 beach for only $2$5. Bkr. n..c..-u..1 JC 1= U7.'i-72Z3 A Company With Vision LOVELY 3 br, 1 ha, e rnEe LlnC'ns EXCITING -Nt.W ADULT 2 BR house. 506 Orchid. Univ. Park CentC'I', Il"vlnc bayshorcs home. 2 5 4 5 • Jo"'REE Utilities LIVING! Renl Your Own Call Anytime, 552-TJOO Crestview. Pvt bch. \Vinter • l''ull Kitchen C ondomlnlun1 Apartmen1. Re<-entlv redec. Crots, drns, Ottice hours 8 A~1 to 8 PA-1 I s.m mo. Yrly •·•= mo. • flca1 -• Pool Consisting ol BACllEU>R &. blt1n11, $275 mo. Call Mullan I:=::::-==== ~ t."\I 1 BR units w/l..ofts, trplc'1, Realty, 540-2960 11 ~9635. • Laundry Facilities beam ceil., patio & pool. 2 BR. Nice paUo. l.;Q:e. stone frplc., bit-Ins, $325 ~1"onth )Tly. 6T3-Ttl79 / 673-2222 agt. h.1DS, pets Y.'eloome. 2 BR, 111 blks. to beach. $275 Mo. 1-fal Pinchin Rltr. GT.>-4392 IBR. \\"/gar, slove, refri~. carpets. Avail Aug lst. $185. 1st & last months. 64fr7223 Cost• Mele YES, \VE HAVE RENTALS ~lay we be of service ln solving Your housing needs '1!11111 11'llt! ---'l. ll1ullur "SINCE 1!).16" San Clemeni. • TV & maid serv a\·all. Featuring: bltlns & retrig. __ ·-e Phone Service Priced rrom $160 to $225. 2 BR, top eond, 2 Ba.. Only $30 WEEK & UP Util. Paid. Office open Dai· Mature Adults. Barcelona, e Studio & l BR Apts. ly 4-8 pm, \Vknds l.2--6 pm. $250. 492-4944. e TV & Maid Service Avail. 393 Hamilton, Ol. Condominiums • Phone Service -llld. Pool &tS-4411 or 642-852{) Furn. 315 • C}iildren & Pet Section More Room·L••• Money 2316 Ne\\~eort Bl_yd ., Cl\! CO:f.fE see a rtal garden Huntington Buch 548-9iaa or 64.:i-3967 apt! Llke livi~ in " home (Ad good for $5 on rent) for $162.50/P.10. 2 BR. 1¥.. BEACH Condo studio, frplc, ATTR.AC. 2 Br, beam cell· BA. 2 prk'e places, prtv call (213l 59fr.9479 eves. & ings, \\'alk in closet11, no patios & rec areas. Wihon wkend.s. Days (714) 95&-7700 dogs, walk to stores. $159.50. Garden.'!, on Wilson St., W. R11I E1tata, "''""I Apertmenf1 For Sale Builder's Attention 5 ACRF.S R-2 LAND &· 5 ACRES R-3 LAND Nf':tr Wlll'l'lf'r Ave. & Br-ach Blvd .. llB 12 unit apartment site \\ilhin walktnt: distance ,,~21.1:l ., l55-956ll. I MESA VERDE \'EARLY Avail Sept. 2BR. -1 Ilf'droom single story 2BA, Frplc, outside 111•wlv .' "nted · tio 6T;i.6022 h•1111r, uv111lahle Augu s t 1st \\'estem Bank Bldg. Unlwrsitv Park, Irvine Days 552·7000 Nights 4 BR, 2 BA. crpts, drps, bl.tns, air cond. Children & small pets ok. sas. mo. 837-9ll5 or 543-1429 Condominiums 536-5114 or Harbor. No chUd./pet. Unfurn. 320 1 BDRM. crpt, drps, bit-ins, 2283 FounS:~a,y East pool. Adults, m pets, $150. -=~===~=-I 152 TR I PL EX San Juan to ne1v 1-luntington Beach pal ' pn pa · ' l llh. $3.'."JO mo. including HOUSE \I.1th Pier, Balboa f!nrtlrl'l('r. TOI) Condition!! Ccrpistrano, inconu? $6900. Civic Centt'r. li1land, Aug. 4 Br. 01ive by XIOI Calvert & large lot for 4 10 6 ad-V!LLAC:F: RF.AL F.STATF. ditlonal units or i;torage, INVEST1>1F:NT DfVISION * GTa--0525 * !hen f"all 546-4141, Agent. s11.soo. 49'l-82&t -.. ........ ii9GH56iiiiioii' ............ ; I C~o-m~m-e_r_c-la_I_____ • 2 BR. Nice patio. ~e. ~l<l11" Property 151 R·2 Costa Mesa r.~1.. b1t-;ns. I"' ""·· yearly leaY * R-2 CORNER * ZONED loc 6 UNITS. * ~-* Eastside Costa hlrsa 66 x 300. $27,500. Fountain VaOey 100xl30. 2 Oldl'r houscs Sparling ln'Vfttment Close in 4 BR. 3 Ba + Rec rm. $300 :i RR -plus lrg ram nn, new f"l"pt, drp~. freshly painted in11:ide and out, Jrg fnced ,\':lrd, ava approx. 8/8. $Z15. :-..i7-0791 ·I BR. 2 BA Townhouse, pool, di~h washer, very dean, children & J>C'fs ok. Avail att Labor Day, $26& mo . s.·19--0738. Laguna Beach $165 -Ulil Pd. 1 BR. Bltns, carpo11, deck, nr1 High sehl. $2'l5 • Lrg Ocean ViC'w, 2 BR apL PC'! ok. $285 . Channing 2 Br. So. La1tt1na. dbl gar, y;vd. NU.VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 Leguna Niguel LRG old 2 BR, $145 plus fncd * S825 n1o/year lease, Lux-"" d urious OC('anlrorrt villa, RIVIERA REAL TY '"""''"C'"o!!rp!!.'":'"13!!3-!!!3'"544!!!!!!""~ I mo. Avail Aug S.Jan. 8. 1'9 B d c ... Pool avail. 968-8680 " roa wav. .in. 6&xl10 LOT. 1607 Cornwall, Irvine 126 Monte Vista, mngr. WS AU. trrlLITIF.S PAI D ------646.fil.\l CHILDREN WEIL"'O:f.fE 2 BDIU.1S., l \~ ba. Shag, NICE 1 & 2 BR Trallers. S80 Bra~ n~ 2 &Inns with C'tz.<il. drapes; gas btt-lns, & up. Mature adults, 1l3 E. refrigerator. dshwhr, range, rlish\\.'Shr: pool. S 2 2 0. l6th St. S42-l2G5. dbl lavator~es. shag c~I, 536-2774 ' dfl)S, walk-tn cl..et, patiO, lBR, spac, cool, 6 unit bldg, garage. Newport Beach gar. Like ne\Y. $160. Adlt11, PARKER.-DOUBLE DEE ----1 no pets. 2220 Elden, 64&-1512 64&-8836 * BRAND Nt'\Y J en. 2Y.· . BA. Condo. \\"/Boat Slip. 2 ~ITRAC. 2 _bdrm beam cr11. car gar. All appliances. lnR"!!. \\ll.lk in closets, no dog EASTSIDE Crpts & drps. Sale or Lease. \\'alk 10 stol'e'S. $159. 536-5114 J Br. indi .. ;dua.l house 9.ith 213: 287-oo23 or 2 1 3 : its 0\1.n garage. Small en- 287-8723. Huntington Beach closed backyard. Childrp OK. Ava ilable immediateJY. 1145-Sl65 $115 MO. BAClrELOR & 1 BR., ED RIDDLE REALTOR. San Juen Capistrano 642-7007 , 64S.S609 Eves. Nev.·-port Beach Nr. shop.1 .H_u_n_tl_n~g-to_n_B_•_•_c_h __ ~ N_o·_wpo~_rt_H_o_lgll~ll----i Commerclal ping. OwnC'r. 673--6293 Property 151 2 BR, walk to water: Also N.B. Bach, SlOO. 2 BR hsc. $185. C.?o.f. $70. 2 BR, S150 Singles Families. Agl l'"ce. 5$-2S15. J BR , gar, Slou. Bring ki s. priv beach/salt pool, rnag- -"A"g'=J.-'F-'ce""-. "979-84"-'-"'°=· -,---I nifiC'C'nt anistic details, 3 3 BR home, crp{.'I, drps, nr frplcs, lovely gaI'l"lcn, im- all schools, College PaJi1. nied OC'CUp, 494-3330 NE\\' 2 BR. bltins, patio, patios, (rplc's prlv. garages 646-5855 Ind I Tra-" • -Di\'ided bath & lots Ofl-==~~===~-1 gar, ry, poo · "'' . clOSC'ts. Rec. hall. pool & HARBOR GREENS wtr pd. Sl!E. 493-8539 ==""'=="-'0::..:='----1 pool tables, sauna baths. Furn. & Unfurn. Fr $130. 2 BR, 1 BA, cptg/dl'f"l, bltJv;, See for yourself. 17301 &ch, l, 2 & 3 BR's. ~Jodels • . .. ' .. AUSO-AVE • I iiiiii;;iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiim Out of State Prop. 178 Charming 3 BR., 2 ba., with 11 COLORADO 5 Acre Ranch used brick lrpl., kitch. C-2 LOT W/INCOME bit-Ins. Jols of cabinets, Assuinf' Pavnicnts pan .... ,: lgC'. lot w/spece for 19B·800 1 d .,. ,~-. 0 "0 '""'cp(lrt On interest tree loan of S2970. Laguna Beach l"'E 1 · v ·• nr air r.. Ollla Original price or $3.595. $300 mo. 5-1&-5112, 540--1310. NICE Lru1::"e 2 Br, house, garage, fnttd yard. ~ \Vallal"C', C.M. $160. &16-72'23 LOVELY ii Bdrm, 2 Bath d~hr, rerrig, poof, $200., Keel.qon Ln. (1 blk \\'. of Open 10 'Ul 7 pm. 2700 fncd yard, $325 lease. 4.96-7916. Beach, 1 b!k N. of Slater). PctC'rson \Vay, CM. nr. liar· 494-8964 nfter 7. TownhouM Furn, 330 Ma-7848 bor Blvd. & Adami. ~~~="-"-----1 l BR Furn Lu.xury Adult 546-0370 poo. :dra ~-gar. on l\.1<'s..,. S3.2519Q. rr. 0\1·nl·r/ Absol ul C'l y no down Sl1S -Ulil Prl.1 Br. Ocean· • alley. $44,000 . Bkr 01h I 11 , . er pare\' s ll\'8 · payn1ents or Interest. Just front Apt. View. Deck. Dana Point Lido Isle Huntington Beach Garden Apt Across from ALL ELECTRIC ---------·I , L,kc Park. $140/nio. 1035 G -~ CAL"\. e 6•6·241.f SCOCBO. make up 3 back payments ~. Uli! Pd. 1 Br. Victoria 9.A ~A !!!!!!!l!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ J of $25 & assume balance on Beach. O!arming 4: Nice! OCEAN Vu. 4 Br, 3 Ba, fam rm, fplc, wet bar & carpet. \Valk 1o Marina. $!l5.}, (714l 586--0237 BEsr location. Jge.J bch·m.1QN Ure wat<'t', 3 BR 12th SI. 536-7447 af!C'r 5 & OLD MEDALLION frplc, pvl patio, dbl gar Townhouse, w/30' boat slip. y,•eekend& 2 BR Apt "'/patio, encl gar, ........ I p the recreational in\!CStment S350 • 3 BR, frlt\c, garagr, Jl~ALTY ncome roperty 166 property w/company ap-ya.rd, virw. \Virrter rental. w/opencr. $300. yr I y, 114: 536-19'"JO "40 _ ULTRA NI CE A 6 \\'/storage & laund. facil 642--0300 T h U f 33r ~· pt. Adults ooly no pet s own f?USe n urn. ~ Pool11. 4 Gardens. Sauna. $!&;/ M' L.A., L ·' Newport Bt1•ch Tennis. Private p a t l o . . mo. c, ...... _, 11 m Corona del Mer Adults. Ph: 846-02.59. C.~t 646--0977 or 646-1809 Nt ar Ntwpor1 Po st Offlct proval. 3 monllu money NU-VIEW RENTALS CLASSIFIED HOURS AdveruSers may plaee their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ?-londay thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COST A ?\fESA om CE 330 w. Bay 642-5678 NE\VPORT BEAClt 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HVNTINGTON BEAO I 17875 Beflch Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El C8mlno Beal 492-4420 NORTII COUNTY dial frre 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadllne ror mpy & ldils is ~:30 p,m. 1hr day be- fore publication, exC<'pt tor Sunday &: Y..londay Editions "'hen dPadlinC' is Snturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIEO REGULATIONS ERRORS: Advcrtlseri: i::hould rhr<'k their ad.~ chtilr &· r<•port "rrnri; immPdlatP\,·. THE DAILY PTWT a<:~umNI'. liability ft1r thf' first In· correct imrrtlon only. CANCELT.ATIO:-JS : V/h('n kllllnl! 1u1 ad l)P s ure to rr1ak(' " 1'<'Cord of th(' h-YLL NU;\1BEH ~vl'n you by your nd takf'r !Is rtt<'int l)f your ('flllCf'llAlion. Thi:. 1kl11 numbPr must bi" nr"· !:enlf'd bv thl' "d\'rrtlser in CBSf' of a di~nUll', CANCET~LNTICIN fl r: CORRF.CTION or Nf'\V AD BEFORE RUNNTNG : E\•,.ry f'ffort i!1 mad<' In kill or M'>rTt'f'l 11. ne"· nd that has bi~n nrdC'rPd, but ""' cannot 1?u1u·11n· tee tn do i1n until th,. ad hi"'-appc11.tC'd In 1 h,. pl'lfX'Y. OIME·A·IJNP. ADS ~ Til~!lf' A.de; Rn' !!ldt'tl\' cash in 11dva1~ by miii! nr at nnv onf' f>f 11ur .if. fi~. l\10 nhoTlf' .,rdt>~. l'.>efldJinr: :l p.m Fridl'IV. C()(ltA i\IMI\ nfflrr 12 noon -r1ll brnnch or. flCNI. TJfE DA.fl.Y PlL0'1' tt· Sl'rvM the rlsrht to l'!ll.'1· ~t:v. edit, ('('n!IOT or re· fu'-~ any ndv('rtl~rment Md to ehanire IU: N1t1..: &-rej'tl.),.tif)ns "'l!hout pl1Clr nnUN'. C LASSIFIED MAILING ADORESS r. o. Bo" 1560. C'o!l11'1. ~feat 92626 SHOPPING CENTER COSTA MESA F..xcellent tax struc1urc v.ith this lOOS~ occupied weU '9c*ted shopping teatC'r in Co~ta J\.feSH $1.50,000 Full Pricl' HARBOR COMP'ANY REALTORS SINCE 191·\ 673-4400 EASTSIDE CM 12 >Jnt furn. uni!s p!u~ ff & F pool. 'Lo-.\', low \•a- ciuic:v. Top renlal area. Nr all transp. & i;ho["n'. Xlm h1rom<'. A real bargain al t'C<luceocl price. 0\1"tl('r leav- iru:: :slate, t.'OU!d be quick fl(JS.<l(>S...QJOl'l. e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 64S-4375 lachenmyer ' Realtor 4 UNITS Great 4 unit for lht' in\-eslor th1U rt'llllll'f'S: a ta.'< shelter. 11·11h 1·u~h flo1\·. D r lu se 1111\ls !<IC'Al IO li\'e in. Mr. ;\J i51:•i<Jnt'. No, :.'27. Phone fi39-1501. TWO BEAUTIFUL 4-PLEXES Side hy ~\l1f' ln best pnrt.Gir Anahi•i1n l(O{'~trion. 2-2 BR & 2 .. 1 Bl{. 0 11·111•r"s rt C'IUXi' un i! S, rrplr. C'ovil1+:1(iTI h11 11 1, l)H- ly 5 .}I'll old. ln\'l"SI. r1('NIS IOOl't' rax ~cltcr, \1·hat do j'{l\I pi't'lpr~', Sparli ng Investment Cocp. 638-5662 SIX PLUSH UNITS l}\1 nrr11' uni ! ()\'('J' 2.000 .~ fl. l'nrit'l'l.'1,lllnd 1mrk11'1!>": 1ilu" 2 c ;u· i.:11r. ("Jos.. I'~ C1vl1" Co~ll tL•r. In I.n.t!l""'OOo.I l' 11/age Real Estate '62·4471 ( :::: ) 546·1103 S llARP NE\\'POTtT T)UPl.EX l hl0<·k In ~llch. :!BR. 21\A •·A. Al11·[1y,oi rr.nu.'li. ~.!JOO. 0WTl!'rfAgent ~767 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 back gunrnnlet>. ~tinutes 6734030 or 49-1-3248 from hunting, [lshing & 4 N rt a. h ski areas In a heavy IWpo u.ac developmf'nt area with a panoramic mountain vieY.'. Call l\.[r. Choman collect 3fl3-.589....4210 days. 0 r 589-3361 e\'f'S. Ranches, P'•rms, Groves 180 W AlK to \Valer Ba.ch, SlOO: Al.lo 2 Br hse, $185; plus $70 l BR, $15()..2 BR. Ci\f. & \Vallf to \\'ater 2 BR 1'18. Agt. FeC'. 979-8--130. \\'INTER rental -4 hr. 2 bl\, dock, Newport 1sland. Avnil Sept 15 lo June 16th. Phone n4: 635-1350 Fountatn Valley $160 • 2 BR, 1 blk beach, ______ .-l BR f'um 21,i blocks fro SllO :. 1 BR duplex, prefer , BR 1• BA 1 Balboa. New crp1s & Redt'c. ~-.-..-__.. ... _ Ai'.. m mamed cpl adults non " · " · am nn. Ill' $350. 3 BR \Vaterfront Lido * * * * * * ""'h~ cou.....,r only. ~ mgr. smokers onlf. & oo' pets. schools, choice area. l..eaS(' I • · ~1 3 B 4ffi 1th St H B S330. Avail Aug ls!. Call sle. JoTplc. bllm, gar. IJ<: u.xe R, 3 BA, Huge · · Req. ref. & $80. dl'poslt. 954 846-28&1 ask for ~largie or $!00 · Ne'ofl lrg 4 BR, frplc, O\\"lll'r's unit, in ne\Y du-L"d Isle \V.17thSt.,548--0358. 8Zl-l!042 i.::-<11'. d('('"k, 1 blk b<"!lchi plcx, beam. clng,_ \'ie1v. Near 1 ~ Eastside Lrn 2 Br's . NU VIEW RENTALS beach, patios fireplace no • 3 BR, 2~~ BA. gigantic rum-• pets $425. mo'. Avail bl · 8_1 2BR, 2~A, brick frplc, dbl w/w, bltns, frig, Pool $160. pus rm. Rll bllns, DW, S\\'lm 673-4030 or 494·3248 • fi75..6900 8 e · gar, winter rental, $375 plus Adlts/no pe~. pool. kids OK. Only $275 * PLUSH * * * * * * * utll. 2ll-79J.-OC27 642-9520/646--1816 mo. No fN'. Agent 842-4421. N 1 cwport 1 Cr«tho2 .... T2 ~· ~ Newport Beach UPPER 2 BR, partly furn, LOOKJNC FOR a !()('al, S!'Ciudc<l :!1 ~ ncre parcel 11-ith \\'lll{"r , t'll'C. horsM: & Rnim11.l11 O.K.? If 4'h n1i. (If unpaved road doesn't bothrr you, call 833-3223. SS.950 And up, full price. HoUH5 Unfurn. 305 Huntington Beach u.x11ry own me. C'Tlll!S, D elcc. bltns, garage, quiet jaeu7.zi, !'tr. $4i5. Avail. uplexas Furn. 345 SEAO..lF"F ~fa.nor Apts. 2 br lOC'ation. $150 to responsible Sl>pl. 1. 9~-IG.n days, Eves. N t Be h wifurn $165. 11; ba. pool. adult No pets. Re t • 11 , Real Estate Wanted 184 EXEC. "ill pay lnunt'd. cash for Enstbluff Condo. Older St"~:!ion only. Call G.ID--179-1. -------General RENTALS Aparo-ta Duplexn - 3RR, 2 BA, \\'/fam.fdin rrn 557-9::78. Davt'. ewpor ac Ame ubout our discount plan. 6464224 ro1nbo, frpl c, C'O\T'd patio, HARBOR Vu Hon1l' OCEANFRONT, winter ren-1525 Placentia Ave, 5-18-2682 $1 40 up. 2 BR; 3 Br., 2 Ba. bltn.~. nr. Edinger & Spring. Somerset 5 Br, 3 Ba, 2 tal, lo\\•er 3 BR, S3Zi. Upper $35 & Up. 1 lih.., 2 BR & Pool, bltins, play yard. ~i:M7~265. Ask for Dal~. sto ry . Ad ja c en I Io 2 BR. S250. Avail 9-15. Bachelor.,. Color TV, nlald 19961'1aple Ave ..... 642·3813 ~=~~~~~---I greenlx-11, park & schls. Oc-67;;....5300 serv, pool. The ~1esa, 415 N. 22"12 Collegto No. I .. 646-6032 ALONE on lot J Br hse, gar. cup. 9/l. $:)75/mo., 644-25-12 ,0CEANFRONT Du pl ex NC\\1Xlrl BL, N.B. 646-9681. NE"'LY DECORATED Also v.·alk lo y,·ater 2 Br, for appt. , avail. Sep!. 15-June .15. 2 Br, 2 ~R. 1~ ba,. fwn. frplc, 2 Br y,•/gar, \\tr pd, Call $165. Viev.· ol Ocran 3 Br, THE BLUFFS comp. furn, Lov.·er $250, up. bltins, pn, patio, gd Rrl'8.. btY.-n 1 & 5, filS.-4120 $235. A~I. Fl'e. !",.16-2575. NE\V 3 Br, pool & yard per $300. 642-6277. Pet? Sa"IS. Tom, 832-921.1. 217&-E Placentia Ave. $145. ~!E .. \~al~t0 2be~~h f.~~ mn~ntcnasn"'75· custom crpts, nurtlexes Unturn. 350 San Clemente $145--1 br apt. trplc, beam & rp11. 5 · per mo. 1111 & ceiling, pri patio, crpts, inclds \\'8.tcr. Immcd. occup. last & deposit. 644-1846 Corona del Mar OCEANF'RONT bachelor J-2 drps, Ringle only. no pet'i. 838--0462. rvenlngs & v.·knds. hr apts. pool, .,,;ev.-. Compl ll\7 21st St. 548-2020 f'1nancial JI •) 4,13 \\'. l9U1 St., Costa Me58. ';;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:rii;i;; 1 ls.:>l S. Coa..~t lh\)'., Laguna • COSTA i\lESA 0J'1·~1CE 2 STY 2 Br 2 Ba Teahouse, BE1\UT. Blurfs Condo. Vu. 2 2 BR., 1 1~ ba., carp, drps rcdt'C'Orated, uhl pd, $1~ SH,\DY EL1\1S _ POOI~ $155; AJ<;0 w11lk to \\'11"."r, br/2 ha, pool. Av! 9/1. No rC'!rig, stO\'C. Lease, S275'. $195. No diild!'{'fl or pc-ls. e Adults. Poolside. $15.5 Business Opportunity 200 MACHINE SHOP Sarni' c11sT<•11ic•rJ1. 17 ~f·ar>'. Runs it"C'I gu(}d h1•lf1. tllnnl'Y 1nai..1 T1•l'nl!t 10 .su1 L Tit'('tl 01\ n1·r 11 ill f1- """"'· EU RIDDLE HC:.\LTY &16-SS \1 * BEACH BROASTER * Cluck<'n . lla111bu1i,:l'l' Tak(" ou1. :\nt fr1Ltl1:hL~" $22.000 COAST PROPERTIES * 673-5~10 * e R1..,,r 1:in1·. Great SpM • Audio-Visuut Systcn1s • Uook ·" l lnhh,v St(}l't~ • Ch!Jrlrrn'!I Shop, 1':.x Loe Hol nd Bu,, Sales i;..i; or 540-0608 Mon•y to Loan 2411 1st TD Loans UP TO IJO<;;, 2nd TD Loans Lowe1t rate1 O r11n9e Co. Sattler Mtg. Co. 642·2171 545-11611 Servlnp: llarbor area 21 yrot, -OoN·T-BORR-OW- 'Tlt. YOU CALL US! Hon'f!\\I on ~our ho1nc equ11y /or nn.\' ~ purfl()M". Srr.·. in~ IP.: ,\n~clt~ County (or O\'f'T' 20 )'f'Ani ruid NO\V in Orunge Ct111nty? SJ(jN,\L :>tORTGAGE CO. • i14l r,;;s.o100 4j(JO Can1pos DrivE", N.B. 2ND Trust DHds PR!\1.\TE FUNDS 1\VAJL. Any Amount * Coll 675-4494 BKR. NO polntA. no peMltk-s, ll"N' npprniS11l, low rntet, fast. 111\/~tc.rs Thrift 639-0411. Neerl I\ "PAd"f T'I•~ an aii! SSS -Util paid fUmished ba<'h, fult kitchen, ideal ror stu- rlrnt. fncd 2 Br's. kids/pets. ;\gt <'h Id rn . S 4 6 5 Imo. Adu!fs. 6Ta-fil45 E\'es. 492-3615. e 2 Bednn Unfum. F'f'. "'1F-25i'"'. Coll I 9~ •~ $100 . small rurnishe<I rot· lnJ:<'. nice yard, uitl pal(!, r<lnsktc r pe1. .,.. "' · -~ 2 BR, refrig, stovP Apt. Unfurn. 365 177 E. 22nd St. 01 Gt2-364:i NE\VLY dewrated, 4 Br. 21 ~ Lease $275. ~fature aduJts. NEAR niaj. 11hopping center, $160 . t'X11'8. nief' 2 Br hf)ffic, l{nr, yard for kid!I, pct. $235 . mini rimcti, 2 Br, on i..: n1·r1• vacant. ho~. kids, (.>Cl!. ' CALL 6-15--0l ll 1.AGU!l>A BEACl·I 01'"1-'IC'E Sl 15 • u!il pall!. r111"1'1sl1C'd bnch, 111 hcarh. i1l('n] rn r Sill · d<'nt. sm . O t'l·.i11 ,·u. z 1:1: :.11111. in~. 1·ai1>. d1':lp· t , 1i $3.'i(l • ii li1'. z 0:1 l)Oiflf", \\ HJ'k shop vu, t-on,;;itlrr ~ngl"~· ALSO SUi\·ntER RD.'1'.\L."i CALI~ 494-9491 * LANOLORDS * !"HF.Jo: RE~T,\L SEJl\'ICE J TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 I G I N N E B I RU E ZA I' Bri. built-ins, frplc., 2 640--0747 Genera, n"·!y painted 2 bdrm. cool block~ 10 heh. ycarly $4:i0. Costa Mesa ---------I all summer . ....,,iet. spndous, r,.1&-1290 or 645-3319 WALK TO BEACH .. ., J\'PT Shores \\1aterfront 3 NEW 2 Story, 3 Br, 11,.\ Ba, 1 & 2 BR. Crpt/drp~. hJ1. no dogs. $l4S.50. 536-Sllot Bil. den, 2 Ba 2 FP. com· frplc, gar, 381-B 16th Pl, ins, gar. 30S JSth. ~-sos.6 ROO~IY 1 br apt. Convenient mu'''·~ pool, • ·-·-Is. c •1 ·-"' ~3 205 15th. 900-1749 to schls & shopping. $125. ...., "" ...,, .. , I ~·"=· ':~=.'~._,~~'7'"---·l ii~:::-;;;,:;;.-----1 mo. incld util. &12-13.34 or _Le_a,._I~''°--_. _64_2-3_123_._. __ Newport Beach Balboa lsl•nd 642-22.10 CARl\lEL ~1Qdel, 2 BEDRQO;\I APT. Harbor \'ie1v llomes, \\ffl\'TER rental, nicely furn LRG. New U~rn. 2 Brt2 PATIO. GARAGE. :1 BR, fnn1 nn. 2 B.\. 3 & 4 br, 2 ba, step11 1o heh . BR, fl·11lc, vie"" Jl all o $l70. * 646-4045 Sl25 pc'r 1no. G-t·l-712-1 l.D11·er $300, upp!'r $3.10. g:nrrlen . Yearly. 6T;:Hi239. POOL. Jo\'>Cly i;An:len, 3 br. 2 Avail Srpt /llh. :'>IS~91 S -..,r.,nit dcl M.:r BACHEl..OR Apt. $11Ckrps, ha, t'IT.i. + &c. Deposit. Duolexes, ~~o pets. 336 E. 20th, 2~ffl Uni\1'1'5lty. &12-3615. Furn. or Unfurn. 355 .-'C=-='=""~,..---,---·I BIG Ba ""' I LARGE 2 Br, encl garage Y \'lC\\'S, lrp c. 3 .... -·1 1 hU I Bdrm. 2 Bu. n('W'.-Only S395 Newoort Beech rSb"" avai · c c · mo. \·r1y. 673-Sns. 494--061 5. 'l7 Call 642-9338. SUl\ll\Jl""R, \Vinter. yearly, :t " ttr<s SPACIOUS 2 Br, 2 level!, l~i Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! & <l BR, 2 BA, fplc, beanlC'd bo.. $155 nio. Cnll 6·12-36TII. ceilings, crpts, drps, t blck ON TEN ACRES * 637-2'J.13 -+ beach balcony octan \•le .... · Apt 11. furn./unfurn. U.•ase $32. u'p 548-69i8 ' fireplace / p11,. parlos 2 BR. Aclulls. no ptls. BA\' a . . Pools Tennis Con~~t'I likrst r-.'IEADO\\'S APTS. 387 \\'. 9'.0 Sea Len. Cd~! 64-'-2Cit l Bay St., Cl\I fWi..0073 l ! 9 J i "'!"!!ln!!o!!A!!H~h~rrr~ruc!J!'!!C~oo!!'!!' !!l!!l"!!.Y!!' 1gB~o:.,c!k~B,!o~y!!V~lo~w":!:2!!B!!.r_1 • i"" S200. 2453 lr.-ioc 548-1729 NE ED 1 Dana Point I Apartmenu forRent BDR. APT. IN CdM Apts. Furn. 360 * SPARKLING ~PAClOUS 3 Br, 2 811.. \"early Balboa Peninsula 1 tcspon. aduil mal" n~s $26.'l/mo. 833-0086. ---------1 a med·lrg l bd. unturn apll;o-c~==--o:--;;---1 $35 WEEK & UP ln Corona del !\tar. Prefer Hu ntington Beach SI I J.::-llrnge unit, firep!act'. Sl70-• eep ng Rooms 1~ nio. I prefer lease. Xlnt VILLA YORBA • lfou.otekeep1na: Rooms 1 1 2 • 3 BR u tum • "-· VI re s. Need by Sl'pl. I. Ph. , « . n , V\."\:atl l'Y.' Afts tlflkc. 67S-l!i27 alter 6. Sl1Jrtlnq-at S123. ~!Lr.~a?nAs!~ 2 BH, 1 BA. ne1v carpet & Refrig.~!IL._ INCL'O 675-87-IO painl, So, of Hv.-y nr p,,rk. 16000 \Illa \orba ,.,.----,-=""-o=-~·I $Z..5. Call AJ,.'t'nl 6Tl-6900 (nr S.D. }N')' ortM11mp1 Su_nlnl<'r, 1 RR, $125 Y."t'E.'k, 2BR I' ba LI I. I ,lk 714/842-9622 ._ ..... I ........ l' ...... l' ...... I_. f I A M U H N I ! The surest woy for o hus.. I I I I: band to tdp over somelning . ,_-' Is Io start -ocound too \ <'nrly 1 BR $175 rno • i • 'Pt , JlOO. " Utilities lnclud~. 67.i-ms. · to be~ch, $2:10 J £'a s e . * DOG RUNS * 641-<ISf.a day1 only. Spac 2 ,fc 3 DR, $'149 &. $199. Corona del Mar Pi\ltTLY furn boch Prt bf1 KidA Ok. Pool. Kfflaon t.n aAY vi ···1~ on N bt h cnt ,l',c yard. ~f~t~ b1df ~l btk W. of ~ach Blvd, oti Lease.ew Sl70/~l0. ur\·e:~1Y: Sl8:l lea.!C!. 6Ta-3110 SlatC't) 84)-3546. tnuch. ,.~, I GABELH I ....... , -..,, .... ,-.,-,.--1 e c....i.i. ""' chrdle -!Y 11111,,. 1, Jtoe ml-_,,, ._....__._...._....__.__, you dewlop from ftp No. 3 belo#, :& :~1~~rs~~~~~.~·nERS r I' 1· 1· 1· 1· I' 1 e ~~~lfTTEISTo I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 ·. Ph' 67>-Cllt. Cos t• Mo.. WALK TO BEACH C t M l l 2 BR. Ctii</drps. bii·l"', a t e •ML NE\V 2 SR APT, BLTINS, rrar. 3lll 16th. SJ&.SCW!S. 2 BDRJ\1, Infant OK. 2267 Ca-~2s . NR. Hunt ~r.ll't', 2 Br ap1 , nyon Or. Costa ~lesa, Apt blmMcrpta/drp11. S-185. mo. B, ~-I lffi. untum, gat"l\gt'. slngle 1'°'84>-"='n-"!8~-~---- l BR. l lfudJo, newly redl.»C.. ar:~1£Slfi'a~;....1 fi.rr--034l 2 DR. 2 IM. ~lux p-onl ~itlv util!I. $130--$115. · · Y<Y• ... 1• ; • ~pt nr beach Sl!iO. mo * ro'"'6600 * VERY NICE l RR , $140. 5.16-6382 J00..$145 Nk.'tly fl.an, l 1 ~ br No children ~r ptts.. gp='AJ:;'7.~,,.,~.,,-1",.....-lrpl~-,.-pn.-.1 !r&ller.. Adi~. ~. ll2 837""9.lli . p r. pe,Uo. nr. llnt1 llarbor. \\', \Yilson CM \\'ant 11d nts\tlts , • &12...'i678 SJ'ii>. ~ l ' ' ' [ ' F I I i L ( I ( r.---------------.. ··--------------•T·--1 • .lull ll, 197' DAJLY PILOT 2$' Interested .In BAL ISLE SWIM & HEALTH CENTER A Real Estate Career? Huntington H•rbour FOR rent or lcue, brand ~ 2BR Tov.'llhoule, av.·Un. °""" PoOI 4 rec., c"' to ocean. Patio & very prlvalt'. l\fust aee to a.pprechue, call collect, 213: m-4427 aft 7pm IN FOUR WEEKS l'REPAJtE FOR .STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR lodlrid"allnd lostnctloo Smoll Classts • Real Estate Salesmen &-Brllllers LACUNA estate lh·lng on acres or maintained gardens, Pool & !ipll. Ocean vieY.'1. Close to beach & shopping. Lge. 2 BR., 2 ba. apt. Y1"/a1nenltletl. Also, studio apt., $18.J.-$3.j() mo., partlall)-fum.. incl. util. 1.-tature adults. 4~ Or your broker. Schools and Instructions • Employment Assistance For -' Graduates With sponsored by Swlmml•CJ l"'41tl 1•11 ., ... Leading Brokers. • , Assist•nce League of Newport Beach (ao-to o.g,.. Ptol) ln!Todtoctory '• c1au .. • Day And Evening Classes HELP FOR WORKING MOTHERS! • Broker Referral Program NON·PROFIT DAY CARE CENTER !or preschool children, 2\<, to S. OONOO fur lea.lie, 1 BR, I Ba. pool, ne"' carpet, no pets, mature adults. So. Laguna, """· ... ,,.,,.. This variety of fine schools could introduce • $110.full Course For lnform•tion-Brochure FrM Guest Lecture LOCATION : Corner of Bay St reet and Orange .'\venue, Costa ~lesa (St. John the Divine Church) • L•guna Niguel you to a new tomorrow. Newport, tt5 No. (Didi Ntwport Blvd. 548-1192 FEES: based entirely on your income HOURS : 6:30 a.m. lo 6 p.m .. Monday lhru Friday, year around. CLASSES FORMING-REGISTER NOW! CONDO. New. 2 BR. 2 BA, on goll course. T~nnls club &. beach. S29S mo. 831-0638. For further information regarding placement of advertising in the Daily Pilot Schools and Instruction Directory EDMOND F. JACKSON 490 Pork Awtflu•. lolboo ldo•d 1 Block from Ferry Landing. Mes• V'1rde DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 &. Encl gar. $165 up. Renlal Ole., 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034. Newport BHch CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 Real Estate Educalion Since 1964 ACADEMY ~EAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A PROFESSIONAL STAFF CALL 645-6570 or 546-1375 (714) 673-2750 THE NEW HAYWOOD APART!\.fENTS in Newport Beach are ready. The sales office Is open daily fron1 JO AP.f to 6: 30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. il San J oaquin 1-liJ\J; Road. 6445555 Ocean Safety Classes For Children Are you BORED ?W~~ 11••••• I 1 111 ••••••• ' .II I ,,~ EBRON IX TUTORING CLINIC DELUXE 3 &rm Apt. S3501MO. Ann. lea$e. 513 W. Bay, Newport Beach, 886-4832 days or 883-2943 nights (San Bernardino) BAYFRON1' w/priv. beach &: pier. New 3 BR. 2 BA, $550/mo. Yrly. AI..00 2 BR, 2 BA, $495/mo Y r l y . 979--0631, 644-4510 BACK Bay area. 2 Bdrms, shag, drapes, stove, garage, lg. patio. Ma.tul'e aduJL<; on. ly. No pets or trucks. Aval! Sept. 3 $175. 642-Z!)? SCUBA DIVING LESSONS FOR TEENS & ADULTS with a dead·end job? Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL today to see if you qualify for an exciting ca reer in the AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. Day or eve- ning classes can prepare you tor a position as: * Newport Air Associates Flight School & F~ing Club LEARN TO FLY $500. tA..cl .. A...n.w.1 FAA APPROVED * 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. 2 BR., 2 BA. Bltn appliances. Pool. 642-6274. Offered Mornings, Afternoons & Evenings. Group & Private Lessons. • Reservations Agent READING-MATH SPELLING Coune lncludn: 35 Hours fli9ht t ime i 1 Ce11n1 150'1 with 20 hours dual instruction . C lu b membership. l Month's free dues. lndividu•I instruction, tailored to YOUR ability . • .Ramp Agent • Air-Freight Agent NEW duplex 3 Br, 21,s Ba, .$375. per l'llQ. 1 blk to ocean or bay. 822 W. Ballxla. (21.J) 471Hi783. • Ticket Agent •· Travel Agent Certified Instructors Tuition financing also available. DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) Your Child Will Receive Guaranteed 1-to-1 Instruction IS AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fiy now --and have fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada 2 BR, nr. ocean; range, & refrig. $205. yrly, shag: no pels, 128~i 46 St; adult; 642-3331 \VATEl':.FRONT Lido, ~ BR, newly deco, cpts, dfl>S, garage. $350. Le as e, 6T:r1060. Underwater Educators 557-0035 Costa Mesa Pacific Travel School 610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana 543-6655 Approved tor Veterans' Training At EBRONIX-Where Reading Is Enjoyable 2750 Harbor Su it• 7B C,M. 979-1626 * Special Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Complete Details Cell NOW 979-1155 \\rATERFRONT Apr -2 br, flC\\•ly redecorated. $275. Util. pd., Slip Av a i I . 673-Zl82 or 640-8496 NEAR HOAG HOSPITAL. Lge. 2 BR, 2 BA twnhse, dishwshr, blt-iras. ga r . Adults. SztO mo. 642-4387 ~-·---~11..s~]l~I;;;,";"'"";;~:;;;; , __ ._ ... _ •• ___ .~.-.-"'~".·-"".-·.-._,.11.·.l,,.IL.~.Loot-;.-""'.-.--;,-;.-;;_ ~ .. ;";""'•';""';;;::;;1;-'"'•""'iiiiiiiiii-;;~l;IQ.~J I [' ..._--... -.... ---,!~ Sum--R-tols 420 Office R•-tol ••A I d · 1 R I • 555 L __ .. _ ••• __ ._ •• ___ ;;.c ... ......, n u5tr11 ehta 450 Personals 530 Found (free ads) 550 ·L:;o:.:•::• ______ ..:.:;.: c_o;;;':.:'------..:5:::5:;5 Cement, Concrete Apls Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Balboa Penlnsu1a 2 Bedroom, Bayview On beach, nr Balboa pier. Clean, cute. upstairs Adlts, no pets 67:Hi37'J or 987-1!& Cost• Men EXTRA special 3 br, 2 ba, sips s. pool priv, nr bch, PRESTIGE NOW LEASING plenty parking, linens turn, OFFICES H 1· t B h 613-2110 P. Fenton. 54"'159. un 1ng on eac .,.... Fountain Valley, Beauu. NEW M·l BfrpEAICH Apts,,1 4c2 Br. Furnd 1' ~!rn.·~.:"~u'ar' egrowtfeetd. MO Sq. Ft. & UP , oppos e orona e .,.. Hamilton & Ne\1;Jand Afar stale beach. Sec. gate. will divide into smaller ~9J or 833-0519 By Wk or 11-10. 83.1-1691. oUices. 50c per square 2 &: 4 BDRM. apts at Ocean foot, includes carpets, I ""*""'c"o"s"'T"A""'M"E"'s"A""'""' ~-$150 & up per "·k. drapes, all utilitle1, janl-* Also yrly rental avail. in tor service. Call Marilyn 6fil sq, ft .•.•• $115 per mo. Sept 548-2408 Stovall cn4) 832-5440. 1300 sq. ft .•••• $19'5 pc>r mo. IBE EXCITING . . . "'~~~~~~~~ j 2500 sq. ft. •••• $324 per mo. PALM MESA APTS. RAYFRONT, slip, pr i v NEW OFFICES 10,!XXl sq. ft. new building. MINUTES TO NP"t'. BCH. beach $2'15 v.-lc; $650 mo -AIRPORT yard space. Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $150 Aug. Bay deck & patio. No lease req'd, full llt?rvice, Robert Nartrcss. RHr 642-1485 Adults, No Pets. .c=O=c""-1,--,---= ~. cpt:s, music, air cone!., NOW RENTING (5 blk51:;mp.k~~ Blvd.) Kd~~~~I ~~~%° ;u:~ ~~~r;:;o.Single offices from LAGUNAM NI IGUEL 546-9860 beach. $150 v.·eek. PALASADES CENTER -=p~R"E~-~V~IE=w~"O°'P"E"N"'l"N°'G=-:_H~al"P~inch_ln_Rl~"--"'-;.<-J92_ 2072 S. E. Bristol 2400 sq. ft.&: up. Award v.•inning 1, 2 & J br ,\VAIL Aug. 4 to Sept. 15. Ne\vport Beach 557-7010 On ~I~~~'>'· apt!: w/famUy nns. No $275 Wk. Sleeps 8, Bay View (Campus-Irvine Jntersection) •---------- lease. Sorry, no pets. Fruni Apt. 929 \V. Balboa Blvd. PRE51'JGE 2 ROOP.t 4 DELID..'E OFFICES just $175. OUR TOWN NB. Exec. oUice, adj. Airporter Carpeted. Jlluminated Ceil· Family Apt s, 1250 •Ada.ms I'-=--------l~otel. Full glass vie\\", ings. Plus 400' \Varchouse Ave. (Adanis at F'airvi<'\11 ), Vacation Renfa}s 425 paneled walls, all util., un· SpaCt'. 1370 D Logan, C.\1 ~ta f.>lesa. Phone· 556-0166. crowded parking. 2112, _•_1._1-_2228 ______ _ Newport Beach MAMM01ll Lakes Condo, 1 DuPont, Rin. 8, Irvine. 400l Bl RCH, NB Br, tully eqped, pool, sauna. 833-3223. 2000 v.ttk. month. Call AM (n4) . 2000. 3600 sq. ft. or com· YEARLY. t To 4 BR. Ocean· 675-8408. OCEAN VIEW bo. thcrror. Avail. 10/1/TJ. front and olhers. Call: -'-'='C'=="""-.,.-.,.-~ s I "' I l'oTr Bnumgaro"e' 54150.12 9 BALB01\ Beach Apt·Sips pac ous, exec. Owce n · " · -· Property House 642-3850 6, $80/wkly &. up or yearly Union Bank Blvd., Newp::n'I: 1300 sq. ft. M·l space $175fnl0. 6/a-5810; 53fH>825. Center \.\'/recept. are a , w/front office. Lg. rear Rentals I~ Rooms 400 phone service, zero)( & part door. $180 mo. 1793 \\lhittier Rentals to Sh•re 430 time secy. Mr. McFarland, St., Costa l'oiesa. 646-5033 6#-9440 Days, Eves. 64&-0681 . RECENTLY divorced man v.'ants roommate o\'er 30 to share. hi• 3BR rondo in Costa Mesa. ~ or PRESTIGE N.B. 3 rm, 1st Rentals Wanted 460 floor 776 sq. ft. patio SUi!e '--'-----'---.;.;:_ adjoining oc Airport. Joint NEED 1 use Ige. recept. nn., xln1. BDR APT FURN. room priv. bath Ir: en· parking, Xerox, recept & • • tra~. weekly maid liCrv .. STRAIGIIT & square male, sec sctV\ces avail. 556-8095 IN CdM S.16-20,j4, 43, has nice 2 BR house on t d 1 aJ "-"· employed man. Re f s . STORE OR OFFICE respon. a u f m e "'-~ ·~ 61., ~ ... ..., E. 191h to share. Lady OK. --'I 1 hd f Non-smokC'r. Su.u. ..-~• &G-1457. Newport I: Bay Center a m.::u-rg . un um apt after 5 Ptlf. """'" N in Corona de! 1'1ar. Prefer GIRL 23 wants roommate for .w.M ewport Blvd., CM. 'Vti pl s 70. ROOMS $20 '"'k up w/kll $30 2 BR apt on Bal ls'·. ~•., ;.2>' Avail A1.1g. 1. Pkg. Util. garal85 i• u/nt 1"' ,•""· X!I l11k up apts. Oilldren & pct ~ .. -646--1252 or &14-2228 mo. prr er f>a.5('. nt sectio 2376 Newport Blvd fum, util, $150. mo., 9 to 5. 1 refs. Na><! by Sept. 1. Ph. n. 3967 ., 6.'\9-86U; aft 6, 499-239.1. OFF CE Space for rent, ?.1ike, 675-1577 aft 6. CM. ~9755. 64.'l-· Lease, $75 lnO, nr Nev.'PDrt ="""'==~"=--"'"-':...,.-ROOMS s~ wk up w/k\t S.10 Rfi.t. MATE, mawre Mnidng Blvd. on Broad\\'ay. C.?.I. WANTED 2 Bedroom house wk up apts. Childrn & pct u·m. 2Z-ll yrs. 2 bdrm Cd?.1 675-8761. or duplex, 3 re Ii ab I e , section. 2376 Newport Blvd., 1st & la'>t deposit. 644·9!168 ---------re s p on s i b I e g i r \ s. 975-,,A • ..,,,,7 dn)'l'I, GT:.>-3811 eves Business Rental 445 References available. Pets. CM. 548-:xi, .... a-..);J<,I • to Sl 7j. Costa J\.fesa or l'ot' with k Itc h e n ~~ ho~ wi~"'2 geys~ EAST 17th STREET Newport ~ach 64;>-6764 privtl~ $80. Employt:d ,,~•>-Z'O">:: Successful n""" RE d . femrde. Nr shop's &: beach. "g-"""" "'Asta ,1.,. , __ 1~,, su.11 D La y wishes l br. ' 'EM -~ -·• · sh ......, " .........:n .... unfu111. apt, 01. No 536-8005. nu;-u ,,. ...... ent will att 1430 Sq. ft. with additional •·-• b t ~~ w • Jimokl'/drink. no p" 1 s. RQOJl,1 for man $70 monthly, •wu .6 r ap • ..-.... -.. ea.. 400 .sq. fl o( atorage. Retail Ml>-5886. ·775 Flower St., C.M. Irvine. 552--0739 eves. It automoUve uses. .,:;~=~~--~~ 646-9136 Office Rental 440 REALONOMICS CORP. w:~~.Ef g~~~~;1:i~ 2 Bdrm 1 BR. Full ba .• lg doset, prl DESK """"' availabl• l50 BROKERS 67s.6700 540-3308 A "Special" seeks a S~11\U. bro\\'I! & black. long j LOST -Bro"'" & Jordan TR· e GENEROUS e CU~J'Oi\t Concrctl! \\'ork. ')Jpl'cial." Exec. 5'11", ]55 hairf'd, 1n..'lll! rlog. fPart rni~ni ch:•ise klun~e, frorn H.l!ll\O\'l' asphalt rlri~. lbs, Life tlnie Refs. Sl!('kll Pugl. El . Toro R<l & llt\ller . in lransll fro1n l'tcpl:h .. 'f' 1•lfl!Oncrete 60c ft. ~tile unencunibrd lady 1\1 e Donalds Rcstauraqt..._ U111\'Cl'Ji1ty P;u·k lo Tu11le e REWARD e No dt•lay.~. 1-'n..'f' t'llL \Valk1, not tiC'd 10 a job. Reply 552-0011. flock \'111 E. Unil'<'l"Sily Dr.. sb1hs, pulin:'I. No job too 11· pi~ture & pc rt i n en_ l BRASS key ting l\'ith n1a11y Cuh't'l:, f.: Tu11le. P.ock Dr. ~·or l'i'! • I srnall. G.18-3325 .. dcr1uls. P.O. Box ·166;>, keys Sl'C'n falling (l'om Call \ail. a.ID-lS.!O. rlon I urr ~r any infr.in•a. CliSTO:O.f CE,\tf:i'l'T WORK Irvine, Ca. brov.·n station v.·agon ap. MALE SIAMESE gold i;:.n1 1~ 1tum of. a Drive11, \\'i\LKS. patios, pool f1.ILL y LICENSt-:D pn:iaching ;-;l'\\'port f"\\'Y at Sealpornr.. Vic: Goldc'fl \\'est. approx. 2 lllC~l~S i~ c1r:r ~1,~· l dt·~k. ... Don, 6-12-IG14. * SPIRI11J,\LIST * Bnstol. Please con tact \\les \\'anl(·r. Heil & Gothard. "·ith jt'\\·elf'd horst's= t . 1 • 1 Contractor Spiritual rrodings JO an1-lO Snydrr. &Kl-1~ \\'!"a.ring nro <.."Ollar. ·· <.'i'ntci" also goid-1 ·kn: ---"7---,.---' pm. Arlvire on. all matte.I'S. FND ~\·hite fn1l p u P.P y REWARD 842·3508 l\1·as ~n duU~f. approx~ i:r j J ,\CK Ta.ulun ... ,. r f. p 11. t·r , 312 N. El Camino Real. San w/apnrol ears, v 1 c. :\f ,\ N · s gr l' en p J a t cl size of a nickel iruM:ribt'd I remorl, add. Llc 8 -l 269072.. Clem en l c . 492·9136, Garfield & Brookhurst F.V. seersucker sport<."Oa l 11. 1 in st·r'.pt Fl.A. 'Thesf' an-l\ly \\'ay Co. ;>17-ooJ(j 492-9034. 962-4197 P.letro Car \\'ash, CMIA dl'eply 0treasured family • Drafting PROBLE:\I Pregnancy. O>n· BLACK kit1C't1, fl'n1al~. \\'ht t.le:i;a July 8. Rcv.·11.rd! mf'mC'lllOS & the logs ts 1r. 1 ---~------. lldent. s y mp at he ti c f)a\1'.<:, flea rollar. \"ic.: Cam· 54G-21i9 after 5 pm. r>t>placeabl£>. PLEASE. OF.S IGN/draft plarui home pregnancy counseling. Abor· arillo St., D.P., 1 \\'k.. LOST Gray .~ while male PLEASE hf'lp if you h11vl' & <..'Omml. atkliliOOS, pr. tion & adoplions ref. 49i.;im . cat. 3 yn. old, v.·earing nea any information . 642·1189 R.IIl'lS. !42.:woo. APCAR!-: 64 2-4436 FOU'' ·o female Irish <--toe•. collar. Vic. Sunncno.·er & Eve!!. & v.·l'('kC'fld!I. ..,... • G1rdenin9 A'ITRAC. "'irio-.v 58 OV.TI 5 mos old. Vic. of Jl;ewport Dyer, SA. 7/'lO. 556-1291. \\'AU.ET lrg blk pall!nt l!hr home & income prop. ml'CI Blvd. & Delmar, Costa SCHNAUZER male salt & \\ rf'd strlPl'. Vt••: :\lannrni MOW & EDGE single-fun loving man up to t.lesa. s.i.~5 JX'ppcr, rtu;le'StOrl('' t'ollal'. :\!111'. Generous fu>1\·ar<I. EXPERT & 65. \\.'l'ite P.O. Box 1148, F'ND: Rik & \\'hi!e fml. kil· &15-2219 home. 0 fr I('{•' PAJK'rll & jev.Tlry n'IUnll'd, DEPENDABLE G.G. ll!n v.•fpink nose. Long t.1il. 776-1191. Re\\·nrd. '"' qui'!lll011$ askNI. Sf'nd to I EXPERT FJ"Cn<'h r a r 0 r Flea collar. Vic. Country GER:\IAN Shep, black $.· tan, Bronston. Oce<1n.~1d1· li<1rh•.,r' Call For Prompt, reader desilY's to contact Club Dr .• C.:-01. 557.()()..11. g mos. bro\\TI colllll'. vie. Office 0ceaJllllide. Ca I i f . ' Free Estimate. Crystal Ba.II reader . FND: small fml. SianiC'se · l!Jth/Pornona, Jul. I 5 : l:~m.;~l4~l9~n~r~l22~-~3~"~9~· ~~ t 534-7187 962-8&1 I. vie. ~lurrly Park H.B. 6-15-2!!26 aft 5. I' -----,E·-----xp. PREGNANT? Th i n king S-12-3508 S1'f,\LL 1'~. blk. cat y,·i1h rluf· American Girdener abortion~ Kno\v all the facts ry long fur & v.·hl!<' patch on I ]~I first! can LIFE LINE-24 FND male Irish Sf'lll!r vie. cht>st. wearin~ nea ccillar, :.rutructlon P15" ;\!11111tel\lifll.-e, Cleanup, hrs S.·U-3522. 18th & Santa Ana. C.1\1. REWARD ~ •~. Lanll:i1:1111lllK & Sprinkll:'1' ' • 6-1~2.18 1 <lJ l .... loJU" ~'''lC'l'. Call &1:..1930 LADIES July ~peclal 1 yr R d C JI ' I niembership $:). ca I I F'ND Fox trrrier, tn·roinr1-d ewar , o 1e ma e S l.i\\\'N Kt G~u"Cif'n care, mow 'Pa11n£'r' 8 3 6 -1 2 7 l or Shavl'n area on back Vic. X.t-12.\6 c~ls & • rdl?l'·Vacuuin-nower beds - a.18-1•179 Npt. Blvd. 6-f6.201't LOST : \\'allrt blue sued!! 1nstruct1ons 575 plttnt ""'' shntb cnre. 213 · . . 5!rl-.1?i7 nr 714 S-17-3372 fND: Ring at Cd:\! tennis I '.'./frtni;::C' .. vie, S.~\. Hl\'C'r Sl':"'SllJ:".'E Pru't'nt Co-Op SWINGING COUPLES courts 2 "'k." ago. Please tratl RE\\ARD. 5'-1 ..... ~9-I. :-:urst>ry Sl·ho'Jt•l has opi·n. C 0 ,\f PL t-: TE l11f1f!!IC11pr Call "Leah'' 2-8 p.m. Identify Terry: 499-2128 IRISll Setter. fem. ho.r.la~ed Ill!.!~ fnr 3 & •1 )r olds. 1n11ir1t. ~·rv C<lmm 'I. Ind, 638-1511. Lost SSS · front PR"''• \'it": ~:ain.·i~v.· & S.'1J-.77~ or 9~9.ii7 Z~im7~prtnklr~. clr11nup. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. _Baker. RevtaJ'l'I. 556--03.ll. LJ-.:,\P .. '\' Sailing. 8 hrs. on thf' , . . Phone S.U-7217 or v.Tite GERi\1A.'\' Shrp. l •: old :\fare RF:\\'ARD, MixM Hraglf', """"'r plus 1-:: rlay 9010 $:'i0. :\~O\\ & Uli.:t>. !'.:"<(}("rt & P.O. Box 1223, Costa ~fesa. Bl\\', name is "Odl'n''. \"1c. Tn color fC'm .. lost July 4, Udo Siiiling: Club. 6T>-OR?i. C'Jlf'nrlabll•. Ca~I for prompt SWINGING SINGLES lSth & i\lonrovia. please call 65-19.ll! bt>f 2 iC.1'I. 11n:>a1. I In''" e-s1. Jntin. ->16-l l·Ki .. Call for info. 2·8 pm 530-l2SO. IHG-8737 LOST l.H h. fl:car Or~c Compl1·1e l..a1\·n & Gardening • • Sell the old stul/ Buy the new 1 & J9'h. Ht'\\·ard. Call [ ·~and•-~ ,~ ~l"\J('(' -llauhng & Clf'anup.r; Family Counseling i1tuff. &16-ll.100 l!\'rs. _ _..,.,_ .. _ •. ~ J1n1 .~l~IOJ ~:1NGIN~ SIN~-~ G1U~55~~6~7lin·ups call "Leah" ~-! oin 53()...1250. I G I 5 • Trader's Paradise 1 "Y'i11'"9 ••••• ~rvoc•• -Social Clubs ' S35 :\IA,.URE, dr(>l'nilablt', f1'1'('· 1 HO:\ff. Rcf)1nr. All Types. tn· * INTRADATA * QUALITY matches "'f Pl-!OTO "Largest In Calli" {Call NO\\' for t1lEE sam· pie profile on 1 prmpeclive match. 2-l hrs) 714 . 541-3138 I LA ~-6283 lines ed yo.rd . i\ly tvimr. Hl'fS, eluding rlt'r.. plu n1blni;c. l~iod Junt"hes. :>1~1067 p:1.1nlfns;:, r11h11~1•;, s~lves. ="""'""°'=C:C."-"-==· -:\hnor 11Hrr;111on~. fl);tUre 81\BYSITIING In n1y hom" repa.ir It! ln~tnll . l'tc. 1'1ml! 4: prcf1'1" a~'C 2 to ·I yrs. $2:"1 ruflleria. 1-·&s II om" '\k, Cul-de-sac. 54S-21 47. Repair. 1)42...)401. Carpenter TOTAL !'t:n \·10;.s co. times dollars CABINETS/ CARPENTRY Pllinfg . Plumh·g . Rcpe\f'!I. i\foh. ltms &: Apl.s. 496-5717, Gl&-0077. ~"°. t~."~"3 .. ~!". • from mo. WU! provide fumllu"' NEW SHOl'S ~~~~~~~~ uo.:u .,. ""V D'tJ"VUOO 1 •: A · · LADJE:S -Summer i;peclal 1 ,_ b a i#Jmo. NMWlJWaerv>Ce A few choice .,........., Atlll 11 ...-1 )T. n-m~o•."lp •;,, C•llq '------------------l l;m'if'oJ~l;;:IY;;l';;";;;;;'"""c:';;•;;«::;--; lfANDY;\fA.'1 ·all k!nd1 ol LOVELY room "' R • avalla.ble. 1781S Beach Blvd. _..,,.~ "' UI;" " • •1 Spado\JI ck:wset. P\1 tntr. Huntington Beach. 642-4311. A\'aUablc at Village Fair, ~ ·PARTNER' &»-lm or ""t::l\0 , remoit'I, lratn(" & u~. innall Jt~llJIS " Garage. S85 mo. 5'~1821. 16I7 WESTCLIFF-NB llOO South Coast Jiwy. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; ~!rl.,i9 * C·I PROPERTY • C1\NYON' Lake iOt. nr loda-r tlnl11h, :o:rores. olfices k I iopeeiahy. 979-J6:'itl. :;..J6....97%1. 415 Laguna. I l ~~~~~~~~~~ll.l'J".i' pru"Ct'l hean Of c.~1. & \\•att-r fl}r Ora~e Co. tY)nH,>, l'IC. Custom 11.'0rk. 'H1ulin9 Gu.st Hom. 19*>, 912, 756 A S40 Sq. Ft. 494 1111 Announc..-nents 500 Takt> 30 ··~1nrcl 6.. type homC', !Of, or '.'. Va.Jue SS,400 Lie. BI-191R01. 96'.l-1961, I --,~.-.-----·I PRIVATE ROOM Ample P'l*lng. Util Baum· FREE atandlng s Pan 1, h :.:.:.;;.:.;.;cc~=='--= 181 unitA. $35.500 eqty for homt, <'lt>u . Carpet Service :\Io' I:-; C. 11au1 1 n a. ganiner. 541-5032. Sayle a:tructure .UOO IQ n + (SO l.osl and fOLWld lxN!.t or '.' ~. ~18-18 clt'an-ups. k ea a o Mb I e for elderly, ~_:n bu I~ to r 1 ruu. SERVlCE parking. can dlvkle into of-.f GYRO.COPTER • * • JOHN 'S C.rpct & Uphol!nery rd Tes, l'rtt e !It Im ale•· ::fr;...~~.q~utr!J: Westclfff BuUcllng llCff ot ideal re ta J J ••••••••••I m ENGINE It 4-"-'httl Ori Shampoo tree Sc<il t h· ColiE'l(C' Sludt-ni.. < 7 l 4 ) mcalJ. ()n'nrr Westcllff Driw A Ahowrooma. 642-<1851 REWARD Campl~e. ready to go. dr1\·e parts fOC' good dlrl or l(UArd !Soll Retardan11f. =832-'=,..""='"""='""'=== Call~ tl"\'tne Blvd., Newporti -~-E-!8~1h-St~~C'-lll=~-.• -b Found (frH ads) SSO l'nlde tor Van, C&r. or ?~T !ltr"O('f blkt". ~a.sen le. all cokr GET RID or UNSIGllTI.Y Be&ch ?-fr Howud .w • • • : """ta le 646·.S&IS 53G-89i7 befot'f' 4 pm bri11:htrnera It 10 minute TR.ASH & Dli:DRtS fU VACANCY for elderly lady &t!t.610t • for ~ore or ore. 362 AQ. ft. Far information. leading 10 CIL\Y ft'm k>"" hnlr c•t -bleach ror wtli1e carpctj;. t.OAll. COLI.EGE STU· In lie. Gunt home. Good ,,;;;;,::~·=-=--.,.~-SlOO/nlO. It 1069 sq. fl. the an'('SI & tofMcliOn ol Vlc. 17th St, & Santa Ana '&'\ PO!\i1AC Grand Prl.' HAVE $12.IXX> eqty In single Sa~"° )T)Ur money by lo1\'ln11: t DDfT 54.\.6d. rood lltl"Wd. 6&3391 NEWPORT Beach-Airport SM/mo. C.J.S. RE AL pentan or J)('l'W.lnll who Btolt> St .• Cl\t. fi.13-2!133 l'till pt'l'\\·er. pht'i ·70 Ka~11.· srM')' 5 BR home ln r . V. me extrn lrlps Will clean S R•ntils 420 area, ornoe space. & -i. ,=""'=A'OTo'E°'."S<S-""'.;.11;:68::..-__ Bicycle from Jfome on Port FE!\tALE Springer Spaniel. -~1 250C'c. \\'~'"T' 4 v.~I \Van1 unl13 In lol'al a~a . 11,,1nt rm miif.ng MTI & l\I 0 VIN G Ir: ha u I In K ummer ft. F\tll ~-XI0-3.000IQ. "TitE FACTORY'· tw &hops Abbey Plact. Reply In oom-Jl,f~lon V\f'fo Olive vehl<'I('. • V1JlaRe Rn.I &.~at" Invest. ha.IJ $1 5. ,,Any nn. s'i.50. l\f\Y\\'hfft', F\imU11~. mt1e. BF..ACll ·~ 2BR, avail Aul(. ft. rttullan Realty, 5«1-2900 avall. from $90 roo. tn Can· pl.rte conlldtnce whh in· ...,. •1o.; 9Ql.!J958 mt!n1 Olvt!t\Qn 963-1567. C()U(:b SlO. C'blll:r $5. 15 yrs. l!l?m'. ctt!'. Btll I Skocite:r, ·-•1 S400 Irvine, Ne-rt Beach VIII 4•• ~" St ,A_ • ...,.,..,.. ,_ .. A 645 2tG1 is thru pt 15. ~· "o. -y-nery •Rf, ""' ..,..," ., fqrmat.u.-. • descrtptkm of $11.1132 151 trun dN!d. 71 1:'~ 121 F'OUR·Pl.E)."'f;s In SaC'· exp. "' y,•,.,,\ CX1Unts. DOI --·-.,...----~- rttature eouplt oflt)'. No O.C. A1rpor1 locaUOn, 682 !J(f. N.B.~ or &42-8.'i20. blcyclr to 01.lly Pilot P.O. y011 t1or'l't ~ 11 ~ In S8'J mo. 10 SllJ mo. In ' ramtnto t\\'~ f"lortn nd methQ.1. I dn ~11rk m)"5elf. GEN Hauhna. 1lte/Shrub clllld"'n. 61>7372 rt., 2Jt&' le:a:e·~r" 1600 kftINDUST. shop, l -'Box~-'-"°-·-llo_,_9~16____ .. Ora.., t'ut" "''hen )'OU Yran, Doe-9 yrar'!I. wtrf.. i\rra1. Qu·nM" will In.de up. Good rtl. 531-0}01. lrtm. G~rrf J,~--leanup. NEWPORT ~ichhool, 811>1 avi. mont · 4 • $225. Alto 600 i n. oHkt Uke 10 trade? Our Trader'• pl11ce an ad In the: CJJJ.1 for motor home or S.-I0,000 eqully. D\BERNAADO and SONS Ell. 531 • l. 9, wuh/ilryer, 40' wlrv:bw, o.Jly Pilot Want Ma ha\• wtuv·a qtn, 1$. Ot Pvad!W column b r.,r )'()U! Pilot Want Ads! Call naw atn. 613-73U, ~1.13 carpet sa1':1, 1nil•l1"Uon & Fut rtaUh.s ar. JUlll a pt.me July 29-AW!(. JJ 833-8350. ti.=rp=lltl;::_:plor<==· ----.:&l&-.::..;%1:.:30~------5 line1, 5 ~'I ft'll" 5 bocb. -&t2-56i1. '------------------repa~. Jo~ Est. 963-l639 c11ll awt,Y &tt-M?a. ~· , ' .. IJ r Houllft9 SSJPLOAOER & dump tn:ck work. C.on<nt". uphalt ilwiQI, brcaki!ll'. 846-mo. i.' FURNITURE Van for klcal furn haub & i:Cn'l hauling. ~1862. FATilER &: SONS. trre- work. t.ruh, yard & g&r. dt!IUM!p. Free est 84U182 L6CAl: moving k hnuling b)• Cudent. Large truck. Rew;. ~ or 613-()647. c:t.EANUPS, renlOvc din . h'eet:,.~. <lr1vi;weys. grnd- ifll'.. 1"1·26fi6, Lil'. 240182. HoUHCIHnlng LADY will do houriet,'it'tJling, ~perll'nceri, 4 hr. n1inln1un1 $2.50 per hr. /.lesn V1~t .. Oolleg._. Park, co.na l\.1<'sa al'ea. ~ Carpet Cleaning Floor Care & Windows Dutch Main!. 8erv. 5.17-1508 OUTC1·1 Lady v."Snts 1teady ,tiouSM\-Ork. Par I -1 i n1 t'. lJ\'f'-001 S3 hr. 968-(610 EXP. Hf;l'(.ing lady. dellre W'Oril: ~· woek/da._v. (}\1-n lnlrul. lll'liable/res. 847-3637 JAPANESE lady v.'Otlld like ti:iuseck.-o.ning. Transporta· tlon Jftded, 9Ql,..OC,03. Meaonry aR.ICK, 'veneers, K 1 e p s, w a 1 k w a y s , glumpstone, block a.nd "l'Ought Iron ti-Oct-.. Ille Cll-t r y w a y s , !fH"5 Pa1nt1n9 & ; P•perhanging siJy W.P, I:. ge( hanging Contract in 1 home call. The ~Rngmen 541-5846 , INT/EXT PAINTISG. Quality \Vork. Reasonable ; Ref's. 61a--OI60, 675-5230 PAINTING . honest work, rj.n--Orinker. Bonded & Insurm. Oiarlit>, 836-9-Wl. ,C & A PAINTERS ' .... ..., , * PAINTING * ;:-PAPERHANGING * L CALL 552-8374 ~INTING SPECIAL J tory $139., 2 story $189. coo &: Eades. Finest ciuality materials. ~556--0108 ' No Wuting '*" WALLPAPER * \\lhen you ealJ "Mac" , 5-el#l eves. PiiOF. pa.inter, honest "'Ork, ~-Inl/exl, tn>e est. ~els. 548-~. 642-3913. ][fi]! l[fi] I L ... ; ' mJ '~--··-···~l[ll]•! _ •• _,., _, iiiffi)iiiJ ~I ;;;._;;;, ... ;;;.t ;..IITTl ... ••~1~1 ;;';;"~';;';;;::[Il]~J liiiiiiiiiiiiii"'""iiiiii'-iiiili" ~]LUJ~J Help W•ntod, M & F 710Help W•ntod, M & F 710 HelJ! W•n~·M & F 7 lO Help Wentod,M & F 710 Hele Wantod,!" a F 7IO Help W•ntod, M & I' 710 H•lo W•ntod, MI F 710Help W•nttd,M& F 710 BANKING ATTENTION MEN WESTWIDS BANK COOK-Dish up, dl,y ab.I.fl, will train, mu.rt be ma~ &. reliab~. S pa1he11 1 Hender, ,71~, 21'-092..2606. Y.!r;!,y ~J.5!~t!':!,~, GARDENER ~-- 10 health IP&-WW train, no ·r"·o yeart Jexper1e:nce In Top pay & Uber&! wage prognm. Paid health ~. nee Apply ln per90n I a n d 1eape maintenance Huntington Be•ch Fountain Valley Costa Mt•• lrvln• Laguna Beach Newport Beach Don't miss this opportunity! 50 TRAINEES \Ve hope that 50 good trajnees will an· s\\·er tbis ad to fit good position. IL doesn't matter v.·hat your past work has been If you can qualify. All we ask is that you will be willing to study and eorn as you \1:01 be taught our work. You will be selected through a Scientific Unbl••ed Aptitude Te1t \Vhi ch \viii tell you \\'hether you possess the fundamental ability necessary for success in our home maintenance elec· tricaJ indu stry. You wiJI enjoy taking the test ; it's free. given on interview. Our work is not hard. \Ve are not the type of company lo stand over a man or \VOman and drive the1n. We do, how· ever expect an honest day's work for an honest day's earnings. $150 -Per Week a1 ptr written guarant•• • plus bonus and cash 8dvances. If you are sincere1 clean cut and a mbitious call : 979-5222 or 979-5469 R;=~rl·=· "'"" ... CUSTOMER &n.Y att or eve. 29.'.JO w. PcnrntrM"nt pos!Hon. Ex: & dental lnsW'll?Ce. 11 paid holidays a year. Coast Hwy., N.B. ccll ent utlu.ry ruxl benefits. I.Ang term secunty. • Tener • Secretary SERVICE CLERK Installment loan, previous \\'e have an Im mediate open- OOnklnn 1•xpcr it'11CC & 111~ In our CWJlon1~· Bervice shortho.nd required, sharp dept . for a candidate who appearance. ha-. iruhfltantla.l general of-• Secretary flct experlf!OC'e. Xlnt typing. Buslntsl d c v «! I 0 P m r 11 t , Diian a variety Of du!jell in- DOMESTIC l lelp Georae Allen Byland Agency, loo..B E. 16th St., S.A. 547--0395 OONtrr ShoP., afternoon !: morning shift, femaJe aa:c Z>-45. Apply in person. ~fr. Oonul, l3S J::. 17th St., C.'-t . t·lutling typing aales otdt•r1 escrow acx:tg depl · AILY Shorthand req'd. Excellent & quotations, o p er a 11 n g DRIVER FORD Cell Mrs. Fielder 644-338'1 9AM·Noon THE IRVINE COMPANY Ne"'POrt Beach F.qual Opportunily Employer benefits, Mlary open. T<'letax, T\VX & ditto PILOT IN LAGUNA Conl'ftct Shirley 835-2511 machine, some telephone B EACH ARE A • Equal Opportunity Ernpl())"(!r eontact. MUST HA V E DE· * GARDENER * ExceUenl hinge benefits in-PENOABLE Au TO Be your own Bost BEAUTIClAN wanted for eluding company paid group AND VALID ORIV. Foll or p/ti1ne In ycur salon located in So. O>ast lnsuranct'. O\Vn area. lligh inco~ Pla7.u , commission I: saJary ERS L I C E N S E • Guaranteed Custom ' ~11r11n1eed. Paid vacation. Apply personnel dept. CALL HARRY SEEL· No Cash Down 1 \ ":.'~:-~·~PER•TOR • Lear Siegler, 1 ~ ... 32 1. ~ "'"' ~68::S~ La'" ' A.ssisrunt \••anted. \Ved., I iiiiiiiiiiiiiii -==~ thru SAL J\1ust be licensed. IDC. Ett'ctronics GENERAL OFFICE Richard Ouellette Salon, Must tiave good figure apti- 1610 \\'. Coast li>A'Y·. Npt WANTED '• tude for this job. Great Reh. Transport chOltK"C' for advanct'tllent. Boat Repairman I Salary to $563. Call Linda \\'at<'rfront <'Xpo?r. prt'l'tl. Dynam CS Ray, ~. Coo.stal Per. Pem1. Full tlruc. Must have 3131 W. S.,.rstrom 1 1 . .wnnel Agency, 2700 l-larbor llhort hair & c!Ntn record. Santa Ane Ad'fv~dt~~~sic!~li~gr fu~ ~hee ~~ ~B"lvd-"' .. "CM~~· ==~=--H!ackil".~ Boat Yan!, New-portunity to Join a g:ro\ving GIRL FRIDAY JIOrt Beach. ' An Equal O i. port uni I y Orange Co. Con1puter co. Rel ail stol'P,. ACCOl.lnts pa.y- BODY lt'lan, Fint Class only Employer lhat offers: a ble expcr, 4 days v:kly, Royal lndustrjes, a major 1nanuract urer of nu· clear components, is now hiring experienced machinists in the following categories. All shills. Jig Bore Machinist Profile Machinist NC Machinist Engine Lathe Machinitt Grinder Machinist ID·OD Mining Machinist Personnel Departn1ent will be open for in· terviews 8 AM·6 PM Mon-Fri. & 8-noon Sat. Other interviewing tin1es can be arranged, ROYAL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Dytr Rd., lRodhlll & Dyer) Santa An•, C•. 540.3210 An Equal Opportunity Employer \\'ilh tools, Earn $400 per I ,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,~ Call a.\()..1541 . \\'k, Apply Same Day Auto DAILY Chlld Care wanted * Xln't Benefits -oG:lliJR!iLLJF'iRiilfiDfiA"Y~-·1.-~-~-.. -~~-!'-~~-!'-~-"-~~-~-~~-!'-~-~~-~-"~~~-!'-~~-!'-:=-,,.~-~-.. -~1 ~a,.;ni!ng, 2030 Hlll'bor Blvd., for lmy chilu"",.n, ~sp6 &k * Competitive Pay ~Grae(' Ln., C.~I. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Htlp Want9d, M & F 710 . . 11. n my vers11y ar * Modern Facilities A 1~p'!'pl'!y~-~~·n~9-:!ll~ll~.,,~l·:!>':Cri~--I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BOOKKEEPEft / Stenogra-J=c""""'='=c' 0'55'02..°'710,89=. ===~ . ..; f LEGAL trainee, part time, pher for gen·1 work. Schock DENTAL RECEPTIONIST -Due 10 our rapid grO\\'lh \\·e HIGl-1 School gi rl helper or INSURANCE SALES fast 1ypist, p1"l'!er 25 to 36 boats, 673-2050, Assistanl, Young Newport have ilml medialc openings in ~~d S~a1i:'.' 1'!f!11n d & years old. 831-2080 Beach office. Experience th(> ro Ol'.·lng areas. · . necessary. Send Resume to 673-9091. No exp nt'C., eam \Vhile you LVN or RN Supervisor, 11.1. BOOKKEEPER Cl · · Ad N 698 D ·1 * JR. BUYER H 0 S TE SS. Some c-. · '"""· part 1lme, cvos & Fringe benefHs, &ood assi11ed o. , a1 y ~.":""'" k d 1 U ti starting sal. 54()....5690. Lite or heavy for bookkeep-Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa 1-3 yrs exper. in pro-Apply In penJOn Ha.muurger \V n s, u me when quail· -=.:======'-- Call 2..(i pm Tuesday Ing office. Expc-r. in public Mesa, Calif. 92626 curement or electronic EDP Hamiel, 1545 Adams, Ci\1. fiecf. MACHINISTS Or 9am • l pm Wednesday accounting preferred. Salary DENTAL Assistant, exp'd 2 fabricated items, i .e . Betwn, 2:]()-.4:30 pni. l''al'mers Insw·ance Group General "'Orie: on lathes, milla open. Call: days 17,r ,,,,k, incls Sat for boards, cable & mechanical HOUSEKEEPER P e rm · Ed La.nl * 54{).1834 & metal inachine -w·pm-. \\'este1-n Business Services bl' · · 2 d 6 I ,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,.I -, ""' Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 spccia ly practice in Santa a.sscm 1es V.'ltt\\Tapp1ng. w/transp. ays, irs, r 1 yr. mlnimum experience. ACCOMPANIST 563 \\'~00 St. ~!·ss~~~~~et~d:i~· * SECRETARIES Lido. Call 673--0629. ti\" .,,_.. .,,_, 11 ~~,!Ys::ti~.uts. r.tany Rt'liablc p1'0fiCl<'nt full 1im1· ASSEMBLERS Costa '-fesa. 642-07!2 DENTAL Receptionist. Typi ng fill, sh 80 min. Several INSPECTION l"'"NE DCDCr\NNEl 54().6740 in high SChool vocal & URGENTL y NEEDED BOOKKEEPER, girl Friday Orthodontic r r act i cc. opcnin_t!s in in ark e t in g ""' r Lf\,.J\.J ROCKFORD ehorat music, "'hich per-Rf!gls!cr today, \\'Ork tomor· ;:!r,:, ~.~~i!~~e r~~ outstanding opportunity for f•nginccring .~ sales office. INSPECTORS SERYl(ES•AGENCY AEROSPACE !orins <lilficult college N>pe-row! Complt!t(' ~fits. Newport quRlified person. To $700. 3--5 Yrs rcc<'nt exper, 17.:.:00 Red Hill Ave. toire. MUST BE XLNT NO FEE EVER Send rcsun1c 1o Classified prefd. After 5 P~1 By Appoin1n1ent Santa Ana SIGHT READER. Prefer TOPS IN TEMPORARIES. :!:' r!4!~e tof0Ja:::t4o.~i Ad No. 901, Daily Pilot, lf you 1neet l h cs c WE M'AKE Control Engr BSEE: to S12K Equal Oppon. Employer recent act.'Olnpanying cX))Cr. Birch, Newport Sch. P.O. Booe E60, Costa Mesa. qualifications, Accounting Supv to SIIK J.IAID "•rk In •x"han"' ~ Oiallen&:ing position. Good Ca. 92626, Replies S"bictly OFFERS Sec'y to Controlr to S7j() ... ... '"" Frl~1 benefits. Contac1 rf" CASHIER over 21.. Apply in confidential. Please Apply In Perso11 Exec. Secretaries to i100 room. 5 hrs. per day. %l7S J\1ni. Reynolds btw. 9 arn & J-(jlll 2lGDlr.tlr. person aft 12 pin. Theo --E-NT~A-L--Chai-.r-,-.,-,,-t-an-t, Or O>ntact B. Kratka NOT PROMISES! Legal Sec'y/Gen'! $650 Ne>A·port Blvd.,~- 3ApmDM. 548-SE1121C'Y. TRNE H ~. m.·-~~~tbcttHlwyBendeN'· e620lw pwo'r''t Xpart' lime,. must have ~h d v DM h ~!t'•Rrl.Ee',./Legal !too~ I Appl~!AIExD .:."MtlOTve EJ::lt--.1r .---,._ ~h. ·· w-:;-ky. '"wct"'tye, !e~~ •. ::; ,"'d Varian Data Mac ine1 ~ting Clerks to~ a'.J80 ·New;rt Blvd:'c.if: Be )'OW"' ov"n bos."I w/l11st lttall "'"' ...,_u.,.. El M h T h $600 growing land dtv. co. Type CtfUCKER opcralor needed. No. 910. Dally Pilot. P.O. Due 10 its rapid growth has cctro-~c ee !l.1ALE or fen1. full or & sh. Pitid 2 v.·k vat.•alt0n. """'""'""""'""""''"""""" Job shop. Good overtim<'. Box 1560, Costa ?oifesa. Ca. several openings on 1st & sr,-:.Collecllons lo $600 p/!in1e in s a i Ibo at Start $'1j(). Co. ttimburscs -Paid holidays. Group insur-92626 2722 Michelson Dr, second shin in l'C('('iving & NCR Proor Opr to ~ hardware store. Love of fee 90 days. Cii.IJ Ann ATTRACTIVE artec. ;H.l-4007. DENTAL Receptionist I Irvine, California in·proL'i'SS inspection tune-'-Tt•ch. Dr:attsman ~ sailing essential. Apply in Christie, ~. Cnntrol Slun g1r!s/\\1}1l1en den1on. CL£'ANING lady, n i 1 cs. As.sistan!, full time, sala"-' 833.2400, ext. 336 lion. \\·c: o[fcr : AR~~-ct,•,,~Tc'i~lskt T . to !~ person, 8 am-6 pm, Ca E I 81,'"t" !ood p~· ts . •J l.:C ., "r l'fllr}('(! 4'11111 W•'••l,,·,••·d •tan·"", ""°" W. "" mp oyment A"ell· .. ,_ •uuuc Ill sup. tt t f olli-sui!es '" 't I 'fi~ d " " " "'-~,,., .. "a ure or "'"' ·• open. .-.n e c: ass1 ~ a E 1 0 E 1 * Cha nco for Dic!uptionc Ty1>ist 10 s.;oo Coa t H N 8 oy, 3400 Jrvi!l(> 81\'rl, N3 <'t·markets pa11 time. Good N B 40 11-vk Ex-r & N 9IO D ·1 PiJ t po quu ppor. .mp oycr • 7'"'='"'-wy=.:..c=-----l _ . . • ... \ . ... o. . . nr y o. . . Adven.ctrn•nt Keypunch/CRT $475 .--; • · · *·PATCH PL.ASJ'ERING * A/P Clerk, resp. for ""'-"'·c..0o..·""66:~==' ==~--_ho=n<l;:•::b!::•o:·,,:644--0606::,:.,::::::::·=~-Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. CALL TRISH -HOPKINS ~1ALE & tcm~e. &bOOI bus Pla,ter, P•fc:1'1, Repair ~ t)tpe1. Free estimates matching purchase orden ATTENTION CLERICAL 92626 EXECUTIVES *Competitive Pay ~88 E. 17th St. {at hvinel CM drivers needed. \Viii train. 1 Call S4o.6825. w/packlng slips & suppliers llclp with light housekeeping DENTAL Ass i st ant , $12,000 to $75,000 * Xln't Benefl~•. • Suite 224 642·1470 Call for l n ! or mat ion. ptumblne tnvolce11. Typing an a.~t. half days only. $40 per ;, Chairside, l'Ull time, !\tin. I Send resume or call TODAY * Modern Fac1ht1es '11\...,_'lfl-s ~~ _4.0092-38:::..::::;7:::3:..· ------1 L.R. OTIS PLUMBING !:!. ~~·in ~.B~ AnUTOalf dayLl"N.eckE .M6E1CHANJ.Q;G.1'1CS ASSISTANT yr exp. 847-8501. for ~nfidential. NO COST If you're interested in joining JANITOR MANAGER TRAINEE trorn oc Airport. Send -Dll.IARY Aide. No expcr. execulive lnterv1ew. . . world f Start a management caner R.emodelt I: Repairs. Water resume lo Classified ad no. AND SERVICE WRITERS. Perk'C otters 'permanent em-ntt. Jo"'ull or p/t!me. Good EXECUTIVE SERVICES the fascinating ~ Rear.aurant. !\Iature. reliable. in local branch or nationally heaters, di5pogals, fumaces, 930, cio Daily Pilot, P.O. c;tievy dlr. i;edcs exp. ~ btneflts. APP I y 14'15 INC ' computers & have exper .. an husband & wife team. 10 kno11'!1 ro. Approved for GI <tshwa.shrs. 00-6a)J MIC 4 P.ox 1560 Cosfa Mesa Ca hne mechanics and GJ\1 ~~~~nt·mo:1h!. va,1:~ Superior Ave., N.B. 888 N. !\-lain Santa Ana one 1~ mtclu:engas c~!bl~~-Al\1 10 3 P~f. $600 per mo. on the job tr'Jlning benefits. BIA. Com plete Plumbing ' ' 5'ERVTCE WRITERS Ex (114) 54' 7-9625 spec . 11 .11 • ' Apply i11 [)('rson. 50l-30th Caill Ed Woll, "" ='. ~. Service 92626 • · · · • \\·{!('k paid time off at Christ-DlSHWAST-IER, v.1tda.ys vnly. -~~-~--·~-c chassis, c1rcu1t board s. St., Ne-.1•port Beach. """"""""' ._.._ ·A '"p"'p"'L-IA_N_C_E_Se_,...-_-k_e_Dc_p_t_., 1 cellenl opportunity in "<'\\' nuis, company paid life, tios-Apply 2606 Avon St., N.B. EXEC. &c. xlnt typis t. gd. co111 ponents, sheet nietal • .... , al Pe'r!!Onncl Agency, 1190 • PLU1118tNG REPAIR parts sales & call schedul-facllitiel'i. Lots of business -pi1al, surgical medical and betwn 3PM & 4:3'0PM phone pc1·sonaHty, grt. front parts, sub-~ssemhlies. JANITOR , p/titne. Senl.I Harbor Blvd., CM. • No Job 100 small in". Coast EI e ctr i c' and growlng. Afterooon cool dt'ntal benefits. Excellent ofliee appearance, shol'thnd retired. No expel'. net.-css. MANAGER TRAINEE ** &4i.3128 ** "' ocean hre<'7.PS! ~ 1'l!rvlce \\'()Jic\ng conditions and Draftsman (mech) $585 rlesircable. $f:iXl per mo + Please Appl y In Prrson !\Ir. Senne or ?itr. \Villiams. Remodel & Repelr 6~2486· mgr. HOWARD Chev · • growth potential. Bkkpr Cons1 r to SG50 top benefits \V lopp. for ad· Or Contact B. Kralka ~ilveN'OOds. 45 Fashion Ot1t11tandlng opportunity 10 APPLIANCE Serv. ?.1an. Top MacArhtur &: Jambortt, l\iarketlng Sec'y $600 van<.'CmE"llt. 556-0890. Island, N11.·pt. Center. adv11nce to managerial posi- Ho'IE o.-. .. : •· .., ___ .. _, wages for exper. man. Newport \Beach. ne a r \\'111 ---'onn a van-... ol G ·~ Bkk $550 VDM JANJTORIAL HI lion in 3Q..60 days. OUr cur-., •..c.,....n ...: """"........,. · General App\iallC('. 831-1301. Orange County A ir port , '"""" "'"'" en ...._,,ger pr F/C Bookkeeper. lte.siaurant e p, part -rent n1 a nag e r s earn ing Valley west Buil~ 833-05..>5 clerical duti~ including typ. Keypunch to !~ expcr. pref'd. Phone !or time night I y, Expel S1000-$l500 nlo. Must have MaJntenance. 552-8374 lng various tt'ports and Legal Sec0y ~ appt. &H-5060. ~~/8-568t"C'lat7<d•tt e 3 pqmu i pm en t. direct sales e.'<pt'.'rience. Sewing/A1t•rati?nl Assembly Atrl'O Route carrit'r tor maintainif€ department til('ll Sec'y R.E./escrow to S600 Fib I ..... c.11 (\.Jr. Newnum 979-5222 •.1~r•tlon· "2·5,.5 BECOME A ~~:!per~erz;t~r.1~~-tnl ~:07:~~:..:;u~:nt ~re~er;nsor to= erg ass 2722 Michelson Dr. JUNIOR SALESMAN: ~1ARINE Hant"·are Store "'... --s '" Ide-' I d -· · t d Co A t t 11110 Foreman l!:am $20-$40 per "'eek Clerk. Pern1 t/Ume. T"-Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. :.,., pni. Approx. a.i for on a .... processrng inpu an st ccoun an $1UO' Irvine, California >A'orklng alter school and lhru <-'nt. ••,•·t know ~":-, VARIAN housewife or re1ired ""l'SOn. ou1put. Requires excellent Personal Scc0y -assum --mpJ--r-pon 36 ~ '""" ........ Television Rtn11ir 54()....300i-\\'oody. ,.... clerical experience. Apply Tell~. p/{ $3 hr •u e ,_,, ""«= "" • 83J..2400, ext. 3 on Saturdays getting ne>A• hardware & be neat & ac- r--sibilily for molding or quOll-customers for the Daily curate. Sarah's !\1 a r In e t'OLOR TV Repair, expert, AUTO PARTS CHAIN or contact: Teller, tl l $500 iry 3T' Tra>A1er Type Yacht. Equal Oppor. En1ployer Pilot. This is not a paper Salvage, -411 30th Sl., NB. ASSEMBLER T. Knight Sec'y, Ut $5 hr PAc:ific 11-awlM" Corp. route and docs not include 6""' A,., ... ~uonahlt", most in hon1e. Seeking mature l'areer-n1ind· (71 4) s.ID-8340 Exre. Sccl'€!UU')' $700 547-6908 ""''~~=-=------·] Free estimate, H.B .. N.B. & f'CI indlvtduA.ls for ad~ PERT EC Clerk Typ/stat $575 JNSPECI'OR dt>Jiveries or collecting. MATURE woman for shcrt Ci\1. Bert Gallemore, 111ent in fa.c;t groo.\.ing com· NEWPORT FRY COOK We have openings in Costa order cook, 3 hr day, 4 day 968-2783. • lmrned. "'-......nings pany. Apply Cllt>clcer Auto PersonMI Anenci Prt1n1e. Dick Oiun..ites Rest· Electro/ i\'l~ and South Huntington 11.1'. exper. Preferred Tiie VJ-Psuu, tu E. 19th St .. Costa BUSINESS SYSI'E~IS • 1:1.W'!UJI, 2698 NeYo'PJrt Blvd.. Beach only. Apply TlOllo'! 54S-99~9. ' e Outstandln' i\1esa. ~. 171J2 Ami.strong Avenue &l3 Dover Dr., N . • Costa l\lt.'Sa. 968·9641. MEDIC Opportunities Sant Ana c lif 642-3870 M h • I JR. SECRETARY AL Seo(R..,.ption;st. CERAMJC TILE NEW & AVON SAYS 8 • ' • l'ULL Um• DELI MAN. ec an1ca Good typist. Exp'd only, rt"model. Free eost. Sm. job& • lit & 2nd Shift ''8• Your Own Boss'' an equsl opportUnity ~~~~~~""'""'""'~I must be neat, sc I f Rapidly gro1\•lng firm in \\1th SCHTie knowledge of welcome. 536-2426. 8S89 VARIAN Earn an income of your 01i·n, cinp!O)'('T m/f DRAPERY Tabler needed, n10tiv111cd, depcndablf! &. a! 1 t Irvine Coniplcx. This the ~ck ortice. Busy GP. Hunt.. r ight in your 0\l'tl neighbor-• Cocktail Girl steady \\'O~~ train. ~~~lc~~i.AR~~ :.9: ~~17~~ nspec ors ~~~~ ~g\n~~~ti~~;::i t~~ ,lnglon Beach area. 847·:547. I II i J] DAT A hood. Be an AVON Repre-• H t CLEAN G ed T & typing skills. Start $j25. ME D l CA L Sec retary I ''--.. _-_,_"_._.__ sentativc. Call 00\\': a4-0-70·ll. OS ess DllY IN shop nc s eny. Call LI-',·• "··y, SA" ,.""~.. \1!/p1'Cvious MD 0s office e'X· . MACHINES e W • t.'OUntcr girl. full time. r ULL Time & Part Time to perform pr•ci· "" "·" ~. ...., Good 1 _ .. , BABYSITTER, my home, 5 Gltf855e5 644~ d f 1 I Coastal Pel"S()nnel Agency, ,.~r. . lyp ng s~. days. References required. · Typesetters neede or oc,a sion and essembly 2790 l-larbor Blvd., O.f cssen11aJ, 213·4Z1-8929. l••••••••••lt!r hlrinit cll'i'tro-meeti~ical Job Wanted, Mal• 700 RSSC1nb\(>rs for 1!5'1 & 2nd ~hifts. Required is a min. 6 i\IOTEL Nll':ht Auditor. NCR mo'" rxper. in OnC' of the 4200 ,fr: 2001 F'.,xp. Will be !0!101\·ing areas: avait art Aulit'. 2nd. Reply 10 Oasslfied ad •921 , Daily ..Componrn{ Prep, Pilot, P O Box 1560, Cos!a -.<;c:ildi'!rl11g, '-leM. 926a>. -A11Sl"m. of PC Board~. J~o"b=W'-•"n"'t"od~. -F-em_•_le-70_2_ '-Cabling or \\'it'e\\·rap, NEED help at honie? We have aide~. nurses , ho u s ekpNI, companions. Flomemaken U p j o h n , 517-.fi681 TE~fPORAHY 1ypi!1iVK'M't'· tary by day or "k. legal, pr_ !('('h or rea.1 t'stat('. Ph. S4i-7•177. COMPAN ION, days. Drh·<'r. Good plnin cook or "''ill do da)""-Ork . 6·14-19":>4. Jobs Wonted, M & F 704 GOING away ror a 'vhile'r Honest1 Tclin.ble, r(l\lple \vtll hou11e111 or boatslt tor yoo. 54S.7901 aft 6 pm. Hele W•nlod, M 1& F 710 ACCOUNTING PAYROLL CLERK Major Nrwpo1rt l3t«1"h finn Ktk~ cn.ndidah· •rho l~ familiar wllh 111' l •u"~~ of llMI payrnll f'uncUon. E.x· pPrie~ with romputerlzed ptiyroll fiQs dcslnblt. D.et!lltnl its. Call Mu • ..Fieldor • 644-3319 9AM ·Noon i THE IRVl,.E COMPANY Newport Be•ch 9Jual Opportunity Empk>ytr • DON'T WAIT APPLY NOW Join a lrf()Wtng Company t::xcelle11t Benefits Plc11.~ Apply Jn Prt-son Or Contat·t: J . rullrr VDM 2722 Michelson Dr. Irvine, C alifornia 133-2400, ext. 336 Equ11I Qppor. ~~niplo~'<'r ASSEMBLERS ;\lui-1 ni_, ablr-10 di> prt•<'L~lon S10ht;>nn1:. ~lln. J yr. ;>spcr- it•n•'•' t't'(IU lr<><I. ls1 <:· :ln{l ~11 1 1! op<'nini:s. ,\t11:~11 ·r Spct:i111it1cs Cu. lrl"VI :'llonril\·l:.1, C~ra ~f('!<a l-)lur1\ Oppo11unlty Entployt"r ASSN'T bkkpr &. front drsk. J>"Yf'QI\ t'Xp. !'I('(!. C):in."ltr. ""'""' "''· Daily job -· Inf:'. hi!l tnsr. etc, S500 mo. Illar!. 548--5511 TIME FOR Cj)UICK CA$H THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 6 Part 'N.n1c & Full Tin1e HaV<! something YoU want to ne>A·spaper, Nigh t shif t on y, ininaction. Ex-r· l.J..65'19 ~leadov.·lark Country (1ub sell! Classified ads do tt \Viii train. Call 8.11-2121 for ,..-,.--MEDICAi.. transcrlptionist- BABYSJTTER, I i v <' · ; n, 16782 Graham, lluntington "'ell • calJ NO\V 642-5678. further lnfonnalion. ience in using sur· l\EYPUNCJf ft'Qnl oftice girl for x·ray of· i\lii\Sion Viejo area. Phone lkarh O face plates, coordi· fice, in AUssion Viejo. 58&-2181. R~1186, Ask for Carol Sims iH~o~lpiiiiWii•iiniitod~,iiMiiiii&iiFiiii7ii10iiiiHiioiil~piiWiiiiaiintiiodiiii, iiMii&iiFiiii7iijj1 nate machines, and * JEMPO * 49:-HiOO. S.\BYSITIING. Vicinity of COCh."TAll.. \\'&it.re&!!. Exper. optical comparl· i\IODELING -Photos for Euclid & \Varner. attractive. 21·26 yrs. See tori required. Must swim\\·ear -1974. Teenage OOS.0036 0.U"k, '"3 pm, at -._ MEN .. WOMEN f NEEDS NOWI I girls S'.l. 9. Barefoot l\.1iu of \Vhi'te Horse fnn, 329'5 MANAGERS have minimum O Calif. 50.-.1043 BABYSITTER for working mother. my home, Np!. lkh, Phone aft 4:30. 640-0365 BANKING S•L Growing savings & 1011.n 11 i1, 1 o c i 11:tlon anticipates opening of Newport Bc11ch branch oftil'e August 6th. Openlnc:s. tUtTI'ntly exist ror 1h<= fol101\i11g position~: TELLERS/ NEW ACCOUNTS Po~i1illn 11•11! prov\dr f'X- J>O'llr(• to llC\V 11('('()unts ::r.s 11.·t·ll 11.s regular tellt'r duties. 6 rm. ll•il<>r cxper1ence re· quired. ~·nr fui·th<'r inforntation &: in· lf'n •lt\\' r•!'IPI . Call Ptr.,n- nrl. (213) 62S·73"4t Nowpm1 Blvd.. Newport EXECUTIVES -throo years expor-OPERATORS MOTEL MAID Beach. K ie nct as an insptc· Ne\\-port Tra,'\'\ 1 -i-. !OK, 1 SK, 2SK, SO ' I ~· co NT Jl Ac To R need! SALARIES-NEGOTIAILE tor n aerospace or 642-8252 R.1\1.E. i n1 n1 e di at e l Y. related industry. e 029..059 Univac i\IOTO~ Routl' Driver far Laguna Beach are a, Ar• You Unemploytd Now -Ar• You Seekin9 e 026-056, 5496 Dally Pilot in South Laguna, 21J..i73-291.1 A Change -Worri•d About Your Age -Apply In Person Mus t live in A.rea and have COUNTER >A'Oman. Apply at Tired of Broken Promis•s -Und•c.ided As To rdeaJ way to earn <''(tra valid drivers Ii c en A e . Fnsler f"l'C'C'zf', 899 \V. 19th I 3333 H•rbor Blvd. nlOTlt'y, \~'Ork t tt or p/t. Top Dependable auto and a1.sh s1., C(l\<;la ~1t'M. A Proper Cour$• 0 Action -Costa Mesa, Calif. SSS bond required. Call H,._, ARE YOU UNDER PAID? . 0 --1 ''" ·3~ -·, COOK . 1\lus1 br over 21. hv1nr ~ .x.,: cy, ........... ~' \ragf''I acrording 10 t>xpcr. If You Can Answer Tht F0Uowln9 CateqoriH ; li802 Sky Park i\'O\\' going through planned Apply In person. Hamburger In Th• Afffrmatlwe, We'd Llkt An Interview r ~ Anahelnl 533.2372 e~pt\nsion. Need 12-15 yrs. H&n1lct, 151:> Adams, Ave.. With YouC k•Cf(.... I!;]{)\\". La Palnia ('Xper. finish cabine t Costa i\lc:Sll. Ask for ~'Ir. ----=:-~ l'l::T='=·":::'':::"'=T=•:::n="='°=""::::·ry Help •'ii"ii'"ii'ii"ii'·"541>-iiiii2860iiii.iliiiliiiiii•I ll•gan. IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL c I• -WE CAN HELP YOU NURSERY CONSUMER CREDIT CLERK F..,;Pf'T'\r11t·C"t I 4j \V.P.~I. Typing UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E. Coast Hwy. Corona dtl Mar 673--924(1 A. Do you 11 .... 1tron9 .. ocetion1! drivs1? Equal Qppor. Employer m/f KEYPUNCH OPTS FOREMAN B. Do you heve good n1 tive lnt•ll!tente? ~~~~~~~~~·,URGENTLY NEEDED C. Do you feel tufflclently motive led to 1chie•e 7 INsrRUCTIONAL P-i e di a 129 experlenct. D. Do you ll1ve t+ie ebility to me\• d1cl1lont 1 lci ..,,..... ALI~ SHIFIS E. Ari you 11•dy to 1et 1 re•li1tic cir••• obje,tiv11 tcchn Rn $579. to 1•u ... per n..m ... ,,.. t"~)', mo. Open in1n1e-cl . 12 mo. , ..... ,P,,,.., uu11 F. Jf vou w••• cot1 .. int1d +h •I help••• •v•ll•ll1e, would Able 10 run 8 production 11-on romon"tl\\·, you t tcipt it witho..,t il•l•y? 1 1·00111. busir'l('P tnachlncs. TO~ IN TE~IPORAR lt:S YOU SHOULD KNOW e Tk• bell•• jo!.1 ''' t1ot etl~1 tllt•d e Thi1d porty prof111fon•I !t1fluen'e i1 to111•lir!'et t11,en•rv e Gitting 1111 rrth+ doo r1 op1n. •' the ri9ht l•v1! 11- quir•1 11,hniqu1l ' w llh graphic :arl N(l r F.E E\1l'R background. Coninct Sad· ,--:-~-----­ dlcOO.ck \i11\ll'y U n It i e·d ~.Gizl S<·hool 0\i;tticr. 2.'ili2 t.n J·( Pa;: Hct., Laguna 1111111, 92Gd3. Dl.11 586-12.11 then ~ acnd follo11.·-11p tt11ume. J·ltfan Thl'ef' y~ars m I n I m u m 11upen'1!0ry experience ln ornamental Ahrnbs and tt'ee produclion Mu.st be. bt- l ln~nl {Engllsh/Spanishl. Exctllt'nl ic:1l11ry, benefits and opportunity for ad- \nr1cem n1. Call Mrs. F ielder 644-3319 9 AM·Noon LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS Equal Oppor. Em~r Equei Oppor. EmplO)'tt m/f I.,..,...,.,.;,..,...,.,,.;,.;,...,. COUNTER womllll. Foster • c.:cu liv• po1ltlon1 •r• fill.d throuqh .,,,ut•~· it1- lorvl•w1 • M111 t•tuft'" 1111illt19, it not I tot1I 1n1w:r EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. .._..._,..,,__,I ~~ Till J I~ ' THE IRVINE ' BANK Jo'reei l'. Apply 899 \Veal 19th SI .. Costa J\tttfl. St11tc Mutual SAvif'l(I h1Ui im- m~. opening for exper. loon $trv1ct pt' r S('l l1 n f'l I . \~'otic in L.A . until our mow to NU. late '73 A€0E: ~I collect '-fT'll. Engelkty 1213) 62&-7411 f.'X'I' 264 ('OOKS lo trAin for assistant manllgt.r ()0$itlon. Graw yan1 Mitt, 6 dayw W'C'tk/ Com!Nl ny bentllts, Apply ln fM'r"'1n, I~ Baker St .. Co11ta. Mcu. May Hcrvt An AMwer For You! S1t1G lte1u111e Or C1l1 lod1v -F.~ HO COil DICUTTYI IHlllWllW EXECUTIVE SllYICE5 INCORPORATED Ill N. MAIN ST. -HOMI OfPICI -SANTA A.HA Security 11111! luildln9 Suit1 701 PHONE: (714) M7·fUS Uke to Trade? Our Trader's PandiJle column ~ for you! ' 11-. ' • .,.. tor S5. Coll '"""' .•. 642-$11 C(X)KS. Bre•kfas r le Brotlmn.n. d*Y!'hin. Botti w/exper. In Int busy opera- tion. Chef }o"'ffit, 64i-1700. ll!!!!m!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!•l!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll I I <i Liz Reinders Aacncy .i121 \\'t$tttl.Y PlaC!f' Suile U5, N\\-pt. lkh. 833-8190 or Pt.13'811l2 KEYPUNCH COMPANY SWING SHIFT N•wport a.am 6 1\-10·1 l\clu.al 11.'0tk flXpt'r. Equal Opportunity Empki)oer on kt'ypunch, keytape or key disc devl(-e. NURSES Xld~. an ahl.tta. Apply In The ,,._ 11--~nncl l>tP1"1.r1mont xlnt hinp bn·~. uo;vq ty ~"-!'!'~-~-~~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~_..~ tltonday·Frl 9 am·12 Noon l\1aMr Conva.leacenl Hot-INTERVIE\\1NG Sluampon PACIFIC MUTUAL pi1a1, Capistrano B c 1 ch· girl~ & aAArs. I.le. only ~ 700 N<'"'J!Ort Ct ntl'r Or. , .... =-'-'"'7'cc'-,.-,.---~ apPly In pcl'Sl()n Tut's-Sat. Nt >A"jX)rl Bt<a..:h ;\ good wail! art ~ :ii load b- lh1ir \\·e1t 3.100 !'iyl Blvd NU1.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,.. -""'=:o"'°="':::·------ - .. " 11 : I I : .. N 11 " ~ ' • c I I ' T11tida1, .ktl1 ll, 1973 DAILY Pll.DT !74 ][fi] [ 1,.11, :est l[Il] I I: gtl) al l[Il][ ~ ~----~l[Il]~J I I lllnt•dlo I~ I -I~ I •d ... 1~l Help Want..i, M & " 71~ Help Winl9d, M & F 710 H~·!!IJ!.P..:!W~ .. !!"~...,~· !!M!!IA~P:_;1~1~or,;;;'';w;-..i.;;;;;;;;;;M;;&;;;F;;7:;10 Help Wanted, M & F 710 A.,ee;<...lle~n..;<.:.es;.._ __ ..;I01.;,;; Furniture 111 Ml1ce1l1neou1 111 P!Zl.App•·· ~!,.rior8. he~• wt.n1 Hl<dw•', RICllARD'S Marlcet Corp SECRETARIES WAITRESSES FOR \\T..st'HSE. electrit.· <h')"M". l M"l'IQUE t tTrll'h 1lf1'1'le Ot.rr iiro;n8~eTrl. Ru~I ~ VP RIGHT fl'ft'~r S 125 . Chr1t.t or rlni.",.ri s1~ .. sro .. ~. h'.ill·hrn tl\blc> 4t 4 cba.ln SJJ, :'\t'W lo\(•kll.1 $.11. CoJ. • • NURSERYMEN '"'·-~-~ ., huane!dtoraJ>tt*)ftwltb ITAlfAN ..-r SI:.?'!, GE 1iort1tbll"' dish door Annoir Lo .,·i:I)' hl>ll.rd ~· 11 • .-.w. .. -....... w~ .. ~~achiii.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I • '"""' ~c in M·"• •· RESTAURANT "Mr I )T Sl!IO. Adnnral SCOO sc1.llopec1 be\:e.IM mirror ftl'mlnatan 22 C&J. Simi ~t1nlmum 1 yttt nunery tX· peri eu c r r e<1 u lred. .Ptnnanent pogll\on. F.x. t.-eU~t aalary & benefi ts. --put-p,..I--..,.,. land dtvtwpmen! Vnn llTli al ~ ..... ~"" ,,._. ....... •IOOr front. Shclvt>s & Auto. ~JOOni uM'(I US. PENSION ;;'biy ;• ptnon ~th ID~ ha.I imnwdiatt openings ~or CALL 646 U66 FOR r tv. .. , -. ..,.., ,..,,,. dra-.·t>r 00 the 1n 1 l d e . Ho11'11.' ah 3 P~I. ~. CONTRACT kno.,\:I~ of Unk>n con· M.'Cn't_arles "·tth 11t1b~t1al APPOINTMENT ~~~~.;~e;o u:· 9:~1,. r . ~latching cat"".<d t're-och J'()C')L tab!" liaht, Lovely ttt & 2 end lllblt'• Sl-'>. Vani· trat.•bl Acoounta: ~ble expene1~ ln the held of 1bJblt-~ a~I btoveled l.'usrom 1nadl' bran double CALL 1'JRS. CA PECE (TI4l 91M828 exp .. helpful. Only £xp'd , Public Relariorui. :\1tt.rketin¥ \VAlTRESSES • O~r ll. Nory;:(' i.:u dl')'tr. Hrunllt\lti nwb!c lop carved nlt-,-ht shade pool table hxtun-. 3 TECH Nffd Apply at our corporate or J.inanct". Sho r tha n d l'J<P<'riroced prcfcrn:d. Ap-•'loc dl")'l'f', s:itl. f'&ch.-C ;U<.ir. &land. ~auti!ul condltkm month.I old. Sacrtl1~'f' tor oltk>e , 3433 Vla. U6o. N.Jl. SO+, type 70. ~lust .be good ~:~ da~ft ~1~30 ~eo! t'cP~t!i ~..sif~lh'f'I')', ~ati-t\67:.! or $400. 'thl'H' pll't..~ ICI. or \\111 ~If priet". $300. ~llT ty & 11ool Sil. 1'\"t'adl~ .evt· tti n1.1dlint-. SQ. ~li11e. I l">£0 U&\BLES, 2:>EO ·I Nt>"'flllr1 Ul\1d., C.M. 1'uM I lhN ~1 . ! THE IRVINE CO. .E:.~per, ln Pension Und<'t'l\Th· An Equal Opp~ Employt"r on phonf't and detf.11na; v.·1th Restaurant, 296 E. l ?th St.. prtce tepars ti·ly. 4!t-1'-Rl l7. SIGNS, "open & clo&M," Ing or a BA In BusineM or liiiiiii&iiii;ii;;i;;&ii;;;;i;iiij the public. Exctilent "'m'k· Costa rt.les.a. f"TI£IGHT DanU&g.t' Sale, \\'ASHER .t,. dryer, l'OUC'h & 7*" x 1.91.s", <'U•L dt'alftnt'd. *AUCTION* COMPANY Irvine, Ca\Uoi·nla Equal Opportunity Employer &..'Ooon\lcs. ROUTE SALESMEN lha condltk>ns and bentfl\l, "'a!ihrrs, dryers, ttfrigs, ,h ff • nd r--l'·h 1 . 1 \\'AREHOUSF. po·"•---•. R b I rv\'I' M-fl.I , ,..., l'I· ~ ..,.111..., eurrU11t on i;ta 11 I ""' "" '""'' nt•w \\'8.ITaJlly. l' t libf••. "f•b\f' lan11•. '"bl• I •-··-"--'. "'~" "~"'". I App y [n The Call Mrs. F'-lder -· r-per r.-· 12= To b & d I UIVWn vuu l;>1~~·uig •·ine f"\1m!ture I; Applianct'll r .. ~,.. LJI • •• · ·-y,·as l"rs. l)'{'f'11 t\>nl ehalr1. •<I bedrm • c 1 pm-'pm •nionnel Dept. ~••11•9 11rarf. Ex~lt>lll f r ill '"• •..._.<>=-"-'~"180 ~~~---=---A\ll'Ur·na Jo'rlday, 7:30 p.tn. : riton t1+iu F'ri 9 am-12 noon Large National Co. is Jooklng 9~~oon benittits. .. .. ,.,,.,.,, J'U'V • Y./d('sk. ~!tr.> OOOGl: truck. V\\', boat1, l<rr pennanent 1table men. Apply In Pl'non fn.t;E P1clru~Rc!trig, an)' Sf.CR.l"'"I'AR"I:' dt'Nc \\'tth ·I' outboard engtfK'~. bo ft 1 W indy's Auction Ba rn ;1 ~1 i Nf'Wp0t1, C~t 646--8696 lklun<J Tcmy'11 Bldi: ~IAl'I. STl-.:H1':<) :--I-:\\ 1m Gar· Nur'RS . PACIFIC MUTUAL . Excelll>flt atmin&: Alary. P.l'1Nl>fl SpoMini Cood8 nrpliann>s, running: or not N"turn. \\'t1.lnut tinlih. lnl· lt11.ile r , Climpr_r t.helL C'nl l 700 Nl'll'port Center Dr. ti l.nlerffted CaU : THE IRVINE 3j{l E. Paular!no, c.~I. :\11,\' .-.<•1'1tp :tit'~!. 6Trj:l.'l8 11\;l('U\;1!('! AIJ<I' 6' CO\k'h . ('\'('n\nag, 6 .i 5. 4 6::. 3 or RN-LVN-AIDE Nt•wport Beach 714 : n4-G330 COMPANY ~ anytlmf'. 1'11lk~ ofll't. :-t11 -51~ dQ)'ll; 64~ f<)Ul<o'TF:R 1011 ~as unit and 4~1.-M t'\'t'S. ))="\=.,=.,=:i=1 '"B=u=.,=.,-.-,-.,~1on--p=1,-0, hulll·ln o,·ru S.'l5 or tnulf' 1 ,~.~,:r=-o~l~t~w-m~.,-,.-,=,,~ . .,=,.=,-:1, <'rvt: Ille gold. 190 yd,. .. 11•11 lor rt'lngt'ru\or or rungt'. nUttln>ss, hkl' 1ic"" $'25. ::.151 1t111· i,."l'll, 133 yd!J. :i1tORJ.~ ~9-ffi3{). Tasman Dr . lh1nting1on 1:--11-.:RIORS, 642·?'255 or rnnt nklllt•l , l\1\1 !!>I ll" 11·'1 & other shifts. Top pvt duty pay. fmmed. pay for noor duly. C o un t y w I d e lrrttvwl. P.1on·F'rl 9-5, Lescoulie Nune& Registry, 351 Hosprtal Rd., NB !Lob- by Park Lldo Bldg ) &12-"15.I, >1().9!!;1. NURSES RNs, LVNs & AIDEs 1-lospital Statf Rellef \\'ori< The Day!! &: Shifts You Prefer. Good Pay. "llo Fees Or Rebates. Homemakers-Upjohn 1800 No. Broa<hl•ay, S.A. 547-6611 Nurses Aldt1- PORTERS WANTED P.1wrt be exper. F/time-. Se. Perionnel. A-Jgr, Ba}boa Bay Cub, 12Zl \\', Coast H11')'., N.B. PROGRA.\t Assist I Se::y I Bkkpr. P.fust be able to nleet the public, S e n d resume no latl't' than 813. CIO Bruce Collins .. P .0. 8CJK 117'&1, S.A. 921ll. PROOF OPERATOR Experienced on b1nk proof/encoder. Apply: UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 222 Oce1n Ave. L1gun1 Beach Equal Opport Employer PURCHASE ORDER TYPIST 0rderll1s ()peniJl&s all shifts. Good starting wages • xln't bene- fit3. Trainees accepted, older women prerd. LVN . Charite 11·7 shitt. Relier Experienced. Long term L.VN . All !lllifts. Bayview assignment Conv. Hospital ~. VOLT NURSES, RN & LVN, full or Instant Personnel part time to 11'0rk in at-Temporary Service tractive c o n v a I e s c e n t 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 100 h0spita1. Good 'wages & Ney,·ort Beach 5-16-4741 benefits. Call 642-2410 Ask Equal Oppor. Employer for ~fr. Snyder or apply at I "'~""!'~~""''""~!!""' 1445 Superior Ave., NB REAL ESTAt'l:. SALES NURSE'S Aides • \Ve arc \n· SUCCESS CAREER creas.!ng our staff &-need New or experienced. Join the experienced people. A I I World's largest and fastest shilt.s. Good benefita &: growing resale orpn!Ation wages. Apply at 14 4 5 with a network of <>ver 300 QUices and become a Superior Ave., N.B. member of our Millionaire NURSERYMAN, retail sales. Club. Multi-million dollar Pr e f e r ex p e r . m a n adverti&i.ng program. Free w/knowledge of p l an t !I • &'U&l'Mteed licensing school. C.M. area. Call Ray or Excellent sales training. Jeanette, 21315.»-00ro. \Vhat ls your license \\'Ort\\ ORDER Desk -Gro11'irli: lo you?' C'heck our monthJy N e w po r t -C o s ta Mesa bonus program which means sportsv.1!ar manuf. needs $$$ to YDU! Please call f/tJme, sellstart:er for order Virginia Jones SJ5.48U. desk wfgood knowledge of ~ inventory control. Exper. Type -Good at figUret. Sal e REAL ESTATE SALES open. Send work "''""'.. OPENING FOR P.O. Box 2203, Newpor1 . Beach, Ca. 92660 ~ 1or ~perienced lice~ · -'-'~=-""=--==-.-I nc:a """ate Salespeop .... 2 OFFICE GIRLS Your ov.n private desk &. NEEDED phone, good "'aik-ins. tree Radio telephone dispatch advertising. Same location Must be~. able to drive 18 years. Call for interview. Apply In """°" e CALL ANYTIME e YELLOW CAB CO, 6#-3928or Eve. 67:1-45n 186' E. 16th, Costa 1.1esa ORDER derik clerk. Small gas appliance finn needs sharp aggres11lve person to process orden from phone & mail. $375. per mo., starting. Please send \\-'Ork resume to P.O. Box 957, Santa Ana, 9'1702 PART-TI~tE \VQRJ{ IMerting in !he mailroom lit l!te ?rogresstve-computer pel'- pherial product., manulac· turer ha.'I an Immediate opening fOf" a Personnel Ai;. si5tant to "'Ork 10!' lhe Per· sonnel Manager. \'l"ill pt'r· form various k'Cl"Ctru'ial and admtnlstratlve duties. Requirct: excellent typing and communication skllla: Mtt 11.1 lt'BSI. l )'ftU'I rel a led •Per- 10nt1el b&dlground. Some applicant lnterviewin&: and atallltlcal IUl'Ve)' prepa.ra· Don desirable. Pertee otters P"~1 t:m· ployment, paid vacation• after tlJt month11, plu~ one "'tock PlUf time off Al QiriJll· mu comptny paid Ufe, holJJ>ital, aurJicaJ, medical. and de111:&1 bmcflll, and ex. cdlmt salary and v.•oridng conditions. Apply or contact T. Knllht (n41 S40-8:\40 PERTEC BUSl1'ESS svrn:Ms 17112 Armltn>ng AVt!tlUI! ~nta AM. Calif. trv\ne lndurtti1J Compl.ei An equal opportunity """""'"" Sell k!le lttms ••••.. &Q..S671 Lachenmyer Re.1 ltor R.E. SALESMAN * SALESMEN * ,.,..,." ae"'" Do you take "Salesmen Eqtml Op n ·1 <'-pl wanted" ads with a gn.ln of po uni Y "-'" oyer salt'? Can't say I blame you. I followed up a few myseU SECRETARY in the put. The job seldon1 G . WELCOME WAGON INT. NO 220 CUTI.ET -).ft;ST &•11eh. 11t1er ~ & "f"l"k<"nds. ~4'5.1 SELL! G E. t'lectric dl)'E'r. 891:8174 ~ I -""'C"A"°'R""P"E"T°""'L'"A,-Y=E"R.-- 2 )'t>ani old. Ltke ne11" .sm. PLt:Sll v~l.,.et .~fa & l..'). HAS NEW SHAG t u1~11;1 t1l,'. A.\I r~I ~!PX r'\'t'('l\·f'r, 2 JUSp.•1\#ll'.).ll speak· t•r~. ~'l•·1'\f1<~ S'(l;, ~II.Jee into I Qutt,d 3)'5t('m l..ir Ul more. ~ 1 Ttmu. 893-«'fll SACRIFICE lived up to the claim l.n the !"Pat opportunrty for bank ad. t';'q~r. SICO"f'tary. Sf: req'd. Do ,Yourself a favor &:-t'X· Xln t salary & ~fill!. plore this one. I! YoU'd like ~tact ~fr. Gilbert to make s:zso a week ini· for Appt. r>4.7·71!ll, mediately, with an eye to Bank of Cahforn1a much more in the f\llut'C', Equal Oppor . En1ployer I'd like to ta1k to you. II SECRETARY / Rereplioni~1 your quaHfic.aUons match on 1t1ariners ?.file, N.B. our requirements, tftl.s could J.'/time. Pref 21-30. For In. be the career you ve been 1er.·ic11• M&-2'.53 Hostess Positions P1elllRU'lt C'(\l't'M'. t'lf'lObJ(' hrs, xlnt l'am!np. Car MCe$$81')'. }"or J>('rsot!AI ifl, tf'!Viev." contact '.\I.rs. \\'ood iCollectl 646-123-t \VIG salesgirl11 &: .,.,.1g stylist Large \\'ig Co. needs krv people. Cal 96&-445.1 Ask foi: 5-i;).....'i037 Ibis, chair"s, rlN'p !Tce:r:t>r. A Pana.wn,· llf<'l"f"o'l 1ape tt"- H EC 0 N D. APPLIANCES Al~ quet'n hlde-a·bf'd. J'>rl. R?lls, ro!-1 C'nd!I, R~lt'. 1'\)l'\\f'r \1 !!h llUlon1atic rt"-1 Delivered _ gt1ar. Dunlap',~ f'i~·. 6i~9. Guar. &12.n ot fi..12-TI07. 1·1·rM'. :-;p .. ak1·r.-, hNd· I 1815 Nl'"'poM, 01 5-iS-7780 \\'ROL;GllT Iron sq table, t::l,.EC. sm:im. Ji,.rro, , i:.irl.s phortt~. Lot" or lllfl"&. Bm -Rent Wishers/Dryers f:la~s top, 4 ('hairs, a.ntlqul.' rk>tht'I 5171' I0.1.2 . l\tit.c:.1 ,c'~"~'="='"~'~''-·~~·c;'·.oc:"'"'-· ~~-I $7. \\'k. F'\d/ niaull. ~r'l'f!n Llkr ™'"' S S!) ll(>usetmld 1ten1ll. \\M . & JIOLRl)YIY~ PA\\~ Shop, Connie * 639-1:.112 .. !Kn-1627 Thur:t. 177 t:. Z'?nd St., c.r-.t. T.".(i \\', l~h St., C~t. hM I VlENNA Bent\\·ood Set~ \\'ltOUGll1' Jn)ll it 1 n l n I! llA)f SJl~\CK NC·9S, RCVH . 10,tm Jr(•n1ic, h11it ru1ncnta, I Oril'nt11.I r•U7 runnt>r. Call 111hl". 6 n1ntchg ('hr~. fohrir V G~~. $60: }°'1\lkhl T-Gl, 60 1,Xlbl, Jtv.t·lry, C'anlM'ti.' In· '! 644-1 375 . ._ c'\i~hkln!I. 16'' Jeni. $250. v.·u, SIR 1'NL. $2(1. 546-7515 tlqut'!, t•t1'. Ovt!rstocked \• loo king tor. ' · Interview appointment lQ..4 SECURITY DIGNITY PM. weekda)'S, 586-3182. Quality products w/Une ac. ceptanct'. Sal + Comn1. Gas SALES allov.-'. fringe benefits. pro. \VHO \VANTS 'fO \\'ORK'! DRIVE A CAB! !J6.>t-3(i00 Tini. n'll'ldc o!rr, 642-9107 t \\'ASHER, Gas dryer, "'·ork· ST'"'Hf.'0 'f"\\' G ni I .• , . ·= r bo b G 5 812 A'M'ESTION! All Comic .-~ • : .. • ama ng c.'Ohu lion . ...,., or I · 1r1ge lie Book Collecton~ Old & new modf'l. profC'MIOl\HJ si~ 979--8200 niter 7 pm. ..... ... , ,-ft-to,·s '''"'' turntable, 200 y,•an l't'Ci!iver. CUJn-1£8, girl's • 1G.-l2· ..... ' -" ...... · A TIENTION: CANOY tec ted terT, il"ads dcvelo[ll'd FUND RAISERS by nal'I & local advert. CHOOSE your houN. work for yourself, be your own bos.s. ~fen or "'Omen. C.n bC 111i£:htiy handlCRpped , Ne a 1-0ean Appearance. Vts, retired. Age 25 to 7U. Supplement your Income. Dr ive a cab 6 hrs or more a day. Apply in person, Yellow Ca b Co., 186 E. 16th St., Cos!a t.1eu.. ~ullding Materials 806 \Vomen's s. 9. z lO. ,\· 54&-.1116. :;.-G pm. all' ~uspen..\JOn IJl~e"rt. -~ Spt>aken alone t1at for llXl. J.'IOUN'f!('('n l hu!bs, 1nl.!1<.:! 1'"REE flt!.' Y.'tX>d ~ 50 ft Red· ."·-ti,._ ~-...,.ht~· to . 1, e Surplus. Buildlnn 1-·· K irul llB ~_..... ........,._ •• ,_ r ,,..._,, .... ., ..... , •. ..., ' • ~ u · \-.,....., •. ~,....,....,...., t'nc.. l f<i To-·s. ~ ~f I Are you tired of working for Want only highly elhical & petlllUts'? Join an orxaniza. ambltiOWI applicants. Earo-· lion that can make you big lngs to $20.COO. Call for in· do/Ian in commW:ion & tl"rview. 67J..6020. t.fATERIAL. HY'.JO's of NEW '"2-62!'M 153.S Buena \.isla "'" .. ~ ITEri1S! Doors. ll1JTlber, ply.H __ o_u_ .. _h_o_ld_"°"" __ , __ 8_1_4_ 1 ~--=-· -----· _· TEAC A-7010 !ape deck. Pro. , wood, alum sheetin&:, mold--~0 111.111.l1ty, HY~ .. n "'-ll1. Xln! l"g "ndow · <f'" DIN. ~et drop Jraf r~L 1bl, 4 AL;T :i.tATIC G11r&gr Door --', E,t--I•. --, , \l o !0 '-• /'\. R 1~ S · I \.V llU on ,._,.. ''"'""' BUILDERS SURPLUS etiN;, buUl•t, ).!aple tK'd nn v iX'ncr. cg. ~. · J:ltttA rontrol unit. Orti· fl50. will bonusrs using c a n dy , SELL N a t u r a I Food candl", stationery, gifts & Supplemt'Rts & othtt Shaklc-e novelties. jev.'t?lry, etc., etc. Products. 542-7077. No lnv"tment. \Vr!tl", giv·f~==~~----­ing phone numbt'r to: P .O. ~VICE Sta. . Salesman, Box 85, Canoga Park. Calif. flllme e\'C shift. Also, 9L107 p/time eve & .,..·knds. l 'l'r · lite mech. expet'. Neat ap. Sales & Pl-1ana.11:em~nt pear. Apply moms, 2500 OPPORTUNITIES Newport Blvd, C.M. \VOMA."", full time, ca.shll'r &. n.'port.s girl. Some exp. nee. ~fust be m•er 21. Con· tact JI.Ir. F1eische.r c 10 Hoelsche~. Sou th CoasT 2406 So. ~lain St., S.A, f\Jon thru Sat l0.5 TI4: ~1032 Plaza. Costa hfe!l8. ' C1m1r11 & \\'O~li\N \\-Unted li vc·in, r11 rl' Equipment f o r e l d e r l y l ady . Rl'fC'rences. Cnll 847-11·11 . 808 16 ~P.>I nlO\'ie equip. 220 roll-; of a,s§OJ'!ed J1Jm, rolor, a!J sound, aft 6. &-l6--089j • in. ~a.flt growlna: ret~il fabric 2 SERVICE Station Attl'nrt I '~~~~~~~~~~ I chain. Xlnt trslntng: pro-P/time. Lite mech e~p<'r. grRf!l. Full & part time. Apply Laguna Chevron, 604 ~ ASHA! Pcnta.x. Black body. Sew1n!J kno.,..•ledge required. So. Coast Hwy Lag. S ch. ~-----""" __ .. __ _,! ~ 1 A·:lJmnl lens, 6 mos old, Interviews Tues July 31.st. ' _ V $W. 5-15-3310. \Veiibrooks Y!!rdngc, 20 SERVI~ Statiqn ~ttendant Furniture 810 J.,ashion Island, Nev.·port Full tune, Exp deSlred. A~ I••••••••••• I ---------- Beach. Also opening in ply Bill Rash Oievron. 24081 Antiques 800 CUSTO).f sofa 9' Laguna Bt'ach Store El Toro Rd. Laguna llills. Tapeslry. Slightly 1'~renl.'h curved $30 0 . SALES. New Exerelse ~fach. SERVICE Station Attendan1 , SCRAM-LETS ha!Imoon crescent Dayna Gym needs dcalrrs full or pa.rt time. exp, neat. 5.-'12-T."143 Distributors & Sales people'. Apply in person, j1)() E. 17th ~R~E~,~-R~f~G-.-.-11-,-.. -.--,-.,--& Fantastic money! 956-9600 St., C.M. ANSWERS chairs, sofa & chair, t\\ill or see us at the Home Sho.,..., SERVICE Station Attendanr. beds, rib! bed, all good .. '1()29 Anaheim Convention Center Full & part time. Apply in Fillmoft' \\'ay ,\pt 138. O t Jul 27 A 5 Benign -Azul"(' -llun1an Y -ug · person, 990 E. Coast H~'Y·· _ Bang!..--RUXNING 8' GOLD Couch In l)('rfect Sales Nl'wport Beach. The surest .,.,.ay for a hus· condition. $100. TOY &. GIFT PARTIES SE\VlNG ~1ach.ine operat<>r!I band to trip O\'l'r somcthins;: Call 6T;>-21'~1 flouse\V\ves demonstrators, E x p 'd q u·a I i f i e d is to start RUNN ING around FP.l.)IT\\'OOD oval tbl .,..,13 earn to $2,00l by Dec. L No trainees. 3700 Campus Dr., too much. lca~·t's, 6 chairs v.·lcanc delivery -no collection. N.B. 5'M)..45ll Fr }{ -" ~TIQUE sick-board, Arr hacks, cabinet. 644-03i6. ee Ofleu gHts, Tl{'t.-u SHfPPING Clerk P /ti me. N ,_, rn.: car. 52J.-.M84 Gifts 'n 1 • ~'!.i.~~$!95••:.'·· 00An1h • COUCH &: LOVESEAT Gadgets $2.50 ht. Exper. ...._.._..., "' '-VU""" bnuxl ~', lxl!:h for $150. 642-341'2 Vt'l'y lliet>, l·'f76.78J9 U-••l\y home · ~ ~o SALES Rc!preM!ntatlves. "" · ,_,_.,.,, · GIVYling cosmetic firm TELEPHONE SALES HALl..ET Custom • Boston. PEOEST,\L 11·alnut din tbl. 4 needs top notch people to PCTmanent or pa.rt ltnlc sq. Grand Piano, 12289, chairs, $%. A rl j us t a b J e •,1emonstnore•. 0~ ... ~~ ~et~ cm: ,1wk, mornings & eves. 1l200, 962-3S26. \\'alnut hutch $55. S-17~. ml••lon. ~II-".'" -JI .... v Gua.r. \\'llges & comm. f'or The fastest draw ln tht> \\'est. Don't give up the ship! ~~-==~~~-·~~-·---f details call: · · .a Dally Pilot ClaSAified "List" it in classilied, Ship SALESHELP full time, cxper, LA TIMES Ad. 642-5678. to Shore Results! 642-5678. Apply 46 Pi\f \\'eek-days. 540-0301 \.\1tlmsey l·loUow rt.1nrincrs ECHN CI l\\1n ctK-st ll'lt m1m1r $Jfu $1 29.95. Installed 11·/5 yr. 11ell for $GJ nnn. Denn.ls bt'd.' vacuurn cleafK'r, th! J{Un. R93--3577. ......._,, ""'""'""o-,--===-'""'o--1 ,..;.~. l inen.~, Oiu !ll\'t'r, miM." :O.tOVING &: STORAGl: T°'A~N~'=O~E~>~J =b~\k-,~1.5.1=·'"'"1·--•-nl~ne-I kitchen "'n.r(' adding n1ach, Lo w-esl rates in lln'll ·~ • "' d,_.._ E ,.....,.hi drav.-er cilelit, muTor f60 n S('t _...... v~., .... ng 968-4765 rl i&h.11·aahcr, hotpoint iz.. Xlot cond. 64J>...-Ol.18. 15 STUDEJ\!'T De&k For Sale. 968-{9)9. Jewelry I $1 2.. Good Condition --------- Call 893--1~ Musical Instruments 122 • GENEROUS • POOl. hf'ater 100,000 BTU Sl:il lackk>r <PJghboy pools SIO, 536-116.~. ' LUG\l/JG ·" pc. drum 9et. I 21 " Zen Cyba.I, Olrome ! E CE b. 1 marr. Grear cond. $250. t'IR PI.A • v.· ite ename , ~ free &landing. New cond. I~'==""'=~--~~- • REWARD • For retorn or any in· Call 644-4.'\Th. 5 mt.ING Banjo It ~mft' 'j formst.ion lcafilns:" lo return Bundy F1utr. &At oftN. I ol a gold four leaf {'lover R~D & \\11ITE STURDY ftlta -5.58-3299 pln, approx. 2 lnrheii in CRIB \VlTII ~tA'ITRESS Office Furniture/ dia1nl'ter. \\'\th j f' \\' c 1 e d sn ... 536-36-lj Equip. 124 I horse1hoe in ccntrr: Hl!IO. *QUALITY• gold lock<'l h\'llS on <'ha\11 1. •MULCH & TOP SOIL • EXF.C ~""'·I chrs $1.5125 Sec a ppros. the size uf 1\ nirkel. 58&-6930 chn S812'1 Desk.I pj/!IO j' ln.scribft.I in script, t'l .... A.ISe'~u-,~<fl'"e-,~ . .,=m"'"-',=.=.-. ~..,=.56111=1 • ?le~ 1167 \V 19 Ot 64l-34IJ8 These are rlecply treasured 1-,iijjjiijjjijjjjiiiiijiijiiiiiij;iijjiijjiiiijiiijjjjiiiiiijiiiiiii I 'I family ml'ml'nlos,, the loss[~ is iM'E'placea bll'. PLE:ASE, PU..:ASE help if you have any information -&12-~ E1·es. & "'t't'kend1. Mi1cell1neous TENNIS -membership for .sale. f]OO. Ql~l. Tennis C!ub. 6ID-0>45 ~IEN'S clothes, near nt~'. sx 42 tall. Suit~. Jl!rkets. blk tux etc,. P vt pty. 8.7-C>-2770 RATI'AN couc:h $300. Carton F·l \1·11.I li'n.'I $4;il. 28 mm le ns $100. Jeti-y. 5-M)..-OZ'iO. A COMNtfHT SHOPPtNG SfWINC GUtOl fOlt TH[ CAL OH THE GO. For an 1d In Call Mary Beth Seamed-To-Slim! Woman·s World 642·5671, •••• 330 Play 'n' Pool Trio ' I Village, Dana ?t 'l'.-1~na. ~ERTE~ ~ers pennaJ'K."nt SALESLADY for Je\\·elry e.mployment paid vacation store. Ref's r e quired. after 6 monhis plus 1 week 548-3402. pair! time off at Christmas, FREE DAILY PILOT PASSES FOR OPENING NIGHT [& I qi " • ' ' con1pany paid life, hospita~ Secretary 1n:rgical, medical and derl· DEPARTMENT '"\ benelH•. Exoellent •Wk· ing renditions and gI"0\\1h potential. TEST TECHNICIAN " ' I • ' • . • , !a DAllY I'll.OT Tuesd11, Jut1 31, 1973 l[jj I ..... *.. I§] I ~ l§J I -*.-l§J I -·-l§J I -·-:I~ l~ I _ ... _ llB I ...t'l:w~" l~,1 :.1 iiii ... . Mot0< Homa T k 970 A-, hnpcM1ed .. , I 970 A-11 11 1 rled' 970 .A '"-~:U;wd;;;;;;;;;;;o"°-i PllftOl/°'11on1 126 !lop -Boots, S.11 909 S.lo/Ront 940 rvc • '68 •·orto pk/up . PAYMENTS? JAGUAR VOIJ(SWAiiEN CORVEllE 1 Free n...n Lessons • PUPPY WORLD • KITE ....••.•••.•••••••• $ • SAL1:s • RllH"'''" •• "'" oond . • •• DOWN ~s Mo. VI ga ~llah .Bull mtx, O'llhua· Soling w/trtr • , • • ..• •. ,U'.XX) e SERVICE e fJn problems! need to tell ~ .,.. VETTE ... ,l wi hllllt:, American Eskimo Snipe w/trlr ............ mio !5r31-3230 P.todel nD, No. 1118&, 45 moe. '69 JACUAR XKE 2+2, air, '69 VW, utra ckan. k>w '6S C:OR • "t" t n- • Al Lone· A• You Llkol , : Noo-players It piaym we!· come to attmd Tul"'IClllY • l\lgb.t ar 7:30 PM. We y,·ant • 0\lO')'OM to lrt1m to ploi.y ' the • orpn! All n1aterials fumll1bed. Tom Dfeterlch • in charge. . ""-642·2151 COAST MUSIC Ne\.\1po11 Blvd. at llarbor Costa Mean PIANOS -ORGANS New &; Uttd. Great 11elecUon. Compctctlvc prices. Open !.\/es. Ir. Sundays. The best Mala are al\.\'8..Yll at: Wolr.chs Music City • ~ Coe.st Plan 540-2830 (spl"·) Pit Bull• T.CU• Lud<r 16 ............... $1000 • ~TALS • ...,. Incl. true, lie, a .n c·-•-auto. Oesn, l'l'l Patt)<. m11,..., pv1 Jt0l'!1. 1l1!J2 -· -· 377. auto • Poo(fie~, Creal 0a'ne, Bull Columbla 5.$ n1tr •••••• $2'JI)) V•nl nw charae• on ~p , -~L S3:500. Can ~7656.. Go Id en W e.11 St, AM/FM, aood cond., clean. Terrier, Cockapoo. 1 00 A:ll boat• owned by USC 111.U-Dcten-ed pmt. : 3153.80 ui A•DA WHtminater (at Chevron $USO. c.I1' evn. 980--1379 ft1lXED PUPS!! Stud Ser-lrtl tean1 and are In xlnt EXPLORER TRUCK & TRAILER Incl, tax Ml c. ANNUAL fftllUo Stal10n). SWO. ' DODGE vlL'C' M08t Btt>eds. OPF.N cond. PRICED to Sell! OF 1970 CltEV. 1ton350 Vtl, 4 PERCER'!'AGE RATE L ir-i. '61' VW, KOOd co,nd.1----.,....----1 EVES' 5SJ~. 644-<.162 or 67'H719 HUNTINGTON BEACH •peed, 1l rt •13kc, gd ~ ll.61% -A aotory -.-o mechanically. Racing equip. ''6 POLARA ~ °'· llrdl]>. BEAGLE. 5 mo. old Femal~. 18' UNICORN Catamarati. 18801 Beach Blvd. OA<) _,, xlnt,.f\l.nnlng cond., uoupl MAZDA inJ!aUed, needa paint & Auto. Alr/cond. p I fl . All shots. AKC ~ trlr, TayJor »aH. many HUNTINGTON BEACl-t with 16 ft. IOw boy heavy body work. Best oUer buys. Radio.. Xlnt cond. MUST S'KI. or trl\df> for at1)'1hinr xtra.lj;_ Trophy w Inner. duty • triple ax.le, s!raiKh1 645--465.1 eves. SEU..! 968-9913. '°' ol equal value. 544-3417. --~~·=-~-=~-~ .GMC hitch • t.'lecu·lc brakeii, 4 ft. RX3 Statklrl \\1aaqll, our lnOlt tm VW DUNE QUGGY •10 DODGE ....... •1 ........ r RT :: plywood side• • removable. puJ modcl s t Le at. N" $700 ... ,....., -... -LEA VlNG for Hawaii. mwt 1.tAIUNER 31. 'bl;J, Oberg las& Motorhomes Both aides covered with Po ar ! tree g iee. · 440 4 speed X L N T seU. Pneed reduced 4 Silky hu1u, delsel, 1 lull ..Op 'c11i& • 23, &t 26, vinvl tarps. $3000. M&.M94. 7600 Westminster mvd. 0 _.. $IO l l M .. ~•y Private Party. 4 9 4 -414 7 SJiAf>E! 615-3t00. TV'tier Pups. 832-9122 or t> e i= tr o n c • . a c . .., \Velrt:minflter '"J • '"' .eves~"'·=--=--.:-~-"° Ent_..,rlses 645--78.10 IMMEDlATE DELIVERY H.B. alt 5 p.m. 89.l-T<>5l or ~18801963 ~ v IV •..• Good ~·1 FORD 0644-<iBEO';NCE o· .. lo ......... D~; ~hie Endt>r 3j', Orange Co.'s '71 PODGE Van, V-8, mags, _....:::::....:=.:::..,,,-::::::::.._ MIRACLE MAZDA new -~~-Good 7;~ ~ • ·-. Exd.Wvc Deeltt side p;pes, ~·elled & AUDI ., ·~ -1971 FORD \\'ed., Aug 29, 7,30 p.m. io Sound, sea\\'Orth,y, "'ooden B'll a_ P ti ~· 1---------mt ea&;e, .,~. 1 _,, ..,,,,,,., f u.rry on •c ca rpeted, Lear Jet, 21SO llarbor Blvd the lrvioe/NB area. hu 1• motor _..er . ........-. J. GP.1C REC. CENTER AM/FM stereo tape deck, ·n AUDI, fuUy equlpped, lo . · "73 VW OunprnobUt. Xll1( GALAXIE 500 * 546-4928 * ?.Ulanl 548-5TIS or 6'5-8800 a:oJ E. 1st St., Santa Ana 1-fa.vdl"n trans cooler, easy mileage, $3650 OI' best oiler. Costa Mesa 6t5-5700 ~.: ~~ !f!l7· Will sac. 2 ~ •• n-~ BOXER, 2 yr male. brindle. MUST SELL Dolphin 24', 558-1000 lift hltch. Set up far trailer ~5'&-0704==:c/831=-:::2875"''----~-u.v ~ .,..,. 459. UUUl' iuulop Ex"'Ptiooatly 1 in e dog. Aux. Sloop, .dl.,..,I, teak MOTOR HOMES """'"' 642.2'185 BMW * M.ulo 73 Rotory * 1866 VW CamP!•· ,.bu ~-: trans N.-more room, I'S,, ,;""ocb=ln"'-0.d'Cce"P'"-'4·c.49;)..34()6=.c=-i ,-61-DO~;x;-E-V-a~n-: A-u-.,-,,.,,.--. --------$66 MONTH , • engine, new · pomt. fully l'Owcr 1tcering . ORGAN Kimball No. 190, 49;){Ml)7, STAN Miller racing aabot. Apollo, Pa.ctsetter, B 1t r on, Good runnil1':'. condition. L:EASE A Tf7l 36 ~10NTilS OPEN LEASE crpted. Rlta 558-8299 Power disc· brakes brand new, $1295 or best of-AFGHAN pup, AKC, shots, No. 5960. National champ, Jamboree, Roblnbood • Paneled & uphol. Inside. WIU accept trade-ins _ * * '70 Bug * * Tinted windshield fer. 557-53M, eves only 6-9 '''Ornled, excellent pedigrff. good cond. S350. '\li-OU6 \Ve've got 'em at SGSO. 644-4300 BAVARIA , CALL A1R. FRY 84U6&8 Xlnt cood. Low mi. $1400 Air conditk>l\ifli pm. \VBI IW!ritice. Te! rm s LIOO 14. $695 or offer. Sail KENDON '72 DODGE van, Tradesman --.-H I B h * 842--SlM * AM radio HA~BtOND M-3 Org11n, dbl a\•ailable. 537-4240. a"'ay oonclitlon. Lido Isle. MOTOR HOMES 300 P/S, P/B, air, n\any We Buy Used un • eac '69 vw Perfect engine & Vlnyl roof keyboard, good ronc.I. $500or SILKY Ten-ier, AKC "reg., 8 _P_h_,_6'13-10~-28~~~--xtras. $3995. 645--0315 or BMW's trans, am/ftn radio, needs \\7heel Covo.rs S bcst otfcrM. 548-806llhl 21 ino n1a1e, all shots & lie. SABOT No. ~2 707 N. Harbor, S.A. 642-96113 Top Dollar P411id MAZDA body ~'OI'k, ~. 536-4313 Nvew woodhltew~ .. ,~res 1 ewlnf ac net I Hscbroken, ;100. 5.52-704.2 Completely refinished + 554--00.n **'69 DODGE Van '70 SQBCK, fm 8 trk, veat ery g o...vuu .. on. oan. $200. 64&.9570 * RENTALS * A/C, camping equiped. •tick CREVIER BMW cood!l»n. Mult sell. Call 49,000 mtieo. SHOP DOWNTOWN Hor,.. &56 HOBIE 14. No 7~. ~1nt rac· •hltt, new engine, 61>-8613 Sal"' • S.t'Vice . Leaslng 64~. $l9'S _Costa Mffa and Savel I TH o ROUGH BRED in ing sail, a:ood hulls. Maire i!:~~~~~& '61 FORD Van, carpet, al8 \V. lst St., Santa Ana 17331 Beach Bl. 8'12•6006 '65 VW BUG, $600. DAILY pil:r8~PLOYE HOO'Vft', U!ll'd vacuwn $19.95 training, 2 year old Filly, offer. 673-386.j Winnebago Motorhomes mags, new tires. Ex cond. 835-3171 BOB LONGPRE Reblt eng. Good Condition PARKING LOT Eureka uprldrt used "$39.!IS socinl climber, have got to * 24• YAWL. Gaff rigged, RECRF.ATION $Ta0. or otter. 557--0757 _O_RA_N_G_E~C-OU~N-TY-'S-MAZDA Call 673-9WS eves 330 Weilt Bay, Costa Mesa \Vhite Ir. ~ used,~ sell 493-3375 uk for Ken. dacrons, cedar hll11, 25 hp RENTAL AND SERVICE '72 DODGE Van. Camper. 'fi6 VW Bug, sunroof, must or ~~ zil)CHOQSE'~i\~ BAY Gelding 8 years old, Gray, $2.300. 827-4249 216 N. Clara, SA Xlnt cond. Eitt:ru. See to OLDEST -SERVICE FIRST-sell. $f1S. prl pty. Call M8l'lartt Greenman 1 Power machines rent or »ell ~trrrs. ~nglis;h or \Vestcm 13' METCALl~ fiberg.laas ==-=71=4-c-836-861=::;:'.~--appreciate. ~1077 eves 0 96tr1851 542-4321 au guar, no gtRunlcks!! 1ntennediate tider 644-12ll sailboat 1v/.!lllnddolly. Jnt MUST SEIL _ 24• Pacear-'69 vw Bus, good cond, good J:i~~ ~~~-1973 VW Super Beetle,' "n~ro=RD~W~,"iOJl--,-dark--ra-c-1 Sincet'e Sewing Mach & Vac cond. $39;). Call 548-5168 row, .xln't cond. ll,000 mi's. tires. a101 E 1st Strttt sunroof. Evenings Ing green, ale, cnise OM· ' 1878 Harbor, 64&-9742 HOBIE 14. Xlnt cond. 1.tl15t Loaded. Color tv, $7695. _ _,Ca""-'.ll.::ev:::"='7'>-=1632='--Santa Ana . 558-7811 968-4311 trol, lug tack, pis, disc ~St,~::io, Hi Fi, . 836 ( ....,. ... ~ II~] Jcll. Call 615--lSZI :i-:= Luxury Liletimes ~.soc;~,E !t~~an;is~ ~~~G ·~tte~t, ~~i 2?o o~ $745.':00 "!!U~ ~k~rt ~=: u=: . . CLASSS A racing cat, 18x7~i 23-25', Immac. Sips 6 ''Com· c"'6-9288==o.·.::eve=•:..· ---~ ROY CARVER, Inc. 557-4071 View Homes, N.B. SACRIFICE '•t"'.~!i..~I. :fc"' ... ~· See ~~·~en·~~~· WANT better ... mile ... ? 234 E. 17th St. MERCEDES BENZ· ___ v_o_L_v_o ___ '68,roRD,.w""',hn, •,u•,0 ....... cond. A Panasonic stereo tape re-Bofits, Gener1I 900 · .,..............,, ~-,..., • • ~-un Hays Pointless Ignition, 3\iO Carta lafesa. 5464144 1.. P s, P • r • x n • <.'Order with automatic re-RANGER 26 Olerry, 3 sailll, 25' EXECUTIVE motor Dodge. $80. 6«'>-0315_ -E-CONOMY ~bra~, tire&1! 1~' verse. Ult'S Ampex 7~• !\!ID-SUMMER c.ompasg, R.0.F., etc. Like home for rent. Fully self LEASE A "h BAVARlA 50 USED · "1 cons r · reels and tapes, includes 3 BOAT SALE new. $8500. 642-6079 contained. &12-2150 Autos Wanted 968 Demo .·Serial #3132993 1=·!94--0368"-"~==~~-~ speeds, 2 ldt'n.'O r;peakers, SAIL Trailers, Travel 945 :..;;:=-'--'---'-----for $166.41 PE'I' month MERCEDES & ·10 ~tAVElUCK, 2 dr, stk, hcadphon.,, 15 ,....,.....rded IS' MaHbu Cat $350. Boata, Sllpa/IJoc:ks 910 TOP OEL °' huy tor $11,299. ON DISPLAY SAFETY R&H. air cood. Xln·t cond. tapes and bl8Jik reels . a.II 1s· O-l)ay Sail:star ;850. '6 7 NI l>l R 0 D TENT Bob Mclaren, BMW1 Sll50. Days 833-2161· eves le equipment Is brand new. 30' Ameri Marc Yawl $2850. SLfPS . sail boats preferred TRAILER, Gocxl cond/all DOLLAR 1 Sharp New Car "·kncls, 67&-:1883. Ask1714;,,g) 0_!,~;,.or. make offer, POWER 14' to 32'. f'leet. & waler on L'OOVertiences. $825. 548-1822 PAID (714) ~~;.5624 Trade-ins PLUS '70w21",,.0!;,D F2nd-100 Pcu •• s. ptShortcust . .,..,.,........ dock. Res rooms, showers. CAMEL Caravan tent sleeps C I I E D Savings & Comfort • • * Summer Spec:l1I * ~: ~= ~: = =·~stngtn ~~=:r! 4, ~-IMMEDIATEL y BMW "l3 2002 Tii, under moo A. An:o:; o:~rin1:J. In Our Remaining w/b, H~tsman shell. P/S, Rebullt~Picture Tube 24· Diesel tug~. ; 673-87ll til 10 pm. 968-5038 fl.B. FOR ALL ml, mag \vhls, Becker Und Mercedes Lease 35 clcll.ll, $3,39S. 673-29&8. $17.50-21'' or 25'' Color 25' Diesel Cruiser .-n, ~~~~~~~~~ Slcroo, loaded, 548·'1222 eves. Pl NEW VOL VOS •70 Cntry Sedan, p/s, a/c, ~ SLIP, at 407 E 8' l FOREIGN onl -·•· D xlnt oond. new ""'" trlr * 2 YEAR WARRANTY 36' Diesel fun boot $3650. .,,.....ter. Balboa. Up to CAPRI H f I lm~••lo ellvery hitch. hvy dty air .-, R~1 • .nT~llol-~·tvnal~brvl~-AYS 646-9000 38' Jong, 10' wide. $100 per 1· ......... II Vi] CARS ouse 0 mports lug rack, 586-4898 ;2'Dl ...... ... ............ ~ «-~ mo, (TI4) 5.25-1153 days, 6862 Manchester, Buena Park 1\81111 l•O.:• 'crn~s-~~ S:::111~r JN~~ tis~ ip: ~ =l 697-13.16 eves. :;;;;;;;;;~>,;:;;; DES;i~~~ ~EEO ~-un the ~~Ana Frwy --vo··="' iwagon~~~to.T~r~ 305 Sq~:;: open 9-5 C6 days) Fishing tleet.. 1.-take otters. h, Speed & Ski 911 I OF GOOD, CLEAN '-lU Many extrrui! Low mileage. Call · 64" =· Antiquos/Cl•sstcs 953 JIM SLEMONS s:n-= o' ,..,_7676 RCA, Zenith le Sylvania con· evl'IllllPo ~ or '72 CRESTLINER. M"·'·le ...;.;==;..;.;.;;;;;:;.:::__:.;:.: FOREIG1"' CARS tole Ir. component Rtereos 66-'9'l1 17, ~Hull, •= -Hp " NOW OWN THE IMPORTS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ·n FURD Galaxie 500, 4 dr. "~ ~ '29 MODEL A, high cab TOP DOLLAR-PAID T condl · F 11 ra-drutical!ABC eor--TV .. ,.·•,ear,,. WANTED 16'·20' Sea skill or ~lercrulser, Vanson Trailer, P.U., Restored. Very good FOR OR NOTI FABULOUS 1973 MERCEDES BENZ Autos, Used 990 .:!? -dlot~Snt830' u ..... .P~T138' c lUl" • dary. many extra 11 lncldg oond. Asking $1.JOO or of/en CAPRI ' '"' ' · "°"'""" Bro o khurst, Huntington Call 6'73-345.1 lipeedometer, ~'D.lcr 5 k i considered. 646-34i8 Call or come in to see us. At!J'HORIZED BUICK '70 LTD \Vagon, 1 O\\'ni?r, 'Beach, 968-3329 * 10' GLASSPAR w13Jf. equlpm•nl, ta•·•-, com-Sport roupe decor, body side SALES & SERVICE xlnl ·• All ~ uua n10uldings, reclining front co.... power. ~- lr---k-=rr.'n710.ttiiJi ~Pro. v~ KiJ&.l!g. • ~ 'I.~er~·-:l~~ Recreation•t--lleQtA,cootoor-Nar-se-a:S;---4 Jim .Slernons 196! -¥¥~ p1f\ ~ si~: 962-mTI quality, ™-'" reels. Xlnt $500. .,._, Wttkdays after 6 PM, Vehicles 956 speed lransmission, power Imports xlnt mt & I res I '63 FORO-----xr;soo,-Auto, • I eond Extra 1 Boats/Marini 1--------...;..; front disc brakes, s~le steel w/witt whl covers. $700. P/S, P/B, R/H, Nc\V tires, • ree a, remote 63!J...8805. * * DUNE BUGG y, wheels, bucket seats radiaJ 1301 Quail 979-1733 aft 7pm low miles $175. 548-5336 control untt. Orig. $750, will Equip. 904 ....., ---------~ ----,..__,_ rv><>.--', ~t ~. H NB I . IGAECN= 42 N--rt n ••• h sell for ;450 firm. De · ~~~ ...uov&1.0 .,....,....,,""' ..... ""' 3100 W. U1tllllt wy., · • PY tires. 1 lf:f'J7 ). "''·.::;,9300~ 'fi5 BUICK Electra. Full '64 FORD Custom 4 dr Xlnl 54&-2(!;0 • nrus Broodblll Fiahormon 14' SKIBOAT legal, $650. 54.>0295 eves. , 642-9405 OVERSTOCKED I ENTER IBOM MacARTIIUR power, air, nu tires, $600. cood. "'1dng $400. •~=--~----Harpoon Gun, cased w/xttt MERC 75 • BEST OFFER 1971 VW DUNE BUGGY TOP CASH IMMEDIATE 833-9313/644-86{).t 5.16-ftn ZENITH cons:>le c:o)or TV, harpoons, line & all cleaning 53.i.2164 or MS--8995 Street legal Nice. $700. DELIVERY '69 MB 280 SL Rdstr, 4 spd, CAblL-lAC '67 FORD Wagon, xlnt cood.., Olromomlor %1". Beautltul implements. Great for aml ---~ -----Private Party. 494-4747 eves. for dean late model cars GUSTAFSON ps, air, lo miles, $5475, gone over sr..o. cond. 1 yr old. 536-5875 or trg 00..ll w/or without a ~----...-VW' SANDRAI L and trucks! 673-5620, 116 Industrial Way, * 962-8786 * 21" OJLOR TV. beau1 color r=· :"'.~" .'fi.=:,:;''i 1~~ ~,t c!nd~:l;. ':';' M>-3578 dayo: oos.ru• eve• Howard Chevrolet Linc:oln·Merc:11ry N.B. EL DOltADOS $85. \_Also 19" 8 & W fiah more than pays for gun.1 ~r~er~. ~67>-8~~163~.~~~~~ 1 ;S~po~rt~s~, ~R~a~c~o,~i<~od:;;•~9~59 MacArthur and Jamboree 16800 Beach at Warner ' 59 300 SL Roe.dater, needs 14 TO CHOOSE p:rlaole $30. 54Hll8 Ph: 9G2-'301 . eves 0 r Newport Beach Huntington Beach e~~:·0~~s 494-2671 COUPES-OJ~"VERTIBLES weelreods '68 CAMARO 357 CID, 4JO ---~833"-.(J565=~--142-1844 * (213) 592-5544 e SML 4 -1 Gr•• Marioc 1[11] HP. Bored, Blancod , 1MPORTSW.U-'fED "Homo Of tho Vlklnt" OPEL DE VILLES ... ;r _, Transporlltlclll Edelbrock-Holly Hookers, ___ _:.;.:...;c;:. ___ I Inboard engine. Great for ~------;:::: lmmac. motor, nu trans. Ornnge County's '72 CAPRI. Dlx Int Group, 38 TO ·CHOOSI bay boat or aux sailboat. d f 1 t TOP ; BUYER xlnt coud, low mileage. •n OPEL 1900 4 dr sedan, COUPES • L'---, 2 Times, $2.DO 54S--3561. e , mua'111see6410 ap7prec. SIU. MAXEY TOYOTA $2250. Call 552-7633 SUn. or 17,<m miles, auto, $1400. SEDANS • -BOAT trailer tits 16. dory. C•mpers, S.le/Rent920 =~===-'74-<139"""--·~-18881 Beach Blv1. wk-day evening ,540-4!=="::..,..~~~~--I CONVERTIBLES $1.50. '55 CHEVY full race but H. Beach Pb. M7-8555 ".72:,::..:CAP:::<,.,:Rl.::.:::w"". ~,-,..,~.-full~y PORSCHE Many excellent colora PLAYr""UL ~ai,Jttena, 7 wkl, 2 645-4653 eves. CAl\rPE;R. x1ut cond. 1969, st reetable, professionally W~m.JY equipped, under lO,OOO mi. -....:C~:.:.::..::.:.;:.:;:_ __ IOloice of interiors male, 2 ftml. black -~~~~-~-8%', half cabover, oven, bit Sacrifice $1000 firm. IMPOR AUTOS ~.. COoth •~ leafuerJ w/whlM markings. Aft s. ·n 20 HP Mere. Excellent to frig $S25 645-3190. ...au 50-CM2 '58 M E R c E D E s SL. O< 1 ,___r ... _i._v .. ~J[I JEEP '66 JEEP !;tation \vagon, 4--wheel drive, V-8, big tires, extras, $650. 968-8238. MERCURY LATE '70 ?.ferc:ury Marquis Sta \Vgn, A/C, full power, luggage rack & well. Top cond. $2650. J. Milani, 548-5TI5 or 6778800 557_, condition. $JOO.. Call ev.,, ~"' ·• /otter ,;.:.=-==----= BEST PRICES PAIDI DATSUN Removabi. banltop. N-Factocyalroondlllonlng 64!>-465.1 OI' 645,8927 True ks 962 Dean Lewis Imports little body work. ,Best offer Full power. Ololce of: '67 COUGAR -p/s, auto, FREE to gooo nome 21i9 yr -FIBERGLASS camper shcll, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I ---------or trade. Stereo AM/FM radio R&H, exceptJonaily clean. am. spayed DachltlW1d. Call '72 20 HP Mere, Only used 30 fila Datmn. Luv, or Toyota. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 1973 DATSUNS Cnnse. control Best oHer. 3236 Idaho Pl, 84&-71M hours. Xl'nt oond. $400. Call Used once, $200. ca 11 71 SPORTS CUSTOM 646-9:1>3 '68 ~11. Nu Kof!is. semperits, Trunk opener&: more CM SHEPHERD · le&, 9 eves, &G-4653 or 645-6927 645-4653 or~ Super sharp, 4 spd, rad &: \VE PAY TOP OOlLAR All MODELS pa1nt, 10 miles, am/fm, All in immaculate condition l·.~73~CO~LO~NY--Park--W-...,.-, weeks. c.o.:°' ~pp 8"!a. $95, LIKE NEW. 18 hp * 8' CABOVER. Water. heater. Ntw 12 x 16.5 tires. FOR TOP USED CAnScl IN STOCK ~~tape, pert. lhru out. ~t .. ael• ,.,~~.in like new, all pwr, air cood., 673-4510 r 646-61.73 eve Qirysler FWD & rev. gears. stove, rebig, sleeps 4. Good $2700. or best ofler. 1J your car lJ extra ean, ..... _ ~J' under 8,000 ml. 642.-2917 3 am: "'clown marlred" 32'7 w. Wll,.,., No.~ cr.i. rondlllon. sooo. 642·51154. * 892"1832 * ... u~!;U'Ei< BUICK BARWICK IMPORTS "2~';nt!~;. ~1~~ Nabers Cadillac: MUSTANG kiuens, 7 wk&. 1 part calico. Boats, Power 906 Cycles, Bllcn, 1965 % TON Chf:VY Pickup 2925 Harbor Blvd. 33375 camin, Caplstt_ano sunroot 673--0234 AIJI'HORIZED DEALER -:Cal:-01=67'_,.;.0873~7."-.,.,.,-=ccc-I l961 34• FAIRLINER, like Scooters 925 w/campcr shell. New V-8 Costa Mesa 979-2500 8:-1'~: ~!Jf.~ '61 PORSOIE 1,ii/reblt '64 ml,..... HARBOST MER BL., '69. ?.tACH I 351 V-8, Lo SIBERIAN Huskey, female, 1 truck motor (heavy duty). ..,.__ ~ .wo;i N hol & .:-v.:.i A SA mileage. New tires. WAY ed I tlf!\V, extra (' ean o v c n' * BICYCLE SALE * 675-2698 JUNK car'1 wanted. '"•-= '71 240Z, 1 O\.\''""", nu -•ial•, ~~·..,....,. ew up u.u:::S, 540-9100 n...... SUndAv UNDER LO BK, 1•~ -1 year. Spa,y • oves pco-stove, Yiinch. refrig, new tO\\'ing, title clearance, 2.t • ...,. ,...., ~U'l,O '-'t""'.. "" ~ "' pie, call 548-8439 carpet and interior stereo NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN 1960 ~ T Picku11, fi.-..:er up--hrl'I. 494-1000 ext 608 mags, nmtlm stereo tape, , '68 CAD. Lo mileage, $1rJO. make ofter 673-0507 FREE puppy, 7 weeks, to twin 225, bait tank'. $10,r:XJ BICYCLES ;;,9.(fj, Beach per. ;495. Ph bt'f Z> pm, Autoa Import-.. 970 ~~!o.;., .... a1i6r..., ~~ .. mi. $3650. ~~~ 68pty~12•1= or bestCalloUer~.,. ,,.,,,A MUSTANG '69, 351, radio, good h 0 m,,.. Huntington ask for Paul -193-2348 or Bleyclcs, 806 E. Balboa 847-9696, aft 6pm or wkcnds ' .... ,;~o=.;::::::,:;;'c:,o:~::;;;·~--673-8608 ~1375. O'flHXJQ't heater, air cond, auto tranR. Beach area. 968-3519 business phone 494-9773 or Blvd., 675-7282. Authorized 642-1178 * * * ·n DATSUN' 240'L, a Ii-, ' 19n CADIU..AC Sedan de x1nt oond. Must sclJ, ;1615 * *FREE -5 mos old 831-1315 NISHIKI dealer. 1973 DATSUN Pickup, 500 Ellen Olson 4-spd, mags, orange, im· '56 ro.~· Reblt eng. Ville ·all power, l owner, aft 5:30, 673-1696 black Labrador, female, CLASSIC Bay Boat, 28' 350 BULTACO Pursang, new miles, a/c, new camper, 2265 Miner St. maculate! $3650, 8'1~, trans transaxle. A Steal $5.<m 546-3565 ruiytime '65 MUSl'ANG Fastback 8·17-3312 double-ended Navy \.\'~1ale 2/73 reed valve w/full wide tires & mags, Cost eves. ~2806 at $1200. ~· 9-llPM '67 c~ILLAC Convert 56M many extras. 642-8196 attcf ffii-..'"E to good home pointer-boat. or pend ab J,. porting. Reliable, super $3660, Sell $3100, 979-3825. Coste Mesa '73 DATSUN iroz, silve.r, 'fi6 912; Rebu1l~ engine. Super miles. R/H. Air. Private 4 pm. Cn>!.'S puppy. 8 ruoe. all Graymarine Light. Folll"-09 last Nc\'er raced. Many ex· '69 EL CAMINO SS 396, new You2 -:;eek: ~r of ~~crillto, """"ce . .; .. ~E:~r, 500J mi, ~~i:Z:.cw tll'es. ;2100. Ph: -""""--· M&-8069 aft lPM ~-O~L~D-S_M_O~B~l~L~E- ho•· ft 9~7..,... inboard power. $1000. or tras, $1500. invested, only brake•. pam· 1,· ,h 0 ck,, --s '""· 8 ernoons, '"'"" """· _..,, "~<)8918 • 5 RINGLING BROS & BY owner ~ 'TI El Oorado .. •---------trade use fo• dockage. .......,.,. v.u-a .. er pm. clutch, uphols'""''• immac! FIAT TOYOTA •···~ ' EEO home !or 5 yr. old 557 ms -' BARNUM & BAILEY 36,000 mi, ~. Nu "-Sale• A Service .~ P 1 , -l\rusr 81."ll desert bike, 673-9419, fl500. ---------1 -;;~;:;~;;:;:;;---I..!·~~-~~~ ~--~-~U!g:~·~~ ~= s o 11pa~-,., ers an ca. CIRCUS .., · un~ er.~ OLD M BILE "S.,uirt·•. 646-'624. 21 FT GRANDY Yamaha 360 MX, XI n I '68 OIEVY Pkk-op, "'°" ar n... '71 FIAT 124 Sporn Coupe, JOYOJAS CAMARO GMC TRUCKS BEAtrr. min. Shepherd Sporbo fi8hcnnan. 2 Chrys. = oond. Best oUcr. bed. 4 speed, 6 cyl. ~. ANAHEIM 18.000 mi, radio, ht>ater, 5 . HONDA CARS male, h:ee to good. horne. engs. 1-'ully equip. for fish· -· 64Z--O'l31 speed, gear shift. &12-9434 ~n --~-89 Ing. T.S. Fly Bridge. ;u.cwx>. '66 HONDA eo 1'1'ail-.Bike. 1.1,;~~RAN="'~~==~"o~ •• ~.mo~•-, CONVENTION JAGUAR FOR '70 CAM.ARO Rallye Sport. UNIVERSITY OLDS o....a °"~' · Phone 8.11-2889 or 4~136. Good eond. Lo"· .mileage :°eds a ,:;:'w~m~ Best ~f-CENTER IMMEDIATE Immac! PIS, P/B, air, PUREBRED n\ale beq:le 1 12' ALUl\flNUM Boat, like E.35-, 540-9439. 3245 Iowa, .re=:•.:_· ::.645-=1::69l::;·c_ ___ ~ FOR OPENING NIGHT DELIVERY bucket seats, 00f1901e, auto, ,..__,_2850 Harhlr Bl~~" MM year ol<l. Good family & ,,...., 0....11 -'64 JAGUAR MK 10, Oass\c disc brks, radio, vinyl top, UJMM. Mesa ~ ' hdog ~,..... new Su..>. 3 hp, British '65 DODGE 1,·, T Pick l1p AUGUST 13 t ··• fuJ MX "-~ &I"-.....,,,.,,.. ~ ......... wa c · _..... .....,. c.--~--11 I'" d 6 ·~ BMW ~ wrury ~an. ly restored HI LUX ,.... •• a.1 -.,, .-. -~·.lollAI. TORONAOO like new ~-..... ..,.,e ?le\\', use ""' """"' \.\ith .a.1 camper shell. Bt>st Pl ·'I ·~ =-t ••• I -• N r....<:"t" to .-...t home . L-.. -$100 ~ ~79 Eqptd ~ .. & d/ba 71 case c.... '"v"'"o, ex ~ to m nt C01K1. ew lthr, lac-t nroiCA '72 MONTE Carlo, air, win· with "·" .......,"f:r rn.i:.£< 6V""' , ........ ,. · • .. ,........, ''l'i''6 s::i gs oflor buv.. . .,..., ..,.,,~ .... ,,. lal "k IN rth ~ ! ...,.,,.,. .. ~ ... ..!.~.:-~ , Lab/Wrimaraner m \ x e d $600 536-0L'iO "v ~ ..... to c m your .. c ct1. o qucr. wvuu inish, eng, CORONA do"'S, vinyl top, radlals, 4~ ~ 1 6 540 oA""' 35' OWENS Sedan. Immac, ==.:;::::....::*...::::.;:;:::;__ '59 FORD P-U. 4 spd, Eno, Coun\y toll free number is brakes, Pirelli tin>s. •Mnn · x•-· pn·v -H•= u:ma. t', mo. O"'O'UJ, n· hoard 0 ·" 0 ·•·· '71 HONDA SL •= I il ·~ •••1~.1 ~ LA'~ CRUISER .. -. ., .. ,, .,.........,, PINTO Tl\~ CUTE l\tALE VMI.· · 4<U-ley, .-..,.,,, • """"• o m e great shape. Nu clu!cl\. Bit ~ 1-'-'J invested, Jr1ust sell, $3900. .,v , ,0493-::..,031,;20o;·o,· ~~~~--I ---------I v hettd w/shower. SleeJ)I" 6, put'ect cond. Sec to ap-,l::;or:,,c~•::,:m~pc;::r~$~400=. ='73-64::;;:;;"~..:..===*=='*0=;:*==:.:_=:':',...:==11====::':' =:: l " KITIENS. Lots of maJxigany, 846-8173. preciale, $.j('J(), 556-787'7 ~---...:... t\tir.1t 11n:.1 '65 CHEVY Malibu, 2 cit, 6 '72 PINTO: 1600cc eng, 4 gpd, ~~~~*~-~~97~13~*~~~1 16' SKI & speed boa1, lfO 6:i HONDA 30.'l -UIA (Allllll cyl, auto. Needs no work. air cond, nu w/w, GOod M•rc ""''"''· S3SOO. Days, GOOD CONDITION $200. STAR G 19. "TE'W>".M -lll TOYQTI $425. G7J.790I con llB50 49J..3965 I I~ 547·T146, n;gh1s 642-J355 =-=*-="'ss'=--~c,.*~~ .ra..., -"-"" ·~ . " CHEVROLET PONTIAC ,_ ... .,... ..,.., 15' outboard Ylilh '69 BULTA(Y) l>fX ~ady. i:;::~r..!..!.!..!..,~---~1o..AXJt. 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646--9303 :::::-::::::;.:~;:._;:=.:~-I·-_::_:::.:,::.:::::::_ __ , . 40 HP EVINRUDE Rl!blt engine, nevM" uSi'd. W: Ylllll"o..tlr~~ Ji. '68 roYOTA eorofla, 2 dr '66 CHEVY Impala, 4 ~dr, LEAS~ Oil BUY 152 $350. 646-6984 Xtras. 536-8487 -V-Aercord/11f ht lh• Stori. auto 42,00l orta: miles, 1 ~ ~ $500. •n thru '73 Pontlaca Cm 18' !B. Good condition. MUST oe!I "69125cc Yamaha Tod.,.,1..,....._ttrwa...day, owner, &OOd cond. $975. ' DAVE RCSS \.\"/lnlller. $900. or best of· MX. Many nu xlras. Gd, ~wordsain~dl!"Qtorunblcs 548-1482 aft 6 '72 GOLD CAPRICE, low PONTI C PERSIAN kittens, CFA ""'" for. !rlH\28 or 837-8144. cond. $250. 613-2722 of-Zodiocl>nlu"'-TRIUuaH mileage. like ll<'W. $3395, • A from c:tiamplm, gr. ch. I: l·You'll 31Wlrh 610f "''"" o:.~-~ ch ~ • t f ........ _. 16' BOAT 35 hp. John9on. ·n HONDA 350 CL. Looks 2~ 32Fitlt 620thl!t 1---------1 .....,..'005 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fail ..... gr. , a ... ca o J'<=TU Ort ~--· Ille ·~ -1 anetalon. S100 &: up, Also Blt-in bait ta.nk -tllt Uke JM>w, needl clutch plate. 3W 3JS.lr>Q 63M 1 .. 7 TR-3 with ....... •m QlEVY lllPALA. ve, 1.Alllll& sa --...1. stud leMce awllable. h'8ilcr, ;.1;;o. 548-a174 SS2Yl>Mlt oU6'. 556--027G. ~~ ~i:!'!' !;~ fuie. !.lake otter . ...,,.... runs $150 RAMBLER • 892-2970 * Bo1t•, Rent/Ch1rt'r 908 19T.l YAAtAHA 250 l>IX, lo 6 ~'1 l&a-«A ~~I i;.t2.3740 OIJI 493·9'247 ~ft.er 4 pm Dogs 854 mileage. $700. call st>-0315 ~~ ~~ ~~londl '64 OIEVELLE Malibu, 1ee 1963 R.Umt.ER Cluslc 2 10..-=--------\VE nre vtlcationing in or &U--S6S3 9 llit! .J9YOd "'~"';.;'~""•'"'• VOLKSWAGEN at 571 Wf!St WU.CO. Costa dr, Vl"I')' clean, runs xint. AKC Germ. Mep pups. Xln1 Nev.'JXlrl &: v.-ould Like to ·'11~::...::::Ki:.:\\:;:V:=ASA;,._.,Kl~~,~00~. -X~lnt fOSorMorJt ..OGaln 70New ?ilea bef 2pm $1ro 531-8188 1:-It bloOd llnta, nrld ('I Pm\'tr boa.1 ·21·~ to 11 Yourfflf •tA 710-·so BUS. :dnt t"Oft'J. • 1~-·-~=~---1 m:un renl from prl pty fi'om Aua. condil~~1~5 t}~ ~:... $}~ 1'1~t 1ell $525. or Ofiff *v: :!.ii~ RWl)t~cn: T-BIRD ST. ~ERHARD PUPS 11-25. Pleaae cal! R£wet', __ _:;:::_:;,:.:;:;::..,.,--14u... "'To 74Qualiet * 5ri>"'7-o757 * m-3m ~13: 782..Q;62 durina day, tm KAWASAJ\1' 100 hs.s 1SW9'ght ASYoar 7S$tolts 1912 VW 4.11 SqURftback 1969 T Bfir(I, Xhrt ODnd. New- S wks, tiholA, $7S. 213: 67().2449 evf!I. ~ &: k1wer range. $325., !'Tote "'6 i.e... 76 ~ Air Condidonlng J969 DtEVELLE. 0 r I I lY painted, muat .u. $1950, Call S..'1'879 1m• LUXURY Yacht. Built $9358, 7 pm·lO pm. ~~ ~x~ ~~ ~I a~ Spt'Q 4!Q..8683 owner, top Mq>e. Make o(. ~ Ol" 67S1197 • IRJSll SEllF;ns far the America'• cup. Motor Homea 19H..-"'lJ:lal 79~ f(.'f'. 60-3740 ..... TBIRD Sol Good •v~ 6 WE""'""S. rK -1 50 _.,, llONnW>ie '89 V.W., Sharp, Oean, "' • · t top. nno.., COl'O * •'"· CDmp. ita.lety equip, w•ter S.11/Rent 940 21 .;_. 51 c:;;;:.oi11c11 11 n.INll RAH, radlala. luitPP rack, COMET tcmdlUon. C&ll all 6 pm, * St&--1288 8kling, 5 lrttltfl rma w/hlll --'-------nm MShoiAd 12~ CaJJ 491 ... 1372 ~t.696. * Mnlahmt Schnauzrr * halh,, eo&or 1'V etc. 213: 197'3 DilKlO\'tM l'nd SUndlaJ ""~ bl~ lllt '66 COMC'I' n ..... t ba ---==~---1 Stud Servlef' 835-2254 or 714: 557-4543 Aft Momr Jlomes for rent, mllke 24 Moll.. .154 Bf. .,-f~ WANTED VW'S 1 coov, ...... 11~' VEGA SIM.190 6 prn. (213) 473-&4&,'j, re&emtioo• flW S\.lmmer ~~ ~~ :=. RUNNING OR NOT "h!te top.,"6 cyt. IOw4'l'li>n,l---------I MINIATURE Schnau&til' BOits, Sill 909 ::· =-:";oS:Tr::'. r.f.:& :~:"'-~~ ~ CR.A:£0.V\V5.10-4799 $950. ~~v·• ·~l~~.GJ'~~~~-:i~ puJlLI. Champ line, clean. 11.C· ...... ~ :ittU· ~"-Y' ~OWllilv 1'"or &ale...... ~ ~; 613-6501 tettlonllll! pets. flP-8000 8' SABOT. Sail, mass. ke 1 ..::892=-'6.\=l..:or::...:~:::..::::;·,,,,_~ :toA\dd 60flfftincl to.AA-.,"""' I• 1'f AKC Yorbhlre Terrier board, Nltrr. $150. OU DELUXE WINNEBAGO t0.. ® 111 645-$191 '&> CORVIJR. clcu. 1'1111 'TI VEGA WlllO"I· I~ ~Stud tt.rv avail. ____ 'loo:!~·-~----M.11. RENT ~lf\S/Gaol AdftHC Ncutnl The "'Yelklw ~· ol IOO(I. sm,MH231 ~ ~iSird&yaatlck, r , · 5~ er !cr4-001G Oual!ltd Ado •• , --N.D. clua! • • • •$1 . • • . I • ' I I ' I I _j ( ., I I ·- San Clemenie Capistrano * VOL. b6, N0."212, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES Today's Final EDITION N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Clemente's Tax Rate Will Be Set Wednesday By JOHN VALTEllZA Of lfM DIHY 1'1111 SI.it San Clemente's official tax late for the new fiscal year will be set Wednesday by city couneilmen, and few changes in the $1.~ levy are forecast. The routine action should require only a formal vote because of recently. com- pleted budget work· by the council. ' Revenue-sharing funds, a substantial increase in assessed valuation and prior year's surpluses are some of the factors in tfie retention of the tax rate. The city's Shooting Case ' ' total budget for the current year Is $4.S. million. The couocil's Wednesday action is ex- pected to include a tiny reductiOll in the rate of 2.5 cents in lhe municipal lighting category. That redutUon occurs each budget year as Jess money is required to keep tbe aC<OW1t bolanoed. The tu-rate vote comes toward the end of a large agenda with many wrltten- commwtlcation items. Among the other issues racing the C0W1cil on the schedule are : Clemente Youth Freed by Judge A 15-year"ld San Clemente boy was cleared o( murder charges late Monday by an Orange County Superior Court • judge who ruled that the youngster acted : in self defense lvhen he shot and killed _hls_motber's male· companion-1asLJ.une- l 7. David Moberly retumed to his home.at %17 Avenida Rosa immecliately aUer the verdict w8.s announced. cleared of an allegations filed against him altd the killing of Geolge Twiddy, 38, of Newbury Park. t Judge Raymond Vincent, acting fer tl!e county's juvenlle court in what 1s normally an adult trial courtroom, dismissed the petition filed against the boy after hearing one week of testimony. Press and public were barred from the courtroom throughout the trial. And lawyers on both sides were ordered not to discuss the court action with newsmen. Police reports issued beJore the gag Woman Writes _.Thanks~'L<>.st Hopes in Surf Oftimes a lifeguard risks his life to pluck a swimmer from the surf and gets little ::thanks" from the shaken victim. But a woman wo was saved from drowning during last week's siege o~ .hur- ricane surf In San Clemente has written a letter to city councilmen which could make up for it all. Mrs. Frances Cyphers of Riverside tenned her rescuer, Lifeguard Ken Casper, "an angel of merey" who sa~ed. her whetl she bad lost all hope of making it through ·a set of 10-foot breakers. After the harrowing episode when she and seven companions were safely on the beach, guards said that the rescue was the "roughest in a long time." "] owe my life to one of these young men and words cannot express my gratitude for his life-saving efforts on my behaU," she said. Mrs. Cyphers, an executive secretary with a Seventh-Day Adventist insurance organization, had been visiting the be~ch last Wednesday and joined the group for a swim. "MY endurance was exhausted and there was no hope in getting to shore alone," Mrs. Cyphers Mid in her letter. After noticing the guard jumping from the pier and swbnming toward her, she realized that the battle was still not e~ ed. "He took me under the pier and to the other side through ·monstrous wave after (See LETl'ER, Page 2) Sexy MoTie l\lotel Raided; 4 Arrested KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Last week Richard Welsbach chaogtd h I s motel rrom G-raied to X-rated by show- ing adult 1111111 In e>ch or th< J5 rooms vii closed circuit television. Tbia week he was llrrested. -Police desctnded on Sir Waight'• Motel Monday night. lnspectlllll each room and allowing pnlrons to leave. However, Welsbach. his wife and two employes were arrested. order was impcised. indicated that the Moberly boy shot Twiddy in the chest , neck and arm with five bullets from a .22-caliber rifle following a Father's Day squabble at the Moberily home over dirty laundry. -Dfficers...said-lhe.boy-used-a rifle-given to -him by Twiddy as a gift a few days before the shooting. Twiddy was dead when they arrived at the home and the youngster was picked up at San Clemente Pier shortly after making a telephone cal.I to police. Subpoenas In 2 Nixon Homes Urged WASHINGTON (UPI) -The chairman of a House government expenditures wb- conunittee said today he would seek sub- poenas of construction records for Presi· dent Nixon's homes in Florida and california. said to have between $3.5 and $3.7 million -m government-funded Im· provements (Related stories Page 3). Rep. Jack Brooks (D-Texas), said the White House was trying to block the sub- committee investigation. The f u 11 Government Operations Con1mittee will meet Thursday to act on the request for subpoenas. Brooks added.. "The White House has now involved itself in this investiga tion and is seeking to block the subcommittee from carrying out its constitutional obligation," Brooks said. Brooks said the government has turned. over documents indicating a total of $1.9 million was spent on Nixon homes at Key Biscayne, Fla., and San Clemente. He said the General Services Administration (GSA), which bas supervised the con- struction, has indicated additional Im· provemeots were made, but bas refused to turn over details. The GSA said Monday it is preparing a new "definiUve" statement on con- struction at the Florida and California White Houses and it will be ready later lhiS \Yetk. Brooks said he met over the weekend wilh GSA Administrator Ar\flur Sampson who promised him all the ~iles on con- struction. Then, Brooks said, Sampson told him on f.1onday: "Pursuant to in· structions from the White House, he could provide no further data until the \Vhite House released a comprehensive state- ment on these mallers." BEERCAN RACE WORTH THE PAIN Whereas most sailboa t races are '1bor- lng to watch and dllficult to pho " oblervet Daily Pilot Chief Photographer' Lee Payne, Newport's &Mual Beere.an Regatta 11 not your aver1ge water com- petition. Payne bas betn In the !hick of It over the y .. n with "big boala cr .. hing about," and on Page 21 today ls a col· lectlon or some of his flne!t recordings for several publications or that "dingy" compefilion. It's tbe only regalia he'll shoot, because the Beerc1n Is worth lhe pain. Ahoy, he eels seasick. . ) -A public hearing into the zoning ap.- pUcaUoo by the Vista del Verde company for the change ill land-use designation from "unclassUied" to R·l single- residentlal. The property, next to the ex- isting development at Sborecliffs north, ls near Calle Vaquero and Camino de los Mares. -A request from the Capistraoo Beach Chamber of Cotrunerce for permission to erect a welcome sign to. the community on land at the westerly edge of San Clemente. That area lies at the comer of • Ill • Camino Capistrano and El Camino Real. -A recommendation lrom parks and recreatk>n commissioners for the calling back of existing annual tickets to the cily golf course and those would be repla~ by new annual tickets of $5 which would allow discounts for weekly play ; ex.- eluding weekends and holidays. The com- mimon also urges a freei.e on saJes of the tickets under the existing city policy Which member. assert should be phased oot. -Endorsement by lhe same com· mission of the annual Boys Club carnival set for Sept. 7 through 10 at the Nonh Beach parking lot. -A recommendation from traffic--park- ing c:onunissioners that a system of warning signs be erected in the golf course area street! advising motorists of golf-cart traffic. -Recommendations from planning commissioners for approval of two separate tract n11ps involving con- struct.ion of almost 160 new condominium OlllY Pl_. Steff ...... IT WAS A LONG, LONG TRAIL FOR 21' YOUNG BICYCLISTS ON A BORDER·TO.BORDER TREK Adventurers Piss Through L1gun11 Buch En Route to Tiju1na on Their Summer Adventure Car Kills Alien. Escapi1ig From Border Patrol A ~1exican citizen apparently al· tempting to avoid the San Onofre border patrol checkpciint was killed Monday when he dashed across the San Diego Freeway and was st.rock by a car. Juan Herrera Alvarez of the state of Zacat~, Mexico, was killed instantly when be darted west across the freeway ana was hit by a southbound vehicle driven by William E. Carter ot 25371 Romera Place, El Toro, a highway patrolman said. Alvarez and another J.1exican had departed early in the day rrom a smug- gler's car and were attempting to sneak around the checkpoint \vhen the accident occurred, said a border patrolman. The two had paused at the center divider of thi! free"'ay \Vhen Alvaret decided to make a run for the other side through the sparse traffic, aceording to a highway patrolman. Monday's fatality was one of a series or recent similar accidents at the border check. Last spring four persons were kiUed in two similar incidents as they at- tempted, with the aid of a.lien smugglers, to akirt the immigration check. Officials termed the practice of rm. nin& acrosa the hazardous freeway lanes as commonplace when smugglers err and mate th< lrip north wl\eJl the d!cckpolnt Jn operation. Generally, ii the driver is an alltn, himJell, all the oocupanla or the car leave the nhlde at tbe roadside and try to croos the ftteway and walk und<tec<ed upcoast along the beacblroot. Occaslonalfy, when tht dr;ver of 1he smuggling car is a U.S. cillztn, he order:. h1s twman cargo fmm the auto and succwfully negollate.s the roadblock alone. ~ llls passengers, however, have to fend for tbemsefves. Student Bicyclists Pedal From Seattle to Tijuana By FREDERfCK SCJ!OEMEHL Of ..,_ Dilly Plllt lttll Imagine riding a bicycle through pound· Ing rain for 75 miles. Or trying to find a laundromat with enough dryers for 2l persons. Or wondering whether that uphill pull will ever end. Such are the trials encountered by 2l Junior high and high school bicyclist! from Seattle who pedalled along the Orange Coast Monday en route to n- juana, l\1exico. The group left San Oemente State Beach this morning for the last leg of the J.800 mile !rip which began at the Cana- dian border 39 days ago. "It's been a great trip, great weather. not too ho!,'' said a sunburned Linda Staheli. 13, while the group descended on Boat Canyon Cleaning and Laundry in Laguna Beach Monday morning. Pair Win Suit • On Parking Lot A San Clemente couple who blamed Ille city for property damage caused when a parking iot was constructed on Avenida Gaviota have OOen awarded $26,000 in damages by an Orange County Superior OolJrt jury' The jury verdict In favor ol Los Angele! attorney J. Patrick O'Neill and his wlfet. May, 319 Avmida Gav·iota , end- H 'a month-long trial of the Issue in Judge W1Ulam Let's courtroom. \ O"Ntlll auctt..rully argued that hi• property was damaged in Augu.'it of 1968, while city workmen were developing a nearby parking lot. lie claimed In hlJ la-t Iha! land •llppage and Oood;ng occurttd on his laod 11 a result of the city'• operations. • Riders averaged 50 miles -and one flat tire -per day in their ride down the Pacific coast. The longest day on the road ended in Florence, Ore., after 80 miles. Sunday, spent in Los Angeles, was !he shortest with 13 miles logged. Each rider paid $270 toward the trip. It works out to S3'.50 a day for food . $20 for spendint and S70 for air fare back to Seatlle from San Diego on Thursday, ex· plained 13-year-old JeMifcr Hunsaker. Along the way, the bikers stayed in campgrounds, churches and recreation ctnlers and found hospitality \.vas "great•• every"·here they stopped. The trip got off to a wcl and wild starl \1·ith 7~ miles or rain in southern \rashingtoo . "You get so "-'et after a while. it doesn·t malter." laughed Carol Caddcy, I~. who learned about the trip from an advcnisement in a Seattle newspaper. The group probably was glad to leave Oregon behJnd. In the northern pan of the state one rider was sideswiped by a truck .and badly shaken up, but (Klt in- jured. In soothem Oregoo, Linda cut htrtelf and was forced to receive a cou· pie of tUtchet:. ~ In northern Cllifomla one girl ended in the holpita\ after catching the fiu. She lost four days, and took the bus to San f"rancisco to catch up with her 20 com- panions. Linda's mothtr. 1.11'!. E.T. SlAhali. ar· ranged the trip a! "something different'' to do durlng the summer. Ellch rider was required to have a 10- spctd blke and to go through SOO miles er "practice" riding before getting the final OK for the trip. Would lhey do it •gain~ "Sure," said one. "1 don't know," groaned another. unils at 1he large Presidential Heights tract inland of the city links. -A repon from City Manager Kemeth carr on a possibll' resoluUon seeking upgrading of anin1al-control codes by the County of Orange. The codH would a!· rect animal issues In San Clemente. -Discussion by Ca rr on the status of a grant application for the purcba.se ol Poche Beach, assuring public U1e of the surfing beach 1hrtatened eventually by private deve lopment. Two Survive S1nasl1up In Heavy Fog BOSTON ( APl - A Delta Airlines DCI jet with 89 persons aboard crashed and disintegrated on landing at Logan International Airport in heavy fog today. Police said at least 85 persons died. HospHaJ . 1\1.-o persons were unaccounted for . Only two survivors were reported in- itially by Massachusetts G e n e r a 1 Hospital. An eyewitness said the twln-engine plane crashed on a runway about 1,000 feet from the edge of the' water at the busy airport thal juts into B<Mton Harbor. Stale police said it appeared that the jet struek a seawell at the approach to the airport. A state police spokesman said there WllS a break ln the 2\!·foot high wall. indicating the craft's landing gear struck it. An observer said personal effects and parts or bodies ~·ere strewn all over the runway. He said the plane, arriving on a night from Burlington, Vt .. seemed to have disi ntegrated on impact. He said the largest port.ion of the plane he could see was a 10-foot portion of the fu.sellge. In Washington. the N at i on a 1 Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a JG-member investigating team to the scene. The board said the team \\."OOld be headed by board member Isabel • Burgess. State police said a temporary morgue v;·as set up at the fire station at the airport . Repcirts from the scene said numerous vehicles drove to the era.sh site to collect bodies from the debris and mud. Some vehicles became mired. in the mud. A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said the plane, scheduled lo leave Burlington at 9 a.m., made an unsched.uled stop at the municipal airport in Manchester, N.H. lie said he did not know the reason for the New flampshire stop. One survivor at f.1assachusetts General H05pital wa.. identified u Leopold Chouinard . 20, of ~1arshfield , Vt. A hospital spokesman said he had thiJ"d. degree burns over 80 percent of his body. The 91her survivor was identified by tSu BOSTON, Page 2) Orange Cout Weather Orange Coast skies will be cloudy during the night and early mactl· Ing hours. will! hazy .......,. to- morrow morning. HigM wl ll be tn the low 70s, whh tbe low In tba 60s. INSmE TODAY Procioiming that he ·W : fJtot ' indescribable "kt1owledge -and with a .rnowballing movenwnt bihind him -Guru Maharaj .J't · 15, i.& embarking 011 his thtrd "ptate1' t.ou r in the Unittd Sta te;. See Georae Cornell's story, Page 14. L.M. hYtl 11 C•li~• t C11MlflM tt·M t.lftkl 17 ( _ _.. 11 O.afll Hltkt• 1 •llll11rtal II'••• i l 11tert1l11-111 ,. ,lll•JW• • 11·11 "" !tit lttwrtll ' ,...._ ,, AMI L at1ti1«t J S " ' DAIL~ PILOT SC Mu11in Toot: Sacrifices .-Attorney SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -Horbert W Mullin klUed IS pmoru as hums~ &a~ices to prevent an earthquake which would destroy Calllornia, ttis defense v.ttoroey lai4 Monday. "I will sh:Jw' that my client is mad - 1tark ravtn,g mad," public defender James Jackson IJ&ld in opening remarks 1t Mullin's trl4l on 10 counts of murder . f Jackson said that Mullin firmly bcliev· ed that ao earthquake which would ha ve sent Callfomia sliding into tbe Pacific Ocean was averted only because of his Intervention in otferlng human sacrifices. He said Mullin, 26, a college dropout and drug user, claJmed he was "telepathically instructed'' to commlt the kUlings. Mullin pleaded lnnocellt and lnoocent by reason r:i, insanity to the slayings of 10 persons tilled in a three-week period this year in the Santa Cruz: area. He has not been charged with .the three other killings be admits to committing. Prosecutor Art Danner, an assistant district attorney, made a brief opening statemep( and showed jurors pictures or the 10 victims. •·Each time Herbert W. Mullin klUed, he killed with premeditation a n d deliberation," said Danner, wbo asked the jury to bring in 10 first-degree murder convictions. Jackson said Mullin stomped and stabbed a Roman Catholic priest to death last year in a ccnfesslonal because he received a telepethlc message to kill the cleric after going to the chun:h to pray on All Souls' Day. Mullin has not been charged with the priest's killing in nearby Los Gatos. Seven witnesses were called io the stand after the opening slate:ments, in- cluding the mother of one victim who described the discovery of the bodies of her daughter and son-in·law. From P119e 1 BOSTON ... the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31, of Louisville, Ky. The spokemian said Brown bad muJtiple injuries. Both survivors were reported in critical condition. 'lbe craft W1U identified from the air- line's AUanta headquarters as Delta Fllgbt 723. It bad 83 putengers and a crew of five, according to a spokesman from the airline in Boston. There was one DOD· paying pesseriger. I . 'Ille craab occurred on the llU1h !!land Flat! area of the airporl A wilneM at the scene ·said the only parts o! the craft still Intact wore the rudder and stabilizer, the two engines and two pices of wing. 'lbe crash site was believed to be in the area of the Ocl 4, 1960 crash of an Eastern Air Lines jet into Boston Harbor with the km of 62 lives. There were 10 survivors of the accident, which occurred as the craft was taking off. Authorities said starlings pulled into the plane's jet engines caused that crash. Logan Airport, which bills itself as the world's eighth largest, sits on a large landfill area. It is the second largest airport in the country for oveneas depanur... One of the fll'St men to the scene of today's crash, Fire Lt. Robe.rt Alexander, said be and 10 men carried one survivor from the craft. He described the man as middle-aged. 1 He said be was conscious when carried out and sa1d. to the rescuen:, "Please help me. I can't feel my legs." Alexander said the watches of persons found in the craft were stopped at 11:05 a .m. Boy Held in Arson U'IT ..... lft FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF H. R. HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGATE PROBERS Testifies That President Nixon Asked Him to Listen to Tapes and Report 011 Their Contents \ Haldeman: Nixon Requested He Report on Tapes WASHINGTON (UPI) -Fonner White House chief of staff H. R. tlaldeman of Newport Beach testified today that President Nixon asked him to listen to Nixon's Watergate tapes and report back on their contents. H"'aldeman said he reported to Nixon jhr~h ' a White House lawyer that the H.R. HALDEMAN- 'Ni xon's S.0 .B.' Story, Page 4 tapes indicated John W. Dean III was "inaccurate" in testifying he discussed a Watergate coverup with the President. In his second day in the witness chair at th~ nationally.televised S e n a t e Watergate hearings, Haldeman, who acknowledged he ran a "tight ship" at the White House, appeared uncertain about many details of the Watergate case. Unlike Ni.J.on's other top aide, John D. Ebrlichman, who was erpan.sive an4 volable,in his answen, Haldeman, with a- t4t0Ue voice, spoke haltingly at times and ered generally brief repUes. -Haldeman disputed John N. Mitchell and Dean and testified that he was kept in the dark throughout 1972 about White House involvement in the Watergate break·in and other potentially em· barrasslng activities. Speaking in an even voice, flashing a frequent grin, Haldeman -once con- sidered the second most powerful man in the govemmmt -listened while the events that Mitchell called "White House horrors" were enumerated. He said that all ol them escaped his attention until this spring. Haldeman testified that he listened to tapes of the Sept. 15 and March 21 meetings that he and Dean had v.·ith Nix- on -meetings at which Dean contends a cover up was discussed. l-laledman testified he listened to the !\.larch 21 tape in an anteroom of his of- ffce in mid-April. He said he did not be- lieve it was before Nixon's April 17 slaie· ment "but I'm not sure." Nixon said April 17 that he had Jearnt'd of "major developments'' i\larch 21 and ordered a new inquiry into the case. Grrrroond Beef? Response to Capo Valley Sampling 'Encouraging' Public response to a four-page ques- tionnaire sent Q.Ut by the consulting firm which is updating the Capistrano Valley General Plan has been "substantial and encouraging," an official of the firm said today. "But we still would be happy to get about a thous~d more before the deadline Friday,' added Tom Moon, the principal planner for the firm hired by Lhe county to revise the outmoded set of development guidelines for t be Capistrano Bay area. Moon said that the surprising aspect of the public response so far aa has been the completeness of the answers to the far-reaching questions in the brochure. Resldmts are being asked to give their views of what is good and bad about the area as it exists ; tbey 'also are asked for suggestions on t be community o! the future. "Often, yoo can get just a few words scratched. in each category, but in 1thl.s cue we're getting detailed paragraphs, aod that shoWlll that people are sitting down, thinking fuKt taking !mies very seriously,'-' Moon said. A tot.al running score of questlOllllalres has not been kept. "There is still time for people who haven 't gotten one to call us and obt.ain one in time for the deadline," he said. Residents wishing lo give their views on the plarming for the county areas of Dana Point, Capistrano Beach and Capistrano Heights can call the finn of Danielian, Moon, Sampieri and Jig tor a maillng. The number is 546--3693. The project -almost tWo years behind schedule -was authorized by county supervisors recently at a C05t of about $24.000. The quec;tionnaires are the initial step in the planning project set for completion early in the fall . Once the dead line for the documents passes, the questionnaires v.•ill be gat hered and turned over to a special coordinating co1nmittce composed of volunteers from the three county.ad· ministered areas. . Over a peMOO of three or four ex· tC'nsivc meetings, the panel \\' i 11 assimilate the ansv.'crs and' draft statemenlS repres"'ting the majority opinion on each issue. Thus far 10 persom have volunteered for the panI and Ht more are needed, MOOfl said. He stressed that residents living in the planning area should realize the im- portance cX the questionnaire project. "People .should realize that this is their chance to have their apinions directly a!· feet a document which will be an im· port.ant tool in the planning of their com· munfiy,'' Moon said. He added that even though all the com· ments, obvl~ly. can not be included in the final docwnent, areas of consensus will. "And anyone interested in what people in the area have to say will be weJcome to go over the.. questionnaires when the job is finished," he added Strong suppart for the planning effort has been lent by the United South Orange Coa.st Communities (USOCC) group which represents several homeowner's groups in the general planning area. 'Ille group's preslden~ Dana Knolls resident Paul Sayre, hailed the planning effort in a recent statement: "We consider this a very positive step forward -if not belated -on the pe.rt of the board of supervisors to recognize the importance of letting people who live In an area become an integral part of form- ing Its basic development plans." Sayre's group also has pledged to v."Ork with the planners in the dratting of the plaming document. Body of Tustin Man Discovered in Desert LAS VEGAS (API -A Californla motorcyclist has been found dead in the desert about 40 miles from here, authorities said. ' A. R. KilUps, 30. of Tustin, apparenlly died from exposure, investigators said. Killips was spotted near some brush ~1onday from a police helicopter. An autopsy has been scheduled. Aides Heard Nixon , c ·ontinues .. To Keep-"Tapes By·HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPl) -Presidtnt Nixon I.! standing by his refusal to turn over taped conversations to Watergate investigators, although H. R. Haldeman, bis former chief of staff, and two top aides have beard replays, White House officials report. Haldeman revealed in o p e n i n g testimony before the Senate Watergate Plane Crash Kills Pilot From Coast Engine trouble was blamed today for the death of a 47-year-old Newport Beach man whose private plane plummeted to the ground 1.1onday afternoon and burst into names ~a vacant Buena Park field. Killed 1n the crash was Evan Koppe , a resident of 1400 Santanella Terrace in the Irvine Terrace section of Corona del Mar. He was the sole occu"1ant ol the twin-engine Cessna 310. Koppe radioed Fullerton Airport that he was experiencing mechanical trouble but reportedly ded.ined the tower's offer to mobilize emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, its right engine malfunctioning severely, went into a steep bank, stalled and plunged into the ground near Beach Boulevard and Malvern Road. No one else was injured by the crash which was officially logged al 2:50 p.m. Buena Park JX>lice said witnesses reported the plane's right engine was running so ~lowly that they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the wreckage but were driven back by flames. Comm.lttet Monday he heard two aecrct president&! tape recordings related to Watergate. He gave further details ~ day. After Haldeman testified, Deputy Prtss Secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters that in addition to Nixon and Haldeman, two olhers heard the tapes 3l the President's behest : J. Fred Buzhardt, special counsel, and steve Bull, appointments secretary. Warren sald that Bull sat_i.n with Nixon June 4 when the Presldent listened to the relevant Watergate tapes for IO or more hours at one stretch. As Nixon "took • break," Bull llslened to the teleiQ>ne conversation between the President M4· former counsel John Dean Ill which 00: curred March 20, Warren sa1d. • Federal Aviation administrator Alex· ander Butterfield, a fonner Haldeman assistant, divulged the fact that Ni.ton had an automatic tape recording system in all of his presidential offices gince the spring 0£ 1971. He is the only other person who had "technical access" to the tapes. News that Haldeman heard the tapes aroused speculation that t h e in- vestigating panel and Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox may have a legal talking point to secure the tapes. But late Monday evening, Warren said: "The President has made his pogiUon clear an this matter, The President has stated his position," in refusing the tapes. Presidential COllllSe!or Melvin R. LWrd acknowledged today that a majority of Republican congressmen believe Nixon should let investigators hear the tapes. Laird refused to say directly that he recommended a course to Nixon, as House Republican.Leader Gerald R. Ford said. but indicated that he did since "I'm a politician" and that, he said, was "the political advice" Nixon got. Laird said on the NBC-TV Today show the President elected, however, to take Budget Hearing "constitutional advice" against yielding to subpoenas by the Senate committee and Cox for the tapes. Set Wednesday ·---.. FRHll-Pllfle..-iJi--- F or Saddlehack rrhi LE1 iER .•. A public hearing oo the 1973-74 Sad· dleback Community CoUege budget of l j l.89 million, Is set for 8 p.m. Wednes· day in the administration building board room . The budget calls for a tax rate or 90.89 cents on $100 assessed valuation, up 25 cents over last year's rate of 65 cents. This v.•ould mean a bill of $91 to the owner of a $40,000 home. f\1ajor uses of the increased income will be for campus ~ction: of a $3.9 million science-matheinatics building now being built, and to begin a utilities building and initial phaselll of a music· arts building. Also on Wednesday's agenda is a pr<r posal to establish district police jurisdic- tion over enforcement of parking regula· tions on the 200-acre campus. The Orange County Sheriffs Depart· ment now issues parking citations, fines for which are paid to the county. If the existing district police force of three part-time, three full·time, and two relief officers takes over the parking citation chores, a portion of the fines which range from $2, to $5 will go to the school. No additional budgeting or extra di strict police officers is being proposed, Mel Mitchell, community services direc· tor, said. 11 monstrous wave," she related. "He encouraged me all the while to 'hang on' until he finally was able to bring me to shore where I collapsed in total exhaustion and ~ar-delirium," she , added. Mrs. Cyphers was taken by fire depart· • ment ambulance for a checkup at San Clemente General Hospital and later in the day she was released from b'eltment • and rejoined the group at the beach. "There ls DO describing the ancuisb Md terror one goes through ln an uperience like thls, and I cannot streu the won- derful performance of these young mm," she concluded. 'Watergate' Stolen WASHINGTON (AP) -A briefcase containing papers to be used by lhe Senate Watergate committee was: !tolen I.lite Monday from the auto of a com- mittee investigator, Washington police · said. Officers said the brielc8j\e, with combination lock and Senate sfal, was taken from the trunk of a car owned by Stephen Leopold, 22, a law student who. the committee said is working for it as a. volunteer investigator during the sum· mer. SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A !~year-old Mendocino County youth has been taken into custody for investigation of 13 counlS ·-Lucky Li"on Country'.,_ d. setting forest fires in the Covelo a:ea. ....-. All For The Family- OU.Mel COAST "' DAILY PILOT 'l'1M OrMIH (OiUI DAILY PILOT, WI"' Wlllcf\ I• CDllll!lned 1"-M-·l"r .. 1, It -·I-ty 11\<t °'"'"Ce.ti l"lll>tilllillt C.Om~nv. ~ r•M tdUIO!\t 1r1 jlllbl ....... MIW>ClfV l~•ewh Frlel•r. lw CO.If Mew, M-t lffdt, ti..,..11.,.,.,, ._,.,,,._""' V111.,., L19.,.,. &Mcfl, ln"'9.l~t lfllll S.." C-t/ llfl Jiit" C.plttr-. A. tlrttlt ro91oNI tdltlM lo •llalltf "~" Mii ""'10fYI. T1lt prlrW:lttl llubllt fllnt """' It •I DD -I ••r sf.et, CMJ• M-. C.•lflrllllt, n.1'. ~eb1rt N. W,M l"rftlderlt -'""*ltMr J •ck k. c,,1,.,. Vlu l"rftlll""' , ... 0-tl MIMW' Th•l'l•t K•evll fdlt« 'BMll•1 A. Mw,hi11e -.,...Int Editor Ch•rlff H. "-" ltldt•t4 fl, N1 tl ..... 1111 ............ l'dlflln S-C111te~ 105 Merit! El C•t11lt1e 1t,,1, t1672 --CHI• llMWi DI W... ..., JlfWI N..,..-t hedt: ms ,...._. ._...,._. """"-"" IWUI! 11171 •..et1 hvltw•l'CI UifVM IMClll m ,.,_, A.-111' T .. 1,ll1n1 17141 '41-4111 a.lflH .W.11111 I '414671 S. C._,. All hps:t1Aatai Tels1l 1ss 4t2MJI C.,.,.., 1fn. Of'fflf9 C....I 1"'*1ellfllt ~-'" ""'" 11W1'1, lfl1t111r.tt'llM, •••11t1 IMtttr' tr ~~ ,_.111 may .. ,..,,....._, WIWIOYt 1111«itl ,.,.. ""''"" " ~ ...... ...... di• ...... ,..,, It C..11 MIM, C.11'-""t, ~-..-c.rrttr 12.41 l!lll'ltrllYI .... IMfl U,IJ lftfllff'llYJ m/llf'lry ........ , .... #.Mi -"'l'V· Animals Eat Horsemeat Uy -i\IXRCI DODSON Of "'' D•lf'f ,llot '"" llurnans aren't the only ones to be rac- ed with rising meat costs. A1anagcrs of Lion Country Safari said i\londay that lhry have had lo budget la rger sun\S toward feed for the animals. ''but we're not getting alarmed," said an official for the drive-through preserve. "Obviously, the economic situation is , affecting ll.'I, but only to a small extent. There's been a marginal effect on the over·all picture, but It Is not substantial," said William W. Dredge, executive vire president. The main rtason the park officials have not been fared with budgetary prrtr lcms nlll serious as those l:M!:ing f1tced by housewives Is that the scores of carnivores t:at a different klnd of meat, explained Dredge. The V3Sl mujorlly of the meat the feeders purchase tor the animals is horsemeat. .. Of course. that I! not to say that our priet'S have not been increasin". But It 's not as If our costs wert rising two or three limes as murh a~ btfore. we·v" been seeing .11 lJve percent, eight percent . and sometimes as much as an 11 perctnl Increase. "But It's not getting out of hand , ah11ll we Yt)'." j The park officials do purchase some beef for the animals, but it is of a quali ty belov.' the USOA-checkl'd heel \Vhich house\\·ives buy in the stores, Dredge said. Olhcr foods the feeders buy with their 5200,()00.plus annual food budget include h:iy for the giraffes and o I h e r vegetarians and some fruits for the primates, he said. ··eut we've been having no difficulties in getting sup plies and we don't an· 1iclpate any problems 1n the near fu. lure." And even though prices: may rise. Dredge admitted, park of[Jclals see no rea50fl to Increase admission fff'J!I to the wildllfe preserve. But hasn't the "average housewtfe" be been complaining that he can longer feed her family 'f\'ilh thJ! present economic situation? "\\'ell. indeed we can afford to keep our family here fed .'' 11nswered Dmige. ''But our budget.! here have been rising, too. \Ye just have bttn sure to budget carefully and analyze our costlll." Jn addition . !he park ofHcials deal with volume purchast:!, be sakt. •·By volume buying, we avoid many or the problems of the hou~wife who buys food tor her family week to week." WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THING? ~ WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTICS DRAMATICALLY? WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE? WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT? ••• CARPETING FROM ALDEN 'S, THAT'S WHAT! {IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES._ 1663 Plocentla Ave . COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: M..,, !11n1 TIMln., 9 "' 5110 -Fll., 9 "' 9 -SAT. 9:30 "' S • •. \ . j I his .. , Sy1 aVj Ion ro~ ""' pe1 I ral ~~ m1 opo t en cal ~ wh tri I uJ ra Ji\ tho Ii\ ro lie " C< pi lit th "I in y1 $i ot If ci Ii " Yl o; lo ,c to _L n s s $ p • d lo • \_ \ 12 DAILY PILOT SC Tutsday, July 31 , 197) Interest Today Commonly Equals Mortgage .Amount By SYLVIA PORTER A.a 1nt.ere!lt rates surpass the historic peaks ot 1969-70 and as the Federal Re serve Sysltm dehberattly curbs the ava1Jablhty of credit in an ef- fort to slash in0at1onary bor- rowing, mortgage money ls. or course, becoming more ex- pensive and harder to get Even "off1c1nl" n1ortgage rates are moving lo ancj through lhr 8 percent level ~lany Americans arc paying much more than this rate 1n open and hidden charges. What you pay will be cruc1ally influenced by the calibre ol your banking con· ncehons, the attractiveness of your loan and the area 1n which you hve -but the cen- tral p:iint is clear: ~ The cost of mortgage money 1s climbing and adding sub- stantially to the already sv.•ollcn costs of a house. \Yhile the ol>- l"O•Tl!lt j t! CI I VC Of tight money is to reduce the rate or nse 1n ) our cost of hvmg, tight money accelerates the rate of nse 1n the cost of ltv1ng or anyone who must bor- row -and that includes mil- lions of you across the land. To illustrate, 1n Uus interest rate era, it's not at all un- conunon to comnut yourself to pay more in interest over the lifetime of your mortgage than the total amount of the mortgage itself. On a $10,000 mortgage, the interest at 8 percent over 2S years would be S13 157 a full $3,157 more than lhe prmc1pal of your Joun ALTllOUGlf J\IOST mortgage lenders in any given city or area of the US are likely to charge about the same rates at any given time,. you still may fmd a variallon of l,li to l percent -a dif- ference which can be s1grufi· cant 1n terms of y01Jr total in· ' terest costs. For 1nstar.ce, the tota l in· 1----"~•esl:a_1on,,_a ~..1-000, 30-year mortgage at 8 percent 1s $32,780. At 81.2 percent. 't's $35,340 And at 9 percent, 1 $37.820 The difference of I percent is nlore than $5 .000 And this 1s still not all, by anv means There arc. in ad- dition to the 1nte1 est rate, the less obvious costs inevitably OUR PAGER RENTS FOR $1650 •'"' tu PER MONTH I unlimited pages l HOW ABOUT YOURS? No Deposit Requ ired On Approved Credit ORANGECOUN7Y R~Dl07ELEPHONE SERVICE IN(' 401 SO. SANTA FE ST. SANTA ANA 17141 835-3305 from L1gun1 !1.ach, Mlnllfl V1110, Dillll. l"tt<nl, 5111 CleP!lctOI•, Siii JIMlll C1plslt•nl, El To,., <IH loll fret ' "''·322J J tucked Into • nmgqe loan. llere are Lhe key extras-and ways you save on them. POJN11>, Bo:ause of S"'te regulated ceilings 1now going to 8 percent 1n n\any states). lenders add "points" to their basic 1nortgage charges when the general trend of 1ntert.>Sl rates es up, This holds for FHA nnd VA as v.·ell as CQR· \'Cnhonal rnortgage loans. If a lender charges you five points. 1t means he deducts 5 percent from the face value of your mortgage at the begin· ning. You . however, must repay the full amount of the mortgage. TO IlJ..USTRATE, on a $20,000 mortgage. $1.000 would be deducted, leaving, only $19,000 actually avaJ!able to you This 1s the equivalent of adding more than 1,.z percent to your basic interest rate. If the lender charges you 10 points, th.s is the equivalent or addmg an extra 1111 percent to your Tate Since the number of p:>Jnts you are charged y,•i ll vary from 1nstituuon to 1nst1tutLon, be sure to fi nd out how ma ny potnt.s eatb lmder In your area woul~ chargt you. Also explore tht: possibillty that the seller of the house might sh3re the cost or pomts . CLOSING t'OSTs: 'file~. too, can vary dramaticallv rro1n I end c r 10 len&r aOO. ~1nce they can range loday h'On1 2 to 10 percent of the loan, they rt'present a major <irca for possible saVIngs \I/hat's more. you have to pay closing costs m cash and there 1s virtually no room for ncgot1at1on on <.Yrta1n closmg items property laxes, hre 10. surance. title insurance, credit hfe insurance (il requlred). BUT THERE are other clos. 1ng costs which may be negotiable, such as the bank's charge for processi ng your mortgage application and legal fees. Typical closing costs and related expenses for a S30 000 house bought \v1th :l. mortgage from a comn1crc1a\ b.ink in lhe New York-New Jersey area run $1 000 to SI 500 The message can't be miss- ed Shop 1 Dispute Deadlocked _,- Set Sail for Tu11a SAN DIEGO ( APl -Lured by schools of bluef111 tuna. half a dozen tuna boat operators have sai led 1n defiance of a vote by f1shcr1nen locked 1n a price dispute \vllh canneries But spokesmen for both sides $aid l\1onday t h e deadlock remained unbroken after the ninth successive tuna "auction" left prices un- changed THE DEFECTORS left San Diego over the "'eckend after "bluefl:n--were-repbrted off the coast of Southern and BaJa Cahf 1a e executn•e secretary of American Tuna Sales Assoc1at1on. Lester Bahnger. said Monday that at l{'~t two boat operators agreed to return home without f1sh111g Operators of 26 tuna boats, among the largest 1n San Diego's JOO-boat fleet, voted last week not to sail until can- neries raised pnc:es of $482 a ton for yellowf1n tuna and $452 a ton for skipJack. Since the,P. other boats have sailed inlo port and are bound by the assoc1alton vote. THE FISHERMEN say their costs have risen and note that foreign boats get nearly twice as much for tuna from the canneries. who can't fill their supply fro 1n the American boats' catch But canners said f\1onday 1he1 r prices are locked until Sept 12 by the federal Units Bougl1t By Mesans J\.Ir. and Mrs. Edwa~ Lacey of Costa Mesa have acquired 88 industrial units in Santa Ana for $1,400,000 Thtr transaction was ar· ranged by Dennis Fredstrom of Ronson Realty and In vestments, Fullerton The recently constructed 1n· rlustrial un11s, located between \Valnut and Chestnut. off Grand Av{'nuc. '~ere f~nanced hv ~lar1ners Savings ai\d Loan Assoc1at1on Lacev 1s president of Un1vC'rs1al Electronics. I See by Today's Want Ads • A JE\VEL among CILNI is thtfi '71 Opel 1900 4 door sedan Il has 17,COO miles, Is an automatic, and Is S<'lllng for Sl •IOO e PEOPU: LOVER. Th111'11 ltHs S1benan llusk<'y, Shl''s t year old. e CO~I Pl.F:TEL\" 1Tf1n1Mt"d Sabot -'!lboat for -5.11<". 11 ~ •20-lt and rom~s \\Jlh """· freeze.and added that the future 1s uncertain after that "WE llAD promotional dlS- counts to supermarkets 1n ef- fect \\'hem the price fr~cze came," said Jack Dinnerste1n. vice president of Westgate- Califor rua Foodi:. "We "'ere frozen at that level and were suffermg with those pnces " 'Black Box' To Start, Stop Motor TOKYO (UPI) Toyota ~1otor C.O said Tuesday 1t soon wtll market an electronic "black box" that turns off a car's engine when 1! stops at an intersection and restarts the engine when the driver 1s ready to go. A spokesman said the device will offer ma1or savmgs 10 fuel consumpt1oa and contains ant1pollullon features for big ctl1es, where most driv1ng is on a stop-and-go basts, CALLED TllE "automaltc engine stop and start system ,·• the device will sell 1n Japan for $75 50 as an accessory at Toyota dealers A company spokesman said rhe smaJ:, box·hke device also has been tested with success on such models as the Chevrolet Camaro and the Ford Maverick. The device, the company said, IS a small computer that automahcally stops the engme when the car reaches zero speed It restarts the vehicle when the driver puts the car 1n gear and touches the ac· celerator. BUT, THE company said. the device will not shut off eng ines when cars stop on slopes of greater tha n three degrees ~1orcover the c o m p a n y said the device w11\ not stop eng ines \\hen batteries are run do\1n or 11hen \\:lier tem- peratures 1n radiators are cx- ccss11,:cJy hot or cold The co1npany said t h c device 1s easy to install A SPOK ES~tAN said tests 1n trafhc driving in Tokyo in· d1cated fuel savings of more than 12 percent and reduction of the vehicle's output of air pollutmg gases by abo ut 21 percent • Toyota said it applied for patents 1n Japan,· the Unlled States, France, Britain and West Germany. e Banl.:Atnerlca Special to th e Dally Pilot SAN FRANCISCO BankAmerica Corp . an· nounced f\.1onday 1 t s a~ plication to hst all the issued shares of •L" common stock on the stock exchanj!e 1n London. Arrangements for the listing arc being m.ade t h r o u g h Kle1nwort . Benson Ltd . Brokers to the hsung In Lon· don arc SinlOn & Coates. Railroad Earnings Decrease e Firms .<,:11,.d NE\V YORK fAPl -1'11,:e ma1or 011 'and gasoline co r- porations have been na1"1Cd as defendants 1n a $54 b1llton Discount Buys Three Area Stores Complete Ne,v Yori{ Stock List HEW VOlll1' fU~O -F....,,,. .,.. D"k:a Oii ... ,._ 'l'ort. $to«, (~~. ..... ... ~ lllClt) Hltrl Lo-La)I et. f I . 1 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHl,IGIITS KHJ D 7:30 -"The Last Time I Saw Arehie." Robert Mitchum plays the t!Uo role and Jack Webb Is his buddy In this 1961 comedy about the biggest goof olf in the Air Force. NBC U 8:00 -"The Alamo." The rll'St of two parts of thls hlstorlcal epic culminating In the fa· mous Texas batUe. John Wayne Richard Widmark Lau.re.nee Harvey, Richa.rd Boon~. ' ABC D 11:30 -Comedy Concert. Various styles of comedy are dl!pl~ed by Pat Paulsen, Hen· ny Youngman, Jackie Vernon, Stanley Myron !Ian· delman and Carl B&llanUne, among others. By Phil lnterlcindi 1lltSdlr, .lut)I ,1, 1913 DAILY PILOT J J ' 197: Deadli~ OVER THE COUNTER Big 3 Given New NASO Listings for Mondoy, July, 31), 1973 Pollution Delay WASHINGTON (UPI) The Environmental Protection Agtncy has given the Big Three auto makers until 1971 to turn out cars that will meet lhe full rederel pollution sland- 'l'ib -<he second such drlay granted this year. FINAllCE • T~O'T.: ·~~t_ ti C f~'-i .Ci ~C!: :1-'t 1!)) ~:~nt J!lti; IU : 1=1 .:OC.l~Ol'IH:; 1tto r.~ Ovt .... ~l'I rn! iJi; 101 112 ~llfll " llC.l~lt''· 11.J' = c: 111111 'k. 't§-W AD~ S! .. .,., ~ .,,.j"""Ofttr• R1vcm r '' "' '1" --',::i:""M., by M"l'IW-~ '~ 14 211 llS My loo ,,., .. ~ lo RIYind t1 22 l n. DC ~ 1114 •t = OlfW!' .. of 1 1lv, :HM Pw 11~ 11't t:W'i'1 Mf 1' l'' "" l1,,,.I ri.'":':r.'. ' 1• 1~ ·~" sl. ' r.M C" i li• .. 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Hwttt c • SCJ'llflr '11'1 )3 'llc!Otl SI lJ u AHWll 11 .\.\ M'llter C 1' $Coll 111 ... )1--$= Sn ,.. 6V.1 \ Am Al>rol 11 11i.1"61 Will lt\.11 IMll ~ IM t \li t Y ""'I k lllo 7 A ArlCrff '~ t'lt flllt HllC:I 2t~ 25 _,,.L G ,.. I ill StlOf l~ Ul.O ~·, c.,: 114 Ni l11lom N lDI.~ !~•11Pf't H 1'44 29 With HG 13\lo 1lloit ~ "' t f.' 111"' Cro 53 S4V. -.rpro I IV. 2~ Wlllt Mt _... )IUi ~ IM• ' '"" '' ... •> ... W"' M ~· W~ ' N '" Am "_yrn \; nif'rll Gt lf'Jo lf'lo SY Mndl 16 1' W •t ·~ •VII Am ~-U\'. 1111 M\Hl'I Ii ~ Swrl4i1/r 2'\.\ 27\, W 1 711 AMI,,.!°!. lftt lf. In all;W A 5tYM UD 31\'1 2'\li Wela! 'WI 1i )6 ~ wW lf\'I f 1~.='r.. 1 ~Co JV. 3 Wtl[' M is-\ U'o AMttJtr ' 4 "" ja lOYI I SlomMoll t I wtta '°' 6" 1\'o .'t Anktn t11 4~ ! J _, AlrFr !\'.I '"" SllH llV. 17'4 W1IPvO n 17h 11N'o ~RCfll(p " ..... l gi:::. r. 1 \'t 1~ Slr!4 i: = mz ~1i':mr·. n" :J ·\ Ardll Myf 'lto'i 3\11 ~l~tr c ill '"' SO«'lr1 Ill:, '' Wlbn H J 1114 ll!AI ' ArfV'I/ Hr 11• lffi .. m Ti: 1 St-.,Y I 17Yt 11\llo Int ll'll;T 1"9 l•l.lt ' ----------" ,.,,.!ell "' Ktllw«I . I ~' 11'11t Sid lll'Qft 1.SU 1614 WllC ,,, I 1..-1••• !fro.'"', H .. • M .. • ... ~ ......... 14 12\1. Siii H Alt ~ JI~ WOid Ltfi 1"6 11Y, 't TV DAILY LOG NJn terms or flight, it's a great &hot. In distance.. it stinks! .. terms or ROBERT \Y. FRI, actlng EPA administrator, said ~{on­ day the extension r or emissions of nitrogen oxides - which he said would not pose "a signiflcant problem" with respect to air quality v.·as granted because the technology would nbt b e available for the companies to produce 1976 model cars that would meet the federal s\jnd- ards for nitrogen oxides. In April, the EPA granted a similar one year delay -a\oo to 1976 -on carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon standards for 1975 model cars. .. L l• ,, .,. 6\a 6'-l'llN 8rw ~ N wor111 sv 13 IJ'iO Alllo Tr11-10\'t 11 KIYft "b 1~ 14111 .~ H S f'l.I 101' Wrlellf W J J .... I,~,. CJ' J\: W. KtY C""t 1lt r """ Ttc 16-.:0 17'~ ~-Co f~ 100.~ • ,. > ,-K•"'' ''' ,, ... > . s,_.. El 101~ 1•• "" 'rt .. "" ooe-year suspension on alr a:"' ~ '5 '"! '™' 1nc1 , ... ''"' V"ll!' co '~ 11"' zltlii'r co 6v. ;v; all' ' Ol ' 'Ii t 8tkl\lm l '411 ~ ICMPt Yt IS\111 171.\ Si•tio ,. W '"' Zloft# Ulll a f1'4-... ' Tuesday Evening JULY 31 '7t -JGtnl'll P1tttt. Vic: Morrow,.---------------------~ qu y 1s n a sigru can 1any Mft 53\~ !fil IC~ Pr 1'1'11 """1------------ • 8•nk II:~ ~ Ku11m El 1 W. Jf.& " ., ... problem " Bnk lido ~"' 1\~ ICrveo•r ,,,. '"' 10 -o•t A-tl·-f! To meet the temporary 1976 R:~"::t ~ U ~~ t111.::.r1•1 ,~~ 1fv:1------------ SP'EtlAL NOTttl 4U. l'ROCMMMINC II •wbied ti cMPllt 1"4 /0t pre. ..,.._ lw c.wtr•1t ti tM Wrttrialt -1:ooeouemmm -rn1111 -·-(j) CWblllp " Ydlf'• fdtt ..... ,... .... ....... _ ..... , ... gi.. Ttrm ·-..... ill ""'"- l:lO(l)HttW• llmt• 0 Mtwle: (C) (90) .,... Awful AMut Alllfl" (sUsp) '70--Antl'IOllJ hrkin.l. Jut~• Harris, Joan H1ekett. ()) CIS NI'#$ W1ll11 Cronklt•. G HM 11111 Will TIMI ~ Mm Grffn11 Show ltWJ 'tlffl~ fD Sitt Y11111 Yiq Jet . ""'' "" m- Ell""" """" Slimeluul• r.ttB CIJ D&'l-8 ..... , , .. Dllll1J (I) -(CJ (2111) ·-<I S--(ldY) '66 -Ylll 8lyuef, Robert FuUtr. (l)Uott.- 11 n.t"t MJ LIMJ e1L111L1CJ Q) I Dnm If 1'1111111 81 SI.,.. ... M1ril f8llll fnlldl CMf ··-IET• DnllVMr ftESplld bur Ann Solhtrn. Jtma CrtlO"J, lmf· 11 G11l1~d. A drln'la blStd 01 I trut story 1bout 1 )'OUlll nun who ls torn betw1en tilt duper1t1 re•li· ty of her $ecul•r job 11 a Juvtnil1 probation olflou ind tile splr\1ual Y~S sllt htd dtdlutM •• lif1 to. lJ) Mtn G.riffiD ~ m 0r&11• t.00 (I) 11111 far Ytvr Uf1 m-m_._..._ fJD l11lerllt!M&I ..,_ m-r- t:lOll (l)CIS T--(Cl {90) ..... -....... (RJ (dR) •n -Barbar• Edin. Stlllfl Whit· 1111n, Robtrt V111&hrL. A ... lthJ woman Is drlwfl to tl'lt ~ of a ' br111u1own by th• f11r lhft 111 ifl. ltrn1tlo111I }lwll thief and muldem IS on hat tr1il. Ofttwt ID 1tt Sa111t ill M11thlth1 !titian• m '••ttn• •11car11 IO:OOO ®J !ll•lt '""" "B~ • This Pro1reur A IOOk 1t tht tech· nolo1lcal revolL/tlon of tllls untury -from !ht standpoint of haw It has 1ffecl1d thl W.,. Wt 11¥1, WOft, tlllnk. 1c:t ind letl. omm-00 '"""'-U CD ED llartS..., M.D. •ria R111t, Trytnt' (R) Th• f1thlr or 1 13-ptr.old bor with mfniinll brlist dysfunctioll •savttu !lb IM'1 prabl1m whln ht rtf11111 to ~ tilt boy has •flJ kind of bllli t11m1a:1. Ga11 eomns. El1tM Dmy, Sun Kiiiy 1MI Scott G1rr1tt runt o -(Ill)"'"' ..... _. (dr1)-th1rltS Dtwr. l~JOIJT1~ .... (l)"'"' ... -6) TnMI Aiwfltl.tJt tJl Ylda 111 Coatlidl l.xl 8 hbby "'4sbtr9 SMw Ylctl fii) [Mlllll( It r.,. Lmtnu Ind Bobby Rumll 1uHt. @m lot Dias f1lk.n (I) Hop111'1 Mlrou rim Ntws/Spofts D Ptllca s.rrm (R) Geori• Chf. klrta iuab u In ·~·COit on ptroll 11:00 II u fJ mm a> ..... who 11 1ssl&llld bJ Or. Lock• Ill 0 ON Stilp ..,_. dri'fl th• Trlldic1I van thlt becomts Cil (I) lll f» lllWS tilt ftl-IWI)' whicll fot 1 robbtty. @ hny MIMI e ... no"''""' m '""' " ..._ (j) TMI ll TIW UI• '8 M9Vlt: (C) '1lMi Ulll ftlMI" O Mllliel S Mwlc (211r) -'h. Wt (wes) '54-»t1 McCr11. TIOI I SIW ...... (mm) '61 ll:lOO (l)CIS"" """'jCl""" Robtrt Mllt1111111, .llrJI ,W1bb, fKI tf felt" (dr•) 71~ llllm = s.ums Mon1111>111, Elz•betti AstiJty, Jltk Wlf'Clen. m-O ~l!J -""" Sl) 01Ja1tlwl 0 MM: "fllt eon.,-{WtS) '5' fDltlN' Dp •Jiii ChMt' -Wiltlam Conrul, John Dehntr. tE'I c...tr D (JJ WW1 Wor1d of Entertlft. &l T'9 Md••• f111lly 11tflt "Cl>mtdy Concert" Pit P1ul- aoo D (I) M111d1 (R) M111de ind Wll· sen. Hanny Youn pan, Jackit Vtt• ter um1mber their 1tormy courtship non, Slappy WMtt, Pl\ Henry, St.~ lour y11n earlier. non. SltPPY White, Pit H1nry, 0 ®J m NIC Tu1M11 Mll'li1: (C) Stanley M~1on H1ndtlmtn. Ctl1 (2M) "Opemlon Kid 81otftlf" (dr1) B1ll1nhne i nd Corbitt Monlu 1r1 67-Nell Connery, 01niel1 B!1nchl. 1mon1 lh05e woo, each in turn, ,t,dollo Celi. mike • $0\o appear1nce dl19l1yln1 0 Movie: (Ziii') "fttty·Nlntll hrll· !ht many dltftrtnt stylts of comettJ. llr' (dlt) '42-Etlt Pcrtm1n. m T1 Till tllt Tt11UI IJ (}) Ql T1111per1turn Rblnt (R) 1l!OO CIJ M111f11I Dlllo• Jlol111d has to boost the tonl!d1nct 0 Movlt! "Lncll lkiul"' (com) •gz ff In lnMCUrl lnttrn 'l'lhill dlll!IO--Shirley Ann• field, Robert llnl their mutu1I p1tl1nt, 1 ltkL S1tphins. e MM "ikhcod" ~b m Allrtll Hltdlad htsnb • DI Ufltoudllbllt • 1.8 S.r1 Jm1 U:J0 m Mwlt.: (C) -..-111.N lr (dra) e Arhlr UM ·~111 An11n, Gerard Bl•l"- • ll Ultldl M £nfr111\t m'"""'""'"""' l:GD CIJ OOCIJ -e-..: "NM Clrf" (cf11) •• e Hfrhwlf ,... Mii $ttttld1n. 145 IJ Mt¥k: "lM HI,,,.. (COll'I) 'SO &:a 8 Cl) Mnlll rm.O (R) A 1raY1l I -Vtft Elltfl, Thi Mtrx Broth•rs. tl'M 011trat1n1 11mblln1 .Junktts Is 2:00 6D All·Nlftlt Sllor. "lutltt in t11e tlt!n •• 1 w11nl111 la ~11 putntr Altert00n .. "Cittutrln• Ult Qittt" to atop competln1 tor 11mblln1 ' birslnw In H1w111, 3:10 ID MMle: "World Without (Id" 0 CIJ Q) Alt T11tldl)' MD: (C) (Sci·fl) '56 -Hua1t Marlcwt. N111CJ (IO) "Tiit W1t~111tl Nun" (R) (dr1) G11e1. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:oo m "lhrt• Stripq in 1111 Svn'" (dll) 'SS-Aldo R1y, D~ York. 1:30 0 "Tiie St1rtht1s" (1dv) '56 - John W1ynt. Natali• Woo4. ..... C) •.,.t11 {wu) '51-Ell· l :OO (l)(C) "lf~plllcc11t Sntl" P11t I ..... O'l11t11, 0.111 .llutr. (•ts) 'W-Yul Brynner. sate I]) ..... All ,...... (•ch') '52 0 111111 '" l.Mn'" (dtl) 1&-- [mlf f1J1111, MiurMfl O'Hara. R1y Chtrlts, Miry Ptadl. TOlll Ben. • ......,. ("'11) '62 -W1!Uarn ):30 0 "Outwts llf Nit Fitts" (•) ..... IL lfttJ MeDon11d. '52-Dilt Robtttso11, Anne Bottr. t!M• -....i ff H .. •1l'llh"' (wtl) 4:00 IJ (C) "OMIJ KlllJ7HI"' (tdv) '51 10-Ji1W111 Dlboll. "\.ldr tf la· -Comtll Wildt Dltln 1'1pt ...... (•) '4~a SUlll· ' ""' illCOll( O'Sl>u. l:JG CD ""' u I"" - KOCE, CHANNEL 50 ()fange County's UJIF telei.1sion station, KOCE·TV. has -.cbtdui<d the followlna spe<l•I programs today. Del•llt'd flstJng1 or Cb&nncl 50'1 program.s are carried lD the Daily Pllo<'• TV \Yett each Sunday. llOt" J1u d•vl'flll'ltf SNl!Y M.•11,.,. 1•1• ld CI fl'IUlltl •ll l 111 II \ Mttd•I. 1;00 Or•f19t CMMy ••YI t w !Cl Cull%. totl•I· R51tlc•11 Mid C-· mt,111! lvt~!• 1pr wH~. 11,)11 111 •llllfl, Ml Dttt,.yi IC) 'PV*1f IO !tit ll'MPlt" Mi Uttlllll SUll• •1y, Ill~ 2'tll, II •:OO P.11'1, t:_O!~ ,. .. M-'"' Tiie Af'ft lCI r:iOf)lt hnlll*""" ((l ..,'" "' Mott'' -.--Mii• lilOrflOocl Pl'OOfl llY ttll"f ~K-eel "" 10 ~ ... ':h.tto y(ll,ll!il "" .,.,.. .. ,..,,, ' L. /tJ. Boyd standard, Fri said. probably g•~v r: F ,",,' .~ :nr.• 3011i 31v. ,"',w Y01t1C 1vP11-T111 10 """' kllY• • ,,... ,. L1w11r C :19\'.I •1 ' oc • "!<It'd on •lie OTC mtrk•I Mondi'<' \l,'OU!d re q u. i r e automobile lt,\r~ ~ ~l\"I J ll?'t' BOY :J.l:Y, ).l'llo II •uoll N OY NASO. Russia Divo1·ce Rate Highest The famous calamity Jane of tbe Old West dressed like a man. Client asks if she was roma.nilcally lDclined toward women. Hardly. Her first 11 husbands were shot to dealh. But not her twelfth. He just lit out one night, didn 't come back. Incidentally, Calamity Jane was a brunette. ·why Doris Day was picked to star in that movie about her remains a mystery. Notions during the commercials . . . Suppose John Erhlichman would accept a guest shot on "Mission Im·' possible"? ... Still think Cleb Laine is the best blues singer ever .. _ Who was it described Disneyland as the greatest people trap ever built by a mouse? _ .. Looks as though Peter Falk lSjust flat out incapable of play· ing an unsympathetic character . . . What will restore faith in the execu· Live branch? A good woman in the presidency, I think. ELEVATOR -Young lady, never get on an elevator alone with a man you don't know. No, doesn't matter what he looks like. Just don't do it. Say you push the button, the doors slide open, and some fellow springs up to bold the door for you. One Milton Lederman of fbe President's Council on Physical Fitness is the author of the foregoing 1advice. What do you thing of it? Jolting, no? Q. "What country has the highest divorce rate?" A. That was the Soviet Union at last report. With 273 per 1,000. It'S 216 per 1,000 in the U.S .. Q. "How many acres before it can be called a fann!" A. At least three. Or IJO the federales decreed for many years. However. smaller tracts that have produced a large dollar volume also have been considered farms. Q. "\Vhen walking to the table in a snazzy restaurant, who goes first, the man or the girl?" A. Depends. If led by a hostess or waiter, the girl goes fint. If not, the man. SO say the social sages. Q. "Whal proportion of <be typical lady doctor's pa· tienls are men?" A. Maybe three ool of 10. THE JIARD FACTS -Pollsters say the average teen· age girl during summer vacation eats nine times a day ••• OU rLanguage man says "shampoo" comes from the Hindu word "capo" meaning "massage.".; .. A sufficienl number of babies are born worldwide in any 36 houn to equal the population of Alaska. When caught in a trap, it's said a lynx 'viii jump once lo get loose . but only once. Not that it gives up, exactly. At least the animal experts don't think so, Just too proud to struggle. Earlies t of the beauty contests were in old Rome. Love- lie st of the ladies competed. First prize was the honor or posing for the goddess depicted on the current c<>in. In every 100 treated oysters, there will be about three cultured peals, the Japane~ experts report. . Some business experts insist their studies prove that less lhan five percent of all the papers filed by most com- panies aren't worth keeping>. TJI E 1970 Clean Air Ac1 originall y required that 1976 cars give off 90 percent less nitrogen oxides and other pollutants. Congress also allowed the EPA to suspend that deadline for one year if it determined, among other things, that the automobile companies did not have the technology to meet the deadline. A3 a result, Fri approved the request of General Mo....,, Fon! and Clirysler lo put off the nitrogen oxide standard for one year, to 19TI. AT THE S.O.fE time, Fri did say 1976 model cars would have to meet an interim stand- ard for nitrogen oxide pollu- tion of 2.0 grams per mile. Had Fri not granted the ex- tensi on. the engines would have been forced to emit 0.4 gran1s per mile. The current federal standard is 3.1 grams per mile. Fri told a news conference: "No one -manufacturer or supplier or anyone else - presented evidence at our hearing that the standard coold be met in I 976 . . . l\!y technical staff independently confirms this cooclusion. "SINCE I DO not think technology is available, 1 believe substantial disruption would occur if I denied the ex- tension ••. The Impact o{ a Hotel Sale B y Denny's Has Okay Special to the Dally Pilot LA MIRADA-Denny's Inc. has agreed <o sell the Grand Hotel, Anahei1n. to a subsidiary of Holders Capital Corp. based in Santa fi.{onica. Holders Capital is engaged in management and marketing for hotel and recreational facilities. It owns a majority interest in and operates the DuPon~ Plaza Hotel in \Vashington and owns a hotel n1arkelin$' and reservations company. DE~'NY'S WILL receive cash and notes for the book value of the hotel , which is ap- pro:timately $4.37 mi 11 ion . Consummation of the agree- ment is scheduled for Sep- tember. • • L1t11oet Pt 1•1~ u \loh11r11 •rd "'Htd Ct>a • companies to use an improved 1•1r Prd ,,,~"' L.,..1 Pl 1,...., is Rink oro11 ft.ODO 11v. 1 ~~+ ·-r. ' , j et1 L~ "31~ "'\'• LI H 3\lt 4 Am E•P 163'1<1 ~+ ~. • exhaust gas rec1rculat on ftl,Ob J 1•"-1•,•,•, Lil>'C'~m" ·~ ,,, Po1ka1t .i.u ~ $ h -1•, 'em E l o Cl '' , 71 7,,_ e1111 lit' 1 , ti\ l\t:: , , sys . Bird 1 71 2tV. n< s ,,,. ,,·• ,"-"hevi. 811•ch 51, 41 , I'' loolh No w. \'a loclllt SC\li. 51\~ Ban::• n< <II.SOD 101 101 -J , Bell vns '314 fl 1.lofo CISI • tm 1 WITH THAT system -and l rlt'ICo t 1n; L-co sa stl'r p i.. ~~ oil,600 "'lo "~ " others designed to control R=J .!.'; ~ 6t1o M.•,d 11:G4i• """ 1'""' c'111'H111B11 1111 ~·!ii i{lt j~ --'t': ' I tlty .~:ir. 71,L Flr1t NllCltw8k 31;;; "''"' "6 _ 1 ' other pallutants -it may be ~~.~ 1•~ is,• •.•,,',',k' .. ~ -~' ,, _ !""' ~• 6.. ,.,, 2D NA~O \lcll,lll\I Tod1v 4 441.l<IO I possible to turn OUt cars in urno Sl "V. 23~ Mtrv l(y 79\i 30"A Advilrtr.llS 07 1976 and later that will \l9e the 1:£tr r!: :3¥; ' ~~ ~ t: ... ~·~~"' IM2 i same amdunt of gasoline as .,, ~ ii~ 1.R11 =~ ~ lt~ Tot• 1 llUS 1 cars turned before 1968 when r.:. 'A 1~ lt .... .:9"~ ~~ 1~ 1= Gainers & Losers pollution control:J: were first ::= S.~ ~ ~ MfiTtoor S3'" Stlli.~-----------. Ill Ir ), 0¥. MW. Mpl1 Gn 22 ttl'r• imposed Oil cars. 11111 ltc ,.. '" ":i:r.:IM F~b. ' 61'1 H-Yar1t (Vll'IJ -TM lclk'ow"" '!•I ., ,_ 'll\.'t 2'V. ..,_.. tM lltoc:llt 1'1111 Mft g1lnld tl'lil Cars turned out for the cur-1111 u A 36 1'\lt M u 1n 39Yt ~v. "'°'1 ano:1 10.1 ""' ,,_, btSlcl,p;;;'~' levtllt IOI'> 11 Moort SI 2S"' 27\li Off dllnQe on 11141 o--!tr rent model ~·ear have been us-1-CrP 11v. 11ia. Morrl111 211? n'llf'k., •• -'" lw" tht HAS . · · d b I oc.C LI 1a~ I Mot« Cl 11\'.112'.<. ,,".,"' llld Dlt!'Dlnlaoll Clll0011 art fM 1ng co n s 1 er a y more om! sr.r uv. Gv. .v.s1 Ot•• ' n; rtne• be!WMtl TM orw1-1n1 blci J' ' ~.. f mwTI P ~ 6'4 NII C11...SI 9'.<. 10 orlce •nd lhit CUf'r9ftl 14111 lllCI prl«-gaso me '-""""use o an-on11111 P It ~· Hi• utitv 1oi:, 11 11,, o.-.1HE11s ~ -·~· • ...~ 22.:;;> HI Plttn• t\9 .9\lo l '11"1'fll Mk,o ~ ~ Uo . .-~· 'd l l • v•~n ... """' N edhm 12" lJ\lil m111 Coro j •• Up 1:1 I tipollution requirements. ~111co 21~ NI MOICr 11 12 I c1vma11 cor11 1-\it " uo !!·l "1 l sat some s a e .! , ~r1 Noll 11 " N:....ii co 10~~ 111; ' •UY cororrn ·• ~ uo 1t.2 notably Galifomia, m•ght re-:~I ... 1'll1 'ii·. ~~1 NE';l. GE :s~ u'N ~ ~=:tv ·1J~ II"" J ~: \l:t quest an ••empl•·on from the •rr Oro 7!A.i lt• NJ '' G 61-U~• 1 Entr<iv convr ' HI uo 'j·' " ...., e!a OllS 3>,t •"'-' Hlailtl In 7 8 I hi A:taltv Inv s•• \4 Up 1 1 suspension so tha.t they could 8~1. Gif. 1~~ fi ~l:l:~ ~ ~::? fi.,. 1~ gm"'t'e.:~~~v 1·14 "' u11 ,~·· " set a lower nitrogen-oxide ~Of In so,; v-. Nore111r 21 1,1, 11~ 11 S.l5Com oen11 ~t ~ 8: 115'.g e1nissions level than allowed ts:r~r ~~ "i~ 5l'" ~::er1N~oG Jv. ~~ H ~~1~:t"ri? .. 1d'1~ ! .• f ~ H: 11':J b F ., ;· 01lu•• c 34 :M'llo Nuclr Re 214 J U lnlort• lncoro ti.:. 1 uo 1 ·' Y n s new ru mg. g1•m crs llV. 11 Otkwd H 7-\i 1 15 ~T CorPOr•t l'~ ''• uo 10.s r 1m Hd 1014 11 .,. °'"" or ss•;. 5''~ 16 111141$ Fd~ 'h \l uo 10.0 Van Camp Cannery Move Hit 8 ck A e !E'' 7111~ Oct•ll E~ 1 7.\0 17 MtCI ln1 Inell! 11'4+ I UP t.I lvr.s Sel '" 1•V. Ocnor Ml J'\4 ~·· 11 HtndY O•nHo 1·•1 ~ UD t.7 otllltl ~\\~ §!hh Lgi 1.-a~ 19 M.,ldlan .ltd J~ \>, Up t.S Ocllr Gt11 l•o N Uvy M It '10\li 20 ll:ecoq11 Ea11!0 6 \'I UD t.1 OoM1"1 27'11 21V. Ftrro 71'11 I\~ 21 Anl•le!' 8l'OI '311 '• UD 1.6 §F.o°'j, JIS"l fl~ ii~ 0011 CMf II 19 ~ =:m..oit! r\\ ~l~ H: ·I:~ kin o 3>\ ~ &mont 5"' '":• ,, Clnemtllon tn 31,1, • Up 1.1 fon lab ~ '°"' ...... rmvrNA ~ !l~ 2.5 Gene•PI COl"P l "• \4 UD 1.3 E P11a lJ'-'o lJ"" ""'" ..... • LOSE•S El Nite:tl $"°' ,,,., Oillt Crp ' 6?._ 1 T•ltcrnlll lllC ti;,... ti §ii '" E""11¥ c t f\lt Ptbsl er '71.li •1'olt 2 Stltlr. a. l rtw ~-10.:. ii·· Ea11 S&l 1J'h 13 PKctr l7V. 31114 ] Malnllr. Fii• SI'>-I f 1 :. Elll1n 1A 2t 29,, P0K •,-,.21~ 11,,• 's $Fla Gl1u IMI ~ ~ ~ 1.S E~K\I II • ' K 11m ,. IUCOlll~ lnco ,.,.._I 11 I E 1 ",Int •V. 1\lo PpaSo Brd ,•~ "' j )'.•n ShlClt .26 1"'-I 11:1 Far ne W. t an OtOI •VI 1"1o ... 1>uru F<Cl'lk 1v,-"' 10.• Ftr1on El !!O¥o llV, P•ul A:.V 19 io 157.'9 I P•t>slBrwv ..._II ~ Jv. I 10.4 Farm er " 1~ ll'IUllY ,, ~ • 'Y1rl1y1m1 <.P 11+-t,li Ott 10.00 F1Y9 Dn:r N Mio P'V!ll en 17& 11\.'r 10 Hvdrot1PIK LI 3V.-illt I t 1 F1norllt 1S'4 16 PtY N .sv ltl.'J lS 11 N•lnl css lnc 23...,_ M I ,., SAN DIEGO (AP) - A F1t ••In It~ :Kr., PtGK w 1rn. 11'4 lj NalMrdl1n Sv 2V.-\lo 1 t:1 • Ill T~Flll 21 21 ... Pl'I H&M %l'h 24 I T•-•v lllC 104-~It H t I campaign to prevent a major 111 w11F n r. ,,, Porh''O Lw ~ ,.., 14 v1oon1 01tm1 sv.-~ ,:, food ' Flsco Ill[ 11 11 ..... Pl H ~ ' 1 IJStn!OFTMlf £1 ~"' IS sea capnery s move to Fl• T•l•o 1r-• 1•~ ,.1~rt11 •v 33 ~ .... 1a Sm111111<1 Food I""-·~ 1 1:J Sa D. fro S ed . Flk:kor 12\lo 13 Plontf' w IO\'t '°" 17 Solr•t Mela! c """"-~-1.3 n 1ego m an P ro 1s For.,,1 ot 15 1sv. r i..-,_. •-· 1..,,_ 1a R1no1 Af'OllftClll' • ~ t• 1.1 ~ ed d F•tt>ll e1 t\1 ru P "" ... .,. '' u s s11,.1t11 4•~-~ 1 1 re.,...rt un er v.:ay . Frtn(I• 70 M~~ Pitnct1, •Mk 2:1 __ 23'\lo,,, 111 N1rtoa1a co•o 21 _2 1:0 F•lend tc 26 2'U -CC> "' •• ,. "' Jl Adva11 Mry Sv & -.,,, f 7 7 The United Cannery and Frbcll 1t lll't 1'1i ll'n:if Golf 2~-. 3'4 Z2 C11n0r11_. Mem 12•4 -1 is • FrM FdE '"' 10\~ '"ill"' ,~ .... 14 2:l HOl.lll\llSW• Ga J•4-"·~ 7 l Industrial Workers Union of "ull•• H 1~ 1,.,,., PS f.N: J.1 11~,. ?4 Ar<io P•trolm 6t~ .,., 1 6:, San Pedr h h. ed Lo Funlr. Sit M f Pu $/!( 2 20,. 2S Miii Auot .2G llV.-1 '·' o as 1r a ng ·- Beach firm to turn up en- vironmental grounds lo oppose it r a union official said. MTTTU L FTTN SUPERVISOR JAMES A. . \:): A ,_i. DS Hayes of Los Angeles Countyl"'•""'""""_..., __ ,...:j,, _________ _ noted .the new Va~ Camp can-N .... Y0t11 -Fiii· eaa1, Gr 7"4 1.Gt Jenid Fd 11.u 11.2.4 11un111 12..$51 ... nery lS planned m a coastal ...... , ~ ... '• • 111~1 SATON .. JHa11 1111\ 1.10 l.IO lli.c: Eg I.ta f.25 b d\l nu 11ktll • i.ow.-.•o: JHtn 51g I.SI t.2J 1Silt•lr Ul • 2.41 zone. c•• °" ~ 11:.J i" Fe1 t . .s 1o.s.s Jo111111n 2'"7 :u.u • Fd 1,,,, t.n "Any new construcUon or f,:nc',:Ar~ 1::. 11tm• F 1t~ 111: Kc~!11Tt1"~i.1s 1t.•1 ~u~o~ .. :~:, '·" that '(ud . ~ oecH I" tA t.17 Cu1t a2 19.«121.:M l11tr Inv 17.G1J7A7 magru e tn a coastal J;, XI fm ltk fd 13.ot 1•.31 Cuti I• 1.22 t .01 ltlanc 16.641 Me 'II • i. ..ii: E~rskl 10.4211.61 Cuti Kl 7.16 7.IS Corn 10.,110.t1 area Wl come under very ADMIRALn~ ErJE So JJMHM Cuti 1(2 6.16 6.1J SP«•• l0.1S\75 tight scrutiny." Hayes said' In r= ·1··~ :·t: ~~ M8rMT •• ~lt~:n ~:! il R:rstt:;: ircuWTY ~I lO a telephone interview 1..-11 ·21 t'01 Eaiv Pr j ·u l.a c1111i SJ 1.m l.t4 Clllttw ).JO ~ , ' ,·,. ':ll' Frid Am .63 1.)( Cuit $4 4..0 4.12 ln¥11St 6 19 ~=:rFf t'.st ,. Eo_rtt Gt 12.7113.lf Apollo "'" J..1• Vlln " 1m .10 THE UNION hopes to Atlnl In 13 . .Q 1ut ~ltUn Tr1 •·!:! · POl•r• 3.73 t.07 SllEC1•D P.OS : Atutvnl t .t\ f.91 lrnff'!I t,.,. .u7 Kllltk• 6.21 6.11 "'"' Stir 1-35 1.)S pers~ade the San ~ i. e g 0 ~a~ •• :d 1tn 1tn Fr::ll '1:ril 11:: ~~~~Ill ~:U ':U ~ srfr.! it~ 1~:n Regional Coast Corruruss1on to ,4,1o11a Fe1 . n.M 1'!! ~~ \";.: ,!! t.13 tf~ l.'oui.-40 s.1:1 t:::1...i F t.n 10.51 reject the project , said SteVe :::=~ ::: 1~.16 "1o•L1TT •· co Ledr is.~ u .JO 1tt11.~111~3·f.1~·~ Edn . , . Arn ~qjy 11) 10 G•OUll'' Gr'Wltl 6.711 1 J2 Con.$! ::1-36 J,67 ey, the uruon s president. •M 1xll'RllS ~"" o.o 1.t2 •.1s A:•t•eh 13.n is:10 En!rpr $.7l •.26 P'UNCIS: 10111 11.9913.10 L1blv Fd S.,S S.'6 Flt! Fd 3-U 02 Van Camp spokesmen have C•Ol•I 1.n .... on1,.,• ,'-", .. Liii lnlv a.11 t .$1 Htrtw 7 ... I.IS . h . lncom J!l.,7 ,.26 V ec · 9 7..SI line CtD •7.oM 1.1J L~ll L 6.1$ ,,72 said t e San Diego plant may 1nv11m 1.01 1.12 ~t 1f·,.~ lino Fne1 l.JO Pace Fd 1.n 1.61 I Soecl .. 1.n 1.u EH•• • LOOM IS , ........ SON "DS· empoyas manyas 1,600 but s1ock 1.10 1.•2 Eve"' 11.1s12.19 s.-.YLES : A111>rc 11 711 ;iii,, h l ho ' '"' Gr1h S ff 6.S$ Fund 16.0117.SO C•p Ov 13311J37 lntom li0611.64 f at On Y a Ut 180 \l.'OUJd be Am 1n1tn J~12 5.60 l:Purl1~ F 9.3610.2J Mu!ull u:1, 1t'.l4. lnv1s1 9:.i.J 1o:J1 ed fr S Ped Am nv1t (,92 •.tt iem •.V •.61 LOllD Al8: Sh Dttn 1111 1111 mov om an ro. Am Mui !·n t.09 ''"" 2'.9221.tJ ,.11;111 ,,637.11 11111 Fd 1:11 7;.o AmN! Gr .'3 2.6',IMAHCIAL Am Bui. 2f7 321 IGMA f'U NOS • .-.wcHOll f'lllOGll,t.MS : 811d Otll .:t310~7• \•P Sllr 791 i 12 \ GllOUll': Fill Dvn i :J1 A.21 lu!h!<'n 10.17 11 la nv 10.61 li'67 ~0111 •·g I 5, " lhCI •.AS '·" Lu1h11 1n , .• 10:21 l"1 1:,, ,·11 nc1 Inv 7. • Fin nc 5.6! S.6' MAGN ... P'UNDl1 \f111111r t.3' 10 26 •" !· !·" Vtnl ' l •.12 Caotal 3 u 4 22 !rntrb. e 10 ss 10 s.s rncom .IS "' lllfd V1 11..st 12.67 f11ccm In t 53 8 11.Gr 11 05 11 05 \ffl!lll• I~ t.•SP'ti;ST Pllgrm 160 ''°lg G9!1f' U.1'01330 Wt N•ll lj 13 tf I~ ESTORSt Mtnhtn 4.0t 4 •1 WI! Inv 1 is f OJ P . . .-.11ron '·t2 1'c Ff J1Z 6.12 MAIS COi . w lllY G •'.Js ioe etitions "r.f• " f. t rth Fd f.22 frf'tfn 713 1.51 f:"' In 113'li 6' ~UGMTOHI 1 11l°'~111~ ,r, :r, ~~FF 1tM1l'I $~trfno t~ 1!! F1111d A '16 S. f'ORUM GROU,: MA!S fMCl• S[ATI 8fllD G .., Bankruptcy Addresa mail to L. M, Boyd, P.O. Boz 18751 New- port Beach, Cati/. 92680. The hotel has 240 rooms. It \Vas acquired by Denny's in_, December 1969. D• I sed Fund B 7.ot 7. jOO "nd 111' 11.u MIT 1166 12 Q ont "' ,,.11,., Sloe-s" 6.44 Ql Fnct 113 Ill MIG ,,,. .. ., o·-·· :-j ~ lsc 0 ,.,,.., Sc:l 6.21 •.st C:clum 9 Ot t .Ot ,. ;..21 s TT eLC Git\ 11.7011"' {i\Funcf •11 611 =~OD lU:l!" st'Y..'Q,. .S.2' s.n l•l)lon ll:Jl 1 .J:1 Gr 4.75 5.lt ~o 1.,,,,~ !' ,',, "·• YO etVl'OC 1.t ,fS" VND••S '"" "" llC '·" t :It ~ 1o11-~·g pe--have 81Wf1l 11r 6.0I ,,n G OUP: M41'" • ., 2.2• 1· ,!!!.• Sir 47.17 • 12 No · Disneyland British Plait Historical Couiplex LONDON 1Di!!neyh1nd with a difference h.-is con1e to Britain wiili the launching of a giant leisure compl ex called fi.1 e r r I t England .. Instead of Mickey 11-1ouse and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, visitors will b e treated to a "living pageant or British history -waru and all." THE MAN behlnJ' the $250 million scheme Is Eric l\forley, chalnnAn of Mecca. Brilain's largest entertainmen t organization . "Dlsneylnnd is a \t er 'I successful children's play· J:rout\d," he aa Id, "But ~1crTle England will b f. !Ormthlni; that contributes to the cultural activities of the country. It Is disguised eduCa· lion." Whm It opens tn 1977, Mer· rle fAlaiand c:oold be <he largt!\ lels11rc complei in I Europe and the organizers ex- pect i\ to attr11ct several mil- lion visitors in the first year. ll is anUcipated that about half 3 miltioilof them will be rro1n overseas. MERRIE ENGLAND will be located 80 miles from London al Cannock in the heart or the industrial M I d 1 a n d s, on redolmed land that used (0 be a coal mine. Between no~· Md 19T1 DriUsh craftsmen will be con- structing, among other thing~. rt'prodoctions of the original London Bridge. the lesendary casUe of camelot, the Globe Theatre whtre Shakespesre's plays were fir!>! raaged and a fl'lerrte England t o m o r r o w pavilion. \\Then 1he comple:«: I ! located. the oreaniurs 5a)' ll will provide employmeni for more than 2,000 including a number of Britain's out-of· work actan who will re-create the more memorable ~vents frorn Britain's pa st. SllAKESPEARE h ims e If u·ill be on hand at the Globe and King Charles It will be seen regularly strolling dovm Drury Lane buying oranges and making assignations with 'tl•ll Gwyn. In addition, there will be pigeon racing , hawk· Ing. oquare dancing, knlghl$ of armor and a herd d. genuine English cows releHlng milk into genuine v.-ooden buckets with the help of mllkmruds. There will also b@: mountains of souvenirs. medieval btln- quets with "comely scr\ting \\'enc hes," a.nd pickled. OfliOl\S, which for some reason v.·Ul be !klld In red-spolted handkt.rchlefs. TllOSE \\110 rind the whole experience a little too much w1\I be able to sleep I< all off Jn A series of specially fl'()> vlded motels. As Morley put it hopefully: "We are gotng to makt a lot of money out of this." I "~ •••• ·~ !Men HI t.oM ,._ Grwttl S.3t 5,tt Mlllher 11.7~1 1' '"'-'DAI.AH PM· filed bankruptcy petitions with Heon 11~ iliJ tncom 11.121211 =. A,'" 1~·U ,f o' ~1~ :i11 3.ri federal court at Santa Ana · :=rK 1l 1L1l ~ r:::: 1:ft lt~ MSeV F: U'..t51i:'1 J:w,1 f l:!; : !; • IOfld'lk ,_, !"' FOVt'SO F ,..,. t .llO Mrt BllG 10 ll 111 .... ,,. 11:01! p05: BATES A:Obtrl O .. r 1 ,1111r1nt o.I H11 t ,t01 .l'll'R ... NKLIN MIF FCI 710 l.l'.I J•141nc 21 •!71.tS mane1w.r. 12• hi 51., St1I 81tdl Brown l.)oi J,6.1 OllOUll'' MlF Gro •.tO 4'1 -.tOtl! J0,6t 106& LlabUo rles !U,f13, •J1t11 1115, rt!trH IULLOCIC • ONTC 1.01 1 7tMvOm al t.tl 5l6 1S,1toc~ 15 • .!.llSU Pel~• Elllctr l'UND~: Gwlh Sf f.11 !·i' M~ I" I." 96' OltOUll'· GltAHAM,' Ht!M41 Cl•!re, •alttlady, 81111 "' l.SI 1• SI Fr }:f'ICm .96 • 1 Mui Shra IJ ti U.•1 Grwlll l"I !'I l•.S Shc!rlnglon Pit'' Htwport l••dl Cfn Fii .21 2•ji US (e" $ f H lOA Mo.rl! Tr\ 1 t7 1 ~7 lnc01n 1 1 Lltblltlltl M.02t. •isorll USC 2avws::-I ·~la:,, ~~11='10 !·r~ ttl :~TI~~ ~i~~lO U l~\ 'I I !NTERCOMMUNITY COU NSELING tl~ Vtn 112' 2lS 111 l:otv t,-ft •t1 l11la"~ r tl f90 Svncro F ~r r) SEA:V1CES. INC. lllO kl!OWll II Olvm· !mhm t.91 '·'' Fk1 LIECI 12 ~ ,, " 81111d Sr • 7S 5.2t l "IR Ap • :r :1· olt Y•lltv C:atnl) 111(1 kllOWll 11 S1trr1 G F11nd It.if 11 ~ Fd Mt <I P ~ '•'' 9.11 l'!lvl.!~ i r • ! Ill ""°' G (J) Iii' V.J.lltV A:1 n c h Of Tt1n•Ol •~ Trln 1'.M11.t3 FUND~IH'-P~ Slk 61t •n tl7Wl!r C 6.12 Rtl'lallllll111on, \)63 Loo1111 Ave C01I• tnl S~i il.f..11 5. OCROU : 9 tt<\ 1n«tm '"'~ ~lt ~111Cao I.SI '.Ji Meta. UAbUilln S1S6.66S, 11111, n~~~)MO t:"~ 1::1 1'.s.t ~!~\Sr 6.7' 7.'2 +:.::. Ii~ !'·'-11."6 $'3,6.t2. A:tffftl Ptr~r Ell!ol!. ltlllCd 10.U 11 65 lfldU$ tr 11 13 n 16 "Ew ENO tr 7 " JO!h CG 1 "11."6 LEEOS. K1•m• JHn. "'W.llon of.~ Fd 901 ,.s Pilot 7'6 II~ Eo~l !v 16111151 ;(Ith Cl 11!1 '·" Iker. 1611 $111 Wav, AO! B. Sttl -~lk 1 l:I 1.45 ~llWY 7.71 S 37 Gfwln 11U12 'A l.inl/19(1 3.11 '·ll Buch. Lleblllt ts UO,U,?, •1Wl1 1100, th 51t l,99 ES.S P 37513751 ~ldt 17•3311 1, Unlf\IM flf1004 rl'ttrN P""IOI. flCOfTI 671 .olC n SK 666 6.66 r.tEA Ml flOlOCIO UHIOH SE' l.IO f.f J McAULAY. EIMfl' W1llKt, mt1I CUI· 111<1 1.u ·tt llOUP sec: Ntu Cent s u ~14 •lllOUll' RYie• ter, m• Ot11v Avt .. ""'""l•ln \11Uty. ~l'lf '·" t , ::r-,,~ J·~;· 1·:: HtvWtl'I I 911 ! tl Br• S fv It 03 Litbllllltl SU,t)11, 1"'11 S7,100 ''""" i ATQ", t"' Slll 11' I~ r.ttwlon 11:111 :. Niii Inv .,,:i·r. £111011. Ml Bi' I" I § Am ... •61 Nw Pt•• 131 1$,10 U11 C•ol (z) ri1 MCAULAY. S"4fl. hl>ll14iwlf1, Cltlall• "'" p .S1 tlld 11.:n~.31 N,..,. WICI 1•,.•21,>.n u""•.l~ar 1213 ll,02 a1 tbOv•. lll'r 1 •°& , \llnl 23.MI .«I N!Cl'll11 .It 1.lt "I D P'UHD1i Dt~~.~L1!w!::t:r1 JOffl~r,H~OO 0:1 "d 1t:lf 1tl tt~LTON f~•1, fit =~tr 1~it 1~it ~f ~::f :J: £11.ntllf'O on .... , M ttlon v'1t10. COlO~~AI. ~f'Wlll ,·, ,,, §i'""' f .. 11'9411·,, ~;;-. ,;: 10.11111.Q& Li.blll!lft $ll)i.)J6. •u.,, Slt.OS7. 'io. •:"·n llCOIM'."' 11:1111:11 "'WUI 1.:u 1 :a ·~llC ,•,.to10.ts MUELLElt , ul1ne 51\lf'ftv. MCre11rv. ........ l " .... 1.33 ,,.NHM P D! St!-.t:l 15.J6 lttlt ftl •• lllil>"'· OlllPV I ' ii .N ~ 1.11 1.n NATIOM, Elita~. ,..... ..,.tt "' I 10, ' HedDeo 1.17 1.n ~ Alm 10.7' 11.:N v 7.t "" t ·2• :J; Hitdn S.10 l'nd 1.a f .17 II C1 1J 11 3' ~~~~"' .. ~.~111\1~: ~~ l~1,~ ~:= 1:ji ~:P. oT't Tc 1~:ll1{:C ~lt8:SL1~'i0'~~! 11~J\f.• .:1ot1"',~-~ ~tlOfl ~w:?,.~TM I l="G~D J.n 19:.; ~:~nl~ ~:~ :~ ~= ~: J•/1 '·it eonlr'Oller. 11~ Grltfllll Clrt'e. HUii-5T1 l'IC N.-.m \),I; t•,., Pffu,.. F 5 11 s.n L~ Ott'! 1.•s 1,., 111!gton l eKll. Ll1lllllll11 "'""'" ••h A • 1.ll 1' •· jM ,.,., !'ff 1~ Pt Miii ,_,, 1 Sl Y~l Soc S:41 ,;,, M ,)1 rellf"tto Phtlr1 C 1.fi •#" nd .. rn • • •..,11 Sq 6.,f .. 17 V"'Hrl 'OG.i.l II' 111 I St ......,\111 Jimmy -r: 1:5 A ~"I"" 1 )6 '·f, Pl\U• "" ' S 7 ... l lND•q1 uor!>Wll.,, 102 Arla Cl~•· H11111i119I.,; = : 1·i1l ti! l"~""G t:1t 1.1• ;~ 5i,. 1lfi lO •1 i"s~' ~·" 1.'1 Bel(fl.lltlllllllttUl.6)\.ltllthll).2'1, -f .••• n 11\I Cf,,. ,,,.,_._ .. .,,,,NE ... fDI ' foec1'°"' ,:: :~ ,.,, ...... Emc11 ~rd ... ;• tflY "'!If 7.J4 7.5t p!ofo En 1 '' '~ "11o<lllt '-°' ~ ltl' OOAI., &enll4a ~llo, l'I011Mwll1, ~ tnv !!!~IS, I 1~ ';°',: 1fi:1fJ:o "'"-"" l'CI 11:10,-: "-(rt Ir! 01ttH1 ti 1bovt. ....,n °!':: -1i· ,_i•t-T · PIO&'\• H I" . ~· lO'O ~ n ROEHLING, JOllll (ftrlto Mlt1 =l11 11 •ft 7 C~MSll :1,',"""o• 1:1.il1i -V GI (t) '0) ....,,.._,,11 .... 16fn covr'lll'I' UJll, OfllrV c 11.~ 14. IMn'I 7.l' • 1r • , i ,.., " '~1 ~. t l-fvrU!"9fon IHCll. lltDlltlln ll)2,J11. -Diii 6. 1 11111 IV 1·t? J·f! ;:..,~ O'j1'4.~1H!' ::~~I MO: ! r ;r ,, ii •1t11! la.50$, rlf'f" A.IC. l"tltlin. wt\ OIY '· ,. ....i, Sii oo'' ... ""'"' I'•~ 11 I 1¥oltN "" 11' ROEHLING. or111• l ou\M, ~''· ~v ft.. • . ·~v•sT 0 !JP! ~ ~o· !O. 10, -·.Ll"IO 1111,1 dtl1!t1 II lllO"'' ~ijji ... ll \~~ ~·a :~· t I' '"' f." I.Al ' • OltOUP: TON w.-.LtURGllt. OtoM\t C .. coo«, SMVI i i 1 ··1 ·1~ rnSPr 1 :~ •rov di '·" 1.., f,•olw 7'I II 11 .. Hemltton SI .. Cotll ,.._, Ll1"1U!lt1 w ~ t. 1 . urrt ,I·,~·?!=~$~-,:. itll1\·r. ~ 1fij11 U Qt.la, '""" 11.17&, rm«t (Hiott. ,. '· 1 toe I-'; 10 .,, ... ,, ... ,M Tclllll I~ ~1 lt. wAL1u~o1t11 c •'" •, 1 11 1 1 .. ~""co 6~· !J' vi?'~.11 ·¥1 1oi: ,.l1tu»1 T·•I"' v I' 1~ ,, .., ~. "4\.\ H1f'lll'11'" •• .. c''" .. I · 1. , •llY 1t11 s.11 s.w "1111~•r '!·"' 11.t11 w'"I" 1.n .,~-, ""'· ""~lllllt no.1a llMI• 11.0.0. ~ ! .ll O.ll I s It 1";111111~ 111 • ,n .... I '" I 1111: ,...,.,.. EHIO!t. • ,ut. l:P o rw111 '·l' ':I' "'"" 1t.d 16.H Wllldv 'r. ~ YOUNG. OtralCI A .. II~•""' r' "ll"fi lllC-~.\-. Orwlh 11 ~!U. W1,_1 11111 ~ ' <1•tlt 1M«l'r1, LlqllM !! \I t I . a Cl j '· T,tl UI i-ij !II( f 0. l W1ne1 Gr 1 '""'"u .....,.. -· ,.,_ • ~· 'I '"' ~ 't· '"'' 'n' ii" ,. w,.,... !' I" ·~si·r.G, ,,_.,.. ... JM11. cl11Wfllll 1rc1 1r.;'1 ; 1 :i1 t!~1 .."un.i 11.'ti'J'.l; ._~;;:. r; lt:~l1j;il ~vtdt!!!L fl .6I Miii Clff._ lttllll( 11 1111'<'1, I.II Mii JS P Gwttl t I I .ti "-Iii 7 U .N t>Vl"I Y•lllbll- \ I ' ! I I I \ ( I I I I I 1 ' ~ I ' • I I ' ' ' I • ' ' ! ' • ' • ' ~ ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ ' ' • i ' ' ' ' ' ' • ~ • i ~ ' • • ! c ' ' L ' c c ' ' ' c c c ' c c c c c c ' ' c ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' • ' • • ' ' • ' ' • TUHd'1 Ju~ ll 197' Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Profit Taking Dampens Mai~ket NEW YORK (AP)-Stock market pnca moved lower Tuesday~ extending their nuld decline Jnto Its second day, as profit takers cashed ln on recent gains The decline follows a two-week rally that saw the Dow nse some 50 points In the 10 trading ses· SIODS ended Friday Analysts said the downturn was the result of normal consolidation 'The market couldn t keep on nsmg day alter day after day said Alan n Shaw, analyst with Ha rns Upham & Co SC OAILY PILOT J:S Good Deed mal<e the ...... Sundays 111 the Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List 1 FtclrlCO I )0 2 0. tel: ln1n J CCWI Fr91 ..S1 4 F1rW1tF 5lt 1 WelDHI (.p • "'"''" 0 1Ncic'.MIM I Pl111 ~rr. PfOfllOr 10 Etltd NC 4 II llrotk GI 71 1 Gt Wftl Un I) Ail'lfK 6" ·~'"" IS tCN ~Mrm ! ........ " 1 ~· 11111 l L .. r ... • n oi.-1 n Jot 10 ClnM 11 1 .0 11 COft'llll"'I 11 tt K1'1'Mf1' .. n C~ lllld NW 1.IYI St,.. • ltfei Ml .JQ J • . " H li1i •• .. .. ·~ I " . .. '" •• , •• '" ... • • • ' • , ~ • H -~ _, IJ.,._I '~'" ·-· ·-· lt<i4t-•• .... .. '" ,.._ ,, I'• Arthle American Volume : • l'f Ullli.d ~rnt lnltr111t1 .... 1 l \\+ \._ ADo<O• ! 11•1 •IOCl IOltl J 711.llOI 1,~,__ 0 Slot ~ IOll \'#I -J MO tU ,.._ APO o• I ,.. -•llft 11 BO DOO 1 • e-s• '' Yt•r ·~ ,, tn.oao ..... 11 1----------------2t<.•-r l ' • ,~..,:._ (\ ' • .. -· . • ' - .. .. ' -\~ . -. ,,,_ . ...... . >-h ..... Symr.ors 0 We•lern l/11io•a \VASHINGTON (AP) TentaU\e agreement with two unions on a three year con tract calling for an 18 s per cent lnC'rease m pay and benef11s \\<1S announced ~1on clay ni~ht b> the \Vesteffi Union Ti:l('~rnpb Co Conipnny spokcsmrn s:ud the ~t!tll.'tllClll ~l1IJ JllUSl l>f' rat1hefl b> the L: n 1 t (' d Telegraph \\orkcrS w h 1 ch '"presents 11 000 clerks and tcchn1tul f>i:rsonncl aod bv the C-011Hnun l anons \\orkcrs vf An1cr1ca \\hith rcpre!cnls sor11c 2 000 cmplovcs '4i1th smular jobs in New York City e U'f'•lerH Gear Spcdal to 1hc l>a1ly PUol L \ :"\ WOOll -\\ estem Cur Corp announced 1'.1onday COJ>. llnucd 1mpro.,.emcnl 1n sales cam1ngs and bookings for the first half of 1973 wi th the pace acctleratlng ln I.he .second quarter Sl'C'()nd quarter sales or $31 996 000 were up nearly 38 pe_rcent rrom a }car ago Ne~ earnings-of $1 '400 000 agalnSl $50 000 Ja11.1 vear amounted to 36 <.'t'nts Pt'r share \1 one ctnt ~ \tar :tgo J(itl s Like To Ask Andy >-hi--~--~----~- I I • \ . ' DAILY PILOT "'""'" .kily )I, 19n • Teenage Guru Hailed as 'Greatest' CHILDREN'S ·SHOES By GEORGE W. CORNEIL AtM<IJIM ,,..... Alflf!M Wrtlw NEW YORK -An •t>- parently snowballing mOVe- ment -in asstls, operations and ft"rvent young crowds -is building up ll.round a teeo·agc guru from India and bls prom- ise of "the knowledge." Just what "the knowledge" is. however, is hard to pin down, either In · ,listening to Guru ~1aharaj Ji, a lad or 15, or questioning devotees. .. IT'S THE greatest Uling," says Grace Wallace, Z?, a bnmette secretary working ln the guru's second-floor ornce here. "&tit can't be confined to the limitations of words er explanations. lt can only be experienced." llowever it i.! characterized, the lure of that nebulous ''lbe knowledge" preached by the yoµthful Maharaj Ji -which means "king of kings " -has put •him astride a busy, spreading enterprise in this country in 'vhlch he's starting his third "peace" tour. "I'm jU!I. a humble sl!:rvant o( God trying to provide the knowledge," he say._ When lntervlewtn try to get lt defined, he often turns to 11· Justrations ot the difficulty. "IT'S LIKE trying to ex· plain the word, 'pinch'," he says, ''You CM say, '\veil, I~ hurts'. But tha( doesn't ex· plain a 'pinch'. 1r you fall on your knee , it hurts. But it's not a 'pinch'." A short. black-halrtd youngster. ~1aharaj Ji spent most of his week's New York visit at a spacious, ranch-style !Ang Island home i n Westbury. N.Y., donated to him by a follower. At limes, he recejved groups of disciples. 'Ibey would kneel silently before him as he sat on a cushioned couch. lie also was the central attraction for a big rally Saturday night at the Louis Armstrong Stadium in Flushing h-1eadow Park in Queens. HE "REPRESENTS divlni· ty," says Christopher Ullman, 24 , a publications official or the movement. called the ''Divine Light Mi ssion," which claims six milUon followers "'orld-\vide. 40.000 in th e United States. "Mommy, will you tell Jeffy to stop bumping me while I'm crayoning?" lt has branches in 30 U.S. cities. a monthly magazine, "i\nd It Is Divine." with 90,000 circulation. a b i w e e k I y newspaper, "Divine Times,'" lvith 60.000 circulation, and U.S . headquarters in Denver, Colo. The organization also has a public relations organization, a dance ensemble, a theatrical troupe, a food cooperative, a film·production agency. an aviation service, a wholesale firm dealing in electronics and office equipment. -~ .PHARMACY 44t ,Jlr Dr. (ltfOIS 1(1)1'!1 F•lrvltw S!1t1 HOlJ)llll} l l------------1 Ctst• MeM S4'-J:2tt TWO FU L L·LENGTH documentary fitms have been issued .' "Satguru Has Come," and "Who is Guru Maharaj Ji," plus a long-playing album and a paperback book of the same name the latter being issued by Bantam Books in October . e PREKRll"TIOH S e SICIC.ROOM RENTALS e HOLLISTER OSTOMT • HUOSOH VITAMINS e JOBST STOCKIHOS • CAMP S\IP'PQRTS DtlllllofY hrYke e M.lsler CMrwt Kids Like To Ask Andy "•••••••I I I I • • • • • • THIS SUMMER • • LOSE • • =WEIGHT . '' • • • • e No UP TO • • Contracts • • e No • Exercise 58 lbs. • ! • e No Ampheta. • • mines IN I I I I I.~ • • • • • • It's by former radical ac- Rock Star Given, Year Probation MOUNT HOLLY, N.J. (AP) -Jerry Garcia, lead guitarist • of the Gratefu1 Dead rock • group, has been placed on one- • year conditional probation on charges of possession o f • narcotics . • Garcia, 30. of Marin County , • had pleaded innocent to the • charge. • JUDGE HER!\tA N • Belopolsky said !\fonday that 40 • under the conditional pro- • bation he would entertain a • n1otion for dismissal of the • • charges at the encl of the one-• DAYS • year period if Garcia followed • • the terms of the probation. • • Belopotsky ordered Garcia UNDER MEDICAL to report to a New York • psychialrist every two • SUPERVISION months. He also ordered that • reports of each visit to the • • psychiatrist be sent to a coun- • ~---------.----.----• ty probation officer. • Welcome Unions • GARCIA WAS arrested • and All Health Group • March T1 after police stopped • his car for speeding in Mount • Insurances Laurel Township. Police said • • they found marijuana and co· • caine in the automobile. • The performer's lawyer, • Francis J. llartman, sub- mitted to the court a state- :11 CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT [E • Houri 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. • ment by Dr. Herbert Smok.1er. • a New York psychiatrist, that • Garcia was· not addicted to • any drug. Hartman described Garcia as a family man and a : OMEGA CLINIC • crealive individual. • Garcia was brought to the • 1869 Newport 646-1633 • Costa Mesa • • • • • ANAHEIM SANTA ANA 16'4 w. ldwy 11,22 T•stlfl Aw. 771·4141 S47·6l2' I. I I. I • • • • • • F•llerto11·l• Hobfe 17141 170·•l47 1213) ,,1.11•1 710 W l•Hobro llvd. • • ••• • hearing in a helicopter fron1 • \Vat kins (:Jen, N. V .. where his I. group had bee.11 perfor1ning at a 1nammoth rock music festival over the weekend. UNDER WHAT CIRCUMSTANCE S MUST A FEDERAL ESTATE TAX NOTICE BE FILED? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON ..... dfbl9 ., ..wtttf af tN U"ltH SNht IMY" • 9"'• fttON •alNd I• ••c ... .. SH.HO.to • 9' fM 4ete ef deott., e ,,.,i1111l1111ry AOtlto ff fefllt 704 "'lllt be flfff ;.ft11 .... Dhitrkt Dhctor et ,....,.... a...-... by ~ d11ly -.uallflff •1ec:11tot' '"' •••'*"~ 9f ..... ,..... If • •aec•tM IN adml1dttr«tef deft .. t 11••llfr whtlln two ............. ""' ......... , deftta, ... tic. M•st be flMd by °"' l"f'OR I• oehl•I ., cawl:wt ... pssasafM of 1"'11,.rty IMhHMd 111 l'ft9 doc•Mt'• ''"' "totti. ftt ..ttc. .-t ~ fl'-4 wtttllll tw• -11th •ffff th• deced..,t'1 dfftti, ••t•pt tl!crt, H • •c•tw et ~Of 11tollfle4 wttltla svc:ll '"''°' ~ ••tk• _., k fllH wltt.fll twe ..... _,.., Ml 41..tHk.ri ... A Fed9fel btot• T•1 l9'11n1 II 4•• ffftttw 1M111'M ............ , ,.. ~·· dMfll, Wl•• 40 ,_...,.,..ti.. wllf M wwettd I• ttllt aof11M1t. B.it::-Bergerota F1111erul llo11ae COSTA MESA > LOCATIONO CORONA del MAR H644Z4 6 73.94so tivlst ReMie Davis, now a disciple ol the guru. The Maharaj Ji is to hold rallies at major centers In Bostoo, Detroit, C h I c a g o , Atlanta and Kansas City on his two-month tour, and a three-day celebratlon Nov. 8-10 In Houston 's Astrodome. "ACTUALLY l'M the big- gest businessman -l 've got big business in spreading the knowledge," the guru says. "I'm ottering my voluntary services to give p e op I e peace." He is termed a •·per.feet .. , UP't T1lePhol1 ON 'PEACE' TOUR Gu ru Mahar•j Ji Bernardino Integration Ordered SAN BERNARDINO (AP ) -Declaring the so-called Wakefield antibusing initiative unconstitutional. a Superior laster -one who ttach.el perfect truth -• title In· herited at tbc age of 8 from ltls lace !other who had fOlllld· ed the movement in 1960 in India . "I got blissed out just llste~ ing to him." says Ullman, ei· plaining bis stepa toward 11the knowledge." which he says he altaioed at 4 a.m. Feb. 28 In Chicago. "He really opened my tbJnl eye and I saw something so :ln- cr<dlbly beautiful I delinltely could see. taste and ft!:el so1nething," he added. P oliticia1i 'Fed Up '; Will Work Fl"om Wire Services "Politician who's fed up seeks honest employment in community, intergroup rela- tions or labor fields.'' \Vith that advertisement in the New York Times. Assemblyman Seymour Posoer announced he was available for a change in jobs. lie said in an interview he was "fed up" with the declining image of politics and ol being "accused and blamed for everything from t h e \Valergate scandal to garbage in the streets of my district." .. * P u 1 i l z e r Prize-winning playwright Arthur Miller has been appointed adjunct pro- fessor·in·residence to t h e University of Mi chi g an 's OUTSTANDING BACK-TO-SCHOOL VALUES I Unbelievabl.e Prices FINAL DAYS Buster Brown • , • Child Life ••• Keds ••• Clogs And Many Others Several Hundred Pairs Regularly to $18 $ 00 PLEASE, ALL SALES FINAL-NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS • 35 Fashion Island e Newport· Beach e 644-2464 theater area. I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..... --..... ~~ ... ~~~~~~ Author of such critically ac-1- claimed hits as "Death· or a Salesman." "A View From the Bridge'' and "The Crucible," ~liller will return to his al.ma ,. i Court judge has ordered the c ) city's schools to devise an al· p EOPLE tendance plan for !he 1974.75 school year to eliminate racial '-------- STORE WIDE se gregation . The order, drafted last week by Judge Paul Egly of Pomona, was made public Monday . CALIFORNIA VOTERS ap- proved the anti·busing in· itiative, Prop. 21 , 1 as t November. It effectively ban- ned busing of school children to achieve racial integration. The order, whiJe less strin· gent than anticipated, will require some busing in the city by the start or the up- coming school year. Most or the seven board or education members already indicated that they will appeal any order that requires man- datory busing. THE DECISION stems Crom a suit filed 16 months ago by th e National Associalion for the Advancement of Colored People, which charged the district maintains a segregated school system and thereby denies 10 named black children the right to an equal educational opportunity. The judge later foWld the case to be a class action and It was expanded to include all black and Mexican·American children. JN MAKlNG his ruling, the judge followed closely a notice of intended decision he handed do~·n last !\1ay. Too Early For Heist CAGNES SUR MER, France (AP) -Two bank holdup men arrived too early for the crime. Inside the new building they found only a man laying carpet. The bank \\'as not to open for many days . mater to conduct informa l seminars \vilh the theater students and to advise the faculty. * Sen. Ba rry Gold\\•ater says the main interest of the con· servationist Sierra Club is fleWlg its political muscles. Goldwater (R·Ariz.) said he has resigned as a member of the club in a dispute over a bill be is sponsoring to enlarge Grand Canyon National Park. President Nfx"on will meet Thursday with President Bernard Bongo of Gabon, the White House announced. Bongo, who has headed the African nation since 1967, is in the United States to receive an honorary degree from Du- quesne University. * Mrs. Henry Ford II has been appointed as a member of the board of trustees ol the in· ternationally known National Music Camp and Jnterlochen Arts Academy. W. Clement Stone o f Chicago. board chairman of the can1p groups, said !\1rs. Ford "has a strong interest in the arts, including paintings. graphics and the ballet and has shown concern for im· aginativc and ef fect ive cultural education."' * A 2l·year-old Arizona State University student ha s been named Miss Indian America. l\1axlne Henrietta Norris, a Papago Indian from Casa Grande, Ariz. was presented a scholarship among o t h e r awards. The contest was held at Sheridan, Wyo. * l\frs. Lyndon 8. Johnson , STARTS THURSDAY, AUGUST 2nd, 9:30 A.M. FABULOUS FASHIONS •SWIMWEAR •PANT SUITS • SPORTS WEAR •LONG SHIRTS • DRESSES (long and short) •SHOES •ACCESSORIES UP TO AND MORE! CREDIT CARDS WELCOMI Newport Beoch-3424 Via lido and Balboa Bay Club Anaheim-Disneyland Hotel a~d Royal Inn Hotel •widow of the late pre11ident, arrived in Paris on a privatel---------r---------------------- vi~J;,'h~o~;,,;~~1ss6.s~i~;st Cliallenge the News Quiz of honor today at a luncheon given by U.S. Ambassador ••• on Saturda."'·' s F ll.rnily Page John lr\vin. .! DOWM WITH YOUR .AMTEMMA UP WITH TELEPROMPTER! 11 z. II WITH MORE CHANNELS ~ II, 5 6 ~ 9410· ' CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO ~ & II WITH NEWPORT'S OWN ~ W~i® 9U$ NEWS SERVICE tJ'J'!JW ){"',;"' no., ~ TElEPROMPTE R i1 th• lltl'gnt cebtt television Ofganlzation In th• wo,ld . lllll Lii We hrte the most up-to.f:l1t• tlChniell facilittn. Now you can get rid of your ugly an11nna (and mlll• Newport even "'°'' bel\ltifut) 1nd 911 1 better picturt 11 the um1 time -Plus you'll MVI money! 011• fXX1 il'I Olble •en O!'l!v. .. ·· DIAL 641 -3160 TELEPRomPTER C3fj[JQ8 ~ l INSTALLATION FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. • 1 I n In w " st g e ·fi I ( Laguna Ueaeh EDITION Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 212, 2 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES TEN CENTS Robbery Chase Produces ,One Bonus Suspect Laguna Beach police today arrested a man in connection with a knife-point arm- ed robbery of festival visitors and in What was termed "frosting on the cake" nabbed a burglary suspect While pursu· ing the suspected robber. Eug'ene David Dil)gey, 22, Qf Oroville was booked on susPicion of armed rob- be_ry into Laguna Beach Jail this mom-illg. Daniel L. Rodriguez, 21, of La Verne was booked for alleged possession of st01en property in an asserted crime Guard Killed Violence unrelated to the robbery. Police Sgt. David Avers related the events in the unique Art Colony heist and capture. A Uewport Beach man, Frank Rick Cowley, 22, and a female companioo were leaving the Sawdust Festival when they were approached by a man who first engaged them in conversation," Avers said. The couple then walked to their car, at which time the man grabbed Cowley, Erupts At Leavenworth LEAVENWORTH, Kan. (AP) -One guard was killed today as violence erupted at the federal prison here, of· ·fieialS said. Warden Loren Daggett said Landowners . Quizzed on Density Rules More than 80 major landowners in Laguna Beach will be invited to offer thei r views on a set of density standards at a special hearing before the planning commission next week. After taking a second look at the pro- posed standards Monday night, com- missioners agreed that a m a j o r discussion and debate of the prcposed standards is in order. Commissioners made it clear they \¥ant interested members of the general public also to come forward to air their thoughts on the matter. The density standards, as proposed by \Vayne Moody, director of planning and development, would tighten the rules on hillside development in the city. Slopes 50 percent or more would be allowed one-half unit per acre of land under the new regulations. A 50 percent slope is equal to a 45 degree angle. . Other standards are: 30 to 50 percent slopes, one unit per acre; 15 to 30 percent slopes, 2.5 units per acre; 0-15 percent slcpes, five units per acre. The density standarsd are part of a a five-point planned residential devel· cpment standards program presented to the planning commission. The intent of the program, ~loody said, is to be able tG tell a developer what he <?an and cannot do before a substantial amount of mooey is spent for planning and design. This would help avoid problems created in the past with major develop- ment proposals such as Sycamore Hills and Machu Picchu. The hearing on the densities was called for 7:30 p.m. Monday at city hall. Due to the study session nature of the meeting, commissioners 'Will not take action on the ' proposals. John ~1c00\\-'e\I, commission chairman, stressed the planning body is not com· mitted to the density pro~als, but wants to use Moody's suggestions as a place to start discussion. . Determination of the density of a piece (See DENSITY, Page !) BEERCAN RACE W{)RTH THE PAIN ·Whereas most sailboat races are "bor· Ing to watch and dllflcult to photograph," ob'erves Daily Pilot Chief Photographer l.ee Payne, Newport's annual Beercan Regatta is not your avera.ge water com· petition. Payne has been 1n the tb!ck of It over the years with "big bolts crashing about ," and on Page 21 today is a coi.. lection of some of his finest recordings for several publications of that "dingy" competition. It's the only regatta he'll shoot, because the Beercan is worth the pain. ~oy. he g<ts seasick. ( inmates were holding one to four hostages. The warden said he didn't know how many inmates were involved. but said he believed the number was small. The identity of the dead man was not . immediately revealed. Daggett said an inmate called him from the prison laundry and said he was llolding four persons hostage. The warden quoted the inmate as saying the -... would not he hurt il "the wan!· en and the press showed up." lt was first believed only another guard was being held. There was no indication whether the hostages were guards or other inmates. The weapon used to kill the guard was not known. Daggett said he believed the disturbance was a response to last week's major riot at th~klahoma State Prison in McAlester, Okla. He said prison officials had "beard through t h e grapevine somethin g might happen." He said the morning watch was held over as a precaution and the "A" cellhouse was secured just before noon. Efforts continued in early afternoon to secure the rest of the prison. Inmates were being moved from the prison in- dustries area back to their cells with no difficulty. Daggett said, "The rank and file had nothing to da with it. Jt was just a few trouble makers." Five guards suffered minor injuries and were treated at the prison hospital. A minor fire was reported at the prison shoe factory, but officials said it was ex- tinguished and caused little damage. The warden said the inmates who were holding the hostages had not made their demands clear immediately. Holdup 'Victim' TID·ns Tables 011 Assailants I The intended victim or an armed rob- bery in Laguna Beach turned tables on hi s two hitchhiking assailants as the men attempted to fleece him. Monday night. Timothy C. Cleary. 22, of Santa Ana picked up the two men on North Coast Highway near Cliff Drive. He had driven only a short way when the man in the ba ck seat grabbed Cleary's. hair and ordered him to pull . over to the slde of the road, saying "don't tW1l arowid, I've got a gun." Cleary turned around. He saw the man did not have a gun. So, be punched him in the face . ''He then engaged both men in an altercationu," said Police Sgt. Nonn Bab- cock. Both men fled. Man Falls to J?eath SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Palo Alto man reu li50Q feet to his death when he lost control of the free soaring delta.wing kite be was piloting and smashed Into a beach near the Monterey-San Luts Obispo <.'OUnty line. Ronald Frederick Davis, 221 was the first of a group of foor scheduled to jwnp Sunday trom the high cliffs above.. Sand Dollar Meach when the ac- cldeot occumd. pulled out a awitchblade knife, and said "give me your ~·allet," Sgt. Avers sald. Cowley turned over his wallet and tbe man ran. Yelling for help, Cowley and four other persons chased him, lost him, but again made contact, chased him and lost him. The second time I.he suspect was observed,. he was shirtless and several tatoos--one reading "Harley Davidson"- on his arms, chest and shoulders were seen. The suspect also was wearing a • distinct hand-tooled belt "'ith "llarley Davidson" ~·orked into the leather, Avers said. O>wley told officers his w a 11 e t con.. lained the usual identificaton and credit cards, an unknown amount of money and a Mexican peso. Although the robber outran them, the Victim and witnesses were able to give police a good description cf the assailant, Avers said. Police began searching and Det. CliU Nye subsequenlly observed Rodriguez holding a package of some kind and trot· ting down Forest Avenue . • Nye ordered him to stop and Rodriguez "picked up speed and threw away the en· cumbering articles," Sgt. Avers said. Nye apprehended Rodriguez and observ- ed .the encumbering articles to have been a terrarium in a glass bottle. •·Jt broke on contact with the roadway," Sgt. Avers e1ptained. Police believe the terrarium was taken ffom the Sawdust Festival. Nothing more ~·as seen or the suspect in the robbery until Patrolman David F.mory spolled Dingey on Forest Avenue this morning at about 6:30 o'clock. Emory followed lhc man to the 300 block of Forest Avenue and observed that he \\'aS \\'earing a belt of the type described as being \\'Orn by the robber and otherwise fit the description given officers. Dlngcy was taken into custody without incidool. No property and no · weapon \Vere rerovercd, Sgt. Avers said . Ill ....,..ras ' ~ ... ~ .... . . ,.,. (. ,,1 ~ ,~, ' 'Lu~ ,-,,al!~ Ol'lh• J'li.t Slltt I'~• IT WAS A LONG, LONG TRAIL FOR 21 YOUNG BICYCLISTS ON A BORDER-TO·BORDER TREK Adventurers Pass Through Laguna Beach En Route to Ti juana on Their Summer Adventure Cyclists Encounter Trials 21 Students Brave Elements 01i 1,800 Mile Trip By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of tlltl DallJ J'ii.t $!1lf Imagine riding a bicycle through pound· ing rain for 75 miles. Or trying to find a laundromat with enough dryers for 21 persons. Or wondering whether that uphill pull will ever end. · Such are the trials encountered by 21 junJor high and high sChool bicyclists from Seattle .who pedalled along the Orange Coast Monday en route to Ti· juana, Mexico. The group left San Clemente State Beach this morning for the last leg of the 1.800 mile trip which began at the Cana- dian border 39 days ago. "It's been a great trip, great weather. not too hot," said a sunburned Linda Staheli. 13, \\'bile the group descended on Boat Canyon Cleaning and Laundry in Laguna Beach Monday morning. Riders ave~aged SO miles -and one flat tire -per day in their ride down the Pacific coast. 'The longest day on the road ended in Florence, Ore., after 80 miles. Sunday, spent In Los Angeles, was the shortest wilh 13 miles logged . Each rider paid $270 toward the trip. It works out to $3.50 a day for food , $20 tor spending and $70 for air tare back to Seattle from San Diego on Thursday, ex· plained JJ.year-old Jennifer Hunsaker. Along the way, the ~ikers stayed in campgrounds. churches and recreation centers and founC hospitality was •·great" ever)'\\·here they stopped . Sho~tage Nears Lack of Beef See1i This W eeke1ul By Un ited Press lntern1tion1I The Adminstration calls it "scare talk," but meat packers warn that they are caught in a squeeze between the retail price ceiling and the cost of catue tbat will cause a nationwide shortage ot beef -be- ginning possibly as soon as this weekend. "Area supermarkets are facing a drastic shortage of beef. which could lead to the disappearance of some cuts Crom store meat cases, and jn some cases -no beef at all," Lyle Everingham , president of the naUonwide Kroger ~-ood Stores, said In ClnclnnaU. But the administration reaffirmed Monday that the price ceiling would not be lifted until Sept. 12. Economists ex~t beet prices, which have already risen by more than 60 percent 1n six months, lo lurch upward again after the fnoeze is lifted. On the .West Coast. it was learned that some cattle American ranchers are withholding from the U.S. market during the price free•• are being bought by Japanese. The lrip got off to a wet and wild start v,rith i5 miles of rain in southern ' Washington. 'vYou get so wet after a while, it doesn't matter," laughed Carol Caddey, 14, who learned about the trip from an advertisement in a Seattle newspaper. The group probably \\'as glad to leave Oregon behind. Jn the northern part of the state one rider was sideswiped by a truck and badly shaken up, but not in· jurcd. Jn soutbem Oregon. Linda c.ut herself and \\'as forced to receive a cou· pie of stitches. In northern California one girl ended 1n the hospital after catching the nu . She los t four days. and took the bus to San Francisco to catch up \.\'ith her 20 CQm· panions. Linda's mother. ~1rs. E.T. Stahali. ar· ranged the trip as "something different'' lo do during the sununer. Each rider was required to have a I~ speed bike and to go through 500 miles of ''practice" riding before getting the final OK for the trip. Would they do it again? "Sure," said ooe .. "I don't koow," groaned another. Irvine Ranch Singed By Srnall Brush Fire ' A small 'brush ffre burned an acre of Irvine Ranch land early this morning before being exlif18Uished by fire units from the 11111e, county and j:ity of Laguna Beach. County forestry olficla1s said the Ore's CAU!e Is undtr invesUgatlon. The brush blaze was hx:aled north of Laguna Can- yon Road Rbout \'1 mile north ol the In· tersecUon of El Toro and Laguna Canyon roads. , f Two Survive Smashup in Heavy Fog BOSTON (A Pl -A Delta Airlines DC9 jet with 89 persons r-aboard crashed and disintegrated on landing at Logan International Airport in heavy fog today. Police aaid at least 85 persons died. Onlt two survh·ors were reported in- itially by Massachusetts G e n e r a I Hospital. Two ~rsoos were unaccounted for. An eyewitness said the twin-enj.ine plane crashed on a runway about 1,000 feet from the edge of the water at the busy airport that juts into Bostoo Harbor. l State police sakl it appeared that the jet struck a seawall at th e approach to the airport. A state police spokesman said there was a break in the 2~·foot high wall. indicating the craft's landing gear struck it. An observer said personal effects and parts of bodies Y•ere strewn all <lVer the runway. He said the plane. arriving on a night from Burlington. Vt.. seemed to have disintegrated on impact. He said the largest portion of the plane he could see was a 10.foot portion of the fuselage . In Washington . the Nation a I Transportation Safety Board said it wU sending a IO.member investigating tearri to the scene. The board said the team woul d be headed by board member Isabel Burg ea. State police said a temix>rary morgue \\'SS set up at the fire station at the airport. Reports from the scene said numerous vehicles drove to the crash site to collect bodies from the de!>ris and mud. Some vehicles became mired In the mud . A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said the plane, !>Cheduled to leave Burlington at 9 a.m .. made an unscheduled stop at lhe municipal airport in Manchester, N.fl. He said he did not know the reas<>n for the New Hampshire stop. One survivor at ft.Iassachusctts General ~ Hospital was identified as Leopold Chouinard, 20, of Marshfield , Vt. A hospital spokesman said he had third- degree bums over 80 percent of his body. The other survivor was identified by !See BOSTON, Page !I , Orange Coast Weather Orange Coast skies will be cloudy during the night and early morn· ing hours, with hazy sunshine to- morraw morning. Highs will be in the low 70s, with the low in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Proclaiming that he h<U that indescribable "knowkdge -and with a snowbalhng movtJMnt behind him -Guru Maha.raj Jf, 15, ts 11nbarki110 on .Jt,J, third "ptace." tour in the United StateSy See story, Page 14. L.M. lttll II (•lii.n.M! ' Ct•t~ H•tt '-1« 17 c ... ..-. 11 °"'"''"'I'" 1 111119"1•1 ...... ' l11l.,l•l11MMt ,. flfMllKI 11·11 ,,., .... ·-· 1 -" A1111 ~ II ) 2 DAllY PILOT LB Coast Split On Beaches i Requested ' . I Newport Beach will ast the CalUomla League of Cltlcs to demand legislation that would split up the cost of supporting ,...ional !aclllUes -like beaches - -Ill eJU.. In the Stale. City councllmen Monday nlghl ... dorted a reeolutlon declaring the city went nearly Sl mlllloo In the hole last year paying for beach maintenance and protection even though BS percent of the 10 mllllon men came from out of town. City Manager ~bert L. Wynn told <OUncllmen be r .. 1s It is only lair tbat the tax burden for supporting the beadiet In Newport Beach should be shared by all lhe cities whose people visit them. The reolutlon adopted by councilmen cites the curTftlt tax limits and other fac- tors supporting an equalization of the taxes. 1be resolution asks the state to afford all Callfotnlans jlthe opportunity of shar- ing in the &st of roastal preservation and maintenance ••• throug ha statewide t.a'x subsidy to the governmental agencies within the coastal zone." Wy n n suggest ed some other alternatives -Including a bed use 11:1 of up to six percent on viJltors in hotels -but said some kind of equaliza- tion method would be th' most workable. Wynn also told councilmen the Orange· CoWlty League of Cities has already agreed to help Newport Beach set up a meeting of CGa!!ltal cities to work out some kind of formula for assistance from the state. 'The council's resolution, along with :!lmllar actions by the coastal com· numlti• of Pacifica and Half Moon Bay, wlll 10 before the general League of CiU.. meellni In October. Newport Pilot Killed in County Plane Smashup Engine trouble was blamed today !or lbe death of a 47·yeal'-Old Newport Beach man wt.>ee private plane plummeted to lbe ground Monday alt.moon and burst tnto Dames ln a vacant Buena Park field. Kllled In the crash was Evan Koppe. a resident of 1400 SantaneUa Terrace in tbe Irvine Terrace sectlcn al Coorona del Mar. He was the aole oeoupanl of the twiHngine Cessna 310. Koppe radioed Fulletfoo Airpdrl Illa! JM' .... _.i.odftf mechanloal -~ but reporledly dedlned tie 1o...r,'1 611 to mobllbo emeraency equlpm..,L Soon thereafter tbe plane, !ts right engine malfunctioning severely, went Into a steep bank, stalled and plunged Into the ground near Beach Boulevard and Malvern Road. No Me else was Injured by tbe crash which was officially lagged at 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said witnesses: reported the plane's right engine was nmnlna ao slowly that they could see the propel.fer blade turning. Per!IOtU near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the wreckage but were driven back by name.. Police &aid a morrumental traffic jam reUled when they blocked off streets to aid firemen fighting the blaze. It too\ fire crews approximately two hours to bring the fuel-fed fire under control. Kappe. believed to be the owner or the plane, brought the craft within one mile of the Fullerton Airport runwa y before he lost control. A Bank of America building was just a few hundred feet away from where the plane crashed. Suhco1n1n ittee Eyed UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -Th• General Assembly commit.tee on in- ternational terrorism reported ~tonday it was considering creatlne: a su~mmittee to define "international terrortsm.,. OiAN•I COAST L• DAILY PILOT n,. OfM89 COnt DAILY PILOT, .... !ti ""'lcli .. ~ "-~·"''"" Ill Pll&ll ..... b'I' fli. or.,...eo.u PWUM'llnt COmMnr . .s..p. ...... edlllorli •ff pUCll"""5, M°"""'y rhfOU\lh """••· fW C01t1 Mne, ,.. ........ ,, flo~n. ...... tl,..IOn ' 19Kll/fl0o\ll'ltlln YU,..y, Lao""" ~ 1,.,in.1S....rw.ck ...i Sin Clfmr,111 Sell Ju&n <"•tr-. A 11no11 •t9iMll ..tlllofl It lllltll111td S.l1,1tit.y1 Ind S.,,..,1y,. TN ltll'ie!IWll Pllblltl'llnt pl1nt It " 1IO Wnl ••• ai.....i, ee.11 MeH, Glllttmi., mu. "okrt N. W1e4 ,,..Went .... '11111"'* J1c• It C1i1rler Via "'-ldlrlt _,,. O.W.tl M-.... n.11111 ic.,.u Edi,... lhM111 A. Murphln1 ......,. ,.""' ct.1rt" H. lff1 Rlc h1nil '· Nall "-'-"" ......... Edi"" --~ 2JJ '-·· A¥1ftYI ~.1n.., Mtlr1u 1 ,,0. ••• •••. t2,IZ --o.t. ._,Ill Wnl ...... ,.,... _,..,,.,, ltlKfl1 am........,;.......,,... H1111tffttJM audl~ 11'111 I~ ......... ,.,. IM o.n..lei Jiii Nlr'lfl •I Clm .... 11 .. 1 ,.,,,,, •• t7141 '4J .... Jl 1 C' .,.... .w ......... '41·1''' &.,..... ..... Al •• ,., ...... , , ... , ...... , .. , ... ~·. ..,,. ~ <-ft ~ti.II"" ~-... -'"'"" '""''"''"""" edlM(lotl ,....,.,. .,. lldWrffMINnfl ...... _, .. ~ WlfllM H*lfl ,.,.. ...... " GMPrrllflf -.. '9Cllfllf c .. ,_.,_ Hid If C ... • ""'91, Giii""""-......_,IOI'! w cwr"" a.u _.....,, 8t' _,. U.11 INlllM'I mlllr.tY ............... '"""""" Tuesday, July ll, 1971 Shooti ng Cue • Clemente Youth Freed by Judge A 15-yeaNJld San Clemente boy was cleared of murder charges late Monday by an Orange County Superior Court Judge who ruled that the younpter acted In ..U defense when be shot and killed his mother's male Companioo last JUD6 Subpoenas In 2 Nixon Homes Urged 17. David lifoberly rttumed to his home at 217 Avenida Rosa immediately atfer the verdict was aooounced, cleared of all allegations filed •gainst him after the kUllns of George lWlddy, 38, of Newbury Park. Judge Raymond Villcent , acting for the COWJty's juvenile court in what is oonnally an adult trial courtroom. dismissed the petition filed against the boy alter hearing one week of testimony. Press and public were barred from the COW1room throughout the trial. And lawyers orr both sides were ordered not 10 discuss the caurt action with newsmen. Police reports issued berore the gag order was imposed indicated that the Moberly boy shot Twiddy in the chest neck and ar~ with five bullets from , .22-caliber rifle following 'a Father's .1?4i squabble at the Moberly home over dirty Jaundry. U,I TttnlMIM FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF H. R. HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGATE PROBERS Testifi es Thlt President Nixon A1ked Hlm1'o Li1ten to Tapes and Report on Their Content1 W ASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The chairman of a House government expenditures sub- commJttee said today he would seek sub- poenas of construction records for Presi· dent Nixon's homes in Florida and California, said to have between $3.5 and $3. 7 ntiUion in government-funded im- provements (Related stories Page 3). Rep . Jack Brooks (0.Texas), said the White House was trying to block the sub- committee investigation. The f u 11 Government Operations Comntittee will meet Thursday to act on the request for su bpoenas, Brooks added. Officers said the boy used a rinc given to him by Twiddy as a gift a few day1 before the shooting. Haldeman: Nixon Requited He Report on Tapes Noted N eivport Painter Benjamin Gary Dead "The W}lite House bas now involved itself in this investigation and is seeking to block the subcommittee from carrying out its constitutional obligation," Brooks said. Brooks said the government has turned over documents tnf tcating a total of $1.9 million was spent o Nixon home3 at Key Biscayne, Fla., and San Clemente. He said the Geoeral Services Administration (GSA ), which has supervised the con· struction, has indicated addilionaJ im· provements were made, but has refused to tum over det.ails. Laguna Ma yor r Urges Blufftop Land Purchase Mayor Roy Holm would like Laguna Bead! to buy a portloo of blulllop prop. erty at the base of Legion Street as an ocean view point and pedestrian walkway , lo the beach. . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Fonner Whit• ltouse chief of staff H. R. lialdeman cf Newport Beach leslified today tbat President Nixon asked hlm to listen to Nixon's Watergate tapes and report back on their contents. Hal deman said he reported to Nixon through a White House lawyer that the H.R. HALDEMAN- 'Nixon'• S.O.B.' Story, Page 4 tapes indicated John W. Dean Ill was "inaccurate" in testifying he discussed a Watergate coverup with the President. In his second day in the witness chair at the natiorially-televlsed S e n a t e Watergate bearings, Haldeman. who acknowledged be ran a "tight ship'' at the ·White House, appeared uncertain about many ~lails of the Watergate ..... Unlike Nixon's other top aide, John D. Qirllcbman, who was expansive and voluble in his answers, Haldeman, with a gentle voice, spake ba1tingly at times and OUrid gerierally brief replies. >(Haldeman disputed John N. Mltcbell i;ac,t Dean and testified that he was kept ... the dark throughout 1972 about White House involvement In the Watergate break-in and ptber potentially em· barrassing activities. • From P"fle l DENSITY ... of land is the first step in the plaMed residential development, according to Moody's proposal. After ·the density is established, general development constraints, such as geologic and flood factors, \\lould be determined. The third step would be lo decide "'here the units would be placed on the land, followed by a fourth step in which minor details \\'OUld be ,,·orked out. The last step \'•ould be for issuance of building permits. l\loody suggested the new standards be ,,·oven into existing zoning ardinanccs rather than creation of ne\v planned residential development zones. Grrrround Beef? Ftmeral services are set for 3 p.m. Fr'l· day at Paci.fie View Mortuary for Newport Beach artist Benjamin Lee Gary, often called "The Grampa Moses of the West Cout." Hailed countrywide for his colorful and highly skilled pointillist paintings of ru ral and small town American life , Mr. Gary, of 4000 Hilaria Way, died Friday. He was 83. A New Jersey native, be bad been a Budget Hearing Set Wednesday For Saddlehack A public bearing on the 1973-74 Sad· dleback Community College .. budget of ,tl.119 mlllJon, is lie! for 1 i>.m. Wednes- day In the adminislroUon building boanl room. 'The budget calls fOf' a tax rate of 90.89 cents on $100 assessed valuation, up 25 cents over last year's rate of 65 cents. This would mean a bill of $91 to the owner of a $40,000 home. Major uses of the increased income will be for campus construction: of a $3.9 million science-mathematics building now being built, and to begin a utiUties building and initial phases of a music· arts building. Also on Wednesday's agl.nda is a pro- posal to estabUsh district police jurisdic· lion over enforcement of parking regula· tions on the 200-acre campus. The Orange County Sherifrs Depart· ment now issues parking citations, fines for which are paid to the county. If the existing district police force or three part-time, three full-time, and two relief offi cers takes aver the parking citation chores, a portion cf I.he fines which range from $2 to $5 wil\ go to the sc hool. No additional budgeting or extra di strict police officers is being proposed, !\lei l\1itchell, community services d.irec· tor. said. Lucky Lion Country- Animals Eat Horsemeat By rt1ARCI DODSON Of rllf 0.11¥ ,llot S11tt Humans aren't the only ones lo be fac· rd "'ilh rising meat costs. f\·lanagers of Lion Country Safari said l\fonday that lhcy have had to budget larger sums toward feed for the animals, "but we're not getting nlanned." JSaid :tn official for the drive-through preserve. "Obvioll.'ily, lhe economic situation is affecting us, but only lo a small extent. There's been a marginal effect an the over-1111 picture. but it is not substantial." said William W. Dredge, executive vice president. The main reason the park officials haJe not been faced with budgetary prob- lems as serious a~ those being faced by house'l''ivcs is that the scores of carnivores eat a different kind of meat, txplained Dredge. The vast majority of the meat lhe feed ers purchase for the animals is horsemeat. "Of rourse. that is not to say ttlat our prices havt' not been increasi ng. But ll 's not as If our costs were rising tv.·o or three times as much as before. Wc'\'e been seeing a five percent. eight percent, and sometlmes as much as an 11 percent increast'. "Bul ll's not getting out or hand, shall we say." The park officials do purchase some beef for the animals. but it is of a quality Ix-lo"' the USOA-cheC:ked beef which housewives buy in the stores, Dredge 1 said. O!her foods the feeders buy wi!h their S200.0QO..plus annual food budget include h<iy for the giraffes and o t h e r \'t'gctarians and some fruits for the prln1ates, he said. "But we 've been having no difficulties in getting supplies and we don't an· tirlpate any problems in the near fu· lure." And even though prices may rise, Dredge admitted, park officials see no reMOO to increase admission fetS to the 1,1:iktllre preserve. But h:isn't the "average housewlle" be been complaining that he can longer feed her famlly with the present economic situation? · "\Yell. indeed we can afford to keep t1ur family here fed." IMWered Dredge. "But our budgets here have been rl!lng, too. We ju.,t have betn !ure 10 budget carefully and analy7.e our costs." tn addition , the park offlclnls deal with volume purchases. he said. "By volume buying, we avoid many of the problem$ of the housewife who buys food for her family week to week." commercial artist all his life \D'IUI he moved to California in 1955. H• came to tile w .. t Coast pmmiless after losing the savings of a lifetime oo unlucky stock market speculations. Onc.e here, he found a new lifestyle and a new art that brough him critical ac· claim, more to his own surprise th.an anyone else's, he once said. Color and light were central to Mr. Gary's style. Hls paintings, produced laboriously one every three months, are marked. by rich glowing colors bathed in sunlighl. • "Color is love, and without color man is empty," Mr. Gary once said His: first show at lhe Newport Harbor Art M""11m in 1971 brought him his first natioo.al atteotkm after_ years of ~ duclng the pointillist canvases . Mr. Gary bas no immediate .survivors. His only son, Hollywood actor Benjamin Gary, Jr., died several years ago. lift. Gary, who sported a mane of white hair and a fuII white moustache, 11tood six feel, four inches tall. He was the son of an Irish rose gardener. From Page l BOSTON ... the hospital as Roi.! E. Brown, 31, of Louisville, Ky. The spokesman said Brown bad multiple injuries. Both survivors were reported In critical condition. The craft was identified from the air· line's Atlanta headquarters a9' Delta Flight 723. It had 83 pallSellgers and a crew of five , according to a spokesman from the airline in Boston. There was one non. paying paMenger. The crash occurred on the Birds Island Flats area of the airport. A witness at the scene said the only parts of the craft still intact were the rudder and stabiliier, the two engines and two pices o( wing. Council Weighs Parking Meter Hike fu Laguna The Laguna Beach Cily CoU11cil will consider both increasing parking meter fees and nwnber of meters in town when it meets at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at city ball. The regular council meeting will be preceded by an executive session (cla;ed to the public) starting at 6:30 p.m. Wednesdy. The proposal to increase parking fees is one o{ 31 items on the council agenda. The council will also consider fonnation cf a city parking authority to finance constructlcn of the $970,000 Glenneyre parking structure and future parking facilities. Other tlems lo be laced by the council include: -An infonnal public hearing on con· cerns of Nyes Place residents over fre· quent traffic accidents at nearby in- tersections with South Coast Highway. 1be state highways ljivision recom· mended installation cf barriers to prcr hihit l•fl turns ooto the busy roadway. -Recommendations from Mayor Roy Holm and Councilwoman Phyllis Swee-- ney for membership of the "blue ribbon" citizens committee screening applications for the position of Laguna Beach city manager. -Creation or a city division of municipal transit to adrniniJter Laguna's mass transit affairs. -Suggestions to improve street sweep. ing problem on Ramona Avenue and the Legion Str~t area. Holm broached the possible purchase at a weekend budget study session of tQe city council and said the cost might run as high as $100,000. The land at the base of Legion Street', he said, might be used as • combination ( street end, pedestrian access and vista point. "It's something I'm dnterested in pursuing. Of course, it may or may not make sense depending OD What property owners in the area want to do," said Holm. Land between Sleepy Hollow and the Hotel Laguna is owned by several in· d.ividuals and Upland Industries, a subsidiary of Union Pacific Railroad. Upland two years ago presented a pro- posed condominium development plan for the area, but later dropped il Since then, no other development alternatives h~ · been forwarded. Holm suggested the city use gas tax revenues for land purchase. "\Ve might , set a certain amount of funds this year1 next year and the following year," he ex, plained. Marine to Face T1ial in Rapes An El Toro Marine aceused of rape and sexual perversion in lncidecits involving two girls ages 14 and 16 and a 20-year-<>id Orange Coast College student has been ordered to face trial Sept. 5 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date for Larry Ray Duran, 23, who was ar· rested at the base June 12 shortly after a 16-year--old girl was raped and sexually humiliated near Saddleback High School. Police identified the Marine corporal as the cruising motorist who picked up all three victims in the Costa Mesa area and attacked them after offerink them a lifl: Duran is held in Orange County Jail with bail set at $20.000. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- -... ' ~For The Family- WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOU SE MORE THAN ANY OTHER TH ING7 WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTICS DRAMATICALLY7 WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE7 WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT7 ••• CARPETING FROM ALDEN 'S1>THAT'S WHAT! (I F YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOUIS: Moo. 11n n,.,_, ' to 5130 -FRI. ' to 9 -SAT, 9130 to S I ' ' • ' ' . . .. ! I g ' Ii ii • h 11 J J j ti n 4 ii r ~ ~ ,, h b l• " • g ~ b a rl n p ii 11 b 0 a fi b p 0 h b a . 1 ~ . • ~ c -. c ~ ~ b . u I • v l l t • ·1 l J I I I ' I ,< . ~ I • , Saddlehaek EDITIO N VOL. 66, NO. 212, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • Ill Guard Killed Violence Erupts At Leavenworth LEAVENWORTH, Kan. t AP J -One guard was killed today as violence erupted at the federal prison here, of- ficials said. Warden Loren Daggett said inmates were holding four hostage&. 'lbe warden said he didn't know hO\V many inmates were involved. The identity of the dead man was not immediately revealed. Daggett said an inmate called him from the prison lawxlry and said be was I Plane Crash f( ills Pilot From Coast Engine trouble y.·as blamed today for the death of a 47-year-old Newport Beach man whose private plane plummeted to the ground Monday afternoon and burst into flames in a vacant Buena Park field. Killed in the crash was Evan Koppe. a resident of 1400 Santanella Terrace in the :&vine Terrace section or D:>rona del Mar. He was the sole oceupant of the tur:in-englne Cessna 310. Koppe radioed Fullerton Airport that he was experiencing mechanical trouble but reportedly declined the tower's offer to mobilize emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, its right engine malfunctioning severely, went into a steep bank, stalled and plunged into the ground near Beach Boulevard and Malvern Road . No one else \vas injured by the crash \Vhich was officially logged at 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said "\\'itnesses reported the plane's right engine was running so slowly that they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the wreckage but were driven back by flames. Police said a monwnental traffic jam resulted when they blocked off streets to aid firemen fighting the blaze. It took fire crews approximately two hours to bri;ig the fuel-fed fire under control. Koppe, believed to be the owner of the plane, brought the cralt within one mile of the Fullerton Airport runway before he lost control. A Bank of America building \Vas just a few hundred feet away from where the plane crashed. Marine to Face T1ial in Rapes An El Toro Marine accused of rape and 3CXUal perversion in incidents involving (WO girls ages 14 and 16 and a 20-year-old Orange Coast College student bas been -ordered to face trial Sept. 5 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge James Turner set the trial date lor Larry Ray Duran, 23, who was ar· rested at the base JWle 12 shortly after a t&-year-old girl 'vas raped and seirually humiliated near Saddleback High School. Police identified lhe Marine corporal as the. cruising motorist who picked up all three victims in the Costa Mesa area and attacked them arter offering them a lift. Duran is held in Orange C'.ounty Jail with bail set at $20,000. BEERCAN RACE WORTH THE PA I N Whereas most sailboat races are "bor· Ing to watch aod dilOcO!t to photograph," -.Ve& Dally PUot Chief Photographer Lee Payne, Newport's annual Beerean Reg1tta is not your average water com· ,P<tillon. Payne hll1 been In the thick of it over the years with "big boats crashing 11bout." and on Page 21 today ls a col- lection or some of his ftnest recordings ror several publications of that "dingy" ,competition. • tt's the only regatta he'll sboot, -because the Beercan Is worth the pain. Ahoy. he gell seasick. l holding four persons hostage. The 1varden quoted the inmate as saying the hostages would not be hurt it "the ward- en ~nd the press showed up." It was first beheved only another guard was being held. Th ere was no indication whether the hostages were guards or other inmates. The weapon used to kill the guard was not known. Daggett said he believed t h e disturbance was a response to last week's major riot at the Oklahoma State Prison in McAlester, Okla. He saicfprison officials had "heard through t h e grapevine something might happen." He said the morning walch was held over as a precaution and the "A" cellhouse "'as secured just before noon. Efforts continued in early afternoon to secure the rest of the prison. Inmates were being moved from the prison in· dustries area back to their cells with no difficulty. • Daggett said. "The rank and file had nothing to do with it. It v.•as just a few trouble makers." · . U,I T......,.. FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF H. R. HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGA,TE PROBERS Testifies That President Nixon Asked Him to Listen to T1pes and Repor t on Their Contents Five guards suffered minor injuries and were treated at the prison hospital. A minor fire we.s reported at the prison shoe factory, but off\cials said it was ex· tipgWshed and caused little damage. The warden said the 1i1mates who were holding the hostages had not made their dem~nds clear immediatety. Haldeman Heard Tapes Mission Viejo Company Neutral 011 Street Issue Former Staff C1iief Calls De,,ari's Words 'In.accurate' By JAN \VORTH Of "'• Oalrr 'Hot Si.ff A representali\'e oC the Mission Viejo Company said today the Company ''docs not v.·ant to appear to support or oppose any point of view" on the closures of three Mission Viejo streets at their i~ tersection with Jeronimo Road. l\1artin Russo, manager of commun ity services. said company ofticials are col- lecting facts in preparation {or a public meeting on the controversial closures set for Aug. 14 by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Firth District Supervisor Ro n a I d Caspers appointed a CQmmittee last week to discuss the blockades, which have aroused angered reactions from both those favoring and opposing the CQunty action. \\rAsHrNCTON (UPI)-Fonner \\'hite liouse chief of staff H. R. Haldeman of Newport Beach testified today thlll President Nixon asked him to listen to Nixon's \Vatergate tapes and report back on their contents. Haldeman said he reported to Nixon through a White House lawyer that the H.R. HALDEMAN- 'Nixon's.S.0 .8.' Story, Page 4 tapes indicated John \V. Dean III .~as "inaccurate" in testifying he discussed a \\1atergate coverup with the PresidCtlt. In his second day in the witness chair at the nalionally-televised Sc n at e Watergate hearings, Haldeman, who acknowledged he ran a "tight ship" at the While House, appeared uncertain about many details of the \Vatergate ' case. · Unlike Nixon's other top aide. John D. Ehrlichman, who \Vas expansive .i.nd voluble in his answers, Haldeman, v:ith a gentle voice , spoke haltingly al times and offered generally brief replies. Haldeman disputed John N. Mitchell and Dean and testified that he was kept in the dark throughout um about \\'hile House involvement in the Y.'atergate break-in and other potentiaUy em- barrassing activities. House Committee Seeking Nixon's Ho1ne Records Russo said the Company "sincerely \VASlnNGTON (UPI) -The chairman to block the subcommittee from carrying regrets the inconvenience. confusion anlll: conflict" caused after the closures of of a Rouse government expenditures sub-out its constitutional obligation," Brooks Montilla Lane, Carranza Drive ;:.nd committee said today he \\"OOld seek sub-said. Cordillera Drive a month ago. poenas of construction records for Presi-Brooks said the government has turned "The company has been requested bY dent Nixon's homes in Florida and over documenl3 indicating a total of $1.9 concerned homeowners to take a firm California, said to have between $3.S and million v.•as spent on Nixon homes at Key statement of position." Ru!SO said. Biscayne, Fla .. and San Clemente. He But he added "It would be in-$3.7 million in government-funded im· said the General Services Administration appropriate to make any further com-provements (Related stories Page 3). (GSA), which has supervised the coo- ments (until the committee has met) Rep. Jack Brooks {D-Texas), said the struction, has indicated additional im· because, like many residents involved, \Vhite Jiouse was trying to block the sub-provements were made, but has refused we lack sufficient data from whicli to committee investigation. The f u 11 to tum over details. ; draw a fair conc.lus4on at this time.'' Government Ope.rations Committee ~·ill The GSA said Monday it is preparing a The streets were closed by Board of meet Thursday to act on the request for new "deftnilive" statement on con- Supervisors actlon after a roup o~-~s~u~bpoen~~·~'~· ;B~roo~ks~a~d~d~ed~-~~~~~=~st~ru~ct~i=on~a~l~I ~~lo:ri:da~a~nd~Ca=l~if~om~ia residents on ~n Andrts Lane, Roque "The White House has now involved s and it w1 ready later Drive, and Naccome Drive ask itself in this investigatioo and is g thls \\'ttk. a bearing te discuss traffic problems on their intemal streets. Following almost unanimous agree- metrt among residents at a hearing, the three feeder streets were closed. After that decision, anoufer group of residents who found themselves without their acustomed access to Jeronimo or to shopping centers on La Paz Road, picketed four times at the intersection of Cordillera and Jeronimo. Safety Was cited as reasoning by both sides in the disagreement. Proponents of the closures said their streets were unsafe because speeding motorists were using them as shortcuts. Opponents said the closures of the three strttts made traffic on the rt· malnlng open ones more serious and ln- crtased safety hazards to pedestrian children around Cordillera School. Escape1·1r Sen tenced FORSYTH, Mont. (UPI} -Two jail escapers were sentenced to death Mon· day for !he Sept. 28. 1172, faLal shooting or a j(lweler during a robbery. Shortage Nears Lack of Beef ~eeri Tli is W eekend By United Press International The Adminstration calls it "scare Wk," but meat packers warn that they are caught in a sq ueeze between the retail price ceiling and t~e ~Ost of ~tile that will cause a nationwide shortage of beef -00. ginning possibly as soon as this weekend. "Area supermarkets are facing a drastic short.age of beef, which could lead to the disappearance of some cuts from store meat cases and in some cases -no beef at all/' Lyle Everingham, president oi the nationwide Kroger Food Stores, said In Cincinnati. But the administration reaffirmed Monda y that the price ceiling would not be lifted until Sept. 12. Economists expect beef prices, which have already risen by more than 60 percent in six months to lurch upward again afler lhe freeze is llfled. ' On the West Coast, it was learned that some cattle American ranchers are wllhholdlng from the U.S. market during the price freeze are being bought by Japanese. Spea king in an even voice, flashing a frequent grin. ·Haldeman -once con- sidered the second most powerful man in the government -listened while the events that Mitche!fcalled "\Vhile flouse horrors" v.·ere enumerated. He said that a!! of them escaped his anention Wltil this spring. ~laldeman testified that he listened lo tapes of the Sept. 15 and ri1arch 21 meetings that he and Dean had wilh Nix- on -meetings et which Dean contends a cover up \li'as discussed . Haledman testified he listened to thr. 1tfarch 21 lape in an anteroom of his ol· fSee llALDER!\tA~. Page 21 Man Denies Hero Role Follo iving Free·way Rescue John Del 1\-tonaco, principal of Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School in Irvine. said toda y. "It was just the humane thing to do.·• lie denied any heroics in his rescue of a tw<ryear-old girl from speeding traffic on the San Diego Freeway in Garden Grove last week. "I don't like that word 'hero,'""' he said today after hearing that one account of the accident had described him that way . "l like kids. That's the reaM!n I'm in this business," he said, indicating he felt he just did what he should. Del l\1onaco was driving on the freeway v.·hen he "saw the cars in front of me were kind of swerving out of the way for something.'' , That something v.'as Aimee Beyer , who, minutes before, had f3llen out of the rear door of car in which she and her mother, ri1rs. Richard Beyer of Orange, \\'ere riding. Del ti.!onaco pulled his car over to the right shoulder and started across the freeway, waving a handkerchief to warn oncoming traffic. At one point a car darted bctv.·een Del l\1onaco and the child, stunned and bloody in the number two lane. "She was calling 'Mama , fi.1ama.' "Del l\1onaco said . as he described how he scooped her up and dodged cars to get back to the skle of the road. A doctor who had stopped examined tbc child and the mother soon joined them. Del l\lonaro, convlnetd the baby was safe. drove away without identlfylng1 himself. News tb&t Mrs. Beyer was searching for the rescuer finally reached Del l\tonaco early this week and he phoned the family "to Ste how tht!i baby was." Aimee reportedly ls recuperating well. "I was just scared,'' De.I Monaco recalled today, "because there was a kid there." Today's Flnal N.Y. Stooks TEN CENTS Two S11rvive S1nasl1up in Heavy Fog BOSTON (AP) - A Delt3 Airlines DCt jct with 89 persons aboard crashed and disi ntegrated on landing at Logan lntemalional Airport in heavy fog today. PoJicc said at least 85 persons died. Only two survivors were reported In- itially by ~fassachusetts Gener a I Hospital. Two persons were WlactO\lllted for. An eyewitness said the twin-engine plane crashed on a runway about J ,000 feet from the edge of the wat er at the busy airport that juts into Boston Harbo r. State police said it 3ppeared that the jet st ru ck a seawall at lhe approach lo the airport. A state police spokesman said there was a break in the 2"'·foot high wall , indicaiing the cr:ift's landing gear struck it. An observer said persooal effects and parts of bodies were strewn all over the runway. He said the plane. arriving on a flight from Burlington, Vt., ittmed to have disintegrated on impact. He said the largest portion of the plane he could see was a 10-foot portion of the fuselage . In \\'ashington, the Nat Ion a I Tr~portation Safety Board said ll was sending a IO-member investigating team to the scene. The board said the team would be headed by board member Isabel .Burgess, State police said a temporary morgue was set up at the fire station al the airport. Reports from the scene said numerou.s vehicles drove to the crash site to collect bodies from the debris and mud. Some vehic les became mired in the mud. A Delta ticket agent at Burlincton said the plane, scheduled to leave Burlington at 9 a.m., made ~an unschedult'd stop al the municipa l airport in Manchester, N.H. He said he did-flot know the reason for t.hc New Ham pshire stop. One survivor at ritassachusetts General Hospital was identified as Leopold Chouinard. 20, of Marshfield, Vt. A h05pital spokesman said he had third· degree bums O\'er 80 percent of his body. The other survivor was Identified by the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31, of Louisville, Ky. The spokesman said Brov.·n had multiple injuries. Both survi,·ors 1>1'ere rcportt'd ln critical condition. The craft was identified from the air· line's Atlanta headquarters as Delta flight 723. It had 83 passengers and a crew of fi ve, acrord.ing to a spokesman from the airline in Boston. There v.·as one non- paying passenger. The crash occurred on the Birds Island Flats area of the airport. A 'vilness at the scene said the only parts of the craft still intact were the rudder and stabilizer. the t\\'O engines and 1"1'0 pices of wing. The crash site was believed to be in the area of the Oct. 4. 1960 crash of an Eastern Air Lines jet into ~ton Harbor with the loss of 62 lives. There were 10 survi,•ors of the accident, which occurred. (See BOSTON, Page ZJ Orange Cout Weather Orange Coa st ski es will be cloudy during the night and early morn· ing ~ours, "''ith hazy sunshine !<:>- morrow morning. H.igh.s wiU be In the low 70s. \\'Ith the low in the 60s. INSm E TODAY Proclaimi"g that ht ha.s that indescribable "k11ow ledge -a11d will1 a snowballing movement bthind him. -Guru !traharaj Ji, 15, 11 embarkhtg on hi.I third "peace" tour ill tilt Un1ttd States. See storu, Page 14. L,M. k\"11 11 Mrlltl a (111..,,.11 I M•!Val ... ,.._ 11 Cllnlflal n.• Mtn.i.•I Newt I C-k• 0 O•tllff Ctfff\' t" c .... ..,.. 11 ,,..,.. 'IH'lw " 0.11111 Jffttc" 1 1-11 . I 1 .. 1f llllttrl.. ..... ' 11.U Ml1'•ff , .. ,. allft11•1-I It TIM1¥klM 11 ,llllllKI 11~1 . Tktttn 11 ,., 1111 ."-.... 1 W•lflfr f ~ '' w ....... """' 1s.11 o\11111 ~ 15 w .... ...... ,2,,__0_•_1L_Y_P_IL_o_1 ____ 1s ______ lwt\d•1 J11ly J l , l'rll Cwme n te Boy Fr eed • I A JS..year-old SM ~1t ,._,,,,. wt~ cltaN'd of murdt-r <'hlllrf:~ l.att ~ll'INA' by an ~ C"""1) ~.,,mor f "'" judle '«1la ~ that tht-v~"~ ll,-:1.'\i in self .iefet* ... ,,,,,..n hi• ~ a."ld k f'd his motM-'s ma~ t"Omp!mtM la.~ Jane 17. Dani ~•l'lbe!l't· rrtUr1'leO 14 hlJ l't:omr .. : lJ7 A''tNda Rttsa ~Ltl'f'~ t tir 1~ \'trcltct ··15 AM(\Jn<'f'CI (')c.11:-t'\! I~ Jll\ allegnt.xru: f , ~am.< t .. r:l •~':;r· tl'w.' k11lin3 of 'r'°'>"" 1'v. i.1b ~. 1.! '\r• ~ Park. J~"'"f' R.aymo .. "'ld \~--en~ ._-~..,.. f,~r t.~ f."(llD\t\·'5 }Ut't'O.Jlt-ro.i:i 0 .-nit :.$ "norm8J.1,· an 3d-h :-i•: ~,u.,m.'l.'l'I. di5misst.d, \bf pi'tt:X,1' !ti\'~ ~.::.l::r.~l I~ boy afier be.a.~ .:ot' 11·tt t\~ :Hti..-oony. • ,. Cou11ty Plan Irvine Health Council Irvine's hcal!h care services com- 1nittee \vas to meet today at 5 l;l'clock in city hall to dis<.'tls~ impncts of an adopted county master plan of health facJUties and services. Mrs. Loi.s Benes of the Ranch is the eity council .appalnted delegate to the Orange County Hea tlh Planning Oluncil. She was expected today to outline the rhangcs in the report finalized before it "'flS forwardl'd to Sacr11n1cnto. Those changes v.·ere adopted by a unanimous \'Ote of the count y health planning body lollowing a July 10 hearing. Al that hearing, lr\'ine city interests were represented by ~l rs. Benes, G:iry Dalzell, "'tM) spoke for the •lclp Irvine Get llospitlls (J-JJCll J ad hoc citizens rommittee. and Dr. Stanley van den Noort, acting dean of the UC Irvine- Calilomia College of Medicine . .. ·Meets reeled by the county roaster plan. Scott Mulholh1nd chairs the group which includes me1nbe,., Mrs. K a t h y Roach. Sam Devitt, Robert Goldstein and Glen \\'oodmansee. The committee's origina l assignment to study emergency ambulance services resulted in the city council budgeting $100.ooo, for an initial pa r a med i c emergenry service. 'J'hc program will ])(- law1ched in L'OOpCra tion "'ith 1he coun!v fire depar1n1cnt so1'rlclln11• this fisc31 year. 1973-74. li.lembers 1nay v.·a111 to rcco1nmend 10 eouncilmen the type of study body to be appointed to continue the health planning effort suggested by the county hea lth pla1rning council. Pr61 and pu~>t \&f'!'t ~"'T'f\1 !rom \ht counroom ~t U>to tn.il . .\nd la"·yers on bot~ S>dt'S wtrt ordtttd :'IOI to diSC'USS \.'°II:' C\'11.1?1 action "'th newsmen. Police rtporu Ls:surd befort lht gag order was imposed iocbcattd that tbr f\loberly boy shot ~, in tht cbeS1 , neck and arm with fi\'e bullets from 3 .22-Caliber rifle foUowing a Father's J?ay tiquabble at the ~toberly home O\'er dirty JAPAN ESE PR IME MINISTER TANAKA BOWS WITH PRESIOENT NIXON AT HONOR GUARD REVIEW Le1d1r1 Begin Two D1y1 of Discu1sion1 Amid Pomp 1nd C1r1mony a t the White HouH Among the several amendments af· fecting Irvine was one providing an op- portunity for residents of the new city to innuence the continuing planning effort. Dalzell, who serves on the city plait· ning commission, indicated at the mast er plan hearing he and others in the HIGH group, would cooperate 1vith the counl)i agency cha rged 1vith ntaster planning health services and facilities. Tanaka Praised laundry. . . Officers said the boy used a r1ne g1\•en to him by T'l'liddy as a gift a few days before the shooting. . Twiddy was dead when they amv~ at the home and the youngster was picked up at San Clemente Pier s~rtly after mak1ng a telephone call to pohce. N ixou, Japanese Leader Confer Budget Hearing Set Wednesday r For Saddleback A public hearing on the 1973·74 Sad- dleback eommunity College budget of $11.89 million. is set for 8 p.m. Wednes· day in the admin.i!tration building board room. The budget calls for a tax rate of 90.89 'tents on $100 assessed valuation, up 25 cents over last year's rate of 65 cents. This would mean a bill of '91 to the owner of a $40,000 home. \\'ASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on l today v•elcomed J,apan'! Prime ~1inister Kakue.i Tanaka as "an equ'l partner v.·orking for a cause to which We are equally devoted -peace for the v.ilole v.·orld." The greeting amid the pomp and ceremony of an official welcome marked the start of two days of talks between the leaders. Tanaka said that relations between Japan and the United States have "ex- panded greatly both in breadth and in depth." He said it is "all the more important for the peoples of our two countries, as partners, to develop a full gra sp or the na tional characteristics and the social fabric of ea~ other." Tanaka omitted a reference to a "lack of understanding" between nations and peoples in his prepared arrival remark.., and substituted instead the need to ··deepen understanding among peoples." Nixon v.·elcomcd Tanaka v.·i1h a pro- longed handshake and exchange ol remarks wN!n the Japanese leader step- ped from his limousine on the south lawn of the White }louse. 1 Ma)or uses: of the increased income will be for campus: constnictlon: of a $3.9 million science-mathematics building now being built, and to begin a utilities building and lnitlal phases of a muslc· ' arts building. Ne I t s k Also on Wednesday's agenda I> a pi<>-\V}lO • ee S pooal to eslablish dlsltlct police Jurisdlc-1 Uon over enloreemenl or parking regula· Regional Funds tlons on the 200-acre campus. The Orange Counly Sheriff'• Depart· T CJ B h m<lll DOW issues parking cilatiOll!, fines 0 ean ea c for which are paid to the toUnty. If the existing distri ct police force of three part-time, three full-Ume, and two relief officers takes over the parking citation chores, a portion of the fines which range from $2 to SS will go to the school. No addi tional budgeting or extra district 'police officers Is being pro~. Mel Mitchell, communi ty services cti'r«"=" tor, said. Irvine Ranch Singe d By Small Brush Fire A small brush fire burned an acre of Irvine Ranch land early this morning before being extinguished by fire units from the state, county 11nd city of La guna Beach. County forestry officials said the fire 's cause is under investigation. The brush blaze was located north of Laguna Can· yon Road about 1', mile north of !he in· tersection of El Toro 11nd Laguna Canyon roads. · 1 OUNGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Newport Beach will ask the Callfornia League of Cities to demand legislation that would split up the cost or suppor ting regional facilities -like beaches - among all cities in the state. City councilmen ~·tonday night en· dorsed a resolution declaring the city went nearly $1 million in the hole last year paying for beach maintenance and protection even though 85 percent of the 10 1nillion users came fron1 out or town. City ~1anagcr Robert L. \\1ynn told councilmen he feels il is only fair that the tax bUrden for supporting the Ix-aches in Newport Beach should be shared by all the cltles whose people visit them. The resolution adopted by counciln1cn cites the current tax limi1s :ind other lac· !ors suppo rting <1n equalization of the tnxcs. The resolution <1sks the stale to afrord all Californians "the opportunity of shar· ing in the cost of coastal prcsC'rvation and maintenance ... throug ha statc"•idc tax subsidy to th£' governmental agencies "ilhin the coastal zone." \Vynn suggestC'd s ome other alternatives -including a bed use 1ax of up to si x pcrcenl QO visitors in hotels -but said some kind of equaliia· tlon method \vould be the most workable. \Vynn also told councilmen tt'oe Orange County League of Citlt.'t ba.s already agreed to help Nev.·port Be1ch tel up a meeting of coastal cl.tit! 10 '''ork out some kind of lormula for uslstnnce frorn the state. A 19-gun salute v.·as fired and the Japanese and American anthems were played. Mrs. Nixon was oo hand for the ceremony, y,·ith Secr,etary of State and l\1rs. William P, Rogers and Adm. and Mrs. Thomas 1'-1oorer. Moorer is the chainnan of the Joint Chiefs of ~taff. Nixon and Tanaka, who met 11 months ago in Hawaii, are expected to ta lk about a proposed American.Japanese-Soviet oil and gas deal in Siberia, joint approaches to trade, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia and European security. On Monday, Nixon met with Prime Mini ster Gough Whillam of Australia. WhiUam, the leader of Australia's first LabOr government in almost a quarter· century, said after the meetin g in a speech that Australia was not a satellite of any country but a friend and partner of the United States with independent in- terests. Car Kills Alie1i Escaping From Border Patrol A Mexican citizen apparently at· tem pting to avoid the San Onofre OOrder patrol checkpoint was k.illed Monday when he dashed across the San Diego Freeway and y,•as struck by a car. J~an llerrera Alvarez of the state or Zacatecas, Aitexico, \\'as killed instantly when he darted west across the free1vay ana was hit by a southbound vehicle driven by Wi lliam E. Carter of 25371 Romera Place, El Toro, a highway patrolman said. Alva rez and another ~1exican had departed early in the. day from a smug· gler's car and were altempting to sneak around the checkpoint when the accident occurred, said a border patrolman. The t"·o had paused at the center divider of the free11•ay v.·hen Alvarez decided to make a run for the other side through the sparse traffic, according to a highway patrolman. l\1onday's fatality \1·as one of a series nf rece nt similar accidents at the OOrdcr thC'Ck. Last spring four persons 11·cre killed in two similar incidents as they at· tempted. with the aid of alien smugglers, to skirt. th'C immigration check. Officials termed the practice of run - ning across the hazardous freeway lanes as commonplace when sn1ugglcr s err and make the trip north wh(·n the checkpoint is in ope ration. Generally, i( the driver is an alien . himself. all the occupants of the car leave the vehicle at the roadside and try to cross the free~·ay and walk undetected upcoa st along the beachfront. Occasionally, when the driver of the smuggling car is a U.S. citizen, he orders his human cargo from lhe auto and successfully negotiates the roadblock <ilone. His passengers, hov.·ever, have to fend ror themselves. TM Or•-Co-1! DAILY PILOT, "1"" wlllcfl It ~-"'' Ht ..... Pttn, 11 ""blltll«I 11Y .... Of'l"9• Ca.ii! ''*'I"'~ (OfnN"'f· StW• rlM •cllllorot 1r1 !MlbllilMd, MONl•'f l~tQW" Frld•Y• tor CMt1 Mei1, MfWIW:lll ll••th, Hlllllll!flon 1 ...... 111-1911! \/1llty, L19......, 1 .-d'>. lrv"'4/S10Cll_t_ ,,.,. S1" C~~~'" S.11 Ju.... C•olt!flNI. .. •l<>o•t •1<jlO~•I ld!tlOn It pufll!•-i~rurdlYI •NI ~ .. ...,.~, 11'!1 pr;,,.,l~t pwDlll~l"O pl1~! 10 M iJl Wr,I t •V •1tt1I, CMte Mtw, C1lllil•~1t, l~Jt ll o1"rt N. W1•1' ,., ..... _ ..... ,.~Olhtt J•c• 11. c ... 1,., Vic' .. ,. .. ..,, t NI Gtl't•t l M•f!ftoff T1itfl'lt 1 1Ce1•il 1!4ll!Ot Noted Neivport Painter Benjam.in Gary Dead • Th'''"' A. Murph ;,,, M-.ll!f ll•1Mr Cherf•t H. l t ot llit~•1d '· Nill ..... llllfll M-r-9"'9 l!•ltoto .,,... £ell• MeM; »I Wt1! I " Sorttt "'"""" 19flfl: ll» H,..._1 ..... ~ .. l .. 11111 lff<fl1 m 110-ei• ,......,.,. H..,ll!lf .... l .. tll; 1'UI t~di I O\ril'o>••• Sift Cltlr'fMf! JI» N&t!!! ~I '''"'"" 11111 , • .,.... 171 41 642-4)21 c~ A"-"'""' , .. 2.st11 S.. c ........ All 0.,•"Mlllflt ,,..,.... 4tl-44JO ~. ltll, o ..... Cotti ,.110111~1 ... (.tm,.~f. Ht -· t!Otltt, lll"'tr1ti...1, M1Wlll -f!tr tr H•tt'"-" l'ltnolll _., • ,.,..,i.oc... wlll'!WI ·~I.ti "'' "'Ii.a..., tf cwtTllf!I tMllf. IKtftll t laH •tt ..... 111 II t;ftl• M111, C.llflwftlL twlltct'l,tltll t'f ,1rr1tr Jt IJ -"'"' .,,. men u .11 '"'"lll1Y1 rntlll"1' .... 1111111•111 • .,, .. '"°""'''· I Funeral services are set ror 3 p.m. Fr1· dav at Pacific View ~tortuflry for Nr°v.'J>(l1 Be.sch artist Benjamin I.AX" Gary, ofttn called "The Crampa M~s of the West Coast." Jlailed countrywide for his colorful and highly skilled pc>intllllst pAintlngs of n1ral and sman tov.11 America n life, r-.tr. Gary, of 4000 •hlarta WA)', dlcd Friday, l~e "·as 83. A New Jerse y nat ive. he hnd been ;i commercia l arti!lt nil hts hfe until he moved to Cal!tom1a In 1955. He came to the West Coast pcnniles.1 after losing the 11av~ngs of a lifetime on unlucky stock market speculation.". Once here , hr: round A nl'"' llfr.style and a new 11rt lhat brough hln1 critical 11c· claim, n1 ore lo his o"n surprise th:in I (lnyonc else's. he once said. Color and light v.·ere cvtlral to !\.tr. Gary's style. His paintings . produced laboriously one every thrte months, are mRrked by rich glov.:lng colors bathed in sunlight. "Color is \o\'I!:. and y,•ithout color man 1s empt}'.'' ~tr. Gary once said. " His first show at the Nev.,,ort llarbor 1\rt ;\fu,.eum in 1971 brought him his first nalional attention after )'ears of pro- ducing the pointillist canvases. r-.·tr. Gary has no Immediate survivors. Ills only son. Jlollywood actor Benjamin Gary. dr . died several years ago . ~Ir. C'lary, who sported a manr. of \\1hlte hair and a full whJtc moustache, stood sax fret. four Inches tall. lie "'as the son of an Irish rose g11rd~er. Co11nty Welfare Cuse Load Drops 1,5 60 in June Orange County 's welfa re department case load dropped 1,560 in June below e-0mparable figures in A1ay, the depart- ment reported Monday. The decrease Js in line with a statewide case load drop for June of 35,706 reported by State Welfare Director David B. Swoap. The largest number of cases dropped from the county ro lls during the month continues a year long trend of decrease in Aid to Families With Dependent Children. County v.'elfare officials believe the drop can be credited largely to better economic conditions with more jobs availabl.e to fathers and mothers. Swoap said the statewide decrease in the past year has totaled 154,447 cases. County case totals are 58,769 in J une compared to 60,329 in 11ay. ln June. 1972, 65.207 cases were listed. Jn the aid to families category there \vere 421 in JWle compared with l ,OO'l in the same month of 1972. Assistance to the-aged was also do\\'Tl in June from the previous year. There \\'ere 9,175 cases last month compa red to 9,936 during June, 1972. This was at tributed partly to an in- crease in federal Social Se c u r i t y pay1nents. From PagffI BOSTON ... as the craft was taking off. Authorities said starlings pulled into the plane's jet engines caused that crash. Logan Airport, which bills itself as the \\'orld '9 eighth largest, sits on a large landfill area. It is the second largest airport in the country for overseas departures. One of the first men lo lhe scene of today's crash. Fire LI. Robert Alexander, said he and 10 men carried one survivor from the craft. ile described the man as middle-aged. He said be was conscious when carried out and said to the rescuers, "Please help me. I can 't feel my legs." Alexander said the watches or persons found in the craft \Vere stopped at 11 :OS a.m. While the original master plan for the ccunty flatly baMcd any hospital con- struction in Irvine for 10 yea rs. the revis- ed version makes provisions for growth not foreseen in county and state popula· lion data inco rporated without change in I~ master plan. Irvine residents may be served by health council-approved hosp it a I facilities. Anothe r way the new city may be served is if facilities operating in other areas In the county are attracted to move to Irvine, closing underused beds in other areas o( the county. The m a i n emphasis of the county master plan for health ca re, however. suggests communilies c on s i de r "services" not "beds" when planning means or caring for people. Irvine City Councilmen recently e:it· tended the life of the city study com· mittce l~ detennine how the city is af- Grrrround Beef? From Pagel HALDEMA N. • • fice in mid-A pril. 11e said he did not be.· lieve it was before Nixon's April 17 state· ment "but I'm not sure " Nixon said April 17 that he had learned of "major developments" March 21 and ordered a new inquiry into the case. Hald eman resigned April )J with hi gh praise from Nixon. Haldeman said that although he had no knowledge of the Watergate operation or its coverup, "I felt it was very damaging to the office of !he presidency that anybody in the senstive position I was in should be distracted at all -and 1 had bceJl distracted for some time." Lueky Lion Country- Animals Eat Horsemeat By t.IARCI DODSON The park officials do purchase some or t11t oa111 '11111 1111t beef for the animals, but it is of a quality Humans aren't lhe onl y ones to be fac-below th e USDA-checked beef which ed with rising meat costs. housewives buy in the stores, Dredge Alanagcrs of Lion Country Safari said said. !\1onday that they have had to budget Other foods the feeders: buy with their' larger sums toward feed for the animals, $200,~plus annu al food budget include', "but \Ve're DOt gett ing alarmed ," Said M hay for the giraffes and 0 th e f. official for the drive-through preserve. v~getariiµis and some fru its for the ' "O bviously, the economic situation is primates, he said. affecting u!, but only to a small extent. "But we've been havi ng no difficulties: There's been a marginal effect on the in getting supplies and \Ve don't an- over·all picture, but it is not substantial ," ticipate any problems in the near fi.:~ said William W. Dredge, executive vice ture." president. And even though prices may rise .. The n1ain reason the park officials Dredge admitted. park officials see no have not been faced with budgetary prrt.-reason to incr ease admission fees to the: · lems as serious as those being faced by wildlife preserve. housewives is that the scores of But hasn't th e "average housewife" be carnivores ca t a different kind of meat, I · ed 0 ed been complaining that he can longe r feed exp a1n r ge, . her family with the present economic . Th e vast majority of the ~eat ~e r 'situation? feeders .purchase for the animals IS "W II . deed ff rd ·, '· horsemeat. c '· in we .~ a o o ~eep , "Of course, that is not to say that our ?.ur family here fed, answered Dre<!ge. prices have not been increasing. But it's But qur.budgets here have been rising,~ not as iI our costs were rising two or too. \\le Just have been sure to budget three times as much as before. We've carefully and analyze our costs." been seeing a five percent, eig ht percent, In addition, the park of~icials deal with and sometimes as much as an 11 percent volume purchases, he said. increase. "By volume buying, we avoid many (lr "But it's not gelling oul of hand, sha!I the problems of the housewife who buys we say." food for her family w~k to "'eek." All For Tl1e Family- WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOU SE MORE THAN ANY OTH ER TH ING? WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTLCS DRAMATICALLY? WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE? ( WH AT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AN D COMFORT? ... CARPETING FRO M ALDEN'S, THAT'S WHAT! {IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) ALDEN~S CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 Placentia AYe. COSTA MESA 646-4838 . ' HOUU: MOft. Tllru Tll•rs., t to S:JO -fl!., t 19 t -SAT. t:JO 19 S I S1 s. al "' "' en C( " .m pr "' fiz . id! ty G< I d• ale 11" ' bo 1111 Ii$ All I po! lln me Be De I •n; del WI ml • •• Huntington Bea~h Fountain ·Valley EDI TI ON * ! , Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66., NO. 21 2, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNI A TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1973 TEN CENTS ' Haldeman: Nixon Asked Him to Hear Tapes \\'ASHINGTON (UPI ) -Fonner White House chief or staff H. R. tlalden1an of Newport Beach testified today that Presiderlt Nixon asked him to listen to Nixon's Watergate tapes and report back on their contents. Haldeman said he reported to Nixon through a White House lawyer that the tapes indicated John W. Dean Ill was "inaccurate" in testifying he discus.sed a Watergate covcrup with the President. In his second day in the witnc~ chair at the nationally-televised Sen a l e \Vatergate hearings, Haldeman, \\'ho acknowledged he ran a "tight ship'' al the \Vhite House. appeared uncertain about many details of the \Vatergatc case. Unlike Nixon's other top aide. John D. Ehrlichman. Y:ho was expansive and voluble in his ansy,·ers. Haldeman, v.'i th a gentle voice. spoke haltingly at times and offered generally brief replies. Haldeman disputed John N. ?.Utchell ea ' "< ·~·- and De an and testified !hat he v.·a.s kepl in the dark throughout 1972 about \Vh ite House involvement in the \Vatergate break-in and other potentially em· barrassing activities. H.R. HALDEMAN- 'NIXON'S S.O.B.'-Story, Page 4 Speaking in an even voice, flashing a frequent grin, Haldeman -once con- sidered Lhe second most powerful man in • Ill ' ' UPI Tt~Phol• the government -listened y,·hile !he events that ~l ilchell called "\\lhite Hoo se horrors" \\'e re enumerated. He said Hun all of 1hcn1 escaped his attention until this ~ring. Haldeman testified that he listened to tapes of the ~pt. 15 and hlarch 2l meetings that he and Dean had with Nix- on -meetings al v.·hich Dean contends a covl'r up was discussed. Haledman testified he listened lo the r.-larch 21 tape in an anteroom of lilil of- I Survives S1nashup in Hea")-Fog BOSTON (AP\ -A De.Ila Airline~ DC9 jetlin er \\'ilh 89 persons aboard clipped a seawall today on its approach to Logan International Airpon, crashed and dis- integrated in heavy fog. Stale poliee said there Y.'as only one survivor. One-man, \\'ho lived throu gh the crash. died I a t e r at 1'.1assachusctts General Hospital from multiple injuries. He \V!JS identi fied by the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31, of Louisville. Ky. An eyewitness said the twin-engine plane crashed on a runway about 1,000 feet from th-e edge of-the waler at the busy airport that juts into Boston Harbor. FIREMEN CONTINUE SEARCH FOR BODIES IN WltECKAGE OF CRASHED JETLINER IN BOSTON State police said It appeared that the jet struck a seawall at the approach to the airport. A state police spoke-sman said !here was a break in the 21h-foot high wall, indicating !he craft's landing gear struck it. Plane Disintegrated on Landing in Heavy Fog; Only One Person Survived Crash ' Computer Sciences Hired An observer said personal l'ffects and parts of bodies were strev.·n all over !he runway. He sa id the plane. arrivi ng on a flight from Burlington. Vt .. seen100 lo have disintegrated on impact. Neiv Firrn to Supply County Data Processirig Needs He said the J;1rgest port ion of th e plane he could see v.·as a HJ.fool portion of the fuselage. The Orange County Board o f Supervisors today hired C o m p u t e r Sciences Corp. of El Segundo to suppty all the county's future data process~ needs. With the action, Orange County became the first county in the nation to engage an outside £inn for data pro- cessing. The conlract will extend for seven years at a contract cost of $26 •million. Supervisor Ralph A. Diedrich. who SPlarheaded the review of county in- tOrmation requirenlents that led .to the contract approval , said. "Orange County is taking the lead in applying to county government a practical approach that has well proved itself at the federal level. "By utilizing industry assistance to im- prove our information systems, we believe we'll provide the county with the Cinest data processing services at the _. lowest possible cost." The Company bid was 30 percent less than the $37.8 million cost of the county's internal data processing center over the seven-year period, as projected by he county negotiating committee. The facility management contract will enable the county to save Sil million in tax dollars while materially improving the quality of services rendered, Diedrich suggested. Erwin L. Allen, president of CSC's commercial divi sion, said the agreement provides for joint ownership by CSC and the county of the software systems lo be developed by the company under the con- tract. Orange, second most populated count y in California and seventh largest in the nation , plans to develop or improve systems serving a wide range of func- tions. These inc lude budgeting, ad- 'Fullert'oia iVicti11i' Seal Beacl1 Police Learn Dead Ma11's Identity By JOANNE RE\'NOLDS Of tltt Dllfr P'llet S11ff Seal Beach police said today the y have identified the dead m::in found in their ci-· ly ,.tonday morning as 21·year~ld Ronnie Gene \Viebe of Fullerton. • Wehe, they said, was strangled to death and his body dumped in ice plant aiongside the Seventh Street ooramp to lhe 90Uthbound San Diego Freeway. There was no identification on \Yiebe's body but officer.s said they were ::ible to make on identification because he was listed as a missing person with the Los Al1mitos Police Department. Poli ce would not comment on the possibilit y that \Viebe'1 murdt.r may be linked to the so-called mutilation mqrders whi ch occurred in the Seal ue.ch -Long Beach area b e t w e. e n ~mbet and April. Investigators al!tO declined to release •nY infonnation on the condition of the dead man's body, other than to nott ii was clothed with one 90Ck and both .shoes missing. \\'iebe's bodi was found near the spot where the first of the so-called mutilation murder victims was found in December. That victim was F..dward Daniel Moore, 20, a Camp Pendleton Afarine . Three additional murders have been linked in the bizarre case. The second \vas wa.s discovered Feb. 6 alongside the Terminal Island Freeway in Long Beach. That victim is unidentified and is listOO as John Doe No. 16 by the Los Angeles poliCi!. The third victim whose murd er may have been committed by the sn me person responsible !or the first IY.'O v.·as found April 14 in. Huntington Btach. The tortured and sexually mutilated body is also unidentified. John Doe 52 is the murder \'ictlm v.·ho led pollci? 10 beJieve 1hal there. may bt a llnk betWttn the murden. Ills hacked up body was found wr&pped ln green plastic ~cks in several k>cations along the Tenninal Island 1-~reeway and ln a trash bin in Sunset Bl"acll. ministrative man3gement. tax assess- ment and collection. land-use planning, jury selection, probate and others. r.tajor de velopment efforts will con- centrate on further automating municipal court procedures and expanding the county's on-line criminal justice in· form:l tion syslem to increase I t s usefulness to local Jaw enforcement agencies, t h c courts and r e I a t e d departments. CSC will also perform more than a dozen analytical studies for Orange County. One of these will investigate the feasibility of developing a n en- vironmental model of Orange C-0Wlty, us- ing data on land use and air, water and noise pollution. llunlington Library Has Filins fo1· Deaf The Huntington Beach public library can no\V offer access to 14, five-minute I.~ mm films \vhich help the deaf and hard of hearing learn sign language. Sign language films can be ordere9 by the local library through the Santiago Library System. \.\1h.ich CO\'ers most of Orange County. These films also come in 8 mm cartridges. For information on the sign language fi lms cont act the audio visual department at 536-5"84. In \Vashington. the N ation a I Transportation Safety Board said it \\'as sending a In.member investigating team to the scene. The board said the team v;ould be headed by board member Isabel Burgess. Stale police said a temporary morgue \\'as set up at the fire stali-On at the airpon. Reports froin the scene said numerous vehicles drove to the crash site to collect bodies from the debris and mud. Some vehicles became roired in the mud. A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said the plane. scheduled to leave Burlington at 9 a.m., made an unschOOuled stop at the municipal airport in t.·Janchester, N.H. He said he did not know the reason for the New Hampshire stop. One survivor at l\lassachusctts General Hospital \\'as identified as Leopold Chouinard, 20. of l\1 arshfie\d , Vt. A hos pital spok esman said he had third- degree burns over 80 percent of his body. The other survivor v:as identified by the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31. of Louisville. Ky. The spokesman sai d Bro\vn had 1nultiple injuries. Both survivors v.·ere reported in critical condition. The cr<ift v.'as 1dC'ntiJied from the :tir .... line's 1\rlanta headquarters as Delta tStr: BOSTON. Pag~ 21 Shortage Nears Lack of Beef Seeri Tliis W ee kend By United Press Internationa l The Adminstration calls it "scare talk," but meat packers warn that they are caught in a squeeze between the retail price ceiling ancf""' the cost of catUe that will cause a nationwide shortage of bee! -be· ginning possibly as soon as this weekend. "Area supermarkets are facing a drastic shortage of beef, \Yh ich · could lead to the disappearance of some cuts from store meat cases, and in some cases - no beef al all." Lrle Everingham, president of the nationwide Kroger Food Stores. said 1n Cincinnati. But lhe administration reaffirmed fll onday that the price ceiling r would not be lifted until Sept. 12. Economists ex pect beef prices. which have· already risen by more thttn 60 perce nt in s?x n1onths. to lurch upward again after the freeze is lifted. On the \Vest Coast, it was Jearned that so1n c cattle American ranchers are withholding from the U.S. market durin g the price ,,...,.are being bought by Japanese. I~ • fi ce In mid-April. l~e said he did not bl'· lieve It v.·as before Nixon's April 17 s1<1tC· ment "bu! t'1n not sure." Nixon said April 17 Iha! he had teamed of "ma}or Urvelopmenls" hiarch 21 and ordered a nev.• 1uquiry into the case. Haldeman resigned April 30 with high praiSe from Nixon. Haldeman said that although he had no knowledge of the \\'atergate OJX'ration or ilS coverup, "I fc•lt it •·as very damagin& to !he office or !he presidency that anybody in the ~en.5tivc position I \\'35 In shou ld be dlsi ra<·t<'<i at <1 11 -and I had been dislracted for soml' umc." Jlald\'ma n tes tthed th at hl' listened to :he 1apc of the-Sefll. 15 met?ting during the v.'el'k of July 9 -he v.·asn't certain as to the d:He -aft er he returned to \\'ashington from his California home . Th(> 1ape v.·as delivered to him at an of- fice he maintainL'<i 1n the J::xectlljve 0£. flee Building, and he took it home that !Sec llALDEft.\tAN, P1tgt Z) ..__..ras Di!lr ,lllfl Sttff ,.,.,.,.. REC LEADER SHARI SILVER WORKS WITH YOUNGSTER Christine Si:ym1nski, e, Gets Help With Poster Big Siblings Bea clt Rec Lec1ders Aid l 'ity, Kicls By TERRY CO\'ILLE 01 lflt O.llY Plltl lltH The city call s them "big brotl'K'rs and sisters." , Some chil dren look up to them as subslitute parents. 1\·h1le somC' parents no doubt consider them excellent baby sit· ters. "Some kids from big raryilies don"\ get a lot of attention." ~l\'S Shari Sih·er. 23, a •luntington Beach playground leader at J_,ark View SChool. "You ha ve to be a lit- tle bit of evl!rything here, more tha n just a big brothe r or sister." She is one of 78 pl ayground leaders and 20 subst itutes \\'Ork ing for the ci•y ttus summer ut one or the' re<.Teatlon departmcnrs <!O playground<>. Playground leaders like Shari. or Dan llavhk 1also La rk View) or Barb<ir<i Hutchinson and Gary Jmayan:ig11a ••l Hobin\\ood School. are some of thr c11y ·:, n1o~t \"aluablc assets. says Bill \'ancl'. the rec reation supcrvi:.or \I ho hires them ;ill "\Ve spend Sl.\3,000 a ~car just on sala ries for our playground leaders," says Vance. "\\·e like yo uths .J.·ho h3'1C enough maturity to handle the problems of children and enough creal1\1ty to ketp the m excited." During the warm summer months the playgrounds -nearly an located at elementary schools - are open all day for such activities a.s baseball, basket- ball. arts and crafts. mo,·ics. games and special event.s likt: the annual pcMy carnival. In the v.i nt tr. when schools nre in session. the playRrounds arc open for games and sports a C'Otlplc hours each day 11fl er classes. Righi now, Vance is recruiling high i;chool and oollege students for "'inter \\·ork. beciu.se m11ny o( the :summtr leaders go b8ck to school fulltime in !he hill. The city pays a rtcrtation lead r from $2.l'i an hour to S3.ti0 Rn hour. v.·hiJt: an assiMant can cam $2.40 to $2.70 per hour. ~ job go to the rollcge stttden t.s •nd ) :-ome l<-achcrs_ High school JUtl\ors and seniors 16 and older can earn S!IJ<I to S'l.30 an hour il!S rcc rcalion aides. The only hang·up v. 1th v.·intcr "'Ork. S:t\'S \"ancc. IS lhe lack of hours. A reCreat1on leader usually "'orks less than 10 hours a v.'el'k, general ly from 3:30 p.m. to ;. p ni . ~1 onday through Frid ay. But there ts rnore attraction than mooey 10 this lype of v.·ork. Gary 1s <i sociology major at Orange Coast College and feels working y,"it h !See LEADERS, Page 2J ' t • Orange Co;ist skies will be cloudy during the night and early morn· ing hQurs, \\'ilh hazy -fiUnshine to- morrow morn ing. 111ghs •·il l be in !he lo•· iOs, v.·ith 1he low in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Proclaiming tl1ot ht> 11~ r.hat indescribabl« "knou'/edge -oitd u:1tll a s11ou:bal1111g movement behind him -pu.r11 J\lal1oraj Ji. JS. 1.t e111bark1no 0·11. lu3 thrrd "peace.. tour iii Ilic United States. Stt story. Paye 14. L M, llY'll 11 C1Ulttltfa I Cltfl.lflM H·2t (tfl'lot• " (flH-' II °""' i..tk., , ""'""' ..... ' ..... , .. ll!Mftt • "'-· 11·1J '" lllf -.c.,.. 1 --w &1111 i....llttf"t II ....... . Mwlll.fl 1"11IM• It N1fl1011I M.... t Or-CW•IY t S•l¥l• PfftW 11 ~ , .. ,. SI.Cl M1tll.tlw 1a.1J ffltW"'" 11 ThHl9" 11 w .. -4 W-'I N_... IJ.1• W""' Nt'WI .f 1 DAILY Pilar H G1iard Dies In Kan sas Uprising LllAVl!NWOR'nl, Kan. (AP) -One guard •u tilled today as violence erupted at the federal prison here of- ficials aald. Warden Loren Daggett 0said inmates were ho1dlng four bo$ttges1 Tiie wlnlm Aid he didn't know l)ow l1lalQ' ....... """' Involved. Tbe Identity of the: dead man was not immediately revealed. Daggett said an inmate called him !run the prison laundry and said he was holdlac lour penons hootage. The warden quoted the Inmate as W.ying the boltl&CI would D0t be buJ1 lf "the WIJ'd. ea end the prtsa showed up." It was fint bellevtd oaly lllOlher guard ''"" being held. 1bere wu no indlcaUoo whether the hnltaca were guards or other lomate3. Tiie -used lo till the guard .... nolkmlra. Daggett said he believed t h e disturbance wu a response to last week's major r1ot at the Oklahoma State Priaon in McAJester, Okla. He.said prison officials bad "heard through t h e grapevine tomethlng mig)>t happen." lie eald 1he morulng watch wu held over u a precaution and the "A" cellboule was aecured just before noon. Effort! continued in early afternoon to secure the rest ol the prison. Inmates were being moved from the prison in· dustrle.a area back to their cells with no dJlficult7. Daggett said, "The rank and file bad notbiD& &o do with il lt wu just a few trouble makers." Five .....,.. IUl!ertd minor lnjw1ee ond were treeted at the prilOll bolpltal A minor fire wu repor1ed at the prilon -lact«y, but oftlcials said It WU U· llnluilbed and caueed ~ dam8ge. 'l'bo warden eald 1he tee who were hoidJna the -... had not mode their dmwldl clear lmm'11at.iy. Newport Seeks Regional Funds To Clean Beach Newpor t Beach will ut the Celllornla Loque ol CIUee to demand JePlatlon the! would lplit up the -ol 111pporllng repmi-laclllUee -like -= amoD1 all clUee In the 1tate. City OOllllcllmen MCllday night ... -• ,_....., declartni the' ty wmt morly 11 million In the bole last year Pl1lllC for belcb malntenanoe and P-.... tboUlb 85 percent al the 10 million ·...,. ceme from out al town. City Mlnqer Robert I. Wynn lold coomcllrnea be feebi JI ii only lalr that the tax bunlen for supporting the beecbea Ill Newport Beach lbould be -by all the cltlee whose people vlllt tbem. The ....WUoo adopted by councilmen cits the curront tu Umlll and other fac- ton IUpport1ai an equalization of the ...... The reaolutJoo ub the state to afford all caJllornla!ll "the opportunity of sbar· ing in Ute cost of coastal preservation and maintenance , •• throug ha statewide tax subsldy to the goVemmenlal agencies within the coastal zone." Wy"nn suggested some other altemaUves -including a bed we ta:1 of up to six percent on visitors in hotels -but said some kind of equaliza- tion method would be the most workable. Wynn also told councilmen the Orange County League or Cities has already agreed to help Newport Beach set up a meeting of coastal cities to work out 30me kind of formula for assistance from the state. The council's resolution, along with similar actions by the coastal com· munlUes ol Pacillce and Hali Mooo Bay, will go before the general League or ctUes meeting in October •. OIANel COAST HI DAILY PILOT 'nit On11ge CNll DAILY PILOT wlltl wltl<lt h ...,.,._.. lfl9 NfWl-P"*I• 11 ~WIM W IM 0....,.. C .. 1t Plltllllhlilt C...,._.,, 1.,.. f'lll •lt'°"9 ••• IM!llll'l«I, MllNl<ly tlll'lllll!lt ''"''Y· to( O»i. Mna, N-t l1K11, H1111llnol9l'I ltM:ltl'-'"" v.11..,, L"una 1.-dl, l,¥IM/IMNl111Kl1 Md Stn Cle-1111/ $"'1 Jlil<tll C111lstr-. '4 1111tlt rt1ior..I edllltn " PllblflfllOlll S."'"9t'f' ""' ·~Yt. Tiit pril'll!. .. I Pl*t!lhll'IO 11'-~ 11 •I tJ0 W.SI ttr lttNf, C..11 M1t1. C.llftni11, nol. llehrt N. W1M ~-'"*'ltlllr' J1•k II. Cvfl1y VIW ,,.. ..... """ 0-11 M...,.- 1\•m11 k•••if· ...... Tliefll•• A. M1,,phi11e ~lnt£t11W Clittl .. H. LM1 llc)i•"' P. ~n Mt.letellt ,.......,.. Mtlln ''"" c • ..i11. ... , °'*'* c:-ty Etlltlt' ............. OMM 17171 ..... a..i .... ~ M1lllllf A4M••u r.o. •·• no, t2'41 --L"""" llKtlt m lltfttl ,._ OMll M ... 1 .la --:.;ff Ill'"" H....,. a..dll Qaa N ...,IWIN "" Oemlfl .. I * Nlf'1'I I Cfflllrll .... , ........ 17141 MJ:-4121 Ct•"'-4 Me•llal f MJ.1611 ,,_ ,_. Otlflllf C-'Y c.m .. ..,.. _,, .. (!iltyflfl\t, ltn,. ~ C..I ~­ c...,..11r. ,.. -•'-''"· 1nw.1ttt11M. ...., .. , _,..,. ., .. ...,,.""""' ~ WY .. rl~ .,jfllllll Mlfll'.111 ..,.. mlullll "' Cllllftll"" _..,., ..... <II .............. et c.t• .... c;alHlntla. ~-W unilt SM _.,,.,,, W -14 •.If -'fllrl ,,ilfffW1 tllallNlllM ta.6' ffttllllltf, I Tutsd.iy, July 31, 1973 Family Affair Cali1ornla Angels ouWelder Ken Berry took a busman's holiday Mon· day to watch his son Brett, 7, (wearing cap) play baseball at Lark View School In Huntington Beach. Berry's wife, Judy, and younger son, Rick, 4, also took iI\ the game. Just like his dad, Brett played center field in the recreation department game. CdM Man Die s As Plane Develops Engine Trouble Engine trouble wae blamed 1 today !or the death of a 47-year-old Newport Beach man whose private plane plummeted to the ground Mooday afternoon and burst lllto liamea In a vacant Bueoa~Park field. Kllled In the trash was Evan Koppe, a rt!ident of 1400 Santanella Terrace in tbe Irvine Terrace aecUon of Corona del Mar. He was the 90Je occupant of the twil>engfne Cessna 310. Koppe radioed F\Jllerlon Airport that be was uperlendng mechanical trouble but reportecily decUned the tower'• offer to mobilbe emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, Ill right engine malfunctioning severely, went Into a steep bank, alllled and plunged Into the ground near Beach Boulevard and Malvern Road. No one else wu injured by the crash which was officially logged a~ 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said witnesses repo~ the plane's rigbt engine was ruruung so slowly that they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot Distance Race For Runners Se t At Huntington The 19th annual distance rwmers derby will start at 8:30 a.m. Saturday on the strand next to the Jtuntlngton Beach municipal pier. Runners from throughout Southern California will compete in seven division,, in races ranging from 1.5 miles up to 10 miles in length. Anyone who wants to run can join the race by registering near the pier at 7:30 a.m. Runners must pick up AAU cards at the registration point. RegistraUon fee is $1 for 10 mile races and 50 cents for three miles and under. The course stretches from the pier along the sand to Bolsa Chica State Beach. The seven divisions Include: JO-mile 1nen's open and handicap; 10 miles women 's open, 14..J4.years-old; three mile open for high school age. 9th through 12 grade; thret mile run for girls 13 and under: three mile run for senior women 35 and over; 1.5 mile run for 7th and 8th grade boys ; 1.5 mile run for boys in the 6th grade and under. Drug Overdose Pr obed in Death A spokesman ror the Oninge County Coroner said today the death of Jmc Martin Luna. 23, whotte body was found wrapptd in a blanket in Westminster Is being Investigated ias a drug overdose. Luna, whose address is unknown, was found in a ditch along Hoover Street between Main and Spruce streets Sunday afternoon. lnvcstlg;itors said the young man had Jived in the area ror years and had a background or drug use . The coroner's spokesman sold no tc1use of death hH bttn determined pending loxocologlcal tests. from the wreckage but were driven back by flame!. Police said a monumental traffic jam 'resulted when they blocked oH streets to aid firemen flgbting..the_blaze._lLtoot fire crews approximately two hours to bring the fuel-fed fire under control. Koppe; believed to be the owner of the plane, brought the craft within one mile of the Fullerton Airport runway before he lost control. A Bank of America building was just a few hundred feet away from where the plane crashed. City Engineer Recommended For Works Post City Admlnistraror Dave Rowlande will recommend that City EnginOO" BUI Hartge take control of the Huntington Beach public works department for "at least a few months." OJ1Te11t public works dirtctor Jim Wheeler leaves the city Wednesday for a new job as public Y<'Orks director o( the U.S. Trust Territory of the South Pacific -~licronesia. Rowlands said he ¥i'llllts to study the department for a few months with an eye toward some reorganization. During that lime, Hartge would serve as temporary public works director. "He 's well qualified for the job and knows the department well." the city ad· ministrator said today. r "l '11 make that suggestion at Monday's city council meeting." Wheeler served 15 years as chief of the public works department, flrSt holding the titled. city engineer, when there was no public works director. Hartge has be<n city mglneer In Hun- tington Bead! since 1968, serving as the number two man under Wheeler. 'Doomed' Cyclist Buried After '(raf fie Acciden t I LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man once sentenced to die in the gas chamber was buried in sou~ntral Los Angeles after a colorful funeral procession which In· eluded about 100 motoreycllsts. Services £or Dan CUiton Robinson, 30, were h~d Monday. He died Wednesday at Dominguez Valley Hospital of injuries roceived in a July %2 traffi~ accident. Roblmoo and two companions were convicted In 1982 or kllllng a bartender during the attempted robbery of 11 coun· try club. H~ was sentenced to death. The other mtm drew life terms. His conviction in lhe shotgun slaying was reversed fn 1964 on technical grounds. Robinson was convicted a sec- ond lime and sentenctd to Ure, But the second conviction also was rcve~ed by an appellate court which found he had not been advised of his con· stltutional right.I. Robinson was acquilled by a Superior Court jury in 1966 allhough he once con· fC3Sed to the kllllng. COl!rt roeord• •how. • • I Ex-lawmaker Pleads Guilty W ASHING'l'ON (AP) -Former ll<p. J. Irvinl Whalley o I l'fllWJllvanla today ploaded gullty lo charla ol 'mall fraud and o1JetrUdlon "' jUatlco. Wbllley, 11, 1 Rtpubllcan, served 1n the House 12 years. ~e did not seek r<-<!lecilon In 1972. The government accused him of rorclag 17 staff members to kick back portions of salaries. Sources clOMI .to the case said the stall members ltlcked back 10 lo 20 per. cent of their pay ror a total "ball part figure" of about $50,000. F t'OmPfJffel HALDEMA N. •• night and listened to It alone. "I'm not sure whether I did or whether the President did in a message to me," Haldeman answered to a question about who Initiated the request lor the tapes. "It ended up that l should Uaten lo the tapes and give him a report C'l the con- tents. "There was a suggestion of listening to other tapes but t did not do so," Haldeman said . "They were meetings at which I was not present at an. 1 made my decision myself that it would not be appropriate ... " He said he took notes, told no one, and turned the notes over to Nixon. "I reported the general contents - let's say I confirmed to the President via \llhite House Special Counsel J. Fred Buzhardt by telephone call f r om catifomia that from my recollections of those notes, that Mr. Dean was in- accurate (about the meetings) and our recollectkln wu accurate," Haldeman said. Frot1tPf19el LEADERS ... children le pe<lect lor hie career. Three years ago, at 20, Barbara, in her words, was "Just a bousewife sitting at home." "Then I otarted taking course> at Golden West In recreaUoo and found It to be a really exponding fleld. Adults and children netd lo learn bow lo uee their le~ Ume. Eruybody needl recrea· ti on, n I Now she's a recreation major at Cal Stile Loog Beach. Sharl, a speech therapy major at Cal State LOil( Beach, simply likes wortlng oullida ~ with cblldrm. "!'Ill' not •err~c.'' Ille admits, w11b"'11iue · -·'Burf otiii't like to •""!'I around watch. fbe first year we liad &-l!irbi tealli we loot all al OUr 1amee. But we learned bow to lole and have fun too." "It'• a great job, but you netd a lot ol tolerance and patience. 1be children are always throwing something new· at you." Buckley Asks Pa yola Probe LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Sen. Jamee L. Buckley said Monday he asked the Justice Department to i n v e s t i g a t e c:harge• of payola In the record Industry, including allegaUons that recording com. pan.les buy drugs for performers. The New York Republican also said his staff uncovered lndlc.ation.s that what be called "the underworld" sells "protec- tion" .to recording stan:, taking as much as 25 percent of their income. Buckley wu joined at a news con- ference by John Phillips, of the disband· ed "Mamas and Papas" group, who said he had evidence of a "$60 million rip-<iff" by one recording finn t h a t systematically cheated its singers. .. ' Nixon Continues To :Keep Tapes By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon ls standing by his refusal to turn over taped conversations to Watergate lnveatigalors, although H. R. Haldeman, bls former chief or staff, and two top aides have heard replays, White House officials report. , Haldeman revealed in o p e n i n g testimony before the Senate Watergat.e C'.omm.ittee Monday he heard two secret presidental tape reconllngs related to Watergate. He gave further details to- day. After Haldeman testified, Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren told reporters that in addition to Nixon and Haldeman, two others beard the tapes at the Prflsldent's behest: J. Fred Buzhardt, special counsel, and steve Bull, aPPointmenll secretary. Warren said that Bull sat in with Nixon June 4 whcl,l the President listened to the relevant Watergate tapes for 10 or more hours at one stretch. As Nixon "took a break,'' Bull listened t1> the telephone conversation between the President and fonner counsel John Dean Ill which OC· curred March 20, Warrea said. • Federal Aviation administrator Alex· ander Butterfield, a fonner Haldeman assistant, diwl~ed the fact that Nixon had an automatic tape recording system In all of his presidential offices since the spring of 1971. He is the only other penon who had "tedmlcal acctu" to the llpes. News that Haldeman heard the tapes aroused speculation lhlt 1 h e In· vesUgatlng panel and Speclsl Prooeculor ~bald Cox may have a legal talking polnt to 1eeure the tapes. But lote Mooday evening, Warren said: "The President baa made bis position clear on this matter. The President has stated his position," in refusing the tapes. Presidential counselor Melvin R. Laird acknowledged today that a majority of Republican congrmmen believe Nixon should let lnvestlgalors hear the tapes. Laird refused to aay directly that he recommended a course to Nlxoo, u House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford * * * said, but indicated that he did since "I'm a politician" and that, he said, was 11t~r. political advice" Nlxoo gOt. 1 • • Laird said on tbe NBC.TV TodJly show lbe Presideot elected, however, to take "constitutional advice" against yielding to subpoen83 by the Senate committee and Cox for the tapes. Mutual V isits Set Between U.S., Japan WASHINGTON (AP) -Prtsld..,t Ni•· on will visit Japan and Emperor Hirohito will come to this country on a form•I visit. it was agreed today at a meeting between Nixon and Japan's Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. Plans for the mutual visits were an- nounced by Japanese Am bass ado r Takeshl Yasukawa following a two-hour Wbite House meeting between Nixoo and Taiiall. The Nixon visit is expected to take place either late this year or in 1974 at a mutually agreeable time, Yasukawa said. Hirohito's visit to the United States will come sometime next year, alao at a mutually agreed date, he said. Earlier, Nixon welcomed Tanab to the Wblte House as an equal partner "working for a cause to which we ate equally devoted -peace for the whole world." The greeting amid the pomp and ceremony of an official welcome marked the start of two days of talks between the leaders. Tanaka said that relations between Japan and the United States have "ex· panded greatly both in breadth and In depth." He said it is "all the mo~e · portant for the peoples of our two tries, as partners, to develop a full of the national characteristics the social fabric of each other." ·1st Impeachment Tanaka omitted a reference to a "lack of undentanding" between natiOM and peoples In hie prepared arrival remarkl M • B h and substituted Instead the netd to otion roug t "deepen understanding 8Jl10l18 peoples." _ Nlxoo welcomed Tanaka with a pro- Bef H -1~-oncr exchange-01-0re ouse remarb when the Japanese leader atep- ped from hie limousine on the south lawn of the White House. WASHINGTON (AP) -A resolutim lo impeach President Nixon wu introdu<.'.fd in the Houae loday by Rep. Robert F. Dl"lnan (0.MaSB.). Severa] congressmen have suggested that the House coosider whether to begin impeachment proceedings against Nixon because of the Watergate scandal. But Drinan's resolution was the first formal moUoo for impeachment. Orinan, a Roman Catholic priest, has frequently been at odds with the Nixon administration over the war in Southeast Asia and Administration cutbacks in social programs. "I think the time has arrived when the members of the House must seet to think the unthinkable and lo eeereh dili· geoUy lnlo our cocvtctloos and our con- science as to what is occuning under the Constitution as We behold the unprece- dented revelations which every day be. come more incredible," Drinan said in a statement. The resolution was referred to the House Judiciary Committee. Drinan told newsmen he decided against using a special procedure by which he could have forced an immediate conslderatlon. A 19-gun salute was fired and tbe Japanese and American anthems were played. From Page 1 BOSTON •.. Flight 723. It had 83 passengers and a crew of five, according to a spokesman from the airline in Boston . There was one non- paying passenger. The crash occurred on U!e Birds Island Flats area of the airport. A witness at the scene said the only parts of the craft still intact were the rudder and stabilizer, the two engines and two pices of wing. The crash site was believed to be in the area <lf the Oct. 4, 1950 crash ot an Eastern Air Lines jet into Boston Harbor with the loss of 62 lives. There were 10 survivo rs of the accident, which occurred as the craft was taking off. Authorities said starlings pulled into tbe plane's jet engines caused that crasb. All For The Family- WHA~ CHANGES YOUR HOUSE MORE THAN ANY OTHER THI NG? WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTlCS DRAMATICALLY? WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE? I WHAT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT? . . . CARPETING FROM ALDEN'S, THAT'S WHAT! r (IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE US FAST.) HOURS: Moo. Tin 11lon., t lo !:JO ALDEN~S ' CARPETS o -DRAPES 1663. Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 -l'al. f to t -SAT. 9:30 to 5 · I ' I I l I I H DAILY PILOT' :J Panel to Seek Nixon Home Records Sorry, Cliff Clifford lrving, who authored a bogus biography of Howard Hughes, has been denied a shorter prison term by the U.S. Parole Board. Irving, 42, is serving a two-year, six-month term in Danbury, Conn. Judge Oears Clemente Boy Of Murder Rap A 15-year~ld San Clemente boy was cleared of murder charges late Monday by an Orange County , Superior Court judge who ruled that the youngster acted in self defense when he shot and killed his mother's male companion last June 17. David Moberly returned to his home at 217 Ave.n.ida Rosa immediately atfer the verdict was amounced, cleared ot all alleptioM filed against him aftU the killing of G<orge Twiddy, 33, of Newbury Park. • Judge Raymond Vincent, acting for the 1'0W!fY's jtlvenile cOUtt ln--..hat Is ~=:I i:~:n ~~ :~ boy after bearing one week of testimony. Press and public were barred from the courtroom throughout the trial. And lawyers on both sides were ordered not to discuss the court action with newsmen. Police reports issued before the gag order was imposed indicated that the Moberly boy shot Twiddy in the chest, neck and arm wilh five bullets from a .22-callber rifle following a Father's Day squabble at the A-1oberly home over dirty laundry. Officers said the boy used a rifle given to him by Twiddy as a gift a few days before the shooting. Twiddy was dead when they arrived at the home and the younpter wu picked up at San Clemente Pier shortly after making a telephone call to police. Tax Probe Ori Homes Rejected SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ca!Uontia 's tax administration board has refused to investigate President Ni.Jon's property taxes. 'Ille State Bconl of Equallution re- jected a proposal by lls chalnnan Mon- day that it det.ermlne whether the owners of the Western White Hotue ano paying their fair share of property taxes. Chairman William M. Bennett said he thought Nixon and a weallhy industrialist friend · were getting a tax break from local officials. Bennett called for the state probe on the basis of reports that the 29-acre com· plex at San Clemente is assessed at $1.37 million th.is year. The original sale price and reported improvements total $2.33 million. The assessment of the property was "shrouded ln mystery," said Bennett. Without a state investlgatk>n, he said, there Is no way to detennlne "whether the property owner there ls paying hls fair share of taxes -J don't care whether It's Mr. Nixon or Mr. Abplanal~ er some secret list d contributors." But BeMett got no support from his three fellow Democrats or the single Republican member or the board. If any investigation iS done, said board member George R. Reilly of San Fran· cisco, a Democrat, It should be done by Orange County officials. He said a board investigation without a request from Orange County would be improper. "That is their job," Reilly said. "That is their problem." Bennett replied, "I don't think anyone from Orange County Is going to ask us to look at San Clemente." Tbe Santa Ana Rqisler reported this month lhat the Western White House estate, owned by Nixon and industrialist Robert Abplaoalp, had been undertued by 125,000 to 155,000 over the i\ast three yean. Oraoge County officiau dealed lhat property is under~ or un- dertued. White House aide Ronald Ziegler_ said, "We have a~mH:ly nothing to do with tax assessments the tax assessors should assess. That's their job." Bennett agreed with a board attorney that the board could not step in and in· crease the assessment on its own, but he said the board had power to send its in· vestigators to San Clemente to personally inspect and appralse'the property. "I think you're going to find somethir'\g there that may surprise you ," said Ben· nett. Bennett said he sent an aide to Orange CoQntY to inspect the assessor's records on 'the San Clemente estate, but county officials refused to show him the files and referred him to Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's former personal attorney, or White House aide Leonard Gannent. Kalmbach could not be reached and Bennett said be told lhe inspector to give up. lf(;l Gets 'Ttiition' o.llY lll'lllt Slaff ill'llot9 IT WAS A LONG, LONG TRAIL FOR 21 YOUNG BICYCLISTS ON A BORDER-TO.BORDER TREK Adventurers Pass Through Laguna Beach En Routt to Ti ju1na on Their Summer Adventure 21 Cy~lists Pedal In • Students Face Trials, Jo ys on Long Bicycle T ~e k By FREDERICK SCHOE1\1EllL Of Ille ~Uy lll'llot llttt Imagine riding a bicycle through pound- ing rain for 7S miles. Or trying to rind a laundromat with enough dryers for 21 penons. Or wondering whether that uphill pull will ever end. Such are the trials' encountered by 21 junior high and higA school bicyclists i Grrrromld Beef? from Seattle "'ho pedalled along the Orange Coast Monday en route to Ti· juana, Mexico. The group left San Clemente State Beach this morning for the last leg of the 1,800 mile trip which began at the Cana- dian border 39 days ago. "It's been a great trip, great weather. not too hot." said a sunburned Linda Staheli, 13, y.·hile the group descended on Lucky Lion Country- Animnls Eat Horsemeat By MARCI DODSON • tltl D911Y ,._ Stt H Humans aren't the only ones to be fac- ed with rising meat costs. Managers of Lion Country Safari said ~1onclay that they have had to ' budget larger sums toward feed for the animals, "but we're not getting alarmed," said an official for the drive-through Preserve. "Obviously, the economic situation is affecting Ull, but only to a smaJl extent. There 's been a marginal effect on the over-all picture, but it is not substantial," said William W_ Dred ge, executive vice president. Boat Canyon Cleaning and Laundry in Laguna Beach ?o.1onday morning. Riders averaged SO miles - and one flat tire -pe r day in their ride doY.'II the Paci fic coast. The longest day on the road ended In Florence, Ore., aft er 80 miles. Sunday, spent in Los Angeles. was the shorte st y.·ith 13 miles logged. Each rider paid $270 toward the trip It "·orks out-to $3.S&-1!1-day-for-food. $20 for spendi ng and $i0 for air fare back to Seat tle from San Diego on Thursday, ex- plained l3·ycar-olcl Jennifer Hun saker. Along the \1ay, the hikers stayed 1n campgrow1ds. churches and recreation centers and founC hospitality \\'as "great" cvery .... ·here lhry stopped. The trip got off to a Y.'et and wild start wilh 75 miles of rain in southern Washington. "You get so "'Cl after a while, it doesn't matter," laughed Carol Caddey, 14. who learned abou t the trip from an adve rtisement in a Seattle neY.'Spaper. The group probably was glad lO leave Oregon behind. In the northe.m part of the ·state one rider was sideswiped by a truck and badly shaken up. but not in- jured. In southern Oregon. Linda cut herself and \11as forced to rccei \·e a cou- ple of stitches. Executives Back in School The main reason the park officials have not been raced with budgetary prf'b· lems as serious as those being raced by housewives is that the scores of carnivores eat a different kind of meat. · explained Dredge. In northern California one girl ended in the hospital after catch ing the flu. She lost four days, and took the bus to San Francisco to catch up with her 20 com· panions. By GEORGE CEIDAL Of JIM Dally l"llot SltH Forty government and business ex· ecutives recently paid $950 apiece to tell each other bow to nm their offices. They paid lhe money to UC Irvine and then proceeded to "educate" themselves by sharing management erperiences in 18 Wednesday evening sessions. At f I rs t hlmh, UCI's Executive Program sounds like the swindle of the century -getUng students to pay the university to avow them to teach themselves. Yet, for lhe first 40. lhe experience was so meaningful, the group has formed UCI Executive Aasociation to perpetuate the relationshlp with fellow E x e c u t i v e Program "classmates" "as well as the relationship with Ute university." Jay Haas, 43, marketing execuUve of Moxon Inc., an Irvine electronics firm , heads the newly formed association. "For 18 weeks beglnning in January, Wodnelday night waa the hlib point of my wee.ti'' Baas said. • He crodltl lhe involvement of hlih level _.,te and government manag .. 111<11t, the dla<lmkm 111111 the dlsclmian -wllh JeadJnc experts 111111 ""'IJll"'1 aulboritles In managemeol phlloaophj<. TboM! included P • t • r Drucller, Harokl Koontz, Sheldon Davia, G""1e Steiner and Anlbooy Raia. Hus atlo 1U1&estl lhe emphaals oo lhe "behavioral ldence approach to management" was another reuon the flnt UCI Erecutlve l'rolram waa of such lntereJt. "The penonaUU.. ol people In lhc work force are c!J·anging, the old ICbool of the bos9 u someone who ordera subordinates around Is rapidly klOln& ground. "The new successful bretd of manager Is one wbo rea>gnlzes the pottntlal value and Iha cootribotioo each Individual can mate/• Rua said. wn lso't tbe ~ ' • FOUNDING PRESIQENT Irvine Executive HtH divtdua1'1 job to pul hlJ lalenlJ forward , but it'1 management's job to dlscover WlJI to best use a ptrson'1 taltnta," the UC Berkeley elecironlc en11netrlng grad said. · Of the 18 sessions, Hau estimated , "from one-third to one-half the time was spenl lrylng to help managen learn how to "get the best out of people." 'Ille benefit of "tapping Ibis heretofore unreeognize4 and unused resource" for Qiness is obvk>\ls. lt c.tm mean "greeter productivity per indJvldual," Haas sartl. "It can alto mean a happier worker, becliuse bis rtal worth Is recognized and effectively ustd /' he adds, noting that for blm lhla up<d wu of the grutesl significance. Increased productivity also benefiJs the community as a whole. "Because labor is the most costly part of most l:Jufilnesses," Haas notes, a smaU gain in productivity can be translated ln· to a combination of higher profils and/or lower prices." Orange Police Olief A-1erle V. Duncan is treasurer of the newly formed associa· lion. He feels application of the most ad· vanced management t e c h n i q u e s available is important to an institution supported. by taxes. Haas adds. George F. Norris, county personnel develapment spkialist; Robert L. Simpson , !lousing and Urban Develop- ment insuring office dire ctor, and UCI vice chance llor John C. Hoy Y.'ere other public agen cy representatives in '1he first UC! Executive Progranl. The majority of the class was drawn from industry. They represented land development. con· struction. aerospace. electronics and small busioeu inclOOing personnel and management consulting agencies. John D. Spear, UCI dev!lopment and alwnni affairs director, believ~ the ex· ecutive program, patterned a f t e r similarly ~ful efforts at UCLA, benefits: both the campus and the business community. · "Our program ls an outgrowth of our UCI Industrial Assoc111cs," Spe or noted. '"The Idea sprang from that group of ~ine.ssmen who benefit dlrtt1ly from their association with the university as a support or1antzation. "The Euculive Program in 1um has sponsortd a new group to al.low tilt pertldpanls to remain Involved wlih both the ongoing executive program classes, the university and current trends In management science. Jn return busintl!I leadership proVides ucr an "ever-up- dated welupring ol cun<nt lhinklng 10 share with farolty and ol.ben." Spear said. The vast majority of th e meat the feeders purchase for the animals Is horsemeat. "Of course, that is not to say that our prices have not been increasing. But ifs not as if otir costs were rising two or three times as much as before. We've been seeing a five percent, eight percent, ~ some~es as much as an 11 percent increase. "But ifs not getting out of hand, shall we say." The park officials do purchase some beef for the animals, but it Ls of a quality below the USDA·checked beef which house\l·ives buy in the stores, Dredge said . Other foods the feed ers buy with the ir $200,000-plus annual food budget incl ude hay for the giraffes and ot her vegetarians and some fruits for the primates, he said. "But we've been having no difficulties in getting supplies and we don't an· ticipete any problems in the near fu- ture." And even though price:11 may rise, Drtdge admitted. park officials Ste no reuon to increase admission fees to the wlldlile pmerve. But hasn 't lhe "average housewife" be been complaining that he can longer feed her famlf)' with the prtsent economic sit uation ! "Well , indeed "'e can afford to keep our family here fed," answered Ortdge. "But our budgets here have been rising, too. We J~t have been sure to budget cartfully aDd analyia our costs." ln addltkm, the park officials deal with volume purchases, he said. "By volume buying, we avoid many of the problema of lhe housewife who boya food fer her family -t to .... t." Linda's mothe r, ?o.1rs. E.T. Stahali. ar- ranged the trip as •·something di!fcrenl'' to do during the su mmer. Each ri der was required to have a IQ. speed bike and to go through 500 miles of ''practi ce" riding before gelling the final OK for the trip. Would they do it a gain~ "Sure," said one. "I don·t-know,'• r.oaned another. Santa Ana Ma n, 2 Others, Die In Mexico Cr as h r-.tE;(JCO CITY tAPl -'rhe bodies or three persons. including a Santa Ana man. \\'Cre recovered over the weekend from the wreckage of a light plane that crashed north of Acapulco J une 22 . authorllies said Monday. The three victims were the only oc· cupanl3 o( a single-engine Aero Com· mander which crashed tM miles north of Acapulco ln rugged mounta in terrain. The U.S. Embassy identified tY.'O as Willis B. Frttps, 49. of Santa Ana. 2nd Steven P. Teresi, 30. of lm Angele~. The other vict im had not been identified yet, an emba"Y sPoke3mtin sa id. All thrtt bodies were badly burned. he said. Airport authorities ht.re said the alrcrtilt v.as Oying from L.a Pa z. Baja California. to Acapulco 1~1htn It crashed app.irently aft er encountering stonny -·ea1hcr in the area. Search crrws spot· ted the Y.Teck Saturday afl<'moon, the airport said. Plans called for the remains of the l\\O Callfomla victims, kept in a P.fexico City morgue, to be returned for burial !()metlme this week, the emba.lsy said. "We have Wonned the nert of kin already." the •PDl<""'1WI added. l President Reportedly Res istit1g \\'ASHINGT0:-.1 tUPl l -The chairman of 3 House go\•eniment expenditures sob- romm11tee said today hl' "·ould seek sub- poenas of ooostru{"tion records for Ptf:si· den t Nixon 's honws in 1'1orida and ca1Uomia, said to ha ve between $.1.5 and $3.7 mill~ in government-funded im- provemen't.s {Relaled storie!I Page 3). Rep. Jack BrookJ ([).Texas), said the , \Vhite House was trying to block the sul>- committee investigation. The f u 11 Government Operalion.s Committee will meet Thursday to act on the request for subpocnns. Brooks added . ·'The \V h1tc ~louse has OO\V involved Jtself in this 1n\·cs11~a1 ion and is ~king to block the subco innuttce fron1 carrying out its constitutional obligat1on," Brooks S:Hd. Brooks said the government has turned over documents Uldlcating a total o( $1.9 million was spent on Nlxoo homes at Key Biscayne, Fla., and San Clemente. Ha said tbe General Services Admlnistratioo (GSA ), which h., supervised tbe con- struction, has indicated additkmal lm- provemenll ~:ere made, but has refused to tum over deta.lls. The GSA said ~londay it is preparing a new "definilive" stat.e.ment on coo· struction at the Florida and California White Houses and it will be ready later this wtek. Brooks sa id he met O\'er !he v.•eekend vli th GSA Administrator Ar1hur Sampson Y.'ho promised him all the flies on coa- structioo. Then . Brooks said, Sampsoo told him on ~londay : "'Pursuant to in· stnictions from the \\lhile House. he could provide no furt hir dala until the White House released a comprehensive state- ment on these matters.'' * * * New Government Report Slated " On Nix ori Homes \VAS HI N GTON (U PI ) At!n1 inisrrat1on officia ls say a new .. defini tive" statement to be made public later 1his v.·ee k y.•i!l place government spend ing on President Nixon's Florida and California homes at $3.S million to $3.7 mill ion. The new report on government ex- penditures on the Nixon properties at San Clemente, Calif., and Key Biscayne, Fla .• is being prepared by the General Services Adminislration (GSA). The New York Times reported Sunday the total cou ld reach $10 million or more. Administration officia ls said there was "no way" the total could be that high. But they conceded the estimate will be much higher than Sl.9 million stated in a GSA report June 21. There were indicatlons the White House, al the time the new report is issued. would clarify the President's ' !ra nsaction wit h New York industrialist H.obert i i. Abplanal p in the sale of 20 acres of the San Clemente estale. An investment company set up by Abplanalp paid $1.2 million for all th e property except 5.9 acres. which Nixon retained. Cnder the settlement. Nixon·s ou1 s1anding Joan fron1 Abplanalp totaling $625,000 was then canceled . It will be the third lime the ad - ministration has attempted to add up outlays for projecl.!I at the presidential compounds , which it maintains were re· quested by the Secret Service. On May ZS. the While House said an estimated $39.000 had been spent on lhe California property. The new report also is expected to ment ion security install a11ons at the hon1f' or Ju lie and Da\'1d Eisenhower 1n ne:lrby ~taryland and on (;rand Cay 1n the Bahamas. an island owned by Abpla nalp. "'h1ch Nixon has visited 21 umes os Pre~ident Th hon1c \\here lhc 1·:1senhOY.'l'rS li ve 1s oy.·ned by Charles G. "Bcbt•'' Heboro. a close frie nd of the Prcs1d('111 Officials said the announce ment would he "definitive" nnd lhat (_;SA Ad1n1nistra1 or Art hur J Sao1pson would provide poi nl-by·point information on the outlays Mari.I1e to Face Trial ii1 Rapes An El Toro ~farine aco.iscd of rape a sticual perve rsion In lncldenl~ invol · g IY.'0 girls ages 14 and 16 and a ~ye Id Or11nge Co11~t Collf'gc litud(>n been ordered to facr trial Sept. ~ in Orange County Superior Cou rt Judge James Turner set the trlAI date for Larry Ray Duran. Zl. who was 8f'I. rested at the base June 12 shortly after a 16-year-old girl was raped tind sexually humiliated near Saddleback lllgb School. Police id~tined the Marine corpora_) 11 the cruising motorist who picked up all three v\cllnu; in the Costa ~1esa area and attacked them after offertng them a llfL Duren Is held In Orqe County Jail "'ith bail set at '2(1,000. 1 , 4 OAllY PILOT r-. July ,1, 1m I Spacewalk Delajed ,Until Saturday Letting Old George Do It POUMERS DEPI'. -Up at Cal State Fullertro, students In political oclen« arMt~~ental studies have gone out in an ~~ to learn what Orange Qlun.. tians ~ our way of life. You might conclude we're not terribly pleas- ed. Preliminary results ol the poll-taking suggest that the msnber me priority among Orange Coonttana Ls to sUip pollu- tion, then reduce unemployment, then aid the poor. We figure the govemment ooght to d· most of tl)ese things. '!be citizens them9elves don't participate really, other than cuting an occasional vot.e in elections. '!be ourvey uodertaken by Cal State Fullerton was uodet' the dlre<tion of Bar· rt E. Gerber, an assistaot professor ol political ocl...,.. Students eumlne at- Utudes of residents In a crooHeclioo of ecoaomlc and cultural levek In 1,000 households. Of that nwnber, 6.12 ~ were uUlized for the tabuiaUon. i NOW, I HAVEN'T the foggieot notion d what q u es i 1on1 Prof. Gerber's )'OUllgslers put to the lolka out th..., but the preliminary results j""t releosed are lnla'estlng. 'lbirty percent of the Orange Coontlans polled said that eliminatioo ci. pollution shook! he our number one pricxity. Arni along those lines o -Nearly 88 percent said they would be willing to separate out their own trash. -About 66 percent aren't willing to poy a fee to have that trash separated. -Almost 85 percent said the govern- ment lhould require Industry to eliminate pollution. -Near the same number said the government im~ doing enough to dean lr---!:'P.: the mviroomenl · ::::J'ust """' IS peromt sata t1iey·a nae a bicycle to work U they could. -And 64 percent indicated they'd use public ~tion rather tbari their own autos to travel to work U they could. AFTER ALL THJS comes the kicker line, wherein the !tlldents ·appareo.Uy asked tbe householders U they belong to any organlzatiom which are fighting for a cleaner Orange County environment. Of those polled, nearly 9C perOent said they doo't belong to or participate In any such outftts. M a matter ol. fact, 67 per· cent admitted they don't do anything In commUDlty affairs except cast that vote """' and then. And u fa< casting that vote, some 60 percent of the Orange Coontians polled said they thought that lawmalws ougl\I to be respcmible for solving eo- viroomental problems. _ NINETY PERCENT said a need fer ' urban city planning exists and 46 percent said that current urban planning in their communities is inadequate. Seventy per· cent favor tax dollars being used for developing a mass rapid transit system. Well, with all those percentages rat- tling around , you might want to nitpick or argue with how Prof. Gerber and his youngsters operated their poll. That a- side, it still leaves you with a sort ol. melancholy picture about life in good old Orange County, long l'OllSidered the stronghold of individual enterprise. What tbe Cal State, Fullertoo, Poll seems to be saying is, "Gee, we've got a problem with the environment. It should be fixed. Let's have the government do ii. ''D'.rl't bother me." Rescued at Last cave explorer Mike Mooneyham, 19, bolds puppy be had just plucked from bottom of 90-foot shafl in Nashville, Tenn. The pup, owned by Rusty Garney, 15, (left) had slipped through hole and was trapped for more than 24 hours. , Insurgents Slip Through Phnom Penh's Perimeter PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) - Communist-led insurgents s I i p p e d through Phnom Penh's defense perimeter today and fought government troops on two sides of the capital. The insurgents were two miles inside the govemment del"I'!"' positions and ooly live miles from <his city of three millioo as U.S. warplanes flew over the capital constantly. wir'il Defe~ Bombing, Not Faked Reports .. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Melvin R. Laird vigorously defended today secret bombing ol areas of neutral Cambodia in 1968-70 as essential to save _i\merican lives but said the Pentagon commltted a snafu In giving Q>ngress doctored reports. Laird. woo u def""' oecretary pro- posed the bombing and said he got Presi- dent Nixon's authorizalion, insisted it was necessary both to reduce American casualties at the time and expedite U.S. withdrawal. LAIRD, NOW A collllSelor to President Nixon, said the raid.'! on so-called sanctuary areas for North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were made secretly because of diplomatic sensitivities. Cam- bodia was proclaiming itself neutral at the Ume. But U.S. officials say Prince Norodom Sihanouk gave tacit approval for the bombing provided they were not publicly reported. " Since the Vietnam cease-fire, U.S. bombers have attacked Com.mwlist forces menacing Cambodia, now under the Lon Nol r!gime that deposed Sihanouk and tilted toward the United Sta tes. I 'l1te dnnnroll of heavy explosions characteristic of bombs from 852 bombers was beard in Phnom Penh. To the southeast of the capital, three government s o I d i e r s were reported -ed In a fireligbt at tbe sprawling village ol Robes Angyanh, bet"""1 the Ba!SOC end Mekong riv.n. TO 111E NORTHWtm'. a squadron of armored personnel carriers moved in to reinforce a government ootpost that came-under attack in the village of Kap Srau Toch. Field officers in Kap Srau Toctl said ilr surgent wtlts are attempting to slip within rocket range of Phnom Penh's 1!'U<:hentoog airport to threaten !he capital's principal transportaUon link. Sixteen government soldiers were wounded and a civilian killed in a misdirected U.S. bombing raid Mooday near the village of Selbo, t• miles south ol Phnom P<nh, according to fl e i d reports. Monday night insurgent forces came to within four miles of Phnom Penh's southern o u t s k I r t s along the government's defense line there. Fighting was reported during the night within two miles of Takhmau. and a government communique said three villages south of the town were bit by fire. Many people have Oed their homes aJoog the thickly settled road between Takhmau and Phnom Penh. Other fighting was reported both north and south of Phnom .Penh, but details and casualties ,...,, not announced. On the south, the battlefronts were at the village of J>rateah Lang, where a government armored force is trying to outflank the insurgent advance from the southwest ; at Wat Sleng, on lDgbway 3 nine miles from the capital ; am at Prek Ho. six miles south of the city. Northwest of Phnom Penh, fighting erupted at the village of Kap Srauthom. U.S. B52 bombing missioos cootinued around the clock, pouoding at imurgent concentratioos and supply r 'o u t e s . American fichler-bombe" continued to give close support to government ground forces. Uncertainty On Campaign Reform Seen WASHING TON (AP) -An uncertain future lies ahead in the House for a Watergate-spawned campaign reform bill passed by the Senate. The bill , intended to curb "big·mooey influence" in elections, would sharply limit campaign contributions and cam· paign spending and establish an in· dependent enforcement agency. While the Sen.at' was passing the bill ( IN SHORT ... ) 82-to-8 Monday, the House balked at even considering a bill to open the way for congressional pay raises in this IMJ11.elec- tion year. '111.e vote in the HOU9e was 237 to 156 against taking up the pay bill which the Senate passed July 9 with no debate or roll call vote. e 'Big Brot,,..,., Feared WASIUNGTON (AP) -A gnvelnment advisory conunittee today recommended new safeguards ' to protect Americans from "Big Brother" misuse of com- puteriz<d lnfonnation about their lives. The report strongly advt.sed cubing the growing use ol Social Security number:s ' for personal Identification and proposed legislative restraints to protect individuals Crom unwarranted invasion of privacy. e Stennis Discharged WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Sen. John C. Stennis (O.Miss.), wounded seriously in a Washington street holdup last Jan. 30, was fonna11y discharged from Walter Reed Army Medical Center Mooday but he will not resume his run duties in the Senate for several weeks. Stennis, 72, had been able to leave the hospital for brief periods during his treatment. I • r-S•••P c .. ,..e• WASlllNGTON !UPI) -Jolin D. -bu ''.,....i that ..... amlnatlon of • ._ -· -tu returns --bJ an aalstant of John F. Kemedy lb .,.. after ltmledy became President. Showers Linger Over East Ebrtichman nprroodlloeddnood a 11'19 ooo- I Pleasan.t Co11.ditio1is Over Most of U.S.-Not Texas gresslooai record 1t the Sen ate Waterpje !Jeerings on Monday "1llcb said the Kejtnedy aide, .Clnnlne Bellino, "called on the oommlssloner of Internal revenue and wutertook inspection of mc.ny, many tu returns." Bellino now is chief lnvestigator for the Sen.ate Watergate Committee. v.s. s ...... ,,, ''-"' ..id """*"._. lll'lfl"d I ' ( Coasted 'Wefltller Moll!y """"' todtv. l,.I...,. ¥M'l1bl1 wt• "'i;.t ..., 1'110f1'11ne i.ou.. ""° tero'll"9 _,"1, 10 to " -l'!Ott 111 t i· ~ 100.y ...., ~. Hlgll lodty low 70t. ,,,.,,,1 ~·iw.. r11191 fl'Ofll 6.1 10 n. lfllllt'ld 1"""4't- ,..,,.. ratlll't trom •i IO 11. w111r ....,_ Ptl'•tvr• a. Snn, Moon. Tide• TUISOAY $1CON1 N9'1 11:0t p.111. "' WCcwld low I 1tJ p.m. 1.l WI DMllOAY Flnt lllflt n :1J 1.111. s.J l'lrtl low ••• •• ... . l :SS 1.m. .. _. s.cOlld """ 11... P."'-u StcM9 1oW l:M p.11'1. 1.l ! $4111 """ •:M 1 m. 1t1s 1:15 p.m. M-rt1e t:U • m, &m t;ts o.m.1. e Camper Stabbed Dead SPECULATOR, N.Y. (UPI) -Police using bloodhounds and he 1 i c o p t er s searced a wooded area in the Adiroo- dack Mountains today for a gunman who slabbed to dealh a teen.age camper Ued to a tree and then threatened he would "kill again." DAILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DIJivtrY of tht Dally ,.not IS !INl'llllffd' MIMeP.P:fW..,L If '" .. Ill ..... fwr ...,... .., .li• ,. .... ult M '"" ~ will .. ltfwtN i. '"'C•"" Ire ..... 11 ,,. ,.111, .. ~· .... .......,, .. ,... ...... __ ....... ~ "' • 1.111, .....,..,.. ., • l ,M, sw...,. (Ill .,.. I '"' wlll "9 IMWllll • 1"• (Ilk .,. 1111.,. .tit 1f •• Ill. , ... ...... MM! Or•ltll ,_.., ... ,... ............ , ,..,..,_, tlwllll!ltfM 1.-dl "" .......... • ............ Ult Mii ,.._.., ,,,..,,_ ..... Siii ,.tll "'.....,._, .,_ ....... ...... ~ .................... ...... Astronauts Believed Getting Over Illness HOUSTON (UPI) -'!be fl r1 t $p8Cewalk of the Skylab 2 missloo WU delayed again today, thLs time unW Saturday, to give the astrooauts Ume to catch up oo lagging -k and over<ome their motion stckne&! with rest, square meals and exercbe. '!be three spacemen, apparently feel· Ing better after a thne<!ay bout with tbe space sickness, made progress tn ac- tivating their space station and even bad time to observe two minnows confu&ed by tile lack of gravity in tbe ship's aquar- lum. Mission commander Alan L. Bean had predicted earlier that a relued schedule for the next few days woold give hlm, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma Ume to regain their strength and get read,y fe< tbe spacewalk and the rest of the two.month flight. GROUND CONl'ROLLERS decided rest was t1>fJ number one oonsideratioo. The spacewalk origin.ally was set for to-- day and the astronauts' first day off was advanced to Friday from Saturday under a revised plan sent to the crewmen by radio-teleprinter before they awoke. There wu no early word from the astronauts on h>w they felt today, but Ibey were busy moving about the ti;g space station Installing a replacemeot tape reconler, working wllh a troublesome dellumldifler and ""'*ing up a bicycle exerciJer. It was such move- ment that led to stomach queasiness and nausea during their flnt three days ol fllgbt. GARR.IOTJ', WHO bad to take two an- tlnausea pills Monday, felt well enough to open a can containing a small aquarium and to observe two oonf'used ~ inch min· nows in synthetic sea water. 'Ibe idea of that unusual experiment was to see what disorientation fish experience when ex· po5ed to weightlessness. "We've got a couple ol m1noows at the moment that an jtmt swimming all over the place," be reported. "Both these fellows are really swimming full speed.. As a matter ol fact, Ibey seem to he oomplel<ly disoriented , , • "THEY'RE AIL swimming in small circles BO they'll apparently think they're climbing or something due t<rthe zero G gravity and they're pitclling down to overcome that. And they're gwimming in very Ugbt circles." Garriott, who bolds a P!lD In eltctrlc:al Girl in British Scandal Admits , Oiarges~ Fined LONDON (AP) -Nonna Levy, the call girl at the center of the sex scandal that rocked tbe British gOVf111D1l!O~ pleaded guilty to three counts ol In· fluenclng .....,utu!es and WB> fined $li62 today. The magistrate, John Phiws, said tbe three charges resulted from Mrs . Levy agreeing to m a n a g e a friend's "organization" for a couple of weeks. The charges bad no bearing m the government. scandal. Mrs. Levy, 26, was identified as the prostitute pbotograpbed In bed with Lord Lambton, then the British air force minister. He resigned. The LambtOO bl· vestigatlon fonled the resignation of Loni Jellicoe, government leader in the House of lords. He admitted dealings with call girls. Both Lambton and Jellicoe said they were not blackmailed. Both said there were no securtty leaks as a nsilt « their relations with call atrls. Mn. Levy's lawyer, Robert Gibbms, tol<I the court that despite the charges ~led b his client "slle II not the head or tbe member ol .., gq of · or blackmailen." Red Itleetfng eoglneer!ng, said he at.so could - development In some of the 60 ..- eggs In the I by I Inch aquarium. They are expected to batch out week. "Yo.r can see the embryo imdde a number ol them just by eye without JIUl- ting a maJ!Difying glass on them," he reported. The Di!nnows, commonly called "mununichog minnows" were caught in the Atlantic Ocean off Beaufort, N.C. Haldeman- ' An S.O.B. For Nixon' By United Press In&ermt:IGDl.l When you talk about loyalty to a pres!· dent, you talk about Harry Robbinll Haldeman of Newport Beach. "E./ery President needs bis 1.0.b., and I'm Nixon's," Bob Haldeman was food of saying. , His detractors, and they seemed legim, compla.lned that he was too plup<l'fect an s.o.b. HLs BllJlllO'f=, and they oftm -few, said that il Haldeman dimi exist N"lXOll woold lave bad to--. BUT 'IIAIJlEMAN cared not fer bis detractors nor his supporters. He saw as bis job to protect the Preoid<!JI, to -him from the favor-seeker• and the power-l>rolrer> (tbe pests). Detractors and supporters alike sald be did that job well. '1bose wbo liked him said bis ..... necessary hmction if the President was not to get bogged down in minutiae. Those who dt.sliked hlm said he was too successful, that Haldeman caused Nixon to operate out of an ivory tower and to run lhe country as a benevolent patriarch wbo didni trust hls dlildren. HAWEMAN, 4', ooce the strongest man in the White House next to the l'residjoll, bas fa ll e D -to lilo Watergate~ April 30, with deepesi regret and with pmlic laudinp !or tbelr loyalty and ability, ~ ac- cepted the resignation& ol llaldem'"1 and his UCLA roommate, Jolm EJn•WMD "Hans" and "Fritz," as Hal~ IOd Ebrlidnnan were called -but DOI to their faces -were Nixon's chief of staff and chief ilomestic adviser respectively. 'Ibey tendered their resignations follow· ing a rash ol published reports that they may have been involved in the phµm1ng and rover-up ol the Watergate t>Ugg\ng . THERE ,...WERE few sorrowful ei:- pressions, • in the White Holl58 ar on Capitol Hill when the news bro t e. crewcut, formidabl~iooklng Haldeman bad won a reputation IOI" the rutbleas ex· erdse of power and unqueoUonlng loyalty to Nixcn His protective shield around the President became known u the "Bertin Wall." He managed tbe· President's time, personally ·cleared everyone who WBDled to see tbe President -even Cabinet of· ficiaJs -and controlled an """' mlmicatioos to the Oval Office. With the President's acquiescence, be ruled supreme and delivered the bad news that Nixon did not want to personally handle -such as firing 2,000 top.level govemmeot offidaJs -the dor after the landslide election. Haldeman had served the President since they began an association in the 1956 campaign when Nixon sought re- e1ection for vice president. Calls Monitored NEW YORK (AP) -CBS News lald Mooday it acquired documents Indicating that tbe U.S. Army ts moollnrilti tbe telephone. calls " news w: 1 ...... ~..,,,,. and civilians in West Gennant. Angela Davis Wits wllh girl survivor o! Son MY bamlel in South Viei,. nam. Miss Davis Is in East Berlin to atlend 10th Festival o! Youth and Studen ts sponsored by Communist groups, -'. I -1. ·, Orange f;oast EDITION .. -·. ... Today's FhJal N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 212, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TtJESDAY, JULY JI , 1973 N TEN CENTS Ervin BEERCAN RACE WORTH THE PAIN \Vhereas most sailboat races are "bor- ing to watch and difficult to photograph," observes Daily Pilot Chief Photographer Lee Payne, Newport's aMual Beercan Regatta is not your average water com· petition. Payne has been in the thick of it over the years with "big boats crashing about," and on Page 21 today is a col- lection of some of his finest recordings for several publications or.that "dingy" competition. It's the only regatta he'll shoot, because the Beercan is worth the pain. Ahoy, he gets ·seasick. Council Will Pay for A~y Land Used Newport Beach will not take over any private land for public use without paying for it, councilmen ru1ed li-1onday night. By a vote of 3-2, the council refused to participate in a prescriptive rights action ~ainlt the owner of several vacant lots adjacent to Inspiration Point view park in Corona deJ Mar. Councilmen also agreed to notify the South Coast Regional Coastal Conaerva· lion Commission that, although the city won't buy the land outright, means of ob- taining federal revenue sharing funds are being pursued. The nwner of the most e<>ntroversial section of the land, Carl Hilgren of Newport Beach, will go before the coastal commission Aug. 6 for a ruling on his plans to build on the property. The question of prescriptive rights - taking over ownership by right of long use of vacant land -was raised by a group ol. residents seeking to tack the va- cant Jots onto the view park overlooking Big Corona. The residents have asked the California Attorney General to study the validity of prescriptive rights in the case of the Ailgren property. Tully Seymour, attorney for the group (S<e LAND, Page Z) Thief Steals Office Equipment at Bank A burglar who forced open a window at a Newport Beach bank escaped with nearly $1 .400 worth of assorted office equipment, it was discovered Monday. Al Brimer, credit officer of the Bank of Newport, 745 Dover Drive, ca11ed police alter staff members discovered the break-in when they arrived to open for ~iness. The loss included two typewriters. a dictaphone device and a stereo sound ~ystem, totaling $1,397.30 in value. Orange Coast Weather Orange Coast skies will be cloudy during the night and early morn- ing hours, with hazy swisbine to- morrow morning. Higllll will be in the low 70s, with the low in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Proclaiming that he has tltot tndercribable "knowledge -and with a rnmoballing movemtnt bthtnd him -Guru Malloraj Ji, 15, Is ern.barkfng an his third .. peace" tour in iht Un.ikcC State1. Ste 1iorJ1, Page 14. LM-..,.. 11 Ctllftnll• J ClttliflH ft.ft C-kJ IJ <,.,._.. ,, O.tll IM!lul ' ......... ,.... . lllWl-1-' ,. ,.._ 11•1$ ,., .. """"' ' li.tl&c.M ,, Al!ll LMfen IS ...... " MVMI ,-...,. U N•n-f NtM f DrMtll cwm 1 SfM• '"9rtlr IJ SMftt JI·•• ll'ldl Mlf';ftl U·ll T ............. 11 T"-'-" Jl w .. lfltr • WMllll'I Ntwl 1~11 W9fti9 News 4 Raps Haldeman's Role Hit At Hearing BUILETIN WASHING TON (UPI) -H. R. Halde- man tesUfied this afternoon that to learn about his associates' Watergate Involve- ment, Presklent Nixon questioned John \V. Dean In March %1 about wbttber to pay a Watergate de(endant's blackmail demand for $1 million. WASHINGTON (AP ) -Se n ate Watergate Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. accused the \Vhitc Ii.ouse today of leaking selected contents of disputed tape recordings through committee witness H.R. Haldeman. of Newport Beach. "I think this is counterfeit evidence.'' the North Carolina Democrat declared as the committee heard again from Haldeman his acrount of how he listened. to recordings or two key meetings between President Nixon and John W. ' H.R. HALDEMAN- 'NIXON 'S S.0.B.'-Story, Poge 4 Dean m, the ousted White House cowtSel who has accused Nixon of complicity in the Watergate cover-up. Presid~nt Nixon has refused to furnish the ta'*' to the senate panel or to the Watergate special prosecutor. Both are taking legal action to get the tapes in a major constitutional confrontation. Haldeman startled the committee Mon- day when he said he listened in late April to the recording of a March 21 meeting between Dean and Nixon, and then listen- ed just three weeks ago to the tape of a Sept. 15 meeting. Haldeman restated today in more detail bow Nixon asked him to report on the two meetings, and said he listened. to one tape in bis office, then checked out the second tape to listen at home. \Vh.ite Howe spokesman Gerald L. Warren said today that Nixon decides who can listen to the tapes "based on the President's judgment of who could best assist him in detennining the facts on the Watergate matter without jeopardiz- ing the confidentiality of the tapes." The White House sought executive privilege for Haldeman concerning a por- tion of one meeting Haldeman had not at- tended, but the committee denied this Monday. Haldeman said Monday the tapes con- tained no evidelrce that Nixon knew of the cover-up, contrary to Dean's testimony about the two meetings. "I think this is a little planned action." said Ervin, "in which the White House allowed htr. Haldeman the use of the tapes which the White House denies to this committee and lets Mr. Haldeman make tbe interpretation before this com· mittee. "If this was a court of law this never \rould have been admitted in evidence because ... only the best evidence can be received," said Ervin. "I think th.is is counterfeit evidence," he said. "but still I'm going lo admit it.'' Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. (R-Conn.) protested that the committee "should not hear from this particular witness in- formation that has been solely provided to him and no OnC else in America." Nixon himself has said the tapes are open to various interpretations, though (S.. EVIDENCE, Page Z) * * * • Ill Nixon Tape Leaks FORMER WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF H. R, HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGATE PR°Bam Testifies That President Nixon Asked Him to Listen.to Tape1•nd Report on Their Contents Engine Trouble Blamed In Death of CdM Man Engine trouble was blamed today for the death of a 47-year-0ld Newport Beach man v.'hose private plane plummeted to the ground hlonday altemoon and burst into names in a vacant Buena Park field. Killed in the crash was Evan Koppe, a resident of 1400 SantaneUa Terrace in the Irvine Terrace section of Corona del :P..Iar. He was the sole occupant of the twi~ngine Cessna 310. Koppe radioed Fullerton Airport that Trial Witnesses ~ Not Revealed GAINESVILLE , Fla. (UPI) -A government prosecutor said today he did not want to reveal the names of the witnes.ses in the conspiracy trial opening today of the "Gainesville Eight" because he was concerned "!or their safety." The defendants, all members or the Vietnam Veterans Against the War ex- cept one. are ace~ of plotting to disrupt the 1972 Republican Na'i:ional Convention in Miami Beach \vith lethal slingshots, crossbows and unorthodox weapons. The eight claim they v.·ere framed by undercover agents v.•orking for the Com - mittee !or the Re-election of the Presi· dent and that the government used illegal wiretaps in the investigation. he v.•as experi~ncing mechanical trouble but reportedly declined the tower 's offer to mobilize emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, its right engine malfunctioning severely, went into a steep bank, stalled and plunged into the ground near Beach Boulevard and hfalvem Road. No one else was injured by the crash which was officially logged at 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said v.•ilnesses reported the plane's right engine was running so slowly that they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the wreckage but were driven back by names. Police said a monwnental traffic jam resuJted when they blocked off streets to aid firemen lighting the blaze. It took fire crews approximately two hours to bring the fuel-fed fire under control. Koppe, believed to be the owner or the plane, brought the craft v.ithin one mile of the Fullerton Airport runway be£ore he lost control. A Bank of America building was just a few hundred feet av.•ay from where the plane crashed . Newport Woman Held by Police On Voodoo Rap A woman who tried to break down the door of a Newport Beach homt with an iron bar Afonday was held for psychiatric observation when police found 25 voodoo dolls and the decomposing remains of a small animal in the overnight bag she carried. The five-foot , one-inch. t!G-poWld woman also carried a ballpeen hammer in her pocket and a purse containing old com cobs and other refuse during the in- cident, investigators said. Officer Bob Hardy said police were summoned to the home In the 2800 block o{ Broad Street 1n disturbance. response to a Investigation of the distraught v.·oman's odd assortment or baggage also included discovery o( various pins, needles and rocks. The items were booked in an evidence locker £or safekeeping, while the woman hersel£ was admitted to the psychialric ward of Orange County Medical Ce er for care. Nixon---Ouster~ 1 Survives S1nashup in lleavy Fog I BOSTON I AP) - A Deli. Airlines DC\I jetliner v.·ith 89 persons aboard clipped a seav.-all today on its approach to Logan International Airport, crashed and dis- integrated in heavy fog. State police said there was only one survivor. One man, \Vho lived through the crash. died I ate r at ltfassachuset:ta General Ho.spital from multiple injuries. He was identtfied by the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 3t, ol Louisville, Ky. An eyewitness said the t~ine plane crashed on a runway about 1,000 feet from the edge of the water at the busy airport that juts into Boston Harbor. St.ate police said it appeared that the jet struck a seawall at the approach to the airport. A state police spokesman said there was a break in the 2\i-foot high wall, indicating the craft's land ing gear struck it. An observer said personal effects and parts of bodies were strewn all over the l"WlWay. He saKI the plane, arriving on a flight fn:>m Burlington, Vt., seemed to have disintegrated on Impact. He said the largest portion of the plane he could see was a 10.foot Portion of the fuselage. . • In Wuhingtoo, the N a l Io n a I Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a Ill-member inv .. llpllJI& team to the scene. The board said the team Yt°OUld be beaded by board member Isabel Burgeu. State police said a temporary morgue. was set up at the fire station al the airport. Reports from the scene said numel'OWI vehicles drove to the.crash site to collect bodies from the debris and mud. Some vehicles became mired in the mud. A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said the plane, scheduled to leave Burlington at 9 a.m .. made an unscheduled stop at the municipal airport in Manchester, N.H. He said he did not know the reason for the New Hampshire stop. One survivor at hfauaehuselt.s General Hospital Yt'as identified as Leopold Oiouinard, 20, of Marshfield, VL A hospital spokesman said be had tbird- degree burns over M> percent of his body. The other survivor was identified by the hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31, o[ Louisville, Ky. The spokesman said Brown had multiple injuries. Both survivors were reported In critical condition. The craft was identified from the air- line's Atlanta headquarters as Delta Flight 723. It had 8.1 passengers and a crew of five, according to a spokesman from the airline in Boston. There was one non- paying pas,,enger. The crash occurred on the Birds Island Flats area of the airport. A witnes.! at the scene uid the only parts of lhe craft still intact were the rodder and stabilizer, the two engines and two pices of wing. The crash site was believed to be in the ISH BOSTON, P11e ZI .. Rep.1Drin(l1i Urges lmpeaclim e1it WASlnNGTON {AP) -A resolution to Impeach President Nixon was lntroduoed in the Ho""' today by Rep. Robert F. Drlnan (0.hiass.). Scvtral congressmen have suggested that the House consider whether to begin impeachment proceedings against Nixon because of the Watergale scandal. But Drinan's resolution was the first rormal motion for impeachment. Orlnan, a Roman Catholic priest. ha' frequently been at odds wllh the Nixon admJnlstrotloo ovtr the war in Southeast Asia and AdmlnlsLrallon culbackJ in social pnisrams. I •<1 think the time has arrivt'd when the members of the HOtlSe m~I seek to think the unthinkable and lo search dtli· gently Into our ooovictkms and oor con- science as to what ls occurring under the Coostitutloo as we behold the unprece- dented revelations Which every day be- come more lncredlble1" Drlnan said In a statement. The resolution was rererred to the House Judiciary Committee. Orinan told newimen be decided · against using a sped1l procedure by which he coold bave larced on Immediate coosidtration. ( ...T_ FIREMEN CONTINUE SEARCH FOR BODIES IN WRE~GE OF CRASHED JETLINER IN BOSTON Pline Dl1in1'9r11ted on Londint In Huvy fog;,Only One Person Survived Cr11h . ' • ' '' '' I ... \ DAILY PILOT N TuHdi)', July 31, 1CJ7J . Coast H i ghway Bicycle Bridge Ex-lawmaker Pk ads Guilty WASHINGTON (AP) -Former Rep. J. ir.tog Whalley o I Poonsylvanla loday plooded guUty to" cbatpl at mill hod and olloCnlctloo at justice. • I Cost Requested Whalley, 7t, a Repob11con. aerwd ln the House t2 years. He did not •eek ~ectlon In 1972. l By JOHN ZALLl!ll Of ... Ollb ,,.... , .... 'Jbe Newport Beach Bicycle Trails I Committee ask~ htonday for a <USI estimate to build a bicycle brldgt: across the Pacific Coast Hiah~·ay al ilS in- tersection with Newpon Boule\'ard. The propoaed blcyde !ridge would be installed southeast ot lhe enslinc Arclle$ automobile bridge and run parallel to iL Rough estimates lndleate the '-"OSt would be at least $85.000. 1bt tnlU'f budget for the trails commiltet lhls year is only $35.ln>. But commiuee members reptatedly re{p'red to the area around tbe Archrs ~e as ont ol the most dangerous in the city for biC)'cllSU. City ol!idols today said there hod been se\'M "car versm bike'' a~ts in the * * * Balboa lsl.e Bike Trail Talk Opposed The newly elected chainnan cl the Newport Beach Bicycle rran. Com- mitt.. said Monday she lavors ''putting off"' dlacuss!on of proposed bike trails on Balboa Wand. "We have so many other things to ac- oxnpUsb that a.re more imPortant," said M.ary Blake near the end of a three-hour meeting of the committee. "I don't think we shouJd allow OUr3elves to ~nd too much time on thi.s one problem.' J\frs. Blake said that contrary to the belief of some people, she has never favored building ·a bike path arotmd the perlmeter of Balboa Island. But she said she did support "some kind of project" to accommodate bicyclists on !be isfand. Mrs. Blake sak! she was not s u r e when the proper time would come for bicycle traib work en the Island. "ll llllgbt be that we never m anything, there," she Aid, "but I feel that we aught to bold open the door for doing IOIDelhing In the fulure becawoe lllere Is a need for it." Allan Beek, who said that he opposed a blcyde path around the perimeter of Balboa Island, emphasized that he nevertheleu wanted signs installed on the island directing bicycling riders to the best routes. He also supported widen· Ing or the bridge lead in& onto the .Island to mike more room for bikes. Herring Franklin, e I e c t e d vi~ chairman of the committee. said he felt Midents on the Island opposed any kind of the bike trails because "Balboa Island just isn't suited to heavy bicycle traffic." Frankllo said any kind of bicycle trail wouJd tend to attract more bicyclists. Fl'Olll P-.e l BOSTON ... area of the Oct 4, 1960 crash ot an Eastern Air Lines Jet Into Boston Harbor with the loss of 62 lives. There were 10 survivors or the accident. which occurred as the craft was taking o(f, Authorities saJd starlings pulled into the plane's jet engines caused that crash. Logan Airport, which bills itself as the world's eighth largest, sits on a large landfill area. It is the second largest airport in the country for overseas departures. One of tthe first men to the scene of today 's cf ash, Fire Lt. .Robert Alexander , said he and 10 men carried one survivor from the craft. He described the man as middle-aged. He said he was conscious when canied out and said to the rescuers, "Please belp me. I can 't feel my lep." Alexander said the watches of pel"SOrul found in. the craft were stopped at 11 :OS a.m. • DAILY PILOT TM Or1"'t eo.11 CAIL 'I' l'lLOl, •1111 Wiii(" 11 ~IMlll "'4 Nt•l·l'rHt, It """'lil\lll l"t' ll>t Or•n11 CNtt l'llb!ll/ll"' (Ol'\Nft'I' ,_ •t1t tdlllotlo ••t 0"'1oll1htd, Monlltr ll!f'11111" ,rldtV, Mt Catto "'"'• N"""''' •-11, Hltt'lllnt!IHI lttt"/'ll\l~ll h<I V•lloy, LIO'VM llKll, r .... rMJitdcll-tk Ml 5tn Clt!Mnlc/ ltn J111n C..lt!rlno A 11"011 rtt•I IOlllfll 11 1o111t1lthed ll!ll'dtr1 trio 1unc11r1- Tl!1 ptln(l .. I tilllllltl'llnt OltM It ti JJO Wt1I ltr a1r .. l, (ftll Mwt, C.U10t1111, fUJ6. "•!.ort N •. W114 ""ldenl 11111 'lilbl~ J1cli. l. Cvrlo'( Vice fl'r•IHll 111111 "-•• ......., Tho"''' K11"ll .... l\loii\11 A...M11rphl111 M-.11-. h ltor L P1tn Krl .. ~lotocflCl!rl~lw ---JJJJ Now,.,t h1tlt'l1~ Mo llr1t1 A4Jr1111P.O.111 1171, t2•6J --<:ttlt MIMI UI w.1 11'1' ltrttt ~ IVOIJ tl1 l'"orftl A"""" 14Wll=11~l IN1J hKfl '°"""'I'll loll I M ,..,. II ~ tlMI T .. 1,t11111 C7111 Ml~lll ClautW ........... MJ.f611 ,.....,..,_, 1m. °"'"" c.... ~i.i.1r11 ~: Mt -••lot. , lllft"ll"""' tlll!lttltl 1111nff ., M""1l1""'"'9-1~ IN'f II ~ Wllf!"lf I ,.... ... 11.r.n " ,_.,...,, """" 1-..1 cl'.elll ...,,... NW " c.t• "'-• Cal""111L llllllMl'llttltft "' clt'rifr IUI ,_,.,.,_.,, "" !NII N,lJ mt11llllr1 ll'lllllWY -.rtNtllN .... IMflffl"· orf'll around the Archts since January. The bridge. If built. YOOUld &en.'!'! bt~·cUsts coming to NCYO'port Beach do.A'n Newport Boulevard . It would also serve as a crossing point for children from the Nl'\.\'port Penlnsulii: urea who ride tbelr bicycles to E n s I a: n ln!mnediate and Newport l~arbor HJgh school<. "Maybe those school children shooldn't ride their bike.s to school. and maybe 1hey're carele!S in the way thty drive," said 1'tary tlanley, an at1ernate member of the committee. "But let's face it, the kids are out thtte, and we still don 't y.·ant to run them over," she said. The decision to seek a cost estimate on a bridge foU~·ed an hour-long discussion o( how the problem of the Arches should he approadiod. The original ldta called !or building a bicycle bridge on top of the existing Arches bridge. Such a "piggy-back" bridge would have to be at least 800 reet long, city officials said. Committee members dropped that idea y,•hen Don Webb, a city engineer, told them the Arches bridge probably would be tom down and replaced in 10 years. In addition, the construd.ion of a ~ foot bridge bes~ -rather than on top of -the Arches )>ridge appeared to be a more lnexpeMive project. "If we did build one beside the Arches," said Allan Beek, a committee member, .. we could build it far enough away thal tt would not be endangered il the Arches are tom down." If the bridge is bulll beslc\t the ~ It could link up with old Ntwport Boulevard, thus making the older streel the main thoroogblare for bicyclists coming to the beaches in Newport from inland areas, committee members ooted. The action taken Monday followed a request from the city Parks, Beaches, and Recreation Commission to give special study to the problem. Benjamin Gary Dies at 83; Newport Artist Funeral services are set for 3 p.m. Fr1- day at Pacific View Mortuary for Newport Beach arttsl Benjamin Lee Gary, often called ''The Grampo Mooes of the West Coast." Hailed countrywide for ru., colorful and highly skilled pointll!IJt painting> of rural and small to~ American llfe, Mr. Gary. of 4000 Hilaria \Vay, died Friday. He was 83. A -New Jersey nalive, he had been a commercial artist all hls life until be moved to California in 1955. He came to the West Coast penniless after losing the savings of a lifetime on unlucky stock market speculations. Once" here, he found a new ll!estyle and a new art that brougb him critical ac- claim, more to his own surprise than anyone else's, he once said. Color and light were central to Mr. Gary's style. His paintings, produced laboriously one every three months, are marked by rich glowing colors bathed in swiligbl "Color is love, and without color man is empty," ?.tr. Gary once said. His Cirst show at the Newport Harbor Art t\.tuseum in 1971 brought him hls first national attention after years of pro- ducing the pointillist canvases. Mr. Gary has no immediate survivors. His only son, Hollywood actor Benjamin Gary, Jr., died several years ·ago. ~fr. Gary, who sported a mane of white hair and a full white mousta che, stood six feel, four inches tall . He .,11as the son of an Irish rose gardener. Girl Falls Off Bike, The government accused him of forcing 17 staff mtmbers to kick back port\ons of salarles. Sources close to the CDse said the 1taff- members kicked back IO to 20 per- cent of their pay for a totaJ "ball park figure" of about $50,000. Pact Given For Station --Minus Jail Newport Beach city councilmen gave the g1>ahead Monday. n~ght to start con- struction of the Sl mtlhon police station on Jambor~ Road -minus the jail that would cost $207,000 more. Councilmen awarded the contract. to Johnson and Mape Construct.ion Com- pany in Anaheim with the understanding they could tack the jail on later and pay for it out of next year's budget. City. ?\.tanager Robert L. Wynn told councilmen the need to dedilct the jail and several o the r embel.lisbmel'lts became apparent when the lowest bid eame In $!20,000 higher than the II million budgeted for the staUon house. Wynn had promised to get the whole thing bullt for 1964.000. Besides the jail other deductJve !terns Included the parking lot, which will lose its concrete airbing and one inch of Its asphalt surface thickness and the carpetilig for the new facility. Wynn told the council he shou1d know by November or December how much money will be available in next year's budget and if enough will be on hand to add the jail. If there is, W)1ltl said, the whole st.a· tion with its jail could be done by next fall. Councilmen accepted W y n n ' s e1 · planatioo without comment a n d U/lllflllnou>ly approved the contracl '!be only remark came at the end of. the vote wlien Comcllman Carl Kymla quipped, "there went $1 million." Murder Victim Found to Be Fullerton Man By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tllo IMHY ~1111 Sl•ll Seal Beach police said today they have identifled the dead man found in their ci- ty Monday morning as 2I·year-old Ronnie Gene Wiebe of Fullerton. Wehe, they said, was strangled to death and his body dumped in ice plant alongside the Seventh Street onramp to the soutbbotmd San Diego Freeway. There was no identification on Wiebe's body but officers said they were able to make nn identification because be was listed as a missing person with the Los AJamitos Police Department. Police wou1d not comment on the possibility that Wiebe's murder may be linked to the s1>-ealled mutilation murders which occWTed in the Seal Beach -Long Beach area between December and April. . Investigalo~s. also declined. ~o release any information on the condition or th_e dead man's body, other than to note 1t was clothed with one sock and both shoes missing. Wiebe's body was found near the spot where the first of the so.called mutilation murder victims was found in December. That victim was F.dward Daniel Moore, 20, a Camp Pendleton Marine. Three additional murders have been I d I A linked In the bizarre case. The second ll j nre >y lllO was was discovered Feb. & alongside the 1 Terminal Island Freeway ln Long Beach. A Newport Beach girl was . injured That victim is unidentified and is listed t\.fonday afternoon when a passing car as John Doe No. 16 by the Los Angeles rRn over he:r foot seconds after a bicycle police. spill on \Vest Coast Highway. The third victim whose murder may Tammy Zitter. 17, of 1824 Santiago have been committed by the same person Drive. was treated at Hoag ?tfemorial respcnsible for the first two was found llospllal following the mishap about 1:15 April 14 in Huntington Beach. The pm. in the 3100 block of \Vt:st Coast tortured and sexually mutilated bodY is Highway. Police said the Injury wes also unidentified. purely accidental and the driver of the Jolin Doe s2 Is the murd er victim who passing vehicle was not cited. led police to believe that there may be a ('.Jink between the murders. His hacked up Ho use Refuses Pa y Raise Bill WASlnNGTON (AP) -'lllo H°""' Monday refuoed eveo to cmslder I bill to give congresm>en a pay ra1,. thll year ju!t before they begin lhetr rHlectlon cam pa lens. The Stnale-passed bill also would have increased the p • 7 for convessmen, federal judges and top AdmlnlJtraUon of· fldals c\·ery two years lnstcad of every four years. Dtmocratlc Leader Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. (f>.Mas.s.), aald the rumor 11 that • special commJllion recommended that Prfsldent Nt1on lncreue congressmen'• pay 110,000 hut that lhe Pro.lldent will reoominend only a l pel'Cl!<ll Ulcr..,. or fl,3llO. ~are paid $42,500 a y<ar. body was round wrapped in green p1utlc sacks In several locations along tl1e Terminal hland Freeway and In a tra5h bin In Sunael Beach. Home Mortg age Bill Approved WASHINGTON (UPI) -LeglslaUon to nstore FKA·lnsured mort1agts for thousands of Americans wu approved by Jlouse-Senate negollaton Monday, but the compromise bUI coot1ln1 language that could product a presidential veto. Th• bill would extend to June 30, 1!174. authority of !be Housing and Urban Development Depanmtnt lo Insure home mortca1cs 1111der I he Fed•nil Houal ng Administration. Loan guarantee• have not been made by FJIA since an e.uthorlzlng Jawupired June 30. Sinoe lhtn, thousands of poten- tial home buyers have btc!n unable to gecure loans. • Compute1~ Firm Hired By County The 01'3.nge County Board o f Supervisors today hired Co m p u t e r Sciences Corp. of El Segundo to supply ull the roun ty's future data processing needs. \Ylth the action, Orange Counly became the first county in the nation to engage an outside Onn for data pro- cessing. The contract. will extend for se ven years at a CODtract cost of $26 million. Sllpervisor Ralph A. Diedrich, who spearheaded the review or county in- formation requirements that led to the contract approval, said. "Orange Ciounty ls taking the lead in applying to county government a practical -approach th.at has well proved itself at the federal level. "By utlllzlng Industry assistance to im- prove our infonnation systems, we believe we'll provide the county with the finest data processing services at the lowe.st possible cost." The Company bid was 30 percent less than the $37.8 million cost of the county's internal data processing center over the seven.year period, as projected by '.lie county negotiating committee. . The facility management contract Wlll enable the county to save $11 million in tax dollars while materially improving the quality o( services rendered, Diedrich suggested. Erwin L. AJ!en, president of CSC's commercial division, said the agreement provides for joint ownership by CSC and the county of the software systems to be developed by the company under the con- tract. Orange, """nd most populated county lo Calllomla and aeventh largest In the nat}.)n plaru to develop or improve systedis serving a wide range of func- tions. 'These include budgeting, ad- ministrative management, tax. assess-- ment and collection, land-use planning, jury selection, probate and others. Major development ef£o~s will . ~n· centrate on further automahng muruc1pal court procedures a~d. exp~~g t~e county's on-line cnmmal JUSt1ce m· formation system to increase i t s usefulness to local law enforcement agencies, t h e courts and r e I a t e d departments. CSC will also perform more than a dozen analytical studies for Orange County. One of these will investigate the feasibility of developing a n en- vironmental model of Orange County, us- ing dais on land we and air, water and noise pollution. -( Pilot Newsbo y ' Reports Blaze Daily Pilot carrier Randy Rubens and his companion may have ave~ a ~a­ jor laundromat fire Monday. night while making collection rounds 1n Newport Beach. Rubens, 11, of 114 42nd St. and Jerry Anderson, also 11, of 110 41st St.. spot~ smoke billowing fro m the clearung establishment on 30th Street. They ra~ inside to investigate and then turned m the alarm to Newport firemen. The blaze was ~held to only $200 dan;age. A dryer full or clothes bad ig· nited. 2nd Day Trek Ends FURNACE CREEK (UPl1 -Two San Francisco \11omen completed the second day Monday of their 140.mile trek across the floor of sizzling Death Valley. Jo Ann Claudio-\Vi!lia n1s. 21. and 1\nita Perrot, 22, set out at dawn Sunday from F~rnace Creek. Daytime temperatures 1n the desert hover around 125 degrees. Boy 5-year-old Hurt; Animal Squglit Five-year-old Kenny Hill was walkin& to lbe dntg •toro .. Main Strtet In Balboa Monday rnornlni- He •lopped ror a minute lo pet the big dog lying on the sidewalk near the cor- ner. But the hulking German shepherd - without warning -lunged at the youngster'a: throrit, ripping through bLs skin. Witnesses so.id the dog then ran east on Balboa Boulevard. Kt:nny was taken to Hoag f\1emortal Hospital where he w11.s treated for wounds on bis neck and chin aod releas- ed. Animal control officers were unabl e to locate the animal, however, and this morning the boy's father. Douglas Hilt, 111s E. Balboa Blvd., issued a plea to Balboa residents to help him find the animal. "I gue5!: Kenny wUI have to undergo rabies treatment If the dog can't be found," Hill said. lliil aaid he issued the plea to residents Delp l!rged because he doesn't feel the Police l>epartment'1 animaJ control of0cer1 are looking hard enough. I ''The animal control peoplo didn't get Ille oamu of witnesses.'' he said. ''Tbtn, this morning they said they didn't have the Ume to look for hltn nnd tofd me. 'Oh, why can't you go out •Jld look for him yourself." Hill aaid he works at a bicycle shop at the Balboa Pavilion and can't get off work. Police Sgt. Les Chapman said the animal control officers are not con· ducting an extensive house-to-house search ror the dog, but that all officers bave been instructed to watch for it. Sgt. Chapman said the dog Is described as a large male, black and brown. with a Dea collar and choke chain around bis neek. He said there are poMible acars on its front paws. Sgt. Chapman said persons who may reoogolze the dog or who s~~ ~ should notify police headquarteAS ~iately. Newport Seel\:s Fi111ds From Area for Beach Newport Beach will ask the Calllomia League of Cities to demand legislation that would split up the cost of Supporting regional facilities -like heaches - among all cities in. the state. City coWlcilmen Monday night en· dorsed a resolution declaring the city went nearly $1 million in the bole last year paying for · beach maintenance and protection even though 85 percent of the JO million users came from out of town. City f\1anager Robert L. Wynn told councilmen he feels it is only fair that the lax burden for supporting the bea~hcs in Newport Beach should be shared by all the cities whose people visit them. The resolulion adopted by· councilmen cites the current tax limits and other fac· From Pagel I LAND • • • said his clients proceeded with the prescriptive rigbt.s investigation because of mounting fears the Orange Cotmty Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission would strike out a $100,000 revenue shar- ing request for the land. "Hilgren has alway11 taken the position that if he gets the needed approvals; he will build,'' Seymour said. "Facing reaJi. ty we felt we had to move ahead to pro- tect the public's interest." Mayor Donald Mcinnis said he was "surprised" when he learned of the prescriptive rights probe because he had thought everything was left in limbo until the county made its ruling on revenue sharing. Mclnnis claimed there was a "gentlell}eD's agreement" to do nothing until that ruling was made. But Seymour SJid his clients felt things were moving too last and that coastal commission approva1 might come before the county decision on funding. But Mclnnis and Councilman Carl Kymla pressed for and won a cotlllcil ac- tion against any city particip<!.tion in prescriptive rights actions. Councilman Paul Rycoff voted with them. Coun· cilmen Milan Dostal and John Store opposed the motion. "If we as a council allo\ved this to hap- pen once, it could happen on any prop· erty ·in the city" Mcinnis said. "We were approaching a reasonable solution and I hate to see -this let go." . tors supporting an equalization of the taxes. Th~ resolution asks the state to aHord all Californians "the opportunity of shar4 ing in the cost of coastal preservation and maintenapce , •. throug ha statewide tax subsidy to the governmental agencies within the coastal zone." Wynn suggested some other alternatives -including a bed use tax or up lo fix percent on visitors in hotels -but said some kind of equaliza. lion method would be the most y;·orkable. \Vynn also told councilmen the Orange County League of Cities has already agreed to help Newport Beach set up a 1neeting of coastal cities to work out some kind of formula for assistance from the state. The council's resolution, along with; simil ar• actions by the coastal com- munities of Pacifica and Hal! Moon Bay. will go before the general League of Cities meeting in OCtober. From Pagel EVIDENCE . • • ,. he contended they show to his view his innocence. Ervin said getting one interpretation of the tapeg to the committee ''is \lo'hat I would call leaking the tapes. TI1ere d~s ool seem to be quite as much concern 1n certain quarters about leaking things now as there professed to be in times past." Haldeman and his attorney, Jolvt J. Wilson, took little part in the discu.5.'Sion about the tapes. Under questioning this morning after having read a tw1>hour statement Mon· day, Haldeman told the committee he made no moral judgments about pay- ment of Nixon campaign funds to Watergate defendants and said he did not recall several key events testified to by prior witnesses. . Haldeman's mild and some t 1 me s deferential manner, plus his frequent brief ans\vers, contrasted sharply to the past w~k . of tcStimony from John _D. Ehrlichman the other former top White Hosse aide ' y;·ho often jousted verbally Y..'i th the comn1ittcc. ··Please don't rest on a no or a yes ansn·er," Dash said at one 1>0int. "J"n1 getting more of those than I got from f.lr. Ehrlichman." All For Tl1e Family- I WHAT CHANGES YOUR HOU SE MORE THAN ANY OTH E~THING? WHAT IMPROVES ACCOUSTLCS DRAMATICALLY? WHAT WARMS UP A HOUSE? WH AT IMPARTS UNIQUE BEAUTY AND COMFORT? ••• CARPETING FROM ALDEN 'S, THAT'S WHAT! ;. (IF YOUR HOUSE "STIFLES" YOU, STOP IN AND SEE us FAst.j HOURS: MIL Tin Thn., t to l 1JO \ ALDEN'S CARPETS o DRAPES 1663 Placelltla Ave. COSTA MiSA 646-4838 -PAI. t to t -SAT. t :l O to 5 , I I l I I VOL 66, NO. 212, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES Ervin Small Section Of Costa Mesa V oti1ig T odciy Don't forget to vote today. There is an election and, although it hasn't been publicized much, it is important to many Costa Mesa residents. The election is for a tax increase in Orange County Street Lighting District 12 which covers parts of Costa Mesa and Santa Ana. Permission is being sought to raise the tax rate from 16.5 cents to 25 cents per $100 of assessed valua- tion. Polls -there are only two of them -are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Costa Mesa voters will cast their ballots at the C a m b o residence, 1572 Pegasus St., Santa Ana . Each of the S36 voters eligible to vote in the election has been se nt a sample ballot and told where to vote, -according to the county Registrar of Voters. Countv Hires • Computer Fhm For Data Needs 'The Orange County Board o f Supervisors today hired Co m p u t e r Sciences Corp. or El Segundo to supply all the county's future data processing needs. With ·the action, Orange County became the first county in the nation to engage an outside firm for da ta pro- cessing. The contract will extend for seven years at a contract cost of $26 million. Supervisor Ralph A. Diedrich, who spearheaded the review of county in- formation requirements that led . .to the contract approval, said, "Orange County is taking the lead in applying to county government a practical approach that tlhs well proved itsell at the federal level. "By utilizing industry assistance to im- prove our information systems, we believe we'll provide the county with the finest data processing services at the lowest possible cost." The Company bid was 30 percent less than the '37.8 million cost or the county 's internal data processing center over the seven-year period, as projected by he COWlty negotiating committee. The facUUy management contract will enable the county to save $11 million in tax dollars while materially improving the quality of services rendered, Diedrich suggested. Erwin L. Allen, president of CSC's commercial division, said the agreement provides for joint ownership by CSC and the county of the software systems to be (See COJ\IPUTER1 Page Z) Orange Coast Weather ' ~ Orange coas kies will be cloudy during the nigh and early morn· · ~ ing hours , with ;iazy sunshine t~ morrow morning. Highs will be in · the low 70s, with the low in the . 60s. INSIDE TODAY Proclaiming that he ltll$ that indescrtbable "knowledge -and with a tnowbolling movement bt'hind him -Guru Maliaraj Ji, 15, if embarking on hiB third "peace" tour in. the United States. See story, Page 14. l..M. ··~· " ....... " Cllll.,ftllo • MMIHll'~Mh " Ci.ttfflM "'" ,,. .............. • ternla " or-.. CtutT , Cm•'"" " ''""' hf1* " OMtft -1c• ' ...... ta.It E•tott11 ..... •• Steck ~th 1>11 lltitrl-"'-1 " T--" ~M-11·11 T-" '",... lltt«~ , ... , .... • .. __ .. ._ ........ ~,, "'""' Lflllftl't .. ..,.....,., .. I I • ea Raps Haldeman's Role Hit At Hearing BULLETIN WASHINGTON (UPI) -H. R. Halde- man testllied this afternoon that to learn about his associates' Watergate involve- ment, President Nixon questioned John W. Dean Ill J\1arcb 21 about whether to pay a Watergate defendant's blackmail demand for $1 million. \VASHI NGTON (AP\ -Sen ate \Vatergate Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. accused the White House today of leaking selected contents of disputed tape recordings through committee witness H.R. Haldeman, of Newport Beach. ·'I thU1k this is counterfeit evidence," the North Carolina Democrat declared as the committee heard again from l~a ldeman his account of how he listened to recordings of two key meetings between President Nixon and John \V. H.R. HALDEMAN- 'NIXON'S S.0.8.'-Story, Page 4 Dean III, the ousted White House counsel who has accused Nixon of complicity in the Watergate coverup. President Nixon bas refused to furnish ~ tapes to the Senate panel or to the \Vatcrgate special prosecutor. Both art taking legal action to get the tapes ·in a major constitutional confrontation. (Re- lated column Page 6.) ' Haldeman startled the committee Mon- day when he said he listened in late April to the recording of a March 21 meeting between Dean and Nixon, and then listen- ed just three weeks ago to the tape of a Sept. 15 meeting. Haldeman restated today in more detail how Nixon asked him to report on the two meetings, and said he listened to one tape in his office, then checked out the second tape to listen at home. White House spokesman Gerald L. Warren said today that Nixon decides who can listen to the tapes "based on the President's judgment of who could best assist him in determining the facts on the Watergate ma tter without jeopardiz- ing the confidentiality of the tapes." The White House sought executive privilege for Haldeman concerning a por- tion of one meeting Haldeman had not at· tended. but the committee denied this Monday. Haldeman Siid Monday the tapes con- tained no evideilce that Nixon knew of the coverup, contrary to Dean's testimony about the two meetings. "l think this is a little planned action," said Ervin, "in which the White House allowed Mr. Haldeman the use or the tapes which the White House denies to this committee and lets Mr. Haldeman make the interpretation before this com- mittee. "If this was a court of law this never would have been admitted in evidence because ... only the best evidence can be received," said Ervin. "I think this is counterfeit evidence," he said, "but still I'm going to admit it." Sen. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. (R-COnn.) protested that the committee "should not hear from th.is particular witness in· formation that has been solely provided to him and no one else in America." Nixon himself has said the tapes are open to various interpretations, though he contended they show to his view his innocence. Ervin said getting one interpretation of (Set EVIDENCE, Page !) BEERCAN RACE ' WORTH THE PAIN Whereas most sailboat races ere "bor· ing to watch and difficult to photograph," observes Daily Pilot Chief Photographer Lee Payne, Newport's annual Beercan Regatta ls not your average water com- petition. Payne has been in the thick or it over tM years with "big bo8ts crashing about," and on Page 21 today is a col- lection of some of his finest recordin~ for several publications of that "dingy competition. !l's the only regatta he'll shoot, ~use the Beercan is worth the pain. Ahoy, he gets se~ck. t • Today's Final N.Y. Stooks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1973 c TEN CENTS • Ill ......... ras Nixon Tape Leaks .. • UPIT ........ FORMER ,WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF H. R. HALDEMAN BEFORE WATERGATE PROBERS T11tifie1 That President Nixon Asked Him to Listen to T1pe111nd Report on Their Contents Epileptic Sues Costa Mesa Over Police Conduct A claim for $500,000 has been filed against the city or Costa Mesa by a Newport Beach man who asserts he ras brutalized by two police officers when th ey restrained him during a seizure. The claim filed at the Costa Mesa City Clerk's office seeks general damages of $250,00 and exemplary damages of $250,000 for injuries William Bernard f\.10\'Tis, 47, of 1955 Sherington Place. Newport Beach, alleges he suffered April 19. Morris was taken into custody that day after what witnesses described as a violent and bloody bout with police of- ficers James Farley and Jay Morris outside a convalescent hospital at 340 Victoria St. In his official claim to the Costa Mesa City Council attorney Roy \V. Kurrash, Los Angeles, charges the two officers "recklessly, willfully, torturously and in- tentionally used excessive force" while arresting his client. The injuries allegedly suffered by the epileptic, Kurrash maintains, will result in pennanent disability and loss of earn- ink capacity. Police Chief Roger Neth was not available today to comment on the charges but sometime after the incident disclo100 that an in-house investigation had Deen conducted. rt ~·as explained by Neth that both of· ficers had acted according to prescribed police regulations and that they had done nothing which would have required di sciplinary.. action. f\.1orris was discovered unconscious oulside the Beverly Manor Convalescent Hosp ital by staff members who ot first tried to restrain his convulsions b u t called police for assistance. Witnesses said the officers managed to subdue the man but only after they had repeatedly smashed Morris' face into the hospital Wllil and kneed him in t h e stomach. ~ It was not known to police at the time that ~Iorris suffered from a convulsive disorder. The damage claim will be placed before the Costa Mesa City Council Aug. 6. Normal procedure is to deny claims and to refer them to the city's insurance carrier !or fµrthcr dlsposlUon . I I ' Congressman Requests . Impeachment of Nixon \VASHINGTON (UPll -Citing the secret bombi ng of Cambodia in 1969 and 1970, Rep. Robert F. Drinan (0-!\.1ass.), introduced in the Hoose today the first resolution calling for impeachment of President Nixon. Drinan's bill v.•as not gjven the privilege status he cowld have -~manded. llad he asked, the House \vould have been forced to stop all other business while the impeachment ·resolution was resolved. Several other bills have been introduced in the House since revelations of the \Vatcrgate scandal began that have call· cd for a e-0mmittee of inquiry to look into the possibility of impeachment. But Dri[lan's was the first actual impeach- ment resolution. Drinan. a Roman Catholic priest, said in a statement, "I have come to the point where I must follow my convictions and my conscience and recommend that the House of Representatives pursue ils duty under Art icle 2 Section 4 of the Constitu- tion which provides fo r the impeachment of the President.'1 Drinan could have sought recognition on the floor. and demanded that the f{ouse begin impeachment proceedings. If he had received a second to his mo- tion, the business of the House would have been suspended until it decided whether to impeach. If approved, it \vould have been sent lo the Senate for trial. Instead, Drinan 's bill v.·as referred to the House Judiciary Committee. v.'hich has been reluctant in the past lo take up the impeachment issue. The House leadership has said it felt impeachementl r o cc e ding s v.·erc "premature." Asked why c chose not to interrupt House business. Drinan told reporters that "if we bad forced the issue now, a lot ol people would have sustained him." He said a similar try was made in the 1930s to impeach President Herbert' Hoover, but only 11 members voted in favor. He also cited Nixon 's decision to tape record conversations in his office v.ithout the knowledge of tbose l\1lo ~·ere being taped and the secret "plumbers" unit whlch the \\1hite House organized to stop IS.. IMPEACH, Page %} I 1 Survives S1nashup in Hea"J Fog • BOSTO'.'.' tAP ) - A Delta Airlines OC9 jetliner with 89 persons aboa rd clipped a sea"'all today on its approach to Logan International i\ifl>ort , crashed and dJJ. integrated in heavy fog. State police said there ~·as only one survivor. One man, \\'ho lived through the crash, died I ate r at Alassachusett! General Hospital from multiple injuries. He was identified by the hospital as Rosa E. Brown, 31 , of Louisville, Ky. An eyewitness said the twln~ngine plane crashed on a runway about 1,000 feet from the edge of the water at the busy airport that juts into Boston Harbor. State police said it appeared that the jct struck a seawall at the approach to the airport. A state police spokesman said there was a break in the 2\iJ·foot high wall , indicating the craft's landing gear struck it. An observer said personal effects and parts of bodies were strewn all over the runway . He said the plane. arriving on a fl ight from Burlini;l:lOn, Vt., seemed to have disintegrated on impact. Re said the largest port ion of the plane he could see was a lG-foot portion ol the fuselage. In Waslilington. the Nati o rta I Transportation Safety Board said it o,yas sending a IO.member investigating team to the scene. The board said the team would be beaded by board member Isabel Burgess. · State police said a temporary morgue was set up al the fire station at the airport. Reports from the scene said numerous vehicles drove to the crash site to collect bodies from the debris and mud. Some vehicles became mired in the mud. A Delta ticket agent at Burlington said th e plane, scheduled to leave Burlington at 9 a.m .. made an unscheduled stop at the municipa l airport in Mancheaier, N.H. I lte said he did not know the reason for the New Hampshire stop. One survivor at Afassachusetts General Ho$pital was identified as ~Id Chouinard, 20, of Alarsllfield, Vt A hospital spokesman said he had third· degree bums over 80 percent of his body. The other survivor was ldentlfied <by lhe hospital as Ross E. Brown, 31, of Louisville. Ky. The spokesman said Brown had multiple injuries. Both survivors were reported In critical condilion . The craft v.·as idC'nlified Crom the air· line's Atlanta headquarters as Delta Flight 723. It had 8J passengers and a crew of five , according to a spokesman from the airline in Boston . 11-.ere was one non- pa ying passenger. The crash occurred on the Birds Isl&'Dd Flats area of the airport. A witness at the scene said the only parts of the craft sti ll intact were the rudder and stabilizer, the two engines and two...pices of wing. /"' The crash site was believed to be in the (See BOSTON, Page ZJ Escapers Sentenced FORSYTH, Mont. (UPI) -Two jail clieapers were scntenctd to death Mon- day for the Sept. 28, 1972, fatal •hooting of a jeweler durlng a robbery. 11,IT ........ FIREMEN CONTINUE SEARCH FOR BODIES Ill WRECKAGE OF CRASHED JETLINER IN BOSTON Plan• 0 1.sintegr•mf on Landing in .Heavy fog; Only One Person SurviWtd Crat-h O.IJL V PILOT c Guard Dies In Kansas Uprisin g LEAVENWORTH, Kan. CAP) -One guard w11 killed today as violence erupted at the federal prison hert. of· ficiols said. Warden l.Drcn Daggell said inm~tes we~ holding lour hostages. The warden said he didn't know how many tMiata v.'Cre Involved. The Identity or the dead man was not lmmpllately revealed. Da.gcett said an lnmate called him rrom the prison laundry and said he was holding four persons hostage. The warden quoted the inmate as saying the bcmages would not be/hurt if ''the v.•af'd.. co and the press showtd up." It was first believed only another guerd was being held. · There was no indication whether the hostages were guards or other inmates. \ 'lbe weapon used to kill the guard was not known. Daggett said he believed t h e disturbance was a response to last w~k's major riot at the Oklahoma Stale Prison In McAlester, Okla. lle said prison officials had "heard through t h e grapevine something might happen." He said the morning watch was held over u a precaution and the "A" c.-ellboll5e wa.s secum just 1:>erore noon. Efforts COD.tinued in early afternoon to secure the rest of the pmon, Inmates ...,. being moved ln>m the prilon In- -aru back Jo tbeJr cells with DO dillkulty. Doggett llAld, "The rank and Ille bad nothini to do with IL It was just a few trouble makers." Five guards ltlllered minor injuries and were treated at the pri.IOO bospitaJ. A minor fire was reported at the prison shoe factory, but offlcials said it was ex· tinlUlsbed and cawed litUe damage. '!be warden said lhe inmates who were holding the hostages had not made their demarxb clear immediately. From Pagel COMPUTER. • • developed hY the company under lhe con- tnct. Oranre, second most populated county In Callfomla and sev..th largest In the nation, plans to develop or improve symm. oervlna a wide ranee ol !unc- tions. These lnclode budgeting, ad- minlltraUve management, tu 8Me55- mmt and coll..,uon, land-use planning, jury ..iectioo, Jltobate aod others. ~tajor development efforU will con- centr•te oo further aulomaling municipal court I procedures and expaoding the . county's m-line crimlnal justice in· formation system to increase i t s usefulness to local Jaw enforcement agencies, the courts and r e J ate d depertmenla. CSC will aJso perform more 1hari a ) 1 / do7.m analytical studies for .Orange County. One of these will investigate the leulbillly ol developing a n en- vlroomenW model or Orange Coonly, us- ing data oo land use aod air, water and noise pollution. FreMP,.el IMPEACH ... secmity leak1. Drinan referred to a recent poll, which he did not identify, indicating nearly one- fourth of lhe American people thought Nixon should be removed from office. "If the House of Representatives is to be tnily the 11ousc of the people," he said, hwe can no longer tell almost one· fourth of America's citizens that they must expect lhe Senate or the courts to determine whether or oot the President hal commiU.ed impeachable offenses." "Uotll the last few days'' Drinan said, .. I, Uke qlher 1ncmbers or the House of R-tatives, IOOk refuge In the hope that 50mehow these questions would be resolved either in the courts or in the Senate Watergate Committee hearings. OU.Mel COAJJ CM DAILY PILOT TM~ C.0.11 DAIL'!' 'ILOT, wlfll ~ k """""""" ~ "'"'""··· Is "'*' ...... "" 1t1e or...,. eat.t hlllltli"'4 """""'"· '-" ,..,. ..it...... •rt ll\llllftl*I, ~., """""'"' '""""~· .,.. Col•• ... _. trt....,..n --. H1111!"-"'" tHoell/l"Wftlllft VIiie\'. l.Ait\tM 1tK11. lrwt!Mlllddletloldt .,.. kl! ClllN!lt./ folft .hllft C.pl11t1M. A 11ntle rttllMI •lllll:NI I• llUlllltMilt S.rvrdt.,.. ~ kiniMYL T1Mt lll"IMINl Mli.lllnt 'It"' It •t Jal W..t .. "t St'"1. C•tt MtW, C.llftNtlt. flll».. ltoNrt N. WoH l"rftldlnl W M lllMf J•ck •· C"'t•i Vb ,,..lfwrlt .... 0-.1 . .--.... • J Til•1t111 K•••ll ..... "fh9111 A. M.,,lti,.• --?•rf•• H. loff ll1•at4 '· Hill AMlilltilW .--. ...... ,..,.. c-.--JJt W11J l1y ifTMt M1llU.1 A114,..._..,.o, a.1 I llO, tllll --""""'°" '-dll 1111 ,......, ........ ,.. L89l"'I a-t11 m ,,_, "--' Hwllllnfitol ..,., 11VJ ._.. ........... ,_ , ........ """' ., c.tll\lrlt -- , ........ C714t MJ ... 111 Cl•HW .w. .. tM11 t4Wl11 ~""'· lff). °""* c.... ~ °""'*"'· Ht _.. ttwM. lhlfllR'"""-.. IWltl IN,. W ..,.,.,~ Mrtlll _, ........... .........., 9"'Cllll .... ~ ., Canl'flM _..,, ....... ci..,_ ~ Miii ill c..f• ......... C..11......,, ............ "" ....... MMlfWI W _.. U.11 _.1¥1 fl'lllllllY ...., ...................... r TUHdo\J, July 31, l'fll UPIT ....... I• fi'11lle rton ltla11, 21 ' Police Identify Seal Beach Body By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot tllt Dlllr '''°' 11111 Seal Beach police s::ild today they N.ve ldentlfll"ll the dead n1an found In their cl· ty Monday rnorning as 21-year-old Ronn ie Gent Wiebe of Fullerton. Webe, they said, was strangled to death and his body dumped in ice plant alongside the Seventh Street onramp to the aouthbound San Diego Freeway. There was no identification on \Viehe's body but officers said they were able to make nn identification because he was Usted as a missing person with the Los Alamitos Police Department. Police would not comment on tile possibility that Wiebe's murder may be linked to the so-called · mutilatk>n murders which occurred in the Seal Beach. Long Beach ·area bet we c n December and April. as John Doe No, 16 by the Los Anae:les police. The third victim whose murder may hti\•e been com1nltted by the same person responsible for the first two was found April 14 in ~luntlngton Beach. The tortured and sexually mutilated body Is also unidentified. John Doe 52 is the rpurdcr victim who led police to believe that there may be a link between the murders. His hacked up body was found wrapped in green plastic sacks in sever.ii locatklns along the Terminal Island Freeway and in a trash bin in Sunset Beach. Mutual Visits • . Farewell Cere11aoaaies Investigators also declined to relea se any information on the condition of the dead man's body, other than to note it "'"s clothed with one sock and both shoes mi~sing. \Viebe's body was found near the spot \11here the first of the so-called mutilation murder victims was fowid in December, That victim was Edward Daniel Moore, 20. a Camp Pendleton t>.1arine. Se t Betwee n U.S., Japan \VASHTNGTON IAPl -President Nix- on 1vill vi sH. Jap.an and Emperor Hirohitn will come to this rountry on a form~I visit, it was agreed today at a meeting betv.·een Nixon and Japan's Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. Canada has officially ended its six·month participa· tion in South Vietnam peacekeeping efforts, and lls 249-member delegation prepares home from Tan Son Nhut Airport. to deplane for Newport Seeks Regional Funds To Clean Beach Newport Beach will ask the Callfomia League of Cities to demand legislation that would split up the cost of supporting regional facilities -like beaches - among all cities in the state. City councilmen ~tonday night en· dorsed a reaolutlon declaring the city went nearly $1 million in the hole last year paying for beach maintenance and protection even though 85 percent of the 10 million mers came from out of lown. City Manager Robert L. Wynn told coundlmeo be leeb it is ooly fair that the tu burdeo !0< supporting Jhe beaches In Newport Beach aboWd be shared hY an u., ~u .. wbose people vl!lt them. The resolution adopted , hY councilmen cites the current tu llml\I and other lac- Jors llUJ>POrllng an equallutlon of the taxes. The resolution asks the state to afford all CalilomiAml "the opportunity of shar- ing In the cost of coastal presenration and maintenance ... throug ha state\\'ide tax subsidy to the govemmen1f11 agencies within the coastal zone." Wy.nn sugges t ed some other aJCernatives -including a bed use tax of up to six percent on visltor.1 in hotels -but said some kiod of equaliza- tion method would be the most workable. Wynn allO told councllmeo the Orange County League of Cities bas already agrttd to help Newport Beach set up a meeting of coastal cities to work out some kind of form ula for assistance: rrom the state. The council's resolution, along with similar actions by the coastal com· munities of Pacifica and Half Moon Bay, will go before the. general League or Cities meeting in October. Car Kills Alie1i Esc api1ig From Border Patrol A Mexican citizen apparenUy at- tempting to avoid the San Onofre boTder patrol checkpoint was killed Monday \1:hen he dashed aCf06s the San Diego Freeway and wu struck by a car. Juan Herrera Alvarez of the state of Zacatecas, Mexico, was killtd 1.nstanUy v;hen he darted west across the freeway ano ~·as hit by a 80Ulhbound vehicle driven by \Villlam E. Carter of 2ml Romera Place, El Toro, a high~·ay patrolman said. v Alvarez and another fl.iexlcan had departed early in the day trom a smug· gler's car and were attempting to sneak around the checkpoint when the accident occurred, said a border patrolman. The two had paused at the center divider of the freeway when Atvarei decided to make a run for the other side through the sparse Jralfic, according to a higltway pallOlman. Monday's fatality ,.... one of a ICrles of recent similar acddenta at tbe border chklt. Last spring lour ponons were killed In two lirQ!lar lncldmta u they at- tempted, with Ule aid ol allm llDualen. Jo skirt the lmmlir&tloo -Olliclal1 termed the pniotlce of run- ning acrw the hawdoul freeway Lanes as commonplace when rmugle.rs err •nd make \lit Jr1p north wl>en the cbecl<potnl ts in operation. Generally, It the driver Is an 1llen, himself, all the oet.upanta or the ar leave the vehicle •t the roadside and try to cross the freeway and walk undeteCted upcoast along the bt:achfront. \ Occasiooal!y, "1>•n the driver of the 1muggling car Is a U.S. cil.lzcn, he orders his human cargo frvm the 1uto and successfully negotiates the roadblock alone. HJs passengers, however, have to tend (or theroaielve1. Engine Trouble Blamed In Death of CdM Pilot Three additional murders have been linked in the bizarre case The second was was discovered Feb. g k!;gside the Tennlnal Island Freeway in Long Beach. That victim is unidentified and is listed FrotnPqel EVIDENCE Plans for the mutual visits were an- nounced by Japanese Am bass ado r Takesbi Yasukawa following a two-hour White House meeting between Nl:roo and Tanaka. The Nixon visit is erpected to take place either late this year or in 1974 at a mutually agreeable time, Yasukawa said. Engine trouble was blamed today for the death of a 47-year-<>ld Newport Beach man whose private plane plummeted to the grow-Kl Monday afternoon and burst into flames in a vacant Buena Park field . Killed in the crash \Vas Evan Koppe, a resident of 1400 Santanella Terrace in the Irvine Terrace section of Corona de! hlar. He was the sole occupant of the twin-engine Cessna 310. Koppe radioed Fullerton Airport that he was experiencing mechanical trouble bul reportedly declined lhe tower's ofler Benjamin Gary Di.es at 83; Newport Artist Funeral services are set for 3 p.m. Fri· day at Pacific View Mortuary for Newport Beach artist Benjarhin Ltt Gary, often cal1ed ''The Grampa Moses of the West Coast." Hailed countrywide for his colorful and highly skilled pointillist paintings of rural and small town American life, Mr. Gary, of 4000 Hilaria Way, died Friday. He was 83. • A New Jersey nati""'· he had been a commerdal artist all his l~e until he moved to California in 1955. He came to the West Coast perm.Hess after l05ing the savings of a lifetime on unlucky stock market specu]ations. Once here, he found a new lifestyle and a ~ art that brough him critical ac- claim, more to his own surprise than anyone else's, be once said. Color and light \\'ere central to Mr. Gary's style. His paintings, produced laboriously one every three months, are marked by rich glowing colors bathed in sunlight. ''Color is love, and without color man is empty," hfr. Gary once said. His fint show et the Newport Harbor Art Museum in 1971 brought him his first national attention after years or pro- ducing the pointillist canvases . Mr. Gary bas no immediate survivors. His only son, Hollywood actor Benjamin Gary, Jr., died several years ago. Mr. Gary, who sported a maae ol white halt and a lull white mustache, stood six feet, four Inches tall. He was the son or an lri!h rose gardener. ' Se nior Citizens To See Holl ywood Arid Las Vegas Senior citizens from Costa Mesa can look forward to two !OW-cost e1CW"Slons during Augusl, bolb i!pOlllOl'Cd by the city Departm"1t or Leisure Sent,... On Aug. 15 they wW ,,.,,.1 to Hollywood Jo view the Hll'Ola lJoyd -10. tour movie slan' ~ and head for the~· Martel Jo m. dulRe In a little abol>Plni -· Coot Is fl~ per pmon. ~Included. The bw !or the Hollywood -will leave the Communlly Re<rutkln Ccnltt •t the not pie of the Orange CoonJy Fa.lrtr'ounds at 9 a.m. Md retwn around 5 p.m. The Los Vegas lrip is scheduled Aug. 27·29. Tour members will travel by Greyhound bus and stay at the lr1int in downiown Las Vegas. Cost for double OC· cupaney ls ff) per per5tlfl , single oc- cupancy $56. Inc::luded tn &he fee •re lunch, con- tinental bre1kfuts1 drinks, lodging and tl'1U\Sl)OrtaUon to and from !...as Vegas. to mobilize emergency equipment. Soon thereafter the plane, its right engine malfunctioning severely, went into a steep bank, stalled and plunged into the ground near Beach Boulevard and Malvern Road. No one else was injured by the crash which was officially logged at 2:50 p.m. Buena Park police said witnes.ses reported the plane's right engine was running so slowly that they could see the propeller blade turning. Persons near the impact area attempted to pull the pilot from the wreckage but were driven back by names. Police said a monumental trai'fic jam resulted wben they blocked oll meets Jo aid firemen ligbting lhe blaie. It took fire crews approximately two hours to bnng lhe !uel·led fire under conlrol. Koppe, believed to be the owner of the plane, brought the craft within one mile of the Fullerton Airport runway before he lost control. A Bank of America building was just a few hundred feet away from '11he re the plane crashed. From Pagel BOSTON ... area of t.he Ocl 4, 1960 crash of an Eastern Air Lines jet into Boston Harbor with the loss of 62 lives. There were 10 survivors of the accident, which occurred as the craft was taking off. Authorities said starlings pulled into the plane's jet engines caused that crash. Logan Airport, which bills itself as the world's eighth largest , sils on a large landfill area. It is the second largest airport In the cowitry for overseas departures. One of the first men to the scene of today 's crash, Fire Lt. Robert Alexander, said he and 10 men carried one survivor from the craft. J1e described the man as middle-aged. He said he was conscious when carried out and said to the 1"'eSCUers, "Please help me. I can't feel my legs." • • • the tapes to the committee "is what I would call leaking the tapes. There does not seem to be quite as much concern in certain quarters about leaking things now as there professed to be in times past." Haldeman and his attorney, John J. Wilson, took little part in the discussion about the tapes. Under questioning this morning after having read a tv.'0-hour statement Mon-- day, Haldeman told the committee he made no moral judgments about pay- ment of Nixon campaign funds to Watergate defendants and said be did not recall several key events testified to by prior wi~. Haldeman's mild and some t l me s deferential manner, plus his frequent brief answers, contrasted sharply to the past week of testimody from John D. Ehrlichman, tl\e other former top White Hosse aide \\'ho often jousted verbally with the committee. "Please don't rest on a no or a yes answer," Dash said at one point. "I'm getting more of those than I got from f.-1r. Ehrlichman." Dash l frequently accused Ehrlichman of evading questions. Again and again, Haldl'ftlan sought to portray himself as strictly an ad- ministrative figure, never a policy decider. He spoke often in tenm of reports going "lhrouglt" him Jo the President, never "to" him ror decisions. Body of Tustin Man Discever ed in Desert I.AS VEGAS (AP) - A California motorcyclist has been found dead in the desert about 40 miles from here, •authorities -said. A. R. Ki!Up.s, 30, of Tustin, apparently died from exposure, investigators said. Killips \vas spotted near some brush Monday ! fro1n a police helicopter. An autopsy has been scheduled. Hirohito's visit to the United States will come sometime next year, also at a mutually agreed date. he said. Earlier, Nixon welcoml'd Tanaka to the White House as an equal partner "working for a cause to which we are equally devoted -peace for the whole \\"Or!d." The greeting amid the pomp and ceremony of an official welcome marked the start of tYt·o days of talks between the leaders. Tanaka said that relations between Japan and the United States have "e:r· panded greatly both in breadth and in 1 depth." He said it is "all the more Important for the peoples of our two countries, as partners, to develop a full grasp of the national characteristics and the 90Cial fabric of each other." Tanaka omitted a reference to a "lack of understanding" between nations and peoples in his prepared arrival remarks and subsqtuted instead the need to ''deepen understanding among peoples." Nixon welcomed. Tanaka with a pro- longed handshake and exchange of remarks when the Japanese leader step- ped from his limousine on the south lawn of the Wb.ite House. A 19·gun salute 'o\'as fired and the Japanese and American anthems were played. . Mrs. Nixon was on hand for the ceremony, with Secretary of State and l\1rs. William P. Rogers and Adm. and l\lrs. Thomas Moorer. Moorer is tbe chairman of the Joint Chiefs or Staff. Ni:ron and Tanaka, who met 11 mootbs ago in Hawaii, are expected to talk about a proposed American-Japanese-Soviet oil and gas deal in Siberia, joint approaches to trade, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia and European security. On Monday, Nixoo. met with Prime t>.1inister. Gough Whitlam of Australia. Whitlam, the leader of Australia's first Labor government in almost a quarter· century, said after the meeting in a speech that Australia was not a satellite of any country but a friend and partner of the United States \Vit.b independent in· terests. 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