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1973-08-03 - Orange Coast Pilot
• _, • ere ~·' .- . I ' - Interest Ceiling )~ ' " Capo Bea~h Boy Phase-out Asked May Aid Others By Preside,nt Njxon , DAILY PILOT ' . " * * * 1oe * * * ) ' FRIDAY AFTEP:NOON , AUGU ST 3, 1973 VOL .... NO. tu, 4 $ICT10fris;1 .. ·,AOIS Matter of Life Aia in -neath? . ' . : Capo Boy'~ Organs May Be Used ' By-MARCI DODSO thi;lc, other YQiJDgsters who race death O! !tit O.lb'•PUet Sltff , themsclves unfeSS 8 donor is found. .'l,ason Atthur Rea, ~. : of f8P1~trano ~kesmen from the medical center ~~cb, .left . on a pl8ne foll", Colorado. ,sa14 roday that the .team is still in its 'l'llOrsday,·k~ alive ~linlcal only bv , · al~ and urill h• dill' I ''"'"-.,.~t'.,.~ef..-..oo; .., -, _ ~ _ ~ -~~£~, ~ .-;. ge~., 'i ,.,__~y.e.· ICU t)'. · . . . 1n re g·a ·dec1s1on because or an ap- The pJ~n caUS for h1m to ~ICf'J\ Denver. parent~utge in the boy 's bodily functions ~d his mother, Mrs. Lindl Rea, ex·· after' his arrin.Lin__Dcnver _Thursda peQls-to-bury-her-onl y-childl-sometime .afternOQn. - -Y next Week, Th " .L ' ' d ' ' ' ·-:nut the dealh..4S not ·ttiat si~pfe. .. r • ' • • e .agoru:qng :;''~n.'Ol' ec1s1ons ,Ul t~e ~ause Since Jason't arr"al at the . c~e 0~ J~son R~a .began w~th . h~s Unl\le..Slty •f Colorado Medical Center a . "li>lh~r,,,o) 34'1a1 ,Calle Fortuna,. who " ttlm of physicians has been laced with divorced. ttle grim task of deciding if the machines She· and her Jormer husband reached should be shyt off to allow body lunc!IOD! •It early this , wook when orange Coast to--ceasc. ,,.... , • phyaiclan ·Dr.:Albert F'erguson informed 011£ there is still·a ray of hope for the her that her son's chances for recovery cute, tow head who {elf vtctlm to a tragic from the deadly effects or near drowning · I pool accident two weeks ago ·in Hunt~ were nil. \ in&t.on Beach. ''lt' really wasn't a hard decision. tt Early today tfie team was far from a wni Just ·knoWing that JDson could make dec:lslC>O. , aoroeone else live. ·1 bad already ac· The concerns In the case arc momcn· cepted the fact that J~n was leaving tous, me. Then I Just starteil to think of It Jason ceases to live, his mother and others," said Mrs. Rea. the phyaiclan1; have arranged for his ··1 think it's about the greatest lhing ·kidneys and liver to hb transplanted in (See DECISION, Page t) Divwwee at 100 H us ban.d, 103 , 'Chases Wom en.' STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her husband of 28 years, for divorce, ·because he "spends all his money on other women." She is 100 years old and be is 103, according to records in San Joaquin County Superior Court. "I wanted to stay with Wm , but he wouldn't stop chasing after wornel)," Mrs. Fegion said in an interview Thursday. "He likes to go to the show-that's where he meets them." _,, Mrs. Fegion said she filed for divorce two months ago and since that time "he's been so mea'n to me, always wants to fight. He doesn't want to give me nothin' to eat." She and her hµsband have separated, each living in one of the two homes the couple own here, situated "only about 10 steps apart," Mrs. Fegion said. Richardson Asks New Probe of Kent S tnte WASHINGTON (AP) Ally. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson today ordered a new . Justice Department investigation of the deaths of four Kent State University students shot by National Guardsmen in 1970. Richardson said his decision was based on "the need to exhaust every potential !or acquiring f8.cts related. 1to" this tragedy." He gave no indication whelher a federal grand jury would be convened to assist. Richardson ordered J. Stanley Pot· Unger, assistant attorney ·general in charge of the department's Civil Rights Division. "to pursue ~he additional in- quiry by such means as he feels are ap-- propriate so that we will both be com- pletely· satisfied that the department knows as much as can J>VSSibly be learned <:oRCemllll ~ . · .' !&'P.01Sible•viola~Q!l4 9f.Jederal " aw." Richardson reopened the investigation after studying-the findings of PoUinger's preliminary review of existing files. Richardsort initiated the preliminary review on the heels or a \Vbite House statement last May which reaf£inned the August 197 L decision by former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell to drop lhe case without a federal grand jury probe, Rour students were killed and nine others wounded when ·a National Guard contingent opened · fire on students demonstrating against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. The slain students were Allison Krause, 19, of Pittsburgh. Pa .. Jeffrey Miiler, 20, ot Plainview, N.Y., Sandy Lee Scheurer, 20, of Youngstown, Ohio and William Schroeder, 19, of Lorrain, Ohio. Kent State Prl!sident Glenn A. Olds said he welcomes the new lnquity. "1 /hink it's the wisest step to tuke," Olds said. "There are still a lot or ques- tions unanswered: Kent State is no longer an event, it's history ." The fat her of Miss ·Krause, Arthur S. Krause, said when told of the ne\v in· vestigation : "I don't think justice \vas very even-handed under Mr. Mi tchell or former Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst end I think Mr. Richardson. ts trying to ma)te justice even-handed again.'' A spokesman for Ohio Gov, John A. Gilligan said the governor, who was unreachable immediateTY. we I com e d "any action by any agency to discover the truth." Col. Joseph McCann, spokesman for the Ohio National Guard's adj¢anl general's office~ !aid·-·'1t the}' want 16 reopen the investigation, that's their prerogative." Mt'Cann said the guard would hav,e,no other comment. r -'".:.PottingeF• told il:•news"il'On{etenee 'it Is· possible that the Justice Department will convene a federal grand jury to in- vestigate the shootings, a step directly (See KENT, Page !) GRADUATES 'NOT READY FOR LIFE' ATLANTA (UPI) -According lo C.Orgia Gov, Jimmy Carter. today's youth are "very expensively graduated students" who are totally Wlprepared for productive life. Carter, at a meeting of state school·of· ficers, urged that vocational training be included in public education In Georgia so that every high school graduate can do more than "hold a beer, comb his hair and make R peace·algn ." • Pictures Circulated By Police By TOM BARLEY Of th DllllY Piiot S!lft La\vmen in two counties today con- ,. tinued their search for Rochelle White of San Juan Capistrano with the stated growing conviction· that the attractive brunette has been the victim of foul play. FOUL PLAY FEARED Rochelle White Interest Ceiling ' P l1ase-out Ask ed Orange County Sheriff's officers are circulating pictures of Mrs. White, 22~ of 16702 Calle La Bom ba, in an attempt to contact anyone who may have seen the 1nissing woman shortly before she diia~ peared last Monday or prior to her auto being found two days later in Carlsbad, San Diego County. ?llrs. Ylhite di sappeared two ·days before she was to appear in Superior Court for a hearing into the divorce peti· tion she filed against her husband, elec- tronics machinist Gary Roger White, 25. That hearing was reset for Aug. 13 when she failed to appear for___..tbe scheduled court session. Mrs. White fil ed for divorce June 15 in By P residen t • WASHINGTON (AP) -Pnsiaent Nix- on today proposed major changes in the country's financial system, including phasing out Interest rate ceilings on sav- ings and other bank deposits ov~r a S1h- a petition which is supported by allega- _tions that her husband physically abused her dur ing the couple's four-year mar- riage. · year perio:d. · TI1e recommendations include in- du cements to banks . and financial in· stitut ions to lend more money for home mort gages by providing a tax credit on the amount of mortgage loans. Jn addition, savings ·and loan associa- tions would be able to offer checking ac- count services and the so-called NOW ac· counts would be authorized (or both com- n1erc ial banks and savings and loan associations. NO\V sta nds for Negotiable Order or \\lithdra\Y)l.!i l!Od. I?~VidfS Jo] :nego!lated'Tlilris' Of itftere tS on checlWOg ..... accounts. There were seven major changes in the rhinncial package released at the \Vhit e flousc. They fo llowed a study or the count ry 's 'fln.8nc"tal institutions initiated by the President in 1971. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury \Villi am E. Si'm~ said i.n explaining the proposed cbang~ that the timing is right bec~us~we.,are....in.aperiocLLhat could be classified this moment as an interest rate crunch." Simon said· he hopes the propased changes can be ready for presentation to Congress ln September and that hearings cnn be held beginning in October. lie d~scribed the proposed changes as ".the ~1rst major restructuring or our f1n1u1c1al system since 1865 \\'ithout a crisis being present." fte emphasized at n ne\vs briefing that a 1najor goal of the changes is to main· (Ste SAVINGS, Page!) ---._ Superior Court documents on file in- clude a court order for forbidding White (See SEARCH, Page %) OraBge Cout Weather Niflhl and early morning low clouds \viii again be visible aloilg the Orange Coast. Afternoons Will ..W ~y,,. ·"'J.th)e~~i:-at~s~l ~ beach near 70. v;Jth the low near 60. L'\SlDE T ODAY Conteniporary ar t is the theme of this week 's cover stories in the \Veeke11der with features 01& Ja111cs Bvnes, tl1e tiew director of Ne1vpor ! Haibor Art Museum, (H id o-n the Alt-Ca lifornia Art Exhibit being presented in the Lagu11a Beach Museum of Art. Al Yt11r Strvlct I L.M. 90Yll lt ewnn1 11 C•lllor11i. t ci.11111tc1 i1 .441 Com1<1 tt Crt•1tffr4 tt Ot.1111 Nttlc" I ••1191'1•1 '""' ' l'llltll(t 11·13 l'llt' thf ltMtrel I Hor•KtH I' Ann L•ncltrS 1' Mllllbt• • MtvlH ,, .. Mufllfl l'il!ld1 11 Nt!IMfl N...... 4. t or111t• c-1)1 · • •tt1-1nt1 ~u SPff'll 1•• SIKll M1rll1l1 l>ll Tt lt vli.lffl IJ 1ht1Nf'I ,,.. W1•1Mt' 4 Wt!MfO Nt#t l>-11 WotMI flttWl ~· WNllMdtf 2NI • ' I I ,.,.,fl. -•I • I . ./ -• Gray Says Destruction of Files Intended \\'ASJl1NG1'0~ tAP) -Former IJC:ting in 1\prll. released the text of his ope:nlng FBI Director L. Patrick Gr~y Ill said to-.~tatemcnt In advance of his tippcarance day he was never directly orde~ed lo l<1t<'r before the Senate \Vatergatc com- destroy sensitive riles given to him by mlttee. John o EhrUch1nan or John \V . Dean Ill rn It . lie took issue with the testimony wants to turn over to you,'' Gray recall- ed. He said Dean wld him 1wo manila legal size folders contained "copies or sensitive and crasslfied J><lpers of a political nature that ltoward Jlunt had been working on. • of other "'ltncsses. Including Lt. Gen. PAN EL SUBPOENAS REBOZO BANK RECORDS-Story, P•g• 4 "but there \\-'3S, and is, no doubt in my 1nind that destruction was intended." And, i1e admltted , he read some of the fil es before burning them. Gray, who resigned as acting director 3 Students At OCC Held In Hash Sctle Three Orange Coast College students are In Costa Mesa jail loday on charges of participating in the sale of half a quart of purported hashish oil valued at $5,000 to an undercover narcotics office r. Awaiting arraignment on charges of cmspiring to sell 420 mililiters of the highly_gotent marijuana derivative are Richard Lee Smith, 26, of 1700 16th St., Newport Beach; Talbot Perry Simmons, 25, aJso known as Talbot Perry Somovich, 2229 Al exander Ave., Laguna Be·ach. and Samuel Hershel Clauder, 779 Shalimar Drive, C.Osta Mesa. All three men \•:ere taken into custody at the Shalimar Drive flat at 1:30 p.m. Thursday after the officer allegedly con- cluded two days of negotiations for the sale of the oil. Officers claim Smith and Simmons ar- rived at tbe residence carrying a sack contalning the valuable liqui d while Clauber and the undercover man talked business inside. Smith later stationed himself lMide a parked car and acted as a lookout, duck- ing his head inside the vehicle when of- ficers arrived, according to police allega- tions. The raid on the Costa Mesa apartment involved five narcotics detectives. in- cluding agents from San Oemente, COGla Mesa and Laguna Beach. Laguna Beach Police Sgt. Neil Purcell said the first contact for the oil was made in Laguna Beac~ by one of his detectives, John Saporito. Purcell said Saporito subsequently had several conversations with Clauder and arranged payment of $4,100 for the oil. The oil has a street value Of $5,000 but the dealer's wholesale price is $4 ,100, ac- cording to Purcell. Fro11a Page I KENT • • • reversing Mitchell's decision. Pottinger, however, defended htit- chell's decision and said che requested authority to reopen the case silnply to exhaust every PQ$ible avenue of in- formation. "I'm only going to say there are areas \vhere 1 am not satisfied," he said, refus- ing to elaborate on the route bis new in- vestigation will take. San Diego Drops Symphony Head SAN DIEGO (AP) -Philip A. Whitacre has been abruptly replaced as general manager of the San Diego Symphony Association with his two-year contract up this week. Robert Christian, assistant manager, was named the group's 11th manager or acting manager in 13 years. A brief announcement Thursday said Whitacre· "has not fulfilled the functions of manager of the association to the ex· ccutive romm.ittee's satisfaction." Conductor Peter Eros p r a i :s e d \Vhitacre, however, in a separate stat· ment. OIAN&I COAST IT DAILY PILOT TM Otl1'9f C•••I DAILY PILOT, Wiii! """!di It ~l"fd 1'11e H•-·Prn1, It p,ibll---bY tM Ortnot> .C•11I F'ul>lltl>lnt C-"Y· $t~· r•t• tc11tlon1 ''' P\lbll•~td. Moo!llHy flln:tuO~ f'rld1y, !or C0tl41 M ... , MIWllOH IS-.c;I>, H"'"flr,g™! IS1M1'l!FOU11!1ill v.1 .. y, LtO~• ••ti!. lrv1 ... 1s-.ii.t11dl ind S.n c .. ~itl Ian Jutn QopJ1lr1no. A tl"'lt tt'QIOfltl .. ltlorl I• po.>Dllllled StlUf'CllYI -llllldtya. Tiit flrlrlC;lpal l)Vlllllt\lflll pMlll 11 II SllO Wtsl ••Y Jtfi"tl, Ctnl• Mfta, C.tltimll. t»1'. ,,._ ~-~ ·1,;,.,,, N.'w,J "'"Id'"'' ..... Pvbll"'-• J1d1 II. Curl1v Viet Prn k!tM 11111 Gtnert! Ml"'V., lhom11 Ktt•ll E\ll~t Tho111., A.. Murp•i"• MINflllll f OllO!'' Cll•tt" H. Looi Ri,herd ·p. N.U AHltlflrt ~111111111 Edl~rt """• Cfll• M-1 "'Wnt t•v Strttt N..,.rt 1 .. (11! >W -tlt"llfJOl'I hulf••rf LAtuN ettet.r m ""'"' ~"'".....-Hllflflfll•'IN<ll: 1ms •• ..,, aou,..,.,., lt('I (~ttt SOI HOrlll 11 Gtml"' lltll T .. ,,.,,. lf1 4l 441-4111 Cl 11'""' Al..,tt .... Ml·l671 ,,_ QMlt1 ..,,... .... " ......... _.. 492-MJI , ,,... .. Ori .... CMl!tf CeM_lt ... 140-tU• '°"""""''' 1'11. ~ C..t l"IAIUtl1 .. ~ Ht -•tori.. O!vtlr1llllfll,, ... ...,,. •. -"· " ..,.,.,,'*-', lltrtlrl """"' .. ,~ •l"*" '**-1 ..... ,.,Wllllfl ff 09flf'"IOM -· ltcall'I d .. .,..r-Hill I f CMlt ,lo\ttt, c.#fllnlla. lllllO'i.I..... ... '""".. tl.s ""*""'"'' .,. _ .. U,lt -llllt'1 f!'llt,..,., .... t1911t ., ... _ •• ,. " Vernon A. Walters, lhe depuLy director of the Cen tral lnterllgence Agency, who preceded him berore the committee. Gray said he 1net Ehrlichman. I~ Presiden t's do1nestic adviser. and [lean. 1hc \\lhlte House counsel. J une 28 -11 days after the break·in at the Watergate offices of the Democratic party. "Mr. Ehrlichman said something very close to ·John has something that he "fie said that they have national security implications or overtones. have nbsoluteJy nothing to do with Watergate and have no bearing on the Watergate in- ves tigation whatsoever,'' Gray added . •·Either Mr. Dean or ~1r. Ehrlichman said that these files should not be allowed to confu se or muddy the issues in the \Vatergate case." Gray said he took the files home. put REACTION CONTROL ROCKETS ( l O,.•QUADS) UPI N.wtdl•rt TWO STEERING CONTROL ROCKETS THREATEN SKYLAB MISSION Rescue Fligh.t Has Been Under Consideration by Space Officials First Rescue Mission • Readied to Aid Skylab HOUSTON (UPI) -NASA ground teams today readied the first rescue mission in space history and reset for Monday the Skylab 2 crew's first spacewalk outside the big earth-orbiting research station. She Apollo ferry ship that took the astronauts to Skylab was hit with its sec- ond steering rocket failure '111ursday. But space officials said the Apollo was in "minimwn flyable con<lition" and the crew could fly ho me as planned next month. Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma were in no danger aboard the l~ton Skylab orbiting 270 miles above earth. They began initial earth resources research of the schedul· cd 59-day flighl. ·•A couple of us feel pre Uy clean and may not take our showers," Bean said. "We -may use that time to catch up on some other things but don't. send us anything to do." · Garriott, the crew's medic, reported the astronauts were "in excellent shape'' and taking no medication. The pilots were stricken early in the mission with,.. - motion sickness due to slow adaptation to weightlessness. The rescue mission was ordered ready for launch from Cape Kennedy in case further trouble develops aboard the Apollo, marooning the crew in space. Of- ficia ls said the earliest the rescue ship could be launched would be Sept. 5. \Vork began Thursday night on modi- fying the rescue Apollo command ship to include extra seats to hold five astronauts on the return flight from Skyla b. Tests were started today at Cape Ken- nedy on the first stage of the 22-story Saturn I B that would boost the rescue Apollo into orbit. Ground engineers hope the astronauts will be able to beam back television pie· tures of the crippled rockets on the side of Apollo's service moduJe during Mon· day's spacewalk. The spacewalk is needed to set up a new sunshade over Skylab and reload fi lm in sun-watching telescopes. The 3lh- hour venture was delayed three times earlier because of the crew's slow adap- tation to weightlessness. From Pagel DECISION NECESSARY • • • that could ever be performed." But Mrs. Rea's decision did not have to be made quickly. After doctors at Hunt- ington Jnlcrcommunity Hospital revived a hearbeat from the apparently lifeless boy following his fall into a friend 's swimming pool, Jason managed to stay alive for 1nore than two \\'Ceks despite numerous complications. Doctors performed brain scans and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests to determine the extent ot the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery was performed to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. "He was more or less telling us, 'I'm not going lo rnake it.' " said his n1other. Then, Oil la st Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. ''l had to 1nake my decision then," ~lrs. Rea rec.vunted. The doctors then put the blond·haired boy on a respirator to "keep his blood circulating so that the organs wouJd re- main undamaged. They also arranged for a private jet to take the child to the Denver hospital, and produced the necessary legal papers for Mrs. Rea to sign. "! didn't think I'd be able to do this. 1 think God helped me immensely in my decision. I prayed a lot, and He answ·ered my praye rs. The doctors helped, but without God, I could.n1t have made the decision," she said . "Bui just knowing that Jason could live on in someone else," i<nO\Ying that Jason could make someone else live. that's the whole reason for thi s. "I know if Jason were alive and he needed a kidney, J would hope someone else \\'Ould do the same." "But to know that Jason can help some- one else .•. " she trailed off. Rundowta 011 Features People Make the News ::. ·-. ...-, ·-. ....,.. ........ _..-.,.. ..... ~-' . . 111 Su11day's tlaily Pilot People make the news in this week 's Sunday Daily Pilot -rron1 cliqu<'tta ex- pert Arny Vanderbilt. a police h<'licopter pilot who draws cartoons to the: missing ( Sunday's Best) students of the Nc\vport·Mesa Unified school District Here's n rundown of some of the features: STUDENT SllORTAGE -W hi 1 o schools in South Orange County are struggling to meet high s t u d c n t c.n rollrnents, th~ NC\\'port·f\.1t'.s;a Unified School District is wonderlng \\•her~ all lhei r students have gone. The feature, by Slaff \Vrltcr William Schrclb<'r, I.~ the Jead to lhi8 week's "YOU " section. PEN 'N PISTOL -Police lleUcoplor pilot Robtrt Dawson, 27, wields both the 1>en and the pistol in his hobby and work. A five-year veteran with the HunUngton Jleach Police Department. Dnwson is also the department's unofficial car- toonist. Some or hi s sketches will be shown in this week's "A" section . CLOSING IN -The world Is closing In 011 Preside~ Nixon over the White House ta1>es. Public opinion. instead of admiring the President 's pluck in denying them to investigators, has turned against him, columnists Evans-Novak wri te. In an editorial page column. Evans-Novak tell how the President is conrronted by a new challtinge from senators who feel they huve lx>en betrayed. them OD a closet shelf under his shirts: then brought them to bis office tlnd into his personal safe two or three weeks later. "To the best of my recollection, I removed the fJJ.es to my home 1n Ston- ington , Conn. ln la~ September or early October 1972." Gray said. But his plan 10 bum the files wa!I µostpont.'CI because he went to the hospital. •·1 distinctly recall that 1 burned them during Christmas week with the Citristmas and household paper trash," he said. Site Advice For A ir_port Not .State's From \Vire Services The st3te isn't recommending that an airport be built in the Chino Hills area of northeastern Orange C.ounty, the deputy director of the state Department of Transportation said Thursday. Joseph R. Crotti, appearing at a Los Angeles press conference, said "'Mle state doesn't recommend sites for airports. That is the proper function of local and regional plaMing agencies, he explained. "l~owever," Crotti added ... the state's -planning process will indicate fu ture air travel needs and point out general areas requiring additional aviation facilities.'' • Crotti and Haig Ayanian, district direc- tor of transp:>rtation for Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties, called the conference to correct what they said w e r e widespread misunderstandings about a state consulting firm report made public last month. Airports, Crotti said 1lmr.!daY. will be included in the state'.s Master Plan of Aviation only if first approved by responsible local agencies . The firm of Daniel, Mann, Johnson and MendenhaJI was commissioned in 1969 to evaluate the existing aviation system, determine future demands and prepare a comprehensi ve statewide plan for balanced air transportation. Other than lhe Orange County site, Crotti said, Lhe misunderstanding con- cerned the firm's fmdings that 59 million air passengers a year will use the Los Angeles International Airport by the year 2000. The Los' Angeles Department of Airports estimated the airport's capacity at 4-0 million passengers a year. Crotti said efforts would be made to reconcile .the two figures. Her 'Lavenders' Were Potted "To this point, I had not read or ex· amined the files. But immedJately before putting them in the fire I opened one of the files.'' It contained \\'hat appeared to be copies of top' secret State Department cablegrams, Gray said. "l read the first cable. I do not recaU the exact language but the text of the cable implicated official, of the Kennedy admini stration in the assassination of President Diem of South Vietnam . I had no reason then to doubt the authenticity of the 'cable' and was shaken at what I read." FromP"fel SEARCH • • • to harass, n1olest or threaten his \Yifc. And he was further ordered by the court not to attempt to contact 11er at ber place of employment or c0ntact her employers. The court file inc ludes thE!' statement that White beat his wife last October and November, slammed her against a door and threw her on the floor while she was pregnant. The lawsuit states the couple have no children. Mrs. White also alleged that her hus- band took a teapot from her on one oc- casion shortly after she had made tea and threw' it out the door. He then ripped all the laps off the gas range, the action states. Sheriff's officers today said they have interviewed White on several occasions and will do so again today but the San Juan man has been unable to throw any new light on his wife's disappearance. Investigators said the abandoned, late n1odel foreign-built car she apparently drove to Carlsbad contained no signs o.f a struggle. Officers said they drew the same conclusion from the neatly kept San Juan home. Fr<tm Pqe I SAVINGS • • • tain a flow of deposit money into banks and savings and loan institutions by lift- ing the interest rate ceilings. Simon said that in a period of rising in- terest rates -the situation at present - people tend to invest in areas of the eronomy where they can get higher rates of interest than banks and savinfs and loan institutions can provide. Nixon said in his statement: "My recommendations, and the in- creased competition that would follow, should reduce the cost of the entire package of financial services for the con- sumer." He said the consmner who saves his money would be assured a fair return on his savings and that increased com- petition among banks and thrift ~ stitutions would help eliminate "the in- equities now imposed upon the small saver and borrower." The present ceiling on interest for sav- ings accounts is ~m 5 to sy, percent. ALEXANDRIA. La . (AP) -Mrs. Investors, however, can get 8.5 percent Arthur Laborde insisted that the plants .interest on Treasury bills and ~.5 percent in her flower garden must be lavenders . mt.er.est on so-call~d commercial paper, because that's what she bought from the -lendtng by one busmess to another. local feed store. Police Chief Jack Rogers said the 7- year-old woman will not be charged bee a use she didn't know what she was Minuteman Launched There has been testin1ony that the cables were forged by Jiunt, one of the convicted Watergate con11plrators. to falsely link Pres ident John F. Kennedy to . the assassination. 1'he files had CQJlle out of Hunt's White. lfouse complex sate, wblcb was opened shortly after he was Implicated in the Watergate burglary. Cray said he thumbed through the other cables in the file, which appeared to be duplicates of the first and "t did not absorb tbe subject matter of the cor· respondence and do not today, of my own knowledge, know what it was." Nixon Warned, w alters sa,·s WASHINGTON (AP) -A lop Central Intelligence Agency official testified today that President Nixon was warned less than three weeks alter the Watergate raid that something was amiss on the Whlte House staff. Anny Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters, deputy director of the ::IA, told the Senate Watergate ::ommmittee that he, CIA Director Richard Helms, and former acting !i'BI Director L. Patrick Gray ill resisted pressure from the White House staff to involve their agencies ln covering up the political wiretap.. ping. Walters said Gray finally .SfXlke to Nixon July 6, 1972, and said the Watergate case could not _be covered up, that the FBI's in- vestigation would lead quite high, and that Nixon should get rid or the ?eQple involved. Officers AiTest 2 for Showing Obscene Movies For the seventh time this yea r, Buena Park police officers swooped in on the Pussycat Theater Thursday night and ar· rested two employes on charges of t i · hibiting Jewd motion pictures. Arrested were Darrell Vernon Smith, 4-4, the assistant manager, and ticket seller Dandy Thompsop, 20. They wue booked for inve,,tigation of showing obscene materials. 1be theater, currently showing "Mak- ing the Blue Movie," will remain open for tuslness as usual , said a spakesman for the Pussycat Theaters . The manager of the theater, Larry Gene Washburn, was also arrested but he was ta.ken into custody on an outstanding traffic warrant, officers said. They said Washbum would probably be amstcd at some future date on charges similar to previous arrests. The spokesman for the theater chain said three raids have now been made on Pussycat theaters. growing. -· ?vlrs. Laborde called police after local teenagers told her the "Lavender" plants \1•ere really marijuana. VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE "They've tried w close us down but (AP) -A Minuteman II missile was we've got a good film library so when launched from here Thursday by a they confiscate one print, we just get out Strategic Air Command aew. another one and the show goes on." ~~~~~~~~~~~..::_~~~ LAST WEEK OF STORE-WIDE SALE -•' n' f"\ .~. . .. .. ~ ~ •••• ~ ..... j tj RR Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sale Merchan"dise Ready for lmmedi. ate Delivery. Don't Delay. Final Chance to Select From Our Large In· ventory at Reduced Prices. · DR£XEL-HERITAG'-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS 1AN INTERIORS WUICDATS & SATURDAYS 9100 to 5110 FRIDAY 'T!L f :OO NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCllF, DR.. '42-2050 tOp•11 Svncl•y 12-.S:l OJ LAGUNA BEACH e s•s NORTM COAST HwY, (0p111 Su11cl11y 12·51lOJ 494°6111 TORRANCE e· 2J64t HAWTHORNE ILVD. J7f.f27' ! ,, . ..,,. . i • r At Your Service A Sunday, WednesdlJi and Friday Feature Of the Dally PUol Got a problem? Tl!en write Pdt Dun·n. Pat wiU cut red rape, get the answers end action fl o u need t"u ~ l 'olve . inequt· ics i11 oov- eniment and business. Mait 11 our ques· dons to Pat 01,nn /At Your Service, Orange Coast DQily Pilot, P.O. Bo:c 1560, Costa ~fe.ta, <..:a., 92626. Include your tciephone number. A111trak's Record DEAR PA.T: It's been some time now since Amtrak took over this country's pa ssenger trains. I'd like to know how this arrangcincnl is \\'Orking out. What kind of safet y record is being tnaintai ncd and is the passenger rate up or down? S. L.., San Clemente Passenger fatalities and injuries from train accidents showed a significant decrease during the first six months o( 1972, according to the Federal Railroad Administration. For the flrst time since 1966, no passengers were killed ln a train ,accident during tht>se months, allbougb t"'O people were killed getting off trains. In tbe same period there were 79 fewe r Injuries than the 315 In 1971. Grade-cross-- ing fatalities droppt'd from 68% W 625 over the six months. Passengers in· creased by 2,479,826 during the first quarter of 19i2 to rench a total of i7 ,617 ,3 07. Surf a11d Sen The Art of Passing Time Things are slow at times. Even in Laguna Beach. Even during the s ummer. Even at an art festival. Laguna Beach h as four art festivals in progress. At this one. Art·A·Fair, Don Town and Phoebe Thorpe 01111 Piiot St•lf Photo found that gin rummy helped pass the time. Located at 595 S. Coast Highway, Art·A-Fair is open from 10 a .m. to .10 p.m . Sunday through Thursday anQ.fro1n 10 a .m. to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Teachers, Trustees Clash Friday, Augv.s.t 3. 1973 s DAILY PILOT J Flght IJills ' County Trustees Back Advocate Orange County ScOOol trustees Thurs- day decided to help fund a Sacramentcr based legislative advocate whose first duty will be to fight a bill that would er· fectively cut their operation in half. The county will, pay $700 annually to belong to the "Association for the Governance of Offices of C o u n t y Superintendents of Schools." The association organized by Santa Clara County education_ officials has hired Mike Dillon as advocate. A total of 33 county superintendents, not including Orange County, have said they'll join the association, Santa Clara County Superintendent Glenn \V. Hoff- man said. Their main worry now is AB 746, authored by Assemblyman Ken Corey San Clemente Man Facing Fraud Ter111 A San Clemente man accused on arrest of bilking $10,000 from investors in a non· exislent cattle fattening operation utiliz· ing equally non~xistent In dian reserva· lion land has pleaded nolo contendre (neither .guilty --llOr innocent) in Orange County Superior Court. . ,,. Judge James Turner accepted the plea of Howard J ohn Arnold, 42, of 603 Avenida Vaquero to one count or grand theft and ordered him to return Tuesday (0.Carden Grove), which w o u Id eliminate all instn1 ction and consultant services by county schools offices, restricting them to a business depart· mcnt. 'fhc Corey legislation v>'ill be heard Aug. 8 by lhe Assenibly \Vays and Means Con11nittee. '!'his is the third year it has been introduced, '·for quite sonic time there has been a need lo have someone in Sacramento to represent (us)," Superintendeot Robert Peterson said 1'hursday. · Associate Superintendent Fred Koch said he has seen Dillon "in action" and called him "very influential, very articulate." At fi rst trustees Don Jordan and David Brandt \vanted more time lo study the proposal, but board president A. E. "Pat" Arnold insisted that he didn't want lo wa it. "If you have more (counties) behind you, you go," Arnold declared. Peterson said he norn1ally wouldn't send the association a letter ,about the action until it is ratified in fwo 1\reeks. Koch suggested a letter of intent be mailed to Hoffmann or one of his associates, Russell Kent, which inspired Jordan to poetry: •·A letter of intent to Russell Kent to let hin1 know what is our bent," Jordan recited with a smile. Arnold then called for adjournment and Jordan quipped : "And with that we went.'' For mer Laguna Ma1iager Admits ' DEAR PAT: During last v1eck's rough surf and subsequent rescue or many swimmers at Orange County beaches, I've beard to "heavy seas" and "heavy surf.'' Do these terms mean the same tiing, or are they different? Saddleback Laboratory Credit Hours Disputed since if the policy was changed up to eight new teachers would be required. Patrick Backus replied, "I'm sick and tired of being the bad guy every year." for sentencin -U.Ut f:.or.. ' mOTO-~a~c~e~s ~a"""'.po'°"'s~S1""e:--Osroa~e;-;p;.r~.,~on""""-jf,f. '---E,J.ll-j~~~~~~-1 R.H., Laguna Niguel Both terms describe waves, but the slmllarlty ends there. Waves that (orm ln "·lady waters are called a "sea''. When those waves break on a shore, they're called "surf." While the waves are tra,·ellng lo"·ard land, they are known a5 a 1•swell." Co111p11ter Blan1erl DEAR PAT : \Ve have been receiving dunning letters from the Grolier Com· pany, Danbury, Corm., si nce ?.fay. They request payment for merchandise ship- ped to a n3me similar to ours at our ad· dress. We have written to explain we never ordered nor received anything. At the end of June the firm wrote telling us to ignore the letters -it was their 1nistake. etc. We consequefltly destroyed all correspondence and then received a threatening Jetter from the credit manager and another invoice! F.N., Anaheim The company·s computer sends the siped letters and it hasn't been in- formed of the mixup ·yet, according to Grolier'• customer ser,·lce department. It "'ill be straightened out, but the com- puter won't understand the sltutiop unless It recel\'es information lbDt "yoor'' account now bas a zero balantt and seod1 Its mystery customer one last blU at your address showing the account Is cleared. No Jllaga%ines DEAR PAT: 1 ordered House Beautiful magazine through my son during a money·making project at his school on Oct. JO, 1972. As you can see from the enclosed correspondence, I haven't received any copies of the magazine. ?\.1y lailt letter was mailed to Q.S.P., Inc., Pleasantville, N.Y., sometime ago and I decided to seek your assistance since that letter has been ignored. By JAN WORTH Of rh• 04llly Piiot St.tf A clash between Saddleback Com· munity C.Ollege trustees and teachers di sturbed with the results of recent salary negotiations punctuated the board meeting this week. After a !even-hour n e g o t i a l i n g n1arathon in July, teachers v.•cre granted a five percent pay raise. But a proposal from science teachers in the Certificated Employes Council (CEC) that load credit for laboratory hours taught be equal to lecture class credit was tabled. At Wednesday's meeting, a three-mem· ber CEC committee urged the board to act on the proposed credit hour revision before they passed the 1973-74 budget. Flattering But the board voted to maintain the present lab course ration of two-thirds hour credit for each Jab hour taught. "The CEC disagrees that \Ve've come to a mutual agreement and \Ye want to make that clear," Jean Vincenzi , a n1athematics instructor, told the board. She said the group has presented the proposed credit hour revision four years in a row without response. "We're !er· ribly frustrated," she said. · "This year, we went lo Dr Bremer (president of the colleges) with our pnr posal, far enough ahead to assure that it could be included in the new budget. But he told us it was not the time," she said . Obviously irritated, Dana Point trustee Reagan Denies Image Of Partying Governor SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan says he's not a live-it·up partygoer. even if that image might be a bi t flattering. Excerpts from his news conference Thursday: Q. Governor, have you been going to any parties lately? A. t had a small dinner party last night. Q. Did you read the \Vashington oPst yesterday? How did he know? "I h~ven't see'n anybody spying on me.'~ he said. "Haven't been to any parties where I didn't know who was there.'" The infonnation the Post received of the alleged investigations ordered by "senior White House aides" did not elaborate on the Reagan reference. For the record, Reagan is considered by those who know him to be a light drinker. One Iong·time associate said he" never knew Reagan to take more than two drinks on any occasion. • "You come in here every year shooting your mouths off, making innuendos that \ve don't know what \\'e're talking about. But we run this school for th e entire district, not just your problems." Mrs . Vincenzi \vas supported by Frank Sciarotta. a biology instructor, and Tom Gaines. an art teacher. Sciarrotta told Backus, "\Ve"ll never stop coming in here to tell you what we think is wrong. If we did , \ve'd be a lousy fa culty. We don't expect to find total agreement." The current Policy states that all full· time teachers must carry 45 to 48 credit hours per year -or an average of 15 hours a week during each of three quarters. For non·lab cour~ s.uch as English and history, the teacher gets one hour credit for each hour spent in the classroom. · But in laboratory courses, three hOurs of class credit may mean nine hours ac· tua\ly spent in class. Board members Hans Vogel said he understood the inequity but said ptaciilg lab courses on an equal footing with lee· tures posed a budget problem. "Maybe the ones v.·ho are changed should be the non lab teacher:;/' Michael Collins, trustee, said. He advocated restudying the entire concept of CQUrse loads. After the vote, John Lund, board chairman, said the board ¥:ould begin such a study. "'This formula is a historical accident that we're all at a loss to explain -but unfortunately that accident has been built into our budget," Collins said. tenn of one to 10 years on the conviction. San Clemente police arrested him after he allegedly persuaded seven investors - five in San Clemente and two in C.Osta Mesa -to put their money into a plan to bring a non~xistent herd of black Angus cattle from Utah to Indian reservation land in San Diego County. Officers said several initially doubtful investors took the plunge and obtained shares in the venture after Arnold told them his wife was dying of cancer and he needed the money to keep her alive. The story was untrue, they said. Authorities have been unable to trace the herd of black Angus cattle described by Arnold. San Diego County authorities have described the story of reservation land near Mount Palomar as "a figment of the imagination.'' Man Hits Wife, Jun1ps to Death LEMON GROVE (AP) -An elderly man quarreling wih his wife apparently hit her with a board, then jumped to his death from the roof of their home, sheriff's deputies sav. A sheriff's spokesman said the body of Jesus F. Espinoza, 76, was found Thurs· day in the driveway of his house in their San Diego suburb. His wile Rita, 72, was found in the bedroom bleeding from head and facial injuries. A board covered with blood was found nearby, the spokesman said. Mrs. Espinoza ,.,,as listed in serious condition at Grossmo.nt hospital. Good Investment News: Former Lagtina Beach City Manager Lawrence D. RoSe ~nfinned Thursday that he had his office searched by in- vestigators looking for c l e ctr on i c evcsdropping devices. Ho,vever. Rose said the search was '·normal" and "routine". He said nothing ln particular prompted the bug hunt. The ex:·city manager, who resigned his position Wednesday, said the incident took place "two or three months ago," and that other o£fiees had been checked too. Confidential sources had reported that the city manager "had had his office tom apart" in a search for hidden bugs. Nooe were found. Asked about a possible role in search for bugging equipment, Det. Sgt. Neil Purcell declined to comment. Asked why the search was undertaken, Rose said it was just thotight' th.t it should be done. Couple Sue Builders Fot· Blocking Ocean Avco Community Developers, Inc. was sued for nearly $116,000 Thursday by a Laguna Niguel couple who claim the ' company's building activities have block- ed their view of the Pacific Ocean. George J . and Judith McGaffi gan claim in their Orange County Superior Court action that Avco pledged to give them an unrestricted \Vestv.'ard outlook \vhen they bought their $50.500 home on"'' Oct. 19, 1972. Construction by Avco since- that date amount s to a breach .(If oon· tract, the couple claims. D.T., Corona Del Mar A. t know what you are referring to.' But J don't know what they are referring to. I was a perfect picture of decorum. (Reagan was being queried about a Post report that White House in- Q.S.P ., Inc., which offers magulne and vestigators were interested in learning candy fundralslng plans to schools about "the behavior of California Gov. and organizations, is owned by Readers Ronald Reagan, a Republic-an. at a par· Digest. Its custo~ service department ty. ") Mariji1ana Found On Pleasm·e Boat offered "trou6le with the publisher, -Q. Even al,he--pa~rtY.: 1 don't know to JJ,arsl rtt_agD!iq~s;:_a1 ~i:i .~xcu_!,e 1or_y~u! __!hlch they are ref g? SAN DI EGO (AP ) -U.S. Customs • LARGE DEMAND FOR ESTATE JEWEl:RY noia-dellvery problem. A tf rerand '1'8S ·n:a:uiliter:) --·a.rents seized more than 1.400 pounds' of re(iuested and Q.S.P. agreed to mall a A. I don't know. But you have really marijuana Thursday on a pleasure boat cJ)eck to you Immediately. caught me here with mixed emo tions in San Die.go Bay. Two San Diego n1eo Now available for the µubl ic: filll' jc\v e lr~· frc)nl .. -because I don_,t know whether to get a were taken into custody. 11 C 'I J I Co1111eties Goes sort of glint in my~eye and let you thJnk Stan Verusio, special customs agent in severa arge estates at ,o;.;t;:l l\' l'S<:l e\\"C, r _, .. :DEAR PAT: What has happened to that there w~ a ski~ of n1e ~?~knows charge, said the cabin of the 24·foot boat Save 507~. J·:~lale 1·ewelry 11r icetl fin· irnn1c1ii<lll' rtlchael cosmetics. particularly the or not But Im afraid there 1sn t. off Shelter Island v.·as filled with mari--- ljpstlcks? · Reagan added he has no reason to juana packaged into kilo bricks. sale. Invest nO\V for unbelievtll>ll' f>Ou;O :-;;1vi n~~. • - . D.B., r'.Aflta Me&a believe there was such an investigation. Another 24-foot boat and two motor T -·-"I don't tllinlt really that there was," v~hicles were also comiscated, Verusio Wiseinvestmentopporlunily .. Coll~cbion in clutl <!s -~:O:~:·::,T~."";=:~~~"".::!«~ he •ai<L said. - -· diamonds, rubies and emeralds. Bi;: invest- ~rtment. The original for~ta l\Ucbel ~ ment demand bccallSC of incrl':-tsi n~ value ;ind 1'i1t1tlcks are belnlll'. sold out anij replaced Cl • ! , o . N . . d til~I~ ~~.1~:"0:!;~ o~~~ot~~·~t~ll~~f; eme11te angry ver 8 !Jmtte HU]l)lly. • 1 Beautiful seleqion of latl i"' <trHI men 's rin~s ...... ipi~\I h ~..!-~~...!".!J.!~tu~~·~--........ ~-:~=~.._.._~ ....... H--~~-".-.........-.~----=-~-~ ... -"'1--t~~~~·nrt -< «: -!"'.:toi.P.tSft:.f«r·-'n trc·li-\at·r·~:'"""-hrctt~c-lc•~ ,t-· C·ounty Fund.s for Slieltei· and pins in ;:.11.1 or pl alittttlll. !'riced front '(Jad Wig Fit . . l1tsulu CIA WASHINGTON (UPI\ -1l1e disguise experts at the Central Intelligence AgCf1· c'J feel they have been insulted. Former CIA Dl<CJ:tor Richard M. l;lelms rei><>rtod this during Senate Watergate hearings Thursday. According to new11 reports, Watergate l.'Ol\!Pirator E. Howard HWll wore a poorly fitting red wig for a disguise on a vlslt Jo I'M' lobbyist Dita Beard. llut Helms said ho was told CIA provided Hun t with a 11brunette wig.11 "So1ne of the CIA technicians rather resented tho re el that the red wig had been tied into the CIA because it was 1ucb a lousy !it,'' llelms said. ' Councilmen In San Clemente a rt disturbed over the fifth annual rejection or funds to build a satellite animal shelter to serve the South County. Councilmen Wednesday agreed on a resolution criUclilng county supervisors fl>r once -.galn-removtng-u!e-.beUer' fund• 'from the county budget That com· plaint will accompany an almost stand- ard resolution demaqdlng a greater level of s~rvice to the city from anhnal control orficlals. lnitially. councilmen were ready to tighten an\ma:I control regulations - primarily those relating to dogs. The suggested ordinance -shelved by the council -would have forced dog owners to clean up their animals' fecal matt.er 1r il were deposited on a sidewalk or other public place. The measure '"'as tabled because or general agreement that enforcement would be a problem. Instead; councilmen vowed to press the Issue o fthe shelter which has been prom· ised annually on a sitC near the San Diego Freeway and Crown Valley Parkway in the Mission Viejo area. "Each year when we complain of poor service we get some results for a while, then It tapers off. And each year we get these promises or a sheller. "Someone up there -and it takes three supervisors -keeps N\lecting the money for the shelter. 1 dbn't know'" who," lamented Counciln1an Arthur r~olmes, $200 to 8 J l),()()() ... 1 alttt·S Ill ,;Jil.111.10 . Out-of-Pawn jcwl•lry -a ~n·al invcslmcnl. Hundre rl s of prt•l'ious "'"' se mi -precious ilems now available. Pric('s low as $10. · Make Someone llappy wi th the perfccl ;:ift from Cos ta M csa J ewel ry. M a kc a sound fin ancial invcslmenl Loo . · RACITI'S - Sptclacular t1al1,rol l>lu t• star ~ap phire ri11g. 1i .. 1·if1lil>' •11·1·r .:: ('ri1·nt."f. ,C\ur· r11u11r!rd h,11 :iii'1(uz:/11111 ,/in111orir/.1; set iii pln ti 11 11111. \lafiuYL iii $.:.!1:i fl. /'ri(','f[ to .l\ff{ al $f .. 11f.S. COSTA MESA-JEWELRY 1838 Newport. Boulevard. Cosla Mesa. Cali fornia !J2(i27 714/64()-77 41 • • l I ' tf UAll Y l'H.UI Can't Drive If You Can't Parli RICKY TICKY POIJTIX' Notable among recent governmental flaps in our region .. has been the running battle between the city of Newport Beach and the California Coastal Zone Commission on how much off-street parking ought to be where. It has been a fun sort of thing . The battleground involves what is -known in the building jargon as multiple dWellirig units. By this, they mean places to live like duplexes or apartments. The city of Newport Beach, on the one hand, has taken the position that one parking place for each living unit is just d8ndy. The coastal commission that rules in our region, on the other hand, believes more off-street parking is needed. 1be coastal board folks are rather en- vironmentally inclined. They reason that people in each family have more than one auto. Provide only one off-street space and one motor car is going to be lert on the street. Thus the coas_tal people \\•ant two off-street spaces provided for each living unit. · SO IT HAS BEEN the battle was joined and. back and forth the two governmental agencies argued. It would appear at this writing that the Coastal C.Omrnission is \vinning and Newport will go along with a couple of garage slots for each place. Through it all, however, there has been little debate on the blessings of having off-street parking. Comes now into the parking question another governmental agency, this time Federal. It is known as Ute Environ- mental protection Agency, or EPA for short. Because of mutual interests in the en· virionment, you would figure here that the Coastal C.Ommission folks would ha ve found a real ally in the battle for more off.street parking, right? UPI TtltPllOlt New .Jersey. Flooded Youths lend assistance in South Orange. Torrential rains and flood· ing killed eight persons in state and National Guardsmen evacuated 1,000 more. Nine inches of rain fell. President at Ca1np David, Maps Watergate Course CAMP DAVID, Md. IUPl) -Lookmg somewhat tired and drawn, President Nixon has flown by helicopter to his Camp David retreat for a Jong weekend. He may spend part of the time working on another response t9 developments in the Wa tergate affair. White House officials said Nixon was comidering issuing another statement on the Watergate and related events simila r to the statement he made May 22. They said he also was considering a separate television address. TIIE PRESIDENT has promised to give a further accounting of his own knowledge about the Watergate and the subsequent cover-up attempt when the Senate investigating committee com- pletes its hearings sometime next week. The May 22 statement \\'as the most detailed account Nixon has given to date or \Vhat he. knew about the break-in at Democratic national headquarters in 1972 and the efforts to cover it up. Nixon has said he will not make ad- ditional comments while the current phase of the Senate hearings is in prog- ress. Nixon arrived at Camp David ac-. companied by a White House doctor, Dr. Roger Ward, and a military aide. --~----~--..!.---~---., • ' Reds Push to 3 Miles Of Cambodian Capital PHNOM PENH (UPI) - A new Com· munist offensive swept to within three miles of the center of Phnom Penh today and govenunent troops began setting up roadblocks half a mile. outside the city. U.S. B52s and fighter-bombers were reported inflicting heavy losses on the in- surgents, but the American planes could not give closeup support to the retreating government forces because of thousands ol refugees in the battle are~. The High Command warned last week or the possibility of rocket attacks on Phnom Penh and of Communists in- filtrating into the city. Today, Phnom Penh forces intensified their search for infiltrating rebels. SQUADS OF' SPECIAL. pol;ce ra; Od three houses in the center of Phnom Penh, seired several hundred 840 rocket rounds and rifles, an~ .arrested two women, police sources said. Government forces threw up road blocks on Highway l only half a mile southwest of the city limits, refusing to allow civilian traffic down the highway because of the heavy ground fighting. · American warplanes flew heavy air strikes at rebel rear positions, reportedly inflicting severe losses on exposed Com- munist troop concentrations, but pilots .coordinating the air strikes refused to allo\v bombing at the scene of the fighting due to the uncertain positions of government forces and the presence of ·thousands of-~·fugees·fleeing the area. PHNOM PENH JS under siege on three sides but the major threat was from the sootheast along Highway I where four battalions of rebels (about 2,000 men) crossed the Mekong River Thursday and opened a major ne\v offensive that sent government forces retreating more than 15 miles. U.S. fighter-bo1nbers · suspended at- tacks on Highway I because of the flood of refugees and the wavering government front lines being threatened further by leapfrogging tactics of the Communists Police Shoot Killer DANVILLE. Va. (UPI) -A man who killed a wo man and wounded two police officers \vas shot repeatedly b y policemen in a parking lot gun battle Thursday when he refused to rwi for cover and taunted the officers to shoot him. Ray Morrison. 42, was subdued .after five officers trail ed him·to a park- ing lot and hit him with from six to eight bullets. who circled around government positions to menace them from the rear. UPI field reporters said thousands of refug~ belongings heaped on carts and bicycles, jammed a bridge crossing the Mekong River about three miles outside Phnom Penh at a point where Highway 1 was closed to civilian traffic. ALTIIOUGH BLOCKEIL in closeup support of the government troops, American warplanes were able-to carry out intense raids against rear rebel posi· tions and there were reports of heavy in· surgen t casualties. Field reporters said the Comm unists ~ 'La1indry' Probe \vere moving into the area of the fighting from the south and the north, using sam· pans to cross the P.1c~o!1g river and outflank govcrnn1cnt postUons. Son1e field reporters came under s11ipcr fire behind the govc~eot fk'.onl line positions m... Veal Sbov, fiye miles do\.111 High\v8y I. but only 31h miles from the center of the capital. Dispatches fron1 Vientiane s al d negotiations for a pr~tocol to ~et up a coalition governinent 10 Laos hit a snag today in OJ dispute over what positions govcn1n1en1 ;ind Cornniunist Pathet Lao troops will hold once the peace ~ tlement is completed. Rebozo Ba1ik Records Subpoenaed by Panel MIAMI (AP) -Recon:ls or the Key Biscayne Bank, owned by presidential confidant C. G. "Bebe" Rebozo, have been subpoenaed by the Sen a t e \Vatergate collUTlillee. a bank spokesman says. Thoma s H. \Vakefield, vice president of the bank and Rebozo's attorney, also acknowledged in a statemelll Thursday tha t the Internal Revenue Service had audited Rebozo's tax returns for three years. but not six years as had been reported previously. Wakefield said the records would sho\v that neither the bank nor any of its of· ficials were guilty of any \Vrongdoing. He said the IRS audit was routine. ABC News reported Wednesday that the Watergate committee was probing reports that illegal contributions to President Nixon's campaign from Baha- mian gambling casinos has been routed or "laundered" through the bank. \VAKEFIELD SAID that ''contrary to the broadcast. no directors of the Key Biscayne Bank and Trust Company have been subpoenaed nor has any represen· tative of the federal government an· nounced or ever intimated that any ii· legal or laundered funds were channeled through. the bank." ~le said the Watergate committee had issued two subpoenas for "records on several specified accounts," but he did not elaborate. •'The bank is cooperating and will .com-' 'ply fully with the subpoenas," Wakefield said, adding that the records "will su bstantiate that neither the bank nor t\lr. Rebozo 'vas involved in any im· proper or illegal activity. "Mr. Rebozo happens to be a friend or President Nixon. therefore he is ob-- viously a target for those members of the media obcessed with the desire to destroy the PreSlcient and those near to hitn," \Vakcfield said in his prepared statement Tunney Seeking New ITI Trial \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The antitrust suit against International Telephone and Telegraph Corp .. settled out of court by the government in 1971, should be reopened. Sen. John Tunney (0-Csllf.) has demanded. 1\\"0 other Oemocratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee succeeded Thursday in stalling confirmation of \Villiam D. Ruekelshaus as deputy at· torney general because the Justice Department has refused to give the panel government documents dealing with the controversy. ~femos written by former White House alde Charles W. Colson and released dur· ing Senate ·watergate hearings Wednes- ady indicated that President Nixon could be "directly involvt!d" in the out-of· court settlement. WRONG AGAIN. The EPA is currently mulling a proposed dictum that would force cities and counties in our area to reduce the amount 6f public off.street parking which is available. IUS DOCTORS HAVE pronowiced him completely recovered from :i ·bout of J-::;iiiiiiiiiiii viral pneumonia last month but have urged him to take regular rest periods iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -As _ a n1atter of fact, in gradual stages the EPA wants local governments to cut back existing parking 20 percent before Oct. 30, 1975. Additionally, the EPA rules wou1d de- mand that cities take one traffic lane on each maJor road and designate it for use by car pools and transit buses only. Now, apprised of all this inte!Ligence, you may surmise ttiat the EPA people have slipped all their cogs. Not so. They kno\v precisely what they want. UNABLE TO REDUCE smog through phony claptrap devices on motor cars and the like, the EPA is obviously out to eliminate the motor car. Don't give the motorist as many lanes lo drive in or any place to park, and there you have it. It is sort of similar to the logic used by America's undern'Orld . If you can't beat the opposing gang's gambling setup in regular competition. then you get out the tommyguns and erase the compelitors. The EPA has apparently decided it can't handle the automobile so it had better eliminate it. . _IN ADDmON TO taking away traffic lanes and reducing parking, the Federals coWd go further. They could ban any new manufacture of tires. Or make it illegal to repair streets. Or -hey, how about a phony gasoline shortage? There is no end to the wonderfulness of government. 'Ibey are always in there pitching ; working to solve all your problems. 'Som the Light' For1ner deputy CIA director Robert E. Cushman Jr~ testi· fies about E. Howard Hunt's "secret 1nission" from White I·Iouse. Cushman said Hunt got to be a pain and the ClA be· came convinced it shoudn't be involved. morning and evenings. • "The doctors would preler-,t~h.-l-lh-e President got "some more rest but he has been following their orders to some ex· tent," said Gerald L. Warren, the deputy White House press secretary. But observers who see the President reguJarly felt he looked tired. Nixon followed a busy schedule of deal· ing with foreign government represen- tatives during the week. He held con- ference. with the prime ministers of Australia and Japan earller in the week and Thursday conferred .,..·ith visiting President Bernard Bungo of the Republic of Gabon. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of the Oaily Pilot i~ 9uaranletd "'911ea.,·l'ridfYl II YO\I de ~fl lllW ,_ l"IP'f" e, S:JO P.11'1., Cilt illd Yl\lr COiiy •Ill .._ llt'tvtfll I• you, C•"• •rt t1~t11 vntll 1:lll ...... SiPhtf'dly Ind 5VlllllV! II )'OW Clo llfl rn:tlVI ..., CiPPV _., ' 1.m, 51"''111y, or I 1.m. 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' l'ideotape'Evidence1 I Accused Slayer's Defense tq Open I SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The defense was to open its ease today in Herbert W. Mullin's mass murder trial, after the judge took under advisement a defense plea to introduce a videotaped talk between the defeOOant and his lawyer. Public defender J a m e s Jackson made the request Thursday, as the prosecution conc luded its three ·d ay presentation. Jackson said the hour-long tape, made when be first talked with Mullin, would show that "he's crazy, he keeps slipping in and out of reality." SANTA CRUZ Cou nty Superior Court Judge Charles Franich withheld a ruling on the request, which was ex· pected to be challenged by the prosecution. Jackson's first witness was to be Stanford psychoJogist Dr. Donald Lunde, whom he said would testify that Mullin was mentally WJstable. Jackson said ln his opening statement Monday that Mullin is guilty of the 10 slayings he is charged with committing during a three.week period in the Santa Cruz area. He also said Mullin had killed three other persons before that. ·- On Thursday. prosecutor .Arthur Danner linked Mullin and the .22 caliber pistol that killed Jan1es Gianera, 24, and his wife Joan. 21. Danner said the gun was found in Mullin'!' car when he was arrested shortly after the murder of Fred Perez on Feb. 13. CR I M I NOLOGIST l>aul Weinberger 'Presszired To Co1npete' SACRAMENTO (AP\ · Welfare Secretary Casper W. Weinberger acknowledged to- day that' he is under in· creasing pressure to run for governor in his home state of California next year. Weinberger, a Republican, said he was hooored and flat· ( BRIEFS J tered but had not yet taken time to think seriously about the prospect. Dougherty lestified that a OOllet from the same gun was lodged in the wall of a cabin where four teen-age boys were round shot to death Feb. 17. Jackson says Mullin is .. a psychotic schl1.0phrenlc" who killed 13 persons as "human sacrifices needed to save Califonti8 from earthquakes.'' He also has stated that Mullln claimed to be under hls family 's telephatlc cont r o I when be killed his first three victim.!. The prosecution has said it will show during the trial's sanity phase Mullin was sane at the time of the murders. Gas Ousts .tA Suh'urh Residents ios ANGELES (AP) Residents of a six-block area of the San Fernando Valley community of Arleta were volWltarily evacuated from t~eir homes early today when fumes from an insecticide sprayed, on a nearby field brought complaints of eye ir- ritation and nausea, police said .. Th ree residents and 22 Foothill Division policemen who went into the area were treated at Holy Cross Hospital, mostly as a ·precau· tionary measure, off 1cia1 s 'said. No serious injuries were reported and no one was hospllalized. OFFICERS AND ftremen alerted about 160 home owners in the area to the-problem, police said, addin g th a t evacuation was voluntary. A fire department spokesman said at least 20 homes were evacuated while firemen used fans to blow the fumes - described as similar to tear gas -from the houses. Berkeley Barb Shuns Sexual Ads Couple Succumb ·In Desert BAKER (AP) -The bodies of a young South Gate coupl~ have been found 1n the desolate Devil's Playground area of the Mojave Desert, ap- pclrently victims of scorching desert heat. Viigil T. Dawson Jr., 26, and his 21-year~ld wife Becky were identified Thursday by the San Bernardino County coroner's office. The couple left their home last Thursday in a borrowed camper truck. Nothing was heard from them until a Union Pacific Railroad work crew found the husband's body about 41f.r: miles from the abandoned camper, which was bogged down in sand. MRS. DAWSON'S body was about 800 yards farther along the road, beside an empty water can. Officials said the couple were ill-equipped for a trip in- to the isolated part of the desert, where d a y t i m e temperatures hovered around 110 degrees. It" appeared the couple al· tempted to walk 20 miles 1 to the small community o f Ludlow after they remained with their inoperable truck for about a day. · Prostitut,e Sues Judge For Ledger SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A prostitute who says she's earning money so she can go to college and become an ac- countant sued a city judge Thursday to get back her ap- pointment book, The Superior Court suit filed by Elaine Carlson, 2.1. also re- quested return or a conta iner of contraceptive fo3m seized when she was arrested on a prostitution charge May 7. Miss Carlson said t h e charges: were dismissed July 4 but Munkipa] Judge Eugene F. Lynch refused IO'return the book and container.' -- "Unless the book is returned In the very near future, I will suffer the full damage of the lo~ since appointments will have already been missed and so forth," Miss Carlson said in the suit. Lynch explained his action by saying "often times . we refuse to return property ln certain types of crime because the items are sometimes used in the crimes themselves. An obvious example would be a Friday, August 3, 1973 ' DAILY PILOT •• i Chavez Asks Picket Ban Defiance FRESNO (AP) -Cesar Chavez wants his followers all over America to "stand with us and be arrested" here where dro ves already have been jailed for challenging court bans on mass picketing. Almost 3,000 United Farm Workers Unkm members and supporters have been arrested in the San Joaquin Valley dur- ing two weeks of massive civil disobedience picketing at fruit ranches where growers had obtained court restrictions on the number of pickets, Almost 2,000 of the arrests have been * * * Compromise Meany Goal WASHINGTON (AP) AFL-CIO President George Meany met tod ay w i t h Teamsters Union officials in an attempt to settle a bitter jurisdictional dispute between the Teamsters and Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers Union. Meany, asked on his arrival tr be thought the session would be productive, replied, "I haven't the slightes t idea." It was not certain whether Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons attended th e meeting held on n e u t r a I ground in downtown Washin_gton. In FrtSDO Counly, reportedly the nation'• richest crop p.,,. duclng county in dollar value. Chavez, visiting some 300 still in jail here, blasted the arrests Thursday as . ' • a disgraceful misuse of justioe •.• tnJly a blot on America. 11 "I feel the only reason in- junctions were issued was to .. appease the growers and destroy the union," Chavez charged. "I AM CALLING on friends across the Unltd States to witness the outrage or jailings and hardships brought on our union people. I am asking that they come from all over to Fresno CoWlty to stand with us and be arrested." In Sacramento, S t a t e Agriculture Director C . B . Chr ist e nsen says the California National Guard has been alerted for possible duty because of continuing clash·es on picket lines in the San Joa· quin Valley. Christiansen told the state board of agriculture Thursday that the Guard was alerted Tuesday night following a day of clashes between pickets and Kern County Sheriff's deputies in the Arvin area. The dispute involves court· ordered limits or one picket to every 100 feet and restrictions on use of bullhorns at 50 fruit ranches where growers have refused to renew UF\V con- tracts. Most of these .gr~wers have UPI Ttl-tPltOll UNITED FARM WORKERS PICKETS TALK Cesar Cha ve~ Attends Rally in Community of Parlier lo date remained independent had Chavez contracts. The· of the rival Teamsters Unlon. teamsters are also negotiating which has signed 51 other \vith 29 Delano table grape Californi a (armers who once growers whose pacts with Chavez expirt!d Sun<lny'. Chavez cont cr.d s lhtl picketing restricti ons violate constitituiona l rights of free assembly and speech, but of· ficials here have tried to avoid a court test of the civil ln· junctions on those grounds by charging the pickets with refusal to disperse. TllE TACTIC 0 F en· couraging mass arrests "is not going to quit unt il we arouse public opin ion and possibly jail 10,000 or more and public opinion makes them county official s look in· ward and realize they've made a grave and unjust error," said Chavez, who has been ar· rested himself in past labor disputes. ~lore of his supporters heed- ed the call Thursday as 143 were arrested here, seven in Kern County and five in Tulare. The bookings here in- cluded 20 nun s, upping the total of nuns and priests ar· rested ·aff.er coming here to picket this week to 60. The nuns and priests already jailed began a fast Wednesday to emphasize their solidarity with C h a v e z • Fasting has been a chie{ tactic in the past for the UF\V leader, but he has not begun one in his current struggles against T eam s ter en- croachments that have \Vhil- tl ed . UFW v-:orking mem- bership from a high or 40,000 down to 6.500. RECREATION IN ACTION SHOW YAMAHA MINI-BIKE Drawing Sun. Aug. 5, 3 p.m. South Coast 11111 AUG. 2nd thru 5th Register for prires in C.rousel Court 32 HOURLY PRIDS $10.00 Gift Certificates Starting at 1 pm Daily SCHEDULE OF DAILY EVENTS TOYOTA SAILBOAT Drawing Sun. Aug. S, 3 p.& TMUISDAT. AUGUST 2n4 ·tflrw 5th. Dlitr-Towota/\'_. Rotd & Trait Family ~ .r. Childr~n's Art, Bicycle ·Grand Prix. Surfbo.rd ChlMl!ionships, Childrel'j'' T~ln\l'fft$-....._ FRIDAY, AUGUST 3 Huntington Beach senior Citizens "GOodlime Singers" 6:30-7:15, 7:15-8:00 Music Man Band-SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 11:00-11:30 Children's Darice, 1 l:J0..12:00 Tumbling, 12:00-12:30 K1rate, 12:30..12,45 Tumbling, 1:00-1 :15 Baby Baltet, 1:00-1 :45 Community Th~tre (Peter Pan}-SUNDAY, AUGUST 5 1:00-1:15 Trim to Rhythm, 1:30-1 :45 Gymnastics, 2:00· 2: 15 Round Dance, 2:30-2,45 Baton Twirling Presented by Recmtlon De1t1rtm1nts of Cotti .... foofdlin V1Rty, Munth11ton a..th I.,.,,,.... Weinberger said in a in· terview that he would consider the idea "at some polnt." BERKELEY (AP) -The publisher of the underground newspaper Berkeley B a r b says future issues will not con- taip advertisements of a sex· ual nature. gun." 1------e Chph Foreseen SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Rooald Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Mo!'Cl- ti headed today t o w a r d another potentially bitter clash over the one-cent sales tax in· crease, which some say Is un- needed and unwanted. The Republican governor proposed Thu rsday a half.-cent cut in the sales tax for one year. That \\'OU!d u.se up $320 million of the ~tate.'s $8'i6 million treasury surplus. e Reagon Pu•h SACRAMENTO (AP) -It could set a national precede.M If California we re to throw out the legal rule that evidence gathered illegally may not be allowed in court, says Gov. Ronald Reagan . That rule "haS permitted criminals to walk free," said Reagan in a news conferenee Thursday. Jr Calif o rni a discards it , he added, the U.S. 1 Max Scherr ann oun ced Thursday that the rabloid will cease to print "slimy" ad- vertising that "exploits" other human beings. • Scherr, who denied he wa s yielding to right w i n g censorship, said the Idea of purging ~ Barb, entering its ninth year of publication, was his own. The beillled publlsher ad- mitted thdf'is much as 80 per· cent of his advertising revenue may be lost. I "Yeah, It will probably ~eek our ad\rertislng. We'll e. I plug aloog. We started nothing, we'll probably up with nothing," he said. !"We will no longer accept advertising which m a k e s person.c; into· obj ects," he said. "We will no longer allow slimy • style ads whether they offer commodity s e x , encounter groups, stereOs or airline tickets." LA Judges Censured SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Two Los Angeles judges have been censured for "willful misconduct in office" by the state supreme Court. Superior Court J u d g e Leopoldo Sanchez d r e w "severe censure'" Thtµ°sday , and Municipal Court Judge Antonio E. Chavez w a s "censured." Both orders came on the fecommendation of the state Commission on Judicial Qualifications. The commission said du.ring a three-year period Sanchez gave a bail bondsman OT'ders for release of prisoners which were blank except for the judge's signature. Supreme Court might to ~------------------- likewise for the whole country. e C011talnment EURE KA (API Tunney Order Senator . Wants ChiWren Firefighters today were ex- pected to contain the Klamath National Forest's big g e $ t timber fire in silt years -,a blare that has ravaged 14 square miles of timberland at RIV~RSIDE (AP) -Sen. John V. 1\tnney's wife has '8n estlmated cost of $13 been ordered to return frcvn Holland with the couple's -mDcillionnscr..·;:,.,._sm, ""'e .--1.hat·· ·ha-d ·thf'ee-_,.chUdren and....appear in court Monday to resolv.e. a ... ake cus tody disagreement. ' • ham1>e!rcd firemen's efforts by Attom~y Horace CO~le said Thursday that 1\-lrs. Tunney shrouding ridges and creek canyons since the fire began a took the children -Teddy, 12, Mark, 8, and Arlann, 5 -to week ago was cleared Thur1· her native country contrary to an agreemen!Jb(l.J Tunney day by breezes from 3 Pacific would have custody of them during August. cold front, U.S. Forest Servl<F Tunney (!).Call!.) tea med of "the departure Monday in 1ipO}cesman Ernest Weinberg _ said. a not• from Mrs. Tunney who left for Europe with the children over the weekend, Coyle said . e S111peet Held Mrs. Tunney filed for divorce In May, 1972, but Coyle SANTA ROSA (AP) -A man IM!lng held tn 9 C811adlan said the 14-year marriage has not been dissolved. The Jail wa s to be questioned today Tunnejs lived together In their Georgetown home last June, by Sonoma County author~les the lawyer said, adding that it was not an effort al investigating the deaths of llye reconclliaUon. DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMM UPWITH TELEPROMPTER! WITH CLEAR RECEPTION OUR ANTENNA IS 350 FEET HIGH WITH LOCAL PROGRAMS INCLUDING SPORTING EVENTS II WITHJJ.HF~C.ti_Atj~!S .: . SESAME STREET TO STOCKS . lf-Wlt-H--CRYSTAL CLEAR F.M. no ~ TELEPROMPTER is the largest cable talevis ion organization in the world, • i. We have the most UP'to.cfate technical facilities. Now you can get rid of your ugly antenna (and make Newport even more beautiful )o and get a better picture at the same time -Plu5 you'll save money! Offer good in cable areas only. young girls whose nude boi:Hea Tunney issued a statement saying, "I want the chil· have teen found nearnert. dren In this country 10 share In their upbringing. 1 want FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, liELEPADmPITiEA Sheri£! Don Slrlepkc !oaid them ral•ed In America as Americans." OUR INSTALLATION CHARGE IS FR EE . '11 Thursday the man, Albert d ruchard Voorhees,' 27, I has Coyle sald the order for ~lrs. Tunney to appear woul Ol'AL 641 3160 r.::J n 1-1n r.:I r::;-;::;vJ already been charged with the be served on Lawrence Stocker, her attomey in San Fran-n -l:JJ!.G~ LJ \J ,June killing oC a Sonoma man l~cl:•c:o~. =~~~~~=~~~~:~----~111~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~!'! in the Coastal town or Jenner Tunncy's legal residence is in Riverside. nco.r here. " .. " I •• j 6 - D r\ILY PILOT EDIT081AL PAGE Comment \\'age-benefit bargaining sessions at the city level oflcn create friction. 'rhe city coupcil is dealh1g with ·public money. 1l'he employe feels he needs more of lt as ne struggles with inflation. 'J'his wa s the case in San Clemente recently. 'rhe cou ntil settled the issue weeks ago. But a news release issued by public safety employes prompted some harsh con1tnents recently from-Cou ncilman Paul Presley. Amohg other things, Presley declared that any city employe disenchanted over the council's refusal to yield on wage-benefit' demands ''is free to move on" and find another job. It wasn't necessary to say this. It is understood in the American employer-employe relationship. Presley's acrid comment could only serve to promote bitterness and employe morale is important. lt is far better to try and keep such n1atters as busi· nesslike and free of emotion as possible. Cl1alle n ge Justified San Juan Capi strano has in the past borne the inlage of a 'city where almost any sort of residential de· vclop1nent could win routine approval. But all that seems to be changing as city council· 1nen become 1nuch more concerned about the quality or life· in the com1nunity. In a recent strong display of that ethic. the council flatly rejected a second version of a grading plan for hundreds of acres along Ortega 1-ligh\vay earmarked for a Pacesetter re~idential de.velopment. The cou ncil, expressi ng strong disappointn1cnt over Not Helpful • the lack of co·mpromise between the developer and plan· ning commissioners, simply decjde.d tbat the environ· mental impact of the massive grading for lot pads wa s too adverse. It is not easy £or a city councilman to make such a decision in light of threats of court action by developer John Klug. But the fo ur members of the panel which rejected the latest plan to gouge lhe hillsides of lhe city should be commended for their decision to challenge th e pro. posal. Perhaps now a true compromise can be worked out. Stabilizing Lea dersl1ip The Laguna Beach City Council found promising 1naterial in the person o( Al Theal, former public wOrks director, in replacing City Manager Lawrence Rose, who resigned Wednesday. . During his tenure at city hall, Theal has proven h 1m~e~ qualified both as a technical expert, and as an adm1n1s~rator wi.th a fine knack (or finding a common ground m sometimes complex and controversial matters. . His new job is demanding. Matters of first priority w~l be t he fill ing of now vacant top level jobs of police ch1e£; Theal's old job as public works director: and a r~solution of the vacancy created in the fire chief's posi· t1on by the lingering disability of.James Latimer. In appointing Theal, the council ju~ped ahead at least several months in ~tabi1izing the city government leadership. It picked a fine man who no doubt would have emerged fro1n any competition as the first choice. s • .. " . , • I 'Well, I see we're doing our part to speed up the meat shortage .. ' The Calley Tapes: P1·eeede1ats for Nixon's Sta11d A Bewildered Man Dear Gloon1y • ~us \\11\SHl :-iGTON -\Vhi!c the nation ;nraits the Supreme Court sho1vdown over the \Vhi fe llouse tapes. we have listened lo sotnc secret ta1>es which may present Prcsidl'n! Nixon wllh another ex· crucioting dilcn11na. These tapes tontain LL \\'illiam Calley 's lengthy, ag· oni:dng ps)'.chiatric intervl e1vs after he was accused of 1nass nuirder al lvly L(ti. Some psychiatrists h av c concluded fro1n 1hc intcrv11.•\\'S that he probably 11·:1s q.. ·'legull y i n s a n e" \\'hCn he led h1 ~ coin· pany nn lhc shooting spree. Other psychi<1trisls, \vhilc agreeing he had p1•rsona!ity problems. found "no evidence of 1nental disease. defect or derange- n1cnl." PRESIDENT NIXQN has promised personally lo review 1tie Calll"y case. Hi s f tnal decision \l'iJI have tremendous en10- lional impact. People around the 1vorld believe Calley \\1as a monste r who should be severely punished. But others feel he 11'as a madman whose irrational behavior .should not forever stain America's ft~hting men. Cal!cy looked upon himself as quite nor mal. exccpl for one ''irrational bclla\'ior happening." As he recounted the incident to psychiatrists, "I had all the troops in a !ruck. and !here \\•as no '"'arm feeling for the Vietna1ne.se people Hlllong the troops and me. I had nothing but disgllst. I had just. I \\'OO't sny highly hostile feeli ngs. to the point where I \vanted to wantonly shoot anybody or beat anybody up or anything like tha1. But I had no respect for then1 ... '"THE TRUCK came up to the village, :1 t \rhich time I \ven l into the store to get ;;.on1c candles. And there 1vas a bottle of Seagra1n's Seven there, \vh1 ch I picked Ufl and \\·alked out -just v•anlon theft. Of \\'hich Mama San ran oul -\Veil not the flola1na San. she \Vas a )'Oung girl - r;u1 out ... 1 told the guard, Lhe truck <lrlver to go on .• .. I just thouglilihat \\'as an extren1ely irrotional beha\?ror. It seems to me I did pay for the candles ... I came back and I gave the booze to my troops. And I said, 'Joe, check it out for glass.' I don't Chink I'd personally drink it. I had no desire in drinking the booze because I v.•as afraid of it because it was on the market. "1lJEY DIDN'T drink it (either ) ... The MPs and I gave it back to the girl. It was a matter of why I actually did that, for which I had no excuse." Calley v.•ent on to describe his frustra· lion over the diffi culty of identifying the enen1y in Vietnam. He confessed grief over the loss of men, anger at the war and constant fear. He tried to explain his feelings: "I think the moral issues of the ·war -the question of when is a war right , when is a war good, when is killing right, when is it wrong and actually \\'hen is, what are \'IC fighting-we shouldn't be there. ''ARE WE !ighting the Reds, or a tribe <lf people. or a bunch of human beings because they're in that situation? Or are \\'e figh ting an ideological philosophy that bas been conjured in the minds of human beings?" ''What is your feeling about why ate ire fighting in Vietna1n?" Calley was asked. "\\fell ;" he replied. "everybody knows \\'e're there to stop communisn1. What is communism? Today. actually com· munism is not an animate object. It's a philosophy in !he minds of men. So how can you go into an armed conf lic t and say we're going to save these people fro1n lcon1munisml. \'ou've got armed combat troo ps in there to do a job, troops tha t 1vere designed to figh t a hostile enemy ... \Ve're not going to change your \Vay of thinking. We're going to take ~·our posilion and then endanger yo ur 11•ay of life." AT ,\!\' I.A l. Calley felt he was merely tarryi ng out orders to shoot everyone re· n1ainlng in I.he area. because they had becu identified as !be enemy. He was Understand that folks from Love Animals. Don't Eat Them are head· ing north. Maybe their first stop could be Tustin to say hello to Police Chief J. J . Kelley. S.A.f. Gloomy Gu1 c:om"'em. ire 1u11mirtH by re1d1'1'1 Ind do no! ~esurilr rell«I ti!• ¥i1wi ol the neww1per, Send rour P111 oe1v1 to Gloom¥ Gu1, D•ily Pilot. "hyper'' or "psyched up," bu t he felt be \vas in full control or his faculties. Afterward, he \Vas stunned over the rnurder charges brought against him. "I \1·as pulled into the Adjutant, no. I mean the Attorney GeneraJls office,'' said Calley. "And he said we've got a, we 're conduct ing an investigation about the ~1y Lai problem. "And I said great. And I was happy. Not because it had entered my mind that I had done anything wrong. I thought somebody finally was going to come and ask me my advice on the war. And .I had built up so much stuff inside me ... "BUT TIIEN in the next breath, he told me 'at whi ch time you will probably be charged v.·ith murder. Do you want an at- torney?' And I said, 'Gee, I thought you wanted to know something about a com· bat operation. \Vha t do you mean you're going to charge me wit h murdei:?' He said. '\Veil , we're carrying' on an· in- vestigation . . . There was something wrong there.' '; "\\'hat is it," a psychiatrist asked Calley. "that you have actually been charged with as far as you know today?'' "One hundred and two ca ses of premeditated murder," he replied. "And against whom?" "Oriental people of mixed ages and races." THE ACCUSATION, he said , "suddenly presented me at this stage of my life with a cross few men have to bear in life. Now, people don 't talk about the My Lai massacre, they call it the Calley massacre. All of a sudden, f have no\v become the personification of evil and h<lrror, and everywhere I go, I must face these attitudes of people ... It is dif· ficult and hard to understand why it should have happened to me, and l sin· gled out." P lanes Rob !rave l of Its Mystique l 'he only good thing you can say at.tut an nirplanc is that it's-fjl SI. That is. if ll gets off on time an.d lanas on lime. Tin1e is t~c .. onjy thing that a!r t~:ivet is about. · But travel. pi'<ipoily >conik!i!\"~a, 'OURhf lo be abotit rnorc than time. \V e are . already bc1noaning the lo~ or trains in the U.S. NO\\' it looks as if ships arc go· 1ng to go the \vay or lr:.iins. And !h;ct 'vould be another ir· rl·parable loss tn lrnvt•I experience. A good friend nf Jnine went. en a two- \\•cek Caribbean cruise !hi!' sp ring. tt was h1·r first time on a large ship. and she '-J td It \\'RS the best trip she had ever had 111 ht1r life. No doubt part of this was bc.-c·u11sc she went without her husband , bul ship-life itself must take a lot of the: rr1'11i1 1'11l:R.E IS·11 "'ooderful mystique ubout ll !!Up that is unrivaled by any other fonn of t(ansportallon. JI ls a sclf·C<lll· Uunccl unJ t ln a very special way, and it . . • f ~ take a plane there and unwind on a ship SYDN coming back. But most people begrudge EY J. HAR.llIS the time, and pretty soon lh'lj"e won't be ~ ~ • , r . , • ~-ship . to ~ake back. Which is not only a . ... · a c ...,, -.• • 1tytfroqJ,.,.tbe,poJm.....t,.'VleW•ot..relaxingj offi:>rs a rcgre~sion from reality that can but also because i.t's one of the bigg~st be ht•nling to th e bruised soul. A century ~flrgalns you can find ar:1Ywhere. Try bv· ago, ''a sea trip " 11·as often the best 1ng in a good hotel for !1~ days on what 111edication ;i doctor could offe r to 8<lme it costs for the same service on a ship. 1ir his p<1tients. But it's going fa st Trons·Allantic crossings g(·t scn rccr Pvery year; more and niorc of th (' big, glorious ships arc being taken off the long runs. 11>cy arc desperately lryin~ to make money on shor~ crui se$, but a large ship is in- credJ bly expensive to maintain and run properly. IT 1VQUtD BE a tragedy if \v~ cnme to rely exclusively on air lravel for transportation. The tra\J1 had ll S own n1 y,stlque -tra\1ellng to New York on the ''20th Century" "'as fl delight no airplane can rival . 'rhe big new· planes: with all their gloss, are just skyborne buses, with aboul as rnuch personality as a steam shovel. The ideal wa y to go to Europe Is 10 WE ARE ali-eadl' sorry that we have Jet our railroad system go to hell. Some of the routes they served simply will nQt be replaced by alrllncs, 'and m a n y American communities are more cut of! tOday than they were 50 years ago. We will be just as sorry if we pbandon the sea·Jines, not only for the pleasure we wi ll have lost, but b eca u se It's 1.'Corlomically wrong to give any one form of lransportatlon a stranglehold. Americans: arc slaves to their cars, because public transit has b een shamefully neglected. We will soon be slaves to our airplanes, when the last great ship retires from the seas. I can't believe that any form or slavery is beneficial, no matt.er bow much time may be saved. · • Presidents and the Courts To the Editor: sho.u!d pr:esident Nixoilignore a court order to obey the su bpoena of the Senate's Selec t lnvcstigalive Con1mittcc, he \\'iii act in accordance with 11'ell established precedents. The courts have no power to enforce their decisions. T·he Executive branch of our govern1nent alone has this duty. Tbe doclrin e of separat ion of powers rests on the Constitu ti<lnal provision that establishes the leg islative, judicial and executive branches of our government co-equal. Each is independent of the others. Each branch is sole judge of its own affairs. THE SYSTEM of checks and balances was adopted because the members of the Constitutional Convention opposed a strong centralized government. The plan was for Congress to legislate, the judiciary to interpret. and the executive to enforce the Jaws and legal decisions. The system has worked smoothly with complacent presidents. Sttong presidents have acted much as they pleased. There has been only one direct C<lO· frontation with Congress by any presi· dent. until President Nixon's refusal to surrender certain tapes and documents to the Senatorial committee. That oc· curred 'vhen Andre\v Johnson deliberate- ly and openly violated the Tenure of Of· fice law, which had been pa ssed over his veto. To act contrary lo a statute is a crime. He was impeached, and escaped conviction by one vote: but that vic tory sus tained Johnson's right to act contrary to law. Other confrontations have been compromised before the y reached the direct C<lnfrontation stage. THE RECORD of presidents ignoring the orders of the court s. even of the Supreme Court is different Thomas Jef· ferson, as president, refused to surrender certain documents to the judiciary when ordered to do se>· by Chief Jusllce !vlarshall. Marshall had .even a worse af- front when Jackson, then president said. "John Marshall ha s made his decision: now let him enforce it." During the Civil War Lincoln suspended the wri t of habeas corpus, and made arbritary ar· rests. The Supreme Cou rt. under Chief Justice Taney ordered the release of those arrested. Lincoln did not argue : he ignored the decisions. All the judges could do was fuss and fume . As presi· dent, Lincoln bad command of the armed forces and the law enforcement branch of governm ent. · Should the occasi<ln arise that the Judicial system would order Presi dent Nixon to comply with the Select Com· mi~tee's subpoena, he would act, should he refuse, in accordance with the best precedents, set by both RcpubJi~an and Oemocraic presidents . ROBERT O'BRIAN iJ1it...1CS. 'You need exercise. Why not go to jail for a month?' (._ __ MA_I_LB_o_x_ ....... )- Lette rs fro11~ readers are welcome. Nonnally writers should convey their ntessages in 300 words or less. The r ir;ht to condense letters tJ:> fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All letters must include sigl"i.ature and 1nailing address, but names may be u:itlllield on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry wiU ttot b publi.~/ied. Lag11111fic atlon To the EditOr: + Tentatively, I've named it the Society for th e Lagunification of Social lssues, aod from even thi s stab at a title it's obvious that SLSI ("Slopsy?") has a real function in this town and along this sho re. Furthermore .. the Society is already functioning. if not in being. For years Frank and Phil Interlandi have been engaged in the lagunification of social issues. So have Ed Nofziger, Den· nis Madi.son, Jim Dilley,, Tommie Gtmn (now gone, alas\, and a great many others -none natorious for keeping their light under a barrel. TIIE ESSENCE of the thrust by members of the Society is their wit. It helps, too, that they in oo wise "represent'' the town. Quite the con- trary. They are a reaction to the prevail- ing intellectual inertia of the town . For example, the town believes that if the President did it -as 71 percent of Americans outside Laguna think.--then it's our patriotic duty to keep quiet about it, to denounce the people who ta1k about it. to clobber the media for blowing it up, etc. It is through this mass of bulldozed earth that the Slopsy raise their shining heads . The Slopsy are feared and resented at home, or conrse -but who could expect the lu1np of earth to un- derstand tbe flowers It supports? ALL I can say is that Slopsy ought now to pull itseU together in a formal society. There's c·ollective work to be done, movies to produce, TV to be reformed, ideas to be handJed and handed out. These larger tasks are, cooperative by definition; laguniJled, they repr,esent the shimmer side of America, not the dull. If political, the rapier would typically thrust' at Nixon -not as crook and op- pressor but as dullard. U concerned with moneymen the butt would be the despoiler -not to shake a biblical finger al the greedy but to ptUlcture lhe porn· pous bubble .... Arc you with me? DAVID A. MUNj\0 To the Editor: I would like to conunenl on the Pilot headline, July 23rd issue, "Laguna Chokes on Horrible Traf~lc. '' I am ~orry-you did not tell mere ab9\1t the del ay in alleviating Laguria's horrible traffic con· Quotes Eldlne Eger, Mountain View, on new moral standards -"Outside, I don't care wha t people aro doing. but with U kids I have to have some stand ards set In my home." Jan Va.n Hou ten, rettrlng Netherland& Consul Gener1d, S.F.-1·t rnay be an old .r.uarc In many ways. btll I Jov~ to hear the views of the .young. Wherever we lived Ol,Jr houS< has always been !illed with young pe<)ple." dl!io.!:t~ hai visito.rs and_ n~\'com~s la_ this area perhaps do not know about. Permit me to tell the story \\·hy \l'e \\'ill get no relief for many year!: ... Laguna is destined lo strangle. \\fHEN THE State High\vay Depart· menl informed the coaslal cities that it would be necessary to build a Pacific Coast free way, practica.lly every Laguna organization and citizen became angered at the thought of bisecting our city with a free\\:ay. It y.•as a ·1ong drawn battle, but with the help, at that time , of our Orange County Supervisor Alton Allen , and the late ~layor Bill J\1artin. \''e finally got the state to agree to build the free\\·ay behind U>e Laguna hills, ay.•ay from the city. Amen. A victory was won . Oh yeah" "" 1n January. 1972. a top state official ~d the city council that, "anti·frccw:i.v timent, plus financin g difficulties h ve delayed construction of the free\\·ay ~~til at least in the 1980s ..• and while !1>t state would like to see the freeway bu1ll at an earlier date. there seems to be more pressing needs and desires elsewhere in the state." THE LAGUNA Chamber of Commerce sent a strong letter in supJXlrt of the coastal freeway to the city council, the Orange County Board of Supervisors. and the State Division of Highways. stating the proposed free\vay is critical tor the orderly development of the entire south coast, including Laguna Beach. Jn reeent month s. six prominent Laguna Beach civic organizations have voiced opposition to the freeway, saying that lt should not be built at all. As reported in the news. the groups included Village Laguna, Laguna Civ ic League, Community Historical Society, Laguna Greenbelt. Inc .. Citizens' Town Planning Assn.,1and Pro-environment People. PUBLIC opinion now is that the recent actions of our city hall officials indicate they too are in accord with the obstruc· tionlsts. Therefore, it appears there is no hope for relief . . . the State has aban· dooed the Pacific Coast project ... and Laguna \'Viii continue to "choke on the horrible traffic." THERESA YALE EAGLES President, Laguna FACT'S Bicycle Uo%arcf To lhe Editor : Regarding your editorial on cars and bikes, if S<lmething isn't done to make bicycle riders stop at stop signs there will be lots more accidents. Most of. them don't prelend to stop: they just'shoot right through in front or you. HARRY HAMMOND • OllAHGI COAST ,194IWIQl-·- Robert N. Weed, PubUsher Thomas Kctvll, Edit.or Barbara Kreibich ~<Utorial Paga Edit.or The tdilorial .page of 1he Daily Pilot 'sttks to lnfonn and tUmuta1e · rca.d~n . by Pmt'tlting on tills pn,ge dl~cemmmtlli'y' on-toptC!H>( In. tet111t thy '11)/ndlca.ted colWT1nlrt1 •nd cartoonlalt, by pravl.dll'IJt t forum for readers' vltwt: and by prt1mtinr this ncwapaper'• oplnion9 and idclll on current topic8. The «HlOtl&l opinkms of the Daily Pilot llppcar only in ih& edltor!Al column at 1hc 1op of the pflle. Opinions expresstd by the &l· umnista and c.cin:oonists and letltt writn ltt their own ind no endorst- ment of !'!fir vlcwt by the Da.il,y Pl.lot s1louJd be tnfflnd. Friday, August 3, 1973 , ' UPI Tttephttt IN THE DOUGH Paul McNabb, 30, has won $1 million in Maryland lottery. He plans to retire as nighl manager of Baltimore area doughnut shop and travel. President · Of Natio11 Th umber From Wire Services President Jose Flgueres Costa Rica thumbed a ride to town with a passing woman motorist. the newspaper 4'-Hora reports. The paper said t h a t Figueres had an appointment at the People's Bank and didn't have a car at his home four miles from downtown San Jose. ''In an action so charac· teriSlic of him." the president walked lo the highway to wait for a bus, the paper said. Thi.bus dian'I come aOO tne -- time for his appointment w~s gelling near. so Figueres ( PEOPLE started thumbing. Sever a I drivers passed him up. Then the woman recognized him and took him to San Jose. * Danctrs of the Broadway show ''Irene," starring Debbie Reynolds, said they wouJd strike unless the stage noor is made more ne.xible. "Dancers can't dance on a super rigid noor,'" sa id a spokesman for Actor's Equity. "There have been back prob- lems, shoulder problems and leg problems. Some or the kids have had to seek medical help and chiropractic help." * Sen. Ge0rge l\1oscone (D·San Francisco) says he is running for governor of California but delaying a r o r ma l an- nouncement to take advantage of the curiosity o( newsmen. When a reporter asked Moscone at a news conference \Yhy no announcement has been made, the Democrat replied, "Frankly, I am leery or losing the benefits ol media available to me before a ronnal declaration." But. added Moscone, "1 am unequivocally a candidate for governor." ---* -President Nikolai V. Podgomy. of the Soviet Union received from A m e r i c a n Embassy officials in Moscow a small rock sample from the moon. The rock, about half the size or a baseball, had been brought back from the 1JOOO's Taurus Littrow Valley by Apollo 17 astronauts. It was presented as a gift from President Nixon. * lt was a long time between Fl Phantom jet nights (or Lt. Cmdr. David W. Hoffman - 19 months and two days, to be exac~. Hoffman's last night ended \vhen his fighte r was · shot down over North Vietnam Dec. 30, 1971 . This week he __._._......._ ..... ~s~w~ -!.he_rgst.J.onn·er._~~.Y>'. priooner lifl!la/i'tlt'll9 gnl!f."" "That's got to be the most fantastic reeling in the world," the 32--year-0ld officer said after his hour-long night rrorn Miramar Naval Air StaUon at· San Diego. * Ellsworth Bunker, 7 9 , veteraitJl!Plomal who presided over U.S. nalvi{les iff11atgon during the height ol the Viet· nnm war, was nominated by President Nixon to be an am· bassador at large . Nixon also nom lnated Bunker's wife, Carol C. Lalsc, to be ahlstant secretary or state ror public affairs, a post· tlon th;t has be n vacant since 1971. Ml.ss Lai1e1 who re- tains her maiden nam e, formerly was U , S • am· bassador lo Nepal. •• • • ' Reg. 29.88 1988 Now ...... . SEAGRASS Yc:iUR FLOORS. Seagr;iss floor- covering. By the squJre or by the bale! Cover the den,. the bedroom, the \VJlls. Cover thPni ,ill \vith CJSUJI fl ,1ir! 32( Squ;ires.--•. ·-.. ·--•·•A .~,_._.,., __ _ ORIENT YOUR DREAMS. Bedspreads,from India. In Far eastern colors. 100% cotton •.. Hand-loomed and printed. 72 x 108 and 90x108. See them at 4" .,,, Pier1,today .•......... .' •I --· ---------- Mill fresh pepper and salt • Now a mill to grind salt • Paired wi1h a pepper mill •Already filled and seated Compact mills grind out natural spice flavor. One's fi lled with whole black peppercorns_. the other with -pure salt c.rys lals froin the sea._ Non-b reakable !or cookouts. Dressy enough tor table use. Pi ck up !his spi cy duet at Pier 1 today! from Ital y. 3Yi"x2\I•". 2" ., ·--.... ROLl OUT A RICE LEAF RUG. Tatami mals, hand-woven from rice leaves in Japan. 3'x6'. Natural, bound with black. Or col· ored! Peacock, purple, 1 ••.2H gold, orange or khaki ..• FLATIER YOUR FLOORS. Numdah prayer rugs in rich Oriental colors. Interesting designs, woven in India. 50°/o wool, 50'Yo cotton. 2' x 3', 2' x 4'r 4' x 6'. •••.••.•••. _.,. ,. 35010 • ,.,., HAMMOCK THE GOOD LIFE.,.Treat your· .self to a ~\ving1ng_ snooze! St retch out in a hanimock for a laLy summer. ll 's T feet long. lslJnd-gro\\'n i1o:tle, cro~s-14,, woVen in1o multicolored plaid. BURN A TALL O RIENTAL FRAGRANCE. Daigi!nko incense· from japan. Eaeh -stick releaseS an exotic Eastern scent. Liven your senses with - sandalwood. 9v.~ tali. .....•....•. 19C ;:---..::..:_::...~~~~~~~~---1 TASTE RICH EUROPEAN COFFEE (Decaffeinated -yet gourmet) The impossible dream : A connoisseurs' 1:offec with only 2 milligrams of caffei ne in a cup! t:alma coffee tastes soft, · never tlitter. Imported from West Germanw-, Ground, instant, single servi,,g packe1s. Savor a rich Euro pean brew! 1 lb. on 1 .50 Fon pak. l 9c ·1ns.tant 1.25 • Of OUR NEW BOUTIQUE • Friday, Auqust 3, 1973 Easy on your body. Earthy standouts. Cool tops of natural fibers. Sheer and savory. Young European mood of the minute. Hand-crafting weaves intricate embroidery. Bright, bright colors. White, white embroidery. Swi ng about! Enchant- ingly inexpensive. Sizes 6-14. J99 Regular 5.45 NOW ea. Tenl•llzing tops. Crinkle cotton (in Europe they call it cheese cloth). High· lighted by rich em· broidery. • Pleasure unconfined. Smock of lash· ion crinkles. Embroidery bold and brilliant. Regular 9.95 NOW 699 Ft11h a nowery·top. From India: a covey of peasant tops. lnlricate handi-work from begin· ning lo end. Even the em· broidery. Crinkl e cotton. DAILY PILOT 1.. Bold and showy. Soft and APPAREL AVAILABLE -· dem~re. Th~y'i-e so inex· AT THESE STORES .~...,.-:ii...-~e!J.S~.Y2'.~~..2M. ~ ~«¥ .... .,.,.;..;_......_.._~~-~-'4 10 suit your every mOOO. J. . COSTA MESA Cor. Harbor and Aclamt 2710 HARBOR BLVD. 540-7337 I Sizes r,.1•. • ... oSTA MESA Regular 6.45 RegU1ar 8.75 Now 4 99 Now 5 99 • & LAGUNA BEACH SHOP MON.-SAT. 10-9, SUN. 10-6 509 E. lfATELLa AVE. ANAHEIM 772-2472 So• ltt1n1 •re •-t nolleble et llll ltom 1294 SO. COAST HWY. LAGUNA . BEACH 494 ~8101 ' CITY SHOPPING CENTER ORANGE 633-0995 • t r ·- • • ' I 8 DAILY PILOT • Friday, Au9u~t 3, )lj7J ' !<' ' ' ~ P.~c:.i.~~s.~~!?.;~~ For the Record Marriage Licetases • ID No Ti111ber Produ~tion Forest SAN DIEGO Th l' Cleveland f orest in Orangl• county \\'Ould not ht· aflectt_-d by a U S. Forest St'rv1ce budget proposal to boost timber production this year, "'hile reducing rundlng levels Another Election Scheduled for re-crentional faciLities. 1'he service. acting on Whitt l~ouse budge\ rt'COCJ\- rnendalloo.~. ha s proposed fighting inflation in lumber and plywood prices by offering 11.8 bill ion bor1rd feet ol na- tional forest timber for sale this year. This effort to ease inflation, acrording to service so w-ces, could cause !he closing of sornc forest campgrounds, currently the biggest single recreation resource available to outdoor vacationers. However, a spokesman for the Cleveland National Forest, which C'O\'ers portions Of SANTA ANA -Orange ---------.... County's Community Action CoWlCil will hold a second countywide electi on Aug. 18. The first election, held July 7, was declared \'Oid af1er some council members ob- jected to the "·ay i!'\'i.·as handl- ed. Daniel O'Callaghan. direr· tor of the CAC, said objections included that there was not enough notice give n, voting secrecy 'vas lax and the voting direc1ions printed in both Spanish and English did not coincide. \.,..__, ORANGE COUNTY The Spanish di re c tlon s reportedly read to "vote !or two" while the English version '-----------" did not specify how many to vote for, O'callaghan said. Orange and San Diego Coun- ties. says there is currently no umber production going on In tne forest. ''The only timber <.'Uttlng we do at the forest ls to salvege diseased trees," information olfk:er Konrad Reinke said. The federal agency has also proposed reducing the recrea· tlonal budget by eli1nin nti ng play areas "'here maintenance fr~}r;.xcced admlssion cht.trgt! The recreational funding cutback proposal comes in the "'ake or an anticipa ted 5 to 10 percent nationwide increase in recreational usage. .. The California rtgion is not expecting any campground cloatngs al this Ume,'' Reinke said. Rtlnke said the proposed regional budget is expected to be the same as last year. Jn the past, campground ad- 1nission revenues w e n t directly to the Department ol Treasury, but Otis yea r there is a possibiliiy that these fw1ds \Viii be returned to the parks, Reinke noted, thus ad- ding additional fw)(fs to the budget. Traffic <il tho Cleveland Forest has not been as great as last year. Reinke said the traffic shortege may be clue to the gaJOllne llloriage. 1n the pest, he noted, camp grounds have always been full on weekends. This la not the case thh1 year, even on 'the July 4th weekend, he noted. The park official odded that if the traffic does not increase, nddiUonal personnel will not have to be added and currenl budget requirements coulr.l easily be met. Any final action on the Forest Service funds awaits Congressional action on the matter. El Toro Still Has Beef EL TORO -The Defense Department is having prob- lems buying enough beef to stock military nlarkels, but officials at El Toro and Canlp Pendleton ~1arlne bases say they haven't Decn hit by shortages. Pentagon officials have an· nounced that they have been able to find enough meat to feed troops who live on bases and rely on military mess halls. "\Ve are experiencing some local beef buyers and what difficulty in supplying beef for happens next wee k "depends resale to military families on ho\v much they can buy. throughout the mi Ii la r y \Ve just don't know." sy!>1em," added Air Force The future. he indicated, is l'.1aj. Gen. A. J. Dreiseszun, less than certai n. chief of the Defense Support The supennarket supply at Person n e I Center in Camp Pendleton in Northern Philadelphia. San Diego County also is suf- "We're looking pretty good ficient now , a Marine Corps this week," a representative official reported. at El Toro Marine Corps Air The base buys its meat Station said today. "There's loca lly -not through the no shortage at -present." department of defense -and PAYS 3 on deposits of $100,000 for six months to one yea r The number of.these accounts that we can accept is limited WE PAY COMPETITIVE INTEREST RATES ON ALL OTHER ACCOUNTS FOURTEEN OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN Arudia •Cerritos Lt Cr1fctnt1 •Qr1n;e Bell Gt1d1M •cost• Mew Los An11l11 IZ) · •sin Btrn1rdin1 •c1noi1 P1rt Downey {2} MonttttY P11k Whittler fiye Additional Otl ices in Northern C11ilar11i1 Pleas11t Hill San BruaD (01ui11 Soon) M11ntain View SJn Jost Other Deatlis O'Callaghan had some good news for the agency. It has just received a grant of r! $109,000 from the U nited 1 States Department of Labor to t train unskilled "''orkers ror ~ need('d jobs. H S C 'd The El Toro spokesman said isn't "experiencing a shortage earing et to ODSI er -.;;'h;:•;;;ba;:se~h;:as:;;:•;;;coo:;::•':;'c::t::•;:·it;:h;;::a::t ;:'w::·'::';;:m:;:e,;;'";;;he;;;';:':;;d::. ::::::::\\l;;::::::;:::;:::;~:::;:::;=:;::;:;:=::::::::;::::;::;:::;:, N S · Tiur1eruland ... noture1 Partner. for every blo.omin· thing® · Just a week ago. CAC got a $200.000 grant from tbe Office of Economic Opponunity to provide minority business ven· tures with starting capital. Adding a!lles to 111t - CARLSBAD (AP ) Frederick E. Bensoo. 60, a drummer W'ith the · Tommy Dorsey and Harry James bands in the late 1930s and early 19409. died Tuesday in a hoopital. Be'1Son also played with the Art Kassel band and we later a member of the San Diego to Union School Board for six years. MONROVIA ( A P ) Funeral services were planned today for Phil Bortells Sr., a leader in the Southern California food industry for 44 years. Bortells died Tuesday night at his home at 69. LOMA LINDA i API Natbanltl T. Colemao, 53. a soil and p13'lt nutrition expert, died Wednesday of a heart at- tack at Loma Linda Universi- ty Medical Center iwbere he had gone for immunization shots for a trip to Indonesia. Coleman was a member o[ the staff at UC Riverside. Death Notices CAC is financed abnost enrirely by federal funds. The board of directors is made up of poor people and represen- tatives of government agen- cies and rom.munity groups. SANTA ANA -A hea ring has been set to consider ad- ding to the List of defendants naoled in a class action lawsuit against firms which acquired Air California, the commuter line founded here nearly 10 years ago. The proceedings initiated by a major shareholder, San Francisco radiologist Dr. C1if· The representatives or the poor are elected each year. 1 ford E. Nelson, were set for * * * Deadliries Scheduled Aug . 6 beiore U.S. District Court Judge Charles B. Rcn- fro1v. Defendants to date are Air California itself. \Vestgate- California Corp .. and Pacific South"·est Airlines. SANTA ANA _ Persons in-The suit was filed last April terested in running for Com-in fede ral court by Dr. Nelson, munity Action Council {CAC) who owns 8,000 shares 0£ Air governing board in its Aug. 18 California, on behalf o £ election must file their him self and other minority nominating petitions by Aug. shareholders. 6. Last month he filed an The CAC board has 24 mem-amended complaint w hi ch hers. Eight are represen-.adds eight individ uals and an tatives or the poor. The accounting finn as defendants members are elected from and alleges additional viola- DordrcchL Dudley f . ti'iillcr, Phillip A. Toft, R.J. Sutter , C. Smith Shannon, Norm an Foster and Alexander Grant and Co., an accounting firm. The a m e n d e d complaint claims Westgate -California, h o I d e r of 81 percent of Air California stock , and five of its officials who were board members of the airline "acted and ronspired to violate the law and dissipate the assets of Air California to their ovln enrichment and bene!it or for that of \Vestgate. ·· The suit. in part. invol\'ed the recently terminated plan- ned sale of Air Californ ia to Pacific Southwest. The state Public Utililies Commission had approved the merger but this week rescinded its order after the acquisition plans were cancelled. Alvin F. Arrt~~!'.H'f1:J2" N•s••u Li ne, target community districts tions. Huntlr111ton e11en. 01111 o1 dO•th. August and must be nominated by 15 The suit alleges that the cor- Nelson's suit alleges that in 1971 Westgate caused Air California to issue stock to it at $5.66 a share at a cost of $2.5 million while the stock had a market value of $8 per share. It said this enab led \Vestgate to increase its con- trol from 59 lo 81 per cent and that minority shareholders had no chance to buy any of this cheaper stock. 1 1'73. Sut vl11ed bY '°'1So J1ek M. 11nd Fiovd A..,.1nqton1 dauq111or, Ann• J<> persons who live in th at porations And the individuals Nl'llOlll bn>!hlr. R•Y Arrlnofl:Wl1 Jl!Mrs. d' l · ,.,1r1 8 .. 1. ,,,.,. o. s1Mivo ..w;i Polly; is r1ct. .,..·iolated federal and state 11 ur1ncklllldren1 -grNt-9r•~nlfd. Petitions must be turned in security Jaws, antitrust laws s.n.1as. S1tun:l•Y· 2:lll PM, ,m FiinUy coion111 Fu-•I Horr-. at the CAC office at 1140 S. and breached their fiduciary urv• M. H¢<:~Hi~641• ot u>0 1"11 Bristol St., Santa Ana : the duty. A companion class ac------------ s1 .. Newport e11ell. 011• of°"'"· August S.O.S. office, 1015 Baker St., tion is on file in San Francisco I. 1973. survlvoel bY h1nb11'1d, Jonn r>~ L Hvtc_, th,... <11ug111w1, M•s. Jo11. ........sta Mesa ; San Ju an Superior Court. Kid ike To oeitln. M111 Jolrwt Hutcri-I nd, Mrs. · S 0 1,,.,. Tlltl'91'rowi ind t<>rr 1r•nckh1ldren. CaplStrano Cen t e r. 26891 Those whom Nelson seeks to Slrvlcu. S1!\lrdly, Auous .&, ll PM, S . S San J Ca . I d d f nd C PKlflc vi.w c1Mip0I. 1n1wment, Peelllc pr1ng t., uan pis ra-a d as e e ants are . = ~=~ :::. ~~~" .,::..t!~ no : and Coionia .Juarez, J().111 Arnholt Smith, head of conrr111vt1oM '° ""' Good Shll)hen:I Htltf'I Jndopend enc1·a F o u n ta ,. n \" t t Calli · •·•-rt ..,,. ""' Men1111y 1to11rdod, £1 Toro. · • ·TCS ga e -orrua, ~ Ask Andy westcutr Ch11~ Mor~rv. 646"'811&. Valley. \V. Clifford , Machiel P. Van OlrK!u<'I. JOHNSON ~;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;========;;;:;=~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;:;< Oorofl'lw piper JohnlOll of IXIG w, B11tio.1. Blvd N..-i:ior1 Be1ch. O..t. of oealh A1111~11 1, ltn. SUNl.....S by d•UUll!or Mrs. cnk Cl1rk• ind rnothor C•roll...e F. iilptr. GroVftlO. Ml"llCM 2 pm S.Jlurd1y 1t H1rcor ltnl MtmOrll1 P1rk. 811!1 e1r111ron Mort~1ri. Cost• M111, Olrec· !lnQ. JOUll'RT M1 rl1n G. JQUbort. Survlvl'd bV nusri1nd, Tom. o1 C<>ll• MOUi brotner, Evnene 1t1uldlort, 1ric111n11 ti•!«, Hl'l111 klrlt· min, ot R•mon•. SlrvlclS. Soturd1y, 11 AM, 1no1-aod Mortuarv G1rdo!i c111po1, 121Ni Cont1nel11, lnolewood. •714381. SKLfrlHlllt TMlm• E. Sk1nMf' of iU61 llr<>0~1\ur1t, Huntington 8011(:1\. O•to o!' dH1h Akl';IU!! I, \f73. Survl'1'<1 bV hu11111rwl J1me1 R. "' 1"9 llor'TM. 01119hlll' Judlf' N • GtJld111nol11: ..,., J1mt1 w. Sk nnff ol V1 · $1111'!". H"19<1 Ol!otl of Mlell.; 11.,;tt.r, HUQl'I IUch1rdson of Mkh.; Tn..e 11r1nck:ll!ldren. 5.rvlc•s Mond11v .1.uau11 ' •• l pm 111 Peelflc v11w c 111pel. lt11emi.nt P1elnc VI-~·• Pork P~lflc v1-MorluoN OlrlC!on. - ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa f\1esa 64841131 • BALTZ-BERGER0:-1 FUNERAL HO~!E Corona de.I f\Ja r 673-9f50 Costa Mesa 6t~!42f • BEU BROADWAY MORTUARY po Broa'l'.i~&!J;'ta M•i;;i. • OIIJ>AY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Bl,•d. llantlngton Beach 84%-1771 U4 Redoodo Ave. Long Beach %1~3.l-1145 , .•J.. ... ,._. - ~lcCORMICK LAQUNA 6EACll MORTUARY 1708 Laguna Canyon Rd. IH-1415 • PACIF1C VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemet.ery r.1ort11ary Cbapel · S5Clt Pacific View Drive Newport Be1ch, C.W.rala lff.170G • PEEK FA~IJLY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME 7181 BolM Ave. We1tmln1ter ns.JSts • SMl'nlS' MORTUARY ~.st. H~Beadl WE BUY BIRDS FISH & ANIMALS Give Us a Call See 11 JEREMIAH" the full grown MINIATURE HORSE •:;:~~;~; ::.:~ ON DISPLAY F0Rl.-SAT.-SUN. IN OUR STORE KAL KAN DOG FOOD SPECIALS! Ila c ... Loh Onlyl MPS 14 OL 31• JJlh oz. 43• CAN CAN STEW 14 oz. 29• JJllJ oz. 43• , .. CAN BEEF CHUNKS 2l''i oz. 47• CAN HORSE MEAT JlllJ oz. 47• '" ATTENTION BIRD BREEDERS DIATOM FILTER Fancy Finch Feed 3.69 1S l.8. RENTAL Parakeet Mix 3.45 !XM) U La. IBy The Dayl Canary Mix 5.29 IM•llttl U L1.~r, . .... _ ... This Week FISH SPECIAL • Dwarf FrocJs • Flonders ' For Your Cat FREE Kitt~n• \· ' .\'~ ~-.. PETROMALT ·-~ii~ f)lpples .. "<• I OL " - 50% OFF GROOMING Wit .. n1, FOR DOGS &CATS •• We Carry Uve and Frozen Brine Shrimp • Meal Worms • Red Worms • Feeder • Fish and Tublfex Worms ~NOAH'S l fur, feather and fin ' 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. • COSTA MESA ·-·:1 • I •EUREKA LEMON .• BEARRS LIME Your c/'loice of these two ou1- standing citrus specials. In I gallon containers 1.75 VALUE 87i BLOOMING • PERIWINKLE IMPATIENS Brilliant summer color tor borders or accent planting. In bud and bloom. Your choice of hybrid colors in 1 gallon containers 1.60 VALUE TUBEROUS BEGON.IAS Exotic semi·shade spec imens. Upright or basket. Plant now for brilliant summer color. In 4" pots. 1.60 VALUE 69~ TROPICAL SPECIALS •PHILODENDRON •SUN FERN •ARA LIA 1.75 VALUE 1 GALLON LANDSCAPE SPEC IA LSI SHADE TREE SPECIAL EUCALYPTUS POLYANTHEMUS Slender, erecl, tree. Creamy white flo wers in 1 Inch clusters. Spring and summer. Popular landscape and s1reet 1ree . Excellent tor flower ar1angemen1s. Ex!1a large in 5 gallon conlainers. 6.00 VALUE •WHITE OLEANDER • STAR FLOWER •INDIAN HAWTHORNE ~?>-•PAMPAS GRASS Dramatic accents end showy llo wers. Your choice al four 1avorite landscape i1ems 1.75 VALUES ~~~ 77;, "'-"'• "GREEN THUMB GUARANTEE" TUSTIN ANAHEIM 1 FULL YEARS GUARANTEE ON ALL ) GAL, A~pj.ARPE8 ._ NURSERY STOCK ... ONLY 10¢ COST PER 1.00 PURCHASE RElURN YOUR "'"· ''" PllSflC'""CONTlltltRS FOi CREDIT W[ ISSU£ 5c Cll[Dll R(fUND FOR [ACll R!US!ABll CONIAll'l(R RCTURN[O , , • I CAL OR lJJIC[R ••• NO O!POg1 NEC!SS>Rf .. 90,d~.[!ryJand MASTERCHARGE AND BANKAMERICARO IALE lNDI AUO. ITH OPEN 7"DAY8 A WEEK 8:30 'TIL1:30 . , ANAHEIM 1123 N EUCLID AT LA PALMA 635-8181 TUSTIN 1050' EDINGER AT NEWPORT-. 838 -9000 Pipeline Approved By House WASl!lNGTON (AP) E n v i r o n mentalists were defeated In another major ef· fort to block the Alaska oil pipeline as the House followed the Senate's lead and a~ proved building the 789-mlle system. The House Thursday voted 356 to 60 for the facility, despite the concern expressed Jacqueline On Spree ATI!ENS (UPI) -A bodyguard kept photographers at bay Thursday as Jacqueline Onassis made her annual shopplr.g toor through the city, purchasing ennloads of dresses, hats, and ban· di crafts. Mrs. Onassis, who is continually besieged by plx>tographcrs, was ac- : om pan i e d by her children, John, 12, and Caroline, 16. on the floor In nearly 10 hours '---------~ (IN SHORT ... ) of debate overoil spills both on land and in coastal waters. But, principal backers of the pipeline say major disagreements between both houses stlllstahd in the way of final passage. "I don't look for a long drawn out conterence, but there are important dif- ferences," Rep. John Melcher (0-Moot.), said alter the House vote. e Special Vnlt WASHING TON (UPI I -A national lawyer's organization has created a special com- mit.tee to coordinate disclpllnary p ro c e e ding s against attorneys stemming from the current Watergate investigations. The special group was form· ed Thursday by the National Organization Of Bar Counsel, which is the only national association whose membership consists or lawyers engaged in disciplinary activities In state and local bar aMOCia.tons. It was rounded in 1964. e P11t in Cells LEAVENWORTI!, K a n . (UPI) -Fifteen inmates suspected of violence in rioting this week in which an wiarm- ed guard was stabbed to death were in segregated cells ~ day. "Some or them assaulted or- ricers, but we don'.t have anybody specifically ror the killing," warden Loren Dag- gett said Thursday. "We've decided they had some part in some incident•." e Veto 01'errlde WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate Thursday overrode President Nixon's veto of a bill to spend $JBS million to help states develop better emergency medical servic:es. The House will consider over- riding the veto when It returns in September from a month's vacation. The bill would set up demonstraUon p r o j e c I s in- cluding improved hosp i I a I emergency rooms , am- bulances and comnwnication betu·een hospitals and am- bulances. It ~·ould train doc- tors, nurses and paramedics and would finance research on emergency medicine. e 'Old 1'fea1111' CJUCAGO (UPI) -AFL- CIO Presldent George Meany, increMingly unhappy wllh the Nlxoo. administration a n d Watergate disclosures, says he will break with tradition and not invite the President or his top lleutenants to the labor federation's convention in October. The 78-year-old Meany also said If there's a dedication ceremony or a new addition in the AFlrCIO headquarters in WashJngton a block away from the White llouse, he won't in- vite Nixon to that. Getty's Mother 'Hurting' ROME (UPI) -The price kidnapers set for the return of J. Paul Getty 111, a lawyer for his mother said, was $16.7 million. But he said she cannot pay it. Attom~y Giovanni Jacovoni told newsrrien Thursday that the alleged kidnapers of the 1 7 -y ea r-o Id namesake grandson or oil billionaire J. Paul Getty have demanded that sum for his safe return. But he said Mrs. Gail Getty, the divorced wife 0£ Getty's .son, was "desperate" because she could not raise that amount unless the billionaire helsp. He said last week he would not. Mn. Getty made a counter offer, Jacovoni said, but the alleged kidnapers turned, it down as too little. Family sources said l\trs. Getty and the youth's father "spoke of" paying $42$,000. The youth, known to Romans as "the golden hip- pie." disappeared July 10. He had been staying at friends ' home1, modeling and acting in an underground movie. The police said earlier they were not completely convinced he was kidnapcd, but did not explain why. "Gall is desperat e.·· ' lacovoni said. "The senior Getty does not want to pay a cent and she can count only on her liquid assets and on thoic of her former husband. The lawyer said the ransotn demand came last week. 27 Injured In Prison EL RENO, Okla. (AP• TY.'enty-seven inmates al the fedcra·l refonnatory here have been injured in y.·hat prison of- ficials term a "major race riot." Acting Executive Assistant Warden \Vjlbur Gardner said all but one of the inmates were treated at the prison hospital after the disturbance Thursday evening. He said one man received eight superficial knife woW1ds and was ad- mitted to a hospital in El Reno. Gardner said there had been racial problems at the prison "the better part of the sum-mer,,. He said prison officials had received indications that there might be trouble prior to yesterday's fighting. "Things were a little bit tense. \Ve were prepared for this one," he said. TAKATA ' . -.. .. NURSERY " ~t-%--OFF SA l E ALL PLANTS SATURDAY, SUNDAY AUOUS~~th 1.-Sth 710 IAlll ITltm • IN•a' Se. Coa1t Pl111) 0.1 ..... .1.tltlmt C.. .. M ... 546-4724 -. • Era· Ends, Brothel Closes • LA GRANGE, Tex. (AP)-At 1 p.m . Thursday, the normal opening time at Texas' oldest brothel, the rambling green and white !rarne house $at si· lent, baking in lhe sun. All the doors of Edna's Fashionable Ranch .ioardlng House had "Closed" signs on them. The window air·conditiortthg units were-still. Th usually busy parking area was empty. GOV. DOLPH BRISCOE ordered the house closed. Sherill's Deputy Walter Chernosky, 38, blamed a Houston television reporter who went to Briscoe last week with a claim that the house was linked to organized crime. "One man stirring up a bunch of stink," Cher- nosky said. "He should ·of cleaned up his own to wn ." Residents of this nearby town voiced different opinions of the closure. "\Ve're all too old to know about that/' one elderly domino player at the Part Time Club said with a laugh . BEHIND THE BAR, Gladys Hoffman. married and the tnother of three, J>au~ecl a long thne be- fore answering. "It never bothered me. 1 think they should have left it open." County Atty. Dan Beck, 38, said: "l suppose for consistency in enforcing the law it wa s a good thing.u • Bonner McMillon, publisher of the Fayette County Record, said,. HI was tickled to death, just like the majorit~ of the people in town." Briscoe said the house is per1nanently closed and that resolves the problen1. Asked why the oper- ation should be closed when it scen1ed to have lo- cal support and was not linked lo organized crime, Briscoe said: "The laws of the stale must be equal- ly and fairly enforced, period." Frldil}', A11gust 3, 197) DAILY PILOT 9 Harbor DENTAL CENTER DENTURES e . CREDIT e PENTDTHAL We t•«t.1111• In ""'•°"•' ltftlurtt", 1!•••¥"'"" Clft lie ftlll wtlll• YMI '"l 11lttP. P•rtlc~l•r •rt.,.llOft h fllVln to crew" & llfWI• w.rtr. Wt lfM lne fttW por< .. .,n lllkloll It told lft l•cktl• & ., ...... P1'C .. ._... I• •G•IMCt. AU ""''°"'"' ..... l<m Ind !NflOflll ll'l~vrll'll:• .,. 1"lcotnt. FILLINGS • EXTRACTIONS • IRIDGI WOIK x.u.ys • DENTURIS, REPAIRS • JACKm PINTOTHAL • ROOT CANALS , CROWNS • WISDOM TErTH & MINOR OHHO'ISoNnA DR. A. FREDERICK SALTZMAN 2706 HARBOR BLVD-COSTA MESA ot Adofftl St. • Next to Plet' 1 Phone 556-8013 KOCE, CllANNEL SO Orange County's UHF television station, KOCE-TV, has scheduled the following special programs today. Detailed listings of Channel 50'.c;; programs arc carried in the Dally Pilot's TV \Veek each Sunday. IN STOCK NOW FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Luxurious chaise I au n gt in fine. quality fabrics and vinyls. A wid e choice of covers in many exciting colors. WHILE TliEY L~ST .. ' , r '• ' 95 • -"" I ..... l \ f Q .DAILY PILOT f'rlda~. August J, 1973 / QUEENIE ~ L. !fl . B&yd Sonja 'Sold' Rockiest Reprieve R eviewed By Phil lnterlandi Carmakers Back Seat Belt Laws ~- ,. , • "·' , • , ••• " .. .. . .. . " . ' ' ' • • .. ~ .- .. . . . ~~. r . ' . • -.. -. ' • • • Sl1o rt Skirts Again the query arises as to who introduced the ladies' short short s kirt. Most credit that fancy dancing doll Ruby Keel tr, \\'ife of the renowned Al Jolson. Possibly so. Who popularized ii, though, was the original feminine figure skater Sonja Henie, no doubt about that. Wasn't until after she jumped forth somewhat barely that girls worldwide seriously took up lhose .. sports which allo\\•ed them to wear the abbreviated costumes. Geography I : .. , Pennsylvania is that state v.·ith the most covered bridges. Then comes Oh.io, Indiana, Oregon nnd Vermont ... Almost but not quite a fifth of all the river water in the world runs down Sooth America's Amazon ... When sitting on the floor in Laos, be careful your feet don't point at somebody's head. That's bad manners there ... Iceland's average January temperature is 35 degrees F .. New York's is 30 degrees F .. _ The men who jumP._..PU-San Francisco's Gt>lde~~eoar-number--Uie \vomen who do so by three to one. QUERIES Q. "\Vhat are the grounds for divorce in Spain?" A. Same as in Ireland, Brazil and Chile. Aren't any. Q. "Look, old boy, did I see you refer to the place as Cape Canaveral? Where were yoo when it was changed to Cape Kennedy?" A. Cape KeMedy is the missile center, sir. The city is still Cape Canaveral Q. "What president had the biggest feet?" A. Don't kno\v, don't know. It has been reported from time to time that Abe Lincoln. wore size 148 shoes. 1bat v.•ould appear to give him the big-feet championship, if true. However, some experts insist that 148 sizes was the result of a different numbering system. Abe 's shoes were mOl'e nearly llB by today's standards, they ~y. HOT WEATHER SO you thought southern girls tended to mature earlier than northern girls, did you? Likewise. But that, too, is an erroneous notion. Hot weather retards puberty. Retards conception, also. Or so a man of scienCe reports. He says the rate of summer conceptions is highest in Maine, lowest in Florida That law of the Netherlands which prohibited anybody under the age of 30 from marrying without parental con- sent bas been changed, I'm told. It 's age 21 now. Add-ress n1ail to JJ, ftl. Boyd. P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Student Honored A Newport Beach junior has been placed on the honor roll at Colorado School or l\tincs in Golden, Colo. Thomas L. Tjossem, ..,')On or l\1r. and Mrs. \V. \V. Tjossem of 2927 Carob S1 reel. \Vas honored for his achievcn1cnl during the spring semester. .. WATKINS GLEN. N. V . (AP) -Local h1wmakers are \YASIDNGTON (AP) -The preparing a JlO-day ban on n a I ion 's three mt1jor large musical concerts In automakers have endorsed Schuyler Cotu1ty. '· lnws requiring motorists to The measure is designed to fasten seat belts or face rines. head off a repeat of last Ford and Chrysler endorsed weekend's n1assive "Summer the mandatory "buckle-up" laws as more effective than Jani" rockfcst, attended by government proposals to drop some 600.000 persons. seat belts in cars in ravor of automatically operated crash TICE COUNTY legislature protection devices. 1'he bes t voted unanimously Wednesday known such device is the ai r nighl to have Dist. Atty. bag. \Villiam G. Ruger draw up a GENERAL l\1()T()RS, which moratorium bill. The lcgisla-has initiated-an advertisin g tion would prohibit for the 8-3 campaign on be half or the seat next four mon ths the holding l"'.".::---:----,,.o-"°'_. -'-----""'-'---·.'·.'·.'."-'.".°""-"';.·_·-----"'_, belt la\\'S. announced it \\'ill of any concert that might at-procec!d with delayed p\arn to "I can always tell when there's a crisis brew1·ng. vou ,·ntrodu-ao·r bags as an option tract nlOre than 5,000 ru>rsons. l ...... r-start lighting your jelly beans... for the se<.'Ond half or the 1974. --The-concert-held -Saturda-y GM's plans had b een at the Grand Prix race track delayed by a t'Otlrt battle over drew an estimated 120 times specifications for a test dum- that nu1n ber who tied up traf·l------------------------m--'-y._T_he __ b_ags=--_co_st_in..:g:.....$2_00_ fie in the Finger Lakes area for three days and left tons of refuse on hi ghways a n d residential property. LEGISLATURE Chairman Rexford Richards commented, "The moratoriu m, which I aµi: sure the legislature will adopt, \Vill give us time to have a special committee of officials and town~"J>Cople explore the v.·hole ques1ion.'· The pron1oters of "Summer J am" have said they \\.'OU.Id like to hold another concert at the track Sept. 15, this time holding the crowd to 200,000 or fewer. Bl!I' TIIE WATKINS Glen Grand Prix Co rp., owners o£ the circuit, said it would not consent to any more concerts at the track this year. each now will be available on Cadillacs, Bu I c k Electrns. Rivieras, Oldsmobile 98s and Toronados. At the same time, GM asked that the Aug. 15, 1975 date for mandatory air bag instaUation be delayed until researchers can compare various restraints. OFFICIALS OF the National llighway Transportation Safe- ty Administration said at a Senate Commerce Committee hearing, at which th e automaker also testified, that the agency is actively lobbying in the states considering nlan· datory seat belt laws. Spurred by a report or a 20 percent reduction in trarfic fatalities in Australia after mandatory buckle-up J a. w_s went into effect, advocates in this country have introduced similar legislation in 21 states. · In a related action. Ric~ards said the county would submit a $6,000 bill lo fhe track for the cost of its cleanup and repair of county property . WINEMEN'S CELLARS of NEWPORT BEACH THE PLACE TO SHOP FOR PREMIUM WINES & SPECIALTY DELICATESSEN FOODS FROM OUR UNIQUE WINE DEPARTMENT: LOOKING FOR A 1970 BORDEAUX ... ? TRY WINEMEN'S CELLARS NOW! OUR FIRST SH IPMENT HA S JUST ARR IVED. Winemen·s,, Regular Sale Price Per Boule Winemen·~ introductory Sale Price Per Bo1tle 4.9S 1970 BORDEAUX -INTRODUCTORY SA LE Chaleau Pipeau {St. Emilion Grand Cru) A 1970 graduate of Corona del lt1ar High School. Tjossc1n has been awarded a Sl.000 tui- tion scholarship for his senior year · in the school 's Depart- ment of Mining Engineering. the Treasury ORY CLEANING Ch11eau Tronquoy -Lalande (St. Eslcphe -Cru Bouraeouis) Ch1teau Lamarlre (SI. Emilion -Grand Cru) Chateau Brane Ca ntenac (Mar11aux -2nd Growth) Winnnrn·~ lntroduciory Sale Price Pn Ca>< $5 3.46 69.9S 53.46 Ask Andy Kids Like To GIA HADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St l!ORRAHCE SeJHJll'ed~ ano Hawthorne WOODLAND HILLS 2!500 Victory 01vd LAK EWOOD Caison St. and Paramount Blvd. llYIRSIDI 3520 Tyler St. IUIHA PAii BeJch anJ 0r<'ltieti'Of~ $AHTA AHA 3900 South Bristol St. ORANGE Gardefl Gro1e Blid. Mid Mancriesi. s.se' 6.9S s.se IS.99 IS.9S ' 15."15 48.00 SS.89 ,0.75 6.SO 4.95 13.9 5 14.95 J 4.9S 45 .95 so.so SI.OD Chateau Ducru -Bea ucaillon(St. Julien -2nd Growth) Chi1eau Montrose (St. Estephe -2nd Growth) Chateau Haul·Brion (Graves -Isl Growth) Chateau Latour (Pauillac -·1st Growth) I S0.66 161 .46 161.46 496.26 545.40 SS0.80 Oien weekd1y1 9:30 lo 9:30 -S11nday1 10 to 7. • · ., Ill. Yellow PEACHES ARTICHOKES 1~ 17~ WHOLESALE TO RESTAURANTS DAILY 2016 NEWPORT BLVD. -COST A MESA [NE AR BAY) PHONE 6*-5718 Chateau Mouton-Rothschild (Pauillac -Isl Growth) FROM WINEMEN'S INTE RNA TIONAL DELICATESSEN Winemen's lnternaljonal cheese case features more than SO cheeses of the world which can be purchased in quantitys from Y.i lb. to I 00 lbs., sHced or chunked, fr eshly cut from brick loaves and wheels, TABLE CHEESES DESSERT CHEESES SWEDISH FONTINA Rea. NEW YORK SHARP CHEDDAR Reg. .99.J"'(b. v§io lb Sale .89 % lb. .99 % lb. FRENCH GOURMANDISE CHERRY 1 .4~1b. FRENCH GOURMANDIS E WALN UT }<49 Yi lb. Winemen's Jntemational cut meat section has its own individuality offering delectable delicatessen delights. Here are some examples specially priced for our GRAND OPENING. ' DELICIOUS t.fEAT TR Et\ TS ) Reg . Sale Reg. Sale Sale 1.29 1/i lb. 1.29 11 lb POLISJI SAUSAGE b. .79 11 lb. COTTO SALAMI t.19)1{1b. 1.09 1\ lb. RIEl!U!l:B~El!N3s•A•L"A=M~1~··...,,,.,b •. _._7_9_11_1_b. ____ s_L_A_c_K_F_o_R_E_sT_"_A_M_:._~_~ 11 1b~·,.;2. 19 11 lb . STUFFED ESCA RGOTS BOURGINONNE MARINATED ARTICHOKES WINEMAN'S POTATO SALAD 49¢Pt. 99jP1. . W INEMEN 'S GOURME'T:13UFFE T'CA1'ERlNG''S:Elr Vlbl For home, offk:e, boat .Pt wherever .. :Winemen'I apedaliits in gourn1et party !rays and co mplete buffet caterina for parlit'.'J or JO to 1000. Pick up your rree catering boo~J.today from our International dcllcates..'4en. We deliver any ordt.r over f t S within store area . 2500 WEST COAST H'IGHW AY NEWPORT BEACH 642-70 76 STORE HOURS: MON. THRU THRUS. II 1.m. to 8 p.m. E'.JU, 4 SA.I. -10 1.m.10.J.O p m , StJJllDAY 11 1.m. 10 7 p.m. • ' Tl!LIVISION • APPLIANCU Since 1947 S O NY.TV Excellence Black & White exeenenoo-the state of oons1,1entl)' OOlng e.boYe the crowd-kl one reason why the Sony name on any ptoduct is yoor assurance of the finest In elot:lronlcs. At Sony there Is never a compromise with quallty ot pertoonance. Every prod· ucl must mcasuro up lo the highest standards of quality bef0te It )5 ollered for purchaso to you, Iha consumer. Here's anolhet example of Sony excel· lence. TV·5t0U BLACK&. WHITE ---PoRTABa;rv--• - • 5-lnch acreen measured diagonally •Weighs 1rt>s.8 07, • Operates on AC or DC (with optional accessories} •Soll" slate relhlbltity • Per.JONI! earphone •White and blue call(O.C with chrome lrlm SONY.TV Reliabili1y lV-760 Bl.ACK & WHITE PORTABLE TV • 7-inch screen measured diagona.ly • w eighs just 10 lbs . • operates on .AC or DC . (witn o{lliO"'al acceasofle9) • Sol d sl ala 1eliab1l11y • Persoiial eRrohone 0 Black cabone! Vrllh ctirome \tom SONY.TV Preci si on TV-750 BLACP".: & WHITE PORTA!llE TV • 7-:n<:h screen mo3SU1'ed diagonally •Bunt-in ba!lery/recharoe compa1tmen1 •Weighs only 10 lbs. 1 ot. (1 5109. w11n otilional bat1eriesl • Operates on AC or DC (with oplional access°""9) • Solid state raliabHHy • f>c1sonal a;irphone • Wnite or gray cab1Mlt with chrome trim SONY.TV Precision J'V"950 BLACK l WHITt roRTABLE TV • B·inch screen menured' dlagonally •Weighs just 11 lb:i. 7 OL • Operale:; on AC or DC 1w11h opllcnalacceuo1lu > • Solid stale 1e!!ablhty • Personal earphon& SONY.TV Q..Jali1y TV~1t:? Bl.ACK • WHfTI. PQRTABLE.TV , •1f-ll'IC~plct11re•1•:M dlaOOMllv •~14lbm.IOCIL • Ope111tn on l<IJ •DO (wilh ~IOnll • eotld 11•1# ~I~ • Eay C•"Y h9rMllit for potttblUty TL • J '" • A'°'l.IAMc:•f C O~TA MESA 1"tft St. t; i"y ··' s.t; ,,., EL TORO 0 Tote R4. C. fwr. CNe1t te ,..,..1tJ D ,.t Set. t 0 6 ' ' • I " Fl,lday, Augu11 3, l97J DAILY PILOT l PllBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'UBLIC NOTICE ruuuc NOTICE 1t'all Street ism l'ICTITIOUl •Usn1e:ss l'ICTIT10US llUSUllUS MCnK:& Qf1.., Tllllu.._'1 IALS lfAMI ITAT._MINT 'lci'ITtoUI IU$11fltS NAMI P'AThllEHT .... Ma , Tlw tfdltiwll)(r Ptttor\ lt dol11q bU,IMM NJl.MI SttTRMhT Thi lll(Jowlll9 .on5 •fe ~! NOTICI IS HaRfl'I' OIVEN· Th•I °"' .,, TM klllGW!"i CiltfiOl'lt ••• dolnu l>Utlntu •• per I'll W~y, AtJQutl JS, lf7111 tilt l\ol.lr ti (JLEMDAN II EA l TY & I ~ buil1119u 11 RANCHO VISTA PltOftt!ltT!ES LTO 11 •00 A.M. •I !ht Main .ntraroc. ol '"' VESTMC:MTS, 161D S1n11 AM ....... $AN'TA MONICA WEST. 215, 011P'onl ,.,, Wt••ellH Orlv-. 511!11 101, N~OOtt OVER THE COUNTEJ\ Some y eru·s Good NASO Ll1tln91 for Thursday, Augu•l 2, 1973 ,,. .. ~~~...,,;L ' Mmlnl•tr•tlon •~11111no loc•tld '" ""' Lt '1.11'-(, CO.I• flMW, ,,, •u .Drtvt. W•• 2lU. lrvl"9. C•llf, f'»f,a IMcll, C.llf ,,.. H•W• Clltlt C111ter, CUy of Lio Hibl'.. D1nltl JOHlf)tl Kltln lllQ WlnlOl'I' SI.. Tll9 TroV lllYtllmtl'lt fi.lnd, t Andy A. Clrt'J'. 1$0t ll!ton Plac~ CounfV Of Ofenoe Sltlt of Ct1tfomtt G.ltO.n Grovt, Ct '2660 Ctlltorn1• Um!ltd Ptrll'lttlhlp con-Ntwp«I Bttdl. Ctlllornl• t:!o.60 OTC STOCKS Ff"Of Fdl! t\11 10 Puhl C111 •V. ·~ TIUV Crp ·~ IVI FIRST CHART!i Fl"IANCIAL CQR' llll• bu•lllOH 11 conducleo;t t>y tn In• llflll\Q of Chtrlff A Sml1h and ROV J John E Ktylor. m N Hlgh!tlld AY•. PORATION, • (Ol'pOr•tron ••• Tt!KI" dlvld111I w .. rd •• G-11 Ptrt-•. "" Dv~I FuU1rtOl'I. Ct ~ vf\dtr Dffd Of Tru$1 In 11141 orlgtntl Ot11lttl J IOtln Orlv1, Suitt 2IQ, lrvll'lf, CtUltrnlt ""°' lhll bllllntll I• Conducltd by I Ofntrtl ,,,,_t Of 126 @.00 u.:IJfld by llllt 1!tl1mt11• WM llled wl!h the ~'" Jerrtl C 8ttlo, 1tl7 R!cl'lty .S!rMI, ptttl'ltralllp R091UtT N TAV.LOR ANO DORIS M. Iv Cllf-Of Or•no• Coun•v on Augv.r 1, ltntt A/II C1tlfornr1 Andy A, C•r•v lAYL~. HUSflANO .t.NO WIFE tlld ltn. Wlllltm A. VIII! dllf P111. 1f11 R!cht'W' John E Uylor For Stock P1·ofits lllt,,. 11UOl11fon1 Fuller H 11\l 11~ Oonfr ~P f 9\\ Tall!Ol)I 1"1)11111!;1 bV !ht Nt• FUl'lk Set I I'll Outkr h f111l l~ I" 149 11on11 A1toel1tflft of "'••••Y .,. ,.1~ ,,. OU111n • 2~ IJ\4 T1r,1or W f.ol4 Jl'Ao Stcu•ltltl Otti.r.. c;t11)1-t11 t'"" )4 • 1t1t11r Cp 1\'J ,.,., Tt..,,., -.,_ n1 • ••• !lid• tfld ofltr1 ... ,.,n~ 10-'',',, ••ttm -.. .. TTl!!!"Voc 1~ 11 <1uollld by over-the--o,;111 L.rJ I -··-eouni.r dttltrs 1q .,,,.,0 1,p 1 lJ¥1 R1vrnd '°"' 21"' T tan IW. r...:~..:I on OC:TOtE'R 21. 1'71 111 look •lnot SlrMI, Senlt Ane. CtUfornlt lllll 111111"tnt Wtl llttd with 1ri. Cou11- ft"6 P'tOt l4l of Oflltftl 11.tcordi ot PYb!fllllld Or11111• Cotil Otlly P'llot, Tlllt bl.l•l~I 11 Conducttd bV •l'I unon• tv Cl..,ll of Qra119e COUl'lly on Jiiiy 2S Or•nt1t C-IY C1Uilornl1, of whld! DMd AIJ9.Y•T ,I, 10, 17, 2•, lt73 ne+t.1 corPQr"lll'CI IUO(ll!ion other fl'ltll I 1912. ol 1'rwt AMEIUCAN SAVINGS ANO -1>1r!nerthlll •11o:JI LDAN ASSOCIATION, • tor110tet1on, PUBLIC NOTICE i~e A~ll.~Y ~NVdESTMENT FUND Pub!I~ or1t1<.1• COl\I 01!1v 1>!101 Ju (SUCC~SSOR 8 f_ NE Ft Ct A It y TO Generaly p 1 "' IY 21, t/1d Augu1t ~. 10, 11 lt13 2'01·1~ CALIFOANIA MOATGAGE SEAVIC!J 11 , tr l'llr Int btl'lell,lttY by rulOI\ cl do1~ut1 fn the l'ICTITIOUS aUSINlSS \-l lll• •lottmtl'll woi !!ltd with Ille Coun PUBLIC NOTICE PtYmtl'lf or perform1nce of OOllQfllO•U NAMI!. STATEMENT ~~ll:lerk. ol Orll'IQ" Coun1V on Juty 11 --------------·I MCured ftlefoby, tnc:l t1otlet ot C1tt1ull Ind 1 hi to11owt1111 per~on 11 do I no l)u,111es1 Fmff Bt'ntlklorv'• tltc:llOl'I ~ tt\IM lo bl •old ti Published Or111.Qe Cot•t O•llY Piiot Ju lht Pf'OPfrly llei'tl11Mtow detetl~ htv· fl) DESIGN~ OF THE TIMES I02 ty 20, 11, 1t1d August 3. 10, lt13 119113 Ing bton r.c:Otdtd Iii 11rt1vld1<1 lor by l1w Edr~llt Sin Clemon!•, C1lllornl1 Tiie ,ICTlllOUS IUSINIESS N~Mf STATEMINT lollowln11 1>1rson 11 doing busln~s• •nd mor• INll'I lllrtt rnol'llhs llt~lfltl '2672 PUBLIC NOTICE 11 11111..0 1ln.c• Nlld rtcOl'dllloo wl!I Mii 11 11) DESIGNS LANDSCAPING 60l (.8 SElt VtCE CO IOSf S.11n11 tru1 111/btlt tl.lcilOll 10 Ille hl111'1tst bidder for Eittetla San CO•t• M•l(I Ctl 92616 cttfl, ptYlblt In 1•11/ful mot1ty of lht t?'7l Clemente C•lllornl11 "'1CTIT IOUS •USIN!'SS Ch•rltl Gr11>0W, 10ff S1nl1 Crvi, Unlllld Sl1lt• of Amerlcn 11 tllt time of Cl M << ,.2 E NAM&: ST.t.Tt:MIE NT COi.it Mtlt Ctl '26:l6 Ult, wllhoul wirr&nly tKPl'll$ or lrnplltd ci"rence ~rre .., 1tron1, Stn The 1011owlng """"""' are doln11 Thl1 blls!11tss 11 cooduclfd bv 111n In· It to Hiit, llOSMltlon Of incumbral!(o, 9men11 Calllorn!t t:l6'1 buslMS• as ttlY!dutl tilt lnltrtu ccww•ytd 10 tnd new held bv This bu11n''' 1$ tonouc!td by on In· lHE ST A:+PPEltS m E Slevens Ch11rlts GrtbOw II •• IUCh Tru1lee In and 10 ll'MI lollowl~ dlvlduaF SYlll E S11nt11 Ant, C1tll '2101 This Slbtement WIS h!ed will\ th• Coun dtKrlbtd l)tOl)Olrly 1n tilt County ol Cltte11ee Murrell (ll Milo E. David.on. 2~13 Falrw1v IV Clerk. or Oren<.1• Coyntv on Julv 2~ Of'•flll9 Sttte of Ctlllornla This ll•tement was llled with 'llt Countv Or, Cotta Mtse Ctl!f 92621 1913, LOT l3 OF TRACT 2~79, AS SHOWN Clerfl, of Or1n91 County on AUOUJI 1 lt1l (21 6(110 J, Oavldson 2~1J F<tlrwav ON A MAP RECORDED IN BOOK 18, F tntl Or Cost11 M~~<t CtlU tt627 PAGE' SD Of' MtSCEllAl~EOUS MAPS, Publl!ht<I Or1noe Col" Oeilv Piiot, (J) Ha<Old L H11r1 Jr 202S So Ft10)0 Published Oniflile Coa•I 01!1y Pltoi July 21 and Augu11 l, 10, 11, 1973 229l-13 RECORDS OF OR/\NGE COUNTY AUO!J'9 3. IQ, 17, 24. 1f73 Utt-73 GernJlty, Sdn l.s An• C•Ut 92207 CALIFORNIA. SAID PROPERTY IS (41 S!epl\enle e H.sr1, 202S So PUBLIC NOTICE ALSO SITUATED IN lHE Cl1Y OF PUBLTC NOTICE Gern$ev. s .... 11 Ant. C•lll t2201 --~----------COSTA N,ESA ANO COMMONLY Tnls bu~lnoH 11 tonducle(I DV a <,tenet.st - KNOWN AS• Mil TOWNE C:.TREEl • partnership SLP 74 COSTA MES"' CALIFORNIA 9?616 fd-I 4ft14 Miio E" Oav!dson •ICTITIOUS BUSINESS tno pu~ of PiV!l'l<,t Thft obl!(lalklfl' NOTICE TO CltliDITDRS This statement was llte.:t wl111 tho Coyn NAME STATEMENT $tCvrlld by .aldlDetd QI l ruil lncludlnll SUPElt1011. COUltT OF THE tv Cl1tlt 01 011noe Cov111y on July 11, Tilt 1o!low1ng persons are doing feoe'j, Chlrgtt tl'ld eJCptnif!S or lhci STATE 01' CALIFORNIA l'Olt 191J bus•ntlS IS lrulht In<! ot tho wile TH!' COUNTY OF ORANGE FUIVl TH£ K'THANGA, 1027 Norlh Coan (This ts the third of five articles by tlie ft101utor's business ornl financtal edt· tor 011 the question of u1hetlier a person ca11 still 71-Wke 11t0'11ey on the stock 111arket This focuses ()IL what to took for it1 stock prices £1~ the next 12 nionths J By RICHARD NENNEMAN BOSTON ~~SS. Whate1;er the amount one can expect to make on the market over a period or time, some years have that extra plU.aZZ in them Dlr.d 11'11• 111111 dflV ol July, 1913 Nt A·71044 P11Dll1t1td Oranqe (o.i~I 01Uv Piiot. Ju-Highway, Laguna Betch, C1lttorn!1 ~ -··--•r• f-o-~late ot WILFORU-.--J._ MOGG.AT+. 11'..lQ,JJ,_of)(I AWuSI 3, 10 1973 222.11-73 921.51 -.-~· '-"" ir-----Ooceestd PilfOT"E'U, IFilC::--A -Oel•wAie This is because the market tends to overreact on both the upside and the downside. And, wherrtt-JSas-!owas Jt 1s today, there is plenty or room for un- p r ovement :;N:,.~;1~L COAl'ORA1ION, NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN 10 1111 PUBLIC NOTICE Corporahoo 1021 North Coa'1 Hl;nway, By A M KnOllkt crtdllors 01 lho above ntn\fll decedent Laount Beach C•lll 926S1 lie Attorney in Facl lll1t tll Olf$Ons h1vln.gi clalm1 •talnSI Iha Th!1 business f1 conducted by I Pul>llshtd Ortflill Co.st O'll Piiot Jul 'tld dt<:edtl'lt &rt "'""'""" lo tile them, PICTITIOUS llUSINl!SS Cori>0rat1on 20, ,, tnd ,t,uguJI J 1973 V 2238 1~ with Ille neuisarv vouchers In tht olllce NAME STATEMENT 1 Volney J SteUlre, Pret1ldenl ' ol lht cltrk of Ille •bOve enHlltd tour! or The !ollowlng per100 Is doing bus nns Tiil• 1111toment was tltlld 111!'11 the Cou11> PUBLIC NOTICE lo present them wllh Ille necessary a~ ty Clerk ol Orange County oo July lS. ln3 V(luchtrs, to the unoer1.!one-d at the oltlee AJW ENTERPRISES, " SO I• F·17'52 Of Ills llllOf'IWJ'll BARNES SCHAG Ptaprl•IOl'Shlp, Post Offlct BOK Drtwtr MeCOltMAC, O,t,VIS & LOHR SCHMIOT ---------------I JOHNSON &. ICENNEOY ~12S MatArlflur 0 L"kewOOll, CA !IOn4, f3D3 Vltlt 44' South Olivt 51r'flll, S 14?0 SUPlltlO. COURT OF TNE Blvd p O Bo• 178& Newport Beach Strena, Cypr1s1. CA'°"° LOS A1t9tle1. Ctllforfllt 90014 STATI OF CALlfORNIA l'Olt CatUor11l1 92663. which Is tho pltce Of Alvin J Wt.fnberg, 'fll13 Visit S.r1t11. Te(1p!loM a2f·2U4 lHt: COUNTY 01' OR.t.NGE bu1ln1s' OI Ille underslone<t In i ll IT'tttltr, C~llff"'' CA 90d.30 Publlll'le'd Or~nge Coa~I Dally Pllol CA.Ill NO llM101 per11lnlng 10 the esttle Of ••Id d&ceOl!nl Thl1 buslm1ss 11 tonch>ettd Dv tn In-July 27 and AugYst 3. IO, 17, 1913 2326-73 SOMMONS IN IMINENT DOMAIN wllhln tour monlh!. efltr lht f!rsl llYbllca dlvld1111l. • CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACM, a !Ion ol tlll$ nollce Alv!n J Welnbel'll PUBLIC NOTICE munlclPll corpor1Uon Plaln!ltf, ~ , 011led July 31, 1973 lhls 1111l$t'lle111 w1s filed with lht Coun·•---------------I DAISY THORPE HOOK. also known a9 JAMES A BURGA N 11 Clerk of Ottnge Countv on A1.1gu1t 1 I DAISY E HUALEY THORPE VIClOA Adrnlnl"lltor wllh will anno•e<I 01 197l STATEMENT O• ABANOONME/\IT R HANSEN, LILLIAN HANSEN HOOGE the estal• ot ~ tbOv ~ F2721S OF OSE OF l DOLLE. JEAN B DOLLE. HODGE L dett<lent t l'llm...., GQ!tDON , Fll!LOS & •OL,t,NO l"IC:T1TIOUS 9USINESS NAME DOLLE, JR , CAROL C. OOLLE BURKE BARN~S SCHAO AllorMYI ti L1w Tht lollowlno person ha$ •Dandontd lhe MATHES FAY MATHES COUNTY OF JOHNSON & KENNIOY nn Llktwood a011llVJ1td ~SZT~ .. :-...riz.11:1~1~\L~o~'~;ie4~ ~rn;,hT~l~ ORAl!IOE. • pollllcal 1ubdlv1.ion. ODES I Iv Etllffl J Sellt J L1ktwood, CA to7U '' 1hrowh 20 l~lu1lve 11nd ALL PERSONS CSU MtcArtlllilr 111!., ' Ttleph0111 1211) .S:Sl-1710 Ntwl)Ofl Betel! Ctllf -UNICNOWN CLAIMING ANY TITLE OR P'O •i• 1... PuDllshtd Orange Coaif Dally Pllol lho llctlllou' b\.1Jlnes1 name relerrtd 10 tNTE:JtEST IN Oil TO THE PltOPERTY Hewport .·-e,, C HI 92Ul A11111nt J, JO, 17, lot, 1913 lolOG-7i lbOV• WOii IUtd In Ortnoe County on Nov SOUGHT TO BE COHOEMNEO HEREIN, Ttl 1nt) •;19~ 1---------------nnSYun L Wllsoo 226 Emerald Bay, 0i~.:r~· OF tHE -nATE OF Ati..--1 lor AC1ntlt1blrtlllf' CT,t, PUBLIC NOTICE L111una Beach C11lll CAl.lllOR:NIA 10 lht lbOV8 ~ dtlen-Publllllod O•afli!O Ce.ts! D•lly Pl!ot<.I ·--------------This buslnosi Wll (;Ol'ldui;le<t bv 1111 ln-dtntl Auou1t 3, 10, 11, 24, ltJJ 1390 7J SLP·7' dlv1dutl A <!vii compt..,hil !Mi bfff1 lUt<t bY tht FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Sus~n L W1l1on pltlnllff •<.t•lnst you 11 you wl1h 10 def•nd PUBUC 0 C HAME STATEM~NT lhl1 ll~ull, you rnu11 1110 1n thl1 collfl 1 N TI E The following Pllf'IOlll "r' dolflil wrlttt11 ~tdff'lll 11'1 rnpotlM 1o tht com-bu1IM11 "'' F21414 PYbllshod Or11119e Co.Jsl Dally Piiot J1,1-ly 27, tlld AUQUSI 3 10, 17, lf1) 229& 13 r.al nt Wlltlf11 30 d1y1 oiler lhll Summon, IW2 NATIONAL JAK ASSOC~AlES 3001 1 ~ed on you Offltrwb•, your CltllUll NOTtC• OP TJIUSTl!lE'S S.t.LE , Redhill AYtl'l\11, Suitt 216' 1ot1nade 111 PUBLIC NOTICE IF QNE USES an unweighted market index (not counting the number or shares outstanding per company) he gets a better idea of the large losses the average mvestor has. suffered Indicator Digest uses s uch an average, C<Jmposed of 1,500 New Yori( Stock Exchange stocks, and as of July 6 it declmed to $37 64 just two cents short of its 1970 low of $37 62 This compares with a topping at $80 in 1968 " According to H Alden JohnS01'1 Jr , senior vice-presi- dent and cha1nnan o f M asschusetts I n ve s t o rs Growth Stock Fund's p:1rtfolio committee, four things have Wiii bt t11i.rtc1 on tr>pllCtllon by Ille NI, JeS7 Coste Mew Calltornlt ml6 , l-------~------- D(1l11tlft Ind The court mev tnl•r. ludo· NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEH. TP\at on .~ •• ',,•'.· co,•s,'"u,,rn•.~~· co. 300I FICTITIOUS llllSINESS 1 ~·-··-.. _ •• -.. _ ... -.. _ .• -... _ ... -... _.-.... -.-· .. ,,,.,,, 1gtlnu \IOU tor lho money 04' other Wlldl'ltld11, AU(IUSI 15 19)3 11 the flour ot ""'" YI. U It t , ..,.•l'ltdt Ill, NAM• STATEMENT - rtlftf t'tCIU.19<1 In Ille tompltlnl H 00 AM 11 thl m11ln e111rtnct of the Cost" Melt C• 92626 lht followl1111 pen.on 11 doing business Tht oblett of 11ld tenon 11 to con<fomn Admlnbtr1tlon &ulldlng loctled In the Lt 2 N11Hon1I Ult lnsur1{1ce Comp.any, 11 rttl propw1y or lnt1rnls 11'1 rett properly Habrt Civic Cenler, CllV of Lt H•bt.1. S610 Wllshlrt Blvd, Suitt 1185 L°' LAGUNA LANDSCAPE CO, l0801 tor 1Wbllt uM. n1mtly, for • 1WOlfe County ot Ore1190, s1111 of C1lllornle, AngelH. C11Uornl& 90036 Orlllwood or s LMIUl'lt, Cal n~n hlo11w1y FIAST CHAltTER FINANCIAL COR. This bu1lneu II conducted by A Gtjltrll , John C Ftllows. 30901 Driftwood, S Tht ,..., pr00ff1Y or lnte"'" In r"l P'OlllATION, • coroor1Hon. as Tr1.1s1ee P11rtntnhlP 1..19una Calif 926n prOl)trl'Y tlfecled bY s1ld lcUon lfld under Owcl of lrust Jn Ille original JAIC CONSTRUCTION CO, This bus1Msl ls conducted Dy 1n In •auaht to be ottll)lrld 11 s1tu11e.:t lfl 1111 t m0\11'11 of S'D2jl)OO txecult<I by • Callfornla corpor1!100 dlvldu•t City ol Hu11ll1111ton Beith CO\lflly of WILLIAM H WILLM NG ANO MAAY By Jol1n Koowlser, Prnldent J C Fellows Ortnge Sltlt of C1Hlornl1 tnd h more ANN WILLMING, HUSBANO ANO WIFE Getteral Partner This s!alemonl was flied with lllt Coun p.1rllcv11rly de1e1lbed In E~fllt>ll A ti-AS JOINT TENANTS tnd "'corded on Th+1 slaltmtnt was lllCl'd wino the CO\ln iv Clerk ol Oraflilt Coun1v °"July 12, 1t7l t1ched ltlrtlo 1nd bY rettrtl'lce rntde 1 Febrvtry 10, 1971 In Book 9997 P1i;ie lS ol ly Cleik of Ortn;e Counlv oo Auoust 1 F 26n1 plrl ltlrtOf Of!ld1I RKords ol Orll\ljt County, 1973 Publ11hod Or1n9e Co11,1 Delly Piiot • • • When it is as low as it it todalJ, there is plenty of roo111 for i111prove· 111e11t. You tre lltrtOV nolllled lo llPPtilt •"' C•llfONll~ or which Deed ot Trust F2n11l;u1y IJ, 20, 21, and August J, 1973 2161-13 $haw taYtt. II ony you M!w Why !ht 1eld AMERICAN SAVINGS AND LO AN Published Ortnga Coast Dilly Pilot, ~~ properly 1hcM,lld not be eOl'ldtonned •• AS.SOCIATION, I ~POrellon. ISUCCES Auou1t 3, 10, 11, 2•, 1913 'l399·73 PUBLIC NOTICE pr1yld for In the c:omplJllnl on 1111 In !he SOR BENEFICIARY TO COUNTRYWIDE •bove enUlle.:t proceeding FUNOING CORPORATION) Is 'ht bt'ne PUBLIC NOTICE lF YOU WISH TO SEEK THE ADVICE lldtry brr1110n of deftYlt In tho 11av~n1 OF AN ATTOlt NEY IN THIS MATTEA or P<trlol'manc• ot obhoa11ons :'iOCUrtd -------------- YOU SHOULD DO SO PROMl'TL Y SO lhe1'1by •l'ld 11ohce ot del.,Ull and SLI> JS The FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT lollowln<,t persoo •s do1n11 bu11ness THAT YOUll PLEADING. IF AHY, MAY B""tflcl1rY'1 eh'CllOl'I 10 (IUle lo be' told FICTITIOUS aUSINESS as flE FILE D ON TIME tho Pf'Olltf'ty herolnbtlow .tncrlbed hav NAME STATEMl!NT GLENNA S INK CO, tlS Ahso A~o DATED ,_ ia, 1f71. 11111 oeen .--Otd .,1 provld<ld tor by ltw Tilt lollOWll'l!I Pl'l"IOll 11 doing buslne11 P 0 Bo• 108S, Newp0rt Beach Calli w. tE Sl JOHN, c1 .... k Ind rnor• 'min lhf'ff months h•vh>Q •• 92660 By Hlflt" (, Gunnellt, Of'Ollly 1lelllilM "nc:t Nlld racordt!lon, wlll ll!ll 11 NEPTUNE $0CllETY, 1017 Nortll Glennt Trevtrs McGl!ady 41J Allso DOfll ,., BOllPA. Cfly A.'"""'y 911bllt tucl!on to !ht· hight" blddtr for COtll Hlo11w1y, lfll\INI BNCh, CA "'51 Ave , NIWQOl'I fltllCh, Cell! 92660 WILLIS M•VIS, Dtplrly Clry Att.rflty Ct'll. fl'tllblt \n ltwlul n"\OMV ot fM Proteus Inc.. I Ot!11wtf' torportllon, Th11 buSfnt$1 ,, cOflduc!ed t;y '"" rn (tty .. ..._., ...... 9Hdl Ulllttd!$f.'. of Amtrlct 11 lht tlmt ot 1027 North Coesf Hlgtlway, L111unt d1Yldual ,..., Offl~ au ,,. .. le tlllil w11rr1nty e•11rto1s or lm11ll@d BH<ll CA ,,.,, Glennt l McGeady H....._. ......... c~ f't4M 111 to f l , POt.l.esslon or tncllll'ltlrtl'IGf ThL' bu$1nt» •S tonduc!..O by • cor-This st•tement w•s ll!ed wllh 111e cou~ T ... ....,., t'ntJ SM-S2'1 11'\t l11ternt convtyecl to 11!d now held by llOl'lllon fV clerk ot Ol'lll\llt Coyn'y on A11911st 1, A""'11r('t tw •te1etUt It IS well Tru1ftt, In •nd to the follow1no Voll'ltY J Sltfllrt, President 1913 tVfNlllT A d•tcrlbtd prOPfrlv '" tilt C:ounty of Tri!1 ~111emen1 wa, filed wllh tllt Coun FtJltt Tl\if POl'llOI' of $ac-tlon ,,, Tow!lshld-'• °"'"°" S111e Of CtllfOf'nl!" IV Clerk ol Ortngt Coun1y on July 'ZS. Published Or1119e Ce.est Dally P1tot South 11.lnot 11 Wtst In Ille Rtn<:ho llJ LOT 111 OF TlllACT 1111. IN THE lt73. ,,-" Augu1t 3 JO, 17, 24, lt'l ll8S.-7l 8olll• In tht city of Hllnllngton lle9cll, CITY Of' COSTA MESA. AS PER NAP •w been troubling t he market m ost recently d1v1dend con- trols, a negallve psychology affectmg almost everyone at the moment, inflation and the question of whether the cur- rent boom would end m a bust Johnson finds reasons to be ophm1shc on all four fronts County Of Oronge, Sl1lt of C1Ulornlt,. ti RECOROEO IN flOOIC SO PAGES XI McCormlc, D1v11 & , .i-11 on t ll'ltll retOl'decl 111 BCloOll. S1 TO l6 MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Lollr·SChf!lldt •: ~I• Of Mliolltnt0U1; Mactt. 111 Tiit ol· lHE OFFICE OF 1HE COUN fY AE 606 Sowth 011YI SlrMI PUBLIC NOTICE -Dividend controls were partially hfted June 21. and companies are allowed to pay out a cash d1v1dend equal to their average payout raho (the ratio of d1v1dends to after-tax earnmgs) m the five years 1968-72 For m any stocks comprismg the Dow Jones mdustr1a1 average, this could mean a substantial tn· crease 1n their d1vutend -General Motors could pay $5 25, for instance, which would give 1t a yield of 8 per· cent at its present price. ...... flte ol lllt County Recorder ol 11!d Cou~ COROfA OF SAID COUNT"!', ANO Los Anteln. Cllllorftll toell4 " ty, dttctlbtd II follows COMMONLY KNOWN AS 969 LINOEN (21JJ a17Uf( ~ A strip of lend 10000 Itel 11'1 width ly!1111 PLACE, COSTA MESA., CALI FORNIA PubUshod Orange Coast Dally Piiot Ju Tht FICTITIOUS aUSINESS N,t,ME STATEMENT ',: ' sooo ... , tither slelt. m111urtd II tight tor tile PUtp0$1 of paying,,,, obtlg1tlons ly 27, and AY<.tU'' 3, 10, 17, 1913 7315-J] .. I tnolel. from 1ht lollOWlng d1i,ctlbed Mturtd b~ Solld Deld OI 1 ru1t 11'1Clud111$1 LYN CRAFT MOLDS. 9083 llolsa eenltrll1111 fees, ch1roes tnd •x1>1nw1 Of tho TruslH PUBLIC NOTICE Ave Westmln,ter Ca 92683 fltOIMif'lll 11 IM not11'1ettl torn« of al'ld Of Ille Ult 1.1ld Slldlon 2•, tllittu:t tOlllh tt• l7' ltl' 011td tllls 10th d•Y of July lrtl Rlch•rd M1rvln SChrOeder. n62 ' _, 1456' lttf 1long 1111! notlh 11111 o1 FIRST CHARTEA a W7U Ntwm1n Apt 1. Hunl!llQIOO Beach, Ca following per$0n 11 dol.,11 Du1Joiess • • • : ' l l ' ' • •• .. NOTICE TO CREOITOltS 9Ul7 1.tld Stcilofl -to t Ill on t _. FINANCIAL CORPORATION SUPERIOR COUltT OF THE This bu1lnes!i Is coodl.lcied b• 1n In ttl'lglnl Clll'Vt cotlUve lo t"'9 notlhwdt '' Tnrsltt ri.vlng 1 rtd!ut of lOCIOOO lttl 1 rldlil By A M Ktiopkt STATE' OF (All,ORNl,t, FOlt d!vldyal. llnt llll'outh Solid point l)Nn IOI.Ith Jr Iii AllOl'l'lf'Y In Foci TME COVNTY Of Olt.t.HGE' Alch11rd M ScllrOeder 23' llY' .. 111 flltn« IO\lth.,..Jt..,ly t1":1 1>11t1l1111Dd Ort!!Ot COl$1 Dilly PllOI July N .. A·1~ lhls 1ttlemenl was !fled with Ille Coun· •• -• I • 20 1' .. • ••n I 1Est1te Of NELLIE MAY Dt<:ftSJl!I ly Clflll OI Or1ng1 County on July JO, ...,.., curvt u•fOUQn I tenlrt 11111 • I A119u,1"' 223•·73 NOtlCE IS HEAEflY GIVEN to the 1913 1r U' l't" Ill t tC d!SIM!Ct of 217.3t.... ' to 1 point on 1 llnotnl llrie lhenet crtCll lor. ol no. •bow n1med dtcldenl Ftnn south oo a• Jt" -•t I0."4 tWt •lonl PUBLIC NOTICE 11111 111 pe1'Hll'\s llavl1111 claims 191lnst !he Published Ortflile C,,.51 Oa!ty Piiot Nld 111111 ffl 1 point OJI 1 llOl'l•nget'!t ltld Cleeedenl 1rt l"llOQl.llred to Ille thtm, A1111ust l. 10. 17, :to!, lt13 7392 73 C11fY1 un<tve ff1 "" nortt'llt•I lltvlno 1 with tilt l'lllCIJStry voucht.,, In the on1ce rtclhll Of ~n1 JO 1"t 1 ridl•I Unt NOTICE OF TRUSTEl!'S SALE of fht cttrlt of the ibtwe enllt11d court, or th h Id ... I be .. .... ... '--Ht. T .s. Ht. tM2 n lo pt'tfffll them with the MC:ffs.ll"'f ~OU'll II n ltl toulu -COMMONWEALTH LANO TITLE COM voucll1rs, to tlMI undersl9ntd •T tho otllce 3r tJIJI, .aid CUf'Vt btlno lhe l>ANV, 11 duly 1ppolnted Truitn under ol her ittorn~ CO\.ONEL HERRING S FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ~·'~ .,11t~::.,-wcv 1":: 0'1.:1~ Ille lotlowlng dtlCrlbed dlltd of trusl FRANKLIN 107 Etsl 18th SlrHI COSll NAME ST.t.TEMENT 11'11" OVl'I on r 1 ~· WILL SELL Al PUBLIC AUCTION lO MtSI, Ctlllornla which 11 !hi place of Tiie followln9 per.on• are doing 00.1 Ch-I (Huntlnoton llNCh Clll,.,. THE HIGHEST BIOOEJI FOR CASH 1>\1$1"'5s of !he u'lld•rsl9n6d 111 t11 mailer• buslMss IS ~4500 :11H1111n =~ :;.,ngy ~!~out; fPtVtlllt ti !Imo ol 111111' In l1wtul money perttlnlng 10 the esttte of ,llld dec""enf, PACIFIC PROPERTIES 105 Mein St , H$.OO t!!r 1 nu":,. 1 wn of tl'le Vnl!ed Slel'Ml all rl9ht title "l'ld within four mon!lls 11!rr the first l>Ubllea 81lboa Penlns1111 Ca!ll 92661 ~--f 0 ~ .. 11 ~ .. 1 ','""!'1\ C\lfvt' lnlf!'Oll conv•ved to tno now held by It !loo of this 110tlce Frank "M" Corier. 2233 Canyon Or, ...... ,.....,. o llCMI ..-1. "'" 111 • under uld O&ld of lru1t In !ht pr~tv Date<! Jyly 11 1913 Coste Mest Cahf 92~26 rldlw Of HL61 fftl I tit n CI hert.fn&tter .sescrltlad K,-,YE GUAOAGNO, Gt•dY• H Allon, 2102 E Hy11tlng!on SOUl'-"1t1rly tlong ~Id ~u~ lllrough TRUSTOR THOMAS A OAV\S ANO Ek«lllrl• of Ille Woll Dr ' Duarte Call! 91010 ~ ~lrtlof ':'.:,~ ofllt~ to.,. ~. t 'n ~~~ SUE KATHERINE OAVIS, husb1nd •l'ld ot tht above 11amed decodtnt This business Is conducted by 1 llml!ed 1 tnee a ,....n on '"" W•I• Cot.ONEL HERA ING S Fll.ANKLIH parlntl"l'hfp norlheol•Jtf'F'( bou!ldtry 111111 OI I tei;ord flENEFICIARY, SAMU El A IOJ EHi lll" SlrMI Frank M Cor1er d llolWYt)' ~ Ill ..-"· Pfl9t u. RIMAN ICH I ,rngLt man Cos!• MINI C•lll Tiils Slalemenl WIS 111td wl!h Ille Coun l{lll;Ol'ds of S11......-,. of 111111 Oflnoe COii~ R.c:orded Jtnuary 16 1f7J '* Instr No Tel c1141 S...1111 IV Clllfk of Ortflilt County on Jvlv 11. ty, wld Po111t btlllll the Tnll Pol11t d 12113 In bOOk 10$10, ~. '55 of Qttldtl Atl.;,...y for E•eurtrix 1'13 ~Ml"'°:,..W point btfno dl,11nt f'lll'l'lh RICOl"dl 111 !ht ottlct of !ht Aecordor of Publlshl'd 0t11111e c°"t 011ty Pilot, FU611 S2 00' 13 wtfll 2S72' rtef tlong Jtld (K1ngo Cov11tv , .-Id dMd of lru1t JYIV ll, 20, 11, tno August 3, 1913 21s+7l Pvbllshtd Oranoe Cot!I D•lty Piiot Ju llOl'll'IHtltf'IY bOund•ry 111111 from Stlflon dnctlbtJ the tollowlno propertv ly 13, 20. 27, and August 3, 1'73 21:M-7l "A" N -.Wn on llld. Record of 5Yr:'Ytl 'I -Lot 17 ol Trtd No 1062. In tl'IJI county PUBLIC NOTICE 2t 11 C1.11ct nort11t1stffty ~·rv lfne of Ora1111•, ,,.,, of ca111orn11. •• 111own, -------,,...,=-----PUBLIC NOTICE btltlf eolltd IOUlh St' 00' 10' tis! 11'1' on t mtP rKorded In bOOk 211 p19es 11· 1---------------- PUBLIC NOTICE -Psychology can be sum· med up in o n e word Watergate Johnson thinks this 1s bemg nverdone, 1ust as were previous rears that tfte students would be running the country or that the Vietnam war would never end "Even Watergate w1U end.'' noted Johnson In fact, there are some analysts who think that at its present levels the market 15 even dis'-'9unting the possibili- ty or a presidential resign.a· lion. teld ll!tCOrd Surwy 29>7711 thence c~ to 4 lnc:lulllve, MltcelltMOUS Mlt». In I "'11 tl1111lno •lollll ••Id curve (Ol'l(•vt to ,,,, Ille ofUtt of !ht counly rtc:ord•r ol 1tld NOTICE TO CltEDITOltS PICTITIOUS BUSINESS -lnnat1on cannot be solved M>Ulhetll, hlvlno • rtdly1ol121" feet. tounfy SUPERIOR COUltT DI' THE NAME STATEMENT SOUIP)Msttr!Y 11\t°""'h • tentrll 11\Qlt of EXCEPTING THEltEFROM '" ~ STATI! 0, CALIFORNIA FOR Th• following ptrMlll 1$ dol!IO 1M.11lnt111 as easily In fact Jt is 2)• xr 12" on •n: dlJltnce of 3"11!00 feel dlvl<llld OM-11111 1nterl$1 In 1111 °'' llt\ THE COUNTY 0 " o•ANGE •• BRUCE JONES su••••••os ... -, a pereruual ~·1em' for all to I point on • ltno«ll 111111 llltl'I« I I __ .. ... .. ' ' No .. 71DOI ..,.. t''··"""' JOUllt 9• •r 2,.. w.ll 51 131 '"' •IOl!ll m ner1 • ..... vontr "Y r o t 1 r b on eitate of ARTHUR JOSEPH M"'ltTIN. P11c111c Coast Hwv , Syn!.!!! e.,ch 90742 the mdustnal nations, whose ..,Id u.,. ~ 1 polnl on 1 tangent curvt IUblltn<H below • dtllltl ot SCIO lee! Otcetitd Bruet Dunlllp Jones, 126 25111 Ntwport tonci vt 10 th• nor'lhweit l'l•V1ng t from !ho 1vrfa'o o1 said 1elld bYI NOTICE IS HEAEflY GIVEN to !he Be1ch, Ctl tt660 governments CO!lttn to rtdllll Of tOO oo fetll th• n c 1 wltflOUI tho rl(lhl ot intry upon tl'IY por crtdltmt Of the above nerned dlttdonl This builf!1ss Is tonducttd by an I~ ue prom- 11CMJlhw111tf1V tlOng Hid curv• lhf'OUOlt tlon O! 'Url-CJI OI sold !tnd tboYI 1 that tll persons hllvlnQ ctalmi llltlntl Ill• dlvldyal ISe f.00 much Of at }eaSt taX 1 wntr11 •no•• ol 20' 51' 2.S" tn tn: depth Of 500 feet. '' resor'>'fll In lht aold decedent tre required 10 lilt them, Brvce D Jone• ' dltllnc. of ,., 15 '"' lo 1111 lermlnus of lollOWlflil dffCli ol rtcord, dffd rtcorded with the necenarv VO\lthets. In 1111 olllct Thia tltllmenl was lllM with 11\e C<lll""' prom!Se !I'll dttcrll)td ctnltl'Hn•. Hid ltrmt111 June 5• 1962 1" book elJ.t P•ll" 16• Of of lhl clerk of lht tbelv• t11tlllfd tour1 or fV Cltrk Of Oroog• County on July 11• However, the US inflation On on 1 l'IOl'll1ngenl curve conctv to fl~llll AecotdJ, r .. racordtd Jyne ». 10 presenl them with tho ntelt,ll'Y 1973 tht nort11n1t 11tvlng 1 rt11IY1 of '100000 19'2 111 boot!. 615'. Pl9e 7"46, Of. vouch••• 10 1~e unoors111ntc1 a1111e ot11c1 F"'417 r ate. even with the horrendous fHt 1 rtdtll line through wld fllOllll lltltl kl<Orda. died reeor~ June 5, of W!Ulln'I L Dur1nlt, 1.SOl WIJICllff Ot , Publlslled Ortnao CCMSf Diiiy Piiot, Ju-r••• In the -t Of food \h•• DH•• llortll. ~ ..,,. 1191. Mid cClrvt lt62 In Dook •1)1, INllNI 12. Olfl<llt Ste 31S Newport l!ltteh, Ct 9?'611 which tY 1J, 20, v, Ind Al/VU5t 3, 19t> 2157·73 ..,.. '-V.:> .,, bt.fng tht norfheellttlY line of perctl of ltetOl'dl, t•~ JUl'll U 1'62 Ill Is 1111 plllCI of buSlntSI of Ille ynderilg~ed year, is Stilt running belOW that lond tor Sftt'f ,,..w•Y pul"pOWI bOOk 61S6. Ploe 7'Q, Offldtl Rtc0rd1. In 111 m11tt•r• pert1lnlng to lilt Miile of PUBLIC NOTICE clncrlbtd •• perc•l 2B '"I Fll'ltl Ofdtr tnd dffd rtG'(lfdtd Mey "· 196f ln bOok 1tld dtetdont. within tour nlOl'llhl tll•r in Europe and J a p an -of~, .... f'ICOl'ded In llOlllc 7J02 Ifft. He• •• Offlcltl Rtcordt. .-Id 1111 llfll pubtlClllon of !hi• l'IOllC• FICTITIOUS BUSINllSl Moreover, Johnson sees some JM9tt m OlllClll RKOl'dt Ot Oronge rtMrv•llon to run !or • perlOd Of 10 01tlld Jvly a1, Im NA.Mii STATllMENT CIU!'lfY, C.llfornlt, lht i!dt ll!lfl Of wld Y•tr1 lrom the d11e·01 recording Of It'll RUTH L. fOLKE•T Tilt tollow!ng ~s •re do!ng hope Of the US. inflahon beu'.lg 100 °' l'Ool tlrtp of 1111<1 to ()1';""411fitntd tboYe ~llll'lllCI cited•. ~ ·~ • EICKUtrt• Oii tht w111 Of bulfnfl) ••• t I-A.I or-thor'ltntd •• to fft'mlnt1• on the ALSO EXCEPT lh• ftmtltl1flll on.-!hi lbl'.MI ntrntd Cltcedtnt THE BUNKHOUSE. lilO WUI Wll~ .... con au~ l'IOrtl'INsl lo Mild norlhlt•ltrlfbound•ry htlf ll'l!t{~J Jn_IU on gts. mlntrlll Ind WILLIAM l , DURANTE Cost• M•SI, C1lllorn!1 mn Phase 3 was rrnbably ar-111111 of Rteord of SU......., 7941 .-.cl on ol1ltf ll)ll:lrotlrDOn tul»tinc" lvlng 1MI Wetlclllf or .. Ste ll4 l C1pe ,t,lrt Co. t fo 81rene1 Dtv1I01l' t-" 11'11 .itl,itl\wttt 10 Nild l'IOrlMelt 111111 of below I dll)lh of D IHI bul WllllOUI Nntporl llKllt Ct nut mtnt, Inc;, 140 W•1t Wl\!IOfl, Cosio MeS.11. nounced at the WOtSt JlOSSlbJe wllif ,......,,.Y P1rc11 lhe tlghl ol' wrt.ce ttnlrY to 1tkt. ltfffl!OrM1 (7141 toef•tM Ctlllornl1 '24'1 t' he ff Cor!ttlnlflt 1,51 .crs-~ or 1111 mtrktr mint 1x111or1 or Clrlll for 11r111 AttOfMY tor l•tcwlrh 2. weUt Firoo Mort0o0& l!l\lil.llor;, t.me, 85 t C e<::ts of an •'-Ubl~'lli:O{•l'lft.,r~~·ltJlJlPl J~~~l~ 00...;;:.~:;:1• Pu1>11111td oranllf.1~t 01ny P1101, Post Olllct Bo• ))OU, T ... n11n11 Anne•, overexpan51ve m o netar y ;.;1J-~ ms-dt'il ~Ot1l11flOWl'l1boYt "°~~~ A~""IOt f,,~toiFI ~ ...... 1!"'11 -CW7A~~llklf"'*C'°°30 ~u~m---mttt--~-~ I f. 1 II I 1' ' Thll bu1ln1tf$ 11 bllnQ COndUCttd by a I"' "'~ .,,. (I -UUfiC PUBLIC NOTICE r'.cln:i ~~ 0 1 j:omP • •neu or cor· ~ PUBLIC NOTICE Go!'era1 ,.,r1....,1hft; deficit under boom conditions The t1tnellc111y u~ 11td OffCI oi !~'h,.8~'i~0~pse were beg1nn1ng to m 8 k e • ..,41 rru11. by r1t1011ot•brtaehor11111u1t In NOTICI' ~o~::&olTORS t• CtllfoH111 111m:rt111a1tnflrshtp) themselves felt Th the IOPl'll!IOlt COURT O' C,t,Ll,ORNIA. 1ht Obllg!tllonl HCl.lrwd I hireby, SUl>l!R IOR COOll.T OF THIE I parlrier • en COUNTY 0, DRANO• htrllo',!• ltXKUllld ,•nd Otll'i"td to '"'' JlATI OF CALlftOltNIA fOll By llSli MILLER February devaluation added ,. CIVIC C•NTll Olt lVa Wl!lT, l.lndtrloyntd t Wt ll1n 09'C trt11on Of lly WILLIAM T ROCHELLE ( ho f ' IAlfTA ANA. C.t.LIFO•NIA Oeltvll •nd Demand tor S111. •nd W\'llltl'I THiil COUNTY 0 , o•.t.NGll Thi• sltl•m.,1 ... ,. lit" with lht c--0 a s rtage 0 commodities • NUMIR nollc• ol bt•acll •nd of •lec!lon to (IUIO Mt. A·7•"' .,. c d th Id de u s CAI II. tf1t 1111d11'\lontd to Mii Nl1d propertv to Et!•lt of MARCAREl S PETERSON IV Clork OI Or1ng1 ounty, C11llott1l1 Ol'I 8fOUD e WOt , ma . D nm · Jvly 11, 1tn . SUMMONS tMA••••o•> 1t111ry 1110 otit1oetton1. 111K1 1111re1tt•r !hi Ott:eattd l':MM4 commoditle~ a bargain t'lll !ft ,. '"' mtrrllQI of 1>111!\ol'ltl', "'"°"1119M(I Cllllltd Mid l'I011et of lltffCh NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to th• l>ybllshld Ortnot COlll Dally Pll01, JU< Id kets add" hel ~ JOt!PH H CLARK Ind R.KPQl'ldll'\1. •nd ot ti.ctlon to IM RtcorCltd Aprll 26, tredl!Ot1 of IN tbOV• lllmld d~I ly 27 Ind Auguit J, 10. 17 ltn 2'11·73 wor mar • 1ng tot r OlltALDIN~ CLAR.IC 1m •• Im;!?' No. 2'661, In book 10665. llltl 111 Pft"Ol'll having tlllmt 1911Mt !ht • prtce at home ' ' • ro ttw RMpondtnt,41fhl pttltlontr 11.t ""~ m of Mtcl Otflel•l Recordl Mid dectdlflt •l'f l'fqltfred to fll• tt!tm. PUBLIC NOTICE • : , flltd • "''"°"' eofQf"lllng yovr mtrrtell s.10 "'' w111 Dt fl'llOe but wltriout whit tttt ntchltrv vouc11tr1. In tM Olf!Q Tn 1974 the federal bude;et Y'N tNY nit 1 wrlli.t! mpontt "l'llhlft COVf'nlllt or w1rra11ty, tKP:l'tl• or lrnpllt<I, ot tht ('tl'k Of IM •~ enlllled court, or ll be 'cl baJ ~.,. Of tM dlte l!Mt lfll• lltl'l'tll'loM 11 M•l"dtno 11111, pOttff,lleti. I/fl' -to prettnt ftltml wtllt lht l'lllCISlltY ,ICTITIOUl •USlf\IW Wl ose to ance :.:: Mtvrllf Oii yoy II vou Jtll· .... f\lt-41 WflltM CUrnl>f'tnCN to ~y tilt r•mtl11l119 prln-\'OVCh,,..,, to !ht tlndtfillOlltd •• tM olllw NA.Ml lTAT•Ml"T , ""'°"" wttlll4' •udl tlmt. wur ~•.\1,11 clpel tlll'n °' t11t "°"-\•I ttc:uttd bV ttkl of hb 1ttorl'ltYJ, B.t.RNES, SCHAG, Tl'tor tottowlnr prrllOflt-•,. dol111I~ PUBLIC NOTICE I mtv bl Mlttrtd 11111 lht eouti miY~fl'I~ DffCf Of TfUSt, wllh nl•rtll ., 11'1 11ld lOHHSON .. l{l!NNEOY. '515 MKArlhlir bUilii.U II' ~ !,J::'":=:.1n•:fv111~~~w ~,.,_,~ ~~::Y!:T:' i::.·~~i!t~~ "":!,;': ~'f:'tcir! on::.-.!~ r,~'01:-C:; ~~·~~~. ~.~!u~:! ~:~~~i··l----,-,-..,-IT-,-o-u-,· -,-u-,-,.-,-,-,--- l9PfMlll -~· tl!lkl (Ullody, dllld .,... •lld •~PtMff of tllt lrutlM •11<1 of 11141 bulll'ltll of "" ul'ldtt'llgntd In tll mitten nut NA.Ml lTATI MINT port, lllllll'MY'• '"" e .. 1 .. IM •11e"I •ruut Crtlllld by .aid OMd Ol lrutt. ptrl~!tllnt lo lfl9 11111• ol Hid dtetcltl'll. a ,_ C(lll(tr, 1111 Yor1Uhlt1. Gtrden TM k1H0Wlfl0 Ptr'tOll II dolrlil lxlJ!ntsl olMf Nlltf +•• NY tie 9r1nl9d 'f1f" It'll Sold 1•1• wlH l:lt Mid .., luttdtY. w11111n tour monlh1 tftfir lllJI first publlct Grove. C';llt '1'41 •• c.ourt. A111111•l 1'. ltn 11 11 •• A.M. at !I'll Ofne1 llOl'I ol !hi• notlct. Ptltr G Ctrll•r. 33'11l Mtrln• Visit, 11 COASTL.INE MARI NU· , 1 If r-Wltll .. MP fflll Hvlitil If 111 of T,O $ttYIC. Compeny, fttnk ot Otled July 31, lt73 Otnt l>oll'lt, CtUf t2629 AMiR,ICAN MA.RINE !LECfltONICS lttwMJ' 111 111it """"'· ,.... 1t\ellli ii Amtrlc• Tow.,, °"' ctrv Blvd Wltl, ,IOHN c PETERSON Biii I wor,n1tn ~lld OHn Work"ltn, f1$ A w, 1!1tt ll .. NllWllOft Btft(:~. Ct .. ~ M th.It }'t\lr wrllft Sul!• 1110 Ortf'!ll•· C1Ulorn1• &KtCUh>r of 1tit •Ill Of ljt),U lh1clol111! '1r • El Toro Ctl1t tUlO flHO ~ If '""' ''"' .. flltf on 111111. ' Dltt JulV "· 1m lht lbOYl llllrnecl dKtoe"t Jerry "'· Lint._ 1SS13 Btn>•t111t Ave.. SllllV J, TOl'bl11. tsel Arbor Or Ntw Wll;LIAM f , St JOH~, Clttlt COmrnot1w ... llh 1.11111 lA1'HES, SCH.t.O, G1rdtfll, tll!t tO:M l)Orl htcll Ca t2ftjO •Y lktlv TIOIJlft, Olpvty Tiit• Comp•ny, JOHNSON .. KIHNIDV Tlllt bush1ess 1t corwtucttd by • citn• Tl'lll IM.ltl"-'' It C'Of'l(IV(llld b~ '" In ISl.\I..) • 11 111(1 lr11tttt. IW' lni..t J, klltl, Jr, 1r11 P11rtner1hlp env11111al Jot•.-W M. u.A•K IV l .D. llRVICI COMPANY. uis Mot.t.rlhlll' ll¥d.. DIAH WORKMAN Silly J, l0fbl11 •17 ~ t111enl Po, lo• lfN Tht1 slllttMfll Wtl tlllld w!l'fl Tl'lt C1Wn lhlJ tlfltmtnt W•s lf1t<l wllh lht Cou" Of11119o Cill""""" fl y R.111" I!. II~ .. ...,.., •tte11. c111t. ,..., lY Clt11l ot Or•l'l(I• County on Afol!IU)I 1, IV Cleta ol Or•no• tOYnly ... J~ly lT Ttl '1Ml• AultlanJ SKYtlllY tth 1n4) .,...,. 1tn. lt73 ,tm....,."' .,. ..., n~·111s Alltr"lltYl fot IJtc:Vlor r2111t ,,..,~ FINANCE l~(h oflltf 11 of "'" Autm U ltllM l>K 17~ It~ lOWle Ml 1 • !"' close IE••'''" "'" ,....,,0p " ,, RKOll Ea '"' t'h lr111 Cit l'l tl. !!mt I Tll9 Qllcrlf· un t.rlfll.t UV. tt'h Itel! "Elte 20'>\ '°"' Tm Ct1P 21h 1-<I~) do not hw;ludt Uold Med JI• l~ Atll Univ 13'h 1~ lrn Duft 12\t l2t,'a reit I rn1rkuo. mark urnm Mt 11 1£..., lttx Pl11 6 ""Trnoll F11 •-'°" dOwn or tomml .. Gr1oh SC I\\ • Row11 •R. .. '911.<) Uni CtOI 9ft lo.M> llon1 tnd do f\01 v.-.1 Adv 9v, 10._, RIYtl Ml 21V. 2J14. UnlOl'I SOI lla 1'• rtotti(!nl tcllHll ttocn .. n 'bi .,,,,.. Ro.Id E1 J.SI• ""° Ufl.Arl Th l 7'\ tr11111cllons n ... tl !;W 1;,,. 10., Aobrf [)Is IS\/; lf'io US 8k Nt !!! IND05TRIAlS tlvll l'nO: 14-.. 1~., Rol!ll\I fl 16~ 11'ii US Trk L I 1 ANO UYILITllES ntu•ll ur ~I ·>~'" ACM,r•I CO 15"0 H\lo Univ Feb 15~ 1 ~ Thu•wl•r <1•rlvn P o}'I -Row• nt 101,(, 11 Unv Motil o: ~ AUOllll 2, 913 n1r1A1t 11: t~ °'• Ruckr Ph It 1tVt VtQM Ho • f\li '11W111 Fl I_. /""' Aull S1ov 19 20 Vll!(I Sn m • ' &111 Alk nvc .. n~ ._ ''• •+. Sagd Ads 1''s /'h V•n (Wk 1114 1)\(1 Acu1t1nt 111~ ttl4 ttthl11 Ms 4\1 ¥ Selim C-P ti~ 1'4 Vtn Shel( t ~ A",','o •,.", :IO\o 21 11e ... +on 1~" ...,..,. S•m•nl! 14'\lo 1''r• Vl(lorl SI ljlA lt"' to 14111 U .,., ntxcel c ll\'l 160., Stllerer JP't n v. Vldto $ys ~ '"" AUeg 80\1 1\1> 2~ 11omwd JU 1 ! S(llOtt In 291• )l)V, V!sutl St t 'A 1 AIU~ Ttl lth 1t" Hoover 14h b \\ Seo!! Inn 7~'t •v. Vol SllOt I• l•Vt Allyn _.p., '"' '"' nul'lt MIO JCLIV, 12•,. Sconi LG IVJ 9 W111'1 NG 12\l 13t• An> •-r•I 11 IP, H~tll ' 1311< "" StrlOPI H "'" :io W&sl• Ml 11\Qo 19'A A ArtCrft I •Ill Hv11e• c llh 211<11 Scr1p10 I IV. 1 ~1 We•mn I 7\\ lllo AmEI Lb "'' 211 Inda Wt! II~ 19\t Sell Wrl(j 2~\<. 2J Webb It• .wt $V. Am E•Or 61~1 12""° lf'WU N~cl ,_..,...ti, Sv M11rch i6\~ t7\I. Wetdtn 61' 7'r• Am Find 12'4 12u, il'l•Ort• 10 IO'r\ Svma1tr 1S1olo ~ we1g1 wt IS 16 :~ ~~;.. .~~ J:t 1n•~• .;rp .;1~ Sol Seven UP mi. 2''h Wol!n9 M 151~ 15". AMlrc Sv 1, 16v, tn11rc En 6)'o 1'lli S~tnr Co 110 2'• WOtfl Pl 6\IJ •~• Am Tel•v ?~'to l "" I",,"' Vi 1~• U"" Shortw 1Vi I Wi!Pub n 111;~ 11~ A ~-q nt Alym sr. 6 Slmp1on 1! 11 Wet!r i;td 1~ 20-i. "I Wela 11'• II"" tn Bll.W A 6'• 7 Snap Toi• Jof S5 Wlll1mt I jl14 21~o Anhevsr 41 •2Vt '":r" co 13, 1"'' Slnd Pap 14~ IS'• WU1n H J 1 It A"ken In m s • .,. Aoexco IO\!t 1~ Ir •nd A •~ .. .._ Spectra 16~ 17'n Wint PtT U,. 1"71 APS ln(p 14V. 15 .... J1mesl;I u,•• 111/o Std Req1$ IAV, lSV. Wisc P\I 19\• 19,~ Ardn Mvl 1~t l V. Jtr A1rFr J'h ~·• Stk. N Alt 30 31 Wood l h 11\ .. 1~ Arrow Hr 1611) If\• .wsrvn M 16\'f 171,. Stll.N Brw 6\4 ~World sv 11.\t 111, Arv•d• JV, 10 Kalsor st 1'''-13~ Stea-N S 9:\li 9"o Wright W ,,,., S AHO Colt 2l'J 2~1'> Kalv1r C l'o ''' Str110 l 'c 1m 16 .... Xom~ Co t•~ Ht'~ Ano Cola 2l''1 l4'h tc.111rn TK s~ 6 Super El 10 ltll '> Ytllo Fri tS 4.P• All Gi LI 14 .... '"Vi KlllWOCI 16\W. 1~ Svnor Co 10~ Ill.I,, l'l"lllr Co 6'4 I Au!o Trn t•1 lOW Ken (Of1n lo:llo 11~ SltbO Fd Sl4 6~• Zions Ulh » 17') M ta " II t B•lrd Ato ~~ 57!1 ICey Otlt 6 '°"' one ry P51 ucy WI .no coo-Baird wr 113 , K•v~ FoD y!l lm:i\.==::Yn'iiiir.;;:;;:T::Or.;;;;r.;~==--- tr1bute further to infliltlOn, ::~·~nF[ ~ n111 keys! ~~~1 161,. 17 Clive c laims Johnson eanv Mn s. 1s KMS Ind '"" •,,,.l _ _:__:__:_,z:._:_ _ _:_~_:__:_:__ Bn~ Bldg ls~. I~ 1Cn111t Vt 15 11 / Bank Ral 26" 21\ro Koger Pt 24'11 2S"' NEW ~ORK {VPll The 10 mint -This leaves question-mark~:~~":, 7' ~"!~'.lo ~~~~re1 :.\lo ~:Z·,~Uvo,11ock.1 tr•¥it11on•"'•'••'oc merk•t 6 ~ , ·•-, 1 ... 1 Y•' ev ts suoo y .S No 4 whether this booin will B::1r,: F r~ ~~ t::::Ca51 e 1iv. 13 s10cit Volu!NI a1e1 Allltd""' be I e 1 C ~ u ll\11 :)31,\ Nai'W\dO Cp 190,700 1~\ 1;1>.,+ ("o ollowed by a bus t . He B:~1r.,. ts 25"" 2tn L•~~:r c 3,17 39 ~eu Lb co t62C 6'h 6'•-1• thinks It unlikely. Bes! Pro 43 •AV. [ •iY Boy Jll<o l4Y. union 0011 l~ 1s-141J1&+ 1 J6 Bert Lit> 431'> .U.l,Q tg!Jtl Pt ISO\\ lS',; ~:.\°n G:~n 1n1 19'~ U U~ ,,Z "There will be no maJOr m Bibb co •~• a't Llblrtv H 2'1• ~Am E•orff.$ n..-oo 61J• 61'h+ •• • Bio Orm 174 131') LU Cmp I 8¥1 B1nk1mer CP tS 1>00 ~ "6V.-1 '> VeftIDry COlTCCllOn this tt.me Bird Sons 261'> 29 line Bd1t 11.I ~ Cenlrnlc Dllt S't.600 29¥1 :ll'lr! 3' &ob Evn1 21:Y. 22V. Lion CISI •'I• ~ Anfleus BuKh 51..000 •2 G\lr l~t Also there has been no big Booth Np 2214 7.1 loctlle 4 '' B""'nu In! 5'.200 1~ 1~1 ~ b ild' I 8rtw1eo I 211'> 27 LOIJWI co 51¥1 ~ U Up ln pant capacity dur-Brinks In 1014 11 M•d Gas l•V. u... NASO Volume !Odav S,233,IOO mg this busmess cycle The ~~;:.Ar 1~t 1~ ~:!it~rY .:~ ~~"' ~~~~:' ~ devaluations will also be show· :~~gv sr ~~ riv. M,u11 Fri J..!~ ~ u¥0~:rQ~1 1939 ff Bii M •1 •3 Miry Ky£•"' mg very positive e ects by c~m''T.oo 23,_,, 2~~· Mc Crntk ~~ 1l~ 1974" Ctcl Sow sv. S~ ~~~~v ,,VI 16~ Cen VIPS lS•/• lS'oll Medl!rl! .SC S5 Gainers & Loser~ Jehn Put this alld together and ~~~~ Pl l~~ :~ Merld 1n sv. 6v. son an many othefS g:;:~ ~';, 'J3MI 3~ ~f.f1~Fr ultJ ~~ Ntw y .!tk !UPI! -The tollowl"IJ 11•1 build 3 5trongcase fOt markets Chi Br Ir llJ 84 MMf,,', GoFo's ll~ 221'1 tl10w5 !ht SIOCIU that lllvt galnt<I !ht c 1 Sec " m ~ most end 10$1 the most btwcl oo petcent turning Strongly Up W 3 f d hr 1 1.U 113 MOllul C,1> ll'h 22'12 Of (t\ellQe on Ille Ovtr-l~nter t he _. Clllt lJ A 35\4 3W. Moftk " 39 40 m1r!ltt 11$ QllOled bY the NASO some 1me Int ne .. ~ year. cloveOk _10 1ov, ~· Sa .2•'VI 2.S'h Net and i>erten1110 chtnoei 1r1 tne • Clow Crit 11 12 MOlrlsn 2114 UV. dllltrenc:e between Tho Ptt\llOUS. list bid (Those who disagree tick off cocic Le ll'h 1&vo MrJ1o~0 c,1 111Vt 111,1, p1lce Jin<! th• cu-rren1 1111 111d prle1 h • • b Coml Shr ~ 21'/. M I I. •Vt ' GAINEltS t e same list of items, ut are cmwTt p 23y, 2•w NII Cl'lvSt '"" 10 1 Pl111e1ou Min l:v.+ v. lJP 2• 1 t• abnut tbe I Cot1t1lll p u~ 1S'4 Nal LlblY 6\'! &>II j Tilly Cofl)rtn 4\~t ~ VII ~0 pess1mlS IC If ear y Cousltl$ Jt\'! 2(11Ao NI MdlCr 121,'J 13'h APOldDlolt Dt 214 ~ Up ..... resolution They fear m vary-Cr'011 co 191/o 20 NI Pttent ~ 10 ' Sc:on• LIQG01d avi 1•t. U1> 112 • crvtch A f fl1o rofltdhm llV. 12v. 5 Centronlcs Oa 3'A Vil' 12.3 mg d egree a recessioo, higher Curt Noll 16\4 17'4 Ntwll Co l•l ll:V. 6 El'lff"!Cv YIS 1' IV. Uo 120 • ' Dtn1 11111 30 llM NEl"ll GE I~ IN 7 Siiicon k ln<:p 7'A ~~ Up !"i 1nflat1on, OT 8D m<:apac1tated Dtnty M &'lo ..... NJ Nit G 16 16Y, I Brand lnsulal 5 \, UI) l, ) Oar! 01";1 714 1"o Nltolel In 61'1 JV. 9 Moir CIAm U 101'> 1 Oo 10 S governmen t oeri °" 3:ii, •V. N!elsen A 32•4 ,n:; 10 v1oon1 c11ern1 s•~ v. UP 1~ s O.,t Gen 41111 42\4 Ni.IMll B 32V• ~ 11 Enerp~ Con~1 9'1'1 lo VII 100 Oecl1 Ot 11:V. 13\4 NClfdfotr 20\'o 'ZO'r• l~ ~~~~II sFrC~~ I'~ i: Up l~g n:·r,.~~:sJo~:,4 .. ;r11~~ 8:~ fn~ ~E 'ffi ~Er:' N~~ ~~ ~~ 11 i~~~!~ fn~ ~:t ~~ ~g : ~ may be Ori Sllghtly. By l~s . ""o• "'c' "• '' lj'l/o 04lkw<1 H a41 9 l~ 6!r!u11~.1e~1n ~~t ~ 8g : ~ ;,i am rs I 11•,i, Ocean Dr 5• S.S 18 Aloelt-Coro H'f \o UO 8 ~ they may be no better than Diam Hd 111/o llSo; Ocean Ex 61.'r 111• 19 Lanct Inc "6 31~ 2~~ UP 83 Okk A. B 28 28V. Ocngr Ml 3'~ •~• 20 En>tr•ons lid \lllt ''I UP I ~ 1973 B t t Olvrs Sci l~ 1:ru Oflsh T 111 l \.'J 8~~ 11 c11roovevor EQ 3'1• "• Up IO • u pnce-earrungs ra 105 Docu1e1 J9~• ..a~ 0011vv M 1• 201/i n At11nhc Indus l Yt+ '• UP 11 have been unusually low s m ce Ootlr Gen 8 a•• oli i<Prro n; 11.<. 21 p~,10 Prod 10'4+ '• Ull' 1 s Donaldg 251<'> 26 Orlt~ C•P 6'0 &111o 24 1n18.,i!c Econ 3'•+ •<lo Uo 1 4 1971 . They don't take into ac-Oow Jons JH> 31'~ O~rmvr lol~ " Contech ll'ICO 3'111+ •4 Up 7 l Dovie OB 14 14'4 overs NA Jto 4V. LOSERS COlIDt the fact that the earn-Dunkin 0 l',~ ~ Optl Coal 17''t 18~7 I Ar<ln Mayftlr 2'\-•t 011 17 'A. -Econ Lab 40 40''1 ormont S~i 6\lii 1 Gor,Capt croo 21/o-V. 8" IS 4. 1ngs we are now seeing for a E1 Palo 11•'. 12111o Patc•r 33v. 39•~ 3 Pr merv Me.:t 1~ >to ft 1s' b d ba f d t al El Nuctl '1• S~o Pat.51 Br .&6 '6,,., 4 1oxtooelnc Sk r-v.__ 'II ~If U l roa 5e 0 ID US M corn-EMrg! C 9•i 101.\ Pac Cam 11Vo 11'• 5 Raolda11 OSb 1 -1 ff 12 i pan!es IS normal for them Ee~an &~ ~~V. Jl Pac Lum 391h 40'.lo 6 fltctro Nucln 4~ ~ If 11 0 Y t thes be • ,,_, tn ""• •:,L Paso Brd 8 t 7 liberty HlllT!e 2.,.._ ~ ff 11 5 e , e eanungs are mg ,,-,,,,, •'• 1"i," Pan ocor 1••• 1t¥< • Am,ovrt sy11 3 -"" Off 11 • '" p I R 15\t lS"" 9 BvlldoSys Old 1 -!4 OU 11 1 valued for many good com· Ftlr Ln• 7'14 Bl'• P!~1,Y ~ ~ no 10 Nuclttr 1t15': 2 -1-4 1 j" , Ferlon El 30\1:1 ~1"' l1\~ II 11 PtrkvltW Gm I -\lo !·' p8.Rle5 at about etght ttm~. A Fttm Br lj 1 1ift Pylss Cas '' >•'L 12 Cavrn1n Coro 214-\4 l U , FIV• 01'1 ~ 61.\ Pay,N Sv .,-, 13 CP PrOdUCICO l..,,._ 'lo I 9 I p-e ratio o[ 8 could easlly FlllCll'ht 14 lAO P,~"'H'&WH 17'/o ,~,,.. 14 Geru\YloPI .. 2 -l • 1 beeo il Fit &oslfl 11'\li 1~V. "' 22 13 15 An:hon P PdlS :Aro-V. I l .J me 12, even 1975 taJ'P.• ls! TxFln 20 2(1>.(o Pet•o Lw 11\/o 11'1> 16 ta~way Int ut:: ~ \..3 ings are no higher than 1973~ ~~sc:sl~ 1~v. 1114 ;:~~rt~av ,f"" ~:'; 11~ F~lsth1W $: 12 -1 7~ ' J!IJ~r 1214 13 "loor Ind ''~ 1~•r. 20 Mey Pe!ilm l -\4 1 ~ Thus an opinlOll· 15 growm· g Fl.e. Teleo la~ lflll Ploner w 104\ 11i 1t ' Gr111mM1111 Jk 12 -1 I " among analysts that the place =~:J fl 1~t 1:, ~~~71' :.: lf• 1;,~ 21 r:.o:lch Br':.! i,tC ~ ~. for action, when The marker Fr~ll!lt 1~ .. 1-Prol GOif ,r 1Z~ n i~~Z~1~" ~V.-~ ,1,: finally does tum up, will be m ~~~~~ 'i ~; }jv. ;~r(!',, 11 111'2S Utd commu111 l\4-1<o the stocks o[ basic industry = l"k;. ··•••""""'""'""'-""'""~ where earnings growth has ' been steady. even if not as MUTUAL FUNDS spectacular as m the handful of glamour stocks ~ ... f1Pitfi'Cii--1 ft .•• FOR INSTANCE Re 't.i"· N w York Fol-llATON-& Jenu~ 1-0 17 1• 17 I• "'"'" 12 S6 • yno UO> 1ow1' 11 , u;i 1 w.t.Ro. ~"•" "''" , ·~ • •~ ""'"'" lio ,. ~ 'Ill Secur1t1es notes "Conunoo bid ~nd ••keel pr, B•tn fd t .sc 10 o ~""'" ::010 11-10 Yu. ~ ...... ar ...s1 • Jv ' CM on Mulua1 Gwth F 1•.3S1561~0o,nt111 2";12"." .,.,, .. ~ r-d t>4 "/SJ stocks o{ America's lead.in"' Fitrlds 1s Quoted ttv intm• sn , .... ~y,toNtr.. xuu1 :.11 11r"J ~1• ~ t11t HMO ln.c SP'ICll F 7.35 f 03 .,...,., 01 1~ 6' 19 5!> ~ • .,., .. ell t-Ul>I companies are at levels which --sick Fd 12 1214 01 ... ,.., 112 iv 31 21 I• 1111r 1nv I•» 14 ff T""''l ibersld f.39 11.36 -.u~• ~· ~ u ¥ W> o"olflt lo JI l•.J!. JS retrospect may prove the Auou11 2 1m 01e s11 •222.u Lu11 tc.1 1w 101 ... 1>m 1u11u111 be • lid A•ll P'C M.GM GRP: ... us1 1<.l tYI o~ """'eal :IU~ai.!W st buymgopportumties smce ADMl•.t.LTY : Eol'f Gr 1'6 15' 1..Ull i i 23 IS:Z,,Jf "'° UY ,6\1 ).\14 World war II N-lsthe Grwtll 4,4' •r. Eotv Pr 301 3.36 Lu~r :.:t 1 1Yill1~ ....... u1uT'I' f'DS • • • v.. lntom 31• ' 0 Fnd AlT\ 7.JI# a It LUii u 19:.1 ~ 6Y l:OUllY l.4l 3.JJ ttme to take stock 0 f 1n111m • 1• a 96 E11,.., Gt 12 .so ll st Lu11 :;.. 4 '' ' tu u1¥111• • 6Q 1.13. AdYIMr ' •• S2 Ellull lrt 16 51 p,po!IO 'ti ~OS Ullfll ,.. 6.fll 1 ~ Afnencan Industry and to Atlllll Fd I 0 9 It Ernero 3 97 .e.J.I Pootrl J 01 4.UI ac"'•"TED t!'.PS. Aet~ In 133'14.s&EneWd 11•111•sKnlckr 11U11 t..•7 Am Snr 1,1, 110 purc~se the 8 t .() c k s of ~r1~1.'i! 1'1,t:1l1l ~~r flurt i.u : n ~::n~lh l~ ~ t ';;r srir: !lrif' rif' Amenca's leading cor-Al6"• Fd l .23 14:'6Ftd,••1,•v t.56 • Lonx I'd ):al s:1:11 s..n11ne1 t 1uA Al\'ICIP F 'n 5 u PIO L Lax Gll.OVP' ::O!l'lllrV F 13 14MS poraltons " """ ovn '~ 1031 08•.,ou1>. , " , 10 .,.0 L11Gr 1......sc 11 01 :u1All&HL.D P' : H W It h • f Arn EfllV •.53 4..96 ~eb Grwtll tSI 719 L°"111 3 6' enry a er, c all1t\al\ O .t.M l!XPRESS r:ot• 11j~12 IM kn.rcn IJ 1>31• 111.1 1::.11rrpr ~~ o 16 the 1nvestment-poLiey C(lm. FCVf'l2,l1 1.63 8~ on'S£et f 4 1 .. LlblY Fd ) 39 5.lt l'1et Fd 3..~ <2' IP•• .33 I 1.21 • lite lnlv ¥;>1 ¥:ID Htrbr 1 ''* m1ttee of the investment-l::C~ J 9, X 0 ::.. l0.80 Lint cap 714 1t1 ~·1 L '·/A•" II !Jehnp .....,..,_ spec\ 7S6126 Evtnt 11001205Llngl'nd 3.1t , l'ac•Fo ~. •·• counse Inn 0 "-"ll<tl.":!e SIOCk l p i Zl Fund 1S.66 j1 II LIWMIS SM£AA50N F I Inc , suspects that relax:mi :~ 1~~~ iln ib r:1'::: F ?1~ t: ~:P"~v 1311u11 ~~. ;tt:,f.~ the di 'ddld controls will tt Am ~nl •1'2 4.!t lrenci ' 2'2426•t Murutl l•IOl4tS lnVttll t,'31,\'1.16 VI ·--d blle. ~'! UGI ,~ !:sJ ~lr~~'s. lf:.e,ABll6(f 702 !~°f:n .1t"ii1.:I courage a Ut\lll er pu c A'N'N~oa' Fl" Ovn ,,, 421 Am BIA 292 311 5IGMA FUN • partlc.1pat"1on "m ma~·t oR&u;" Fn Ind 439 439 Bnd,e1tt:1 ~161067 ca11 snr 1 t . .ff ."'"' C ttl 471 S2< Fin Inc 5$1 SS1 lUl/lftl'I 10641163 Inv 10 11.3' "The public wtll hattt .. to F= Inv 1 63 136 vent '01 • 01 L1JllW1 In 9 311011 Tr11 7.11 1.611 ...,,.!§':'"' Grwth 7'8 J?Sh!Fd Vt ll:M12.3>9 M.4.GNA ,.UNDS Ven!ur 't i 1002 return by buying secunties It 1ncom 1.ot nF1RlT c1111•1 371 •o' smuh B 1o!f11ou understands." he says ''After ~-:·~~" J'M1ti* 11tY1<='J~RsS-st, ~ttt.~ -l;.'f ;;'!, ~ J!~~ ~t~gf~ t ha I ·• the r . I Aslron j7••09 ~rlh Fd 727 7'7M~;;i.;,n 4..tlt '.u.Swsl Inv 19!,;17• I s nt:U U1;.~f8 ~~~, II lt'l s~ F ).1.61 8..J4 MASS CDI Sw lnY G 6i•" Motors kmd of stock sod not r:·~OHTON· ~~RU~11oRt:J,'" r~-:~ i~: ::! ~::~1~; 1t1 11::: been burned it may begm' to utld A •70 su 11001 ',~ 10,!~10,!~ Mau F 114112.50 s&P 1no ·~ oat • 1 utld 8 •.M 1 ff 10 "'' vo -MASS FNCL, ST.t.TI INO P get into the stock of lesser· Stodl s 8.l 6:!J co1'1:rn., ~f ·~g MIT 11 )f 12.3' com Fd .. 1 5 1• I Akt Sci 4 16 • 2 :LS U 10 t O MIC la.Jf lj63 OlvUll S lli S" known but we I-run companies BLC Gth 11112" F~'d11 FG'r.d : t: 6 1~ MlD 13 22 1 •s Proors s aJ: 1 s.. But it w1ll start with f.he very I:= 1l:ll }~A n Sr • 6' s o7 ~g ~t~~i~ ~l ~~ ~ ~-~; ~ big and very safe narftes " ·,~~ ... or HI i ~ 61~ S ~~~e-111s M•tt' iv z.~l 2.21 s1•1t s1r ,.. ,i/;;,,, oo .. • :-con K ~ll~l :1~ r~.:. 1~~,1~; ~:"~tn 'l:;;'lf. sz~A=--!!3 ~~ Bw.:; n f: FMtua1902t86MOnYFd10Mllt5 A1toFd 11 111 AN 0 THE R EXPECTED B~t' !,18 !4' F soecu 10 ts 11.97 MSB Fd \'~ iRta ffl1~1 1110a1 !)l..37 source or strength for the i;ldn ;~1 I £iA'=k[1N 1 a. '"~r'F B~ 1.ss a,1• ~:111\C :zozo'' market 1s overseas purchases ~r~" ~0~!: 181 l6l~~~1~ !:? :-n s1oc: l%1~1t1~ Of stock With the dollar at Its ~11 Fd 12 te 1' 20 to Sr 7'ff •.., MUOrll n • ao t s1 '•" •1tOUP1 " ~03:U.12 r lncm 1J1 209Mvt Sl!r• IS1S 1SJl5 rwlll tl 611 cheapest level ever and prob-~ 651:.~ w~1~1.s ;:1~ .. ~¥·"1~~ ~'~ ~;: ~=' ~i!:~ 8 b!y consider a bly cheape rMm e.i 1 ,t1l{r R"li1r: :.~ ~ ll e'\T.!c c 'ffi ''4 SY tc:~ F 11~13 ~;: th:;in 1t "1111 rem~m. and stock ~~' , .J .b Jl:li ~~t:'l:l' 1~.:J 1~41 B~ sr t~ lil t!o1 A& I ;!~ prices at bargam !eve.ls, the £:1 441 •iki;'; flKP ~~~tk t.G3 ..,.. r-c e rombi'rtattOn COUid prove-•1r.-, NO ~C~: in t.70 1~sr :.u ~_l: t~cl: 1i 1r ~ I r bu !!M. ,,_.11 Cl lmpec ,1 I Cl A lh 6 71 7 41) Tudor H II 11-lt Tes1st1b e to ore1gn yers, J;;;_· fit ;i 119 111<1u• 1r n 12 ?s N•~ eNc; LP1 :iroth ~G '6 2.•• once lhcv ar~ convinced the lj~1 53' -tc':1~;.; J:ll I~ s~~ :t;1r=tt...1'11~ .. ;:.1 }~ doll!lr will decline no further. 11coi;n f:r.6' :n 8:n ·s! 'i:: 6 ., Sid• Mt 1~ Jt 1: ;t ij)/1o;i s•R8vijfJ '' obcrJ..H....,P'ar.k§_._.,-J~c tn I'.. _J_I _!IROUP llC ~::~nt GltOIJP. economist or B lyth Eastman • NS ~ t st ~"";tft1f-~ ==')31 °' ~°',e -i 1#-il Dillon, reinforces this with the 1~~ ip Ji· !n !l~ F~,: i3 ~ '31' ~:w ~:.,~~I~:~ ~~J:rt 1r ; g argument th:it European in· Ptl1 F; 11U 1r~ ~l~'i'LTONtt~r,n ~~~1~~1• lti?lt 2 uA~~~o f fli nation. alrc:idv wo~se than in ~°'it ~~AL ~~11 f:g'J ~:fgc~7 ~t~ t:J P:, :: l. l:f the Un.1tcd States 1s nolng to ~~"' fj' '!'! rl(om ~ 10 6 11 o Ntn Id 11 •• 11... con1 inc I 10 11 ' • ,, INllY SI f, 1r,....1 101$ 10 IS ooe Wiii 16$( 16.$.1 fll(0"' 1 ' ,. '' getirt\JIWOrSe. Fllnd , ..,110 tr! Lv 116111 0Pl>£NNM ,0 .1 eel= 1, J41 "The mnationary problems = ,;~18.~ ~ J 1" &: ~1: ,,11 11~t us'M c1 11: 11i1 or the Un1!ed States will look ?;'~G 1Hl 1ln ~trl 1, :t4:: D~C l= 1&31,~ ~ll811SLn1e ~~4 like a Sunday~chool picnic tl~~WLTN rnP ~0 '"'1's.;::i1 .... ~ft J.il ~!Ii: ~!'R comµared with the orgy of AN 1·11 20 fl(; *E,m 1iu" •('lllutJi SO't SM ~·v ~th l ~·'• troubles a.head for Europe." ~ f 0 i I 111..:i~~ I· 1l1 $1~ ri ! ! J.e ~:$::;,, ·" -· .. ! I 11\'ll~ 1 • 1 ,.,.,. $' 1111210.t:I I"-' =11 1.H slill omit Fd , 1 ,,,vtrl'I n ~T'l'ft ~ t~ ~.,,,..~ .. d STOCKS WIU. face oncro 11nv~ '!°''•·" ,..,,....... ... -.-,.1 '"" I ----t...-t 4 'ij '""' -.ttJ :a -.iflll-Ffo.-,._,..__,,,,. .11ftlhM1 _.,,.,. __ stiffer compel tlon t an "'" •• J Inv 1 1c .11 ,.,..,, ~,. • 1•,.. ,,._.. 1, 113 f r higher onMI In j11v fl1" l M 12 Ot l>lonr u • ,,. te •~ """-' 10!0 fit: prt:VI0\1,, "J n.'IM l1'I--on1t11L 4 11\l&ll o"'"""' < t Alt "•""'1 ! 1 ~ ti t t t Bond ylelda ma ontrv c ii ii ~Ml&\. .u. PL\ r.11;r'I ,. 'II 'l" ""'""' or ..... eres ra fS Y wn 0011 _ '.29 • 1 •Nm j"' j" p,. ..... 0 ... .,. ·~·ri•1 .... ,"oi; st•Y In the 11.;-8~ perccntD•v"Olv l~I~ !:fll! ~"' T ~ 1•".inwti•"M" '".,.;"• • ~ •• ·" 1~1sf''oit0 .. · ~ P~• •11'1,, M ..,......., -·~ -.io.tt ranite Banks now con !let SI~,. A ! Gth .. i lrfw He>f '" M 10 1to> ..... 1 '"'OlOM-\ r t t ~1 ' t~i..I.' I NO 6 •f'lo,....,,, •~• •0("•01tP1 their OWTI rates o m eres on 1 .: ,. t4t I JJ 1 5,.,. ,.1 ••ov1d1 iflfi ''" .,_,,,,. ,.. ,1...., C~ or f•"r yea 11 T '*'~ .1 ~~u11111 • 111·~ .. ...,. ... ,.,. • ,. • ~~ • -· • .,.,. ,. consumer lJ':i "" rs or v ~ i : Ltotk ,, ,,~ ...... •t• to•4 ll.41" ~ i,,," h igh " 7'1 1••rccnt "I • ·~ I~~"• · £ -···-· "'" 'l·" _,,, '" "' S d T t ' f OIT1 • f.,a (;rwtti 11 I~ -• lflft 'I .-.., arur ay· 1110 1er1 or-'' 1 . nl "! . •!IC ,.,,. • ·-~.,. ·~ .,.,1 ftter, or us a 1 11tt1 Fnd u n.u \it-i.o P 11\.•tu_• ""'""'-•, ,.:i; Pu!lllll'llCll ()(Inge COiia! ~tr ,., ..... M,,·j. ',,"',.","""• Or•* Co••' DlllV PUOl, Publltlltd Or11no• Cottt OtllV Pf!Ol,I Publlsl'ltd Oret!Ot Cotti O•llv Pilot, Pllllllll'ltd 0t"'llt C0911 0..1tY Piiot Ju J111y ''· to. "· -AVGLltl ,, 1'7) "' 10. '· IP11 2Jll,73 Avo1111 1. 10. 17, ,,., lt7' 23t1·11 AUOUSI ,, 10, 11, ll ltfl net 73 Iv 10. fl, llld August ~ 10, lfn 1'l1f..ll lon({r.r. and some are going as • 1 . I .,,11te~1 !' • !~ ~ ;::~!"-~::";:• 1~ , ._, P8US I r•11 Ith !" •. t.s Q:'IY 1t11"' t It ~~~ ';' ! ; j t I~ r rt " 061• tn~ tftlO 1 wi.,..,,.. '--,"! /I e't 11 !YVFlll>d 1Cl2f.O?V...,tQ -..n11,.-..o11 .. 1.-...,.., J) m . "' r • J~ Gwlh 1.•1 ..... " .... ,.. F ,m ,, ............. _ I • • ' 12 DAll Y PILOT s F~d11, August J; 1973 Meat Market Turning Gray By IJlll<d Pttu Jnt<naLloul Call ft black market or gray market, the day may be com· ing when housewives willing to pay more for meat than the government allows wUJ be able to do so -law or no law. \\'hile there were scattered rf'?)rts Thursday of extra money being paid for beef at the retail le\1el, the chain or events had already reached m a n y wholesale suppliers, most of whom were almost out of beer themselves . •·1 v.·ouJd estimale tile black market is already lS lo 20 per- cent of .the total national sales -meaning that much is sell- ing above the ceiling prices set by law," said Merson Moran, operations manager of the Vienna S a u s a g e Manufac- turing C.Orp. of Phoenix, Ariz. "'A lot of legitimate people have had to go out of business in the slaughtering business," said a wholesaler in Buffalo, N.Y., who declined 10 be iden--nnea .- , "A gray market tttat gets 1vorse is a bl ack market." said Herrell deGrarr, a spokesman for the American M e a t Institute. "Mrs. Housewife is going to go the supermarket and she's going to find her seven-pound rib roast is going to be 10 pounds. with the short ribs ad- ded. It'll be the same price,'' he added. The U.S. attorney for the New York City area said he Y-'ill issue subpoenas at the end of the week for an in- vestigation into charges that some butchers are charging higher prices for better cuts of meat and supplying what they can or the cheaper meats to customers who do not want to go along. The price of beef stayed frozen under the Phase IV economic plan announced tast mooth while other food prod- Aircraft Compa1iies Earn More NEW YORK (AP) -Both United Aircraft C.Orp. and Boeing Co. announced sharply higher earnings for 1973's sec- 'ond quarter. United's second quarter prof· its increased 18 percent to $16.4 million, or $1.40 a com- mon share, compared to $13.9 million or $1.15 a share for lhe san1e quarter a year ago. SALF.S \\'ERE up 27 percent to $595.4 from $473.4 million. Boeing's second quarter prof- it .... -as $14.S million, or 67 cents a share, up 76 percent front $8.2 million or 38 cents a -share in the year earlier. Sales were 56 percent higher • at $976.4 million, compared to : $624.4 million for the second -quarter a year ago. BofA Plans Expansion Due to increasing lobby traf- fic resuJUng from student enrollment growth, the Bank of America is expanding its Irvine campus office at Cam- pus Drive near Culver. Manager Doug Watters said the pre-engineered structure would be expanded nearly 25 percent with the installation of an additionaJ modular unit along the south side of the ilructure. Sales Hit Record PITTSBURGH (AP) -U.S. '., Steel Corp., the nation's big· gest steelmaker, T uesday reported record sales for the first siX months of 1973. • But the corporate gian t said Its profit marJ?ins for the perk>d were ''inadequate" under government price cen- trols. ··-PRIVATE TRUST "FUllDS IYAlrAILE fON MA.L ESTATE LOANS 1.t l ZM TRUST DE'EOS S1 .lllO To $250.ooo U,. TO IO,._ LOAMS OH YMIST DlED OOUATD!AL NIWPOllT 10UITT fUNDI H'"""°"' C9111w llD'N9WPOn Cenltr ~ ""'°" le«tl. Ollll'. (714) ........ Much Protei11? ~cki~g n;ieat to fill his displ~y case \Vith , grocer George Laskaris of Chu:ago filled 1t with beer. "If meat prices go down, I'll put fresh meat in again." he observed, " ... now they buy frozen dinners and cold beer. and they go happy.'' Fixed-wage Earni11g G1~oups lgno1~ed by Eco11omic Policy By SYLVIA PORTEH To you, the younger U:-S. worker belonging to a stroog unk>n or holding an essential job, the White House offers the hope that annual increases in your paycheck will keep pace with annual increases in your cost of living under Phase 4 and whatever follows. The standard for wage in- creases is 5.5 percent a year plus 0.7 percent in fringe benefits and , most revealing, lhe Administration is saying as little as it can about con- trolling wages. This means that 5.5 percent-plus is an ex- ceedingly flexible guideline which can be "bent upward" -and if prices continue surg- ing upward, up is where the pay bent will be. But what hope does the Administration offer to you, l he older ,. worker al- ready at an age \1•here your pay- check is not being in- creased much, if at all ? Or to you. !he man 1"01t.T•• or \\.'Oman already reUred and living on a fixed income? No hope. There's not even a whisper about your p light in \Vasttington. There's not even a hint about the crisis of survival you will face if our countf'i'"s ltadcfship 1.ooes. not• THIS JS TUE gap which ter# rifies me. This crisis of survivul is "'hat I can see exploding in our nation's colleclive face l{ we do no t get inflation und!!r control. There is a Jim.It to the Social Security tax burden that can be imposed on those of us who are working to finance the in· creases in Social Security benefits to the retired . We l • Complete New Y 01·k Stoc~ List • ~ • . ""'"'' Thursday~s Closi11g Prices-Co1nplete Nelv York Stock Exchange List Market Slumps For Fourth Day NEW YORK (AP)-Profll laking and econom ic womes pushed stock market pnces down for their fourth straight day Thursday. "The market is cont1nu1ng in the consolidation phase begun Monday," said Larry Wachtel, analyst with Bache & Co. Trading remained Jlght, wilh most investors sitting on the s1delmes and prices tended to drift most o( the session. A major factor in the sell -off In addition to technical fa ctors, was the climb in interest rates, brokers said. NI Hom• .lO 1' NII llld O~ 11 N1l IOll I" NPr11 l 0. S Nil ~m con Jll NII Serv XI ~ Nt Sr1ncl IS 16 N151trcA M ZJ .. ~·r.: ·~ • Niii .. (..O N1tU"EI VO J N1roma1 1S 41 Nt1H"'nt 4'11 I• Ntv P'W I.JS • NtvPt)f I 60 NEnDEI I et ' NEoT I 2.Ji IZ N1w1M I JO l97J OAILV PILOT Ad ve1·tising Phone 6424321 NwrMI 104 14 N Wl'llflOf 4 \l NYSEG 11 ' HY!i!!i"'° NI 1 II 10 Nl J~ •• Nii Sri 1 lib Co1nplete Closing Prices-An1erican Stock Exchange List NL l!'MNll I I NL.T Cr!'_ .36 11 NorfDlk'('ll ! r Norlln<:11 .. S Norris 1 OI 1 NA Coel 60 12 NA, Ml I 17b II NAmPl!ll I 7 N(l'\Alr QSb 1 NDCnAlr1 *' Noet!UI l 02 NOCn1G1 .60 HOjllGs I f'l NO nPS l 3$ NoNIG1 1 60 frrjoNG!lf 5 60 NoNGrrt 14 NO.SIPw I I• 10 NOSPOI )60 NoSPof '10 NC.SPol '5' N~Pof 1 M >I . ' • • • • ~,..,_ .. ''""'"'" ' tAJrl ..4S lt Nwl1" 160 IS N"'"t Ind .tJ j NWll llld "'" Nwlll&M 41> NW1llnoK S NWMl,I 1~ 11 NOWllS!I 71 1 NorthCo I \' I Nortl\SI lt'D l S NrtSI OI 1.60 N...c:«" OSb Nl/F Co XIII: $1119 PE (h<ISI High l.ow "" 1tcn11 eriean .uose Aeeive Finance Briefs e /fle.nore:r: Corp. Special to tbe Daily PUo' SANT A CLARA -Memorex Corp Wednesday reported. th a t prevJously announced negotiaboos with the Singer <Jo. concerrung tbe proposed sale of a coo.trollmg fnlerest 1n Memorex to the Smger Co. have been lemunated Accordingly, Memorex, w11h the Bank ol America as its prmc1pal banker, is consider- ing other p<l551bte so1uuons to its fmancing pcoblems. e Arden./flayfair LOS ANGELES (AP) Arden-Mayfair Inc.. a Los Angeles-hued. grocery chain , says 1t will skip preferred divtdend and debenture in- terest payments Sept t because or a $3 6 trull1<>n operating Joss for the second quarter The lo,., amounting to $1 06 per share for the ~uarter end- ed June 30. was reported Wednesday. The grocery ch31n said the lcu ~as caused by the ont-tlme el])enSes of con- vert.Jng its Mayfair stores to discount supermarketii. e Rlehtleld Oil M~an ANGELES (APl -• t C! .Rlchftekl Co.. llVltil'--.,..· Is n gotlating M1th "r!rit , Miss:wl ppt Corp <>( Jackson. Miss, for' possible sale (I f Arcos retail farm suppt)> centers in the f.lld~tst The company also sa~I Wednesday that it ls bargain· log wtlh Flnt MlssiS!ippl rot ' sublease ol the Atlanti c lldJl!eid agricultural ch<ml· t _cal plant at Fort f.fadlson, : Iowa. 'Ille plant is ~11ed b)' the city and Optt"dted under a lease by Al't'O Chemical Co , a subsidiary of Atlanuc Rich- nt1d. Good Deed In tho ! ·-. • . . : - .... ~- "'LJWE,YOUI? MA6~ SPELL IS EVERYWMERE.:'" Probers Of Panel 'Grilled' WASHINGTO N (UPI ) The man at the witness table in the Senate Watergate hear- ing room -a household name to mi11ions of Aniericans - looked squarely into the television camera and said, "I have no knowledge whatsoever about the Watergate." --... .. 185/14 19$114 205/14 215/14 205/15 STEEL ER78/14 F 78/14 FR78/lil STE El G78/14 GR78/14 STEEL H78/14 HR78/14 STEEL G78/1 S GR78/IS STEEL 1be ''w itnes s'' lvas showman Dick Cavett. "'ho then turned the tables and for the next hour and a half, with suitable interruptions for conl- mercials, did the questioning of the four c ommi t !cr members present. 215/15 HR78/IS H78/1 S THE UNlJSOAL scene in the Old Senate caucus Roon1 Wednesday ni·ght \1•as special taping or the~ Cavett ShO\V. Committee Vice Chairman .• Howard Baker (R-Tenn .) and Sens. Herman Talmadge ( [). Ga.), Lowell Weicker (R- Conn.) and Daniel Inouye ( D- Hawaii) were hi·s guests. The show will be presented Tuesday on ABC.TV at Il :30 p.m. CAVE'M' OPENED the show with his u s u a I monologue. saying the hear- ings were aU? ."longest running quiz show on TV." He compared them to the television show "To Tell the Truth" where he said, "Two out of ttree people are ah.\•ays lying." His questioning or t h e senators often strayed far from the hearings. BAKER WAS asked it he once pushed his \.\1ifc into a rooe bush. He did; Inouye was asked how he lost his right arn1 tin ltaly during \Vorld \Var Ill; and Talmadge was_ asked lhe size of his hig h school graduating class 1300). At some points. however, the senators' humor was bet- ter than Cavett's. "By sitting in that witness chair I felt guilty," Cavett joked at one point. "You may be the rirst one,•' Baker replied. Toilet TV Tips G70/1S G70/1S 205 /lS E70/14 18S/14 !70114 . 175114 f70/14 195114 f70114 f78 114 F6011S F78/1S F60115 f60/1S l . ' O.r c•1f0Mtr ,auc, i• to bttl•r 11ry• yo.u, tf yo. k••• a ..-11tion co11ctn1i119 pro. d1i1ct1 Of' 1trt"ic11 rtndtrtd to yo1i1, pltol t call oor Oir.c:tor of Con1vn'ier Affoir1, Mr. S. Arabian 1213) 170·1737 or 391 · 1211. II •• 1ho11ld .stll 011! of ro-r lilt, • "loi11 Check .. will ht i1,u1cl 01111ring • laitr cltli••ry •t the tclw1rti11cl price. 235/15 l.R78/IS WIDE TRACK 60 SERIES $28!.~ SIZE BELOW SIZE F60/14 F60/15 860/13 SAYE $7fl!l 11~-7.tS Alit• ... f•ll Silt U.S. Ctn •.. Witll tllit '' ••' 2 lire ,, •• ,.,,, ••• Air ''''· & t1r1i11 c1r1 Sl.tJ ,,.,,, ..• offtr .--NATIONALLY AD YllTISID--.. ._-"'""';''°'•'°'31'--7'-'3'-. -------~ DELCO AIR SHOCKS COMPLITIL Y All ADJUSTAILI 1:111;1ifM•tti1114.1.1111ig It[ SW I SO'l'ICl S.I AISOQ[IS r1t Ul tw;(S & ~ W ,WDllU CAil, t.l.lllf'(IS, STlTltN WAllllS, UCIJT JlllCCS I llAIUIS . V11ir1•yal Orig. Equip. as.u ~-i·763 ca8rs8 :;::;j '11' GTB-14 HT8°l.f GTB-IS G11/1~!j~f6'i• Z·i!fJ '""'"; A71 / I JI Iii' J ! fi1 11,1rnr•u H18·1S 118-IS TOKYO (API -A newspaper suggested that Tokyo television stations give instructions on how to use Western-style toilets. "The J apanese ha v e been accustomed to the s quat system to i I e t .'' wrote the En g f is h - language htainichi Daily News . • llb.l'l IU.llrf.llll $TlM&ll'J llt'll llK • ewt:11S•n• rt1 ,.,". 1.111c-rtoirs • 1111 L•S _., & ....... 1¥11U91.[ • lllfU.Rl 111 K~ Tl Ll'ltl Cllt JIJTMU,_l,M.11111 J f.11111Nf170111 Vw DATSUN I TOYOTA 5 & others COSTA MESA 3005 HARBOR BLVD. (corner of Boker and Harbor J "The general trend is toward wider adoption of the imported system. The question now comes up whether these \\restern- style toilets are be ing properly used." • (714) 557-1!,000 tlf'1'f'/irinl "'•"'""" Trr · ·-hungry ·tiger '.· .. •. R 'EBTAUR ANT •?. • e •ND ••••ooo or1r1 • •a• 1 • NEWPORT BEACH '(ONLY) : . • L PICfflc Coolll HIOhwlJ • Ctli 10< rtMrntlonit (714) I~ . - • • GARDEN GROVE U. HAIRA IUENA PARK 14040 11roo1thun 1 2tOCI Wlllllltr Blvd. 2f'J Llnc•h• Blvd, (corn•• of Wfll!!ier CGrner Gf Lincoln (corner Wesfmln•llr I ncl 8t11Cfl and Knot1l and 8rookflurs! ' , 17141 SJ0-3200 674-3666 . 17141 826·5S!i0 215/14 136" . 165/13 205/1 5 135u 215/15 235/15 6.50113 7 .35/14 7.7 5/14 8.25 /14 8.25/15 8.55/14 8.55/15 1121 Sovth 'l!IKlkl (! Bloc~ NGrlh Gt R ;~ersklt Frff'W•V~ 17141 170-0100 878/13 E78/l 4 F78/14 G78/14 G78/l S H78/14 Includes: PARTS & i.ABOR 17141 6J9"'4l21 • 155 15 165/15 175/13 165/14 185 14 1.77 1.13 2 .oq '2.00 S.20/1 3 5.60/13 S.60/13 S.60/1 S 6 .00/15 6 .IS 1 S 6.50/1 l 7.00 13 s.•011• 6 .00 '" lR71/1 Full SlH U.S. Cars Rtr. DRUM TYP£ I I I 1 I • • I / .. J ,. ' • --.. .~ , ~ • ·-· . - ~~ _., < ' • ' . ' • . .. . .. -~~. . '-~. ·' •• • • ' • ~-·-. 6men BEA ANDERSON. Edito• Frid~y. A'u1u1t J, 1t 7l l"•tt U Refreshing Habit: • Sabo t Adrift a "Believe me, my Friends, there 1s NOTHING -absolutely nothing -half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats ... " Cassandra Smelher, 8, of Balboa may be having second thoughts about that philo- sophy from "Wind in the Willows." But she can manage as long as instructor Patti Tuck- er, le#, shouts words of encouragement or tacks to her assistance. Also in the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Department sailing class, Sandra Geiler of 1Corona del Mar, below, exempli- fies another part of the excerpt: "Whether you gel anywhere at all, you're always busy and you never do any- thing in particular; and when you've done it there's always something else to do." Daily Pilot Phatos by Ric:he11d Kaehler ----~ • • • • • ' I •• JG DAILY PILOT Fr iday, Aug11st .3, 1973 Women Viewed T·hrough Camera Lens By JO OLSON Her involvement with the Gall °'0a"" &:i ·~·~=~ge is Christy Minstrels came quite that women can ach.ieve and by accident and W a s stifl be wives and mothers. something she really disln't Her medium is television. want to do. The Laguna Niguel resident, She.was persuaded to audi- "anchor man" for Channel tion by an agent friend, and 50's Orange County Review, when the Minstrel represen- hopes to use lhe new Orange tatives gave her the nod with County statioll to promote the an 11 p.m. phone call. she image or women as capable gave in and was on a plane people through a monthly within 24 hours to join the special focusing on local group in Detroit. women. After leaving the 11instrels "I'm not a women's libber she started her own company but I'm a follower," she ex-to produce industrial sho.ws. plained. "I hope this will be During the time she was al· significant to women i n tending Califomia S t a t e Orange County." University, Los Angeles, she As she has outlined in her was workinJit in movies and proposal, the program will television. To her credit are showcase "Orange County appearances in "Playhouse women who have found the 90," "Mr. Ed," "My Fair way to become i n v o I v e d Lady" and "Three on a outside the home routine Couch." without minimizing the role of Her touring company, which the homemaker." was formed after her wa.rk -She will produce-and write with the Minstrels, went to the show but will not direct it Vietnam, Guam. the Philip-- herself. pines, Taiwan and Okinawa, Gail's work with Channel 50 entertaining troops. is not her first foray into the Gail, who retains her pro. television and film world. fessional identity by using her Her career began with a maiden name, Da Corsi (she stint as lead singer for the is married to George Pagano. New Christy Minstrels, where a public relations represen~ she sang such hits as "Green, -'talive for a disti\lery), is Green," and continued With enthusiastic about the op- movie roles and the formation portunities she has at Orange of her own production com· County's only television sta· pany and touring musical lion and the potential of the ·group. station itself for leadership in the COWllry. "We are allowed to be in· nova tors," she sald , "KOCE gives us an opportunity to at· tempt new things. It is a testing and growing ground for many young people who are very talenled." Her job as commentator for Orange County Review has led her to interesting and skilled people such as Sen. Allen Cranston, actor John Wayne, Angel pitcher Rudy May and Irvine Councilwoman Gabby Pryor. Mrs. Pryor has most im- pressed her so far . "Her ideas are much like my own," Gail said. "She's a mother. a homemaker and she has achieved something. She ex- emplifies what a woman can do and still remain a woni.an." Gall tierseU is a "homebody" and loves to decorate her home and cook. She makes her own c1Jr(air!S, refinishes furniture and is "getting into Italian cooking" because her husband is of Italian descent. She, too, is dedicated to youth and has always had a dream of starting a n orphanage, though she is not sure whether that goal will ever be realized. In addition, she has started other youth organizations, an a c ti v i t y which she has found "very rewarding." Gail Da Corsi goes over script for KOCE program with Richard Jansen, stud io supervisor. ·Secretary's Conscience Dictates Response DEAR ANN LANDERS: I felt a strong kinsJUp "'ith the woman who Mote that she blushed all day and couldn't face her boss because of the dreams she was hav- ing about him. Your advice. "Get another job" was sound. I hope she takes it. I was in the same spot 10 years ago and "·here I got the strength to walk out of th;it office is more than I \Yill ever know. Today I have a fine husband and family and my \Yonderful ex-boss's fan1l· Jy is intact. It might not have been had I stayed around. It's easy to fall in love with a man you see every day. especially if he is at· tractive and successful. A secretary can 1Tiake herself "indispensable ." She can also be more interesting to a man than his wife. · A secretary and boss have so much lo talk about that has noihing to do "'ith problems -children, in·lav1s, repair bills and other troublesome and boring topics. I hope the secretaries out there who find their bosses dangerously appealing "'iii take this Jetter seriously. The minute you feel yourself falling, girls, clean out your desk and leave. -GLAD I DID DEAR GLAD: How right )'OU are. Preventive medicine is inrinJtely Jess ex- pensive and less painful than a cure. Thanks for telling it like ii is. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Regarding the photogtaphic buff who wants to enter a nude picture of his wife in a local art contest: Many centuries ago Herodotus Mote of a Persian King who had a very beautiful wife. He was so proud of her body that he invited his best friend to hide behind the draperies in theii-bedroom. The friend was delighted. The Queen became aware of the plan. SAN CLEMENTE 440 CAMINO DE ESTRELLA IN THE GRANT PLAZA PHONE 493-9711 UNBELIEVABLE PRICES ON NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS OF LADIES WEAR . --VALUES s600 to 140"· 00 00 • . Of9111 ha. <Ill +h• built-i~ t•l•nt you will '"''' n••d to fully •njoy fll• fiin of m•lt· in9 your own mu•i,. f\IEW HOUllS On that extraordinary night she manufactured an excuse to send the King on an errand. When he left she told his friend, "\Vhen .the King returns, either you Y!'ill kill him and marry me and become King or I will scream and order the guards to kill you." handsome, immacu1ately groomed, has perfect manners, a cha'nn.ing .sense of humor, is thoughtful and kind and has a promising future with a fine firm. Marie told me several months ago that he wants to marry her but she ·can't make up her mind. (They ~re both 24.) I told her she'd have to be crazy to pass up such a gem. Last night Marie came home with a Sl\'Ollen lip. She tried to conceal it but she couldn't make it to her room in time. Then she told me that the "ge1n" had hit her -and it wasn't the first time. This is why she is reluctant to marry him. ri.ty question: Ho)'I serious is this fault ? can he change? -CLEVELAND Q "HOMI O~ ffff IA!DWIH MUSIC IAI .. WOODWORTH ""°"· 1t1ru Fri.. 10',. ' SllU"'IY 'Ill I P IANO AND ORCAN $ALE1 Ewinl11ti lly 1p,.lnlmt11t 515 NORTH llllN, SANTA AHA • 547-5151 ................ • I • • • • • • • • • 4 • • That's how Persia got a new King - HISTORY· BUFF • • THIS SUMMER DEAR BUFF: It's easier to inherit the j-Ob from your father. Thanks for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our daughter is going "·ith a-young man who appears to be ·too good to be true. He is DEAR Q: It's plenty serious. J( be changes It will probably be ror the worse. A man who gives a girl a SY!'oUen Hp dur· ing courtship _will .probablf lracture her skull after marriage. • • LOSE ,• ' :W~IGH~ • • • • Your Horoscope Pices SATURDAY AUGUST 4 lty SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l·April 19)o Accent is on the hidden, the occult. You find what can be done and with how much money. Family member deserves explanation in corr junction w i t h investment. Taurus, Libra persons can figure prominently. TAURUS (April 20.May 20 )o- Lie low. Absent yourself from usual haunts. You may not be seeing too clearly. There is tendency toward self-decep- tion. Work quietly behind the scenes. Waiting should be your game. Pisces, Virgo persons are likely to be involved. GEMINI (May 21-June 20l : Obtain hint from Taurus message. Pace slow: you are able to obtain overall view. One who shares interests con- fides health problem. You will b e car r ying hea vier respansibility. Refuse to take blame for mistake made by arrogant. older individual. CANCER (June 21-July 22)o Lunar aspect is such that creative juices now. You feel and arc able to express feel- ,. I• •• e No • • • Due to Gain • Contracts, I• I• •No ~p 58 • • • ings. Romantic situation may be put to test. Aries, Llbra persons might be in picture. Significant changes occur. LEO (July23-August22)o Ac· cent frankness. Get to heart o{ matters. Highlight in· dependence, originality. A new start would be beneficial. Home and security are in pic- ture. Get opinion from one :it top -skip middle man. You can obtain current price and potential. VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ) o You deal with relatives, more so than usual. You find out things, you analyze and car. make accurate deductions. Your hunch could pay dividends. O_ne who taught you in past makes reappearance. Be receptive. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22 lo If versatile. cash now could in· crease. You are expanding horizons. You have more ap- peal to more persons. You col· Ject needed material, irr formation. You t"Ollld make social contact which leads to profitable, profession a I association. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2l )o Lunar cycle is high and your perception is sharply honed. ,. Exercise You n1ay have to revise and ~. rebuild. Aquarius, Leo persons I could figure prominently. Be • e No direct. Frank approach now is1• Ampheta~ best-don 't say one thing anct i• do another. • m ines SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. • 21 J: Find out who is saying what and to whom it is being • said. Personal investigation is • necessary. Reject the • superfic;a1. mg for m-• UNDER formation. Co-member of , fraternal organization can aid.• SUPER lbs. IN 40 DAYS ~D~CAL Don't let pride block progress.·• \ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. • 19 ): Friend can serve as in-• I"' _____ ... ~~ .... ~-----..._.., .... ..._ tel!hediary. can bring yoo W . om• ' Unions IS~~N together 1vith estranged friend • ,J, or lamily member. Restore•• and )All 'Hea th Group harmony at home b a s e . • I • • • • • • • • • Taurus, Libra persons might • , ____ ...__,..·~n-su ... ra'!~F;..•;..s .... ..._ __ ...__.,...( be involved. Overcome tendcn· cy to overindulge in sweets. •• ~ Iii • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. • ' CALL FOR, ; AN POINTMENT -•. 18): Deal gingerly with one in • , authority. Be'-tactfut but get • ·HdUr19-•. m.-m-1-p.m; i r.~~:acl~~;· gi:~""~~i y~. 0 ME I A e· LIN I c . your own. Accent self-esteem. • • PISCES (Feb.19-March 20lo • ' • Pursue creative pro j e c t. • • a ~~~::1,th:" w;.~ .. p~./~·~~:. Costa Mesa 1869 NeWport 646-1633 • dicated through written word. • ANAWll M SANTA ANA •11llerto11-~H•ltN • People no1v Me more willing • 1664 w. tclwy f tJ922 Tnthi A" C714l 170·9347 II to listen and evaluate. a · ff ( C21JI 6V.·1791 II 771•4141 147•6l2f ! 710 W t..HQN 11¥4. • ,• ...... ·'· ............. . • D~WM WITH Y~UR AM / E~~ UP WITH TEL=EPRO--PTER!~ "\,, .. ,z~"'~·.i ·· II WITH MORE CHANNELS ~~ti r 61 · 10 ' . .....,_ JP J CALIFORNIA FASHIONS FACTORY ounETS GARDEN GROVE HUNTINGTON BEACH LA HABRA lJI" llOOKHURST 958' HAMILTON AVE. IJM S. EUCLID 1 ..,. "'" ef ''"'" Cmt llJll. l l ltcl1 Wnt Of Jtoathwst 11 tllt Alpll• ltll 1.,.,11 tMil• 61'·1111 9'8-1250 870-6124 HOURS Mon .• fri. 10 AM to 9 PM Sot. 10 AM to 7 PM Sun. 11 AM to 5 PM . -ti I. \h lwt Dr. S.llflower Le• ....... Mffk!.lr 9204 £. Al1n,rt J1J5 S.n f1 m1M1 RI. 10211 Ctr1!r1I A1t. ............. •14 f1tnn<e ""'· CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO ~ ' ii ~ 84 •1i1TH_NE_WPORT'S OWN . ---~ W@tBi® 9 U® -. NEWS SERVICE ll\.NDVIJ-jfi;)!.liLJd no ~ ~E~OM PTER i1 tht l1r09s1 cable television organia:ltion in tht world. • i.. We ~ht most up·to-dett technical facilltles. Now you can get rid of your ~gly antenna (and make Ntwport even more bl_!Utiful) tnd get 1 better picturt at tht samt time -PluJ you'll 11ve money! Oller good 111 eabl• 1ru• onlv. DIAL 641 -3160 1111 ,. INSTALLATION FOR A LIMITEO TIME ONLY. • , DAILY PILOT f 7 I) I Human Se iX uality G iv en New Exp ression By ALLISON DEEnn· ot tlte D•Uy ,lltt 51111 Is marrla~e the only context l'or expression or human sex- uality? The traditional viewpoint says "yes ," but "v.•e're in very revolutionary times for human sexuality. The beasts haven't changed a bit, but we're in a very heavy process of change regarding sexuality.·· The new view. explained ma r r i a g c and family l'Ounselor llev. David A. Crump in the fourth session of the Marriage-go-round in the NewpO(-t Harbor L u t he r a n Church Wednesday night, of· fers another context. People a re beginning to say, ''Perhaps the only meaningful context for human sexuality is within myself. as related to the world about me." besieged, by outside attitudes -those or family, church and ' t ' SOCJe y. A TTITUOES SIIAPEO tral to it and to il's develop- ment and my sexual fu!Hll- ment. 'That's revolutionary in our times." "They faced, and were1 SEXUALITY REAL shaped, instructed and chained I There also is the realization by, t hese attitudes until th ey tha t "my sexuality is real gained majority; then came \ whether I'm 14 , or wheth~r the push toward the context, I'm married, whether I'm marriage'" he said. r-;ngJe , whe ther I'm divorced, "Today, there are new 'whatever, my sexuality is understandings, c h a n g e ; t eal." revolution is on." I The Rev. Mr. Crump, citing portant subject to us means trouble in marriage.'' He cited the example or the common belief that there 1s a sexual slowdown wit h age. So when you !'Mt middle age you feel you are going lo slov.• do\vn. You do, through in- frequency and disuse, slow down. "Disuse o.nd infrequency adds and c:ompounds the slowdown, so, now, t h e slowdown is a reality." The speaker explained that the need for better education, part of the new understanding said "I think that a great deal SLOWDOWN is the realization by the in· He added, "Sexologists say dividual that "1ny body is of ignorance persists today. you ought to be a good lover good." Secondly, there is a with so many people who have all of your life. ri ght into the Joss of fear, of being afraid. never read a proper, in-90s. Can you see yourself al "I'm convinced that the an-formative book on human sex-90'?" cients. and people nu1ch closer uality. Another example of develop- to us than the ancients, were ··Jt isn't something one ment is "knowing you are afraid of the power of sex-learns well from his mo th er responsible for s how i n g . uality. So it was surrounded and father, from kids on the assisting, instructing you r with codes and mores. Devia-~treet or from some popular mate as to where you are sex- tion in some cultures meant fl.oll ywood. movies. ually and what you like. That's ---•·This is a challenge to-the traditional co nce pt," the Rev. l\1r. Crwnp said. "Tradi- tiona lly, persons young and old were surrounded, if n ot -death.'' ~···-T.fte-6Ubjeel·--is-¥--e-F-;1-·-6eYelepmerttµ --- Peering Around • HOSTING a cocklait party lo honor members of the City • of Hope Diamond Horse Shoe were Mr. and Mrs. M. Keith lit Gaede or Laguna Beach. Gaede is chairman of Lhe Diamond. Horse Shdc, sponsors of the show which benefits the City of Hope. Today. the new un-leclmical. very-ali ve and most Also. "accepting your body derstanding is "my sexuality peopJe are very uninfonncd. in nev; ways. appreciating it , is personal to ME, given to Either disinterest or ignorance enjoying it -that's develop- ME, a part of ME. r am cen-ln this most basic and im· men t. Working out the sexua l HELPING plan a surprise birthday party for his parents,1 l.J.,,....""' l\1r. and a.1r!i. Carl Gavotto of San Diego. y.•as Richard C. Gavotto al Costa M e s a . Though their birthdays are in Nove mber, the affa ir y.•as sched uled to coincide with a visit from their son, the Rev. Robert Gavotto, secretary general of the Augustian Order in Rome .. fl.1ARRIED in the \Vrig!ey fvlemorial and B o t a n i c a I Ga rdl'ns on Catalina Island "'·ere 1'-1.rs. Helen Kissel and l\lillard l-leis lcr. both of Costa J\·lesa. needs in your marr i age , dl•1•eloping new and im· <1~1na live style in your k>ve. 111 aki n g , d.i s c o ve r i n g possibili ties for your sexual power and that of your Jover. ' That's development." NEW CONrEXT 'fhe new context also in- cludes •·experiencing tile in- tegration of your life in your sexuality and experiencing the richness or your eDdowmenl. ,, ning's topic. (;then pttferred to dea l with other concerns. One grou p found lhat com- munication Is a key In worklug out marital problems, large and smaU. Including sexual problems. GROWTH ALLOWED Discussing the problem or the wife's changing role as the children begin to grov.· up and leave honte, consensus v.•as that she must be in charge of her own growth, not sheltered by her husband . but that his support and encouragement was needed . The Rev. Mr. Crump added, "The opening of doors Inward lin1itless experience a n d ruUillment sounds like human sexuality. It also sounds like the hum!ln process at its best. A young couple mentioned a "You can't generalize as far close "friend" relationship as sexuality is concerned," he with both sets of parents. em p h as i ze d , ''because emphasizing that their own everyooe is himself. What I parents' marriages w ere have said s hould be taken very "rocky.'' This offered them particularly by everyone who the early knowledge that t here has heard, and done wi th in are problerr.s i'n every mar- his or her own way , because riage and you have to work on no-onffi.ttke-ttnyooe elsei1----it-aD-ih3··fuBe,---··--- After the Rev. Mr. Crump's A once-married man, under talk. participants for m e d 30, noted that too often people small discussion groups. Some marry fo r the wrong rearons groups talked about the eve-and too young. It is a Socials Fill Summer Club Bill Alumni social and religious organiza. lion open to single Ca tholics who are college graduates or registered nurses. Exhibit Irvine Jrs. Prospective members of the Irvine Junior Woman's Clu b are invited lo a luncbeon at noon Saturday, Aug. II, in the home of Mrs. Richard Hegner. Li on ettes New officers of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Li on- ettes are the Mmes. Tweed· "neurotic dependency rather than a marriage tor com· panionship because you feel lonely and alone at the same time." I-le not ed that one factor in the railure of his n1arriage v•as Jaek of communication. Not communicating. when each partner grew, they grew apart. A n1othcr or four teenagers fell it ifnportant for couples 10 co1nmunicate, not build walls, A couple that does nol even fight , and then tells th!' children they arc breaking up, shouldn't be surprised if the children can't believe it. Key y.·ords to consider are viewpoint (each one's 1. hones· ty and wi llingness to co1n- promise, they said. One man added that c~t::i many years of marriage. it ~s only in the past five· he and h1s wife-have begun to .l\ll ~ communicating, really talking) out problems. Last in the series is Wednes- day, 8 p.m. Big Band Sounds Revived Sumxner Music Festi· val, featuring 10 con- tinuous hours of j azz to classical to the big band sounds 011 five separate stages at the Newport.er Inn, will be presented Sunday, Aug. 12. Hosting the annual event is the Orange County Chapter of Mu- sicians' \Vives, and pro- ceeds will help lhe emergency relief and scholarship funds. ?\.1u- sicians, Bob Ciccarelli (left) and Ronnie Brown remind spectators that entertainment begins at 2 p.m. Ti ckets. at $4.50, may be pur· chased at the door. RUF FEL L'S UPHOLSTERY ..._Y .. w..r ·-1tu ............. . c.... ... -541.025t ~@Dlr ~@Dtr ~ Oli CO IT COIT COIT COIT Kicking off Acapulco \Veek v.·ith a young singles dance Friday, Aug. 10. in Disneyland Hotel will be the Orange Coun· !y Catholic Alu1nni Club. Get-acquai nted hour begins 1.1t 8 p.m. and dnncing to live music will conti nue until l a.m. All singk!s, 21 and over, arc invited . Fifty bonsai L rel' s . ii· lu!:ttraling va rious styles ;.ind stages of growth of thi s con- tinually changing art form, wi ll be on exhibit to the public from 10 a.m to 6 p.m. Satur- day. Aug. 11, in the J>ark Newport Spa. l\lcmbcr~hip is open to all v.·omen between 18 and 35. 'rhose interested are asked to n1ake reservations with Mr;;. Norman Hayashi. membership chair1nan. Stone. president ; Marty Dales. vice president; Paul Brecht, treasurer and Doug Ward, secretary. ' I ;;iiiiiiiioiiiiii-. Acapulco \Veek, including the trip and festivities, is sponsored by Calholic Alumni Club, International. CAC is a Gloves Retu rn A stroll along the most I fa shiona ble part of New York , the most expensive apartment section of Park Ave .. in early artemoon shows plenty of white gloves worn by affluent rnatrons of all ages. I The gloves go wit h the nc:i t- as-neat look -every hair in I , place, bandbox fresh fron1 ~ ~~'.~ ~~~· . "" At I p.m. a demonstration will be given by Francis \\'atari, president of t h t' Orange County B on s a i Association. and tlarry Haran. Both v.•ill Judge C'nl rics and prescnl awa rds of 1ncril Racquet Club Mr. and Mrs. John W. Rush \viii host a get-acquainted champagne party in their San .Juan Capistrano home ror the 20 membe r s of the Capistrano Ra~uet C 1 u b 11·hich will open in the fall. YOU SHOULD JOIN A CLUB ... NOW! NOW ... YOU can benefi t many ways in TE NNIS ... EVERYONIO IS PLAYING! 1. Leoni to ploy ,r_ l,;.pro., 1 e your CJOIM co11'le11le11tly. ?. Add elcelle11t. hocdthful f1111 exercise to to11• yo1u body. J, Ploy tet111ls rt.• re1t of your UN N9ar~IOH of your prese11t •••• ; ~ Qt#ICkfy ,...... INW -•114 .-.ifl"9fMfillf,.,..... .. -....,J.....,.. trov•I: 011ywhet"e 111 , ... world. S. • llt o•• yout motthet orro11qed or arra1t90 your ow11 o• • reserved co11rt. So'" yo11 .,ah1able tlmo. BSP The liuntington Beach home of !\{rs. Hugo Clements wi ll be ' the selling for a poolside barbecue Saturday, Aug. 4. Afterward members of Beta Alpha Pi chapter and Lheir 1 husbands v.•ill move to the'I townhouse complex's recrea- tion ha ll for dancing. JrL A Vcmorrs , SPORTSWEAR I W'estc1iff Plam. 17lh and Irvine, Ne"'port ~ach,C:ilifomia92660 SURPRISE~ w•,ch ,... deliver • ., .. tte-ritwl~itew Fabric Store 111 whor was 011c:e Wn ,brook'• Yardo90 ... S-Ooit to M • ... ; ·, A •'ZJ' oflifl' .,ht'rc yuu ... n g;i.zc our iu bohhing bu;us clocJ:cJ b)· rhl· st· ... lns1czJ 0 1 .. , a sea of p.irkeJ c.irJ. W ht!re you bre111he 11ir freshly hru nde~ b)' rhc oceo11n. lns1l'11J of 1nl.a nd smos. Wlu:re you don't have ro ••;ih ~O weeoks 10 s~nd 2 at ._ sc.aside resort. 8ct11use )'l".i-rc livins in Olll' And, lil.:c If~ fl'tort, yuu h;ive plen1y of 11mc 10 pl11y. B«au.'loC J.itri_AA.2~ltic-1o" a,.communi1y ... Uf t~1ndo~ilfiums. So there are no mowln.ic. no ma.ioccnanct", no clt·an up chores ouriide your homt". Evet". lns1c1'd.You fish, s ... 1m, sazl off 1nr07tic..uinilC'•·~ Frmn"Yotil' Own rrt'ni: y1:d.- Yoo don'1 have to spend ,u J;ly commuunJoC, l"ilhtt. f\fann;1 Po1Citica IS io('a1<'d 10 give yuu n1ure nmc uo tht• ....arerwiys :11\J lcss umc on 1M ftteways. It'~°" PI ANO S OR GANS 6. Well01tocked pr ... thop for your co111Mtt~• off OJI anroc-,1.,. cl11bho11M tor yoo t• •111loy. 7. Clo~ Melot te1111l1 to11r11ome11ts & "'otchn .... lth othff clubl orro119ed for yo• no cl11b INMbet. Plaza 1 t\l;1mi1os 8 11y, JU~( 30 minutes lrt>m Jown10 ... n l..c1' AnB't'IC~ To thousands WALLICHS m~1ns TV, sttreo and records. But WALLICHS 1lso mtens pianos and org1ns ••• ind in 1 big way l We are factory direct dealers for Hammond organs, 11 well as Wurlit1er pi1nos i nd 6rgans. Wt hi ve over 50 organs on the floor with pricts starting 1t $295 fo r • 2·manual used organ, Othtr un d orgens of m1ny brands .•. all guaranteed -with fr ee delivery •nd libtral financing. SO when shopping for pl•nos or organs, WALLICHS is th• Pl1ce for YOU! WALLICHS MUS IC CITY SOUTH COA ST PLAZA-Costo Meso -540·2830 OPEN EVENINGS ond SUNOAY S The Coit of TlteM .. 11eflh t& mo•y Mar• )fl o!Md~ty tow .•• SIO Slittl• & 115 Two'""°"'°"'"' M•""'tr D.n O"°"'lme procnil"' ... of 0111,J SIOO Sl1t1 ... .._ .... -. · $-121 for11Hy. Low l11cfttd who11 coftlpared to ethft chfb fHS 101191119 tro111 SSOO to S?,SOO & SJO to S<45 "'011thly. ADD YfAAS Oil FUN & INJOYMI NT TO YOUl LIFE. DON 'T r UT IT OFF ' •• YOU owr IT TO YOURSELF TO JOIN RIGHT NOW. CALL fOll: A LlSSON 0 11: A MIMIEll:SHIP TODAY . CORONA DEL MAR TENNIS CLUB Tolophono: '7J.5711 • ~abr-icd ---•-----#20 F•shion lsl•nd open Sat., Auq. 4 Westb rook's Ya rdage closed on Wed., Thurs., Fri. for restocking Th11 t not fzr 10 go for"a ne-w w;1y of life DI RECTIONS: Gee of( 1he San Dit,t0 f'ree•i1r :If Bflllkiwcr • Soulc"'•rd and Jr1vc Sou1 h 1<J•arJ1 1hr Ckl:"lln. At Ptei6' L..n~1 1 1 .1 ••nty turn kfr,go l•I/:! long blOl i.:. 10 r.111rln.a P•c16u. Marina Pacifica Waterfront Condominium l:kimes 6161 PacifK Co." H i&hwa1, i..oQJ, 8C'Kh, (21 )) ~93-1}67 • ' • " .. f t .. j J ; t • l ! ' • ' I • .. f ' -pc 1 • , ~ . ~i • J8 DAILY PILOT Tosdal Disappointed With-!fime IMspite Win -DANA HILLS HIGH'S PEGGY TOSDAL SWIMS TO VICTORY IN THE 100.METER BUTTERFLY AT MISSION VIEJO THURSDAY At Missiori Viejo Swimmers Attack Meet Standards By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ti!• Dally l"lltt lt8ff The record assault at the 15th annual Los Angeles Invitational swim meet being staged at Mission V i e j o ' s Marguerite Recreation Center will con- tinue tonight \Yhen finals in five ad- ditional events are staged beginning at 6 o'clock. \\'ith \\'Orld cl ass swimmers competing in virtually every event and a myriad of Olympic stars on hand from this coootry as well as several foreign areas, records are expe<:ted daily. Perhaps the most likely mark to topple Angels Send Singer Agai11st A's Tonight Bob Oliver wore a smile that seemed to stretch the length of the clubhouse. "Sec," he yelled to passerby Frank Robtnson. "you don 't have to get base hits fo get interviewed." in today's action is in the women 's 2()(}- meler freestyle "'here F'ountain Valley's Shirley Babashoff is the current meet and American record holder. Shirley set the meet mark of 2:07.69 a year ago and the American standard at 2:04.33 in the Olympic Gaines. Keena Rothhammc.r (2 :04.9) of 5anta Clara, Heather Greenwood (2:06.4) of Fresno and Jenny \Vylie (2 :07.8) are under or near the 1nect record. Enitha Brigitha {2 :08) of the Netherlands is also a threat. Valerie Lee of the host Mission Viejo Nadadores has the top qualifying mark 12:21.1) in today·s opening event, the 200- meter butterfly. However, she will have to improve that effort to set a meet standard. where Karen Moe holds the mark of 2: 18.59. In the two other open events for '""'omen. both meet record holders are set to S\\'im and perhaps lower their own n1arks. Claudia Clevenger is the meet record holder in the 100-meter breaststroke but Cathy Carr of Albuquerque is also on hand and she holds the world standard of 1: 13.58. Jn the 400-metcr individual medley, Jermifer Bartz of Santa Clara will threaten her own meet record of 5: to.so. She will be facing Susie Atwood of Lakewood, Keena Rothhammer of Santa Clara and Liz Hogan of Lafayette, Calif. . . . Babas~off Third, Fourth In LAI Sw·irn Invitational ' ( By GLENN WHITE Beach Aquatics Club was fifth with a Of ni.,.,,111 PUtt lllff 1:07.41. Nllty Peggy ·T'ddlal came through with Miss Tosdal will come back tonlght in the third fastest 100.met.er botterny the 200 fly. clocking ol. her ure to capture the gold "l wanted to swim nice and loose, but l medal Thursday :night in the opening didn't," Miss Tosdal told the Daily Pilot. salvo of the trabsplanted Los Angeles "J fe lt tired the last part of the race - Invitational swl.ni meet being held at especially the final 15 or 20 yanh. I Marguerite Recniation Center in Mission guess I was tired from the mental stress Viejo. 1 as much as anything." Her coach, Mark Schubert, felt his Shirley Babashof! of Fountain Valley young starlet would have gone faster had placed third in the 400 free and fourth in Olympian Deena Deerdurff been in the the 200 individual medley and comes finals. Miss Deerdurff scratched after back tonight at 6 to face a classy field in hurting her shoulder in the backstroKe one of her favorite eYents -the 200 free. r Kurt Krumpholz former Corona del pre ims. Mar JUgh whiz, plaCed 1th in the 400 free, . ''\~ggy didn't l?Ok .~s smooth as l'd for-which-.he holds· the -worki-f'eeerti.=Gf_J1~Schu~rt said. But she ~esponds 4·00 11 to compelffion and with Deena 1n there · · · she might have done a 1:04." Miss Tosdal never trailed and breezed Miss Tosdal went out in 31.3 -about a to victory with '3 highly partisan throng second slower than she'd like to have of 1,677 to cheer her on. The Dana Hills clocked for 50 meters. High mennaid was disappointed not to Miss .Bal>ashoff says she went out too have swum faster and said she was hard. She was caught in 2: 10.5 at the 200 shooting for a sub-1,:04 clocking. -two seconds faster than she recorded Her 1:05.1 was, lxlwever, J'h seconds at the 1972 Olympics in Munich. faster than nmnerup Billie Yoshino of "I was shooting for something under Pasadena. Valerie Lee of Huntington , 4:22," she told the Daily Pilot . She covered the distance in 4:23.79 while vic- tor Keena Rothhammer came honle in an American citi1,en's record of 4:21.5, just a tick ahead of Heather Greenwood (4:2L85)" ~":'"1pholz, who says he is striclly pointing toward the national cham- pionships in l:.ouisvilJe later this month turned in a 4:11.44. • WDMIH 100 ~ bUlhf"lly -I, ~ .. tr TIKClll, M!lllM Vltlt hY!fM,,_ ltt:S.•, 2. 811Ht YO&hlno. P•Uol:l- Swlmmlllfl Assocllllon. 1:06.61. 3. Nina M1c lnnl1, S1nt1 Cl1r1 Swim Club, 1:(¥..74. 4. Lllldt SlmPton, <~10 Swim lusocJ111on, 1:01.u . J. v11•r1e LH Hunt*''°" ••aell Al!llall( cwt. 11•1.11. &. Mour~ C1mplon, ...,,.rln A.qu1nc Club, 1:07."4. a ~r lrN -1. )(-Rotllhtmmer, scsc. 4111.S. 1. HNl~r GretnWODd Fr"nO Swim Club 4:21.fS. l. Slllrlty ••MSllol'I H11.c, 4:21.7'" '· JtflflY Wyllt, SCSC, 4:21.25. S. ]111 Siron, (In. M1rlln1. 4:l6.ot. 4. Ann Slml'l'IOOf, Llkewood Aqu1llc: Club. •:36.2'. • 100 l'IWl1er bile~ -1. Enllti 8rlglltla. N-1"9rl1nd1 1:06.11. 2. Mtrl""" Gr1"9m, 11<141fA<'hed, 1:07.n. 3'. ~~l!_AtwooclR • AC, 1 :08.71, 4, Libby Tull/1, ArllON ........... , 1111, l:Of.11. s. JoJ!tn Etierm1n N11r-11nc111, l:ot.21. 6. Lindi Stimpson, CSA. l:ot.n '. 700 nwt• Ind. mtd. -1. Mlf')I An,,. Gr11Mm untlflcn.d, 2:!6.3. 2. Jennlltr 81nl, $CSC, J·17 6f 3' 5.,.11 Atwood, LAC, 2;11.9. '· Kllhy C1rr: 0c$c" 1:l0.9 . I. Slllr .. l ..... ,..,,, HIAC. J1».6'. ... sut Hunter, Ntw let 1nd, 1:JO.U. 400 ,,,.!Ir medley r111! -· 1. 58n!t ci.r1 $C, •:l •.91. 1. Nell'llf"lendl,,. •: 1.11. l. L•~.wood Aqu111c Clutl "A", •:40.tc.. l . ~•nit Cltt1 SC "I " •·ii 45 J Cl1KJ,..,1ll\Mar!lm, "A"', •:•1.4'. '· Santi (11~1 "sC "C", •:..i. s. MIN 100 mlttr Ounerlly -1. Aotlln l1tkh•1,111, ,....rln Swlrn TMm of Ari•on•, !1.•9. 2. S!t\1 81.ttef", un"-l1clled, $1.". 3. BOii A11t1ia..., Clncl,....11 Mtrll'*', ' .51.30. •· Jtff Rolen, H8ACj 51.17. ), Mlli;t Bollom, SC.SC. 51.11. '· Jtff Aon, P A, 51.lf. 400 mift.r It" -1. Rici< OtMOnl, MJ<C, 4:02.,, 7, Robin 81cktllu9, MAC, •:CIS.OI. i. Tim Slllw, PhlllfP* ol6 Long 8~ch, ~:06.19. •· Mike Bruner, PAC, 1:C11 )I.· S. Rick Ki.tr, Duk• Cily Swlrn Club. 1:09 . .U." '· SlllV'" Greo9, u11o11t1che!I. 4:09.11. 100 ~ blck -I. Mic"'-' 510'1'!, COt'onodo N1vy Swim Auocl1!lon, 1:00.71. 7. J im 81ll1ro, PltdtnOlll Hiib SC. 1;00.97. l. 8rue11 H1nkost1e, LOdll CllY IC. 1:01.lt. •· Al1n 011 .. y, s.csc, 1:01.4. s. Brl•n McKlnllY• SCSC, 1:01.'-t. 6. Pt11r Rocc._ A4\llt>Mr1. 1:01.27. lOO -t•r Ind. fl"\lld. -l. SllW fMrnlu, M•At, 2:M.71. 1. Alct Cot1111, Totem Ltke SC, 2:13.$8. 3. J'ff IOLI, LAC, 2:1•.17. •· Rick DtMonl. MAC, 2:11.6'. 5. JOM Henchfn, SCSC, 1:1•.67. 6. 8r11Ct Furnlu, HIAC, 2:1•.18. 'CIO ""''"' medley re11v -1. S1n11 CJ1r1 SC, l ;OO.Jl. 2. Santi Cl1r1 SC: "8", •:Ol.:n J. Mvnll,...._ •.-c:h A~IHHC Clllb. l :t6.IJ, '· P11uoden1 Swlmml119 AIMKlttlonl •:01.11. s. M1rln Aqul!lc Clutl, 1:01.Pt."' P!ttstnt H 11 SC, l :lC.15. * * * Capsule Look At Schedule, Usually when Oliver is sv:anned un- der by sportswriters il's because of something he did with his bat. His 14 home runs and 52 rbi rank second only Angels Slate Kurt Krumpholz of Corona de\ Mar is one of three entrants in the 200 meter freesty le with qualifying times lower than the meet record held by Frank Heck! at 1:56.98. ~---~ THEN RECEIVES CONGRATULATIONS FROM TELEVISION STAR LUCI ARNAZ. Top Entrants Aug. 3 Au11. I .4Ug. S Al 0•-• KMP'C 171t> Otkl•nd tf C•lllornl• Otk!•nd 11 Ct Ufornlt 01kland 11 Ctllfornl~ 7: 55 p.m. 6:55 p,m. 5:55 p.m. to Robinson among California Angels. But Thursday night Oliver saved a game' with his arm. No, he didn't pitch, but he threw a strike to home plate from right field in tl1e ninth inning to nail the potentiaJ tying run and the Angels, behind Nolan Ryan, held off the Texas Rangers, 3-2, at Anaheim Stadium. •·As long as we get pitching like that we've got a chance," CaU[ornia Manager Bobby Winkles observed after Ryan v.'On his 12th game -and first since he no-hit Detroit oo July 15 - with an eight-hit ter. He struck out II and walked fou r. Ryan now has 250 strikeouts thi s season as he chases Sandy Koufax' major league record of 382. Ryan is now 12-13. The Angels get a good chance to gain more ground on the Oakland A's tonight when they launch a three-game series with the American League's Western Division leaders. • VJ:da •. Blue, g..7,-..the Yiettm of Rangtr Jim Bibby's nt>hilter in his last start, will duel Bill Singer of the An gels, \1•ho is 15-7 in the opener. Ryan carried his tenuous 3-2 edge i1110 ·~"...i""'-nln!Jl,Jlld l)>lin><l.wafott batle' Rich. Billing$ on a foi1l -pop. But then tile See Ankels, Page 19 Krumpholz is the v.'Orld record holder in the 400-meter freestyle and is swim- ming for the Santa Clara Swimming Association this year. He is a student at UCLA" Others in the 200 include Mark Greenwood, swimming WJaltached, Rick Klatt of Albuquerque and Jim Doyle of Pleasant Hills. Four swimmers in the men's 2.(M)..meter butterfly are under the meet record for that event including Robin Backhaus of the Phillips 66 team from Long Beach with a bes t effort of 2:03.1. Others include Jorge Salgado of Pasadena, Bob Alsfelder of Cincinnati and Murphy Reinschreiber of Coronado Navy. Rick Colella of \Vashinglon, John Renckeo ot Santa Clara and Dave Baron. unattached, are among the favorites in the men's 100-mcter breaststroke. Colella will also compete in the '°°'" meter "individual medley where he will face Steve Furniss of the Huntington Beach Aquatics squad along with Gregg Bland of El Monte. Rick DeMont of M:irin. the OI)rmpic swimmer who hard a gold medal taken away on a drug charg~ because or asthma medicine he was using at the time, is also among the top cntrw.its. ~h Pl~l wiJl .c;on~~de."Saturday, \.it"~ preliminari~ ln thC moni.mg at 10 aria - the finals at 6 tha t night. New Look Rams • Ill Debut H adl Ope1is for LA Agairist Cowboys LOS ANGE LES (AP) -Chuck Knox previews his inaugural edition of the Los Angeles Rams tonight in a National Foot- ball League exhibition game against the Dallas CoY.'boys and leaves no doubt that he wants to \\'in il. "\Ve want to establish a winning at- titude," says the ne\v head coach while approaching the kickorr at the Coliseum. Veteran coach Tom Landry of the Cowboys wants to pro \'e the reports of dissension on his Dallas club were out of proportion. Quarterback Craig Morton and defen sive tackle Bob Lilly rejoined the club after each balked at the start of the practit'e :ressions. - Los Angeles finished 6-7-1 last season. the first losing ca1npaign in seven seasons and il came in the first yCar of Carroll Rosen,hJoom '.c; Cf-11ersh.ip.~ 1.,h!;, !P"i"' :!\!'IJ)m-Ore.ownet"•Pr<>mp!ly saCKed coach "1'01n my Prothro. paid off the three remaining ye;irs on his con- tract, and a trade brought quarterback John Had! from San Diego. Hadl's arrival made Roman Gabriel unhappy so the Rams quarterback asked to be traded and a deal was arranged Y.'ith the Philadelphia Eagles. The Rams got wide receiver Harold Jackson, the leadJng pass catcher in the On Radio Tonight KABC (790) at B National Football League, in that ex- change. n proved particularly beneficial when NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle suspended wide nicelver Lance Rentzel for a year. Rentzel had pleaded guilty to a mari· juana p05session charge after earlier being in trouble in both ~!iJylesota ·and Te~s .f<J:.:~lll ~P.9SutC.~ .;._ I r r John Fitzgerald takes over at center for the Cowboys ~fter the retirement or Dave Manders, but generally Dalla& looks much the same as the club that posted a 111-4 record a year ago. However, in the preseason game against the Rams in 1912, quarterback Roger Staubach suffered a shoulder separation and Morton had to dlrect the club most of the way. · Los Angeles has made seven Uneiip switches with Kno1 planning to start his veterans and then take looks at the asplr· ing rookies. Dick Gordon, acquired trom the Qlicago Bears last year but thf.ll was in- jured, stari. at wide reoe!V« .In place of Rentzel, Had! al quarterback, and LarrY Smith al fullback In pl'ICO ol Willie Ellison who was treded to Houston. Defenslvrly, Fred Dryer ope!lS "1! tnd • iri pl ... 6f l!OY'BiicoO-'Wfil 'Was"'.ltidea'IO San Diego, Ken Geddes and Jack Reynolds are new starting linebackers. Dodgers, Giants Open Cru~ial Series Al Clark, who playrd lhc final four games of the 1972 campaign at cor· nerback, is Lhe starter ln place ~ Clancy WiWams. Rog« Williams probably wlll open at free safety" Staubach si.rts at quarterback for 1lle Cowtioys and can be assured he -~ afaln run Into Mar1Jn McKoover, lhe Rami linebacker wllfi whom he cdllldcd a year ago. McKeever ts rc~tlna from,lcnee !W'gery and won't see ~ion. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco GI.ants open • three-game series tonight that could do a 1ot to tighten up the Na- tional League West ba.5eball race. 1bc Dodgers, whose division lea d has shrunk over the last two \\'f'Cks. won tv.10 but of three games from the Giants last weekend before erowds totaling 146,239 in LM Angeles. The Oiflints expect cl ose lo )00,000 tabs to tum out for the three 1•111•• al CandltaUck Park" Tom Jll'adley, M, Is tonight's pitcher for the third place Giants. whosr peManl hopes w!U suffer a damaging blow if thA>y Jose the series. Andy Messersmith, lo-&, '""'ill open the series for Los Angeles. Meanwhile, ninth innings are tuminr On TV Tonight Cha1111el I I at B going into the ninUl and the Dodgers were leading 2-0. On first pitches, Doug Rader hit his 18th home run of the year and Lee May hlt his 17th 10 tie the score. Ken McMullen made things turn out fine tor the Dodgers, however, as he scored a tv.'<>"run <kluble in the 11th to out to be nightmar~! for Dodgers pitcher provide the victory margin. . Don Sutton. Sutton has had long ball trouble in the The Dodgers ralliea for two runs in the ninth before. Rader beat hi m in Los I Ith Inning Thursday night to defeat the Angeles earlier this year and Hal King of Houston Astros 4-2. but a ninth inning ClnclMaU hit a three-run homer with the bomu run problem that has been clinging • !'lame e.Uect. Johnny Bench of Cincinnati to Sutton .ent the game k'lto overtimt. ~ •homered to tie the game on Sutton Sutton 'ht1d givEin up Just three hits 11ri,Otber occasion ln the ninth, ; LOS .4NOl!LES HOUITON ,_"' '"' .. MOI& If fl•twl'!" IJ WO.vii cf WCtwln! rl F•rllutoft c Garv•r lb C•r 311 Jothu• If P1clortk rt Ruutll II S\ltlOli II McMuln ab .. rhltl .. , .. ., lOOOAptrf t!O OO 4 0 0 0 JR1y p O 0 0 f 6 0 0 0 Stew•rTPll 10f0 O OO OP!a,,.op 0000 $1l 1 Ul)Jl'!IW ll 0000 0 000...wtrttfsa •000 s oo owvn11C"f 10•0 S 1 1 1Wt1'0!l tl t10fl lOJO OtRlldtrJb 'Ill 01 00LMtyHI f1 11 l 0 10ldw.rdfc 'ooo 1 1~1 811ut11\ 1000 1o o O Htlm1 1b 101 0 1 011 RNUO 1 .0 0 0 CtO•noi ti" 1 o o o Tol•I •1 4 11 4 Toltf J1 J S 2 1.61 Anttl•1 010 000 Olf OJ-I HMton 000 'ooo 00'.I 00-2 1-""'•Mll. 0"-1.ot A119 .... t, ttov.tM I, LOl- LOi """'" 10, Hou\!on 1 21--e:.t-, ,McM1111911. '~'I"'•· HR-w .0.,1, 1~: Otltdr ,,, l,.Ml'I' 17, l-P1dattk, Sl~l•1'1111r 11. WP-11.wu. T-l:fl, A-lf,1111. Dalla• will have 11• last year's i,ading rusher ind receiver, CaMn HJII ~Wall Garrison, ot the numlng back apota. Staubach has his lamlliar targ , !lob Hayes, and newcomer Otto Sto Crom the Miami Dolphins ai wide receivers. Jlm .Bertelsen, who cttme out ol Tex.as. last year to win a siartlng job. \ll>ent op- posite Smlrb In the JWDs •tarting backfield. , TOOAY'I ENT.ANTS AND lllCOllDS WOMIN'S nt-METl!ll tUTT811PL.Y Mee'! rocord; Karto Mee (59'111 Cl•r•l 2?11.-"l Amtrlc1n and Worlll; K•r•n MQf !hntt Cl1r1) 1:1S.S7. TOI' tn!r1nb: V•lwi• l " fHIACl 2:21.11" ar111t Y0$11lno tMcltnaJ 2:22.1; Nl111 MKlnnlt j$ont1 c11r11 2: . .J: OMnt DM•d!lff 1Clflclf\flttll :n .t: Lit Hoo.; (AqwbHrtl 2:25.01 °"°" WYN! lPtlO Allo} 1;l6. IN'I J0141!1Ttlll auTTall,l,.Y ~ II! Hlnll FtMnKhl (iPM!IJPt U) 2:0f.o5; AmiltlCINI World: Mtrk Split (Allltn HUii) 2:00.70. TOI) onl nn: Roblt1 llackllflus IM•rlfl) 2:03!" Jotte Stiel CPtstditnl) 1:05.1; &ob All1-10w IC n.. clnnatl) t : 6; Murphy R•IMCl!,.11111" tCOf"ONOOI 2:1».t11 on Scott (Corontao) 2:07..01 Mike &"fMr lP flcl 2:Cll.6. WOMIN'S 11t-Ml!Tl!ll llllAITITllOtcll Meet rt«H'CI : Cl1\ldl1 Cl~V"1;tr !De Anu) 1:1 .... : All'lef"kt!I tl'IO World: Co•nv CM"r, 1:13,51, Top tnlrenb: C•lhy .Carr IDVKEJ 1:17.31 CorrJt Gr111'1rM OeuQs INelhel'l1ndll 1:1 ,I / Amy ltl· !ltl(OUrl (Jtnft Cl1r1) l:lf.1; Cl11Jdl1 C~ !Unttt.I 1111,21 ; L.orrlt Port1r tLOdlJ 1:11.•; Vicki Hlvt IAn1l'ltlml h lt,o. MIN'S ltf.Mll'llt aJU!AITITllOKI Mffl rtcord: John Ht<Kken IS&l'lll Ci.rt) l:N.IJ; A~lctn: Tom Bruce (lanta Cllr•l 1 :Ol.~1 WorlO: Nobul1kl T19uc:hl ~JaptnJ 1:04.t'-Top tnfrtnb: Rick Colella (W61hlnoton) 1:0..11 Jol'WI Henckln !Sin!• ci.r1l 1 :W.771 ~Vt ltron (Untlt,) 1101.91 Mlrk Cllttt tld IPtNffno) l :Clt.01 Ken Holmtl CLOdll l10f.•1 C. KNtll\9 {Clndllnttll l:ot.1. ' Roher~on's FanOuh Expanding l ' , The Isiah Robertson Fan Club. known as Isiah's Invaders, didn't exactly come from a well-formed plan to help put the Los Angeles Rams linebacker in the limelight . "lt just happened," says Robertson, the s.J and 225 pound Huntington Beach resident whose home looks more like a boys club than a peaceful residence these days. "Last winter I decided to become in- volved in youth work , so I coached a lit- tle league baseball team, the White Sox in the Robinhood League in Huntington Beach," says Robertson. "\Ve finished tied for second but that didn't matter. "Jusl working with those kids was the greatest experience or my life. I wa~ helping thoseltMS"1!anrthe rrtt~ trade just like \Vhcn someone helped me." Robertson. An All-American football star at Southern University in Loolsiana also played baseball there. "When the season ended the kids kept coming over to my house," relates Robertson. "One day the kids came up with an idea. They asked me if they could form a fan club. l didn't know what to say. so 1 said 'yes.' · "There were two kids then. 11\e next time there were 35, then 75 and now ov'r 100." Since Robertson is currently residing with the Rams in Fullerton, he's gotten some help fro1n another Robinhood League coach, Joe €archio,. \Vho also works with the kids. .. The kids really look up to Isiah and when he asked me what I t~t of the l•n club. I told him I thought it was great," says Carchio, an ex·ba~ball player In the New York Yrinkees chain. •·we started with a handfuJ of kids' and now they're all over the pince. These kids are from the Huntington Beach area. up- per middle income families. but they, liko any youngster, get bored during the summer. ''They need somelhing outside the family sometimes and this group fills that \'oid. The kids are at Isiah's house most of the time and mostly they just like to talk. .. We've shown highlight films of the Rams and we have plans for bigger things now ." 11\e ran club's president. 15-year-old John Danielson. 7682 Everest Circle, Huntington Beach, explains: "Isiah says he'll lr)' to get us ruscount tickets to the Rams games ~·here we'll go with banners, horns and T-shirts with Isiah's picture on lhem. We'll be a1 the Dallas game tonight. "But thal's just part of it. We'd like to go to hospitals to help, and things like that. "Basically, we're trying to show our appreciation to Isiah for the things he's done for us." "It's a good thing. The kids look up to me and I have lo acrept that responsibility. The v.·holc idea is to keep us all out of trouble by doing something coos1ructive. Besides that, It's fun ." The club's vice-president is 12-YCfT-Old Jimmy Gagnon, also of HlDl~on Beach. "The kids are football freaks. so I can relate to them," says Robertson. "We're trying to get across to the kids t.hings like M!U-dignity. pride ana leadership. "We figure if the kids develop that, they'll have learned something. Those Interested in joining the· !an club can call Jotm Danielson at 879-9565. DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO GAS SAVIRS 'U Nova SS $977 ''' c.,.. •. Coupf A11hl. frlM., •r'flllllt. .. , Htllll., llH .. 1r (YCllDll $1477 $1277 '70 M1rk II 4 Door Awtt. fTWftL. ntlle. lliMtw l1KIOCI ~ $1577 70 ~ tr c.u,. ..... tr•11t.. -1!IYI ..,, fMt, ......... ,.,..,.11,..., 11" ~Ml .. nllle 1mllLI $1977 '72 Toyota Celttl• flltl •~llllllf. ltllL.U 4 .,.... ,..... -... "'"" .... $2777 • .. I Friday, Augut:t 3, 1973 OAILV PILOT 19 , • Rams' R.obertson Expects Big Year By STEVt.: BR.AND season, DO\\'," he says. "I can't let down 01 1111 01ur l'li.1 s11tt those kids. 'They believe in me. When a The stereo from a neighbor's suite M!Ven·year·old says, •you're the greatest blared oul the popular sounds of linebacker playing the game,' you've got Deliverance and the Los Angeles Rams' to live up to that. Isiah Robertson leaned back on his cot , "l don't feel any pressure. I coosider pondering the questi on. the kids direct moral support. "What innuence do the kids have on "\Vhen I was just starting to grow up, 1 my outlook?" repeated Robertson, the re1nfunber a couple of guys helping me man the football world calls the black past some tough times. If I can be that Dick Butkus. "That 'l\'OUld be hard to put kind of inspiration to these kids, it'd be into a few words." great." A man of many, but select 'l\'Ot"ds, Rams fans would probably prefer Robertson went on to explain how Isiah's RobertSOfl be an inspiration by at least Invaders, a group of neighborhood matching his rookie season when he was youngsters now numbering more than a standout, being named the league's 100 have inf1uenced the ~'eak side line· out standing first.year player. baCker's approach td his third year of He denies sophomoreitis cut him down professional football . last season \\'hen he wasn't nearly as ef· "Tile kids are looking for someone fcctive. other than their parents to talk to. to "As a rookie the olher clubs would ~~ .,;n confide In . to trust." be says of !he come right at me." he says. "I'd say it l ,,ttt ..,. mostly Huntington Beach youngsters \\'ho \\'as about :,...1 in plays coming my way. .-"""""-"' ---------Dilly Pllit S11tt ~VllTaii'M'K6tll11ii'-·-imve formW'"fH.ttn-ekiG-.·---~-~-----L..1£':.:.-;i.ear. ~Y-WC.!!...l..J.l.!9.~ lYay_aJol.._·----1 LOS ANGELES RAMS LINEBACKER ISIAH ROBERTSON HOLOS IMPROMPTU MEETING WITH FANS. "'They've got me pumped up for the .. , wns disap1xHnled with ,the way ~'e · played as a team but I wasn t upset Wlth Sports in Brief my play. I played a lot on instinct my first year. Last year I learn.eel about the other players and our own players.' Now l'm ready to live up to that image people ha,•e been painting for me." 'Skins Starting Thomas; Riggs-Ki1ig Match Set Out of Southern University, he was labeled the black Dick Butkus because of his taste for hitting. "! like to be compared with Butkus. lteck, I even named my dog Butkus.'' Robertson says. "But I have my own identity too. I'd rather have people call rookies the \Vhite Isiah Robertson." Robertson says there's a new spirit. like a shot or adrenalin, flowing through the Rams this year. \\'ASllINGTON -The WashingtQl'I. Re<iskins newest .acquiSilion -Duane Thomas -will start instead of Larry Brown. when the Redskins entertain the Detroit Lions in a National Football League exhibition game tonight. Brown, who reported to training camp , late because of a contract dispute, was not slated to ~ay under coach George Allen's strategy to keep him out of all ex· tiibition games except for a couple near the end or the preseason, as he did last year. The other eight veterans acquired since last year Include linebacker Dave Robinson from Green Bay: defensive tackle Fred Miller. Ba It i mo r c : ANGELS ... Cotltinoed From Page 18 Rangers rattled him for three straight singles. Jim ~1ason started the siege Ytith la ~se hit and Dave Nelson and Vic HarrlS followed suit. Mason tried to score from second OD Harris' hit but Olh·tr charged the ball, came up thrO\\'ing, and tossed l\ilason out at the plate. Ryan then fanned Jiln Spencer to end it. TEXAS CALIFO•HIA •• , " bl DN•IHfl D • 0 2 1 "lom1r ll Herrrll Cl S 0 1 0 G1U1oher lb ~ lb J 0 l 0 Fllobnsn Oh AJollMn dh ' 0 0 0 llOHvt r rf Sud .. 111 31:1 ' 0 I O E11tl•ln 1t1 Burrilotu. II 3 I I 0 11Par11" 2b llUllN1'" rt J 0 I 0 hrTv cl lllllllllot t ' 0 1 1 Stinton II Ml1Clll ti l I 1 0 5tephntn c Sl.mrf p 0 0 0 0 N1t~1n p 011r~m11 0000 1b r ~ Ill l 0 0 1 4 0 I 1 ' 1 0 0 J 0 1 0 ' 0 0 0 ' 0 0 1 l 1 I 0 2 1 1 0 , 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 To111 lS 1 I 2 Tol.i 2.S l 5 l TUii 001 000 l~ 7 C1llton"t!1 002 001 OO>r-l E-M1.n, Gll~llhlt. DP-T1x11 2. LOB-T1••1 10, C1!ffom!1 '5. 28-0.NetlOll, Sl1Pftlf!SGn, Sptflef'r, Burrouvhs. SF-A1<>m1r, ll.P1r1l1r. Slll!bert L, 6-1 Ovrh1m N.llyan w, 1,_u T-4:11. A-1.~. !l"H•Eltlll50 ' 5 l l ' 1 100010 t I 2 2 • 11 linebacker John Pergine. Los Angeles; tighl end Alvin Reed, Houston; wide receiver Paul Staroba. Cleveland; cor- nerback Clancy \\'illiams. Los Angeles; safety Ken Houston. Houston; and run- ning back Moses Denson, who came down from Canada. e Aslrodo111e Shomdo11i11 NEW YORK -"I'm going to let my racquet speak for itself" is how Wimbledon champion Billie Jean King summarizes her chances in "the tennis battle of all time." The $100,000. winner-take-all duel between ~frs. King. v.'ho calls herself the old lady of l\'Omen's tennis. and 55-year· old Bobby Riggs, tennis hustler supreme. \.\.·as agreed to in July. But at a closed circuit television news conference Thurs· day an announcement was made that it will be staged Sept. 20 in Houston's Astrodome -and aired on primetime television. e Connors Trhnnphs "Coach (Chuck ) Knox has told us wh!t1 \\'C have to do to win," he says. "It'll take a price. \Ve have to suffer now, gel ourselves into good condition 'and con· centrate on working with each oilier so that when one of us makes a n1ove, the others know what they have to do. "It's been said the linebacker has lo k.nO\.\' as much as a quarterback. That's true. Coach Knox has stressed that we ha\'C to at all times be aware of the ~ituation (down , yards to go, fi.eld posi· lion l. of what our linemen are doing as 11·cll as how our defensive backs are gcing to react. "It's a big task but when .,...e work as a coordina ted unit, I just know we'll play better than last year." \Vith good speed and the love to hit, Reihcrtson was asked if he wouldn't like 10 pl,ily defensive back since it appears to be a "'e<ikness in the Rams defense. "No," he says. "As a linebacker you often get first crack at the ball canier," I love to stick my Riddell (helmet) into them. 'fhere's nothing more rewarding that a good, solid stick. COLUMBUS, Ohio -Jimmy Connors "I just love to blitz the quarterback. and Brian Gottfried, the No. 1 and 2 It's a rare chance to get in the seeded players in the 125,000 Bllckeye JOHN OAN IELSON (lEFTI AND JIM GAGNON LOOK AT. TROPHY. limelight ... Tennis Championships, advanced to the ,-_:------------------------------------------~ quarterfinals with easy victories Thurs· day. The 20-year-old Connors ousted Jun Kamiwazumi of Japan, 6-1, 6-4, Md Gott· fried defeated Von Molina of Colombia, &-3, &-2. e King, NeWt'ombe Sign NEW YORK -Billie Jean King and John Newcombe v.·ere the first players to sign with the ne\Yly or~nlzed IS-t eam World Team Tennis, it was announced Friday by commissioner G e o r g e ?tfacCall. a Laguna Beach resident. Mrs. King, the 1973 '\'imbledon cham· pion. v.•as signed by Philadelphia while Newcombe, of Australia, \\'as inked by Houston. OPENS Aut. 4TH SPECIAL 6 DAY SALE 15"'0FF 24 -Fish .... Soort -675-2545 Baseball Standings k .... -._ .... Rtntt .... W ....... .......,_, .... _ ................ lllt ........... ' • AMERICAN LEAGUE Baltimore -New York Detroit Boston Milwaukee Cleveland East Division IV L 56 -46 00 '° 57 49 56 49 51 54 38 69 \... West Dl\•lsion """"" City 62 48 Qakland 60 48 Minnesota 54 51 Clticago 52 55 Angela 51 54 Texas 40 65 'T!Ulnf1y'a Gl!Mt M!l'#MM I, ~I , ' CllWlll'ld I, llltllll'flOl't I IOI~ 10, Nflrl Vort 0 Mln~I 6, 0.kllnd l Pct. GB _549 .545 .538 .533 11i .486 6~S .361 2D .564 .556 I .514 51\ .4116 81\ .488 81h: .381 19 \\ Allttll l, ltltCll 2 .,. K1n111 C!l't' 3, Chlc11tO 1 ~ ,; TMl1,•1 Oll!RI llotl (Tltm 13-1' Ind Po!• 0-0) II lll1ltlmorw (Mt •I!' ,.11 ind J•l!erton J.J), J ._.tt_..._ '(Ofk_ !Pet,rton,,.1-,ill. •,t. ~troll ILoll,c:h • 1j;'lf}r"1':1 '\\ ~ • • , <.; Ml .. l ullff (Pl'l'IOl\t WI •f Ctt\'lllnd !Tl"" mHm•" 3-51 f l(l11t11 City (Fll-rlt 2.tll •I M!Mt0!'1 (ICtlt n -101 .l'1•11 1811*'1' 1-41 11 Cnlcff<I (JoflMOn NI ~o.shlnd (81U. f-7) •I Ahtl'll (Sl.,..•r IJ.J) lltlll'N'(• 0.tl!lft l(llf!UI Clf't' It MlnMM111 Tu11 II Cl'll(;ego MllWM#lt 11 Clmllftd lktt.lon If llltl"*I HIW Yort 11 o.tl'Oll 9'1kl#fld It Alltllt • NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dl\•lslon St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh ~tontreal Philadelphia New York W L 58 49 55 ·53 " 54 51 55 51 57 47 57 West Divislon Dodgtrs Cincinnati San Francisco JI oust on Atlanta " 41 64 45 60 47 56 54 49 63 36 7(J San Diego T~vnd1,•1 Gt"'" PhUad~phl1 1, Chlc"o 1 ~-t..-41. l..olMt 0 • Hew York s. Pltlllll.lrllh 1 Cll'ldl'lntll n, Allelll• 2 O.Olltl •, H01.1Jton 2 (11 !nnlr1111l Oil!\' 111mn 1ched11led. Pct. .542 .509 .486 . 4111 .472 .452 .620 .587 .561 .509 .438 .340 . . GR Tlll•r'• 01rn11 Houtlon (Wiison '-12 end O!erker 0.1) •I Cln. tll'IMtl !NOien 0-1 Ind Htll ..,.,, , P1116bul'th (Wtl~ll' 1-6) ti Ph!lftdtll'hll (Cerl· ton 10.11) ~1CHll (A....wi.i 11.&J. 1t ~·M091J.,t1t Wr- •httl 11Ml -, St taut• IGlbtO<'I 11-10\ •I New VDrk (Mii• IKk 7-10 Sin Dleoo {Greif 6·111 at Allent1 <5d1U'tlcr .. , Dllltff' (Mtt\er•milh 10-61 11 Sltn Fr111tlKo !8r1dl~ ,.9) s1turd•~'1 G1rn11 SI. LOI.Ill 11 Htw VOfll l)odlft'I 11 $..i Frtn<IKO Plll1burDh 11 Ph1l&dt!flf'll1, 1 $1n 011110 11 A!11n111, 2 Hou11Qn 11 Cll'l<lnn11l CMClllO 11 MOnl""H • ' WHITE STAG :. --=-~~ • . -~ .... -SW." ~" - SPEEDO sun': HUGE STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM • Swl"' capt TENNIS FOR EYERYONEI NEW PRO-AM ·--.""' ....... ,.. ..... ..... f9MI• , ..... 3 ,.... ............ tlth f ....... rd4f ~t.sr -,,_...., NEW HEADXRI ~lvml11.-fi •• .,... ,.,..t ..... ............ -. S""t with ~ .......... $M.DO ,..,.__~-~ Out,.:·~··~",,•!r..e'"-f!, .................. --OCDJI flSHIH IS IRUT • 'ID Wiil SPICIAI. . ,. -.... ;.;,., 20 . lit. -11 .. ""' '/2 Clllil . ,...,..... . ' A~L LURES 2&'/o OFF ' ,,.. ~ ..... ....., .,_,. .. . . ..,,,.. ........ ' - •. • • 0 DAILY PILOT f'nday, Augusl 3, 1973 1 Pole Leads South Line By flANK \\'t-:SCll Of ltM Dilly l"llol Ji.II \\1hen it ca tnc to selectins a defensive end for the Soulh team for the Orange Coun ty All-star ga1nc, coach Dave Holland didn't ha\'e to look any further tlk1n his own Corona de\ !\.1ar football team . Defense had been a strong poi nt for the Sea Kings in 1972. and one of the anchors of that defense \\<a.5 Tom Pole, a 6-4 , 2Q5..pound two year lcuerman. "\Ve needed someone who v;as familiar \.\tilh our type of defense and Tom had done a very good }ob for us.'' Jiolland savs. "The \\•ay v.·e play our defense he lines up where a defensive end would, but p\<iys like a tackle." p;1rtil't1larly good g :. m t· s against Ne\vport H(lrbor 11nd Edison, l\\'O Of C:orO!ltl <le i f\.1ar's biggest \Yi:ls of the season. The Sea Kings g::ive up only one touchdown in both games and Pole was among lhc leading tacklers in each con· test. At season's end. Pole y,·as nan1ed All·lrvine League and All-Orange Coast area. "Actually Tom never had a bad gar.1c fo r us.'' H.olland says. "He's a steady player, and the big tb,ing is he's just starting lo reft'@h his potential. "l·le'll fill out quite a bit in the next year or so ;ind he has good speed and quickness to go with his size." .. .. Alamitos Racing Results llW Thllf'MllY ci.u a "'" ll'llllT llAC• -.al l••dt. 7 '"' Okh . Ct1!mll\Q. Purt1 11600. llH llllvw "inty tSmHftJ s.eo 3.60 3.10 L11111 Jimmy LIO (Orty1r) 1.IO 6.20 Mod Art (Tr'H1ur1) 4.IO TFm1 -l!.?6. Also r1n -ICh'l'I CrulJ•· Wow'1 8 rDktr, Sprlng'1 Otslrt, Tr•/\quH s11r. 01rlln11 En1, 51sh Cord. Sc:r•lchtd -B11ch 81r1111. Nlc1 1, Bo. Frit5l'IO Otck Ch1rg1, Qu1r!ll' 8tnd1r, 5h1non. tt •Xo\CTo\ -:J.lled 11.lvll' llUS!l' I. S-LIUll Jimmy Lto. 1>o1ld 1-11 • .IO. SICOMD lllACE -CO v1rd1. J 11ar olds & 1,111. Cl11m1ng, Pur11 lllOO. AChM;lrr !Wrl91'1!) 11.ol) S.60 l,20 Wiich CrHk Chic (Oreytr) 6...0 l.20 Aoyll TOP B1r (P191) ].20 Time -20.6"1. Also r•n -Aoy1!'• AfQUHI, Fish Alrrl, L1o"'s 01•1, Wtrch Mt Tr11el. No K•tlchrs. THIRD Ill.CE -350 Yards. ] Vt•• olds. Allow<'!nct . Pur11 51900. 5!rong And 8otd (H1r1l • . ..O J.20 t.60 lruly Ho! Panl1 IB•nksf 6.60 l 60 Mlr1cl1 Moon (Adair) 7.60 Time -11.11. Also ran -Scent 01 Lime, Cai:tJ Wnlch, 81m•lol, Barcv Jtl. No Kr•lch11. _f_qle pla~e<l_enough to letter £or the SCa Kings as a so phomo re. n10ved to Bakersfield for his junior yea r as Corona de\ Mar won a league championship, then came back last season. -hle...J:l-1.'i.~D. .. used _ex:.. ---· .~ .... , .• .,;~.-··-D111r·1•tt•1 .. ,,.,,.~, ... ~~ l"DU•Tw 1tACE':... ;,o:,trra~. 1 Ye1r c I u s i v e I y 0~1 defense TOM POLE OF CORONA DEL MAR ANCHORS THE SOUTH ALL-STAR LINE . olds. A11ow1nce. Purse s1100. Thi Ml• (Her!) 3.IG 3.00 7 . .0 throughout his high school 01d1r·, Gem CB•nksl e.oo •·'° career, nnd is acCU$IOmcd to Haist Boom (Mltchtlll s . .o the job no1v. • SUJDllter Traek Aho •an -Mr. w~1s111. wise can, E d ill Tlnll -10.51. "Playing defense just fits sea I' e, ~l~c~:c""k~v, Dtct ettoo, Mcl111t, 11.ed Holland describes him as the Sea Kings' most consistent defensive p I ayer with my personality," Pole says. "I "lo s'r~1che$. Rustl ers Roll , 8-3, In Metro The Senik Rustlers con· tinued atop the Metro League baseball standings with a 12-4 record following a routine 8-3 t r i u m p h over Saddlcback College Thursday night at Anaheim's Boysen Park. The Rustlers combined six base hits and ei ght free passes for the easy victory. topped by a five ·rWl fourth inning that ended any doubts as to the final outco1ne. In that .fatal fourth frame Jerry Brown opened with ' single and advanced to second on a walk to Jim Sparks. Gary Rungo walked and Craig Kenned y got aboard on a fielder's choice. Sparks scored on a passed ball and Rungo came in on a \l.'ild pitch. Rick T e s i; i e r squeezed Kennedy home \\'ilh the third tally and Rod Bro\vn foJloy,·ed with a free pass. Gordon Blakeley. v.•ho finish- ed the night with three singles and three rbi in four trips to the plate. got tv.·o runs in v.'ith a base hil Pat Espinoza 15-J) picked up the victory after hurling six inning!. lffcll1Wck tJJ .. • ' ' ' ' • • • • • ' ' L1k. cf Klno,ss Av•I~, lb Wil!i1ms, c JO...$. II Oouvl••· lb Mw!i. 2b M.lr!ln. rf PtrtQvd, 11 Movq~an, o Total' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' » 51~1~ llustlen Ill .. . R. 8,own. 21> W~ltt1y 2b Br•dlrv, cl Pl.'Ters"n' lb·r Blftkel1v. SI Miiis, lb EnQ1trom, Jb J. Brown. d~·C S1>1rk1. lb.r! G. 11.unoo. rf.lf l(rnnr<rv. lf·C I Ttssirr, c EcdHo dh Pclef1ori, lb·P ' ' ' ' ' . ' . . ' ' . ' . . ,, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' . • • • • " . " EIUson, p To1al• Sc8" ~y lllllll'IQi ' 5•ddll'b«k 100 001 001-l Sl-nik R11Slleo 011 101 00•-f • •• ' ' ' ' ' • • • • ' ' ' • • • • • • ' • • ' ' ... • • ' • ' • • • ' ' • • ' • ' • • ' • • • • ' ' • • • ' • • • ' • ' • ' • ' like the idep of not knowing what's coming at you, and A & c Wi"n, having to react to it." Pole says speed a n d quickness are his biggest E 2 d assets on the fie ld. and expects ye n they'll be tested by the North. "I've never even seen North quarterback Bob Acosta play but @dryooe says he's really good arbund the outside." Pole says. ·'Jt does put cx!ra pr essure on you. but you don 't lhink ahout !hat because there are a lot of other guys oul there to help out. "We don 't have a lot of the big name players like the North does. but we've got a lot of good ones and I think we'll give them a close game." Pole pl;ins to attend Orange Coast College in the ra n and has his sights set on playing major college football , prob- ably at S21n Jose State. SA Valley Unheate11 Santa Ana Valley High's sum1ner I ea g u e baskelball team completed an undefeated season in the Costa Mesa Recreation Dept. prep leagtle at Estancia High Thursday night v•ith a come-rron1· behind. 64-57. ove rtime victory over Mater Dei . Jn other finales it was Rancho Alamitos bes I in g Fountain Valley Red. 43-46. and Santa Ana Valley's junior va rsity \\'OO its second straight subbing for Canyon, 59-49, o\·cr Garden Grove. R. B. Jamison led Santa Ana Valle,rs attack with 20 poin ts. but lie fouJed out and four others shared the scoring duty in the overtime. Escadrille gained a bit of revenge and a solid shot at se- cond place in the <Asta Mesa Open summer b ask e I b al I league Thursday nig ht at Cos ta ri.tesa High with an 86-76 triumph over ci rcuit champion Blackies. The win gives Escadrille an 8-4 record -the same as A & C Properties, which handled Nads, 98-68. If Escadrille and A & C Properties are victorious l\olon- day and Tuesday there will probably be a playoff game between th e l\\'O for outright possession of second place. Escadrille did it with a flourish as Mark Ramsey and Dav id Payne led the way with 29 and 26 point! in tripping up Blackies. Ramsey had 21 of his points in the first half as Escadrille rolled 10 a 46-38 halftime lead. Jeff Cunningham was high point ma n for Blackies with 22 points. A & C Ptoperties had an easy tin1e or it as Brian Atnbrozich. Mike Contreras and Rod Snook clicked with 24, 18 and 15 points. E1c1drillr (16) Mc<:Drmltk Novick 11.amsrv Mclfrt 1! 1 II ,i IP ' ' . ' ' " " i 0 i ~ J . P1vn1 0 . P1yn1 lo11ts l J IS . . ~ 16 )9 16 l l•ckitt 1761 • •• Ch!Jdrus 1 P1r .. rr I 7 George s 1 5ADins s ' Bur!lno"'m 1 0 B8rnes 1 3 Kev rs l 3 CunnlnoNm 10 2 Tol•ls JO 16 H•l!!lme : EK1drillr, 41NS • I. & C ~.,,,..r11ri O~l ~ tt • • ' . " . ' ' ' ' Mlll~r 'on!•er11 l.mbrozlch ~ .llen1Jen1e• Wcr!hy ·-· ~-,,, Etc~eogoven •llllcllrr eerQQ~fSI fQlllll ' ' • • . ' . ' ' . 44 10 H1ds (U ) " ~ ' • ' ' ' " ' " ' • • ' ' • ' " " " " ,, ' • • " ' " • ' ' • " • ' ' • ' ' ' ' • " "' II pl Ip ;;.::~~tld l ~ J ,: Re1m1s 1 1 1 5 Lellfrr 7 1 l 16 Gl•Ylna~lch ' 6 o 11 iMnks 301 6 Tol•ls 25 11 11 ill H1llllmt: o\ & C PrOPer!ies. 45·11. *PORTA IM GIRO UM ITALIAMO ./ - DRIVE .4~ ALFA 'TAKE AN ITALIAN FOR A RIDE BEACH IMPORTS IS PROUD TO OFFER YOU THE ALFA ROM EO. .. IT'S A TRUE SPORTS CAR WITH SAFETY AND ECONOMY BUILT IN . • 25+ 1111/es lo a Raffo,, with low pol/111ion fuel ifljection • 4-wll eel power assisted brakes for q"lcktr. safer s1op1 • 5-speed,f forward. rack 011d pi11io11 stetrlflg ANO NOW BEACH IMPORTS OFFERS A SIX· YEA~· PLUS WARRANTY! Area Athletes FIFTH RACE -]SO v1rd1. 3 vHr olds. Allow1nc1. Puru 11900. Go Chickie GD (Trta1ure) J.(11) 1.-«I 7.IO Wh1l1 Desire (l(nlQM) 6.20 •.IO Midnighl Becky CW1rd) S IO Tlmr -17.H . Shine at Mesa it.lso ••n -Os1oe C~v, Ch(od!ego, Lltle W•r Cl!fc, Thr" 01 Dl•mollCli.. Mis' Limits. No Kr•Tellri. !tlXTH lt.t.CE ~ 110 v1rdt. l VII' olds & UP. Cl•lfTllna. PUr}e •~1M Rick Case flashed lo a pair of sprint victories Thursday afternoon at Costa l\lesa High in the championship finals of the Costa Mesa Recreation Dept. All-comers track and field meet. Case clocked a 10.2 and 22.3 in the 100 and 220 in the high school division while four other Orange Coast area athletes garnered first place prizes in the high school division running events. Former Newport llarbor High s'lando ut T o1n DiStanislao, who pole vaulted 15-0 in his senior yea r. sped to CM Cagers Fall, 52-50 Costa Mesa High 's summer basketball team closed out its activity Thursday night in the Orange Hi gh circuit on the los- ing side, falling lo Lowell, 52- 50. The loss drops the Mcsans· league mark to 11·3. Mesa had a shot at winning in the wan - ing seconds, but a 20-foot shot missed with tv.·o seconds re- maining and Lo"·ell on the long end of a 51-50 count. Lc)\~·ell hit a fr ee throw with no time left for the final tally. Phil Salazar led in re- bounding with live and Thn Carrico had four assists for Costa l\1esa . Cost.t Mru CYI 1 " " " ~.:11111• , ' • ,_, ' • ' • ~wain ' • ' " J•cobt ' ' • • Ca•rico ' ' • • Cummln5 ' • ' • Har11Q ' • • ' Toi.ls " • ' " Scor• b1 Ou1rltf'S Co111 Mesa " " " ~-Lowell " " " 11-J7 a 43.2 in hurdles. the 330 intermediate Huntington Beach High 's Robert Angel \\•as the v.·inner in hi s specialty -the 880 - garnering a sub two·minute c(fort in 1:59.9. Ne\.\·port's Brian Theriot y,•as the 440 \vinner, capluring the even t in 51.2 Loara lligh's Ralph Serna continued his domination in tht> featured three-nlile, clock- ing a 14 :51. Other tllree-mile \\i nners in- cluded Darryl Taylor y,·ith a 16:07 in the 30-39 ag<' group. J em' Smn rt with a 16 :09 in the °40-49 bracket and Randy Dunlevie in the open division ("' 571. Opfft DlvlslOll lClll -M'trk lllUrf 10.0; 400 - Jan>H S~irk!y Sl.S; UO -Mike Ee'< 1:51.•: Mlle (tlO'rd -Nell S~r! •:ll,,; \glrltl -Virglnl1 L1nrrv S:tO: l:JO Int. -Carl Flrfds •5.•; ~lie - Randy Oimlevlr 11:57; :J.mlle t:io-.ne1- overl Oarr vl T.tvlor 1':Q1 ; :J.mil1 (.0. and-ove-rl Jerrv Smarl 16:09. Hlth SChDOI DIVbOtl 100 -(bov•l Rk k C•se 10.1; (girls! -Jan Les!er 11.4: :no !boys) -Rick Cate 1.1.l •«> tbov•l -Brian Theriot Sl.7: fglrlsl -Amv Thompson 61.0; !90 -11.~rl Arw;iel 1:59.9; mile -JO•~ S1•vedr1 •::11.7; 10 HH (boys) -S!evr Adams t.l: ~girls) -Janice Le1!er 9.•; lJO lnl -Tom OIS!1nlst10 "3.1: 3-fTl!le -11.alph Serna i•:SI. Junlw Hith D!vhiD11 100 U>oy•) -llm P11te•son 10,o, (Ol•I') -Voonlr Tanooeo 11,9; 220 lbOvsl -Kent-iv 15.S. UO (bo)'S) - Te-rry HuddlHlon 1:01.7: (g!tiJl - K1rrn Alr c(ll 2:11.0: mlle -Col•n McConnttU •·36.7; 10 HH -L••rv F1lk1 f.6. A91 Group 112 •!Id lllldlf'l \00 lbOYSl -11.00Cle R•mPSll !J.O: (glrl1l -P•I McF•H 13.1. Mlle \llOYU -Kellll Yi.wood 5:21; IQitlsl -Cllrl•lv Wiison S:..0.6: i100 ttoy,J -Orrw 5!eohen~ 1:•1.J; (!jirlsl -1(1~1 Lln!ry 1:31.6; Io" g 1um1> !bQyt.I -C n r Is McPlllfsan l~YJ; Ccilrl1) -PlfTI Panrr1llo 13-'l. Ni111 •"41 Ul!dlor 100 Uic•v•I ~ Orrw Sll~ns U.S: (olrlsl -Jan• 11.•fTll>Sh lJ.O: -MO (boys) -Oe>uq Dunn.r n.1: (Qlrli) -Jinnv Laix;I!, 13.1. • 5•• •no U...S.r ''° Cbov') K1vln Str1in: {girts\ -Iv<'! Janrs. VH1r1ns 100 (10 •t«I over! -P~ll Schl"O•I H ,2; fSO 1ne1 over> -JOI C•au. 11.1; (60 and over) -Jar C•rusr. no li"'W!; mil& -(J.0 ana ovet) -DaYld Ltwl> 6:().1 Fiiiy Grand /Ward! t .IO •.Ml •.BO Ot' Din CC1rdo11) 11.10 l.1G O' Dlal (Pagel S.10 Tinie -"6 • .it. Atw ran -Idaho c;o. Moishe, Ole My,lerY M~"· C•UIOf'nl1 S I n d 1 , S...~guine's Jel. Scr1tchfd -llhode•l•n. S$ aXo\CTA -1·Fltly G••nd & l· 0' Otn. paid M67.00. !EVl!HTH ltACI -UO vard1. 3 ve~r aid• & up. C11ssllled l.Uow1nt1. Pu"'' 13}()0', Burkt'I Plslot {Plgr) 7 . ..0 •.llO S.00 Rockrl S1lulr IW1n:ll 1 . .0 4.90 Lindi M<1<h1ch11 (Ad1lr ) J.o!O Tlmr -11.13. Also ran -JoyOl,IS Fav, O!ckry Bl~ Bov, Im For You. "lo 1c••tches. EIGHTH ltl.CE -l50 v1rd1. ] Vflf old1 & up. (l•lmlng. PU'lf l?SOO. 8 uSll R<'lldf" 4Hortl ,.,.., 1e.ao 10 «! ReDel Clt.arllr (Cardol1) lJ.60 I.~ Ha'I 1'1r!11 (Ore~rrf 1.80 Time -11.ff. it.lso r1n -11.ack On Man. Mr K~ndv Ch•rO<', Moolah Dl•monG. Opr"ll'IQ Gun. Dorl'! Loo« Bae~. Orwrl San<1s1...-m. Bold Bid. Sc••lcl\rd -Aruicr.e Ptslum. SS EXACTA -•·Bulh Raldtr & 1· Rt'brl C._.tlie, Plld t1"6J.OO. NINTH lllACE -.tOI) v•rds. l YllT old!.. C11lmll"). Purse Sl900 GIT Rr..av (knlghll U .IO 7 60 • iO Joyous Prld1 !G1t11J 71.60 J.90 II.ova! P1r1dt' 011rl) •.l'D Tlmr -10.61. it.ISO ra" -H.oda Be You. DI!· tawadlttv, Fano, tiv Overdrive, !turt "1 M . "lo scraTthl!S. IJ E)(ACTA ~ti l t4dV I. l· J orou1 Pride, p,old Sl,166.$0. Slo-pi tch Loop Set for J\fesa A sli>'pltch softball leagul! will be sponsored by the Costa ~1esa departme<it of leisure services this fall with ga mes to be played on Thursday or Friday nights beginning Sept . 13 at Te\Vinkle school . Co!lt of entering a team is approxin1atcly $70 with all in- terested parties urged to con· tact the department of Leisure services at 834-5300. llWPORT DATSUI IS MOVll8, tbe Prices Down • the Savings Up. • WE 'RE MOVING TO OUR ·NEW LOCATION VERY SOON.AND WE 'RE OVERLOADED WITH 610's, Li'I HUSTLER PICKUPS ANO STATION WAGONS, YOU'LL SAVE MONE Y IF YOU •·BU~ NOW·.~,BECAVS.-<Wti'H .. ·• SAVE'MONEY. IF YOU 'LL MAKE YOUR MOVE TO BUY A NEW DATSUN, WHILE WE MAKE OUR MOVE YOU 'LL SAVE i • Check our Leasin2 Plan • Many Pre·Owned_ Oatsuns COME IN FOR A TEST DRIVE ANO GET A FREE GALLON GAS CAN, TO PROVE WE MEAN BUSINESS. ' • •• For Toniglat Alamitos Entries L" Al•rnl! .. EnlfiH For Frld1y, c1e1r a ll'11t. ''r•• htl ''" '·"'· ll'llttT lllACE -'50 vard1. 2 vr•f nld,. AllOWAllCI. PU<'H $1 ,@ M•r.• Ca! fJ. llltl\lrd1l 110 5uci•r Br Sure CR. Ad•lr) 111 C~lck~O (J. Or1Yerl 111 Whl1ard 01 Ou (R. ll1nk~l 110 My 1111 01 Hllf'IY CO. Knl!Jhl) 111 Two Fo Go IL. Wrl!lhll !U Cha•IJ•llulldred (C. Smith) 11'0 llbOve 11.tbelllon CL. Mvlt!.) !U Flrtl ao !J. W•rdl 1~ ll.ack1l GI••• !5. Tre111ur1) tl'O o\llO E llt !IM1 ltlptvmvtau !J. Orrved IH Aovtl B•r LMI (R. B•nksl 110 Cn•rald11go !R. Ad1lrl 111 E•sv Big Girl !K. H•rH 111 Sl!COHO RA.Cl! -350 y1rds. !r vr•r okn & up. Cl1lmir1Q. Purse Sl.100. Cl.timing price t7.000. LI LI C~duu• (11., Binks) lit SpanMI Ptll (I(, H•rll 1'1 C•nda B•v Ila• (S. Tr1•sure) 111 I'm 81r(o (E. G1rtal 11'7 Mr. t.a .. r (H. CrMbY} 119 Un•lllCMd (J. MllSvdl) 119 1 111'\ ll:l!WISI IL. My1r1 ) lit Prel•r Bel> !J. RlchlrdU 111 • THIRD Ro\CE -$1'0 y1rd1. l ve1r oldi. & Ill'. Claiming. Purse $1.100. Cl1lml"ll prlc1 51.600. Pht>ebf't 81uce (C. Smllhl 11' 11.ov Ch•nl (5. Tre1sur1) 118 F~y Nr•K fl(, H~rl) 111 Mrl'IO Sluy IM. 8lckrl) 119 Tri• Fir• !It. Baflktl ll9 €1 Attll (E. G1rl1I It• Bras• L•nil {0 . l(nlghl) ll' C1 p111n ltb: (J. W•rdl llt ·-AllO lllllllte klldee {0. Knlg~I) 11; Julll>lt•b (J. MllsucJaJ lll Armed Clsh (I(, He•!) 11 9 Tap Frelgnt (M. llk~~ll 119 FOURTH RACE -JSO y9rd1. j ve•r Did\ & up. Claiming. Purr.r $1,100. Ct11mirw;i price 1-1,000. Deep Sea Fisl1 Repo1·t HUNTINGTON IEACH -7! •'l<Jle<I: JO blrr1cud1, 75 bon!IO, m Sand !;>IU, • haUbu!. NEWPORT CO•vev'• Locker) ..;. 1/o angler1. 31 bftrrecvd.i, '61 bal\llo, 151 Ila••· JI rDCk cO<I. J 11,iloDuJ. I mlC~t'rrl. !o\M'l Undi119I -1,3 analrr" 1 l>l•r•cuo•. 7.:11 ""nil<J. S14 1•nd bl••• II rock cco. J marktt&I. LONG IEACH 18elmoAI ll'l•rl 71 •nQlers: 1 vellcw'l .. 11, 12 W •ract oh, Ill Wnd l>l!.1, 51 bonito, 2 h1Hbul. llar91- Mr Mlri ll1r fJ, Wtrlll 01ndu'1 J1I IJ. M~llu"•! Don Bar'• •m•o• !J. R1(fWrdsl l'lld wno (C. ~mlth l A"J<lll P•i•um Ill:. 8•nk1) f\lo J"lld (S, Tr•A1ur1) P•rr ll•r fR Adalrl •• m m "' "' "' '" Fll"TM RACE -400 v•rds. l y .. r olds I. up. Allow•ncl. Purtt SJ,$0. fll'o 110...n~ T ~ 10 Knlg~lf 17? !tel Him GD <A . Adllf) •n ~·r. Arm•m••r rR. 8~nks) 111 Be Su•• Moon (I(, H••tl 111 O•!vln' M<\n CJ Rlch••dl) 119 Ruby B•rrHlll! CM. lllckell 117 StXTlt 11.t.CE -..0 v•rclt. l Vfdf ota1. r1<11m1.,g Pur.1r tl.600. Cl•lm!no prier S?,J.00, Erhn Too IL. Mylt<! 119 Cu!lorn ..,,, 10. l(ntghl) 11'7 Jethroe !H. Crosbvl 11• C•"" Mo11!1n IJ. Wt•d) 119 KIC•Oll Lu fE Ci••ll l llt SOOl's Luck IK. H1rll 111 ElaM~ Wonder (II. Ad•lrl 119 Oulnn'I Allbl (M BlcktU Ill AndV Oonr II CO. C1rda11I It! SEVENTH Ro\CE -310 ynrds 1 year nld coils I. grld11'QS. Puru Sl0,000. Moon Flyer CS. Tr1•sur1) 120 R11Val Moon CD. Kn!Qhtf I') !'ma on cq. l'dtl•J 117 Laeldl~ Fftcft IL. Mv+e•l 110 T•IPOtl Jer (0 . C.trdoral 111 Hn~v Too Oe.c:k CJ. W1rd! 117 l•lple Beal !R. BIW'k•) 110 OftndV (•nr1J1 IG. Prtslldge1 110 s~v O! Offtmood (J. ll lrh•rctsl 111 lln>e lD Thlnkrlch tJ. watSOtll 120 Aho llUtlblti C"•ntaln Crynch !K. 1+1r!1 111 Mr. Cule BrllCMS !O. K11l<,1M1 111 ADC~IY lerre MOIQ (5. Tre11u,.tl 110 EIGHTH RACll -e10 Vftrd•. l vt11r old• & up, Cla!mlng, Purse Sl.900. t:l.:il,,..ll'lO prke S2.i.M. Rue Frree t R. Banl!Sl in Dllf' K•.>r ~E. G1riftl 11' Kjng's A<11!Us (S. Tr1t<11ur1I 11? c .. 1 FO< AC~• jR. Adelr) 119 ~oeed C011nt 1J. wardf n' Venda L!Ma !O. Ca•do••) Ill F1ncy Wiiiow( L Wrlgh!f 122 6arrlno (IC. Harl i 111 o\11<1 S llglble Pluqfd In IJ. Richard•) !19 HD! To Trol IL. Mvlt\) 11' Alt d•c•u•r( H. Page l n• GrHn Up !J. Richards) 111 NINTH ltACE -•.O Y••O•. 3 ~el• a•d•. Cl1lmlng, Pur•e Sl,600. Cl1lm1ng price t1 SOD. Oupe's Ottl•ll"un! 15. lr11wrel "' Lil Amigo Jk . H1•0 n• Fite• AvHah (J W1rdl 119 Suw•r>ee TDO 11.1 1'1lt~el 1 n• lle~r~ 'N' Gett I! tJ. Rlcrwr11u 119 11eor,..1D1>t>er IL. Ai'vlrs) 119 Eft<Jl~t'• Cule B.>r Ill ll•nksJ 119 MOO<\ Fen !O. knight! 11' The Eun<1<h !II. l'dllr) l lt 19& bonlro. ! 1>•rr .. cuda, I} s"nrl Da ... • ... ------------:; 15 nalll>ut. (Pl1rP01nl Undl"'!) -S61 1 1no1er1 : 1 vtl!Qw!ell. l6 b•"~<Udll, 8? bon.t!D, t7 c1llco blss, ~ rock cod. •1 Dlut w .... VINTURo\ -84 1n<Jler~: •JO c~llco i.-11. lll blue i..11. 1 whilt s•• ban, 1 ~aUbuT. 11( rock end. SANTA llAll:IAllA -420 •otk cod. lJ wnl11 li•h. 120 calico bliss. l""ElllAL IEACM -•• •noleri: 16 Wrriteudl. • tton!lo, J7 calico biH. • 1 ve11ow1al1. 69 rock cO<I . SHH P&OllO (t2rtd SI L•ndl1>11l -62 •no!"rt: 11 M"<:k 5"1 NH• I IN•· r1cuo1. 110 c1llco b.n1, s halibut, "1 •~nd w1s. 11 tl<Yli•D, 161 blue b•H.I t5plrlflshlll41 -J'O ,on1lt•\ J h•• ·~".aft,• ~..,,lln. 71 r~lir" ~,.., 17 ~and b•ll, 1 while ~· wss. •• rocl cod. ltEDO'"DO -213 •"-'• • ;· t>.>r· ••cvd•, 761 calico N•t, ns b'Uf! !Nu. ! halibut, 7'4 t>onlto. 8•r~e -16'' ""°'ers: 1 IN'IBCU0'1. ,., n1n1a. Jll I m:~":l'k~rc~°'~ ~t1 an .. J•,. 10 b'"· r•cU<I•. 7! bortllD, Ill ..,.n,i b . .,,. U ~1li1>!,t1. Mt macke••l 74 •r.c' •• l•nie -Ill ln'l!trl: 1? """•<vd&. 150 DOnl·~ 15 ~~11 .. ,,1. MOltllO 91,y f\li•n~<'• '1""("111 - 4 8nctltrS: U llrw;i cod, StO rock ~ (SIR S!"'""l-'9 1nglers: 6] lino cod, I 1.111 rock cO<I c1 .. 11e.i -11 •11111..-i: I JU rock cpd, 16 Ung cOd. AVILA IAY (P.,1 S1n Lultl -1t •noir e\. ~ rDCI< cO<I. 1! 11"11 tOd. ! 1alfT1on. I ~Ott HUENEME -11 lln(tlfri; 1 111~~ 5"~ DA,,., }]1 c~llra 111111. 111) lflu• !Ms•. •while 11a bl''· Ui b9r<Atud1. l' Deni!~ MAltlNA DEL REY -)J ll'IOlt ":' .O< MCI< <<Kl. I l'.l.._N I W .. A"F -?P< ~~"'"" l0•.1 tJlkD b,)n, 117 lh1racudn. S6' bOl'ito. 7 hftlihH I, S v•llowt1;1 l"' m~!:ll.•'fl OXNARD -1°~ ~n~t~,., ' _.~~co·~ n 1 ca!lt~ b~n. tt 1aM l>••!.S. B~ c1ur o~« ~ ~ ... ,~.,.. , OC EAN<!DE -1•1 ~,,..., ••• , ' hr· •ec,,(!a. ''' ~nil.,, 'll" ~ti~ c.i,., 7 ~alibu!, •3 '"''· C""· < yrlle ·t-·< REPAIRING THAT BOAT?? Ev•rything Needed For Repairs From Nicks To Holes, Oinghys To Yachts 270' H.&.RIOR ILYD. COSTA MESA 556-0900 Dolly 'Tl t Clowid ~1111doy ONN 20 ACRES OF COOL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA HIGH MOUNTAIN COUNTRY! • ... ~."·~€~·~"'""··~'Ill"' l . ( •. • Only $1 ,iOO por e Utiliies in .. LESS THAH. 100 MILES FROM L.A. CITY LIMITS .•• cool, beaulilul, 4·seasons high country . peflect lor a llrst or 1econd hOmBt Waler, etectricity and p1v11d roads are In, You'll love the tan 11mber. the lush green m11d0w1. the lower· Ing, 1now·capped peak• 1urrounding this clo1e·ln mountain retreat. Super-low priced at only $1,400 11n ecrel Thars only' 128.000 lor 20 acra11 .•• plus water bond ol Sl .430. Only 15"' down, 15 yr. llnanclog avaltabte to quallllad buyer. 111 7~ % slmple lnteresll Take a beaut!lul drive this weak11nd to 1ne cool Ge rner Valley~ •nd see It lor yourself! Oerrier Y11ley 11 27 miles east 01 Hemet on Hwy. 74. tl•• .. ·--~ ... c. ............ _ v ,t ... •H 'r. •' . . ' .. . _. ,r.:..td::..':.c.' ._A_:_"'l:c".:.:".:.'::..· ..:.19.:.7::..3 _______ .:.D::.A.:.:ll::.V.:.P..:ll:.:O..:.T_.2,,,_J ~ Newport's Famed Kialoa II Joining the Coast Guard . IN ACTION -Kialoa II close-reaches through a lumpy sea in a race for the Nassau Cup. The fained racing yacht has been turned over to the Coast Guard Academy. Weekend Calendar Luna del Lido Sailing Tonight With two large traditional 100 classes in the annual Tn.idswnmer ~vents stealing Midsummer Regatta. This the llgh thi event takes the place of the yachting spat t s traditional Southern California ,weekend , actlVity on the local Yachting Association Midsum· front will be sparse but mer Regatta which was drop- .spirited. • ped several years ago. l.ocnl Lido-14 sailors will be Boating events at Long active · tonight when Bahia Beach, highlighting the open- ' . . ~ ing of the California lntcrna· ?°r1nth1an Y.acht Club stages lional Sea Festival, will in- 1ts annual night race. called elude three days of high-speed \he Luna del Udo. in the con-po"•erboat racing by the Na- .fines of Newport Ha rbor. tional Drag Boat Associaton. Dana Point Yacht Club has and a colorful race by schooners and ketches known a doubled-barrel~ event with as the Ancient Mariners race. its 5th Dana Day Regatta for all classes Saturday and SUn· day, plus the fact they will be -host-to a fleet of schooners, ketches, ocean racing cata· marans and other offshore classes in the 4.th Dana Point race sponsored by Seal Beach Yacht Club. rttANY LOCAL vachts-both po"•er and sa il -.8re involved in the Yacht Racing Union of Southern California's annual familv cruise which got under wa y Wednesday and will con- tinue through Sunday with races around Catalina Island coves. The premier regatta event is scheduled for Santa Monica Bay where the Association of Santa Monica Yacht Clubs will host over 300 boats in some lllGA----"""-Coutal Weather F1lr tod1y. l lflhl Ylfllbll wlr>dl nl9llt 1nd momlng hour• bteom!n; we~! to JOUltlwetl I to 16 kMllt 111 If· ltrf!OOl'll toc111y Ind S.tlvrd1y. Hlth to- dlly, oe1r 70. COllslaL 1emw1tv,..1 flnot' from '5 lo 73. Inland tempera· '"''" range tron'I 6' to n . W"!tr tem· i:>tr.llurt 67, Su11, Moon, Tides SCYA YACHTING calendar: Los Aogele&-Loag Beach YACHT RACING UNION - YRU Cruise (Aug. 1 5. in· vttational to member clubs of the Yacht Racing Union of Southern Callfomia .. CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -Summer Regatta, all classes, Saturday..SUnday. SEAL 'BEACH YACHT CLUB -Dana Point Race, schoo.ner. ketches. o RC A , TOR, MORF, PHRF. Islander· 36, Catallna-27, Saturday. Santa Moalca Bay ASSOCIATION OF SANT A MONICA YACHT CLUBS - Mid s umm e r R egatta. Saturday-Sunday. Newport.Balboa BAHIA CORINTHIA N YACHT CLUB -Luna del Lido Regatta, Lido-14, to.day. DANA POINT YACHT CLUB -5th Dana Day Regat· ta , all classes, Sahqday-Sun· day . San Diego SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB -Dix Brow Trophy Race, SDH F, Suiiday. ll•tOAY Second low .,. . . 1:03 p.m. I CORONADO YACHT CLUB " SATUaDAY Ffr1t llloh ., ......... 1;'9 e.m. l'lrU low ... , .,., 7:30 •·1"· -Local sabot Regatta. Sun · "' d 1.1 ay. . , SKond M9h ....... , .. 2:22 11.m. SecOl'Kl law •.. , ...... 9:3J p.m. SUNDAY '' u Flr.i l'll{lh ,,, ...... ,.. l:l• e.m. 11 Fl'•' low . , ........ a:n 1.m. 2.2 Second hliiri ........ 3:21 p.m. !.O SKOl'Kl low . '"''" 11:0? p,m. l.J Su" rlM• t :llS e.m. S1t1 7:Jl 11.m. MOQI\ rlMI 11 :2• e ,m. $111 10:39 p.m. • ·make the scene Sundays in the l1Mlljijl!1ll North and Inland ANACAPA,YACHT CLUB - Santa Cruz 1 Island R a c e (Scripps Seffes) Saturday. WESTI..AKE YACHT CLUB -Summer ·~ries, Sunday. SANTA BARBARA YACHT CLUB -T~ cla.ss racing ( 1;,, '4 and %) i;+turday.Sunday. SANTA BARBARA SAIL- ING CLUB + Family cruise. LAKE ARROWHEAD YACHT CLUB -Finn ln vita· tio.nal, Satufday. CONVENIENT INEXPENSIVE ATHLETIC -EXCITING SAFE fUN "the late•t •allh1g er•:re •• ·" roa 17141 67J·1070 WllKDAYS tNF~~~~~ION 17141 675·7W IVINJNGS By ALMON LOCKABEY Of iftt 0.llY l'Utf Sl•lf The famed aluminum racing yacht Kialoa JI, facetiously refeITed to lri yaChting circles as "Rin Tin Tin" -will be seen no more oo the Southland yachting scene. John B. Kilroy, Newport Beach and LOs Angeles in· dustrial developer and ardent yachtsman. today handed the keys to Kialo II -ak>ng with a formal deed of gift -to of- ficers of the 11th Distrist Coast Guard and officers-of the Coast Guard Academy, Ne-.v London, Conn. The presentation was made at a press luncheon at the California Club in L o s Angeles, attended by high ranking Coast Guard officers and the yachtjng press. ACCEPTING the deed of gift for the Coast Guard was • Adm. James W. Williams of the 11th District. Does this mean Kilroy, in· ternation ally k nown MOTOt HAVOUNE POPUl..AR IMPORT OIL FILTER MOTON OIL 199 en.;.,,., n.. u.. 19 99 Of Joc~1 Or Horse• -'"1tled 61111 lnture Po1ilive Troctlori P,(1-': TRAILER LEVEL STAND Ad iulls From 13" To 19" !.ale; Eo1y Lorgt Bose 7" P<evenh Sin~in11 !" Solt Ground yachtsman is dropping out of ,.--------.... the sport? The aruwer to that is : "Negative." Kilroy announced that the Ne w York flr1n of Sparkmon and Stephens is designing and tank-testing a new Klaloa 111 . She will be 79 veet overall, 64 efet on the waterline 18 feet ~am and dis place 85,000 pounds. AT THE TIME of her launehing in 1964, Kialoa was the largest aluminum sailboa t BOATING ever built. She wa s designed by Sparkman and Stephens and built by Yacht Dynamics '----------' in Torrance, a firm formed by Kilroy and several Douglas Aircraft officials to build modem yachting history." Kialoa 11 .and other aluminum In recent years-like many yachts. · another older yacht -she fell victim to the International During the ensuing years Offshore (IOR) measureinent Klaloa e s t a b I i s he d a rule and has not fared as well remarkable record in the in· as she did under the old CrUis-~ernational sport of yacht rac-ing Club of America rule. ing. Based on all-around performance, Kialoa ll, in.. .. -.TUE NEW yacht is being Kilroy's own words : "Was the built to the lOR Mark III rule. best ocean racing yacht. in lier displacement of 85,000 HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL OIL 20 & JO WEIGHTS Rrr • .+I( QUAl<"I 3 ~6~ 99 c PLASTIC OIL POUR CAP Snap Q., A .. d Pou• 19 t _ ...... ~ ·--::.. ::-:::: ... ~.~~·· STUD OIL TltEAT- MENT Gucro11!ted To Meet Dr Exceed Tire Beil Known Oil Tr•clmen! Cbrckrr u.,. ,~, 39 ~, COAST GUARD APPROVED FIRE f-..."E::;XTINGUlSHER ~!iii! • ~~1-~ !'.~~:'-:.'. Ory Ch.111icol Firt Eirlinguisher Greot For Cot1, Comptu. 60011 12 INCH JENSEN CONSOLE J.(CK STAND 4,000.Ut,. Copocity Ptr S1oncl Adj1111obl1 H1igh1 HYDRAULIC JACKS INDY SHIFTER "H " Polter" Floor Shift Co,,¥er1ion Kit E•1y To l"1t•tl li9htni119 Feil Sllflin9 !~TON 3TON STON • 1?,9 899139915 9919 99 MOOEL ft9 GENERATORS 10~~ RALLY PRECI SION THERMOMETER ,;;;ro;;-o-. --9 A -- Mog,,eiit Sty1• 7 STARTERS , .. Amerit•n c~r· 12!? SE T OF EIGHT REBUILT SPARK PLUGS r;ooo -..:1 9c· .... -M<ie Cwroni11 Sill' ALTERNATORS '111'11 f ,\:CllA.N(,1£ Americ•n c.,. 16?.9 pounds will be some 17.000 pounds lighter than Kialoa IL Klaloa II, a 73-footer, was built at a cost or a reported $350,000. She came into being as a sloop, but in later years Kilroy added a mizzen and converted her to a yawl. Other improvements included more lead ballast, a spade rudder and trim tabs to hnprove steering. Kilroy said Kialoa ll ~'ill be used by the Coast Guard Academy at New London for training purposes and son1e ocean racing. The new boat ~·ill be ketch rigged and is being designed to comply with all the modem innovations of the JOR. SOME OF Kialoa Jl's most famous victories came in the Transatlantic rare to Ireland in 1970, the Sydney (Australia ) to Hobart (Tasmania) race in 1971 and the Tasman Sea race of the same year . She has also scored elapsed time and handicap victories in the Ensenada race, t h e ~laza 1lrui ract. tM AcapulL"O partly in New i".ealand and rtacc and other Pacific Coast partly in the United States," blUt'!·vn;iter cvc11ts. She was Kilroy said. entered 1n several TranspaC I >"=~========; races but never cincrged as a \.\·lnn(•r. Kilroy said it is not certain \vhcre Kialoa Ill will be built. Ncgotia!Jons are under way for at least parti al con- struction in t\c\V Zealar.d . ''/ think it v.'ould be safe to say that the boat •,o:ill be built Done by Dunn Put Dunn gets things done. Throw her your challenge 11nd see how she handles It in her "At Your Service" col· umn, now appearing every Sunday, Wednesday and Fri· day In The DAILY PILOT. cfearn Saifinl/ Eight Hours on the W •ter in a Be•uliful Cal 25 Plus On e Hall D•y Solo All for Only Fifty DoHars. WE GUARANTEE RESULTS JlJo ,Sai/infl Club NEWPORT BEACH--{714) 67S.0827 SA VE 3 0 % • 5 0% AUTO PARTS THE WEST'S MOST COMPLETE 00.IT·YOURSELF OPEN SUNDAY 9 • 6 PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU TUESDAY. AUGUST7, 1973 AUTO CENTER BRAKE FLUID I ·Quart Dot-3 sa c lst QUALITY INNER TUBES Great For Pool Or River Riding ., HERCULES LEVEL LIFTS Keep1 Your Ride Smooth & Your loocl lev•I co .. fl#•• j \t PrictJ up To 2J.OO EA. El.st whtrr 1 0~?. HERCULES HEAVY DUTY LIFETIME GUARANTEE SHOCK ABSORBERS Guo•onlted · FCH The l ifetime Of Yo11r Cor 5 GALLON PLASTIC WATER CAN Great , '• ''" T rlp1, Compe11, Hu"l•<I 199 PICK-UP TRUCK STEP FOR FORD, CHEVROLET, GMC &. INTERNATIONAL Glidtt Out Smoothly & Qui1tfy Q., Necpr•ne Support From Under Cob When You Open Door Loe~• Snugly In Special S"op Clop Under Cob Whe" Non 111 Ute Pe,feroted Slip Procf 9 '"""' 119 ln•tol\t o,, Eithe. Dr iver Or Po11enger Side TUNE-UP KIT - -CAMPER STABIL- IZERS Prevent1 Cab Ov1" Comp1r1 Form Bou .. ce & Sway Rtg~/,,, 14.9? 16 ~.~ ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT TYPE LIFETIME MUFFLER c~m•~terd For Tiu 1,i/efi.,, Of 7 ~?:c .. TURTLE WAX EXCAL IB UR CA R WAX KIT Cleo"s;'Pcilitk"t"1, -•-2 99 -Seol, All Co1 • Fi,,hh11 12"x 18" TRUCK FLAPS R11bbt dttd Vinyl 4?.? FLUS H & FILL KIT CHECKER COOLANT Prol•Ct Y e>ur 1 s 9 Car Agoi111t S11mm1r1 Heal G<I. FREON 12 D0oh·Your11ll A"d S.0Ye COOLA NT SAVE ii , Ii!.J_ . ·' Easy 1 a Aue,~ Sove On Coola~• Wo 1t1 ••• 69' -- 17 ~· ,; '" FREON VALVE & HOSE KIT ................... 'lti•vr Phone 111 East 19th STREET 1 COSTA MESA 0t~~ ~ifN'.·,~ 645•8264 ~UST OFF NEWPORT ILVD. -lthlnd MHO fhocrtor-Sto" Hov,. BANKAMERICARD ,,~;;.,..,, /,' ................. • , • • .. • ' • . • ' . . .. ' .· \ .!i OAILY PILOT t-rlday, A1.19ust 3, 1973 _),· Alternative Schools Grow ANIMAlogic.11@~ .-•Snla-Seeks Offi~e SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS \vork." says Rodney Skager, a UCLA Graduate School of Education professor who studied the pioneer Southern California public alternative school last spring. That school, in the Eagle Rock area of Los Angeles, had 300 volunteer students in kindergarten through I 2th grade and a \Vaiting: list of 300. It \\'as so popular that the Los Angeles Unified Schoo I District. largest in the state. this sumn1cr approved six n1ore such schools· sought by parent groups. OT II ER ALTERNATIV E schools patterned loosely a fter Eagle Rock's will operate this fall in Pasadena, Sa n ta J\1onica and Fullerton, and s!ill more districts will feature "alternative'' prograit1's \Vlthin I norn1a l schools. \Vhat nuikes these schools · and programs different fron1 the traditional school is the participation by parents and pupils, and the r c I at i v e freedom students can enjoy in tbem. Students at Eagle Rock. for instance, can form groups in· terested in particular subjects and the school will then teach those subjects, even if the in- structor wouldn't ordinarily ha\'e the academic qualifica· lions to teach. STUDENTS ALSO are freer than usual to co1ne and go. Rather than having teachers '11'e have 011r see o 11 d a r y st••· 1le11ls care fo1• n11d tulor Ifie efe111e11· tary p11pib.' take attendance every day. pupils sign in. If they leave during the day, they must sign out and let a teacher know they've gone. The purpose is t o teach i n dividua l responsibility. Another aspect of t h e alternative school is its "ex- tended family'' approach. "We have our secondary students care for and tutor the elementary pupils," s a y s Barbara Kovner, a n ad· ministrator at the Eagle Rock schooL "That way we've found they have more warmth and feeling for each other." Ms. Kovner also says the pioneer alternative school has i>dt?n suc~sful academically. "ON STATE 1nandat e d reading tests, for ins lancc. all !he students perfonned nt the same Perecntlle or higher than they had at the traditional schools they attended before," she said. · Taking a less positive vie\v ""'as Skager. "There \Vas no real dif· ference iil the \\'ay the kids peitormed on the 'state man· dated tests," he said. •·The schools neither i111provecl them or hurt thcn1." But Skagcr. \\'hose lour· l>erson teatn o[)served 1hr ' schbol' dost'lv nnd~in1erV1~'t'd 1 · parents, te;ithers and studi.:nt s during i\l<iy and J u n e . 1 reported that pa rent s . who took their children out of th c a\1 ernative l school said they did so • Nice Gu)·, Th.at Bear MOSCOW IAP l -The Soviet news agency Tass said a newspaper reported t.llal when a bear and 1wo ~imbers met on a na.rro"'' mountain path, lhe bc<1r raised his ~,.,,s, backed agAlnst a rock to give 1 he climbers: room and let tlicm l,>ISS• ••• • --· • -·- . - METAL SHOWER CADDY For le11 than a buck UU. is u!l'elul. No more hunlinq for the soap (or slippinq on it) or the •hampoo v \ bottle. ~aaJ 8" ELECTRIC FAN This ia a late blooming summer so ! tJUnk you11 still be able to get a lot of good out of ii. (11 not, nic• for ice boating.) 511 TURTLE 3 MINUTE CAB WASH It only takes you thr•• minutn if you run like th• dickena a:nd ~ov• like a tornado, olherwia• multiply it by 5. 411' COOLANT RECOVERY v' "*.,... SYSTEM The price keeps going down. down. down. Wail awhile and we'll pay you lo take it. (Funny. thing is. it r•ally works.) 122 CAR RAMPS Changing your own oil and doing your own· work is just smart with today' a prices. This steel ramp will make it a lot easier. 17~? POP RIVET TOOL KIT Got a selection for thin to hecny.metals, l•ather, plastics. cloth. And the heart is that famot111 one hand pop rivet gun. 2•1 REC HAR GABLE FIRE EXTINGUISHER By American Laf'ranc• (you see that on the big lir• •ngines). You can haTI it refille d. With pre&Sure .gauge. 4'7 • -SAF·ET'i~REF-LECTOR .llT. I think it's three of thffe deola you unfold and ••t up to, warn ot your break• down (and then the cop runt 'o••r all three as h• •lope. right?). 311 .. '0''' ma11tet charge ..... RADIAL ABM SAW "' --- DOUSLE EDGE. l=O~ CLDSER SHAVE. ~ho-.!~:::ai 6;:.i:-· 199an, accuracy. The kind of a 1TIN~H tool you h<n'• to look at. BLADE aak qu .. tiom. kick th• tire•. and get our b•at expert lo tell au. • ~ DOUBLE llSULATED Everytime I buy something at regular the management runs it. or better. at special. This does nothing for my paranoia. Single edge deals run more than this. We got a ton of them. but they won't last at this price. (Which wav do I take that?) ' 418 SHOP PLYWOOD Ali long m the loqs hold out for dom•atic production you or• qoing to q•l 1w••l J)ric• her• at NcitionaL hock oa. wood. 4~i AJAX SELF·CLOSINC HINGES ·@ Swell. you open the door. . but forget lo open it all "'- the way. and ZAP. you. ~ are swung ri1'hi inside the cabineL Nice plae• to take a nap. S§ 47! DEXTER .ENTRY LOCKS Goi that nice brou finish "°;;;:,,J. (or ii it Finnish Brau?). Double ~•yed. easy to install (They gj•• you ;: · '"' ; ;•31uro ahiJ · -=--= U.S. MADE 5 ~I!'E Cl:YST!iL ,._ CHANDELIER Very preati7ous. preati1eous, ahhh ••• nic• looking. FiYe braas candelabra baus with th• crystal hangy down • thing1. PT440S . 1497 VAPOBEm INSECT STRIP • Han~it up and ffiu and things don't com• around lor months (n•ither do your nei1hbors eith•r. butwj9;>· •. " EVERAIN OSCILLATING SPRINKLER 2'' J111t turn th••diaJ and hear the swe9teat so~da thia sid• ot th•A•alon IQJ.lroom. (Ab, this stuff ia reallytqettinq tom•.) & Ft. FAN TIEIJJS Train your r01• to grow nice, or play d.ad, or roll o•er and 1ay, "ThomH mak:M a greet pcrddl• U you're not · qoing antwhere. 97c ' ' ~ ' ..... . • "' t y s e • • By JOHN SCHADE Of It!• Deur l"llot Stitt The Newport Harbor Art Museum has emphasir.ed contemporary art in its re· ceftt exhibition programs. 'f.here \Vill pr9bably be even more erripjlasis in that area n?'" that Jame~ Byqi.es has been appointed museum dirCctor, replacing Tharnas ~arve.r. Btrnes is known as a speCialist 1n 20th . Century art and was the first curator to can'y the title of "Curator of Modem ~d COotemPorary Art," a post he held· at tl\c oilginal Uls Angeles County Museun:i. ' He stu<iled painting at the National Academy of Design and the Ar.t Stud~nts League with a nwnber of leading artists of the period. He later attended . the U]li.vtrsity ·or Perugia • at the ~st1h1to r.ieschinl in Rome where_ he studied art b~tory and archaeology· '.ijis professional cfreer. has covered nin ny cities. but al"-ays with a thenie of contemporary art .. Jt started after \Vorld \Var TI · at the old Los Angeles County Museum and included stints-at the North Carolina Museum of Art, the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center and the New Orleans Museum of Art. The New Orleans Museum is now can~ ed "one of the finest in the . South," thanks in part to Byrnes development of ~etRperary ar-t. --~-- Byrnes was an "expansionist" in his ll yeaI'! in New Orleans where he qaudru· pied the space, the budget ~nd the - museum's permanent art collection. If-Byrnes' past patterns holds true, ex- pahsion could be in the offing for lhe Nd\vport 1-larbor Art 1'1useum. . Byrnes \\ill not d.icuss <Jny mn1nr building plans or future relocation of the niuseum , which he calls "one of the ex- citing galleries in the region and one \11ith a gflO<i reputation ." \ There is still work to be ·done at the-' museum 's present 22~f \V: Balboa Blvd. location, , : .. "We arc currently jusl examining plans for : the better utilization of our '· present space," be says. Whatever work is done, the renovated ·building is expected to display the latest '. • • • • • Appoints :1dditions to lhe museum1s pennan~t collection, 30 contemporary paintings presented to the museum by AVCO Finan- cial Service when the firm nloved iL-i of· fi ces to NC\l'port Beach in 1971. The director 11·iil continue t h· (' rnuseu m's present contemporai'yist udy in its "Art of Our Times a'.nd IWJated Cld.t\ltes" exhibitioos. Byrnes bppe to ex~ p.and th~ series though to include the su.4Y oC the.develogment of that 'art ''The museum must keep its identity. but ·-we rriay do some t.raQng bQ.Ck.-of ni<_ldMt1 1art to see what.caused the"$lyles of 'today;" he said. . . , .• l!l>:S planning;" series of elthlllitiOM1ct · •• ... !., , jr further excite interest in contemporary art. And he .hopes to encourage an active interest in colJecling \VOrks of significant artists . works \Vhich might eventually find their · way into the museum 's permanent collection. Thus he will emphasize collecting as an art in itself· in a series called "Artist as Collector." Byrnes hopes such i.rmovative ex- . hibftions ·will make the . putilic more aware. "Remember, a .~·isonly,as good as its·suppptt,.'' · , . . . Byrnes thinks . public ' awareliess also will be· kindled -by ttle s«ies of) ex· ·) • ! ' Arts,:Dining Out Entertainment Friday, August 3, 1973 DAILY PILOT 23 . , 'Expansionist' hibitions the museum has scheduled for its coming season. ~1ost notable items in- clude major oils by Mary Cassatts. Mark Rothko's cc>lors and a graphics exhibition financed by the National Endowment Fund. West Coast art wHI be studied in a "Pioneer of MOO.ern Art in California " display featurfug artists, dealers, col- lectors and movements which helped shape the· area's role in the art world . The program promises to be varied. · "So )'Q:tl can see, we are not closiI~g ihe ,c;loor o.it;II)Y possibility," he addei:I.. 'T~ ne* director is a transpla.nted Ne\v 'Yorker. But-he and his-wife, Barbara, . ' ' O•llY l"li.t . ......_ W Rldl•nl IC ....... '.'# James Byrnes, specialist in .contemporary art,. f_;' t he new director of the· Newport Harbor -A" Museum. known as an "expansionist'' at the New Orleans Museum, he quadrupled· ,the space, the budget and the permanent art col,lection. He J>e. lieves the· NHAM is' "one of the . exciting gal~eri•s in the region and one with a, gooP reputation~'' His first ·project: better utilization .of space at the present building. retW'ned to Soutliern California for a variety of reasons. While he was beginning his professional career in Los Angeles, His wife 'had her own gallefy, one of the first above · growtd in ·Los Angeles af a · time· wheD_! most public gallerJes .were in-, ti.~ basements or· buildings. • ''We spent our : early riiarried ~.,., (See-MUSEUM,_ Page Zli) ' ' • 'l Laguna :U.onors California Art During the summer season, the spot· light in Laguna Beil<:h sliines with ,full force on its art fe stiVals, the booth-type "displays that are a-bustle witb tour- ··ists. -But the art 'festival season is also .-the_Jime•fl>i;,,J,lie;J.agun'-".Mlls.e\un .Q • Art to put on i£s annual All California Purchase Prize Competition, which \.represents. a review of contemporary art in California. In a preface in the . ' show catalogue,.tbe Juror, Wayne Tbie- band,, pfepares the viewer for some surprises 'by noUng that the contem· porary artist "no Jonger portrays ·Ufe · ideallsticaUy, ,but ~untly shows the complexity of our· !Mng today!" A sampling ot these complexities show, top, "An Egg Walking ," a pencil ara.w· ing by Santa Ana artist Nick Turturro, a sculpt ure, right, by Robert A. Goulart of Los Angeles, and HJ\merican Goth· ic," left, an oll ey Laguna Beach artist Ken Knutson. The show wlll conthiue through Aug. 26. ,, - ' i ' I • • • " DAILY PILOT Friday, A119ust 3, 11J7J ' W:ill the Real George Carlin Stand Up? Chinese Op era Yerforms '. -.. ' • Comedian George Carlin and a cardboard cutout qf himself as he looked a few yea~ ago. "Let's face it," Carlin says, "TV is controlled by the government and paid for by private ·industry. Ce rta inly with that combination the result is bound to be mostly junk." , Lou Jacobs, the ~orl d's 'most f~,;,ous·..., clown, is one of the stars of Clown Alley of t he Riiigling Bros. and Barnum and Balley Circus. Jacobs is the originator of the most imitated clown face ii') Ame r· . •· -·. ~ - 4 tea -not surprisingly, since he hlls''lip- peared ·on Circus posters for almost SO .. c.;...yw.Ts. S.e-..him.,_.t •• t.he"""Anaheiro .~'\: · vtnfion Cent•r Aug. 13-21. Show starts at 8 p.m. Tickets $3 to $6. SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH ' ' --- I VALUABLE COUPON ''T1to .. 1c .... 1. Fl~H OF Tlif WEIK" C41tl'Oft Miilll It ~'"*"ttd At Tl1111 et ~lttCftlW .. ' ""' . ... .. KISSING GOURAMI ~15 ... 45~. L.Jmfl I Wltll COUlltft Ill"' .t.119, tlll By ARmtlR UNGER (,'Jirisria11 Sci~nct Monitor Se rvice NE\V YC>RK -Television ls just a place to slop ol( and tell the world tbat you're making il without television, ac- cord.Ing to George Carlln. "It only relfects that you're a success in concerts, records. movies, whatever you do well. You then come on TV to boast about it and maybe offer a little sample," In this case. the sample is "~1onsanto Night Presents the REAi George Carlin," a TV special which will appear in most major viewiflt regions sometime in mid· August. To shoot it, the con1edian is returning to all his old haunts in his native Ne"' York City -Columbia University, near where he was bom; Grant's Tomb, where he played as a boy; the Bitter End, the kind of club in whi ch he performs best He has brought with him Kris Kristof· ferson. ltita Coolidge, B.B. King - and tour air-conditioned trailers. He is chat- ting in one of the trailers, parked near the Columbia library, where 300 students, hangers-on, and passers-by are wailing for the camera to be repaired so he can perform. "Let's face it," Carlin continues, "TV is controlled by government and paid for by private industry. Certainly with that combination the result is bound to be mostly junk. "Even with the freedom I was, pro-- mised on this show I'm sure I'll only be able to get 50 percent of what I want onto the screen . REAL GEORGE What he wants is for the world to know that there is now a new, "real" George Carlin. 11-he finlllY st.ps out to p«form t>t qo8cll)r .. 1abllshes tblt ract. "I'm G""IO c.rlln." he lll)'S polntin& lo • c:anll>o&nl aat<l<lt ol the G- Carlin U another ern. "I used lo tie lhls guy Or maybt this guy used to be me. J liked him. I had a lot of fun. lie did a lot for me. Bul Utere was nothing behind him. Just surface. I wasn't there. I found out I wasn't in my own act after awhile. And 1 discovered a much better character for me -myself." As a matter of fact, if you haven't seen George Carlin since the old days -that sOOrL-baired, business-suited character with the funny disc-jockey and weathennan routines -you might not even recognize the new George Carlin. He's broomstick-thin with a rcddish- brown beard, long hair tied in back with a rubber band, dressed in jeans and T· shirt with a pendant around his neck and an earring in one ear. A man seemingly at ease with his youthful audiences -and with himself. During the next fe\v days, on the various locatioos, he talks freely about the changes : "I've been into myself for two and a half years. Before that I was doing an act which consisted of a series of character sketches for which I served as master of ceremonies. "It was a period when a lot of people were reevaluating t h e m s e· I v e s·. Consciousness-raising became almost an art fonn. I tried acting and I found I hated that loss of control. I realized I was a monologist . 'Okay.' I said to myself, 'why not say the things and do the things that are really in your mind, and in your heart?' Suddenly all my personal observations about llfe became usable in that context. "SUre, I know that J'vf been crlUched fur takinc on the physical appearance of a subculture. Anti·hlpples Keep saying lhlt I'm contormlng to another kind of conforming -nonconforming. But the fallacy is that when a person leaves a society that forces men to conform under duress and joins a subculture where brothers tend to con(orm, it is voluntary conformity. And that's a big, big dif- ference. 'NOT A FUNNY MAN' Despite his supposed new.found con· formity, George Carlin never really fit- ted into a mold. This Morningside Heights class clo"'TI finished only ~ ~car and a ha lf of high school be.fore he Jou1cd the Air Force at 17. At 18, he was already a disc jockey in Shreveport, La., the town where he was stationed. -. :· .. Tickets can be obtained ~ the appearance of the spec~ tacular Peking Opera troupe of lfong Kong at the Greek Theatre, opening Mo n d a .y through Friday. . The product of 2,000 years qt Chinese historY, the Peking Opera ls a disciplined es.: ploslon of color and ~. Combining the ancient talent or two dynasties, ii weaves· precision acrobatics and sweet 1nusic into a de I i g ht f u I · tapestry or total thl'atre. It Le; a showcase for the best dancers, acrobats, musicians :ind singl'rs from famous Pek- ing Opera academies. The troupe "'ill entertain audlenceti at the Greek Theatre for OQ!y: five evenings. ;-. : That started him on an entertainment career in radio, then into•coffec houses, graduating into the Las Vegas "big time" and recordings, at the same tin1e making numerous appearances on late- night talk show s where his hard-h~t M iN•ATUR1:a routines made him a national co1ruc 01..c cou.• figure. 1_'ben, George Carlin disco\'cred B MANNING'S. George Cartin. . COLLECTOR!i, "More and more I began seeking out SHOP W:t · the cOunterculture audiences. My klnd of ·2428 NEWf"QRT ei..vo. stuff i·ust doesn't work for coventioncers. c o•·tA M••"'· CAu,.,. 0•2-e 2s1 H"•· 11-•:ao All those characters sending back steaks and making noise, I am a monologist - not a futmy man but a man of funny , ideas. Nightclu~ and TV arc stridly . commercial arenas -e.ntertainment Jc E s KAT J N , :~Ed=~;~~·;: 'JEd~~tr·:~~ LESSONS. · there. The only thing the audience gets to eat is popcorn .... and they have to go outside for that." 'Mame' Awaits · Her Big Entrance It was a long climb to the top of the commwiity theater heap from a position approxin1aling the o the r extreme, and when t h e ¥/estrninster Co 1n mun i t y Theater achieved the pinnacle last year the group promptly elected to sit out the 1972-73 season. The Westmirlster players mowited only three shows in 1972, but two or them (mi.shed in the top five in the Daily Pilot's annual yearned evalua- tion. including thc-T611icking musical comedy "A FWUly Thing Happooe<I oo the Way to the Forum," which earned the DP Distinguished Produc- lion award as the year's finest presentation. The reason for the dark season was, and still is , that all available WCT energies are being channeled into the con- struction of the group's own theater, a project-which has involved thousands of hours and a like number of dollars, and has earned the admiration of community theatergoers all over the county. BUT THE Westminster group wasn't about to forego another summer musical, not after the success of "Forum" and its predecessor, "Once Upon a Mattress." Next Fri· Intermission ·Tom Titus day the curtains of the 17th Street School auditorium will part on a fully orchestrated production of o n e of Broadway's brightest musi- cals, "Mame." Like'' Mat t re ss'' and ' ' F o r u m, ' ' Westminster's "Mame" is being directed by Fred \Vest, a man of all theatr ical seasons with a particular f o n d n e s s for musicals {he also directed "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" for the WCT you th group). West, who's the resi- dent director for the La Mirada Players, has managed to involve himself in seven Orange County productions over !he past couple of years. ncting in "The Big Knif.t" for Westminster. "Sheep on the Run\vay" for Lido Jsle and "Champagne Complex" in Santa Ana. TV, Radio Combine for Concert West, a stern taskmaster and perfectlon ist who nevertheless maintains the ad· mlration of his actors, has a pair of aces fro1n t h e "Forum" company hack in their respective backstage assignments -choreographer Rita Lledags and musical director 7.ack McEwan. Carla Trick, well known for her set designs at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, is perform- ing this lunction for ''Mame." • Enhance your chi/d's poise and posture. A. p lann ed program of lessons with the THE CAST, beaded by excluslve Ice Capades' eas y Westminster actress-dir ector learning method gives you Doris Allen in the title role. is or you r child healthy exercise a cross section of local theater in pleasa nt s upervised talent. Penny Hayes (Vera), s u rround ings. Al Ballard, a former Milwaukee big-time jock has moved into XPRS' big-time morning slot frOm 6-10 a.m. "1bere were s e v e r a I outstanding men under con- sideration for the spot, but we chose Al because he's not only right for our fast-pace d format, he's also an extremely personable man, and whelf' he talks he talks about the kind of things everyone can relate to," says Dave Sweeney, general manager . Across the hall from KABC, KWS-FM is r eadying itseU to ai r another "In Concert~ stereo series in conjunction Friday at II p.m., featuring ti.·landrill, the Eagles. Ike & Tina Turner and Jim Croce. Some country & western recording artists are now doing good business with songs that reflect the sexulll side of life. Witness Charlie Rich's Turning on REGISTER NOW Scott Manchester Alan and Donny Osmond, Glen Campbell, Jerry Reed and David Cassidy, assisted by station's Bill Wade. No small recording artist himself, Cat Stevens, will be the musical subject of KNAC. FM 's John Clark "An Evening With" concert, for a four hoUr encore session Monday, from 8 p.m.·midnight. Jack Denton, popular radio--tv man about town , has another "first" going for him. He's taping a series of 96-minute interviews for stereo play on United Airlines, featuring all kinds of celebe for your in-flight en- tertainment, including KABC talker Maureen Reagan. Don George (Beauregar.d), Jimmy Hart (Uncle Jeff), Richard Riley (yowtg Patrick) and George Harris (Lindsay) all have played other theaters but never Westminster, while Jo Scott, who has both acted and directed (or WCT, returns after a considerable absence to play h1other Brunside. smash, "Behind Closed Doors" and Conway Twitty's "You 've Never Been This Far Before." KLAC has elected not to play 1\ritty's release (Bill Ward, general manager, says "it's too graphic") but KFOX has it on its playlist; thus far has not received any complaints from its listeners. Country and western music has ridden off into the sunset over at KFI. How ever , Lohman & Barkley will con- tinue to get your day un- der \Vay for you for some time to come. \.\'hat with their new contract. And signing in with KHJ as new program director is Sean Conrad. Conrad comes to the station from ABC owned WDAJ-FM, Otlcago, where he was also p.d He also perform- ed similar duties for KYNO in Fresno, and had his twn at the turntables as a d.j. for WKNR, Detroit, and KTKT, Tucson, racking up 14 years In broadcasting. All proceeds from ''Mame" will go into the Westminster building fund, according to theater officials who point out that the group's re g u 1 a r season won't get under way until the building is fin ished, probably sometime late this year or early next. MESA YElDE SHOl'l'ING CINTt:l Harbor llwd. at Ad- COST A M!5A Tel. (714) 979-8880 Until Charlie Van Dyke rolls 1?iiiiiii<iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiimiiiii;:;;;o;:;iiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiie:i..::z;::o:;iiiij;;;:;;::;;::.;o;:iiiiir---;~-;x;r.;~· in from CKLW, Detroit, toll ... take over the fi-9 a.m. slot for KHJ, the station has linked a growing chain of top rerording artists to be guest d.j.'s; in- cluding Diana Ross, DioMe Warwicke. The Carpenters, ENJOY FRUIT NOW! They're at Their Best in August! • • • and Look at the Low Prices! ' • • • . t , ... $5,000 A VOYABEI ·FDR YOU, $3.50 -·--The Queen Mary Is not only the biggesl show afloat, It's a lso ·a big bargain. There's a full day of enjoyable activity for every member of the family, all for one low ad· mission price ($3.50 for adults, $2.50 for juniors and $1.25 for youngsters 5 to 11). For that you get !he whole ship, Including Jacques Cousteau's U~lng Sea (a complete attraction In Itself!), lmpromplu shows by our madcap mime troupe, free admlnlon to ou~ ml nl-muslca:I revue, "Don't Rock the Boat" and much, much more. The rich and the royal used to spend $5,000 to enjoy a voyage on the Queen Mary. For you, 3.50.For the_k!d~,t'~~le~I ~,. .. . ...... QUEEN MARY TOUR LongBead1 Don, mlao tho booll Open every day fro m 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Ticket booths close at 4:30. Phone (213) 435-4733 • I I PIACHH 4 LIS. $1 00 CANTALOUP!$ J llG $1 00 IAITLm PU•S • HONH DlWS ONU • With Coupon lelow I ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••• I!. • OUR FAMOUS Flower Shop SJMCl•I • CALIP VALINCIA • Flowe r Shop Speclal • • OUR FAMOUS • ' OUR FAMOUS • CARNATIONS ORANGE JUICE. SHORT STEM • • '"SH " Mod•!" • ROSES • : 25 101 125 : 49' 9..... : 99' -: : • Lii >S • In H•lf G1llon1 Only • I t -l mt Lllt V.Gal Lmt2Dor1n •• ~ With Thl1 Coupon • WlthmThle CouP,.n .. With This Coupon • .;! .................... , .......... ·:. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·? • GRIAT 110 ONlll • THIY'RI DOWNI • At Thtlr Int Now : ·:_ • HONEYDEWS • LOCAL GROWN • •. IARTLm PU.RS . ~ . . ~ ·~ CANTALOUPES TOMATOES YELLOW PU.CHES • :' :-· 3"'·;;, 1t11 · :-~25c ·~.. :, 4 ~;.. 100 ·-'":'? Limit ThrM of lach Limit J lukett Lim it ,our IN. I tch • •• • · With Thi• Coul*I ~ With This Coupon ~ With Thi• Ceupon • e .. ~-····························~ COUPONS IXPIH AUG. I, 1t73 :; a_. _w_E WIRE_."LOWERS AROUND THE CORNER 6 :: W OR AROUNO TRE-WO"RLO BY F.T.O. -~-· "Orange County'• Mo1t Popular Produce and Flower l!ou1<" NEWPORT PRODUCE PLOWERS IY DEIU. ()pM 7 Doyt • Wetlt t o.m. to I p.m. 2' 16 Newpon loul .. erd °" the P .. 1 ... 1o ,h ... 67W11S '714711 67M :ztl • .,., z 1ar1 of Produce Know How" IONDEO FllUIT Sl.l lP,EA FOR JI YEARS "Whert QU4 y I oro.r of Ill• l!ouu• . • • • • .-· - • • Steak 'N Pasta Go Well Together at the Derby It's not easy to come by a restaurant serving equally great Italian specialties ;:ind Char-broiled steaks . Bul the search is over when you arrive :1 1 the Otrby Airport in Costa Mesa. It's revealing, too, .to note the origtns of the Sturniolo's unusual monikers. Seeing as how the names be~l>Cak a warm approval by others. and topped with a dash of Italian meat sauce. . ' Friday, Au;ust 3, 1973 DAILY PILOT %/J I l Dropped oy this fine spot -klwv.'n jocularly to regu.lars as lhe •·House of Sturniolo" -one afternoon last week for lunch. Left with the same brimming con- l1nllmt.'flt which has followed a fine din- ner in lhat same restaurant. And upheld the eonvic1ion that it ranks among the bes~ restaurants to arrive on the local scene since the late 60s. Slugger gained hers when several desnonstrations impressed associates that she could quite capably hold her own in tough situations - "'ith a feminine but firm grip. No fislicuffs, just an abun· dance of woman's wile and strength. The beefeater sandwich, $2.25, was the second entree. It yielded a generous quantity of sliced roast sirloin of bee{, topped \Vilh American cheese, served on grilled sour dough fo~rench bred, and ac- companied by sliced tomato. . I Murph was christened in 1935 when Ila· ly stabbed Ethiopia in the back. Chided by friends about his ethnic descent, he retorted: "So who's Italian? fl.1y name is Out 'N About Norman Stanley Additional possibilities on the lunch bill or fare include the executive sandwich (ham, turkey and Swiss cheese), $1.75; ravioli (stuffing of meat, cheese and spinach), $1.85 ; choice sirloin slices. $2.95: spaghetti (v.'i.th meat sauce), $l.li5; broiled ground beef. Roinana, $2.35. If it looks like you can have dinner there before you make it for dinner, great. You'll find an even wider variety of taste treats on the evening menu. ·Among those we can recommend from paSt experience arc fcgatini di polo {chicken livers prepared in a mushrooin wine sauce), $3.50; poulct (boneless chicken) with wild rice dressing, $3.gs; Any reference to Sturnio!o, if you're Murphy." And ii \vas from that day on. young Long Island duckling, $4.75: not in the know, is voiced by way of a The Arcadia restaurant dis p I a Y s brochette of beef tcriyaki, $4.50; mezzo chummy salute to the friendly family thousands of turf mementos. 1bere mezzo (combination spaghetti and. that owns and operates the Derby. aren't as n1any in Costa f\.1.csa , but the ·I") $350'. Paterfamilias of this clan is Dominic . rr· . r 'd bl ravio I ' . ' quantity 1s su 1c1ent or cons1 era e Still other possibilities you might want ("'Murph") Sturniolo. The o-t her ed rnernbers arc his \vi(e Lorene t"Slug-study -and lhey've been incorporat to consider are carni parmigiana (bread- ger"). their son, Chip. and Chip's wife. handsomely into the P r c d 0 mi nan t ed sirloin simmered in wine), ~.95: l •• An odd assortment of charat:lters asMmble for ~'The Hot L Baltimore," Lanford Wilson's new comedy, whiC:h opened Thursda.y night at the Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles Music Center. The provocative work, named best American play by the New York Drama Critics Circle, is being presented in its West Coast premiere through Sept. 16. Its a comic and adult look at life in an about-to-be-demolished hotel. • MUSEUM APPOINTS NEW DIRECTOR Donna. f\:lediterranean decor. bacon wrapped filet mignon, $5.75; New (From Page 23) He bought one of the late Pollack's '·I'm sorry to say it affected me 'Ibe Cosla f.1esa Derby had an ad-Luncheon prospects at the Derby em· York cut, $7.50: Louisiana fried shrimp, "·orks in 1951. five vears before Pollack nf'galively." he admits. Vatltage from lhe-iTioment it got into the brace a nice selection of combination $4.ZS; filct of sole, $3.SO; roast prime rib here in Soulhem California and got to reallv became kno\~ll. Le Parc's 1~·ork Byrnes says he no\I: likes De Kooning's starting line-up. The tho r o u g h b r c d n<hviches salads pasta dishes and know many of the local artists, dealers was -purchased three years before ihc work, but his initial impression so shock- Hneaoe of a 11·k,,·n"mcd restaur""l the sa · · · of beef, $6.75. and collectors " J he r· · · th V · c:i " .. .... • All •"ndwi'ches are served · scu ptor won t 1rst prtze m e en1ce ed hi·m· that IL ,.,.,,k him some time to ' senior Sturniolos had been operating for mam courses. ~ No matter when or what you eat at the He also likes the growth pot~nlial he Biennale. .....,. 18 'years near Arcadia 's Santa Anita with a choice of cottage cheese, Derby, save room for an order of the sees 1·n the Orange Coast area. r • h p II k h the d' t recover. ,.._ I R Tr k kh f . tabl f th day t s t e o ac pure ase irec or The director says there has been some: !ce ac . stea ouse n.cs or vege co e · restaurant's sterling cheese cake. More '"""'ftMe 15· a very noticeable hea\·y talks the most ai>out. · 1 11= · change in art in recent years. Even so. it ·s not a simple task lo You have the same choice with t 1e th<>n superb, It's the finest encountered in "rowth in the area since I was last here "I first saw Pollack's "'Ork u•h.i le in -· • h "Now artis1s are college trained and duplicate the success of an original ·Nin· other menu selections hut they. in turn, a lifetime of cheese cake as a favorite (in the 1950s)," he says. New York on an exhibition trip," e ex-are really grasping with ronnal problems ner. Especially when, instead of building also net the addition of a very special dessert. The new director is kneiwn as a man plains. r ,, h "The 'd' new, an existing facility is takffll over hi ( d · who has spotted early potential in still "I suppose it was through \vhat I would 0 art. e says. Y are provi ing 3 and has to be adapted to individual re-item. And that's !he Derby's hig Y an Located at 1262 Bristol St.. just o[f budding artists -buying works before call 'learned intuition' that I felt his work \\'ay for new visions." qtiirements. justly) touted garlic cheese toast. Newport Ave. and near Orange Cou nty !he artists became known at ivhat v.·ould showed that searching quality which Byrnes says this approach is helping to t )3ut hturph and Slugger acromPlishcd The first of our two midday entriC'S Airport, C-Osta ... Mesa, the Derby is open no1v be considered ridiculously 101\• keeps art alive." open art more to the young. t the undertaking in a v.·a lk;nvay. Im· \l"as a splendid 01nelette, friltata d .1 •1 d th h S 1 d for prices. Byrnes also got his first impression <it "Young people are open to these Sl·,.1·1,·ana $235. It cons1·sted ol ham, aiy, 1•00 ay roug a ur ay. · · ks P II k w·11 D K · · k th th! "h "ltd not bother" mediately making the Costa Mesa place . . h d' d k .1 0 . t" Abstract express1on1st Jae on o ac · 1 en e oon1ng s wor on e same . ngs, c says. oes w.iem commensurate to the Arcadia home base parmesan cheese. mushrooms. onions lune ' inner an coc 131 s. pening ime and Argentine sculptor Julio Le Pare arc trip and that introduction also had its e(-to \Valk through the gallery and look and 00 all coun!s. and green peppers rolded into three eggs Sundays is 4 p.1n. t11·o of his mosl fa1nous early finrls. feet on Byrnes. study art to find its meaning." =~~~~~~i~~~l.~~~~l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~m ;= .••••••••• •.li G ~ RESTAURANT =••ru~!,E~~.[~~•~•••r: ) {) LUNCH e DINNER ' aoscol tto\.\.~tao • Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home CHINESE-AMER ICAN CUI SINE LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS Food To GO -Special Discounh BANQUETS/ CATERING Dining Satisfaction Guaranteed OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday Thru Sunday 2121 E. Coast Highway 10• lfoc:k Wnt of McxArtflntrl Corona clel :Mar 673-9919 NEWrORT IEACH-lrlstol lralltadesl at Campus SANTA ANA-4th Strt1t and Newport frHway TUSTIN-Red Hiii near Santo Ana Freeway COSTA MESA-1155 laker at Fairview HUNTINGTON IEACH-5856 Warner Ave. at Sp<lngdale ENTERTAINER low Cltolestofol M•11.. • ~ COCKTAILS • -HecirtS..et-_K_O_N_~ LA N~°s~ t~•u ~-~· I II ~~~~~~~~~~~~~: • UNllMlftD SAU.D AND • • TEA WITH DINNEll: • IWllll !hit C•uPGnl MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Choic:• of Soup or Selad B•k•d Pol•to or Ric e Pil•f e G•rlic: Br••d WEDNESDAY -Top Sirloin Steak ··--··----·-··--$2.95 THURSDAY -Pdm# Rib .................................. $3 .40 FRIDAY -Shrimp Stuffed with Crab ··-·-·--.... $3.10 SATURDAY -Tournedo1 of Beef ...................... $3.85 SUNDAY -Louisiana Prawns ............................ $3.65 Orn11ge Co1111ty's Top Entertain1ne11t TH,E TWIN GUITARS Buddy and Hein WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY Bt nquet f•c:ilitie1 up to 450 P•opl• 16712 .-RA.HAM AVENUE IAt WarMrl HUNTING-TON llACH 17141146·1116 121JI ltZ-lt54 ARBYJ OFFERS ROAST BEEF DINNER Delic ious Ro1st Beef French, Fries SERVED FROM 4 TO 9 P.M. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK Good 0 11ly ot Followl119 Locotlo11 7942 EDINGER AVE. HUNTINGTON BEACH SEA FCOD-STEAK5-PRIME RIB ;NTERNATiONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 BANQUET FACILITI ES ENJOY A MEAL WITH CLAUDE AND JILL Prime Rib e Lunch $2.75 -Dinner $4.95 Paul Buny•n Cut $6.95 Entertainment By ''DOUBLE EXPOSURES" DANCING NIGHTLY Lunch-Mon. thru Fri. 11 a .m. to 2:30 p.m. Dinner-Mon. thru Sat. 5to10 p.m. Cornplim•nt•rv Bak•d Al•'k" for oil Birthd<"Y' l Anniv•r1ories 2645 Horbor Bfvd., Costa Mesa 545-9471 ---- MARGARITA'S MEXICAN RESTAURANT NOW HAS DANCING FRIDAY-SATURDAY -SUNDAY LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 8 p.m. to 12 Midnight 2285 Newport Blvd., Costa Mes• 496-5773 499-2626 MICllSll FAMILY MEXICAN RESTAURANT "OUR MEAU ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO." -LIJJUMllc.111. - • COCKTAILS • 296 E. 17TH ST., HILLGREN SQ. COSTA MESA • (714) t.45-7616 OYSTER BAR BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, foes.-Sot. ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR 4 to ,7 p .m., Mon. thru Fri. Sund•J Royal Ch1m~9ne Brunch -' Fashion Sltow by M1trlel '1, 12:15, n. .. nday. Ope11 S.'" Do~. 32802 COAST HWY. (•t c.._.. v1111tv l"•rtlw.1,.1 LAGUNA NIGUEL We're Bard to Flnd ... BUT ... We're Worth the Effort ' . You'll Love Our EARLY BIRD. SPECIAL Tuesday • Sunday 5-7 P.M. Prime Rib $3.50 • Chers Special $3.50 Memorable Cuisine • Excellent. Service DISCOVER Old Fashioned Elegance Unusually Fine Cuisine • Excellent Service Interesting Artifact. Intimate Diniiig Nightly Entertainment • Dancing Lounge Open 11 A.M. Sunday Champagne Brunch 10.2 P.M. 3000 Palm Avenue • Huntington Beach • (714) 83&-8866 CLOSED MONDAY • NO RESERVATIONS . . • • • 26 DAILY PILOT Friday, August 3, 1973 Open 7 Du!JJ w..ai D11yt: 11 :)0 A.M. to 12 P.M. Fri. ond Sat. 11 :JO A.M. to 12:10 Sundoys: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT EXCELLENT MEXICAN CUISINE 9093 E. ADAMS . HUNTINGTON BEAC~ 962-7911 JOCKEY CLUB DINNER SPECIALS MON. -Center Cut Po rk Chop . $2.95 TUE. -London Broi l WED. -Calf's Liver ....... $2.95 ....... $2.95 THUR. -Go ld en Fried Shrimp .. $2.95 FRI. -Fish Fry .............. $1.95 SAT. -Pri me Rib ..... SUN. -Fri ed Chicken $3.95 $1.95 r~~~i COSTA MESA 3ll1 BRISTOL ST. & SAN DIEGO FREEWAY "557-3000 FAMILY DINNERS SUNDAY BRUNCH DEU BAKERY SPIRITS llESTAtJllANT 640-0322 630 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE (Fashion Island) Prime Rib • Steak • lobster For Your Dancing Pleasure SCENE Ill Tuesday thru Saturday 2201 E. 1st St., Santa Ana lletwe•n Santo Ana and Newport Fwys.) -----------, Steak • Lobster • Chicken JIM MY LEE DUO Tuesday thru Saturday JOiiy Ox kuntlngton Beach fl Blocks South of the Sa11 Dle90 Fwy. on hoch llwd.J DOUBLE EXPOSURE With TOM FALLON TuHday tflru Saturday Jolly Ox Mission Viejo l La Pa• Road aitd the Soit 01990 Fwy.I WAYNE GABRIEL'S MUSICAL WORLD Tue-sday fhtu Saturdoy Jolly Ox Anaheim {Sorta A11a Fwr. at loll ltaadl 1, I ; ., What to Do, Wlaere to Go Costa Mesa High Stages Dynamic Duo . AUG. ~10.11 WEST SIDE STORY -The confrontation between rival New York street gangs is portrayed by students at the Costa Me,sa High School Lyceum. Sunday's performance is at 8 p.m . with all other perfonnances at 8:30 p.m. AU seats are reserved and tickets may be obtained at Fine Arts Office on campus at $2.25 each. AUG. 7-9-12 ''THE FANTASTJCKS" -Stage production at Costa Mesa High School Lyceum on the above dates, which al· ternates with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District pro- duction of "\Vest Side Story." "Fantasticks" is one of the big· gest box office hits In recent years. All perfonnances are at 8:30 p.m. with tickets at $2.25 each for reserved seats avail· able at the Fine Arts Office. AUG. 4 ~10VIE ON THE SANDS -Free showings of old-time Clicks on the beach, adjacent to the Lifeguard _Headquarters at Lake Street and Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach. Viewers are urged to dress \varmly and !)~in~ something lo sit on by si>on- sor, Huntin gton Beach Public Library. Shows begin at dusk. Schedule: Laurel and Hardy in "Brats" and "Music Box," Aug. 4; W. C. Fields Night, Aug. 11; "Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein," Aug. 126: "Blaze Glory," "Sergeant S\vell" and "Catch the Joy," Aug. 25, and Sept. I to be an· nounced. AUG. 4 PARK CONCERT -Ansell HilI Big Band performs at 8 THROUGH AUG. 5Tll 110~.-1E AND GARDEN SJIOW -Major flowers and garden show, the 19th Southland Home and Garden Show takes place in the Anaheim Convention Center. Doors open week- days 5-11 p.m., Saturday, noon-11 p.1n. and Sundays, noon-9 p.m. Tickets, $2 for adults1 $1 for juniors and children under J2 with parents !rec. AUG. I MONDAY NIGHT CONCERT -Hear Henry Brandon's Pops Concert Orchestra play a varied program of PoPUlar tunes f\.1onday night in Fashion Island, NewpClrt Center: "Gypsy" selections, in a Persian Market, Mimi, Love Is Blue, "Love Story" theme and "My Fair Lady" selections. AUG. 4 AlR SHO\V - A three-hour show above the Queen Mary and Long Beach Harbor takes pla~e SOturday, Aug. 4. Two hun- dred pleasure boots and the U.S. Air Force jet flight dem- onstration team v.·ill participate. Fireworks show \Vill close the event. · THROUGH AUG. 9 UP WITH PEOPLE -The new cast members of Up With People make their public debut in a series of concerts: San Clemente High School, Aug. 3-4 ; Oceanside West High School, Aug. 7-8; Leisure World auditorium, Aug. 5: La- guna Beach Festival of Arts, Aug. 7; and Mission Viejo High School, Aug. 9. All performances starts at 8 p.m. Tickets are $4, reserved seats; 3, general admission, and $2.50. students. AUG. 9-12 Concert in Park series: Pedro Sevilla Trio and dancers Aug. ciRcus TIME _ Ringling Bros. and Bc;i.rnum and Bailey 10, and Long Beach Junior Concert Band, Aug. 17. Circus will be featured at the Long Beach Arena, Thursday In the jintst tradition of tht true innkteper's art; J801 EAsr Co.~sr lliGH\YA\' CoAOSA OF.I. ~fAM, c ... 1.r •O~:\'l ... P11o~·t : (714) 675·1374 dl<WJ~ EXQUISITE CONTINENTAL DINING ENTERTAINMENT and DANCING LUNCH T•. tflru Fri. For Reservotlons 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 llre1kl1Jt Luncll CHAMPAGNE ~Ji:·~.,. SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. -3 P.M. DINNER IS .SERVED FROM 5 P.M. Phone 833-2770 · c.,Airporter C/nn C'LIO(""}. 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. ~Ill .... {Oppo$ile 'Ille •l'l'Ort) Nl!WPOl!.T TEMPLE GARDENS ~NESSnest1111r1111t RICKSHA COCKTAIL Featuring Exotic Tropical Drinks l uncheon & 1500 ADAMS f•t Harbor) COSTA MESA 540-1937 5<10-1923 AMI, In G••n Grove 12201 lltOOKHUltST IAt Cltap11101I iJl-7020 'YOU Section' Tliere's something for \'OU in the ''YOU Section" of the DAIL\' PILOT every Sun<lay. Check its' personal appeal for vou and yours. ROAST PRIME RIB OF IE!F Au Jus AMONti 20 SELi CT DINNIR ENTREES Vt NA HAR MER DUO Enterteinin9 through Aug . I!' with both 1natlnee and evening pcrfor111a11 · ccs. Atl scats are reserved at $3, $4, $5 and $6. P.1ost perfor· rnances at 3 and 8 p.1n. Children under 12 receive u $1 discount at all \Vcekd:1y performances. 1'ickets available at all J\1utual and Liberty Agencies at lh(: box office. Sunday pcrforn1ances are 1 and 5 p.m. and Salurdny al II a.m. also. AUG. 17 CONTROVERSIAL ENTERTAINER -Acti visl Joan Baez will appear in CQncert at 8:30 p.111 . iu the Long Beath Arenu. She has recorded so1nc 19 albums <Jnd written a best-selling book. All reserved seals are $2.50 at the usual agencies. AUG. 18 SINGING STORY TELLElt -Judy Collins, who startC'd as a folk singer and switched to conleuiporary !>OP songs, \vill appear in concert at 8 p.m. in the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium . Her songs arc both lyrica l and poetic and 1nany are of her 0\\111 con1position. Tickets arc $6.f4T~1S0.4.50. AUG. 13-Zl GREATEST SHOW ON EAnTll -The Hingling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus moves to An:.ihcl~1 Conven- tion Center for a nine-day stay. Afternoon performances at 3 p.m. and evening performances at 8 p.n1 . Also. 11 a.m. performances on Saturday and l and 5 p.111. perforn1ances on Sunday. Tickets on sale 110\v at all ~lutual <ind Liberty Agencies and the Convent10~ Cente r. A!\ seats reserved at · $3, $4, $5 and $6. Children under 12 rccci11c a $1 disCount at all weekda y perfornu1nces. AUG. 24 TllRO UGI I SEJ>T. 9 CALIFORN IA STA1'E FAIR -Sacran1ento Cal Expo take place on 630 acres reaturing horscracing. rodeos and Pollack Bros. Circus. Fair hours are fro1n JO a.m. to 10 p.1n. daily. Admission is $1.50 for adults and 50 cents for children age 7-12, children 6 and undC'r are ad1nitteCI free·. SEPT. 8 FLA~IENCO ANTHOLOGY -Rene Hcrt'.'dia, Spanish gypsy guitar virtuoso. is one of the f~remost Flamenco guitarists in concert in Down('y Theatre <it 8:30 p.m. Ticket.I $5 and $4 at the box office. {213') 861-8211. \'laterrront F:1vori1e of Old '''h::rlc-rs-. Sailors :itul llobie C:it SkippC'rs ENTERT Al NM ENT Victorian Bar 1t THE liALUO,\ p,\VILION 400 ~bin Strel'I 642-8293 Newport l lwd. at 17th StrNt COSTA MESA Mexica1i Restaurant '$ BRINGS A ~ -..t\0 FUN FAMILY Belafonte Si11ging Outdoors Featuring Orange County'• Finest Americ1n &: Kosher Style Foods CATllllNG &. IAKl•T LUNCH I DIHNIRI COCKTAILS "From o 5'lndw1Ch ro o f.ftaf~ _SUNDAY BRUNCH -BUFFET 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. HOURS Tuesday· Sunday -1 Q A.M ••. 9 .P.M....~· -IU, Closed Monday 645 -8900 421 Etst 17th St. Con• Mew, CL. PROUDLY PRESENTS THE CHAPTER II Fvr Your Dining And Dancing Pleasure "'» Playing Nightly WH. thru Sun. "Finest Mexican Food in Ora11ge County'' OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS 5<17 W. 19th STREIT COSTA MESA .. --the-New .. ,e!-.~ RESTAURANT TO ~ -NEWPORT CENTER 210 NEWPOl'IT CENTfl'I Dl'llYE, NEWPOAT 8£ACH IN THE DESIGN Pl.lli TELEPHONE f71•) ""'2&01 11.30 A .... TO 12.00 MIDNIGHT ....... "'·• "'"" ,,, ... ,,. ''" .. , ... ~-. '"' , ... _ NOW APPEARINC. WALT & PAUL Wiiii'. thru Sun. SUNDAY llllUNCH 10 A.M. 'to 2 P.M. IANQUlT ,ACILITIES Jl 7 PACIFIC COAST HWT. HUHTIN•TON IEACH 536-2555 The n:imc llarrv Bclafon tc conjures up n kind .of ··magii>" and he brings that ·•magic'' to U n i v c r s a rs outdo c r Amphi theatre, Mo 11 v wood Free\\'ay ;it L.1 nk••rstlim, Sun- day throu jh Aug. 12. .Joining lrlafonte in concert will be South Africa n ~inger Letta ~!Uula and gultari st Sivuca. Performances are nightly at 8:30 11.nl .. anr1 tickets may be obtained at the an1phitheatre box·office ancl all ~·Iuturi l , Liberty and 1'icketron agen- cies. Ample adjacent parking. Followi ng Bclafonle will be The Carpenters. ,\ug. 13-19; WAR. Aug . 20-26 : St h Dimension and Blood, Sweat .\: Ir·-- - - - - - - --. Tears, Sept. 5-9: Bette Midler. I A Chinese <.:u.isine I Sept. 10-.'6: and Engclberl ~ (Jc Humperd1nck. Sept. 17·23. I /i7\' oP&H o.t.11.v 11 •M -11 PM • cLOS•o MOHOAY I For informa tion coll (213) . Pol~ian ~··· I ft:f&\O". Sll0-9421. . ~ ··rQH MEALS l\fiiii"=iiiiio===-. • II PR!j>AR!:D WITH -PARTICULAR CARE" J,..,-1~ 1 1 1 x 'ft I'. 'f\ --Oriental Cocktail Lounge l 1. F'entur1ng Tropical Dri nks 11 I One entree at our regulaJ!.price."{f>o><,..,, ...,,. = ·. ::1 .... ml :-' --~"~ ti-II .. ~111 " ... "" . ,. '~ . • J .. ~ ~. 1-t PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT and the second entree ~ twn1n fOU Pf'fl..,.-,hll C:O~ptn-¥1Ulll SL/Mlf tllrM TlllolrM•y fttru Allflllf 16 I "PHONE ••• ·'•G·S&l'iO IL···~ -11' EAS'r 17TH .•••• cosTAME::J Xi"'"-11 -~~-~-~ -~.'...._ ~-L , r :1 NOW OPEN SUNDA,YS ftMtM~ RESTAUMNT Contint'lntal Cuisine Cocktails Servi110 l,unrllcon and Danner 'Mn11d11 J1 U1r()ugh Saturd411. SINCE THE OLD -DAYS Now Me 'n Ed 's mobile oveni speed delic;io1Js piping-hot pJues to your door In minutes. for prompt "rvlce phone 646·7136 (Newport Beech/Costa Me.sa~l7th.1ndTu1tin) or 847·12J4 (Hunt;n&lon Beach-Beac~ ond Hlel), • 3901 t Coasl Highway/Corona del Mar Phone, 675-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY 11 I I I ' I I : I I I Lunh "•'" 11 :JD Moft •• Ffl, Dh1Mt Nftlltty Pt'01t1 I P.M. GOURMET DINING ENTERTAINMENT DANCING M"419Y thr• S.r•rdoy Pte1t1 S ,.M. 600-D Newport Center Drive Fashion Island .644-5060 . . : I NEWPORT BEACH ____ .J A•,t. Pfw '-''"' e lntm1tlo111 Acc•pN-4 Closed Sundays oJJe 11ro IOc:ottd nol(f to the May Co. in South · r Plnll' Jl)J s lrl1tol 140-1140 1Kitb Lik;'io Ask Andy / -·• Movie Review IJ , f'ILUI 27 P,\Cl,IC THIATNl5 DRIYl·IN TV DAILY -LOG c_ Touch of Genuine Humor SUPER SWAP MEET F.:Mtl I ~ ~11~1"d F~•t r r•fitt! lor9:M,. ... Go•l•ttl $111 &-$11'1 -I •m . ., • i.on '.1A1;1c. :i•.·.o. Otlv,...l'I Friday Evening AUGUST 3 SPECIAL "OTIC[ All PRO:lRAMMINCi i1 tullJect lo ch1n11 alld /or 11, .. unptlon tor w-•r•&• ol Ille w1ttic•t1 Saturday Morning AUGUST 4 7:00 U 00 Silm111tr S.mttter o o m n. Ho11ndc.1b (!} T111neoee Ttatd• FJ (I) H.R. PultltUI ([IM Lib '----~----Ji ,,,. tJ ... .,.. r ... - li:OO e o 0 m mm m l'len am •0111111 Ho1111.,. Ht11i~1•. (}) tlgJ News 9 A Bettlf' W«td O Bonanza C1J UMM Waldo @ Co11rt1hlp 11 Eddie's f1tht1 OCIJ W a':..": O Wanted De.td ., All11t ID Th1 flinblo11tt ltQ1 Wotld of Wolldtr Q) SUr T1tk m ta11dlan Prt fM~tt Montreal &')LOI Tonti vs. H!mllton. ED Hod11pod11 lMI&• 1:00 0 Cl) lup l1n117 El} Tllrt• ~ooan 0 m l1lt Jt\Mlll &:30 (j) Horan'• Heioes 0 kltin W1rne 1Mltn 0 Movie: (90) "H•lluti ol tlit (6"1 Rotky 1 friend• Nar(' (adv) '51 -Ronald Re111n. ~ '3) Thi Osmond• 00 CIS Nnn Walter Cronkite 3q) Visloft On 0 Hm Cun Will lr1nl cg Country ~ ®I MIN Grlll!n Sllow l :SO El@ Stbrl111 m Andy Griffith C lg) m Pink Pa ntflcr fnJ Slit YunR Yln1 Yet @ Undtrdol m living E1sr (J@ ABC Supentar Motl• EiiJ Novell 9:00 fl Cf) Am11ln1 Ch111 till Ot1trt Thealr• 0 (Jij] m Underdo1 m Littie Rauall I 0 Movi•: "Palmy Dap" (mU1) '3 l 7:00 0 @ 0 m l'ltn I -£dd" Cantor. Georae Rall 0 low1ln1 lor Dollan @ S.1111011 (})Mo-It: (21u) "Dttllll Wtft" 0 Maril:: "Thi W•h" (dra) '47- (com) ·55 _ Cary Grant. Edmond O'Brien, Vincent Price, (1) Animal Wtrkl l!J Movie: ''Ordm .. lilt" (du) O What's M~ Une! '59 -Paul Massie, Eddi• Alblrt. m I Lll'lt Luer t:JCI IO SOIGby·Doo I (E) I D111m of Jun11i1 0 (1g in1Th• l1r'Mys G SJmplemenlt Muia '6' loll11ny Qlltd £) Whttli, 1u1111 & c11, 0 (}) Tlle lradt' K141 I e!l Muneu l ~ti C.rtoo1Cinllv1I mi Rolltr Derby 110:00 0 (}'QI m &lal•b 2020 I El) Spttd Rater (t) Ultra Min 7:30 fJ World al SUNival (II) I 0 Cil lewttdlt4 I 0 Hollywood Squarn m M0tie: "Pinn tf PlllQJlvanll" O H1lp ThJ Htlshbor (drs) '4Z -Clifford Evins, (jJ Chcus III CIM tn II CUI 0 Miiiion $ Maril: (21u) "It-lO:JO 1.J Cl) Josli 11Mi t111 Pmyt1b twee11 Two W1tld1" (dra) '44-John O ~~m hul'DUll G1rti1ld, Paul Htnreld, lleanor Par· 9 MoM: ''alu" (dr1) '43 •~r. ·r.tta Yount. Alln Ladd. (fQl The Mew Pritt II Rlrht 1 Yor•P to httolll If S.• m Dod1tr W11m • Up / Baseball ')Cl) aJ lid Powtr I M11ttiplkl- Dod1111 11 San F11nelsco Giants. ·n R I m Drarnet OYi!: "flunt of "" OMlu" iOWerld Prtu ~!Iv) '41-Marlene Oletrldt. rn Unttmtd Wafld G GDSJl'I S"nglna: JullAM EE Addams F1111lly 1;00 Fl -'.\ Tiie Fllnbtom 1:00 fl (J' liO Minutes I 0 St:rtict ta Statiot 0 lip mt 11n10111 and ~ O @~·a> funkf nant111 0 Mnie: f2flr) "Fartt.Ml'nUi Pall~ 11:30 O Exprn:Mon bit: Wtlt By THOMAS PALMER ot tllOI 0.ll'r Pllet 11111 ls at once selfish and. as w ual, charming a n d jn-- The rich, IYrlc score deals expllcably endearing -~he unabashedly with the film 's imperfect character lhat Is 1nain characters, like film loved and anguished over with s1..'01·es used to. It promises equal measures of emotion. even that the pair have, uh, a The uneven tale of this cou- touch of class. pie is shockingly elementary Class? Today? As a mat-for the interest it maintains. lt ter of fact, it is refreshing to is the genesis, meat and relate, George Segal and Glen· evaporation of love. a rela- da Jackson do show a bit of lionship that soured mostly the stuff. And what's more, due to cirewnstant ial feasons it's in a real movie, one that but, it is suspected ., also proves great escape in film because neither lover could Isn't dead, Saturday night in a make sacrifies indeli.n.itely. theater still can be relief However. the ending is of rather than reproof, anc1 · all little moment ; all the fun is in quality celluloid since 1965 is getting there. And "A Touch not necessarily in the form of of Class" is quality scripted, soeiological lecture. cockamamie comedy of a In "A Touch of Clasa," the subtle, genuine kind , directed lecture is out , the lecher i$ in. by Melvin fo'rank with a Hut a loveable one he is, and rekindled respect for past the object o( his aggression is directing standa rds and acted in every wa y capable of pro-with aplomb. ' teeting herself from a A so_mewtiat unintel'esting reckless. spo iled, slick mover, succession of events i s who al.lo happens to be a bus-virtually disguised by fast set band and a father. ui:rknock down one· and two- tt is the complete Segal, an liners and enthusiasm among American businessman living most of the actors that at in London ("th e last in-times even clips them from habitable city on earth"/. He the pages of reality and stands ·-them up as Hollywood paper· ~----------doll conceptions, the kind wi th MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE 1111 fb!K~r• ti I/It rtl11101IJ 10 ilttotlfl ,..,..,,, tboo.ol mt ... J•O.~I~ of _;, ,_ lot "''•'"'II &!" I ...... ,,_,.,,.,, ® JIO Qlf( UlfOll 11 AOMITTIO (AQt 1111111 lfttY rtrt '" Ut'laln ll'IU) extraordinary personalities. This rabidly active personal relationship is sti ll another tattoo of the genre of comedy that has seldom been made \\•ith any degree of success 211d llG WllK ! "LIQUID SPACE" by Dole Dnl• A SOAPING ODYSSEY 1:00 •114 10:00 ••ck nit• lately. Oh, there is footage that deserves ignoring : Upon an in- quiry by Miss Jackson or a prostitute neighbor as to whether she has oregano, the cheerful \voman returns with "Gosh, I hope not. 1 just 'ad a checkup lasl week." But preposterous or not, when the handsome Segal bullies from invitations to tea to lunch to a weekend in Spain in the space of 24 hours, the implausible gray of it all turns to Involving brightness. The overdramati.zation and far too far-fetched coln- cldences are excusable, taken \V I t h Lubitscb-llke chaotic comedy scenes. It's good for laughs If not for credibility when this love-starved im- probable pair continue their vacation even after returning to London, by carrying on a full sex life in a half boor a day. There are excesses, to be sure. Insensitive references to the gay male are exploited for a good bell y-laugh. (It is useful to note that artists ca~t hold up a l.ol!\l!Plll L•!\llMll CORl'OR.<ITtlJN o fOUNIAIN VAlllV ., ... ~~1 .......-.;~:,::.:;.;-, -:;.,-,;,,,~,, .. ~ ,. "CAHILi.. -U.S. MAll:SHALL" & "JI.AGE" Cf'O) 'SLITHER" & "SOYl..ENT GREEN" (PGJ Sunday is Fl1 tlt:lA Y' ····························I ... g ~-[ii-....... ........ ca ·-_ ......... ._ ... ..., .. -.. ...... U.A. City 1rtd 5111111 C•11t Cln1ma1"-r .. 5dly Ste !Lllllfl Ind Gold-tin) -Optn 'Iii 2:00 p.m ltlN (dr1) ·4z-£r!S"Por1m1n. I (i) Tijuan1: Window bl !lie s.uti o r11 rn '''4-r" au"'b o (3-, m Udtw1111 ~ Q) Tiit Un~ables m Dodpr W1r111 · Up I laMball • •7l4260~ Ei) La s,.iifr1 Jonn O:ldgers n . Giants. I ID~"~'"~" WHk '' ,,... Ill """' """ of Fln" (dro) '51 ........ Ri)tlltsplrito -Cameron Mitchell. •• ml Co111munitJ Events Aft J91J •111 C111r Hwy m 11p111Ht L111a:•• ,,.11,11 ~rnoon . co11:0NA DIEL MAii: • 1:30 0 (Lal m Tiit llttle ... pie 12:00 B 00 Artlli• I n fll&ftltl 0 nn m no1 OH Ct It 0 ®J €!)Major t..1a:w llW:btl ~-~~ up O John Warne Tllllt11 u:.i._,, .. 1td1111 (R) (1) Mowll: "~tell• W•MM" (wtS' C1) D11m41 , ., r ~Joan T1ylor, Ll01d Brld11s. !:00 IJ J) CIS Ntn lroNust 0 riJ fD ..._ ?J 0 ~ mt Watera:•lt R1 • C.J, 0 Mowit: "Pwh• Yllla Rtllnll" J~n Cl'l1nc~llor is _report~r tor fl· (adv) '51 -Leo Carrillo. p11se of this w1ek s l•st11110ny on III thi•pionshlp W111tlfn& w.1,r11t1. [6) Run lor Your Liie 12:JO IJ(f) fat Albert O ._:; CD Rotr11 Z22 ''Pl/don Me 1:00 II 00 ~~ Children's film ~t1liY8' , .. Y~ur Apathy ts Showin&" (R) IJ MO'llf. "Wiiy Musi I Dlt ld11) (F) Dr11ntl '&G-ll{IY MOOft, Debra Pa11L £D Futbol·Sotctr 0 Mttlt : "fcnlp ~I" ED M11llrpff!c1 Thtalrt /mys) ·~o -Joel McC1ea. I aJ E1pectlc.ular 0 (ii) 7tk Ann111I Wntdltsttr W EE Japanese Ltna:u11e ~oer111 CllUk 1 9:l0 t!JN~ 0 !Cool off with Comedy! a> Um Clu~ * TH E CORNER BAR 1''° ~ "'""'"'" PRE' R S (6, MO"rlt: "Tiie Fab1lt111 Ta11" * n11E E TONIGHT {lits) '47-Wlni41m Ellkitt. 0 3 Cl) DEBUT Th• Con1ff 111 OJ True AdYeat11rt ~ :::nSmart OJ Fanhrria f1lct1 EE Mucllath• ltJllllla 2:00 D Dusty's TrtthtllM EE l'ftmltr dtl 40 CJ' Ske~hbook 0:00 tJ (I) CBS News l ro•dc•sl r:l Stltion lo StatiH "Run1wl)'S" 0 (E) Ntws ;. lntt111lti0n1I Kour 00 Twlll1ht Zont "161 Thrilltr 0 (}) m lovt Arntrlclft styli (R) @ Tk 8t111111d 0 Shtrlock Kolmt1 Tht•tr• m futbol·Socctr @ii fi1ln1 Uni 4 ml T11velute .0:3D O Ttlk B1tk 2:JO II Just N1tu111 (i) 0111 Slip ltyond ClJ Far Dut flitb GJ N11lnllltr M111k a;, Hum41n Dimtnsitft €m Cuitliru 3:00 fJ l llnwt•klot "''" 11O0 !E !?! al •m O .. ~..,,.USA (]) ((l \iQ) 1'1n 0 Movie: "f'fVt I Yllt West" (wts) D 0111 Step ltYolNI '55--John LulMI, Dofothr Malone, (6) Perry Mason (!) C..lld m Nin 0 $portl Adlo11 Pr.Jiii "M1rty CD Morlt: "Cntic tf ['Ill" (ho1) Rle»tn" '66-Scoll 8r1d~. Vlr1lnla MIYo. 0 Movl•: "Otstty Rldu Ar•ll" ll:IS m CIMlll 34 I (wtS) '39--J~mes Stewart. I l:lO tl CBS L•lt Ml'llt: {C) "5·M111 !ffi'• Scitnct f1dkl11 Tlttlttl ArmJ" (adv) '70 -Pater G11ves, m M~•: "'\.1111 Nl&'t Of '43'" 0 0 ml .IClhnflJ' C.non (d1a) '6Z--O.lno Ctrvi, Btllnda L•a. 0 (}) In Coftart M1ndrUI, E11lt1. I!) MD'V'lt: "Clint 11 Kntrld•11n" Ike & Tin1 Turntr Rtvu•, Jim Croc• (hor)-.lerNne Rohlts. and Triumvirate 1111. fl) fllttlol·S6ettr Cf) Nl1htma11 @!;) tanldlln Advtllt111 0 W1&0n Tl1ln 3:30 fJ lt111t1· Ptt·S..Mfl fMlhall Tht lZ:OO @ M111h1I DHlon Los Angt!es R11n1 m•et lht DlllU m Atrrtd Hltrh~ Prntnb Cowboys. 12:30 m Mo.le: "The Daill Ctrn1r" (dr1) (j) HIM Ful11fl '46-Mirk StMnS. Lutllll 8111. 0 CtltbrilJ' hwfl111 1:00 0 9 m Mlllnl1•t Spttltl Al m A(Ylc11lt11t1 USA ' G1een Is host. Gu•1U lncludt fot· r:D Cir & Tritt htl, Bobby Womack, Th• ,Styl!1tlcs, Don Clmpn _,. ~1·""'""''i°'lLlof~O\b.'i!:J/~fl, •• ,_ ., .,, • '; .,. IOffiild rum1n & Murrtr. • .. O "°"'' ''Th• """" ,,..,.. 0 WHAT'S GOING ON (dr•) '62-$t1nl•1 B1t•r. * "Who Makes Money Oft O (I) Mews the Watts Festival?" 0 Mftlt: "f111r Skulls ot Jon1ttt. Host: WILLIE DAVIS 11 Ortk•" (l'lol) '5t-£du11d f11n:, 0 Whtt'1 Wq h V1ltrlt frtnch. (l) Outtr Omits 1:45 IJ Mll'llt: (C) "Tt Clltlt 1 NHllot" U Q) (J) It.dis fmi Wtilst1 (adv) '63-Rich1rd BrtdlOfd, Ron · Sqvatt Carin Ralldtll, ~ m Mii 1.-..., .,_ lntrtfl "Ml 2:00 ID All·Nl(M SMw: "llowlftl Wiid," Ille fl5h In th• SN" "Bury M• Dt••.'' Ill Anlct: Ill Dmlt 1:10 fJ Mwll: "Clri In tM Krt11tht" Ill lollff a,.. (dlll '57 -L•~ 8'rbr, Ziii lw l&Pwr•MI L1t1!1t a.... 1111o1ce o1 ""'""~ KOCE, CHAN NEL 5t Orange County's UllF television station. KQCE..TV has schtdulcd the following Spt'Cial programs toda y. 0ei1ti111d llst1ngs of Channel SO's programs are carried In the Dally Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. J 00 Omllllwl M '"'lllllff •ncl T1111P011" Se1 ll•llllQ l~f, JUiy ~1 , 11 6:311 OM :t.:llO c1mi1ct111M1• un1vtr. tklH• tor Ir.. Mtl'llC•ll·Amt!'IClll cllH • •:Oil M1"t' 1t•n' NfltnllOl'lloOd •:JO attttllt C1111 .. 11y S·OO S111me SlrMI 6·00 L1111r ,OI' Tiii 'th Litton )fl I.'" cOl.l•t.t 111r coll-crltlll •:)Q leam 1:t0 W•f'I Nl1"1' Al •1111111 W1lff hi! ll1llng Wtdnttcllf, AUOvtl l•t, •l 1:0I p.m. •:oo ,,l.,.lltUH .... Y"11 l /19r1J11w "Helttr! Hay"'" t·)Q Jvtl Jan "~• Atntn0n1" tne {lllCtQO ltflOI' U.WOf)l\onlll l llf)t•ft Wiii! l'lll W•lff, ll111tttlrt1tlf 9:00 P·"'· Col lthfftN '°" s.11. Sc.Nd• .. o-.. hl•I Ottn1111 J1e1<"" "A TOUCH • Of CLASS" -pf•-..... ~""' .. '"' "LOCUSTS" 11t11 111 ColOrl (l'G) Wlldl E•ploslYe' ''THE HAMMER • 01' GOO" _,.,_ .. llOOK O' NUMIERS" •• ,,. In Clllr! '" J. Cllttort1/ll:, W1Ju ''THIR LAST 01' SH•ILA" "TH•t1• WHO CAM• TO DINNIEll:" CllOr (PGI 11.,er Moon 11 Clf7 • "LIVIE ANO LET CllE" ''THE M8CHANIC" ., .. In C•ler1 (1'01 "HAll:ll:AO l!XPIE•IMl!NT" "EVlll:Yl'HINO YOU WANTIO TO KNOW AIOUT SIX" ' Mlra,11 If 1 M111JcaU ''GODSPELL" (0) "MAiltOLD 6 MAUOE" f~OJ l•fll Ill c'*r 1•1 Aolll Ill C1l9r1 JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL AIR CO ITIONED SEE I ... THE ONL l MAJOR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN fOUTHERN CALIFORNIA _.f~~!4Jl!Ji<iJ9~ !HE F)R~T TIME A !:lYY!HER~ "FLOWER MAGIC .OF Tllf TROPfd•.-. I. i\~ ANIMA{ED FLORAL SPECTACULAR SEE i ... THE VERY LATEST INNOVATIONS FOR THE HOME A GARDEN WITH OVER 135,000 50. FT . OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS SHOW HOURS, 5·11 P. M. WMkdays Noon·ll P. M. Saturdays Noon·9 P. M. Sundays . . ADULTS 12.00 • JUlllDRS st.OD (ch!ldrtn under 12 fr•• wlth .parenh) -·. blackened race to ridicule with an outrageous accent , but the mlnorily of the limp-~·lrisl s~reotype is still fair ga1ne.1 Still, some small truths nre socked t.\Y.IY· Miss J ackson . :1 resignedly independent di· vorcee, 11tlck1 some sharp observations to Segal about predominant American malt· attitudes, sexual and other· wise . As friendly as the softball game that it opens on. "A Touch of Class" Is not betrayed even by a series of closing scenes that struggles too long for imaginative ef- fect. The nonsensical quibbles the batty pair engage in are like signals directly from the carefree~ '30s love-story com- edy. The film is still absolutely worth a couple or hours or time and a couyle of dollars. A value like this, not im· peccable but human, ad· mlrably so. gives hope in the nick or time that film comedy e~ures even in a grumpy age, and we are not doomed to in- ferior substance in this area of pure entertainment. Singer Bill Medley will step in to Disneyland's To- morrowl1nd Stag• spot- light during the week of Aug. 12. Singing such greats as "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' " and and "Brown ·eyed Wo- man," Medley will be showcased at 10 p.m. and mid:1igl;it Sunday through Friday. ----------~---- "MIND-BLOWING!!!" · l "lli\HJ.ES ('llA~lPl.I \. I.,\. Tl~lf:S "BRILLIANT!" .Jt'l)l"rl! ('!ilST. ~.\'. i\l:\G . .\1..JNE "FASCINATING!" -l)\\'ID SJU·:f:JIA:O.", K ~XT·T\' "ENTERTAINING!" . IO·::\ 111-:J-:I >. :-;Y~l >l(',\'J'f''.D COl.U:\l ~I ST "SPELLBINDING!" -ltU.\.\ B..\HHl~T . :\!ETH!) l\1f:DJ,\ TV "FIRST • RATE!" -Hll'll,\HU SClllC t\f:L. "l'l ~IE l\·L\GAZ!t\E ft),\.lhO fOX is. Th·e J11e•al '"?''"°""'I !)yltE .. 'lc Ill "0S!I • ""'•"" O• .:.~Cl'<·~::; t'.IL.LRIJI ft""' ,.,.._t·•~I '"~don-bot F~'; ;'J.(.>;tC'»l~~· .. °"Wt:I'"" tw f.1>£0 l>Nl<IE ... Al•'l • I><~ '·'<.•'11'Y JC>'<" WOOLf _._.,.~·,.,ic~•'l"---V'• ··"·' .. ..,. • ·•·····•~' A UNM!RSALP.IH F~E . lECl"llCOICl"' PG~-,~:-:.-: CO.HrT IOTM THIATllS -Matthau Olt'1NGll! Driir• 1"1 1 & 2 ~u·o·y On•v---t Hn to ~ om FrH l'tr•lng M•ll••m S!t41~rn tc******** ~ ' . ·~ OHlT Ol lVl-IH lllOW1MG' DAY Of THE JACKA.l 110G• W.lLl!I ""'""AU• (.llOI IVl ... I" PETE 'N TILLIE !IOG! "l"" JAM.IS COllUUj PAT GARR ETT & BILLY THE KID 111 CHIN ESE CONNtCTION (I I "., . .: !<-·· '" , .. GIOIGI c. seem rnl IMNW&T OK LAHOMA CR UDE 11'61 CHfYfNNI ~l.ll ClUli1'111 ' + ·'" ~· ' ' ..... ;,, ·'· .. , ... ' ~ ... S34·6212 Nl:WIU IOl'IO DOI ... 1 IOGfl MOOtl llVE AN D LET DIE '"'' THE MECHANIC 1.c;: ,. . .. ···~ ' : • ' "'\ : ! ·; ~ , . ! 111 18&J HIWHT IONO .001 ~If JOGI• MOOll LIVE AND LET DIE 11'6\ .._ __ THE MECHANIC 111G1 .. ,. .. I"[ lo<• ~V\ICAl JESUS CHRIST SUPER STAR · SHOW DOWN (PG ) ...... ' ' ' • r ' ,. '•"'"'I ' ... •' >4!. .JJ I J DOUtll H•lOll! TOI.I'll Dll Kll&MING! ltGEND OF Hill HOUSE !PG• ..._-,Cr,:CHC,l BOSTON STRANGLER ,, .... 841-159! 1.00 '11 CA•tOM! 111'\I ACllO"I HnSI (l.J ,it.ClflC V lllATION~iG: !2.) llUE SAfAll IGI l .1 f.lNTASl!C ,lASl1C MACHIN C.voJ (PG) '--===="---' 111 sumett .. 101.·fRI. DPll DI P.M. SIT. I SUR. IPll J,DU P.M. S!IOI mm II OUSI ' . WEEIDIYS OPEN 6'45 P.M. WEEKENDS 12'30 P.M. FROM L8VI SOMETHING OLD ... ~filt': ; ·~ ;,= \. '. < f--J[)l 1.: ;·,. ;: 1l 1 • ; '', I r ! ~I I 1 ~ .. \ , ;,I, •\•. j <I •~I, ., . )'I" I I,•,,•, .1 I ,, I' ,, 'I;) I t ···11 ',I 1. '1 · ,,, . " : ; I '1, ! 1 ''. i \ .. :,' '1;' tllpll't!d cordnroy ., ' ' I .• 'I : • ' I I I ~ • ' : ' r , , • ' , . :.... I., .. 1• I r • ' ' ' ' , : ' ' ~ 1 ·=··:.;·,; ', ,· 'I , i . : '' ' 'I . I : ' ,I 1, ' •:11 :,,, I .1 : '.· •I I , . . ...... " .... ~ \ ,1; ~· ' ·\,' : ' ' . '·.'/'' :' ! ,, • ' '; I 1 I 1 )"I , I i ' . ! ' : \ ·1 ' ,. ,, '· ··' ,. ·11' I i -· ' ,eans. all sizes, most colors . • 44 leohlon Island, MWpart centlf 644·5070 j ·~-.. I • 28 DAIL V PILOT Sur1111ierti1ne Offers V aired Productions· .. The li:m~ror's New CJotbes" Final perfor.n1nnces of thi~ children's production wUI be given tonight at 7:30 and Saturday afternoon at 2:30 p.1n_ at the J1unlinglon BL'·ach Playhouse. 2110 l\1ah1 St., Jlun· 1 ington Beach. Jleservalions 5364446. "Follies" T1lC Orange County prcmif'r<:> or this award-winning musical 1.:omplc\es its four-day run v.•ith closing performances 1onight and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Orange Coast College auditorium, 2 7 O 1 Fairview Road, Costa f\.1esa. "A J\tid summer N i g b t ' s Dream" \Vinding up its fou r-day engagement at Golden West College with perform ances toni ght at 7:30 and Saturday ;it 8,30 pm. is t his Shakespearean fantasy in the t :\VC Community Theater, 1)744 Golden \9cst St., HW1- 11ngton Beach. "The J\latcbmaker" On stage tonight :ind Satur· dav at 8:30 in Thornton \V(Jdcr's old-time comedy at the San Clemente Community Theatf'r. 202 Avenida Cabrillo , !'.an Clen1entc. Rescrvat ions 49'2-0465. ·•Catch t2" South Coasl Repertory opens its new season next Friday ~'ith lhe first stage production of Joseph Heller's famous noveL playing \\'ednesdays through Sundays at 8 o'clock for seven weeks at the SCR theater, 18'27 Newpo rt Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservalions 646- 1363. I "FORTY CARATS" -..... --'·'•"'-... S !AO/UM · 2 :.\~ .. ...llU!U.:ll.l IT.! :t'::9 .. , ... _ .,,.,.. $1AOIUM•3 :t:. .. . . ·~ '"' "DOLLARS" !Rl "LEGE ND OF HELL HOUSE" '"' "BOSTON STRANGLER" !PGI "LIVE AND LET DIE" l'6J .... .. TH£ MECHANIC" "THE MACKINTOSH MAN" '"' "IULLET' Orange County Exclusive! BACK TO THRILL A WHOLE NEW GENERATION! THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE FOR EVERYONE! "DISNEY'S GREAT PIONEERING VENTURE IS THE SEASON'S HIT REVIVAL!" ••~-• "AH INCREDIBLY REVOLUTIONARY FILM .•• THE MINO CAN RUN RIOT'" Th• NYU '"'" "FAR AHEAO OF ITS TIME. .. BEST AUOIO·VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN!" Wdham Wolf, Cue "BEST FAMILY FILM!" JosephGelmis. Newsday "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND ... z'' ..... THE rnl0mill&® EXPERIMENT Hon-adc.looe--r.... 1-.,..........., botw_ ..... Wclentsore 9ne0Urvged! plus "LOVERS AND OTHER STRANGERS" • with Gt Yo11t1q m MANN THEATRES Paul Ntwm111 "MACKINTOSH MAH;: U&llf jl 2:45-6:-4S-11:4S "BULLET" South Coast Plaza II l l11 0!1$0 rwT. IT •~1110l • S49.JlS2 MESA THEATRE NEWPORT & HARBOR 548-1552 j Nobody did it like I D\ll\tl9t\l I ,. ... he wos the l · gangster's I gangster. I I I Another outstanding combination exclusive! PLUS lhe ptOSpKftw OWMn °' Maxy'i Ccr '#Oltl, l'ittsburgl\ .-0 Gr:N£ HACf<MAJI/ r+ii~"h SC/-O?EO?O\lv SHOWING(!)~o NOW SHOPPERS MATINEE Wed.-1 p.m. Continuous Sat. & Sun. 2P.M. AND COLOR ••• MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" ~;::::::::::::::::il Bob Sa1magg1, Group W Network I '.,o,1rinuo·Js :;or. & 5"n. 2 p .m. Added: j \.1!1.:.T Dl<;NEY'S. 1 BEAYliR VALi.EV ~ I ..... ' JULIE ANDREWS DICK VAN DYKE : ; ' ' " ~. WN!ii r.!illfl.:l ·: ~. ~111i1 -f1 .. .... _ .. ~ .. U.11·~~ 11 ·~· • SHOWI NG NOW ! • .,.1 _" 11'.~ ·it.IA/ ' . .. ........ ~··- GEORGE c. scon FAYE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS JACK~PALANCE Rip·roaring adven t ure ... w ild, raunchy humor! WIEKDAYS 6:4S SAT. SUN. HOl. 11:45 . .. DRIVE-IN ONLY "CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB" . SIDNEY POITIER •• 'WARM DICIMllR" IJ!t HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER • ·. ······ ····· ····· ······ ... Wll!.STMINSTll!.A AT GOlDll!.N Wll!.ST 1€TIHlll GAllOlll GllO\'E ~ SAii OlfGO fWT$, ••:i-...... 3 ••3•7 0•• PE~ SALLY KELLERMAN ~ GEO. KENNEDY tEl[i ~ ·""~"'~ "iXJ@~· 2nd •I lotk-Sicl!My Poitier "A WARM DECEMBER" IPG) ~ AT IOfJI CIHIMU :r·k ·R'i" ••• ~·;;.·I .. · . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • I• • 1 ·I 1; :i 1 l\I \1\1 t\ltl\ "'dt!J~ Al ADA"11S \0,T A o.J(~A • 979 414 1 '" . . . '" ~ . WHAT~ An epk story ol'wooden derricks, iron men ... and adcnanl .,-om11n. (.QU.Mij.ll~n.¥oi <; ... ~. The S1'AKJ:V itRAMEll ,.,OOIJ'_ GEORGE c. scon FAVE DUNAWAY JOHN MILLS K.PALANCE OKL ~HOM - CRUDE (PG) • . '' • •. :\ ·A wild raunchy rip-roaring yarnl " •: 1913 ••• A GOOD YIAR FOR OIL COMPANIES, A BAD :, YEAR FOR WILDCATTERS. AND EVIN WORSE FOR .·.WOMEN. And now the movie ... " ... perhaps the most remarkable film to emerge si nce Ceci l B. DeMille fo unded Hollywood'.' F~....:.:...--===____:____: _ ____:=-_ __j -VERNON SCOTT, UPI Uni\.rrxtl Pk.ium; -Robtrt Stig'ol.ood ...-A NORMAN JEWISON J-i lm "JESUS CHRISI SUPERSIAR" "BRAVO, AND THIN SOMI! A MORI DELIGHTFUL SPRINGTIME TRIAT YOU WON'T FIND ANYWHERE . A WARM AND WINNING FILM!" ...1.-rc.1 ..... ,- NOW ASP.I. IUNUM PUT IT ''TH ERE IS A SUCKll · IOllN IVIRY MINUTE." THE ONLY ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT :r.o.SHION ISlANo • f!IEWPOIH Cl NT!ll" . . . . . . • , ~~.r .':.".':1115 BOTH CINEMAS r01J,H1 •ovis Cara-ts You. Liv Ullmann Gene Kelly Edward Albert Binnie Barnes 2ND BIG FEATURE AT BOTH CINEMAS GOLOIE HAWN IOffElln.11!8 EILEEN 'HECKART .AJIE fJU!I! EDWARD ALBERT Cl\I lf\(}\lf,R ~A~bOI\ AT ADAMS co~ TA Mf S~.211 .. il!L t SHOWING NOW t A gun in his sack a tire iron in his belt andnabadge. The stary al Eddie. The best ex-cap in the business. ROBERT OUV~L.L VERNA BLOOM BADGE 373 ID.MAT ONLY so· Till 4PM • INI WEIK THE WESTBROOK~1r mn UOOKHUl51 ON WESTMINSTER AYE. S 1.00 till 2 ILKS. SO. Of GAIDIN OIOYI FWY. :30 P.M ~HDWAllD W. KOCH~•·" BADGE373 .... Wf,.. urutftltl'IM tu• ROBERT DUVALL Ill VE RNA BLOOM Jiil.... MH~ 2nd TOP ATIRACTION elm("~"' "T~F H:o~MER " I 01'iii1;'(j.\i · 1•1 I\< KIDS MATINEl.,"ISLAND 0 THI ILUI DOLPHIN" "(. ALL WEIK "SNOOPY COMIS HOME" IOI • ' . • • • TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith YiH. I ALMOST MAC TO C"°""' THR.EEOTM~ GUYSTOOO IT/ DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS I/vi 01:.1ttus1oNeo IJITH sHO<'J BusiNess, 4Jt L soN, f Q,VIT J J---t';:;::-""\-' I l I frinay, A119un ), J".l /J OM, '!HAT!; EASY, l)O()U:V ••. 1J.IE L.lrTt.' ONl>S AAi; SfAPL'O lb 1146 5'(:{1 ANO 'f~E LARGER ONC:S AR' HELD IN Pl.AC£ \Ill I 'fl.I EP<1'I('( JJ~I L V ~ILU 1 29 by Roger Bradfield r WPPOS'" w• MARO .,...,.. IS fll<PUCING 1Hli !1>.'11'1'R1~S by Charles Barsotti ~ •·• L--------'"------==== ~ ~.~~.C4.Ti"1fs•-•...CI------=-' GORDO by Gus Arriola ·' : • .. by Dale Hale • MOON MULLINS · · NANCY by Ernie Bushmiller PLE"ASE' DO ME" A FAVOR--- KEEP YOUR ANIMAL CRACKERS OUT OF MY .JIGSAW PUZZLE ,t TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLI ACROSS 1 ._..__ta Bom'" • J1,1111p forward 62 'PllC•CI 111 event 53 Elongal:ed fllh . 54 Artlci' 57 Ring 10 Thin parton declllont: 14 Compretienth't Abbr. 18 SM: Fr1nc11 SI Songs 18 Prtpo11t1on el loo• 1.1nlt1: tf Hl9hwty 2 'W Ofd l • protecUve e4 Courteous devle•• 87 M1x1u1t 19 C•dlz 88'8uperma11tst1:. a ch11ra 2word1 SASSY !lo Re commend 70 A.ctr••• •• wl•• -O""'V" 11" ColOM lltl 71 Ml•• Rain•• 8 N•ttow 23 Come Into 72 FeMclng 25· Alllrm•llv• t'Word• rtpty 73 WW tf 21 Goller'• ·PtOP 27 Knlghl'I UUe 211 Parched 3 1 Sla111 33 ln1p1otor: Abbr. 34 BelUUn;a '"'' 315 Tow1rln; 40 Sol1tdl1k: Var. i-11latanc• group 74 Tall grasa 75 Bacoma. ,IWIUa C?f DOWN 1 s11waad 2 Studt. "t•bl1n king 3 E1ttand1d 1cro11 4, Smlllng' brotdly atraat. ti Bother 10 Fttaca 1 I .Ntn'O'tf water • chann1t 12 Onacuble ma tar 13 Sherlfl't ' llalptra 18 Falt dilly 22 Fol!Ow: .Informal 24 sevar1 t el 27 :fhalland, ·one a 28 Prapoaltlon 30 Word• ol · f1r1wa11· 32 Comic 1&tp 38 Lumb•r • aourca 311 Scra1m 41 fiber olUtltr 43 Feke : C'O ntt•I• 48 Wlnt1~•1JOt ·,.. M loft\t•n .C8 'lndtC1t1• 51 lnfonnel •tio• 84 St1M &11 _0111: S ank on•'• putt 158 81nlthmtnt 158 Took without rlgtit 80 Marry · ••crelly tl2 Old Fr1no1;1 co Ina PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER THE POL.ICE WILL WANT TO INVESTIGATE THE 6HOOTIMG, A68EY ! I'D LIKE TO TALK TO 8ETGY IP I MAY! .MISS PEACH 42 lOYfl lo e icc111 44 81nd • tala;ram 45' Dl1p1ay by wa1r1n11 47 Spoka f\lrlou1ly 411 R1la111d: 5 Ru11lan army P•P•{: 2 WOidt II Gr11111nd 1 Anoi.nl Ora111: c;:ounuy "word" 35 St1oe dram11: Siano 37 St1e1t 1ound: 83 Foot 111Hl1;1urrac• 88 ·Letteta 88 Actual being 88 Fall'ltr: ·i~ 15 Of\/ A we1,....T-LO:IS OIEi, veT HE 'iSeM<; TO se INDl.41.wlNli< HIMSiLF ... Abbr. 50 CIHIM 2 word•· Informal M1,;s l C11tv~TAL-! , _ __, .rl-,llo-lh-1 .. • ..... j, >v'"""";.f ! • DICK TRACY • .~ I I1LL HANG IT ® 11ERE·· '(oUR PRICE' INCLUl>fS .f:R.AMING tT, OF COU!':SE '? .L.,,.,, ' ANIMAL CRACKERS H~'I, 'I'M SICK AijC> TIRED OF S !TTllJ.:; O~ THIS NEST UJHll.E Q()I) ARE Fil:EE. TO COME AIJC> 00 AS (/OJ R£.AsE ! by Charles M. Schulz OH, THAT'S ,OKAY- M&'5 COL-!NTING- GAL.Otl:tl6 •. ! f, 1,,,1 ... by Harold Le Doux /ltlGHT- "l,3~J-7, 3¥¥- 7, JI.IS ... by Mell by Chester Gould by Roger Ballen 1 OODERSTAIJD TH/>.T A Ul•FE's l.lEED 10 eer AVl/JJ Fil:OM IT AU. IS eue~ BIT As tJECe!>SA11Y A5 HE!'? H068AIJD'$ ... • ~ ' f ' 'I 001EVE THl>.T 1>£ ~EST ! IS lJOT Ol!\.q TriE ' < Wifes ~011.irQ! •' ' i THE GIRLS -· J"-' i..;1 r--..i._i,,.-.i. H()J,FEEl.F TO Hiil:E A IJE'Sr-SITTE.R • • "I won.der whatever happened to people who worried lt they looked all right before they went someplace." ' ,, DENNIS THE MENACE pne,._ .,, I ·: • ' ,, f ·, .. DAILY PILOT • August 1973 WITH NO SIOE LOl><NS WITH APPROVED CREDIT '73 DUSTER ''73YALIA T ; '73 -SCAMP . '73 SATE.LLl.TE Year•nd Clean~up on all '73 Mode1Chrysler-Plymout1'~-;; Serial #CS4JTJCl2717l NEW YORKER BROUGHAM 4 DOOR HARDTOP , '69 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON va, automatic, radio, haater, pow- •• 1tearin9 & br1ke1, WSW, air cond., AM.FM radio tilt wheel. roof rack. (709AEX ) $1495 '70 FORD GALAXlf 500 va. 1111lomat,c, radio, h1af1r power 1taerin9, power brak11, w1w, air conditio11in9, vinyl to'p. (686FONI USED '70 PONTl4C CATALINA 2 DR. H.T. va, •ulometic, r1dio, htel1r, pow- ., 1leering & brtkt1, WSW, 1ir c.onditionin~. rally wh ttl1. ( l l '4: BHLI $1395 '64 OLDS 98 " DOO ll: HARDTO, VI, aulomalic, rad•o. haatar, power 1t1erin9 · br1ke1 • 1eaf • wi11dowt • anten<1a t ilt whtal, crui1t control air conditi&ning. !IOZ911) SAVINGS '69 FORD GAU.Xll 500 4 DR. SED. VI, a11tom•tic, r•dio a11d h••t•r. power •l••rn9, . whit• 1id1 wall "'tlr•1. (9A3'4F108 176) $795 '67 CHRYSLER TOWN I. COUNTRY WAGON VI, ·,u'tomatic, r.1dio, hatter, pow· er it1arin9 pow t r br1kt1, WSW tire1, eir conclitioninq. !TUA6661 ·S•rial #I Rl2 ICJG I 52427 l '68 CADILLAC- coura Df v1w Full power, factory air, e\Jto., c.li- m1.te control, tilt tale wheel, AM · FM 1lereo, c.rui1e control, Le1th1r inttrio r, vinyl top. IV HFJIO) $1195 '69 FORD XL 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI, automatic, ra dio, heater, power 1taering & br1lia1, w1w, vinyl top, bucket 1eah, con1ol1. 19J60KI 39275) '· THRD•:IGllOUF · OUR ' ., .. •. . INTEANATIDNAL 1m TRAYfUU. 4DD !OFF MANUFACTURERS STICKER ' PRICE)· Si!ral #JHICOCHl7JOJ7 ·, " 1m l/2 TON pa.:up TRUCK LOADED: V8 en gine, autom.•tic, power steering, AM ·ra- dio, tinted 9las1, custom exterior frim pa ckage. ' . ' • ' CONSTRUCTION AND EXPANSION . ' ' ' . ' -· - , CLEARANCE SALE! --- t.l1.J-i s:PE\ti11J~:S.k"VfN{;~Y-·No w e ~I ~;;,fr~( ~·. Jf~~-'~t-·~~g ~~orked on we invite you to drive right on to ou1· lot. There's plenty of park-. ffl . ' . "lIU!'.. . ., e~,~l mi I . :; to_p •.. i ,. _., ,: ,,. '' • '<•' "' ~ ... fC'.1 4 ' '. ' • • (· ,, 1. "' .. • :JX t. •' ' •i • t "'° '< IJ !' b f' ,~~. "''" • ... : ·~ .. ""' "~ ~ .. ,•':r/:. o:;r, .~ .t r: .J .,~~·ft.~ t'.''"'l ~. • • DE VILLE . ' Friday, Aug ust ·.3, 1973 DAILY PILOT 3J Largest Selection Of Cadillacs In Oran.ge <Aunty BROUGHAMS • CONVERTIBLES • COUPES e CPE. DE VILLES e • • EL · DORADOS • SED. DE VILLES OVER 175 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO CHOOSE FROM Wide Selection of Models & Colors For Immediate Delivery 1972 DODGE ~r OTORHOME FULLY SELF CONTAINED Only 5,800 miles, U>aded with eQUipq1ent including VS . engine, automatic,· power steerlnr.. power br&kes, .air conditioning,. dual real wheels .. Home bu refrigerator, range &: oven, forced air heating: dual air coitdltlonJng, bathtub and sho\ver, sleeps 6, etc. (KE7826). '66 SEDAN DE VILLE Vinyl top, full leather interior, tilt steering, whee!. .AM·f_M ~o •. ,power door locks, full power and factory air conditioning. Immaculate conditloJL (SBD939). '69 COUGAR HARDTOP Only 44,000 mil~. V·B, auto. trans., p<>\\'~r steering, power brakes, radio, heater, new white sidewall tires vinyl interior. Sho\\'S excellent care: (683ASA) '69 FORD LTD HARDTOP COUPE Cream puff, factory alr cond., vinyl top, tapestry interior,· auto. trans., power steering, power brakes, A!\f/ FM stereo multiplex, low miles. (-399· ACH) · 68 COUPE DE VILLES 9 to choose from. Full power, factory air conditioning'-tilt \vheels, po\\·er dQor locks, AM1.l'}.1: radioo, choice ot colors, cloth or· leather interior. C282ESI). As }O\V· as . ' '68 BUICK SPORT WAGON Factory. air conditioning, automatic transmission: power steering, power brakes. radio, heater, white side wall tires. lO\\' mileage. Colonial yello\v \\'Ith saddle vinyl interior. CXEU509). '71 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 4 DR. H.T. ... iYinyl top, facto~~<!COI\ditionirig, ·vs, autoq11f.tic, r8'11.D',-lfea~. power sleering, power ~1$.es, white aide· ' I' ~R· JT 1,\'.J.., ·;:p,i-FULL PRICE ' -~ c o -~!iiir con i., 1 , ·'.Ii t'f , 6t649:i'4;~_,', •";,'. ;;~1 . ' .; i _,} ~~ ~ llie~~ggj~J • • I ~ • • • . . • • t r l ( • . . • eiL~~·· · ~ ~·~.1 ~ <..~ ,t · f1' <1W s >I. , pb'fl'e'I'' doo · ... . : :'. locks, tilt & telescopic steer-:.,.1 ing. Whitewall tires and other 24 :ri.10. Open End Leese · -· factory convenience extras. on Approved CrediL _ (Stock 6851} LEASE ,... .. 1y ___ _ _ -·--------$146°! •. , ... ,., . :~ . '~ ,. " . ' .... . ~ . ' ' ,' ,,· _BUY OR LEASE_ .. ··· ' ~ .. E'ULLY EQUIPPED WlTH full power, incl. 6 way seat, power antenna, factory air conditioning, AM/FM, tilt & telescopic 'steering, wsw tires & other factory convenience extras. VILLE FULL PRICE j6325 36 Alo. Open End Leaae on Approved CrediL (Stk. 6871) •'!' .. ' ' ~ LEASE '°' ooly _ ---·-----·--·-·-------$141 :. _ .: , -, ~ -----------------------------------··-~.II'. ~ ··\·~-1~· • • • , ·-' • t• l l ~ • •• .. •• -: " •• ' •• • ' • • . i t ·, • --- ,9. 1 · •_y ·o-r, ' 1:ASE ......... •'/'• ... ·~.,·~ LEASE DIRECT ~-~ .. , 1 .·~ :' _;;ti/! ·\1~a~.lit'·;l.e~n9 • .,'. .:\' ~. 11 • j, ' ' • ~ '-, .! '.·i\lmmedi4te lle1ivery ¥1~.srn::.L~ ... ~CKUP AND DELIVERY. FREE LbAN CAR wHiLE'iiASE CAR SERVICED. WE WILL BUY YOUR PRESENT CAR FOR IMMEDIATE CASIL Four ,and one-half acres of total authorized Cadill8c ficllltles designed to better sell and service Cadillac automobiles. (80 work stalls and 45 factory trained techniciins). i973 ..EI. Dorado - Cabriolet Full Price • (363FPW.) ., l ·'-... .,, ..... Full "°"'or including 6-way seat, power antenna, -"1-fM stereo multiplex radio, tilt ol .t elescopic ·~~"{)1-dm"'~-~~~~"' 'hlil~. ' '7l -CHEYELLE MALIBU Alpine white with black vinyl top and matching vinyl interior, factory air conditioning, automatic transmis- sion. power steering, radio, heater, white sldev.rall tires. 31,267 miles, (668CXUl - .s2555 '72 FORD LTD ": . ,4 ·QQOR·HARDTOP ~ t op, ~r 1nter1 .... faclofl''all- condition±ng, automatic transmission. radio, heater, JJC)'W'er steering, power brakes, white-side-wall tires_ (50JEYJ) '69 FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM Factory air, Fireml&t lacquer, vinyl top with matching interior, light sen- tinel. dual comfort seats, tilt &: tele. sooplc steering, door locks, extremely ··)ow .miles.· (YV A482) :$322-2 .. '73 TOYOTA CELICA ST Hardtop coupe. Automatic transmis- sion, factory air · conditioning, bucket seats, sport wheel, sport stripes, ra- dio, heater, white side wall tires. You'll have to see to b«illeve how im· maculate this Jittle beauty is. (397· JHL). '71 CADILLAC ' .. ~ COUPE DE VILLE ~ .. ..r , .... -- Vinyl top, tapestry and leather in-· terior, full power, factory air condi- tioning, tilt Steering· wheel, AM-FM stereo, power door locks, twlUght sentinel, cruise control, new white wall tires. · oUtsianding condition. (720DLH) ' '71 · MERCURY MARQUIS 4 DR. H. T. Ru~et brown with ma~lng vinyl in- terior. Full power, factcrjr air condi- tioning, radio, heater. An impecc8.bl~ car. (639COW). '71 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WA~ 9 ppsengeri 'Co)onlo 1 Yellow ·witl) v1ny1· int>rl<ir ttiin?' tact&y -aJi' cond., auto. trans., pwr, steering, pwr. brakes, radio, beater, white side- wall _tires and luggage. rack. Low miles: and ready for a great vacation! (468CJ0} '69 EL DORADO F&ctOI')' air .conditioning, full power, vln;yl top, tllt-telesct>plc steering wheel, AJl.f /Fl\1: stereo, full leather interior, power door locks. cyznoo) '70 CADILLAC FLEETWOoo B.ROUGHAM Full power, factory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, power door locks. dual comfort sea.ts. Vinyl top, full leather interior. BeautiM automo-- bile. (033ADYJ .• '71 CADILLAC · SEDAN Dli-Vll.LE • Spanish silver with black vinyl top, matching cloth & leather~ interior. Factory air, tun power, tilt·tele wheel, AM-FM radio. Very low mile- age. (826FBC) ~--~'444·4 -•"' ,• ·---~14444~. • ' I A • '70 BUICK lUVI ElG("·. ... VS, hardtop coupe,·'factory air con- ditioning, Chestnut brown, brown vinyl top, full pOwer 'Phip factory air conditioning, tilt steerlrig whl., AM/ Fl\t radio. Immacula te. (592EXC) '72 V.W. BUS t PASSENGE.R . ' . ' "' -. . ..... .. .,, ... -·· ... '" ·...::; ... ' Factory air condltiohlng, 4 gpeecS transmhsion, AM-FM stereo multi .. plex, new tires, vinyl interior. In ·Outstanding-condition.-('192FLXr------- '7 0 COUPE DE VILLE Leather interior, AM/FM stereo ra· dio, vinyl top, full power, factory air conditioning, tilt steering wheel, and power door Jocks. (380AGC) ,. " .... ' '7 0 EL DORADO Adriatic Turquoise . lacquer finiSh ~th . white ,.¥inyl top ._and turquoise mtenor, tun power, factory air cond., tilt & telescopic steering, AM/FM stereo multiplex radio, power dpot" locks, etc. Low miles and exceptional condition. (ZQW967) '72 COUPE DE VILLE •' ,', , 'l .~, _)t ': Chestnut bT-ciwfi With btow.n v1rt;i top and A&ddle leather interior. Full pow· er, factory air, tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo, power door locks, cruise con .. trot. twilight sentinel, Vogue prem- Jum tires. Exceptionally clean. (028- GWY). • • • .-' "' " . ~:· • i~ " 1 ...... ~ \ • ..... 3 DAILY PILOT The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast ~ Homft for Sole ' • ' llS -M9 AnnounctmtN• • . , . . . 500 · Slot Aul0111atMlr• •••••... 9SO m loah & Morine IQu!pmer-9 900 • 91• Lr~"""'· , . , .100 • m DAl ,LY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .................. .S2S ·'"9 .... ond ......... , •••• ISO· ... lllOI lilat• Gen.fol .•••• 150 -199 Finonciol • , • • • • lOO • m HcLus lor Sole . • • 100 • 124 Lou & found . . . . S50 • S7"4 Metthondfte . . • • . . • . 800 • a.t9 You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval a.ntol . • . • • . ' • . • . JOO -'99 Schook ond lr1'1fuction • • • 575 • S99 Setvim ond hpoin .•• , 600 • INI T1on'P(lflotion. . . . . . . . 9tS • 949 ERRORS. Advertiser• should chtck their [ ]i-1 L jl-1 I 1~1i 11-1 r ]~ l )~[ ads dally & report errors tmmtdietely. The Houlnfor S1l1 ~ Houtc•lorSllt ~ HoultsforSalt~L~nforSalt~ Houst1forS1l• ~ Hoult1forSite fl!' Hous11forSll• DAILY PILO l assume• llabillty for the first I ;~----;;~;;~-------~;;~1~~~~---;;.~;;~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:iiiii.:1 ~-;;·----~-~;;~ / .;-mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;~1 Incorrect inMrtion only. !• Gener•I General READ THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30,490 A new concept in Home Ownership by Ayrt1 Construction Company You Own the Land and the Home Not a Condominium or Co-op No Monthly Maintenance Fee 4 Beautiful Exteriors ALI \vith 3 BR, 2 8 1\, Ige fain r1n, lovely living rm, ktch. with range & oven, gar- bage disposal, dishwasher, sep/fuU 2 car gar. Occupancy prior to start of school. Models at corner of Adams & Florida 1 block W.of Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach AYRES SINCE 1905 536-1445 SEE US! BIG OCEAN VIEW For the right home for you. Complete selection of homes ,. . in the beach area. wtth pool. Harbor \IC\\" llllls. HARIOR VIEW HOMES ' 4BR, 3BA ... Fain. rm. REALTY $126,500. Open Sat and Sun-"' day, 12.;>. 3615 Sausalito. 133-0780 &14-2141 -"''-="-------- Gen.ral General 1. General General General General General General General H youte phµ\_ning a =~= Half gone in ha.If.a year and the rest will not last Jong. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxurYt comfort, convenience and quality construQ:ion. Sundecks, fireplace, wet·har, e legant Master Suite, Sun-Liteo kitchen, private enclosed doubl e garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! From Pacific Coast Highway Hli:;J" -!'~'Y and Supcrior Avenue (Balboa Blvd .), drive up Superior to Ticonderog11, nnd directly to Newport Cresl Information Get the feel of bayfront living ... See it by boat! For Reservations Call : 644·6262 646-4021 SEVEN , BAYFRONT HOMES!!! \Ve Are I-Jere For You ... To 1nake it easier on you in you r search for that special water· front hon1e. And have Fun while doing it! PERIMETER CORPORATION offers you a unique way to experience some of the area's most exclu sive waterfront ~1omes. On Au gust 5, between 1·5:00, you can view 7 such homes on a special boat cruise. General General ****** * TAYLOR CO. * GREAT ASSUMPTION!! and payments are only $'.ll6 per month. This 3 bedroom CUI iE> is vacant. Fremly painted inside and out, ha.I all new carpets, and you can have Immediate possesskln. Only $27,500. Call 8-17-6010 now, this one won't last. OPEN TIL II • rT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ ~~ ~ _?lltfd, ~ REALTORS CORONA UEL MAR 11:1:.>tt lAST { OA._,T till HWAY 644·7270 Gener•I General ... NEW TRIPLEXES & DUPLEXES WATERFRONT in COSTA MESA CONDO This lovely 2·story end Wlit OPEN DAILY has everythlna; -even a Pl1centla Ave. at Wiison BOAT SUP. Also modern ~~~tt~v~I = ~~: ORANGE COUNTY APARTMENT pla<:e, 2 Bedrooms, 2% EXC~USIVE AGENTS, 547-6791 Baths. SUNDEX:."K ovet1ook· I '!~"'"'l"''"".;,,...,..,..,""l~""'"l"""''""""''""""'"i ing the water. Ali this can General General be yii~ 7270 [-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[ STEAL THE SHOW aud enjoy !his lo\"cly home: new carpcts and drupes, family roon1 or formal din. ing room, but \Vhat a value this 3 bedroom, 2\4 bath, fireplace hon1e i.s'. Large patio for your entertaining pleasures. All yours for only $31,450. 644-7270 ''V" AS IN VIEW lovely CUITTOl\l BUILT split le\'CI horne \\i.fh nuu1y . Newport Heights--With View Beautiful New Custom Built 3 Bedrooms -3 B:iths -Fan1ily -Dining, Living & Recreation Roon1s. Rooms are large -2 fireplaces -Large closets & linen storage. Detached garage on alley ........................ $85,500 Drive by and see at 423 San Bernardino Ave. Call Owner at 045.6619 to show. marry CX!ras. Be au ti r u I !l!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll brick patio and 13-B·Q an>a, General Gener•I full length SUNDECK overlooking 180 degree VIE\V. So many things in thla 3 bedroom w i t h ~ate stol'l(> fire~act', 2\2 bath home thnt you ree..tty uiust Sl'C to appreciate. 169,950. 644-7270 Don't Call Me A Duplex!! I'm a roomy 3 Bedroom 2 Bath home on an open eor. ner lot with manicured front yard and shelrer't'd patio. PLUS An easy to rent income unit with privat.e entrance, now prndudng $200/mo. 189.500 CALL 644-7211 /JD.NIGEL ·• ll~ILEY f,, ASSUCIATES ABANDONED!!! Out of !'!late 011·ncr \\iii fi· nance this rustic 2 Bit Cd.\l bC'aC'hle? F'plcc, paneU~. patio. \\"Rik 10 bC'uch Md shops, Ask ing $42,950. Call today! Va cam!! Call 66-8400 F N TIL *NEWPORT HEIGHTS* Large yard. 2·S!y. 3 Bil. 2 ba. Ch\"ner l'xtrerncly anxious, will ta.kt• 2nd T.O.'s. BALBOA BAY PROP.' "'' " ' ' " " OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOON Enjoy this forever view of bay & ocean at 2727 OCEAN BLVD., Corona del Mar. Newly decorated 3 bdrm. home. $175,000. Mitriel Barr Centei:: Telephone: (714) 645-6141 Sales Office open dally 10 a.m. to sunset IRON GATE ENTR\' and long private dMve to mag. nirlcent Spanish eiitale. Pri. vale t.'OUrtyan:I entry. G IJNI. roon1s including hlde·a·ll·ay nu1s1cr sui1e, guest rucili!y wiU1 pl'ivate entrance and S('tvants' qua11ers. EIC"gant THE REAL ESTATERS When you list with us, YOUR HOME 11 advertised in Home for Living mag•· zlne in more than 900 1rea1 • and cus. tomer1 •re sent to you 11 referral1 from our over 500 afflllates of NMLS. TREES TREES Large 3 BR .. fam. mi. plus * 642-7491 * ' PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE OPEN SUN . 1-5. 1507 Keel. Can you be- li eve pretty 3 BR. Lusk home, corner lot, on fee and! Bike to tennis & beach. Only $79,500. Harriett Davies EASTBLUFF BEST BUY OPEN SUN. 2226 ARBUTUS Spacious colonial 5 BR. Lusk home. fa!"· ily rn1. w/frplc. 3 car garage. Prox1m1ty to schools, churches & shopping. $79,500. BAYCREST'S BEAUTIFUL BARGAIN $&1,500. Sal. & Sun. 1-5; OPEN 1807 Holi· day Rd. 1'his Ivan \Velis home has luxury. Lge. formal dining, 31h: ba's., fam . rm., 4 generous bdrms. Corne see~ Mary Lou lvlarion BIG CANYON Scai-ce DeauviUe condominium. 4 BR. - view location, $120,000. Beaut'iful 5 BR. home, lavishly decorated by Cannell & Chalfin, realistically priced al $142,500. P . Hug. & E. Hudson IMMEDIATE POSSESSION .o OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1·5. Irvine Terrace, 1400 SERENADE TERR. 4 BR., 4 ba .. large lovely poolsized fee lot, nr. beach & clubs. $89,500. Geo. G111pe BALBOA ISLE BAYFRONT I..argc home, 2 lots, pier & float. 5· BR., den, playroom; 5 baths. Beach, priv. yard. Xlnt financing. Move in! $317,000. . See SUN. 3.fi; 003 N. BAYFRONT. Paur Quick EASTBLUFF Lovely & sharp 3 bdrm. Lusk home near the park. Only $69,000 & you can have immediate occupancy. Call now! Jim Muller , OPEN HpUSE SAT.&. SUN • .1·5 , 909 TILLER WAV :'""Mtl'oii'lllovelh1 charming 3 Bit . hon1c. F'am. roorn \V/ frplc. Sparkling pool. Ocean viC\1'. $9 1,500. Marl~ Bush 1601 CASTLE COVE, SPYGLASS •1 OPEN SUN. 2·6. \'iew of hills & ocean In privacy. Outstanding Lusk 2·Slory 4 BR. home. fem. rm. & bonus rn1 . Quick OCCU· pancy. $129,500. Cathryn Tennille ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA c ustom home. Dramatic use of vood, brlclc & glass. fireplace in large living room. 3 BR .. den . $94,500. By app't. Dean Kring '33-0700 ~ 644-2430 Coldwell, Banker ~ 550 Newport Center Dr., N.B. • C5LI No. 2666lt .,.._,;;; , ......... ..! ... ,...... _, .,..,_.. ...... -_.,.. ............ ,.,.. -•• -...... oddo.l ..,. __ .,.....__ '°'"' --........... _.,.,...., .. ....._t .. :Hlloo.F ....... l<C. ..... _,..,,.. .. .._ _ _._ ......... ,..... .. ~-- living 1wn1 \\·ith garden ========= patio. Cantin11 kitchen. f.~icsta parly 1uom \\ilh hand laid CC'ran1ic tile and ceiling high fireplace. 60' observa- tion deck overlooking miles ot scenic roastline and BLUE PACIFIC. Ca 11 OWNER FINANCED! , __________________ &t:..0303. Eager seller "'ill finance at 712'; ! Potential packed rot· tage on large R·2 tre<' shaded lot • add units lat('l'! Under market at $23,500. Submit do\vn. Call 645-8400.1 1 F fRVI ! OPfN Tit 9 Ge neral General CONDOMINIUMS BY THE SEA NEWPORT BEACH 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms -2 or 21h Baths. Formal Dining Rooms. Pool , Sauna & Tennis Courts. RESERVATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR FUTURE SALE OR LEASE SPECIAL PRICES NOWll ! Real Es tate Consultants 1525 Superior -Suitlt 3 Newport Beach (714) 645-3230 I OKI \t L Ol.\O\ " .<.>£,A I fLJR.l ,-. 1: E. ''°"•nl & Co. ~ lhl~~ LIVE IN IRYIN E'S );.,....~-~-~-iiii-i;;_iiii_;::;;_~~;;i-~.., RANCH On lr1·i11c·s Ranch. 4 br, I yc11r old. An offering no one can REFUSE! $3900 do\1·11. Walker&lee 111 .. L llT .. ll No. Calif. Ranchito 5.93 Acl'l'S, 470' nn H\l'Y -496' on River -good fishing - bunting -rccreac. '$5450. Full price. $j5() Dn. bal $49. rc1· n10. You get the deed. likr 675-£712 & 54g....s795 YOU 're to bla11W: for not sue· 2828 E. Coast Hlway Corona del Mar HORSES WELCOME __ Call now 546-0022 cecding v.·ith Russell & G.n.ral I G I Associates Real Est ate. If you'rC' looking for an unusual home in east Cost.'\ Mesa we have It! This charming t\l"O rtory Cape Cod home is a stone's throv.· tron1 the Santa Ana Coun. try C!uh. ,You decide it It's to be 3 &drooms, den ·or 4. As a . spccla.l bonus. thi1 outslanding homc is located on an R·4 Jot. All thb for $39,00J. Call Tod a y ! 546-2313. enera THE BLUFFS EdJJcalion by the exclusive ---------y Front row. View. Encl unit Ru~sell Method. See our OCEAN VIEW IEW--CORONA 3 "'· 21!. Ba . 185.000 '"'" "'I" """live Hbnuy w;th Cottage + GUEST DEL MAR-~7~?2 Vista Parada ~h~ 3 ~~nafz!,k~~~vi~.:::. Under $30,000 FEE LAND Ukc lo trade? o"' Trade''' i;ngton Bc•ch TI4-962-Tl87 Charmin~ bcarh c·oltai;{e Lovely rour bedroom mime Paradise colun111 is for you! ~!re<! a "Pad"? Pia~ an Ad! overlooking the blue P:u·ifil·. or pool sizt"(f lot "rith family General General Gener1I 3 big btxl1oon1s including room. breakfast nook, laun-1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I hide-a·"·ay 1na~!<'r suilt'. d~ ronn1 . large sunny pe.lio!I iruest focility iu1d captain"s 1\'ith lots of privacy -180 den. Party room and huge dcme p;1nornm lc view. cntM1aincr'11 patio. TA h'. E And f('C' land truly priced ADVANTAGE. Call &ti-0.ID.1. :i7~~~50~1arkct. Call ?10\V - HllllSI L 01.SO\ '" RrA1 r()N\ Artisr-Writer· . Recluse , C-1 PROPERTY , , j Five itc1ns or inron1e \\ e vc rountl a hon1c for you ft'-... a '"'--ta M ' · · f t ,,. rt I ... \_.Vlj • esa n 1~1 a M a lC t"e!IO oca· Plficrn!ia 1, So. of 191.h • tion. In .(uct. !lien: .. 11;r {~\·9 ,.Q,tf~-.w.iJi..ufJ'Y li -m fh&lf061t-~ ~Mr T>'Y ~111 I "'/ll'r': do"'"· 1-liu"rY on is and !h1• pnl't•c. nrc un $85 000 u1~1~1i<'1·11bh·, ~tt,j()(). & • C:Ai..L ANYTIME e 112.500 llt 10 ·• down these 6..t6.3928 E ,., •543 won't lll.'lt! -or ve. - Sparling lnve1tment Corp., 83:1-3544 MARINE CONTRACTING NeWJ'l(lt1 Beach. F I n e 1 t equipn1ent & waterfronl location. 35 Yr. old com· pany. Space avaU. lo't boat sale11 & rfll)tl.ln. BILL GRUNDY RLTR 675-4161 ~T~H=E~GREA'~T"'E"'s=T~ 3 BH .. 2 Im, C'OIMIO hnl! Just be<>n Histed! It's In the Cape $et'IH 4pool, golf. t'1t•,J whrre 1tll llirtinga sell f1111. If yo11're look1ng-ror 1uu'h 11n adult plact, you'd be1lrr c-all now or rot-get It. Only $3!1.000. JOllN P. CAREY REALTORS 646-i414 Lachenmyer Realtor DUPLEX BAl.BOA PENINSULA C\l&tom quality 3 BR/2 Ba Double attached garage 7~~ assumable loan Call 645-12'21 ~21 17l3 Wl'11tcllff Dr., N.n. O\VNER transf. Clean 3 Bit. 11' l»l. Xlnt carpet. Nice garden. large yard. •~ortJn Co.. Rltrs. 6t2-5IXXJ • HARBOR YIE\V HOMES POPULAR MONACO 2 bedrooms & den, well decorated, shows like model home; Priced right for todays market. PALERMO MODEL Like new 4 bedroom, family room formal dining, wet bar; up-grade carpetr,floon:'1'erlect for ynur family. IMMACULATE MONTEOO 4 bedrooms, famlly room, formal dining, creativ e decor. 2 bedroom & den, well decorated, shows llke model lfARBOR VIEW fJOMES REALTY 833-0780 -· . separate den, large pri\'B.le ---------1 lot In super neighborhood. Won't La•t Long! Vacant. Imm ed i ate BeautifuJ 3 lxlrm with« po5Se1s1on. Reduced to ~II tral air cond. Gas BBQ. Kl -$52,000. chcn built-Ins. Patio Ginny Morrlton,, Rltr. Carpets, drapes, $33,500 * 557~130 * s.&o.1m. Like to trade? our Trader's TARBELL Parndlse column ill for you! CLASSIFIED will &ell It! Gener•I Gener.al MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES EXCITING UPPER BAY VIEW Custom "E" Bluff Condominium -extra lg. LR w /lg. custom fireplace -walk~in bar. 2 BR's, paneled den w/firep lace, 3 baths. $69,500. Jack Custer 642-8235. (CU) . PRIVATE PARK in your own biick yard in th is special home in lRVlNE TERRACE. All glass tit brick & trees. $88,500 fee. Barbara Aune 642-8235. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 p.m. 1412 Serenade Terr. (C J2 ) BIG PRICE REDUCTION Spells value In this 4 BR Harbor View Montego. Super location near community pool. $69,900. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (Cl3) BAYFRONT-DOVER SHORES Prime location on main channel. Owner moved east & wants offers. 4 BR, 4 bath + PR. Refrig. & water softener incl. Gustom built. Master suite w/FP. FR w /wet bar. 4400 sq. ft. 3-car garage w /openers. Tom Turner 642-8235. OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m. -50S Morn!ng Siar. {Cl4) .$!?.ARKLINP ,BAYC!tESI-,$7.~,~-v "" Lovely 3 BR/f'R home beDutifully decor- ated & landscaped . Lg. dog run. Cookie Allison 642-8235. (Cl5) NEWPORT HEIGHTS AREA 4 BR, 8 bath, lg. FR w/fireplace In MBR. !I-car garage. R-2 lot. $48,750. Jack Custer 64U235. (Cl&) BIG CANY-Q~VIEW LOT Superb homeaite overlooking 17th fair· way!-$80,000. mzl Sharkal\y 644-8200. (Cl7) IDIDottorll<twl 1141•1111 1144-llwN>l·llH -,.,i -. Cllllomto ftlU ' ' • I l • ' " ' ' " " "' . • Friday, Au91.1Sl J l1;7J OIJL V PILOT 33 l ~,;~-;;;"' .. ;;;;!l~~,k~-~· ...... ~l~;;,1~! -;;·;;· .. ··~l~~l;;-;;;·;; ...... ~1~~\;r~;...;; .. ;;· .. ··~l~~l _;-~· .. ~-~I~ [ -iiii,·iiii-~l~iiiii~ I -.. ....... \zG;.,~•;•;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;u:•;•;•;••;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;\~G~•~n;•~••~l~-;~~-;~;G~o~n~o~r•~l~-;~~-;~\;o;•;no;;r•~l~;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~G~•;•;•;••;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\Gono;;;CE GOING Gontr•I l~r _.,.... I~ Gener•1 : IRVINE TERRACE -VIEW ·' * * * * * * fl !. () t HARBOR VIEW HOMES fabulous ,new listing in exclusive Irvine ' H • ( II • ol.i11c a JJ{(J DOWN Terrace, with spectacular bay & ocean views. er1tage 0 ect1on PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES presented by S Large bedrooms & 3 baths, absolutely $30,000 ,1potless! Formal dining room. gourmet kit· SHOWN BY i\PPOIN'l'MENT T RS chen, pool & pool side lanai. First time of· Thal'11 right, tho pa·tce h11 s THE REAL ESTA £ !ered. $186,800. LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT ""'" '""'"'""' $30.000. Th< UNIVERSITY PARK $Bdrm .. $ bath family home with lge, [am· home "'"' 001 ll«ed 100 OLDE ENGLISH -VIEW BIG BEAUTIFUL TDWNHOUSE-3 BR, 2'h ily rm. facing encl. patio. Waterfront living M•h. the ""'ncr ""''t -I MONACO -Newly listed sbarp :!-bedroom and convertible den. Fine tile nnd carpeting. 14andscaping delightful \1:ith abundance of fruit trees. $65,500. Bi\ · d I ! & ( I d' · L k't I /[ il re1>eat. 111U&t sacrUit'f' 1.111d A bit of olde England, perched on the hill, , new carpeting & rapes, cu -de-sac oca· rm. orma intng. ge . 1 c l. w am y ll«'ll today. He hal'I put over b eside the harbor entrance in Corona del lion, near pool & playground. Everything dining area. Pier & slip. $179,000. S2a,OOO into h\11 home !1h1.;·t> P.1ar. Over 4500 square feet of luxury with ~o:o. ~f~' living. Offered at $42,950. CALL Lind• Isle W•terfront ~~a.re~.,~~-~ou ~~!1~i, 3 bedroon~s. paneled den, large sundeck, Custon1 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of priv11.te bead1. 50' boat dock. MONTEGO -4 bedrooms On one noor ·like ne\v • join those Y.'ho are finding the ultimate in Newport living · $72 ,000 Fee. super fa1n1ly toon1 "pub". The view is un· SPLISH SPLASH main chari.nel. Soft colors, rich wood panel· open sun. 1-5. Please ('Cl111t> believable. OPEN HOUSE Sunday 1·5. See ing & 3 frplcs., give a \varm intimate feel· bv 406'l lluinboldt llun· 2501 Ocean Blvd. $296,500 3 BEDROOMS + SPARKLING POOL Ing. Waterfront instr. suite has dbl. bath, 1 C11~1on l·larUOur. Nev.• p1-il·e $30 ,050 Fantastic Cosl a ~1esa home with $16:>,000 or ?? Subrnit . PRIVATE BEACH plush carpets & drapes. Separate family sitting area, view decks ......... $295,000. THE RF.At. ESTATF.RS INVESTI\·lENT OIVISION For the use of home owner's living in ex· room. dinette area, detached double garage Linda Isle Waterfront ~HiOO SOMERSET -5 bedrooms -the !inesl In Harbor View Homes • all the options • dis- tinctive elevated brick patio • $85,900. elusive Cameo l-lighlands. See this desirable on large lot. O\vner moving to Washington 1..-0vely 4 bdrm., 41h ba. home \Vilh swim· ·ocean vie\~ hon\e, set among trees & beau· & \\•ants fa st sale. CALL 540·1151 ming pool, pie r & slip. panoramic view of CALL THE REAL ESTATE RS For The Fin- est Selection in I larbor Vie\v Homes. $41). 2313 . tiful tantlscapin;!. 3 11edrooms, plus con· NEW O T EA B 1uaiJ1 channel. Lge. fa1uily r1u. \v /space for vertible den. Hoom for pool. Lots of privacy. p R B C.H EST BUY hilliards & family dining. Waterfront formal An unusually good buy at $72 ,000 ON THE WATER-F6r $87,500, 110\V vacant, dining & living r1n. $275.000. ready for in1mediate occupancy. Boat sli p by your front door. Spacious 2 BR . 2'/2 BA. Linda Isle Watorfront MESA VERDE-, HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del M•r ••selling Real Estate in Newport H1rbor Since 1944" 673-4400 Gen8ra1 * BAYCREST * On a Budget Large 4 BR., 3 ba. family home on a lge., well located lot. O\vner is lea~ing town & has priced the ho111e for quick sale. $69, 750. CORBIN· MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime 644·7662 General General 1.;:=:=:;;;;;;;;-* 4 BEDROO:\I, 2 ba1hs, double ~ai·agl" SJil "00. BL'iil of terms. OLDIE BUT A GOODIE i Gorgeous, Convenient, private. CALL Custo1n 4-bdrm., 4lh batlt hotne on lagoon. Fully 537,900 540-1151 equipped island kitchen. \Vatecfront family roo1n. billiard fQOm .'~ .............. , , ..... , .$245,000 Ve1·de, n1c11.nin~ g1·ecn. 1s OWNER ANXIOUS just right for t h i s For Complete Information l)('autifully landscaped ftuni· TO PROVE IT -They reduced the price On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: ly honic \vlth colo11ul from $47 ,500 to $44,500. Delightful upper planler areas unrl fruit bay location on quiet cul-de-sac. Spacious BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR }\~;~~;.y ~~dse sl~~pii:~~i~ 3 BR & family room, freshly painted inside 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 bcdroon1s. 2 baths, garage & out. Short walk to school. LOW INTER· I~,..~.;,,,..""'""'""'""'~""''"'!'""'""'"'"""'""'""'" door opener ancl larg:e EST VA LOAN, ASSUMABLE BY ANYONE. General General L'Overed palio. CALL 540·1151 ACCOMMODATE A GROWING FAMILY Walker&Lee Ill.I L I ll.Il l Rea.IOI",.; 201:'1 '.\"cs . .:11.i D1·hc s.tG-~11 1 CUSTOM HOME ROOM TO. BUILD Prin1e investn1en! pl'ope1·ty SUPER VALUE PRESTIGE NEIGHBORHOOD Spacious 1\\"0 s!Ol)' home has lour bedrooins. upstairs and forn1al di ning, l;imi\~· 1'00111 nnrl fl<'n dO\\·n~tai11'. T\\'fl, '~ h .. ·nh~. 1··,~111 1111•-" i•1•·l111lr t\\"ll li re·11lat'l'~. pla1111P I kl 11·111•rl. 11··1lk-it1 rianll·~ l'llrl 111·crsl1.l' ga1<lg<'. n 11 1 .~ 1 ri n 11 i 11 •• • cat'ef1'{'1' lancl~·a11fng f'Olll· ple1nenr ;; I his lic:utl.)-. Ul\dl'r The n1arkel al ~ l8,9j(), so Rush -call 926-SS:}J, OPEN 11L ll • IT'S FUN ro BE NICE/ 4 BEDROOM, 3 BATH -Large master Bdrm \Yith mirrored \Yardrobc situated for privacy. 316 sq. ft . bonus roon1 for hobbies & games. Patio.kitchen is a \Voma n's dream with rich- ly grained cabinets, spacious pantry, & double ovens. Quiet cul·de-sac, convenient to schools, shopping & freeways. CALL FOR COMPLETE DETAILS 546-5880. OLD CHARMER ONE OF THE BEST IN NEWPORT HEIGHTS This 3 bedroom home with curving brick walk and New Orleans balustr ade has warm beam ceilings, a Unique floor plan and over· 1ooks hills and l-Iarbor. Recently redecorat· ed. OHered at $85,000. Keep the house. build 5 , 1 ~ neHr Santa Auu Coun!ry 1~, Club 11..ith ahnOl>t 11~ ACRE! w1its out hack or buy it lo have a flne secluded hon1e ~'==,;'="'='='='=~ THE REAL ESTATERS NEWPORT HEIGHTS COTTAGE -sharp 2 br, I ba., w/lols of paneling. Lg. brick !rplc. & Hardwood firs. 127' deep R·2 lot 'vith alley access. P.S. Don't miss the un· finished guest house. CALL 546·S880. NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA MUST HAVE QUICK SALE -Ad ult OCCU· pied 3 hedroon1, 2 bath, \vith a large kitchen, f-luge cul-rle-sac lot \Vith many fruit trees and brick {ireplace and beautiful covered patio. Room for your O\Yn garden. Owner leaving State. CALL 546-5880. UNIQUE HOMl5 OF HIWPORT llACH, 641·6500 A. li1tl11g of K11Y Gla•CU u ,_.,vu 1: li()Mt=s REALTORS Gener11I General a 1nong shade trees. E\thl'r \\•ay, IT'S A \VINNER! $39,900. $17,000· NO MORE * 6 UNITS* NO NO DN GI SELLER ~·ill pay all costs. 3 IArge BR, 2 baths, phi! cozy fire11Jrice & 11. 9X14 dC'n. lfon1r on SOX135 fl. lot near ]JlS A1nlgus HI &:hool ! Call 1101\" :tl&-0022 \Va Iker & lee lltlAL lllAtl EASTSID~ ·COSTA MESA $25,000 * COP.U.1ERCIAL ZON E · 2 BR tM> story older home, ·corner lol. SU.,fiOO. Cutr 2 hdr, I ba Ire.ml' with loads nf 1:iancling and red ""'' nrepl•"'· Large R-2 JUST LISTED Jot 111 choice Ea.st Costa STEAL THIS 'ONE DECORATOR'S DELIGHT Nearly ne\\' 2 BR., 2 ha ., delu.-.::e unils 011 oceanfront in Balboa! Elec. frplcs., heavy shag carp., bltns; sundeck or balcony w/each unit; 7 cov'd, carports plus 1-park· in~ space. $330,000. 4 1-;H ::.: Fn111i!y room with \at~c yard. !F airview ,'<.:, \\';irnerl -flC\\'IY painted & cnrpct!I -15 minutes to N1•v.•1>0rt Beach. 0 n I y $26,500 -early occupancy! Roy McC•rdle R•altor 0 1810 NC"\o\"ll011 Blvrl., C.)I. ri.11-sa plus alley access. LOVELY 4 BEDROOM & FAMILY -with Clos~ to ail shopping you large attractive pool. Sharp landscaping "-on t need a l'ar hcTI'. bo t ~ & ( k't h Pr' d l ' Perfectly priN?d at $30.000, a i:tCCess • rant 1 c en. ice on y OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Cozy 3 BR & den hon1c, round brick S\\"Cdisil fireplace, nice carpeting, s<'parate Walker&lae this one wW EU fast. C11.l1 $38,950. Excellent terms. CALL 546-58&0. 541-n29 Can Provide l\'Olit shop & 11·ashroorn. 2 patios. double wiragc, All this !or only $20,50(). Try Call: 673-3663, 642-22.J;j' Eve.l'i. •I.IL llto\TI Red Carpet, Re:altors ~ 1,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 Sell the old stuU Bu.v till' TM'IV stu[f, JO<;i do\vn. CALL associated HIGH ON A Hill OCEAN-VIEW rrmlB DIRECTORY k.., ttih lltuldy dlNCtel"f wtttl Y•• tflis w"'--' • ye• t• tte .... 1l•lltittt· All tile iocett.M listed Mtew ... detcrfMd 111 ,,...... detoll ~ ............... witefe 111 t.cley'1 Deity ,119' WANT ADS. Potre• tllewlltt .,.. •0111et for tale °' to '"' o:r• .,....t ,. llst Mch lllforfM'tlM I• this col1ftl11 eoch F.kkry, Set- 11rdoy &: S1111day, 2 BEDROOMS 331 Dahlia. Corona del l\lar $48·9346 $52.500 !Daily 1-4) 3 BEDROOMS 2626 BasS\\"OOd (Eastbluff ) Ne\vporl Bch. 644·2430 $69.000 (Sat & Sun 1-$) 2727 Ocean Blvd .. Corona del Mar 644-2430 $17$,000 \Sun afternoon) 1$07 Keel (HVuHomcs) NB 644·2430 $79.500 (Sun 1-5) J. BR & FAMILY RM OR OEtj 14$6 Key View (HVnHomes) NB 644·2430 $9$.000 (Sat 1·5) *909 'filler Way, Corona dcl Mar 644-2430 $91.500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *995 Sandcastle I HVuflills) CdM 644-2430 Si9.500 (Sun 1·$1 3206 Nebraska Place. Costa Mesa 546·45!9 (Sat & Sun 11-61 4 BEDROOMS 2638 Vista Ornada (Eastblu![) NB 644·2430 $73,$00 !Sal 12·5) **210 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB 644·2430 $185,000 (Sun 1-6) 1400 Serenade Terr (Irvine. Terr) CdM 644-2430 $89,500 (Sun 1·5) 4 BR & FAMILY RM OR OEN *3615 Sausalito'(HVuHills) CdM 644-2141 $120,500 (Sat & Sun 12·$) 1945 Port Dunleigh Cir (HVuH ) NB 64\-7230 (Snl & Sun) ,!~Jfi~~~~Y ;J~llY5fo• 1tJ:i~ ·sun· r:s1: 1601 Costle Cove (Spyglass Hill •I l NB 644·24:!0 Sl29,500 (Su1j 2-6 ) 3619 Sur!vlew (HVuHllls) CdM 644-2430 Sl35,000 (Sun 1·5) 223Q J\•Icycr !>lace. Costa J'v1csa 1138-1157 $29,900 (Sat & Sun 11·5) l BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 2228 Arbutus (Eastblufl) NB 644-24!!0----t79,SOO (Swt-afternoon) **00.I N. Bay!ront, Balboa Islaud 644·2430 $317,000 (Sun 3-6) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 2 BR 31384 Wc sl 9. Laguna Niguel 497·1701 $37.1!00 1Sun 1·5) Peel Wererftent w.,.,,,.,., & , ... ERITAGE REALTORS General * BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS * BRIGHT-LIGHT-SUNKISSED A bonnie home in a best of "Sunset Maga· zine" setting in Baycrest. 3 Bdrins., 3 baths; 30xl5 htd. pool. $79,500 OPEN SAT/SUN. 1·5 2018 COMMODORE VIEW OF THE HARBOR 1\ spacious home on an 80 ft. garden happy lot . in Cd~1 . A "just. right" property for a NOW famil y. 4 Bdrms., 2 baths. $76.500. OPEN SAT /SUN. l·S 1014 SEA LANE CAMEO HIGHLANDS f>restige location, at a price you can afford. 'fhis exceptionally '"ell decorated 3 bdrm. & fa111ily rm. home, has an xlnt view of canyon & ocean. Price only $69,500 THE BLUFFS -CONDO This lovely 4 bdrm., 2 bath home is ideal for the busy family . Your picture windows over· look a lge., well kept greenbelt & a commun· ity pool is only a pogo stick jump away. $59,500 "WANTED" SIX CHILDREN 1st TIME * 675·S930 * · IN · OFFERED :L·~·~~~ t~ 3629 E. Coast Hwy. SOUTH. COAST NEWPORT ~!!~!!!!~!:!! .... ~C:or:o:•:•.,d~e~l~M~•:r .... .,I Onl.' 0\111er, custoin bullt 3 ,_ 1111 PLAZA - -bedroon1 hon1l'. Spotless Super 4 br, ntodel honte _ l'Ondition v.·ith ne\'.' paint in General two fireplaces _ \\-"el bar _ & out. Large lot v.•ith boat :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j ~neling, tilr floors • 2'>-IJ storage area & roon1 for a li.'lths -great rnn1ily hon1e ! pool. S69.500. * CUSTOM, DELUXE BAYFRONT HOME * 15 n1on1hs old! $4500 dow n. 3 Bdrms, plus lge, guest roo1n'. maid's room or r.=~!111-~ ;._~ playroom, over full 3 car garage. Perking for ti W lk & l 1st TIME OFFERED HEIGHTS AREA 372BOCEAN BLVD. OLD CORONA DEL MAR GO BY! Beautiful old Spanish hon1c on double lot large enough for the large~t lami1y. Spec- tacular view only s1eps to the beach. Take a look at this labulous hon1c and then gi\'e u~ a c111I. 673-85j(). OPEN TIL g • IT"S ~UN TO fJE N/Cfl l!IJ~ - ' ' ' ' ~ $22,500 f'"or this I ni n1 a e ul n te , upgt"aclcd 3 bedroon1s, 2 batl1s, only 2 miles fron1 the beach. Seller will pay loon fee!' !Kl you CAil huy FHA 1·.-ith as little 11/ii Sl.000 {lo11·u , or ~ou mny \\'Olll to assu111e 1hc <>xistine: loan ol only BROKERS -REAL TORS 101'> W 8cd boc 671 166] '$29,500 1-lov.· v.·ould you like to own this n1agnilice11l ho1ne on a private Sh't~I. \\'ith park like surroundingll, wlth viC'\v of the Pacific Ocean, you will be surprised when you RARE MESA VERDE FOUR-PLEX Larg(' 3 bedroo1n, 2 ba,lh see this 3 bcd!oom; 2 bath O\\·ners unit 1vil.h 3 . 2 home, hurry & ca 11 , bedroom rentals. Faces a SU-2535. park in a real pride o[ Ol'£N nL D • 1rs Fl.IN TO BE NU• ov:nership area. First time 1 ! advertised . $85,950. 64&-TITI . ,: OPE.N TIL ll • IT'S Fl.JN 70 8E NICE/ .--• -'. LIDO ESTATE BUY! ~··==~!;"~!;"~~~ One or the largest homes on ---l11iand. Ptime corner setting. $14,000.. Vi:.ry open & spacious feel· THE REAL ESTATERS No MORE ing. llut,'l' livin:; 1111 1v/"•el bar, forn1a! din art"8, lgl' This hon1e include~ a hou se fu1n s·n'. G ET:. 4'~ BA , t\'ailel' -re nted at $160. The Bcaurirul and in1n1cnSl' pri- hon1e itself is rented for vale 1mtio. ,\ rl'a l buy at $150. Hom~ ha.'I 11e1v cooper $1.55,000. plun1bing, electrical '\<iring 11 nod ""''°· R-2 lot <oo! ,ufittlngham Realty Walker &lee Ill.IL ftlAlf BIG VALUE FEALTCAS 3336 Via Lldo 675-0t23 GREAT STARTER .HOME $30,500 cars. Lot 50Xl68. Large, private !oat wilh shared 3 er ee pier, which is in x.lnt cond., \Vith steel pilings. 111 •L 1 • 1 •' 1 Honie completely rebuilt \Vith everything modern ~\~~~ & the best! llot & cold. large custom made bar ·~ - with ice·maker, included in sale, is made of solid BAYCREST Oak by master cabinet n1aker. Kitchen has all accessories avail. incl. kitchen compactor & ra· dar range & everything else to delight the home· maker! A view that cannot be surpassed. Only $250,000. I Bedt'OO.lllS S: 2 lull Buth,., Co1.y f:unlly rwu1 \11lh fireplocc, bulUi:t ('Jecoic I kitchen. excellent fnn11I) Ooor ()111.11. Quiel stL'l.'t'l. n1•:lr schools. s;)l.500. Walker &lee 111.t.L 111.lill 1:>N A OUIF.T CORNER Th ree bed roo111s, 01\C' nnd n hal. 1l:1 1s n11 .t l<ll"T~r lo! l:ca.1 .or :-. 111nke this an ideal starter 20-1'.: \\ c11«·1lff Drive hon1r. Ncs11C'd in n quiet !l's a good 1\'ay to get 11tarted in life bu ilding cq,uily 'in ,YOUI' 01\-n home. Pel'fect for nC\1 I)' marrieds or rf!lir· ing couple. Thi~ 3 bedroom has :rruch lovely t'x1ras as 1n'l'lty shag 11.Jld even built in aquariums! It v.·on't last al Uus prit·1•, so ('al! oow to see. Sli-6010. Move into 5 BR before schoOI $59,950 • PETE BARRETT -REALTOR- 642·S200 64&-·111.l 0 1-"!n l:;vcs. nei~11ho1 oood ,this carJ>1.>tl'd H.rbor View Homes and dral)('d hotl'K' Is near Pe f I J II f ·1 schools. Us many plusses r ec or ~nte ami Y· 2 add up to n1ore than the OPf.li TIL ll • 1rs FUN 10 BE HICE! Open House Sat. & Sun., 12 to S p.m. 2021 Bay1kle or., Corona del Mer 1'~or the Harbor ll[ih, Ensign I :-:o-'!!'-::O-'!!'-:~-!!'-'="'-!!'-~-'!!':-:o-'!!'-~ & Mariners school district, formal dining plus large Bedroo111 &: convertible den -cathedral ceilings tn llvtng $26,950 prlce. Cal 962-8851. rooni, dining room • m11.ster OPEN TIL t • IT'S FUN 10 BE HICEI g ,: f(ijl'li'11 SALISBURY REALTY, 673-6900 ~,.'!;'~ ~O:io~·:~.~~,:;'. 315 MARINE AVE., BALBOA ISLAND flee or hobby room. New 'l"'""',.. __ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~""'"""'"""""'""''""""I carpctA custom rl r a p es , General General -mO\'c'-i11 l'OndiUon. _ ~-;;:; .., ~S-...,.lb"'"_::-;ii-:;; 400J,.i7• • JOR ~ . NICEST HOME "" I;) ~ """ C.I( I IN TOWN Cl.1l·!ll'•!UIC iill'CCI. Thli< Ill II _-ln1~ honlt" t\'hi(•h will ollO\\' you tu 11•ulty 11)1(' ,\'Our hn· llL:'Ln:lllflrl. Over 2.100 i;;q , IL Thi!'I hon1c 1l1'11V llft!L 2 bedroorn!L rlu1i (t u l' !I I ri unrters. L.1 1~e Back ynrrl. $-14,9;,(). Cllli &l&-0.."'\5 tor F'..iu 'Hlllr I 111111~ 1u.1r11 \t"n d!I. 10 pool t,. llrt' ring en· l(•f1 alnn1c.n1 ff'lllPr. Enjoy 1hl' llL'<Ury of 11('11• c•nrpc1s in this 4 B<:droon1 hon1f'. Lo11· lnterc-!11, q11umable loon. PETE BARRETI =:&EALTOR- 642-5200 FRANCISCAN FOUNTAINS Spiral 11!11irc'L'lf' 10 111'' '!(H'S. .i. Bt'droon1J1, fondly rcl1'l'at, ~111(l 8"f' !hi.Ii (\)'('~ 6% VA ASSUMABLE c 1·:NTu1i r 11. clct:til~. • • • Nellie Kingsley 480 Bro1dw•v Costa Mts• You su"I' lhl' wlnnc1· of 2 lickcl!'I to lhC' _RINOLJNO.Jl8..0~ & BARNUM l BAILEY CIRCUS II :tit ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER For Sa le . By Owner FOR OPENING NIGHT J Bef11Y"•~1 r>t•ll • l\U AUGUST 13 en1111•t • 2 etu· ~rir11i:e. c1r.11e t°'l1·:i~C' ··a•I fM~-rJili( f'xt 3.'l~ to Sl'hool and ~hQpll.. Nh·r to f'h1in1)'f)Ur1ickr111. 1Not1h neighborhood. Kid !!IZe yard County loll frL'C uu111bc1· I& BALBOA COVES Beautiful 4 bdrm. 'vnterfront home 1\11.th pier & pRtio. 1140,000 IRVINE TERR. Beaut. 4 bdrni. ho1u1-. f,1111ily rm., flC\V carpets; fey 1(1.nd. •.aoo---~ ;: .. ~-,,,..... ' I 17'41673·6210 I 200\ W.BalbGi 111"'1 Newport hKtl· CMIOl"nll ~2660 OC>droon1 -sunlit kitchen i ! openi' to M:'ar patio & l!:Rl'den for outdoor dining run. In sparkling condition Fantastic 4 Bdrm. & ('(lll\'<'1!1en1ly located to 1--f ully IRndscnPf'(I. R()('k fire· rw1rk & )M.li..>l -$65,950 VIEW-$79,500 p~11eC', fan1 lly rr11 . Count!)• C~~OJ~orthy:. Cu~IJ.lttl !.uJ.ilL 1. litQ.lj' tn1nily 11.11rht·n.-:l i'rtr gnt'flgf'~ !?at1o. Realtors -640':-0000 "'h'bli~t~ll'Mi" ,o;;t!\~11 ~ ~'-q~su.e.. dt'CW:l...St'l.500 bd!: - ----R<'Rf'h !111·ntiva. Quiel u1·1•1r jkJ.J i20. 2 Homes on 1 lot ,11t11 t·,,11·11t·1 .... 11110!1phC'1l'. __ TARBELL f".,\STSll'i': 011 Uron1h1·11)'· ~•'f•r 1''111ppirr.,::. One • :I BH, '! It.\ + Ont• . 2 UH, I R1\, 1 t::"lr.t~l'll. TOP REN'TAL \.f''I." thr n " rn il" hi 1n1 till' B•lbo• lsl•na lii'llf'h. ISLAND CHARM ""~' kliY'.f\'M~ • Walker & lee "VERY PRIVATE" 646-3928 or Ev•._, "" """ Bccauffe or b f' fl u t j f u 1 Rt'uJtor~ S1i·pi1. t1.1 l>.'ly, :, Ur. 2 be, sn\l'.ll piny roo1n + rental uni!. L:1r . !II.JI\ 1lc-ck. IQO! Old l\'Orld ch1t1·111 . Fin1t ti~ of· fcre<J. Lou1 of 111'00CI, vault"d open ~an1 Ii\', r 111 . landSCAp'tng-anrt locntion. 3 21>tl WH;!t·llff Drl\.'I.' bedroomz, fa mily roo111, un· ~1'711 Open l!Vl.'S flnlahecl honu~ rooni. llnnit' MESA VERDE l!I appcaJlngly dl'romtt>d. perfectly nialn111i n<•rl A 1..,_.. ........ _. ............ ,..,1 uvl~ at S3nt.a Ana 11rk.'t's. homa for a lifc•!huc, $36.9rifl. I' 1\n a~lutely lmtrl3cuJrah· Ari OO\\'. $.$Z.2l.1::i, ~ASl l/E GT n:sn.le! Rem ro11~ Hol"!le In n. 11ttlud tod ·I BDR.!\l!'i, ,, l~i\, fnn11\y 11e lwhbo1•hood nf to"'l'rl11i,: 1'0l.llH, ope n bt•n1n.~. $Sl.9j0, fl'(>t"!i Ii l'tl'lit' 1h~1trhr-d GRllllB & ELLIS c;,u,1.,, •. SU.w:<). 10'. "" Realtors ~-~tr oll ~lty 8)1 .22~4 'i~ '3 •·· ''-ii CI I "\V('ll'(t 11 & ltt"ap · '.:i ,_ u. \.:iot . \\)'., {fl, 1'"ront trfru!UR'" to 111\!l h 675-7080 Tu rn them In to ca11h wJba}CQ.ny. Re c ent I~ n1modelfti Ji In xlnt cond. $116,IXXI. O....•ner . ~ml. 213 Topt\Z. Sunset Op.n House• Fri/Sat, S .. P.M. 115 Abalone Nr11 tJ1<t•'l111s .~1yh·. bull! (or 11 huil'h•r. :~ U<l r •1111., '! OOths ~1l'111 2 rm. & mi1 h IPl..'.nthousc 1'1111<', 111Hl11'illfl!f' jJOA.""'IS.. $113,iXJi Un iversity Reelty GU.l!:J:.N IU·:AL'l'Y SolT·lllt, ~VMI. &12-43..'1,i Need a "Pod'0 ? Plao.'t' 11n lld! -$2l,5oo Prine. o 11 I y . :>-IO·ll'.lO.J .~_;;;M=~·...;5U-S=;.;1::.;1-'c-'"'c."..._ln=.••o..·, ___ • __ • __ • ___ C.1uaified Ads •••••• 64:h618 C.\U. Oail,Y 1•Hu1 JOOJ f':. ('111 II"')' ~10 ·' •'"-o," -~ ~--I J,.- ..... _ ' ·-"' ,.nday, August 3, 1'17l • I~ I~( ~ ...... ~, ...... ~,~~II'--__ ... s.i._j~ [ ---------- I~[ I I~ 1--1 -_,.,_-__.!~(-_, ...... l~ I Corona cf.I Mli r Corona dtl Mer F t i V 11 1:;:;;:;::::;;:;;:;;:;;:;::::;;:;;:;:::;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;;:;;:;;:~::;;;J ;;0~u~·~·~·~~·~..,;;;::;;::;;~1 :H;•;•;:•1;n~v;•o;n;;B;;•;•;;•h;;;;;;; 1 .~H;;u;n;t1;·~vt;o;n;;a.;·;•;h;;;;;;;;J L•M Beach Ll!UM NiVvt' Newport 8Mch --------------4-BR. CONDO ENTERTAINING? wooos coVE 3 BR o. CAREFREE L1v 1NG The ONLY One l10n1t! wood pa'neJt'd Liv r~ Lovl'ly l~e golf course vl~"" WESTCLIFF GREEN VALLEY Id .. ! lnRlde & out; 2 Yrs w-!rplc secluded b r 1 < k h•m pnvure, well mam· NEW DUPLEX Just !IOnie of 1he fcatut'es: old, 4 BB., forn1al din. mi, patiO, ~orbl))p, dble gar. lfiined 2 BR Spanish vill<a. BY OWNE R Bl I 1ndo tan1 .. r111, bonus rrn. 2 wet Only $79,500 M1.ngov, e in now. ~)' tlnanc· I . ~ li1y ~ 2 w, tltep-do\vn bill'&, touniaru~nt pool table, NOT a fixtr Upl)('r! All lbl.a ~~~'.:!e~ibug~a:a~~~a~ locts<:N sup11'm1 .. 2 11;ulofs, F'AJ\1fLY 11o°ME w/3 BR 2 PRESTJGE AREA ::~~~'tam~ym~ ::',,.~ h~b~ (Pick your favorite colors, carpeting, drapes, etc.) 3 Bedroom, 3 bath home plu s 2 bedroom, 2 bath apt. over big garage plus port. $105,000 carpets & d-1·apes, formal wat('l' SOft('ncr, gar opcnel', bll~. + TV ram rm. frt)Jc, Large Spanlshhon-it:, prestige start at school at Ma.liner's, dining room, l)llul recrea· SUMMER FUN 4·u~1on1 \\'Ull & 1\1ndo11• 1.'0V· Njce nel~bborhood, yard h.as al'ea. huge 1naster Bedroom Ensign or Nev.'poM High. 3 Uonal Ul't'll, pools & park. C.AN BE': YOURS today in erinJ;)i. sprinkler$, $47,950. with a bul<:ony, pool size' BR, 3 BA, sop din nn, huge ' ' Comme rclal Property ... ~ ... :·"AMERICAN "· ·.HOME ·' '., !<I Al 1 .,1, • •' .......... Commorci1I Bldg. slto Dup,e xe1/Unit1 11le i161 ....:.=----_;; Only S:la,aQ(J 111th au lhis tunt a!l'!IC vacttul pool WANT? lot, tlrt.' cir-tie B-B-Q, golf t-e<: rn1, nc1v "plush sh~" usumable FhA loon hom(t. 3 Bd1'\1111, 2 baths, D1\NA POCNT Duplex, split tourse at the door irtcp. <'Urpcting. 2000 plw; sq. rt. I' 1'00nl tor a hoat and rnu(·h A 3 BR ('OUlltry kitchen? level, 2 BR, llh bas, fenced RED CARPET or the good tlfe in Newport. CUSTOt-1 duplex, penthouse n1ort'. 1.u1d >l"Ould you belh'•\-'(' S2:.IS pays nll, if you assume yart,1, good cont}. $55,CXXl. REAL TORS Quiet & t re e t , quiet bdt'm & sundeck. 5'100; 1':4. w Only $29,900. Call quick! SZ.J,OCJO. VA 7•;;•Joan. Cypress. 497 1761 n e i .. h b Or h O od, $6.'l,000 fl,, OCC;UI Vl~\V, 277 &'. 17!1 UNIVERSITY REALTY 3001 E. Coast H wy., Coron• del Mar 53J-510Q ( ,.;"i.J 5JJ·5100 Owner ait-.ious. CJ\ LL • PATTI • LlVE IN ONE, rent thc1-------'-'----OPEN llOUSE SAT & SUN Dolphin St., Lll i;:una Booch. I '"""'""""!''""!'!!"""'..,_-. ... I S42-93n. WAL KEI olher, brand ne\V duplex in * LEASE/OPTION * Call for appt. 646-9159 OiM!n houRe Sat & Sun. By '~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ CONTEMPO-R-ARY TRADE YOUR ~(A, 111,.11 pru·k like setting, 2 BR, 2 4 Br. 21:! ba. 300 Ft deep lot, l "';~?"!~~~~!'l':~~ 1 ~o~w~n~ec:,.jp~ru~· '!!:'~o~n!Jly~.__:::_:,_~ CHARM EQUITY 1TI7l Beach Blvd., H.B. t~fcs, gr!1!:1~e!~~~pa:~~ 40 ~iL.t~~s.REALTY BEACH DUPLEX 1'IORSE Country! Sha.1·p~ 673 -6510 Is reflected lbruout this 3 FO~ TillS goi-g.eous s_piraJ CALL 842-1418 deck, short walk to beach, 494-9704 4M-9729 2 & 3 Bdrm units, one block Large lot. &uLlu }rlil bedroom honie rlchly dee-~1al!"case F.r-dltC~sc~n foun· ""!!""!!"!"~ ... !""!""!~~ ~157,000, BEST BUY • ,'l!.l,50() ti:oin beach. Needs palnt & Heights. $37,j(l(). Principub: SOUTH Bayfront • Island Charm. 1st oUering, 5 Br only $200,000. Appl onlv. Very exclusive & hard io conic by. Dynamic Duplex Sensational 3 BR, 2 BA 01\'Tl· l'l'S unit plus roon1y l'Cntt\I~ Cprtg, drps, bltns, ll'fllk to sul'f! Low niain!t:rmnce. 01\·Jt('r tnay fina1H't". Asking $82.950. Submit do11'tl or \\'ill trade fol" honll' or s1nall incon1t•. Call 00-8400. orated wiU1 the golden colors taln . l lome. Loa~s of UJJ· REPO '"S"SSIONS 4 BR 2'. ba ~ 1ix up. Bei;t buy on the only. App1. ;H()...29TI or I grading CALL 842 9371 ;a 1;o; LARGE d .: · · ·~ · Lge. yard l.n •an G-12-l280 of NDIAN SUi\1M E R . 3 B · · .. · ramaucocea11v1e\v Pl.ACE REALTY ucach . ..,.,,500, 1 ~=-==·------- Double·door entry, drrunatic , EDROOM 1 BATH :'1Jr infor111;ition and location lot ovet'loo~ng ~a g un a 494-97().1 494-9727 1197 Orange, C.r..t. 642-1771 I p ty 166 cathedral ceilings. Palos HUGF. LO~'. Use yo~r GI, of these J"l l.·\ & VA homes, Bench, easily buildable on 1 ~me roper ' Albert E. Dayton, Rltr 673-4324 Or 673-4062 3alboa Peninsui• * OCEANFRONT* OPPORTUNITY New, large duple.'<: 4 & 3 bdrms, Top location. 1'1'Plcs. $169.500. OPEN SAT /SUN. 1·5 402 E . OCEANFRONT t JONES RWTY lNC. "51'."'6 (714) 673 ·62K> 2001 w.a~~ &Nd. I NtWJSXL BeK!l·CAliJorn!a 92&60 2 BR., 2 ba., t'Onv. den Quiet street behveen ocean & bay $67,5'.JO COA~O' P rop. 673-5410 Cotlege Park C.OlLEGE Park home by owner, 3 Br. din rm & fan1 rm combo lrg living mi. w/rplc, 1~ ba. nu dishwasher, lrg pat i o V.' /BBQ, finished g a r , W /bar. Fre1>h paint in & ou t , fenced yard 11· I s prinltltr front/rea1', xlnt move-in cond, $37,900 Sho"'n by appt o n 1 y . 5»-4857 Corona del Mar *LOCATION !!I'* CORONA HLDS. 428 · li.-1ol'ning Canyon l)r. 3 BR. 2 ba. chanlH'l°. l\-·lini- vlc1v. Askin~ $62,500. Habor View Homes 1979 Po11 Nelson. 2 & a den, 2 ba. Monaco. litany exlrns plus fee Jund. Asking: $64,950 HARBOR VIEW HILLS 966 Sandcastle. 4 BR., fam. rm., pool, view. Asking 191.500. CAMEO HLDS. 4600 Dorchester. 4 BR .. fam. rm., 2~4 ba. Vacant. Quick possess. Subntit o-r f e r s . $71,500. OPEN SAT/SL'N. 1-5. CORONA DEL MAR OPEN DAILY Outstanding 1vhile \\' a t e r view -priVate beach. Brand ne\v carpeting and bcautHul new kitche n. 5 bedroom. family roon1, four baths, and three fireplaces. Vacant Open 2-6 p.n1 . 186 Shorecliffs Road Asking $250,000. NEW LISTING Lovely ne1v ty,•o story sL-. bedroon1. 4 bath ho111e \Vil h lovely vie\v from Spygla ss. Beautiful colonial detuils, top quality Door coverings, and many many extras. $134,99;), 6Ta-7225 Verde l>lone fil"Cl>lacc gar-sellers 1.•:ill help financt'. tor::::·t · gentle slope. Topo 1nap incl Lake Forest Ontu den view, space-agt'd 'kitch· C,\LL 842-9371. KASADIAN in price, Not effected by Ill en iv/pass thru windo\V to pl'oposilion 20. $21.500. LAKE b'Qnl corner lot, 4 Br, "'21 ctinin~ palio. Spacious inas-R eal Esta te 962-6644 LINGO REAL ESTATE 3 .Ba. tennis &. swin1'!1ing, ~ lcr \\'ith mirrored \\'ard1"Qi)(', Irvine 31706 S. Coast l-J\vy, priv. club, dock~. $7.>,000, ~ I I n\r ~·ondilloncd. l\1ust sec! So. Laguna, 499-1397 586--0475 Ol' 586-77.,7. 7 F NTIL9 f'A V. E. llo.•nl & C.o. .. a..L~~- OPEN DAILY 1-4PM- Branrl New Town hoUlil' at 331 Dahlia, nr. Sea\'iC\\'. 2 Bdrm, 2 Ba1hs, 2 car gar. Fee land, $52,500. VogC'I Co. Realtors. 548--93'16. Costa Mesa *BY OWNER* 3 BR, 2 full baths, tubs & !!ho1\•f"rs. Large d.ining roo1n. Man1n1a's kitchen 1\•ith 1\ish- 1\·ashc i-& dis11. Beauti ful brick fireplace, Sprinkl1•rs fl'Qr.! and back, Large (_"QJ'· nC'r Joi, lots or 1'00n1 for bon!. ,..;,,_ traller . Churches, schools & shopping in 11,aJk- ing di!o,1:ancc. Like nc1v wall fO l\'aJl Ca~pels & dl~<tJ-lCS. Ch\'ncr will help finance. Will rent with opt.ion to buy. 1328 Bellas! St., CM. -ADULT - OCCUPIED , •. and absolutely inimacu- Jate! Full carpeted, aJJ builtins, plush and modc1n. Walk to theatres, n1ajor shopping and restaurants. Beautiful 3 bedrou1n, 2 bath. to1· on.Iv $36.!f)(). CALL 545-s.t.2'1, • SouthCo Realtors. $24,250 Cozy hon1(' on R-2 <."Qrner Jot. Nlce 1'1'1..-.es .I.: largt•. clear bldg. ;;it(> f,.,r UJ1other unit. CALL e '-'6 ·14 14 ~idlle. ~£ALTY Nt•r Nt•porr Po•t Offi ce EASTSIDE Cull Thl! Rea.I Esta.It" Fair, 1110 Glenneyre St., Lido Isle S.:-l:l-2"1. · Small But Precious Laguna &nch, · 4~1----------- 7% ASSUMABLE • i\lodel condition * 3 BR, 2~'2 BA Condo • \VaJlpaper & paneling • Deep· shag * Covered patlo Gobs of glan1our for $34 ,950. larwin realty inc. 968-4405 (24 h'5) THE BIG WHOPPER Ideal tor the fan1ily with teenagers! Your O'Wll swim- n1ing pool, B-B-Q outside wider lhe large covered patio. This home with sep- arate formal dining is a _____ .. ___ large, lovely, single story 4 5 BEDROOMS bedroom. Como ,.. it. S. ' p . 963·5621, 1ng e story .. r11111~ Fountain CRAMPED KITCHEN Vnlley locat1011. Corner lot 11-'ilh access for bllal or · · · gol Y~tl do1\•n?. If so, ix' tl'n ilcr. Asswne !j~;, V.\ loan sut'C' lo, in~pcct U11s roon1y \l'ilh n1onthJy paynients of h?lll l'. You 11. i:ave a 1w1ny $240. ~lichen and l1v1ng room 1viU1 VfLLAGE REAL ESTATE I fu"t'place, 3 bedrooms and 2 lNVEbl'MENT DIVISION altl'al'.li\"e bath's, all on a 963-4567 deep lot. I>ri.CC'd ut $26.000. "DAi'fCE FLOOR"' I Hurry, CALL 846·3377: · Most exciting extra fun • RANCH / POOL room! Tavern & lounge in i our very 01vn 4 ~roo1n your own home + much ranch strle ~on1e vnth a more! Span. tile thruout din large s"~n1m1ng pool, Thls & kit. Huge side yd. for boat ~ard to find, hut ~r!h look- or n1otor home, 3 BR, 2 BA 1ng at ho~ne, is locat-;d Put this home on your: niust North Huntington B(>ach 111 see lis!! Katella Realty a Popular art:oa. Try $34,950. 9fiS.3.'1.Ql • 546-9832 841 -3584. REPO $750 OOWN 2 01· 3 BR To1vni1uusc. hgc 11.\n1p11~ roon1 dhlf' i.:a1·, s1vim pool, fe1v left. Htil'l'Y! 968-7177 or 1'42-4-121 First Pioneer Realty Garden Grove ~l'!ftll'I~ rt~~~ We're here to help! Open ev& 111 9 BEACH LOVERS Thcy !>earned the ceiling air OUTDOOR LIVING conditioned nil ti1e rootns A Unique Home This Lido IsJe fii!auty on and J•lanned for lots of stor. Open Sunday 1.5 oversized corner Jot, is a age in this little 2 txlrni., l 802 Manzanita Drive true l\1editemuiean mini-ba1'h l'Ondo. Priced tagged villa. lligh "'·ailed for I S"l 000 A \vinding Cypress lh1-• al on y v, . d . = privacy, with spacious patio V • • nveway; white w a t e r lslo n-view. Tinted glass. Natural area. 2 &Inns.. 3 baU1s. woods. Mexican tile. New Stressed garage. S98.500. plumbing. Shake.roof. Stain-OPEN SUN. 1-5 i .. . red h·i.11. ed gla"' & more. 2 BR., 808 Via Lido Soud st~dy, din. rnt. & frplc., Ontu \\'Jlh a guest apt. bclo\\'. On a big, woori sy Jot Ill \\'/privacy. 4 Blks. h'Olll "'21 RE.\LTY b<>ach, nr. hi~h school. A -c€mTI'" A Co1n1xu1y \\ii!h Vii;ion sho11•plc.ce residence !or Univ. Park Centl'r Ir\-i ne $7'l 900 Call At1,11i111e, ~2.7500 ( 494-7551 Offi('c hours~ A).I lo 8 Pi\1 JOI)) N. cst. 1-hvy., Laguna Burr White Realtor 2901 NC\\llOrt :-l'•pt Beach * 675-4630 * UNJVE-flsJTY Park Villat.:c 2 t.1arquctte l\1odeL 3 Br. 2 Ba. r·;un Rn1 & I-·ornial Din .. Beaut up graded, '>.,11.!')' (o''.:1'"5 . e.a.1..<or * $79,500 * ,._ pren11111n area, steps from ---,.--c.o===~- Sandburg Pool. $ 5 7 5 O O J.'h1n. By O\vner. 18285 'Man· drake \Vay, Irvine 552-T;>SG, Open Sat &-Sun 10-5. , BY O\VNER lmmac 3 br, 2 ba, on cul-de·sac, intlds rt>C. vehicle storage, o p e n \\'eekends 11-.l S 3 6 5 O O Spru1ish slyle ho1ne on large lot. 3 BR. & den, open beams. l.11tert?Sting !pl. Neat' * A 1TENTION * Lido tennis ct. 5.)2-8(};jg. • • Bi' 011·nl'r. 'I BR. 21 ~ Ba, fan1ily l'OO!ll ho1nc in Turtle flock . S52 .. JOO. lncldg luud, For appt. .sc:z..,cc;"'~5~9-- La guna Beach BUILDERS & INVESTORS LIDO REALTY Oceanfronl b I u t f , San ""77 Clen1ente. 2 Bdrn1 hon1e .A) Via Lido, N'pt Beach lop shape, roon1 for 4 1no~l-=~*"--'-67:.:~:..:..7300:::_*"--- units. $95,0ClO. A REAL ClITIE! By o"mer. * Beautifully Decorated * 2 BR, 11~ BA, enclosed Le~el home in lovely Laguna patio, A-1 cond. $68,900 Niguel on lge. corner J('\lt'I 613-3103 :~;s Roo~1 f'?r pool. \Viii -B~Y~0=,,.-,-"-. -. -,-.,-,-,-,,-,-11,, .. _e Y./Opt10n to buy. fa hulous Bnylro111, 5 BR. J .s~A~iL'I'. EXP.\;\DINC? * ~i~i~~'.l' & slip. $206,000. This spaCJous ho1nc has 4 -"''-'o.'.:'-------- BR, :1 ba ... ~ farnily rui., Mesa Verde ne1v cafP('ting Sc \"l'l)' rlcan! * 3 UNITS * Fabulous l\·H. vil'11·s. $62,500. MESA VERDI-:: by O\VllM:. 1 ENGLUND )T old, <I Bil, 2 fu ll h:i, --- O('t':lt1lr11nl -snuu.:k on the fan1ily rrn, dining rn1, 3 cru· sand! In rhe heart or La-REAL EST ATE garage. Nr. all $Choo!s -~ guua Il!·Cll'h. 3 Old(•r units, i,>oU courses. $72,900, By BY O\V11er 4_separate houses POOL $47,500 1-0111p!e!c-ly furnished. No 318 THALIA 494-8003 appt. 546-72a>. on 1 lot Ill lnt location. ere BUCCOLA SHI'..:H\VOOD l\'ll{lll. proble1ns here! On•n-PRIDE Corner lot, R·2 zone, can ESI'ATE Used b . ·k 1 . er 11;J? finance. Askins: • • • 4BR, 2BA, custom kitchen, add more units. Retire early . . · i-ic ex Cl· 1200 000 •. Of 0\\-'tlershlp; beautiful 3 Spanish tile ,t, .\vrought iron. l\'ith this one. 5.'l7-6968 or 1or .\\'tlh heavy sh~ke lYJOf. • • hdrni. plus family room Assumable 6'ro loan. Very · · Loads of decking. Poolside canyon view. 8 wed i 5 h 549-0076, 646--4242 DOVER SHORES 5 Bedroom. 4 Bath, living rooni, dining roon1 &: den, Super pool. Aulon1atlc ga1'- age, sprlnklers & lighting. $139,COJ. l.115 $an.tiago Dr., N.B. By Owner, 645-8'173. Principals only. * OCEANFRONT * 4 Furnished uni.ls, Owners' unit 11·/sundack. Two dbl. garugt>s. ,\ rare find at $125,000 BALBOA BAY PROP. * 673-7420 * IMAGINE $105,000 for 60' del11 \l'ate:r hayfl"U11t. 3 Bi· .. ~ BA, + i;ue;,1, pier & ~lip. Consider trades. Call D<!ui,son A.s-!IO<!. -673-7311. PENINSULA TRIPLEX 3 BR, 2 Ba & 1 Br. gd. in- co111e, ton cond. 0\\'ner "'iii finance, $30 000 do\\' n. Prine. on1y. 675-8321. BEAUTIFUL CONDO 1 story, 3 Br, 2 Ba, in ex- clusive adult park. Finest recreation, lowl'st price. Denison A!lliOC, 673--7311 BLUFFS By 01,'llt'.'l', X plnn. C'lld unir. Nr.xl to rr.11ni.~. Upi,:1..,1clt'l! + $0•1.900. "40-002&. -----Santa Ana As.-;u!\I E 6'' V,\ Loan $1 S.~mo. $2°1,UOO ho.l11nt'1.'. !I years youn~. 3 b<'ilroorn 2 bath, Ni•·(' 11·.'\ I I f wa l l carpets & drapes. Co111er 11)1 f en e~. Beautiful landseaped. Just $2!'1.T:iO. Broker • 58&-5111 ~:1 Aci'e, ~:Imo~. As:.un1e 5r'o loan. 3 BR, fam 1m, trce- lined cul-de-sac. open beam ceiling & bar "'/tapper, fplc, huge rear ya-rd, Roo1n for pool. boat or y,-hatever! !·!URRY! Call Br 0 k e J· 645-6646. 893-8119 16 x 36 Jl;F sparkhng pool. -~. bill honie. Exceptional ocean & clean. Many featur es , Hu"tl·ngton Boach g lass kitclle n 11·ith pa1io r 1 . 11 . puss-tiu·u & b.ru-. Custom trep ace Ul ving rooin: M ission Viejo I~ ;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! ceramic tile & jL·t age ap-"q4.s67t "99.2too lots of storage. JjS,000. til•Homu fillil NEWPORT \VE::il' -2 story, p!ia11ces.. Big family room, [iiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• [ ~'41Z.~ NE'iV Jl.ladrid P)nn &Kl, pool j .:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ . * OPEN HOUSE * 5SO YORKSH JP.f.: 3 BR + fan1. mt, 2~2 BA, used brick tircplacc. 4 huge & VU lot. 4 BR~ frple'l! in-ER' · I h d · VIEW Fan1 Rm & l\1a!!ter RR, brick patios Iron I & 1~nr. -' • s int· ugt• 011n1tory REAL E$TA':fE parquet floor l' 11 t Ire Mobile Homes Boat gHtr. Assume 1011· in-for playroom or '! !\laster BRANO NEW tn do\l.'llstairs. c<Hnpl lndscpd, For Sale 125 te1·esl FHA loan Ol' l)('I~' fi. sui1c has Ronian sunk en tub. Finest Quality! ·I HP.. 2 Bi\ 1190 Clennt:'yre SI. $77,JOO, ~31 --0324 __ :.;_.;;..:c.;:_ ____ = nancing. $39,500. • ~t,oontl for11 boa1 '. or catknµer. hon1e, fan1 rn1 11·/cathedral 4g.J-9-173 $.19--0316 N 8 12X6Q n1obile hon1e. A\vning, '"ROSS ''RO'r 1 ·us se I us \\'et'.' ·end~ c-ciling, cptd. z ear <>nr., * OPEN * ewport each skirting, coolf'r, likf' ne"'• EXc1-'llC'ni opening: fol' a\. r : Pt\RI..: • ONLY $299 lllO. 11-hl•Jl VOU eA2 000 n-• T •· 1 NC1l'ly painted 3 BR&. lam. assun1e "·is "t"Cat L~ll.\ 1o'n••· ,,.. ' . °'" sure Ill check SAT 1 '/S OPEN SAT ·s 1-0\\'ner. ScacliU l\fobile op .;o..'l.eSmef1 u• b r this one!! Broker S&>--5974. • ... UN. 1·5 I UN. 1-4 Pat'k. 890 \V. l:t!h Sp 63, 3 BP.., 11\: haths. $25.~,{l BALBOA BAY PROP. rni. lrg-irl'cgular lot, cov-HtuTy. it 1vo1l't last~ Broker 15 POINT SUR 704 Emerald Bay Ne\\i>ort Be11.ch. &12-2816 * 55M800 cre<l pa1to, 2?; yrs old. 962-5511. ---· -~*c-____ Crprs. drris, nr. school. i-'-=='--c$_ 2 _ 6 ,- 9 - 50 ----* OCEAN VIEW* SPYGLASS HI LL Bellmed l'E"i lings, p I an k :i BR. 2 BA. By O\\'ner. 20x:'i0 O\VNF:R sparkling 4 ™· 11 ~ $3l:J-:-,O. IBRJN'G YOU" POOLT,\BLE 1-Iugl', oce11n vicy,• liv. r m. Ne\v Spyglass Hill home 11"ith ~~0011-s. c:ound~ry k i I ch l' n. \v/polTh, patio &. sheds. In Ba plus large .14 x 25 fl. r\. w/frpl: din area. 2 BR, den view of Ne\.\'JX)rt Harbor & ~ rp cs. in' Lning rm . S: liv· llayside Village, N . B. Family roon1 \\"/fireplace FIXER·UPPER . Excellent for this beaut. 2 BR condo. + guest rin, 1v/\V carp, Catalina Ililand. 4 BR .. 21~ ing rin.: 3 bdrn1s., 2 ba. $13,500. Ph: 639-2126. buillins, forced a ir, fullY buy (01· the handynian, 4 Bonus nn 2{)' x 20·. 2 car tliruout. Central kit . baths. l\'Iany upgrdded e.X-Roont for pool & 4th bdrm. NEWPORT BAY carpeted & drapes, large BR Dutch Haven. Vacant ~net gar., bltlns, xlra cab-\1'/rangc oven, dishwstu·. tras. SU7,000. French . Co~try dressing fenced yanL Close in to Fireplace. bltns, fenced. mets, shag crpts. Adil occ. See this one! $5.1,500. Turner Assoc. tbl. "":/sinks in nistr. bath & sclJOOls, churches and shop-Xlnt location. Only $28,500. Fl'onts greenbelt & steps to Mission ReaJty 494--0731 1105 N. Coast H"'Y·· Laguna dressing rm. $129,500. ping areas. Only $29,900. SH\RPT 3BR +I I , pool. RED CARPET BEAUTIFUL location ·-494-1177 Anytime Turner & Assoc. 838-11 57 .'" · -rg. acn, Realtors 5.16-8836 SOUTII LAGUNA. 1 block 1------~~---11105 N. Coast H"'Y .. Laguna dini ng area, shag ap>s * 4-PLE"x·_*___ I"•-h N I od 1 d OC 49'1177 Anyt1'me By 0 '"8 500 I v ucac · C\vy ren1 ee EANVU ESTATE ~ \\11er -., " , . . thruout. Lr«. cornC'r lot. Assun1ablc 5~ •;;, GI Loan. SJl,500, 0 3 BR, 2 1 ~ ba, O\\'l\er·s Ap1. 2 Bdrm, family rm, large Superb architect designed A·FRAME 38R-.-- J\·lcsa \'erde 4 br, xlnt cond. \1'/fpl, 1650 sci. ft .• big vtl. & deck \l'/ocerui vieiv. Guest J 18-0 d · 4000 Lo-r h & nl ~-ai)t. •r.·i,500 firin. By 0 ..... n,. 1ome. C'gree view, ,,. o c arn1 o ya ,..,.,rt \\'ill consider 2nd. KA TELLA REALTY patio + three 2.bt-11111. Call 499-l204. \Vould "~n-sq ft. 6 Br r2 niaster 1\·aJk 10 beaeh, pools, 1ennis. Open l-Iouse, l2-6pn1 Sat & o~ h I" Wlit s. S8J,OOO. sider sunir.ier rentals al"". suites), 5 Ba, fomml dining, Family rm. w;floor lo cell. Sun. 15&> Co1-sica Place. Dl.'ac al -.-arncr, 847-fiOSI GEMll---"" rain l"lll, garden bath, huge frpJ. A b\ly at $46,500. 540-9730 .... CUSTOM duplex, penthouse kitchen. $104,000. Prine on-CAYWOOD REALTY EASTS I DE CUSTOM ROS-TIC-HONEYMOON 1610 \V. Coast H\vy., N.B. wrm & suncleck. 5400 sq. ty. o"·nr \\'ill help finance. * ~1290 * Ne\\· 2 BR. 1 BA living r111. Adult park 1\·/privnte beach $16,500 54V-3672 MOBILE home near beach sonie furniture low space rental. $4,150 . .l3&-7743 lo.10BlLE Honie, 2.i' bayCront $11 ,500. Rent $&) mo. Cali 64:>-.3516. LTOO \Valerfront Park. 2 Br, Expand<>. Vle1v, patio, pool. Inunac. Only $4500, 6T.'l--82'l0 By oy,·ner 5 BR. 3 Ba, fam COTTAGE REALTORS &12-4623 ft., ocean vie\\', m .~ 279 2808 Zell Dr. Open daily, -- rm. ·hrd\i·d firs. 2 beaut ,\'EAR BEACH • $30,900 AYRES-LA CUESTA Dolphin St., Laguna Beach. 494-8.122 STEPS TO THE oranfle trt'es. S59,!X)(). 2021 Dran1a1iG cathcdi·aJ ceilings, EL CAJON MODEL Open house Sat & Suu. By Beach A rea Home OCEAN Real Esl4'te, l"1JJ Al iso Ave. 6-16-2634 1nhTnr1-'d panels in living 400 Yds lo beach. No_!___linish-oivncr, princ. only. Delicious 4 bdrm. Lovely 2 stn1y A-F'ran1c 3 BR. 2 BA. 1 :.miiii°"jj'jj'°'~-·i'iiiiiiiii.iiii: 1wn1 i't.'flee! floor to ceiling c{I yet, a\·ail" iif Aug:· Take •-) .. EASE/OPTION * ocean vil'w. Dining rm, Sundt<ck, wlk ~o lhe bt.'81.'h, East Bluff briek fireplace. Country 01·er n1y csc1"0w $4500/Full North Laguna view hon1e. 4 rlrtam kitchen, Faniily rm, Pools, teru1is. S46.500 style eat-in kitchen/fan1ily purclutsf' Jll'icc S 5 2. 5 0 0 . BR, 2 ba. l..<u:ge yanl fireplace. Rear Jiving rm. * 548-2633 * 1-IO').IE 1\'an1ed F:astblurr. roorn. 'I. Ilc<lroo111s 11·i1h D a Y ~: 8 3 3--9078/Eves: PLACE REALTY p fl $5.1950 bk Apartments For Sale 152 4uu l'' 'k11·<•e l\'alk-in rlosels. -\Voii\.,,'6~·12--SnS'-'-~6.:_ ______ 49-l-!170.1 494-97'19 a.rque oors. '" · r *BRAND New 3 BR. 2~t n n.. H, DR. pref. pool , " " 494-SOOJ. BA. Condo. w/Boat Slip. 2 T ft I Call P. Dyt"r 5·1(}.5!MO shop in ~ublc ,garage .. Dog BY 0\1·ner, 6'0 VA OCEANFRONT, secluded TARBELL car gar. All applianct>S. PLEX San Junn 11·kdays, 673-:M.>2 \\'kcnds or 111!1 on s~rle yard, uniq ue Shorcc:rcst 4 Br., 2 Ba, !iv· home & guest apt, magnifi-Crpts & drps. Sale or Lease. Caplstraho, lnrome $fill()(). aft 6pin r;11Jroad ti; pa!i!l. A must ing rni Din rm. Fan1 rni, cent \1Civ, $137,JOO Bkr Laguna Hills 213: 287~ or 213 : lnrg<' lot for 4 to 6 ad· LOVELY ltirge •I Br. 2 Ba, see! Call nie Real Eb1A_te frplC'. 20712 Spindrift H.B. 493-3611 I 2$7-8723. 'dl7illi.•500n•.' 4~1ni~!,40l'> storage, ~1tir, 5.'~2.J51, £.> !J62-87:l2. ' * ~EASE/OPTION * 1-=''='-'"='=-------,. ~• separate f<~run. r111., East BEAUTIFUL Ot..t!lln vie.,..· lot 4 BR., 2 ba, S32.3 l\1onth TRADE 130' ON B t B!ull ,1on1e, lcasi\ 1\vuil. t.10DEI. Honie Landscaping, Only $13.900 PLACE REALTY \VATERFRONT 3 Br, 2 Ba, us netl Property J5C Sept. l. 833-6S05 Days ONLY $22,500 l5'Xl %J11:i1·r• FL 1 mi. to brh, 0Cf'anvic\V Rlty. 67::....8500 491-9704 494-9729 fatn rm. H!\S pier & fioat. 'J'\.\10 LOTS TOTAL 104'x209' . UNIQUE OUPLE.X ~11--2-196 Eves. Perfect 101• niiddlc-agcd cou-6'~ loan, $10,000 down. COND0-2 hr. 2 Im, on golf tfs a })reeze. , .. sen your $129,500. Comm. lot tn O IOICE LOCATION, Hun- So. or I fwy original 2 BR, El Toro pie, 2 Bcdl'00111s on exlra l=~-36_.ooo __ ,_7_I<_l_!l6S-~~3563___ crs .~ tennis club . View. Items with ea.~. use Daily Balboa. $49,500. Newport llngton Beach, z ONE D con1plctl' l'f'tnodt•\ \\" benuL lar,i;:e lot. <ill electric kit· N('{_\(l n "P;irl'.? Plare ~ ful! I~ d \\'Tl, $37,500. 831--06.18. Pilot Classified. 642-567S, ,1~'i~e;_r~R~•=a~lty~,~6~13~·~2058~·::c· __ BUS INE S S , PRO - ne1v liv n11 + nc1v 2 BR LAGUNA REAL r:hcn, close to (ree\1tays,1==============::'.:========:::§~~="== SAJ~E BY O\VNER 1'~ESSIONAL OR OFFICES. 1u1lr . Frpk·s. In;:. rlbl. ~ar, · schools & shopping. l lw-i·y ll arbor Vie\v Home $17,500 ca. TERMS \\•rite used bl'ick patio, lrg. s1or-1\10\'C your famiJy into U1i!1 on thi!i one1 $©~41}~-·~-C?}Q. 9 PALER!\10. 4 Br, 21,.{. Ba, KANPAI\, 1993 Kihci Rd., age . laundry nll. Asking beautiful ·I-BR ho1ne \Vith If p V numy exiras. Jmmac. Lge Kihel, Mnui, Hawaii. J.$5,tll',X): 6T;i-7629. l-'onnal Dining Room and a lot cul-de-sac ,.,,A ......,"C ::0::""'-"'"C~.::;:::o;::._ __ .. :F·a.nrtfy' Jtdont: T-htS honle iir . , That J f , • W d G "flt Ch '/ -""'-' ='-"'="'·~~"-'~·=-:..· -• omm•rclal * CORONA H LDS. * designed for easy living '62-4471 ( ::::.) 546·8103 n riguing or ame WI a UC« e BLUFFS Property 151 Vic\\• the Ol'l';Hl· rron1 this \\'ith. all the conveniences ldlted IJy CLAY L POUAN -------C PLAN, overlooking Back --..:...-.:....-----"' cham1in~ 3 b<lr111. hn11i1• \Ii ~111(1 loc::itcd riear the iln· -Bay, 4 BR. 3 BA, $73,500, ATT·N : ARTIST _ Corona J-liir!1~anr~)i. Pn,Jf'.~s. po11ant shopping center~. ABANDONE_D__ o r:rrro1e':°mb\~e~~• :: Bkr. MG-5022 COUPJr.E dct'Ol·11h'<l & 111 t1p.111r cond. No1v priced at onpt $41,900. SPANISH FORTRESS low 10 form four 11inple words. HARBOR vu PORTO~"'INO Commercial Bldg; lge !llkf' II tOOk at this ru1c r;1n1-Call 1oday, 1ve·~ ready lo + POOL • " 3+ b bo 31<. btl ~ I • d N o p· ,'-" cr• NEW""" Tl IN.~G ,., ... ,Jl'l!'wlo1·nx1 .. ,:;001i__..,. -·Z·O-N-li-E'.-R·-"--;, OUl.S\,..dlng d.ot~f . c ·oat t·'·HJo<v cr t..,.Unil''f .J_~hQltlC:_,P"W'X.JOt"ln1111~11, .Ji119w!_".:1.!I:~. s:t'·" ..... n I I .. r, nu~ nu, f';J " 1p eyw1n owson • MOR'CiAN REAL TY ,. . . ., L . • ;,\·t1t'1 ~~~~~1~~'.0~~r:~~;r·,~i~i~;,·: ·1 J J' J I; J · -· ~if~-.~rrc"r:-·64 or · B1ach~ Al;;'i A-~-on 67• "'2 675 ,.59 .xt·1t111~ .,-BR hOm<' in love· 1 2;, fl .,_ fl t ...._. --ly l.akf' Fn1~SI Village. 1'hltt l°OOlll, hll IHl'd si~ed farnil)" BLUFFS SAI..E OR LEASE llU r. mc19n c en SOUTH OF HIGHWAY . j,., a \VCll·builr hon11' in ex-iw1n ivilh :>:i!t"Olld flrcpl11ce, Condo, line G1'CCn Belli view; Artists supplies Choi,.,. 49· lot . H!'lm'• & ,·"-celle:nl i;.'onUU lon. Call us for •I 11;p11.ri<lus lxxl.roon1s. l'.i'nfral I T 0 0 p E I ; i· Dolores end Model, 3 Br. 2~ & equip'mt a ls o for .... " " · 1 · nir confll11oning, ln1n1cdl11 tc •. I --c. ••89,500 r·i•·"•· C•"I 111 orn1nt1on nllout the many ! Bn. lrg Patios, pool, tS.100 l a e. 8 y 0 w-n e r , ,_,, ~ " •• 1 p · , 1 ''""'"'ion. The Ile•! Esta le • I I I I 1 "" 500 6~ -Denl50n ,\l'iSl'.X., G73-7::-Sll. r-x ra~. 1·1cr-. -o 11 y r 1 536 nw. or.....,, . ·~.w•, ...... 7823 $43.300. ~iSfi-0222 'II r, • ·Z'5l. * NEWPORT CONDO * ....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiii LRG. 2 story 3 Br. ho1nc'. TlllS home hlui knO\\'ll ·I sundeck, ~tlo, built·l ns, nr I Nr. Ocean. J3rand new 2 Bftr shop. sch & heh. Hy 0\l'ncrc .. ~.~~~--JIAPPY )"EARS! Atfl'lJ('livt F u l 0 R I r Save I 1 5.52--0175. . ~ 1:11n 0 ,,. ~ P.!'_Ofcsslonu.l landscMJing _ .: ... • ....... ~.1.-ooty--6.16-4319. enter tiuii CO\il'fya.ro-mro I' I 1· 1--Contcie~ts~a-lot-O•"----BLUFES.Condo $60,000. 3 Br-. SPYGLASS lUll 's Best Vu .irnrtJcn decorated house. _ • . • • .. a edit that belongs to _-. 2~ Ba. OWner:. \Valk to ten· New .fBR, 2~~ba. Sep. dining V.'/tl Br or 3 Br + parent nls clb. 640-1090 Rm . %> Carn1el &y Dr. By saver retre"t. Outi1lde ct'-I R A· C T E E I t-1 OCEANFRONT H 0 M. ~ · owner. jof111cnt for all w/2 patio~. Cleon. 9ual.nt cornel'I lot. 2 OUPl..EX-Conwr I.or -~~======='-gall flrtpit, 7 shatly troci;, ~.~~, ;;...:.;.j .::..rj :...:~,7..=.rl"_. 0 Compf•NI th• chuckle qvot.d BR. $13 9, 5 0 0 . Call Xlnt eontt. 3BR. 2BA. +-'"'"' children's plflY are:t. oii li:;c • . . . . • • bv fllh"i Tn the mirsi~ ~ 1 ..:7l:::4:cl~:.:::..:' ;:::::::_ ___ _ 2BR. lBA. :>00 Poin~lfin . Cj)UICK CASH r ul ·de·i;ac: lot. Shot'I st1'Qll to ..__,__,_ .... _,_ .... _, y~ dev•lop from step No. 3 below.. DuJllexes near thf.: ocean OJIC!n 1-S. bench. park, A ch oo l s · 1\f.llca Lar.on, Realtor COZY I Br, hou~(' on nice THROUGH A $4i.SOO, 962-69U. Prine. only. 8 r:~7iRrY~B:~i~RES I' 12 ~ r ,. 11 I~ 1: ,. I· .. *6~3* R"2, lot $14.500. hy •• ,,,.,, DAILY PILOT LllQUESTA -SanlR c""· . . -. . . . . . BAYl'RONT • lrui< beach, 67~169 ~fodotkll, mo .~ual°(' IFI, jA ,uNNSCsw'e'•MBLE fORI I I I • I I I I ~.500. Lease .epace $200. WANT AD M ' Home. ~18 ·~•1 1i "'" V mo. 1115-Tl(l2. V• Ac.....iiorbor Blvd. ()Ver i,t; acru 51..omi,\mproved C·2 parcel, one block fronl Newport rttWRY route. N'OW · 'rr · NNN lease to major :111t1t. }\Ill price • SiS.000 C."8sh Fred-i.¥nttt/Oav.e r.tunro QOLuWELL, BANKER RF..ALTOR$ Sfl-5221 An)' d"l' iill the B£5T DAY 10 I J 1nl to bch, ,V\JV n up ~1 ~1~~d•1•" · 642-567B ~~ SST,!IOO. 171 4 1 SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 The "Ycl.low ~·· ciAH!ftod, • ·&!~• C-2 lOT w /INCOME 19.800 , ~. fl. on NeY.·port Blvd,, ru.· Fair Dr., Costa Mesa. 13.zt/!<J. ft. Owner/ Bkr. OUier parc>els avaJL or Jl4Mi00. " TWO BEAUTIFUL 4-PLEXES Side hy side in bcsl pa1!1 nf Anaheirn location. 2-2 BR & 2·3 BR. 0"1ncr's deluxe 'runit & frplc. Covington buil!.1 On· ly 5 YI'& okl. Invest. oCects 1no1·e 1ax shelter, \Vhat do you propose. Sparling Jnvestme~t Corp. 833-3544 • BY Ownl'l', Bea.ch duplex: big apts, Sharp cond . Xlnt owners apt. Short walk to ocean. $S9,500 4 BEAQ{ units, just a hop to UM? 1\•a ter. Trcmendou.<1 J'('n· tal histo1y & good potential f-01• increase. Ser\OIJs con· sidcrution i:::lven rt:aso1U1hh• cash-out offers. Coad tern1s also avail. $11;),000. Grindle R. i::. 93.i-6767 * 8 UNITS* HAPPY TENANTS OCEAN BREEZES $110,000 RIVIERA REAL TY 149 Broad"'•ay, C.i\1. 642-7007 645-5609 Eves * 38 UNITS* $395,000 . \Vcll locil\(>(l in Costa Me1ia 61 ,. X Gross LIDO REALTY 3.'\77 Via J.lr'o. N'ot. Bc-ach * 673-7300 * --~ *TRIPLEX* Cu~t11111 p1·irlf'-0f-0\1'\t('1-ship, all ll•"I\' ·~lt'l:i<'IS, (\rd~!; (U'll[ 11n;nt. l.Hl'}.'.1.> 0\\'ncr unit l'l~-gu nily furni shl'd, huil1in kill11~·n.-;, r·l•)S•'fl i:<"IH11&<'i. (',\LI, !012-4:1;i4 for df'laiU-. BARRETT REAL TY 12-2 BR. FllRN. UNJTS, \1'/pool $190,000. Inc. S2'S.:t.'O by O\\'ncr. Prine. only. S.12-9'.lto art 5 P.~r. CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertisers may pla,ce ·thetr ads by tcleph~ 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 Pill· 1\londay thru Frida~ l:I to noon Saturday: COSTA l\1ESA OFF1CE J..10 \V. Bay 1- 642-5678 ' NE:\VPOltT BEACJ-[; 3:J33 Ne,v1>0rl Blvd. 6'12-:>678 ' HUNTINGTON BEAC1i 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-12.20 LAG UN A BEACH I 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLE~lENTE · 305 N. El Camino Rell 492 -4420 NORTH COUNTY ; dial free 540·1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES , Deadline fo1· copy &. kBh; is 5 :30 p.m. the day be- fore publitation, except for Sunday & 1\-Tondfty Editions "''hen deadli.be is Saturday, 12 noo~ ' CLASSIFIED , REGULATIONS , ERROHS: Advertlsfrs should check theh· i:fds daily & report errors ln1n1edia1t:ly. THE DAILY 11JLOT nssurri~ llability for the first In- correct Insertion onlt. I CANCELLATIONS: \Vhen kilting an a= sure to 1oakc a r of the KltL NU1\1B. R given you by your hd taker a.<1 receipt of y<itr cancellation. This kill number must be pte- sented by the advertl~r in case ot a dispute. CANCELLATION R CORRECTION OF N!lw AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort Is made~o kill or COt;.l'ect a ncw d that h~-bee!) 9rdc 1 ·but! \vt' r:.nnnot-Kua .,.. tre to do SQ untlf thct11d has appeared in th c Pl\1~r. \ OlME·A•LINE ADS: ~ Th.C!le ad!I are strielly cruih in ndvfl.ncc by mhtl or at any One of our Or· fices .. NO J~honc or~~· Oeadlint': 3 p.m. FrldN'.. Costa Mt>sn. offj~· 12 noon -all branch r. fleet~ THE DAILY PILOT .. st,'rVCS the rlRht. to clf,!- ~lty, edit, ·censor or te· fuse a ny advertlsiem t. and lo chnnllfl Its rs ts Ir reglllaUons \\11th 1 J)l'IOr notJ~. E LASSIFIED MAILING ADORE S P. 0. Box 1560. °""' M,.. ll2626 ' l • • ! •" ' ,, I" ' . Rial Es~te, ........ 166 -............ ,_ :"AMERICAN "., :. HOME .: 0 •,0 IHAlTOll ,•' ......... Ocean View Lot Ji 1 1 B..'autHul Nrirrh C'n<l Laguna : ::_., ' I ! • ' ' - ' ,, ' ·-' .1 l " Bt-a1·h, plan.s 111't1ll S·ll.750. Commercial Bldg, Site Fnntnstic HiO' N. Cst H\1)' L1.1gu11u Bch. Generares sorne )nconH", !;uilablc for n•s111urant, oHi('t' bldg, art ga:llf'ries, t'le. $225,000. 8'1S N, Cs! H11y., Lag-i1na &h 494-1001 494-7513 Ranches. Farms, Groves 110 Friday, AugllSt .J, 1973 _,__ DAILY PILOT 35 365 Apt. Unfurn. 3'S I Newport Beac h * • * F. W. Glddon1 19S3 Killdoor Costa Mesa You 1u<· the 1viriner of 2 til'kcts to th<' RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER FOR OPENING NIGHT AUGUST 13 Plea.<;e call 642-5678, ext 333 to claim your tickets. (North County toll Cree number is 540-1220.) 2 Bedroom, Bayview On beach, nr Balbon pier. Clean, cute, upstairs Adl ts, no pets 67~71 or 987-1988 ROOJ\IS $'20 V.'k t~p '11.'/kit $30 wk up _ a.p_ls. Children &-pet scr.Hon. 2376 Nrwp(lrt Blvd. Cr.I. 54S-9Ta5. 6-15-391-!7. ' ' ' .. .. . . .... • . . . I • , • • O < I fr• : 1' -. ..... ~ ~ . . . . • ' Look around your house and garage and you'll prob- ably discover you have a mountain of merchandise you could sell -all kinds of goodies that you just don't .. ·-use much any more. Wouldn't you · really -rather have money? Okay. To move that mountain, just call a friendly ad-visor at the DAILY PILOT. Use' the direct -~-·"'· r.• -·'". •·· .. -,. I, ' line. · · · · · · · · · · • Don't iust sit there on your smal fortune ••• · ·ELL IT! • • • • Thousands of ready-to-buy want ad r e a d e r s are . "shopping" the ads in the DAILY PILOT every day. And it may surprise you how many of them are eager to -. -.. _,_ -...-----·-- buy just whal you have to sell. Want to give it a try? Get with the Orange Coast area newspaper .. "wi!~.:·r..':~Pe.'!!.e .., a~.!!_ty;:; .:.. '.. !h~'!!.~!.~~! _ ~,!~."" "J~~! ,.,,. , . , . ~ .... , . ~our mountain of merchandi~e. • Advertise in the Orange Coast Newspaper with Response Ability \ ' . ' '•, .. -. • .. Classified Ad Line l !:o . 642~5678 J •• •• I • 1 • • , .. ---• I J DAI LY PILOT :f'1 ...... l~I .... .. I~ ~' iiiiiiiiiii-~'~~ I IMt *-l[gjl -*·-lr5J [ -~..-. ][5J I --· llff 1 ~' ;;' ';;t I ;;;;;' ,:.l!ttl~! ~-~-~;;;][fl~~l l Rooms 400 Nlct room, priv Mme, Wlllk d 1st an c e OCC/t~airvie~· lloip, $5S mo. $15. wk. 54<h1810. ' ROOMS • $'l5. & up. Ovcrlookliii Harbor I: Ocean. 11~ blk to ocean, 2'j()() Sea view, CtlM. 1 BR. Full ba., lg closet, prl patio & ent. 3 hlks, lrom heh & bfty. 645-6688. LOVELY room & ha. Spacious closet. Pvt e-ntr. Gnrage. $85 nlO. 5"0-1821. NICELY fu1Ttished roorri; priv bath, patk> & entrance, Employ«t, ove.r 40. 673-13t)t ROOM w/be.lh & priv. entr. Near Laguna Beach HI, $75. mo. 497-1284 Guest Home 415 PRIVATE ROOM tor elderly, am b u I a to r~ person. Nice, quiet sui<- roundlngs. Good, nutritious meals. Cali 54.~-4T"a.1 VACANCY for elderly lady In lie. Guest borne. Good food served. 646-3391 Summer Rentals 420 Bu1lnes• Rental 445 Personels 530 Found lfrH ads) 550 General Servi'" _ 'lumbiftg · t;telp _Wanted, M lo F 7_10 Halp Wonted, M lo F 7 10Help Won ted, M&F 710 NEWPORT BLVD. A "Spedal" """' a Lost 555 HOME Repulr. All n-.1n-L.R. OTIS PLU~m!NG AUTO PAR.U CHAIN FRONTAGE "Special." Exe<:. 5'll'', 155 ~"-------..:;:;:1 eluding eke., pfu-n\blnw;, Remodel' & Rope.in. Water Sttklng mat..ire caret'r·mlnd· . • • A:a:ve~w::t~lore:. =iteUl~=~~~-~~ •GENEROUS• ~~~ngai~a~l~:~. a'O~V.: ~~~~~~=~~~~ ~e~l~::·;~i::= CIRCULATION. catpets, drapes, util tum, not tied to a job. Reply repair & install. etc. Time & BJA .. Complete Plumbing pany_ Apply Checker Aufo alr cond., lat fioor, plenty ot w/olcture It p er 1t11 e n t e REWARD e n\ntcrlal. F&B Hom e Service. Peru, J 11 E. 19th St., Costa : J>f\J"klf\R. Furn or unturn. detalli. P.O. Box 4665, llepalr. 642-1403. PLUMJJNG REPAIR Met1a. 66.8264. ; ':_~~~v~~~8 ~~~~·!~. 50, quiet hahiur, F~r tttu~1 or any lnforn>a· 1e0~~Y~uill all ;~:s 0~ ~o"it fi.~2~~Jn~a2 AUTO MECHANIC TRAINEE : pl . uon lt>admg to return of a !l""'Clalty. 979-4636 546-9723. "-'C::.--1~ •. ~.otif"n•.••x'°in'.1 T0e1x,1•,.~. •', EAST 17th STREET easant personality want.II gold four It·af clover pln, .,.. ' . Re model & R epa ir ~·· ,,. v , Successful quarters in hou~. apt cont· approx. 2 inches in diameter, S\VIMMlNG Pool R.epairs. $650 Base IMll., + group med : Costa Mesa Location plex or bout In exchange for wl!h jeweled bo~shoe 111 l'.:ntryway8 ln!:ilalled. Lie. &. 1-10~ Repairs & Ren1odel· Jn11, + lO 'lO comin on buy MALE OR FEMALE , 1430 Sq. ft. with additional ~I~~ ~!111. es. 6 4 6 -2 2 8 8 , c_'(!nter; al!IO, gold locket Bond(.'(! Contractor. 548-1024 ln1t1 Valley \Vt>sl Building 1~'0rk. 846-7412 or 846.9086. ~ 400 SQ. ft. or storage. Retail ,....,... ... ..., (~·as on cha.in), approx. the uft 5 PM. ~intC'mtn<.'t". 552-8374 , ., It automotive uses. SWINGING SINGLES size or a nicktJ, inscribed SAN CLEt.1ENTE AREA _ifiw1 n 9tAlterali>ns ,,n _ AYVouOrNOwSAnY!:..11,, The Daily Pilot has an opening in the cir·:. REALONOMICS CORP. Call "Leah" 2-f! om 530..1250. in script. FLA. These are Paint'g -Plumb'g -Repairs. -~ uu culation department for a beginner to man~ BROKERS 675-6700 Soci•I Clubs 535 deeply treasured family Mob. HnlS & Apts. 4!JG..5TI7, 'Alteratlons-642-5845 ~ 4!I. income of }1l~ own, age a small district oC boys and girls, de4 OFFICE on Newport Blvd. meme11tos & the Joss is ir· 646-0977. , Neat, ~~te. 20 years exp. ~~t-~o! ~Jb~e1~~~r!: livering, collecting and selling news papers~ Avail on lease, partially * INTRADATA * ~~~bJ~,elp PlfL :;,:-~a~~1 :Hc:•:.•::l::i "::9._______ Tele v 1s 1on Repair sen1alive. Call no"•: 540-7041. Full time, permanent posi tions with regular': furn, ca.rpted, air cond, Q u AL I T y matches any i.nfonnation . 642·3589 Mo v I NG, 1-1 au t Ln g, COLOR TV Repair, expert, BABYSITI'ER for 10 1no. old raises and fu ll fringes including personal:, ~~~ n!Pt~~ J! w/PHOTO • Eves, & weekends. clean-ups. H. ea so na'b I e reasonable, m(}st in home. boy, South Coast Plaza area use of company auto. Apply in person l~ Avail. Ideal for Contractor "Largest In Ca llf" LOST male Ger man rates, Free est I nl ates. Free estimate, H.B., N.B. & or North C.osta Mesa. Must A'lilan Leavitt, Daily Pilot, 330 \Vest Bay~ ~2fil6 (Call NOW lor FREE sam-Shepherd Mixture Black & College Sludcnts. ( 7 14 l C.M. Bert Gallemore, be mature & reliable, Street Costa Mesa. 1. p)e prof11e on l prospective crean1 w/H.B. lie ~-Nr 832-75111 968-2783 ~-' · E I 14.5 E. 18th St, C.M. Suitable inatch. 24 hnl Aliso, N.B. Urgently in need GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY Tile . BABYSI'ITER, my home, 5 An Equal Opportunity mp ayer t for store or ofc. 362 8Q. fl. 714 • ~59'l0 I LA 658-6283 Of medication. &15-3843 bef TRASH & DEBRIS St2 days. Reference!! required. [ .......... ~~~~II!!!'~~,~~~~~~!11! $100/mo, & 1009 MJ. rt. LADIES -Summer special 1 3pm LOAD. COLLEGE STU· CERAMIC TILE NEW & 64~79 I ~ ~"5S'f/AmToE .. "'~~JU.SSS. RE AL yr. membership $5. Call MAN 'S green p I aid DENT 548-6428. remodel. Free e11t. Sin . jobs BABYS(TIEH.. 1 iv e _i n, He lp Wa nted, M & F 710 1-felp Wanted, M & F ~0 ~ 'PARTNER' U-1271 or k I 2 26 g::.on 'f 543-1479 seersuc er sportcoat a I r-,1 o v IN c & ha u 1 in g we oon1e. ~ 4 , "°" Mission Viejo area. Phone COOl(S 8 . " k f & ·~~-~~~~y~~lsns~!~ ~~~~~~~~~~ Meti'O Car \\'ash, Cost~ any1\·bere. Furniture, n1isc. Top Soil 586-~!8,I. CLERK Rroile~an,1 ~;yshiti.5 ~i.; ti ...., ?.lesa July 8. Reward. ilctns, etc. Bill & Skeeter, nery Village, 425 30th St., 1 ~ 541)...22'19 afters 1v/cxper, in lrg busy o · N.B. 673-9606 or 642·8520. l ______ _, pnl. 64?>--2 161 ( * QUALITY • BANKING lion. Chef F'red, 6-J·l-1700.~ I600 "'1· fl. INOUST. "'1op, lattt""'-GERMAN Shep. black & tao, GEN !faullng. '1'ee/Shrub * MULCH & TOP SC!L * WESTLANOS BANK TYPIST COOK-rnsh up. day s1\i1. 3 BR, 2 Ba, hsc. 2 blocks 1225 Al 600 l 1 8 mos, bro1vn collar, vie. trirn. Cur & Yd cleunup. SSG-6930 w>'ll lralt>, "'""' ~. ma•~ ocean, pool, linens, phone · so s<1, t. o lioe I•••••••••• if~:tf::"~rotn5a_, Jul. 1 5; Est./531-6377, 557~90<1. T S · ., "" ·~--furn, lrplc, patio, W/D, P. 'v/llv'g qlrs. $155. CM. ~~~~~~~~~~I iD ree ervice • Teller We have an immediate open· & reliable, s Pa g h ~Jti Fenton 673-2110 or 545-1159. _646-"' ='c-130===~=-~ Found (frff ads) SSO SK'I" .LOADER & dump truck ing in our customer service B c n d e r · 7 l '1-536-~. • · '-:;..;.'-''-'-'""--'-'---feock Con .. c•lc a"phall TREE trimming including Recent exlV'rience, sh"'"" ap-21" •~2606 BEACH Apls l & 2 Br. Furn, SHOP' STORAGE 1350 sq. ft. -· ... "" • ., "'" ~,. dept. for a. candidate who .,....,,":!~ · • frpl, opposite Corona del In rear nr. Npt Post Office, FND • mo.le Ge r man I I~ wing, breakl~g. 846-7110. palm trees and t re e pearance. . has substantial general or. Data Processing ~ Mar state beach. Sec. gate. i175. Agent, 646-Z4l4. Shepherd -black and tan. 'ns1ructlon .... 1 32" FURNITURE Van for ::::~vt\n?~.c~f-~fgr. P • • Secretary tice experience. Xlnt !yping. Supervisor ~ By Wk or Mo. 833-lG9l , Trained. Vic: Mesa Verde -local furn hauls & gen'l Install nt 1 . Orfers a variety of duties in-Al O.C.C. to plan, scheduldo& Industrial Rentol 450 Costa Mesa -couldn't keep ' hauling. 548-1862. Tutoring bank.me oan,, preVJou&s eluding typing sales orders supe-·•·sc <lat• P'"""'""~:.g 2 &: 4 BDRM. apt11 at Ocean -taken by Animal Control utg experience & m~ta" er t ,. n g • • "'-'''"¥" edge, $150 & up per wk. Center 8/2. Schools & J..OCAL moving & hauling by HOt.fE TEACHING _ in need shorthand required, sharp -.--... ons, 0 P a operation & personnel. 2 'l):'s . t . 575 student. LargP truck. Reas. pe Telefax, TWX & ditto college or suJ}ervisory tr,.;. Also yrly rental avail. in NOW LEASING BlACi.: kiuen, rcrnule, ~·ht __ 1_n_s_r_u_c_t•_•~n-'--''--I 5.14-!846 or 673-0647. of king term professional a p arance. machine, son1e telephone 3 y . -~ Sell!. 54~-2~. H t • n. h -'I v· c -priv instruction for vour • Secretary ta t per.: rs exper. in LJr: un 1n9ton o.ac j)8\l'S, flea Lu ar. 1c.: an1· SUNSHINE p c-~ CLEAN . ? . • " con c · C.omputer ex.v-r in edui· . AVAIL Aug 4 t Se M. 15 NE ·11 SI D p l k 11ren~ u-vP UPS, rernovc dirt, child. Call ti46-2721 betwn 4-Bus>·ncss de " e Io p nt en t , r · ~ Wk SI. 8° 881 Vk! ' W M-1 ~93-5~ ·• · "' 11' ·• ~ursery School has open-Trees. ivy, drivc~·ays -grdd· 6 pr-.1. , 5 c, 0 w • aoclg dept. Excellent fringe benefits in-tional inslitulion r c q ' . ..,...a · ettps • Y w 9-ID Sq, Ft. & UP .. -.>. 1ngs for 3 & -4 yr olds. ing. 847-~. Lie. 240182. eluding con1pany paid group Resume req'd. Applicat n Apt. 929 \.\'. Balboa Blvd . Hamilton & Nr>ivland t'OUND feinale Slaniese. 540-7730 0 979-9577 Shorthand rcq'd. Excellent insurance. deadline Aug. 11)th, Cont+::t NB ,,, .,9 r Housecleaning [ jfil] "'"•fit•. salat1' open. p 1 o"';·os · -1 or 833-0519 Turquoise rhin~tonc t.'Ollar. BEGINNING c · I i 1 ersonTK' · ,..,..... 1 ·' NE"VPORT be I o. u S .__ uitar essorui, 1:_,. Contact Shirlev 833-2511 A ] I d t • achlront, s ps Vic . .,.,,vi e & M I. on tin: ho D & Pv C Cl • ..,,_.yrnent ~ PP Y personne ep · DAY rockfall 11•aitress . .....__ 9 hi• 40, J ·•~ . 1 Call ,~ 0208 my me ay eve. I arpet ean1n9 Eciua.l Opportumty Employer "'' • 11'0.S uryer, w huuW, NOW RENTING penll\SU a. 1.-:1 lessons. 642-1278. -Floor Ca re & Windows; L s· I ply in person Love's B .. ~. July :IS-Aug. 11 1133·8350. . .• ~"Nk .,!GUEL FND' Champa--...,., Th ·--------ear . 1eg er, ""6 Brl,tol, Costa Mesa.~ -~ ~ ........ eatrical 580 Dutch t.1aint. Scrv. 537~1508 BALBOA IS. t' urn is he d M·l fml. small poodle within J b W ted F I 702 BANKING DENTAL Assistant. o ~I hornc 2 story-3 br. avail 2.\00 Rhinestone collar Vic. JAPANESE lacty would like 0 an ' ema • PLATFORM SEC'Y I surgery & x-ray exp. Ioi· no"'-$250 wk. 314 Ruby, On sq. tt. & up. Shenlyn, H.B. 842-5082. r-.fEN · TVflt100ELJNG housecleaning. Transporta. NEED help at home? We Bank exper. req'd. nc mediate Opening. : MTNI·lllock from bch. 2 ~ ~i!fsooFwy. FND cat: yoong smoky col· INTERVIE\I/ tion needed. ~.0503. have aides, nu rses, Centinella Bank • 644-6161 '• Br. w/patlo. Aug. 4-11 & A DELUXE OFFICES or _ yellow/green eyes, E;xpancting men's • depart-EXPERIENCED dependable h o us ekprs, companions. Hunt. Bch Branch Transport D EN T AL Reception'-t. 18-~. Sept. 1-8 67~ .. think It's fml. Vic. Magnolia ment -A rewarding full or lady will clean your home.. Homemakers UP j oho , (Il4) 963-5651 Orthodontic pr 6 ct 1 cl , 1 BR D I I I Carpeted, llluminaled Ceil· & Bushard 842-2281 part time eareer 18 to 30 636-0974 547-6681 _ Mr. Klbala Dynamics _.,,1 ·1y -up . s ps <I, 1 b k ings. Plus 400' Warehou11e ~~--·------years old 5'10". or over''°"'-';::,:,:'-·~-----outstauu ng opportun1 ..-~ ocean. $100 per we e k Space. 1370 0 Logan, CM BLK Lab -Aboul 8 or 9 wk:s • clean cut.' ' R~LIABLE exper. lady will TEMPORARY typisUsecre· Equal Oppor. Employer 3131 W . Segerstrom £1ualified person. :ro $780. August. $16.S. mQ. 642.1272_ 644-2228 fnd la.st v.1c. Vic Terry & F'LAIR'E ACEI\'CY clean by the day. Call; tary by day or wk. legal, 1 .. .,..,....,,..,.._,..,,..,...., Sanf.] Ana Send resume to Classif~ Monroe, 847-9853. Call for appt. (213 ) 278.2292 673-8117 after 5 PM. pr. tech or real estate. Ph. Banking (Near HarOOr & \Varner) Ad No. 901, DaiJy PUQt, V•cation Rentals 425 4001 BIRCH, NB Jo"'ND. surfboard sail mast &: il0-51. 473 So. Robertson HOUSECLEANtNG: fast, 847.7477. Note Teller P.O. &x 1560, Costa Mept 2000, 2000, 3600 sq. tt. or com· boom at foot of 15th Sl. Blvd .. Beverly Hills. de~dablc: good cook. C01\1PAN ION, days. Driver. Experienced An Equal Opportunity Ca. 92626, ~eplics stri~y CUTE i\JXJBE HOUSE, 1000 I.lo. !hereof, Avail. 10/1/73. NB. 1/'n, 642-8066. Fully licensed . not a school Re r s. 836-8988. Good plain cook or will do Installment Loan Oerk Employer confidential. ~ gq. ft .. a1ljolnlng busy cor-Mr. Baumgardnl'.'r. 541·5032. KATINKA, female. Collie. nc iiiiiiiiii~ JIOUSE OF CLEAN day.1.·ork. 644-1954. Part Time :::::::::::1 DENTAL RECEPTIONirn -ner, for business or off ic Branch Secretary A · 1 t Y N ~ u 1 e . C 0 s 1 fl ~-!es 8 . 1300 sq. ft. l\f·l space Harbor & 19th C. M . Stean1 Carpet cleaning, win. Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 Typmg, S-i"l ,_,.d. Security 8ssis1 '" -11. oungEx e~t'\f' • «L-161., "-=" "'/front ol(iee. Lg. rear 645-5486. 1 ]~ d™'l\l & floors, free est. ·--. CLERK TYPIST cac l o iee. penc!!=e VIV"""'"" ~"""' door. $180 mo. 1793 Whittier .::..:::..::=:='-=-~-~--~ 6-12-6824 GOING away for a \Vhile? Pacific Nat'I Bank, Laguna P .'tin1e. Typing, diclaphonp necessary. Sc-nd Resume~ UJVELY f\\'O bcdrooni homt> St C-ta M ·~~33 FND 71'15 Vic. 17th & Tustin, 5emces Pd Repairs 11..:.::..=::·------Hone-. -l,·ablo, -uplo wt'll .Be::o;::aco:h:.4"94c.--07..::::71c.._____ Classified Ad No. 698, ~y •• ...., 1 t>sa . .,...,....., S.A. Small lmJ Siamese cat. "' ... ~" -exper. At least 20 hrs per Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, a tor rent in Big &oar. Taking Days, EvPs. &16-0'.i81. .,~ "°""· Insurance housesit or boatsit for you. BEAUTY OPERATOR -week Morlday thru Frictay. ~·<-·. Cal>'f. 92626 , rese1-vations now S 1 0 0 =~~-'--'~=--455= -~54.:o~:.190=1:.:caft::.::6.'P:"m::· ____ 1 Assistant wanted. \!/ed., CLA y L CO '"-~ we()k . 5.11-1150. Storage FND male Irish Setter vie. Baby s itting AUTO Ins. by the month. thru Sat. Must be licensed.. • A • DENTAL Exec u ti "e MAAfli.10TI-I Lakes Condo, 1 STORAGE lot, locked yard. 18th & Santa Ana, C.li.1. --'---""-----Many tickets, cancelled or Help Wanted, M & F 710 Richard Ouellette Salon, 1701 Placentia, Costa Mesa secretary, exp in o!ftt:e Br, fully eqped, poo l, !18llna, Boats, trlrs, etc. $1.50 mo. &f5..2;)S4 BABYSITIING in my hOme under age. Lower rates. -·-·-~~ W. Coast Hwy., Npt Equal Oppor. Employer mJf management, Insurance, C· "'N:k, month. Call AM (7141 Neill Neon, lnc., 531-3374. FOUND, new mother cat, prefer age 2 to 4 yrs. $25 54S-4110 AD TAKER/ F /time · counting. Salary ope . 61~. Rentals W•nted 460 vie. t.lission Viejo golf club. wk . CUI-de-sac. 548-2147. l-M~a-in~t~.-n-a-nc_e _____ ll you enjoy "'"'Orking withe BOAT TOOLING MEN COCKTAIL waitress. Exper, 646-2481. e BALBOA Beach Apt·Slps Tabby, gray & blk. 831-00.58 BABYSITIING vicinity public & are looking for a attractive. 21-26 yrs. See ~D'°E"'N"'r'"A7L-A7,,-.,.;,71a"n7t,-:-.,c:pc:>','*-2 6, $80/wkly & up or yearly UCI u n de r g r adu ate s, IRlSH SE'TI'ER Euclid and Warner F1..0AT Main. Paint, crptfy, job w/advancement. we are Chuck, 12-3 pm, at The days per wk, incls Sat no $175/mo. 67>-5810: S36-082S. graduates & faculty w1 11 Westminster Vic. * 968--0036 * repairs, dty rot etc. 14 yrs looking for }UJ. Must be NEEDED IMMED. White Horse Inn, 3295 specialty practice In Sar ~ 891 9710 ----'-'"-'=....C.---1 997 3464 mature •~ Sales exp"'.. Neurnnrt Blvd., Nc11"""rt A o .. • t p ' Rentals to Share 430 need housing begiMlng mid -C t exper. -"" resp. ""'· ··.-.-na. ""'"" resun1e o . FEM_ roommate, beg. Aug. JO!h. to shr 2BR, 2BA, apt In CDt.-1. $125, 675-7fi66 aft 5,30 SfRAIGHT & square nlnle, 43, has nice 2 BR house on E. 19th 10 share. Lady OK. 64>-1457. ROOr-.11\tATE to shr 3 BR, 8.1. wt.same, female 'n.·25. $100 mo. 6Th-Till (avaU mid Aug I. FEi\IALE lo Khare lge 2 Br. cond in Santa Ana. (213J ~132 aft 6 pm. G•rages for Rent 43S STORAGE Only 9x2J' $25. Costa ri.tesa near l9th & Harbor. Call "94-J7S3 or 642-5013. G1\RAGE t"or storage only $25. Sept. If you have a room. FND Blk & ~Y !ml """k-a-~•;;.r_,pe=n..;..:.•:.'-----p · ti g & helpful. Co. benclits. Good Beach. Box 851, San Gabriel, CR , ... • · """"" a1n n working conds. Apply in J\'lust be ~xperient'ed in mak· C ON T RACT 0 R ·• house or apt to rent ~ar poo •'c •·asl--D<. & 50lh NEW -model "·ame & p h I ~ ne•:us D E N T A L A s s i s t a n , ·the campus please contact St. N.B ~ ~745. nnish, ''"siores,' offices .~ aper •ng "9 person, Pennysaver, 1~5 iog wood plugs & all phases R.M.E. i m n1 e di a t e I y. Chalrslde Exp rcq. $451). D. Katl\y at UCI HOU"Sil1g Of-• homes etc, Custom "'ork. INT/EX'T PAINTING. Newport Blvd., CM. of tooling for the new Laguna Bea.ch a r e a . Call Mrs. Bi~hop, 644-'24: '' ·cc. ~, •-1. >'-ll•rtln<> FOUND f emult>. Dalrnation L. Bl l9 962 !16 APPLIANCE •· M T Pacilica 35 213-'n3-2911 o.Jo,;r1}0.L ..... •Oft ~·'" AJn" 1c. · 1801. -I I. Quality \Vork . Rcasonllble .,.,r.r. an. op · :::::..:'°"~'-c=-=c'°",.---DENTAL •·· · t I service. -in Costa Mesa. ;.r'ru-'• "°" n~r· 675" "I60 •=52.,,, -i1•ages for exper. nlan. ' . Contact .. COOKS ,.,.sis un ' WANTED 2 Bedroom house F'OUND: lri!lh Seiter, vie. Carpet Service "'""" s. J-U ' ,.,.. "" General Appliance, 831-1301. Pac1f1ca By Kipper gi~nlic ofriC(!, exp on!, or duplex, 3 re Ii ab I e' Margueri!e Prky & Avery. JOHN'S r .• ~ U I PAINTING, honest ~'Ork, 9'18 \V. 17,h, Cos1a Mesa . i re' P on ' I b I e •Ir I s . Mission Viejo. SJ7.51J62. D . Sit~ I"'"' ·~Ptig .. sterych non-drinker. Bonded & ASSEMBLERS 645-5.570 Full time positions . night DE NTAL-Chai.rside As: ts· ~ n an1poo "'-" .A'Ot • Insured Charlie 83&-9441. t l Sal ' I 0 --t.,, References available. Pets. SET of 9 keys, Incl. Chrysler ard (So'! R tard · • B C shift. Good pay with fl"inge an· 8 on y. Z'd'.\.-.:n .... · to $175. Costa t.-Iesa or car. Vic. of Harbdr& Baker. ~ 1 & call ~:~~ C & A PAINTERS URGENTLY NEEDED oat arpenter benefits. Call or apply: nee. 558--8077. Newport Beach 645-6764 C.M. 346-4141. brighteners & 10 minute 836.9443 Register today, \\'Ork tomor· \Vith }~iberglass experience TONIO'S DISHWASHER RELIABLE & responsible bleach for wPlite carpets. PROF. waUcovcting state row! to work on 37' Trawler type n4: 644-260l Must be n£>at & clean. 0 ~ married couple & pel need l Save your money by saving lie. no. 279514, insur., all NO FEE EVER yachts. 210 Newport Center Dr., NB 21. Dependable. Apply, S H or 2 Br. hoUse or duplex, [ ~ me extra trips. Will clean types of paper. 714: 842-4386 TOPS IN TE1\1PORARIES. Pacitic s!=r Corp. Between 2:"'n PM·S:OO PM & Sirloin, 5930 W. · Co lit HB or E. side of CM. ref. Lost and Found I living rm., dining rm .. & * PAINTING • LAWRY'S Hwy., N.B. 557-7943. . hall $15. Any. fl!!· _S7.50, * PAPERHANGING * tiGUJ. 1 Boa t Repairman ASSOCIATED -~-------+ WANTED duplex or 2 Bdnn l'miliiiliiiliiiliimm;;;; couch $10. Chair Sa. la yrs. CAU. 552-8374 \Vat'erfront exper. pn!fd. RESTAURANTS exp. Is ~·hat counts, notl---'==--'==~--21DO.r.t Dr. p F'·ll ti. M h Draftsman lmechl : • home. 2 ~50· Lost SSS method. I do 11.10rk mysell. PAINTING SPECIAL rn... m.uw s=·1~ &. ~~an u~~~ Equal oppor,:Ety Employer Bkkpr C.onstr to Good ref. 531--0101. 1 slory $139 .. 2 story $189. fMtm. Btackie's Boat Yard, New· COUNTER woman. Apply at ~k~ngger~cJ;,1. $' t ?>1ATURE cpl needs 3 or 4 br & ram rm. Npt bch. Must be good area . To $400. 64EHi.l37 lDSf small blk ~ Ca~ DIBERNARDO and SONS Stuc(_'o ,P,,z Eades. Finest "-~~~-----"'1 .cpcoc'.o.' ..o"oc'=""'h=·-----Foster Freeze, 899 w. 19th "' .,. istrano Bch Palisades area. carpet sales, Installation & qualit y mate rials . 1 ... ..,.,...,...,...,.. ... ,. BOOKKEEPING / Interest-"Siitii"oi°"iiiii"i.'MiiOe"'iii·iiiiiiiiiiiiiO ~~~~s ttoo It tag •OT::i573. very old blind. ,re~pa:!!i~"'-"-'F~ree~_oE~s1'.:. . ..'.963-~~26~39"..l:'E55&-007.;:;""~';::556--0:::._;c.108~=o-= -• Plt'6SC' call 496-3342 or ~ PAINTING by Color King ASSISTANT P L A_N_N ER. ii~g position. in health care C • I Per90llal Sec'y $ 492-5396, 494.9309, Re"'Rrd. _c_o_n_1,_a_c_1o_r_____ . 1115 Ad . . . l CITY field for 1' IC Bookkeeper. 0mmerc1a Teller, p/t $.1~ .,avg . ..!u. "','}pt.35.1.:;,r0•semd. &. 0( t:" nunSANistrativeJUAN-CAP· CI111med84. !"'5ope15n1ing. Delma Teller. r11 LOST. Male Siamese, L'Ollar JACK Tau.lane, rep a Ir, J•~ " "'" " · orp or appt o-· · 1· 2135 Elden Ave. Apt. 1, c .r.I. [ JI ~l Office Rent•I 440 _ ~ _ w/bell ..... barrel on it, l'E'mod, add. Lie B-1 269072. ,gu="c.c"·..cs.>H0:=-"'·190.·'-----ISTRAN'O. $908.-$1U9, per . . Tener E"" y, :rt·Unlc air Either Big Canyon or East .My=..o"c.c'ay"'-C"o:::·..054:.:1;.-00='6"---N \\" . n1onth. CoUege deg r cc BOY~ 12·16 wanted to work xcc. cretary PRESTIGE Bluff area. ~'D -,·,veways· W 0LL·PasA1'p"'ER * in Planning or related lield getting new ~tomers ~or Cleric Typ,stfll 5 Announcements 500 ..o:=,,:::,,:::=.,::c..o..:c='--* A and experience in proc-Orange County s favonte Brokerage C~shier to $ OFFICES ----------SIAMESE Scalpoint eat. 6 ;.... __ ..:.,_____ When .vou call "Mac" essing land use requests ne1vspapcr. Make S20 to $25 Experienced P/time Mktng Sec·'y, no sh :.....~;;;; Fountain Valley, Beaut!· (50 yrs old, vie Cristobal El * DRJVEWA Y * l---'548~ -1444 eves_.__ anci counter iVork. Obtain '''t'.Ck plu~ compete for .cash Exec Sec Cons!T bckgrnd ful new building, ground ~ Can1ino/Ola Vista, SC. SEAL COATING * PAINTfNG * applicalion form and in-~nze.s, tf!ps etc. You ntust UNITED l.egui Sec'y SftO noor, 3,000 8QUate feet. 49Z-3712. FREE EST. 645-34~l-1 11 pays 10 cnJI professionals. formation from Personnel hve in H1Jnlington Beach or CALIFORNIA BANK NEWPORT ~ will divide inlo smaller REWARD LOST German Shorthaired For free est. 646_5178. Otfice, 32400 Paseo Adelan· fountain Valley onl y. Call Personnel Agency , ofoo!tfices, • ln50ccludes"'' .~""',,, I Pointer. Area OC Airport. l ~D'.'.r~a:'.;ft'.'.ing~------.liP~R~O~"~-~pa;;;;;;m.~l~c•~·.~h~onno•;'sstf;; ... ;;orrl<k, to, San Juan Capistrano, CA Mr. Ambrose 9~49. H~i~;!! Stae""'acht 833 Dover Dr ., N.8 ., · -..-· R e w a. r d . Joe, r ~ " 9'£75 -n4t493'-1111 . BUSBOY • experience re· ........ .,., • ..,.. 642 '11170 drapes, all util!Ue.sl Jani· For information, leading to 67J..J457/979-6265 D&51GN/dra!t. plans home reas. lnl/ext, free eirt. i 1 S2 25 hot 1 SJ6-8gll '".JG tor service. Call Marilyn the arrest & convicUon of & comm!. additions, gar. Ref!!. 548·2759, &12-3913. ASSN'T bkkpr & front desk.I qu ro-.: · ~ . tr, P WI ~====::::===: ~ all (Il{) mSMO GERMAN Shep, l~ old li.1ale 842 3400 Payroll exp. nee. Constr. gr~lluit1es. App Y in .person Equal Oppor. Employer • ii Stov • penon or persons who stole B/W, name Is "Oden". Vic. ages, · · bkgmd pref. Daily job cost· daily before 11 am. Big C~-DRIVER FOR DAI '.· NEW OFFICES ~~~ept°:. ~~~~ ~~ ~:. 18th & Monrovia, please call Dra peries P la:.t er, Patch, Ra~ ing, billing. etc. 548-5,;11. ~~yf.l~0'g':~ N~~b, 1 Big c 0 N s TR UC TI o N IN· PILOT IN LAGUN AIRPORT plete confidenC(' wilh ln· 646-8Tl7 CUSTOt.I Drapery. Swags, * PATCl-1 PLASTERING * ~Ln,.'.lt"gl•·tveln c"i"ass>tfh,.'ed, '.~fp? CAN YOU REPLACE ~~~RA-P ~~i ~~~As. B EA C H AR EA No le&.sc! ~·d, full .strvlce, formation & descriJtion ot LOST: ma.le Burmese cat, bedspreads, tableclothes, All types Free estimates ,,,u 'MUST H A V E DI drps, cpts. music, air cond., bl~l!,"to Daily p · ot P.O. nea collar, vie. Top or the your fabric or mi ne:l:;;;;;;::;;Cal;;;l :;5•;:o-'825::;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;;_.;;';;o;;S;hc::ro::;;R;""";;;;';t•;:;';;64:;2~-56:::;18:;·;;;_I Vele ry? ~.(pe"ri~r!on~·-!~ P E NDABL\l,A UT all util. Single offices rron1 Box .wuu. Box 916 World, Laguna. 0 w n er 839-4599. Vulery could draw sailboats, AND VAL I DRI ~ ..,IJ!:. heartbroken. 4M-55n houses, 0 st r l ch es and strucUon work aod ability lo ......... mo. Garde ning read ron-·c•'•n plans Qb. E~ LICENSE PALASADES CENTER MALE Orange Cat with ;;..;----''------11·hatever. ~uu ....... . I\"[ 2072 s. E. Bri~ol [ -]rii:l brown m8:"kings. Tip of tail * C reative Gardening Trader's Parad1"se Valery coo.Id take a ~ati%~li~~n P~n~ CA L HARRY SEE Newport Beach 557·7010 ~ bent. Vic . Poppye &: 2nd, "Put li fe in yoor garden & 11 handwritten manuscript and OU:ke, 32400 Paseo Adelan· EV, 642-4321. (CllfnWS·l.rv.J.ri.e IP!,~Uon) _ " CDNI, Reward, 0'73·8397. , llOl1K in your be~." -~ • •. 1 • 1 ne'ds ~'f~·ix':r ~u:1 :r. to. San J uan Capl!ltrano, CA:1ual Oppor. Empl~ PRESTIGE 2 ROO M SCl-INAUZER. male, salt & E:<per. Irlshmail. Cleanup, ~ •C~A~-~926:75.~~71~4~, ~-~lll71~~-... , [ •=;~~~~~=~= Exec. office, adj. Alrporter Personals S30 pqpper, rhinestone collar, Ma.int, Land s ca p in g, reeling grammar and spell-ii Hole!. Full glass view, 645-2219 home, office. Sprinklers installed/repair. J~f~ry Could paste·up ads, CONSUMER Dr's Assistant t paneled walls. all uUl., un-FUU..Y UCENS~ 77ti-ll9L $100 Reward. 646-1072. ti" mes forn1s, notiees, k?tterheads, Young lady (l.S-281 lo u~st crowded pe.rk:lng. 2 172 * SPIRITUALIST * MALE Siamese 5 mo. old MOW & EDGE t•l e. In hculth spa. \Viii train, l\it) DuPont, Rm. 8, Irvine. Spiritual readings 10 am·lO white flea collar. l"C'WRrd. EXPERT & If YOU can do mO!ll or all of· CREDIT CLERK t'XJl. nee. ,\ppJy In ve.r~n 833-3223. J)m. Advice 0~ an matters vie .Lincoln &: Huntington. 1 l/\eS(' tasks, quickly and ac• nny nft or eve. 2930 W . • ,.,.ruu..szRv1a: .... ,(¥.U~~~'k ~""-140. ·-. 00E11eJ;0Nr"~~,·~m.L·p~ •• -• • •• ~~dol--a~ . ,,,1."".1,. . _ .,,,..~~ ,, ~o.,111wy .. ~.s. ~ . _ Westcllff Bullillng · SMALL F. blk cat with nut· ~c ,.,. u ,~~ Cid · M'r. '°McC'.arty ftt '(Tt.'I) r~xrwnenc-f'd - Comer wcslcutf, Ortve & PllOSLEM P1tgnancy. Con· · t .. loag rur k white patch on Fru Estlm a t•. ri4Jl.-11G4 45 \V.P.l\1. Typing DOt.lESTIC Help Gco~e Irvine Blvd., N d'w p o r l fldenl , I yln pa t h e t l c ;:-heat, wearing flea collar, S~7187 " Clcllc.Lc.0-'C.w-.-IC-hcr--n-e-e-d-e-d . Allen Byland Al,-cncy, l~l3 ~~tit. Mr. Howard f:,~p~:e~~-AbOr-REWARD 897-6502. C 0 1\1 p LET E lnndscapc ~G3 PON1"lAC Gr~ rrix H1\VE $12,00,l eqly ln single Clo~" to bch. Call before 2:30 UNIT ED E. 16th St., S.A. 5-IT--0.195 • ' ~~ APCARE "'" "-LOST Lad. nluc "•r•ncnl inalnt. ,., ... cont>n"I. 1·00, Full. pc.1vey. .p\iu: 70 Kawa· st0ry 5 HI{ hon1e in F.V. pm. Sa l or Sunday 6T:>-3TJO. CALIF ORNIA BAN K OONUT Shop. afternoon le N EWPOR'f Beach·Alrport . Q'M-'t't.lO bag.: Sun 7i:t,gm, U found resid. s~inklrs. cleanup. !JB.~ 250c.'C. WANT 4 11'heel \~1U1t units ln local area. Cl.l·~ANING Lildy, Exp'd & 1nornlng slufl, fC>n1t1le i "I.' area, office •pace· 45c ICJ• PREGNANT! T h I n kl n g pleue cNl collet.1. 64;)..6987. Dn,•e vch!.;!,e. 9958 Village R~~l F.s1~1c _ Inves'I.-Purllculnr, $Z.50 hr. Hun-3141 E . Coast Hwy. 25-"5. Apply in penon. l r. ft. Jo"ull scrvlct. 300-.'!r~ llq. abortion? Know t.11 tbe fact. ...... nt<! ... 1')R ~ men1 01\'lSIOn 963-4567 . ll rbo Cor--a del Mar 673-9240 Donut , 135 E. 171h St., c. • ft. Mullon Realty, ~2960 tint! Call U1'E roNE-24 -""'~ JAPANESE Gardener, ex· ~ · tington a W" are a. -·~ "'~'-"·Ml, Ne.....,. ... Beach hn, 541-5521 lDST: Wallet blue soode per. Cleanups, yard aerv. $8,032 Isl tnist deed, 7% ,'(I Sma ll T rust Deed [;~846-'~:tm~~-;:"""""""""""' [ ,~~u~al~O~p;;"r~,~E~m~~l:o-~'~'.., DRAPERY Tshler ncedld • .,_, uvu .. _.. w/trtnae. vie s.A. ruver Rella. & ne&L rrec est. $82 mo, to $130 mo. ln 4 ;· stc:i.d 1\urk. 1\•ill train. { ! OFFICE Spece for rent. LADIES July ~ 1 r. trail REWARD, ~ &&-OGM. Years. Due 9 years, w/m-+ CASI-I CL.ERICAL. ;:,~~.\S ' I Lease, m mo, nr Nffo'POt't ~m~lp8 3 6ss1 .• 1C1 • I LOST Lab. Ne.er ~..:. ~PER. J GA-' courte ror motor home or Wnnt clean Cadilll'e or Con-CONTRO!f-ER tBusiness Oruve:R ror nurM!ry l'll.+Jli. Blvd. on Broadway. C.M. ""artnt.r -' ·or ..... ~..... ~ apanese tu ... ener. cars 673-73tl tinental. 499-2770. ORDER CLERK ~ .. anager ~ 67s.-8761 M&--1479 Ii 19th. Reward. Cltl Cleanups, yard serv. Relia.1~-· ~~~----Hugfl OP90L1unity! matun!, respon., e v 'li n · -[..,,'N"G r OU PL ES 648-8300 eves. &: neat. Fret' est. 642-4389. PALr-.1 Dcsctt &: Lake (21 F'OUR·PLEXES In Sac· AK gr es s I" e per 11 0 n tcmpcml. Ck!a n clrl~ ---<DESK-r..;;a.vaUablL.m ..SW ~ .Elsinore-Lota plus 'Z! ramt'nto 1.\\'e1l E'lorin _Rd Order: dc$k experience. .re-1~·" ~ ...••... A record. 1>tell~ d<!..~.L mo. W C u. •·-j•·-Call "' ...._._,. -.;,...--p.m. 1.11..-1 Wliltel'efififn-r~·mile Gi\RDENING Cl.EANUP w UUll•ne!!! """"""...,,..., 1 u~cr 2I -old. •pp~ 2 llKI n11.11 lw~ -.. 4-6 ~· -Trade for double wide Areal, Own('r w\l\ trodc up. qulrt<t 1-leavy tell?'phonn f'C· once• F-,_..,,,.,.,.. "1 tlo I 11<.1 ~·u " .I $5 mo. nswert..., eervtce ~15ll-:--- -cat-Lkto Sands vicinity. R.ealOl'lablc Prlce.-l''ree Eat • ..., ,..,,. I I · tu 1 · v• ~ • ., .... ~ '-'" nil h I• w " ·• 81 • ..i ~ .. 646-0478 • 54.1-2().ll • • mobile home. _.-,vuu eqty. For unils or ? qu tts P t'tl.SM1, ma re a · company. ~nd resum<' to rs (>('r 1 y. "ii s available. 1'l'rn'i Boach 'n,I.. SWINGING SINGLES 673·212S 549·0433 titude. ExceQent benefit Box No. 917 care of Dnlly 6~169-1. \Vkd~l'I 3-l~™·t lluntlna:ton Beach. 642-4371 Call fl>r lnfo 24 pm 5JO.l250 !VIALE ~lar'r\ete. 6 mot1 old. MOW &: Edge. Expert ~ llAVE 21• l!l7l Fireball mtr NE'\\IPORT BEACll pn ckagt. Con1act pen90nnd : Piiot, P.O.Bool: l!l60, Costa E11 r ·---s"100-i1 000 ~·r ,0. 1617 WESTCLI FF-NB -• I . Vic. W IM>n & Pla.centJa. 2 dtpt!ndable. Call Jor..,~romp hon1C' on I T, Dotlgt cha~~1i'5, Trade or !IWll lJ tny "'Iller-(114) 540-4020 MCIQ. Gallt. !Q326. tr r hon1e. Your Olm 1980, 912. 7"J6 A 5'ICt Sq. Ft. P•mHy CounH Int. am. boys wt. 548--'794? tree e1't. John, S46-J 6· !ltlll uOO~r 11.•u1T. 7400 ml. be(! iihop / headshop for COUNTER 1voma.n. Fo~ter hr IS-16. ! Ample parkbll'. UHJ. Batun-63$.."°9> °' &&lf.364.1 SMALL CAT Complete UHvn & G11rden1ng Wiil trd eqty for car or ? van or c·ru11pi't'. Call: Avery Products F'rttze. Apply 899 \Vest 19th f M, :'ITEN·r 0££ prdncr, M1·5032. ~HOlJCS Anonymou1. Shtmese wtlh white Sttvlcc -llauling & Cle= 545-376ti/fi86.!\807, • 673·2784 • St., Costs Mcsn . l\tnlc•. ,~11 llte n1r, ~ o.c. Airport loai.tkm, 682 tq. PhOnc Mi.-1217 or Write Col1eae Pa11c: 557-7141 Jim 54 WILL trade cq11\1y. Lg view C·l Pmp, $9000 p/yr net co;~n~r =n COOKS to lTaln lor assistant nc .... ds n-llablc f I t I 1 • ft., 2 year ~uo. furniture Pip.Box 12tl. <:bit. Ml":lll. · MALE IRISH SEnER Cru'dcnlng & cJt"an-up! lot Rancho Ln Costa on 111 Nct 25 yr lse hflck. lh>atl of g,.ntn Ana· CA \ilornll\ manager po11i\lon. Grt1v1• f'mplo)'•"t", Oppor. fO ltl w ava. S27IL monlb. 833--3147. .JVLJ rroio _Mlpoiwi or ~ -Rc!wardl 554-0657 ho.le KO!f crsc. for income co~ta l\lesa. 32 "l\totrl 6" 1Nl!ar H11.rixn. A Warner! yard shift, li flli,)'!I "'eek/ w/ro. Min. t"XPt"r. ""' d. FOil INtr 2 adjotntna otca ,anyone who ca.n corhC't her, Dcm'l gtve up the ahlpl Tbe tute'M dr11.w In the \VesL property to 10 un11s. Or 1 lypc un . & rc~I. S90,txXl. F'nr r.q113t opportunity enlployer Company bcnclit.!1, Apply In 979-2200. J im C 1 in • view l ,fk,, l.l&n1eft. Ht.rt Ct.ll Rudolph(); 604838. "Uwt" It tn clulffied, ~ • , .a DRlly Pilot Oaaltied F;v~. 644-1 rn. cir. holl1(' ur 1st TD. G~ rn /(, peM10n, l2t'IJ BRke.r St.. weekda)<,_ Rlt)i, ~ 8tU klle ktfns ••. Mi-sm to Shore llffullll 6G-48TI, Ad. 6C:667L ;;·••••••••••••••••-• eo.ta ~tcJ&. \\\1n! nd results .. SO J ' l - . -. I ' ' . ~ ... • i_ ... _ ... _ ..... _. _rui_1;;I ;;"';;'"';;''-;;;;,;l[Il]~J;1·.:.~"'-""'.~·"·-·.· ;11111[Il]11111.;._I ;;';;;-.. ;;"-"-;;;-~~[Il]~J~I iiiiiiiiii" .... _._ .. ·~l[Il]~IJ Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710. Help Wonted, M&F 710 Helo Wonted. M & F 710Help Wented,M & F 710 ESCR'OW TRAIN EE CIR.L f rtUay, p/tlme. Ile.Ip lnven. Control Clrk ~~ f'ine !OC'a't t'O. \\111 rrnin sh.!lrp in 1-et1til !!:lore. $500 2nd Shift u'll'llvhlu;ll \\' b"<Xlo'I rna1h 11p. Call G41·S020 \\'H1clif! MACHINISTS tlflulc & a<.X-'Ul'ate typing. GREAT opportunity lr1 fast Personnel Agmt·y Stu.r t $475. Call Kay \Vlng, grov.•ing fabric t huu1 5'-w· 1651 E. Ed inger. S.A, 'fop pay & liberal wage program. Paid health & denta l insurance. 11 paid holidays a year. Long term security. 5-J0..605&, Coastal Personncl ing ability required. If you tMark III Cen1 l'I'! Ai.:•·uey, Z790 llai:bor Blvd., I t'njoy 1nt-'{'\ing 1hf' public & 5.;2-8836 Cr.·I. 11·11.nt to Y•urk !'.!tth<'r full or IRON \\'ORKER, I<XP'O EXt;c·. &'I.', ,,1111 lypist, gd. f}att tln1e v.·r· 11·oulrl like to1 OftN,\UIENTAL Royal Industries, a major manufacturer of nu· clear components, is now hiring ex perienced machinists in the following categories. All sh lits. J>honc pt't~na!ity, gd, front talk lo )OU. N<'!'d fl('l"SOlllKl LAG UNA 494-6376 O')tfiC'I.' apJ)C'<U'&nce, shorrhnd for N.B. & 1..l.t location. <ll·~irca bk·. $550 per nio + Apply at Pla:i;;.1 F:.urll·s JANITOR tvp tx-nefi!s wl opp. tor ad. f!lrmerly \VI' St brooks Restaurant. l\1ature, reliu.ble, vaneenient, 556-0S90. Yardage, 20 Fashion Island, hus1>!n4 & wife tearn. 10 EXECUTIVES $12,000 to $75,000 Send resume or call TODAY for c.'On!identia.l NO COST executive intervie v.·. DIBCtrrfVE SERVICES, INC. 88S N. l\fain, Santa Ana ( 714 l 547-9625. E:\PER. COOli: aloo di sh· ,,·asher. Apply 10 an1. The J.'ranciS<'an R e s I a u r a n t 31781 Can1ino Capistrano, San JU&n Capislt'ano. EXPER. Cook wanted, spilt shift, call or come in, 673-4530. Village Inn , Balboa Island ·EXPER. Bookkeeper & Girl Friday for retail wear store. Irvine Oflice. 833-3622 EXPERIENCED landscape \\'Orker wanted. Good pay. Good future. Call 586-2883. EXPER. Cashier & Desk, f/fime. Apply Gene's, 2300 Harlxlr Blvd, C.M. • • • Jerry Davis 1991 B Charle Costa Mesa You are the winner of 2 tickets to tl1e RINGLING BROS & BARNUM & BAILEY CIRCUS ai the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER FOR OPENING NIGHT AUGUST 13 Please call 642-5678. ext 333 to claim your tickets. (North County toll free number is 540·1220.J • * * FOOD service \\'orker, ex- perienced pr e f e rred . Rotating schedule. G00d e1nploye bc'nefits. Costa l\1esa l\1emorial Hospital, 301 Victoria, Costa Mesa FRY COOK P/time. Dick Oiurches Rest· aurant, ~98 Ne\vport Blvd., Costa Mesa. FULL time Service Station Salesman. FrinKe.-benefits. Time & 1,t overfime. Apply 8 am·5 pm, 15922 Pac. Coasl lflvy., H.B. 592-9104. No ex· J>('r. necess. On the job training. FULL tin1e DELI MAN, must be neat, se I f n1olivatcd, dependable & at least 18. Apply 495 E. 17th St., C.?11. Ask for J im or TeJTY. FULL Time & Part Tlme Typesetters needed for locaJ newspaper, Night shift only, \Viii train. Call 831-2121 for further information. GARDENER Two years experience in I and scape maintenance. Pern1anent position. Ex- cellent salary and benefits. Call Mrs. Fielder 644-3389 9AJ\'1-Noon THE IRVINE COMPANY NC'\\·port Beach N.B. A~1 to 3 Plll. $600 per n10. Jig Bore Machinist GRIU. COOK Apply In person. 501·30th Mon&!., ll am • 8 pin, St., Nev.•port Beach. Profile Machinist NC Machinist starting $2.75 per hr Xlnt JANITORIAL t-.1en, Women, advancement potential, call Couples. Cleaning offices Del Taco at Orange County p/time eves in Newport, 1\irport. 9~. !).A. areas. Must have t'ar & Engine Lathe Machinist GUARDS l'"l.IU & P /time Positions, open in Orange Co., Long Beach, 1...1..guna Nigul'l In La. gUna & Compton areas for qualified applicants v.·ho de. sir£> steady employment. 18 Yrs. of age or older. Apply in person, 326 So. Lemon St., Anaheim, betwn 9 am & 1 pm. ArYr Sterling Security Service An Equal Oppor. Employer GUARD Positions no\v available full time or part time. LA & OrR.nge Counly a re a . International City Security, Inc. 827-2020 or 213-43()...7548 For local Interview ap-, pointment. HAIR Stylists lease your ov•n station. Beautiful Salon in SJC. 493-1011. 1-IEALTH Food Store desires exl)('riC'nced mature l"·omun for full time v.'Ork. Phone f\tr. Keller, 544-7134. Helper.Mechanical Must have expel'. w/hand & power tools. Capable of ac· cura1e \vorl<. Topatron, Inc., 549-1178. Hospitality Hostess Service Is looking for \\'Omen to v.·elcome & iI1tervi{'\v new residents. Sales or adver· tising exper. helpful. ¥!!!it have car & typewriter.' 547+:ID9'5. Eves & wlcnds, 846-9004. HOSTESSES & WAITRESSES Apply in person Airporter Inn Hotel 18700 MacArthur Blvd .. NB Opposite Orange Co. Airport H 0 S TE.SS. Some exper .. Apply in person Hamburger Hamlet, 1545 Adams. CM. Betwn, 2:30-4:30 pm. HOTEL desk clerk. Lile maint, Salary + apt. Call for app't. 673-8800 HOUSEKEEPER -Babysit· ter needed, 8 to 5 daily, start Aug . 20th. Must 1ove children. Have car. J\.lature, exp'd., refs req'd. 963-3n8 Huntington Beach Union High School District I-fas An Open'ing For a temporary • HEAVY DUTY MECHANIC Salary S4.32 per hr. Must have gasoline & diesel en· gine exper. pref. individual wt large bus ex]X'T. Inter· estl'd individuals may apply al Classified Personnel Office, 1902 17th St., llunt. Bch. Equal Oppor. Employer phone. Apply 123 N. Olive 01·ange. 1·6 pm. JANITOR p/tintc. &n1i retired. No cxper. nccess. Mr. Scane or Mr. \Villiams. Silverv:oods, 45 Fashion Island, Newpt. Center. Grinder Machinist ID·OD Milling Machinist J1\NITORIAL Help, pa.rt Personnel Departm ent will be open for in· terviews 8 AM-6 PM Mon-Fri. & a.noon Sat. time night I y, Expd w/related eq u i pm en t . S.1&-5687 aft 3pm Other intervi ewing times can be arran ged, J. c. PENNEY CO. ROY AL INDUSTRIES 2040 E. Dyer Rd., (Redhill & Dyer) Santa Ana, Ca. S40-3210 24 Fashion ·Island Newport Beach An Equal Opportunity Employer Has Openings For ·Full & Parl-Time Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 BEAUTY OPERATOR & COFFEE HOUSE COOK Excellent v.'Orlcing conds Outstanding benefits A·pply in Person 10 AJ\l4 PM LADY Companion for 2 months for Leisure \Vorld \\Uinan, non-smoker & drinker. 539-7632 morning or evening. LIQUOR Store Clerk, full time, Apply at 2072 South East Bristol, N.B .. (Nr. OC Airport) LVN or RN Supervisor, 11-7. Fringe benefits, good start· ing sal. S.10·~ ~. MACHINIST J>..1nt opportunity for man with all·around machine shop background to handle v.ride variety of \\Urk in sn1all shop. Lathe, mill, surface grlnder & some progn>ssi\'e dle expe1il'.'nee required. Call (TI4J 642-SOSO. Equal oppor. employer MAfD v.·ork in exchange for JUNIOR SALESMAN·-room. 5 hrs. per day. 2376 ·k Nev.'P(lrt Blvd., 548-9755. Earn $20·$40 per v.·ee ,. MEDICAL Asst. -Urology, back oftice. Limited X-Ray insuranC<'. 548-2247. MOTEL MAID N{'\.l,'JlOrt Travel LOOge 642-8252 l\1CYI'OR Route Driver for Daily Pilot in South Laguna. Must live in area and have valid drivers Ii ce n se. Dependable auto and cash bond required. Call Harry Seeley, 642-1321 · Equal Oppor. Employer NEED an extra income? Permanent part time help needed. Eves. only, incl. °"'knds. Over 18. Male & female. Apply Paulo Drive· In Theatre after 8 pm. NOTE TELLER Experienced -UNITED- CALIFORNIA BANK working after school and ~ALE clean cut, good d1 ~v on Saturdays getting new 1ng record, mech. abil ., customers for the Daily no~moker. Shop & _truck Pilot. This is not a paper matntenar:ce & delivery, 6 J\.lonarch ·Bay Plaza route and does not include -";ble to hft • full or part South Laguna 'deliveries or collecting. tune -student OK -Tues 496-1273 · · c thru Sat. Ha rd wa r c We have openings in osta Limited 3737 Birch St Equal Oppor. Employer Mesa and South Huntington ' . . ·· B " nl Appl now, N.B. Interv1ev.-s Mon thru' "'""""'""'""""'""'""'""'"" ... ac .. o y. y · Fri 3.5 I · 968-9641. ---·------- KELLY · GIRL MANAGER As.sT. l\1ANAGER BUYER Top salary. Better women's "'ear exper. nee. Liilian's, SOuth Coast Plaza, 549--0369. our custon1ers gct t~e shil.ls MANAGER TRAINEE they need not whats ava1J. . . able. \Vhe'n you're the lead-Outstanding opportll!llty t.o in the temporary nelp adv8!1ce to managerial post-~ tlon in 30-60 days. Our cur-field you have tn be good. rent m 8 nag e r s earn Come in & regist<.'t' today in $1000.$1500 mo. Must have our new office located in door to door canvassing ex- Newport Beach by the O.C. perience. Airport. Call l\1r. Ne-.vman 979-5222 • Typists • Secretaries • Accounting Clerks •· Receptionists • Lite Industrial Assemblers MANAGER Piu.a Rest. San Clemente, No exp. nee. Over 21, married, Top pay. 640-4!19 "tANICURIST, exper. i\ir, Ron's Men s 1-lairstyling Salon, 548-9174. i\1ATURE v.·orr..an for pre- school kitchen ~Ip. ln1· mediate employment i n Costa Mesa. Call 545-1392 after 6 pm. MECHANIC In1mediate Placement \\'ith Orange County's Top }'inns ~'lust have own tools, xlnt incentive plan, good salary. 1401 Dove St. Santa Ana, 83.J.9937 John. NURSERY FOREMAN Three years minimum supervisory experience in ornamt>ntal shrubs and tree production Must be bi· lingual (Engljsh/Spanish). Excellent salary, benefits and opportunity for ad- vancement. Call Mrs. Fielder 644-3389 9 AM-Noon THE IRVINE COMPANY Newport Beach Equal Opportunity Employer NURSERYMEN Minimum 1 year nursery ex· p{"r i ence required. Permanent position. Ex· cellent salary & benefits. Equal Opportunity Employer I ::-:::-:::-:::-:::-:::::::1:1:~~=· ::E Newport Beach 833-1441 MEDICAL Sec'y w/previous MD's office exper. Good Bank of Calif. Bldg. typing speed essential. CALL MRS. CA PECE (TI4J 979-6828 *GARDENER* Be your own Boss r-un or p/ti111e in your w.'n area. High inC'on1e. INSURANCE SALES __ __ ___ 213421·89'29. Long B. THE IRVINE CO. Guaranteed Customers No Cash Down Earn No'v. Pa,v Later 968-0812 No exp nee., earn while you learn, part tin1e, eves & 1\'knds, full time \\·hen quali- fied. r-a1,ncrs lnsurancc Group Ed .Lani * 54Q.1S34 GARDENING Supt'rviso r. INSTRUCTIONAL Ille d I a experienced, needed to "'ork ( technician $579. to $702. IX'I' in the !Nine area. \Vrite 1no. 01)('n in1med. 12 mo. P.O. Box Y, Altadena, Ca. Ab!e lo run a production or call 213: 681-9683 room. business machines, GEN'L HELPER v.·ith g raph ic a r t bar.kground. Contact Sad· dleback \1alley Uni f I e d School District, 25172 La Paz Rd., Laguna Hills, 926.i3. Call 586-1234 then send follow-up resun1e. INTERVIE\VING Shampoo KEYPUNCH OPERATOR SWING SHIFT 4 PM. 12:30 \\'c are seeking an expcr· il'n<-'t'd Tab Punch Verifier. Appl icants cxpc1i cnced on the JBr-.t 129 and Univac l701/1nCl equip1nent are cHgibl e to be trained. PLEASE CALL LAURA .r..lcCOY (714J 5'17-75n ext 79 Plastic!'! Parts l\fanufaeturer has opening on 2nd shift !Or mechanlcal!y inclined man. \Viii train in al! phases of prOOuctlon. JI.lust be neat, dependable. possess stable work record & be able to lift 50 lbs lfneCe!!s. , ~,,.,, & ""r" Li<. only -GREAT WESTERN appty 'In per!IOn Tues-Sat: -~ '":l. ". ., · Apply 9am·l1 8Jn or 1 pm·'.1 11111 * Or&nge Coas1 Plastir.s * 8.)0 \\'c!'I -18th S!. Costa "lf'S<l, Calir. Genf'ral OHice fl air W'5t 3305 Npl Blvd NB SAVINGS I N TERIOR d esif!'ner Sjle(.'ializing in model hoines needs junior designer ,r.:, girl friday. Call bl\\'. 9-6 pn1 G45-870fi. J,lJ R J'lo. i\tain Santa Ana Equal Oppor. Einployt'r n1/f MEDICAL transcriptlonisl· front office girl fOr x·ray of-COMPANY fice, in Jlitission Viejo. Irvine California 495-4700. • Equal Opportunity A good \vant ad Is a good in· 1 Employer vestn1ent. Help Wan led, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M. & F 710 MEN -WOMEN EXECUTIVES · MANAGERS 1 OK, 1 SK, 25K, SOK SALARIES.NEGOTIABLE Are You Unemployed Now -Are You Se eking A C hange - W orried About Your Age - Tired of Brok en Promis es -Undecid ed As To A Proper Courie of Action - , , • AR<,..,YO U ,UN~ER PAl07 If You Con Answer The FollowllHJ Cotegor1n In The Affirmative, We'd Like An Interview With You IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU • • JW(.-cptJoni,stf.Typlst 1 e A/P AIR KEYPUNCH OPTS RGENTL Y NEEDED t.. Qo, '.(.~u htv!' d~91;1.j v~-'~!ti:i.,r clti,v~71 ~ • B. o! vt>v k""'.llood n.iliv• 1nfe!li9e~c• 7 ., Salaries open, Tntervle,vs F'ri, Sa!, Mon. Position to he filled by f\1on. l 8 b 4 2 Gothard, Huntington Beach, Corner Talbert & Got.hard - aak for Lee GENERAL office, pa11 ti1ne ·mornings. P011!111g, lite lyp. in&', filing & etc. Exp. preferred. 1599 SuJ)C'riQI', A· 5, Costa Mesa. ~PERSONNEL SERYJCES.,AGENCY GIRL Fttda)' needed by sales manaaer of young & grow. q-j!lltwaro co.-P'-"' SEE; OUR c&-worken & 11urTOu11rll11)(11. SUNDAY AD Room 10 advance. Sh SO, Cl\\..L TRISH HOPKINS Good typing esscntl8l f70 .JEHH I \VIUITEi\10RE wpm) should live nt'ar 488 E. 17th SL (<1t lrvineJ 0 1 ~:lf~. Niguel, S3l·llill. Suite ?24 '642-1470 Girl Frld•y to $700 ~ l:rl cxperie11C'f" · ALL SHIFTS ltegislM" today, '>l'Ot'k tomor1mY. TOPS IN TEi\IPORARIES NO FEE EVER KEYPUNCH Top Ill ;\U ghl fl11 avalh1 bl1· trvlnc 5-lfH.lj() ~17802 Sky l.,ark Anahrim 533. 232'l Fee Pnld. Great Job dial fill> )"OUI Com;tr ~nd helpt\il. AJto Fee Jok Ca.11 flit E!Jis fQ&.SS05, Omtrol Caftcrs 'tmploym en l """"'1· :MOO 1rv1nc a1 .. 1 .. You rlnn't nPrd a l{Un lo 1730 W. lA P:tlrna N.B. "Ora"'' Fa11r.. when you NEVER A FEE: AT TF.'1\oJPO p!it(·e nn ad In th~ DAiiy/ Tempo Temporary 1-lclp PU01 Want Ads! Call now """"'""'""'""'""""""""'"' -G4l-:i67R. F!lsj results llrt" JUSI a phone Nf'f'd a "Pad·'? )"'lae<' llll ad! cal ewRy • 642-5678. C. Do you fe•I 1uffiti1ntly motiv•i•d to achf,vt ? D. Cfo you have lht ability lo m•ke dtci1ion1? E. Art you r••dy to 1tl 1 •e•lhtic c•r••r obfe(t;ve1 F. H you w•r• convinced that help W•t 1¥1il·1bl t , would you 1cctpt it without d•l•y? YOU SHOULD KNOW 8 The beft•t job1 •r• not •dv•rthed e Third party prof•11ion"I 1nfh11nc• 11 1om1tlm•1 ntc•••••v 8 G•tlin9 the right door1 open, 1t the rl9ht 11¥•! re• quir11 lechniqu•l 8 E1tcul!vt po1ifion1 .ue fill•d throu9~ elt cutlvt ln· 'llft'l'ftWt , e M•11 rt111m• m1llin9, i1 not • tot•! •ntw•r EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. Moy Hove An Answer For You! S1nd R•1urn• Or C•ll Tod•v -For- HO COST IXliCUTIYI, INTI RYllW EXECUTIVE SERVICES INCORPORATED 111 N, MAIN ST. -HOMI OFflCI -SANTA ANA Secwrfty l•n• l11ild!119 $yll11 702 PHONE: 17141 547·9625 , • • Are You Letting Cash ~ Slip Through Your Hands See· 11 You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 2. Guitar 3. Biby Crib 4. Electric Saw 5. Camera 6. Washer 7. Dutbo1rd Motor I. Stereo Set 9. Couch 10. Clarinet 11. Refrigerator 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Mochine 14. Surfbo1rd 15. M1chlne Tool• 16. Dlshw11her 17. Puppy 18. Cabin Cru1Mr 19. Golf Cort 20. Barometer 21. Stomp Collection 22. Dlnetto Set 23. Play Pen 24. Bowling Boll 25. Water Ski• 26. FrHttr 27. Suitcase 28. Clock 29. Bicycle 30. TYJMwrlter 31 . Bar Stool• 32. Encyclopedl1 33. Vacuum Cl11ner 34. Tropical Fish 35 . Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File C1binet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Sliver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide, Projtctor 42. Lawn Mowtr 43. Pool Teble 44. Tlre1 45. Piano 46. Fur Coat 47. Dr1pes 48. Linens 49. Horse SO. Alrplene 51 . Organ 52. Exercyclt 53. Rere Books S4. Ski Boots SS. High Choir 56. Coins S7. Electrlc Train 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto 60. Coflff Teble 61 . Motorcycle 62. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 65. Work Bench 66. Diamond Watch 67. G .. Kort 68. Ironer 69. Camping Triller 70. Antique Furniture 71 . Tape Recorder 72. S1ilboot 73. Sports Car 74. Mattr111 Box Spg1 75. lnboord Speedboat 76. Shotgun 77. Siddle 78. Dart Gamt 79. Punching Beg 80. Baby Carrl•l• 81 . Drums 82. Rifle 83. Desk 84. SCUBA O..r These or any other extra l'hings around l'he house ' ' can be turned into cash with a • l_._ ~ __. DAILY So • • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 ' • • • ' . Buy a Border to Border Bargain I Every classified want ad in the DAILY PILOT appears in every edition every day. That means your ad will be seen in papers delivered to homes and sold from newsrac~s from border to border all along the Orange Coast ... all the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All Bm1tlngton Beach Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeh Laguna Beach lrvi11e Sa1t1tlehaek . , Sa11 Cleme11te Capistrano (Plus the dally newsrack edition) For One Price With A Classified Ad Phone 642.;5678~· YOU CAN CHARGE IT-, TOO • Frfday, August ;, J.'11.> uAI LY PILOT 39 ![Ill '~[ : ...... ,~ . .Ml ~1(111:~ [ ..,., .... t llllJ [ ~ --iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~iiiiiiil Help Wonted, M&F 710 Hel Wanted M & F 7lO Help Wanted, M & F 110 Help Wanted, M&F TlO Help Wont,.t, M & fl 710 Hele Wantod,,M & F 710 ~ntLquu IOO [ Empo, ...... l[Il) I ...... ,..... . ![Ill [ ![Il][ ~-·---- p ' SERVICE Sta. Atteodrult (2) LETS NURSES Nuries Aide..,.. ~ ?.lcchantcal abUity helpful. URGEHilY SCRAM• RN1, LVN1 & AIDE1 Orderli11 e REAL ESTATE SALES SEJCRETARY Group ins pd, good ...t<lng Hospital Start Rffief Work The Ouys It Shlfts You Prefer. Good Pay. ~o F'OO!> Or Reba!~. Oix"'i""' •ll sltlft•: Good OPENING FOR ADMINISTRATIVE ~Kls. -Village ~ll, CM ANSWERS inarti1'1J: \vagt1 • xln t bene-• . . ~1745· NE£Dm Jit!. T'rainecs accC"pted, new o1 e:icpenenced Ileen~ SERVICE Sta. Craveyard Hotnc111a~ers· Up john 1805 No. Broadway, S.A. 547-6681 1 ........................ ... I NUH.SES Aides, all shifti;, xlnt fringe bnfts, &verly l\h1.nor Convalescent Hos- pit1tl, Capistrano Be a ch, 496·5186. NURSE'S Aides -\Ve are in· creasing our stall & need experienced people. A 11 , shit!§. Good be.nefits & ·a:,:cs. Apply at 14 4 5 Suoerlor Ave., N.B. aanif!e~ INDEX Adverti11ng olde1· \'.'Omen 11ref'd LVN -fu:nl Estate Salespeople. SECRETARY Shift J.0.7 am, Must be 1~3.1 Charge 11-T shift: Relief Your mvn prl~nte desk & & exper. Apply 3190 Harbor LYN . All shihs Bayview phone. lj:OOd \\lllk-lns, free .B~l~v~d~ .. ~C~·~M~·~~-~~~ C . · advertlsUtg. Same location "" Oil\', Hospital &t().5690, 18 y@nni. Cnll fOl' interview. Excellent shorthand nnd typ-2 SERVICE Station Attend. NURSES, RN & LVN. full or e CALL ANYTIME e ing skill'! required. t-.1ust be P/tln1e. Lite mech exper. pai1 tin1e to "'Ork !11 at· 646-l'2S or Eve. 673-4577 flexible in . ~pproe.d1 to the Apply J..niuna Chevron, Gl>-I tractive co 11 v n l e s ce nt job and \\'tlhng to accept a So. Coast Hwy, Lag. Sch. hospital. Good \\'agea & variety at tasks as the \\'Ork SERVICE staUon attendant, Secretaries Typists, Keypunch PBX Oprs bene lits. Call 642-2410 Ask load den1and.<i. Substantial 2 yr min exper. Local ref. tor Mr. Snyder or apply at prE"vlous secrelarial E'xpt"r· permanent. Union Oil Co. Ten\porary Sel'\llcc 1445 Superior Ave .. NB ience. Pl'>sition is in the 393 E. 17th St .. C.M. 3848 Campus or., Suite 106 VOLT Instant Per1onnel ORDER Desi(; -Growing marketing department and SE\\'ING Machine operators Ne.,vport Beach 546-4741 Newport -Cos I a Mesa requires pen10n \\1th pleas. Exp'd or qualified traioot"S. Equal Oppor. Employer sportswear inanu1. need11 ~ antpersanalityandabllityto Top Drewer Swtmwe•r 1.,.,.,.....,...,,....., ... ,,.., ... ,. f/tin1e, selfstarter for order RED CARPET deal "'1th the public. Exccl-Dr N 8 WAITRE-SSES FOR desk \\'/good knowledge of R I lent salary and fringe bene-3760 CampJ.s ·• · · inventory control. E"per. ee tort fits. ~l.l ITALIAN Type -Good at figures. Sal REAL ESTATE SHA.i.\JPOO Girl, s a I a r y . RESTAURANT open. Send "'ork resu1ne, SALES MANAGER Apply In Person Be:au!y license requin.>t.I. CALL 646-8866 FOR P.O. Box 2203, Nc\vpor! Resale Otfice needs manager L s· I &15--0212 APPOINTMENT Boach. Ca. 92660 with 2 year. ot R•al E"ato ear leg er =c:st=a=ti'o-n -A'"'t""to-n'd'a-nt:--WAITRESS EXPER, 2 OFFICE GIRLS experience. N1....,vport Beach Son1e exp nee. Good salary Full & pllizne. to.lust be over NEEDED area. Expanding company. IDC ror right man. SaJita Ana 21. Xln't hours. Surf & Ra:lio telephone dispatch Exc,el!e.nt alopportunhltyA tolr • al'ea. Cali J ohn S35-!¥.l:l7 Sirloin, 5930 \\'. Coast Jh\-y., I\Tu~t be 25, A.hie to drive pro ession gi:owt • PP Y STP.EF:T-CITY OJ-' S AN NB. Frozen -DePol -Flour - Create -C.'OLD FEET ConscietKoe gets a ~ of credit that belonys to COLD Jo~EE'f. \\'OULD the girl 1DianeJ that got a compo KC'\vple and P aisyene doll lrotn a seller at the Ilcgister Antique Sale in to.lay, please bring the dolls bal'k. They Y.-ere J.:>1 paid fol', 5'Q.236K BEi\lITIJ.-u L Louis xrv dlningroon1 set incl 6 chairs .~ marble top buffet server. Respond to, 1'lr. J-lum- phreys PO Box 6 4 2 , Carlsbad, 722-4.300. SPINET DESK n1ake offer ITT9-0))7 Appliances 802 i'Rt-:IGl·IT Dnmage Sale, \Vashe1·s. <lryers, refrigs, · llC'\V \1·arranty. Re bl t '-·-·_•_' E_•_"_"_'_"_._ .. __.[~ I Ho11t11 for S..11 . .. .. .. .. .. 100 Modul1r/Pr1·Bullt Homn .. 120 Mabll• Hlmq l'or lilt , ... , • llS Acrt•!I• tor 1111 .. . .. . .. .. .. ISO in confidence. Send resume Apply In Person to Classif!C<l nd no. 63S, c/o Trensport Dyne m ies J U/u"ll CA r I S TRA N 0 . YELLOW CAB CO. 0 .1 P 'l p 0 Bo 1560 Division $704.-$863. per nwnth. Ex- 186 E 16th C t.'f ru Y 1 ot, · · x • perience required in Public \VANTED gardnC'r, helper, 48 \1•nshers, & dryers fron1 hi'. 1vk. Tilne ,i:: 1:: for over S39.!I.), 545-0780. AP1r1""""1 ftr tal• .. , ...... , U2 81111114"1 Proptf'fy . . . . . . . . . 154 Ctm•l•ry l.011/Crypll .. , . . . . . lS. Comm1rcl1J Prtperty . . . . . . . . IS. Condomkllumi for 1111 ........ 140 · • osta esa Costa 1.fesa, CaHf. 92626. \Vorks constrnotlon a n.d OFFICE f\ssistan~ & Typist R E SALESMAN 3131 W. Segerstrom maintenance operations. for record keeping & In-: • Senta Ana 0 · 11 f f d inventory control. Must be Jnv~gate t~e JJew approach 1 bt1un app ca ion orm an accurate detail minded & & ~nova•ivc marketing Equa1 ()ppor. Emplo)'W information (rom Personnel tin1c. Apply at South Coost ELECTH.lC "'aste King, dbl General Offices. 54~2. oven & stove, Penthouse ~tedical 1·etirernent bt>nefits. model, Brand ne1v, avocado WAREl·IOUSE packers need· green, $150. \Vanted, srrrl d ~. t •265 T apt sz gas 91ove. 548-1557. 011(lll1l!ll/UnU1 Mio. , ... , ., , 1'2 en)O· ., Y.'Orlcin 17 w/li"''""!I. 5 techniques ot THE GAL-Office, 32400 Paseo Adelan- , ·~ 0 --LERY OF HOMES You to. San Juan Capistrano, OA Days, Tues. lhn> Sal. !Mon . · * SECRETARY * HOllHI lo " movtd .. '....... llM IM•m• Property ....... ' ...... 1" e . .i:. .... per. r,re. ,, . o start. Excel ent f r i n g c COUNTER top gas unit and tnd11Jtr111 l'ropenr .. .... .. .. u1 oUi . Mr. Shaw, 1fiOO w. will be glad you d!d; CaU . 92675. TI4/493-llTI. benefits. builtcin oven. $55 or trade Coast Hwy., NB. 642-9262. ~-5611 for appointment. TO DEPT HEAD L1t1 tor S•lt ........ ...... .. 171 Mobil• Hom9/Tr.it•• P'•r1n 1n Apply in Person for refrigerator or range. Mo.,n11111, On•rt, aasort .... 174 Licensed or unlicensed \Ve TECHNICIANS Munson Sporting Goods 549-00.10. Or1n111 C•, Property .......... 11• I Oul ol 511'1 Propertv ........ 111 Aant hff, F1rm1, OroY•I .... 110 Oflice Biding Custodian Want older dep. man \\'/partial income_ to work 30 hrs. \vk. Steady employ- ment, 110 drinkers, C.M. resident. Submit ref. Phone will train. Rapidly gr'™ing Orange REAL ESTATE County Co. is looking for ELECTRONIC -;;;350;;:"~E;;.;;Pi,a;;";ilar~ino;;;:,, .;C;i.'ioi';;· ;;;. INO 2'20 OUTLET -l\fUST ~ SELL~ G.E. electric dryer. A111 E1t1t1 El!cll11111• . . . . . . . . In R .. I £st1!1 Wl nltd . . .. . .. 114 '--·-·_ .. _'"'_·' _ _,![ •I 1uslne11 0PPOrturn1y ....... 200 Bu1lnes1 Wilnled , ... 210 1nvo11m111t Opptrtunlly . . . . 120 lnve1lm11tl Wanltt:I ............ lJO MOn•v lo Lo111 ......... , .... , 140 Money wanttd . . . .. UO Morl91111, Tno•t OllCI• .... 140 '---"'_""_~ __.11~1 · a.ggres5lve, career minded SALES Sec. "'"" "'"' so+, ""'"· FREE LICENSE hanCl 100+. Diversified TRAINING duties. Co. pd benefits. Xlnt 847-9696. ,.., ' a.dvauccn1cnt oppty. Sharp ORDER desk clerk. Sn1all Ft'i'e Place111enl Se1'\·iee. junior Sec considered. Call, PAINTER Free Training Progrwu. Apply or mail resume ri1011• Nt'<'d cxpcr. cnan1el painter i;:arn "'hile you learn. Al day U1ru Sat, 7 am-6 pn1. f/tin1e. Sec PcrsonnC"I Jl.l!ln· Sloan (TI4J 332-54-10. TI4-&10-9172. age1'. ftEAL EST,\'fl:.. SALES Balboa Bay Club SUCCESS CAR~ER STARCREST OF 1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. New or experienced. Join the . CALIF. PAINTER'S Helper. Albln'a \Vorld's largest and fastest 3162 Redhill, Costa 1ft.>Sa Paint & Body Shop, 788 W. growing resale organization Comer Rec:trill & Paula.rino 16th St. Ct-.1. 646-075l or with a network of over 300 _.... __ ___ _ _ ___ _ Ho•n•• Nrn1111e-c1 .............. HO oroces and become a ~ Hou1n Ufttvrn. . . · .... · · · · · · · · · '°' --=='~71=7~·==~==,,..-I member of our Millionaire Secretaries ~$725 Hou••• ium. tr ulllum ....... 11• PART·TIME WORK Club. Multi-mUUon dollar Lile Ins Girl to $800 C011Hmlnlum1 lurii. . , . . . . . . . . JIS CfMam tn1um1 ullfum, . . . . . . . . »O Inserting in the mailroom at advertising program. Fl'ee Payroll to f650 Condo, furn. •• un111m. · · · · -· · · m the guaranteed Ileen.sing school. Liz Reinders Agency ~::::: ~f:m ... :· ........... : DATLY PILOT Excellent sales tralnlrlf'. 4lZl Westerly Place Townllo11H, lurn. •r untum. · )41 330 W. Bay St. What Is your license \\'Orth Suite 115, Nwpt, Sch. Oupl•••• tum. ............. M$ Costa Mesa, Ca 92627 to vou? Check our month!)' 833-81.ro or 833·8192 Oupe•tt vnturn. . .. .. .. .. .. . . lJO ;r Oll1Jl•11H. 111rn. or 11nlur11, .... l5J Apply In person to George bonus Ptqj{ram wh.ieh n1eans ~ Ai"•· llll"rt. . ................. * Arauz, 9 Ar.·1·11:30 AM. SU to you' Please call Apt. 11nt11m, , ................ UJ I O ,, I . . · . SECREl'ARY A1Jll., 111,11, or unlurn ......... )10 Equa ppor . .i:.1np oyer V1rg1n!a Jones 835-4811. Great opportunity for bank ltoomf ........................ 400 PIZZA Parlor help \\'anted, Room & 1101n1 ............... 405 RECEPTIONIST exper. secretary, Sh req'd, H•t.i,, Mo1111 .•... . .... 410 Apply 410 S. Coast 1-lwy, Xln't salary & benefits. G11t1T Home . , •u J .aguna BPattL. summer 11en1a1s .. . .. 42fl l""iOiiiii.Oiiiiiiiio ... iiiiiiiii•IO;i_y or night, no exp. nee,, O:intact Mr. Gilbert V•c•llon Aen111J ... . . ..... •15 ea~'. fun ,.. b. \\/ill train, 110 Jo~or Appt. 547·7191 TECHNICIANS \Ve produce a specific line on nuelear ins1J1.rrnentation that requires 1c>Chnicians \\'/a strong digi'tal backgrowxl to trouble shoot, test, & dc·bug. WELCOME WAGON INT. Hostess Positions Plea!)-ant carl'Cr. Flexible hrs, xlnt eai'tlings. Car necessary. Fo1• personal in· tcl'Vie-.1•, contact Mi'S. \Vood (Collect) 646-123·1 540-1TI7 If you have 1·3 yrs exper· WHO WANTS TO \VORK? ienc:e & appropriate educa-DRIVE A CAB! t:ional back~ (military CHOOSE your hours, work schools are fine) v.·e would for yourseU, be your own like to discuss opportunities bosa. Men or women. can with yoo. be slightly ha ndicapped. . N e a t..Clean ApRf!arance. Immedi:a~ location ls Harbor Vts, retired. Age 25 to 70. & Im~, Fu!Jert.on. Move Supplement your income. to Irvine Industrial Pal'k Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a early 1974. day. Apply in person, Apply In Person or Call 8n-4848, m 1234. BECKMAN INSTRUMENTS Yell.;iw Cab Co., 186 E. 16th St .. Costa 1.tes& .. I~ 11.,.1115 to S~.ire · · 430 PORTER ~~ B k f C l'f ' 0,,111" tor 111n1 ............. w !yping or shorthand, etc. an o a I orn1e Antiques 800 Offk• R•rrl•I .................. ~ Fun T.in1e, P1··1.TI1anent Apply in person any a:ft or Equal Oppor, Employer INC. 1ndu1tr111 Jl111l•l ............ 4~ Ove r 21 t 2930 \V t Ct Jl s,.r•11• ................. , .... 455 i\ppl'-' PersonnC'l Office e~e. a C'S s \\'Y., Secretary .. Typist ENGLISH Country so fa. 1t....i11J Wanted ................ 440 ;r N 8 p . 4 hrs 3 da k C'-a 1730 o•-" ""O>" MIK•t1•nt11111 R11111b ........... , 3rd tl.oor · · art time, , ys \\' . 251)) N. Harbor, Fullerton .... ' .. cu .,.., ._ N n-....... Cou · restoration. $400. or \\ill hrtervil!\\'ing 10 AM-l2 noon 6.ENTAL manager . esta~ r ......... &e nty airport. (N. of Imperial Higll'Y."Q)') trade for old paintings or 2 yf'ers old. Lil-e new. $70. >l:>-5037 ,, R E C 0 ND. APPLI ANCES Delivered -guar. Dunlap',s 1815 Nc\vport. Clit 5-18-7780 CLE.1..~ nice refrigerator * $50 * S.17-8323 after 4.PM Rent Washers/Dryers $~. \Vk. FUU· maint. * 639-1202 * REFRIGERATOR-Newer.- auto defrost, top freezer gold color $96. 548-3673. \Vl-JCRLPOOL e I e ct r l c clothes dryer, 2 yrs old $75.. * ~10'19 * MATCHING Washr & dryr $75. Coppertone refrig. $55. 673--3120. Building Materials 806 e Surplu•. Building l\.fATERIAL -l(YJ()'s of NE\V ITE!\IS! Doors, lumber, ply. \\':Xld, alun1 sheeting, mold- ing, \\•indows, etc. BUILDERS SURPLUS 2406 So. :P..tain St., S.A. ?ifon thru Sat l0-5 n4: 545.1032 Ce meres & Equipment IOI Y lished recreational vehicle I _,Ca1,:ot,o.fo5c,7=-4281.~o.,..==== An Equal Opportunity other antiques. 8 4 7 -5 2 8 6 THE BROADWA center is openi"8 new toca. SECURITY DIGNITY Em'"""' , .. ,,after 6 pm NIKON "F'' PHOTOMIC 7777 Edinger, H.B. tion in Huntington Beach, Quality products w/fine ac-*'""'*"'B~EA=UT=~~ol~d.-~l~u-r:-n-, I Used only twice. Best oUer. '--·_-___,!~ Aftntllftt:ll'flllltt ,,.,, ••••••••••• SOI Cl,.. of TMnluflft M4-lwm ,.J L1911 Hotkn ...... ·• . Sii Equal ~r. Employer August 1st Rcq. sell start-ceptance. Sal+ O:>mm. Gas TELEPHONE SALES clocks, rugs, Jots of oak, Call 675-39n ~~~~~~~~~~·I ing, manager, (2131 358-3284 allow, fringe benefits, pro-Penn.anent or part time misc!! Pl'ivate Par t Y Furniture 810 ,___._ .. _ ... _.,_. ~II ~ I PORTERS WANTED tectect terr, leads developed rk morni & 835-1789 '---------'-'! i\1ust be expcr, F/time. See ROUJE SALESMEN by nat'l & local advert, Guar'. \\'ageS T co~m.evF~ 1,;EVERo=="YTH'=~I~N~'G~-l~S.-~O~N. * COUCH & LOVESEAT PM"SOnnel l\.1g1', Balboa Bay Want only highly ethical & SALE · brand new, bot}'; for $l50. Ctub 1221 \\1• Coast 11wy., . . ~bitlous applicantB. ~· details ccdi: ! Best pnces are at Usually home, 968-7910. Auto tr•n•P1rtlllDI'< l'•PIOnllJ , " .... ,. • .... 515 , • JJO .... JU 71.· B' Large National Co. 1s looking 1ngs to Sal.000. Call for m-LA TIMES 1550 South Coast H\I.')'. -· for pennanent stable men. tervlew. 673-6020. 540-0301 Lait!na Beach. PEDESTAL walnut din tbl. 4 PREPARATION PERSON E II t ~arong· saJ BASKET SALE• Sat/S chairs, $95. Adjust ab I e Soc lat Club1 ... ". Travtl ......... 540 -xce en "'' """· SELL N l I F'--' TIRES SALES & se-•-, . un :\Ion.Sa!, 6:31J ani-12. Starting · -;r a u ra vuu ~ ...... ._ \\·aJnut hutch $55. 847-8906 . 1! interested Call: Su I ts & !her Shald-B-'·• & Allgom•nt •·rvi-. All shapes & sizes. From all i'-_ .. _ .. _._ .. _ ...... __ ~J[g] $2.00 ""r hr. Call Del Taco ppemen o """ •'"I.-= " ""' ..... & lrl 1550 So h ,.. 714 • n• ••30 Prod t ••~7077 Full or part "m•. Sal""" ages coun es. ut NEW Bent"'·ood sh•le dinnetc at Ornnne County Airport, ' "'"""' UC s . .rur • u " -;r c H Lagun "-., "' plus commission. Ca 11 oast wy, a ot:ach set. 2 new bar stools. Must 97~030. SALESGIRL Nee.t & attr SENIOR Steno & Clerk, pa.rt &W-8022, Coast Au to Service VIENNA Brentv.'OOCI Setee see, make offer. 646-1736 PctlllHI llrff llf•l ........ ,.. U0 PRE-school teacher, exp and Son1e eves & some time, Newport Beach, call Center. Orlental. call 8' SOFA, $125. Call 556-1244 or certificate P~L 4 niorn-weekends. Fun shop. Seren-betwn 9 & 5· 644-5644 644-4375 aft 7 pm, All day Sat & Sun. ings a \\'eek. :>44--1086 or d!pity, So. Chm Village, TYPIST, Sec'y to train aa 847-5529. SUnflower &. Bear S t The futest draw in the West MTS'f opr. ~l Webbs Any day is the BESJ' DAY to FIVE pc BR~en corner unit: Loll ............ w II L--'"''_'"'"-'" __,!~ ;ii0iiOiiOii0iiiiiiOii0ii0ii"l 557_27U2 • · , •• a Daily Pilot Classified Newporter, 644--1700, ext. run an ad! Don't delay. • off l c e desk 3 Ox 6 O PURCHASE ~$ PERSONNEL .:.A:;:d·;;64H678;::;::::;·;;:;;=:::::;;;;:;_;;;;533,;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;;:;;=::::::;:;~:;;:~cal~l;:;tod~ay;;;640;;2-5678~~· ;;;;;;;~~ty;;;pe;::wr:o;/;;;th=':;l.;:;;P;::ho;::o;;:'::64&-:::;;2322:::;".I ORDER TYPIST T~~ ... ~~~: !"Jit::.':.;' USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! Experienced. Long term Soµth Coast Plaza, 54!J.-0369. ; Scllffl• & l1111rvctlln1 .... STJ Tll .. lrl(ll . . .. . .. , ........ JtO assignment SALESLADY for je\\·elry I 1 [:<9 VOLT store. Ref's required. ~ervlcn ind RePlirs ~ Jn st ant Personnel S48-3402. S.rY•c• o1rtc1a~y , ... , . '°° 384• Tc'~n"°ou',a"'o,"' .. "s'~Y7c 1061..::*:::..::.:S:::A::...,L~E=S~M~E~N~-*~ JOll WIJ\ltd, Mil• .. , 7()11 .,,. JDll W•111tc1, J'1rn111 ..... 102 Ne\\'}Xlrt Beach ~741 Do you take "Salesmen I Jolla wintff, M&F ..... ™ Equal Opper. En1ployer wanted" ads with a grain of H•llt w1n1111, M&J' ... : . 110 ""!!~!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!""~"":~I ;: salt? Can't say 1 blame you. I~ R. E. opportunity: ~IVC'C'k I followed up a few 111yself l __ ,.. ______ _, I'\. classes residential & invest-In the past. The job seldom . . V n1ent sales. Enrolln1ent ('llds lived up to tbe claim in the An11qu1s 100 -r-..ronday. Cflll Bob Sniith, ad. A1t1tU111ce1 m 5'17-4j..154.. Do yourself a favor & ex· Aucuo.. .. .... .... ... . .. 104 I thl on" If unu'd like B11!illl"'1 M•ltrl•I• . . . . . . . . . . . IU pore s "' ;r ¥ C•rntr•• & 111u1prnt111 ......... 1oe VlSleN to make $250 a week im· FumJt11r• ..................... 110 mediately, with an eye to O•r•;• 1111 .................. 111 Realty, Inc. much more In the future, H•uHllold Good• .............. 114 1-----~----I'd I"·~ l lk I It Jew•lrv ......................... 111 ..,..,-to a o you. M•t111nerv .................... -1u ----.t your qualifications niatch Mlsc1111nt0us .. · .. · ·· · ........ · 111 our requirements, this could MIKllllnaou• W111ltd . . . . . . . . 110 J . s -. c--M111kl1 lntlrumenb .......... 112 usl ay be the career you ve "'--.::n Olflc• f'Un1ll\lr1/Eq11IP ......... '14 looking (Or. l'l•n01/0"11ns · · · · · · · · · · · · · 11' ( -" · l l 1"4 S1wlnv M•J:lllnei .............. au ntcl·v1ew appo1n men v- Sportlnt ·0oods .......••..•...• 1>0 PM, \\'eekdays, 586-3182. Slore, Rest1ur111t, B&r ... . ·, tn 'Ch I ' · I M h TV, R~dlo. HhFI, ''''" ... , IM . Dayna Gym needs dealers, sw1p1 ...................... IJ4 arge t SALES. New Dterc se ac . Distributors & Sales people. Fantastic money! 956-9600 or aee us at the Home Sho\v, Anaheim Convenlion Cent('r July 27~Aug 5. ~-·,,··,.,·,, .... ,,,..._"_ ... _._·~JI ~ I ,. .. ,, OIJl'trel I~ Clh ,, .. ,,, . , iSl °"' '""" f'll~ Ho-.n~ Llv111tck , . "' "' :~; I '- _ ... _t .. _•d __,[l.*1 1 Mann. Equipment . ~ Otftlfll "........ . .......... ' fOO INU, Mt1nt./S•rvlc1 . . . tt2 1011t/M1r1n1 1~11111, . , ....... , f04 ............... ,.J'~ .. •.: .... .! ...... ~ .. "'-. I' 111h, ltt111!Cll1rt1r . . . . . . . . . . tOI ... ,., Slit .. . . .. . . .. . ... '°' IDlll, SllPt/OIKlll ,, •••••• , •. t10 IOltt, S1Mf 6 Ski .. ,,, ..... tll l •1t1, Ster.,. .. . .. . .. .. ... .. tn .__'_·-__ ._"_"_1°" _ _,JI r1t l Arr.:rtft ........................ tlS c.r11,.n, hi./R111t ....... , .. no WHEN PLACING A WANT AD IN THE ORANGE . COAST DAILY PILOT Sales TOY & GIFT PARTIES Ho\19e\vives demonstrators, eam to $2,000 by Dec. 1. No delivery -no coUectlon. · Free 1-lostess gifts, need car. 523-5484 Gifts 'n Gadgets SECRET ARIES/ "': ·-··n111sts- u RGENTL Y NEEDED Regi.Rtt r IOI.lay, wo1·k to. morro"'! NO FEE EVER . TOPS IN i:EMPORARTES. C'(Clt1, 1111 ... S~ ,., .... , tU lllclrk cen .................. tJI MMUt Htm• .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. tU 'i\tlor H1111t1 .................. f40 _Tn lltn. f[ltYlt ........ , , .. . . . . Ml Tr111tn, Utll"Y ~......... "'' """ llr'ric• .. ,.,.. .. . .. . Nt fGirl. l1UhhetDr. ............... • Mm . --11=~;;:;1 ~-A-"_t•_• ... _s._i._~l [ (Ai l SEC'Y· BKKPR Gl"OY..-'lng Costa Mesa Co. needs sharp Gal FI1day for 1 girl office. D<lOkkCEplng, Otnwtl ........................ tM " p;i.yroll, lypi1'g, :ihorthnod. A111!lltm/C1•1•lc1 '" "" ·" "" 'SJ 642•81):(), i=,•1:.~ .. .,., .·: ... : .. '.: m JUST DIAL sEcRE'l"AllY , R""'"""'" Trvtkt ....................... "' 'i NB V•!lt .................... ;... KS on Mor'inCl"!I . I ll', ' .. Aut•·t. .. 1111t .................. '" 642 _5678 f'/tlmc. 1·~1 21-30. FOi' in· Ault Slf"lkt & ftlrft ... , .... tU t rv\ "•:O 2r.3 Allttl Wiii""' , ............ , .. , "' I l' C\\', a'oo· ~ ' Au1t1. IM,.fltd ............... ''' 1'he tutest dl'tlw In thu \Vest. Avtt-. Ntw .................. "' ti Cl Uled . Aum, u.., .. " ........... " .. , m L--------.Jl "'-"'":.....::D,,•e:U<.y_P:..:::o~t-""'""= 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES ' TIMll $<1.50 $5.80 $6.80 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 OR USE YOUR CHARGE CARD • Pv~lialii fot • ·•, • •, • • • tl•y•, "•1l1111int • • • • • • • • · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cl •stlf\t 1t1 • ._ , , , , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ._ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N•111• •• , • , , , , ••• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • A44rt•s , , • , , , •• , • •, •,, •.,, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •' • • • City • • • • •,,, •, • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pfi•~• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a.t...,Jcft " ................................ , ..... Dft, •..•••• Most. c...,,. N•MMI ••••••••.••••••••••• bplrwtlH .,_,., ••••••• -----------CUT Hlll -PASTt ON TOUR INYIL.OPI ~ ...... -~--....... _..,. • ' IUSIHES S ~E~LY MAIL Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT I'. O. lox 1560 ' TIMIS ' TIMIS " 'flMQ $7.40 $11.70 $14.50 $17.70 $22,SO $9.08 $10.76 $17.30 $27.30 TO FIGURE COST Put only 0111 word in e•th •p•<:• •bovo, lnclud1 vour .. ddr111 or phon• n .. ,..ber, Tl\~ co1t of vou• 1J ;, •I th1 end of th• line on _,h=c~ l~e 1 ~,1 wo•A ,..f v1>11t ,.J ;, writ. I~"· Add $J.00 plu1 l lin•• "lir• if you d•1ire u11 of DAILY' Pll OT lo• 11rvic• wilh m1 il1d ftpli11 . • _ .... _ c-Mtaa, Calif. 92626 Cloulflff D1pt. " • --::.,..r"' ~·· .• .• ~ ·---~ . ., " • ff DAILY PILOT Frida~ A119ust 3, 1973 -\[§] Jr§:' 1~ I ll§l I ![§]I J~ I 1@1 --·~ .'iiiiiiiiiiiii~;;;;1 818 M J1cellaneou1 Ill P i•noa/Org1n1 ' 826 TV, Rl"dio, Hlfl1 Ste.rw Furnitu,... 810 Furniture 810 Garage S.I• 812 Miscell1neous 818 Ml1cellaneou1 ~----~-~-~~ SALE REDECOltATI NG all ltving 130 TO BEC.ONIA , CdM. F'OUH ~l'IOfl HI Orlll T~um FRl/SATi SUN m1 !urn n1ust go. Coor! Antique l.8Co Sh c rat on -Clrl11 ruu1.in~ fund11 for Trip $ Sai·c " Coutp:u" $ shnf)('. G<lld ~1uilted 8' ror· l'f'1nrock drop lear table, to llussia .• ~ u r 11 i t u 1· c , Pri<"e & Quality rlt'r !'.t1(a $6j, 2 upholslf:1't'(l old \\alt phone:, fire exting.. ~·Jot.1lng, mlijc.:, !1en1S. 21 i61 srcx:x 1'0 'l'HE-CEILING chairs t~Jge $20. eaeh, fr. prov. din. 1·ni.. tbl & Fairlane Cir. l·l..B .. S.\U: \VAREl-IOUSE F'\JLL Round 11•p.il(' 111:1rhl<' collcc l'hah~. cor , dei;k & head. SAT & Sun. Pool & ping pong WITH BETIER table $20. Lo V.'hlll' rorde11~.a board. nu nlr ('(Intl., \\"d. liiblt·s, TV chalrl1, lnm()ll, Jo'UltNITURE $15. Black chow table $5. pit~ !bl. Bl'll heln1et 5 jc\\·cl ry, clothes .f.t holL'iC loo, I • t & s · Gold Silk Screen $15. Lrge jeep suburv. lires. kg. 0sz llt>rns. 501 IUl'er!'>ide Ave .. s o :Sty es · JZ£'S toul"lfl bra.'>.<> gon~. $ j. 11-rought iron hradboord NB "Our NC1v Businet;S Co1n;•s" 96R-186.:i. decorator ilcms, h 0 0 ks : "°'=====,,-.,,.-,.--,-.. ,,1ru Sa1is!if'd Custo1nc:1i1" c:lothe,;, toy•, bottlr•. & ?\F:ICHBORllOOD Sal0. Ap-Livin" Roonis, "·-~ms, NR. new \\·hra1 colored . 1. t ., 1 " unuvu Velvncord <"luiir. $150: Anti-n11sc. Sal & Sun., 9 ro .i. P ll"lll('('S, u1·n1 ure. spo1·t r~ D1n1ng Room. Box Spr1ni:s. goods, nwtorf'ytl<', bikr11, l\futlresses, Stoves. Rf•frig. que li1rxil'~~,a~loni~a·din C(AIV\GE :rue, Misc Hrms, ganu.:s. 201.:t, 2015, 2021, 2021 l'ralor,;;, \Vnshcrs, Dryf'ri>. ~~.~ sc• \\' j' 1~ · 1 ini. rom l't' uc·ing salon, 5 Aliso sr. c.r..t. (Fri J, Sat 4.• •\II Al Gt'C'al Savini!s! ! .,...:,u: rrtrvt'< 11' an1p rcclill('r chairs. 2 hot pla '•''>, "Spanisfl ?.fock.•rn" ~·/lc•nlhcr . shnrlc : )')·an-L Office cJcsk, typc11iTil"r, GAllAGE Sal£• -Vri, Sat & .. Frencti Provincial" c1scan china: ltollan hrukl udding niacltlne, c I e c t Sun. Piano, Bun1pi.·r pool Jo"REE DELIVER'{ blQ11n 1..'Cli<>red. c ry stal \\'ashl'r & dryer. 2 uphols 1bl, lois or furn ,'l: misc. Cash or F'inance Available gtass11i•al'('; anllqucs. ~1uL'h chairs. And nmre! Sat/Sun, 1530l Col umbia, 1-ln t g. REPOS..'iESSION CEN'l'ER more. 640-l762 Aug 4&5, 2742 Cibola, C.i\f. ="'="o:':::"·~-~=--- 619 E. 41h St., &uita Ana l\1 0 V IN C a b 1· o a 11 ~ 5.IG-1!173 SUN. 10-5. BBQs. Bike, Daily 9 to 7 • Sunday 11·5 1 Everything rnu~. go' ' ..,i\TJO Sale fi'Onl niy c.'Ol-La\\·n-Voc, lots of house & 1 SET t 1 · . 1 & \Vasher/dryer, refng (only lrctlons dolls & related garden goodies, g 1 rl s · 0 wtokn size.spr ngs 4 nlOs old). Real leather items, Anriqu~s. glass\\·are clothe:; etc, &1'~1211 2liOO i11att.ress, , c new , $25. 5151 sofa Danish i\fod 1\liSI'..' ful'n · t . 11 · \Vavl'l.Tf'Sl Cdi\J. Tasn1an Dr, Huntington I · _ · .. n11111a u1cs, g t 1 t c n1 s, I Reach after 5 & \\'eekends .~ apphances Si'.il-5.j(}J rnan.y more. 2:>c & up. GARAGE Sale, Fri/Sat, 897-8174 · 2 PC Seel .• be<1.u1. off-11i·b1Jc, Thurs, Fri & Sat. Aug. 2, 3. bnby furn, ah· cooler, cedar ;\~'TIQUE nubhy, 14'9", cusl. n111dc by 4th i\fon -Fri. Au g 6-10 9 30 chest & other 11 en\ s, *AUCTION* FRIDAY 7 PM GREEN LV chair. ·rv &land, swlv('I. I-lair dtycr. Tbblo wl·I ctirs. Oval rug, 9 x 12, 4rcy/grecn, Padded '"'lo hl·adbool'{ls, 1vhitc plastic. AUGUST 3RD Rt•d corduroy '"'in sprc:nds. Bedroon1 Sct'11, Dine-tte1, 1·oy C'hest. 3229 Montuna, China C&hlnt•I, Co ft e e CM 545-<1573. Tables, Divans. 0 ff ice STEREO: NEW 1973 Gar· r1trd n1odcl, full s i z r turntable, AM/FM ri.'IPX receiver, 2 s usp e n s ion speakC'r~. Sacrifice S 9 5 . A1ake into Quad sy1ten1 lor $30 more. Tenns. 893--0501 Dt.>sks, Coror TV's. Conaolc Ste1-cos. Stereo Components, \Va1c1· Bed, Rl•frigerators. \\la.shcrs, Di·yen; .11.: l\·IUCH r.10RE!! WINDY'S AUCTION ~~P~l~~~~~ Free Organ le ssons Roll!, roll ends. BetWnable. Guar. &12·Il01 /Gtl-71Q1. A s Lor\g A1 You Like! ..Dr~pery Fabric Sale" NUtl•playcr• .~ plsyel'li wtl· STOCK JlEOUCTION! oorne to nttl!.nd Tuc!Kiny 27,500 Yards, 50 to 7()% OH night nt 7:30 Pi\1. \Ve w1u1\ 1510 A. East Edinger SA evcryOn£> 10 ll'&.fll to plll)' 541-~'80 Sat & Sun 10arn-4pnl the organ! All n1a1erlals furnished, BRAND nC\Y w 0 Ille Tl • s 1'0111 Dieterich -in rhal'gt'. clothc11 sz ;,..12 fron1 .!ax's in Phone 642•2851 Balboa. 545-1143 Now! I OLD Lane <..-ediu' cht.'81: $1.:i, COAST MUSIC 9776 Argyle Pla1..-e, 11.B. Newpo11 Blvd. at llarlJor Brookhurst & Adanl!l Costa l\1t•sa. ___ _ SACRIFICE COl\tE BRO\VSE AROUND M"tscell•neoui PRIVATE PAllT\' \VANTS . . ~~~ Nl:'\Yport Blvd. TO BUY l~IANO .FOil A Panaso~1c stereo tape re-Behind Tony's Bldg. l\1atl's. W1nted 820 CASH. 213: 874-3.)jJ curd.er 11·1th automa11c re-Coi!ta l\fesa • &tG-8686 verse. Spcakcl'S. head-""!!~~~::':~~!!:~" WANTED, CHILDREN'S Sewing M achines 828 phones. Lots of tapes. Bst = VACATIONING? BACKYARD PLAYHOUSE. offer. 111,11 846-549-1. • :><19-1n1 SHOP DOWNTOWN \Ve \Viii Babysit C t M d S 11 TEAC A-7010 tape deck. J>ro. Your Plants!! WANTED small 2 wheel 01 a esa an ave quality, 10'~" reels. Xlnl \'our honie 01.. trailer 1-loovcr, used vacuuln $19.95 eond. Extra ret'ls, remote THE FERN R * 548-1324 * Eureka upii ght usM .. $39.95 conb'Ol unit. Orig. i750, "'ill E Y NEED L A Times Homt"! \\.'h ite & Singer used, sell for $<150 firrn. l)('nnis Flo11'crs, plants, nice things magazine April 1, 1~·,3. Zig Zag:, • • · · · • •• .. • • $19.95 546-2050. 2905 Nc1-vport Blvd., N.B. Phooc 675-612l ~f;\NY TO CIIOOSE 1'~R01\1 DODGE k '"V '-·· N!':-<t door 10 Crin 'N Bier Jt Po\\'t'r n1achlne!I, rent or sell SACRIFICE A Pana80nle .1111?11!0 tape no l'Order with tUitomatlc re- \'l'l'Sl'. Usl'l'I A1npex 7~ reels 1:1nd l<."IJ)("S, lnc-ludeii 3 speeda:, 2 11tereo speak~·s1 hPAdphool'I'. 15 Prt-l'l'OOl'OeO !Opel and blank r'e(lil °:"all equlpmeiit is brand new. A!!klng $115. or 111al<o -Oller. t1141 S46-54M. * Summer Speolal * Rebuilt-P icture Tube $87.S0-21" or 25" Color * 2 YEAR \VARllANTY I.nstallntlon Available Rice's Television Service formerly !i.losa North Center 1 Bick S. or Baker 546-fi002 open 9-5 t6 days) ..__''"_'°_v•_• _,)[I 3 LlnH, 2 TimH, $2.00 true , v • , ....... ts, VAN or Can,~· "8"al•'on It · · "· • • bo " · b 67.rl''ERN .,... • .. a guut', no g1n1n111..'1".s .. out ruu engines, 0 a l1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I rental \\'eek of Aug. 13. Sincere Se\ving ri.tach & Vac 3 DOGS, Australian She.._.,-1, trailer, canl(l('l' sh<'ll. Call i• Di.sCU" .. tcrins. "" 16~ 181" Ila•~ ... 64ti·9',42 ~-. s 4" 4 ti " 3 ..., oa.r ''"' " , .,...,, .30 nio., Belgian Shepherd, $.is Bl V~nity d~·e.sser l\lartin-Brattn1d. To1) cond., A~I to 6 Pl\1. D<>n't n1iss 817-23:13, 1TJ9'1 Prescott Ln, '. ~. . a.ut \\OO<len cor. thl. incl. Rcplaecn1en1 1h1s one! 1743 N c \11 llB , (·~h1~ct ht-ti S2:i. Sofa bed, rost Sl400 sell for $.100. 1-lunipshire Qr., Cl\1. G~A7~R~A~G~E7, -,-al7c--,-bcik-,.-,,-trco.k-·-,·. I S20. fable la.n1rs. nld !an1p 6l'".,.,..1 ... tables & mirros. 6+1-7474 """' •· eve~. SALE household furnishings, baby ilen1s, fu111il u1-e to~'S. cvenu1g-s, :i-.., or M I I ' S I I ·30 B . 8 645-69'17 anu 41c urer s a e OR1ENTAL RUGS priv. pal'-G d 1no. purt asengi, mo. ~!E DIT .. furn. 9 d1·a1rers, w/mirror & king sii<~ h/brd. Twin man. t'hal SECRET~\RY desk "'llh 4· mint condition, including 8 TV & misc. 962-7291, 1772'2 return, ·\\'11.lnut finish. Jn1-pc, Fren1·h stylt• \\'hid-\Valnut, F .V. ntoculute! Also 6' Couch. dirontb bcctroon1 set, 11nct in· ~P~A~T~10"-,.--,-1,-. ~fo-,-"-.. -d~ry-,-, .• i\1nke otfcr. 54J-5t55 days: valid equipment. No. 12 <"ioth£>s, Jots of 0 1 h e 1: 496-1:>911 e~. Beacon Bay, N.B. Sat.~ Sun goodies. 9538 Azall'n Ave. . • Bikinis. cover·ups. long & ty nef'ds several used rugs. Sporting 00 s 830 5-10-002.1 SUPER BU\, nu nylon plush .. 1,., .. , halt _ ~·al """ "-326 or O'>D 2700 '"REE ~ I . . . 11 190 I ·1 " • c.;o, s.-~1 occas-\>Tr'"... o.:io-6.4" RUSSELL surfboard. ,. lo guuu lo in e. trp!, lite KO c · yes., \YI -ion dt'Cs.ses Sat's only 10-5 E....,;cellcnl condition. Best of. Australian-Sh e p herd . \Oii' grn, l'.({ yds. s~~O~RE~ 703 \V . 16th St., Chsta Mc~ Musical Instruments 822 Spayed ..... ell I l'H in eel. ) hinge on h/b. 54.')-1..116. CUSTOM sofa 9' f>~ren<'h Tapestry. Slighlty curved DIN. sci. blk Oriental \\•/S Aug 4-5, 10 a.m-4p.nt. F.V. 531-5401 ~7,Z~JOHS, &12-2'-55 °1 \Corner of 16th & Superior) -1~'~··~· ~675-::..:563:::::'~"--,,.---897-:"'605 l\1ARTIN Guitar, 028 K, 1923. TV, Radio, Hifi, f>'REE Shepherd puppy. 6 DOUBLE bed 11·/nite s'tandl!...~~.l!!-o~~~~~~~~~ Xlnt cond. Orig Hard case, Stereo 836 mos old. J·lus all shots. I halfn10011 e~sC'ent S 3 0 O. .-,j2-7513 :'11oc\C'rn unusl'fl Kingsize chrs. & lrg side board $200. 1-lUSBAND gone. All goes. NEIG HBORl!OOD Gai11.g;; l\1nrhlc t'Off. !bl. S 5 0. Guns, fishing-c q u i o . . Salc-i\1ini bikes to Chinn. \\1alnut setreo cabl11et S100. freezer, 1ah!e, <"hairs. boat Sat only. 9-3pm. 2320 LaLin-549-31~7 .~ 1nisc. 5.16-4410; 8341 In-da S25. Retrig. $25. Porlncrib STEltl':O. NEW Garrard $400. 536-8781 Needs 10 vi 11 g hornc $10. Couch $10. Tn b I c model, proressional size Office Furniture/ STEREO. AA15 1-len!Ntit / I ·11 "36-0lt)i \\'/dra\\·c1·s $.1. 962-7098 tul'ntable. 200 1vatt receiver, Equip. 824 Ainp. jl5(} Wt1tls), dual 1209 \Y cu c ren, ;i I Couoh Bod ,:1.ta.k£' otrf>r. Also \Vorld Book I l!:ney~~p-~lin. ~5-7797. diru1apolis, H. u n ting ton Garage Sale 812 Beach. AUG. '!? PRICE S1\LE .. ----"--------Assistanc.-e Leegue KING hl'adboard, lanlps. air su~~nsion . speakers. I--~~--------turn tbl, Alire. Lanting-}'REE to ~oocl home. n1ale·1 boys bikes , many games, SJX>a.k~rs alone hst. for $200. NCR Rrglsler, 2 5 e c, y speukci'!i. 1311i· by 2· by ino old Gordon Setter & books, need rooin. Sunday-Sac:_r1f1cc cverylh~ng for chairs, Ohth1er elec. adding 1~fl') $550. (TI<ll 646--0434 aft ~-· .Unusual co lor . . POOL !able, trw1ks, ceran1ic ~n· 32 I s NB ' GARACF. Sale, MI s c. nnin1als, etc., furni!urC>. ....,,l. nc I., i 1•1011-Sat. 4812 Royce, IL·vine, 552-S.10-I $IS5. Terms. 893-ffiOl mach. Misc. 1i!lng, etc. 4:30. ! •DANISH l\10DE l{N \\'ALNUT TABLF: & ~ Ci fAI RS $6.:i • &16-·1662 • household a 1~ t l q u cs. & fr<'t'zer. Austin Healy top & ON Sar. Aug. 4, Garage Sa.le clothC's. 2183~ Oceanv1e1v boii·s, s!n1 benches. outhrd Alise. furn. books, etc. Ln, H.B. n1otor control lots of misc. * 675--0676 * STROLLEH ca.i· b cd UPRIGl-IT (1-e£•1.t•r S 12 5 . 5+1-2757 RCA, Zenith & Sylvnni<i 1.:on-KJITENS, 2 calico, 1 11•hlte l\·al ker, infant seat, bub); ~l~cst~ of dt'll\\'Cl'S $15., $~.. cE~X~E~Co'-s-.,v--,-t -,~,,-..,-,llc5c1~25'""S<c-,c sole & ron1ponent slcl'ros 11·/gl'ay <'an; .~, tail. \Vettncd S\\'ing & misc baby iterns. ~-Kitchen table .'l: ~ chau·s chrs 18124 Desk!oi $20/!lO drastically redtk·<'d In rh•ar. ,I',· trained, 962-7659 DINING St'..'I, 45" rnd table, 2 lc-avt~. ·I i·hairs, \V:1lnut Cont;;n1p, d<'Sign a\\"Srd. SZ-10. 494-:?976 .. C.ARAGE sale Stcl'1'0, Early Sat only 10-<I. 513 Narcissus. Jewelry Alnerican co[fcc table. lamp Corona del A1ar 815 G.M-7474 $2Q. Nc\I' lo\·esent $50. Cof-Pierce 867 \V 19 Cr.t 642-3408 ABC ColOt' TV. 1904 6 FREE klllcns. pure \vhite, fee & 2 end tables $15. Va.ni· Bro o khurst. Hunlington long hair. blut' c>yes, 8 wks. T,~~tc~:·~t'~rl~. n~~I' f~~. ~.l~ ly & s1ool $12. Treadle SC\\'· Pianos/Organs 826 Bench, 968-3:t?9 2 llll1k·s. ·19'J..I·="='~· ==--1 & bed set. Sat. Aug. 4th, 319 15!h st .. Apt 3 H.B. AND NOBODY· CAME? • GENEROUS • • REWARD• ing n1achi1w. S75. 1\-Tisc. -FREE-K-l'TTENSI h.v 01vner, !600 .,t, sucrifice U<ED U"\BLES ="" TE c "010 I k p • VELVET sofa & love~rar , Queen Hidc-a·bed, only 4 n10 old. Also p;1inrinr,::s, twin brcls, area rug, 61a-0869 ANTIQUE din rn1 18.ble & , . • . chrs, kit table, 8 chrs. BR ~ot this ~aragl' sale. Jo <'lllUr- furn., other lllisc! 8968 Ing fmi;ntU1"C', St<"l"\..'O consolC' S\\•AllO\\' Ave. FV. 968-8921 ,t, bcl?V('cl s!urf. Sall Sun .., .,,. ' ..:.-. PIANOS -ORGANS A A·i lnpo ( •"'C • ro. .l=or~S=.''°'='-·=536-67"-"'-'60o2-o-~-c-I Nt>wport Blvd., C.l\t. Tues qualil>•. 10•~·· r eels. Xlnl * 6T:>-2T.,O * .c tlu Sat Ne\\' & USC'd. Great sclcrhon. r.IOVING East! Refrij::erator, __ u~-·-------('One\. Extra l'N'ls, rcn)CJ1C FREE Male Oaehshlind. 2· s, stove, bed set, kit chen1 Compctetive prices. Open con1rol w1it. Orig. $TaO. will yrs olcl, good 11i·atehdog. 2 VINYL lounge chairs, \.\·ith ottomans $25 f>nrh 10-6. };J14 Dover Dr. Nc1\·· GARAGE SALE: Sat. Sun port Beal'h . Lots of Stuff! 250 Poniente. o=c.:..=.c=.cc. ~·-----San Clemente. C.E. Refng-, ll('\Y 11-72. $1.lO. t bou '· B k bed CUSTO'f CUSTOM d Eves. & Sundoys, The b;;st It $!50 1. ) For return or anv in-Sl' , l mapre. un s 1v ma e SC' for ' . 1rn1. Dennis 11·12-;)()5 J-1.B. formation leading to 'relurn & chests. 54J..-O.t:i6. \\'Pt suits for children. Any f('a/s arc a1\\·ays at: 5~6-2050 ('ITT!:: 10 l\'k old black of a gold four leaf clover GOLi'' Clubs, San1 Snead.,_s~iz~·'7·7C~al~t~»7"77_-'46~·~9~·~=-Wallichs M usic City fenmlC' kilten. El Toro area. 673-8:197 EXPAND-a-1vay Buffet \\'/3 leaves. 1.-Iodl'tTI design. Call &12-ffi87 GARAGE sale, n1isc. 226 J(nox PlaC'e, l\1esa.. Jo~ri-Sal-.':iun Desk $10. Dresser $10. items. CouC'h SlO, \Vork Bench SlO. Costa Elect Broom S:l. Tools, pin, approx. 2 inches in l:ilue ridges, good condition. l\tOVING & ~IOHAGE South Coast Plaza 540.2830 Zenith Coloi TV ;,gs..1~ dia1ncter, 11·ith j c 111 e 1 e d Golf c1u·t, extras. $50. Ltl11·0st ra!es in area ·~~~ ...... -~~-'""I $50. NCNI~ small a.n1ount of -=::...:=:_---~1 -0--.~t horseshoe in center: also, &15-068.1 968-476.'i I' "MO dtl k ~ 3'l:tl • • 3 Ye11r o!d in11 e ...... ~ e ,A,., ND i\1-3 li1-g11 n. l I =wn.::::'.::::·.::::="o=· =·~-~--10 good hon1t•. Call after 5 gold locket (ivas on chaini, AlITOMATIC Garage Door KING-O-La11·n 20·· fro n l keyboard, good cond. $500 or POR·rABLE TV 11·ith bat-Pi\1. ~~ misc. oilers till s o I d . SUPER patio sale. Crafts. 5-18-7588 app1'0x. the size of a nickel, 0 R S200 Special llu Id 511· Also Ix-st oner. 548-S068 lt> • lm 1 • $125 ,.:..=.=:..==-----inscribed in script, FLA. $ ""29"95'''" 1 og.11--' · /5 'OI\.'. yr. 0 · a30. rleii. a os neiv. · I-lave somC!l.hin,.:. you want to FRUmVOOD oval tbl w/3 leaves, 6 chnirs 11,•/canc hacks. cabinet. 644--0376. A good 1vant ad IS <i. good i.l· vegtment, clothes, etc .. 2571 Vista Dr,c ~=o-u-CH~-Be-d-.-E-,,-,,-.,-.to_po_d-ia, N.B. Bayshores 8/·I & 5 typc\'.rri!ers, gift s, books. 2 FAMilJES Ton of Goodie-!!. house1\'fll'e, lols 1norP. 10-4 Sw1. only. 200 Agate lat pm, Aug 4 & 5, Can1eo These are deeply treasured 1' · · n!.1a "" w yr. Lailln vacuum. &il-00 Player Piano & Rolls • &J6-7CD3 * sell? Classified ads do it fan1ily n1en1en!os & the loss guaran1C't.'. S!-13·3577. \Va nt ad resu.lts ·· .642-:i678 548-03().l CLASS!t"IED ,. 642-5678 I 1ve\I. <'Rll N'O\V &12 5678. is iJTeplaceablc. PLEASE, GARAGE DOOR O_PENERS Autos lmponed 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 A•1tos, lmported 970 PLEASE help if you have Po\\·erful screw drilic, 2 yr iiiiiii'iiim:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· Parkl. Balboa Island Shores. any infonnation -&12-3589 service, parts \\'RI,., $189. II ' For an ad In Call Mary Beth New Shirtshape! ; ~ 9310 SIZES s .. 20 • ,. -!% '" ' t,., 1Tf..,,; .... 1ff..,.i'- Woman's World 642·S678, ext. 330 Potholder Vests GP! t1\·ice as nlany con1· I plin1cnts in these vivid vcsl!'; J\olakC' popular potholder vests INSTAi~TLY -backs, Button inlo this fast-paced (l'Onts arc identical. Crochet shir!shapt' and go! i\-ta~e it of of \\'Or'Sled if! 3 c;oJors. Pat: p0lyt>sl£'r or \l'OOI knit and te.~n 71)): nusse!I S. M •. L, you'll keep your crisp even ?t1ld's 4, 6, 8, 10 yejlf" s12es after hours of travel! S;;nd~ 1nclurled. Printed Pattern 9 3 1 0 : SEVJo~NTY·f'l\'~ CE~ Mlllsl!.s' Sizf!fS !li 10, 12. 14.-16,, for each pattern -add A 18 20 Size 12 lbust 341 takes cents for each patlern for 2 i g · y~ls fiCl·inch. Air Mail and, Special Handl- ins::; 01herw1se lh lrd-class gt:;VP;~ ·l' 1\ft': LT.NTS delivery \Yill lake thret! for each pallern -add Z5 \Vee.ks or runN>. Send to e<>nts for each pa11crn filr Alice Brooks. 1/"w DAILY .Atr P.tail and Special Hand!-PILOT. 105. Neecllecra rt """' ., ........... Wfd..cluo D<l>l·• Bt» J@. Old Chel. delivery will take three Station, Ne\v York, ""N .. weeks or more. Send to JOOU. Print Niunr, Addl'e'l~, ).farlan Martin, the DAILY Zip, Pattern N1lfnher. PfLOT, 442, Pattern Dept., NEED L ECRAFi '72! 23Z West 18th SI., New Crochet, knit, ete. Free York. N.Y. IOOU~ Print dltectiom, SOc. NAME. ADDKF.88 wUh labnl Macran.e Book. ZIP, SIZE and 8TYUI Saale, fancy knotf, pat. NUMBER. ten111. $1.00. SEE MORE Q u J ck lutanl Crochrlt Book - Fub1ons and c:tlOOlt one Learn b&, plcturn! Pat· =1:'.summer &~ ~· -k!~sfte budant Gitt Boolt lies! Only 50c. -more than 100 gilts - INSTANT SEWING B()()K f~~~11lete A.lrha• Book - 1e,vr today, wear tocnorrow. $1.00. $1. 16 ,Jlrf.l Rug Booil"il · 50c. t.N'STANT 1" AS It I 0 N Book of 1i Prlio Afrl1Anll, BCX>K -H•Jndredl o I 50c. Wh.ion fa.CU. rt . QuUI UOok 1 -16 pattern& ~ 10 Trade! Our Trader'• Pendite colwnh II for 1001 s lln<t, s d&y1 '"' $5. c.11 ..,., ... l!um OOr. !\l11t1Mun Quilt Book I -!Ilk. Quilt~ for Tnd1•)'0!ll Lll'ln.r . 1S beautllul pattenlll. 50e. 4:ll5 Tren1011t Ln, CD:'IJ. Evrs. & 11·e<.<kends. installed Boh's, 5W-102L SUND,\\' brass king head-DI A ri.1 0 N D Engagement ESTATE Sale; pri<'l'S slash- Uoard, hanging lamp, nau~1l \\·cdding ring set. Lovely cd; tUrnitw·e, boo~s. d('(.'Or- S\1-;vel chair, boys hike, design. U.lain stone, ll ct. ations, 2·l602 Banbury Dr .. gamPs, hooks. household &l&-002!'! El Toro 837-0140. ilen1s, \\"Ull JJlaques. 4812 M '7i_s_<_e~ll-a_n_eo_u_s ___ =s~1e GAFFERS ,'I,; S..'1Hl£'t' SIOY(' Royce, Irvine. :1.12-8-IDI. like nC\\', $fi0.: Sony tape GARAGE Sall'. Thurs, r1i, COUCl-1 S275. Canon F-1 n.'COrder hardly used $50. Sat Glass1\'arc, antiques, $425. 28mm lens $90. Sawyer 493-9279 bric-a-brac of all kinds. Slide Projc-ctor. Jerry Ji\COBSON front th r o .,... 623l Gumm Dr., Huntington 54&--0Z70. mo\\·er \\'ilh catcher S55 & Beach 'h=u=,=1=s=E~R-o-c-p17'pc--c.,-.,,~,,rng other lawn e q u i p m c n l. GARAGE sale Sun. Aug 5th. rack for back or Pickup. 57:, ,.::.64~£.=2~7~62=-~-~=~- 10-.i, 226 Gl'and Canal. or best otfcr. 545-6084. PICNIC table set $:l:I Singer Balboa Island. liniquc Anti-'vn=,~IA~N:.:.:=,=v=oo""o=A=R~D=-co=s7. ~1ving machine $50 dinette ques. Polynesian artifacts, ~TETICS 1.~ off sale, not all $30 n1uch more 6921 Lo8 plants. householrl iten1s. itcn1s in stock. &'U-0632 An1ig:os FREE DAILY PILOT PASSES FOR OPENING NIGHT Coming Mon., Aug . Thru Tues., Aug . 21 .:.--Anaheim.-Coiiventlon Center ..... FIND YOUR NAME AND WIN FREE crRCUS PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Ge-ts Two i6_y_alue tickets __ -i=-or 0-pening Night · Tht DAILY PILOT makes It easy. Just cht<k throughout the cl11sified 1ection for ''ads'' fist ing winners' names. 11 you f ind your nome just coll 642·5678, Ut. 333 to make 1rrangements to pick up your tickett 1t 1ny con· vonitnt DAILY PILOT oflico. o me a .. ,,,1 .... ----~ Get behind the wheel of a HoJlda Civic and give it a whirl around the block a few 'times. You'll see what front-wheel drive does for cornering. What rack and pinion does for steering. What 4-wheel independent suspension does for road-holding. Test drive the otba economy cars and the new Civic'.' And drive your own conclusions. Introducing the New Honda ,Civic~ . 30 MIL·ES PER · GALL BIG SELECTION .:..I MEDIATE DELIVER~! ' • l • - l FREE to good home. 2 yr old male German Shephet'd. Gn!at w/kids, Gt5-7162 * * * H IM AL A YIAN Klltcn.,, show stock, $75 Up. Also stud scrvic<'. S.14-2956. ' 0091 854 e PUPPY WORLD e English Bull mix, Chihua. huas. Anierican Eskin10 (Spitz), f>tt Bulls, T -Cup Poodles, Great Dane, Bull Tcnier, Cockapoo. l O O r.1rxm PUPS!! Stud &:!1·. vlc-c Most Breeds, OPEN EVES: 531·5027. SAINT Berna.rd p u p s , female, AKC, s h d t s . de-\\1>I1llcd. De\\' c I a w s renlOved, reasonable. 894-6775 BEAGLE. S mo. old Female. All shots. AKC Registered. $40. or trade for anything of equal value. 544-3417. 3~1 MOS Black F. Great Dane. $25. 9 WN!kS, P.1. Bru;set hoond, $20. All shots. 963-2576 • BEAGLE. 5 mo. old 1'~C1nalc. All shots. AKC Registered, S40. or trade for anything of equal-value. 544-3417. LEAVING for JIRwaii, n1wrt sell. PriCE:d ttduced 4 Silky Terrier Pups. 832-9-122 or 644-6118 OBEDIENCE Cla.i.11 ro staJ1 \Ved., Aug 29il 7:30 p.m. in the Jrvine/N area. * 54&-4928 * COCKER Spaniel, B 1 a c k Male 4 mos., shots &: groomed. Champion pedigree. roo. 644-4926 2 PUi"PlES, % afgan, % Shqep dog. l\,ust sell. Seen at 20041 Bushard H.B. or Call !Q-2700 alt 6 pn1. OLD Eng. Sheep dog, 1.-!ale ~ yrs. AKC, P.1oving niust sell 83&-4476 or 893--0293 MINIATURE poodle, black, female 3 months. SlO. * 549-4282 * BOAT trailer fils 16' dory. $ISO. 645-4653 eves. '71 20 HP Mere. Excellent condition. saoo. Call eves, 6~5-465.3 or 645-6927 TIME for Alba.co~. 27' ~'t'flS Lapstake F1ybrldge Sport Fisher, Outriggers, new beit system) lo hn on eng & trans. $5250. 543-3962 by owner F1SH or Ski, 15' Glutron Trl·hull, 60 hp Johnson, fUll 1 top, tach/ap, psv;n, galv trlr. $1850. 919=8ll9 1 ·n LAS VEG.M D' tlt 'trlr bait tank, COYU1 1S5 Mere 1/0 + + Uke new)-lo bra. $.3800 646-9256 35' OWENS Sedan. Im.mac, J1VMl·board. Ge.lley, Salon, 1-d ·w/~....,.,, Lots of nTihogari)t. 84G-8l'B. 44' CHARACTER 8 o a t , .. Balboa" Fun !Bay boat. ~lust sen this Y..'f!ek f'nd. $1000 or best otter 675-5937 MUST sell }6' GJa&cipar &Mlp, Mere, OB. Cl@'ae Good for PUREBRED Irish puppie11. $50 ca. fish or ski. Best' offer over $900. 548-4984/646-8832 Setter 1,,;"'°'=-0--ccc-.,.-,=:-= 16' SKI &: speed boat, 140 Call 675-37?.6 rruSH Setters, AKC regis. Xln't Jines. 6 wks oid. S75 up. -· i\1erc cnriaer, $3500. Days, 547-7746. nights ~ ts' m. Good I condition. w/trailer. $900. $r best of· fer . 979-9328 or 837~44. DALMATION pup, AKC shots l male t e f t ' 16' BOAT 35 hp. Johmon. hand*'me ~1701 ' Bit-in bait tank -Ult ' trailer, $450. 548-8174 SHELTIES AKC reg, shaded . 118.ble & white wonned & ·20 FIBERGLASS packet shots, 49"";,-5373.' type Bay~~ IRISH SE1TERS AKC. 6 \VEEKS, S75. * 548-1288 * * MlniRture Schnauzer * Stud Service 644-4390 AKC Poodle puppies, Min. 009e out. $25 & up Laguna, Day1 494-0613. Hones 856 REG Appy gelding. 9 yr.1 SorTel wht/blazc. 1 6 ~ 19' FG V-8, OMC(IO, Wall< lhru open bow. run covers Xlnt, $3500. ~· '54 19' CENTUR.¥ lnboerd M a h o g a n y Run-a-bout, Clean cond._ $1.850J;540-0295· 21' CHARACTER AT Bay favorite. Many xtras. Call 833-JMS 21' LYMAN bay boat, full cover, Bimini top, 6 cyl. gray. Xlnt rond. 646-4131 ~7 $300 or ~ 0ff. Bo1ts, Rent/Ch1rt'r 908 UAND tooled fancy wes1ern CHARTER 57' KETCH parade saddle tr I m med ''TIOGA'' matchg bridle & collar, of. Coastal & Offshore I!i.land fer, 646-7003 Cl'uislng. Xlnt rates. Daily For sale, 8 yr old l\.1are, or Weekly. Chet Salisbury Xlnt riding horse, call 11. 675-8344 or Tioga, Box 642-7113 316, Balboa I11land. · REG. Quarter 'J\!are, 6 yrs, WANTED to charter 27'-30' Show prospccl, Laguna, sail boat. For Catalina ,.,=,,':O!lh'l39::.-C:=:i'..:0c,"":::'::,· :-°"'~I v.1eekend in A u g u a t . iti.DDLE bred mare. Call 546-945.3. 4!)4...5956 anytime da Y s • Vacancies cost montiy! Rent 494--3644 &ft 6: 30 for info. ho .~ J ...... y0ur use, ., •.. ~ BLX. Ge1ding U years bldJI:., etc. thru a Dally Pilot ....... 11= t ~ ho-Classified Ad. Sell Idle ltehis .UO.UIU, .• :I 0 ~""" <1~1 847-5533 now! Call 642 5678 Now! ---~ I LIDO 14-very dean, good rood, 1725. (TI4) 846-9103 * 24' YAWL, Gaff rigged, dacrons, cedar hull, 25 hp Gl'fl,f, $2.100. 82'1-t249 HOBIE 14. Xlnt cond. Mwrt sell. Call 6T:r1821 OOWMBI.4. 22, an or 1Ai Int. 6H OJB. stps 4, head, llHp avail. $2800 673-8101 CATAMARAN 14' Cal Cat, 'l'Nl -gotld: shape w/trtr, Wi). or trade/car 64.5-3359 CL\SSS A racing cal, 18x7% 150 tail; al. spar. $650. See It. 542-3159, 646-836.1. 16' "Snipe" Sailboat w/trlr & "Sea Gull" motor . $500. 496-6.103. RANGER 26 tlierry, 3 sails, Compass, R.D.F., etc. Like new. $8500. 642-ro'19 13' l\IETCALF fiberglass sailboat w/sanddolly. XI~ cond. $395. call ~ VENTURE 24. '73 w/poptop, l sails. IAaded w/extras. $4000. 64i-7651 LIDO 14 Sall • 36'23. 67S-M63 Boots, Sltpsf lloek• 910 SUP. at 407 East Edgewater, Balboa. Up to 38' long, 10' wide. SlOO per mo. (TI.fl 525-1153 da,ys, 1213) 697-1336 eves. Boots, Spood & Ski 911 15~' FIBERGLASS skiboat , 75 h.p. JohruJOn, tiltback big wheel trailer: Xlnt cond. $5$/offer . 963-2963 SKI Boat 15' -6 HP Mere, trailer, tanks &:. battery etc. $320. 548-5185 l[i] Compon, Solo/Roni 920 CAMPER, xlnt cone!. 1969, 8~ ·, half cabover, oven, slove, refrlg., $525/oUer 675-4403 n:BERGLASS camper shell, fits Datsun, Luv, or Toyola. Used once, $200. C a I I 645--4653 or 645-6927 - CI.ASSIF!Ep ....... 64'"56'111 • .. Friday, A11911st J, 1973 DAILY PILOT 4! • TraNP0t11tlon llii I lfiJ I TrlrupOrtation lfiJ I For information, lead\ng tp lhe tease or purchase of a retail showroom of 1,000. 2.(XX) sq. ft. on the Coru.1 Hwy in CdM. Corona del rt1ar Bike Shop, 3032 E. Coast Hwy, 64Q..09ll. 'TI KAW A.SAKI 100. condition $150. cau 67:Hi215 Xlnt 1972 KAWASAKI 100 has upPCr & lower range. S325., 493-9358, 7 pm.10 pm. '69 BlJLTACO MX Ready. Reblt engine, never used. Xtras. 536-8487, 548-4876. YA.MAHA '69 250 Enduro, xlnt cond, priv party $450. 640-1158 '72 HONDA 500, chopped, plenty chrome, sacrifice SUOO, call aft 5: 30, 962-~ '70 CL 350 Honda. good cond. r.1us1 sell immcd. $350. firm, 494-6515 Tom 1970 HONDA CB 350, $350 1-londa 90, w/spue frame & front end, $40. 49J.6436. '73 l-IONDA 750 $200 & TOP see at 817 Geneva. Htg Bch after 6PM .'71 HONDA 350. New engine. Xln t condition. $600 • 96lh'l24 1973 CHEVY 1-TON CHEYENNE PICKUP Less than 5,000 ml, 9%' calif. Self Contained Camper, air cond. SUPER NICE! {73909N) $6195 1972 Ford COURIER GAS SAYER • ' 4 Speed, Radio, (782FNM) Cycles, Bikn, Scooters 10-SPEED WANTED 925 Need lkl>CC<I bicyele in good condition. PIC(IJJle calt; 646.3612 * BICYCLE SALE * NEW 10 SPEED ITAUAN BICYCLES $59.95. Beach Bll'ycles, 806 E. Balbo11 Blvd., 675·7282. Aulhori:u.>d NISI-llKI dealer. '73 HODAKA WOMBAT \\'/combat kit , Boge slK>l..ics, P, Pt~tys, 1'l{'W tir<'N, big cart>, J\1X lank & exlra.s, supt•r rast. 1nint cond. $625. S.15-0184. 23" PAR.<\i\IOUNT. 1'' u 11 Campy, silks, extras. l\tust sell by 8/10. Best offer 675-5633 * '73 PENTON J\1X. cond * Asking $800. "'. 6T;>-668.1 Xlnl '73 YAMAHA, J\1ini, 80<.-c Xlnt cond. 3 hrs USC, $250 536-6853 YA.MAHA Mini Enduro T.:icc, sel up for racing. P..fotocross s~. 979-4895 ?-.10TORCYCLE frailer, full size 15" rin1s, heavy duty. Pvt party. $135. 64()..]158 '66 BMW 6695 Eqptd trgng & sad/bags $600 * SJG.-0150 '71 HONDA, SL 350, lo mile perfect cond. See lo ap- preciate, $500. 5.i&-7877 1970 650 BSA Lightning xlnt cond. Very lo mileage, $850 or best offer. 536-696.1 '69 BULTACO J\1X Ready. Reblt engine, never used. xrras. 53&-8487 ** '68 HONDA 3 05 Scrambler, Xlnt con d . , streel or dirt. 968-0893 Motor Homes Sale/Rent 940 25' EXECUTIVE n1 o t o r home for rent. Fully self contained. 642-2150 Motor Homn Solo/Roni 940 Introducing tho oil new 19731/l "VILLA" Mini Motor Home by Holiday Wheels . All StHI Prame Full Spnc-0 tllOl\OlllfllliC tt>lle1 wHh full sho\\·cr, hot s, cold "'ater. double di.ncllC!I th1:tt conifortably slcc1> 6 \\•ilh room for !I to rat. LU.\:· uriously appoinled thruout ">i lh drapt.> stylt' curtains, eye.level oven, s If' re o speakc1·s, battery tester, AC·DC clecLric 6 cu. ft. refrigerator, dual slninlc~ steel sinks, etc., etc. Powered by 3GO Dodge VM with po1vc.1· slt•cring: ;\ulo. trans., etc .. clc. !Ser. Nu, 10043) $8995 BILL BARRY PONTIAC Gi\IC l\to1or l lon1r-Center 2000 E. 1st Stree! Santa Ana !il.~·1000 $6895 PACE ARl'l.0\\1 O•· TIOGA Basl' Prier IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CREVIER Bl\1\V Sales . Service -Le11.sing 208 \V. 1st SI., Santa Ana 835-3171 * RENTALS * Lifetime, Superior, 0fl('n ROIUI, Landau, Ovc>rlo.nd .~ Winnebago Motorho1nl'S RECREATION RENTAL AND SERVICE 216 N. Clara. SA il4·836·8615 e Rent Luxury Lifetimes 23-25', lnimac. Sips 6 ''Com· fortably", air, gen, stcn.'O, pvt O\vnr. 838-0900, Tustin Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Call 642-5678. 1972 DATSUN 1200 FASTBACK SUPER GAS SA VER 4 Spred. (893FFG J $1 69 5 1972 DATSUN GAS SAVER 5.lq WAGON · 4 Speed. C569ELEJ Mofor Home• Sole/Roni NEW 21 FT. 940 ll.1 F.ngine, roof air & a:en. t'rlltr'lr. (Order yours today) $."'29:'i. SCOTT'S CAMPERS 1051 S. Harbor, $.;\. 839-3371 (4 nt il~ N .. San Oi{'J?o J-~"'Y· ~ ---1\olUST SELL -2.1' J>Rl'l'Hr- l'O\I'. xln't cond. 11.000 rnl'i:. Loocll'<I. Color tv. $7G.IJ~). 552-7896 Moror Home• Salo/Rent 1967 \\1NNl:."BAG0 Pltotor ht.11nt' JI\', roeU c ont . moo:>nlatic, fac air <.'Ond , CB radio. O\'el'c!:tl.ed tirell, xtra eas tanks, hl1eh. relr!g/~e-.tl'r, propane 11tvl' & oven, dual bait. 645--0a27 ~""'· H.AVE 21' 1973 Fireho1ll niotor hon1<' olll' ton Dodl(t" l'ha . ..;sis, s11ll WlCi('r "'&.n'. 7. IUO nii. \\'ill trad[' et1ully fr,1• (':1r or \\hal-havf'-yOl.L :,ri-37G6. S.'\6-:-l&Yl ----\\'ant ad rc.;ul!s .. 612-51\7<1 F11!\t 1'<.'!\ults ar<" JUSI a iinonc Auto5, Imported 970A~IMPorted 970 4-WHEEL DRIV ES WITH LOCKING HUBS '67 Universal Jeep VS engine, radio, new top. '72 Universal Jeep Perfect. b cylinder, 11,0 00 miles. {880 EIBI '71 Jeep Wagoneer Wagon. Radio, air conditioning, nice. I bb4CPI I '70 Scout VS, 33,000 miles. Stick, radio, beautiful. l b79ABW I CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbo~ Blvd. Cosa Mesa 546-1203 1972 Datsun PICKUP GAS SAVER <I SJ)('lod. Radio, (285F'WB t $1 95 1972 ·CHEVY GAS SAVER • .1/,.TON VAN .CAMPER , t\ir eond .. uuto 1.1·ons., (8'713:)1, 1 S . • SALIS HOU RS SERVICE HOUR S , .. FOR Now It Ul:H Cor SalH -Lomlot l>Glly ... --' S..lc._,om Mon.•Sat. t . a.m. to 9 p.m. Solideyl 9 o.M. to 6 p.m • Mo1 • .frl. 7:30 a.m. ta S p.m. Sotwtljly 7:30 ta Naan CALL 493-3375 OR 831-1375 • I • ) • ........ _ ' - I I -- -12 DAILY PILOT Frldar, August :3, 1973 ECONOMY USED CARS!! '72 DODGE VAN '71 TOYOTA WAGON H1 r111 11 • ,_ mllr•ve !rade In th1t 1111 Here 1, 1nor111r c1111 11111e KOflOmv wog'I>" '" rcC><>Omy ,,. engine. "' gtffl .. " " lhM h e<111•ppecl wllll 1oh'>mehc l•1n1. •nd C(WWlrl 'o enyllllnQ yw _,, oeslres fVtn '" ,,, '""· Tiie•• ...... , m1ny llr\O WI Woll <IQ It !or you •' our c.,,t A iround '"" "" "'"' ~ Kwomv ... ~re11 ••• 'O stve ~ !Ill! "" 0, YOO• tomlort "'" llurtv dOwn ,0 '" 11111 ~· ~r11m1, Murry 11100911 meoe ire 111r<1 ,0 bltot• 11'1 Yone. (1S60JB). "'" ... _., ••u IO"ll. 13Jl68N J. SAVE HARD TO FIND ' '71 TOYOTA COUPE '71 DATSUN PICKUP ''"""' 'ow mlle1111, J3.~t5 mlln. go•· try to hncl """ ol rnesel We h1ve ane OI "~ '11111•"' re<1 w1111 ebOtly •op 11n<1 in- !~nor. Eou<pped .,.,1., • ,pen1 1r11nsm«s•on, tl'le llnesr tow mll11g1 little 1111• \,aVl't• 1nv· '™'11 wn~r,, redlo ano II luoe"• 11•1 11v!ng wnere. !l's as t l•on as c•n t>t 11110 c11rrles • cvl. en11lnt. Th!$ I• • !r11de in lhll! Wll$ lht t~ch.is•ve Bob Longpre M••d11 <I\) ddy '"~"" C••• ., li~e • baby. Musi ·~ 'O )I' laoD mile w11rr11nry Tn;s li!tle devil Jp;>r1Kl1l1. (6690?Pl. ..on'! 111•1 lon9. i9'9CAl:O GOOD BUY ACT QUICK '70 TOYOTA SEDAN '68 MUSTANG AllOlt)er trlldl '" wl!l'I "• miles. Ir's • ~ore Is 001e or lhll cle1nest low mlletG• ,ton>e•v11tl~e 1>eii;1 wl!h m11Tct!lnQ ln!erior, Youstan11s ·-" " • !Jl)fQl!Oll• tlt ep m" Wl'l!f'll, AM-FM ·~ . .,. ""' • fOfllllf ,,_ w'1h le11rher "" lnlerlor ·~"' !•ans. 11nd 1111• saving ~ cyl. engine. which 11 an unbl11t1ble combln11!1on_ Equip.- Tnls cir 11 suPtr (INn 11\d •• l\11der !o ~ will\ rn11 small S<:Dncmv tnolne, 11uro> find !ha n hen's IN!li. Hu1ry down le IN '""''k 1r11n1., rbdlo .,, power st,,.rlng. 1n1, 1;1110 beiate lt'1 loo l11e. (1618ZW). (YVM'6l!. CLEAN SHARP '72 MAZDA RX2 '71 MAZDA RlOO You lu>! c1n'! b11J1ve this ont. Only ti111 Here 1, • 11<111 cuttt. It's 11 redl1n1 1unrl11 16,llO miles 0'1 it. EqulpP"f wl1h • speed tr1n1., r1dlo, Tinled glass, pcwtr disc yellow wllh -· Interior eQUIPPf(I wllh Oreke1, 111r cood. 111'1<1 ~o clean, A brlltl11nt 1.c!lo, .. ~ dick, tlnl..:I 9l1H, air cOfld . lvcirv wlll'I ebony ln!«lor iusl 100 beaulilul "" • ·-trans. A rear IOVf'ly lil!lt tor w1rd1 10 dncrlbt. Pitas• come down 1eooomy ctr wlltJ !he lldvanta11• ol I ro- and lt~I drivf' !his Ill'! won, lll•EVJ). terv englnt 11 I '•• or Ice. C60JEJZ ). LOW MILEAGE CUTE Lffl9' • ••t9ry l .. lfte' Muda for•• llHle M $66,., 1no1rl IJ6 m.. 0 .1,l.1 = MAZDA GOES HMMMM ON THE OIEAPEST GAS YOU CAN BUY! Wont to redvc& your gas cosr-per·mi1c'? Then you wont o Mozdo. !ti. rotary engine h_mmms along on thecheopest gos you can buy. Yes, even on low-octane gos, it delive1s standout pedormonce. And Mazda owners report good mileage, 100-1710 2 I mpg. Some owne1~ report even betlet mileoge. ondsomegelles.s- depending on driving con· di1ions·. So come in now and lest our answer lo high gas prices. ECO·NOMY USED CARS!! '67 FORD '71 MAZDA RlOO COUPE Wt hlVI '" lne•peo1lv1 secOlld ctr or ll•HI ~r ''°""" car !or !"°51 01 you wr.o Cuti 11 CUit CIR Ot. A brllllltfll r..:I wlll'I Ilk• comlvrt but dorl'I w1nl to PIY 1 hlfth tOony lnt1rlor 111'1d oo~ IWl1 2'-'30 mlln. price. 11'1 I VoflllOUI 1M foam 1qU. w th tt't clHner tti.o 1nv ':! You wltl tlnd an lbony lop 1nd lnt.,.lol'. 11 11 tc1ufpl)ld 1ny""1.,.1. 11'1 rollry ~ M lusl humm1 .,~ '" eu1omatlc tr1n1.., r1dlo, ~-~ •looo wHh lllrdly I OY malnl ... IOCt '"" 11-1:1;, vinyl TOii, llnlld gle11 1111:1 tic-11 1tlngy w11t1 911. A tnily bMulllul Llnlt !Ory I r l;Olld, A mulf fo IM IOdly .,...,,111 tcor.omy cer. 1171FAW). II 1Mll. CTVC2lol). GAS SAVER SHARP '72 MAZDA RXJ COUPE '69 TOYOTA SEDAN H.,.• 11 • h11n:1 lo !Ind 1uper clean low 'Ne have mlleag1 bftury. tt'1 11 Off9 rosewood wlln right here °" oi.r Vfl'Y lot 1 4 ~ 1111:1 elr cond. Thlt 1pecl1I .,..,,His ~rd IO 1!1'111 IUPtr CIHn llllle ECONOMY and 11,H •re don1 very t11telut I nd IC· car, 11'1 1 brllll1ot llv1ly IN mru blu11 w. ct nruate th1 1lr1M1y p11uy tlnM. II you'r• m111cnl11Q lnt1rl<N'. Cult 11 11 bugs Hr and IOOl<!ng for a rot1ry 1n;lnt M1zd1 this ?riced ro 1111. EqulPPfd wl!h 1urcmallc l>l'I 11 fer I very luclty Piiion which c.ould 1,1n1ml11lon, radio Ind IEZ glen for your » you. lt50FTI). ~v..,lt11ct. 17'.lCUU. HURRY HURRY '69 CORVETTE '72 VEGA WAGON GT We prOblbly hlYI one ot lhe llnt11 Cor-Htve w1 gol ont for ~011-This Ofle 11 r11lly vetlt!'I on !hi -ri;tl 16d1y, 11 onlv 1'111 loaded. A.uU>marlc r1n1., 11m-lm 111TIO l•.SIO miles ~ " '"" , .. hid lHICltr rlldlo, !11c. air cQlld., m1g wheel1, rool r•ck loving c1r11, It'• • llrll/1h racing grMn, • Ind m11Ch '"°re. H 11 • bNutllul Arlr1;1111 1Pffd, power WlodOW1, AM-FM, rRllll wllHll iJOld wltn -rn11tcfllng lnt.,.lor 11111:1 wood gr1tn will\ wldt oval 11,,, Ind WPfr 11\arp, Thi• 1ldlnQ. Get1 grHI 911 mlllllQt, h11 llOOd !1 • buy cl 1 lilt tlmt. A ctr like tnl1 loolt1 1111:1 ell lh1 convenl111ces. W1111 '"°'" lust can'! ti. repl1c9d, CZOG2«!). coo!d you 11sk for? (5'2Gllll. HURRY HURRY - '71 MAZDA RX2 COUPE '71 MAZDA RX2 SEDAN Thi• only 1111 n .:111 milts on It 1nd ls 11 If Voo're looklng kw 1 lltllt hummtr STOPI (IOl'(l!OUI 111"1'\llflld ,,_ '"' '" 1vci1v We lound vou one' 11111 r."OllOU1 tire m 111 ~Inv• top. Equll>Pld with radio, ~ ·-,Id wl!h eaony Interior 1 II. 5he h1i 1lr tr1n1mlsslon 1nd llle ever &0 POl>Ular rot111·y CON! .. • SPMCI tr1n1., radio I nd ITlUCh mi;ch t<19ln1. Aoother herd to 11111:1 cir ind we rno•e. Hurry OOwn ~or&t 11·, too lilt Ind n1ve one ot lht llnt11. t~OMQ). •oo can mmmmmmmmllll1 Wffllend 100. C:.WEHL) . . SAVE FANTASTIC SALES DEPT. OPEN 9 A.M. • 10 P.M. DAILY Service Capt. 7:30 A.M. - 9 P.M. Monday 7:30 A.M. to 6 P .M. Tues. -Fri. Wt PERFORM ALL MAZDA WARRANTY WORK Regardltu of Where You Origin.ltly Puchased Your Car ONO PRE 558-78-71 . . 2001 E. First St., Sa.nta Ana (Santa Ana FWJ. at First St.) (714) Motor Homes Sale/Rent Motor Homes Motor Hom.• 940 Sole/Rant 940 Selo/Rtnl 940 __ .;..... _____ , __ ..:._ ____ _ New '73 Viva '73 Explorer 20' Mini Motor Home Motor Hame Fully Self Contained, includ· 1 Ton Dodge Chassis, Fully ing range, ov('fl, double sink, Sc>tf Contained, including dual whC!els on 1 Ton Dodge stove, oven. shower, toilet, Chassis. Tinted Glass, Overllead $6595 Bunk, \\'indshield curtain, Jots of extras (260Ti). $6895 $92.19 per mo. for 90 n10. 20'.; Dn. Cash prier 570illl. 70. lX'rrr11-'fl pr11·c_S9706.1'l I. A.P.R. 10.96. \\"~~~I 0.,\.C. ·-EXPLORER.,· HUNTINSTON BEACH 18801 8fACH RLVO tl42 8803 HUNllNC .ION BEACH $99.0S per mo. for !W mo. 20';0 Dn, Cash p1·1ce 57311.70. Dcfen·ed pn('f' 59782.54. A.P.R. 10-fi4. 0.A.C. ••• I • --·-; I : 2'~' \\'l'.'\~EH,\GO, r u 11 y GMC Motorhomes 23' & 26' L\L'1ED!ATE DELIVERY Orangt> Co.'s Exclusive Dealer Bill Barry Pontiac G~'IC REC. CENTER 2000 E. ls-t St., Sanla Ana 5.58·11XIO e SAL1'S e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e EXPLORER ., HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 81.ACH llLVO S.17 880J HUNTINGTON BLAC It •'f!Ulp. ,\ir, .-.Jn'! inr<·h C'Ond. 1 c~~~~~--~~- _21_£_':_ '\. s;,~(.0. ~:-;:1-~1:,":"1. You'll find it in L"lassitil'd 197:! Dis1'0\ rrt'r and Sundial i\lotor l Ionics for ri:!nl, make j Hne:o;, :'i rfays far 5 bucks. 1 _A_d_._6_4.2-~56_78_. ______ n'!l"l"\'llliuns for Surnmer Motor Home1 Sale/Rent 940 '71 Enterprise Motar Home Fully Self Contained, includ- ing air cond, shoY.'el' &: toilet, Dual \Vheels, Dual Sinks, Dual Gas, Dual Batteries, Stave, oven, Gas-electric retrigerat~, l'lpare tire and carTier, Tv Antenna, Very low miles, 1 O\\-ner, runs like new ll81DCKl. $5995 $118.96 per mo. for 60 1no. 20',t Dn, Cash Pi I," :i0.'::37.70. !A·fen-ed price $8409.1-1. ,\.P.R. 14.23. 0.A.C. EXPLORER ., HUNTINSTON BEACH 18!!0! 8lfl(H BLVD 847 f!llOO HUNTINGTON REACH '68 TRAVEL Trlr. 14'. Self· contained, no shoY.·er. Xlnt. cond. $700 or trade for VW. eq. val. 536-m4/673-2Zll, ext. 29. Trailers, Utlllty 947 trrILITY tnlller, 6' x 81,i'. International Pick-up body, heavy duty. $150. 64~30. Antlques/Cl•sslc1 9S3 ':?!! 1\10DEI.. A, hl~h cab JJ.U., Rl'stored. Very good cond. Asking $1500 or oUers considered. 646-.1478 '52 p Ac I< A n D . r /h, overdri .. ·c. C.ood cond. $600. Call 645-lGRQ. Recreation11 Vehlcles 9S6 ' .__._,._ .. _,_ .. _._·" __ J~ I Auto• for Sale Auto• for Salt I~ Recr11tion1I Vehicles I~ ~I ;;;''"""';;;"'·~ Trucks 962 Vans 963 Vans ~='-----'-= 963 9S6 1971 V\V DUNE BUGGY Street legal. Nice. $700. Private Party. 494-4747 eves. Sports, Race, fic:od1 959 '68 DUNEBUGGY. 1600 chrome eng, .street legal, top & side curtains, 496-8877. Trucks 962 '73 OIEV % T.P.U. 8' bed, 29'Z cu. 4 spd. Hvy duty. JJ.000. 497-1884 '68 FORD pk/up. R/h - s1k /srt gd run cond, fin p1'0b- len1s! need to ~ell, 53l-3Z30. '60 lN"rERNATIONAL, 1 ton, dual wheels & utility b«t. F.xcel shape. $1200. 979-8630 ~EL CAfi.1INO I '73 lnternationol Pickup with Campar Shell V-8, Auto Trans, J' o ..... er Steering, Factory Air Cond. Custom Interior, \'cry w,,. ~fllt>f!, 1 o~·fK'r, Fnctory \VIUTaJlty, looks and runs like new {jQ;UC). $3695 "POP TOP" ·n Dodgc Short Van. Sto\·t', ice box. dine Uc, sleeps 4. auto. V-8, cream yellow Y."ilh v.·hite lop. Ready to l:O, huitl hy Crui:o;aire. ~&>r. No. 1027211' fStock lSOCi f FULL PRIO; $5495.00 $86.45 per mo. BILL BARRY P9NTIAC for 48 mo. 20'/c On, Cash price $391g.10. ~fl'rt"('d G~tC ~Iotor Hon1e Cen1cr price S-1933.54. ,\,P .H.. 14.4.S. 2lXXJ E. lst Stl't'('\ 0.A.C. Santa ,\na .'JS,S-1000 EXPLORER ,, HUNTINGTON BEACH 111!\0l ll!fltl1 fliVll tt.I: llSOJ 11ur~t1Nt,luN !Hfl( 11 WE'RE MOVING '72 International Scout II '71 Chevy l/4 Ton Camper Van NEW '73 Newporter Surfer Van CIH'\'Y 01u.'>sL~. \. -8. Auto Trans, special paint, Foot. l>aU Wlndm\•11, ~lag \\~.s. \\'ick-Oval Timi, carpers thruout. ru1~21. S4795 $66.13 per mo. for 66 mo, 20'; On, Ca..~ priC'c 5:>127.70, defcITt'd pric(• $65-18.42 ,\,P.R. 1l.Z7 0 .A.C. EXPLORER ,, HUNTINGTON BEACH IBkl:ll f\ffl(H f'>IV!I i;..17 '" I liUNJtN{.IQN llfN •• "BIG BIKER" Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lfnported 970 !"IOI\', Jlhone i\Iis.~ Bennet al '·n~=E=XP==L~o=R=E=n~=cu·,·.1·00·,~x, 283 AT, PS, BUCKETS s.100 * ;,.~ 7898 '68 1'1JRD 12' 11take, auto, R&l-1, ,l!l,500 miles, $1995. 962-7813 Ani,:pl'f:' on: 1 a c . For sale or rradc. Air. 4000 ··-'66 Cl·IEVY >,., ''''· '.•', 1 -,;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;il.f~~lG~~f~~~·: '61i FURD Canl""r Special ~266-l """' """" 11/101:' can1pcr. Xln"l cond • -. .... '"' · ,} or Uil<>'"JVU. geu., etc., l\lust be i;ecn to a/I, ni r, hydrovac brics. \Vinflh, Gates _ tires. Much DOT DATSUN DELt..:XF. \\'JNNEBAGO be n pp~iated, In Blue ~-....21"'·1 more. Asking $1Ta0. 675-£683 Immuculate, low milC!I:, only 7247 ml. REDUCED TO SELl.. (714CXCI. V-8. Auto Trans, Power 1''tt~ing, Factory Air Cond, Fl\1 Stert'Q with 8 tl'Rck tape. Loflg \\'h<X'I Stl.SC', feP Box, Porta Pony, elC'an as a pin. (llOC\Hl, • $3495 ''rn Doditr ] Ton Long Van, }"f)Jd up bt'<i, ir.:c box, a.ll lln· ~d wi~h CIU'pC! llUlo, V-8, 1ncl11d1n£ 8 hole rnKlil'R with lruck-typc 111-es. \Viii hold l\\'Q bikrs '" can tit into i:rnrng<' IScr. No. 02·1665. S1ock 1724). I GIT YOUl.fll(f DATSUN GAS CAN WITH DEMONSTIATION RIDI "SERVICE'' --, .. , litifCie .......... DOM TOPSI \I II RENT Book + 40'1, 54S-2S.l:G .. , ..,. . • · · ' ---·..iq JEEP and Z:11) engine, ex· '6.l FORD Econo PU f,lil--OIS2. N.B. Like ta trade? Ou1· Tradrr'si' ti-n for sall" $2Q or bc11t of· iv/camper. Runs in-eat. $700 Cla!-.s1f1C'U Ads 642-5678 call ll\\'ay ~2-:i61;-.. 1 ~·r._ ·"·"··-18~9_7______ or olfer. Call Gll--0168 r:A.:":.':;:•c:•:..• .:l:.;m;,;poc:.:.no:•:.:u:_._9;..7:..0:_.A.:.:u;.;to;.;sc:.,..;1..;m..:po;.;cr.;.te:.d:__.:.9.:..::70 Autos, lmpo,r_t.;e_d __ 9_7_;0:_.A_u_t.;o.:.•:..• _tm_;;pocc...r_ted"---970 • $1795 NE\''m~r DATSUN 1000 \V. Coast H\\'y., Nrwporr Bet\ 64&-6400 Open Sunday $81 .n per mo. for 48 mo. :l0':1 Dn, cash pric-£' $Ji07.70. Deferrt<l pric-C' 5·'666.50. A.P.R, 14.4S O.A.C. EXPLORER .. , HUNTINGTON BEACH IRHl)I !'f,~(H fl!>l l , \,' •'H.(11 HUNllrit,lON ttl At f! $5695.00 BILL BARRY PONTIAC Up,,,,"'p I • .,,_" 71 SP.ORTS CUSTOM '71 DODGE Van V-8 Super 11hllTJ>, 4 11pd, ""rad &-side pipes, Paneli;ag~ Gi\fC f..totor Jfome Cent.er nx:I E. ls't St1'l'<'t 1'67 1'67 1'71 1'73 1'62 I .._ hCfllt:r. N~v 12 x 16.a.tlres. c a·J: p et ·e d , Lear Jct. • 892-1832 * Al\t/n1 stereo tape deck, Hayden tr11.ns cooler, t"B.~ DODGE J96:I 4 ,pd no spin lift hitch. Set up for trailer Santa Ana 558-1000 TRUCK & TRAILER 1970 Ct·IEV. 1 tun 350 V8, 4 11peed, 12 It stake, gd tires, xlnt running cond., l'Oll p]f'(I 1l'ith 16 n. lo\v bay hcnvy duty . tri11tc axle, !rtralghl hil ch • clcclrtc bmkc~. 4 f1. 1>!y\\'00d .sldM1 • re1novnblt>. Both 1ddcl'1 COV~l't'(I ' \\•irh vln,vl llU'Pll-$3000, 84fl.-6194. ,lf,a. aft 5 p.n1. V.W. FASTBACK 5 895 ~ ~Pftd. rtdlo, rie1te1, bilge. fWWl(t7') FORD .fl DO Von $1495 ~to,. lflRl....-f<!'i,IF~Hlo. hc1t1r new o~lot, ( CLQJ V.W. SUPU BUG $1595 Au10. lr1111., whllewall llrt1, CUl!Gm =lnl. !$1JBU01 V. W. SUPER BUG 5 2395 A.M l'FM sr.,.eo, or1ov1, low mill!$, llf!drr l1c1ory w1rr1nty, !lfOOMTl Prked to sell 11 V.W. BUG 5 649 •Uwer pelnt, m.1111. rec:tnt ntW -Int, (ICVW2J41 ~68 '69 '68 '68 '65 OPEL KADmF. W1gon. 4 ',Cl·• rldlo, l'ltW tlr•. !XO •Gl OPEL Rallyo 4 SP"d. 1lr tOl'lll#,';I:~ LI· tti«"No. ?AIM , tlif p:tnt. DATSUN Wogoo ~ w>lfd, ,11Jlo, hMttf, .llnl concllllon. Ltttnff v 11.-... VOLVO. 144S 4 Hid., Vltfl' nice cond. 1vyem 1 M!RCEDES· 2205 4 IPttd, Air Cond .. IHllW lflt11lor, httt Ilk• ntw. NQZ724. $795 1 5 .1 .095 •• $1095 I s109~ I 5 1395 I LAROI llLICTION IUlll, CAMPIRI, PAITIACK & IOUA~!~,~.~~.~!'!~'1 !!!',.~,,!.f,,1 CAH ctiffm·nrlal, 'R/11, 6°cyl, ;uns lowlni;c. 642·27!\5. 1veU. $500. 495-5259, l\'Ct'k-'67 DODGF: Van. Auto trons. du,ys. • Good t'1nnlng condlflon. '70 f'-lOO Ranger w/J6"; ;;Jsol~-4~ uphol. Inside. CAn1p<'r shell. Auto, alr.l,,';=:;~·~;:::~-~-~Xlnt care & <.'Ond. $2000. '7' f'ORD Van. Sho rt whtel 5.16.-~~22i1~ ti:'Ct 29 ' OOsc.-'P11oolod, ·Cllt'f'ttt!d, ;---lltcroo, lo mi. Xlnl con· li9 DAT~U~ PU. T·ten''Y duty rlllk>n. r:,·es 714: 846-1492 hu111pcr. (,ntc1 tlrcll, SlL'lll.f;:i~""~~~::.:e::;~:'.!or Ix-st offt'T'. s.g.om aft<'r ·~ DODGE Vlln. Camper. s pm. Xlnt cond. _Extras. See to '65 DODGE: 1t1 T Pick Up 'nppn'ciatc. 5'15-1077 CVC!I "''Ith i;; can1per shell. Best 69 V\V Bus, good cond, good offer buys. 645-4653 eYCl'I. lltt1, '59 roRD P-U. 4 1pd, Eng. Call eves 67S--l6J2 great sh.."\pe, Nu clutch. Bit WANT bf;tter gu n1Ucage?' for cnmpcr $400. 67l-6434 Hays Po1n!less tgn!Oon, 3l30 '67 EL Ca.mine. excellon Dodge. $80. 645-0315, cond, P.9 . fact. al r '69 OODGE SportmAn Van. 494--949.J. nft 6, 4~77 Auto ttan!I, m.dlo & heatcr, .Good conrl. $1950. 675-1999. V.~•;:•;:•:.,_ ______ 9;.;:63 '69 FORD Van, t Ton. Cuat -whla, lapr d<.'Ck, driving '66 FORl) Van, rc11.sonnblc lamp!!, must see. 67&-1673 vf'ry good <."Ond, C n 11 .73 DODGE 646-3"31 Aft 6 PM , Van, v.>i, auto, * 'fi3 FORi VAN * ~111kc offer 493-9TI6 * -497-2502 '72 t"'DRD Super Van, V-8, aut, 5600 ml. New l.-onditlon. $.1250. 54"'639. GMC VANS 1-' Ton & \l. Tons Shorts &:'Long Whl!C:I &11e IMMEDlATE I DEt.lVERY-- • • Ovclr 35 other ionnl Vehiclus ln Slock ·• BILL BARRY PONTIAC • . Whcf!l1 & Ures, 3.000 miler,, 1963 CHEVY V&n,' very $1700. T.O.P 548.5358. Gl\1C Motor Jlolllj,_• Ccnt••r clc1111, p1111rll'd & carpted, ' $350. or bi'JI offtr. 533-6423 The fulest dr11w in the We11t. nx:I E. lat Sll'l'<'I . ' .• Dally Piiot Cle.•tllle6 Santa AnR ~·l<m Sell Idle Hem• .••... fl42-M78 A"d", .:;64.::2'-~=:;.. _____ Y __ 00_·_11_r_1nc1_1_1 _••_O_.,.._l_led __ . ... .Bob Longpre's Exclusive 3 year, 36,000 Mi le Warranty available on all New 1973 Ponti.acs I . , VENTURA II-LEMANS-GRAND AMS-CATALINAS-BONNEVILLES-GRAND PRIX UP TO $ 00 1973 GRANDVILLE 2 DOOR HARDTOP Air Conditioned (Ser. "2P49Y3Cl 24166) 6 ..,., pqwlk a.at odj.,•l•r-drl••r'1 1•111, 101-1-lock pow•r lock1, toll 1ay glon-11 ~ind11w1, pow•r ..,;110ow1, door •dge guordi, ,.111to111 a ir <Ondilloning, body color .,..,11ide . ll!irTor-ttl relllole, • G((ellf 1lrlpo1, duo! n ho111I, tilt 11 ... rlng wh11I, lolly• II whHl1, J71-l.5 wh i!owoU IU..r9la11 lire1, Co1if0tnio 0111,.,bly ,line e111iu lon !•11. front bumper 9uorch, rear bumper guo•d•. ltol1ye 001111• <h.r•IH, cu1to111 lrlfll group <On1i11; of1 fronl &. rli>r «o1lom 1oat .b1ll1 &'front 1houlder, ru1ton1 lro<1! .!.1, C¥1IOlll rear "'°'• <utlolll Jnt.,lor optx>jnlrn•nh, cigor Jigh1..-, f!1111 rid• .pock09•-1prln11• &. lhock1, AA/f/11.. ~•·~-Ndio, c111to111 Cot-doTo top. $torllghl l lo,k. ser. #2P49Y3C124166 IMMEDIATE DE11VERY PLUS DEMONSTRATORS Ora'nge County's Largest Pontiac Dealer ., . . FACTORY EXECUTIVE CARS AT BIG SAVINGS I BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC 13600 BEACH BLVD., WESTMINSTER (Beach at Garden Grove Fwy.) GARD!N GROVE Ii .. ...-;;~\.~O· FRWY, CALL 892-6651 OR 636-2500 AutM for Sale JI ~ 111 ~ __ •'_''_' _'"_'_''_' ~J I ·~· I 1.A-u_t_o•_._1_m_po_rt-•d __ 9_1_0 BEST AT . '--•'_"_'_"'_••_•_'' _ _,]~ ,r--... -.. -.. -, .. -~-...,1~ I Auto1 forSale I~ I AutOI tor SM I~ Autos Wantlcl 968 Autos, lmponed 970 Autos, Imparted 970 WE 'RE MOVING '73 Ford Econollne Custonl interior, J\·lags, Real Sharp, ( 60941. $3895 BMW LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA DATSUN '73 DATSUN PICKUP NE\~,rof(r w.BBM~·~d DATSUN Top Collar P•ld l\lag \\'heels, StC'l'(O Tape, 1nlrrors. 4200 miles, still un- drr f~ctory \•:arran!y, load- ed v•ith Goodies SAVE 1000 W. Corul Hwy, CREVIER BMW Nel\'port Bch Sales . Service . Leasing fi.15-6400 Open Sunday 2™ \\'. 1st St,, Santa Ana '71 DATSUN PICKUP $1795 '73 DODGE Van, 316 V-8, 83S..3171 auto. rth, dlx scnis. cust I ~O~R'""A~N=G'~E'""""C~O"U'"N'"T"'Y='s'"" paint, rully cptd, curtains, OLDEST port \~rindtm•s, roof vent, ~tape, niags. $-lfOO. "" NEWPORT IMPORTS Aul<K Wanted 968 \,ti/ TOP SALES.SERVICE· LEASING DOLLAR OVERSEAS DELIVERY PAID ROY CARVER, Inc. 3100 YI'. Coa~t H.,,,•y., N.B. 642-9405 234 E. 17th St. IM.MEDIATELY Cosia M"n 5'6-4444 WE'RE MOVING ,BlG SAVL'4GS ON. '73 Demos 51o·s Pk·kups FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID FOR OR NOTI Call or come in to see us. NEWPORT IMPORTS . 310<' \V. Coast H\vy., N.B. 642-9405 LEASE A '73 BAVARIA Demo . Serial •3132993 for $166.41 per n1onth OF::L or buy for $8.299. Bob Mclaren, BMW, Inc. (7141 879-5'24 6tO's NE\~,rof(r DATSUN BAtW '73 2002 Tii, under EnlO 1000 W. Coast Hwy., mi, mag wills, Becker Ne\\-llOrl Bch Stereo, Joaded,.M.S-7Z2'2eves. 645-6400 Open Sunday CAPRI 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS --'f;j IN STOCK 131 BARWICK IMPORTS Nt'\lid) OWN THE 33375 Camino CaplsJl'lUlO "''I• San Juan Capistrano FABULOUS 1973 493-1375 or 831·1375 , TOP CASH CAPRI bod "d :10 2'1lZ. Air ,,,.,d;Uoo, mag for clean late model cars Spot1 C?Upe dc<.'O~. Y 81 c 1vh~ls, AM'-FA-1,. tuned ex .... ~and truckal-· '-'"''1 .; ' , ~ulctillgll, r.eclini(llf ll'ont. hal'lst, ro n1 iles, xlnt rond. scats contour rear seats, 4 o 0~.=74 67" 7865 Howard Chevrolet speed trans1uission. IX>"'er nys ~-'J • eve .-,.. I I '67 DATSUN 1600 Roadsler front dlsc lirakes, sty e Ill~ Xlnt. rond. 549--2-!38 rut 6P?\t 1vhcels, bucket seats, 'radial a.111cArthur nnd Jamboree Newport Beach 8.l.1-0005 IMPORTS WANTED Orange County's TOP I BUYER Btu...MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blv :. H. Brach Ph. A-47-8555 WE llUY • ----1MEORTED. AUTOS_ BIST PRICES PAID! De1n Lewis Imports 1966 }lar"'.?!J. C.M. 646.9.,., \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CAflS It YoUr Cll' Is extra clean. tee UI tint. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Colta Men 979·:m:'.l JUNK cart wanted. Froo towlrur, ,tltle clearance, 24 hn. 494-1003 ext 608 ply tires. CGAECNS997421 , nnd all day wknds. OVERSTOCKED! FIAT - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY GUSTAFSON '71 FIAT 124 SPorls Coupe, 18.000 ml, rRdlo. heater, S !'lpt'C'd. gear shift. 552-9434 Llncoln·Mercury ·e9 FIAT ""° Spydcr Good 16800 Bell.Ch at \Varner Con<f., many extras. Call --Hunttngton.Be•ch-n.ftcr 6 968.060(). 142-8144 * t213l 592...5544 HONDA ''Home of the Viking" DATSUN 1972 HONDA Sed1111, n1ag wh.11! Radla I th;es. 16,000 mlle11, Make olfer". 546-1630 JAGUAR '71 DATSUN 240Z, a Ir. Hpd, mags. orangt!, Im· mnculatc! $3650, 8"42--88.36,, --------- eves. M!\-2806 '64 JAGUAR a.tK 10, Cla1111lc '73 DATSUN 2-tOZ, silver, luxury ae<lan, fully l'e8tortd auto1 nlags, spoiler, 5000 mi, to mint cond. Nflw lthr, ll\C- 1111cnfice. &44-58M quor. \vood flni!h, cng, brt1.ker, PlrelU tires. $6(MXl '67 D1t1un 1600 Convt ln~sted. Must sell, $3900. Cn.ll 61S-3736 548-0011. ------'--- ' • THE BEACH SAAB AT TH"E BEACH Autos, Imported 970 MERCEDES BENZ Autos, tmpo<ted --------1 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Sales-Leasing. Service-Rentals ALFA ROMEO AT THE BEACH Sales-Leasing. Se1vice-Rentals ,. CADILLAC '68 Cpc. de V. Auto., c.lin1ate control. Ian· rlau roof AM·FM slere<l. (XSS787). $1895. BEACH IMPORTS, 1200 \V. Co<is t Hhvay, Nt"\\'flOrt 645-6·100 VWs al the BEACH '67 Beetle, grabber orange, l'lldio. JAGUAR '71 XJ-6 Sedan Sable Bisqu interior. loaded, low tniles., (3154B\V), $6789 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car SUNBEAM '62 SUNBEAM Al pine Conv. good tires. $400. Call 54&--0267 '69 SUNBEAf.1 Alpine, ,,GT. HT, 4 pass, good cond., $'725. Phone 586-5790 TOYOTA Trade-ins Coming In Every Dey Ask About Our Unique Used Mercedes Lease -,7-1-T-O_Y_O_T_A_M_K_l_I_ Plans 2-DOOR HARDTOP House of Imports Tenific .{,'O'.lC!i:.ion! .Automatic I -.. ,7~1oc--oJc-a-CJ_U_a_r--:V"'"·-,1"2=-1 6862 Manchester, Buena Park transm1ss1on, r.a-d10, hcat'C'r, un the Santa Ana Frwy and great mileage. (028. .1ltarq111!• · ll111lu1 ~. (llU'ngJIUl'O ..:.i' I •M,U E Type Coup• m= ovM1. $1927 ll. R. "'"'"· loaded, local JIM SLEMONS GARDEN GROVE '" <00'7BWJ. IMPORTS LINCOLN-MERCURY $6666 MERCEDES BENZ 10120 G.-, Grove Blvd., AUTIIORIZED G.G. SALES & SERVICE . 636-2980 Jim Slemons '72 Toyota Celicia Imports 4 speed, radio, mags, \'iny! top, dual exhaust. 803ELU. N~rtQ=eh $2777 ~lllurq111•; llfol!n ~. Tll!IJTI~ i.:.wlli .l•'' ~ iir.\! '" "' ' .. ,. . MAZDA Lease A Rotary Entin• ENTER ~~~acARTHUR tJm Lewi& MAZDA FOR "1•· 1971 280 SE TOYOTA (UUN995l Mercedes. PIS, brks, \vin-. '68 Sunroof beetle, Je1non RX3 Stalion \\'agQn, our most dowsL af.._c,_ auto trans, metl. · yellow, radio (W\VM680) popular model! paint ~Pr:I pty. $ 6 5 0 0 . 1966 II arbor C.~'l. 646-9303 TOYOTA TOYOTAS FOR IMMEDIATE OELIVERY i\1X HI LUX CELICA CORONA LAND CRUISER ;DU1t lewi4 -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 WE BUY USED TOYOTAS ALL 1973 MODELS IN STOCK ~llliinnn!• 111"1!11" IOlll!I & lltGUll .J.1> & \llrl'(l ' ' '"' . '""' . "' . . . TOYOTA BILL MAXEY ANNUAL DEMO SALE "'COROLLAS "'CARINAS "'CORONAS "'MARK II'< "'LAND CRUISERS Plus 25 Back to School Used Car Specials! To Choose From BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beoch Ph. 847-8555 990 "69 Beetle, ginger metal.lie, O I $80 l l Monthly TI4/833-0403 · vinyl interior . <XOA690) n Y • Autos, Used '70 Beelle, """" mctalllc, I MIRACLE MAZDA PORSCHE 990 Autos, Used 990 A•1tos, Used radio, v1 a yl i n· terior 14.17AVBl '72 Super Bee tle (555EIC) BEACH Ia.rPORTS, 1200 \V. Coast J.liway, Newport (714) 64~ ·--. Z150 Harlx>r Blvd. '69 -912 HARD \Vindow Targa, 20,000 n1i, on rblt Costa J\:fcsa 645-5700 eng,, 5 spd, "S" package, ~~~~=~-~--All.1!FM ra dio, m a gs, * Mazda '73 Rotary * ~tichclin radial s, S52j(J, Car i\1USTANG '67 Auto. tr~1n.., $66 MONTH . phone $1000.xtra. 673-4775. P. S'!]:,, radio, new hi-es. 3G MONTH.S O?EN LEASE 64C A Cla~stc Car, ~C\V slate (TRJ:.!10l. $1395. BEACTI \Vill accept trade-ins gray paint, xln t cond . li\1PORTS, 1200 \V . Coast CALL !ltR F'RY 842-66G6 Growing family forces sale. Hiway, Newport 645-6406 H · h $2800. 847-7804. COltVE'J'tE<16•-"·"""""·• -unt. Beac . :.i;:;_~;~~SiJ.~~··,, f~·Hs~~. ~'~·A C~i r1~: MAZDA ~iGeng.U11FM est~~. PORTS, 1200 W. <»ast Jly, Npl, Bch 645·6406 PORSCHE 1961 SOO .conv. brand 11e"'f eng, recent trans COUGAR .'69 XR7 2 dr., l7l1 1 Beach BL 842-6636 r:at car, $2000. 55&-7461 aft 11.T .. P/S, P/B, air. Very BOB LONGPRE l :'=:'m"=~---- lo. ml. V.in. top. Sharp! See MAZDA PORSCHE, 1963. \V h i t e this one! (\'\VR43{)) w/black Interior. Electric BEACl-I IMPORTS 1200 W. sunroof. 673-0234 CoMt Hy, Npt. B<:h --SERVICE FIRST-'11) PORSCHE. 911T. a'""""· ALFA Romeo '69 GTV. Very lst Street at tho Yellow, xtras, Im mac . nice, auto. \Viii not Inst Santa Ana r-rWy, , mags, prtv. pru1 y. 497-lOTI. -1onl(~ (-OC--£286) BEACll IM--2001 E._j_st Street .il_P,O_BSCHE _\\'/reblL '64 PORTS 1200 \V. Coa!lt Hy., 'Santa na. 558-'lSn eng. New uphol & tires, Npt Sch 645-&100 197':l MAZDA -tspct, ate. \•lnyl :..18-31.W top, n1any xtras. a.1ust 1;c\I. '~56~PO=R~SC~J~IE~.-n-,~bl-t -,-,,-,,I IMPORTS -\\'ide Sel~Uon! 5.i7-9.~10 trans & transaxle. A Steal MGs, Poraches. Jag• . You MERCEDES BENZ at $1200. "'"""6. !>-!!PM n(lme it! Beach Imports, ------~·--i'SG 912. Rebuilt engine. Super Newport Bch. C71 4) &15-6408 ,58 J\ot E R CEDES SL. clean! Ne\\· tires. $2700. Ph: Rcnlovablc hardtop. Needs 1,G_?S--_11_29_. _____ ~ 1 -· -ff11\1rl1 Jh11p1111!i t J I,'") >Ii L '°'' "'~"''I" • rJ ,:t••'llr•h•l_I·•, ALFA ROMEO~ SAAB In NEJWPORT ,. . .. I little body work. Best offer '59 PORSCHE, super cond., or trttrle. 549-0530. reblt eng., radial~. S1900tof· '6!) MB 280 SL Rdstr, 4 1pd, ·"lei'r_,, . .;,673,;-&1:=2.J~=--,.-=I 1>~. air, lo n1lle!I, $5475, '68 PORSCllf: 912, 5 spct'd, 67VJ620, 116 lnduatrlal Way, reblt enatoc & clulch, new c.r..t. pnlnt, $.'lfi9J. 557-2611. \ 1166 $466 '65 CHRYSLER Auto, "•n. poww ....,1119, ftte rory olr. (120JFVJ , ,• :: ·: . ' " ' ' i. , I I. 1' I ' I 1• " I I , . . ' Friday, A1191.1sl 3, lf:l7J SPECTACULAR SAVINGS STATION WAGONS GALORE! ' '71 FORD LTD '72 PONTIAC '69 PONTIAC S~UllE t PASSINGEl SAFARI WAGON t PASSENGER OR LEASE V8, 1ufometic, r1dio, h1•t1r, pow1r 1l11erinq & di1e br•k11, f1ctory air c:ond. f )41ETF l V8, •utom1tie, R&H, pow1r 1!11rin9 & br1kt1, f1ctory •ir conditionin9, roof rack. 1),18] mile1. !892GJVI \'8, autom1tic, f1ctory 1ir, r1· dio, h11!1r, pow 1r 1f11rin9 power br1k11. I 1&3077) USED CARS LEASE '71's AND UP. $2845 SPECIAL THIS WEEK $3467 $1995 '73 VENTURA II 350 V-8, automatic, radio, 1 YEAR or 12,000 MILES Available on all domestic uHCI cars. 1 y.ar or 12,000 miles, whichever occurs first. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Will WARRANTY COMPLETE DRIVE TRAIN Including engine, transmission & rear end ••••••••••• hedlter, vinyl top, custom interior, wh ite side wall tires. ! SOSG O U l $2875 I 72 ~t~~!:. ~~;~,~~~"~3 34 5 P.S .. P.B., factory ~i•. 15,790 milei. j9S9b8Kl I 69 g~,~~','~;~:~~~~.~~:~189 5 !YEN90S I '70 !~!2,~~ '";,, ...... $1~395 i761DJBI '72 ~~~~:· .. ~:~~~~~.,$2985 equipped. ( 10181 Ll I 69 ~~~f~;;,~!:~~:~~~~-·~1995 ( YWY'l1'5 ! 111111 lllUllll • IF Mii • HARBOR • ? ' . ,_,. BLVD. 1V2 MILE SOUTH OF THE !AN DIEGO FREEWAY .__._ ....... _ .... __ l§l C ..... tor.:. I~ 1 '"'"'~"· _I\~\ I ...... ~... I ~ I ..... for.... I~ I _,,,.. 1§1 I -..... 1§11! ... , ... "" l§J I Auto•for's.io 1§: A~ut;o;s;, ;U;s;e~;;;;~;;;99;0~A;•;•t;os;,;U;s;e;d;;;;;;.:;;990;;. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmponeo 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Jmpon«I 970 I 1A~u;t;o;s,;;U;Hd;;;;;;;;990;1;A;u;to;s;, ~;; ... ;;;;;;;;:;;990~1,~Aiiuiitiiosii,iiUiisiieiidiiiiiiii~ii990iiiil .. ~~----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN BUICK C~DILLAC CHEVROLET SMALL CAR BOOM GOOD MILES '72 Maverick Coupe VII, power 1tee•ing, a ir co,.d, d .. to .. !8.000 mile•. ! 529 ETC ) '70 Maverick Coupe b c~li nder,) 1pe1d tran1m'11·,,,,. I ISICES) '72 Capri Coupe Radio, 4 1p1ed tra~1m .u+o~. Nice. t841E:LT! '72 'Plymouth Valiant 4 Door. b c:ylinder, ,,,,,o .. P.S. air cond. (977EYE l '67 Ca maro Sm.,11 VB Pn9ine. 3 1peed .,,.,,,mi1.\on. ITYX73 6 l '69 Chevy II Nova Coupe. VS, P.S .. a~lomat.c, air c:ond. r 167HRHJ '70 Ch evy 11 Nova 'I Door. 6 c~li nde<, 111dio ....... tom .. loc. t 2103 ) '71 Chevy II Nova St 11 VB . st1c~ shift,"rad:o. !3!2CTO! '71 Vega GT Hatchback 'I sp .. ed, r~d io. N;<:'e. (I 89DTO I '72 Vega GT Hatchback Coupe. 4 speed r•dio, .,jc.,. ( l OSEKT I · • -~ IZl Y,eg~ ljatchback Co~pe> _ Coupe. 4 ipeed r•d10, nice 1 lO~EKTl '72 Vega Wagon 4 1petd, radio, 15 ,000 mil11. t tt 7F'f\ll .Y3 Vega Hatchback .. .t~Jorrtatle;;;;.9 .• .7 ttl milu • ..U IJG.XP) '73 Chevy 11 Nova Coupe. Ai1 ~ond ., Sm .. 11 Ii&, P.S .. eu!o., .. ,~vi roof. 1,700 m!l11. 19'1SGVG' Connell Chevrolet 2828 Harbor Blvd. --C-osta-Mesa 546-1203 Daily Piilot (la ssified ORANGE CO AST'S BEST SALESMAN •• '{;7 V\V '1800 nu, Sl'rViC<' records. $895. 5-1!1--2083 nft 5 Pl\!. '61 _ V\V \.'an. Pe1icct bo"!y. g-ood intf'r, 8.o:xl n1i on ]10 hp cng. $680. 5,?.6-4313 Call ''8 SUNROOF V\\1 inunediate sale! * 67:'>-'J(l33 * 't'S K,\Ri\.IANN Ghia, xtra t:ll'an, Lo niilcage, SlZJ.J. fall l~1-:~t\'.?2 ·"f!V\\ -lius-·, -,-o-p-ro7' -,,.71.~lo n111t•ag1•, "1/n ir. $2200. 979-1\0lili or 6i:l-9782 ~-~~ ·70 V\r Sq. back clean s1;,o & take tJ\t'r payments, n1orn or eves. 5.".0-1582 "J\.1ake Hoo1n r~or Daddy" . . . clean out the gar~>e ... turn that junk into cash with a Daily Pilot Classified ad. Call &12-5678. '7J V\\I Campn1obilr. X!nt cond. l\1ust sclL \Vil! sac. Fully equip. 6i3-i4iq. '68 VW FASTBACK WE'RE MOVING 4.-spt't'd and !o\v 1niles 1526-'72 VW Super Bug HQDI. 4 Spd, cuslon1 grille, real '70 BUS. Xlnt conrl . lo n1i, Recl/11•hi1c, cuJ"tains, bed frame incld. $1750. 96:~53.'JJ $1088 sharp, l\IUST SEE TO AP- GARDEN GROVE PRl::CIATF. t~NS>. LINCOLN-MERCURY $2699 '65 VW BUG, $60'.) Reblt eng. Good Condition Call 673-9.193 e ... ·es "G9 V\V Cam~r Bus, sunrf, l'C'd, l'Cblt Png. Sl51Xl. 10120 Garden Grove Blvd .. G.G. 636-2980 • 'iO V'.V Bus, rebtl cng. x1nt cond J!li3 \'\\" Super &et!c, • '69 V\V Camper, ·72 Super sunroof. EvC'nings Beetle cng, nu t i r c s , 968-'1311 i'il5-1861 l9i2 \1'\' 411 Squareback '67 VW, KOO<!. con d . Air Conditioning mechanically. Racing equip. Call after 5pn1 492-8668 installed, needs paint & \\'A.NTED V\V"S body work. Best offer buys. RUNNING OR NOT &1!>-4653 eves. 5.'l0-6940 or 5304i99 'TI WESTPHALIA Camper, '70 VI\' "" 000 · I rapid cool, fully loaded. • .xi, m1 es. i-·-~= air/cond. Ne1v li res. }(Int .crvt> .,.,...,,.,,-:1. cond. $1450. 615-6226. Need a "Pad"! Ph.ce an ad! NE\~,ro~r DATSUN 1000 \V. Coas1 Jlwy .. Newport Bch &t-1-6400 Open Sunday '70 VW Bug 4 sf)('('d. radio, a.Ir corHtilion- ing, IO\\' miles. 957-BQE:. $1377 ~w.lwiiA W TOYOTA Autos, Imported ~-~----~= 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, 1mJHJrfed ..,., .. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646·9303 1971 V\V DUNE BUGGY Street Legal. Nice. $700. Private Party. 4 9 4 -4 7 4 7 eves. THESE DAYS YOU HEAR OF 3 HOUR SALES! '71 V\V xlnt t.'Ond ., new brakes, pcrfl'cl n1cch & bcxly, fact alr, $ 1 5:; 0. 645-2-MI. VOLVO ECONOMY & SAFETY PL[}S Savings & Comfort '70 Buick ·10 CA D, perr rond . em/fn1. '72 CHEVY NOVA stcrt'O, all ai·c. Pri pl y. :: 11(.l()R {'()UJ>E Estate Wagon Sa1·r1r at $:.12.'>0. 6i3-SIJO.I J-.:x(·rHPnt l'onr!irion~ Au10- 9 PAS.':iENGER. VS. auto-days matic tra~mission, po1v1'r n1atic t1•1;1ns, pcl\l'l'r s Tf:'l'i"ing. 1972 !\IARK IV. Xlnt ('Oil· strrrin11:. IO\Y luv.· 1nilcs air 1'0nditioning, luggage dition. Lo milrs, loadt'fl. t5311;:AA1. 1"1tck, 2.IGAVZ. Phone 714: 64!}-l."WiQ betwc1'n GREAT ECONOMY $1677 '''°"m&5pm $2377 ;t) l "68 CAD. Lo mileage, $1750. GARDEN GROVE ft•ll .,,.:, or""'' olfoc. LINCOLN-MERCURY e UN\. UNIO Cn\1 84r>-686 I 0 10!2Q GurTlf'n r;1"01'c Blvd,, YQLV l.971 CADILW\C S..'Cia n d4' G.G. \7il!r all pi:m·cr, 1 n11•nc1', 636-2980 1!166 lla1 bor C.i\I. 6.\6-9303 S::i.000. 5~6-.1.'iG.:; anytinte =~--1 '72 RIVfERA '67 CADI LLAC Omvert. :;;" '70 CHEVY ruu po11•cr & factory air con-n1ilcs. R/J-1. Air. Private CAMARO ditioni'"'· St-·I beltc.'fl ""-". party 646-80fi9 afl IP;\I I ~""" ~·"-·~ Gn.'rn Gold, 1-inyl roof, Air and many extras. (#C902). "*AMARO Corlfl. well kept cur {8TJ· $4098 'V '1.\IEL GARDEN GROVE --------1 $2680 LINCOLN-MERCURY '70 CA~tARO Rallyc Spo~L lOl.21l Ga.n:if'n Go:ive Blvd.. ln1n1ac! P/S, PIB. n1r, G G bucktt sen~. conrol<>. aulo, • • J disc brks, rodio, vinyl top. --,..,.-6~3(,.~29=80==---I tlnted gla!ls. $2590. 8Jl-1300. '69 BUICK ·72 MONTE Carlo, air, \vin- SPORT WAGON dows, v;,,,1 lop, "dial,,l ;.6;;;9-;8;;;L";'U"°E~Kicc .. ,----.-,1-,Ch=--I x1ras, priv ply, $3450.. · ngs\\oor. evy Fully ~-·ipped, fX Ul324l 4!)3-3720.. \Vitgon. 9 pass, air, r/h, ""fU p/h. p/s, I uggagc mc-k, $1678 CHEVROLET xlm """I. Make 0 ff r . ~lltan1111 r. lllutu1" lll'rlill & 00» u\11 & SUWl .. -"'' "" ' .,,. . ~ -.. --------1 'l&--061'! '65 EL Camino reblt 327 4 ··~71~0'°1'°E°'v-.~M"'aJ~ih-u-·~1.,71c-. -1,-,,-.1 spd. nu cltch slrtr. :\1nt dau top. lo mileage. aulo, cond., days. 8!J2-8W5; nitcs air. R & H, Shnrp! $2300. 842-2840. 6'1a-o.1&1 or ~96 ---------1'66 CHEVY Impala 4 dr, * * 'GS Cl-I.EV sla wag, hnltp. Real nice -hun-y! auto. air, ps/pb, $5.~. After CADJLLAC $500. Good deal. 71 4 : 6, ~UJ.-1 968-"93 -"-~~----- EL DORADOS ~9 EL Camino Malibu. vety CHRYSLER 14 TO CHOOSE ~ cond. 307 auto. Silver.1-----·----I COUPES-CONVERTIBLES JI.Yogi; included. $13 5 0. Chance of a Life Time e 5.16-3711 aft 5. '70 Custom Chrysif!r 300 ....... ..4JGAKll~SALESl ~ MAD MAD SALES! -............... --.a:.m+-ln -Oo,._;;Remaining--- • JS DE VILLES 'G9 Cl-IEV Camaro, J)\Yr ··~rum" 2 yrs/12,000 mi. re- _'!'_'£'; -•~_!/>, low, miloa<'· .l.",.in "" warra'!'J. 0"'" · J8"'TG EHOOSE -~ i:;noa·eofm~·MU!t"'"1 .... ry lh!S~ma'.''§;l"'i'tof"" . COUPES $1200. 831r7860. $5,cm. LI. #l95BEQ. Owner TERRIFIC SALES! BIG WILD SALES! AND MANY MANY MORE Day In, Day Out, year In, Year Out for Over Thirty·Five_Years ,fhe~Service has Been Better ancl New Car Prices Lower At "LOW OVERHEAD" ~: TERRY BUICK OPEL~. 5th & Walnut, Huntington Beafh 536-6588 CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY I Nl!W VOLVOS Immediate Delivery ~Wtl.W W YOLYO 1966 J-larbor, C.M. 646-930..'\ 1957 Volvo Good cond. Best o t f e r , ~. Autos, Uted BUICK '72 BUICK Electra, CU!'ilom 225, all µower, lilt wheel air, AM/t"I, $3200, Com- Pl:toY tumlshlng nu cur. f 213i"il34-32ll BUICK SPECIAL . '61 Oluc VS. 29,000 rnl. Rn.dk>. AJr cond. 4 dr. $UOO. 518--0297 '6.1 BUICK LnSllhl'e. Good. 3.17 Victoria, Apt . 2, CM 645-72S.5 day~ SF.DANS '66 CHEVY Jmp..i.ln, 4 1Jr, 536-46.~.~ CONVERTIBLES good transportation, $500. ioo.~1-,Cl°"1"'R"'V"S"'LE"R"""'N:-c-w-port-,~2 I l\tany excellent colors 714: 968-£893 · dr hrdlop, ate. power, t Oioice of Interiors •71 GOLD CAPRICE. lovo' owner , very clean, $350. (Cloth & lcath~r) n1il ...... e, like new. $3395. -5'19-$.12 Factory air 1..'0f1dltloni11g '"'""' 1~-~------1 Full power. Choice of, 54G-'l805 CONTINENTAL Stereo Ai\f/FM radio '6,1 Cl·1EVELLE Jl.lalibu, ~l--'-----.C.:.:1.-.-1 Ci'Uliie control a.t 518 West Wil.90n. Costa .73 CONT. 4 Dr "Town Trunk opener&: mare Meaa bef 2pm. car." EverY--'.6>'ncelv&bLc AU in Immaculate 1..'0ndlUon * •72 t.10NTE CARLO * extra. Only 6,600 m i . Lnrgest selection In Very clean, imulYJ:lraa, _A.Jl.$ O l.rtJ-T-E-L-¥-1 Orange County 49:J.-311ll MACUl.ATE! Blue Book Nabers Cadillac: MUST ,.11 •62 Chevy ss S7.235. Prkcd al 16.450 1117n Atrn!ORIZED DEi\L£R Must eee t~ appreciate. n> tor lmmed!Dtc sale. Privt1te 2600 J{ARBOR BL., Center St. Apt..l7 CM $450. ~~ftDJ or 828-4342 COSTA MESA '66 CHEVELLF., 4 dt sedan, =-"';;.-=c'~~""'~~I MIJ.91110 Open su,,day goo0 cond. ~""· '71 MARK IU BY owner _ '7i E'l Dorado. 968-1497 ~I~. full po11:cr, rt1c. t11r mn· 36 000 n1i loaded Nu tJ ....... 65 CHEVY •fallbu 2 dr 6 ri1t1ouirm. vinyl roof, Ah-I/ • , • . .... ,., " ' ' ~·:\·! ~M'f'O 15l!'!CPN) S.'l700. or be11t otter. 846-4666 cyl au10. Needs no \\.'O!'k. Thi W · k rtd 0n'1 1 '6' SEDAN De VIiie. I $425. 613-71\'J.I • ·;s~ y m~r. n,OCXI ml, Needs ·54 CHEVY hnp!\IA RR f\u1o GARDEN GDOVE ~b1t, $900. 675-46S6 !t'(lnl, p/b, p/11, gf'Cll t 0011(1. _ " 1!)1;8 CADILLAC Coope do $4."ll. ~'IZlll· · LINCOLN-MERCURY VIile. Top'. oond. Se11t oller. '6fi CifE'VELLJ.;, v .s. pl~. 10120 Gn~ £rove Blvd., 64&--0648 nlr/cond. Everylblng rehlt 63~2fao CLASSIFIED will smt 11! or nc\1'. $00). 557-3!110. ' . _ _,_ '' ' ' " " 1 ·: i . . • • ... '' ' ' ' . ,.. ' ' . • .:~ : ·: ,. ·jJ . :· '" . •,· . . " •, Friday, August 3, 1q73 DAILY PILOT .ffj • -· )Jy ,, d.J 'DICK JOHNSON • v.P.-J'oHMSoN & S~N L1NcoLll·MacuR't • At Our Discount Prices They're Not A Luxury ••• They're A BARGAIN! DEMOS-EXECUTIVES-BRAND NEW OUTSTANDING SELECTION NOW! -CONTINENTALS- CONTINENTAL COUPE TOWNE BRAND NE\V. Absolutely loaded \\'ith niost popular accessor- ies. Dark copper metallic. (15861 HUGE SA VIN GS COLONY PARK WAGON Nina .Johns.._.ns IX'l'sonn l \\·agun. All thr extras you'd expect the CJ1\·11e1·'s 1\'ife tu hnvr. You 1ui.n1e it, this bcau1y has it. J\Jediun1 Coppl.'r J\letallio. (20521 Spectacular Savings -MERCURYS- MARQUIS HllOUGHAM Denio. Look at this equipment. 460 VS, ''\'in lounge seats. Ste>el hL·lted tires, tilt steering \\'heel. Al\T-fJ\II \vilh stereo ta1)('. J\lany, many more features on this Ginger Glan1our metallic luxury car. (2()36) $5 595 MARI\. IV This beautiful meta!lie blue l\1ark IV has all the gorgeous con· venience acc<'i;;sories you can irnagine. t5420J Less than l,200 n1iles. Yes, 1,200 mies. · $8600 CONTINENT AL SEDAN Ou tstanding s<'dan in Al\•IERICA today. Light ginger gold n1etallic executive cf\r \Vith con1pletl• Continent.al options. I 1594 ! $6980 .'• ... -,. . : : . ,. •' ' ' '. '. ' ., '• Autos for Salt Autos, UMd 990 ' REMEMBER ••• We Still Have A Few Capris At The Old Lower Prices. • • • OVER 100 CARS ON SALE • • .Home Of Th e New Car , , • ••Golden Touch'' Autos for S•I• 11 M•] I Autos tor 5.lle Autos, Used 990 Autos,. Used --~~~---- ' "Ora1111e County's Family o] Fine Cars" ohnson&son LINCOLN MlHCURY C0UG;\R CAPRI ' 2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e 540.5630 Autol for S.Jil• Autos for S.Jile 990 Autos, Us~ 990 Autos, Used · 990 Autos, Used Autos r. Sale 990 Autos, Used Home 01 The New Car , , , "Golde.1 J'ONCh·" Autos for Sale 990 Autos, Uwd 990 --·----' 990 Autos, Used ' CONTINENTAL PONTIAC I -----·--------------------------1 FORD MUSTANG COUGAR MERCURY FORD PLYMOUTH FORD I '71 Continental Cpe. '67 COUGAR .-p/s, auto, '70 Ford t973 GRAN Torino wagon, '71 Ford LTD '71 MARQUIS '67 MUSTANG, nlust sell, PLY. Fury '69 radio, htr, LEASE OR BUY !. Full power, fac air condition-R.~H. exceptionally cl~an. C S . 4200 mi~s. fact. \Vmty, air, VS 1 11 1 BROUGllAM 4·000R S60Js7i~st offer. 675--551.5 fac. air high miles, ru11s •71 thru •73 Pontiaca ing, A'M/FM S1trco, vinyl Best offer. 32~ Idaho\ Pl, ountry quire rack, P/S, P/B, tinted, • a~ oma · c rbans, po\vcr Full power, factory air con-or -very gd. $600 or best offer, DAVE ROSS root (l6SDZZ). CM Sta rion \Vagon. Au!oninlic bro_nzc, i1nmnc. _0lsto1n In-Sle<'rLng, poivcr rakes, fac-ditionlng, vinyl . roof. tilt-'65 ?tfUSTANG Fastback, 536-7257. 8201 Evelyne Cir.. PONTIAC i· LOOKS GREAT . DODGE trans, iio1-1 .. er slCC'rlng, rac-terior . Sac. $399a. Pvt pty. tory ai r, only 39.ooo nllles, whe-el steering, 29,000 miles. niany extras. 642-8195 after H.B. • -.,b .....-~ •. :::....-D,Rl~.,PRUT _ •. " '_J ;:6:::8e-~:::;D;:o:od•'l''9"""'e'"c';:':"i'f"'°'a"r"'9·0'. ·,-::ie•-! .tar;; air.,..'""""'""C ~ ·k~ 2J_ ... Eves. 54!-)667, day 642-7474 30SDZI<. $1 'I""... ~w • ~~5~ZI.~· u MI '·u · CA""' 4 pm~--'70 PLYT\IOUTH Dus I er, 2~ Hfll•bor Blvd., at Fair a. ... _,.. ~ ""S39Br ---1-: --------·---~-• "'But.=~..... ''"'~ "'68"ttlRO "Wa'gOn,·aUto-"'CftiflS; ~· ·• -' .,.., · ' ..... .:o.. ~---,.. '•--,,c.o -r A ui n.· ' '66" ?i-lUSTANG~_,_ 289;' iiU10, -xln't t'Ond. Gl'ettt-ce:orifffir."/ ~·. O:leta'-"'M9a..:5f8£ar17 -~ , I GARDEN GROVE $1477 p/s, p/b, rth, xlnt cond, $2874 disc brks, con!l(l\e, gauges. car. A1110. Rael. Pis. p/h 1965 CATALINA ! LINCOLN-MERCURY A11ton1nlic trans, pOwcr sleet·· nu brake'i, lites & tune. up. f\8111111 L••i:.t GARDEN GROVE Ocan, $695. 494--5924 ate. 548--2492. Xlnt orig condition A/C , ; 10120 Garden Grove Blvd., :: air t.'Onditionlng, vinyl -· ;oWt Lewi& !~ill consider terms, al'ToYOUIO ~~~cga~~!v~;yv~.~ OLDSMOBILE ~ago~ Lo B~~~\·n~a~::~~ ~~: ~~ ~:.7s w.' fef~ .6a2.f9so $977 VOLVO '70 li1AVERICK, 2 dr, slk, W , G.G: Sales&: Sf':vtce A/C, cxli-ns. 979-8373. '69 PONT GTO 4 pd U '69 CONT. St.ij)Cr clea~. load-l ~J:i·. ~~Y~~JJl.'~:~~ 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 _63'-2980 OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC bdy dmg. $7$. a: Ls: J1it~ od. Leath.,, iml· 613-3'l68 "fDll WJi6 1966 Ha•'bor, C.M. 646-9303 wkn<ls, 67;.28.!3. ·71 COUNTRY Squire 9 pass '70 COLONY PARK GMC TRUCKS repaired. 49!H172. COUGAR VOLVO '7! FORD WAGON dark wag. Pis. p/b, rack s1I 10 PASS. WA.GON HONDA CARS .68 PONTIAC l'irebird. T·BIRD '10 Cnt:ry Sedan, p/s, ale, green, a/c, cruise control, radials. ale. disc bJ.'ks, 400 ~ulom~uc trun~m~ion, fac. UNIVERSITY OLDS DOHC 6, xlnl inter ior. body ---------·I , xlnt cond. new tires, trlr Jug rack, p/s, disc brake$', eng, 16,000 mi's. Like. new. tory tnr contlltio~1ng, power & tires. Blue w/blue. lit '66 T·BIRD. Hard(W. All '71 COUGAR 1966 llarbor, C.M. §16: lltch.-h\11---dty 11hocks.~----x1ntt-cond-S2'100-"644=4387 1 Pvt R!Y· ;3250. Call aft 4pm windows, AM/F.l\f stereo, _ 2850 Harbor Blvd. .J'CasLoUe.r!! 8451Jeony La. ol'ia'ltlal lhN mile.. Exef:l,.l--"-1 Sf1:ltdi-V~t:o-tran1, a "thvrnrn:-m-t'hallengcr, 3 lug rack, 586-4898 $ZMlO ' • wkd"ys, 557-2610. luggage ra('k. 11\t steering Costa Mesa 51~ H.B., apt 126. (Nr Newland lent condition. Only $895. air' conditioning. Po w e r •pd ma~ $!300 or best of-'64 FORD Custo1n 4 dr Xlnt '67 FORD Galaxle, -4 • ctr 1972 FORD Torino Sqtiire wheel. ( 17r-.cODI · '62 OLDS CuUass V-S' needs & Atlanta 1 call 557-8799 .t .. rl~ --" vinyl rool ' ••• d ·-··1 .. M w A t A" o:llW:: STATION WAGON I ,_ 1100' ' . 1..,0,"'='""'""'"''-----1 (••~~E·). cu""l · fer. Call bet 1 le 3, 546-2525 COii · ~,. ng .,...,..., hrdlp, full po\\>er, fac air, agon, u o. Jr. """ eng, SPECIAL (\F' THE \I/EEK transm ss"!n. . PONTIAC Catalh.1a 69 pret· '64 T-Bird, Mlnt cond. New ~...., 536-8987 new tires, xlnt cond. $900. MllJly extras! Low mileage. $l68a 557-360'2 ty )'ello\v, blk vinyl top, air radleJs, brakes e t c., GARD~~9~ROVE FIREBIRD ·~:I~•.~ :.;i.21~'. .~2~~~·:'._~00 PU Sptcu" ·~1~~,.°::.-:·R/H, 26 F.o N GROVE PINTO ~f,111"" °' be'I offer. 646-235'1 a!t. lpm. LINCOLN--:-MERCURY .67 Jo~tREBlRO. Good con· Ca.II 673-5692. OW11cr'" 2nd cur. Short n'iles .to the ga:llon, $1,475. LINCOLN-MERCURY 'tOUO Gart.len Grove Blvd., 1962 FORD F I b k w/b, Hunl:unan shell. PIS. S.15-4850 101~ G11.1'Cli·n <>rove Blvd., {!lllory. 32ii 3 11pd. Best offer. 11. con, ro en c, G G.G. • 536--2024 tne~"""C, 557~ ~rive shaft, tow a\l'ay, best clean, $3,395. 673--2988. LINCOLN ·'· · 6''2980 I ~~ If 64° "72 636-2980 ,..,.. d~. Tues I ll"U Sat, Helen (l er. ..,......,.. CVC!I. '64 FAIRLANE. 6 i;yllnder.1 --------- You don'1 need " riun 10 "Dnliw F'laat" when .vou place an ad in lhe I:.i.ll)o PUot Want Ad!J! Call now • 642-0678. "\Vhile · Elcphnnui" ov~r· 1969 FORO Ecooolinc, ElOO 1tanda1'(I, looks & runs very • 7 2 M A R K Iv , '73 COLONY Park Wagon, ru.nnlnR your hoose?· tum Van. 6 CY! auto, $1400 or of-good. /l.8king-$275. 5.~ ¥/h\lc/bw-aundy in ter, lik{' 11r1\, 1111 p1vr, t\lr cond., them Into •1Cash" •.. sell f~r. 645--0.l:n '72 COUNTRY Sedan. \Ygn, \Vhllc 1op, an,/fJ'I'\ SICNo, under 11,000 ml. 642-2917 them thru a Daily l'Uol F"o"r"'t.;.ha"t"'t"1•"m-u1_>()_er~$50~.-11\'-p/a, dlsc brakes, all", $32'1.). J t\11 whl, lcalhe.r, $6850. Dally Pilot Want Acta have clll.S!'lifled ad! the Penny Pincher. Prl. Pty, Art . 6, S..'11-al36 _6"'-_•· _28'ro~·-------, ba'f(aln~ galore . . I \ .72 .• 1 • .1· '67 TE1\1PEST. Good rond. VEGA PlNTO. Xlnt coiiu. 0 ~ · nir cond riidin $595. or best i---·------·I :~;sse~Tr·R.1~_3ffl· moving, otter. ~15_:_' ·72 VEGA. like new, GT, cust · '67 PONTIAC Tempest sta.-Int., a.tr rond •• radio. Unted PLYMOUTH liOn """"" VR, •ulo •Ir, <l•as, 6,200 ml. $2623. C.U p/s, $&"14). 5.17-9367 . bet 8 FM, 979-2186. 19G4 VALIANT \Vagon, good '68 PONT IAC GTO, elec 'll VEGA Wl\gOl'I, lua•ae condition. $273. conv. top, ,I spd, PIS, racl n.clt, 4 speed 1Uck, rib, &i.t~M>16 , .... $9'0. ;J0-9'lQ.i. Sl42S, 8<6-11>19 ~· °""' . ' • I . . • ~-""-• • . ' . . . . . WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS '73 CUS'rOt\\ CRUI SER :; 3 !'.")l,~f; N!BN t!TY ~13 01.DSf~OB ILE .'!i'OR.O NADO 177 WAGON IJR45TJXl lJISO I OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE $ BRAND NEW 1973 GMC TRUCK CENTER! 8~:~o '73 GMC SPRINT . OMEGA with AIR CONDITIONING l38270JLI 176201 • $ V8, Automatic, radio, heater, po'''er steering, & brakes. ~~~~~~~~;(500764) IMMEDIATE $3477 DELIVERY EIGHT I JVJ 7TJM 29 i 599 J I J457WJM72864 1 I . OFF WINDOW STICKER $ PRICE . BRAND NEW 1973 DELTA 88 Air cond itioning, a utomatic, VS, vinyl roof, power steer- ing & brakes, wsw, t int . glass, side mouldings. 1299906 r $ NOW HERE BIG SELECTION! OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE THE BIGGER. ALL NEW '73 HONDA CIVIC THE LITTLE GAS SAVER! 4 SPEED OR AUTOMATIC WE MUST REDUCE OUR USED CAR INVENTORY BY 50 CARS IN THE NEXT 5 DAYS AND '68 Oldsmobile 88 2 Dr. H.T. Full power, air conditioning. IWLK424 / 5477 '68 Chevrolet Malibu 2 Dr. H.T. Air conditioning , <!l ufom<!ltic, VS, power steer- ing. 1230244 ) 5977 '70 Maverick 2 Door 0 cylinder, autom<!l t ic, factory air, stereo. 8e<!lutiful c<!lr. I J9JASE I HERE'S HOW WE'RE GOING TO DO IT! '69 Mercury Monterey Air cond., power steering & brakes, VB , a uto., blue w/ bl <!i ck top, low miles. ! YOFB48 ) 51377 '69 Mercury Marquis 2 Dr. H.T. loaded a nd low miles. Yellow w/black vinyl roof. !ZNA374 ) 51777 '69 Pontiac Bonneville Air cond., power steerin g & br<!ikes, gre<!lt first car for the family. IXWZlO I I , '73 Plym. Barracuda J ust li ke brand new. VB. power brakes, r<!ld io, he<!lter. (51458 11 ·52577 '72 Pinto Runabout 4 speed, 2000cc engine, deluxe interior & exterior, disc brakes. I OSlFYW l 52177 '71 Dodge Surfer Van l ike new and herd to fin d. Auto., radio, hea ter, custom p<!i int. Low mil•s. I 70085J ) I '72 Dodge Charger Th is car is just beautiful wi t h d<!lrk blu e exterior and bl eck vinyl top. Air cond., P.S., P.8., l 500ElF I 53077 '69 Oldsmobile 98 Power steering & brak~. air cond., radio, heater. Silver with black vinyl top. ( 4508) 51477 '69 Oldsmobile Wagon Power steering, power brakes, a ir cond itioning, meg whee\i, bea utiful car. IVTM291 I ' . . -· • Friday, August 3, 1973 DAILY PILOT CUSTOM . VANS by COURTESY • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LARGEST SELECTION OF DODGE VANS IN THE WORLD! e SUPER VANS e COFFIN VANS e WINDOW VANS e CUSTOM VANS e ALL COLORS AND OPT IONS SALE PRICED NOW-IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '73 B-100 VAN e LOADED VB, AUTOMATIC, CHROME .DELUXE PACKAGE Used Low Miieage 182990NI IMMEDIATE DEUV~RY $85 DOWN $85 A MONTH NJ II 10111 dn, pyml. HJ ii 101•1 mo. pyml, Ind. Ill, Hctnlt & 111 c1rryln1 <IMl'11" on 1ppr. creclll for Jl mo1. o.t1rrl'd pyml. price 11 UltS In.cl, l1x & Uc1t11n. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE ' ltATE 11.21, $ BRAND NEW '73 DODGE COLT 16L21 K5311926) $61 DOWN IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s19aa '73 POliARA VI •nt•,,,., i 1111e1m111c 1r1n1., powtr t lffrlJll 1nlll disc brelln, AM·FM redle, ¥1nyt "'"'• IM!Oy P••nt lltitltt, r1c1111 mlrron, blldtll _,. enlll mtr.. (WP29PJ017UU) $127 DOWN $127 A MONTH $61 A MONTH HI II' tot•I dn. pym). ''1 11 i.111 mo. pymt. Ind. 111, llcenn & 1111 tlr,.YLl!f (hlrQfl Ofl lpllf'. crtdll tor 42 m11ntl!s. Def1rret1 pymt, prlc1 12'2J inc.I. 111 & llclnH. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE \l, STATION WAGON 400 c:11. i11. Ya, 111tom 1tic, r1dio, h11t1r plui 11111 f1c:lory 1quip· mint. IOL45lM02400961 US·ED CAR Inventory Reduction SALE! -----------------. '72 DODGE COL TS F•ct11ry 1ir. '4 1peod, r.,di11, lle1t1r, buclr1t 11•l1. (OllETBI ('4J O. EXE> YOUR $1288 CHOICE $43 DOWN-$4l A-MONTH f.tJ i. '91•1 ..._ pymt. s.u 11 Ml•I ""'· "Mt. Mel, tu. lk lllH I. 111 cerryin.. sMf'ltl .......... cNCNI tor :U '""· Dlff..,... pylTll, price fl"1 lftcl. tell • lie ..... ANNUAL PaRCaNTAOE llATIE It.~ 70 MONT£ CARLO $1588 Factory Air, automatic, VS. radio, heater~ po\ver &leering, \VS\V. i861AF\Vl. '7 1 DATSUN PICKUP Fully factory equipped. (482COT) '71 DODGE COLT Fully factory equipped. (536BLFl '71 FORD COIRA VS, power stcer·ini;:, radio, hf'atrr, fully factory equipped. (6851'BCJ FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE . Courtesy Dodge--The Walking Man's Friend ..-....... '67 !LfMQUIH '64 CHEVROLET--'68 DODGE - Val iant. Automatic, fac:tory a ir, ra. Malibu hardtop. Automatic, radio, Dart. Automatic:, radio, heater, white dio, heater, buc:ket seats. {VTI545 ). he ater, air c:ond it ion in9. llDV84l l. wall t ires. IUOFS39 ). 5188 5288 5388 FULL CASH PRICE FULL CASH PRICE '67 OLDS '66 FORD GT 4h Dr. H.T., VS, automatic, radio, Fairlan e GT 2 Or. H.T., VS, R&H, eater, power steering, vi nyl t op. automatic, buck et se ats. !SIW4b4). l894DSZI. FULL CASH PRICE '68 PLYM. WAGON Sport Satellite I 0 pass. VS, a ut o., air cond., R&H , power steerin9 , roof <ack . I 908CQO I. 5~388 5488 5488 FULL CASH PRICE FULL CASH PRICE FULL CASH PRICE '71 VOLKSWAGEN 4 srccd. radio, heater, mag \vhccl~. bucket seal!. (ll2461738J '67 CHEVROLET '69 FORD WAGON '69 PLYMOUTH $1 088 Camaro. Rad io, heater, fully fa ctory Ran ch wagon. VS, automatic, power Belv~dere 2 Dr .. Fa ctory air, •utoma ~ equipped. l590JFT I. , steering , radio, heater. l912AC9). tic, R&H , power steering. IXSD84S I. '6' DODGE DART Fully factory equipped. (794BMU) . ' FULLPRICE s499 s599 s599. 5788· .. . .. _._ .. FULL CASH PRICE FULL CASH PRICE FULL CASH PRICE FULL PRICI • \ '72 CHEV. VEGA Ftct11ry •r, 4 speed, bucket •••h, r1di11 h1•ler, "''""· f IV77B2 U. 1510851 FULL $1288 PRICE $43 DOWN-$43 A MONTH MJ 11 tOlel 41!, nml. $4l 11 lolel mo. 111ml. lnc:I. tu. lklMe & •II C.1"111111 dl.lrtn ... •Hf, c,...r_ fer )6 ""'· Dlflrrl'lll p~mt. price SU" Incl. I•• a. lie-. AHNUAI.. P•RCENTAGl!i llATli 10.3".. '72 CHEYROLO NOYA Y8, automatic, factory air. radio, heater, power steering. I 143EKGJ '70 FORD MAVERICK Rad.Jo, heater, power steering, \vhitc side waU tires. (059BQN j '70 DODGE CHARGER 2 Dr. H.T. V8, automatic, factory air, R&H, power steering (467ASZ) '71 FORD PINTO Vinyl roof, exterior decor. fully factory equipped. (792BTFJ '69 CHEYROLO CAPRICE VS, automatic, factory air, P.S., radio, heater, po\\'Cr scats. (\VBJ6281 '7°"..AMC,HORNn •• ·• • • Automatic, air cond .. radio. hf'ntcr, power steering, WSW. (407AKX! $1988 FULL PR ICE 5888 FULL PRICE 51088 FULL PRICI! , , 51088 FULL PRICI 5888 FULL PRICI ,_ < • . • ' - - . • EVERY NEW & USED CAR & TRUCK NOW AT MODEL YEAR-END SALE PRICES DURING 1973 M·O·DEL CLEA THIS-IS WHAT YOU'VE BEIN WAITING FOR! 1973 FORDS WILL NEVIil BE LOWER •. COME .IN TODAY. DEMO SALE T ·BIR D SAL E! ALL DEMO AND STAFF CARS MUST GO! SUPER SAVINGS ON T-Birds, LTDs, Torinos, Galaxie SOO's, Mustangs, Station Wagons WHILE THEY LAST! IX'AMl'LI: 15 1.973 T·BIRDS TO CHOOSE FROM! ANY NEW 1973 FORD GALAXl5 500 FROM OUR STOCK ANY NEW 1973 FORD .LTD··LTD BRO_UGHAM FRO OU,R STOCK- · ANY NEW 1973 FORD STATION WAQON FR'OM OUR 'STOCK s 00 -iNVOICI INCtuor• rlJIGHT 1"111'. DLA. NOLCll.1.CIC 00 IN'IOICI l~Wtll RllGHT l'llll'. DU. MOl.DtA.CIC s . 00 INYOICI fM(LWIS ""°"' ...... .... ........... OVER FACTORY INVOICE OVER FACTORY INVOICE OVER FACTORY INVOICE * NO ADD ON'S * NO GIMMICKS *NO ADD ON'S * NO Gl-ICKS * NO AllD ON'I * NO OIMMICKI *AN OUTSTANDING BUY ••• WHAT MOii CAN WE SAY?l71 lFFECTIVI THJl.OUGH TUU., AUG; 7 *AN OUTSTANDING •UY ••• WHAT MOii CAN WE SAY?!?! lfFICTIVI THllOUGH TUIS., AUG. 1 * AN OUISTANDING llllY ••• WHAT -II CAN WI IAY?l71 uncnv1 ntaOUOH run .... Aue. 1 NEW CAR SALES HAVE OVERSTOCKED OUR USED CAR DEPT.I SAVE NOW ON OUR 2V2 ACRES OF FINE TRADE INSI T '67 T·BIR D H.T. l oad•d, •ir (Ot'ld., lo milet, xlnt t ond. IFBF584) ONLY B '69 T·BIRD LANDAU Loaded, tile new, good miles, (969CPAI ;, •••••• ONLY '1676 R '71 T·BIRD LANDAU '3376 Full power, air cond., wer· r•nty eveil•ble. Good miles. 1741CPC) '71 T·BIRD LANDAU $3476 D Loaded, lo miles, meny ••· tras. l9340CHI •••• ONLY '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2-0R. H.T. V.8, radi o, he11ter, eulo· trans, power steeri ng, 11ir-conditi&1"1in9. !VIH91 I I '70 BUICK ELECTRA H.T. 225. R&H, .iuto., pwr. $lrg., winds. & 1e11h, tilt wheel, Yiny! lop, AIR COND. ! 7968EU I '68 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4-DR. HARD TOP, full power, air .con- ditioning, good milt11 ( YCNS 11 J '876 '2876 '71 AMC JAVELIN R&H, auto., power stetiring, ~inyl roof, '24 76 A,IR CONDITIONING, lo miles! !830 COT> '70 CHEVY WAGON Kingswood, R&H, .iu!omalic, power '2076 steering roof rac~. ,i;r conditioning. ( l 7bCAXI '70 DODGE CHALLENGER 2 df. H.T. R&H, <Jutomalic, P.S .. .i ii conditioning, good miles. (299BEP ) 51776 ' • FORD SALE! EXAMPLE • '71 SEDAN 4 DOOR PINTO-MAVERICK-MUSTANG .. TORINO GALAXIE-LTD-WAGONS MANY TO CHOOSE FROM '65 THRU '73 MODELS Squires, 2 Door & 4 Door Sodans & Hardtops. Wiiii & Wltliout Air Coodltloo• Ing. 4-6·8 cylinders. WARRANTTS AYAILA9LE. EXAMPLE ~XAMPLE '72 MUSTANG H.T. '70 FORD WAGON )02 engine radio, heeler autom.itic ,power s+,erin9 good mil11. !7070JA ) >.Or conditioning, racllo,-h••fer, t ufom•li'c, power steering 302 111g., good milts. ! 196EAFl Country Std•n, R&H. AIR COND., pwr. 1lr9., roof r•ck, good mil11. ! IOJAER) $1476 $2576 $1976 '68 BUICK SPEC. WAGON Rtdio, heet•r, a11tomttie, power sleer- in9, air, roof r•ck, 9oocl miltt. ( 380· EXXl '66 MUSTANG HARDTOP VB, radio, heifer, •ufomefic, powtr steering, goocl miles, red, ISVGb79) '70 DODGE DART R.idio, he;.ter, iiuto-tr11n1, power 1teer· in9, air.conditioning, good miles . (447 CEKJ '69 MERCURY HT Redio, heater, eutomatic tren1mi11ion, power 1lt1ering, vinyl roof. f5474b5 ) $1376 '70 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE $3476 4 cir. H.T. All POW.ER. vinyl top, AIR CONDITIONING, lo mile1. 1528ADLI '70 MUSTANG H.T. 6 c~linder. Economy 1peei1I. he!ter, good mil11. (7738FCJ ''"'· $15 7 6 z~ ~~~,~~~.~~~·'·· .,, ,,,, $2 776 Good mile1. (b68ETXl , . 7 0MERCURYWAGON $2976 Col. Prk. F11ll power, eir concl., vinyl roof ,roof reek, AM/FM, good miles. (740BS0) • '67 MUSTANG· HT Radio, heater, 1ufo.tren1 power 1te1r- ing, vinyl rOof, good miles. IVHC992l '71 FORDFlOOP.U. $2376 v.e redio, h111ter, 1t1nd•rd shift, ep- proximately 15,000 mile1. (2 141 7H) _ '71 FORD F250 ¥• TON $2876 V-1 tuto .. redio, heet•r eir, 1plit rinu, gd. mi. l38474HI _ _ '66 CHEY. !{4 TON V-8, automatic, r1 dio, htetar, eir con- ditioning, new ptint. (U21846) ' '69 COUGAR SUNRO'Of'. R&R, aufom•fic, P.S., eir co11dition'ing, AM /FM , good mile1. fZVE 111 I '70 SPORT FURY Plymouth H.T. R&H, eutometic, P.S., vinyl roof, eir cond., low miles. 1632 CTB l MAKE OFFIER COM PAGTS-MANY TO ' CHOOSE FROM DATSUl!S-TOYOTAS-YW-YEGAS--l'INTOS MAY!RICK ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED '68 CHEY. IMPALA 4 dr, H.T., R&H, •rio., power 1ktr- 11ig, AIR CONDITIONING, good mile1, I037EIVI . '69 FORD FAIRLANE Herd top, redio, hte.ttr euto-tr•111, power 1teerl119, 9ood mile1. ( ZDT712 I '65-FOID HT Redl'!..-ht•f•r, euhwrte6c trtMmjl1ion, power 1teeri11g, 9ood milt s. [ 00~591 1 . ' '67 PONTIAC FIREllRD Herd toP, redio, he•ter, t11fo-tr1 n1., pow'tr 1tterin9, vinyl ro,f. IUTII 161 '72 FORD ¥• TON 4X4 '68 FIAf'124 SPT. CPE. 4 tpeecl, redioj he•ter, 9off mlle1, IXRSl53) '69 TOYOTA 4 DOOR Avtometic rtdio, he•l•r 9ood miles. (ZVLl 15l '71 GTWAGON HARD TO · 4 •peed, R&H, ·eir cond., chrome trim. I I S!DKH l '72 COUP! VEG AS RIH, eutom1tlc air cond., low mil••· 1779FWPJ' ' . . . 1@131 ... ------·--__ .,. .. -l.llHIAMlllCAll ·- IALIS DIPT, HOURS: I''""''"" Mon.•ll'rl.; I am..f pm Sat.; 10 •nH.pm Sun • .("ARTS SllVICI HOURI: 7 1m•t '"' Mon.; 7 anH pm tun.-Prl. PARTS DIPT. ONLY: I arn·t tam lat. 1 Alt Saft Price• Effective thru Sun., August 5, 1t73 ' t • ' ' • ' . -San Cle111ente To1lay's Final Capistrano •• EDITION N.Y. Stocks VOL 66, NO. 215, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 TEN CENTS Mercy Death Mulled for Capo Boy~ 3 By MARCI DODSON Of "'-Deity l'li.t ••• ., Jason Arthur Ree, 3, of Capisb'ano Beach, left on a plane for Colorado Thursday, kepl alive clinically only by machines. The plan calls for him to die ln Denver. Aod hi! mother, Mrs. Linda· Rea, e1- pecta to bury her only child sometime next week. But the death is not that simple. Because since Jason's arrival at the University of Colorado ~1edical Center a team of physicians has been faced with the grim task of deciding if the machines should be shut off to allow body functions to cease. Or if there is still a ray of hope for the cute, towhead who fell victim to a tragic poiol accident-two weeks ago in Hunt- iniiton Beach. Early today the team wu far from a decision. The con~rns in the case are momen- lous. If Jason ceases to live, his molher and the physician,, have arranged for his kidneys and liver to be transplanted in three other youngsters who race death themselves unless a donor is found. Spokesmen from the medical center said today that the team is still in its evaluation stage and will have difficulty in reaching a decision because or an ap- parent surge in the boy's bodily functions after his arrival in Denver Thursday afternoon. The agonizing chain or decisions in the case of Jason Rea began with bis mother , of 34731 Calle Fortuna, who is divorced. She and former husband reached it early this week when Orange Coast physician Dr. Albert Ferguson informed her that her son's chances for recovery from the deadly effects of near drowajng (See DECISION, Page %) .. State .Official Assails ,_ Nixon House Tax Flap Search Continues Missing Wife Met Foul Play? By TOM BARLEY ot 1t1t DallY Plle1 Jlefl Lawmen in two counties today con- tinued their aearch for .RocbeUe .Wbite o( Sao Juan ea_p~~ano !ith the :_~~ srowiQg . con...,. ·ibal '~,1~e brunette has been tbe vlcllm or !bu! p!By. Orange County Sherifrs officers are circulating pictures of Mrs. White, 22, ot 16702 Calle La Bomba, In an attempt JO contact anyone who 1nay have lltll lb!! Richardson Orders Probe Of Kent. State ~ miSsing woman shortly berore she disap- peared last l.1ooday or prior to her auto being found two days later in Carlsbad, San Diego County. . ~ _ !l'ilite diSa~r,ed, two clays ~ltie wU , i0· i*ar~ to Superkn" C:OOrt for a beirin; intO the divorce pet!~ tloll sbe filed againsl her hl\!band, elec-'tr1ilics machinlsl G~ Roie.-Whi~, ZS. lll,lil bearing WU tele!° for Aug. 13 whlri she failed to appear for the scliodllled Court sessloo, Mrs: Whit,e filed for divorce June 15 in a PfitiUoit which is sui>Ported by allega- Uons Iha! ber husband physically abused her during the couple's' four-year mar- riage. Superior Court documents on file in- clude a court. order for forbiddln~ White to harass, molest or threaten his wife. And he was further ordered by the court not to aUempt to contact her at her place of employment or contact her empJi>yers. WASHINGTON (AP) -Atty. Gen. fbe coUrt file includes the statement Elliot L. Richardson today ordered a new that White beat his wife last October and Justice Department investigation of the NOfelllber slammed her against a door deaths .of four Kent State Univ~Y-~·anct1:breW'ber on the Door while she was students shot by National Guardsmen m • pregnant. The lawlllit .states the couple 1970. . baVe no .cblldren. Richardson said his decision was based. Mn. White also alleged that her hus- on "the need to exhaust every potential band took a teapot from her on one oc- for acquiring facts related to this casion shorUy after she had made tea tragedy." and threw It out the door. He then ripped He gave no indication whether a all the taps off the gas range, the acUon federal grand jury would be convened to states. assist. Sheriff's officers today said they have Richardson .JJrdered J . Stanley Pot-interviewed White on several occasions tinger assisnlnt attorney general in andi, will do so again today but the San charg~ of tbe department's Civil Rlg~ts Juan man has. bee_o Wlable to throw any Division "to pursue the addiUonal m-new light on his wife's disappearance. qu~ by such means as he feels are ap-lnvestigaJors said .the abandoned, late propriate so that we will both be com-model foreign-built car she apparently pletely satisfied that the department drove to Carlsbad contaJned no aign!I of a knows as much as can possibly be learned slrugg!e. Officers said lhey dmv tbe concerning possible violations of federal same conclus100 from the neaUy kept law." San Juan home. Richardson reopened the investigation after studying the findings of PotUnger's preliminary revlew of existing files. Richardson initiated the prelimtnary review on the heels of a White . House statement last May which reafflnned the [ Augusl 1971 decision by fonJ>e4.A\ty. Gen. John N. Milchell lo drop lhO ca,. wilhout a federal srand jury probe. Four students were lnled and nine others wounded wben a National Guard cootingeot opened flro on studenl• (See KENT, p_,. I) .. EPA Plan 'Costly' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A report prepared by a Soulhern CaWornia task I~ for ~ · Enviromnental ProtecUon Agency says the EPA'• plan to reduce mobile travel as a way of reducing smc)g la inoperable and coslly. The Los Angeles Times said today thal lbe reply lo lbe EPA was made In a special reporl to the EPA1a.San Francisco offl~. ~mv.oree-·31 -100 Husban.d, 103, 'Chases Women' STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her husband of 28 years, for divorce, because he "spends all his money on other women.,. Shtris lOO;yea~old-and he ls.103, accordlng to·records· In San Joaquin County Superior Court. '1 wanted to slay with him, bu~ he wouldn't stop, chasing alter • women," Mr!. Feglon 'slid In an ·lnterifew Thursday. 'He likes to• go to the show -that's where he meets_them." ~ ()ff icials ~uiet Regarding Beach Tr11ck Accident The official news blackout into in- fonnation surrounding the running over of a South Laguna sunbather on West Street Beach entered its second day to- day with county officials declining to discuss the incident. The mishap pccurred Wednesday after- noon as the large rig was being driven on the beach and passed over Robert Ward, 20, of 31603 2nd St., South Laguna. The man suffered a broken back. Ward b3d been lyiog on his back at the West Street Beach when the truck's front and rear wheels assertedly ran over him. Thus far officials of the Orange County Harbor District have not released the name of the driver. Sources, however, said the operator of the large service tnJck apparently became distracted while driving and failed to notice the sleeping vicUm on the sand. Attempts to obtain elaboration and 'results of a promised "full-scale in- vestigation" from district officials failed early today. Neither highway patrolmen nor sheriff's oUicers have had any details of the incident . Customarily traffic-related mishaps involving government vehicles are investigated by the CHP. San Clemente lifeguards, who patrol the beach under county contract, have said they were instructed not to ·com- ment on the case and refer the queries to Harbor District headquarters. The situation was the same at the Harbor patrol offices at Dana •Iarbor '-'*" apokesmett<Hhl -officiaJs~ were. not • _ available for comme~t because they were at a conference on lhc incident early today nt· the District offices in Newport Beach. In the meantime,· the victim of the freak mishap was reported recovering at South Coast Communily Hospital. Akles said Ward, who suffered a com- pre§ed spinal fracture, was showing no signs of spinal cord dama ge and his con· JliliOJl..l'(atiCl'.lll«l'.' .. tiSf•clo,y .•• Tn1ckers on Strike Assessment 'Political' Says Lynch By JACK BROBACK DI tlte o.llY f'lle1 Sbff Orange County's area representative on the Stale Board of Equalization today charged that a cuiTent flap over Western White House tax. assessments I s politically motivated . The charges came from, John w. Lynch, equalization board member for the Southern California. area which includes Orange Counly. Speaking in a press conference in San· ta Ana today, Lynch claimed that W!Jllam M. Bennett, the board member who raised the assessment issue on President Nixon's San Clemente holdings, is simply 'seeking publicity. Lynch clalined Bennett is probably going to run for state attorney general next year. "Bemett ran for attorney geiw81 when Pat Brown vac~ted the office to run for governor and he will undoubtedly do the same if Evelle Younger decides to run," Lynch said. The board member said his agency has no right to appraise or investigate the assessment of President Nixon's San Clemente property. He said the courts ruled against such intrusion into county rights more than 90 years ago and the decision still stands. "Bennett, a lawyer and former staff member of the attorney general's office, knew this when he asked the board last Monday to investigate the assessment," Lynch said today. The board voted 4 to 1 against the Ben- nett move. "Four or us on the bl;>ard are Democrats so we are not protecting the President," Lynch said. "We are simply abiding by the law." The board member said the agency coold only move in on the San Clemente property assessment at the request of the Board of Supervisors or the county assessor. Lynch did say tbal lhe Slate board doe s random sample investigating in each county every three years but that the properties are picked bf a ~awing. Bennett told bis fellow board members J\ .. londay that be will pressure Orange County authorities to re-.appraise the (See T~, Page %) N~on Warned, Walters Says WASHINP't.0~ lAPl - A ~P 't.inttal ln~lllgei!Ce Agenty o'ltfciat testified today that President Nixon wB:s warned lets than three weeks after the Watergate raid that !Omelhing was amiss on the White House sta[f. Army Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Wallen, deputy direclor of tbe :IA, told the Senate Waterga~ :ommmlttee that he, CIA Di.rector Richard Helms, and former acting FBI Di..ctor-1.-PalriclrGray Ill - resisted pressure from the White !louse staff to involve their agencies in coverlng up the political wiretap-ping. -. , Oellr f'fflt Steff ...... "I THINK GOD HELPED ME lf.IMENSEL Y IN MY DECISION" Mrs. Lfnda Rea LookJ at Picture of. Her Only Chlld Decision for Doctors Revives Age-old Clash The gravity or a physician's decision to literally turn orr the switch and allow a patient to cease existing is a clash between "neurology and theology," a prominent Orange County m e d i c a I educator said today. Dr. Stanley Van Den Noort, dean of the UC Irvine Medical School and himself a neurologist, said the current medical practice is to rely upon results of brain wave tests before 3 group of physicians makes the decision to allow death to come. "In th.is area the practice has been to run electroencephalogram (EEG) tests and if there is no high-level reDex ac- tivity and .the brain wave scans show a "flat chart," then the decision is made," he explained. But, although he often is brought in on such cases, Dr. Van Den Noort indicated that he is far from comlortable about the present system. Carnival Site Wins Approval Spokesmen for the South Coast Area Boys ,CJub won. swift agpr~his y.:~ ror the use of San CJCmente s · N'Orth - Beach parking lot as the site for an an- nual carnival, early next month. Club Board Member Dan Philippbar tvon the concession fron councilmen for the major fund-raiser or the year Sept. 7 through 10. l·Ie and ~cillJlen a~ced that tllc weekend ' ierl!"wifuld~close-al '1o"p.rtl'.' each night. The parking lot has been used ror the past several years after a ttempts by the club to use old plaza Park failed because of the closeness of the racillty to residen- tial neighborhoods,• Proceeds from the carnival are used t.o finRnCe youth activities all year long at lbe club along Calle Valle. Trek Causes Blisters "It is totally reliant on a machine and a technician and although the margin for error is ve ry slight, it slill is a possibili- ty," he said. An added fa ctor of tension in the d~ision over sustaining bodily functions versus shutting off machines is the urgency 1n transplant cases. ''You have one team c~mping at the bit to implant new organs in patients near death and you have another team which has to decide if .the donor has no chance at all to recover. "I'm an ex pert on neurology, I have told peo ple, but I'm no! such an expert on theology," Dr. Van Den Noort said. "Often people will call me in and ask me to say th at the patient on the machine is dead and they get angry with me when I won't do it," he said. "I'm a conservative in such cases and if I sense a chance for recovery at all, l will stick to my decision," he added. In Denver today, the decision is befug reached in .J ason's case. "1 know full well what those people there are going through right now," th~ local neurologist said. Orange Coast -- Weather Nig ht and early morning low clouds will again be vlsibte along the Orange Coast. A£ternoons will .,be sunny, .~it}) temperaty.ru .al.the _,, beach near 70, with the low near 60. INSIDE TODAY Co11temporar11 art ts the thcn1c of thl$ week"s cover .storle$ h' ti~ \Veekendcr witl1 ftatures 01& James Bvncs. tl1e 1iew director of Nt!wport llarbor Art Museum, cu1ci_on._tlle All·CollfONlia .Art_ Exhibit being presented tn tltt Laguna Beach Museum of A rt. Al Yo11r Str\OICI J M"''" ., •• l .M. IOYd lt Mlllllll l"llllllt ll INff111 II N1ti.t11I Newt 4 t C1Nfonlll I Ot'IMI (lvl\IY I Cl••tlUICI 11... ..,11111r11111 tt-24 ·,;,,!'" Mrs. Feglon said she filed for dlvorce •two months ago and since that time "he's been •o mean to me, always wants to fight. Ho doesn't want to give me nothln' to eat." SANTIAGO, Chile (UP!) -Ownoro or taxis and some private buses today join-- ed a nationwide truckers' strike that has paralyzed business and commercial ac- tivity In many major cit!.. in prole5l against President Salvatore AUende's refUsal to fire an unpGP,UJar-government official. Walters said Gray finally spoke to Nixon July 6, 1972, and said the Watergate case could not be covered up, that the FBJ's ln-- vesligotlon would lead qu ite blgb, and that Nixon should get rid of lhe poople Involved. FURNACE CREEK (UPI) -Their feet covered with blisters but making better time than they expected , two San Francisco women set out today on the ....,,nd hall of their 140.milo hike across lhc ,.arlng sand• of Dealh Valley. Jo Ann Claudlo-Willlam!I, 21 . and Anita Perrot, 221 s<arted Sunday lo cross lhc valley. wnere air temperatures dur\ng the day reach l.20 and more. Co111k1 n SHrll '•·• c.-.11-d n Slee!! Mkllll1-1a.1.a.-.1----1 ONtll Nollftl I Tt lt11/M911 l1 She and her hll!band have separated, each living In one of the two homes the couple own heN, situated "only about 10 steps apart," Mrs. Feglon said. > ' l dlttrlol '"' • TflHtvt 11•• ,lllllKO 11·11 Wfl!Mr I "'' Ill* •1t1rd I W-..i't Nowt 1•11 H"MCtn 16 '#tl'ld Newt t, t Mii Ltncllf't 1• Wtoll .... 11' l.Ht Mol1111~ 6 ' ~ .... ~1 t'ILOI SC Gray: Destroyed Files Without Direct Order WASHJNGTON (AP• -Former acting fo~BI Director L. Patrick Gt3y Ill said to· day he was never djrectly ordered to destroy sensitive files given to hin1 by John D. Ehrlichman or Johr. \V. Dean Ill PANEL SUBPOENAS REBOZO BANK RECOROS-Story, Page 4 ''but there was. and is, no doubt in my mind that destruction was intended," And, he admitted, he read some of the files before burning them . putling the1n in the fire I opened one of the fi.Jcs." It contained \vhat appeared to be CQpies of top secret State J)epartment cablegrams. Gray said. "I read the first cable. 1 do not recall the exact language but the text of the cable i1nplicated officials of the Kennedy admini stration in the assassination of President DieJn of South Vietnam, I had no reason then to doubt the authenticity of the 'cable' and was shaken at what I read." There has been testimony that the cables \Vere forged by Hunt , one ot the convicted Watergate. conspirators, to falsely link President John F. Kennedy to the assassination. The files had come out or ~lunt's White House complex safe, which was opened shortly after he was implicated in the \Valergate burglary. Gray said he thumbed through the o!her cables in the rue, which appeared to be duplicates of the first and ''I did not absorb the subjecl matter of the cor· respondence and do not today, of my own kno\\'lcdge, know what it \vas." Gray, who resigned as acting director in April, released the text of his opening statement in advance of his appearance later before the Senate Watergate com- mittee. 14 School Candidates Tn it, he took issue with the testimony of other witnesses, including Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters, the deputy director of the Central Interligence Agency, who preceded him before the committee. Gray said he met Ehrlichman, the President's domestic adviser, and Dean, the White House counsel, June 28 -ll days after the break-in at the Watergate offices of the Democratic party. Interviewed Privately "Mr. Ebrlichman said something very close to 'John has something that he wants to turn over to you," Gray recall- ed. He said Dean told him two manila legal size folders contained "copies of sensitive and classified papers of a political nature that Howard Hunt had been \vorking on. "He said that they have national -security implications or overtones, have absolutely nothing to do with Watergate and'bave no bearin_g on the Watergate in- veStigation whatsoever," Gray added. "Either Mr. Dean or Mr. Ehrlichman said that these files should not be allowed to confuse or muddy the issues in the Watergate case." Gray said he took the files home, put .them on a closet shelf under his shirts; then brought them to his oHice and into his personal safe two or three weeks later. "To the best of my recollection. I removed the files to my borne in Ston· ington, Conn. in late September or early October 1972," Gray said. But his plan to burn the files was postponed because he went to the hospital. "I distinctly recall that I burned them during Christmas week with t h e Christmas and household paper trash," be said. "To this point, I had not read or ex- amined the files. But immediately be.fore Coastal Panel To View Plans For New Units A request to build a 36-unit con· dominium on South Ola Vista in San Clemente will be considered Monday by south Coast Regional Zone C:Onservation Commissioners. The meeting of the Proposition .20 panel beg\_ns at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor District headquarters, 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. The condominiwn planned by Robert Duran would be at .2484 S. Ola Vista. Duran has said he will provide two park· ing spaces per unit. other South Orange County projects on the agenda include: -Division of a .2 . .2 acre parcel into t\\'O smaller lots at 35406 Camino Capistrano, Capistrano Beach by Robert Holler. -Demolition of an existing two-unit building and replacement with a three-- unit apartment at 113 Cleo St., Laguna Beach, by Steve Levimon. -Construction of a four-unit apartment at 1517 Calle Sacramento, San Clemente by Villa Development C:O. -Claim of exemption from Proposition .20 for a seven-unit apartment at 2560 Solana Way, Laguna Beach, by Edward Guy. OU.N•I COAST IC DAILY PILOT .,.,,_ Orlln9<I (OllJI O,\ILY PILOT, With WllH;ll It Q>lnb\IMICI U\e Ntws·P•t11, It llllblltl'IW W ·1t1e Or"'" c ... 11 f>~ldllnt '°"""'"""· s- r111 91flllot\J ••• puDllllMd, Morld•r through Fr~. 1or 1:01!1 1111 .... , HQSIOl1 htc;h, Huntl119ton Bt«lll FOU111tl11 'v1ii.y, 1,...,_ ~ Buc;lt, lrvlne/kodltW<k llnll S.11 C""*'l1/ S•11 Jue11 (1pl1treno, A 11nt11 •t1l-I lldlllor! J, ~lllhto;I '-'"''''' .... $<1ndtys, Tiit princ:IMI Mllf~I ... J)l1n1 11 •I UI w .. t I.It SlrMf, Col.It M.,., C.lif9ml9, n.-. Orange County School trustee Donald Jordan Thursday again tried-41nd failed -to make the appointment of a Fifth District board member a more public process. Private interviews of the first or 14 candidates for the post vacated by the resignation of Roger C .. Anderson began this morning. · A second round of interviews, · also closed to the public, have been set for 10 a.m. Aug. 13, Anderson, formerly of Hun.tington Beach, resigned. ·July to move to Wchland, Wash., with less than a year left lh hiS four-year term. 1bat timing allows the county school board to appoint a replaoement rather than call an election. Two weet<s ago Jordan, of Garden Grove, argued for an election and was defeated. "I asswned these would be open meetings," he said 'J.'hursday of the interviews. "RepresentatiV'es of the press and any interested residents of the Fi ft h Supervisorial District could hear the can- didates," he added, Jordan began his new effort by asking simply if "there is room for the press'• in the office where interviews would take place. 11! have a feeling these are sup. posed to be public," he added. County School Superintendent Robert Peterson objected that "this wouJd be en- tirely different fr001 previous (years)." Peterson contended private sessions were necessary because some qµestiom might be "personal" and that interviews were . comparable to executive sessions on personnel matters. "I don't recall asking anything last time (a trustee was appointed) that anyone hesitated to answer," Jordan said. He pointed out that appointing a boa.".'d No Changes Seen For Tax Rate In San Clemente San Clemente city councilmen agreed this week that a resolution declaring no change in the city tax rate be prepared for formal adoption in two weeks. At the tail end of \Vednesday's meeting the panel agreed unanimously to the recommendation of City Manager Ken· netb Carr that the rate remain at $1.55 per $100 of assessed valuation . Councilmen essentially ·endorsed the suggestion last June when they adopted the city's $4.8 mi!Lion budget calculated on the retention of the levy. Carr said that because or slightly higher assessed valuation the revenue would increase "only a few thousand dollars", but that ext ra cash would be taken up by the expenses incurred in hir· ing a secretary to serve the city traffic and parking commission. Fo rmal passage of the tax levy resolution Is ex· pccted al lhe Aug. 15 meeting of the counciL Fron• Page 1 KENT • • • demOnstrating against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. The slain students were Alllson Krause, 19, of Pittsburgh. Pa .. Jeffrey Miller, 20, or Plainview, N.Y., Sandy Lee Scheurer, 20. of Youngstown . Ohio and \Villiam Rob1rt N. W11d -P'rftllltnl lr'ld ~Diii,,... -, J1c~ R'. C.;;r1,y ' - Vic• Pr11io ... 1 1""11 G.n.,11 Mt"'Ofr · Tllom11 1!:11Yil ". ,Schroejler, 19, o( l.or.cain..llllia.__,,,.,, Kent State President Glenn A. Ofds said he welcomes the new inquiry. EtllOt Tltom11 A. M11rplliftt Mt"'fll'ltl idltQr Ch11l11 H. Looi IUJ.11.J P. Nill N1l1t111t Mt"'9lfl0 Etlto"' s-c ....... Offk. 305 Ntrlh El Cimino R11l, 92672 °""' Olffc• Chit 'Mltl llO Wnl •ty S!rffl N......-. l .. clll »U "'"""""' BIU ..... trs ffl.lnllf!olorl auc.111 11111 •lldl aov .. ,.,.,, u.-ltldl: m ,,....,, "~""'"' , .. .,.... 1714, '42-4JJ1 CMMH!H A4"rthl .. '42·1671 ' S.. Cl ... llf• Alf Dip •••: ,.,., •••• 492-4420 C°""lllll, lt1J. OI'.. C.O.u Publl"'lnl C...,1 "f, No "''"" llll'"iti, llt111trtt*'t .. W&ll--f!W It .. <'t'l~ll .,.,....; -)' bf ' ~ •l*""t tPK&ll ,..,., ll'lklkM " ~""' ....,,.,, ....,.. t1-M ... , ... ,.Id .t Cotti MtM e.rt,.,..111, ""'-lpt1ot1 1rr (6,.,.., 1t.U -•l)'i ll'r ""41Q u.11 ,,_th"' mmt.,., .... ! .. ,....... U.11 fNrlllll)'' "I think It's the \\'isest step to take." Olds said. "There are still a lot of ques· tions unanswered. Kent State is no longer an event, It's history." The rather of 111Jss Krause. Arthur S. Krause, said when told of the new in· vestigation : "I don't think justice was \•cry even-handed under Mr. MUchell or forfncr A·uy:-Gcn. Rlchal'd G. KlelndleMt and I think f\.fr. Richardson ls trying to make justice even-hanOed again.'' A spokesman for Ohio C,ov _ John A, c;illigan Sflid the governor , who was unreachable immediately, we I come d "any actJon by any agency to discover the truth." Col. Joseph McCann, spokesman for the Ohio National Guard's adjutant general's office, said "ff they want to reopen the Investigation, that's the ir prerogative," McCann said the guard . would have no other comment. member isn·t like hiring an employe and that •·these (candidates) are people '"ho would have had to have been up for elec· tion." Jordan couldn "t get any support for his arguments. Favoring secret sessions \\'ere Trustees David Brandt, Doris Arau- jo and A. E. "J>at'' Arnold. From Pagel DECISION I \Vere n1 .. • • • "It really wasn't a hard decision. lt was just knowing that Jason could make someone else live. I had already ac- cepted the fact that Jason was leaving me. Then I just started to think of others," said Mrs. Rea. .. I think it ~s about the greatest thing that could ever be performed." But ~trs. Rea's decision did not have to be made quick1y. After doctors at Hunt· ington Intercommunity Hospital revived a hearbeat from the apparently lifeless boy following his fall into a friend's swimming pool, Jason managed to stay alive for more than two weeks . despite numerous complications. Doctors performed brain scans and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests to determine the extent of the massive braln damage. Stomach surgery was performed to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. "He was more or less telling us, 'I'm not going to make it,' " said his mother. Then, last 'fl!esday, Jason stopped breathing, "I had to make my decision then," Mrs. Rea recounted. The doctors then put the blond-haired boy on a respirator to keep his blood circulating so that the organs would re- n1ain undamaged. They also arranged for a privato.: jet to take the child to the Denver hospitaJ, and produced the necessary legal papers for Mrs. Rea to sign. .. I didn't think I'd be able to do this. I think God helped me immensely in my decision. J prayed a Jot, and He answered my prayers. The doctors helped, but without God, 1 "couldn't have made the decision,'' she said. "But just knowing that Jason could live on in someone else," knowing that Jason could make someone e1se live, that's the whole reason for this. "I know if Jason were alive ,and he needed a kidney, I 'vould hope someone else would do the same." "But to k:no'v that Jason can help some- one else .•. " she trailed olf. Frotn Page 1 TAXES • • • Western \Vhite llouse property. County Assessor Jack Vallerga has stated that he has no intention of furthe r in· vestigating the property, Lynch said if Bennett brings up the subject next month he might get a ma· jnrity vote lo make the request to Orange County officials "but remember this is only a request for them to investigate," the board members said. "We cannot inJtiate our own probe." Lynch said he would vote io make the request to Orange County to get "Ben- nett off our back and quiet down this furor." The row started when Bennett receritly called the $1.37 million value put on the 24.6 acres in San Clemente "grossly ur.der rw~~.:· ~ !lJ:esid_eol fSjl<).l;l•!!: ly paid $1.5 million ror the property, Former county assessor and now Congressman Andrew J. 1-Iinshaw and Vallerga have firmly defended their ap- praisals of the property. Vallerga said last week that the depression of values on unde rdeveloped or \'acant coast.al properties brought on by Proposition !O applied lo the Nixon property and about 200 other pai:_ceJ!.. fili:ing the-coastline which he halrasscss- 1.."Cf with that ln mind. Valierga pointed out that he had raised the assessment Crom a ·little over $1 million to the $1.37 million this year. J,ynch was asked If he thought the Orange County assessment of the White }louse-property was corr.eel. "I have no way of knowing because we have made no appraisal of the property,'' the board member said. J1e was asked if it was reasonable for property to be assessed at less than purchase priett. I •' DlllY Piiot ST1fl Pholo A tflt111er Peggy Tosdal of Dana Hills High School swam the third fastest tune of her career 1'hursday night to easily \Vin the lOO·meter butterfly at the,,. Los Angeles Invitational swi1n 1neet in Mission Viejo. 1'onight she swi nts in the 200-n1eter fl y. Clemente Orders Building Freeze San Clcn,entc city councilmen imposed an irrunedlatc freeze this wt.-e k on any n c w commercial-residential develop.. ment.s calling for the highest allowable density In lhc city codes. And one specific project -a major apartment building near the city golf cuurse -prompted the drastic measure, .said its author, Councilman Arthur Holmes. The Fairway-Seaview complex being built on land which once housed the city's Catholic church, has alarmed Holmes so 1nuch. he said, that he belleves the city should totillly reevaluate the zoning which allows a dwelling unit as small as 500 square feet In size. ' "The height, the density ... the whole thing, alarms me greatly," Holmes said before winning concurrence on the nieasurc Wl.'dnesday. The move drafted to give the city time to perhaps enact new standards on the controversial C·l·A zoning, means that some projects proposed for the central portion of san Clemente might need drastic changes. or prime concern is the property where the old city yards exist along A \•enida Miramar. That land bears the zoning and coun· cilmen have re<:"eived overtures from the new 0"'11ers and neighboring property owners for permission to build under the high-density standards. City Planning Director Gene Schulte said that there was no immediate in· dication that a project would begin in lhc nC'xt few weeks. But councilmen agreed that as a .precaution. the freeze should be in1poscd. The Fairway-Seaview projecl, built completely within the rules o! the cty al present, raised alarm almqst ln1· nu~diately after ground was broken. C-OunCllmen meeting in a joint study session last spring at the golf course clubhouse made mention of the issue. Councihnen rneeting last spring in the clubhouse of the city golf course -in the shadow . of the large complex -ex· pressed alarm at that time, but le3.rned that because the project was within codes they had no recourse. "We're going" to at least have to set this type of land use up for a conditional use pennit to allow us the chance to review the specific plans for such buildings in a public hearing1" Holmes said. Resolutions suggesting that alternative were ordered drafted by the city staff. More formal action on the dilemma wfll probably come before councilmen in '""'O weeks. Site Advice For Airport Not State's From Wire Services 3 More From 5th District The state isn't recommending thp~ airport be built in the Chino Hills area of northeastern Orange Count~-:the deputy director of .the ~tate partmenl of Transportation said fsday. · Joseph R. crotr appearing al a Los Aogeles pres5/t0nference, said ''The state doe~( recommend sites for airports;./niat is the proper function of local_,.a:6d regional planning agencies, he Seek County School Post e~p(ained. /"However," Crotti added. "the state's planning process will indicate future ajr travel needs and point out general areas requiring additional aviation facilities." Three more Fifth District residents Thursday beeame candidates for ap- pointment to th e Orange County School Board, bringing the final total to 14. Deadline for applications to fill the post \'acated by Roger Anderson, formerly of Huntington Beach, was Thursday at 5 p.m. Anderson represented. the F i f t b District, which runs along the same boundaries as the area represented. by Orange County Supervisor Ro n a I d Caspers. The latest candidates are : -J"ay R. Blakemort, a retired certified. public accountant, of 2509 Harbor VieW Drive, Corona de! ~1ar. -Mark C. Johnson , a sales manager for a hospital products manufacturer, of .26502 h-1onticito Drive. AUssion Viejo. -Albert G. Pino, a physician,rn general practice, of .2610 Avon St., Newport Beach. Minuteman Launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A Minuteman II missile was launched fro1n here Thursday by a Strategic Air Command crew. 't'he first interview session was t.h(s morning. The second ¥i'ill take pl~17'St 10 a.m. Aug. 13. County trustees JISO have made special appointments fol' at least t""'O can~idates who couldp1( meet those two sessions. / The remaining ca6didates, by com· munity, are: -Huntin~o Beach: Norma Van· derMolen, "-housewife: James R. Walker,, occupation unknown; Helen Schoelfel, administrator of Parkhurst Retifement Home; Frank SteWart, real estate salesman; and Thayendanagea Joseph Bryant, a chemical engineer. -Costa l\lesa : ~felvin Gilbert, former teacher, now independent businessman. -Newport Beach: David C. Henley, associate professor of journalism at USC. -Irvine: Marian Ellis, secretary of the city's Citizens Advisory Committee on Public Education. -Mission Viejo: Rev. Preston Howell, Baptist minister a.nd fonner trustee in the now-defunct San Joaquin School District. -Laguna Beach: Thomas Alexander, former director at Cape Cod CommWlitY College in Massachusetts; Dr. Ernest ·Lake, professor of education at Cal State Fullerton. Crotti and Haig Ayanian, district direc:- tor of transportation for Orange, Los Angeles and VMtura counties, called the conference to correct what they said w e r e widespread misunderstaodings about a state consulting firm report made publlc last month. All1JOrts, Crottl said Thursday, will be Included in the state's Master Plan o( Aviation only if first approved by responsible local agencies. The firm of Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall was commlssloned in 19S9 to evaluate the existing aviation system, determine future demands and prepare a comprehensive statewide plan f o r balanced air transportation. Other than the Orange C.Ounty site, Crotti said. the misunderstanding con- cerned the firm's findings that 59 million ai r passengers a ' year will use the Lot; Angeles International Airport by the year 2008. The Los Angeles Department of Airports estimated the airport's capacity at 40 million passengers a year, Crotti said efforts would be made to reconcile the two figures. LAST WEEK OF STORE-WIDE SALE Selected Groups From Drexel, HeritocJe and Henrecloa ftl Remain on Sale Through Au9ust. II ~~ g M ~~ fi ,(ilil ·s~ ~i ~A M " ti~ F$F.t • ' . 1 Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sale Merchandise Ready for Immedi- ate Del ivery. Don't Delay. F)nal Chance to Select From Our Lorge In- ventory at Reduced Prices. INTERIORS WDKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:30 FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00 ' . NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCtlFF DR., 642-2010 IOp111 S11"41f 12.SilO, LAGUNA BEACH e J41 N6RTM COAST HWY. "'---•(Op1"..$.1111d•r..tld:.lOLitA.W TORRANCE e 2>649 HAWTHORNl ILVD • J7t·f27t • -. . ' l l ·•. " • 1~2::-_D_A~IL~Y~P~l~LD~T~....:.~___:s~c::__~~_.!F~rl~da~y~,~·~u·~·~·t~3~,1:9~7~J-• Savings Overhaul P t oposed ' ' I Complete New York Stoel{ List fllllW YOllt:I( IU~tl ,_ Jlo00owh'.!9 •r• ..... ,HI l;ii.t N•I &.ft:! tf1t lll'k9t on ... New YOik :ato(k lr.t""-': P..I! Olo•l HlOh Low L•it (llO ,..~ llldO HIOll "'°" ... ,,('Ml , .. , (IMl•I HliOll 1..ow Liii CllQ. WASlllNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on todar proposed major changes in the oounlr;o s financial system, including phaslng o ut interest rate ceilln,gs on sav- ings and other bank deposits over a 5Mi· year period, merclal banb aod savings and loan 1WOCJations. NOW stands for Negotiable Order of Withdrawa l and provides ror negotiated rates ot lntercat5 on c:becklng a ccotlllts.. $t'" Hfl $1 1·~ g; 1114-"" Fo11erc• ... u » 4"1i .. \,, 411 w HllJl•W ll,o,11 ~ n.. ZJ l,I,, DYi-I,. rate c--~... P·E. ibPJ liloh L-,_.., CJtt, * ' rt -IYI ,,, Ml f,0)1> • 0 11V. I-,.~ '• JOllllMV '·'° • &j 11\-a ~ ...... t lo IUllK."11 1$4 17 ' . =--... Fi.H~ 1.•t 11 ' 42 <12 .Q -.... JOl'l .... Jn ->O SI 12' uni.. 111 111i.. -·· S. 'd •-h ' -A,,,._ 4' ,.._ 1-11 il'•IHC11y .n 2~ m ~ •>t.. -.\oi 1-J JOM live .IO t » ~ 20>' ¥,'"-• 1mon sai IM:: opes the proposed L , .. 2J ,. i 10 1 71Mo+I 21 2m 2'14 + h F1!NS OllC 2 • I ~ " ,, •• JOllLOOll .• Q 'j IOI~ 3-~ l/"7 1'1-llo h Arf'lnd t...0 1f lj ~ 4' .. -\".! 2' flt\ ,_ ,..,.__ V. F1Pf<:P 1.20 12 20 40\oO ~ ,..._ f\ J-L 1tii ) ll'ft 17 t9 1 ·r '' c . anges can be ready for pruentation lo ~"'""""-'j&1 1 10 •,)1 . 'j! 1"4o1· " 1>1 -4111< a~ 411111 -+t.. F1PM1 1.0611 1 22 11:i.o. lt~. 1t1-'-.1or11'9n 1. 1 ' i..1-1 ,..,... u1.1o-I• •lUI ), • I Ith I) .Ullo Jl<\11 Sl.._ ~ F1tURIE .% U It 12ll 11\o ln11· \\ J0&1tn1 , T <I It\< 19 U -'il CongttSS i n c-.. .. mber Md that hear inos .i1111 .. IJ II ~ ~+ ·w; MO! IS j '°~ 20 20 -4-F11va&k ... t1 j • lt It It JoYMtg IAO to a )'\') ,.. a.II\+ •• """yu;; r:o ~ • I s: ''" 1, ... I~ ~ ltlf<I JO ) 20 1'4 ,... J"i.-14 F1Wl1S l .n t l 31 l1 31 -k ll- Can be held beginning in Octo ber, :rv:~:J .rS: ) It 1~"" im 17~ ~ l~ 2:1: 1: ~ ,a..v. ll~ ~~-i; ~1'w.'1:M1·~t: ~f H l{~ ,sr~ h~~ ~=j~~r~ ~ 14 21l !:t:. !:t! u:t,t: 'l1le r ecommendations include Jn- ducef!!ents to banks and financial ln· sUtut1ons to lend more m oney fo r home fhortgages by providing a tu: credit on , c amount of m ortgage Joans. There wue se\'en m ajor changes In the flnanctal package released at the White House. They followed a study of the country's tinanclal Institutions: Initiated by the P resident Jn 1971. 1-fe described the prorv.sed chatJgeS 8S ~:l:Jp\·7i ~O 131 !ft:~ lt°i:"".'' Cl!M(o I.to 10 5 ~ 3$ mt.+ \lo Fl1lw'F .».,i 1 I 10\oi O~ 10\.'o t V. KAl ~7PI •\lo l S1 51 f1 .,-11>1 I""' !Ob ' I! ,, ~~ 'l" ~ fi ... d 1,U .ll S3 14 11<\lo ,, .. +,,,. Fl$Mf!.C .)6 10 ' ,1, I ,~t ·I-~· KAI)~ ~ 1 ".., UV. .S.SYI "the liri;t major restructuring of our (iw;g 1r sv. 'lli ·~· ~I 11r111 ~ j 1~ $: ~ :g:::= ~ ~/:::,:n111·!Z 11 11 1~' ~O\' ~\";;: ~ ~la.~11 ~ , ,cl ~~ ~ .. ~~ .. financia l system since 1865 without a ~ r 2}f 21, ?2t I~ ,2 ::;; c~1~lt~ ~ ' ~ 1~~ 1!~ 1!~ ~ :111'..~~~~111.~ 1) I~ ~::~ 1:t~ ::\~-h (::._pt\1 1:~ ; !i ~t: ~h Jr•:: t; • • be' I " Mo:i.nikltf~ 11 : J:! 2f' J~+ ~ C11 Pnevm 1 I~ 20 ~ ll~ SJ-+~-. Fi/t11~P/ 4\'a 120 st s~ jf t-\l KCJ>Lpl ,Vt 12i.1 SV•• S9Vt )f,,.._1,,. CrtSJS utg ~Q • A.la <Hit i."!I 1 S 161'. aft, 16~+ ... CllOdr.F ,10. 16 10 5V. ~ ~ Fl 111~ p J•, I XI JO 3:1 -I KC So il'd l 1 S l6 b'>'ll Jm-It . 'laPPf 1.21 1190101 l 100 I Chtl1 Cr.ill 1 1 4,,.. ~V. •'1 Fie E CcNnl ,• '1711 llV• 11'~-Vl l(,anGE \.31 1 11 :ID 10 30 +\• In a ddltlcn, savings a nd Joan a ssocia, Uons would be able to offe r checking ac· count services and the so-called NOW ac- counts would be authorized for both com- Deputy Secretary cf the Treasury Willia m E:. Simon said in explaining the proposed changes that the timing ls r ight because ··we are In a period that could be c lassified th is moment as an interest He empha:nzed a t a news b r iefing lhat A a&lf.a 1nt•t n 2.6t ""' v. JOf't= "'c11r1111111 ,20 .. 1 11 n 11 -\.1: i<I• G•$ .t.s '1 1~·· u..., 13•.-"'1(1nN1b 1.n 10 10 1)\'J U"• 1s~ \, , . , A/Utrlo(. .J$ 1 112 9 •:n V.•+ h Chl'Ol'!le .70 6 'l8 13 n•t l~ FlePwr 1.90 10 14 37 36.\li l6\o-'• llfnl'LI 1..U !O 20 22lt 12\rJ 22~ lo a OHlJOr goaJ of the changes 1s to main· ;. wr11 ~ " ' Jll:"' 1J,.. 1m+ i..:; c'"', '"•r t.«1 • 212 26 2.s\oi 1si.t-~ FlePwL 1.i• n 16 ll!\i n"' ll~. Kat1 1nGu11 ., J l VJ )~> S\11 lain n r d . , Ac1n Alu 11 191 . .,,.,, -· ,., rvi r wl •1 II• 11-I'll ,,. Fla Stl 1.>0 t. 11 2l 7104 n•.~ '• ,..., .. ,, .. , .1, .. I" 7 '' 2• , a OW 0 eposJt money llllO banks Alco Sl\l .30 4 ff IYI ~~~ ""1hl \~ CIMIO l.2lll 't 4 1•\,li 1 '1 ll~o+ ~.Fluor Cp 5~ '6 16J 47'0 ~ (llli+11\ i<aiitaP'r I'• •v j l~\I ;:•' 1• .,.. 1 -~••' ndl · tl! · b J'f AJconLD .16Ji0 l6"4).S\03 '--'"'Clnll-tllll.:IO 9 111t 11\'t ltl?-l>'t l"lootCppf J 11 1s1·0IS 1$\1t l1111;awtt ... iul i l•l~ ~'"' !'' """"' .,..vmgs a oaJJ JI1S UtJOOS Y I t• Al•l(lf\ .100 ,, 1 1 6~1 1 + V. (In Ga1 1.6' T ~ 11 21'n 11i.:.+ llo FIVTltr .10e 10 1)4 26>.ii 2511 ?t.;1+ '• Kav1~rli! M ) 715 12" 11 1 •.-•., ingthein~t rate ceilings. ~/"~~Li'·~ 1: fi i~~ fh. i~~~~~:~'i!J·~ ::g 1i~~ .. 1l~""11~1---1 .. ~~~J 2~' 11{ l{i.! ~Vt !J11i+:,;~~~::ii0 :~~ ,• Jf 1 ~ •• 1 1~:;1:,.,.._ •• A IOCo \IOb P 9 IOI'. IC IOl<o+ V. Cl11G€pl •Iii! •IQ 6J <12 62 +1 FoodFr .70!! JS 6'0 &~• 6~< 11.Wl~Y·tl !.lO 7 IJ 231.>. n11 r.i• • ...-!.") A OLud :io • 3 2•Mo l•.\\ 2.w.+ 111 (lnMll,. 1.olO 11 I 21'oli 21'4 71>, • FooleCB .60 10 1 6\" "' 91\ KOm'111 L?O 11 ) 1>'• 1••· 2>1•-t " Allll Lud~I 3 ' ? JllV!t lfy, :111 \1.t_ \1 CI T Fin 2.20 10 4( ••"'-' •1 41... ' Foote Mfn•I 21 6't 611 61.'.-\1 K•rw:ou J.ofJ 8 I~ 29"4 1111 29 ...-h AllQ Pw 1.4' • IQ 19 I~ ·11~0-V. Cll1e.Sv 1.lO 11 159 -«'• « « -~. FootaMln pf /1 ~ 2~ 1?~ I(~ UTll 1,,, o ,., ''' ,,..._ '""\ , Atlf)f1Gr11 ~ IQ 11 12 11 °" 1.2 . ._u1J:MJ 2.1•b 11 12 "Ii F M J 1(1, S ~ SSlo'I 55-1<1 ~\ ' t •~• u t .,.. ' AUid Ch 1.32 12 le2 36\!o :»to JS~._ V. (hy 1nv ,6() ) 11) tt~ ~ .. ~:;:~ t! ,.,:c1Mck '.J I 12 11t'll 1n1o 12~ y. ~!{~~f '~ 29 l(l9 •S 6' 4.1 ...-'• Beef Crisis IRS Asks Al~ ... 21 3 31 31 31 -lo t.hv Inv wt• 21 Ht •1>0 14:.-1, FrM pf 1.1 5 26"" l6 16\lo+ •,. K•vs•n .lOtl 1 1130 l:it l?9 -I " P•ocl ·" • • It'.\ 16"" 16~+ ~ t.ITy lnVPI 2 .,,. 21 2SV. 15 25 -1--o FortOS .93b u l&r. 16V. 16l'o+ ~. l(looe w ·'° • ' :~~ ::l .. i:~ + :· 'lffiRSI 1..0 I 12 lt\>\ :Ul4 25V.-"'Cll't' Store~ s 5<.o :S\la j+;. FortHPa .ll JS I 26~i 26\>'J 16111+ I,. l(l(ldeW pf ' I ~ $0 }(I r • " Soi;rmk! n 13 '"" ~~ '"" ... l.l•rkEo l\.1 I! ·~ •1 ... •2'/.o "'"--~ FO!llefW .90 16 2S 33:1.i lllll\ Jll~ I• K1•"e' r.-' ... ,, .... , +•• All I Ch .l<lb 9 JS 9'h 9','4 9>/o-"J 1.~rk \Ill .ii) i LJ 21 ~ 11 + •~ FMborO .t 26 13 ,','•• 31 .. ~ + 'h Kim I I'~ ...,,, 4~n ..,,, ' AllroruA .SO 9 I 9 t 9 + I• CLC 01 .\m ) ~1 6 ~.._ 5V.-0::: Fran~IM .20 11 111 ~ 12\oi 1,S KfngsOS :;.J l~ SI J9\o 3I~ 3Bl:.-1' Alllflll l-'I .60 ' 1 \)Yi. 1j'11 13~ ... 1.IOV Clllls 2 ll 3 6j .. ,,. 6Y + •11 Fr<lnklSI ·"° 11 1 2a ,,,.. 21 + •1 KlrschC .72 t ~ 1\~ 1~'t'a I~~~~ Ak~s ··~· 15 196 ~ 6 illo 6 •. !.:!tv fl 2 l2 ID 11 :iOh li.Wo ..,,,_ \1 Fre-p!Mn .eo ;o l1 15\lo 2S ~+ '4 I( L M Aid 36 l'f~ 38 ..... 381-H. ~~tacu 1~ ~ ,t 1f,! 2i:: ut',._ ,4 ._..,..OkCO ·.~ 20 211 ll\o uo. 1~-v. Fruehol 1.10 B 47 26~ 2.S'l(i 1,•,:;---+ ~ KnloM N .18 10 I? 41\~ .ov. ~ ~:. Amc(lf ,!Ob 1 u ,VI ~1 41~+ \'i. 1.1..en P $ t 79 Y 11\ro I V.-\.Ii F11Qu11nc1 41 ' 36 llV. llWI "' ,... i<oenrnu 6Q 6 11 131,, ll"'-l~•+ 1. Ar'Mf<t< 1.20 ' t li\lo Ii,,_ 11--. W -.ooe nP pl I I 11\'o 11~ 11...,_ ~. -G ~ >I + 1 K!N>oer 1.811 1 I\ :Ullo »;:, J.4\'o •. 8 Packing Fi~,rns to Close Rollba.ck LOS ANGE LES (AP ! \Vith the price of ·nve cattle going up and Phase 4 economic guidelines freezing ~etail beef prices, some pack- ing plants in California ha ve decided to c lose rather ti)g"~ operate on di mi n is)l.fn g returns. L That was the wocd T hursday rrom a spok~an ror the \Vestern States Meat P ackers AssoclatlorYin San Francisco . , . 1n ann cmg that at least .e igh acking co mp a n i e s \V d close at the end of .. "BY N~T WEEK, mea t packin g/ plants will be opera}ing a t only 60 percent of no;nfal. which m eans-pro- duction will be down one third rrom t his week.'' He said shoppers would feel the s queeze by Monday aod the beef s hortage will grow in· creasingly more apparent by week's end . HUGHES WAS upse t at the prospect of cl~ing his firm in what he called "a fictitiou s s ituation." "The gov e r n me nt 's economists are theoreticians, but they don't have a n ickel's worth of sense," he said. "We process in e xcess o f one million pounds of beef a week and normally purcha se between 1,500 aDd 1,800 b ead or c attle a week. We had only 120 head of cattle p urchased for next week and decided it wasn't worth it to open up." Amerl>f 2.60 .. 2 l1'it )r:\lo 3~ '-Ml 1nv CP 19 133 ,1.,, 40\'o 1(1-b Gable lndsl I 51 11 . 70'< • ,;:oratof~ n 5 10 S'.'i llfo 5'.lo . Am He5s .30 11 103 33V. 33V. 33'4-\-1 CNA Flt\ .58 6 J.4J I~• 12 l2V.--II'> GAC C(lfp 11 3ll J~, )\o-i,. KreUco 1 11 11 11 '3'11 13('1 '3V.-\o A His pf 3\l:o Si 75\ro 1"'4 1S + VI '-NA OI 1. IO IQ.I; 17~ 16'.'t lo\-to GA'° Cr .oM 6 67 ll'h 11 l-l 11'h.,.. ~\ Krn911 20 JS 335 34!'0 )5~ ~-\) AmA!rft ."2 1l JI 20 11!'1. l~\IJ-l 1.oca<.01 1.10 .-96 l4<1W 14.1 h~•,.-1 GAF 0 1.2 ·, I 11 \• 7>71~'-lll...R1-~. Kr~hler iO 1 1 18.\t llV. llh-W Am AlrllM'f> JU 11'.'t 10~ lO'i-"' '-0(118oll .Ji 24 M 21 ~ lOV>-'h Glim Sk I.JO 35 28 -0 Krooer 1.30 11 611 16,t l& 16 -,_ AmBak .20 11 1'% 1'1> 1¥<+ ""-..OIOWll~ .18 ' 8 l• I~·· •• + \.. G.imSpf 1.6-0 .. 2 21'1• 77\-:0 -• 1(1'\Qr .60a 6 1 lJ 1l ll On Meats A.Brand 2.31 'i 4i Jll~ 31V. lit 1.Ule,Olfl .Oii 19 ' IJ~11 1314 lJ~I ~ I\ Gannell .1S 30 16 33 37 ~ 31 t II. -l L-'fty United Press latemaUonal A.mBrcs1 .6' 11 9S 26')1 26'4 2&\la :. c:,01011~ .!M 11 lB6 JJ1• J11, ~11, GardDen ·10 11 SI 181\ 17'14 11\'o.,.. t. L,.,cteoe l'' 1 a 19,,. 19 19•• Am &!au ,4 10 11 I• ll""° 13"'-\~ LP1t&A1k . .)6 ~ J 12 12 12 G.lriock ·'' I 13 11\to 11•t. 11\• · (.aneBrv 12 12 2 22•.1< 21. 11•, AmCan 2.20 j .. 30~ 3l»a 30 ..... CalT!IU Food 10 l 11Rt 10'"' uw-•.;,Aa1svc 1.17 •.• 1•'¥1 14\• 141~ • L .. •M! 2.ci~b 9 J1•2J ·1'?l.fi .. 2J The Int.anal R e v en u e ;. CnM 1,7•0 ' 11 h•:V. le.,. lel'a+ \, cuuon Radio 11 20'tt 19°" XI + "' Ga ewav In & 1' 6~i 6~ 4~-11. 1.auoo. su 11 1 11i, 11, 1' 1 ;. Clllln 120 7 t. U\io 24.\i i4~•+ "•Col Pe"" .XI 4 -10 !16 "• )0 .... !16\a 'Iii GCA Coro IS 11 8\-. 8<• I~-,.-4'o La~rSleQ '.II 10 ~Sl l\l 1\0 7' ,1 '> Service is orderiag be e f AmCvan j ... 10 213 ll'llo 1') ~3' ... lokmSt l.o.1 8 11 16~ 16"" 16\.:: lio Gemini Cep ;4 ! l:W. 11'oto 171.i:J: ~· Le;orS O! ii, x9 26'4 15llo ZS'• AmOlstlll 1 15 1 2ji'I 21v. 21'.li.+ 1,10 Co111nc1 .10 1 21 l}'I> 15'1'> ]),,.__\ Gemnunc: 1 s" U 11 + '~Leascoc 40 JM ll>'lt 10" 101, retailers and wholesalers to ~~t;J,~1 v!1 ~ 3! ··~ 'l~ '!>s:i=1~ ~~::~~~1 1 468_. ~ ~':. !f~ ~~,; -i: &~~:, ta, l~ !J 2~5 ~~ ~=-t! t~:~g\ 1:~ 22 5 2i1v. r,+-~~ _:. : : JI ba k . . th AC>ul OI ..... ~. 1 12Y1 12'h 12'1>+ >1. c a s 1.•6 JO Hl"l lJ 32 ' " + "" GnCallle .so a" 10 9 ·~ ·~-·v. LatiWV .>oa IJ • J.I~. 311 ~ l-11 ·-'• TO c price increases a t A EIK 1.90 ' 216 26•,r. ~ 16 + "',COi Gal 1.0 • l92 27~ 2~. 14('•-\' GnCor 1.lO • l l W. lS'la l~ •. LH<l>&.N .so IB I 12•• 12'• 121• • ' Am EXl>Or1 .. 129 l1 16 v. V:o-S 16 Col Pl(tor•• ·, 190 51,, S\r• 5!'0+ 111 Gn l>eYelOD 9 • ·~ 81'1 ·~ \II Leeson& .50 • 23 l}'. l''. 14' ·-.. v10latetbePbaselVeoonom1c Am €xP1 pf -· 1490 l l'J Ji,. l 'A-·\llco1SOh 1.92 20 251,. 25 25 -Lah PI C .64 6 u II\'> H1'0 l'''•-14 A f lnSy 1.10 10 ll la'llo 1a 18 -1 Comb E 1.SI 21 ISl 80'1> 18"'-IOl".+iv; Gen Dvnam 1 50 21'11. 2I 2n1o+ b L!h val ll<j J2 l"o 1~• P o program, a Spokesman for the ~ t~'6"'i.11r~ an u~ ~: ~: -.~ fO:fo1~f .!ol~,S 10 S1610'1olJ!V.1670~-I;~ g~F~ I(~ ~: ~ ~~% ~l\la ~~ -tt t:~~a~ 1\t~ -5 J~ If;~ l~t: I~:-I, agency said. :&~~ :18 ·1 M lr~ l!* 1:Yi_.ih~si:1 2:;J ·; id~~~"' ~~r-~:~~.r·~~ rt lJl l:t: ::~: ~:t:+ .t:t:~0;.J"c·:g 11 J ';!: ~~ 34,!:+.'· ~Id AJperin, a chie f com· ~r:~.::. 1::g .1 Pi tt~ M'I> i~~t ~ ~~S~~-4~ :: 9 :zsv. ll :zs •. ~ ~1;.:;1 1~ 18 ~ 3~ ~ ~~t iZ tev11 s1r~ . .a 12 35: ~: 2~.~ 2t;:t :.~ Ph ance officer for the IRS AmHom ·" ~ 321 ~VI '~ 6't.-Vo ewe pr 1.90 ~~ ~~· £~ .U::+·~ Gen M1n1. i 21 126 Slfti s"" sa1~-~~ L~vetz co~~~ 1~ is s 47,o •'•+ '• • A.mH050 .21 <12 211 4'¥1 oM\lo ''V:o-+. Comwf d w1 s ~ ~ 9._ \ GnMol 2.0Sll I WI 61 66i;. Will+ .,. Lltiby() 2 21l 1 '8 3'.V.. l •''1 3''•0--'•• told reporters Thursday tha t AmlllV$I .so 1 ' 9 9 9 '" Com Ed Bwt " 15 9'19 Wt 9.!>t+ .,: GnM(llpl JJ'l 5 ""' ~2~· 5.1 + (ll LOI< pf ~+• 61 n 12 12 ... •• f 76 holesaJ fl d A /Mdlcl .1 2 I SS 10',.. 1~ 1Q!'1 , , ComwOll 2k 2• 29 IO'I> l~ lOi'o GenMo! Pl 5 6 10'"' 10'4 7~ 1~ Libby McNI so 9S ·~· 6~'i 6V.+ I'• u. 0 W e inns an A Maclltm s i9 .s '\lo -«'a-v. COmsel 61 1-, u SI~' ~ Sl:\lo+ ~ Gen Puri .ao 1 IG I l'h 11 v. 11 .o+ '" Lltw"ryLn 64 1 2 911 9•-t 9, .. + ~. 155 1 743 tail ch ked , AMflCJC j 11 129'6\/flS'hi lS'h-'lt(omJKi!rScl 28 l~ J \· Jl.<+V.GPubU\.60 9 13S 1 ~19'h 19~1-V.Llberpf il~ 1 1J~:.13~t lV,• /business today, !;II_.,.,., • ...,,....,.., _____ ,. ___ ""',_".! THE EXECUTIVE v i c e president and g e n e r a I manager of the associa tion, Cal Santare, said, "This is the fi rst tim e in 30 yea rs in this business that I've !!I e e n an ything like thi!!I." Others expressed the same vie'<''. "\\'e haven't ·ct~ this plant in 25 years," said ... \Villiam Hughes, president of -: King Meat P a cking Co. in ·Vernon. "We ha\'e gone ·;through earthqua kes, strikes, i power and m echanical failures but we always stayed open." SlX VERNON p ac kin g plant! said they would close. They are King, ServiL'e Pack- ing Co .• Western i tea t Co., 11 Highland Meat Pa cking C.O., Serv·U Meat Packing Co., and -Newport Meat Co. Two others. C&J\1 Me at , l'acking Co. in 5an Diego and SECOND GRADE , u,. ,......,. After scouting some Los An· 0 re el'! ec ln AMtt: pf ,. 16 9'2 91 91 +I CooA,,, '" 7 12 I -I ,! I,... •Gen Retract 11 2 6 6 6 -lo (.IOO My 2\r• 10 13 35 l4fl J•n-'" N Y k City '(ed Am« Molor S llS ,,,._ 1~ mo c Ml ·1 oe 4~• ... , ... · : GnSlgnal .65 18 11 11\lt •2V.. <12;l,<+ 'I• LI Mpr j \, 1 11 81 11 _ ,,. ew o r were CJ , Alf!NG• 2.4 1 1'9 33'11i> :n•;, 311'1-I. one · ,', ,',' ,.1~ !,.AS .U~ ~ Gn s1 ..... 1 Ind 12 J,"" l.'1> J~ii LIWv .Ell .82 <11 -,, 89~• a1•n ur,+ ,, AmSa1t .3611 U U l'Jfo e e~+ .,_ CnnMt 1.•111 ...-~ ~u ,,.,. GTE. I n 11 20t JOi\ 29~'. ::IC\>ll I Am )flfp .<11 9 3 19~ 19,.. 19•• 7:: conracc .60 9 2 11 16'4 17 + 'f.o G n"' 1· 53 2Mll m XI\. '" L nc:N!I 1.oe 11 lt llV• 37 31'1<+ ''• ME'NWBILE CHARLES ASmett 1111 8 u9 207/a mo 21>fi+;::COf1EO LllO 10 211 :no,:, 72 22~ n ,.,. .JO 6 ' -_. llonel Corp II n J~• 31t 1'1> II. ' Am Sr-' ·,,, o ><> l3'" 11 12>•> -.. c,~''e'o "1 's ) 7S'4 7S 7SV.+ ''I> G><u!Ht .l•h ·, o,s S\t 15~'> .~~ '.~ Lifton 2'nl t _", lll'lli I'll 8\.._ 'I> , .. -» 5 60V:t 60'4 60llo---'lo Gtns1ar .10 2 16 5,, •'1'-vo LJl!n (.V pl J :U\IJ ;u,..._ v, H. Brannan, regional director ~~,::~1•, '•"• ,.,. ,", •,,•,•• ",,.!' •,,"," + ~ c::::~ Pl P•.~ lHO 51 57 s1 +l GenvlnP .40 l6 90 41 _ •1v. n + v. Ulln t v p1 2 J .1aa . 11" 11,,.._ ~· f • .. ~ c Fd I 30 12 91 ll~ 31:\( 331/ot 11. Ga P&e .el)g ll 111 ~ ~ l6 -111 l f!lonl';./IA 1 10~'. 10'1> IO'lt+ ~· o the lRS said m orethan9QAmTa.t:1.1 011 6J.4~91'1 •94.•9'10+'V.,M~,,·,. '""''"''" 1•Ga?wp11.n V09S 115 11s •. ,_,, ''' •• ,. ,, • AmT•Tpf ' ,. 511 56,,, ~.,.St."'-.... 011.-p 4,. .. .,_ ,. I ii I 17>,li Ii + v. .. _ .• a,. • norv...nt of the m eat dealters ATifiA J.u ,, u .it.\>i ~9\11. ,9,,. .. c,on~rgt 2.~ 'i 101 ""-14 1.1 .. + 11, Gertier i.Js 73 '1 1 ,, . • Loe~c 1.i1 1 .. " ,','. ,','·'·•' 21 + ,., ~. th'" N •m &• ·-.. •" ~ ·-5,, gns,.G .... a 31 26\12 26v. 26,., Gen1 l.2)b 3 llJ"'lll,.11~-~Lom•sFI .36 ll ~ lll,\.-'A Y k ha " • ~· .., ...,. ..-· · GF Bus 31 n 12 I 6,,. 1 + '• • --·· , ''' '' l ,.. '' " • In e eW Or area Ve A Wair .6' 6 4 IOYJ 10'h 1011) '.:' Consm Pw 1 9 33 2S'I> lS\lo 25'!)+ ''< Glan!P( 'to 1 u 12\la 12 11\ .. + 1. :-~ ·Ml ~ •• ' i. ~1...-.,, be · J . AW!r Pr I '« r60 15''• 1<111o h\~+ y, ConP p! ~.16 1100 51\rf SI 51 -IV, · 1, I +ii.'""'"""' g S 1 lHO 1Ha 1Ho , en going a ong With the Amer'Qfl .6S 6 I J,~. 1'~· 11\'o +'lo Con p ~I 4V, " 1100 5i S1Y, 58 +Ph G!Dr Finl 5k 5 5' l.i<I~ 11,' 5,11:' Loo.! s Ind , a 11 15¥. 1S•1~ 15't.--,, . 'ilin . th f A.messt ,loo s II ...... ' 6 ConP pl 4.S2 llll 6SV. 6.5•,~ ISV• G!dd Lewi' JI ~t 61) ~ ,_ \·· Lon SIG 1.40 10 .., 2 1 26114 U>.;.-... pnce ce gs smce e reeze Alf!e1e11 .10 • 16 13r. lJV:o 1wa+ ·~ conu Alr Ln 11 11• 1•11 a11t e~ ·· g111Hiu 'i36~ 2( 1~5 ~ ... ~~"• ~~,, -1;) Long1L1 1.40 10 91 19* 19~, lt'I>-•-. began in the spring. ~fa~n 1! : 1 1Uf ~ H:f: ~:!:'-. i-. ~~caCOP!;e~ 1 !l 2: u~ ~ +•11 G•~'"1 nCor 111 16 16" l&V• 161~-.. t::"::,D<:i cu'rS: :1 ir 'Iv. 7~~ ~1-i:t t: "A( this ~m· t there ss' noAMPlnc ,'JJ J7(JC \J9 •1'1> 46'/\I •6'!a+:i.ii CCoppf 1'1< rXIO 12V• 12 12 +~Glll&son .•I I• 3117\l:t 11'14 17,_., • t aLal'IG€1( I 20 72 lS'4 3S'.'t ~~-\o ,.... , AmpaiP ,)6 1 , ''"' ·~ 8~ conttCp 2.40 1 '9 39~ 31% 38,,._ \i Glob<lll Mar 11 53 ll'lli ll.,. 13V.-h aPacllc .20 t 103 15111 3c~ :isv.-'lt hard evidence O[ a black Ampell Cp" St -·~ ""' ~~+ ,,. CntlCp pl?l/• 6 '3'ili •2\14 41~ Vo GIOl)l!U" ,60 9 3 l9 \9,,, l9, -(• LOIJG•i 1.fO 10 37 U V. ':S'" 26 . Amrep C(lf p 6 29 SV:t ~ s•r,.... \'I ClllllR 1.30b 10 I 11\la 11 nv.+ ~ GoldWll Fcl ' $ 1•14 -114+.,,. Lowe111f .\IO ~ 13 161/1 16\\ 16\'I ... market," he said. "We are Am1t•r 1.10 1 ll ~ 22'h 13h + <lo Conllnn l 21 1 1 5'4 S'4 s•,1o Goodrich l 6 51 7l~ ?.!,:;::_ 2\1'> +*LTV Corp t. l5 9\'I 9:1\ 9\.:o+ v. '-'• id Amslr of ·" 11 I'll. lti t ~· V.+ ConMlg .810 9 1"6 10 9'ilo 9V. _;.~ ~yrT .92 8 20J 23"" •• 22~ v. LTV Cp 5 pf . . 1 lJ'MI 33V. l3-h->.~ .. ., ... g to avo one. Where we Amlhtd 2.60 1 29 "'" •1 "'"+ \'I con11 011 1111 1 120 29:w, 20v. ~ . GoraonJ .1• • 13 13" ll''! 13~+ \ii Loorito1 .43 79 11 «V. •3~) 130,,+ v. have a Vast mal'on'ty "At Am1el In 20 9 23 5V. sv. SV:o-\lo Con! Tel .88 IJ j 1 2l'Jo 2J 23~ -1"' Goold 1nc,,1' ,•, ,." ,','·· ,n,~ r-,, ~ LIKkV 51 .S<I 12 's lltt 11 '1> 11""+ ,,, An--.25b 9 lPI 13'/a n 23Yt+ v. con1r1 Oa!a 9 6t l1V. ~ 31 -\'I orac• W 1 •• ,. o---Llldlow I.Oii t 72 I• 13\'o 13'4-~• this ~l'nJ (here 1·5 DO hard Anc::hHc I.OB 6 13 11"" 18~ 18'4+ \'I ConOlllf <11/t rl&O 52 51 j l -1 Grand U .80 9 11 11-. 21/~, ii~-V. LukenS!I .llO 9 11 23~ 23'.'• 231/o+ '.. yv • AnOer CI .60 t. 'It~ 1~ IB~V.Conwd l.90 9 2 27 21 21 -\l•Gr•nlv 1.20 5 9 ll'4 ·, LVO Corp 12 11 •I• ~~. 4·\i •. evidence of a black market " Angelica .10 ll ll 9'1. tVo 9'1\+ \.lo Cook Un .52 1 U I!\ ~ "II+ V. Gfenl W 1 'I') 1 l~ \&\\ IS\\ II*+ 4·Ly~a Yoitn \' 21 7V. 7+. '7\t . • Anwl Cu 'k I • l•:V. I,.,, 1•>.4+ ~Coop 11)(1 .80 11 JO 20'1\o 20 19 -14 GrayOr lJIO 9 Sl 11~, II \• 11''+ ~· Lyk pl 3.11c 21 24"' 1•Vo 11~l+ ·~ he said. "\Ve are trying to Al)&C/W ,J'lo 7 10 ll'I 13 ... 11l'o Coopl pl 2'h I 52\.lo 52'11 Slt't--l ti. G!AMI 1.\(1) 11 26 34,,.~ JJ\o ~1 + .. Lyncl\Sy .• o 17 1 I V:t ..... l \o .• . ADCO 011 "~ 7 . 1 14'111 14\'J 141'> -COOPT• .S<lb , 10 17 16:\1. 16"'+ \\GI A&P Te•. 1S YI lH. \ .. -M ~ avoid one. Where we have a A~P .\6 1• 4\ l"'" l'llo 3'11.-'' (;(lOl>l!r 1 10 13 11 ,..., '"'° a~~ GILkO 1.10a 11 6 :n"' 221·• nv. ·. M<lcAF .110 1 11 12 11 >1 11~~-\• . . APL Corp 6 '° lOV. •v. "''--~Copelr)(I .•• 13 19 20'4 lO 20\1.o GINNfk 1.60 II la 461~ ~sv. •51,!o-'"'M•cDonld 12 '3+1. 3•, 31, •..• vast m a1or1ty of m eat d ealers APL.DIC 1.06 1 11'-~ 14'" 1•'1"-'-'• cooo Ra~.. ,6 """ 1m u V:t+.,., Gtw1Fln . .io 1 !Ill 1ov. 20 20 Mec~e .30 6 l• 6v. M'o 6,., I · , h Al>oiled MQ II a S.,. S\'I SV.-y, Caowld 1 60. 6°' 12 21>1~ 26 26'!o . . Gl Wtsl Un 10 ~~I "" 4'1.i+ Vo Mac Mii . \Ob 1 60 J~ 1" 1\ +' ;, comp y1ng w1t the current A.RASvl.1111 10 l30"°'129i,:.1:io cor<1ur• (:p , 26 9,. S-"' n. .. G1wsiun pt .. 2s 12'\li l'l'Jo 12~t•McMpt 1.20 10 16 16 • 1,•+,: l t' th · bla k ArcateN .H I 1 1'11 1 1 + Vo Corn-Gls 1 11 29 11106 161.:i.r. 10>6 +7 Gr! Wash in 2 3 3 l Macv R H 1 a 111 25l1 251' :ZS"-, ~:.ik:tl?f1S ere IS RO C ~~~DEii~P 131 'to 30~~• 195~ 30s%+ ~,t ~=-~~~ ~~ ~! 1~ ~i; 2~1~ 2!t?-:~ e~:y~anl.o~ 1: ll~ 1~'e t~~ ~~r! +l'I ~=~ ~u·~~: U 'i 1:~ :~ IOl~f ·~ · Arl111r .n 1 ' lOV. l~ 10"1 . cox Brei .:is 11 J u 2s 25 G.-aVl'llld wt 9 JV. 21,'o 21,-v. Ma11lc(n J2 y a1 a;., avt ... .. Arlt PS 1.16 I 31 20 IT~ :10 • CPC lntl 1.77 10 A.2 28'1 2IA't 18~i+·v; Groller .to • 9 101• 10\o 101-._ V'o MaQntv :60 t~ 19• 9¥1 9\lt 9+1 i.:, Ark Bes! .Cl t IA 11 10>4 IOV.-"41 craneC 110Q 6 n 171/t llV• u -'-'• Grvmman :l9 1/J'lo 10 10 -'I• Ma1l1r•Cc 1 10 1 ~ 20q 20\lo IN AN<rrHER. DEVELOP-Arlen RJIOv 9 SS 5-\\ 5!/o S\o~ Ill Credi! Fl ·.•O 9 ~ I\~ •~ t~+ Guardian In 16 IJ 2G'A ~ 20Vo •· MaloneH .:n 11 •1 21V. 2l!r\ 21'1)-'i.i; Annood• Cp •1 1 I a I ., Crocker 1 66 t •! 14'• 7•'tl ~•\'i---~It GuMl!I J.130 I 1• 36l/J 36'11 3'\lt ·· Menhln<j ,JO s 1• 10~. J~ 1~ \'I MENT, the Senate voted 84-5 ArmccS 1,XI 7 6t 21 21lV• 21 + ""(romp IC :llO 7 19 13 12\lo 12,,.._ OJo Gulf Liie .to 1 IS l5'Jo JS JS.,. -'la Manow .80 I • l6V. IS!'f 1~.,., Administration's controversial ~;~P~"' 2.if 1i !.r ?:'!' 22:~ I::::1t: i~::neHcM~ 1~' n3 'g'd ~¥. ~~"":!: ~ ~~:l 0~~~\:' ~· t6 ~ ~';' ~.'.1" ~AP~O 1:1! :l 1~ ~ru ~~~ i~:; ~ J th . f beef """''R 1.60 ' 13 26'11. 16\.'t U \>?-.,., (rwn ZI I 20 10 171 lO 1'1~ JO + ~ GlfROll> .65(: I IJOi 131,f l~i ... Miiratnon M I • 19 1814 If~ !ill r eeze on e price <I • Arvlnlfld .52 11 lO 161/t 1 ~1 l6W+ 1;, crwn pf •ill . "o 45'1>11 ~ 6S"-,.. GuHS•u 1.12 ii 91 1111o 1M~• J8V.--1'lt Mar 011 1.60 t '! 29~ 19"4 m..+.~. But the measure wa s ASA L.ld .50 • 1a o~ ~• 47 -~ cr s Ce> ·'° 6 3 1svi 15% 1S'4-•;, vua.ws ·"" 1 ,... 25'1> 2si.1o :zsv. ·· Mercor .90 t 10 22 \' nE u Ash! Oit 1 JO t 1' !t~ 78'o't 29 -~~ cu1Upan .30 1<1 6 141/o 14 '' -\.ii Gulf .. W1 w1 .. 25 •~ 6:i.o 6'9+ \4 Marcorpf 2 . 20 <14~ '" 44~ 'A de layed for a t least a month At.Dt"YG 1 . .011 :rn 36V.·351Jo 36V.+ '"Cum1n1 .aea 13 u 37'1> 36" l1'ili-''•GHW1pf 3111 .. 1101'1>1G111o 10.v.-1.,. Marem .1ob 11 20 '""''" 4<1\'J. ... Los Banos l\leat P acking in . Los Banos, also h ave said the y geJes marke ts, it was fou nd t here was no s hort· will close. age o f meat. though managers bave been force d to t AsSpr l.20o I 6 2•V. 21 2~ -'~Curllss Wrl l2 101 2nt 16'h U l't+1"G1fW1pf 3". S 521/t 51~• S2.o:..+ \'-MerMld l.8 7 630 2•\lo U 2'"°' Thursday by the House Rules A!hlooe .52 s 1 11l1o 12'1/o 1m-'"' curl!siwr ;. 16 l lJ 33 :n +I Gulton 1nc111 l3 16 s:+o ~v. sv. . .. Mar1onL .28 JS It <11 ~ ~._· i4 Co , At!cMI 1.Glll t 10 l P il 17¥. lP11 Cu1lerH LOO 9 ~' 31'.'it 30'1> 30!'-V. --ll H--Marlen 1.18 23 1:11 <15V. 44\>) UY,...~ m m 1ttee on a 9-6 vo te. AnC1ye L•7 a 39 20% l~ lt".<--"' c vc11N>sP 1 • 1 " 23 23 + ~ H&ekW 2..M 9 1 :i&i.. 361!. 36~• . , Mariel .so 21 1 43\lo Ill* 1! " Th". lert the freeze wh'ch AftCEll>f 5~ • 10 a:s as BS -t Cypru1 Ms 1 9 u l) 32¥-Jl + "' HallPrl .IO<I 1 J 1m 17'1• lf'A +I~ Marof cem 1c ,", ,.•,~ ..!~ ..! ~ -l Al l:k~ltd 2 21 2]1 IS II 8•Y•+l -D D--Hallibhl 1.12 la lll lM IM'"' 16'~"-.. M<1rloll 2~.~ II ,. ~·y· ... ... the m eat industry Says IS• p--ARdl ot 3~ . . %210 51~i 51 v. SI ~· Damon CP ll 46 ~ "~ '5 + y, H1mP•P .so 13 31 15 11.\ro IS +•t Marsr,F n .• 11 II 26V. 26 21~+ • • .,.-AtRc Pf 2.10 , , 46 SW. S7 51\!o+ V• OanR!vr ,1(1 I Ii 9 8~ ai..._ V. liamOCo «I 1 11 m ,y. 9\11+ '/, Mdrl nAI .•0 75 9 l'n 11'11 v. ., . duJoin <1 3 bee{ shortage and the AttRctt prf l 1 1'4 113'1. 144 -lilt OanaCo 1.36 7 ?l ~ :11\t. 21'1>+ ~ H<1ndlem :65 7 21 .... 1 91/a +'to MartMr I.IS 1 22 lo~ 16'h \~ ,, .... "6 Aft fl Coro ~I 23 2 11"' 2 '. Dirt In .JOQ 13 166 3'11• )3~ lJV.-Vt H<l>nllv H n 10 2 19111 19\IJ lf'I> +v.; Md c~ .50 I 11 Ill 11V. 17\.1>-'" beginning of ihe b ) a ck A.TO In.:: .16 1 9 1v. mo 11<1+ v. D11rt1nc1 P• 2 . . 211 J1f!, 36".lo J1 + •.1o Hallti c P60 ~ 15 11111 12,,. 121\-" M•ic P .20 :ll '9 50\ro ~ ~t • -Sanlare irxhcatcd also that uell second·r a t e c u ts. If y ou have enough ntoney at least seven otberpJants . . • . \'10uld be working a t Jess than you can get beef -1n this case in a Beve rly HJIJS capacity and b e addc-d: s tore . ... ,.,.,,.- • • IL.~ , • Aulom OaT• AD 61 S71':1 ~ S71ili+ •,:, Oovco 1.1' ~ 1 16'1> IMI lt'h+ l(o Ha"n• 13S 21 6' "\la 46 M>14 +'I> Masonte .13 l~ 313 3111. 31111 32'1< v. marketing -Jn efn:l."1. UDtil its AU!ornl Ind• I 70 5V. 4'1't S .• 011yHnlf\ .2, S 11 7111 1V. 1\.1:+ 'Mo Harc...,r1S I t JD 20 19'/.o 19te-1~ Ma~MY .30b 11 2( 21!11 21'19 21Y, ,. heduled · (J Se ( ,,. Avco Corp <I 211 tOVt 10 lOv.+ V. DavlooH .S<I ~ 1017 14 13ft 13:r.--14 Ha reins 16 17 IS l~ 12"" U'h+ \• MlCPI lOt:> 1.. 2S 19\'I 19'.'t 19\>'l:f ~ SC e%pll'3 On p • u.. Avco CP wll , , 11 214 1 1 -l'il DavPLI 1.66 11 Jt 211':1 21'/.o 2111& -'lo Hfrnllll 1~ 1 10 ~ 2•'1• 2•1'>-~ Mt lnlv .'50 . 26 IJ'llt ll\'a 13'11. * THE ADMINISTRATION Avco pf J.20 . 7 361t'i 3' l6 -I'/• OeenWl1 .(Q 1 11 9 11\ 9 +V. HarrlilnlP 1 12 13 J()\la :m11 29!'o-~ MsMtglv lb II 23 11!'t 21\lo 21h '--AvervPr .15 31 II •314 '3141 13\la . Deere 1..0. 11 "1 41-'t Q'h 4Vt.j:•l HarKO lg 6 2l \s;lo JS\4 15V.-"'MalluE .l•b ' 141 26* 26\'J 2•"1>+ V. sought to head off speculation A.VII In.:: "'° J 14 27"' 26\lo 2"i/o--"'OelPa.L 1.16 ~ 1(1 1~ 111-• 111.lo v. HartSMlt ... I 61 I.WO 1~ 14-441 Mlllel .02h '. " s '"" s ''. Avnel/nc: .JO 5' 9'!1 IVt 914-V. Of'! Mnl 1.10 a 11 18'4 7¥1 11 + V. HertaH IOI> t 1 10\ro l!W. 101.lo-141 May OS 1.60 9 24 32\'J 32 l'l -V. it might be ooosidering an A.vonPr 1.40 233 11•~ 113Va 113'4 , Della.Air .60 IS 2.39 <19'¥. '8~ •t14-l'I Hawaf:I '1.s6 JO 46 261"' 2!111 ~-\,:, Meveru1 .65 IJ 2 22'11t 22\i 1'1:V.-Ill I. end Altec:OH 1k ~ • 1'\lo 161.!o 16'4 .,. Dellec lntn S 24 9\lt 9 9V.+ >;.Heyes Alb l 7 S 11'.'t 14 14 -W MaM VIJW .SO 6 .J ~~ ,,",•, ,.1~ ·;~ Joblessness Down Slightly ear Je r lo the freeze. --9 a-Dellona Cp 6 JS lnli 12"'1 lN~+ l'O Haiel!lna 10 17 SV. :S'lo 5~ \it l\'1~g 1.Ju 13 -u... ,_ ,.,, Whi H Saba.WU .la ,, 62 1•>.a 14~. U 'h-Vo l>eMl&n .ao • 20 24.'h "' 2''hT \II HCA M•rt(n I' 5 19'/a 1$ t'i \~\..+~MC.A Inc .6' JO 11 2.s.,. ,,~ 2s .... + ~ te . OUSe S p 0 k e S m a D SIChe ,ISi:! IS S2 ~ SO,:, ~Vt l)enni1n pf I · · 2 21 21 21 + V• Heck 1nc 12 10 J1 IS 1(\11 1'V-'4 MCCora .v:I 6 1 16'.'t 16 .... 16\\+ l'lt r~-Id L W 'd Th 8eker In 16 n ISJ 21~ 21 \l :U*+ 14 Oennvs .Qli 11 30 llV. Jl 11 -V• 1 M 2JC •7 78 21\4 20:;.:. 11 ._ ,,. McCrov 1.20 ' IO lift 11Yo 11'9 +~ ~a . arren sa1 W'S-llakcr<IU 0 37 21 JS 291>\ 29¥1-29~•+ ~ OtnlSPIY .611 I• 210 19"' l9'h 1•"4+ '1> ~'\'ie~nn ,u 6 21 IQV. 10 10 McO.r'NI I 2i 166 121'• 71\4 11t1+ ~ day there was "no present in-~:\~G~ 1:~ ~ 1rJ ~!~ ll4: ~.~ S:f~::l~n 1:~ 1Z d~ ll.,. 11~1'¥.1!~~ ~e:ni HR 1·~ l!s 1l ~\lo !!'I> !f.;..!t'.; ~8::~ 58 5! ':i It~ 18~ ~ ~ tention" to lift it prematurely BllGS f' i~, .. 110 '° 60 60 ,. Doell:; pf t.31 .. U60 1\li'J lllV. 11111'> ... H:1:.in: clirl •· ' •V. IV. ,,,._ \1 McGr.Ea li;, 11 II 2ti'I 21'4 28YJo+ w · s anca 1 a. t s nv. ZJ\11 r.11'-" v. 0•\I::·~ 'J.'*' 1~·~ f•'M Y.111< .,,,,. HeUerlnl .a 17 7• 3Sh 34'/', JS -+ v. McGr HI .aa 10 111 9" ,.,. tvi.+ ~. 111 July-But Not for Blacks WASHINGTON Unemployment in the United Stai.s declined slighlly to (.7 percent of the labor force in J uly. although the jobless rate for blacks we nt up sharP,ly , the Labor Departmedt reported Wday. THE COUNT R Y'S (AP) unemployment r ate dropped 4.3 mUllon in Jlllle to 4.2 'million in July on a season ally adjusted ,basis. Total e mployment was listed BofA Plans Expansion a s 84.6 million in J uly, about the same as in June, while wiemploy menl dropped from below the 5 percent Jevel in June for the first time in more than three years. 'The June unemployment figure wa!!I 4.8 pereent. The Labor Department said unemployment for w h i t e '<'i>rkers declined to 4.1 per- cen t in July from 4.3 perct?nt in June, but the jobless rate for bla cks a nd other races l'03e sharply lo 9.3 percent in J uly fr om 8.5 per cent in June. The Ma y jobles.. ra te of blacks and other races WJ! 9.4 per cent. The Administration's goa l is ror a 4.5 percent t o t a I unemployment r att! by the end of the year. Agriculture Secretary Earl llandH 10C " 56 3314 31•,r. 33\'lt+ v. o:J(,~ .,;p .21] i~ ' rlv. ?l·~ r •. L -.~ HelmeP• .60 lU 6S 11\.\ 1~ ..... ' ~r!:~a !O i2 i1n l6 56 56 -Vo L Bulz ••'d the d ay bef Sangor Pn S 92 9h 8'\l 9 -Ulel f l!! .!M 11 s lf111 1/• lY~ ""Helma.P .20 14 '' :UV. :U\'I ~+ l'i MCL lh ~II 0 15 ttt ~'4 ~;'-I_·;,:_ from JWle's 13 3 n.>rcent rate • -.. ore Snlt ol' NY 2 • J8 31 3l':t. 13'' ·· DJ•mc11'n11 1 , n JO\\ 29v. m-·441 Hemlsp Cap 1 2~ 2"" 2~ '\ii McN:Y1 1s .. , Jl"4 13~ 1 ·~ ' _. that be personally WOUid Bank VI .Ill 12 1 29 ,n,_ ,n, .... 'l:: ~ 0 am !Ohm l 9 31 11!'o 19 .... 1iq:.-114 Her(Vlet .llO 1• 1,• 1 .. l\11 ~ ~l~;t+ ·;L MaadMNOIC&o ,:!S! ; 51 7 S'19 IS" 1it+" t: and unemployment a mong hnkTroal J 10 J.I SI 1,. .,..... ... OlaShm pf 2 I 21~ 2111'1 211''1+ ~ Hershv 1.10 11 "' .. ..., I 36 )S'h ~+ VJ persons aged 20 to 24 in-"seriously ~nsider" an early ::~m1 .~ u 'fl ;:'I> ~ rr-.~ 8~1Jf.!t~ 1~ ii .! lf" l~ If" ·· · ~~rJ1~ :fiJ 'f ~R :: :~ :: 1 Me: 1 ,.,,! ;; • '"' 2"" 2§" Creased from 7,7 ~nt to 8 lifting of the freeze. But War-Sarne! l .96ll • It uv.· """ 2ST+ Vo Ola M 22 '9 lO'I> so S0'4+ .% Hlpl\Vai! En ,u )9 •v. 5¥o 2f~+ ~ =: ..... ~ 'll' ,•, lt 11~ 2i~ 251 + ~ r-~-, , aaaic If\ AO I( 6 "° ~ 6-tti • OIG01'11Q .'6 1 2M PW 9Vl 'Alo-•.o Hlllenbl' .4 6 1 21\1> ff~ JV. Mere Sir to j~ '!'Ill 7• 1 1\,r. ""'"""llt ren said pomtedly that Butz eetin pl 2\11 .. 1100 21 11 21 -:~ Olg11a1 Eoo1 s1 1• n 'I> t i n •.r.+1v. Hl!tor! HU t 1,1 3a nv. l 2~~ v. Man:k l'.11 •1 l ' am 90 _ ~ ~·" ' nJ f Sil~ Ml .2Q 11 2 111.lo llV. 11 V.+ '" DUI l'IQll AO l l • 1 ~ 6~ VI HMW lfldu' . It ~ l\11 301'> Maf'eOflll ,70 6 lfY. 12V. 1214 But unemployment f 0 r was o y one o own~ 8,,~ Pf l .. 1 16'-• 16'At 1v1.+ v. DHnllllhot 2 •• • 1111 ~1 Zl'ft+.,. HClblrtM .n 1• 16 30\'J '°"" 2!!!'-~ ~~1,",', -"',, ,", :w ).'~ ,".~ ,','!i+i~ Ad • · trati ff · · I s111> 1na :io 1 :11. 22\lo 21'14 21 . O!HOll\.'. JIOll IS 11 u~ 21"' 27'4 ••• Hoerner .t7 Y 19 mi. ~ • ..-_ ~ ~ _ ... ,._ ,.. persons 25 to 54 years dropped mlDlS on o 1c 1 a s B•uschL ·42 22 1n Jl'h 211 .. 31 +~ 1,)\-~w .1l 5s 141 191-. li7V. •m+ ~ Hgff EIKtn 1 ~~ 2Jt" J m-.+"' .v..i.o1>1 .•Sb n ll ~ 911t •~\+ ..,. from 3.3n<>rcent lo 3N"r••• .. •t. reviewing the problem s 1x1..-L :15 eici "-.s2v. 51'n ~2Yo+~11ool"1~ .. me, lo, ",1•~.1sre 161 ++;i;t Ua111qn•A 'I '1JV: i3v. 13.,.._..,.~•M ~ ~ ,.2 lt.._ •'•"-,•,..• -+,~ r~ ,.~._..,., · 8earlnts 60 13 23 .,.... .fOV:I .-0'1>-\-, 11 a ''" ~ 4 • '4 •.,. "" v 11 k 1 10 91 Q.Mo «>'I> 47y..... 'It ... ,_ ·'.!r , ... '!\"' 11u •>•-+ ,, 8 I fct. .62 IS 13t 20\11 to 20»+ Vo LllVtt'&lld In . 22 2\l 1 2 ... Hornnta _, llJ 113 I'll ........ -.. ... ..... THE JOBLESS ra·-for M ·so 11 • 2°"" ll~ 26:it.+ 'It OlvMt 2.15.11 I 4~ ~ 23\1.ot 23\'l_ ""Hon~Wl 1 • .i 23 l4 1,...,~ ~ 21:+ Vt Mf1£pf •. '' 1llQ 99 91Vo 91\l<_l'w 1e REPO RT S OF beef == j.s 21 17' 31111. 31 311,:,-~ LJrPepor .24 lift 69 16111 ~'<I ~ W Hoover 1.21 I 5 .,. ..,,... 1 'It MllE.pl l .90 . , l20 SO SO 50 dull unch ed .,,... 1 •1 l!M~ l:S\'o 1si..+ v. \.lomo?Mn 1~ 71 l 4 92'!/o 91'/.o 91\lo_ h t1or•1on LP ) 6:i ,,,.., ,,1nc lo~"'"+v. MGIC: ln .10 ., 17• '•"" 1s•;. 16\ .. ...::v; a women was ang shortages were wid"-~ to-s,~!1: ,··Z! 1 10 ll»« !!>YI 1~-•" »om1-c1 .9)o •. u n·1 7~ 7~•T .... "010l1a1 Ato ~ 16 v. MJ~tlGs l.IU 10 4 1sv. is 1~ 'r• ~.,,,...... e......-e ~.. ,,_ 1 ~ _In OonLofJ .12 10 6 1 1 1 -v. rlUIQ\..P .lio 13 di 16'1fi •6 •o'f'rT+ I! M ctlS Toll 1 1 5 1'~ I(\>\ 1•\i= ,,. af 4.9 percent. day but m ost SUpe· nnarkets 111tl0!!_';1 1·~. 11, ' .. ' !.., 11'/:i 29\>lt+ \.\i <)UflllellY Al ll ~]) 21 ]l\11 21'h-l\ HOST Intl .:16 10 40 '1,,. 111~.._.12,A ~ Mkl rodol ·" 6 10 12~ l2:t/o u~-~I ' , en nw ·"'.' .. ~" , Llor1c(.o :J'l S 6 12~ l''t. 1~~~Houd11ue . ..0 6 • 1.,. ..,. ~"T" ... Mcrow1yt lJ 6 Z*• Z»l *-"l• The Labor De...,.,.tment said appeared to still have some to 11em111..Q """' • ,•, ~" l~'.~ ~u. -r ',· ....:ort-Cv1. .•v ' 40 o Hi • + v. HC11111n M "" 11 31 u l'o 13"" l•~+ v. M1c1Con1n i 11 n 11,.. u~. 1 Vt+ \-. Y... B-lk 1.GO t -~ ...,.,.. ...,.,_ ·• LlOver~e> 14 11 1 M e "'._ ~.,_ ~ 11ou'!;e f'allr• 1' 3..0 "'" Y.,.. Y ... + I MldSoU 1.10 II 191 :nv. 21 t, 2 ~ 1;, nonrarm payrolJ e m ployment seJJ. OKIOI• pl l ~ ~ » ~• -I'·• <)QW('nem I 2~ 1611 ~ >JV. S....,.-\') Hoo1eFn .116 l~ 1:iO 2•~ ,,.,. l<I~+ "'MIOMt 1.Jlb 10 lll I) 14/,1 15 8~nt.pl .1)'i 180J'J~~Nla -,.,->•UPF lnco ~ 41• 5,. 5-l't-\lo riouMIPl l.,.. l~ )II )II ....-ln MldRou .iQ 9 "lS l4 !)ft\~'(<.; was unchanged a t 75.5 million Shoppers reported there was lleioCpp• .S\i ~ 1 ~·,. 1-.,,_, L. ·-1 ... ravo 1v1 ·v xi 11111 21•11 21r.-\lo Hou1Fpt 2\'J .. ~ ••V:o '""" '".,.,__ ~. MUa~Lb 1.u 1.s ~ ~ ~~. -"'hT ~ l·n July after ris· m· g sleadily ·in meat th •·-b l the Bene pf .. :io J n•.i. 721• ·~·•'T '!lo urtsMr 1 . .0 u 2~ ~ ~ alh+ ¥t HwlLP' \.ofJ 1~ 51. 37.,.. ~'"'" :01 ... + ""Ml11°"er .J6 13 13 1s111 I) 19,..1,. on e C0UD""1.:t, u berlgl>fl Inc 12 136 01 41<• ..... -\o Url!I nf 2.1',1 s '""" .Ullo ~.+ ... 1100N1GI .34 IS 2' ~ 1~ l~l't-"'M nnMa.M l 36 362 ·~· Wt *'"' II I ths •--l fuJJ and 8er .. ey Pl'lo 9 :IJ l:R~ 13'1 IJ•o 1lre1sarp1 2 JS ..o\:o. .0 """-+\'a HoHU po .,,..,, .. J ,.,i ,.,i !>.> -I« ~nnPL 1.46 I 9 19\.'t 1~ U\fJ ~ prev oos mon . counK:a.:o were 00 , 8~,ti~t l.<IOll 1 111 21,.. ~ .,,, .,. l'• ure"ei l.41b Y lt'41< ltl>'it 1t:;i..,-.,., tiOW•roJ JO 21 n :tu\li 19'.'t 201>\ .. rroAI .9' ' 1s ~ "~ ~ ... The a verag e work week in many stores d id not have 819 J 1nd ..s2 i 1 n •1 Mt .011. Dr1v1usto 1 · s ~ Y •111 Y -"" Howmer .Al 9 w ,,_ 1i11a "•• +. M un.Eq .24 14 2 ra ~' v. Bl&<:• O I.Qi so ~· 123 121""' 111 +i lluk• P 1,IO I 1 51 19~ l9v. IV'4 ,. , HubW 1.lSb 12 17 II~ 11.\11 ,II\• •. M h Riv ·'° 10 4 l \<; l5V. lj "· manufacturing was up three anything approaching a fu11 e1arr Jn .18 5 13 1 ~. ,,,.,_ v. ou~• 01 8.10 Jl!IO 106"'2 1011Vt 1w~1 . • nlll:loav 1.w 12 1s ~ ia._ ;111ft-~ Mo Pac A s s 1 1sv. 7fu ' ~+ \'I BllitL11nl lg 6 l 1t!4 lti.< 1&'1•-... uu«t Pl 1.211 ·· J1:JCI IGI lW 1\111 ·' · HllllMI H .-00 • S 6'\ 1\4 th+ Vo MPCem 1.60 97 21 ",,• "is" '11 ~ .'" tenths of an hour in J uly to choice of cuts Btoek HR .ll 11 1u ni,; 10~ n ~i DunsraO .u ,~, 114 39 3\IV. 39 + ~ Huon•f ,1/Jb 26 1•1 6U'tt '°""' .o~ ._. Mo Puts ..a. IS h • 81 B II A$ 7 31 16flt 16' ... I 'lit •. \.IUP!ln CP l~ 6'.'t S','t , .... + \'4 HUnl o,.11 •• 2S IU 19'11 \911) l\J'n-t" ~ Moblla H .20 10 71 12\'J 1214 nv.+ ~ 40.9 ours,while actualhourly Where three layersofmeat ~:aru 1 12 #I 1r,; ~~ ···DuPon1 21110 16 120166'"''63"-lU ···Hu11one:.0 1c. ~ 9 ..,.. '+""Mol)llQl l ·'° ~ nst s1 ~v.-"' earnings in private nortfann we re displayed in me 3 t Boelflll C .AD 11 ~79 ltl9 If ltYo ::: g~~~ ~ ti:: .. l ~tz' roin t:a :z Hu~cr.Cp ~ ll -ll<I~ :b''rt 29~+ ~ ~k ~ .~ ~ 'tt ~ ~+ ~ payrolls rose two cents to an co u nter s in A t I anta !; 1~ i. 6 % 19 stm ~2'Mi s:.r.3t it 8::CT.1 a1i1l 10 ac~ ~~ ~~ ~k-~ i~~"° ;~r~ 2;i Jl JJ..: ~~ ~~+ ~ ~ar.;r,k '=':..J ~ 1~ lf"' lW: l114 + ·" average Of $3.89 in J u}y, SUpenna rkt ts ror example, BOil!~ 1:= : :f ~ Ii:~+: ~n 1:~ ji ~ f~ r~ rtlli ::. ioeaj':lis :w 9, • 14'4 •~Iii •s;;; :·· ~=~:m·60 ~ 1~ in: 1 ~t! 1nL·~ Due to increasing lobby traf· fie r esulting from student 4 enrollment growth. the Bank of America J5 expandlnfl its 'Jrvine campus office a t Cam- i>us Drive near Culver. · Manager Doug Walter! said ·the pr e-engineered structure ·w ould be expanded ne arly 25 percent with the Jnstatlatlon of a n additional modular unit along the south side of the s tructure. 'I I 11or1n•11s in 1• 1 ~ J .3:'>!o " -E E--Idea Tov " l· u• 7s1 ~h 2,,,._·" Monroe;. ·'" 1~ 'h 2:SV• 2•!• 2!'4 BOR De 4verage weekly earnings there was on y one ayer Bost eo 2 .... 11 D l0'1o »4 JOVit+ ·.;., o:aole Pl .91 • 211 :z.s11. -is .... u•-~ l~t!ln'·11~ 16 12 i'ti: 1~ 1.,.,,_ Monwnto l 11 ~11 sTh st-1'1 ~7~-1 m E LA partment rose $1.S2tot146,65. Thursday. 1 B~r'= .• i:Suf 1:~1\'1'~1rs:++;;::ife~'!:~ ~ 1:J 1l::: ·; ·~ =;:;uic.n e>t,3'."' \'1 I• •2~·~ '2'"+·~~:c°~lo'1 9 1ll6~ #~~+Alo saJd e mploy ment W:\S Up y llranltAlr 31 10 215 th ~I ~-lo c<lill.><ll$F 31 11 )/ 11 \• 1~ l•Y.-\II Ill t'Wr .W 1:1.5 2• ~ ;~"•+"(~ Mon!Pr 1.80 ~l t ~) ... ~1 "4 jll>-~ h I d uring July f 0 r BtlOOI l.2Dll 16 !6 .wi., .w S9YI+ ,_ l;a11Ulll ,.., 10 10 It" Ii'.• Iii.<-v. IUPW Of • l1 .. l2tl ~"" ~,,,. . .._ Mo<:t10S .SJO ., 11"" 21.... 1\.>t.-\·· II arp Y <irt• My 1.32 ~J ~I 65"' e.4\l 6S11 t h c'11>.o 1.08• ;i. 2U lJffi 1:.,, lffllo -•• UlfOl;!W .3' l3 I ~ lll't ll "'° .,. '°"'onvM .Sib 11 2S 11 1>'1 llV. 11\'I ,, , f luring WO r k e r 6 B z · F ·1e llds Mv pl 2 .. ( •l'llo 41\!o 411,I.-'\lo tlllni..C> 1.80 I 181 ):11. lln 32~ Yo lmPe.r••I (.p s 611 ~.,. ~ YI~ .. Moor• M<C .s 21 11""' ".,. 1414-·~ ffiMU aC ' est s 8rhPtl ,)7ll 21 II llft \3VJ 13;. +'4 ecnlll1M ,;4 11 40 !1J :i, .... J.J +1~, IN,.C:P 1.108 y el ~1~• J\1 , ?::,:! ~ M°'"° IP I." 11 S9 6) 61 .. ~ +._ e specialJy WOrfJ:e r5 jn durable i ·n ,£) l B•OO Hal M l, JO l4\IO '3\lt l)\it-V. l:cCkd Jk .lO ll -411 ;r.o~a ,,..,_ 3'1~+ Vt INAlnS .MO ·• 2 ~ lllh l\-,,. Morril( ·420, .~ 11 11Vi 171/.o 11'19+ Yo g-~-·mdus~es -~-re the I lie;. Sllwl"',P' 2 .. 1 '°"" ti11. a11:i.;. +~·. i:ckd NC -~' 21 v 2~~1 ~3i,. n"--"' ~~ t.7~~ · i ';;': :~: 91?-1• M0<1e e 1 • . 122 16\lo l~ l6\.~.j: " UUW1 WJ Wll'!' llr(l( G .1, S 21 1~ l~l'I ISV.--'h t:Osn8r 1.20 10 2 :it 2V 7Y +\,lo · ... d ' ...0 .. , l•'I ll ' l&~ + ~ MOrwSh .1~ 6 11 1\lt 1\1> 1 ~ ~~ jobless rate ol •.3 pe-ent llrUO'IGI 1.12 9 lt.l 20~ 1·~· 20'Ao +1. t U .. G .tO 111 ., I~ lJ"• I~ -.... lf'd,..,a t ft ' • MlflTr l,520 • 30 11~ 11~ 17\io-ti • ' ' ' ' -,.IYllHllS1" -- FUlllS AVAllAILE FOR RIAL UTATI LOANt h i & 2nd TAUST OC::tOS s1,li00 To $250,000 UI" TO IO'Jll, lOAHS-....S!'! 'f"IJST OE!O COl.LA1...,..L MrwflOll'T I QUI" "*N "-POft c.tiltlr 620 HtWOort Cahtar Ori,. N1"90ft 99<1~1'1, C1tlt. ft1 '1 ~' ~ ... B-n Com , 9 11 ... l\(o 11'"' t:l<ICI AIM.II; 14 ~9 5'!. 5 5'11-'ill Incl Ulll l~ J I :la ~ h •·-1• MortNor .¥1 ' 70 11"4 ,,.,., k'~ ' . -m-..... ~th 3.7 per-·t in 81Grot11> IV. • 10 2~ ,._ "'-"-l: tO~ (p .:l;)l) 31 23 l'l'IO. ;)9'4 J\1~-~ ll'IGPWL l.•2 • 21 ?411< i•I• U\.o-Vt Mo!orCMI .:Sil E. 1)7 56\lo S4\\ ' -\\ ....,. I>""" .. 'll'l ... ~, llrn Sl\rp 20 10 , 11'1<4 ~ •-Ehic:t Mlmo 11 IJ 4 l"-<I inwNall ·"" !u 14 :U\/ot ~2 ""'..,. I" Ml Foel I iO ,., :ir; ll).Oll ,,._ .i, nd the Jo l -·--F B . . ' ·,, ,, . IAeJCCO Oii ZJ to IUW 1~ 1~.... .... s T .. June a WAS wtS :i.it.R.:e k rrefT J • .ft 19'\ 11 11 -1 l::t M Pl ,SO( .. :S 9 IV. 9 .. , Ina li!nd 21& I~ I'll St ~1#• )/,,.._,. VI Ml t t i 1.-9 9 10V. 20\4> lDlJo +\Ii Or · a ruptcy Bru111wt .2( II 22'l 22',_ 22'.I. 22v. +~ l:IQ+n Nall , 4 l~io '""' '" ,. lnqR pt i.» I 111...._ l .... ~VI MSL ll'du1I a 16 2'\lo 231>1. 2•1k +I• late 1969. n arvsnw ·* 9 I 2111\ 17"' 27~ .•. e11x1r 1114 s 13 5'4 51'1 w + \'\ llW-COlll Lt0" 10 I() II :.1 -·~ Munlord .21 1 s, I~ •I.lo :• ·.'· , job Sucv E LO 16 IJl :M ~ J,f ,1 l:IP110NG I I . 6+ llV. 14\to l•~ l<o lllland Sii 2 1 to ?f 2Mi J'9 '+ l>t MW!~ Pf ,"O .-. -""" " There Wtfe shifts 1n B~Co .-C 4 46 13 lfll4 13 + ~ l:'.llraCp 1.?t 1 41 2~ ~' :lM<t \lo inmont 30 j «I l\.\ 7.,. Ill Mun~ 1.IO ~ 4G 11'4 11\11 1~ li rt the th b II I Incl .. 11 ~ 6\>'i .. ~+Vo Cm!rfl 1\• 31 ~ll tlV. '°"' 91 "trnltcoC '70 J3 IQ .. ., 9~ ;::. Mure>(o 1.20 I 13 17 1~ I~ . , statUS du Dg mOn Y Bui Iv 1.<1211 11 20 ""' 29\'J 29.\li +'Ao SmrYAlr .1~ .)!) jl 6.1 6'\.'t 6.S \.'J onihcvPf j14, • ISYI 15>» 1S;,..::-1o4 MurPl'IOI .64 17 IO n •1'11. JlV.+l a ge ca tegory. The unemploy-:=:R.w.,.~ : ll 1~ 1:~ ·~~~ ~~~~:n1:~ : 1) Ji" 1;~ 20~1" intl)cooo 2 1~ v <1:3 'i1'"' t-\"'-21, ~¥~0 1 :m 11 l ~~ lnt ~ · · meat r.,le for vn11fbs 16 to 19 .SAN J OSE (AP) -Bcstline "Legal actions with unusually aunRpf 1\.\ . • 1n• 11" 1""+ S a:M1 LI .o.ti 1• 1 l'.lo w. )\~ .. l~~ ·1C 1T ' Ut:: l "\;; it·~ ... • Mver1 L ,to n iz 1n11 11-111'. +i,. ;)' 1-~ , . llurl In 1.t.0 11 26 ~ '.II\\ 211+-IOmPO• !."8 IQ 13 1.-16 l• -,..\11 lflMIC.O \'.n lj ,16 fol-• ,1~ .4!"" .. -N M-jum...vl fA tl4.4--pe,rdP:llt bl J uJv, P.J1K!urlt.., &~toap..·~~Uog ... .,.1 .. ....-41 cash11etnands .. .-m)ed &llrt Mt>-I~•'~ ,.,. ~IW ''"'' .11~ lflM>ot•·;-~·..-:'! '11$0 '"'' '" -."'( ;'> • rntrt,.•• '° · i;i ttl>l"'-~ ~-'ii Naf!IM:t f ,,. ·12 144 •M 401>t ~'"'" .,. ::!_ :+F"~J""'-1-~1. ~-.J.-·n· ' ... f3li1\'I' · ,·100· llllo 1 ..... r;. 1 ....... ,. ·a urJN pf .n l 7" 7\i. "" Emo Fin»: .i 1 • • • -i,. ll:IMCP 4 • 33 l<Qliz ,,11.,.3111,_1\\ N•co ..._h .•3 JO ,, » 31\lto 32\'t +\ .. · -• " ~ rm c1a ng "' m n n wi'th od·-rse publle1'ty has eurrol"lt. .to ,, 11, :m 226111 ~1 Emolra Gn s 1 10"' 10 10 -l\ lnf'lavr ,32a 61 ., 9) Mt.. t•"1t 1., N11reo Sc .60 12 s 16 111'\ lS~'I! , . I I h f'led l' ~.. . • ~ c-l[n(lf!llld ,4J 17 6f 19•..o 11'14; 1¥1'">-.... I IH 14 I I .. 2t1'1t ,.~ 2tli1"T \~ N111nu1C .n 21 1 ~ ""' ~-•• annua sa es, as t a pe I-C1t11.T 1.120 u 13 ™-ll~ 14'-•. fiinnl• Bu' F t l• • 5!• • 1· "" •~H~v 1 il1:I 1 nv. 12 • .~!I<-\• N~U Alrl .20 1 121 1~ 1.sv. I' -l• lion for reorg ;:inization under caused BcsUine to &eek pro. C11r>o1 Cp .n 1 '° '""· h 2r~.t -"t:nv1ro1ec;h 26 1 )911< 31llo )Y\~-v.1n1e•nai 'iro<t ·· 27 2 '1h , N1r11.v 1.3)11 1 ""'I•\~""' , Cadenca Ind• 1 •1'11"" ;i~+\iEQYlmrk .IO I 10 1$'1> 1~ 1~, ont lnoi Of '' 2 St;. Slo ''•-'•N•!Can Ari' 11 11»1 j"' '"' the federal ·bankruptcy 8Ct'S teCl!On or the COUrts through Caa$1r1 Wei l IOI 3~ 3\"I ..__ It EqvG..,• ? . .IO 1 ~12 l21• )l'I> 311+-Iii 1nM1nl11 10 i6 3n 31 29:0., 31 I (. Nt Cn DI 1V. I 2J . 3 1l '"!' f'lnanc S 23 ~ ... 3~ 4\'o +14 €OLile l,e31) 11 9 2•1'11 U\'o 2$',:t-'• in!I Mlnj'l'lll IJ -" tO'i 10.. 1 . ._ lo Nat(aSl'I . .0 n o '~ 31',1 36h-(o Chapter Xt. Chapter XI of the federa l Jaws C•I •""~ Jk 19 11 11'11. 11.,. 11~-" E)Blnc:: 1..0 1~ 1s ,. , 2111t 18 +"" 1n1Mu111 ., v <• , ... 2& ~•··-1\ NI Ct.em ·'° " • •IVt !''1 ,, ..... +" . . cams t.10b 9 1 21 161111 2'™' -\.1: ~smerk .n 1 i s 1J 221-. l21h-,. •ni• NIC;Oi.!' 1 l9 iu 31~. ,,y, .u> ....... Nt c11vL .90 / ~ 1s s 'l -"' m~l~lV~es~~)~~ed 0~g!11! g 0 v e ~ n .i.~ g c 0 m p a n y ~:~J :1;: 1~ ii ffR ff~ me~ ~r:;~1 1~ i: ~ ~~ !ii! ~~ ·1';~: i~1·1t~ 1l 1:li ~ ~~ ;~A ~~~~in~:! i 1~· ttl u~ lfl~~ i: 0 __ 11. . J .. tt rcor gan1iallon a rran gemen ts. Gina• R 1.10 12 i 13..,. lJ\1 ,,...., EthvfCorp 1 1 n JO\lo 191,. 30~-t "' ._1 111 .i a 11 B · •. , -J No11 Oen .so j 11• w1• 2t \'li 1 ~ 1ne 1n une 1n a n n orney co111cu11. c 20 "1 '90111 ~ 4~ '"e111v11>f 2.IO • u a~ •:m-"' ·r pfl ..,, ~' •lit& 11v; 6'1\~"f ,,.. Nu Gvb 1.os 1 6• lj'• n,.,, gcner.I' suit charging viola CotOHOlcl ,l& 20 67 tl\.1: 2t \i Ewan1P Ag I l6 IS~ IS•· 1$\!i-"" I,..,. ofJ 4 ' ~\"! St\~ )fl"J-1\• NI Hot11t .70 ,•, 1•1 l,\ ,~ •• --. \, 8 • "CllAPTE R XI II h' l r11Ca 1.60 'I '' Sl\lio S01Jo J ~~+ loi ~(•110 ·'° 10 1/ l1V. U 11,..+ Vt T<l..l prl( 4 . 11 st ~ M~-.\o Na1 ll'>d .O}e 1 /Ii• l l• )11 tlon of California laws agai11$t a ows t e ar1111e •; 1 lt \>IJ JM 1 " .. ~:1noc•r. ' • 1~ Tl'I ~ .... ""I !'f'" 2,,,. · _ 1.,~ :WM. ~.,,~H• N.•1 ~ n~ U ~' l' 11 -'• -pyramid r-e C'r ·u·I H n g-of COlnJ!!ll!Y to continue i n :~Lrt 1~--' tt J-. J ~ t: »on )b n_>p,m:. ti\" ,. '>-II.lo lht!wllJ> l ·; ~ Jl .. ~.,.f~ j~t t: a~·. $«vi~ ': 1J1 131,: 1~~ ~~1~ distrlbutors bus incis a~ opera e M · •1:r"J~.d-;J ~ ll~r,:-11~1' ~:~,;i•c.~ 1~ A :, s':~ ~-v. :~:;.~ d.. ,1 1J:-fJ: 1~1v. N~1:= ::i Ji ,J]~-z:;,;;;:~ • usua l while staying all pending ar!WI . .a. • .. fl 10 II +"' l"a rind .uo n 1 • 6 I -~~ lnttrll 8•ni;I IS 1 7 1 Nat!ifMI '"' • 22 is\lo )~ "'"' OK~ .92 1 l It 11'¥1 11~\ll "a ""!F .50 1 21 i"" I -1" jnblPw I a2 1 tf 11\l 17 17 -"' Na1Un£1 .90 S U I ll II -\' WIUJMA B. Ba iJev of San nnd future le~al acUons. Jn a11 • AO 10 n i ,,._. 1.""+ ~ ~a111111 er • •I 'II )!.• l\if-v. 111'"'•'• Sir $J 1 H'o 2 Ha1oma1 .2s •1 •11 *' u \Qo ......_+ ,,, # 1111' r W, U 1.. '1'111 , ... + \lo a!l?.~ .)Ob 1 ' 1 \.t Jl 1l -l\ tow~ 8Mf p $ 11 mt. r.l'I 21V.-14 NOV Pw 1,lS • I ~\i 21'/.I Miii+ '' Josie, baard chairma n who the verr near uture, the com · 1·~~°1~jp 1 1~ ~ '"" 14-."" ~:;~··' M~ ' 1t l~ '¥o :t:+:: !::~t~d l·~ ~ J lt~ it~ lr'-111 ~T. ':: 12 «: ~~ ~ .. ~~~ t founded the nnn seven years pany Will propose to the U.S. eta Cora 7 ~ "' l' '! -"~r, .so ., .. 11•• ,. 14 lowaPL 1'11 e rr 22 21 \'J 21\'r-v. N~nl 1.GI 1$ lQ lCNo 301,(. ~·tt ~\ ago, won the 1972 Hora tio Dlstrtct Court • pla n of ar· •1·~ .21l ,, f!~ ~ ll~ =~=~Ii~: l:)leo: ·~: ~~ ~~ lli:t tt 1-·~~J:~ M 11 \~ 1!~ 11~t ~ ~YW&' i~n 9 ~ r ~1·\~ r.\lt!.1 \0, Al ~ to I f I t :::r;. 09tl17 1.U1'41o ·~+V.FdNIMl .SO 11601• lll<o lltt+ ... IKOI f?1~ I~ NY•~f! .to 1110 1lftt ...... ,°" .. _,,. ger awan.i for business s uc· r'1ngemcnt sat s y s l'"'1m' '1.110 1 10 211-11\>'il mt:;:~ Fac1 P•Mr 1 1 , JMti '''" 1 1-~1 ;-J ~ ~ 1: ,.; ~ 2"~ M" +ll\ N':t,';r 1,1• to 121 lit! 1t'• 14r, Jegili1nt'l$~redilof .'' M'r'*'~j:lii 11f~ ~w-r~-~ "~;\!:r-\:°f',-;-'-'?,~-~~~~~! 1' Ju 1111L1s 1 'l-u" ~ ui.-""~\!,~ ,~,:.eg in .J!!...:~ ., ~ W C f ,,, I I I. · Jud ML•' fl 2 1t 21 .... 10-\i 21"-i•"' 1111!1 Slct" .ll) ' ) fltii l'-14'-1.• -J-NL ln<1U1 I I ~ Sf 16'' IJ.ltl i•t•+ ,, a rren . Moore. re cree In e ega ac ions inc e nMPw 1'u l ,. I' 'l>;'l 1,.,, FoMDS1 1.oe 1• 11i • \I. a1 i\ -\I, J•~• ~ ,. • 1 1i:. •~· •r• 11LT C•o .>t n ur "" 14...., 1s.i '" bllnkrup:.%c , said 11iur .. .tay he Californfa or cg 0 n and 1n1S1'I 1.'oe 1 " '1~ , i-i 1t\\-i•, Ferro co '° 11 lt ,.~ ,., 1.. .1-111:nl!~n 1 it", • ,', II,, ll~~ 1,,';!-11 "'°'"°1'w• i 1 ~uss ~ -.," 60 .,,\::: '• . ::II.I ' · Ctnll SOY• I 10 " JO ... ~ ~l'a·\ l4 l'!Drtbrd .)6 6 Q I~\\ •'-,,,+ ~ tl · "' ..,, "'O•lll'ICt:I 10 S • 1 11\oo U"o hns sch ulcd a hearing I.or A'lissouri state suits and a ffin' r ,1 ,'6 H ff 1•v. 1• 2•~~ •11 lt'laMo Lljb 1 lO ,,,., 111'> ,.,,._ 't "c11P1101 ·"' 'J 11 in~ »loll w. ·111 Nor111 1 • / 1 l '-'l' 1J•1 . tf"rO tO & 11"' 1S~-'t»ot It FlatdMI 1.1/J I 6 16't 1~ "~·'"' ~ nl'pt 1.n 1130 t3 " t) Nn Co.I ~ !) j 70lQ n creditors Au~28 in San J ose's f"edcral Trade Commission '""'d ·so 1 1 1 "' 1sVt Jr ... 1\ Ft11ro1c" 60 10 ' 121~ 121• 1t1-t ,Jer cP,LP1 • 0i0 »~ soYi ~i..,... •111-11, i..11 '11b 1• , u" 1''' ,.,_..., • . ' t•!·IODI ·'° • 31 10''< v. F"(I FM ~-) )l 12\lo lUt 12ft t wel 161 • 31 )nil 2S1ilo lJI>--·~ N Im PnH 1 ' 1t "" 23\\ 2:)\o Montgomery a ter. s ull -11gt:11nst p yr am 1 d ts•"a .io,i 1 12 ,, til\ ' 1 •. ,11,11on .•6 • ,, to•~ 20" '°""-\11 J1mwa11 ... • 1 ,,,. 11 1 -"NCl'.t.i. tln , 11 i\i , , " f dLs'~b c~ dbl'~ 11'1( \lo Ill! P• ·~ 1t ,.,,~~(ff }! • Jl} lt'• ,_,., lP'o-1.r. JlnlW"I t,M) I 22VI n J'jt ,_ '• NoC~Alrl ,.,, '° 1 .... ,•• A oompany statement said, recru1t1ng o u 1 utors. c~::.01M .-.. • tis 17'1 11 11'\+ •• fi1c,,1, 1.11 ,, ,., , .... ~·· t.>1?---1i,,. J141'1lk ••11 11 it\\ ''" ,.,.,__ 1, N0t,1v1 1 w • 141 1 tt\t " ., . , ' \ • I I ~ ,, I · • • l · " • . Fr14q, August 3, l91:3 • DAILY PILOT '1 PUBLIC NOTICE ---------------1---..;;,;;;,;,;;,,;;,;; ••••••••••• ;;;.Nl"SS fl1CTrnou s •USINISS PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE f'UBLIC NOTICE lt'all Street 1SW NAME STATIMll,.T lllCTITfOUS IUIUIUS II/AMII STAfl~IJfT fllO'nC. Of' TitUSl"l"l"S s•LI" TM loll~ Pff'Mlft It clOiflSI tl<itlim,• f'IAMll ITATIMl!Wf Tiit 1y11.,..I.. ~I i.f'I' 'clol!!e H .. ~ U Tile fdlowffl9 ~ ~ 0011111 b<,ulntM ~ MOTICI •• t1•Rll CIVEN '''"'on . Gt.E.HDAN Ille,.. LT v • IN· ... IMI,) ., RANCHO VtsTA PROP'EltTUiS LTO, ..,.......,.,, """"' '" "" 11 ,,. i.ovr 111 VESTMENTS 1m iot11t• .......... .,. SANTA MONICA WEST. Jiit ~I 1111 Wnl(lltl ori ..... "'"' 101, "'"""'°" 11•• A.M. 11 the IN1n ..,,,itn« Gf fl'l4' $vii• c Cott• Mesa. c.. mv .. Ori.,., Sult• :ic:i. lnl.-. C..111 • .w.a ~. c 1111 ,._ OVER THE ' COUNTER Some Y eai·s Good NASo L1.i1nu• 1or Thursday, Aue"'' 2, 1913 1 AdmlnltVttr.i ll.llldlfli lot•'" 111 llM L• 0 1111.i JOMPh Jt;l.Jri 1i .. , Wlnl0t1 $!., ftwt Troy l1111111tmt11I l"\IM. I Andy A. ¢arr,, 150f (ton Pltc., • tffbt'fl CIVk CtnW, ClfV 111 Lt M10r1 G•rdtn Grov11. C•, '26'0 C•Uforn!t Limited Pttlllfl'•llfp, cori-NtWOOl'I BllCI\, Ctlllot!'l!I '2..o OlC STOCttS ll'tOI !lidf ti/I 10 P111n ('p 4\ti I'll T1llY Crp '"-••VJ • C-'Y .i Or•rw;• $ttl1 of Ctll~l11. Tlih tlol.ltlntll 11 (OftdUCled oy •n In 111111\Q or Chtfltt A Smllt1 11111 Roy J JOhn E. l<llylor, 737 I(, HIOhllllld AVI., : =T10C,.~A~T C:.,,:~,~!Nc!~L rn1t1! 01"101111'0•1\f•I J i.:1,1n ~:.~! t~1?;n,;s~11~~".,.c"a11~1~:;:! ~~\~''b:'1,;,~ 1r~uc1td b"!' • 0-~1 llPIOef' OMO ol Tru.t In tht 0tlQl11tt Thi• 1ttllmtfll 111111 flltd whl! '"' C-· J.rr11 C. 81110 1t17 Jtlchty StrMt, ptrt11tr5Np t mounl ol '26,500 00 alltc:Uled by 111 Cl k ol Or llQe COUii! A I I S1n11 An1, C1Ulorl'll1 And A C r ROBERT H TAYLOfl iloNO C)Olll$ M. 19'1 el° • y °" llQll$ WHU1m A. Vin Cl« Pl••· lf\1 lltltt>ey Jon: E K:v:. ~'1: ""~·1~! =~:r ~ 16.,,, 1if. 8:'~ C~ at"' a= Timp1• 1• 10t tron:t1 AtfOC:ltl ot ""•rt•ll .._ M , .. Outen Cl I~ 1111< j•r,•or W ~ Jl\.o Skurl!lts 0.. ''" \ilillflll ti• 2~~ R•lnl' Cp l 'A t'A •,cm '" 71,• ••• bl(l1 tnd ollffl ""'"""' 11., ,.,, ~rtrn Tlt11ny 111 71 Quoted tiv ovtr·Thl-,..,.,. LrJ a I'" 204 2DI Th'M OC I~ 11w F 01· Stock P1~ofits TAYLOR, HUSBAND ANO WIFE arlCI ~JflOO Slrttl, S<1nl1 Ant C•lllornlt tnlt 1111emnn1 Wlll !l!ld w!lll lt>f toun , t9WtOlll °" OC.TOIER 21, 1971 In &ook PllOllll'l9d Orll~ Co.it ~ Dtllr ~Ho! Tlll1 b\/Jh>ttU !.t tond<Kl.0 br .tn 1111!n· tr Cltrk ol Or1not COUllTy on July :U ,... (9 ... I~ ot Ottl(l•I Rtcoros ol ..,111111u 3 10 17 1• lt73 »M-'3 '°""°'e'" 11ioe:J1Hon otllet 1!1111 1 !t13 Or1ng1 COUtlly. C1Hfonll1 01 wtllth DffO ' ' '"' 1111r1ner1n!p ~1 ef Trutl AMERICA N SAVINGS ANO THE TRO'I" INVESTMENT FUND PuUU~ Ort~• Co.~t 011Uy Pilot, Ju LOAN AUOCIATION • (OO"POl'1!1on, PUBLIC NOTJCE 8v Rev J w1uo iv lT tnd .a.u11u11 l 1l1 11 1973 nor.n (SVCCE,SOR a ENE FI C I A A Y TO Gel\tt,!11 P1rl11tr ' ' ' CALll"OR NIA M~TGAGE 5ERV1CEJ 11 -'Tnl1 "-'tm1n1 w11 111{!(1 Wllll 1111 COllll flll lliottllfldtrv by r....-of Otl~ull In 11'14 FICTITIOUS I USINEll Iv (lerk ol Or,..119e Col.inly on July 17 NY""'1f O' Ptfformtnc. of llbl!l)tllon1 NAMIE ITATl!MEN1' i•n 1--------·~==----1 Sl('-ired th«1by, end no!I~ al o.t11ull 1no Tiit fQllowlr19 person ls llOIM bu\lfltl' 1"uat flC:TITIOUI I USI HEU 81fllfldary'1 ele<'flon lo c•ust lo ~ tok:I a1 Publl•hld O••n!.11 Coo11 Dilly PJlot Ju NAME STATEMEHT 1"9 "roptfly llf:relnbtdow (111ctlbtcl l\ay 111 DESIGNS OF THE TIMES, 602 ly 20, 27, al'ld AllQUU ), to, 1t7l 1198-JJ TFl.ll tollowl119 pt!raon 11 dolnlJ OU•ln10 Ing blln rtcorlle.cl II• proYIOed fOf' by t1w E1tr1111, Stn Cl•mantt C.tJllO!'nl~ ,,, 1no mort ""'" it.•M month1 111vlng nm PUBLIC NOTICE c 9 SERVICE co, 10.St S1n11 Cr;ir, toll!Mold 1111(1 Wiid rtcorll1tlon, will Mii al (1) DESIGNS LANDSCAPING 601 Costa MHI Ctl '2616 Pllblk 1uctlon to 1111 Fl!Ohtll bld<ltr for E~lrtolle Sen Cl1mton1e C1llfarnl• FICTITIOUS BU51 N,EIS Ch1r!ts Grabow 10.St S~nft Cnu, c••h. NV•bl• In lawful mOfltY of tM 9'1611 NAME St4TEMEHT Co1te Me$1, Ce1t 92&2.6 Unit.a Sltttt ol Ai"'erl(• 11 tnt !!me ol Cl1~nce Mu,,td, 601 E!lrell• S•n Tfle l{)llowing l)lr$0n1 ere doing "lhl• butlnesi Is (OndU<:ltd Dy 1n ln· .. 1e, Wlllloul warrtnty IJtllttls or lml)lltd Clemenll' Celllorn11 tU72 t>ullnest "" dlvlduel 1111 to t11i., ~11on °" tneumiwanc1 Tnl1 001tne1> Is conoucieo bV 11n rn THE STRI PPERS 102 E steven1 Cll••le• G•1bow llM lnler11t COll\llYfll IO •llcl ncrlV lltld by lllvldu•I Sul!• E Stnta A,.. C1Hf '1101 Thll Ualemenl Wl1 lll<:d Wllh !ht Coun It ••well Tr111tff In 1nd to the followlng c1~rent~ Mu•r~u Ill Mll1> E Oevld•~n 2413 Falrw6 y 1y Clerk ol Oranoe Coun•y on July 15, Cl'Krlbtcl P.-Optrty In Ille COllflly of 1'111• ~1&1emen1 wa1 filed wl!h 'he Countv or Cos1a Mesa C11>1 9'1611 1973 0..aoOt State OI C1lllMnla Cl k I 0 c 1 A 1 1913 111 "Chl' J Davlll!.On 2•13 F11lrwa y F27030 LOT S3 OF Tit.a.CT 26'9, ~S SHOWN er 0 reno• oun Yon uousr or , Ca•t<1 Me•a CelU '1611 Published Orang~ Coasl 01lty Pnoi July OH A MA!" RECOltOEO IN 11001( I• F l1lfl A 3 10 17 1973 229373 PA.Ge SO OF MISCELLAN<:OUS MAPS, Pucll1"4'd Orenoe Coe~! 01ny Piiot Oi Haro1<1 L Ha rl Jr 201) So. 21 and uguST •· v, , RECOltOS OF ORANGE COUNTY August 3. 10. 17, 24, lt7l 7393 13 G~;r•t~,e~:~~cAn; C~l~ir9110~ So P U BLIC NOTICE CALIFORNI A, SAID PROPERTY IS JC NOTf Gtrnsey S•nt• An1 C;11i f 912C1 ALSO SITUATED IN THE CITV OF PUBL CE This busJntu It cond>Ktl<l bye generall ---------------1 COSTA MESA ANO COMMONLV1.. por1~rihlll I LP·74 KNOWH AS kl TOWNE STREET, --I 61,74 Milo IL Davidson •tCTITIOUS a USINF.SS COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 for NOTICE TO CltEOITORS Tiils statement was tiled will! the Coun-NAME STATIEMEHT file pUrf>0$1 ol e>tvlnQ Ille obllQalion• SU PE•IOlt COU ltT OF TtlE 1Y Cler;; OI 0111n11e County on Julr 17 The IOllOW!flg pert.0ns art (lolng 1«ured by s•ld 08'0 OI Tru~t lnch.icllnQ STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOii 1913 DUsln1ss ••· • ffts, tllll"Qtt, an(I t•pen1es ol the THE COUNTY OF O•ANGE FUl)S THE K'THANGA, 1017 No.-!FI Coasf Trustee and ol Ille .. 1e Nt A·77044 P11Ul•shect Orange Coas1 Dally Pllol Ju Hlghw1y, Levun• Beach Ca1lfornl1 Oelld th!' 10111 dey ol July, 1~73 Es!aTe ol WILFORO J HOGGATT, ly ~. 21, and Augusl 3 10, 1913 ?:t.!8-73 926~1 --F-illiT......C.HAJUER ---~seO;----------PAOTE.US.-IN.C.-A Otlaw•r• FINANCIA L CORPORATION NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N to me P UBLIC NOTICE Corw•llon 1027 Norlh Coa1! Highway •• T[~IH cre(ll!or• ol the ~t>Ovt n1mlld dec1dton! La11una 81<1ch Callt '7.!651 By A M KnQfll<• tllat all l)ef'$0rls h.IYlno clalrnt again~• the This bui.lness Js conOu.cted by • Its Aflorney·ln Fact 11111 clecl'Oent are rl'l)Ui<ed lo !lie 11..,m FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Corpora!lon PWll1ht0 Or•nos-Coa•t Daily Pilot July with lhl ne<enarv VOUCll4''1 In th<I olllce HA.ME STATEMENT Volney J Slelflre Prealdenl lO, '11 &lld AUOUSI 3, 197l »Ja·1J of the cier~ of Ille above e<'11ltled caurl er The loflowlng person Is doing b11slne1s This s1atement was tiled with !he Cc11n· lo pre-sent them with tl\e necener'I' 11 IV Cler~ ot Orange Counly on July 75, 197] vouchers to 1he unde"lgned et the oincto A J W ENTERPRISES e So I• F 27'51 of 11!1 ~llorneys BARNES SCH4G Pr0Prl1tor.h1p, Poot Ofllce BO)( Orawtr M(CORMAC, DAVIS & LOHlt•SCHMIOT --------------·I JOHNSON a. l(ENNEOV 4525 M•cArthur 0 L•kewOOd, CA 9071 •, '303 Viste 4'CN Soul!I Olive Sl!'ffl, S 1420 SUPEltlOR COURT OP THE Blvd, p r:J 801t 1786 Newport Beich Ser1n1, Cypress, CA 90630 LO. Anotlts.. CaUfomll t0014 STATE OF CALIFOltHIA FOR CaUlorn" 9?&63 wMch " the pla(e bf Alvin J Weinberg, 9303 Viste Serene, Tt ltpl'IOnt; '21·2Ut THI( COUNTY OF OltAHGE buslne1s ot ttle \lncltorslg11e<;1 In ell metters Cyp111s, CA ?06.30 Publlshl'd Ot•nge Coosl Oa!l'J' Piiot, CASE NO 1M\Ol pl'r!tlnlng to Ille 11tale o1 tald decedtont Thi• buslnest I~ (on(lucled br en ln-July 27 •n(I August :J, 10, 17, 1913 1326-73 SUMMONS IN EMINENT DOMAIN within lour months <11!l'r !he fir.I publlca. Olvlduat ' J W I CITV OF HUNTINGTON BEACH, • !Ion ol ln!s nollte Alv n e nberg PUBLIC NOTICE muntdpal cO(l)Ot'ltlon Plaln!lll 111, oa red July Jl, 1973 This 1t;uement was filed wlltt lhe Coun l·-c:::-:cc:::::::::--::::-c-:-:c:::::::::-==-I DAISY THORPe HOOK ''"° known 11 JAMES A BURGAN, ly Cl1•k Of Oran111 CounlY on Auouu l.1 STATEMENT OF AllANl>OHMEHT OAISV E HU RLEY THORPE, VICTOR AClmlnl'1rator With will ennt•e(I o1 19TJ. OF USE OF R HANSEN LILLIAN HANSEN HODGE lh1 e1ltlt ot tht tboYl' named F2121' fflCTltlOUS IUSIHESS NAME L DOLLI!', J EAN 8 DOLLE HOOGE L lltcedenl OOltDON, FIELDS & BOLAND Thi 1ollowlng PtrSCn has abandoned lhl' DOLLE, JR , CAROL L DOLLE BURK E IAltHES, SCHAG, AllomtYs It Ltw "-''HES. F"Y MATHES COUNTY OF JOHH•OH & KE.HEDY 5111 Llk.WOOd BOllllYlnf use ol the flcllllo111 buslne11 flame THE ,... L k ood CA t0n2 PATCHWORK PILLOW 11 ,25 E lO!h st' ORANGli, 1 palltl(1I 'ub!llvlslon DOES l Iv· £rnHI J scn.1<1 Jr T!. ewhofl ' 12131 $! lm Newport Beach Call! lflrOUQ h 20 lncl<nlve, 1nd ALL PERSONS asu MatA.rth1,1r 91v(I IP ' 1 0 ,,,, .,,0, '"' llttlllous bu11nen n1me relerred to UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY llTLE OR • Pu1>1lslled OreflQle Coa!1 ,. INT!ilR(.ST IN OR TO THE PROPERTY ::o.;.,:.~ ~'::ch 6111 •UAl Aug11st 3 10 17, 7a, 1913 2400-T.I ~rn· was llted In Orenoe County on NoY, SOUGHT TO 8E CONOEMNEO HEREI N, Tit tn4) t"""9o Su'lan L Wiison :t26 EmerelCI 81y. o.~~'L~ Of' THE STATE Of' All~• lot Admlnlstr11or CTA PUBLIC NOTICE Laguna 8e•ch Calif CALll"Ofl:NIA lo TIM &boVI Nrned defe<i· PUl>hthed O..ang1 Co~sl O•lly Piiot SLP 1' This CYslness was conducfe<I by ;111 ln- Oanl5' AUO<nl J IO, 17• 1'' 1973 1'.!90 ]J FICTITIOUS BUSI NE SS OivldualSus1n L Wilson A dYll (Ol'nlllalnt h•t been lfled br the HA.ME STATEMENT f 11474 11l1lnllff11Q1ln1t rou II YOU wl'h 10 cltltnd PUBLIC NOTICE Tne tollowinv per!l()lll ire Ooono PubJl1fl«I Or•nge Coast Oalty Pilot Ju. 11111 l1wsuU, you muit Ille fn 11111 court e busloesi as ly 11, and Auoust l 10, 17, 1913 2298·n wrfl!en pteadlng In rnpon&e lo tl!I com• NATIONAL JAK ASSOCIATES 3001 plain! within :JO Oeys 1rter lllls S11mmons IWJ Redhill Avtnuto, Suite 216, Esplanade Ill 11 SlrYed on you Olhlrw!te, vour defaull NOTICll 0~ TltUSTEE'S SALE Costa Me'la, Calltarnle 92626 Wiii be e<'1lered on applk1llon D'I' The ND 3tS7 plalnllff tnd tile (Ol.lrt m1y t nter e IUOg NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN "lhet on l JACK CONSTRUCTION CO• lOOl FICTITIOUS 8USINESS menl '!l'lnll YOll 10' Ille monl!'f or otl>er Wednt1day, A1111u1f \$, 1973 el lhl /\our of Redhltl Ave, Suite 116, E$plan41de Ill NAMli STATEMENT rell1I •""111ted In 1"9 cornplefnl 11 00 A M at lilt main 111lr1nte of lhe Cosle Mew, Ca 92.624 The following person Is (!(ling boJ~lnes.s TIM oblecl ot wlO a(tlon Is to condemn AOmlnlstrellon Bulldl119 loc:eled In t111 Le l. Nellon•• Ute lnsurence Company, •s real prOPerty or lnter11h In r11I property H1br• CIYI( C1nter, Clly ol LI H1br1 5610 WU$hlre 81¥0, Suitt 1885 Lo• LAGUNA LA NOSCAPE CO , 30801 for publlc us.i. n1mely, for 1 p11btlc County of Oro~ Stale ol Ce!lfornl1, Angeles, C•Ulornte 90036 Driftwood Or s l 11111ne Cal 926n h1ghw1y F IRST CHARTER FINANCIAL COR Tiiis bu1lnes1 Is Cond>Kled by A Genertl John C Fellows 30601 Drlllwoocl, S Tiit' ...,., prOptrty o.-lnter~sl In m l PORATION, • corpor1tlon, '' Trustee P1rtnersF\lp Lavuna Cati! '2611 prOPeflV atttele<I bV Hid tel/on end under Off'd ol Tru1t In the Mlglnel JAK CONSTRUCTION CO, Th11 business I& conclutl~ by en In· sougl'lf lo bl ac<111!re<I 1$ llfulted In Ille tmounl t>I S23 2SO 00 •~ecutlld br • Cell!Qr~la corporation Cllvfduel City of Hvntlr19ton Beoch, Cou11ty ol WILLIAM H WILLM'NG ANO MARV 8'1' JOhn Konwlser Pr1slOefll J C Fellows Or1nge Slate ol Celllornle, end 15 mo1e ANN WILLMtNG HUSSANO ANO WIFE Generel Partner Tnls sla!emen! wa~ tiled with lh1 Coun PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE (Tlii.s ts the third of f ive arttcles bu the Mo1dtor's business and f111ancial edi.. tor on tht-q"t'stion of whether a persm1 can stilt m-0ke maney on the stock niarket. This focuses 01i what to look for fn stock prices i11 the 11e~t 12 montl1s J By RICHARD NENNE•tAN ChrlUl•n kltn(I MonllOf SltVICI B OSTON , MASS Whatever the amount one can expect to make on th e m arket over a period of time, some years have that extra pw.aiz m them This 1s because the market tends to overr eact on both th e upside and t he downside And, .Jiibenjijs.as low...as..ltls today, there ts plenty or room for im- provem ent IF O NE U SES an u nweighted market index (not countmg the number of shares outstanding per company) he gets a better idea of the la rge losses the average m vestor has suffered. Indicator Digest uses such an average, composed of 1,500 New York Stock E xchange stocks, and as of July 6 1t declined to $37 64, JUSt two cents short or its 1970 low of $37 62 This compares w ith a t opping at $80 m 1968 A ccorchng to H. A lden J ohnsop Jr , senio r v1ce-pres1. dent and chrunnan o f Masschusetts I n ve s t o r s Growth Stock F und's portfoho conuruttee, four things have ••• When it is as low as it It today, there is plenty of roo111 for i111prove• parllc11lerly described In Ewllll>lt A •I· AS JOINT TENANTS alld re<orOed on This •ta!em1nl wes IHl'd wll!I !Ill' Coun ty Cieri< ol Oran'if County 011 July 11, 1973 teched llerelo and by teferenc' mlOt a FebnJtl"( 10, 1912 In Book '1'197 Peoe 3$ ~I ly Clerk of Orangl' County on A1tgusl 1, f U.711 lllell'. pert hereof Otflclel Record1 of Oranoe County, 1973 Publllhl'O Oronge Co.t•I Oa+ty PH01 •· You 1r1 hereby notllled 10 •POe•• 11\d Celltor~la, ol whltll Offd of Trusl F 1n1i I ;111y 13, 20, 27, end August 3, 197J 1161 73 llhow CIUR 11 any you FIOYe, wllv thl stl(I AMER ICAN SAVI NGS ANO L 0 AN P11bllslled Orange Coast O;uly P1IOI ~ property 1~ld nol be con<!tmned ts ASSOCIATION, e corporation ISUCCES· AU11u11 a. 10, 11, 2t, 1973 2399 73 PUBLIC NOTICE praye<I fof In 11\t' co~•lnl on 1111 In Ille SOR BENEFICIARY TO COUNTRYWIOE1----;;;;;;;;-u;--;:;;;;;;;;;;----1 ---,,,-~,,,-,-~,-,.,-_,.: __ _ ,..bOW enUtltd ll•OCto<llng FUNDING CORPORATION), Is th1 be-PUBLIC NOTIC E FICTITIOUS &USIN ESS IF YOU WISH TO SEEK THE ADVICE fld1ry br f'll!lilOn ol Clelau111n 1he ~ym,.ntl------~~------· i HA.ME STATEMENT OF AN ATTORNEY IN THIS MATTER, or perforlf'll\(e of ObHgallont. ~Ured YOU SHOULO 00 SO PROMPTLY SO !he~Dy, t nd notice ol Oefault end SLf .. 15 The following person 11 dolno builness THAT YOUlt Pl.EAOING, IF ANY, MAY Bfileflc!ar't''s f'le<1lon to caust to bl sold FICTITIOUS BUSINESS es BE FILED ON TIME Ille property he relnbf!low dl'S(tll)ed, hav ~~-NAM6 STATEMENT GLENNA S INK CO •15 Aliso Av.e, OATEO June 16, 1971 Inv bftn rtc«ded 15 provided for by law • '"' foUowrng wson Is (IO(no Cu,1ne$s P 0 So• 1065 Newport Beach Call! W E ST JOHN, Clark '"" mort t,..n lhrM month• hevlng as 92660 BY Helen c Gunnette Deputy eta11Sl'd since t.t10 recordetlon will sell •I NEPTUNE SOCIETY, 1011 North Glenna T'aren McGNtty, •U Alloo DOH '· IOJU•A. City AllOMMy publlc e~ 10 tho hlOMt>SI bldOar fOf Coast Hlghwey, Laouna Beech, CA 9U.!i1 Avl' Newport Be«h Cal/I 92660 WILLIS MEVIS, D1puty City A~mtY cash, pa\'~e In lawful rnoney al tr,e Proh!US Inc • Oelaware corporellon Th/1 b!JsJn1tts IJ Conclu<11!(1 ty en Jn Clly of Mllllll11l1111 1Uct1 United Sle"" Of Amerlce •t 11\e tlmt 01 1017 North Co.tfl Hlariway, Leguna Olvlduel POii Offlc1 IOJ! '" 1ale wUflout wtrranly 1•press Ill' Implied a,ach CA 92651 Glenna T M<Gei>lly been troublmg the market m ost recently · divide nd con- trols, a negative psycho logy affect ing a lmost everyone at the momen t, 1nflat1o n and the q uestion of whether the c ur· rent boom would end in a bust. Johnson finds r easons to be optnrust 1c on au four fronts Mllrlllnf!Oll 9ffdl. CallPoritl• "'"* as to t\ltet 1JOueSslon or 1ncumbl'enc1. Th•$ bl.lsmeu •I (ond>Kted by • Cot· This sralement was 1111!\1 wlm the Coun· Teltpl!One ITI4J "'"52'1 The lnftf"nt conv..,ed 10 and now 11a10 bV POf.thon rv clerk ol Oranv• Coun•y on Avgu\t I -Divid .. d """lrols w're AllomtY• for Pltlntlfl' 1t •s sueti Tru$ff!t, In •nO to th<I followfng Volney J Sltf!lre Pres!denr 1913 "'" """ l'lOOllt A oescrtbed properly 1n 111e CouMv ot Thll sta••ment was hied wllh tht Coon· Fnitt paruallv Lifted June !T, and Th.It portion of sec111111 24,,.1owrlslllp 6 Oranoe, Stere of Cellfor111~· lY Cltork ol Orange Coun1y 011 July 25, Published Oranve Co.a;• De.Iv P•lal Sooth Rerwe 11 we,1 1n 111t Rancrio L•s LOT 118 OF TRACT 1712, lN 'THE 1913 Av11v11 ). 10, >11. ?4, 1913 238~73 companies a r e allowed to pay Bol111 In lhe city of Huntlno•on 8t~th. CITY OF COSTA MESA, AS PER l'IAP FJi'(IU --------------out a cash d1v1dend ~ual to Coonty of Or1ng1, s1111 of ca1llO!'nla, •• RECORDED IN BOOK 50, PAGES :i2 McCwm&c, Davos. & P U BLIC NOTICE ~"' tnown on e rl'll P rtcorcled In Boo~ 51, TO J6 MISCELLANEOUS MAPS, IN Lohr·Schmldl their average payout r atio pao. I' of Mls.ttUaneous Meps. In !ht of THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RE '°' Saulll OHve Sln tl I 'Ifft ( "' f d tl~e al the Counly Rtcor(le-r ol Miki Coun-COROER OF SAID COUNTV, ANO LOI Angeles, C1Hlornl1 90014 FICTITIOUS BUSINESS t.n;: ratio 0 JVldends to ly, clescrlbed •• fcrllowt COMMONLY l(NOWN AS %9 LINDEN 12131 •211su NAME STATEMENT after-tax earnin gs) in the five A tlrlp of lencl 11»00 tee! fn width Jylno PLACE, COSTA M~SA, CALIFORNIA Published Orange Coast Dally Piiot Ju Tiil' lollawlng peri.on ll.Polng tuslnes.s 968-F FINANCE ((IVf'lttr dffltrt to ... "a 1,.p 1J I -Ra'l'mcl lO!ii !'"" Tlltn 14'1 Ha ~HUI Olhti' 11 of ..n A.Ulm :U 34 AJ!M f'K 11~ '" Towll Ml 10 ,1 ... OM (E15Nlm l,tll Au•oP ~I ~· RICOQ _ l:CI ""' ~ tr•n C.I l'l d me I Tl'l4 ClllOllo (111 t.rl,lde 21-~\':I A.11 Elec: 20'A! 30\t Tr11 G11P 2!i;. :P.:. on1 dCI nor lnduclt lOOkl Mid ~Iii ti... Rall Unlv UV!! 1a Tm Oc:ffl 121• ~2in =~ m;rku~~f.~ :$~:~ 'r: 1~.-1:"" ~~n P•l• J .~ irc::t I~~~ tlonl tnd Clo not 1.orey Adv th lQV. Rivi! Mt 2114 V'! Unlon $pl 1•~ fiAO ~Mnl ~utl rt < 11 111 lY,.. ROid Ell 3.Jlo'I ~'-UllArt Th '""' 1\lo trtns.ttcllDnt • " 1:.'"w 11"" 1 .... ROOrt OlJ 1.S\.\-1614 us 9k NI ~,.. ~ IHOU.STltlALt ~:'1:" Fn"' .... 1~1<o lloU11'11 8 \Wo 11\li US trk. L l )\.o ~- ANO UTILITllS n•mll or )l)'I );lr1 Rouu Co 15~ 14\lo Univ Fcts 1.W.f~Jt Tllund&y H•rl~n P ''" .,, Row1 nl IOV. l1 Vnv Mllbl Ola -All{lu.i 2, tm n•rDtr ," Iii ••• Rudu' Pf\ II lP\ll VttM HO l \'li ft\11 Htw1n 1 11/< ,.,.. ltu11 Stov 19 2D Vence Sn 5V. 6 Sid A""' Mlt(:"l\O I,; 71)\ .,.. .... Ad$ n.. 7'11i lltn OVk 12\to 13!0o Acu111nt 21 !Ao ?2'H H1nl11 "'' •» , Soltm Cp 61/t 11.1.i Ve11 Snck • ,•• Alu Al-1DV. 21 l'ltUIOll ,,.,_ :a.:.... 61,.,•nll 14\11 lj'M Vidor! St 11\11 ,,_. Allco LrlCI 14\ro U\11 rttll(ll C 1$\/t lt\lo :!>elllr1r 31Vt :n\lt Vldto $y1 s:W.,,\11 Allra B•" ~ l~ rtomwo 1u 11 !cllell 1n sv. lOv.i Vl1u11 Sc 6\4 \' AUltcl 7el 191'1 ""' Hoovt r u .. :b\'I Scoll Inn 7\\ l'M Vol Sllol 14 a\AI AU11n 8e 4~• 5\\ .. uni MIQ 11111':> 11v. Scoti. LG •'h t Wtlll NG jN ~31/o Am Aprs! II IP~ Hyalt '-ll""' •ioo Seri~ H Ji!,(,, 20 W•1l1 Mt .\.(o 1'1\4 A ArtCrll ' 41"< Hrs11r C 2 Vo 21"' S(rpto I 1Yi 1 W••m11 I 7\lt il\!.i AMEi Lb ~-'"' lnde Wat 1•'11 lflti s.. Wrtd i,iv;: 2$ W•bb RI a IS\• Am Ekpr 611\ IN inuo Nucl 2•"" 2) Sv MtrCh l~ 1714 W..otro ~ 71'1 Am Flnct 12711o n"' ln1ore1t 10 10(; Svma11r 1 2"'° Welgt Wt 'l 06 Am Fur "" •~ 1nr11 L•P )l\1 ~ !•ven Uo 2'R Welfflll N\ l '-~SI:• Am Orff Olti Ullo ln11rc En 6tt n., httlt CP M 2l'I Wslat pt 61h I •~1 ~1'~1f,~ !!.,_ !!•\.\> 1n1m1 <01 l4:i. ,,,. Sllor1 IW 71'\ I WilPub n 17V. If.:' \ -u I"' Alum s\4i 6 S mp,son 11 12 Wtltr Fd 191• ~mFl.ll W•ld ~\ .. 1J114 n BkW A ~ J Snep Tols S.C .SS Wi iiem! I 111/o l~'I A~kt~··,_ • ••• '•" nlnt C11 13\.li 13\4 31n(I Pip l.,jllt 15\.ii aUsn H J 17 I' At>tJtCO •• • •fiend R av. 4"' Sr>telre 16"1< lFll't Int Pkt Ullt ~ APS lnc11 ;~t; \~~ Jl'""b IQ\~ 11 1'1 Sid ltttls 14\.i 15\AI rsc PLt 191/.i 9\o Aron MVI 2i'I 31/o Je1 AorFr Jl'l ~·• Stk N Ale ~ 31 WOOCI L11'1 17~) n'I Arrow Hr 1,V. nv. J.Oll1Vn M 1611 17\oo StkN Brw 14 1\lo World SY 11~ ~?VI Arvflle tv; 10 l(alaer st 1~?• l~ Stt.tk N S 9Vt Wrloht W •Iii 1 5 AH.o Ccla tJl'J 2'1'1 l(llyar C 3¥, '"-Strgt Tee 15 161/11 Xom.. C.o 9'11 10'4 Ano COie tJ'.lo 24\\ 11.Htn Tk _s... 6 S\lpt>r El 10 IO'h Vello Fri 4S ~ All Gs LI l•V. llV. t(ellwOd 16'.4 l~ Syner C11 1~ 11\lo Zlttlr Co 6\4 ! 1 Aulo Trn m 10\'I Kfil COl'WI l~ ll:W. Slltl>O fd ~ "" Zlon1 Ulfl ail f l'> Monetary policy will not con-C:l~~ eJ~ 1J~ 1~ ~~ .. °"i'.o '131~\!;1 ------------t tnbute further to-inflatto ==~F~ ~~ n~ :.~., ',~i1 .:~ 1~ 10 ltfo•t Active clauns Johnson. a1uv Mn ,. s.s 1<Ms 1no 1\.':I •Yi•l------------'-Bnk 81<1a ISli 1~ tCn&PI VI lJ 17 t Bink Rt! 16'411 27\li Kooer Pr 2'\AI UV:! NEW YOllK (UPO The 10 rMtl Th. ] ti' k Barnes M 231r. 1'V. Krllt!llre , 9 •-, acllvt stoc:k1 lrlldecl Ofllhe 01'C mettel -IS eaves ques on-mar e1111e11 F 1• u Ku.slrn "" 11 Thu1sd1v e1 supplied bv NASO • No 4 Whether this boom Will 'e'n'i",!! F fft. t~ Lacki Pt t ~ 1 Stott Volllll'MI •14 AtkM ~-·-4\ii 15 L•nce1t ll\4 13 Nal Wld1 C11 1801'00 1~ 13~.+· '9 be followed by a bust He 6ek1n Cp 6" ~ Lenee 321'1 UV. Nill Lib Cp 162 too 6\.'> ~.-{ \~ • 6 H1tly L& 2Wo 2W. LI wt er C 31\.\ 3t Clinton Oii 122 900 1 ~16 1116+ 'I 16 thmks 1t unlikely Best Prd '3 •4\ls [ e1v aoy l314 :W'./o R•nk or11n ;ii 100 11* 11if+l ~ BtU Lib '3\lo a.•.q. l'Ollel Pl 15llo 15'/t Con11 Gtn Ins 88,900 5-1 5-1 \Is "There will be no mai'or Ur Bibb co av. •~ Llborty H No :R .. .a.m E•"''" 71.IOO 611-a:i..+ ~. Bio Orm 17'1 13\li Lii cm:r, • •~ aank1m1r Cp '5;100 ~ '6)"t--:, 1-. vent"'"'' COITe<:tion this Ume BlrO Sont 26\'J 28 Linc B ti 6111 6¥1 Centrnlc 0.11 S'l.+(11> 2914 ;J)SiJ\, ""'J Bob Evns 21'1l 22\.\ Lion CfSa 41,(o A4 Anhlus 8uKk 51MD 42 <12\/l' I~ Also the r e h as been no big Booth Np 2214 23 LoetJt1 <111 4t B"f\11111 Int St.JOO 7ttt ,,,_ ~ • \._ Br1nco 1 2111s n Lm wi Co S7YI st --buildup 10 plant C8lHIClly dur-Brinks In 10'4 11 Mtd Gel l(Y. 1~ NA.SO Volumt lodlV S,2:»,IOO bus I "'-erown Ar 6V. ~l Mt! Rnv ~ '°" Adv1nc11 .0. Ing this mess eye e. 1.ue e uckbl 1'5 .. 1~ M• ictt 46 ,, B•c11ne1 691 de al ti• II !so be show Buckty 6V. 1 M•rlt Frt 1914 lffi nch1noed 1939 v ua ons Wl a " Bump SI 22" 2:1¥1 Miry KY '9~ 30\li Tol•I :JO.II mg very pos1t1ve e ffects by 8~~r,.,M '1 "3 M' Cmck .io ll'v\l ------------- 1914 " ~tpl Sow 2l'r'J 24\lo McQuey 15'11! 16\.\ • • ctr1 v1Ps 1i~ l~ =t~ ~.,.1,.;14 Gainers & IA•erlt Put tlUS aJl together and c1h.,m.,.p P! 1514 16 Mirld In sv. 6'111---------•--+-- J••--·· nd •~-.. 11\/Ji lt M ....... Fr lTV. 1• UUIL:>VIJ a many 0 U:Jllll'> cl:~ <t0 3l6'h~ Mllllpor 5' " New '(,irk (UPI! -TM lollowlflQl 111,t build a strong case for markets Chi Br 1~ u « Mob G11 ~1.\11 22.,.. lhowl tilt •Tock• 111111 lleY• 1111ntc1 , 1M Cllrls Ste Minn Feb WO t.l9 IT\0$1 tnll 11111 Ill• most blHd on perc en1 turning strong ly upw ar d 1.., 173 Moout Cp 11v. :nv, o1 cNnge on 1111 o .... r-1ht<("OUntll" Cltll u A 3SV. ~ Mofu ' In 3' ao merkll as GUOlld bv th• NASO I som e time m the next year. ci._t 10 TOI'! MOore s1 ''~ 2sV2 Ne1 •nd otrc..,l•t• (l\ef'Kll• trt 111.1 Clow c 11 12 MOrrlsn 211/0 2214 dllt1.-.nc1 Dltwfffl Tl'll l!rlYfOU• lest ,1110 ('I'hose who clisagree b ck off Coeec L': 1M'I 11:w. Motor Cl l&Yr ll'M orlc• end lhl currtnl 1a11 blO pr'lt1. Comt Shr 26'4 21 MSI °"'' IV. • GAIHe •s the s ame list of items but a r e CmwTI p 23\7 1,v.· NII CflVSI 9\4 10 I Plene!OU Min 1'ltli 112 Up 2' 1 • '. C 11111 p 1""6 15ilo Naf Llbly 6\'I 6'/t 2 Ttlly Cjrorln (la \:o UP ~ > pess1mist1c about their e arly c::11ns ltl'I 10v. Nt MlllCr 12\.\ 1J11t l APPldOlq 1 oa 1\4 ~• uo o -·lution ~-y fear m' vary C•os• co 191,1, 20 Nt Pa1111t 9"' 10 • scous L1aG?1c1 a'h 1v. UP 11 ,......., • Slit: , • Crulcfl R t ~ NNclhm 111" 12'.lo 5 CtnTrOf\kt Oo ~ ,l\lo UP ,2,., mg de~ a recesSlOfl higher curt NOii 16\lo 111.1. Newll co M n'll 62 •"•"' "Y cv1 u11 1~~ 1,:z V11 i2 e &"~~. • Dini ll'llt :JI) 3DVt Ne~ GE '~ 15\i Slllconl• ncp • Up Jl 5 inflation, or an incapacitated 01n1v M 1v. ~ NJ1 '•'' o "•·· ",!"' ; t"~::1:1~:;.'"'1f~ i~ 1 \'O tl: ~!' j t ) Dirt Org 7l .. 1"I N tol n " •• 10 VloorU CF\tmt 5'• ..... Up II S governme n . 0111 Dis 3l.:I '~• N1t11en A :nv. m< 11 Ene•llY con .. r f\\ ~ u11 ., o O..ta Gen •11~ '214 N11btn B ttt.ro ""' 12 Horzn Rs 010 av. 'l/o OP '110, 0 oec1s 01 1114 13\lo Nor6sl• 20\11 13 cnurell FrC11k r.ta ""' Up S "PROFITS IN 191' w ill be oecor r11 son m N1n NtG N 10 1, s.m1111110 Food 3 il, uo t 1 " 0.1<.lb AR 50!h 61\.\> N011ell Cp lOl'I S2 15 Bonon1a tnler 74li "" Vo It flat." says J ohnson. "or they 8:l~~.1nt• 3r" 31~ S.~~o RJ :~ ~ l9 i:~u"r!.:1;$1n ~~ ~ tlg • :-J may be Off SJtghtJy, By 1975 Ol1m Cr1 1Hl llllo Oc11n Or 54 S5 11 AIO<ltll Coro llt I• Up 8..3 ' Oltm Hd 11\1 11"-Oc1an E.11: 6~~ 7''-I~ L1nc1 111( '6 32\it 2V. Up 1.3 they may be no bette r than Oltk A e 11 281ti ocnrir Ml 3"• '" 2G Em.,.son1 Lte1 11\/J l1I uo 1•1 1973 But pnc~arrungs ratios ~';,'1.iSCI w~ ~~~~YT"-' 1:"' ~~~~ ~~:r,,cw;•r:u;a ~~ :-: tl: '~ ha •--JI J Oo!tr Gtn I •'l'o Ol'I Ferro 11/t 114 'l3 Prttto Prod 1~+ "" UP 7 S ve 111...~1 unusua Y ow smce oone1cn 151'1 2' Ozll• Crp 6\\ ~"" ,.. 1ntees1c E<on ~+ '-" UP 1 4 1971 '£'hey d on't take mto &C-Dow Jans ll\11 J1V• Oyrmyr V.~ 2S Conle<h lroc11 3:w.c+ '4 Up 1 1 Do\lle OB U 1•'111 Ovtrs NA 3':'l •1t. LOS l ltS COunt the faCt that the e3"1-0Unkln 0 3Vti ~ ()oll CHI 17'h 11'.? 1 Arlln M&yltlr 21-&:;, Oii 179 Econ Ltb 40 40\.\ Ormof'lt WI 6\'• 2 GtnCIPI CrOP N -\/ill Off 1SA. 1ngs we are now seem g for a EJ P•so 112' 12"' p1,ce• ,.1,1,, :w1~ J Prlm1r" Mod 1~ v. 011 1s,.1 b d base f • d t al E Nuce! '"' ~~~ Pab$1 Br A6 46\lo ' Ttdonllll( ~k ~-'h ft ',j j roa 0 tn US n com-Entl'(J! C ~-ltft Pee Gtm 21\0f 21lt ) R1oldell OSI! 1 -I pan les JS norma l for tbem Eau &L 11\11 11 Pee Lum )9\IJ 4014 6 EletlrO NU<:ln ·~ ... ll s' Eltten A :it :l'9 p So Brd 8 ~ 1 Llotrtr 1-lomt r-.. Y l these earnings are bemg ElltcU In ~,. S\~ • OcOI 14'\0f ''""' 8 Am(O\ltl Sv1• -'-11 1 e • E.Z P•lnt t'" 1'A Pen 11: IS\'I U$tt 'Bullc1GSv1 010 1 -~ J'•1 valued fo r many good com-~:~~on L~ ~ ~t~ ~:~: .... ';· ,,. !Ph lf ~~~~w RG'.i l = ~ 1l.l pan1es a t about e ig ht times. A Farrn Br 11 11~ ,'',''~ csaJ ~r"' i~Vt lj cevrNn coro 1t~-~ ,•, '•"• Favs Orv s~~ ~vt v 1 CP ProcllfCICP ~ 14 p-e ra tio o f 8 oould e a s ily FlflCl•11t' 1• 1•:w P.~~,.;f ;,~ ;_;•-. '' Gen.a.11t0Pt " '!.. -2.. f ,'•:i' be 12 ii 915 Fil l'IO!!lln 1!1<1 1••~ II 1 15 Archon P P(IU 1•0-•• I com e , even 1 earn-1s1 TaF!11 10 ltl~ P..t•o 1"' 11'' 11 ~ " T1111wav inc l.._ 1, n •••s a r e no higher than 1913 " !.\' w,iF l 2'" PlcN s,.. 61'> .r.2 11 usF 111ve1 •Jt" '""'-," ": •1• ... .,.. FIKO Inc 101, 11 Plnkrtn ~I ~·.,.,II FrllCllJRI .:JJQ 'i -1·i Thus, an opiruon ii grow1.ng ~17~4'.ci l\~ 11r-:~ 1~ lri! l~:: ~ AA~"v"'m:t~c1~ 13 = \~ on '1 among anal•....., that'the pla...,.. Forttt 0 1 ,.,~ ~ Plef\4 Mk 2G't. ,, 11 A:eMerc.h Fuel l, -!.! ~,, ;,.n.:o '"'"Frink e r 9v. ""Pool! Bro s ""i! S1tak& Brew 61>-... ~ • for action, when the m ar ket ,~in1ra ~~· ;:: :""' !°'' 1r~ 1?~~ 24 J:!~l'i'~in~ f·'Z= :Z °'' ! 11 finally does tum up. w1\I be tn ~;1!c": 1• 12 13 Pse:• ca• 11 11~1s u1d com1n11n1 3t:.-v. Off 1 1 the stocks of basic 1ndustry ~ where earn1ngs growth bas been steady, even if not as spectacular as 1n the handful MUTUAL FUNDS .sooo 1111 11111er sldo mea1ured et right for trie our~ o1 pey!ng Ille Obllga!lons Iv 21, and AU1Jus1 3, 10 11, 197J 2375-13 as , • years I 72 or many 1ngla, ".'om !he fol!awlno des.ttlbtd 1e<ured by 111ld Ottd Of Tr11SI lnclucling LYN CRAFT MOLOS, 9083 8o1:w Stocks compr!Slng the Dow _____ .......... .,, .............. ,.. ............ ~~ ... ,. c1nlt rllne !HS, (/\llrgff and t1toenses of Ille: Tr11~tee PUBLIC NOTICE Ave wes1m1ns1er Ct 9?663 h • 8t11!nnlfl(ll ., the northeasf COl"l!l'T al and Of Ille •ale R!~ller(I Marvin Schroeder n62 J ones ind ustnal average, t ls FOR INSTANCE R I.In N y k Fol-•ATON • Janu1 l'U II 14 111 .... norr 11.S. '·' of glamour stocks Wl(I Slcllon 24, lhenct soutll B9• :r.I' 411" Datell lh1S 11lth Oey ol J11Lr 1913, I ,1136 Newm<1n Apl 1 Hun!lngton Beach (a COUJd mean a SUbslantla l in· , eynO = 1ciwr' I Otf u-;t ol WAltO .n .. •I 1o " , '" • •• ~1..C tll • ~ "' W9SI ,1•5 06 ftt'I alono !he north line ol Fl RST CHARTER NOTICE TO CREDITORS V2M1 ' Secur1t1es not es "Common bid ':nos .: .. ed or\-B1!n F(I 's.c 10 '3 '"'" .. 111 .·~ 1 ............. I d :.;:: :-~ MIO Secllon l<l to. point one flOfl· FINANCIAL CORPORATION SUPERIOR COUltT OF THE This buslr~ss Is conOucted bra~ In crease In their dJVJdcnd. • t'l!S an MUIUll Gwin F ''"I~ ........ n •• n ..... "" .......... .. t1ngent cur"9 conc•ve to The nOl'lllwcst &s TruslH STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR dlvldu•I ,.,,. } M ,_ uJd s tocks of AJneriC3'8 leadinlf Fund• ai ®Oltd oy lncme 5f:J 6 411 .. cr:t1UHk l """'"• ~Uol :"' 111 hiving I tldlus ol 1000 00 feel e radl1I 8'1' A M Kno11ka THE COUNTY OF OltAHOE Rlcherll M Scl\l'oedQf ..... nera Oi.urs co pay 1111 NASO 1nc lpecll F t.:.i.s 103 ..... I ... Id 69 If.))........... 1•U)•1." tint lhrougll t.tfd point bt<lrl "SOUlh 59' 111 A!lorney In Fae! NO A J,5J2 Tiiis slatemtnt w~! IUl!d wllh the Coun $5.25, for instance, WhiCh COmpanleS are at Jeve!S Which T-...,.-,1 E~11J'CI 1i~ :t~ ~~:; :: !=~~ l~ !: ~~~.~v lo~ 1o .. 1 23' 411'' <1el!J the...:e southweslerlv along Plll>l!Sfled Or•nge Coas! Oaltv Pllol Julv E1t1te of NELLIE MAY, OKiilsed tr Cito•~ Qt Or1ng1 County on Julr 30 Jd d JS retrospect may prove the AUOllll 2, 1973 EOIE So 22 42 22 2• '-Ulll "' I W / 61 .. om lt1 If~~ II 111~0 curv1 lt'lrough t ctonlral angle of 20, 27 e11d A11gu11 3 197] 2:137·13 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo tlll 1973 ' WOU gt Ve It 3 y1eJ o r 8 per· , 11(1 ... EFC MGMT OltP .,.,., o...i. 0111 o Ji :..,.;;•I "'1\IJ ~II.I 1? 2r 19' •" arc 011111nc1 01 211 39 ffft crf'llotors ot the above nemed dK<:deni F271SJ cent at its present p nce best buying oppor tunities smce ADMIULTY, E111y Gr r u. a 59 Lu~t :i.1 z:i. 1) l> ~1 -t.•v, ~ 1111 'va to a point on. ll!'lgefll llnt Ille-nee P UB!JC NOTICE '"''''"'sonst11v!..,,tlelmsao<1Tnuthe P11bll5hed Or•noe '°"~'Delly Piie! w ld W n N I !he Grwttl 4 Mo 4r. Ecity Pr l013lfi l.11•• )l ,,,,.,,l/.a .. u111T .. 1)$1 1011th oo 03' 39" wan eo "' teei 1!oo0 • ..... or a r , • • • OW S Inc°"' 3 1• , o ~nc1 .a.m 1 ,9 a 19 1.u•t :i.J 1 n •"' c:q1111v 3.G a.ti said 11111:e<1ent •re rtc1u!r10 to nLe them A119us1 3. 10, JT, 24, 1973 2m.73 Ps h 1 l ime to take "''"k 0 I 0111rn • 1• • 96 EP••t GI 12 ~ 13 ~ '"'"'' lo• 4 H • 111 '""'11 • 611 1.1:1 selll line 10 1 paint on • non•a1111eni --~---:cc-cc=c.,.-,-,~~-lw1tn the ne<t>SH•Y vo>Kher1 If! 1rie ot!lu -YC 0 GgY can be sum-.,..,...... "4rlMr • i. ..,52 Elfun Trt 16 sl APO'lo •.ol ~ ll$ v11ra F t .o , ., curve conc&ve 10 !toe n°"t~ast nallll'IO e NOTIC E OF TRUSTEE'S SALE ot trie cll'l'k of 111e tDOYe ent1ned court, or P UBLIC NOTICE med up In 0 n e w·ord American industry and •-"'""• FO •-41 t 19 Emaro 3 97 •.:U Pei.Ira J.1/ '111 ••u.& .. 'llED .. os1 rMlut ol 4n7 .SO ft'!:!! 8 •edlel , lln~ Loan Ho T.S No "''' 7l to presenl them, w!tri the necttsery l.U Attn.I In 13 341•.s& ene11v 11 •S 11-'5 Knlcl!r e \lllJ 6 ti Am Snr * If I 19 lll~wgh 11111 point bears i.outh 43 03 COMMO NWEAL TH LANO TITLE COM v011Cllers 10 the ul'lde!'11gned ~t tile olllce Watergate J ohnson th111ks this ..,,,.,.hase t he s t o c k s of Alvtur• '.62 t.U Fatrl d I.," j 71 "'""' Gth / .,. •:;., VVP t-O 's;, ""' 3t' e.ltl, telO curvto being-It'll' PANY, ai duly •ppclnted Tru5tee under ol her ellorney COLONEL HERR INGS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS .,...._.,. All1lell 1?%f:13.96Fm U•I 65 Lndf'!lr._ 1~ 11, loOI Shra U.J l nortl'letll•rtv rroht-cif way ltne of the trie followi ng deKrlt>ed dff<I of trust FRANKLIN 1o7 East 18th street Costa NAME STATE MENT is being overdone. )USt as America's I ea d 1 n g cor· AIDha Fd ll r, ll:ff ~f&E'llli'Y t.U • 1..1n~ Fa • S ;i., S.ntl...i •~ A Oranoe COIHlty FIOOd Con1ro1 District W1LL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO Me3<1 ciu1orn11, whl(ll Is th• piece of The lollow1n11 II"'°"' are doing were previous fears that the porahons '' ~:;;c~/. :J 1a.J1 Glt_C?u,•,. ,,. , ,. L~E0XL'!!ro~~.:S. 11 j' :::'AViJL~ltf ~ ~I C:lltnn1I IH\ll'lllnQlon B~ll Chan THE HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH buslnets ol IF\e \lfldetslg"ed !n •11 ma!l~" bu''""" •l A ~Qty •.$) 4.ff f'-I 3-" .. nell lA.S.00 fe<tl In Wl(llh as now ltld Ollf, ipeyable •I lime o1 sail' In 1aw!ul money pertaining to the asl•tto at seld CIKedenl PACIFIC PROPERTIES, 105 Main St, Students WOUld be rwlntng lhe Hen ry Walter , Chairman of ~ EXPRESS 101,el 11,,75 l'tM lt~J'11 l~ !1 1 .. .& ~~1r "'" '16 the11Ct continuing south 43° 03' l'I" west o1 the Unlled Stalei) all rlgh!, Htle and wltn•n !cur monlM al!er the first publlCa Salb0<1 Peninsula, Call! 91461 country or that the Vietnam !he · tm 't l FUNDS: on rt ·'° tlbty Fd 5..39 J.&t Fie! Ea 3119 1.tS De Itel lo e Point on I lanllt'nl curve ln!trl'Sf con"9yed to ,..nd oow helll b~ I! lion ot !his f\Ollce Ftank M Corser tllJ C1nyon Or, lnVCS en ·po Jcy com~ Ct olet 7 6" ·~· Y SWC !·~1 },.. 111 l(llY ~..» 9 at klfbr 1 :It Ytl Conti"' lo Ille SOUIMesl hevlng a under ulO Deed of Trust In thl' PrOpf!r!y Date-cl Julr 11 1973 CMta M~, Cahf \12676 War WOUJd never end m1ltee Of the investment• l~~I"' '-fl :la e:!. 10.IO • el~ l.:.F!~ 73 21•, 791 ~ ... ','• •12101 ~ r1<1l115 ol B"l36' lee! thance l\erelnttrer 11escrlbe<I KAYE GVAOAGNO, GlaO~s H Allen 2102 E Hvnnngton 1 16 Everd 1103120S .. ,. '"' ..-.... • seuthwftterly 1lonQ safll cur .. , throuoh TRUSTOR · THOMAS A DAVIS ANO EXKU!rl• of the W•ll Or Duarte Calll 91010 "Even Watergate wLll end," counsel firm of J ohn p Cha.se. ~~k 1ll '1·2J FuflCI IS 66 j711 ~MIS S=ll.$0~.~ 2'. 1 Ctrlh'll 1"91l' DI 9' .U' 00' en ere SUE KATHERINE DAVIS hUJbend anO ol !he ebovl' named oecedent Ttl•S bu.,fleJt I' Concluded by a Umlled noted Jo•----. I nc S pee! that I • Am Orth 1) zl Pur,1tn 9 ~ 0 ot SA L~ c (llst111c. (rt loll) n Itel lo a point on !he W>le CO t.ONEL HERRING 5 FltAHKLIN partners~IP lill<:M.111 , US S re axtng Am 1nsln AW SA ~ tn'\ F A 17 '::I CIP Ov ll 17 \l.11 lncom I•] .)6 norlttffsttrly boundery line 01 1 •eco•cl BENEF1C1ARV s AM u EL A, 1o1 E•11 11111 s1 rea1 Frank M corser In fact. there are some the dividend controls will en-"'•;:: ;;,'11 :·JJ 4!.g ,,\Me:'NCiA~.24 '6 ' (S~1~11 ... ,J:.60 I.LU s~~n 1l ..a ~ of lurvey t«Ottlt<I In 8Qol( 29 peg.e 27 AIMANICH a sln(lll' man Cost• Mt l l C•llf Th•i •l•lemen! w~s !!led wl!F\ the Cout1 NI .J$ 51 PROOltAMS • AtlUtl 'ff r O'l ~lcll f(I ll6 M 6:l Rec:orlls 01 Sur.,ev of sa1(1 Or•ngt Coun-RtcO!'Cled January 16, 1973 ,15 Instr No~ Tll Ol•I M.-1111 1y Clerk of Orange Caun!y on Jul1 11. a n alysts who think t hat at Us couraJ(e a broade r public ~m ~01{ l Flro 0111'1 .i. tl 4 21 Am But 19'l 3 11 SIGMA l'UN iv wld P01nt bt!ng tne Tr111 PofnT of 121113 In book 10516, 11ege "55 01 011it1e1 .a.n orney lor Extcutri• 191J · I I th ~rt!Cl""'tion 10 marke t &D~ur: F n Ind •:It • )f Bnd 1110 t 16 10 61 1.111 :!>!It 1 n A eeoo111n1no. se10 11111n1being111111n1 north Re<0td• In •tie o111,, of the Recorder 01 P btlshed Orange c~;t oel!v Piiot F266ff present eves e market is r--;, ....... _r-pabl'ic will i...:...c.. 1,.. ~=":nv 1ll tJ1 .e~,1"', if, ~·M ~~1~'"111 ':ti ~ff f,!1 1,f, ~,.!! $2' (II)' l:J'' WHI 257 29 ff!t!! along s1IO Or,nge County, 11110 OeeO ot 1,11st Jylyu lJ, 20, ?1, and Auvuu 3, 1973 ?15• 13 PuDllJ~l'd Orenai Coast DeHr Pllof J..,. even diSCOuntU1g the poss1bili· l lit: '-""!"':'"' ""' GrwtFI l" '7S 11151 V• 11.M ll.Jt MAGMA ,UHOS; Ventur t 17 -n~e•ltrlr bounder'!' t.ne l•om Sl;lllon deKrlbel lhe lollowlng f)f'oOl'rlr ly 1J, 20, 21, and August), ltT'l 21;w.73 r eturn by buymg secunu es It lnccim 09 n ,, T,,... CtOlel 311 a 07 Smllh 8 10l6 ;,~·;j~~~::::r~<t~,,::~~ur,I~ o•L~e~~ ;,~~~1 0~0c:.~;;~1: 1~~ ~~':.!~ P U BLIC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE ty of a presidentia l r estgna· unde rstands," he says. "Afte r ~1~~" 1~M 1J~ 1a 1K '",', /jiJ j OS ~'lfo~ :ff :i1: f: ~; ltll f! t>elng cell" IOUlll St' 00' 1C" eas! per an" map'r•co•ded In book 27\ p1g1s 1 hon •t h t • d lbe ,.._ a] Aaffon 37a 109 S'lrlh 11 91 Mtnh1n "°' ._.,. Swst Inv l.OI 1• sald lttcO!'CI SUf'\lly 1927) 1hence con to ' lnclus/ye, Mlset0 tltt(l\IJ Mep1, in 8 4't7! FICTITIOUS IUSINESS I aS n e uener Al.Ida• F 118 ft) tock I~ ll ..... j.3ot MASS C01 Sw lflY G 6.31 11 lln\llng •lono 1al6 curve conce~e lo the !Fie olf/Ct ol 1he Couflly rtcorder of UICI NOTICE TO CREDITORS NAME STAT£M£HT -Inflation cannot be solved M t k' d of tock. and ot ~·· 1,1 Mu I • p .. FrMrn 111 • ol5 Sovr In U.3S 4l =!:;~¥~~1~v:~:i;:~u;.~:,:~.~1'~1 c~X'lEPT I NG THEREFROM afl un ~~:~:ig~ c'.C:.~:J11~r ... ~~~ lhe 1o11aw1no person 1vo1n11 bu1fntsi as easily Jo fact, it 1s be~n~um'!t lt :Oay begin nto F0~"lD"! l2 ~] F:iu(;:1° 1ff: 't~ ~"::SF F 1l~f 11~ t;:'rfno 1~ ;; 1)'J ~~t '!:, ·~e 1~i::~i' f1'n~~~e:: divided ont-h•ll lnltore11 In all oll, Qa~ THE CO~'!TX.fJo.ORANOE ei BRUCE JONES SURFBOAROS, 16921 a perennial problem for all get into {he' stock Of }esset-r1i:;:,$C~ ~tt ~:ll Col'l:"::nc1 tt: 1 ~ MM"'frS 'MCh 1912.J.4 'l~·F:H~.t't ;,,. south 9• '" 27'' wtsl Sl OS ff!t!t ~long m1nereli and other n V d t O Ce ' b On E1ta!e of ARTHUR JOSEPH MARTIN, P&elllc Co.sl Hwy,, Sun111t Betel! 901A1 the mdustnaJ natJOn8, Whose kn b t II ies A.Jct ll G lf'8 F2Jn Gr •'-' S07 MIG 1339 1163 OlvHll 5 16 '4 11kl ltne to & p0lnt on ~ tangent curve substancn t>elow • deotll OI 500 I~! Deceased 8ruct Ountap Jones, 126 15111 Newpot1 OWfi U We ·run COl'Tlpan • =L~ Giii lltl 11 31 :U Fund 6 10 6 10 MID :J:22 1 ~ Proor1 S07 S.. cancav• 10 111e 11ort~we11 11a~mg a from the surface 01 •eld l~nd out NOTICE IS HEAEBV GIVEN 10 t~e Beach, Cal V2660 governments contmue to prom~ But it will start with the very B:Y~ , '• •'i'g ::t•t11~1~1lltS '-" 5 01 ~g u U ltes i ft ~~ !~ ~ ~ t .~ radJu1 ot 900 00 fffl, Int n Cl' Wlll'IOul lhe nght of anfry upon •nr POI' credllotJ ol !he 8boYt named decedent This buslnen fs Cond>Kled bY •O I• b d saf n aYrk II l J'. m'" IY 12l 2.21 5 1i. tr '61S 00 southw11le<t'I' along se!O (urve throll{lll t!on ol 1urlace 01 st1d leflcl •b<ivt a lhat ell persons havlnlf claims 1111ain1t the Olv111uM ISe too mucll Of a t least taic 1g M very e names Bta(::,, HI iT 1f OG~h 1 S* S.tl thlr • )1!.-.1~ tT•APMAH S• a ce"tr1r 1ngl1 OI 20' Ml 15" I~ 1rc d~lh or 500 lee-I, II fll<!rVed lfl tl\l' said decedenl e<e rf!oQulred to Ille them Bru.ce 0 Joneo prOffiJSC t t •=C r K 11 n11 4 lfKO!TO II, 1215 M 0 A~'!) 10S'1 I j Am '"',, 30111 < ~. (Ifs le nee of 192 SS lttl lo the Termlnlll ol loll owing d&ed$ of rfcorll deed ft(Ol'Cled w+lh !he ne-tesSllrY vOUCher$ In lht ofl!Ce T~1S "llttment was t!ll!d wl!ll the Coun• Bl i] u!! F MMll !• 9 '6 MO!IV rv 6' j\NO t I Ille oescrlbetl c.riterU"e, tel Cl termlnll'I Ju11t s, 19'1 In bot:>k 6134, P1g1 16, Of· a1 1r,e cl•rk p1 1111 ibovt tn1111e<.1 court or ly Cl•rk ~ Orenoe County on July 11, However, the U.S. tnOatlon A N 0 T H E R EXPECTED e~1 k 1 ,,_ S0ttl,I, 1 9 11 '7 MSB Fii tll i sVIYt•I 11 Jl .37 ll•s °" i non11noen1 cu•,,. coneave to llc1111 Rtc«Os, rertccroed June 1S to p•esenl lh&nl, with It'll tMH;esaerv 1913 I h the ho d source of strength for the l~[dn , l 1 fr';~'L(tN l .8A ·"~I~·~~ J:ll.1 •• f: .:.~~RO-»t• 9• Ille norlht11t having • radlu• o1 2000 00 1962 ln bOok 61S6, peg1 7'6 Of YO>Khers to 1114' und~rJ!gnecl el !ht olfl(t F 2Ul7 r ate, even W l rrcn OUS rk , cha IUl.LO(IC fiiot.i~: MIF Gro 4411 •:lJ Clflltl 10 t1 41 IHI a r..Oltl 11..e lhrO\lllh said i)Oln! llel<1I RKorlls dee(I rec:or~ June 5 of Wllllern L 01Jr1nte, 1~1 WtsldlH 01 ' Publlshecl O•anv• Coost D•ltv Pl!ol, Jil'-rLSe in the COSI of rood tl'ns m a et LS overseas pur ses ,l.IN0$1 • ONTC 7.17 I 62 MuOrri It A.•1 s Stocti u 11 11 beer• norlll ;no 10• 40'' easl $aid curvt 1961 In Dook •134 page 12, Offlclal Ste 315, Newport Beech, Ce '2660 which Iv 13, 10. 11, and llugu11 l lt73 2151·73 of stock. With the dollar et Its ~~·" ~· l""•°'t~~l ,•,.,.p,nc~ f·ff t1 MMv"°"'• Sh••' 1jj" 1>';1 '~~ ... ltOUPi 11 '' bf!!ng lht l)Otl'1 ... st111y line Of parcpl ol RoteorOs re-recorded June 25, 1962 In Is ttlt Pl•ce ol b!Jslness ol th1 undeNlgne<I year, IS still running below that bea t I I d pro< . •• f: .. ~ r. • ':jl 'i Mv•I T-• l :ll •=ii"' .. ·.. '' l11nc:I for Sl1!1 Freewa~ p11rPO••• book 6156, page 750, Offlclal Records, 1n all matters perlalnlng lo lhe t911le Of PUBLIC NOTIC E E d J c pes e ve ever an U" .... ... •• Cll'S(r1bed 111 Pfr~el lB In a Final o,dtr 1nd deed racorOttd Mar V, 1969 tn bOOI( will (lecedefll, wl!Flln tour montn1 1tt1r In urope a n a p an • ~ 1 • ).'I I e S • Mel Im 9 91 ~= I U 4lt ol CON!tmnellon recorded In Boo• 7SC1 8969, pag1 839, Olfklal Records, l•ld the 11r!1 publltellon al 11111 nOllCt FICTITIOUS BUSIH ~t' M oreover , J ohnson Sees Some abJy cons.lderab(f Cheaper ~tf't' l l ~~t: •1tt i, \~le 'f'i1 'If-" S ~rol (9 11:i1~ ll P<lllfll $» Ottlclat Rtcortrs al Qru'!le reservation to •1111 tor • Pl'rlocl al 10 Oale<I July 31, 1,13 NAME STATEMliNT hope Of'"' US JnfiOtl()' n beJng tha 't Wiii rema'tn and S~ ~i l I ifl\i, fl 13 1&!!.!f'C.11' ' 1·" ~R A~ •.1$ ~t CO\ll'IW, CllHornl11, tl>e aide 11nH ot 1111c1 Yur• from thl' Oete of t«Otdlng of the RUTH L. FOLKERT Thi tollow!no peraons era doing 1-uoe n l ' , 1'J 11 IAt/ I' ••M t o\v\4fi• •). :11 tmo1 lj " 100 0I fOOf alllp DI lel'ld to Dfl le<1Qthenf!lt lboYI menlloned Oeeds Elttculri~ (l'jl tilt wlH ol buslnts• 11 cont a.ined. pl'1 Cf!S a t 1 bargain levels, ~ NtS,C .U : , p Prtf Ilk ~ 4, ....... -.. 1< \ or ~ , .. IO Winn1Nlll :Oii !tie ALSO EXCEPT Jiii rtmalnl1111 -lllt lboVI n1fl'l(!(I <lttedanl T!'iE &uNK HOUSE. 14(1 Wut Wllwn, '!" b t' ~-Id prove I'"' 'f"'H • •• t10 Ir.tom •:?i '" ....,p 20 ~ to S"'a'ld nor1lle1$te11v booncltry lie!! Interest In 1111 oll gin mlneral1 l!ld WILLIAM L. OURANtE CP1ta Me~ Callllll'nl11 91~17 P h ase 3 W8S probably an-CO~ l_Nll IOR "~ J bu ,. ·~. l1; ;0.4611 Cl ~omm 1 71 I 43 mkS< tr -~.2 ~ £" ~f ?• ti ..... (If Record of SllfYly n v Ind on othtf" l'IYCl•ottrDon tubslanc" lyffl(ll 15111 WHlellff Or . Stl 114 I Cape Aire Co. (/0 Bar1nca Otvt•OP. I resist1b e to iore gn yers, 'I!!! ,• 'M !·.~ •'I w ~ ','1l"' '•'U H w ll"'G ! 1 - n CG J; tt t"9 to11111W1St to w 10 110rthff11 llna ar ~low • Oopth of soa tee1 1>u1 wlt1toy1 H•wpor1 I HC:ll, ca tuH ment. Inc. toll) wn 1 Wll:ion. Ccste "'••• n ounced at the worst poss1b e ..... k ... 11111 ... 1 ~I .. Cl 11 ••Id .frf8tY P•l'«'I.. thl rloht ol $\lrltee enlrri to ten, Tlltphone· {TI4) 64S·2M C1 ll10tn!e '2617 t' as tbe errects or an once they are convinced the rwth l l~ ~r-r. 7 • Grw~ 11. I '° n '"" ... Ct11tlllill119 I.St e<:ri,s mor1 or "" mertiet ml111 explore« or 11 fOf' Jlflli AU-y for E•tcwtrl• "" 1• Wtl1s F•roo Mortg~ lnvei-ttrri, ime, d ll~wUJ de<:hne no further ~ A7 • P 1:u.:; , 49 • Sfdt IJ 1f IJnl~ 11' •1 "'1tlllalwdOr•noecoaa10.~v P11o1Julv s101Ooenoke1rv1no c11111orn11 Put>ilihed °'"1111* coo11 01nv p1101 Pmt OfficiB011:J0015,T1rm1nel Anna){, overexpans1vt!• moneta r y .. 0 ~, ~ '. '·-j-Z! l· t(:i NE1'~JM0 • 'H llL'tn.:••lt>'•c, L .,.. 2G, 11 •'10 Al/Ol,lal J. Kl, 1m nl3-13 '(II 1 str..,,.i edor•1• O' common,.A~":=:"c'c':..;;"~"~";;,;'.;."';:..~,,,_,~o""~'c.'•3I LO$ A1'11i1el4 C11ltorn11 I003G \ ~ pollmr. ln 1972 arid a hU-' .-Robert H. .Pafk!, ~c:tdef ~ ~ .Allix ! ,., •,•w-~'nt I M en:rs 111 lJ.10 -:-o::;"":;;;;;::;;a;~~;:::;;::;;::=--ol; _m1on.a11~,s11own~~!1"°~111•.n;,•rUY1, • ' • :tri1s ~"'" '""t1e1119 cchduc1e11 bV, .. , ""' ... j Blyth Eastman N1 1e11 FJ!!! . .47 'J:l!l N111 1 'ft " ' --P UBLIC NOTICE~ ~J~1~~ m'lfl'c ll'fieSt'Ot ctJt. P U BLIC' Noi'ICE Gener•! Partnl'tslli deficit Wlder boom cond1tioos eco90m1.,~ UI nd !I! ,~ fst c:ri..t:: I 1 ·}~ Htwton ~ c:nv n the bet!e'fl~l•rr und~ uid oMC1 of TH E evN HousE were beg•nni'np· to m 8 k e D lUon , reinforces t his with the ~r. .. ~ 'n Jn§~ ,::c; ~J,~·1' ~:_ ~ l :M 1~.u u ',,,,:r 1: av Cepe Al•• co o t th t E In •1 " , so r0 112 .t2 Nk hle1 16.73 l' TJ N TIO P 1 9"71J lru't bYre1SOflof•breecllorOtl&11!t!n l 61'7S (iCellfornl,~erel ptrlf1tnhlp) thc-••lves fe lt 'f11en the a rgum e'1 a Ul"ope8D -~ FCI l ~11 ,.~41LTO Gl l Ntal l'llr 1,,,, Stt Accum 133 02 SUPERIDlt tOl.IRT O' CALl,.OltHIA. tht oblh7111!ons Sl(11f'!d tnt ret>y, NOTICE TO ClteDITOltt a pirtnir .,...,.. n I d th I A '!l "'~000 'fi '" ~nd F(I 160 M CDUHTY OP OltAH0£ herttOIOl'I tlKultd encl (lallvtred lo the SUPEltlOR C:DU•T OF TH E By LISLE MILL.ER February devaluaUon, added ahon. ft rea y worse an n :t'l' L 70 161 mt!!• ' 7~ ont llW ·~ Iii 701 CIVIC Ce HT'Elt DRIVE WEST, Undtr,lgne<l I wrflten Oec:!etatlon O! STA.Tl Of'-CALl,ORHIA FOR By WILL IAM T ROCHELL&. f ,. 3 s hortage Of commodities the Un\ted State~, JS going to l"'~I ,' 00'~ ',M"'1 i'o's 1!!'• NolWlll'd' ,1,1 'W111 ~ lnonl lf'IC ,•,.,n 1l I.UST& AHA, CAl.l,Olt NIA D1fnu1! •flcl Demand for S•le, end wrlt11n THll COUNTY o,t_ORAHOS Tiii• ••11~n1tnl WIS 111111 WUh '*"" Coun· w s I ~•11 ~w ' 1 ":11..l-' ·u I·" ~·•HHM ,Di St~ 'E , .. , CASI HUMlllt <>QllCe el bflllCfl el'lod OI lhW;!lon IO C<IUU HO A J YoY ly Clark o1 On1ng1 CO\lllly C1lftornl• Oii tlfOUnd !he WOrld, m&cfe U ge ... , wor se. IJl'ld Hei't t,; ' .ft Al 10,1t 11 ff Vafl«f ' o 7!592. thl 11ndef'$lone<I to sell 111d Pt'OPl•IY lo Eslltt ol MARGARET S PETERSON July 17 1973 • ,....._:.. infl'aUona-' "'r'ObJemS fro<...,.om m· i I' 1: : 11=:C j33 1:01 IJSA~ C• ll s1i1MM0Hs fMAa1t1AoE1 ... ,1.1v .. 1001>11gat1on1 ... flcl111,,..,,,.r1heoe~uttc1 F'""' comm odities a bargain nn •1tt: '7., \'i 1 .,110t 1es Tm• !n P '~GvtS '·" In l't lht mtrTllOI ol Pt!lllMlllr UncllrJlgnlHI CIU$ed MIO nof!ct ol bf'NCh NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IO 111• PuDHt.llt(t Or•rioe COISI Dally Piiot, Ju-Jd lcets ddlng tO their Of the Un ited Stat es WilJ lOOk) ~G J JJ Ol•f• I :ll;:..t ~ C S-tc 1 0710't 5 YALU!' lUll I o.eRALOIHE C1.Alil:1< tt7) 111 Instr. No. 16661 In bOek i..,.,, ttw11 au oertons 11.1v1no <1alms t01ln11 11'14 price at hom e . com~od With the ~ of'•• a (j .~, m 1 . ~ J'," ~ !." ~" !-!,', •,·"• ',!; To '"' ltt\CIOllClenl Tile pa!lt1on•r 1111 1111)1 m. ol ••IO Olflcl•I ltlM:Ol"Cls llld ~nt .... A<llllr*I to flll 1t11m. P U BLIC NOTICE •• ~ c • fll«I • Plfltlon COO'Um1nv your m1rrl191,.._!~-~ u11 wot ~ m10., 11111 w1tnout with tM roecnsary voucn1r1, In t111 Office ~ In 1974, the federal budget ,_,,, I .,.,, f E " 'i ,e.m "' ~ ,:f 1t YAN<"tl 'l'w INIY fl._• Wrlttffl t"OOflN 'llifl'lln M/""'""'enl Ill' w11rr1nty axpr1w or lmplltd DI IM cl.,.k Ol ll>t tbovt enUtled (Ol.lfl, or W'tll be close '· bala-e, UV'" ff ~ Or urope, orn~ ~ !ltfllOll ' I Phrr. Fd l. •J'I :f:i 1•HD1t•t1 dtn ol ltlot O.te lf'lll this aummona 11 rtt&rdlng title, JIOl ... •lon Of' '"' 10 ~Miii tlllm, wllfl the n.ec1•1try ll'ICTITIOUS IUSINlll w "" II 11'1~ I Pl111t $1 10!21 ti 1...,.1 l'" 1' _..., an you 11 vou !all to flit 1 wr111en tllmbtel'ICltl to p1y 1111 ,.mt!nln; p•lrt-llOll(;h••· 10 tht undtrJlgntd •t th• office HA.Ml ST•T•MI NT STOCKS "WILL s'.ttO face =:r..i-!'l ;:re:., _ 'I-Iii ,P!':,.J.r.__s• 10 ~ em ,"'., ,.•t ,...._.. wlt6tfl wd! ''"""' yDlll' dllellll dPt! 1um ot 1111 ~(•) ttcuted by wtd of 1111 lllOl'MYI IARNE:!>. SCHAG. Th• lotlowlno ptnani .,.. folng PUBIJC NOTfCE , :::t, I•• 1 1 ·' ~ j• 11 ~ Ffl ~ •n 1."~ liM....... • ''' ., m•y bt ..,tertd lfld 11\t (Ollrt may lflltr Died ol T1'11JI, W(tll lflllmt ti In wl(I IOHNSON & tCEHNEOY, d2J MllC.Arthur lwllntl' •• ·~r· ti" th " Ind ! , 'VI• • )llllQn\lfll (OllllllllnO 11\J\lllC'llYI or 01tMtt nolt proyl<lld, 811111roe.., If '"Y• uf!Olr IN lilld , p O 8011 1116, NllWDOrt 81ech, WESTERN CONSUMli.R PAOOUCTS, 5.., ler compe uon ~ n =~n 1 llj'X i , ":'°'C..ttJ I :0.12.ot J>l::r "ii : :.1::: :~:~'f"I l:r., Q Ol'ctlft eonc..nll!g dlvltr°" .. Ol'OOlf'IY "'r"'' ol s.11(1 Dff(I °' Truat, lffl, Cll8tVft Ctllfornl• 11463 wlll(h I• the plact Of »al Marina Vllll. 00111 Potnt. C:tlll, ,..Ct ITIOUS I U$1Nl!SS previously fmm higher Ut-Oii rell • ltiai.. • .• .,,... ' '. ·~ V,.;.hio<j , " NIOllWll M.IPPort, chlkl (u:ftocjy, rhlld .-... Ind~-ol 1111 TtullH and ol ttil l>vlfnet• ol 1111 vnOlrtlQ!'llCI In Ill m1llff1 ""' NAMI STATl Ml!HT te-·t ra•-. Bond y1···· mav ~ •• ~ '. t.' • I~ I lllll =··~-(lllt~ • ..:.·~1lt1 ::,•.·,~ •• ~·. ,~'!! l'Oftt '"°'llft''I lffL eoth, •f'ICI tllCll '11t ll CrHltd bY ltld ~ ot Trutf, ptl"ltlnl119 !o 1"4 tsl•lt Of wkl o.e.dtnt, 8 '· COktr, t1t1 Yorbhlt1, Glrdtn The IClllOWlrtO l)lrloOll Is Clol1'11i1 buslfleh ·-~ WWI " ..-" .. , 111t11r-1'9111 .. IYllY bf''''"''° by flit !llO wr1 win be MIO on t\llld1v, wll!lln •wr mon1ri11lttr the nr.i Pl.lbllc.t· Ol"O'lli c..n1 '2641 ~· stay In the 7•1 111t ,,.."""""I • 1 n •~tt''" "'...,"' """ 1n• court .. " 0 •• ,, ""' M I VI I •• ' I) '"12.~\13. ,............... • • -r>I '1'(1\;l.t.1'""'"-"" f .. 11111111 ,lt7'at ll•OOA.M1l flllolllatJoriolllll1flOffCt P1ttr ""''"· 1r n1 11. 1) COASTLINE MARNI!.; n.-k I u:•• I ••• P i 'l"flolllllloi~•I 1 ,... Wfltl to _. ""' H ulet tf '" ot To servtct COMP•nv. eank oi 0111c1 J~IY ,1, 11n 01n1 !"ol111, c.111 '24.2' AMIJtlCAN MARINE ELECTRONICS. range. U<U1 s now can se ou 1 I :Jltl ·3 .N.:._t;pr ~ ·~ • ~· "'•"••P~tToH ....,._, Ill tllla IMn.,., you ~ ii AMtrlc• Tower, ON Cttv 81\ld W«I JOHN C PETERSON 1111 E Workm•n Ind Dt1n Workmtfl, 175 A W 1$111 SI , Nawoort B&lch, C1 the.Ir own ratCS of interest on w" ·1~·1·; p~O u'ri ·~ !M J.., .... 1.,...· ,.,.. " ,._,.,, .. thlt ''"' """.;. Sufle 1110, Ot~ C.t!10tt1lt, IJr.9CUIOr OI !I'll Wiii °' 25032 JtvdCllPh Cir .. El Tero. Cellf ""'° "'60 t ,lot .. __ <'I.I ·~' , ... ··-· ... 1----~-'" fi,..,.. .......,ulr 21, '' etl0n'"'na111t1t'oececn1111 .,.,v M--WM H~~1H.....,. J"'mT1ttti-""~'1"tffW ~~four )'eftl'I -... , fOC~ .st 9'...-itt~•1t;«I "'• "" " WILllAM I 51 JOHN, Cftf'• Comrnon~•llh Lafl(I I AltHlS, SCHAG, • G1rC11111, Ctljf, 902.tt • port ll1aeh Cl J:to\O 1.... nd · ~~~ 5 b It( .14 lt4 "''T"'IUr1~ "'""nl11 ? '' I.I ,1•r '"'Y Tt00tt1. 0twtr 11111 corno•nv. JOHNSON 1 te6N!.f•OY Tiii• 0Ufolflft1 11 (ond\lcttd bf • 0tn-ffll• ""''""'' 11 c0fld11Cl~ 11v en 1". ''-"'~er. a some are gomg as 1 /JM er 1v " ~ ..... "~' ......... ,, 11 ~, A,. '' 111fd Trurt11, t11 l!llletl J, $(1119, Jr. Ira! NrlMf'i.lllP !llYldUlll, hlgb 8S 7Y.z pen:ent i • I " i'l ltll CO .SO "''\!!'-in,~ tl,1'1 l•-I" '•\ .m•PM N CU.ltl( Iv T 0 SERVICE COMPA!<Y, •ns MKA.rlltur •1~.. Ol!AH WOlt"1MN Sall;-J TQt'"l!I • I Qt 'In ..... ~,., 1.1'1 •-rr .,.,..,"" 111 .... " WI ,.,.,_,, ~nl (9 0 l•K 11" Thi' 1ttl1tmflll ¥111 fllt<I wllh !hi COit!\• Thb 1ta1tm111t w111 111&<1 wllll tlw C.~ ---f! I fl ~ •1.~ t~ ~ 'f.f: ltt? 1~"";~ ~!!• ?; T .... ~~Ii.nit tv fl.UIF\ E. Brown Newlltf'I &Heh. (Afll, ""' IV Cllfk of Ortntlt Countv on AUOWI t, ty C!ttk ol OrlllQI county m JIJ!y 17. Saturday · Two tiers fa,.. ~ 1 11 Ul ~ '"' 1 ...• "' '"""~ "r J ,. a I ....... ,., Aulst1n' $Krt1•ry 111. 111•1 '1MMO lt1). 1m • ,.-,. ~ "M 1n11 t ,,,1011 •"/!~• r:t ,......., ••"" Pw sTA 1MJ An...,.,.,, 1er 1111~ """ .. flWH ttier. or Just a passing tti!li::l 1 \:r• 'I 217 "'-~'" " ',i''ll" 'n"N" ;::::;-.,1~ ... !." J ~-.. °''"" eo-.r Ot\11 '1!0!zl Publllh.i Dl'lnot COii! Dt!IY Pl!OI I l'Ubllllled Or•fl(I• C~•t D•llY "''°'·1 PIJ111!1htd C)r1ngll' Co•ll Cally ftllol, Publl~Md °'1tnot Cot\! ()Illy PllOI. Jii< ph'"•1 • .. •, . • J ·-.~. • ··-F '· ......... ;: "'1 u. v,.,. A111u11 a. 1m ,....,., AllfWI J. It. 11, 1m nsa.1J Al/llUO J, 10, 11 'U, ttn "'1·n A111u,t i, 10. 11. ,..., itn Dff•TII iv '°' 11. 1n0 A1111111t t. 10. 1m n1t n .... ..... ....1 ..., • !, l frlda1, A.iigut.l J, 197) Friday's Oosing Prices-Co1nplete Nelv York Stock Exchange List Stocks Still Hit By 'Nervousness' NEW YORK (AP) -Alter remaining modeslly lower throughout much o! the session, blue chips showed some firming near the closing. Even so, analysts said, the profit-taking pre,s. sures that knocked away at prices throughout the week continued today. "The market is still in the throes of a technical pullback lriggered by nervousness over the Water- gate nearings and the increasing evidence of an up- ward movement of interest rates." During the day, Franklin National Bank an· nounced a boost in its prime lending rate to 9 per- cent. Such a rise. however. was anticipated, and had little market impact , analyst.I said. • • SC DAILY Pilaf J:J · ,. SACRAME:NTO (AP ) I n t ern at ion a I DL .. !1e.Ss l\fachlnes COrp. again Is lhe only bidder for a $40 million · state computer con,,oJl@tlon program, California o(ficials said Thursday. The admrnistration of Republican Gov. Ro n a 1 d Reugan Immediately began negotia tions with the Democratic· co ntrollcG legislature to p e r s u a d e lawmaker:J to accept U1c pro· posa l. I Bt.1' submitted the only ac· ceptable proposaJ ror the proj· ect dunng an earlier call for bids and a competitor firm ac· cused the state of favoring IBM. At the insistence of lawmakers. the bidding was started ov er. • Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List ' I Syml'Job Finance Briefs e Loss Reported SAN DIEGO (AP) -Royal Inns of America, reorganizing after financial troubles, says it suffered a net loos of $559,941 or 31 cents a share ln the three momhs ending June 30. This compares with net ln· come of $594,336 or 31 cents a share reported for the same quarter of 1972. e LA Harbor LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ci· ty Harbor commissioners have approved a $2.4 million con· tract for initial development of a new $.1.5 million container berth. !be commissioners' action came Wednesday. The bertb is to be used by San Franci!OOo based Pacific Far East Lines. It will be designed lo handle reguJar container cargo as well as LASH (Lighter Aboard Ship) vessels. which carry cargo In cootainer·like floatlng · barges. e PSAStock st>edaJ to tbe Dally Pilot SAN DIEGO Ap. proximately 440,000 shares or the common stock of PSA Inc. , have been tendered pursuant to the company's: cash tender offer which expired, July 31, 1t was announced Wednesday. In making t h e an- nouncement. chairman or tho board Floyd Andrews steled that the tende:c o!fer bas no~ been extended. RICHMOND (AP) -SWtcf.. ard Oil of Qilifomla bas unveiled plans ror a $10 million enlargement ot wharf ptpelme facilltle1 serving Jls giant refinery here. , , The plans, ix-ol<d to the ' Bay Constr•atlon and De v t lopmtnt Commission ThUl'!lday, ~-liltlt<d· •l!h Standard's alrel4Y IDl10Unced $t40 million ui>onJton oflts refinery capadlty. e Lo .... Se1t9lllt ~~(M'~,~- Angelu asked oevenl ma~ Japanese trUlna firms i: ·" loans 1o1a11ng lto mlllto"I:· -Mitsubialil Corp. said loday. ,: ' The fund.! would be Used to'. develop oil ftS>tfcts I rt! ~1 northern Peu where 0c1.: cldental has fomld oil In...,,,: mer<Jal quantllla, they Aid.;; • ·' j -·~) I I I i . ·! • • f 4 DAILY PILUI ANIMA~ogic1i,D.,....,... (( ...,,...,YOUl?MA61CSPELL IS EVE.~YWHERE. ! '" Probers Of Panel 'Grilled' WASHINGTON (UPI> - The-man at. the witness table in the Senate Walergate hear- ing room -a hou sehold nan1e lo millions of Americans - looked squarely into the television camera and said. ··I have no knowledge whatsoever about the Watergate.'' The ''wi tn ess'' was showman Dick Cavett, \I/ho then turned the tables and for the next hour and a hair, with suitable interruptions for com- mercials, did the questioning of-the four committee members present. THE UNUSUAL scene in the Old Senate Caucus Room \Yednesday night was special taping of the Cavett Sho1v. Committee Vice Chairman Howard Baker (R-Tenii.J and Sens. }lerman Talmadge t D- Ga.), Lowell Wcicker (R- Conn.) and Daniel Inouye (0- Hawaii) were his guests. The show will be presented Tuesday on ABC-TV at 11 :30 p.m. CAVETI' OPENED the show with his u s u a I monologue, saying the hear- ings v.·ere the "longest running quiz show ori TV.'' He compared them to the television show "To Tell the Truth" where he said, "TY:o oot of Orce people arc always lying." His questioning or t h {' senators often strayed far from tlie hearings. ·BAKER WAS asked if he once pushed his wife into a rose bush. He did ; Jnouyc 1vas asked how he lost his right arm (in Italy during World War JI ); and Talmadge was asked the size o( his high school graduating class (300). At some points, however, the senators' humor was bet· ter than Cavett's. "By silting in that witness chair I felt guilty,'• Cavett joked at one point. "You may be the first one," Bak.er replied. Toilet TV Tips TOKYO (AP) -A newspaper suggested that Tokyo television stations give instructions on how to use Western-style toilets. "The Japanese h a v e been accustomed to the squat system toi 1 ct.,'' wrote the Engli s h- language Mainichi Daily News . "The gerieral trend is toward wider adoption or the imported system. The question now comes up whether these Western· slyle toilets are being properly used." . .("' WHITEWALL '-;.~·,•:::~!;." G70/15 195/15 G70/I 5 20511 5 170/14 185/14 170/14 . 175/14 'f70/14 195/14 F70/14 f78/14 F60/15 f78 /15 l~/15 160/IS Ovr uut-tr ''licy i1 to bttttr stryt yo-. ff rot hove o .-.••Ii•• co11crr11i119 pro-- 4tct1or11nic11 rtftdtrtd to'"' please toll "' DirKlor of (01uot111r Affa irs. Mr. S. Arollit11 (213) 170·1737 or 391 • 1788. If .. shovld .J9n Olli of J1:1W li11, o "•oi11 Chttli .. will IN i1u11d 01u1ri119 o later lltli•try ti tht •~h•1rli1td price. 185/14 ER'18/14 195/14 FR'18/14 205/14 GR'18/14 215/14 HR'18/14 205/15 GR'18/IS 215/15 HR'18/IS 235/15 LR'18/IS WIDE TRACK 60 SERIES $2895 ANY SIZE BELOW SIZE F60/14 F60/15 860/13 6.00/16 .•......... 7.00/16 ..•••...... 7.S0/16 ••••••••.••. ~ . ' STEEL F 78/14 STIEL G78/14 STEEL H78/14 STEEL G78/1S STEEL H78/1 S STEEL · l78/1 s IJt1irf1yql Orig. Eq11ip. ai.14 QiJ.763 cB8 :~::;-; 'Tl' GT8·1f HJ"8.J4 '"i'lf ~' G78/JS(J ii,'Z.f!Ji ••""" A 11/J Jfl II: f j ! fi'J IU (n u u GT8·1S •rMUl'IOll.tr-. .tr au 01 "' rro111 . 6.70/15 ••••••••••. lll:llia 7.00115 •• ,,,,,,,,.IE!il ,.00/16.S ,,,, ••••. ~ 1.1s11,.s ·····-··•r.u I0.00xl6.5 •• ,, .... ~ 12 .00;ir16.S ........ lt.'.4·~ I-• 11 Jt ... ll lo .. d. I• lo• I~ Y. w DATSUN S, TOYOTA & others . GARDEN GROVE LA HABRA BUENA PARK 14040 Brvo~hurst JODCI Whlllltr llvt!. 2H2 l.IMoln llvt!. COSTA MESA (corner of Whl!!ler ' corner of L!ncoln (corn!!!" Wcrslmins!tr arid Beech •"" Knoll) •"" Brooilnurst 17141 530-3200 674-3666 17141 126·5550 3005 HARBOR BLVD. (corner of Baker ond Harbor) (714) 557-800., • lfrttrfirial ,.,_..,,. .. Trr ' . ' ) 195/14 '33" 205/14 145/1 155/1 215/14 '36" . 165/1 205/15 215/15 137u 235/15 '43" 878/14 6.5011 3 878/13 1.77 7.35/14 E78/14 1.13 7.75/14 F78/14 2.09 8.25/14 G78/14 2.00 8.25/15 G78/l 5 2.22 8.55/14 H78/14 il[·'.K·E •.•• 8.55/15 1n1 Sourh Euold 11 Sloo:k Norrh ot River1lde Freew•y) 17141 170-0100 H78/15 I f -~· D 2.:n •Nntww.s ·n.• rm .. lnclude11 PARTS & LABOR 1714) 639-4321 . . ' FMll Slzt U.S. Cars R11. DRUll TYPE .. f 1' I ,, I /, ,\ I' . 11 I I f t f c q a p r 0 d 0 0 r v v n • ~ c a r n I Lagiina· Beach -----cDITION Today's Finni N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 215, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 197 3 TEN CENTS Mercy Death Mulled for Capo Boy~ 3 By MARCI DODSON 01 tt11 O.llW PUst Sl1H Jason "Arlhur Rea, 3, of Capistrano Beach, left on a plane for Colorado Thursday, kept alive clinically only by machines. The plan calls for him to die in Denver. And his mother, Mrs. Linda Rea, ex- pects to bury her only child sometime next week. But the death is not that simple. • Because since Jason's arrival at the University cf Colorado Medical Center a team of physicians· has been faced with the grim task of deciding if the machines should be shut off to allow body functions to cease. Or if there is still a ray of hope for the cute, towhead who fell victim to a tragic pool accident two weeks ago in Hunt- ingtoo Beach. £arty today the team was far from a decision. The concerns in the case are momen· tous. If Jason ceases to live, his mother and the physicians have arranged for his . kidneys and liver to be transplanted in three other youngsters who face deaU:i themselves unless a donor is round. Spokesmen from the medical center said today that the team is still in its eYS.luation stage and will have difficulty in reaching a decision because or an ap- parent surge in the boy's bodily functions after his arrival in Denver Thursday afternoon . The agonizing chain of decisions in the case of Jason Rea began with his mother, of 34731 Calle Fortuna, who is divorced. She and former husband reached it early this u·eek when Orange Coast physician Dr. Albert Ferguson informed her that .her son's chances for recoverr from the deadly effects of near drowning (See DECISION, Page Z) Laguna Ready to Fight Federal ·Parking Curbs J(ent State 2nd Probe -~equested . -· -\VASHJNGTON <AP) -Att y. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson today ordered a new .JIJ,rtice ... Department investigation of the deirtM ·•QI • lo\lr Kent· Stata·1 Uni"'fSity students shot by National Guardsmen in 1970. Richardson said his decision v.•as based on "the need to e.':haust ~very potential for acquiring facts related to this tragedy.'' He gave no indication "'hether a federal grand jury "'OUld be convened to assist. Richardson ordered J. Stanley Pot· linger, assistant attorney general in charge of the department's Civil Rights Division , •;to pursue the additional in· quiry by such means as he feels arc ap- propriate so that \l'C \\ill OOth be com· pletely S81isfied that the department kno\l'S as much as can possibly be learned concerning possible violations of federal law." Richardson reopened the Investigation after studying the findings or Pottlnger's preliminary review of existing fi~~:. ,.. Richardson initiated the ~ review on thit littls of a Wfu'leROuse statement l3't·May which reamrined·tqe Augti.st 1!n'1 decision by former AttY. Gen . John N. ~1itchell to drop the case u1ithout a federal grand jury probe. Four students were killed and nine others wounded when •a National Guard contingent opened lire on students demonstruting against' the U.S. invasion or Canibodia. The slain students \\"ere Allison Krause, 19, of Pittsburgh. Pa .. Jeffrey ti.1iller, 20, of Plainview,•N.Y .. Sandy~ Scheurer, 20, of youngslO\l.'D. Ohio and William Schroeder, 19, of Lorrain, Ohio. Kent Slate President Glenn A. Olds said he welcomes the new inquiry. "I think it's {he wisest step to take," Olds said. "There are still a Jot of ques-. tions unanswered. Kent State Is no longer an event. it's history." The father of lMss Krause, Arthur S. Krause , said when told or the new in· vestigatlon: "I don't think justice was very even-handed under Mr. Mitchell or (See KENTi Pqe Z) farking Meter Fees, B11d!let ~ • ' ~ .• 1 ·-~£'-:::..-... ~,, To Be Discussed Divor~e at 100 Husband , 103, 'C hases Women' STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her husband of 28 years, for divorce, because he "spends all his money on other women." She is 100 years old and he is 103, according to records in San Joaquin County Superior Court. · "I wanted to stay with him , but he wouldn't stop chasing after wpmen,'' Mrs. Fegion said in an interview Thursday. "He likes to go to the show-that's where he meets them." Mrs. Fegion said she filed for divorce two months ago and since that time "he's been so mean to me, always wants to fight. He doesn't .. "Ian! to gjve me !llllhiO: .. lo eat" . She and her_ husband have separated, each living ln one of the two homes the couple own here, situated uonly about 10 steps apart," )lt!l-Fegion aaid . . 50% of .Co_unty Butchers, Meatcutters Face Chop By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ""9 Dtlrr Pllllt l l•H Job layoffs in tbe Orange County meat industry due to the current critical beef shortage are beginning and up to 50 per- cent of the butchers and meatcutters could be out of work by next Wednesday. Representatives of Butchers Union Local 551 in Artesia, which covers .., orange County meat industry workers, were unavailable !or unemployment predictioos today. A spoke6ma.n for Los Angeles Butchers Union Local 563 in Huntington Park said he coilld not comment on Orange Coun- ty's prospects but 6.50, of his members have already peen laid off. "That's almost 50 percent of our members engaged in slaughtering and ~·e expect more layoffs nei:t Friday," said J . J. Rodriguez. Rough· estimates for Orange County's meat workers appeared to coiocide with the trend set statewide. niousands are jobless. ' Telephones went unanswered a t several oounty meatpacking or brokerage houses today, while a couple were answered with recordings saying they were no longer Jn 11ervlee. Gaylord Smit6, vice president of Tustin Meat Brokerage, however, said the layoffs have not hit retailers too hard yet, but many employes will get the axe nert week: "By Wednesday there'll be 50 percent laid ol£," Smith predicted today. "And by the foUowlng week the figure could be considerably higher,'' he said, adding that most workers are now engaged in so-called cleanup work with (See MEAT, Page%) Nixon Warned, w alters sa,·s WASHINGTON (AP) -A top Central Intelligence Agency official testified today that President Nixon was warned less than three weeks after the Watergate raid that something was amiss on the \Vhite House ·staff. Anny Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters, deputy director or the :IA, told the Senate Watergate ::ommrnittee that be, CIA Director Richard Helms, and former acting FBI Director L. Patrick-Gray lII resjsted . pressure from the White House staff to involve their agencies In covering up ttie political wiretap- ping. Walters said Gray finally spoke lo Nix.on July 6, 1972, and said the Watergate case could not be covered up, that the FBI's in- vestigation would lead qulte high, and that Nixon should get rid or the people involved. Art Colony Prepari11g " Its Reply By JACK CHAPPELL 01 fll• O•llr PllOI Slaff The city of Laguna Beach will protest Federal Environmental Protection Agen- ency proposals which if enacted could kill furtb_er parking expansion and actually re°quire a reduction in existlng parking. A letter setting forth the Art Colony's objections to the controversial agency measures design¢ to improve air quali- ty, was being drafted Thursday and would be sent to the Southern California As.sociation of Governments (SCAG) which is gathe ring member cities reac- tioos to the environmental quality measures. be Envirorunental Protection Agency (EPA) will hold hearings on the measures Aug. 9 in Los Angeles, and may impose the restrictions by Aug. 15. The suggested measures could doom the Art Colony's proposed Glenneyre Street parking structure aod \VOuld hamper plans for Laguna's integrated transportation system. City Manager Al Thea! confinned Thursday that the city was responding to the EPA proPQ.58.ls. pointing out that parking in iown is already deficient, the city has a mWJicipal busline and that future parking facilities wou1d be in- tegrated with mass transit. EPA regulations \vhich could be enacted by executive order of the agency director include : -"C.itics and counties owning or operating off-street parking facilities must report to the EPA the number of motor vehicle parking spaces in each such facility and a compliance plan to reduce the number of parking spaces from the numt>cr in existence as of Oct. I. 1973 by five percent before Jan. 31. 1974; ten percent before July 31, 1974: 15 percent before Dec. 31. 1974 and 20 per- cent before Oct. 30, 1975. .""7"Cities and counties wiU be pro- h1b1ted from commencing construction of any new parking facility or the modifica- tion or enlargement or existing parking faciHties if such an action results in an increase or vehicle miles traveled. -"Each city must establish bus and car pool lanes on major streets and highways ( dalined as three or more lanes in one direction ) over which it has ownership or control. -'1Twenty-live percent of the lane mileage for each city must be establis-h- (See PAR~ING, Page 2) * * ~EPA Aims Alrea~y Done ' Lagu1ia Has Reduced Parki1ig, Restricted Access Doubling of current Laguna Beach parking meter fees and the addition of new meter& to increase city revenues will be considered among other budget items al a s~lal city council study session at t .. a,pt: .. Sa!urday at.city haJI. ~ . . _ BY~ accident ot nature, design and• without adequate parking. summer months. Future parking As propo®d, the meter fee would. In-lethargy; Laguna Beach has what the ni'e · new Glenneyre Street parking facilities would lnc:orporate the 1nass crease from 10 to 20 cent.s per hour and Environmental Protection Ageocy aims structure which could be killed by the transit system in a total transportation 680 new meters would b€ added along . . EPA ban on new parking development, nrnara.... ~ _ Coasrttigbway-end-other m.ets' -~eqwre_ clties-to.bave.-.<educed.pa<1-o·--1td on! /ffi!f!lliljij£etonenttalloce· -, .. ~-"--- The clt)1 would receive an eatlmated 1ng., restncted acceu and special mass tlon, par{u;g places not now spread Quoting from a letter he was draftlng $300000 &t.")'tl5 in addit~onal revenue tnnsit. through the town. to the Southern C81ifornla Association of aft~~lthe modlncAtlons.. , "We've got three entrances·and ,Qjj§ "Wt'rt finally getting off the stick and Governments (SCAG), Moody said the The additional fUJ14s would be .u~ to the city, and we don't provide very doing somethin§ about our parking p~ city's restrict" access and parking place partially to defray ex~nses for parking many parking !J>ICCll anyway •.. " said Jems. We don t think we should be shortage "has no t hamj>cred the driver focllllies, Including the $1 mllllon Glen-Wayne Moody, Laguna Beach Planning penalized lor redlstribut.ing existing park~ searching for a pl11ct to temporarily neyre Street garage. director. ing places when we're already low store hla machine. Instead, ·h'e lines up on Also to be studied at the session are 11In effect.,·we're not really aure that's to bea:ln with,'' Moody said. the access roads bchveen other budget Items from the public works the best way to improve air quality. Moody said the EPA measures as sug. automobi.les and moves at a snail's pace depa rtment, city clerk, city treasu'rer, cl· ult does not hampe.r traffic to a resorl gested could also apply restrictions to through the city, often driving around ty attorney, lifeguards and special funds. community llke Laguna Beach, it only privately controlled parking. town spewing out air pollutants nlore In· Adoption ot the budget is expected at backs it up further.'' Moody said. The city bas a minl·muni cipal bus tensely and for a longer period of tlme 1hc city council'• Aug. t5 meeting. Ht txplalned the city has developed system and trams roll during congcsttd than normally requirtd." o.l"!l' "'* ............ "I THINK GOD HELPED ME IMMENSELY IN MY DECISION" Mrs. Linda Rea looks at Picture of Her Only Child Decision for Doctors Revives Age-old Clash The gravity of a physician's decision to literally tum off the switch and allow a patient to cease existing is a clash between "neurology and theology," a prominent Orange County med i ca 1 educator said toda y. Dr. Stanley Van Den Noort, dean of the UC Irvine Medical School and himself a neurologist, said the current medical practice is to rely upon results or brain wave tests before a group of physicians makes the decision le> allow death to come. .. ,n this area the practice has been le> . run elcctrocncepbalogram (EEG) tests and if there is no high-level reflex ac- tivity and the brain wave scans show a "flat chart," then the decisioo is made," he explained. But, although he often is brought in on such cases, Dr. Van Oen Noort indicated that he is far from comfortable about the present system. "It is totally reliant on a machine and Junior Football Regisffation Set Registration for Junior All-Am erican Football will be held from 10 a.m. In noon Saturday at the men's gym ,.at Laguna:.&~.... ~·" ..,.,~ Junior AU-American Football is (op boys from 8 to 13 years of age. Practices '\'ill start ~1onday wtth conditioning \\'Orkouts and the season will run through November. Now in its third year, the sport has at· trac tcd ~ome 270 boys. Uniforms and safety equipment are provided. There is a $20 registration fee. -Camera.Equipment Worth S2,000 Gone Cameta equipment valued at $2,090 was rtport'CI missing by n photographer following a photo session at the Sur£ and Sand. 1155 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Jnne A-1cCowar1 contacted Laguna Beach police to report the theft of a suit- case containing the valuable gear. The loss was discovered ·after t h e photogruphcr returned to Los Angeles. ' a technician and although the margin for error is very slight, it still is a possibili~ ty,'' he said. An added factor of tension in tbe decision over sustaining bodily functions versus shutting off machines is the urgency 1n t.ransplant cases. ''.You have one team champing at the bit to implant new orgaris in patients near death and you have another team \\'hich has to decide if .the donor has no chance at all to recover. "I'm an expert on neurology, I have told people. but 1 ·m not such 3n expert on theology," Dr. Van.Den Noort said. "Often people will caJI me in and ask me to say that the patient on the machine is dead and they get angry with me when l won 't do it," he said. "I'm a conservative in such cases and if I sense a chance for recovery at all, 1 wil l stick to my decision," he added. In Denver today, the decision is being reached in Jason's case.' '·I know full well what those people there are going lhrougtr right now," the local neurologist said . Orange Co~t Weather Night and e3rly morning low .. ·ek:lo<h--w-UI again bevvilible.,,._ the Orange Coasl1.._ Afternoons Wifl be sunny, "'lth tcn1J'Ualures at the beach ncur 70, with the lo\Y near 60. INSIDE TODAY Co11tcn1pora711 art i.s the theme of tl1i1 wtek:s cover stories in tht Weekender with features on Jame1 B"VJies. th i1ew director ~ottJewporrROr6or Art uuum, and on the AU-California Ar& Exhi bit bei11g presented hr the Laguna Beach MU$eum of Art. Al 'l'tur S'"1'• J Mtlfl" 11·• l .M. ...... lt Mw!Vat fl\lfl6t 12 •NllM 11 H1fltftlll """ .. t C1M'9nll• S Ort"" c.-w t CllM.111.. Sl·41 •ntMr111ta U.11 Cf1111" rt SHtt• t•• (,._,._,. " Stldl Mllrtllft 1>1) OMlll Httltt\ I lt.....,._ '1 •• • lllltwttl ,.,. ' 'rllfftws 17 •• ,,,_. 11.,, • ...,.., 4 I ,., !Ml lt.C:.,.. • ·--· ....... U.tl' ......._ '' w.rw ,... "' ·-~ ,, ........... Mllllll• • . - • • ........ , \ -. ,?_~AILY PILOT LB frlday, ~u1111st J, 1Q73 --- Equalization Official Raps Nixon Tax Clash Uy JACK RROBACK Of ltlt Otltr l"llcll "'" Orange County's area rC'ptrscnt::ttive on the State Board of E<1uallzation t1iday C'harged that a current f\;.ip over \Vestern \Vhite House tax assess inents is politically motivated. The charges came from John \V. L}11ch, equalization board member for lhc Soulhem Califor/lia area which includes Orange County. Speaking in a press conference in San· ta Ana today, Lynch claimed that William M. Bennett, the board member who raised the assessment issue on President Nixon's San Clemente holdings, is simply seeking publicity. Lynch claimed Bennett is probably going to run for state attorney general next year. "Bennett ran for attorney general when Pat Brown vacated the office to run for governor and he will undoubtedly do the same if Evelle Y'oung~r decides to run," Lynch said. The board member said his agency has no right to appraise or investigate the as.sessn1ent of President Nixon's S..1n CIC'mentc property. J-tc said th~ tourts ruled against such Intru sion into count y rights more than 00 years ago a11d the deci sion still )jtands. "Bennett. a lawyer and former staff member of the attorney general's office, knew this when he asked the board last ~1onday 10 investigate the assessment," Lynch said today. ·The board voted 410 1 against the Bcn- nelt move. "Four or us on · the board are Democrats so we are not protecting the President," Lynch said. "We are simply abiding by the Jaw." The board member said the agency coUld only move in on the San Clemente proper.ty assessment at the request of the Board of Super~isors or the county assessor. Lynch did say that the state board dOe s randorn sample investigating in each county every three years but that the properties are picked by a drawing. Bennett told his fellow board members ~tonday that he will pressure Orange State Supports Suit To Raise Beef Prices SACaAMENTO (AP) -The State of California is supporting a suit against the federal government to permit immediate increases in the price of beef, the state food and agriculture director announced Wednesday. ' Charles B. ChrlsteMen said the intent of the suit was to encourage a "steady and adequate supply of meat for ~ ~n sumer by giving the producer a ra1r pnce for his product." Christensen's announcement said the suit, naming the federal Cost or . Living Council as defendant, \\'as filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco by the Pacific Coast Meat Jobbers Association. The suit asks the council to permit beef From Page I DECISION ... were nil. . "lt·really wasn't a hard decision. It was just knowing that Jason could make someone else live. I had already a~ cepted the fact that Jason was I.caving n1e. Then I just started to think or others," said Mrs. Rea. . "'I think it's about the greatest thrng lhat could ever be performed." But ll1rs. Rea's decision did not have to be made quickly. After doct~rs at H_llllt- lngton Intercommunity Hospital revived 3 hearbcat from the apparently lifeless boy following his fall into a friend's sv.rimming pool, Jason managed to st~y alive for more than two weeks despite numerous complications. Doctors performed brain scans and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests. to determine the extent of the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery was performed to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. "He was more or Jess telling us, 'I'm not going to rnakt: it,' "said his mother. Then. last Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. ··1 had to make my decision then,·1 ?itrs. Rea recounted. The doctors then put the blond-haired boy on a respirator to keep his blood circulating so that the organs \1•ould re- main undamaged. They also arranged for a privat..: jet to take the child to the Denver hospital, and produced the necessary legal papers (or Mrs. Rea to sign. "I didn't think I'd be able to do this. I think God helped me immensely in my decision. J prayed a Jot, and He ans,ve red my prayers. The doctors helped, but without God, I couldn't have made the decision,'' she said. OUN61 COAST LI DAILY PILOT lh9 or ..... C-1 DAIL y PILOT. wllft Wllldl It COMbll'lf!d !flt N-...-..S. 11 OllbHllMd b'I' ,.... O••t>Oe Co.it Pl'ltlllllinl ~ny. a..,.. 11111 e11111ont -Pllbl.,_,, Mtnlftr fllr'OU!lft producers to pass cost increases on t~ consumers until Sept. 12. the day Presi- dent Nixon's price freeze is scheduled to end. Christensen said the state's support. was contained in an affidavit filed by his department. He said it was based on his own experiences as a cattle rancher and on economic information developed by his staff. In the affidavit, Christensen says the price freeze "is creating a temporary shortage of beef" moving £rom grower to consumer. This shortage is closing slaughter plants, causing inefficiencies and eventual higher prices, he said. "All that is being done is the postpone- ment of those higher costs and higher prices. They must eve11tually be paid by conswners," he said. · "The meat industry cannot operate with fixedprices while being subjected to higher costs," Cliristensen said. "The temporary shortage which ts being artitically created will result in scare buying, higher prices, agd in gen- eral in a complete disservice to cattle- men, processing plants, wholesalers, re· ta.Hers and consumers," he said. From Pagel MEAT ... meat supplies still stocked. The three Los Angeles companies that say they will close this week arc ~lighland Meat Packing Co .. invol ving a layoff of JOO ,1:orkcrs; Serv·U Meat Pack- ing, \vith 75 employes; and Newport Meat Co., 11 employes. OfficJals say other companies also may shut dov.'11. In San Francisco, 145 meat wrappers v.'ere dropped from the payroJJ of Safe\vay Stores. At the same time. state food and agriculture Director C. B. Christensen .said his office has filed an affadavit sup- porting a suit agains the government -which demands an end to the beef price freeze. The suit was filled by the Pacific Coast ll1eat Jobbers Association. Christensen said the price free1.e was only postponing the time when consumers would have to pay more for beef. As the beefsteak supply dwindled .1t the Ralph's supermarket chain Wed- nesday, buffalo steak was advertised. I>rice: 99 cents per six-ounce frozen pack. Comme1·cial Spa 01( Anticipat"1 In Lag una Hills F•llS•v, for Cott• MtM, HtwptrJ llH<t1. Approval is cxpec1ed Monday nt lhe Hu~111111'~ · t•l<fl!Ftou!\t•ln viii.y, ~ Orange County Planning Commission for l!1.oc11. 1·~1"'''"'"•H•tt.M* anct a.. c .. ,_111 ~ ... Juan c-1r11t••no. A •ltlo'-rt111o<w• a $1.5 1nillion commercial spa in Laguna •n~ i. P<11111111t11 Sol""*YI """ avrw:c..,,. llills. r111 prlilc~t Pll(l11.i.1rio p1 ... 1 11 '' n:i .,...., _ The single-story Spanish·style building 1,•1 ''f"i ~~.~ "'~ e.~1'°""~. ~ ..1, ... .J \flll be buHt._,_ on fi\lc acres at th ..., Robtr-t N. w,-a ---r.m'.11lieisf. <:oi-ne't0f 1i:10u1tOh PartW'.a Prtt10 .. 1 1"'111 PVbtltlllf' • J•ck rt C11rl•y va ""''ot.,,, •!'Id 0«i1r1t Ma,..,.. Thom•• K., .. u Ed Ito• lhort1 11 A. M..,rphr,., Ml"fgl119 EG llOt Ch1rltt H. loot Rlchttlf f'. N1U Attblf"I '"'-N9i..o Edl!Ot-1 ....... IMdiOfflq 222 F11r•1• ~"•!I.lit M1 llh1f Addren1 ,,0. lcu '''· f2•12 °"'"' - I • and Cal le Aragon 111 the Ross moor Leisure \Vorld Planned Community. It wil l have a capacity for 3.000 mem- bers. It will apen for public membership, not just Leisure World use. Common recreational fa cilities In the building wilJ include a mlneral pool, an outdoor Olympic-size swimming pool and a central court. Facilities for women alone and men alone will Include lockers, a sauna, a Ru~ian steam bath and finish bath, solariun1 pools. outdoor exercise areas. mas~a.l(e: and herbal wrap areas, and complete gymnasiums. Two handball courts will be provided for men. Robert S. Borders or Garden Grove Is the architect for t11e 36,000 square foot building. Burton At Cantor of Las Vegas, who dcslgned ar>d operates the lnternailonal lleahh Spa at the tas Vegas Jiilton and helped design the Beverly Hills Gc•nd Jl<ltel. ls a consultaru. • County authorities io re·sppraise the \Vestcrn \Vhite House properly. County Assessor Jock Vallerga hns stated that he has no intention or further in· vcstigating the property. Lynch said if Bennett brings up the $Ubject next month he might get a ma- jority vote to make the request to Or~n~e, County officials "but remember tins ts only a request for thern to investigate." the board members said. "\Ve . cannot initiate our own probe." Lynch said he would vote lo make the request 1o Orange County to get "Ben~ nett off our back and quiet dov.'Il this furor." The row started when Bennett recently called the $1.37 million value put on the 24.6 acres in San Clemente "grossly w.der assessCd." The Presiden'-reported- ly paid $1.:i mllJion fof the property. Former county assessor and no\V Congressman Andre\V J. Hinsha\v and Vallerga have firmly defended their ap- praisals or the property. Vallerga said la st week that the depression of values on underdeveloped or vacant coastal properties brought on by PropQsition 20 applied to the Nixon property and abo ut 200 other parcels along the coastline which he had assess· ed with that in mind. Vallerga pointed out that he had raised the assessment from a little over $1 million to the $1.37 million this year. Lynch was asked if he thought the Orange C.Ounty assessment of the \Vhite House property was correct. "I have no \\'ay of knowing because \\'e have made no appraisal or the property," the board member said. He was asked if it was reasonable for property to be assessed at less than purchase price. Missing Woman Se arcli Go es On; Foul Play E y ed By TOi\1 BARLEY 01 lht Dtily Piiot 51111 La,vmen in two counties today con- tinued their search (or Rochelle White of San Juan Capistrano with the stated growing conviction that the attractive brunette has been the victim of foul play. Orange County Sheriff's officers are circulating pictures of Mrs. White, 22, of 1670'l Calle La Bomba, in an attempt to contact anyone who may have seen the missing woman shortly berore she disap- peared last Monday or prior to her auto beirig found two days later in Carlsbad, San Diego County. f\-trs. White disappeared two days before she was to appear in Superior Court for a hearing into lhe divorce peti- tion she filed against her husband. elec- tronics machinist Gary Roger White, 25. That hearing was reset for Aug. 13 v.•hen she failed to appear for the scheduled court session. Mrs. White filed for divorce June 15 in a petition which is suppor ted by allega- tions that her husband physically abused her during the couple's four-year mar- riage. Superior Court documents on file in- clude a court order for forbidding White to harass, molest or threaten his wife. And he v.•as further ordered by the court not to attempt to contact her at her place of employment or contact her employers. The court file includes the statement that \Vhite beat his v.-ife last October and November, slammed her against a door and threw her on the floor while she was pregnant. The lawsuit states the couple have no children. Mrs. White also alleged that her hus- band took a teapot from her on one oc- casion shortly after she had made tea and threw it out the door: f-te then ripped all the taps off the gas range, the action states. Sheriff's officers today said they have interviewed \Vhile on several occasions and will do so again today but the San Juan man ha<; been unable to throw any 11ew light on his \v ife's disa ppearance. Investigators sai d the abandoned, late model foreign-built car she apparently drove to Carlsbad contained no signs of a slfuggle. Of£icers said they drew the same conclusion from the neatly kept San Juan home. From Page l KENT • • • former Atty. Gen . Richard G. Kleindienst ~Dd 1 think Mr. Richardson is trying to "illak'(1ifsl11lr"ll'vllr-!flllttt•<l'"l!gafn~ - A spok<'sman for Ohio Gov .. .John A. Gilligan said the gove rnor. who was unreachable immediately , welcomed "any action by any agency to discover the truth." Col. Joseph McCann, spokesman for the Ohio National Guard's adjutant general's ofUce, said "If they want to reopen the investlgatiOn , that's their pr rogaUve." McCann said the guard would have no other comment. Pottinger told a news conference It is possible that the Justice Department will convene a federal grand jury lo In· vcstlgate the shootings, a step directly reversing Mitchell 's decision. f1ottingcr. however, defended Mlt· chell's decision and said he requ ested n\Jthority to reopen the case simply to exhaust every possible avenue or in· formallon. ''I'm only going to say lhere are areas where J am not sntis!ied , '' he $aid, rerus- ing to el:ibQnlfc on the route his new in· vesligiltion will tukc. . . 'V·ital f 0 1• S1arvival' Dredging Seren For Upper Bay· ' • Diolty Piiot Sl•ff Photo A lfi1111e r Peggy 1'osdal of Dana Hills High School swam the third fastest time of her career 'fhursday night to easily win the 100-meter butterfly at lhe Los Angeles Invitational swim meet in Mission Viejo. Tonight she swims in the 200-meter fly. Officials Q11iet Regarding Beach Tr uck Accident The official news blackout into in- (ormation surrounding the running over of a South Laguna sunbather on West Street Beach entered its second day t<r day v.•ith county officials declining to discuss the incident. The mishap occurred Wednesday after- noon as the large rig was being driven on the beach and passed over Robert Ward, 20, o{ 31603 2nd St., South Laguna. The man suffered a broken back. ' Ward had been lying on his back at the West Street Beach when the truck's front and rear wheels assertedly ran over him. Thus far officials of the Orange County Harbor District have not released the name of the driver. Sources, however, said the operator of the large service truck apparently became distracted while driving and failed to notice the sleeping victim on the sand. Attempts to obtain elaboration and results of a promised "full-scale in~ vestigation" from district officials failed early today. Neither highway patrolmen D?r sheriff's officers have had any details of the inc id en t . Customarily traffic-related mishaps involving government vehicles are investigated by the CHP. ~ • 111-r::::i ·ii~ 'RR Uy JOHN ZALLER oi ''" otnv ruot St•n A scientist studying Upper Newport Bay said Thursday that dredging out its mudflat may be necessary for the bay's ecological survival. "lf man doesn't do something to con- trol the process of siltation, the bay will fill with mud and become a marsh," said Jack Elder, a staff biologist with \Vater Resources Engineering, Inc.. (WRE), which is working under a consulting con- tract from the Santa Ana Regional \Yatershed Planning Agency. Ultimately, he said, silt carried into the mudflats, 1nostly from San Diego Creek, would dry up the bay entirely. But Elder said that a careful dredging could make "time stand still, biologically speaking," or even reverse time by lak- ing the b~y bac_k to an earlier biological stage. Elder stressed, however, that siltation was only one of many critical problems faced by the bay. "l don't know whether you consider this a pristine area or not," Elder said. "But I have studied estuaries all over the country and this one stands out for the small number of species it has." He cited a high level of nitrates, DDT. and fertilizer in the bay, saying they are creating a· "stress situation." Elder noted that the oxygen level in the water is low', possibly because the Pacific Coast Highway bridge retards flushing action of the tides. And he cited a direct Special Hearing On Hill Density Set for Laguna Let1ers inviting about 80 major Laguna Beach landowners to a special hearing on tough ne'v hillside density standards Monday nlght were mailed today. PlaMing commissioners agreed earlier this week that owners of unsubdivided and undeveloped hillside property should appear to provide input on the proposed standards. - The hearing will be held during a study session at 7:30 p.m. Monday at city hall. The standards, if adopted, would tighten density controls on all un- developed pr;operty. · Slopes of 50 percent or more would be allowed one-half unit per acre; 30 to SO percent slopes, one unit per acre; 15 to 30 percent slopes, 2.5 units per acre; 0-15 percent slopes, five units per acre. Planning commissions also said this week members of the public should feel free to express their views on the new standards. The density factors appear to be the most controversial element of a five- point planned' residential development proposal under study by the planning commission for the past month. Other matters to be discussed by the commission at the study session include open space and conservation elements of the general plan, environmental Impact report standards, the future of the Laguna Beach County Water District of- fice on Third Street and abandorunent of a portion of Highland Drive. - threat from huntan activity in the bay "There is heavy use from motorboat s." he said, "and muny of them co1ne so close to shore they churn up the n1ud. I'm sure that's not helping anything. "l even saw people letting their dog s run loose in the, salt grass in the bay. Naturally. the dogs chased the birds out there. \Vhich is hardly a desircable lhing in an area where endangered species art• trying to hatch their young.'' Elder made his remarks to about 40_, persons in the little theater at Corona del Mar High School. The meeting was called by the planning agency to discus.s a series of alternatives developed by \VRE to curb Pollution in the bay. The major thrust of \VRE 's report in· volved the problems or chemical pollution in waters flowing into the bay from San Diego Creek. Three alternalives \Vere present1.>d ; --Constructioo of a tertiat·y water treatment plant at the n1outh or San Diego Creek. Estimated cost of SI. I to $2.8 million. -Construction or a diversion pipeline to channel San Diego Creek directly into the ocean. The proposed pipeline \vould run along MacArthur B o u I e v a r d . Es'timated c9st was $1.7 to $3.5 million . -Use of a pump to bring five to 50 .million gallons a day or ocean water into the back bay to nush the chemical pollu- tion out. Estimated cost was $960,000 to $3.6 million. Members. of th~ audience sugges ted that. if the bay were dredged. I.he ad- ditionaJ flushing action o: the Udes n1igtit make th e vther. more artificial alternatives unnecessary. The scientists replied that it v.·ill take more study to answer that question. \VRE must make recommendations lo the aSnta Ana Watershed Planning Ageo· cy by the end of August. The agency will, in turn, report to the Santa Ana Ftegional \\1ater Quality Conlrol Board in October, The studies are a prelud e to drafting a ,~·ater quality control pl;in for the entire Santa Ana River watershed aren. From Pagel PARKING ... cd and needed signs must be installed by llfarch 1, 1!174: 50 percent by June 1. 1974; 75 pereent by Sept. J, 1974 and 100 percent by Dee. I, 1974." Suggested regulations also include prcr vision for required bus and car pool lane.s Jf roadways have three or more lanes in one direction. Theal said it is possible the city will send its own representative to the EPA hearings, although SCAG will be there to present the opinions and concerns of its members. 4 Nabbed for Drugs SANTA ROSA (AP) -'1\1;0 Arizona men were among four persons arrested Tiwrsday after a narcotics agent paid $1D,OOO for 28 pounds of marijuana, the Sonoma County Sheriff's office said. Cierald Chester Selund, 31, owner of a natural foods store here. was booked for investigation of selling marijuana and co- caine, deputies said. Terrifi c Selectio n of Top Qu ality Sale Merchandise Rea dy for lmme di· ate Delivery. Do n't Dela y. Final Ch ance to Select From O ur La rge In - ventory at Reciu_c:.ed Prices. -- DREXEL-HERITAG~ENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARAS1AN INTERIORS Wl lK DAYS & SATU•D.t.YS t :OO to l :lO FlllDA Y 'TIL 't100 NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WtSTCttff DR.. 6<42-2050 (Op•n S11nd•y 12·5:JOI LAGUNA BEACH e J•5 NORTH co .... 51 HWY (Op•11 S1111~•Y 12-5:101 '49•·6551 TORRANCE e 2JM9 HAWTHORNE ILVD. 111:1219 • I l ( Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stocks EDITION • VOL. 66, NO. 215, 4 SECTIONS. 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 TEN CENTS Mercy .. ·IJeath Mulled ·1or Capo B(Jy~ 3 . By MARCI DODSON Of lfWI Dlll'r P16tt'Sl•tf Jason Arthur Rea. 3, of Capistrano ~ach, left on a plane for Colorado Thursday, kept alive clinically only by machines. The plan calls for him to die in Denver. And his mother, Mrs. Linda Rea , ex· pccts to bury her only child sometime ne xt week. But the death is not that &imple. Because since Jason's arrival at the ~ University of C.Olorado Medi cal Center a team of physicians has been faced with the grim task of deciding if the machines should be ·sbilt off to allow body functioll.'! to ce.&S;e.: Or if there is still a ray of hope for the cute, towhead who fell victim to a tragic pool _ accident two wee ks ago in Hun(. ington Beach. Early,• \oday the t.eam was fa r from a decision. The concerns in the case arc momen- tous . I! Jason ceases to live, his n1other and the physicians have arranged for his kidneys and liver to be transplanted in three other youngsten who face death themselves unless a donor is found . Spokesmen lrom the medical center said today , that the team is still in its evaluation stage and Will have difficulty Jn reaching a decision because of an ap- parent surge in the boy's bodily functi ons after his arrival in Denver Thursd ay afternoon. The agonizing chain of decisions in the case or Jason Rea began with his mother, of 3473j Calle Fortuna, who is divorced. She and fonner husband reached it early this week when Orange Coast physi cian Dr. Albert Ferguson informed her that her son's chances for recovery from the deadly effects of near drowning (See DECISION, Page Z) EP A's Irvine Parliing, 1 Bus Plans Criticized I i l I Kent State 2nd Probe Requested Dfillr P'llol l ,.ff l"llot• School's Over Studen(s at OliveWood School in El Toro ·celebrated the end of sum- mer ,school wt,th an ·open house for parents . They came in costumes and gave ,demonstrations. Tim Deming, 5, plays the role of elephant while Luke Tomcheski 5, is.the trainer. 50% of County Butche1·s, Meat cutter s Face Chop Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL • Of ..., o.nr P'l!Ot 111tt , Job·laiyoffs in the Orange County ment industry due to tbe current critical beef •• Husba1id, 103, 'Cliases W 01ne1i' ' . STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion·is •Uing Solomon , her busbaod_of 28 yemJlll'...dlvorce, ~~pends all his money on olher women." She is 100 years old and be is 103,•according to records in San Joaquin County Superior Court. "I wanted. to stay with him, bu t he wouldn't stop, chasing alter women," Mrs. Fegion said in an intervtew"Tbursday. 'J!e likes to go to the show -that's where he meets th~)!!, •. . • _ , • ·~ · Mrs. Feglo n said sJ>I> liled""for itivo~ IWO>monlb»ag~ and •inc; that time "he'it been so mean to·me, alivays wants to fight. He doesn t want to give me nothirt' to eat. 11 She and her husba nd h.ve separated, each•living in one o! the two homes the couple own here, situated "only about 10 steps apart," Mrs. Fegton said. ' , shortage are beginn ing arid up to 50 per· cent of the butchers and mca tcutters could be out of work by next Wednesday. Representatives of Butchers Uni on Local 551 in Artesia \Yhlch covers Orange County meat ti1dustry workers, ~ . 8 STATE PACKI NG FIRMS PLA N TO CLOSE-Story, P119• 12 were · unavailable ror u mployment predlctlons today. A spokesman for Los Angeles Butcher! Union Local S63 in HWllington Park said he could not commen t on Orange Coun· _ty's pr;!!!(l<(ltl b!Jt MO ol Jils memwr.I have already been laid of!. "That's almost 50 percent of our mc1nbers engaged in sli ugh tering and we expect more lli.yotfs next F'riday," said J. J. ROdricuez. . Rough . ..Mtimates !oc Orange .County's meat workers appeared to coincide with the trend set statewide. ThoUSllnds are jobless. Telephones went Wlanswered a t several county mentpacklng or brokerage hoUscs today, whil e a coupl e \Vere answered with recordings saying they tS.e MEAT, Page I) Officials Won't Go ~oMeeting By GEORGE LEIDAL Of lfl• 0.Ur 'Utt l lafl Irvine city officials will not appear before an August 9 hearing of the Federal Environmental Protection Agen- cy in Los Angeles to oppose public park- ing reduct.ion and bus lane development requirements ..being C®Sidered for the South Coast Air Basin. "U adopted, the proposed regulations appear ~o be virtually unenforceable," Irvine Public Works Dilector Brent Muchow said today. The EPA is proposing par'king and bus lane rules to reduce use of automobiles and improve air quali ty. The assumptjon is that fewer car trips would result If there are fewer parking spaces available. And, establistunent of bus lanes in arterial highways is expected to en- courage motorists to abandon their cars for public transit "Without the alternative or public transit being available it wouldn 't seem that thi s plan would work,'' Muchow noted. .... Only two streets in. the city or Irvine would be subject to tbe bus lane re- quirement that one of three lanes be set aside during rush hours for the exclusive use of buses or car pools. Those streets are MacArthur Boulevard and Red Hill Avenue. Part of MacArthur is used by the Orange Counl.y Transit District for the Irvine-South Coast Plaza bus route. The public parking facilities cutbacks (See CONTROLS, Page Z) Nixon Attacks Co1igress Over Funds Cut-off WASHINGTON, (AP) -President Nix· on accused ConkJ'ess today of "aban- donment of a friend" by cutting off funds for U.S. bombing in Cambodia by Aug. 15. (Related story, Page 4) In a letter to Congress, tbe President said he wants cambodia to know "we wlll continue to provide an possible support permitted under the la,.. -· "No rth Vietnam would be making a very dangerous error if it mistook the cessation of bombing Jn Cambodia for an invitation to fresh aggression or further violations of the Jan. 27 (Vietnam cease- fire) Paris agreements," Nixon 's Jetter said. "The American people would respond to such aggres,,ion wi,th appropriate. ,ac:; l10n,"" It sala. . • The Aug. 15 bombing halt was reported to the House last month -as it prepared to vote on cutting off funds -.. as a com- promise that President Nixon would ac-cept. !·louse Re)iublican Leader Gerald R. Ford told the Hoose then that the Presi· dent would sign a bill cutUng off funds J or lbc bombing .u of that date bu! would veto any earlier cuto(f. Th<l l'n!sidcnt also pledged then. Ford !old too House. to.halt the bombing Aug. 15 unl~s he asked and Congress approved o bombing extensioo. But the Pre!!ldcnt's letter to Congress today put the bombing halt squarely on the legislators. "I can only hoPe thnt the north Vlet- nameae will not draw the.erroneous coo- cluslon from this c:ongresslonal action ," it said, "that they t1re free to launch a military oflem:lve In other areas of (See BOMBING, Page I) , "I ·TH INK GOD HELP a.itw-""•' itett ,....,. . &D ME IMMENSELY IN MY DECISION" Mrs.. Linda RN Looks •t Picture of He'r Only Cl;ll ld · Dec~ion for Doctors • R evives Age-old Clash · The gravi ty o( a physician's decision to lite rally turn off the switch and allow a patient to cease existing is a clash between "neurology and theology," ra prominent Orange County m e d i c a l educator said today. Dr. Stanley Van Den Noort, dean of the UC Irvine Medical School and himself a neurologist, said the current medical practice is to rely upon results of brain wave tests before a group of physicians makes the decision to allow death to come. "In tltis area the practice ha s been to run electroencephal~ram (EEG) tests and if there is no high-level reflex ac- tivity and the brain wave scans show a "nat ctufff " then the decision is made " he explaj~. ' But, although he often Is brought in on such cases, Dr. Van Den Noort indicated that he is far from·comfortable about the present system. "It is totally reliant on a machine and Story Hom· Open To Registration ·Registration is now f>PeR for preschool story hour at the M1s.sion Viejo .Public Library. Children-must be 3'>1: years of age for the start of the stdry tiou:r program to be held on ·ruesdayij and Wednesdays starting in late September. Specific dates and times bave oot been set. .. • Trish Mel~r, chil,<!ren"tlibrar~n s~d f~ ~ll'ies"'an<IPboDe n'umllers ofi>efsOns interested in the story hour program v•lll be taken during registration and they will be notllied a.bout the starting times and dates. Irvine.Man Obse rved . ' Following Cycle Fall Robert 8. Ca rrico. 27, or 4871 Lori Ann Lane, Irvine, Is being held for· observa- tion today ln Tustin Community Hospi tal suffering· from possible head Injuries following a motorcycle accident Wednes- day ntiiht. lflghway patrol officer~ tvho ln- vestlgaled the accident said CruTlc.o was thrown 120 feet when his cycle hit a guard rail on the north bound offramp from the Newport ~'reeway to Dyer Road.· •. a .technician and althou gh the margin for error is very slight, it stil l ls a passiblli~ ty," be said. An added factor of tension in the dec ision over sustaining bodily ftmctiOOs versus shutting off machines Is the urgency in transplant cases. . ''You. have one tea m cham ping at the bit to implant new orga ns in patient s near death and you ha ve another team whi ch has to decide if the donor bas no chance at all to recover. "I'm an expert on neurology, [ have told people, but I'm not such 3n expert. on theology," Dr. Van Den Noort said. "Often people will call me in and ask me to say that the pati ent on the machine is dead and they get angry Wilh me when I won't do it ," he said. "I'm a conservative in such cases and if I serise a chance for recovery at all I will stick to my decision," he added. ' In Denver today, the decision is being reached in Jason's case. "I know full well what those people there 11re goin_g lhrough right OO\v," Ute local neurologist said. r Orange Coast Weather Night and early morning low clouds wHI again. be· visi ble aloag the Orange Coast. Afternoons will ~k.sw111y, wHti temper81ure&.at beitch near 70, with the low near 60. INSlDE TODAY Co11~mporaru art is the ·t~me""' -'•r of this week's cover ·atories in the \Veekender with features on Jome~ Bvne1. tlie new director of Newport 111.ff bOr Art'"MWtum. a11d .on the All-California A.re Exhibit being presented in the Lag u1~ Beach A1u.!tu1n of A r" At Y~r Mfvk• ) MtYl•I 214111 L,M, hr• II M'lt ll flt1M1 'J IMll"' 21 Nll*'•I ~ "-f C•llftf"11I• J Or•llff C..,., I CM11UIM II... lt•ltvrMta ... Cttnkl tt IHth 1 ... C,.M'lllON 2' 1~ M• .... 1>11 Dtlffl IWlc:•t I "T•IWlilMI 'ii llllltf'l•I '"' t ~ V.M ,lllllM• 11·1) WM!tow t "•f ,... lltc~ • w...._·~ Ntn 1 .. 11 .. ~... ,, Wtr .. ,....,, ~· AJ111 L•Mtrt 1• WMll....., Da --. • • 2 DAIL V PILOT IS Nixo11 Tax Flap Called 'Political' By JACK RltOBACK Of ttl• 0.llf ,l .. I Slit! Orange Coun1y's area repreSt'Tllativt on the Slate Board of Equalization today charged that a current flap over \Vestem \Vhite House la:ic assessments is politically motivated. The charges ca me from John 'V. Lynch. equalization board member for the SOuthern California area which inchJdes Orange County. Speaking in a press conrerence in San· ta Ana today, Lynch claimed that 'Yilllarn M. Bennett, the board member who raised the assessment issue on President Nixon's San Clemente holdings, is simply seeking publicity. Lynch claimed Bennett Is probably going to run for state attorney general next year. "Bennett ran for attorney general when Pat Brown vacated the office to run for governor and he will undoubtedly do the same if Evelle Younger decides to run," Lynch said. The board member said bis agency has no right to appraise or investigate the assessment of President Nlxon's San Clemente property. He said the coU.rts ruled against such intrusion lnto ·county rights more than 90 years ago and the decision still stands. "Bennett, a lawyer and former stall member of the attorney general's office, knew this when he asked the board last Monday to investigate the assessment," Lynch said today. The board voted 4 to 1 against the Ben- nett move. ;'Four of us on the board are Democrats so we tln! not protecting the President," Lynch said. "We are simply abiding by the law." The board member said the agency could only move in on the San Clemente property assessment at the request of the Board of Supervisors or the county assessor. • Lynch did say that the state board does random sample investigating in each county every three years but that the properties are picked by a drawing. Bennett told his fellow board members Monday that he will pressure Orange County authorities to re-appraise the Western White House property, County Assessor Jack Vallerga has stated that he has no intention of further in· vesUgating the property. Lynch said U Bennett brings up the subject next month he might get a ma· jority vote to make the request to Orange County officials "but remember this is only a request for them to investigate," the board members said. ''We cannot initiate our own probe." Lynch said he would vote to make the request to Orange County to get "Ben· nett off our back and quiet dov.71 this furor." F"rid.ty, Augu$\ 3, l 973 .F,...rqel DECISION ... \,!:ere nil. "'It really wasn't a hard declslon. ft was just knowing lbat Juon could make someone else live. 1 had already ac-- ctpted the fact that Jason was leaving me . Then l just start~ to tlMnk of others." said Mrs. Rea. "I think it's about the greatest thing that could ever be performed.'' Hut /o.lrs. Rea's decision did not have to be m(lde quickly. Afttr docton at Jtunl- ington lntercommunity ltoapital revived a hcarbeat from the apparenlly lifeless boy following his fall into a friend's swimming pool, Jason 1nanaged to stay aUve for more than two weeks despite numerous o..'Ompllcatlons. Doctors performed braln scans and electroencephalogra1n (EEG\ tests to detennine the extent of the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery was perfonned to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. "He was more or Tess telling us, 'J'm not going to makv it,' " sald his mother. Then, last Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. "I had to make my decision then," b-frs, Rea recounted. The doctors then put the blond-haired boy on a respirator to keep his blood circulating so that the organs would re- main undamaged. They also arranged for a privak jet to take the child to the Denver hospital, and produced the necessary legal papers for Mrs. Rea to sign. "! didn't think I'd be able to do this. l think God helped me Immensely in my decision. 1 prayed a lot, and He answered my prayers. The doctors helped, but without God, I couldn't have made the decision," she said. "But just lcoowing that Jason could live on in someone else," knowing that Jason could make someone else live, that's the whole reason for th.ls. "I know if Jason were alive and he needed a kidney, 1 would hope someone else would do the same." "But to know that Jason can help some- one else ... " she trailed off. "Of course, all this is with the help or God -not on1y for Jason, but also for the other three people they're going to help save. Third Man Held In Tavern Fire A third man has been arrested in the alleged arson explosion and fire which destroyed the Shangra La bar in Garden Grove June 28. David B. Lerner, 25, of 2175 111:allul Drive, Anaheim , was arrested in the burn ward of San Bernardino .County Hospital where he has been recovering from severe burns. Wednesday, Raymond C. Rohm, '13, and his assistant manager, Victor Bomberg, 31, were arrested by Garden Grove police in connection with the fire. Hospital officials in San Bernardino said Lerner had been admitted under an assumed name the same day as the fire. Rohm also ov.·ns the Fire House bar in Costa Mesa. Irvine Plam1ing Action Here, in capsule form. are the major actions taken Thursday evening by Irvine city planning commissioners. -STREETSCAPE LAW: Recommended the city council amend the walls and streelscape design regulations to redeline the waJ\s to be cover~ by lbe ordinance and increase planning department authority to review designs. -OIL RULES : Delayed until a ~1arch, 1974 meeting continued considers· tion of proposed laws regulating extraction of minerals and natural resources. -GROWTH CONTROL: Decided to infonn county planners Irvine will not be ready to reply to. growth limitation. plans until city population projections of general plan are complete. With letter, however, city will send four-page memo from city associate planner Mel Roop which outlines basic city-county poUcy conflicts. -DEVELOP~tENT PllASJNG: Directed staff to se t for study when general plan consuH.ants are ready. further discussion of ways development" may be approved at limes when public services ranging Crom schools to utiliUes are available to serve tracts. -TEN-TmRTY RULE: Voted to continue often ignored commission rule which bans discussion of new items after 10:30 p.m. Adjourning at 8:57 p.m. Thursday, commissioners indicated support ror continuation of the cutoff rule. 0 1.ANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tll• 0••1111• (Nol DAILY PILOT, Wllll wflltll ll tomlllned !tit NtW\·"•Ht, lo l!Ullll~ed llV llM 0••111" cot11 "u1111s111110 com ... ~v. &ep9. ··•• • .llllrfllOr\t .1-•• 91:111111•1,.d; #moiltf lllfO\l'Otl Frlll•v, If.Ir COt!• Mi ... H~""'°'t fltt(~. HIHlllfllllll" •1ec111fl-t.it1 V1!11y, Lttu.,. •Mell, 1•¥1,,.1$.odl~ -.cl $t11 Cit,,,..,!•/ S.11 Jullln Cepltl••l'IO. A 1lnol1 '"VIONI Miiion ft l)llbll•ll«I $~lurd•v1 •nd $und•Y•· TIM P!'lr!(;IPfl P\lllll•hlllCI 11>11111 It 11 »O Wftt ••f •trMt, CHI• "'-w, C.lllO<~i., tu:M., Rob••* N, w,,J l"ltiiclMl tncl f tltll!foll« J11k R. Cu1l•v VI« Prftld"'°' And O•Mt1I ,..,_n•gff lhomtt K •• ,,.;1 Ed•lor TI.0'"•1 A. Mu1phl110 M.Jo.,.O\no E'.d•!Or Ch1rf•1 H, loot R:t.h •rd P. Nill Aatlal•nl M1 .... l11C1 ElllO<I o ... .. Cott• Mnt: ~)D Wttl •• ., s1 .... 1 '-...-!'""'llOrl IHCllt Jl)) N~wj1111l lklu!Svlrd L09V"\'I .. Adi: m f"or11t Avftl,... l'lunllt\olefl-&wc:ll: 1111' !11dl &Olllt¥••1 --~ C*"'°'"'' JI» Nortll El C.mll'llt lletl T.i.,.... 17T41 64J-4J11 C .... HW Aihwrtl1l .. 64Z·l671 S.. C..._... All hp•rt ... m 1 Jo..,.... 4f1-442D ,.,.,..,,, lt11. Of'Mt• tot" l'\ll)ll1llllit c-..n.,. "'• -· 1lo•lu, l!!ut1ni1....,,, .. ltoti.1 -llW ... P••ll•-11 "-••In 1'19¥ 11oe AOnl'llllttd w!I"""'' _ .. , "'· ... i.:..... "' ~'""' _ _... ~ ci101 #11 ... Nlf •t Cnl1 Mna, C•lltwlll•. ~ .. lloll ~I' U trlr• U.11 ~' ., 111111 1a.1t "'*'''11'1 mllH•"' ~,..,_ a.u -""'· Fro11• P age 1 MEAT ... ·were no longer in service. Gaylord Smith, vice president of Tustin J\lcat Brokerage, however, said the lay offs have noL. bit retailers too hard yet. but many employes will get tile axe next week. "By Wednesday there'll be SO percent laid off," Smlth predicted today. "And by the following week the Hgure could be considerably higher," be said, adding that most ·workers ore now • cn'gaged· ln so-c11Ued cleanup· work wtt.h meat supplies still stocked. The three Los Angeles companies that say they will close this week are Highland ~1eat Packing Co., involving a layo[f of JOO workers; Serv·U J\1eat Pack· ing, with 75 employes; ;ind Newport Afeat Co., 11 employes. Officials say other c:ompanlC$ &lso may shut down. Jn San Francisco, J45 meat wrappeN "·ere dropped from the payroll of Safeway Stores. At the same time, state food and ag riculture Director C. B. Christensen s11id his office hns fil ed an affadavll sup- 1>0rting a suit sgalns the government \11hlch demands an end to the beef price freeze. The suit was filled by the Pacific Coast ~1eat Jobbers AssociaUon. C.'hristenstn said the price freeze was only postponing the. time when C(W'IN?Tlers would have &.o . P"Y more for beef. - • - ----------=-----~ 'Vital f or St1rvival' • :._ _ .. . ' .--.. .· ~--Dredging Seien -----·-·-.. -.. ·----.,, __ _ Upper Bay For ~;;..---.,;;_·--· ==#=--. -_.::-:;... ~~-~ ~ --·----.. · .,, --=. -.. By JOHN ZALLER Of t1M D1lty Piiot il•ll A scientist studying Upper Newport Bay said Thursday tllat dredging out its mudflat may be necessary for the bay's ecological survival. "J( man doesn 't do something to con· trol the process of .siltation, the bay will fill with mud and become a marsb," said Jack Elder, a staff blologt.st with Water Resources Engineering, Inc. (WREJ, which ls working under a consulting con- lract from the Santa Ana Regional Watershed Planning Agency. Ultimately, he sa1d, silt carried into the mudnats, mostly from San Diego Creek, would dry up the bay entirely. But Elder said that a careful dredging .... could make "time stand still, biologic.ally ~peaking," or even reverse time by tak- ing the bay back to an earlier biological stage. Gypsies Gone Etc hing by UC Irvine education major Don Button depicts student farm and gypsy wagon which was a familiar sight for three years near Town Center in -Irvine. City law banned student mobile living as of July 1, but new UCI course catalogue provides permanent re- minder of the sce ne. The Button work, along with dozens of artworks by other student artists illustrate this year's listing of academic of· ferin gs, faculty, and general in!or1nation about UCI and the campus. Book is available at $1.25 by mail or for $1 on campus. 14 School Candidates Interviewed Privately Orange County School trustee Donald Jordan 11lursday again tried-and failed -to make the appointment of a Fifth pj&j.rict board member a more public process. Private interviews or the first of 14 candidates for the post vacated by the resignation of Roger C. Anderson began th.is morning. A second round of interviews, also closed to the public, have been set for 10 a.m. Aug. 13. Anderson , fonnerly of Huntington Beach, resigned July to move to Richland , Wash., with less than a year left in his four-year tl!rm. That timing allo"'s the county school * * * Three More~ Co1mty School Board Positions Three more Fillh District residents Thursday became candidates for ap- pointment to the Orange Cotmty School Board, bringing the final tot al to 14. Deadline for applications to fill the post vacated by Roger Anderson, formerly of lh.1ntington Beach, was Thursday at 5 p.m. Anderson represented the F i f l h Oislri ct, which runs along the same bounda ries as the area represented by Orange County Supervisor R o n a Id Caspers. The latest candidates are : -Jay R. Blakemore, a retired certified public accountant, of 2509 Harbor View Drive, Corona del ~tar. -~1ark C. Johnson, a sales manager for a hospital products manufacturer, of 26502 Monticito Drive, Mission Viejo. -Albert G. Pizzo, a physic ian In general practice, of 2610 Avon St,, .Nei.vpart Beach. The first Interview session was this morning . The second will take place at 10 n.m. ,Aug. 13. County trustees also have made special appointments for at least two candidates who couldn't meet those two sessions. The remaining candidates, by com· munity~ ... .re:-,..., . 'I board to appoint a replaoement rather than eall 'an election. Two weeks ago Jordan, of Garden Grove, argued for an election and was defeated. "I asswned these woold be open meetings," he said 'J'hursday of the interviews. "Repre.sentatives of the press and any interested resident.. of the F l ft h Supervi.sor1al District could hear the can- didates," he added. Jordan began his new effort by asking si mply If "there is room for the press'• in the office where interviews v.'OUld take place. "I have a feeling these are sup- posed to be public," he added. County School Superintendent Robert Peterson objected that "this would be en- tirely different fr001 previous (years).'' Peterson contended private sessions \Vere necessary because some questions: might be ''personal" and that interviews "·ere comparable to executive sessions on personnel matters. ' Elder stressed , however, that siltation was only one of many c.ritical problems fa ced by the bay. "1 don't know whether you consid er this a pristine area or not," Elder said . "But I have studied estuarl!'s all over the country and this one stands out for the small number of species it has.'' He cited a high level of nitrates, DDT, and fertilizer in the bay, sayiag they are creating a "stress situation." Elder noted that the oxygen level in the Y.'ater is low, possibly because the Pacific Coast Highway bridge retards flushing action of the tides. And he cited a direct threat from human activity in the bay. "There is heavy use from motorboats " he said, "and many of them come ~ close lo shore they churn up the mud. I'm sure that's not helping anything. "I even saw people letUng their dogs run loose in the salt grass In the bay. Naturally, the dogs chased the birds out there, which is hardly a deslreable thing in an area where endangered species are trying to hatch their young." Elder made his remarks to about 40 persons in the lltlle theater at Corona del Mar H1gh SChool. The meeting was called by the plBMing agency tG discuss a series of alternatives developed by WRE to curb pollution in the bay. The major thrust of WRE's report in· volved the problems of chemical pollution in waters flowing into the bay from San Diego Creek. Three alternatives were presented: -Construction of a tertiary water treatment plant at the mouth of San Diego Creek. Estimated cost of $1.1 to $2.8 million. -Construction or a diversion pipeline From Pagel BOMBING ••. Indochina." Meanwhile, U.S. Supreme Co urt Justice William o. Douglas heard an hour of arguments today oo whether he should issue an order effectively halting U.S. bombing of Cambodia, then returned to his mountain retreat to ponder his decision. Douglas said his decision "''ould be is.sued probably Monday through the court In Washington . "l will not let the question become tnoot," the justlct said. "l will make a ruling." ........ .... ;,._ ! ~ .•• ..._...._... l . to chBMel Snn Diego Creek directly Into the ocean. The proposed pipeline would run aJong MacArthur B o u 1 e v a r d • Estimated cost was $1. 7 to $3.5 million. -Use of a pump to bring five to 50 million gallons a day of ocean water into the back bay lo flush the chemical pollu· lion out. Estimated cost was $960,000 to $3.6 million. h-1embers of the audience suggcstL>d that, lf the bay were dredged. the ad- ctitiooa.l n~itig action o: th e tides might make the other, more arti f ic ial alternatives unnecessary. The scientists replied that it will take more study to answer that question. . WRE must make recommendations to the aSnta Ana Watershed Planning Agen· cy by the end of August. The agency will, in turn, report to the Santa Ana Regional \V aler Quality Contro l Board in October. The studies are a prelude to drafting: a water quality control plan for the entire Santa Ana River watershed area. F rotn Page 1 CO NTROLS . • • and rule that parking space inventories be provided lo the federal agency do not a()ply to Irvine. "There nre no city·/ operated parking facilities in Irvi ne," 11uchow noted. t1uchow pointed out that lhc city's reaction to the proposed progra1n will be "adequately represented" by t he Southern California Association of Government (SCAG). SCAG is acting as the coordinating agency for ci ties op- pos ing the federal EPA proposals. Councilwoman Gabrlellc Prvor noted today Irvine "can cut sinog by proper land uses and development or a decent intracity trans it system including bicycle trails." These methods, she suggested, would mean Irvine "can do 1norc to fight srr1og than both bus lanes on roads and reduced parking facilities could."' ti.frs. Pryor noted Irvine "must seek alternatives to the use of the automobile " but that clustering of ··commercial, church and residential development" ~·ould cut down on au to trips. The EPA guidelines are aimed at reducing commuter use of t h e automobile by removing from general traffic use one lane of three lane highways during rush hours. Another proposal requires 1harone lane of any highway with four lanes in each direction should be closed permanently for the exclusive use of buses or car pool traffic. The parking fa cili1ies r1..oquirements provide a l>mooth schedule ending in a 20 percent reduction of available public parking with.in cities of ~thern California. Muchow noted that in trv ine, the con· !licts between the exclusive bicycle lanes an d cars v.tll ch already exist on Culver Drive would be further complicated if Culver were to be striped for the three lanes it could handle. Once made a three- lane street a bus lane would have to be set aside during morning and evening rush hours. "It would make for some confusion at right turn intersections," he noted. -lluntlngton Btacb: Norma Van- derMolen, a housewife : James R, Walker, occupation unknown; Helen Schoelzel, administr:ator of Parkhurat Retirement Home; Frank Stewart, real est.a te salesman: and Thayendanagea Joseph Bryant , a chemical engineer. ~la Mesa : Melvin Gilbert, fonner teacher, now independent businessman. -Newport Beacb: Dav.Id C. _Henley, associate professor of joumallsm at USC. -Irvine: Marian ElUs, secretary of the city's Citizen.'! Advl.!ory Committee on Public Edr.acation. Terrific Selecti on of Top Q uality Sele Me rchandise Reedy for .Immedi- ate Delivery. Don't Deley. Finel Chance to Select From Our Large In- ventory et Reduced Prices. • -~1Jssio~ Viejo: Rev. Preston flowell, Baptist minister and former tl"U1tee tn the now-defunct San Joaquin School District. -Laguna Beach: Thomu Aleundtt', former <\I.rector at Cape Cod c:.ommunlty College In A-1assachu.wtu:; I.Jr. Ernest Lake, prof....,... of education ot cal Stott t'uUerton. DRWL.-HElllTAGO--i'iENREPON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN ·. INTERIORS Wllllll.AYS & SATUIDAYS t :OO .. SllO FllDA Y 'TIL t :OO I NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF-DA.. 642·1050 IOp•• Svl'ld•y 11·5:JOI , ~, LAGUNA BEACH e 141 NORTH COAST HWY IOp•11 S1111d1y 12-lilOI 494·6551 TORRANCE e 21649 HAWTliOR.NE ILVD. J71-127t ' ' I " I I I -- '' .. 6 DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Children Can Prof it Irvine youngsters with learning difficulties will ~ among the first to benefit from the splitting up of the old San Joaquin School District. While in San Joaquin, these elementary school children were segregated and placed in classrooms at & few special education centers. Now there 18-a good chance they 1will spend mu ch of their day mixing with regular students. - ~t least that's the hope of trustees of the Irvine Unified School District, who feel that both no rmal and slow·learning children will profit by learning to under· stand their diff=ces. Officials say they are "95 per- cent sui:;e" of getting state support for the program. If the integration plan ioes through, it will mean that slow-learning children will be able to attend their neighborhood school rather than travel to a special one. They will still need individual attention, and for aca- demic subjects like reading and math, they will still be separated for special classes. But for other subjects, they will be able to enjoy the benefits of normal association with other children their age. The change is bound to be helpful. Sharing Problems Appointment of a well-rounded, eight-member com- mittee enhances the prospect for a solution to the Mis- sion Viejo road closure controversy. With most homeowners commuting to work each day (recent statistics said one-third work in Los An- geles), the community is characterized somewhat by apathy in matters of democratic participation. On the closure issue however, scores of people on both sides have taken vocal stands-and have learned flrst hand some methods for communicating with local government. It is encouraging to see the sincerity and enthusi· asm with which both sides became involved. Perhaps thi s experience in resolving a community problem can lead to similar broad participation in fu· ture ~ficultles facing Mission Viejo. It 1.s only as people share common iSsues that a development becomes a neighborhood. An Exciting Beginning Irvine Unified School District's Summer School of Performing Arts bas just ended its first session . It was a success because it spawned enthusiasm for the arts in the small numbers of students and teachers involved. The special sc hool is an excellent idea. Given the little time district officials and teachers had to organize their first summer session, the results were good. But t~e program de serves to be expanded and better-publi- clZed . c.ourses if! dance of all kinds, musical theater, graphic arts (s till photography, film), speech and history and apprec1at1on of fine arts could well fit in with the offerings of instrumental and vocal music and dramatics. District-level studies should begin soon on how best to ~nlarge the program and possibly how to incorporate it 1n the regular schoo l year. Instrumental music classes could be give n to more students regardless of their economic situation if a fund- raisi ng effort ~~~ ~nitiated to ~':'Y musical equipment. . The possibilities. ar~ exciting. The basic fact re- mains that the performing arts school proved itself a seed worth watering. SB ... 'Well, I see wei'e doing our part· to speed up the meat sh ortage.' The Calley Tapes: Precedents for Nixon's Stand A Bewildered Man WASHINGTON -While the nation awaits the Supreme Court showdown over the White House tapes, we have listened to some sec ret tapes which may present President Nixon with another ex· cruciating dilemma. These tapes contain Lt. William Calley's lengthy, ag· oniZing psychiatric interviews after he was accused of mass murder at My Lai . Some psychiatrists h a v e concluded rrom the interviews that he probably was "legally i n s a n e" when he led hi s com· pany on the shooting spree. Other psychiatrists. while agreeing he had personality problems, found "no evidence of mental disease, defect or derange- ment." PRESIDENT NIXON has promised personall y to review the Calley case. His final decision will have tremendous em<r tional impact. People around the world believe Calley was a monster who should be severely punished. But oUlers feel he was a madman whose irrational beha vior should not forever stain America's Ughting men. Calley looked upon himself as quite normal, except for oae "irrational behavior happening." As he recounted the incident to psychiatrists, "I had all the troops in a truck, and there was no warm feeling for the Vietnamese people among the troops and me. I had nothing but disgust. I bad just, I won't say highly hostile feelings, to the polnt where I wanted to wantonly shoot anybody or beat anybody up or anything like that. But I had no respect for them .. , "THE TRUCK came up t~ the village, at which time I went In to the store to get some candles, And thett was a bottle of Seagram's Seven Qiere, which I picked up and wal ked out -just wanton theft. Of which Mama San ran out -well not the Mama San, she was a young girl - r~ out~ ... I told the guard, the truck driver to go on. "I just thought that was an extremely irrational· behavior. It seems t\me [did pay for the candles ... I came back and I gave the booze to my troops. And I said, 'Joe, check it out for glass.' I don't lhink I'd personally drink it. I had na desire in drinking the boo7.e because l was afraid or it because it was on the market. "THEY DIDN'T drink it (either) ... The MPs and I gave it back to the girl. It was a matter of why I actually did that, for which I had no excuse." Calley went on to describe his fru stra· tion over the difficulty of identifying the enemy in Vietnam. He confessed grief over the loss of men, anger at the war and constant fear. He tried to explain his feelings: "I think the moral issues of the war ·-the question or when is a war right, when is a war good, when is killing right, when is it wrong and actually when is, what are we figh ting -we shouldn't be there. "ARE WE fighting the Reds, or a tribe of people, or a bunch of human beings because they're in that situation? Or are we fighting an ideological philosophy that has been oonjured in the minds of human beings?" . "What is your feeling about why are we fighting in Vietnam?" Calley was asked. "Well ," he replied, "everybody knows we're there to stop communism. What is communism? Today, actually com- munism is not an animate object. It 's a philosophy in the minds of men. So bow can you go into an armed conflict and say we're going to save these people from (communism ). You've got armed combat tr o o p s in there to do a job, troops that were designed to fight a hostile enemy ... We're not going to change your way of thinking. We're going to take your PoSition and then endanger your way of life." AT J\IV LAI, Calley felt he was merely carrylng out orders to shoot everyone re-- maining ln the area, because they had been identified as the enemy. He was Dear Gloo1ny Gus How honest is our free press? Do the news media really protect drunken , incompetent and licentious senators ? F.D. Olooml' Gut corn..,lllft •111 suDmlHtcl 111' rNlltn •nd do not nec:es .. rltr .-.tlect ttte v11.,... ol th• 11ew1p11pe1°. s.nd your "' PffWO to Gloomy Gu1, O•lty PllOt. "h~r" or "psyched up," bu t he felt he was in full control of his faculties. Afterward, he \\'38 stunned over the murder charges brought against him. "I was puJled into the Adjutant, no, I mean the Attorney General's office," said Calley. "And he said we've got a, we're conducting an investigation about the My Lai problem. "And I said great. And I was happy. Not because it had entered my mind that I had done anything wrong. I thought somebody finally was going to come and as k me my advice on the war. And I bad built up so much stuff inside me ... "BUT 111EN in the next breath, be told me 'at which time you will probably be charged with mur der. Do you want an at- torney ?' And I said, 'Gee, I thought you wanted to know something about a com- bat operation. What do you mean you're going lo charge me with murder?' He said, 'Well, we 're carrying on an in- vestigation . . . There was something wrong there.' 0 "What is it," a psychiatrist asked Calley, "that you have actually been charged with as far as you know today?" "One hundred and two c a s e s of premeditated murder," he replied. "And agalnst whom?" "Oriental people of mixed ages and races." THE ACCUSATION, be said, "suddenly . presented me at this stage of my life with a cross few men have to bear in life. Now, people don't tal k about the My Lai massacre, they call it the Calley massacre. All of a sudden, 1 have now be<-ome the personification of evil and horror, and everywhere I go, I must race ~ese attitudes of people . . • It is dif- ficult and hard to Wlderstand why it should have happened to me, and I sin- gled out." The only good thing you can say about ~ ~ take a plane there and unwind on a ship an airplane ls that It's fast. That ls. if It SYDNEY J HARRI ~ming hack. But most-people begrudge gets oU on timo and lands on time. nme . , . S the time, and pretty soon there won't be is the only thing that alr travel ls abouL _ _ a ship to take back. Which is not only a But travef, properly cod'si~ered, ought _ .Pi~y (J:om~tbe.,?,>int of vit!W o:f .. relaxing, to. be, about..;{80ff•UY~11me-r WI! are often a fegtlislon-fro1n rCalit.y ttiat earl but also because it's one of the biggest already bemoaning be healing to the bruisc.'<1 soul. A century bargains you can find anywQere. Try liv-!:= io::. :O:ft~:O~ ago, "a sea trip" was often the best Ing In a good hotel for five days on what medication a doctor could offer to some . it costs for tho same service on a ship. as if ships are go-r hi · ing to go the way of 0 · s pa~ents.. WE ARE already sorry that we havo trains. And that But it s going fast. Tran&-Atlantic let our railroad system go to heil. Some would be another ir· crossing~ get scar~er every year; more of the routes they se rved simply will not reparable loss Jn an~ more of the big, glorious ships are be replaced by airlines and m a n y Presidents and the Courts To the Editor: Should-President Nixon ignore a court order to obey the subpoena of the Senate's Select Investigative Committee, he will act in accordance with well es tablished precedents. The courts have no power to enforce their decisions. The Executive branch of our government alone has this duty. The doctrine of separation of powers rests on the Constitutional provision that establishes the legislative, judicial and executive branches of our government co-equal. Each is independent of the others. Each branch is sole judge of its own affairs. THE SYSTEM of checks and balances was adopted because the members of the Constitutional Convention opposed a strong centralized government. The plan was for Congress to legislate, the judiciary to lnterpret, and the executive to enforce the laws and legal decisions. The system has worked smoothly with complacent presidents. Strong presidents have acted much as they pleased. There has been on1y ·one direct con- frontation with C.Ongress by any presi- dent, until President Nixon's refusal to surrend er certain tapes and documents to the Senatorial committee. That oc- curred when Andrew John son deliberate- ly and openly violated the Tenure of Of- fice Jaw, whi ch had been passed over his veto. To act contrary to a statute is a crime. He was impeached, and escaped conviction by one vote ; but that victory sustained Johnson's right to act contrary to law. Other confrontations have been compromised before they reached the di rect confrontation stage. THE RECORD of presidents ignoring the orders of the courts, even of the Supreme Court is different. Thomas Jef· ferson, as president, refused to surrender certain documents to the judiciary when ordered to do so by Chier Justice Marshall. Marshall had even a worse af· front when Jackson, then president said, "John Marshall has made his dec ision: now let him enforce it." During the Civil War Lincolll" suspended the writ o( habeas corpus, and made arbritary ar- rests. The Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Taney ordered the release of those arrested. Lincoln did not argue; he ignored the decisions. All the judges could do was fuss and fume. As presi· dent, Lincoln had command of the armed forces and the law enforcement branch of government. Should the occasion arise that the Judicial system would order President Nixon to compl y with the select Com· iUee'a s:~e ·would .ach should he r"etuse, in accordance with 'the best precedents, set by both Republican and Democraic presidents. ROBERT O'BRIAN Wic k s :. ~~ • ( .... _MA_I_LB_o_x ___ ) Letters from readers are welcome. N arm.atty writers should convey thei-r rnessages in 300 words or less . The right to. condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. Alt letters must. include signature and mailing address, but 1wmes may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is appare,nt. Poetry wiU not b~ published. · Lesson for 'Libs' To the Editor: Jt, very painfully. came to my at- tention the other night, as I was parking cars at a Coast Highw ay restaurant, that some slightly liberated females have an immense amowit of homework to do before they pass into the ''liberated" class. EARLY in the evening, a trickJe of cars pulled into my lot and I noticed that these cars were occupied by an unusually large number of unescorted women . The cars did not come in a group and only once did two won1en arrive together. I, therefore had no idea that a group of ladies were gathering for an evening out. About an hour later, the group emerged in full force chattering to each other. I politely stood waiting to be told ·what types of cars to fetch . Finally, a woman in a green dress asked me to· bring up her brown Mercury. With all of the juice my muscles could . muster, I fla shed away and returned not 20 seconds late1· with her car. S•IE WAS still talking but managed to break away Jong enough . to squeak into the driver's seat. Tipless, I closed the door gently for her and said '·goodnight." There were too many ladies waiting, so, I planned to brood about the stiff (no tip) later. In the next three minutes, I brought up four cars in perfect style and politely opened the door for each of the departing women. For my fla.wless service, I netted a total· or fifty cents, two stiCfs and an upset~stomach. Slnce ·that contingent of women was my biggest business of slow Monday night traffic, I had plenty of time to pander my ill-fortune . IN TIUS"' DAY of Women's Lib and equality, two things must take place. First: Women must educate themselves as to how to do things that were done fo r them in the past. Just as the males must learn to cope with the shopping and other niceties tba:t be bas taken for granted, so too must a woman learn such fine arts as, correct tipping and tire changing. Second: People must be pati ent with both sexes as they try to master the new roles that change is asking them to play. JOHN M. DE SANTIS Bicycle Ha%ard To the Editor: Regarding your editorial on cars and bikes, if something isn't done to make bicycle rlders stop at stop signs there will, be lots more accidents. Most of them don't pretend to stop: they just shoot right through in front of you. HARRY HAMMOND Snubbed By a Tiger A BEVY OF BEASTS By Gerald Dur· rel!. Simon & Schuster. 253 pages. f1.9S. As a young zoo keeper Gerald Durrell concluded that tigers communicated by sniffing. So he set about learning the various sni ffs as best he could, then tried them out on one of the big cats. The reaction? "He direc::ted on me a look so full of scom that I almost blu,,hed; then he turned his back oo me and slouched off -bool<~o·hi•·bed. 1 l<It-tl>at I shouf<I have· practiced a bit more before trying it on him." BEING snubbed by a tiger isn't the only thing that happens to Dumll in this \\'arm, funny book which recounts the year he spent workir).g at England's (THE BOOKMAN J rell's never.boring, al ways eloquent pica for animal preservation. As he puts it. "The animals that share the planet with us are just as important and, while it is conceivable tha t angther Rembrandt or da Vinci might be born, once an animal ~.eeciey .~. extern@at~d J!Q;-a~t:~!~~ ~-· tort on our part • . . can reproduce 1t again.'' Phll Thomas AP Books Editor , Whipsnade Zoo. Durrell •as detennined ... 1 • .• to le..im all he could about animals and then to start his O\Yn zoo, and he later achieved these dreams. But that's arlother story and this book deals J)rlmarily_wlth his_ youthful passion for coll~tlng animals •nd his later employ- ment at the zoo, and an Interesting story It is. Broken down into chapters with just· right titles such as "A Lusk of Llons." N. Wted, Publisher Thomas K eevil, Editor Barbara Krelbich .Editorial Pnue Editor travel experience. ~';!r~l~j, i:~i: :~~~s.m~i'Y a~~ Ameri~an communities a;e more cut off A good friend or short cruises. but 3 large ship is in--today th~n they were . 50 years ago. We L~~~!~:!;2;;::~ mine went on a two----'----crtdtbly"'erpensive to -m11rlt.1brrun1~·nm___w!1Lp:Ulill_as_sfil'..CY_IUv_e abandon _the_ week carlbbean cruise this spring. It was prcperly. s~a-hneli, not only for the pleasure ..ye ''A Plash of Polars," and "A Gallivant Ql ... r-+~Gmnu~" _!_~ -~rra.uv~~eals ~~~8;ily w lb afil maTs, olcourso. flow 1 ~r to -Durrell , and how he reacts to them. 1't'lt' f'dltorl al ,paae or 1he Daily Piiot •ks to inform Md stimulate rndtta~ by t>f'("Smting on tlrb po,ge diveN•c:ommen™¥ ·on topics of'tn- lrr.ist by ~ndic11ttd columnists 'and -(l&l'"tooni&tarby priNktloa: ,a, tonim-ft:lr-- ttaden· vJtwg and by presenting tbi.s newipaper'1 oplnklns and ideas on current topJo.. Thet tdltorlaJ opinions her first time on a large ship, .and she will have lost, but because it's said It was the best trip she had ever had IT WOULD 8E a tragedy U we camV economically wroog to give any one form in het Ufo. No doubt part of thl$ was to rely excluslvety on air travel f8r of transportation a stranglehold. because 5he went without her husband, transportation, The train 1\ad its own Americans are staves to their cars, b\Jt ship-lire Itself must take a Jot of the mysUque -traveUrig to New York on the because public transit has been credit. "20th Century'' was a delight no airplane shamefully neglected. We will liOOn be can rival. The big new planes. with all slaves to our airplanes, when the last THERE IS a wonderful mystique ebout their gloss, are just skybome busts, wlth great ship retires fro1n the seas. l can 't a ship that ls unrivaled by any other about ·I S much personality as a steam believe that any form or slavery is form or transportation. It la a sett-con-shovel beneficial, no matter how much tim e taincd unit In a very special wiiy, and It The Ideal way to go to Europe l.s to may be saved . wic..~ 'You nt19d exercise. Why not go to ]all fore month?' OUT TflE book also d ea l s with hr.mans. Not just Durrell, and his educa- tion at the zoo, but the other men who worked there. Most did not share Dur· rel.,s passion for animals, but they did their jobs and did them well. A point which ranks them high in the author's favor. There is knowledge ln this book and fun, Rlll<l, but the n1 ain thre:id is Dur- .OI tht O.lly Piiot •ppear only in the editorial column· at tbet l>P ot the page. OplnloM exp""'8C'd by the ool· umnista and ca.rtoonllt1 and 'letter wrltft'I Art! their OW1I ahd no endorst<· mcpt of their vil'!WI by the Dt.IJy Pllot-ldbo- Friday, August 3, l973 Videotape E·vidence? Accused Slaye1·'s Defense to Open SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The defense was to c>peri its case today in Herbert W. Mullin's mass murder trial, after the judge took under advisement a defense plea to introduce a videotaped talk bei-o the defendant and his lawyer. Public defender J a m e s Jackson made the request Thursday, as the prosecution concluded its three-da y presentation. Jackson sald the hour-long tape, made when he flnt talked with Mullin, would show that "he's crazy, he keeps slipping in and out of reality." SANTA CRUZ Count y Superior OxJ.rt Judge Charles Franich withheld a ruling on the request, which was ex· pected to be challenged by the prosecution. Jackson's first witness was to be Stanford psycOOJogist Dr. Donald Lunde, whom he said would testify that Mullin was mentally unstable. Jackson said in his opening statement Monday that Mullin is guilty of the 10 slayings he is charged with committing during a three-week period in the Santa Cruz area. He also sald Mullin had kilJed three other persons before that. ' On Thursday, prosecutor Arthur Danner linked Mullin and the .22 caliber pistol that killed James Gianera, 24, and hi!J. wife Joan , 21. Danner said the gun was found in Mullin 's car when he was arre!ted shortly after the murder of Fred Perez on Feb. 13. CR I M I N-OLOGlsT Paul Weinberger 'Pressured To Compete' DoUghcrty testified that a bullet from the sa me gun was lodged in the wall of a cabin where four teen-age boys were found shot to death Feb. 17. Jack!on says Mullin is "a psychotic schizophrenic'.' who killed 13 persons as "human sacrifices needed to save California from earthquakes." He also has stated that Mullin claimed to be under his family'! telephatlc c on tr o I when he killed his f irst three victims. The prosecution has said it will show dW'ing tbe trial's sanity phase Mullin was sane at the time of the murders. Gas Ousts LA Subttrh Residents LOS ANGELES (AP) Residents of a six-block area of the San Fernande> Valley community of Arleta were voluntarily evacuated from their homes early today when fumes from an insecticide sprayed on a nearby field brought complaints of eye ir- ritation and nausea, police said. Three residents and 22 Foothill Division policemen who went into the area were treated at Holy Cross Hospital, mostly as a precau- tionary measure, o f f 1 c i a I s said. No serious injuries were reported and no one was hospitalized. OFFICERS AND firemen alerted about 160 home owners in the area to the problem, police said, adding t h a t evacuation was voluntary. A fire department spokesman said at least 20 homes were SACRAMENTO (AP) evacuated while firemen used W U Sec t Cas W fans to blow the fumes -e are re ary per · described as similar to tear Weinberger acknowledged to-_ day that he is under in-gas -from the houses. creasing pressure to run for governor in his home state of Califomia next year. Weimefger, a Republican, said be was lionored and flat· ( BRIEFS ) lered but had oot yet token time to think seriously about the prospect. Berkeley Barb Shims Sexual Ads Couple Succumb In Desert BAKER CAP) -'111e bodies of a young South Gate cou ple have been fo und in the desolate Devll 's Pl ayground area of the Moj ave Desert, ap- parently victims of scorching desert heat. Virgil T. Dawson Jr., 26, and his 21-year-old wife Becky were Identified Thursday by the San Bernardino County Coroner's office. The couple left their home last Thursday in a borrowed camper truck. Nothing was heard from them untU a Union Pacific Railroad work crew found the husband's body about 41f.i: miles from the abandoned camper. which was bogged down in sand. MRS. DAWSON'S body wa!' about 800 yards farther along the road, beside an empty water can. Officials said the couple were ill-equipped for a trip in- to the isolated part of the desert, where d a y t i m e temperatures hovered around 110 degrees. It appeared the couple at· tempted to walk !fl miles to the small community o f Ludlow after they remained with their inoperable truck for about a day. Pros titut.e Sues Judge For Leclge r SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A prostitute who says she's earning money so she can go .to college and become an ac- countant sued a city judge Thursday to get back her aP' pointrnent book. The Superior Court suit filed by Elaine Carl.son, 2.1, also re- quested return of a container of contraceptive foam seized when she was arrested on a prostitution charge May 7. ~ Miss Carlson said t h e charges were dismissed July 4 but Mun1cipal Judge Eugene F. Lynch refused to return the book and container. "Unless the book is returned ·In the very near future , I will suffer the full damage of the loss since appointments will have already been missed and so forth," Miss Carlson said in the suit. ' Lynch explained his action by saying "often times we refuse to return property in certain types of crime because the items are sometimes used in the crimes themselve s. -An F11day, August · 3, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5 Chavez Asks Picket Ban Defiance FRESNO (AP) -Cesar ChavC't wants his followers all over America to j!stand with us and be arrested " here where droves already have been jailed for challenging court bans on mass picketing. Almost 3,000 United Farm Workers Union members and supporters have been arrested in the San Joaquin Valley dur· ing two weeks of massive ci vil disobedience picketing at fruit ranches where growers had obtained co urt restrictions on the number or pickets. Almost 2,000 of the arrests haVJ been * * * Com promise Meany Goal WASHlNGTON (AP) AFL-CIO President George Meany met . tod ay ,.,,. i t h Teamsters Union officials in an attempt to settle a bitter jurisdictional dispute between the Teamsters and Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers Union. Meany, asked on his arrival if he thought the session would be productive, replied, "I haven't the slightest idea/' It was not certain whether Teamsters President Frarik E. Fitzsimmons attended t h e meeting held on n e u t r a I ground in downtown Washington. in Fresoo Counly, reportedly the nation's richest crop pro- ducing county in dollar value. C.'havcz, visiting so1ne 300 still in jail here, blasted the arrests Thursday as 1 ' a disgraee!ul mlsu3e of justice •.• truly a blot on A·merica." "I feel the only reason hr junctions were issued was to' appease the growers and destroy the w'lion," Chavez chai-ged. "I AM CALLING on friends across the Unitd States to witness the outrage of jailings and hardships brought on our union people. I am asking that they come from all over to Fresno County to stand with us and be arrested." In Sacramento, S t a t e Agriculture Director C . B • Christensen says the California National Guard has been alerted for possible duty because of continuing clashes on picket lines in the San Joa· qttin Valley. Christiansen told the state board of agriculture Thursday that the Guard was alerted Tuesday night following a day of clashes between pickets and Kern County Sheriff's deputies in the Arvin area. The dispute involves court· ordered limits of one picket te> every 100 feet and restrictions on use of bullhorns at 50 fruit ranches where growers have refused to renew UFW C()n· tracts. Most of these growers have UNITED FARM WORKERS PICKETS TALK Cesa r Chavez Attends Rally In Community of Pa rlier to date remained independent had Chavez contracts. The o{ the rival Teamsters Union, tearristers are also negotiating 'vhich has signed 51 other with 29 Delano table grape California farmers who once growers whose pacts with Chavez expired Sw1day. Chavez co n t er: d s the picketing restrictions violate constitituional rights or free assembly and speech, but of· ficlal.s here have tried to avoid a court teat of the civU in· junctions on those growlds by charging the pickets with refusal to disperse. 1'llE TACTIC 0 F en- cow-aging mass arres.ts "is , not going to quit until we arouse public opinion and possibly jail 10,000 or more and public opinion makes them county officials look in- •· ward and realize they've made a grave and unjust error," said Chavez, who has been ar- rested himself in past labor dl.sputes. More of his !upporters heed- ed the call Thursday as 143 were arTested here, seven in Kem County and five in Tulare. The bookings here In· eluded 20 nuns, upping the total o[ nwis and priests ar· rested '8fter coming here to picket this week to 60. The nuns and priests already jailed began a fast \Vednesday to emphasize their solidarity with C h a v e z . Fasting has been a chief tactic in the past for the UFW leader, but he has not begun one in his current struggles against Teamster en- croachments that have wl\it- tled UFW working mem· bcrship from a high of 40,000 down to 6,500. ' RECREATION IN ACTION SHOW YAMAHA MINI-BIKE Drawing Soa. Aug. S, 3 p.m. South Coast ?Ja.za / AUG. 2nd thru 5th Register for prim In c-s.I C.-t TOYOTA SAILBOAT Dnwillg Sun. Mg. s, 3 ..... . -. \ ~=\-::=.___' 32 HOURLY PRIZES $1 0 .00 Gift Certificates Startin~ at 1 pm Daily SCHEDULE OF DAILY EVENTS amr =· TltUISDAY, AUGUSY 2"'1 ·tlww .... W,-T--Rood & T ... FOllllly -..... Children's Art, Bkycle Grtnd Prix,. Surfflolrd CNmpionsfti9s,. Children's Terf-trivmt- FRIDAY, AUGUST 3 Huntington line.ft Stnior Otinns "Goodtime Singen .. 6130-7:15, 7115-8:00 Music Man Band-SATURDAY AUGUST 4 11:00-l l iJO Children's Dance, 11:30-12:00 Tumbling. 12:00-12:30 K1r1te, 12,30-12145 Tumbling, 1 :00.1 115 Baby Balltt, 1.00.1:45 Communffy The1tre (Pe1er Ptn~SUNDAYJ AUGUST 5 1:00.1115 Trim to Rhythm. 1:30-1:45 GymtW11fics, UJ0. 2:15 Round 01nu, 2:30-2,4 Baton Twirling Pmrrtflhd •Y •tcn1tlM Dlipe;tMltifl .. C1st1 MIN. ....... van.,, ....... htdi I....._ ~ Weinberg.,,-..id in a In· terview that he wouJd consider the idea "at some point." BERKELEY f>l,P\ -The publisher of fur underground newspaper Berkeley B a r b says future issues will not con- tain ad vertisements of a sex- ual nature. obvious example would be a,-----------------------------------------------------guii ." 1- e Clash Foreseen SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti headed today toward another potentially bitter clash over the one--cent sales tax in- crease, wh!ch some say ls un- needed and unwanted. 'Ibe Republican governor proposed Thursday a hall-cent cut in the sales tax for one year. That would use up $.320 million of ttie state's $826 million trea!ury surplus. e Re oqoia P11 d • SACRAMENTO (AP) -lt could set a national precedent if California were to throw out the legal rule that evidence gathered illegally may not be allowed in court, says Gov. Ronald Reagan. That rule "has permitted criminals to walk free," said Reagan in a neWs conference Thursday. If Californi a dlscanls it, he added, the U.S. Max Scherr a nn ounce d Thursday that the tabloid will cease to prifit "slimy" ad- vertising that "exploits" other human beings. Scherr, who denied he \Vas yielding to right w I n g censorship, said the idea of purging the Barb, entering its ninth year of publication, was his own. The bearded publisher ad- mitted that as much as 80 per- cent of his advertising revenue may be lost. "Yeah, it will probably wreck our advertising. We'll just plug along. We started with nothing, we'll probably "'d up with nothing," be sald. "We will no longer accept advertising which m a k e s persons into objects," he said. "We will no longer allow slimy style ads whether they offer commodity sex, encounter groups. stereos or airline tickets." LA Judges Ce1isured SAN FRANCISCO IAP I T\Yo Los Angeles judges ha ve been censured for "willful misconduct in office" by the state Supreme Court. Superior Court Jud ge Leopoldo Sanchez d r e w "severe censure" Thursday, and 11llnicipal Court Judge Antonio E. Chavez w a s "censured." Both orders came on the recommendat ion of the state CA>mmission on JuWcial Qu alifications. The commission said during a three-year period Sanchez gave a bail bondsman orders for release of prisoners which were blank except for the judge's signature. Supreme Court mlght lo~-------------~----~ likewise for the whole country. Tunney 01•de1· e Contalnme11 t EUREKA (AP) --. Seriator Wants CliiUlre1i ' -l!lrefiK'!ters today ~re, ~ pected to contain the Klarna th National Forest's biggest timber fire in six years - a blaze that hss ravaged 14 square miles of timberland at RIVERSIDE (AP) -Sen. John V. Tunney's wife hns an estimated ·cost of $13 been ordered to return from Holland with the couple'~ million. three children and appear in ~ourt Mondav to resolve ,a · Dense· Smoke tha · had· -cUs100y.C:lli'agre(!lnen"r.'..!..> --· '· ' ··~· · · hampered firemen's efforts by shrouding ridges and creek Attorney Horace Coyle sa id Thursday that Mrs. Tunney canyons since the fire beg'an a took the children -Teddy, 12, Mark, 8, and Ariann, 5 -to week ago was cleared Thurs· her native country contrary to an agreement that Tu nney day by breezes from a Pacific would have custody of them during August. cold front , U.S. Forest Service Twiney {D-Callf.) learned of the departure 1i-1onday in !pokesrnan Ernest Weinberg saJd. a note from Mrs. Tunney who left for Europe \Vith the chlldren over the weekend, Coyle said. e S u spect. Held Mrs. Twmey filed for divorce In Moy, 19n . but Coyle SANTA ROSA (AP ) -A man being he.Id in a Canadian said the J4.year marriage has not been di ssolved. The JB11Was t0b€"que·st1oned today--Tunncys Uved-together·in their Georgetown home last .fune, by Sonoma County authlrltles the lawyer said, adding that i~ was not an effort at inv~tlgating the deaths of five re<..-onciLitttion. DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMM UP WITH TELEPROMPTER! l[t II s: WITH CLEAR RECEPTION OUR ANTENNA IS 350 FEET HIGH WITH MORE CHANNELS CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO l(]t WITH NEWP2~J;Ss~~~£ II Wl1'!L~2E~Ls!o~~!~~~!7s • -~ WJJH ~YHfy C ... ~6.~~.~~~,c . -=, .. c' ~ ·~~~~~-~.,,/; V-tr .,ESAmE STRi:ET 10 STOCKS ... ~ .... ,' II WITH CRYSTAL CLEAR F.M. RECEPTION n~.I TELEPR OMPTER is th• lorgort cable television organization In the world. We have the most up·to .<fate technical facilities. Now .you can get-rid of your ugly antenna ·(and-mako-Nowpart ewn-moro-be iful)•and gtt a better picture at the same time -Plus You'll save moneyl Otter good in cable 1ru1 onl . ... . ,. ~un~ls whose nude bodies TtiMey Issued a statement saying, "J want the chil· :.r1rr ~ ;:{;p~iak! dren in this country to share In their up.bringing. 1 wont FOR A LI MITED TIME ONL Y. liELEPA. DmPrllEA them raised In America as Americans." ~ OUR INSTALLATIO N CHA''"'E IS FREE. 'II =1 v!:11e<~'27~1'l: Coyle said the order for Mrs. Tunney to appear would .. ~ altta~·bcendwgedw!lhtbel~be:s~er:ved::on~La~wr~en~c~e~Sloc:.ke~r,~be~r~al:to~rn~ey~in-S-•n_l'r_•_n·JIJb..::~-~~~~;;;;D;/.;J1;l;6;4;J;-;J;1;6;0;;;;;G/!\J:l;;';;:;[y;;;::];~;;;~~~~~~~ June klll1ng or a Sonoma man clsco. ln the coaatal town of Jemer Tunney'• JegaJ rcsidenc.e ls in Riverside. near-. I • ' .. - Huntington Beaeh Fooniain ·Valley * .. "- ' Today's Final ' N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 215, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 TEN CENTS Mercy Death Mulled for Capo Boy~ 3 By MARCI DODSON ot ltlt D•llY Pllft Staff Jason Arthur Rea, 3, of Capistrano Beach, left on a plane for Colorado Thursday, kept alive clinically only by machines. . The plan calls for him to die in Denver. And his mother, Mrs. Llnda Rea, ex- pects to bury her only child scnvetime next week. But the death is not that simple. Because since Jason·'s arrival at-the Uojversity of Colorado Medical Center a team of physicians bas been faced with the grim task of deciding if the machines should be shut off to allow body functions to cease. Or if there is still a ray of hope for the cute, towhead who fell victim to a tragic ·pool accident two weeks ago in Hunt: lngton Beach. Early today ~he team was tar from a decision. · The concerns in the case are momen- tous. If Jason ceases to live, his mother and the physicians have arranged for his kidneys and' liver to be transplanted in three other youngsters who· face death themselves unless a donor is found. Spokesmen from the medical center said today that the team is still in its evaluation stage and will have difficulty in reaching a decision because Qf an ap- parent surg e in the boy's bodily fWJctions after his arrival in Denver Thursday afternoon. The agonizing chain of decisions in the case of Jason Rea began with his mother, of 34731 Calle Fortwta, who is divorced. She and former husband reached it early this week when Orange Coast physician Dr. Albert Ferguson infonned her that her son's chances for recovery from the deadly effects of near drowning (See DECISION, Page ZI ·Nixon Slams Congress . . Cambodian Cutoff 'Aba,ndonment of Friend' BULLETIN WASHINGTON IAPI -The United Stales will continue unarmed reconnaJ- 1sance flights over Laos and Cambodia after a congressionally imposed bait to American bomblng on Aug. 15, the de-' fense Department said this afternoon. WASHINGTON· (AP) -President Nix- on accused Congress today of ''aban- donment or a friend" by cutting off fund.:; for U.S. bombing in Cambodia by Aug. Gray Clai111s He Wm·ned P1·esident WASHINGTON (AP) -Former FBI chW!f L. Patrick Gray lfl testified today that he warned President Nixon, Jess than three weeks arter the Watergate, that "people on your stair are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and the FBI." But Gray said he didn't know himself the full details about efforts by persons on the White House stafr to draw the Central Intelligence Agency and the FBI into a coverup-scheme . The former acting FBI director said Nixon replied, "Pat., you just continue to conduct your aggressive and thorough in- vestigation." Gray said he had no trouble after that. Gray's account differed in many details from that of Army Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Walters, deputy director of the CIA. \Vallers testified to the Senate Watergate committee during the morn- ing, and -Gray read a prepared statement at his afternoon appearance. Walters said he felt White House counsel John W. Dean Ill was acting im- properly by asking him if the CIA could furnish bail money and saJaries for the Watergate burglars. Gray said he hadn't known about that incident and other aspects of the cover-up, but was confused by conflicting information he was receiv- ing from several sides. Walters said he, Gray and former CIA Director Richard Helms resisted White House efforts to draw their agencies into the cover-Up. Gray said he maintained consistently that the FBI's investigation couldn't be deflected without news of the cover-up leaking out. Generally, Walters <'Oflfirmed testimony given the previous day by his former boss, Helms. He said presidential chief of statf H.R. Haldeman ordered him June 23, tm, six days after lhe break-in, to tell Gray that the FBl's Watergate in- vestigation in Mexico n'tight uncover some CIA assets. He said presidential domestic adviser John Ehrlichman sat in on that meeting, but-said litt.le..---Wal~1• like Jielm!,_sai he knew o! no CIA 5'Crets that could be uncovered In Mexico, but thought 15. (Related story, Page 4) In a letter to Congress, the President said he wants Cambodia to know "we will continue to provide all possible support permitted under the law. "North Vietnam would be making a very dangerous error if it mistook the cessation of bombing in' Cambodia for an invitation to fresh aggression or further violations of the Jan. 27 (Vietnam cease- fire ) Paris agreements," Nixon's-letter said. "The American people would respond to such aggression with appropriate ac- tion," it said. · The Aug. 1$ bombing halt was reported to the House last· month -as it prepared to vote on cutting off funds -as a com- promise that President Nixon would ac- cept. House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford told the House then that the Presi• dent would sign a bill cutting off funds for the bombing as of that date but would Divor~e at 100 Husba1td , 103, 'Cliases Wome1i ' STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her husband of 28 years1 for divorce, because he 0 spends all his money on othei: WOfllen." , She -is 100 years old and he is 103, aceording to records in San Joaquin County Superior Court. · "! wanted to stay with him, but be wouldp't stop cha.sing after women," Mrs. Fegion said in an interview Thursday. "He likes to go to the show -that's where be meets them." Mrs. Fegion said she filed for divorce two months ago and since that time "he's been so mean to me, always wants to fight. He doesn't want to give me nothin' to eat." She and her husba nd have separated, each living jn one of the two homes the couple own here, situated 11only about 10 steps apart," h1rs. Fegion said. 50% of County Butchers, Meatcutters Face Chop By ART11UR R. VINSEL or nt. o.nr P'liot Stiff Job layoffs in the Orange County meat industry due tO the current critical beef shortage arc beginning and up to SO per· cent of the butchers and meatcutters could be out of y,·ork by next Wednesday. Representatives of Butchers Union Local 551 in Artesia, which covers ~ange County meat industry workers, 8 STATE PACKING FIRMS PLAN TO CLOSE-Story, Page 12 were unavailable for unemployment predictions today. the trend set statewide. Thousands ate jobless. Telephones went unanswered a t several county meatpacking or brokerage houses today, while a couple were answered with recordings saying they .were no longer in service. Gaylord Smith, vice president of Tustin Meat Brokerage, however, said the layoffs have not hit retailers too hard yet , but many employes will get the axe next week. "By Wednesday there'll be so percent laid o!f." Smith predicted today. "And by the following week the figure could be considerably higher," he said, adding that most workers are now engaged in t<K:alled cleanup work with meat supplies still stocked. veto any earlier cutoff. The President also pledged then, Ford told the House, tO halt the bombing Aug. 15 unJess he asked and Congress appi-oved a bombing extension. But the President's letter to Congress today put the bombing halt squarely on the legisliitors. "I can only hope that the north Viet- namese will not draw the erroneous con- clusion from this congressional action," (See BOMBING, Page %) Richardson Orders Probe Of Kent_State WASHINGTON \AP) -Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson today ordered a new Justice Department investigation or the deaths of four Kent State University students shot by National Guardsmen in 1970. Richardson said his decision was based on "the need to exhaust every potential for acquiring facts related to this tragedy.'' He gave no indication \Vhelher a federal grand jury would be cooveoed to assist. Richardson ordered J. Stanley Pot- tinger, assistant attorney general in charge of the department's Civil Rights Division, "to pursue the additional in- quiry by such means as he feels are ap- propriate so that we will both be com- pletely satisfied that the department knows as much as can possibly be learned concerning possible violations of federal law." Richardson reopened the investigation after studying the finding~ of Pottinger's preliminary review of existing files. Richardson initiated the preliminary review on the heels of a White House statement last May which reafftnned the August 1971 decision by ·former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell to drop the case without a federal grand jury probe. Four students were killed and nine others wounded when a National Guard contingent opened fire on students demonstrating against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. The slain students were Allison Krause, 19, of Pittsburgh, Pa., Jefrrey Miller, 20, or Plainview, N.Y., Sandy Lee Scheurer, 20, 1>f YOWlgstown, Ohio and William Schroeder, 19, of Lorrain, Ohio. A spokesman for ~ Angeles Butchers Union Local 563 in Huntington Park said he could not comment on Orange Coun- ty's p~ts but 650 of his members have already been laid off. "That's almost 50 percent of our members engaged in slaughtering and we •IPl'J't more.!WJsJ1exJ Friday,'' said J. Links Extension J. Rodriguez. 0.llr ,.,.., ''lff ~ .... "I THINK GOD HELPED ME IMMENSELY IN MY DECISION" Mro. Linda Rea Looks at Picture of Her Only Child Decision for Doctors Revives Age~old Clash The gravity of a physician's decision to literally turn off the switch and allo·w a patient to cease exjsting is a clash between "ntlurology and theology," a prominent Orange . County m e d i ca I educator said today. Dr. Stanley Van Oen Noort, dean of the UC Irvine M'Cdical School and himself a neurologist, said the current medical practice is to rely upon results of brain wave tests before a group of physicians makeS the decision tc> allow death to come. "In this ar.ea the ,practice has been to run electroencephalogram (EEG) tests and if there is nc> high-level reflex ac· tivity and the brain wave scans show a "nat chart." then the decision is made," he explained. But, although he often is brought in on such cases, Dr ... van Den Noort indicaled that he is far from comfortable about the present system. "It is totally reliant on a machine and a technician and although the margin for error is very slight, it still is a poss;bili- Refused ty," he,said. An added factor of tension in tbe decision over sustaining bodily functions versus shutting off machines is the urgency in transplant cases. "You haVe one team champing at the bit lo implant new organs in patients rlcar death and you have another team v,ihich has to decide if the donor bas no chance at.all to.recover. '•J'm an expert on neurology. I have told people, but I'm not such an expert on theology," Dr. Van Den NcMJrt said. "Often people will call me in and ask me to say th at the patient on the machine is dead and they get angry'With me when I won't do it," he said. "I'm a consc?'Vative in such cases and if I sense a chance ior recovery at all, I will stick to my decision," he added. In Denver tod ay, the decision is being reached in Jason's case. "1 know full well what those people there are going through right now," the local neurologist said. Orange Coast ·· (See GRAY, Page !) Rough estimates for , Orange county's meat workers appeared to coincide with Hu1iti1igto1i's Cliance to B1iy Golf Course Lessens Weather Night and early morning low clouds will again be visible along .. ~-.=Skylah -Sigh1 • • / ro b..~R,R'( CPY~~-~(~r ./t!s;ido.W.rl<, al)ll ljj>gqtiati(l)l! b;lve ,_, >llll'lfis. l!Jl4 i!,,§.Jiey~Qli:X\'1Jl¥ to th«, o D•1" Pollot '' fic;ome ShroudOO in mystery. Lusk industrial development. T'hl' deal is The owners of Meadowlark Golf Course There is oo doubt the city wants to no'v considered •idead " because s. and s. • the: Oraogei"CoastAAftemoonso:..wtl ~ -"' -+>"tl-"""' be sunny, with temperatures at lh.e have relused to grant the city of Hun· save the golf course and keep it open wns repGrtcdly informed there was no llngton Beach a time extension ror space. The question is how. way residential zoning would be allo\vcd negotiations over the purchase of lhe Some sources have suggested S. and s. on 'that Ian(I. 96.5-acre club. may be using the golf course as a S. d'nd S. reportePly has shown interest An escrow agreement b e t w e e n bargaining point to get city consideration In the Meadowlark Airport land, one Early risers Saturday will be able to view the Skylab space station officials ?i.feadowlark Corporation and a pro-for rone changes (for re!idenUal con-block from the golf course. at TRW lnc;, Redondo Beach, sald today. spcctive buyer, S and S Construction struction) on other propertit.s in the city. Dick Nerio, owner of the airport pro- The giant space station, orbiting 275 miles 'above the earth appears as the Company had allowed the city six When asked If such an offer bad been perty, couJd not be reached for comment brightest object in the sky an~ moves rapidly, a spokesman said. months i.o make an offer bc!oro the made, Duke replied : 41Atl that has been on that. At 5:28 am S.tunlay the Sltylab Will appear In the west and move to the cours• Is sold. hoarsa_y,_:rbere-has-be.n-no-<U<h-<>l/er-to· -A-spokesman·lor~cand-Scsaldc"tt-we- ilortbeast. It mar~ ... n·tronr0rango-Coa.srl1>Cattan•·for-a-tvtal-.Hlve'llttn~ -··-Til§t-Umellmi~-July 23c&.-end-m.-or the counell. Th•Y (S. and S.) may have any announ-ents to make we"ll utes and 50 seconds and will be 22 degrees above the horizon at maximum ele-S. agreed to a time extension to allow the have talked to somebody else, but call you." vaUon. <Related st'?f)', d~agrams, Page.3) _ . city to continue its purchase erfort, but hoperully they're not trying that. I don't One other area of the city mentioned The followl~g 1s a timetable for limes tbe ·aptce station Will' be vlslble·oo clty 'Offidals revealed Ulla week \hat the think It's the way to operate."· for possible home s:ites, though TIQt cur-subs~uent daya: gcilf course o'\vners would not agree to the Rowlands said he was not aware of any rently ma ster planned for residential u~ Sunday: 4:47 a.m. moving wost to northeast for.alx minutes and 27 seconds deadline extension. "direct offer" as that. "They are trylng is 350 acres of hilly terrain along aothara at a maximum elevation of 30 degrees above horizon. Both Ctty Administrator 0 av Id to get any land in tho city they can to Street, near Ellis Avenue. Monday: 5:04 a.m. beginnir:!J" In the northwest and moving lo the north, 1 Rowlands and C:Ouncllman llenry Duke build on,'' he said , ' About 200 of those acres are. master will be ~en,,,.,,, three l!"nutes and seven seconds at a maximum elevation of said today they are stUI trying to work lt hns been confirmed that S. and S. planned tor industrial use, though city 0r. 12 degrees above the honzon. out a til11fJ extensioo wfth U)() Meadowlark was intere.1Ued in acquiring 100 acres of flcla ls have indicatt!d the hills and gullies L. Tuesday: 4:23 a.m. movi~g northwest to north for four minutes and 25 people. industrial land on Bolsa Avenue, across might make construction too eg-pc.nsivo seconds al 15 degrees above hollzon. But city officlabl h~ve still Mt bec11 from MeDonnell·Dougl... tor industry. but Ideal for luxury homes. able to med personally with attorneys The property Is controlloo by Bank or \See AIRPORT, r1ge Zl Spac~ Station Vis ible Saturday ' beach nea r 70, '"'ith the llw near 60. INSIDE TODAY Co1ittmporaru art is the theme of this week's cover .storUs in t·he Weekender with Jeature1 on James B'l(fltJ, the 1'1e·w director . bf Newport Harbor Art Museum, ~!f!l-"!lrrthf 11'C4tff/ffll!O'-Al"t Exhi bit bejng pres ented in the Lagu1ia Beach Alu.seun~ of A.rt. At Ywr S.nl'• J l.!.M. •-" ,. hllltl'!I ' 11 t.llMnll• s Ci.ttlffell )J.q ""'"' " Cl'fffi..... tt DHtti '"-ffct\ t CllOorlll ,,,, 6 ''"-llU ll•U fr.,-ftlt •MttO t Ho~ ,, """ l.1111,.., !t ~... ' • • • \ , % DAILY PILOT ~-- Fr iday, Au9ust 3, l<J ?J II Valley Co1itroversy Trustees Meet Behind Doors Trustees of the Fountain Valley School District 5pent another four hours in clos· ed executive session T'hursduy night, ap- parently on the Nieblas School problem . This time, trustees met with several parents of children "'ho attend Nieblas, to discuss the confl ict bet\vecn teachers and Nieblas Principal Ji1n Keizer. Twice before, district trustees have held long, closed sessions with teachers trying to iron out the conflict. Parki•ig Ctirbs One parent Ray Gallagher, organizer or a parenws' meeting Wednesday night, said today that the closed session y,•ith trustees \\.'BS jus t a general review of \\•hat parents thought about the situation. The parents ha\'e asked the district to C'i!hcr transfer Keizer or allo\v a third party try lo rnediate the differences bc1v.·ee-n Keizer and the teachers. Tru slet.>s took no action Thursday and so f<1r . have stood by their original EPA Fight Seen In Hunt~ngton Huntington Beach, along with other Orange C.oast cities, will fight proposed parking Jot restrictions ooUined by the federal Environmental Protection Agen- cy (EPA). Mayor Jerry Matney will appear before the EPA Tuesday in Los Ange les to present the city's case against restric· lions which could: -Reduce l>Ublic parking at the city beach by 20 percent by April 30, 1975, and cost the city $321,0 in parking revenue over :siJ: years. -Create a giant traffic snarl on Beach Boulevard by turning one lane each way into a bus lane (or car pool lane). - agreement includes public parking to be provided by the city. "The EPA's whole thrust and emphasis on this thing is wrong," Rowlands com- plained today. "The emphasis shou1d be on the auto industry, the source of pallu- tion." He also said there aren't enough buses in Orange County to carry the traffic created by "bus Janes" on Beach Boulevard. Fountain Valley officials don't believe their city is sharply affected by the pro- posed PEA restrict.ions, but they do plan to send a representative to the bearings to see what happens. 'Jbe EPA has warned cities it may im: pose these restrictions by Aug. 15 to cut down the ""' 01 car• and reduce the Grove Trustee smog level. City A&nlnistrator David--RowJands---------..&.--··--. -• told the city council a month ago that F i} t O such restrictions (less publi c parking, a s 0 pen bus Janes on any three-la ne highway) could be "tragic" for Huntington Beech. B d H • '""' !oroed curb on public parking oar eanngs could also cttynage the city's chance for redevelopment of the do w·n town, Rowlands said today. Part of the downtown redevelop,ment From Pagel AIRPORT ... Another 150 acres of that land is con· side.red as a poMible addition to the cen- lal park (the third phase) and a potential golf course site itself. City Parks Director Norm \Vorthy has pushed for a city golf course on that land, but Rowlands now says if the city buys 1'-feadowlark, development of another golf course would be "financially difficult." A consulting firm has been studying the third phase of park development, with a golf course, and Rowlands said the report should be finished in about two weeks. He said the early estimates of the cost for a city-built golf course fWl about $4 million. That Was also the reported price tag on Meadowlark Golf Course. "Unless we found an angel, it would be very difficult to build a golf course and buy one too," Rowlands said. "We're trying to zero in on an existing goU course which already has a track record. The council would have to make a decision on the other golf course." Orange-County School trustee Donald Jordan Thursday again tried-and failed -to make the appointment of a Fifth District board member a more public process. Private interviews of the first of 14 candidates for the post vacated by the resignation of Roger C. Anderson began this morning. A second round of Jnterviev.·s, also closed to the public, have been set tor 10 a.m. Aug. 13. Anderson, formerly ot HlDlUngton Beach, resigned July to move to Richland, Wash., wilh less than a year left in his four-year term. That timing allows the county school board to appoint a replacement rather than call an election. Two weeks ago Jordan, ot Ga rden Grove, argued for an election and was defeated. "I assumed these would be open meetings," he said 'i'hursday of the interviews. "Representatives of the press and any interested residents of the Fi fl h Supervisorial District could hear the can- didates," he added. Jordan began his new effort by asking simply if "there is room for the pres.s" in the office where interviews would take place. "I have a feeling these are sup- posed t9 be public," he added. decision to let teachers transfer to another school lb.ls year lt they so desire . Nlnc or the 24 faculty members at N!cblas have left the school this year tor various reasons ranging from maternity leave. to school transfers, to switches lo other districts. Keizer reportedly presented trustees \Vith his own plan to settle the situation. Trustees did not elaborate on it. Trustee Sheila Meyers did say Keizer Nixon W urned. , W alters Savs ., WASHJNGTON (AP) A top Central Intelligence Agency official tes tified today th~t President Nixon was warned less than three weeks after the Watergate raid that something was amiss on the While House staff. Army Lt. Gen. Vernon A. \Valters, deputy director of the :::JA, told the Senate Watergate ::ommmittee that he, CIA Director Richard Helms, and form er acting FBl Director L. Patrick Gray III resisted pressure from the White House staff to involve their agencies in covering up the political wiretap. ping. \Valters said Gray finally spoke to Nixon July 6, 1972, and said the \Vatergate case could not be ::overed up, that the FBl's in- vestiga tion would lead quite high, and that Nixon should get rid of the people involved. • indicated be would invol~ parents by allowing them into faculty sessions and all functions where possible. Trustees did not indicate i{ there would be any further discussions or actions at their level. Gallagher. speaking for the parents, said he would v.•ait to see if teachers are satisfied with Keizer's new proposal before taking any further action. Frottt Page l DECISION • • • v.·ere nit. "It really wasn't a hard decision . It was just kno1ving that Jason could make someone else live. I had already ac- cepted the fact that Jason was leaving me. Then I just started to think of others," said "°trs. Rea. "I think it's about the greatest thing that could ever be performed." But Mrs. Rea's decision did not have to be made quickly. After doctors at Hunt- ington lntercommunity Hospital revived a hearbeat from the apparenUy lifeless boy following his fa ll into a friend's S\Vimming pool, Jason m3llaged to stay alive for more than two \\'eeks despite numerous complications. Doctors performed brain scans and electroencephalogram (EEG ) tests to determine the extent of the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery \vas performed to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. "He was more or less telling us, 'I'm not going to makt it,'" said his mother. Then, last Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. - From Page l "I had to make my decision then," ..--_, .. -·-----·...-·· ----Mrs..-Rea recounted. GRAY. • • llaldeman' might know something 1hey didn't. Actually, no CIA secrets were in danger, he said. \Vhat the FBI '"·as investigating in ti.1exico were Nixon campaign checks that linked the v.iretappers financially to the President's re-election campaign. They passed through a Mexican bank on their way to the Miami bank account of one burglar. On the same day, June 23, Gray said Dean and Ehrlichman · gave h i m documents from the safe of E. Howard Hunt, a Watergate conspirator. He said he wasn't ordered in so many words to destroy them, but "there is no doubt in my mind that destruction was intended." Mootm later, around Chriatmastlme at his Stonington, Coon., home, Gray said he burned the papers with some household trash. He read one oC lhe papers, a forged State Department cable implicating President John F. Kennedy in the 1963 Diem assassination in South Vietnam. Gray said he thought the cable was the real thing, and he was shaken. Runaway Auto Craslies; Driver Unliurt, Booked Children to Get Bikes for Roles In Safety D1ive Jack Weaver, 7, lafary Latina, II, and Lori ~1itchell, 12, will be given bicycles Saturday as awards for their part in helping tbe HWltington Beach police department promote bicycle safety. The three children, all Huntington Beach residents, were named' sweepstakes winners in their divisions in the police department's bicycle safety poster contest. The bikes wi ll be given to them in ceremonies at the department's salety display at the Huntington Center Mall. Also receiving prizes Saturday will be the children who designed the first place winning posters. They are: Jeffery Sissung, 5, and Joelle Wiade, 7: Jeff Peters, 11 and Amy Switzer, 9, and John Wyatt, 12 and Suzy Vander Molen, 12. The display, which features the win- ning entries of the 166 posters submitted in the contest, is part of the effort by lhe police department to get residehts to be more aware of bicycle safety. 0 1111 1"1111 Siii! ,. ..... RECORD-HOLDER ELISHA TAUB POSES WITH PARENTS• July Wes a Busy Month in Maternity Ward at Huntington Hospital Re~ord Month Most Babies, 141, Born in July Elisha Susan Taub is only four days old and already holds a record. Miss Taub, daughter of ~tr. and Mrs. Leonard Taub, 101 01 Cliff Drive, HWlt· lington Beach, was the 14lst bay born in July at Huntington Tntercommunity l lospital in IIuntington Beach. The fi gure. which includes four sets of 111.'ins, is the single-n1onth baby record for the six-year-0\d institituion. The previous high was 121 born in January of this year. Dr. llarold Sanford delivered the five. pound, IO ounce, 18-inch·long Miss Taub at 11:09 p.m. Tuesday, only 51 minutes before a new month began. Their daughter's birthday will be an easy one for Mr. and Mrs. Taub to remember. Tuesday was the couple·s seventh 1ve<lding annivcrs.:iry. This is the couple's second child. They have another daughter, Amy Beth, 2. Panel to Study Homes _At lJuntingto~ ff arbour A 125, single family borne project In Huntington Harbour planned by La Solana Corporation will be discussed ~1onday by South Coast Regional Zone Comervation Commissioner.s in Long Beach. La Solana officials have applied for both an exemption and a construction permit from the Proposition 20 com· mission. If the development at Harbor and Midway Channels receives an exemption from Proposition 20 coastline controls, it doesn 't have to go through the public hearing permit process. The commission meeting begins at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbo r District - headquarters. 925 Harbor Plaza Drive. Other West Orange County developments on f\.1onday's agenda ln· elude: -An 8-unit apartment building on 19th Street between Orange and Olive Streets and a 12-unit apartment project on 18th Street between Orange and Olive, both by Jacquellne Foxx. -claim of exemption for a four-unit apartment at 1301 Seal Way, Seal Beach, by Robert Hudson. Exemptions nre granted projects well underway when Proposition 20 beca8'1e law Nov. 8. The South Coast Commission has jurisdiction in the coastal zone of Orange and Los Angeles counties. Fron1 Pagel County School Superintendent Robert Peterson objected that "this would be en- tirely different from previous (years)." Peterson contended private sessions \\·ere necessary because some questions might be "personal" and that interviews were comparable to executive sessions A Huntington Beach man walked away from a crash early this morning in which his car raced down a 30-foot em· bankment, flew across a six·foot ditch LAST WEEK OF STORE-WIDE SALE BOMBING ... it said, "that they are free to launch a military offensive in other areas or Indochina." Meanwhile, U.S. Supreme Co urt Justice William 0. Douglas heard an hour of arguments today on whether he should issue an order effectively halting U.S. bombing of Cambodia. then returned to his mountain retreat to ponder his decision. OlAMGE C0.41T •• DAILY PILOT on pers0tU1el matters. "I don't recall asking anything last time {a trustee was appointed) that anyooe hesitated 10 answe r," Jordan said. He pointed out that appointing a boiwi member isn't like hiring an employe and that "these (candidates) are people who \\·ould have had to have been up for elec- tion." ~ Jordan couldn't get any su pport for hi s ;irguments. Favoring setret sessions \Yerc Trustees David Brandt , Doris Arau- jo and A. E. "Pat'' Amold. * * * and smashed into a brick wall. Michael Gerald Boden, 35, of 8562 Arnette Drive, was treated for minor cuts on his lips following the accident at 12:45 a.m. tOOay. California Highway Patrolmen report that Bod.en's car left the Warner Avenue onramp to the southbound San Diego Freeway, became airborne as it crossed the ditch and took out about 30 feet of the block wall behind a home at 9221 El Cortez Ave., Fountain Valley. Boden was booked into Orange County Jail on suspicion or drunk driving . 3 More From 5th District - -- 1111 Orl/l'jlt Co11t OAll.Y P!l.OT ,..Ith .... !(ft 11 tomilMll·IM Nt,..>-Prn•, 11 1>11t!Ushea by !he °''"'' COii! Putill.r.ln" (ornpeny, S- r1tt r<ll!lorll lfl put1U1Md, Mond11 lhf'Ollllll Frld1v, !or (H!I Mt11, N-rt 1!~1ch, H11ntlt>Qlon 8t1ch/F01111111n V1ll1r, L•gvM !lffC~, lr~1nl/Seddl1Nck Ind S.n Clolmtnl1/ • Ul--:IUl!l C11!1lln11'111. A 1lng11 n,itllltul tdl!~ ii P11tl<i1~ed 511t11d11' Ind Svnd1y1- lf>t prlncl!MOI Pllblhhlnt pl1nl I• II J.xl Wt11 11•1 '''"'· Co1t1 MMI, C111!oml1, •2'2'. Seel<: Co_rn1ty SchQol Post Rob1rt N. W11d Pr".atnt l!ld !'vQolllt!'r J1 c~ R .... Cvrf't'Y \11(1 Prhilltnl •...cl GeMrt l Mtn~llt' Tho11111 K11wil EGl19r .,... 'lhol!ltl A. M vrplrli~1 Mlnatln' 1G•llt 01rl1t H. loo1 Riclrl114 P. Nill Al.lllltft! MtfllOino Edl1011 T11"' Cowillt Wnl Oft1'191 (Ovr.jy E•llv H•ltltlttM ... t!Offt~ 17175 l11clrl loul1w1r4 M1 rlt1Wj Adclr111: P.O . 101 7•0, 92641 ·--'-"""" lllt.f'I~ m ,.,.,, "-'°''' MHI! J• Wnl &ty St .... Nt.,..,,t IHdU Jm N""ll"I loultYll'lf ''" Ci. ...... t: J05 NOtlll II (tfl'llM ltttf T.t.,HM f7141 642-4 )11 c-.1n..1 AIMrtfdllf 641·1671 '""'° Mlrttl Ori"" c--ty Clmi!twiltltt 140·1120 CotiYfitlU, ltll, 0,t,.. C.0.•f PVOl)th'"' Cemp,11y. N-t -""lft,. rn""""~ tdlltrloll """., ., .. ~•rtlS•"""" '*-"' ""f M ••prodwtd •""""" ~111 W • lnlMltlo\ of COO'f''lfl\I -, ~ """ ,..,. ..... 1o1 at C.S!t """'· Ct"""'ll. klDlcf'!.ililn IW t.ll''ltr U.U mefilll\1'1'1 11¥ INlll U .11 tN111t!tv1 !Tlllfft11' ........ llOM U.&I -"'"· Three 1nore Fifth Dis!ricl residents Thursday became candida tes for ap- ,\ 1pointmen' .to the Or&llge.County..school Board, bringing the final total to 14. Deadline for applications to fill the post vaca ted by Roger .Anderson. formerly or Hi;ntington Beach, was Thursday at 5 p.m. Anderson represented the Fi f t b Dlstrfct, wh1ch runs along the same boundaries as the area represented by Orange C.Ounty Supervisor Ro n a I d Caspers. The latest candidates-arc: - -Jay R. Blake.more, a retired certified public accounlant, of 2509 Harbor View Drive. Corona del ~1ar. -Mark C. Johnson, a saleit manager for a h05pital product.5 manufacturer, of 26502 Monllclto Drive, Mission Viejo. -Albert G. Pino, a physician In g~neral practice, of 2610 Avon St., Newport Beach. The first intcr\lfew session was lhls morning. The second will take place at 10 a.m. Aug. 13. County t.n.J.1tces also have made special appointmenll for at least . -. - two candidales who couldn 't meet those two sessions. + !fh& remaiaing. candidates, by · tom-- munity, are; -Hunllagton Bea('b: Norma Ven· derMolen, a housewUe: James R. Wal ker, occupation unknown ; Helen Schoelzel, administrator of Parkhurst Retirement Home; Frank Stewart, real estate sales man; and Thayendanagea Joseph Bryant, a chemical engineer. -Costa rt.lesa: lt-felvln Gilbert, former teacher, now independent businessman. -N•~'JIOri-Btacll: Davkl C. Henley, associate professor of journalism et USC. -trvtne: Marian Ellis, secretary of the · city's Citizens Advisory Committee on Public F;clucation. -Mh11lon Viejo: Rev. Preston Howell, Baptist rninister and former trustee In lh e now-defunct San Joaquin School District. ' -Laguna Beach: Thomas Alexander, former director at Cape Cod Community College In Massachusetts; Or. Erne.st Lake, professor or education at Cal State t'ullerton. »;•. .,.~ ' :::.~---···•'" . r-w ~:I _._ .. --------l' Terrific Selection of Top Qu111ity S11le Merch11ni:lise Re11dy for lmmedi- 11te Delivery. Don 't Delay. Final Ch11nce to Select From Our Larg e In- ventory 11t Reduced Prices. OREXEt..-4-tERITAGE---ttENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS 1 AN INTERIORS WDXDAYS I SATURDAYS •:OO to 5:JO FRIDAY 'TIL ':00 NEW PORT BEACH e 1721 WESTCllF~ DR.. '42·2050 IOP•• Sund1y 12-11301 LAGUNA BEACH e 145 NOR TH COAST HWY fOpen S111ul1y 12-5:301 494·615 1 TORRANCE e 2?649 HAW'IHORNE I LVO, J71 -121t ' . • I I I ' I ' I • f A t You r Service Nixon's Tax Hassle 'Political' A Sund11y, Wedoesday and Friday Feature Of lhe Daily Pilot Got a problem? Tl!tn Pat Dunn. Pat Anilrak's Record DEAR PAT; It's been some time now since Alntrak took over this counlry 's passe nger trains. I'd like to know how this arrange1nent is working out What kind of safety record is being maintained and is the pv.ssenger rate up or down? •. S. L., Saa. Clemente • •l>asseng-er fatalities and injuries from train accidents showed a signUicaot dtcrease during the first si.'t months of 1172:, acoordlog to the Federal Ra ilroad Adrola.lstratlon. For the first time since Jt66, no pusengers were killed in a tniin accident during these month s, although two people were ki lled getting off trains. In the same period there were '19 fe~1er injuries than the 315 In 1971. Grade-cross· ing fatalities dropped from 68Z to 625 -O\'tr the six months. Passengers in- creased by Z.479,826 during the llrst quurter of 1972 to reitcb a total oi 67,617,307. . S urf and Se" DEAR PAT : During last week's ro l!gh surf and subsequent rescue of many swimmers at Orange County beaches, I've heard to "heavy seas" and "heavy sur!." Do these terms mean the same tiing, or are they different? R.H., Laguna Niguel Both terms describe waves, bu t the ~imUarlly ends there. Waves that form In "'Indy "·aten are called a "sea". When those waves break on a shore, they're called "surf." While t.he waves are traveling to~·ard land, t.hey are known as a ;,swell." Computer Blame d Rescue -Ship Gets Ready -. For Mi ss ion ~ HOUSTON (UPI) - NASA ground teams today readied the first rescue n1ission in space history and reset for r.1onday the Skylab 2 crew's first spacewalk outside the big earth-orbiting research station. The APollo rerry ship that took the astrooauls to Skylab was hit with its sec· ond steering rocket failure Thursday. But space officials said the Apollo was in "minimum flyable condition" and the crew could fly ho1ne as planned next n1onth. Alan L. Bean. Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Lousma were in no danger aboard the 100.ton Skylab orbiting 270 miles above earth. They began init ia l earth resources research of the schedul- ed 59-day flight. ''A couple of us feel pretty clean and may not take our showers," Bean said . "We may use that tin1e to catch up on some other things but don't send us anyth ing to do." Garriott, the crew's medic, reported the astronauts were "in excellent shape" and taking no medication. The pilots were stricken early in the mission with motion sickness due to slow· adaptation to weightlessness. The rescue mission was ordered ready for launch from Cape Kennedy in case further trouble develops aboard the Apollo, marooning the crew in space. Of- ficlals said the earliest the rescue ship could be launched would be Sept. 5. Work began Thursday ni ght on modi· fying the rescue Apollo command ship to include extra seats to hold five astronauts on the return flight from Skylab. Tests \\'ere started today at Cape Ken- nedy on the first stage of the 22-story Sa turn 18 that would boost the rescue ApoUo into orbit. POO T IUT .-.--· I • I· . APT IUUCHfAD APOLLO SERVIC E COMMA N D M O OULE REACTION CONT ROL ROCK ETS ( 1 OF "'QUAOS) UPI HtWICh&rl • tTANO.+.IO COUCll Al lUlllY EXPfllMfNT IHUIN PALLET lfSCUf COUCHES Missi ng Woman Se ar cli Goes 01i; Foul Play Eyed By TOM BARLEY 01 lh• 01Uy Piiot Sl•fl Lawmen in two counties today con- tinued their search for Rochell e White of San Juan Capistrano with the stated growing conviction that the attractive brunette has been the victim of foul play. Orange County Sheriff's officers are circulating pictures of Mrs . White. 22 , of 16702 Calle La Bomba, in an attempt to contact anyone who may have seen the missing woman shortly berore she disap- peared last Monday or prior to her auto being found two days later in Carlsbad, San Diego County. P11 hlicity. At1gle Cited By Off icial By .JACK BROBACK 01 !ht t>•OY Piiot lltff Orange t:ounty'I' area representative on the State Board of Equaliiation today charged that a cu rrent flap over \Vestem 'Vh[te I-louse tax assessments is politically rnotivat~d. The charges ea n1e from .John \V. Lynch, eQualization board meinber for the Southern California area \l.•hich includes Orange County. Speaking in a press conference in San- ta Ana today, Lynch claimed thal \Villian1 M. Bennett, the board member who raised the assessment issue on President Nixon's San Clen1ente holdings, ls simply seeking publicity. l.ynch claimed Bennett is probably going to run for state attorney general next year. "Bennett ra n for attorney general \\•hen Pat Brown vacated the office to run for gove rnor and he will undoubtedly do the same if Evelle Younger decides to run," Lynch said. The board me n1ber said his agency has no right to appraise or investigate the assessment of President Nixon's San Clemente property. He s:iid the courts· ruled against such lntrusion into county rights more than 90 years ago and the decision still stands. "Bennett, a lawyer and former staff n1ember of the attorney general's office, knew this when be asked the board last Monday 10 investigate the assessment.," Lynch said today . The board voted 4 .to 1 against the Ben· nett move. ··Four or us on the board are Democrats so we are not protecting the President," Lynch said. "We are simply abiding by the law." The board member said the agency could only move in on the San Clemente property assessment at the request of the Board of Supervisors or the county assessor. DEAR PAT: We have been receiving dunning letters from the Grolier C.Om- pany, Danbury, Conn .. since May . They request paymenl for merchandise ship- ped to a name similar to ours at our ad- dress. ~re have written lo explain we never olldered nO'I' rei::eived anything. Al 1he end or June the firm v.Tote telling us to ignore the letters -it was their 111istake. etc. \Ve consequently destroyed all correspondence and then received a 1hreatening letter from the credit manager and another invoice! Ground engineers hope the astronauts will be able to beam back television pic- 1 ures of the crippled rockets on the side of Apollo's service module during Mon- day's spacew alk. TWO STEERING CONTRO L ROCKETS THREATEN SKYLAB MISSION Rescue Flight Has Been Under Consider1tion by Space Offici1ls Mrs. White disappeared two days before she was to appear in Superior Court for a heariilg into the divorce peli- tion she filed against her husband, elec- tronics machinist Gary Roger White, 25. That hearing was reset for Aug . 13 1\·hen she failed to appear for the scheduled court session. Lynch did say that the state board does random sample investigating in each county every three years but that Uie properties are picked by a drawing. Bennett told his fellow board members Monday that be will pressure Or8nge County authorities to re-appraise the \Vcstcm White House property. County Assessor Jack VaUerga has stated that he has no intention of further in· vestigating the property. People Make News Sunday Mrs. White filed for divorce June 15 in a petition which is supported by allega- tions that her husband physically abused he r during the couple's four-year mar· riage. Lynch said if Bennett brings up the subject next month he might get a ma· jorit);' vote to make the request to Or~ge County officials "but remember this is - only a request for them to investigate, .. the board members said. ''We cannot initiate our own probe." F.N., Anaheim The company's computer seods lhe signed letler1 and it hasn't been in- rormed of the mlxup yet, accordiog to Grolier'• customer aer\1ce department. JI will be straightened out, but the com· puter won't understand the situation unJesi it recel\·es information that "your'' accoun t now bas a uro balance and sends iU mystery customer one last bill at your address showing the account is cleared. No ltlaga:rines People make the news in this week's SUnday Daily Pilot -from etiquette ex- pe rt Amy Vanderbilt, a police helicopter pilot who dra\\'S ca rtoons to the missing (Sunday's Best) students of the Newport·l\1esa Unified School District. Here·s a rw1down of some of the features: STUDENT SHORTAGE - W hi I e schools in South Orange County arc struggling to meet high s t u d e n t enrollments, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District is wondering where all their students have gone. The feature, by Staff Writer William Schreiber, is the lead to this week 's "YOU" sec tion. PEN 'N PISTOL -Police Helicopter pilot Robert Dawson, 27, wields both the pen and the pistol in his hobby and work. A five-year veteran with the Huntington Beach Police Department, Dawson is also the department's unofficial car- tooni st. Some of his sketches \\'ill be shown in this week's .. A'' section. CLOSING IN -The world is closing in on President Nixon over the 'Vhite Hoi.;se tapes. Public opinion, instead of adn1iring the President's pluck in denying them to investigators, has turned against him, columnists Evans-Novak 'vrite. In an editorial page column, Evans-Novak tell how the President is confronted by a new DEAR PAT: I ordered Hou se Beautiful magazine 1brough my son during a money-making project at his school on Oct. IO, 1972. As you can see from the enclosed correspondence, I haven't received any copies of the magazine. My last letter was mailed to Q.S.P., Inc .. Pleasantville, N.Y., sometime agO and 1 decided to seek your assistance since that letter has been ignored. . D.T., Corona Del Mar Comity School Trustees Q.S.P., Inc., which offers magailne and candy fundralslng plans to 1cbooJ1 and organizations, ts owned by Readers Digest. Its customer service department offered "trouble with the publisher, Jtearst i\111ga1lnes" as an excuse for your non~ellvery problem. A $7 refund was requested and Q.S.P. agreed to maU a check to you immediately. Cos11ae t ics Goes Orange County School trustees 'Thurs- day decided to help fund a Sacramento- based legislative advocate whose first duty will be to fight a bill that would ef· fectively cut their operation in baJf. DEAR PAT: What has haf,pened to Michael cosmetics, particu arly the The county will pay $700 annually to belong to the "Association for the Governance of Offices of Co u n t y D.B., Costa Mesa Superintendents of Schools." lipsticks? The association organized by Santa 'l'llis company bas been sold, according Clara CoWlty education officials has to the Bayside Pharmacy's cosmetic hired Mike Dillon as advocate-. departo1ent. The origlnal form ula MJcbel A total o( 33 couaty superintendents, lipsllcks are ~clng sold oul alfd rcpbfced not including Orange County. have said by a less expensive Une. Bay1Jide sug· they'll join the association, Snnta Clara ge1t..• Christian Dior, or another slmUarly County Superintendent Glenn \V. Hoff. prl~ed brand, as a substitute. inan said ....... .....-...w;Q ·~~-g,-,., .. -~.... .. .. _ ~,ThetFi«a1n-~n~-~1J ~1it6' . you, you go,., Atnold declared. Peterson sa id he normally wouldn't send the association a letter about the aCtion until it is ratified ln two weeks. Koch suggested a letter of intent be mailed to Hoffmann or one of his associates, Russell Kent , which inspired Jordan to poetry : "A letter o( intent to Russell Kent to le t him know what is our bent." Jordan recited with a smile. Arnold then called for adjournment and Jordan quipped ; "And with that we 'vent." Bill Lap ivortJi . Wins 2rid R.,;ce ·· Of 5-day Cruise Ba d Wig Fi t Ins ults CI A authored by Assenlblyman Ken Corey {0-G ar:Pen Grove), which \Vo u 1 d elhnlna'le all instruction and consultant services by county schools offices. rt!strictlng them to a business depart- ment. 'Mle Corey legislation will be heard . Oil l..apworth tight~ned the competition WASHlNGTON (UPI) -The disguise Aug. 8 by the Assembly Ways and Means 1n the Yacht RacLng U11ion's cruise experts at the Central Intelli gence Agen-Committee. This is the third year It has Thursday by w\nnlng the ~nd race cy feel they have been insuJted. been introduced. -from How.land's to Moonstone C~ve .• Former CIA Director RlcbarcrM-. -· "For qult~some-time there hu-been a --lnJ~t race Wc<lnesd.•l hlS C•l·~.- R lms re rled this during senate need to have someone ln Sncramento to Merry®wn run scconCflo Jofiii Reynolds Wet t \:a ln Thursday. represent (us)," Superintendent Robert Yankee 30 Ghost. On Thursday Ghost a erg a e • r gs Petenon said Thunday. . \Vas runne r up. Accordlng to news report!, Watergate Associate Superintendent Fred Koch Today the fleet raced frn1n E1npire consplr~tor E. 1-loward Hu.nt wore a said he has SeM DllJon .. in acUon" and Landing 11round the west end of the poorly fitting rel Wig for a disguise on a called h1m "very inOuentlal, very island to Catalina Harbor r-0r the Wall visit to JTI' lobbyist Oita Beard . llrtlculatc." EIHott trophy. But Hel!'M said ht. was told CIA -.At fi rst trustees Don Jordan and David Saturday wil: be a h1>:·day at Catalina provided J.funl with a "brunette wig." Brandt wanted more time to study the tlarbor '"ith Del Rey YAcht Club and "Some of the CIA technicians rather proposal, but board president A. E. CaHtornla Yacht Club acting as hosts. resented the fact that the red wig had "Pat" Arnold insisted that he didn't want The five-day cruise \\'Inds up Sunday been lied into the CIA beca~ It was lo wait. with a race from the west i?nd to Long !luch a lousy fil." Hclms said. "lf you hav( more (counUes) behind Beach ror the \Vest trophy. challenge from senators who feel they have been betrayed. CONFESSIONS -Etiqui;;!~_ •. e2P:rt Amy Vanderbilt writes her ··~~~ns of a Talk-Show Guest" in Sund8' s Fami- ly Weekly. One admission is that she feels television makes her look 20 pounds heavier. LIFE OF POVERTY -The sun beats do1vn daily on an Apache Indian tribe on a reservation in Arizona but their life has more than its share of shado\vs - few jobs. unfit homes, and problems 1vith alcoholi sm. Their story is told in an ii· lustratcd AP feature in the ''YOU" sec· lion . Superior Court documents on file in- clude a court order for forbidding White to harass, molest or threaten his wile. And he was further ordered by the court not to attempt to contact her at her place of employment or contact her employers. t The coUrt file includes the statement that White beat his wife last October and November, slammed her against a door and threw her on the floor while she wa s pregnant. The lawsuit states the couple have no children. ~1rs. White also alleged that her hus- band took. a teapot from ber on one oc- casion shortly after she had .made tea and threw it out the door. He then ripped a\l the taps off the gas range, the action states. Good Investment Ne ws:. Lynch said he would vote to make the request to Orange County to get "Ben· nett off our back and quiet down this furor." The row started when Bennett recently called the $L37 million va lue put on the 24.6 acres in San Clemente "grossly ui.der assessed.''. The President reported- ly paid $1.., mllliOn for the property. Former county assessor and now Congressman Andrew J. Hinshaw and Vallerga have finnly defended their ap-- praisals of the property. LARGE DEMAND FOR ESTATE JEWELRY Now ava il able for the publit: fin e jewvlr.v from several large estates al Costa Mesa .Jewelry. Save 50 3 . Estate jewelry priced for immediak sale. In vest now for un bclicvahlco !i01Yo sa vi n ~s . Wisc in vestmcntoppo rtunity. Col il'c:Lion i nc:l11d1 .,, diamonds, rubies and emeralds. Bi~ invl's l- 1ncnt demand becttllSC ()(" it1crt·,1:-;in!.!; vt1h1\' ;1111i limi teu supp ly. llcautifl1I ~Clcclion of l ~tfiil;~ and n1t·n·:-; r in~~ ct111 I \\"i-lltl1e~. l·:lcg\tnL n1 ·rklaL0 ('~. J·1r1ll't'l~ls oi'h<l jiii1 s· in ·.~·old !1F i>iat 'i1iillli' ·1 ril'T'tl''i"rff1i\- $:WU Lo $10.000 ... '\'<dll<'>' Lo :i'~ll.IJllll . Out·Ol·l'awn jc wdry-:1 ~rl'al 111vcstm(0 nt. Hundreds of pn·c:iou s an d S(•l1Ji -1irecious itc1ns no'v flVflil c-il1!L'. l,ril'(':-> 11)\\1 a~ $10 . Make Someone ll appy witnTlfe perfec t ·~ift . from Costa Mgsa J ewelry. Make a so11nd --financial-in vestment loo. - RA CIT I'S ,"tpert ac11.lar 11al.11ral bl11•· st ar $Op· f'liire ring. l\,.,,ial1s 111'•'1" .:~ ( 'ft l'nl.«. ,4\11r~ l'O/l/llf('d fi!f :}Jj 1/U ::z/1/lf/ t/1tt/l/ll/jr/.'> ~('f /II 11lnli1111111 . l'rtl11"rf al ':r'.;.!1.~r!. /',./rrfl {11 .~llf (I J---$,J,JJ ;: ... COSTA MESA JEWELRY lS38'Ncwport lloulevard. Costa Mesa, Californi a 92627 7 14 /646·774 I -I_ li.i.Jl\' t'ILIJI Can't Drive If You Can't Park RICKY TICKY POLITIX' Notable among recent governmental flaps in our region has been the running battle betv,,een the city of Newport Beach and the California Coastal Zone Commission on how much off-street parking ought to. be \•ihere, It has been a fun sort of thing. The battleground involves what is known in the building jargon .as mu1tiple dwelling llllits. By this, they mean places to Jive like duplexes or apartments, The city of Newport Beach, on the one hand, has taken lbe position that one parking place for each living unit is just dandy. The coastal commission that rules in our region, on the other hand, ·believes more off-street _parking is needed. 'f1: -The coastal OOard folks are rather en- . vironmentaUy inclined. They reason that people in each family have more than one auto. Provide only one off-street space and one motor car is going to be left on the street. Thus the coastal people want two off-street spaces provided for each Jiving unit. SO IT HAS BEEN the battle v.•as joined and back and forth the two governmental ageitcies argued. It would appear at this writing that the Coastal Commission is \Vinning and Newport will go along with a couple of garage slots for each place. Through it all, ho\1lever, there has been little debate on the blessings of having off-street parking. Comes no\v into the parking question another governmental agency, this time Federal. It is known as the Environ- n1ental Protection Agency, or EPA for short. Because ot mutual interests in the en- virionment, you would figure here that the Coastal Commission folks would have found a. real ally in the battle for more off-street parking, right? WRONG AGAIN. The EPA is currently mulling a proposed dictum that would force cities and counties in our area to reduce the amount of public off-street parking which is available. As a matter of fact, in. gradual stages the EPA wants local governments to cut back existing parking 20 percent before Oct. 30, 1975. Additionally, the EPA rules would de- mand that cities take one traffic lane on each major road and designate it for use by car pools and transit buses only. Now, apprised of all this intelligence, you may surmise that the EPA people have slipped all their cogs. Not so. They know precisely what they want. UNABLE TO REDUCE smog through phony claptrap devices on motor cars and the like, the EPA is obviously out to eliminate the motor car. Don't give the motorist as many lanes to drive in or any place to park, and there you have it. It is sort of similar to the logic used by America's undery,.'Orld. If you can't beat the opposing gang's gambling setup in regular competition, then you get out the tommyguns and erase the competitors. The EPA has apparently decided it can't handle the automobile so it had better eliminate it. IN ADDITION TO taking ay,.·ay traffic lanes and reducing parking, the Federals could go further. They could ban any ne\v manufacture of tires. Or m ake it illegal to repair streets. Or hey, how about a phony gasoline shortage? There is no end to the wonderfulness of government. They are always in there pitching; working to solve all your problems, , .u .... UPI Ttlvlleto New Jersey Flooded Youths Jend assistance in SOu th Orange. Torrential rains and flood- ing killed eight persons in state and Nation al Guardsmen evacuated 1,000 more. Nine inches of rain fell. President at Crunp David, Maps Watergate Course CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -Looking somewhat tired and drawn, President Nixon has f!o\vn by helicopter to his Camp David retreat for a long weekend. He may spend part of the time working on 'another response to developments in the Watergate affair. White House officials said Nixon was considering issuing another statement oo the \Vatergate and related events similar UPI Ttltllholt 'Sam tlae Liglit' Former deputy CIA director Robert E. Cushman Jr. testi- fies about E. Howard Hunt's "secret 1nission" fron1 While Hou se. Cushman said Hunt got to be · a pain and the CIA be- came convin ced it shoudn't be involved. to the statement he made ~fay 2'Z. They said he also was considering a S!:!parate television address. THE PRESIDENT has promised to give a further accounting of his own knowledge about the \Vatergate and the subsequent cover-up attempt. when the Senate in\restigating co1nmittee com- pletes its hearings sometime next week. The May 22 statement was the most detailed accolUlt Nixon has given to date of what he knew about the break-in at Democratic national headquarters in 1972 and the efforts to cover it up. Nixon has said he will not make ad- ditional comments while the current phase of the Senate hearings is in prog- ress. Nixon arrived at Camp David ac· companied by a White H.ouse doctor. Dr. Roger Ward1 and a military aide. IDS DOCTORS HAVE pron0W1ced him completely recovered from a bout of viral pneumonia last inonth but ha ve urged him to take regular rest periods morning ·and evenings. ''The doctors \vould pretef-iliat the President got some more rest but he has been following their orders to some ex- tent,'' said Gerald L. Warren, the deputy White House press secretary. But observers Who see the President regularly felt he looked tired. Nixon followed a busy schedule of deal- ing with fof-eign government represen- tatives during the week. He held con-- fercnces \\.i th the prim e ministers of Australia and Japan earlier in the \\'eek and Thursday conferred v"ith visiting President Bernard Bungo of the Republic of Gabon. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dt!ivery of the Daily Pilot is guaranteed MondaY·l'~illa" If JOU do no! l'lavt VOU• "'"' oy 5:30 11.m .. c.i1 ancl vour <•1"1 wm l>e br•uglll to you. C•"• art tit"' uMll 7:l0 p.m, Satunlly '"" S11n<1ay: " yo~ do ... , fKllVt r-copy tv t 1.m. Sar11rd1y, or I 1.m. SYIMlly, (Ill 111d t (llPY wltl bt brovg!U 10 you, C•H' art llktn 1111111 10 a.m. Telt11hones Mtll Or11191 Co1111ly Ara11 . , .... •ti·U21 Htr!llWtll H11nt1111I.., atacll llld W11lminlltr _ .• ,, ...... t-U:rt !111 Cltme11lt, C1p1tlr1,,. 811<11, S111 111111 C1plllr1M, Oa11a Ptllll, ~ulh L1111n1, L1111111 Nlgwtl .••• tn--l•lt "' • ·'' . ~." n •A1N lg~e!efSNow 17"'7.1 ....... ~$H0Wtl$ flOW • wtWf.QflfOJOC.ul• Californl• tllulldtnillln\'D tnd IMlltflld ll9h"'INt 11rlkt&,flll lht c.-itrM "'°"'"''IM of S." (Coas tal weathe r mo.ry tcill be found 011 Page 21.J Reds Push to 3 Miles Of Cambodian Capital PHNOM PENH (UPI) -A new Com· munist offensive swept to within three miles or the center of Phnom Penh today and government troops began setting up roadblocks half a mile outside the city. U.S. B52s and fighter-bombers were reported inflicting heavy losses on the i~ surgents, but the American planes could not give closeup support to the retreating government forces because of thousands of refugees in the battle area. The tligh Command warned last week of the possibility of rocket attacks on Phnom Penh and of Communists in· filtrating into the city. Today, Phnom Penh fol"Ct's intensified their search for infiltrating rebels. who circled around government positions to menace them from the rear. UPI field reporters said thousands of refugees, belongings heaped on carts and bicycles, jammed a bridge crossing the Mekong River about three miles outside Phnom Penh at a point where Highway I was closed to civilian traffie. ALTlJOUGH BLOCKED in closeup support of the govenunent trocips, American warplanes were able to carry out intense raids against rear rebel posi- tions and there were reports of heavy in- surgent casualties. Field reporters said the Communists 'Latindry' Probe ,vere moving inlo the aren of the righting from the south and the north, u.5ing sam· pans to i;ross the Mekong river and outOank government positions. SOme field reporters came wder -sniper fire behind the government front line positions at Veal Sbov, five miles down Highway I, but only 3'h miles from the center of the capital. Dispatches from Vientiane s a 1 d negotiations for a protocol to set up a coalition government in Laos bit a snag today in a dispute over what positions government and Communist Patbet Lao troops will hold onte the peace • tlcment is completed. SQUADS OF SPECIAL police raided three houses in the center of Phnom Penh, seired several hundred B40 rocket rounds and rifles, and arrested two \vomen, police sources said. Rebozo Bank Records .f.~. Subpoenaed by Panel GQvemment forces threw up road blocks on Highway r only hall a mile southwest of the city limits, refusing to allow civilian traffic down the highway because of the heavy ground fi ghting. t.1.IAAll (AP) -Records of the Key An1e"rican warplanes flew heavy air Biscayne Bank, owned by presidentiaY strikes at rebel rear positions, reportedly confidant C. G. "Bebe" Rebo:ro, ha~e inflicting severe losses on exposed Com-been subpoenaed by the S e n4 t e munist troop concentrations, but pilots_,.f Watergate COIMlittee, a bank spokesman coordinating the air strikes refused tO says. allow bombing at the scene of the Thomas H. Wakefield, vice president of fighting due ¢0 the uncertain posiUonS of the bank and Rebozo's attorney, also government forces and ~ pr~sence or ackno\vledged in a statement Thursday thousands of refugees fleemg the area. that the Internal Revenue Service had PHNOM PENH IS under siege on three sides but the major threat was from the southeast along Highway 1 where four battalions of rebels (about 2.000 men) crossed the Mekong River Thursday and opened a major new offensive that sent government forces retreating more than 15 miles. U.S. fighter-bon1brr~ suspended at- tacks on Highway I because of the flood of refugees and the wavering goverrunent front lines being threatened further by leapfrogging tactics of the Communists Police Shoot Killer DANVlLLE, Va. (UPI) -A man who killed a woman and wounded two police officers \vas shot repeatedly b y policen1en in a parking lot gun battle Thursday when he refused. to run for cover and taunted the officers to shoot him. Ray l\1orrison, 42, was subdued after fi ve officers trailed him to a park- ing lot and hit him with from six to eight bullets. audited Rebozo's tax returns for three years, but not six years as had been reported previously. Wakefield said the records would show that neither the bank nor any of its of- ficials were guilty of 8.ny wrongdoing. He said the IRS audit was routine. ABC News repoctcd Wednesday that the Watergate committee was probing reports that illegal contributions to President Nixon's campaign from Baha· mian gainbling casinos has been routed or "lalllldered" through the bank. WAKEFIELD SAID that "contrary to the broadcast, no dir:ectors of the Key Biscayne Bank and Trust Company have been subpoenaed nor has any represen· tative of the lederal government an· nounced or ever intimated that any ii~ legal or laundered funds were channeled through the bank." . He said the Watergate committee bad issued t.\\'O subpoenas for "records on several speeified accounts," but he did not elaborate. "The bank is cooperating and will com· ply fully with the subpoenas," Wakefield said, adding that the records '·will substantiate that neither the bank nor J\'lr. Rebozo was involved in any im- proper or illegal activity. "Mr. Rebozo happens to be a friend or President Nixon, therefore he is ob- viously a .target for those members of the media obcessed with the desire to destroy the PreSldent and those near to him." Wakefield said in his prepared statement. Tunney Seeking N e'v ITI Trial \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The antitrust suit against International Telephone &nd Telegraph Corp., settled out of court by the government in 1971. should be reopened. Sen. Johno Tunney (O.callf.) has demanded. Two other Democratic members.of the Senate Judiciary Committee succeeded Thursday in stalling confirmation of William D. Rucltelshaus as deputy at· torney general because the JusUce Department has refused to give the panel government docwnents dealing with the controversy. . r-.femos v!'ritten by former White Hoose: aide Charles W. Colson and released dur- ing Senate Watergate hearings Wednes- ady indicated that President Nixon could be "directly involved" in the oot-of- court settlement. OPEN 7 DAYS MARIGOLD INST ANT COLORS for your garden. In beautiful yellows • and gold. FERN STAND Attractive wrought iron 30" high. Ideal to enhance your ind~r. outdoor fern display. ttec.i. $9.00 Value VINCA Reg. 1.98 W111te & P1111f, <•.,. nH .. hedf9 pa..t., 'b11&h. PETUNIAS Reg. 79c Pony Pac Re9. 69c 29' 2123 NEWPORT BLVD.,. COSTA MESA -.. (Corner of Newport ond Vlctorl1 Nur,.ry 646-3925 Pollo 642-4103 ' ,..., i i .. • • 6 .... DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Evaluation Needed ·~ Huntington Beach inay spend $272,000 over the next six years to support the environmental unit of the harbors and beaches department. It's a large chunk of taxpayers' money for a program which may have some serious flaws. • ·· The major project of the environmental unit the ' past two years has been the development of an ocean baseline study. The city has only spent about $8,000 ol its own money because it had $501000 in federal Public Employment Program (PEP) funds to spend on salaries. City officials also used student divers and marine biol· ogy majors to help collect -free -most of the water samples used .. to determine the chemical, physical and biological makeup of the ocean and .Huntington l~ar· hour. We don't doubt the sincerity of Harbors and Beach· es Director Vince Moorhouse or environmental engineer Jerry Jackson in pushing this massive ocean study. But several experts outside the city have indicated the first two. years of study may be scientific~y inaccurate - in other words, a waste. The city is sending 450 pages, three volumes, of n1aterial on the ocean study to 12 experts for full eval· uation. Their decision will be critical to the future o! the program, and no financial allocations should be made until the 12-member review panel has finished its work. City councilmen might call upon the expertise of these outside sources to determine if what the city has done was worth the trouble, if the city really can ef- fectively monitor the ocean, and if so, how much would it cost? Stu~ies of the ocean are certainly necessary, but there is considerable doubt as to whether it is the city's ' responsibility and whether the city can even afford to do an adequate job. . While Huntington Beach may spend $272,000 over stx years, the Orange County Sanitation District spends $298,000 in one year alone for Its ocean studies doing similar work. ' That suggests a pretty large cash commitment for an effective ocean program, and there is no point in launching an ineffective one. Before c<_>uncilmen either abandon the project, or fully support 1t, they should obtain a clear evaluation o! the program from an objective, outside source. Summer Opportunity Students in West Orange County have a second shot at summer school this year, thanks to a little innovation on the part of the Huntington Beach Union High School District. . . During August, the district is running a three:week m1ru-summer school at the Fountain Valley and Marina campuses. Students are taking such courses as scuba diving, surfing, pre-algebra, various math classes and personal typing. Llmited credit is given for the co urses (up to six units), but it offers those who want an extra opport~nity to learn somethin g they might not have time for dunng the regular school year. . ~ventually, the second sum mer school may expand suff1c1ently to take some of the classroom burden off W:inter semeste:s. ~ven if it doesn't, the extra opportu- nity for education 1s a welcome addition -to local class-- rooms. August no longer needs to be a dead month for· those. students who want to expand their experience be· yon4 lhe limits of the beach. • H ' 'WelI, I see we'.re doing our part to speed. up· the meat shortage.' The Call~y Tapes:· Precedents for Nixo11's Stand ' A Bewildered Man \VASHINa -\Vhl\e the nation awaits the Supreme Court showdo\vn over the White llouse tapes, we have li stened to some secret tapes y,•hich may present Presidenl Nixon "·Hh another ex- cruciating dilemma. These tapes contain Lt. William Calley's lengthy, ag- onizing psychiatric interviews after he' was accused or mass morder at ~ly Lai. Some psychiatrists ti: a v e concluded from the inlcrvic\\·s th<'lt he probably y,•as "legally i n sa ne" "'hen he led his com- pany on the shooting spree. Other psychiatrists, while agreeing he had personality problems, round "no evidence or mental disease, defect or derange- ment." PRESIDENT NlXON has promised personally to review tt>e Calley case. His fi nal decision will have tremendous emcr lional impact. People around the world believe Calley was a monster who should be severely punished. But others feel he '''BS a madman whose irrational behavior Eihould not forever stain America's fighting men. pay for the candles , .. I came back and I gave the booze to my troops. And I said. 'Joe, check it out for glass.' I don't think I'd personally dMnk it. I had no desire in drinking the booze because I was afraid of it because it was on the market. "TREY DIDN'T drink it (either) ... The 1.iPs and I gave it back to the girl. It was a matter of why 1 actually did tha t, for which I had no excuse." Calley went on to describe his frustra- tion over the difficulty of Identifying the enemy in Vietnam. He confessed grief over the loss of men, anger at the war and constant fear . He tried to explain his feelings: "I think the moral issues of the war -the question of when is a war right, when is a \Yat good, when is killing right, when is it wrong and actually when is, what are we fighting -we shouldn't he there. Dear Gloo1ny Gus How honest ·is our free press? Do the news media · really protect drunken , incompetent and licentious senators? F.D. GIMflly Gus cofll"'4rm are suemin..i ~Y r~ Inell do llCll MCftlaf11y-relied It'll •lewl of ll'lt .....WtPtl'. Stncll Ytur "' llff'll hi Gloomy Gu1, DtilY l"llel. "hyper'' or "psyched up,'' but he felt he was in full control of his fa culties. Afterward, he was stunned over the mu rder charges brought against him . "I "'as pulled into the Adjutant, no, I mean the Attorney General's· office," said Calley. "And he said we've got a, we're conducting an investigation about the My Lai problem. "And I said great. And r was happy. Not because it had entered my mind that I had done anything wrong. I thought somebody finally was going to come and ask me my advice on the war. And I had built up so much stuff inside me ... Calley looked UPQn himself as quite normal, except for °'il': "irrational behavior happening." As he recounted the inci dent to psychiatrists, "I had all the troops in a truck, and there was no \varm feeling for the Vietnamese people .among the troops and me. I had nothing but disgust. I had just, I won't say highly hostile feelings, to the point where I wanted to wanton ly shoot · anybody or ;beat anybody up or anything like that. But I had no respect for them •.. "ARE WE fighting the Reds, or a tribe of people, or a bunch of human beings because they're in that situation? Or are vte fighting an ideological philosophy that has been conjured in the minds of human beings?'' "What is your feeling about why are we fighting in Vietnam?" Calley was asked . "Well." he replied, "everybody knows we 're there to stop commun ism. What ls communism? Today, actually com- munism is not an animate object. It's a philosophy in the minds of men. So how can yoo go into an armed cotinict and say we're going to save these people from (communism). You've got armed combat t r o o p s in there to do a job, troops that were de signed lo fight a hosUle enemy . . . We 're not going to change your way of thinking. We're going to take your posilion and then endanger your \\'ay of life." "BUT TIIEN in the next breath, he told me 'at which time you ~ill probably be charged with murder. Do you want an at- torney?' And I said, 'Gee, I thought you wanted to know something about a com- bat operation. What do you mean you're going to charge me with murder?' He said. 'Well, we're carrying on an in- vestigation . . . There was something wrong there.' " "\.\1hat is it," a psychiatrist asked Calley, "that you have actually been charged i'.1ith as tar as you know today?" "One hundred and two ca ses of premeditated murder." he replied. "And against whom?" "Oriental people of mixed ages and races." ' , "TllE TRUCK came up to the viUage, THE ACCUSATION, be said, "suddenly presented me at this stage of my life with a cross few men have to bear in life. Now, people don't talk about the My Lai massacre, they call it the Calley massacre. All of a sUdden, I have now become the personification or evil and horror, and everywhere I go, I must face these attitudes of people . • . It is dif· ficult and bard to understand why it shouJd have happened to me, and I sin-gled out." · ~t which time I went Into the store to get ;some candles. And there was a bottle of •Seagram's Seven there, which I picked •up and walked out -just wanton theft. or \\•hich Mama San ran out -well not the t.1ama San, she was a young girl - ran out ... I told the guard, the truck driver to go on. AT MY LAI, Calley felt he was merely carrying out orders to shoot everyone re- maining in the area, because they had been identified as the enemy. He was ' ' .. I just thought that was an extremely irratioqal behavior. It seems to me J d1d -Planes Rob Travel· of Its ,Mystique ~ T.hc only good thing you can say &Rout ~ ~ take a plane there and unwind on a s'UP 'an nlrptonc Is that it's rast. That is. it lt coming back. But most people begrudge gels of£ on time and lands on time. Time_ SYDNEY J, HARRIS the time, and preUy soon U1ere won 't be 1s the only thrng that air travel is about. ~ .. _ a ship to take back. Which is not only a .,.....__ ul"tr~_vg,,P\V~f!Y,_sop4i4ercd,,.Q.\!&'1! ..,.,'.,._-"----~-.-.---, ... -.-.,-.,,..,,--.. ::~-l"ID',J~lli< llOJot_Jlf 1le)V,.l>L.rel"'"1&. . 0 tlOOUl mOf{ ffiBD '1iffie. we are · t 't' £ •· -already bemoaning offers ~ regressio n r~om reality that can a so ause 1 s one o tue biggest the lo!S ol lralns ln be hc~1ling to t~ ~[u1sed soul . A century hargnins you can find anywbt!re. Try liv· the U.S. Now It looks ago, a, sea trip was often the best Ing in a good hotel for five days on what as If ships or g n1edlcauon a doctor could of(er, to some it costs for the same service on a ship. . e ~ ot his paUents. 1ng_ to go the way of But it's going fas t. Trans-Atlantic WE ARE already sorry that 1ve have trains. And that crosslngs get-scarcer every year; more let our railroad system go to hell . Some \VOUld be another 1.r· and more of the big, glorious $ips arc or the routes they served simply will not reparable loss 1n being taken off the long runs. They are be replaced by airlines, and man y travel experience. desperately trying to make money on ,A.mcrican communities are more cut off A good friend of short ~i~!,_lm.LL large ship la in today than they were SO years ago. \Ve mine wcm-on-a"t Cfeaf61y expensive to maintain and run wiU-t>c:;ast-as sorry It we-abMdon ttfe week Caribbean cruise thls spring. 1t was properly sea·llncs, not only ror the pleasure we her first time on a large ship, and she ' will have lost, but becau se It's sairl it was the best trip she had ever had rT WOULD BE a tragedy U we came economically wrong 10 give any one form Tn her life. No doubt part of this was to rely exclusively on aJr travel for of transportation a stranglehold. becsuse she went without her husband, transportation. The train Md IL\ own Americans are slaves to their cars, but ship-lite Itself mu st take a Jot of the mystique -trawiling to New York on the because public transit has be e n credit. "20th Century" was a delight no airplane shamefully neglected. We will soon be can rival. The big new planes. with all slaves to our airplanes, when the last TllERE IS a wonderful mystique about a ship lhat Is unrivaled by 11ny other form of lransportaUon. It ts a self-con· tained unit ln a very 1peclal way, aod It their gloss, are just 1kybome busc!s, wtth great ship retlres from the seas. 1 can't 8bout as much per10Mllty as a steam believe that any form of slavei-y Is shovel. beneficial, no matter how much time The Ideal way to go 10 Europe IJ lo may be saved. Presidents and the Courts To lhe Editor: Should Pt·esident Nixon ignore a court order to obey the subpoena or the Senate's Select Investigative Con1mittce, he will act in accordance with \veil established precedents. The courts have no power to enforce their decisions. The Executive branch of our government alone has !his duty. The doctrine of separation of powers rests on the Constitutional -provislon that establishes the legislative, judicial and executive branches of our government co-equal. Each is independent ot the others. Each branch is sole judge of its own affairs. THE SYSTE~f of checks and balances was adopted because the members of the Constitutional Convention opposed a strong centralized· government. The plan \\'SS for Congress to legislate the judiciary to interpret, and the exe~utive to enforce the Ja.ws and legal decisions. The system has worked smoothly with complacent presidents. Strong presidents have acted much as they pleased. There has been only one direct con- . frontation with Congress by any presi- dent, until President Nixon's refusal to surrender certain tapes and documents to lhe Senatorial committee. That oc- curred when Andrew Johnson deliberate- ly and openly violated the Tenure or Of- {ice law, which had been passed over his Veto. To act contrary to a statute is a crime. He was impeached, and escaped conviction by one vote : but that victor:Y sustained Johnson's right to act contrary to law. Other confrootations have been compromised before tpey reached the direct confrontation stage. THE RECORD of presidents ignoring the orders of the courts, even of the Supreme Court is different. Thomas Jef· ferson. as president, refused to sUrrender certain documents to the judiciary when ordered to do so by Chief Justice Marshall. Marshall bad even a worse af· front when Jackson. then president said. "John ~1arshall has made his decision: now let him enforce ii." During the Civil \Var Lincoln~ suspended the \\'rit of habeas corpus, and made arbritary ar- rests. The Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Taney ordered the release of those arrested . Lincoln did not argue: he ignored the decisions. All the judges could do was fuss and fume. As presi· denl, Lincoln had command of th~ armed forces and the Jaw· enforcement branch or govenunent. Should the occasion arise that the Judicial system would order Presidenl Nixon to comply witlt thi. Select Com- mill ee's subpoena, he wciuld act. should he refuse, in accordance with the best precedents, set by both Republica n and Detnocraic presidents. ROBERT O'BRIAN ,i1~KS. 'You n1111d exercise. Why not go to jaH for a month'?' ' [ MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome . Normally writers should convey their messages i1~ 300 words OT less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel ii r eseroed. All letters mvst include signature and maili1lg address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason i.! OPJ]Frent. Poetry wiU not be published. . Lesson for 'Libs' To the Editor: It, very painfully, came to my at- tention the other night, a! I was perking cars at a Coast Highway restaurant, that some slightly liberated females have an immense amount of homework to do before they pass into the "liberated'' class. EARLY in the evening, a trickle of cars pulled into my lot and I noticed thal these cars were occupied by an unusually large number of unescorted wome1;1. The cars did not come in a group and only once did two women arrive together. 1, lhcrefore had no idea that a group of ladies were gathering for an evening out. About an hour later, the group emerged in full force chattering to each other. I politely stood waiting to be told what types of cars to fetch . Finally, a woman in a green dress asked me to bring up her brown Mercury. Wilh all of the juice. nly muscles could muster,, I flashed away and returned not 20 seconds later with her car. SllE \\'AS still talking but managed to break a\l.·ay long enough to squeak into the driver's scat. Tipless. I closed the door gently for her and said "goodnight.'' There were too n1any ladies y,•a iting, so, I planned to brood about the still (no tip ) later. In the next three minutes, I brought up lour cars in perfect style and politely opened the door for each of the departing women. For my nawless service, I netted a total of fifty cents, two stiffs and an ~pset stomach. Since that contingent of women was my biggest business or slow Monday night traffic. I had plenty of time to ponder my ill-fortune. IN TJDS DAY of \Vomen 's Llb and equality, two things must take place. First: \Vo1nen must educate themselves as to how to do things that were done ror them in the past. Just as the males must learn lo cope with the shopping and other niceties that he has taken for granted, so too must a woman learn such fine arts as. correct tipping and tire changing. Second: People must be patient wi th both sexes as they try to master the new roles that change is asking them to play. JOHN M. DE SANTIS Bicycle Ha:11rd To the Editor: Regarding your editorial on cars aQCI bikes, it something isn't done to make bicycle riders stop at stop signs tbe.re will be lots more accidents. Most of th em don 't pretend to stop: they just shoot right through in front or you . HARRY HAMMOND Snubbed By a Tiger A BEVY OF BEASTS By Gerald Dur- rell. Simon & Schuster. 253 pages. $7.95. As a young zoo keeper Gerald Durrell concluded that tigers commun.icated by sni!Ung. So he set about learning the va rious sniffs as best he could, then tried them out on one of lhe big cats. The reaction? "He directed on me a look so lull of scam that . I almost blus~i th® 1J turned. his back on me aruLsloucbed off back to his b4!d. l (cit that I should have practiced a bit more before trying.f t on him." BE ING snubbed by a tiger isn't the only thing that happens to Durrell in this warm, fun ny book which recounts the year he spe~t working at England's Whlpsnade Zoo. Durrell was determined to learn.all .fle..coutd aboltl animals and then to start hi s own zoo, and he later achieved these dreams. But that's another story and this book deals primarily wJ th his youthful passion for collecting animals and hi1J later employ· ment i'.lt the zoo, and an interesting story It Is. Broken down into chapters with just· right titles such as "A Lusk of Lions." "A Plash of Polars," and "A Gallivant of Gnus,.LL the-namitWc-deals --primarily with animals, of course. How !hey react lo Durrell, and how he reacts to them. BUT TllE book also d e a I s with h':mans. Not just Durrell, and hi s educe· lion at the zoo. but the other men who worked therci. Most did not share Dur- rcl'.'s passion for animals, but they did their Jobi and did them well. A point which ranks them high in the aulhor's favor . There is knowledge In this book and flln , also. but the main lhread is Dur· (THE BOOKMAN J rell's never-boring, always eloquent pl ea for animal preservation. As he puts it, "The animals that share lhe planet with us are just as important and, \11hile it is conceivable that another Rembrandt or da -yincr might be born, once an Spi,mal._ species 'is extermfnatcd no amount of ef· fort on our part ... can reprodu~'e It again." Phil Tholll\as AP Books Editor OlANCI! COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Veed , Publlihtf' Thonias Keevil, Editor Barbara Kreibich Edltqrial Page Edito r The Mitorl:i.I iP«rlirC of the Dally ~ Pilot .'lot'tks to lnfonn and stlmuJatt' ~"<!~rs by p~tlr;ta. .ti:" this pqt? diver.st' •commtnt1uy on lo,»cs Of In- terest by gyndlcatl!:d..mlumnisl.$-a.ad Clt't00nlst1, by 'pr.:wldlr1¥ a ton.am for rTadl!rli' vlewt and by prc1tnling this neY.'!IP'lJ>tr's opiniorw and Idell.II on cumnl topiCtl. The 1'<11!01:11\1 opinion.• of the Dally Piiot awtar ooly in the ed itorial column at the top of the p-a11. Opiniorus l!XPrt.it~ by the col- 11mrd1Ui and canoonhta and lell~ Y.1'1tera au their own and M cndorst- mmt of th~tr Vlr.wt1 by the Dall1 Pilot lhould be w.....i. Friday, August 3, 1973 • • • \. ··- Friday, August 3, 1973 OAILVf PILOT [i ' Vid e o tape Evidence? ~ccused Slayer's Couple Succumb Chavez Asks Picket Ban Defiance Defense t o Open SANTA CRUZ (APJ -The defense v.•as to open its case today in Herbert \V. "fullin's mass murder trial, after the judge took under advisement a defense plea to introduce a videotaped talk between the defendant and his lawyer. Public defender J a m e s Jackson made the request Thursday, as the prosecution concluded its three -day presentation, Jackson said the hour-long tape, made when be first talked with Mu!Un, woold show that "he's crazy, he keeps slipping in and out ot reality." SANTA CRUZ County Superior Court Judge Charles Franich withheld a ruling on the request, which was ex- pected to be challenged by the prosecution. Jacksoo's first witness was to be Stanford psycho)oglst 1 Dr. Donald Lunde, whom he said woold testily that MulUn was mentally WJStable. J ackson said in his opening statement Monday that Mullin is guilty of the 10 slayings he is charged with commltting during a three-week period in the Santa Cruz area. He also said Mullin had killed Urree other persons before that. On Thursday, prosecutor Arthur Danner linked l\fullin and the .22 caliber pistol that killed J ames Gianera, 24, and bis wife Joan, 21. Danner said the gun was foood in Mullin's car when be was arrested shortly alter the nuirder of Fred Perez on Feb. 13. CRl ~lST l>aul Weinberger 'Pressur ed To Compete' SACRAMENTO ' (AP) .- Welfare Secretary Casper W. Weinberger acknowledged to-- day that he is tmder in- creasing pressw'e to run for goveroor in bis home state of California neJ1 year. Weinberger, a Republican, said he was bonored and flat· ( BRIEFS ) tered but had oot .Yet taken time to think seriously about the prospect. Dougherty testiJied that a bullet from the same gun was lodged in the wall of a cabin where four teen-age boys were found shot to death Feb. 17. J ackson says Mullin is "a psychotic scbizopbren.lc" who killed t3 persons as "human sacrifices needed to save California from earthquakes." He also has stated !!lat Mullin claimed to be under his family's telephatic cont r o I wbeo he killed his first three victims. The prnsecutlon has said it will show during the trial's sanity phase Mullin was sane :it the time of the murders. Gas Ousts LA Suburb Residents LOS ANGELES (AP) Residents of a six-block area of the San Fernando Valley community or Arleta 'vcre voluiltarily evacuated from their homes early today when fumes from an insecticide sprayed on .a nearby field brought complaints of eye ir· ritation and nausea, police said , Three residents and 22 Foothill Division policemen who went into the area were treated at Holy C r o s s Hospital, mostly as a precau· tionary measure, o f f i c i a I s said. No serioll! 1n1ur1es were reported and no one was hospitalized. OFFICERS AND firemen alerted about 160 home owners in the area to the problem, police said, adding th a t evacuation was voluntary. A fire department spokesman said at least 20 homes were evacuated while firemen used fans to blow the fumes - described as similar to tear gas -from the houses. Berkeley Ba rb Shims Sexual Ads In Desert BAKER (AP) -The bodies or a young South Cate couple have been found in the desolate Devil's Playground area of the ~iojave Desert, ap· parently victims of scorching desert heat. Virgil T. Dawson Jr., 26, and his 21-year-old "(ife Becky were identified Thursday by the San Bernardino County Coroner's office. The couple left their home last Thursday in a borrowed camper truck. Nothing was heard from them until a Union Pacific Railroad work crew found the husband's body about 41h miles from the abandoned camper. \\'hich v.·as bogged down in sand. J\.1RS. DAWSON'S body was Fl!ESNO (AP) -c.sar C.'havcz wants his followers all over America to "stand with us and be arrested" here where droves already have been jailed for challenging court bans on mass picketing. Almost 3.000 United Farm Workers Union members and supporters have been arrested in the San Joaquin Valley dur· ing two weeks of massive civil disobedience picketing at fruit ranches where growers had obtained court restrictions on the number of pickets. Almost 2,000 or the arrests have been * * * Corn prom ise Mea 1iy Goal about 800 yards farlher along \VASHINGTON (AP) the road, beside an empty . AF1<.CIO Presid~t George wate~ ~· . Meany met today w i t h Off1c1als said the couple Teamsters Union officials in were ill~ipped for a trip in-an attempt to settle a bitter to the isolated part or the jurisdictional dispute between desert, where d a Y t i m e the Teamsters and Cesar temperatures hovered around Chavez's United Far rn 110 degrees. Work ers Union. It appeared the cou~le at-Meany, asked on his arrival tempted to walk 2Q ~iles to if he thought the session would the small community . o £ be productive, replied, "I Lt.1dlow .af~er they remained haven't the slightest idea." with their inoperable truck for It "''as not certain whether about a day. Teamsters President Frank E. Prostit ute Fitzsimmons attended t h e tneeting held on n e u t r a I ground in do\vntown \Vashington, in Fresno Coo,nty, reportedly lhe nation's richest crop pro-- duclng county iri dollar value. Chavez, visiting some 300 still in jail here, blasted the arrests Thursday as '•a disgraceful misuse of justice ... truly a blot 911 America." ''I feel the only reason in· junctions were issued was to appease the grOwers and destroy the union," Chavez charged. "I AM CAUJNG on friends across the Unitd States to witness the outrage of jaillngs and hardships brought on our union people. I am asking that they come from .all over to Fresno County to stand with us and be arrested:" In Sacramento, St ate Agriculture Director C . B . C hristens e n says the California National Guard has been alerted for possible duty becauSe of continuing clashes on picket Jines in the San Joa· quin Valley. Christiansen told the state board of agriculture Thursday that the Guard was alerted Tuesday night following a day or clashes between pickets and Ketn County Sherif£'s deputies in the Arvin area. The di spute involves court- ordered limits of one picket to every 100 feet and restrictions on use of bullhorns at 50 fru it ranches where growers have refused to renew UF\V con- lracts. Most of these growers have UNITED FARM WORKERS PICKETS TALK Cesar Chavez Attends Rally in Community of Parlier to date remained independent of the rival Teamsters Union, which has signed 51 other California farmers who once had Chavez contracts. The teamsters are also negotiating \.l.'lth 29 Delano table grape growers whose pacts with Chavez e>plred Sunday. Chavez cont ends the pickeUng restrictioil!I violate "eonstitituional rlght.<s or free assembly and speech, but of· ficials here have tried to avoid a COW't test or the civil in- juncUons on those grounds by charging the pickets with refusal toJ dlspe~e. THE TACTIC 0 •• en- couraging mass arrests "is not going to quit until we arouse public opinion and JlO&'lbly jail 10,000 or more and public oplniop makes them county officials look in· ward and realize they've made a grave and unjust error," said Chavez, who has been ar- rested himself in past labor disputes. More of his supparters heed· ed the call Thursday as 143 were arrested here, seven in Kern County and five in Tulare. The bookings here in· eluded 20 nuns, upping the total of nuns and priests ar· rested alter coming here to picket this week to 60. The nuns and pr iest:, already Jailed began a fast Wednesday to emphasize their solidarity with C h a v e z , Fasting has been a chief tactic in the past for the UF\V leader, but he has not begun one in his current struggles against Team ste r en- croachments that have \Yhit- tled UF'W working mem· bership from a high of 40,000 down to 6,500. Sues Jud ge For Ledge r RECREATION IN ACTION SHOW SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A prostitute who says she's earning money so she can go 10 college and become an ac· count.ant sued a city judge Thursday to get back her a~ pointment book. The Superior Court suit filed by Elaine Carlson, 23, also re- quested return of a container of contraceptive foam seized when she was arrested on a prostitution charge May 7. Miss Carlson said the charges were disnllssed July 4 but Municipal Judge Eugene F . Lynch relused to return the book and container. "Unless the book is returned in the very near future, I will suffer the full damage of the loss since appointments will have already been missed and so forth," Miss Carlson said in the suit. ' YAMAHA MINI-BIKE Dr1wing Sun. Aug. S, 3 p.m. South Coast '1ua AUG. 2nd thru 5th Register for prias hi CanMISOI Court 32 HOURLY PRIZB I $10.00 Gift Certifl~ Starting at 1 pm Dcilly SCHEDULE OF DAIL TOYOTA SAILBOAT Dnwfnt Sun. A ... S, 3 p.a. • g;pw =. nnmtllY, AUGUST 2M ·.\!".! 5111. Dlilr-T0¥0tl/f-... d & Tr1n F,..'ly 0;"'41Y IN! ,Children's Art, Bicycle , Grand Prix, Surfbolrd Chempionships, Childr1n's Ttrrariums-· FRIDAY, AUGUST 3 Huntfngton Beach Sertior Citinns "Goodtime Sini;iers" 6:3().7,15, 7:15-8.00 Music Man Band-SA"?'RDAY, AUGUST 4 1l:OO.J l,30 Ch l1dran's Dance, 11:30-12:00 Tumbling. 12,00.12,30 KarateY. 12130..12r45 T ombling, 1:00-1 115 Baby Ballet, J :00.1145 (omrnUflity lhNtre (Peter Panr .. SUNDAY, AUGUSTS 1:00-1=15 Trim to Rhythm, 113~1 :45 Gymnastics, bO().. 2: 1 S Round Oanc,1, 2:3~2:45 Baton Twirling rr. .. nt.1 kJ ,.1-..... o.,.,._,.ts •f c.a. Mela. Fwwhlhi v.n.,, ...,...,. 1w1111 .,..._ Weinberger said in a in- terview that be would cons.ider the Jdea "at some point." BERKELEY (AP) -The publisher of the underground newspaper Berkeley B a r b says future issues will not con- tain, advertisements of a .sex· ual nature. Lynch explained his action by saying "often times "'e refuse to return property 1n certain types of crime because the items are sometimes used in the crimes themselves. An obvious example would be a gun." !-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- e Clash Fores een SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan and Assembly Speaker Bob Moret- ti headed today t o w a r d another potentially bitter clash over the one-cent sales tax in· crease, which some say is un- needed and unwanted. The Republican governor proposed Thursday a hal£-cent cut in the sales tax for one year. That would use up $320 million of the state's $826 million treasury surplus. e Re agon P11sl• SACRAMENTO (AP) -It could set a national precedent if California were to throw out the legal rule , that evidence gathered illegally may not be , allowed in court, says Gov. RDnald Reagan. That rule "has permitted criminals to walk free." said Reagan in a news conference Thursday. If C ali£ornia discards it, he added. the U.S. Max Scherr an no u need Thursday tliat the tabloid will cease to print "slimy" ad- vertising that "exploits" other human beings. Scherr, who denied he was yielding to Tight win g censorship, said the Idea of purging the Barb, entering lls ninth year of publication. was his own. The bearded publisher ad- mitted that as much as 80 per- cent o! his advertising revenue may be Jost. "Yeah. it will prOOably wreck our advertising. We'll just plug along. We started with nothing, we'll probably end up with nothing," he said. "We will no longer accept advertising \Vh ich makes persons into objects," he said. "\Ve will no longer allo\Y slimy style ads whether they offer commodity sex, encoun!er groups. stereos or airline tickets." LA Judges Ce1isu recl SAN FRANCISCO I AP ) Tu·o Los Ang eles judges have been censured for "v.ril lful misconduct in office" by the state Supreme Court. Superior ColU"t J'u d g e ~poldo Sanchez d r e w "severe censure" Thursday, and Municipal Court Judge Antonio E. Chavez w a s "censured." Both orders came on the recommendation of the state Commission on Judicial Qualifications. The commission said during a three-year period Sanchez gave a bail bondsman orders for release of prisoners which were blank ex:cept for the judge's signature. Supreme Court might to r-------------------lil<ewlse !or the whole country . .,. e Containment E U REKA (A'I>)-- F'irefigbters today were ex~ peeled to contain the Klamath National Forest's biggest timber fire in six years -a Tunney Order Se nator Wants Cliildre1i blar.e that has ravaged 14 Rl\'ERSIDE (AP) -Sen. ,Jolm V. 'Tunney'.s v.·ife has square miles of tin1berland at a n estimated cost of $13 been ordered to return from Holland wilh the couple's million. three chi ldren and appear in court Monday to resolve a Dense smoke !hat had custody disagreement. ~ , hampere<Hiremen's efforts by "Atlorney Horaae Coy!C m.ia''rb~ts'day ihat Mr;. Timn cy ' shroUding ridges and creek canyons since the fire began a took the children -Teddy, 12, Mark, 8, and Ariann. 5 -to week ago was cleared Thurs-her native country contrary to an agreement that Tunney dt,y by bri!eres from a Pacific would have custody of them during August. cold front, U.S. Forest Servic< Tunney (l){;alif.) learned ol the departure Monday In spQ!resman Ernest Weinberg said. a note from Mrs. Tunney who left !or Europe with the e S~ R e id children over the weekend, Coyle said. DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMMA UPWITH TELEPRO~PTER! SANTA ROSA (AP) _ A Mrs. Tunney flied for divorce In May, 1972, but Coyle i.....--man-l!Oing-beld-in-a-Canadl:in .. id the JI-year martiage..has. not bceo dissolved. The . jail was to be quest~ ~ay Tunncys lived together lo thelr Georgetown home last June, by SOnoma County authonties the lawyer said, adding that ft "'as not an effort at Investigating the deaths of f!ve reconcilintion. b:ng girls whose nude boches Turu1ey issued a statement saying, "( v.•anl thl' chi!· rlj Shv•_beeo111 Do!ou0nd."t:!'pkh:",;.1d dten in this country to share In their upbringing. 1 want FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, liELEPADmP EA .. " tbemraisedin Americaas Americans." OUR INSTALLATION CHARGE IS FREE. Thur.iday the man, Alben Richard Voorhees. 'rl, has Coyle said the order for Mrs. Tunney IO appear \\'OUld o·• AL 641 ~160 r:J r\ 1-1n 1-l r:;-;:::'{7 ·a1fe.adybeerrcharged with thel~be:·:":r:vcd~on::..La~w~r~en:ce~S:toc:..ke~r~,~he~r~a~t:to:rn~e~y~i-n-S-•_n_'_·,,_n_-~l~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;i;1t;;~~;;;•;~;;';;;;~~;;~~~t=j/!.~~~·~ ~~ .:~_JL..:::i.:j~~~~;LJ~~ \.:..}~;;~~~~~~~~~~ Jwlt! kllJing of • Sonoma man cisco. In the coastal town of J enner 'T'unney·s legal residence i.s in Riverside. neiar he.re. ~·.·- • • ' . . .. . 16 DAILY PILOT * F'rlday, A11911st J, 1973 Women Viewed Thro_ugh Camera Lens By JO O!SON 0t '*"' a.11r l"IMt '''" Gall Da Corsl's m~ge is that women can achieve and still be wives and mothers. Her medium 15 television. The Laguna Niguel resident, "anchor man" for Channel 50'1 Orange Co.ulty Review, hopes to use the new Orange County station to promote the image of women as capable people through a Jnonthly special focusing on local women. "I'm not a women's libber but 1'm a follower," she ex- plained. "I hope this will be significant to women i n Orange County." As she has outlined · in her proposal, the program will showcase "Orange C o u n t y women who have found the way to become involved outside the home routine without minimizing the role of the homemaker." She will produce and write the show but will not direct·it herself. Gail's \VOrk with Channel 50 is not her first foray into the television and film world. Her career began with a stint as lead singer for the New Christy Minstrels, where she sang such hits as "Green, Green," and continued with movie roles and the rormation or her O"'n production com- pany ~nd touring musical i;fOUp. Her lnvolYement with the Chrlsty Minstrels came quite by accident and w a s something she really didn't want to do. She was persuaded to audi- tion by an agent friend, and when the Minstrel represen- tatives gave her the nod with an 11 p.m. phone call, she gave in and was on a plane within 24 hours to join the group in Detroit. After leaving the Minstrels she started her own company to produce industrial shows. During the time she was at- tending California S t a t e University, Los Angeles, she was working in movies and television. To her credit are appearances in "Playhouse 90," "Mr. Ed," "My Fair Lady" and "Three on a Couch." Her touring company, which was formed after her work with the Minstrels, went to Vietnam, Guam, the Phllip- pines, Taiwan and Okinawa, entertaining troops. Gail, who retains her liro- fessional identity by using her maiden name, Da Corsi (she is married to George Pagano, a public relations represen- tative for a distillery J, is enthusiastic about the op- portunities she has at Orange County's only television sta- tion and the potential of the station itself for leadership in the country. "We are allowed to be lrt- novaton," she said. "KOCE gives us an opportunJty to at· tempt new things. It ls a testing and growing ground !or many young people who are very talented." Her job as commentator for Orange Coonty Review has Jed her to interesting and skilled people such as Sen. Allen Cranston, actor John Wayne, Angel pitcher Rudy May and Irvine Councilwoman Gabby Pryor. Mrs. Pryor has most ;.,. pressed her so far. "Her ideas are much like my own," Gail said. ''She's a mother, a homemaker and she has achieved something. She ex- emplifies what a woman can do and still remain a woman." Gall herseJr is a "homebody" and loves to deccrate her home and cook. She makes her own curtains, refinishes furniture and is "getting into Italian cooking" because her husband is of Italian descent. She, too, is dedicated to youth and has always had a dream of starting a n orphanage, though she is not sure whether that goal will ever be realized. Jn addition, she has started other youth organizations, an act iv i t y ~·hich she has found "very rewarding." Gail Da Coni 9oe1 ' over script for KOCE program with Ri chard Jansen, studio supervisor. . I Secretary s Conscience Dictates Response eru:ore. Dl::All ANN LANDERS: I felt a strong kinship u1ith the woman who wrote that she blushed all day and couldn't face her boss because of the dreams she was hav- ing about him . Your advice, "Get another job" was sound. T hope she takes it. I \vas in the same spot 10 years ago J !lCI where I got the strength to ~·a\k out of thnt office is more than I \\•ill ever knO\\'. Today I have a fine husband and family and my '4'0nderful ex-boss's fami- ly is intact. It might not have been had I ·stayed around. It 's easy to fall in love with a man you see e\•ery day, especially if he is at- tractive and successful. A secre1ary ca n make herself "indispensable." She can also be more interesting to a man than his \vile. A secretary and boss have so much to talk abo ut that has nothing to do with problen1s -children, in-laws. repair bills • and other troublesome and boring topics. I hope the secretaries out there v•ho !ind their bosses ,dangerously appealing will take this leuer seriously. The minute you feel yourself falling, girls, clean out your desk and leave. -GLAD I DID DEAR GLAD: Jlo~· right you are. PreventJ,·e medicine Is Infinitely less ex- pensive and less painful than a cure. Thanks ror tell ing it llkt it is. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Regarding the photographic buff who wants to enter a nude picture or his wife in a local art cootest: ~lany centuries ago Herodotus wrote of a Persian King vfflo had a very beautiful wife. He was so proud of her body that he invited his best friend to hide behind lhe draperies in their bedroom. The friend was delight ed. The Queen became aware of the plan. SAN CLEMENTE 440 CAMINO DE ESTREU.A IN THE GRANT PLAZA PHONE 493.9711 UNBELIEVABLE PRICES ON HA TIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS ' °" LADIES WEAR VALUES 5600 to 540" 00 • 00 • To JP J CALIFORNIA FASHIQNS ~TO_ll__OJltLEtS GARDEN GROVE HUNTINGTON IEACH LA HAl lA U l H IR OOKHURST 9516 HAMILTON All. 1J64 S. IUCLID t llOU IMU of lll'lllt 5rttt ll'lf. 2 II. WHt If btWlt II 1111 AlpU kll 1.,..i11 Ctlllr 636°1111 -.r.a.1250 170-6124 Hd URS Mon.-Fri. 10 AM to 9 PM Sat. 10 AM to 7 PM Sun. H AM to 5 PM -.. 11t1....... "" ......... w ....... , "''"'' ..... 2t W. I.It J11111 tr. •101 f. Al•n411 J1J5 SH rm118" M. 11211 Cflllrtl AN. lH ltrt111Ct llftl. ' handsome, immaculately groomed, has perfect manners, a channing sense or humor, is thoughtful aiid kind and has a promising future with a fin e firm. Marie told me several months ago that he \Vanis to marry her but she can't make up her mind. (They are both 24.) I told hcr she'd have to be crazy to pass up such a gem. BALDWIN ••• This "''"'tile home org111 h11 ell the buill·in telent you will e"'•' n•ed to fully enjoy Hie fun of '"lk· in g rour own mu1 ic. "HOME OI' flff IA.IDWIN MU51C IA.I.. NEW HOUllS WOODWO•TH Mett, 11'"' '"" lO " ' Sa,_tlllly 'Ill S PIANO AMO ORGAN SALES E.,.1111119, lly 1ppollllmtnl 515 NORTH MAIN, SANTA ANA • 547-5151 On that extraordinary night she manufactured an e1cusc to send the King on an errand. When he left she told his friend, "When the King returns, either you will kill him and marry me and become King or I will scream and order the guanls to kill yoo . " Last night ?..1arie came home with a swollen lip. She tried to conceal it but she couldn't make it to her room in time. Then she told me that the .. gem" had hit her -and it wasn't the first time. This is why she is reluctant to marry him. My question: How serious is this fault? Can ~. • • •••••••I• I I I I• I•.• •J That's how Persia got a new King - H!STORY BUFF • • • THIS SUMMER • • DEAR BUFF: It's easter to Inherit the job from your father. Thaab for ~Tithlg. DEAR ANN LANDERS: O\Jr daughter is going with a yoWlg man who appears to be too good to be true. He is he change? -CLEVELAND Q ' DEAR Q: It's plenty serious. U he changes it will probably be for the worse. A man who gives a girl a swolltn Up dur~ ing courtsbJp wW probably fracture ber skuU after marriage. LOSE ':WEIGHT • • • Your Horoscope Pisces SATU RDAY AUGUST 4 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (Marcll 21·April 19): Accent is on the hidden, the occult. You find what can be done and with bow much money. Family member deserves erplanatiorr in con- junction w i l h investment. Tamu11 Libra persons can figure prominently. TAURUS (April 2G-May 20 ): • 1: ,. • No Due to Gain • Contracts • • e No' UP TO 58 ,bs • ings. Romantic situation may be put to test. Aries, Libra persons might be in pioture. Significant changes occur. LEO (July 23-August 22): Ac· cent frankness. Get to heart or matters. Highlight in- dependence, originality. A new start would be beneficial. Horne and security are in pic- ture. Get opinion from one at top -skip middle man. You can obtain current price and potential. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): • You may have to revise and·• Exercis• rebuild. Aquarius, Leo persons collid figure prominently. Be • e No direct. Frank approach now is • Ampheta~ IN 40 best -don ·1 say one thing and ,• do another. '• SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 J: Find out who is saying • what and to whom it is being • said. Personal investigation is '• necessary. Reject Uie1• superficia l. Dig for in· formation. Co-member o f • fraternal organization can aid. • Don't let pride block progress .. • m ines DAYS UNDER MEDICAL SUPERVISION CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . • 19): Friend can serve as in-• I""_...,_...,. ______ ._ ______ "' tennediary. can bring you Welcome Unions together with estranged rnend • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lie low. Absent yourseU from. usual haunts. You may not be seeing too clearly. There is tendency toward self-dee~ lion. Work quietly behind the scenes. Waiting should be your game. Pisces, Vlrgo persons are likely to be involved. You deal with relatives. more so than usual. You !ind out things, you analyze .and can make accurate deductions. Your hunch could pay dividends. One who taught you in past makes reappearance. Be receptive. or family member. Restore.• and All Health Group harmony at home base . • · Insurances • Taurus. Libra persons might • ...., _____ ._._..,. _____ ...,....,.,....,..( • GEMINI (May 21-June 201 : Obtain hint rrom Taurus message. Pace slow; you are able to obtain overall view. One who shares interests con- fides heillth problem. You will be carryJng h eavier responsibility. Refuse to take blame for mistake made by arrogant, older individual. CANCER (June 21-July 22): LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: II versatile, cash flc>w could in- crease. You are e1panding horh:ons. You have more ap- peal to more persons. You col- lect needed material. in- ronnation. You could make social contact which leads to prolitable, profe s sion a l association. be invol ved. Overcome tenden-· cy to overindulge in sweets. •11 AQUARI US (Jan. 20.Feb. • ' .. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT II : ' . Hours 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. • 18): Deal gingerly with one in • authority. Be tactful but get • points across. IC select1ve. you ,• get quality. Oioice "'ill be your O~'ll . Accent self~steem. • OMEGA CLINIC: Costa Mesa" 1869 Newport 646-1633 : Lunar aspect is such that creative juices flow. You feel and are able to e1press feel- SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ~: Lunar cycle is high and your perception is sharply honed. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): • Pursue creative pr o j e c t. a Spread the word. ·Put ideas, • concepts on paper. Gain in· di cated through written word. • ANAHllM SANTA ANA flull•rto11•L11H11ltr11 • People now are more wiJ!ing • 1714) 170-tJ47 c to listen and evaluate. • 1664 W. lctwy 13922 Tu,tln ......... 121Jt 6t1.11t1 771-4141 547•6l2t 7!10 W L11H11brcr llff. ·-. I •••I••••• I I I I I I I I I •• a _DOWM _WITK.YOUR .. .AMTEMMA UPWITH TELEPROMPTER! 11 z II ~~~.~0,~~,i:~~N~~~ .,,.. ~11 5 6 ~ ;!f l ra-w1TH NEWPOR-T ts owN . ~ W@t!!i® 9 u~ " NEWS SERVICE (.JVS!JVll )!"""'"' no ~ TELEPROMPTER is the l1rge1t cable televi1lon organiz1tlon in 1ht world . • ~ Wt ht¥t tht most up-to-d1tt technical f1cilltlet. Now you c1n get rid of your ugly 1nt1nna (and make Newport even mote btautilul) 11nd get I bttttr picture 1t thl 11m11 timt -Plus you'll save money! 01181' good h1 c.ble 8,1.s onlv DIAL 642-3260 1111 .. INSTALLATION FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. • ' • I I .. ~ ". t \_"' 4,l -'• ' . ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor Fr1G1y, ,t,11111,I l , 1f1) P1,, IS Refreshing Habit: Adrift • Sabot In a "Believe me, my Friends, there is NOTHING -absolutely nothing -half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats ... " Cassandra Smeltzer, 8, of Balboa may be having second thoughts about that philo- sophy from "Wind in the Willows." But she can manage as long as instructor Patti Tuck· er, left, shouts words of encouragement or tacks to her assistance. AISo in the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Department sailing class, Sandra Geiler of Corona del Mar, below, exempli- fies another part of the excerpt: "Whether you gel anywhere al all, you're always busy and you never do any: thing in particular; and when you've d.one it there's always something else to do." Daily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler . ' • ..... ,. • • Today's Final N.y • • Stocks ..,,. VOL. 66, NO. 215, '4 SECTIONS, '48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY: AUGUST 3, 1973 N TEN CENTS Will Back Bay Become Just a Muddy Marsh? By JOHN ZALLER Of ltl• Oallr P'llot Sti ff A scientist studying Upper Newport Bay said Thursday that dredging QUt its mudflat may be De<:'e$ary for the bay's ecological survival. "If man doesn't do something to con· trol the process of siltation, the bay will fill with mud and become a marsh," said Jack Elder, a staff biologist with Water Resources Enginetµ"ing, Inc. (~E), which is working under a consulting con· tract from the Santa Ana Regional \Vatershed Planning Agency. Ultimately, he said, silt carried into the mudflats, mostly from San Diego Creek, would dry up the bay entirely. But Elder said that a careful dredging could make "time stand still, biologically speaking," or even reverse time by tak~ ing the bay back to an earlier biological stage. Elder stressed, however, that siltation was only one of many critical problems faced by the bay. "I don't know whether you consider this a pristine area or not," Elder said. "But I have studied estuaries all over the country and this one stands Out for the smaU number of species it bas." CIA-FBI Scheme He cited a high level or nitrates, DDT._ and fertilizer in the bay, saying they are creating a "stress situation," Elder noted that the oxygen level in the water is low, possibly because the Pacific Coast Ifighway bridge retards flushing action or the tides. And he cited a direct threat from human activity in the bay .. "There is heavy use from motorboats," he said, "and many of them come so close to shore they churn up the mud . l 'm sure that 's not helping anything. "I even saw people letti,ng . their dogs run loose in the salt grass in the bay. NaturaUy, the dogs chased the birds out there, which is hardly a desireable thing in an area where endangered species are trying to hatch their young." Elder made his remarks to about 40 persons in the little theater at"Corona del Mar High School. The meeting was called by the planning agency to discuss a series of alternatives developed by WRE to....curb pollution in the bay. The major thrust of WRE's report in- volved the problems of chemical pollution in waters flowing into the bay from San Diego Creek. Three alternatives were presented : -Construction af a tertiary water treatment plant at the moulh o! San Diego Creek. Estimated cost ol $1.l to $2.8 million. -Construction of a diversion pipeHnc to channel San Diego Creek directly into the ocean. The proposed pipeline would run along MacArthur B o u I e v a r d . Estimated cost was $1. 7 to $3.5 million. -Use ,of a pump to bring five to 50 million gallons a day of ocean water into the bac~ bay to fiµsh the chemical po!JU· Uon out. Estimated cost was $960,000 to $3.8 million. Members of the audience su~esled that, if the bay were dredged, the ad- ditional flushing action o: the tides might make the other. more artificia l alternatives unnecessary. The scientists replied. that it will take more study to ans"•er that queStion. WRE must make recommendations to lhe ai;nta Ana \Vatershed Planning Agen- cy by the end of August. The agency will, in turn , report to the Santa Ana Regional \Valer Quality Control Board in October. The stud ies are a prelude to drafting a water quality control plan for the entire Santa Ana River watershed area. ;' ·; ----------------~-------·· Gray: 'I Warned Nixon" WASHINGTON (AP ) -Former FBI chief L. Patrick Gray Ill testified today that he warned President Nixon, less than three weeks after the Watergate, that "people on your staff are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and the FBI." But Gray said he didn't know himself the full details about efforts by persons on the \Vhite House staff to draw the Cen tral Intelligence Agency and the FBI into a coverup-scheme. The former acting FBI dire ctor said Nixon replied, "Pat, you just continue to conduct your aggre~ive and thorough in- vestigation." Gray said he had no trouble after that. Gray's account differed in many details from that of Army Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Wailers, deputy director of the CIA. \Va lters testified to the Senate \Vatergate committee during the morn- ing, and Gray read a prepared statement at his afternoon appearance. Nixon Protests Cambodia Cutoff ; BULLETIN WASHINGTON CAP) -Tiie Unlled States wUI continue unarmed rtt0nnaf. asance flights over Laos and Cambodia after a congret1slonally Imposed halt to American bombing on Aug. 15, the de- feMe Department said this afternoon. WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on ac"cused Congress today of "aban- donment or a friend" by cutting off funds ror U.S. bombing in Cambodia by Aug. 15. (Related story, Page 4) In a letter to Congress, the President said he wants Cambodia to know "we will continue to provide all possi ble support {lermi~_~d under the law. . _ "North Vie~nam would be making a very dangerous error if it mi stook th~ cessation of bo"mbing in Cambodia tor an Fam ed Kialoa II Leavi 1ig Neiv port The Kialoa II has joined the Coast Guard. John B. Kilroy 's famed -.-acing yacht from Newport Beach ,vas turned over to officers of the l I th District Coast Guard and officers of the Coast Guard Academy today. • But, while the Kialoa II has seen the last of the Pacific 'vaters, Kilroy is already planning the Kialoa Ill. See Boating, Page 21, for all tbe ·details. Orange Coast · Weathe• in\jlation to tresh aigression or further violations af the Jan. 27 ,(Viet:Dam cease- fire) Paris agreements," Nixon's letter said. "The American people would respond , to such aggression with appropriate ac· tioo," it said. The Aug. 15 bombing halt was reported to the House last month -as it prepared to· vote on cutting off·fund s -as a com· promise that President Nixon would ac- cept. House Republican Leader Gerald R. . Ford told the House then that the Presi- dent would sign a bill cutting off funds for the bombing as of that date but would veto any earlier cutoff. ·• The ·President also pledged then, Ford told the House, to bait the bombing Aug. lo lmless he isked and Congress approved a bombing extension. But the President's letter to C.ongress today put the bombing halt squarely OQ the legislators. "I can only hope that the north Viet- namese will not draw the erroneous con· cl usion from this ·congressional action," it said, "that they are free to launch a military offensive in -Other areas of Indochina." Meanwhile , U.S. Supreme Court Justice \Villiam 0. Douglas heard an hour of ·arguments today on whether he Shou1d issue an order effectively baiting U.S. bombing of Cambodia. lhen returned to his mountain retreat _to ponder his decision. Air Firefighter Dies SUSANV ILLE CAP) -A Chico pilot died Thursday when his air tanker col- lided with ·a U.S. Forest Service plane above a forest fire in the Las&en National Forest, a Forest Service spokesman said. Harry Owens, the pilot of the converted World-War II torpedo .bomber, was kill- . ed. The pilot of the forest service plane landed safely and was unhurt. Walters said he felt White House counsel John W. Dean III was acting im- properly by asking him if the CIA could furnish bail money and salaries for the \Vatergate burglars. Gray said he hadn't known about that incident and other aspects of the cover-up, but was confused by conflicting information he was receiv· ing from several sides. \Vallers said he, Gray and fonner CIA Director Richard Helms resisted \Vhite ~louse efforts to draw their agencies into Auto's Driver 'Bowled Over' One doesn't need Dragnet's Sgt. Joe Friday to· figure out the prob- lem: it waS .e~r a ROQd night or a bad night at the boWliiig alley. Newport Beach police today. however, are trying to determine who was driving a 1966 German im· port cat. found rolled, wrecked and abandoned In Corona de! Mar. Tbe squashed Bug which turned up at Ocean Bou1evard and Heliotrope Avenue contained two $1 bills, plus a bowling ball, bag and shoes. Fun Zone Units To Be Weighed By Coast Board Construction of 33 condominium units on the old Fun 7.ooe property in Balboa, long delay ed by city studies and private lawsuits. goes before South Coast RegionaJ Zone Cons e rvation Com· missioners Monday. The commission meets at 9 a.m. in Long Beach Harbor District head- quarters, 9'l5 Harbor Plaza Drive. Also on the agenda is a single-family home proPoSed on the Carl Hillven prop- erty, 3611 Ocean Blvd., adjacent to Inspiration Point view park in corona del Mar. The home was listed on the com- mission's consent calendar last month - signifying almost automati c approval -until att<>mey Tully Seymour objected and won a full public bearing. Seymour said he represented a number of homeowners who wanted the area for a park. The ·proposed development a t Edge water and Palm Avenue to replace the Fun Zone amusement park is by Jack Construction Company. Newport Beach pf an pii n··g. com- rriissioners denied the t h r e e -s t a r y bayfront project twice and city coun- cilmen approved it twice: A lawsuit ini- (See FUN ZONE, Page %) Night · ahd early momlng lqw clouds will again be Visible along the Orange Coast. Afternoons will bo sunny; with temperatures at the .. bc'ach near-70, -...with~ow near ; 60. , Dtvoree ~,al· JOO INSIDE TODAY ' Contemporary art is the theme of t1iis week's cover stories in the \Veekender with features on Husband , 103, 'Clias es Wom en' James Bvnu, tlie new director STOCKTON (AP) -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her of Newport Harbor Art Museum, husband of 28 years, for divorce, because he 11s~nds all his money and on the Alt.California Art on other women."· the cover-up . Gray said he maintained consistently that the FBl's investigation couldn't be defiected without news of the cover-up leaking out. Generally, Walters confinned testimony gi ven the previou s day by his former boss, Helms. He said presidential chief of staff H.R. Haldeman ordered him June 23, 1972, six days after the break-in, to tell Gray that the FBI's Watergate in· vestigation in Mexico might uncover (See GRAY, Page Zl Butchers Fem· '50 Percent' ·.. ~ . Layoffs Soon By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ,.,. Delfr Pllet l t1H Job layoffs In 'the Orange Coun ty meat industry due to the current critical beef shortage are beghming and up to 50 per- cent of the butchers and meatcutters could be out of work by next Wednesday. Representatives of Butchers· Union Local 551 in Artesia, which covers Orange County meat industry workers, 8 STATE PACKING FIRMS . ' PLAN TO CLOSE-Story, Page 12 were Wlavailable for unemployment predictions today. ;. Dell)' Piltt lt•ff ...... ' A spokesman for Los Angeles Butchers Union Local 563 in Huntington Park said he could not comment 90 Orange Coun- ty's prospects but 650 of his members have already been laid off. "I THINK: GOO. HElPEO ME · IMMENSELY IN · MY' DECISION " .. Mr.a. Linda Rei Looks 1t Picture of H•r·O~ly C~ild Aid • ID Death:-"That's almost 50 percent of our members engaged in slaughtering and we expect more layoffs next Friday," said J . J. Rodriguez. Rough estimates for Orange County's Capo Boy's Organs May B~ Use d. meat workers appeared to coincide with By MARCI D:ODSON the trend set statewide. Thousands are Of "'' ~1i,· , ... , st1H jobless. Jason Arthur Rea, 3, of Capistrano Telephones went unanswered a t Beach, left on a plane for Colorado several county meatpacking or brokerage Thursday, kept alive clinically only by houses today, while a couple were nlachines. answered with recordings saying they The plan calls for him to die In Denver. And his mother, Mrs. Linda· Rea, ex-were no longer in service. pects to bury her only child sometime Gaylord Smith,-vice president of Tustin next week. Meal Brokerage, however, said ""the But the death is not that simple .. layoffs have not hit retailers too hard Because since Jasori's arrival at the yet, but many employes will get the axe University of Colorado Medical-Center a next week. team of. physicians has been faced with "By Wednesday there'U be 50 Percent the grim iask·of deciding if the machines laid off," Smith predicted tod•y. should be"shut off IA> allow body 0 fl!!!c.!i<>lJS "And by Jbe following week the· figure to cea!e. . could be considerably higher," he said, Or if there is still a ray of:°hope for the adding that most workers are now cute, toWheaJi• who fi;=U victim to a tragic engaged in so-called cleanup work with pool accident two weekS ago in · Hunt- meat supplies still stocked. ington Beach. The three Los Angeles com~ies that E_arly todaY the team was far from .t say~, they " Wi ll ~close-·tfriS .. iff'ee~re -dec~1ion. ~-·•.J ,J ,,.., • :-...,- · l!ighJand Meat Packing Co., involving a The concerns in the case are momcn· layoff of 100 workers; Serv-U Meat Pack· tous. ing, with 75· employes; and Newport tr Jason ceases to live , hi s mothe r and Meat Co., 11 employcs. the physicians have arranged for his Officials say otner compariies also may kidneys and liver to be transplanted in (See MEAT, Page %) three otb.er youngsters who .face death themselves ·unless a donor is found. Spokesmen from the medical center Newport P oliceman said today that the team is still In its evaluatlon stage and will have dilficully ·Were nil. "It really wasn't a hard decision. It was just knoWing that Jason could. make someone else live. I bad already ac-- cepted lhe fact that Jason was leaving me. Then I just started to think of otheis," said Mrs. Rea. "I think it's about the greatest thing that could ever be performed." But Mrs. Rea's decisiOQ did not· have to be made quickly. After doctors at Hunt- ingt<>n lntercommunity Hospital revived a hearbeat from the apparently lifeless boy following his fall into a friend's -swimming pool, Jason managed to stay alive for more thafl two weeks desplte numerous .:om'plications. Doctors performed brain scans and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests to detern1ine the extent or the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery \Vas ~ -rper(armad to stoi> internal , bleeding,:lllld' the boy suffered many seizures. "lie \\•as more or less telling us, 'I'm nol going lo make It,' "satd his mother. Then, la st Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. "I had to make my decision thoo r'" l\'lrs. Rea recounted . E:•hibit beino presented in the ' She Is 100 years old and he is J 03, according to records In San -1.aguna..Beach.MJls.,,m.af_ArL . ---Joaquin County Superior Court. ---- "' veur '""'c• i Mmet 11-t• ' 111 wanted to stay with him, but he wouldn't stop chasing after __.B • h n dJ In reaching a decision because of an ap-~ Jtlen Y-.["'--00 e----p&rent~urge·ln·the boy'~bodlly.functioos· "-" after his arrival in Denver Thursday The doctors then put the bloncf..haired boy on a resplrittor to keep his blood circulating so thnt the organs would re- main undamaged. They nlso arranged for a-priva "" jet-to take the-child -to -tbe Denver hospital, and produced the necessary legal papers for Mrs. Rea to sign. L.M. • ..,. 1• "'ij11111 .,.,,.. 11 women ,j Mrs Feglon said in an interview Thursday '1He likes to go SN!lllt 11 Hltloftat N... '-t ' • • c•""'"'~ • or•1111t tffllrr • to the show-that's where be meets them." ~~:~~" ~i·;: :::;:r•"t' :: ~ Fegion said she filed for divorce two months ago and since c~••lff ,, 11K1t M1t11ett 11.11 that Ume 1'be's been sd mean to me always ·wants to· fight. He doesn't Dlftll Hetktt I Tti.vl&llHI t7 I I gl thi 1 ,, 1 ••1tor••• '"' • T•ten 21.11 wan o ve me no n to eat. :~":i! llttor•11•1: ::!':.", Htwt tJ.i: She and her husband have separated, each living in one of t.he H-..c_. 1• Wtrlf 1ffwl •·• fwo homes the couple own here, situated "only about 10 steps apart," ~':~'""" •: W"41•"°'' 'w. Mrs. Fegjon said. I A stx-foot, four·inch. 2 2 o -po u n d afternoon. Newport Beach pollctman encountered The agonizing chain of decisions in the one of those line of duty hazards Thurs-case of Jason Rea began with his day wben he was attacked by a French mother, of 34731 cane Fortuna, who ls poodle while out on a case . dlvor~. Detective Don Foleltt, 29, said be bad Stle and former husband reached gone to a residence on Narcissus Avenue It early thi~ week when Orange Coast in Corona dcl Mar to ' discuss an in· physiciun Dr. Albert Ferguson )nformed vestiga.tlve matter. The poodle chomped her that her son's chances ror recovery his shin in two places. from the deadly effects or near drowning "I didn't think I'd be able to do this. [ think God helped me immensely In my decision. I .Pray~ a lot, and He answered 1ny prayc1s. The doctors helped, bul without Ood, ,J couldn't have made the decision," she said. · "But just knowtng that Jason ~Id 1lv1 (See .DECISION, Page II ' I .{_ • 0J'-_DA_l_Lv_P_IL..:O..:T ___ _:N:_ ____ _'.'r r1day, Augusl J, lQ73 • Move to Elect .. - Neurology, Theology Official Fails . -·------. - At I ssue 'lbe gravity of a physlclnn·~ decision to literaUy tum off the switch and allow a patient to cease existing is a clash between •'neurology and thcolog~,'' 3 prominent Orange County n1 c d 1 c a I educator said today, 1 Dr. Stanley Van Den Noori. de~ of the UC Irvine Med ical School and h1mse!f a leurologist, sa id the current med1c?I {>ractice is to rely upon results of .b~ain wave tests before :i group of physicians makes the decision to allow death to come. . be t "In this area the practice has en o run electroencephalogram (EEG l tests and if there ls no hlgh·level reflex ac· tlvity and the brain wave scans show a "flat chart," then the decision is made," iie explained. But although he often is brought in on ~uch ~ases, Dr. Van Den Noort indicated :hat he is far from comfortable about the ~resent system .• -. "It is totally reliant on 3 machm~ and • technician and although the margin for trror is very slight, it still is a possibili- ~y." he said. An added factor of tension in the !ecision over sustaining bodily functions versus shutting off machines is . the ilI"gency in transplant cases. "You have one team champlng at the >it to implant new organs in patients ~ear death and you have another team which has to decide if the donor has no ~hance at all to recover. "I'm an expert on neurology, I have :old people, but I'm not such an expert >n theology," Dr. Van Den Noort said. "Often people will call me in and ask ne to say that the patient on the nachine is dead and they get angry with :ne when I won't do it," he said. "I'm a C()n.servative in such cases and f 1 sense a chance for reC()very at all, I will stick to my-decision," he added. . In Denver today, the decision is being - •eached. in J ason's case. "I know full well what those poople here are going through right now," the ocal neurologist said. Frotlt Pqe I DECISION ... >n in someone else," knowing that Jason ~uld make someone else live, that's the whole reason for this. "I know if Jason were alive and he 1eeded a kidney. 1 would hope someone ~lse would do the same." "But to know that Jason can help some- 11e else ... " she. trailed off. "Of course, all this is with the help of Sod -not only for Jason, but also for !he other three people they're going to lelp save. "It's just a miracle through God that fttis is happening anyway -all of this," 1he said. It is that faith which wilt have to buoy ~1rs. Rea next week. A funeral has betn ~lanned for next Wednesday. But she is not sure she has realized the llll impact of the tragedy. "I don't think it has really hit me yel Jason and I were very close and I miss limdearly," she said. "But life has to keep on going, and it viJJ in three other people because o( lason. 'And that, with God's help, is what :ea Uy is keeping me going." Standard Urges Arab Support LOS ANGELES (AP) -A letter from )tandard Oil Co. of California urging ·tockholders and employes to support ''the aspirations of the Arab people" has K'OUght an angry. biUer response fron1 De Los Angeles JC\\'lsh conununity. More than 300.000 or the letters, signed )y board chairman Otto M. Miller. >rought responses Thursday ra nging Tom calls for clarificlltion to ones for a K>)'COtt of Standard Oil products. OlANGI COAST H DAILY PILOT The.Orl"lll Co.tl DAH.Y P ILOT, wllll w~kh ff; <OIT'lblMd 11'>9 NfWt·Prtn, It PVfllith~ bV ni. Or•~ Coa1t P11flll•hl"11 Company. St~· ,.,,. tdlllom •r• Pllfllt11Md, MOlld•Y l!lro1;111'1 ''M« ~.,. -c&it1"' Mtsl, Niwiort-ee1c11~ HUP!tfTiilton 81tt ll /F11<omt"ln V•ll1y, L.1011n1 a-di, lrvLM/S&<ldl~tNoc-1...i Sin ci.meMt/ len J11•n CIP••frano A 1lnQl1 NOk>n•I .. lllon i. pufl!hllld S•tu•llllr:t 1nd Sulld1n. ni._ prtnc:l~I py~litlllng Pltnl 11 t1 llO W11I .. , ltr ... , (OJTI Mt l•, (1llfornl1, t71,M. A-Rob1 rl N. W114 l're11d1n1 111d Pua1 l1llt r • 'J1d1 R. C~rl~v .. ' VI<• l"rNkll nl 1...i G•nt••I M1..-ger Thom11 K11~il EOl!Of Tlio1111t A. M11,phi111 MINltlr>Q l;Ollor L. '•ltr l<ri1r, H.w..rt 8tKll Cil~ ldl!ot "..,." IHc:• Offl« JJJ) Newport loul1~1•J ~M•lli11t Aclclr11u ,_Q, l or 1175. '266) ~ Offk" ()tal9 MIMl UO W1" 811 $1rtt! ...,._ 9..ct>: -,..,.., ... _ H!MllM'Oll t1aell: 11WJ 91'ttl> 90ult•lf'f ..... dRMfn1t: JCIJ H(ll11! Ill C.mlno llNI Tll.,.... 1·114t 642""4J21 'Ct-"W 4'""'91 .. '42·5671 '""""""'· lftl. Or•l!Oto . C..11 l'ybl!lfl.,.. ~. Ho _. 110rlt1, rnu11r1!IOl'll, ........ -lft!l V '1(1Utf"llJ-n11. tow.i11 rif .. ~-wl""ul '""'Ill llOlf'· ..... ti cooyrr,111 OMlf'. a-'tCI cit.U .. ,, ... N)ll lit CQil1 ~. C.11..,...i.., ~Mef~loll 1"' (lrrltr tLU ..,.iflJyf .. 11'14111 U ,IJ '"91'111!1Y1 fl'll!Uuy ..,._,lotl6 .,.., """"'tr. 'NEARING VITAL-CHOICE' Planning Chairman Agee . William Agee Elected Head Of Commission By WU.LIAM SCHREIBER 01 Ill• Dtlh' l'llot Stiff William Agee of Corona del Mar Thurs- day night was elected chairm3n of the Newport Beach Planning Commission and immediately vowed to complete the city's general plan by the Jan. I deadline imposed by city councilmen. Agee, a 37-year-old stockbroker was elected by his fellow commissioner; in a S.2 secret ballot. He i:lefeated Commissioner William Hazewinkel, who was elected unanimous-- ly as first vice chainnan. Other officers include Jackie Heather, Second vice chairman, and Joseph R o s e n e r , secretary. . Agee says it is vital to the city's plan- rung processes to get the general plan satisfactorily completed as rapidly as possible ~·and get on to the other "more creative" things that make the city run from day to day. He said completion of a quality plan by Jan. 1 may take weekly meetings. "We've been so bogged. down in the general plan for so Jong that other things of great importance have gone by the wayside," Agee said. "Once the plan is finished, I hope we can get to the creative planning the city needs." Work on the general plan began two and one-half years ago. Agee, a psychology graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University, has been involved in civic activities ever since moving to Corona del Mar·from New York in 1968. He is a past president of the Corona del Mar Civic Association and was an ac- tive member of the Citizens~Coordinating Com.l"nittee -more C()mmonly known as the "Freewey Fighters." That group led the city's initiative vote against the Pacific Coast Freeway in 1971 . "That initiative is probably the big thing that got me started in this city work," said Agee, who was named to the planning commission two years ago. Agee said the new coastal protection law enacted. by Proposition 20 has taken some of the beat'.off local govt1mment in recent months because the flow of permits has been slowed down. "I think there is a great need to get back on scliedu!c with things like new ordinances or revised ordinances dealing with how the city is developing." he said. Although Agee says the general plan has detracted from other commission tasks, he thinks the plan is still of para- mount importance. "We've got some very important decisions to make about the city's future in coming months," he said. "I hope 1nore people come to these meetings to tell us what they thlnk. "\Ve are nearing a vital choi ce point." Agee added. "Do u·e want growth and 1norl' traffic or do we want to stop grO\\'lh <1ltogethcr?" Agee. who is also head of the cilizens committeee preparing the city's traffic study, said that, while there are ways the ci1y can hold back runaway growth, !.here wi ll never be adequate means of ste n:in1ing the flo\Y of outside traffic to I he beaches. Flattering Orange County School trustee Donald Jordan Thursday again tried-and failed -to make the appointment of a Filth District board member a more public proctSi:i. Private interviews or the first of 14 candidates for the post vacated by the resignation or Roger C. Anderson began this morning. A second round of Interviews, also closed to the public, have been set for 10 a .in. Aug. 13, Anderson. for111crly or Huntington Beach, resigned July to move to Richland, Wash., with less than a year left in his four-year term. That timing allows the county school board to appoint a replacement rather lhan can an election. Two weekS ago Jordan, of Garden Grove, argued for an election and was defeated. "I assumed these would be open meet ings," he said rt'hursday of the interviews. "Representatives of the press and any interested residents of the F i ft h Supcrvisorial District could hear the can- didates," he added. Jordan began his new effort by asking simply if "tQere is roon1 for the press" in the offlce where interviews W<lUld take place. "I have a feeling these are sup- posed to be public," he added. County School Superintendeni Robert From Pagel GRAY. • • some Cl A assets. He said presidential ·-domestic adviser John Ehrlichman sat ln on that meeting. but said little. Walter, like Helms, said he knew of no CIA secrets that could be uncovered in Mex:iC(), but thought ~al~eman might know . something they d1dn t. Actually, no CIA' secrets were in danger, he said. \V~at the FB~ was investigating in Mex1C() were Nixon campaign checks that linked the wiretappers financially to the President's ~Jection campaign. Th~y pas~ through a Mexican bank on their way to the Miami bank account of one burglar. On the same day, J une 28, Gray said Dean and Ehrlichman gave him documents from the safe o! E. Howard Hunt, a Watergate conspirator. He said he wasn't ordered in so many words to destroy them, but "there is no doubt in my mind that destruction was intended." Months later, around Christmastime at his Stonington. Conn., home, Gray said he burned !he papers with some household trash. He read one of the papers, a forged State Department cable implicating President John F. Kennedy in the 1003 Diem assassin~Jion Bl South Vietnam. Gray said he thodght the c.able was the real thing, and he was shaken. From Pagel FUN ZONE ... tiated by residents halted development at one point. The South Coast Commission is one vr six regional panels created by Pro-posi- tion 20 to have control over development within 1,000 yards of mean high tide line. Voters passed Prop. ~O, the ooastline initiative, last November. The 12-Soulh Coast Commissioners in- clude five from Orange County and seven from Los Angeles County. From Page I MEAT ... shut dO\\'fl. In San Francisco. 145 meat wrappers \\ICre dropped fr om the payroll of Sa feu.·ay Stores. At the same time, stale food and agricult\lre Director C. B. Christensen said his office ha s filed an affadavit sup- pol'ling a suit agains the government \vhlch demands an end to the beef price freeze. Reagan Deriies Image Of Partying Governor . '. SACf{A!\JIE NTO !-Al)\ -Gov. Ronald Reagan sa~1s he's not ti ·live-it-11)) partygoer, even if that image might be a bit flattering. Excel'J)ts from his news confel'Cnce 111ursday : Q. Governor. have you been going to any parties la tely ? A. ] had a small dinner party last night. Q. Did you rend the \Vashlngton oPst yesterday? A. I know "'hat you are rererring to. But I don't know what they are referring to. r was a perf~t picture or decorwn. I Reagon was being queried about a f'ost report thal White House in· vesti gators were Interested in learning about •·1he be havior of <;allfornia Gov. Ronald Reagan, a Republican, at a par· ty.") Q. Even at the pal'ty you ~ know to which they arc referring? ~ Laugh1er.) ,. ~ \ I I "i"'; " <"' A. 1 don't know. But you have really caught me here wj th mixed emollons because I don't know whether< to get a sort of glint in my eye and let you think that there was a side of me no one knows or not. But I'm afraid there isn't." Reagan added he has no reason to believe there was such an investigation. "I don't think really that there was," he said. How did he know? "l haven't seen anybody spying on me," he said. "llaven't been to any parties where J didn't know who was there." 7'he tnfonnation the Post received of the alleged investigations ordered by "senior White HouBe aides" did not elaborate on the Reagan reference. Fo r tilt rtc0rd1 Reagan ls considered by lho11e who know him to be a light drinker. Ont long·time associate said he never knew Reagan to take more than two drinks on any occasion. Peterson objected that 40thl1. would be en- tirely different from previous (years)." Peterson contended private sessions were necessary because some questions might be ''personal" and that interviews v.·ere comparable to exe'cutive sessions on personnel matters. ''I don't recall asking anything last time (a trll.ltee was.. appointed) that an)'Clle hesitated to answer," Jordan said. He pointed out' that appointing a board member isn't like hiring an employe and that "these (candidates) are people who would have had to have been up lor elee- t1on." Jordan couldn't get any support for his arguments. Favoring secret sessions were Trustees David Brandt, Doris Arau- jo and A. E. ''Pat" Arnold. * * * Candidates For Board Number 14 Three more Fifth District residents Th_ursday became candidates for ap- pointment to the Orange County School Board, bringing thermal total to 14. Deadline for applications to fill lhe post vacated by Roger Andersen, formerly of Ht.<ntington Beach, was Thursday at s p.m. Anderson represented the F i f t h District, which rillls along the same boun~ries as the area represented by Orange County Supervisor R o n a I d Caspers. The latest candidates arc: -Jay R. Blakemore, a retired certified. public accolllltant, of 2509 P..arbor View Drive, Corona del Mar . -Mark C. Johnson, a sales manager for a hospital products manufacturer, of 26502 Monticito Drive, Mission Vi ejo. -Albert G. Pizzo, a physician in general practice, of 2610 Avon St., Newport Beach. The first interview session was this morning. The second will take place at 10 a.m. Aug. 13. County trustees also have made" special appointments for al least two candidates who C()uldn 't meet those two sessions. The remaining candidates, by com· munity, are: -Huntington Beach: Norma Van- derf\.lolen, a housewife; James R. Walker, occupation unknown: Helen Schoelzel, administrator of Parkhurst Retirement Home; Frank Stewart, real estate salesman; and Tbay~danagea Joseph Bryant, a chemical engineer. :...COsta Mesa: Melvin Gilbert, former teacher, now independent businessman. -Newport Beach: David C. Henley, associate professor of journalism at use. -Irvine: Marian Ellis, secretary of the city's Citizens Advisory Committee on Public Education. -Mission Viejo: Rev. Preston Howell, Baptist minister and former trustee in the now-defunct San Joaquin School District. ·-Laguna Beach : Thomas Alexander, former director at Cape Cod Community College in Massachusetts; Dr. Ernest Lake, professor of education at Cal State Fullerton. Gypsies Gone . ... Etching by UC Irvine education major Don Button depicts student farm and gypsy wagon which was a familiar sjght for three years near Town Center in Irvine. City law banned student mobile living as of July 1, but new UCI course catalogue provides permanent re- minder of the scene. The .Button work, along with dozens of artworks by other student artists illustrate this year's listing of academic of· ferings, f3.culty, and general information about UCI and the campu s. Book is available at $1 .25 by mail or for $1 on campus. Planning, Commissione1·s Begin Fight Over Parking Newport Beach p I a n n i n g com· missioners Thursday night began what promises to be a long fight over new residential parking restrictions ror the ci· ty. Commissioners have been given the grudging go-ahead by city councilmen !o revise parking laws and require mare off-street spaces, some or which may in- clude tandem spaces long-opposed by the councilmen. • Thursday night, the planning staff outlined. three possible choices ror a new parking law and before the discussion \fas over, Commissioner Joseph Rosener added a fourth p:issibility. The choices commissioners must weed through include: -A minimum requirement or two spaces per wiit for all residential dwell- ings with tandem parking (two cars in !he garage and two in the driveway) permitted for duplexes, triplexes and fourplexes. :'\~-.. .,,. ... ~ .. i' ·.i: .. -:------ -Establishment of a parking space re- quirement based on the number of bedrooms in a dwelling house. A one· bedroom would need 1.5 spaces. 1.8 spaces for a two bedroom, two for a three bedroom and one guest space per 10 units. The theory is that the space re- quirement would be rounded off depen- ding on how many units were involved. -Using floor area as a basis for park· ing requirements. Three spaces for a structure Jess than 2,400 square feet and one additional space per addition 400 square feet or portion thereof. Single family homes more than 2,000 square feet ~-ould ·Deed three spaces. -Requiring one space per one-room unit such as a bachelor flat , 1.5 spaces per t"·o-room Wlil, two spaces per three. room unit, two spaces per four-room unit and three spaces for five·room units or larger. · " I' ,, • ~~Jr. $..1_· ------~I • Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sale Merchandise Ready for Immedi- ate Delivery. Don 't Delay. Final <;:hance to Select From Our Large In· ventory ~ Reduced Prices. DREXEL.-HERITAGE-liENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS t AN INTERIORS wtllCDA\'S & SATURDA\'S t 100 to 5110 HIDAY 'TIL t 100 NEWPORT-BEACH-e 1727 WESTCLIF~ OR.. 642-2050 tOp•n Sulld•Y 12-S:JOI LAGUNA BEACH e J4S. NORTH COAST HWY IOp1n Sund1y 12-l:JOI 494°6551 TORRANCE e 21•49 HAWTHORNE ILVD. l71·f21t • -· .. DAn,y PRQT, EDITORIAL PAGE /, An Admirable Record Fifty years ago Monday, a county ordinance was approved establishing a beach protection force for the city of Newport Beach. Since that time, when Newport Beach was a quiet resort villa~e accessi!>le only by long drives on bad roads, the JOb performed by the city's lifeguards has grown to be a monumental one. Last year alone, guards pulled more than 4,000 struggling swimmers from the water. There were no drownings on guarded beaches and only four on un· guarded beaches. Thls ls impressive in light of the fact that 10 million visits to the beach were recorded last year and a force of Jess than 40 men protected the swimmers. 1'he city's guards are a thin lifeline against a big ocean. But time and again they have proved their skill, knowhow, experience and courage in the line of duty. At times the job is more trying than usual -such as when big crowds come early in the summer when the force ls only at half strength. Or wh~n pounding surf sparks exhausting mass rescues in powerful undertow. But Newport Beach lifeguards have provided con- sistenUy fine protection urider all conditions to beach- goers from all over the state fof five decades. Issue Won't Go Away Mary Blake, newly elected chairman of the New· port Beach Bicycle Trails Committee, said last week she wants the committee to stop pressing for a bike trail on Balboa Island. She made cleat·n her announcement, however, that her attitude does n slem from her feeling that they are unnecessary, b t from a belief that homeowner? .on the island are not willing at this tjme to engage 1n a reasonable discussion of the problem and there is other work to do. Unfortunately, she may be right. Balboa Island certainly faces an acute problem fr.om the hundreds oC bicycUsts who daily roam the sidewalks and streets ol the ISiand. But It is just as clear that a few homeowners on the island are doing lheir best to stir up opposition to any trail system at all ·lo accom· modate these bicyclists. It seems they !ear that a proper trail system would not solve the island's problems but _would attract even more bikers to the area. Even if true, this argument does not.bing to re- solve the present critical safety program. As Mrs. Blake said, tempers must cool before the problem ca.n be re- solved. But it won't go away by itself and the trails committee can bypass the issue only so Jong. Fine Arts Center Whenever Harbor Area residents tout their locale to visitors from other parts of the country, "climate," "beach" and the easy lifestyle usually rank at the top. Culture'! Whatever that may be, they haven't put it on the picture postcards summer visi'tors send to Teaneck, New Jersey. There hasn 't been much "culture" to talk about, at least not in popular terms of outstand- ing music, drama and visual arts. With the establishment of the Newport Mesa- Orange Coast Fine Arts Center this summer, the elusive go-al of making a mark on the cultural world should have been given a big boost. The center utilizes the creativlty of 300 high school a~d c~Ue~e students from all over the county, all cul· nunating in two stage productions, "The Fantasticks" and "West Side Story," both of which are on stage alter- nately, Saturday through 4ug. 11 at Costa Mesa High School. Fron:i all al?pearances these two classics are being staged with a high degree of professionalism and skill They are certain to be worthy of the "culture" label. Annual attractions such as these under the Fine Arts Center aegis may in time make Newport Beach and Costa Mesa more noted for more than the climate and the beach. N I ,. 'Well, I see we're doing our part to speed up the meat shortage.' The Calley Tapes:. . Preeede1its for Nixon's Sta1id .... ' ' A Bewildered Man WASfllNGTON -While the nation awaits the Supreme Court showdown over the White House tapes, we have listened to some secret tapes which may present ?resident Nixon with another ex- cruciating dilemma. These tapes contain Lt. William Calley's lengthy. ag· ooizing psychiatric , interviews after he was ae<:used of mass murder at My Lai. Some psychiatrists h a v e concluded from the int erviev.•s th.at he probably was "legally i n s a n e" "'hen he led his com- pany on the shooting spree. Other p~ychlatrists, while agreeing he had personality problems, found "no evidence 'lf mental disease, defect or derange-- "1ent." '.."'PRESIDENT NIXON has promised r.ersonally to review the Calley case. His linal decision will have tremendous emo- ·tional impact. People around the world ·~lieve Calley v.•as a monster who should 'be severely punished. But others feel he ·was a madman whose irrational behavior ~WJuld not forever slain America's ' fighting men. , Calley looked upon himself as quite 'JOnnaL except for one "irrational tiehavior happening.'' As he recounted ; ·~ incident to psychiatrists, "I had -911 : •. e troops in a truck, and there was no : v.1arm feeling for the Vietnamese people · ;'lmong the troops and me. I had nothing 'llUt disgust. I had just. I won't say highly hostile feelings. to the Point where I · ~ronted to wantonly shoot anybody or beat anybody up, or anything like that. ; But I had no respect for them ... : ''THE TRUCK came up to the village, ; at ·which time I went into the store to get : sonte candles. And there was a bottle of : Seagram's Seven there, which I picked · up and \Valked out -just wanton theft. Of \vhich Mama San ran out -well not the Mama San, she was a young girl - ran out ... I told the guard, the truck driver to go on. "1 just lt10ught that was an extremely irrational behavior. lt seems to me I did pay for the candles ... t came back and I gave the booze to my troops. And I said, 'Joe, check it out for glass.' I don't think I'd persooally drink it. I had no desire in drinking the booze because l was afraid of it because it was on the market. ''THEY DIDN'T drink ft {either) ... The MPs and I gave it back to the girl. Jt 't'3S a matter of why 1 actually did that , for which 1 had no excuse." Calley went on to describe his frustra- tion over the difficulty of Identifying the enemy in Vietnam. He confessed grief over the loss of men, anger at the "'ar and constant fear. · He tried to explain his feelings: "I think the moral issues of the war -the question of when is a war right, when is a war good , when is killing right, when is it wrong and actually when is , what a.re we fighting -we shouldn't be there. "ARE WE righting the Reds, or a tribe of people, or a bunch of human beings because they're in that situation? Or are we fighting an ideological philosophy that has been conjl!l'ed in the minds of human beings?" ''What is your feeling .about why are we fighting in Vietnam?" Calley was asked. "Well." he replied, "everybody knows \\'e're there to stop communism. What is comm unism? Today, actually com· munism is not an animate object. It's a philosophy in the minds of men. So how can you go into an armed conflict and say we're going to save these people from (communism). You've got armed combat.. t r o o p s in there to do a job, troops that were designed to fight a hostile enemy . . . We 're not going to change your way of thinking. We're going· to take your Position and then endanger your way of life." AT MY LAI, Calley relt he was merely carrying out orders to shoot everyone re- maining in the area, because they had been identified as the enemy. He was Dear Gloomy • Gus How honest is our free press? Do the news media really protect drunken, incompetent and licentious senators? F.D. Gi-n., GUI com"""" •r• 1vttmlttM ""' rMdtn Ind ijo Ml MC-I'll' ,.ilf(t tfll Vi.wt. If ltli: -~""' SIM '"' "' PffVt te Gloom' GU1, 01lly ,llOI. "hyper" or "psyched up," but he felt he was in full control of his faculties. Afterward, he was stunned over the murder charges brought against him. "I "'as pulled into the Adjutant. no, I mean the Attorney General's office," said Calley. "And he said we've got a, we'.re conducting an investigation about the My Lai problem. "And I said great. And I was happy. Not because it had entered my mind that I had done anything wrong. I thought somebody finally was going to some and ask me my advice on the war. And I had built up so much stuff inside me ... "BUT mEN in the next breath, he told me 'at which time you will probably be charged with murder. Do you want an at· tomey?' And 1 said, 'Gee, I thought you wanted to know something about a com· bat operation. What do you mean you're going to charge me with murder?' He said, 'Well, we 're carrying on an in· vestigation . . . There was something wrong there.' " "What is it," 3 psychiatrist asked Calley, "that you have actually been charged with as far as you know today?" "One hundred and two c a s e s of premeditated murder," he replied. "And against whom?" "Oriental people or mixed ages and races." THE ACCUSATION, he said, "suddenly presented me at this stage of my life with a cross few men have to bear in life. Now, people don't talk about the My Lai massacre, fl'!ey call It the Calley massa cre. AU of a sudden, I have no\v become the personification of evil and horror, and everywhere I go, 1 must face these attitudes of people . . . It is dif- ficult and hard to understand why it should have happened to me, and I sin-gled out." f lanes Roh-Travel of.Its Mystique Tl:IERE IS a wonderful mystique about a ship Uuit Is unrivaled by any other form of transportation. It Ls a self-am· taJned unit in a very special way , and It IT WOULD BE a tragedy 11 we came to rely exclusively on air travel for trans}>OrtaUon. 1'he train had Its own mystique -traveling to New York on the "20th Century" was a #delight no airplane can rival. 'l'he big new planes. with all their gloss, are just skybome buses, with about as much penonalit.y as a steam shovel. • The Ideal way to go to Europe Is to take a plane there and unwind on a ship coming back. But most people begrudge the time, and pretty soon there won't be a·shlp to take back. Wbich ls not only a .... pity Irom..the point \of view oMelatlng:- but also beCause it's one of the biggest bargains you can find anywhere, Try liv- ing in a good hotel for rive days on what it costs for the same service on a ship. WE ARE already sorry that we have Jet our railroad system go to bell. Some o( the routes they served simply will not be replaced by airlines, and m a n y American communities are more cut off today than they were 50 years ago. We \VUI be just as sorry \f we abandon the sea·Unes, not ohly for the pleasure we will have lost, but be ca us o It's «:<>nomically 'vrong to give any one form of transportation a stranglehold. Americnns are slaves to their cars, because publlc transit has b e e n shamefully neglected. \Ye will soon be slaves 'lo our airplane.~. when Lh~ last great ship retires from the seas. I can't believe that any form of slavefy Is beneficial. no matter how much time may be saved. Presidents and the Courts To the Editor : Should President Nixon ignore a court order to obey the subpoena of the Senate's Select Investigative Committee . he l''ill act in accordance with v.·ell established precedents. The courts have no power to enforce their decisions . The Executive branch of our government alone has Utls duty. The doctrine or separation Of powers rests on the Consti tutional provision that establishes the legislative, judicial and executive branches of our government co.e:qual. Each is independent of the others. Each branch is sole judge of its own affairs. THE SYSTE!\f or checks and balances was adopted because the members of the Constitutional Convention ppposed a strong centralized government. The plan was for C.Ongress to legislate, the judiciary to interpret, and the executive to enforce the laws and legal decisions. The system has worked smoothl y with complacent presidents. Strong presidents have acted much as they pleased . There has been only one direct con- frontation with Congress by any presi· dent, untiJ President Nixon 's refusal to surrender certain tapes and documents to the Senatorial committee. That oc- curred when Andrew Johnson deliberate- ly and openly violated the Tenure of Of- fice law, which had been passed over his veto. To act contrary to a statute is a crime. He was impeached, and escaped conviction by one vote : but that victory swtained Johnson's right to act contrary to law. Other confrootations have been compromised before they reached the direct confrontation stage. TflE RECORD of presidents ignoring the orders of the courts, even of the Supreme Court is different. Thomas Jef- ferson, as president, refused to sdrrender certain documents to the judiciary when ordered to do so by Chief Justice Marshall. Marshall had even a worse af- front when Jackson, then president said, "John Marshall has made his decision ; now let him enforce it." During the Civil War Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus, and made arbritary ar· rests. The Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Taney ordered the release of those arrested. Lincoln did not argue; he ignored the decisions. All lhe judges could do was fuss and fume. As presi- dent, Lincoln had command of the armed forces and the law enforcement branch of government. Should the occasion arise that the Judicial system would order President Nixon to comply with the Select Com- mlttte's sut>pOena-;-tre·wobld act1 should he refuse, in accordance wfth the best precedents, set by both Republican and Democraic presidents. ROBERT O'BRJAN Bike TrnU lllstor11 To tho F.dltor:o \ As a former member of the Newport Beach Bicycle Trails Committee -1967· 1972 -l would like to offer a few com- ments. \vmt A FEW other caring citizens of . . .Quotes Eld.toe Eger, !\fountain View, on new mortil standards -"Outside, I don't care what people arc doing, but wllh 11 kids 1 hnve lo have some standards set in my home." Norman J. Mirman, director, L.A. school ror gifted children -"Bright children need ground rules a n d llmltallons, just as other children do. Self-discipline and creotivity are not an- tithetical; they complement each other when tempered with a great cltal of love." MAILBOX Letters frorri readers are welcome. Normally writers should convey Uieir messages in 300 words or less. The rigltt to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All letters mu.st include signature and mailitig address, but names ma11 be 'withheld on request if sufficient reason is appare1it. Poetry tciU not. be published. Ne\vport Beach, one person and myself started the whole thing. \Ve rode the streets. highways, the Santa Ana River "bike trails," which '"'ere at that time covered with dirt, mud, horses, skunks and various unmentionable objects. We did the "trail blazing" for one reason: To provide safety and a new way of life for bicycle riders and their families. Alter nearly a year of "trail blazing," covering over 300 miles, we felt we had accomplished "mis,,ion impossible." We had started "Bicycle Trails," which really began when the first signs went up on the Ocean Front boardwalk and the city of Newport Beach accepted the master plan. We had numeroos meetings and as volunteers we spent many hours at- tempting to perfect the master plan. We bad hoped, we had succeeded. IN REGARD to Allan Beek, Who seems now to be the center of cootroversy, I would like to go on record that in l!ml when Mr. Beek joined the Citizens Advisory Committee, he did so as a volunteer, giving his time and his forethought to this very worthwhile pro- ject. He was a tremendous advocate and a dedicated human being on bicycle sar~ ty and gave much to the committee and the community in general. I was proud to be associated with Allan Beek and the committee that worked so hard to perfect the original master plan for Newport Beach. Whomever the critics may be, perhaps they should take a better and harder look that what y.•e have attempted to ac- complish since 1967 has been successfully done -and we are still trying. To tbe people that are complaining about Mr. Beek and the Bicycle Trails Committee, I would suggest they try riding the 300 miles thctl}Selves and then..stand.JJp and be COOnted. ·r believe In blc"ycle safety. I think we have made our poin t.- aft.er seven years of effort and dedica· lion. We tried -for all ot you tha t ride bicycles -to save your tiVes. ., PAffilCIA DOMECQ -. ·~1 ':I .... ··~ ....... Lessota tor 'Lib•' To the Edito r: It, very painfully, came to n1y at- tention the other night, as J was parking cars at a Coast Highway restaurant, that some slightly liberated females have an immense amount of homework to do before they pass Into the "liberated" class. EARLY in the evening, a trickle of cars pulled into my lot and 1 notiw'.t that these ClfS were occupied by an unusually large number of unescorted women. Tiie cars did not come In a group and only once did two wo1nen arrive together . I, therefore had no Idea that a group uf la dles \Vere gathering for an evening out. About an hour later, the group emerged In full force ch11tterlng to each other. I politely stood waiting to be ' told what types of cars tp fetch . Finally, a woman in a green dre\s asked me to bring up her brown Mercury. With all of the juice • my muscles could muster, I fla shed a\vay and returned not 20 seconds lat6t with her car. SHE WAS still talkin g but managed to break away long enou gh to squeak into the driver's seat. Tipl ess, I closed the door gently for her and said "goodnight." There were too n1any ladies waiting, so, J planned lo brood about the stiff (no tip J later_ In the next three minutes, 1 brought up four cars in perfect style and politely opened the door for each of the departing women. For my flawless service, I netted a total of fifty cents, two stiffs and an upset stomach. Since t.bat conUngent of women was my biggest business or slow Monday night lrafflc, I had plenty of time to 1 Ponder my ill·fortune. IN THIS DAY of Women's Llb and equality. two things n1u st take place. First: Women must educate themselves as to how to do things that were done for them in the past. Just as the males must learn to cope with the shopping and other niceties that he bas taken for granted, so ( too must a woman learn such tine arts as, correct jjpping and tire changing. Second: People must be patient with both sexes as they try to master the new roles that change is asking them to play. JOHN M. DE SANTIS Elevated Free..,011? To the Editor: I have been following the news of all the trouble our powers that be have been having over the Coast Freeway, No one seems to be saUsfied with any of the ideas. • I BELIEVE that this can be setlled by building an elevated freeway. There is room along the beach or at the edge of the bluffs and across the land inland or at the edge of the Coast Highway. Th.is way a lot of valuable land and .many beautiful arid valuable homes could be saved. WITH ALL the money that has befn wasted on surveys and the purchase or land along the coast, I an1 sure that lhe cost of an elevated freewfly would be po5· sible. The Coast Highway could be Je(t intact and all the businesses \\'OUld tJt. able to stay in business. I am sure the people \\'ould be more than willing to pay for the expenses to save their to\\'TIS and get T('licf from the __.,J trafric on Coast ffigh\\•ay. With an our abilities to do so many great things, this should be very easy. . WILLIAM II. COOPER ORANGE COAST . -DAILY PILOT ··~ Robert N. \Veed, Publisher Thomas Keevil, Editor Barbara Krtibich • Editorial Paye Ed itor The.> ~torlal :UK.C.-vl ,.,.... Dally Piiot &eeks to lnlOnn and stimulate readers by prucnti11Ji1: on th1a Pll'.11! dlverwicommentary un topit'I 0( tn- lt"n>st by t)'fldlcatect columnists and rartoontsla, by providing a rorum for ttlld.~rs· views and by p~se-nlinr thlt ncwgpaper's optnlona and Idea.' on CUM'tnf tl)piet. The rdilorlal opln~ ot th~ l>Ajiy Pjlot 11ppe11.r only In !Ml fll llorlal column al tht lop or the page!. Oplnkm1 •XllT"•!i'ed by ilwt l'Ol· umnl1ta and car1oonlsta Md 1ell:l!l" wrlttt'# art their oWn and nn tndot'•t- mtnt ~Ir v\ews by 1he Daily Piklt AhOOla be W~rttd. Friday, Augusl 3, 1973 I l I • Videofi.pe Evidence? Accused Slayer's Defense to Open SANTA CRUZ (AP) -'!be defense was to ope!\ Its caM! ••Y In Herbert W. Mullln's mass murder trial. after the Judie took under advl!ement a defense plea to lntroduce a videotaped talk between the cle!endant and hLs lawyer. Public defender J a m e s Jack8on made the request Tlusday, as lhe prosecution concluded its t hree-day preoentatloo. J ackson said lhe hour-long tape, made when he finlt talked wltb Mullin, would smw that "he's crazy, be keeps slipping in and out ol re&llty.'' SANTA CRUZ County Superior Court Judge Charles Franich withheld a ruling on the request, which was ex- pected to be challenged by the pro.oecutlon. Jackson's first witness was ID be Stadonl psycho)ogist Dr. Donald Umde, whom he . said ....Wd testily that.Mullin . was mentally unstable. Jackson said in bis opening statement Monday that Mullin is guilty of the 10 slayings he is charged wlth committing during a three-week period in the Santa Cruz area. He also said Mullin had killed three other persons before that. On 'lbursday, prosecutor Arthur DaMer linked Mullin and the .22 caliber pistol that Jd.lled J ames Gianera, 24, and ltis Wife Joan, 21. Danner said the gun was found in Mullin's 'tar when he was arrested sh<rtly altef' the murder of Fred Perez on Feb. 13. C R I MI NOLOGIST l>aul Weinberger 'Pres sured To Compete' SACRAMENTO (AP) Welfare Secretary Casper W. Weinberger acknowledged to- day that he i.! under in- creasing preMure to nm for govem>r in his home state of California neU: year. Weai>erger, a Republican. said he was honored and Oat- ( BRIEFS ) -but had not yet taken time to think seriously about the prospect. Doughorty testified that a bullet from the same gun was lodged In the wall of a cabin where four teen-age boys were found shot to dea1b Feb. 17. Jackson says Mullin is •'a psychotic schizophrenJc" who killed 13 persons as "human sacrifices needed to save California from earthquakes." He also has stated that MuDln claimed to be under hi! family's telephatic c o n t r o I wbeo he killed his first three victims. The prooerutioo bas said It will shoW during the trial's sanity phase Mullin was sane at lbe time of the murders. Gas Ousts LA Suhm·b Residents LOS ANGELES (AP) Resideots of a six·block area of the San Fernando Valley community of Arleta were voluntarily evacuated from their bomes early today when fumes from an insecticid e sprayed on a nearby field brought complaints of eye ir· ritation and nausea, police said. Three residents and 22 Foothill Division policemen who ,went· .into lhe area were treated at Holy C r o s s Hospital, mostly as a precau- tionary measure, o r f i c i a I s said. No seriou! injuries were reported and no one was hospitalized. OFFICERS ANO firemen alerted about 160 home owners in the area to the problem, police said, adding t h a t evacuation was volWltary. A fire department spokesman said at least 20 homes were evacuated while firemen used rans to blow the fumes - described as similar to tear gas -from the houses . Berkeley Barb Shuns Sexual Ads BERKELEY (AP) -The publisher of the underground newspaper Berkeley B a r b says future issues will not con- tain advertisements of a sex- Couple Succumb In Desert BAKER (AP) -The bodies or a youog South Gate C(luple have been found in the desolate Devil's Playground area of the Mojave Desert, ap· parently victims of scorching desert heat. Virgil T. Dawson Jr., 26, and his 21-year-old wife Becky were identified Thursday by the San Bernardino County Coroner's office. The couple left their borne last Thursday in a borrowed camper truck. Nothing was heard from them Wllil a Union Pacific Railroed work crew found the husband 's body about 4'h miles from the abandoned camper, which v.•as bogged down in sand. J\1RS. DAWSON'S body was about 800 yards farther along the road, beside an empty water can. Officials said the couple were ill-equipped for a trip in- to the isolated part of the desert. where d a y t i m e temperatures hovered around 110 degrees. It appeared the couple at- tempted to walk 20 miles to the small community o f Ludlow after they remained with their inoperable truck for about a day. Prostitut;e Sues Judge For Ledger SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A prostitute who says she's earning money so she can go to college and become an ac- countant sued a city judge Thursday to get back he r ap- pointment OOok. The Superior Court suit filed by Elaine Carlson, 23, -also re- quested return of a container or contraceptive roam seized when she was arrested on a prostitution charge r.1ay 7. Miss Carlson said t h e charges were dismissed July 4 but Mun1cipal Judge Eugene F . Lynch refUBed to return the book and cootalner. "Unless the book is returned ln the very near future, I will suffer the full damage of the loss since appointments will have already been missed and so forth," Miss Carlson said in the suit. Lynch explained his action by saying "often times we refuse to return property in certain types of crime because the items are sometimes used in the crimes themselves. An obvious example would be a Frtda)', Augus.t 3, 1973 • DAILY PILOT l) Chavez ASks 'Picket Ban Defiance FRESNO (AP) -Cesar Otavc.-z wants his followen all over America to "!land with u.s and be arrested" here where droves already have been jailed !or challenging court bans on mass picketing. Almost 3,000 United Fann Workers Union members and supporlers have been arrested in the San Joaquin Valley dur- ing lwo weeks of massive civil disobedience picketing at fruit ranches where groweNJ bad obtained court restrictions on the number of pickets. Almost 2,000 of the arrests have been fr * * Compromise Meany Goal \VAS~fINGTON t 1\1' f AFL-CIO Presidrnl George Meany met tod ay \V i t h Teamsters Union officials in an attempt to settle a bitter jurisdictional dispute between the Teamsters and Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers Union. Meany, asked on his arrival if he thought the session would be productive, replied, "I haven 't the slightest idea." It was not certain whether Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons attended th e meeting held on neut ra I ground in downtO\Yn Washington. In Fl'elno County, reportedly the nation'• rlcbest crop pro-- duciog county ln dollar value. Cllavez, vWtlng aom.e ~ still In jail here, blasted the arrests Thur3day as • • a dlsgrac.lul misuse of Justloe . . . truly a blot on Anierlca." "I feel the only reason in- junctions were issued was to appease the growers and destroy the union," Chavez charged. "[ ilt CALLCNG on friends a.cross the Unitd States to witness the outrage of jaUlngs and hardships brought on our union people. I am asking that they come from all over to Fresno Cotmty to stand with us and be arrested." In Sacramento, S t a t e Agriculture Director C . B . Ch riste nsen says the California National Guard has been alerted for possible duty because of continuing clashes on picket lines in the San Joa- quin VaU ey. Christiansen told the state board of agriculture Thursday that the Guard was alerted Tuesday night following a day of clashes between pickets and Kern County Sherifrs deputies in the Arvin area. Tbe dispute involves court- ordered limits of one picket to every 100 feet and restrictions on use of bullhorns at 50 fruit ranches where growers have refused to renew UF\V con- tracts. r.1ost of these growers bave UNITED FARM WORKERS PICKETS TALK Cesar Chavez Attends R•lly Jn Community of Parlier to date remained independent ,..had Chavez contracts. The of the rival Teamsters Union, teamsters are also negotiating which has signed 51 other with 29 Delano table grape California farmers who once growers whose pacts with °'3vm: exp!red Sunday Ch1vei cont ends the picketing restrictions violate constltJtulooal rights o[ free as,,embly and speech, but of~ ficia.ls here have tried to avoid a court test of the civil In· junctions on those grounds by charging the pickets with refLWJI to disperse. THE TACTIC 0 F' en- couraging mass arrests "is not going to quit until we arou.se. public opinion and pos.slljy Jail 10,000 or more aod pubUc opinion makes them county officials look in- ward and reallz..e they've made a grave and Wljust error," said Olavez, who bas been ar- rested himself in past labor disputes. More of his supporters heed· ed the call 'Thursday as 143 were arTeSted here, seven" in Kern C.ounty 8hd five in Tulare. The bookings here in- cluded 20 nuns, ppping the" total of nuns and priests ar- rested after coming here to picket this week to 60. The nuns and priests already jailed began a fast Wednesday to emphasize their solldarlty with C h a v e z: • Fasting has been a chief tactic in the past for the UFW leader, but he has not begw1 one in his current strugg\e.'i against T eamster en- croachinents that have whit- tled UFW working n1em- bership from a high of 40,000 down to 6,500. RECREATION IN ACTION SHOW YAMAHA MINl,;BIKE Drlwing Sun. Aug. 5, 3 p-tn. South Coast ?lua AUG. 2nd thru 5th Register for prizt1 In C-1 eo...t 32 HOURLY PRlm $10.00 Gift CertlflcaMS Starting at 1 pm Dally SCHEDULE OF DAILY EVINTS TOYOTA SAILBOAT Drlwing Sun. Aug. 5, 3 p& --· .. ;mr '11MtSDAY, AUGVST 2"" ·-Siii, ...,-T....ill'(-.... d & Tr~i t""tty o;splty """· Childn!n'• Art. Bicycle Grind Prix Svrfbolrd °*tlslionshlps, Children·, Terr1rrurns- RID.AY, AUGUST) Huntington BNCh Senior Citlient .. 09Wtime Singers" 6:30-7:15, 7115-8.00 Music M.n Band-SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 11:00.11130 ChAdren's Dance, 11 :30-12:00 Tumbling, 12:C>0-12,30 K1r1te, 12:30.12145 Tumbl ing , 1:00.1115 a.by Ballet, J,QO..J ,45 Community Theatre (Peter Pan)-SUNDAY, AUGUSTS 1:00.1 115 Trim to Rhythm, 1:30-1 :45 Gymn1stic1, 2i00- 21l.S Round Dal'ltf, 2:30-2:-45 Baton Twirl ing ""'"'" hr 1 ..... 11oo ..,._ o1 cmo -_.. v.n.,. """""'' .. -h 1 '"""'· • Weinberger said in a in· terview that he V.'Ou1d consider the idea "at some point." ual nature . gun." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • cl hF ?l-1axScherrannounced as oreseen Thursday that the tabloid will SACRAMENTO (AP) -cease to print "slimy" ad· Gov. Ronald Reagan and vertising that "e......t"Us" other Assembly Speaker Bob Morel· •yw ti headed today toward human beings. another potentially bitter clash Scherr, who denied he ii.·as over the one-cent sales tax in-yielding to right \V i n g crease, wlUch some say Is un-censorship, said the Idea of needed and unwanted. purging ihe Barb, entering its the Republican governor ninth year of publication, v.·as proposed Thursday a half-cent his own. . • cut ln the sales tax for one '!fte bearded publisher ad- ye.ar. 'nlat would use up $320 n nutted t~t as m~c~ as 80 per-ilr f th tate's tD?G cent of his advertising revenue m !00 0 e !i-""'"' may be lost. million treasury surplus. "Yeah, it will probably • ReflfJOH Push wreck. our advertising. We'll SACRAMENTO (AP) -It just plug along. We started oould set a national precedent with nothing, we11 probably i{ California were to throw out end up with nothing," he said. the legal rule that evidence "We will no longer accept gathered Illegally may not be advertising which m a k e s allowed in court , says Gov. persons into objects," he said. Ronald Reagan. "We will no longer allow slimy That rule "has permitted style ads v.1letber they offer criminals to walk free." said commodity sex, encount£r Ren1r.1n in a news conference groups. stereos or airline --· I · tickets." '11wrsday. If Cal rorn1a dlJcards it, he added, the U.S. LA Judges Censured SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Two Los Angeles judges have been censured for "willful misconduct in office" by the state Supreme C.Ourt. Superior C.ourt Judge Leopoldo Sanchez d r e w "severe censure" Thursday, and Municipal Court Judge Antonio E. Chavez w a s "censured." Both orders came on the recommendation of the state Commission on Judicial Qualifications. The commission said during a three-year period Sanchez gave a bail bondsman orders (or release or prisoners ""hich \lo·ere blank except for the judge's signature. Supreme Court might lo .-----------------~! likewise for the whole country. e Containment EUR EKA (AP) --Plnollghters, ~ w.ere ~x pectod ID conta in the Klamath National Forest's b I g g est dl1lber fire in sl.I years - a blaze that has ravaged 14 ,quare miles of timberland at en est'lmated cost of $13 mllllon. Dense smoke that had littuiier ed !lremel>'• effort. by ,. .UOUding ridges and creek -. dnYOOI since the fire began a ,;reek: ago was cleared Thurs- day by breezes from a Pacific cqld front, U.S. Forest Service .p.tesman Erncsl Weinberg llilld- • s-pe_et He ld SANTA ROSA (AP) - A Ullll being held In • Canadian !Ill wu to be questioned today b; &onoma County author!tles ll!veollgatlng the dealhs of five YtlJll& fllrlo who,. nude bodl" boVe tJe<n found near here. llbetlll Don Strlepke said ~y Ute man, Alber! Jlldianl Voorhec1, 27, bas all'eody been charged wllh the JtJM tllllng of a Sonoma mM In ... ot111lal town o! Jenner near hlrL ' r_(unney Order Senator Wants C1iildren · RIVERSIDE (AP) -Sen, John V. Tunney's Y.'ife has been ordered to return from llolland with the couple's three children and appear in court !\1onday to resolve .a custody diS<JgrecmcnL -J.(!"o!Tiey !fora~ Coyle sAld 'l'M~"!l!at 1rs'."'l'tl!!ney took the children -Teddy, J2, Mark, 8, and Ariann , 5 -to her native country contrary to an agreement that Tunney would have custody of them during August. Tunney (0-Cali!.) learned of the departure 1'-1onday in a note from Mrs. Tunney who }eft for EW'<lpe with the children over the weekend, Coyle said . Mrs. Tunney f1Jed /or divorce In May, 1972, bul Coyle said the 14-year marrtage has not been dis90lvod. The Tunneys lived togelher In their G<orgetown home last June. the lawyer said, adding that it was not an cffon ot reconciliation. Tunney tssuNI a statement saying, "1 want the <.:hil- drtn in this country to share In UM!ir upbringing. 1 \\'ant them raised in America as Americans.'' Coyle said the order for Mrs. Tunney to appcnr \\'OOld be served on Lawrence Stocker, her attorney in San Jt ran- clsco. Tunney's legal re1ldenoe Is In Rl•eralde. • DOWM WITH YOUR AMTEMMA UP WITH TELEPROWPTER! s: WITH CLEAR RECEPTION OUR ANTENNA IS 350 FEET HIGH I ra WITH MORE CHANNELS . • " CHOOSE FROM L.A. & SAN DIEGO II WITH NEWP2~!;sspR~~E .II WITH LOCAL PROGRAMS INCLUDING SPORTING EVENTS II no ~ TELEPROMPTER Is tho llfgllt cable televitlon o~iution in the world. .• I.JI Wo hevo the most up-to-date ttchnlcal fociliti•. Now you ~n get rid of your u<Jy antenna (and mike Newport even more bt111tiful)· and get · a bettor picture at the same time -Plus you'll save money! Offer good ;n cablt arns only. FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, OUR INSTALLATION CHARGE IS FREE . DIAL 642-3160 • • ' . ' • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. i 15, "I SECTIONS, "18 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' ' FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1973 c TEN CENTS -•• Mercy Death Mulled for Capo Boy~· 3 By MARCI DODSON Of •• Diii,, .. ,.., 11•11 -Jason Arthur Rea, 3, of Capistrano Be.acb, left on a plane for Colorado Thursday, kept alive clinically only by machines. nte plan calls for him to die in Denver. And bis mother, Mrs. Linda Rea, ex- pects to bury her only child sometime next week. But the death is not that simple. Because since Jason's arrival at lhe University of Colorado Medical Center a team of pbysJcians has been faced with the grim task of deciding if the machines shouJd be shut off to allow body functions to cease. Or if there is sWl a ray of hope for the cute, towhead wbo fell victim to a tragic, pool accident two weeks ago in Hunt- ington Beach. J E:arly today the team was far from a decision. CIA-FBI Scheme The concerns in the case are mot1en· tous. If Jason ceases to live, his mother and the physicians have arranged for bis kidneys and liver to be transplanted in three other youngsters who face death themselves unless a donor is found. Spokesmen from the medical center said today that the team is still in its evaluatioo stage and will have difficulty in reaching a decision because of an ap- parent surge in the boy's bodily functions arter his arrival in Denver Thursday afternoon. The agonizing chain of decisions in the case or Jason Rea began with his mother, or 34731 Calle Fortuna, '"°'ho is divorced. She and form er husband reached jt early this week .when Orange Coast physician Dr. Albert Ferguson informed her that her soq's chances for recovery from the deadly effects of near drowning (See DECISION, Page %) Gray: 'I Warned Nixon ') I WASHINGTON (AP) -Former FBI chief L. Patrick Gray Ill testified today that he warned President Nixon, Jess than three weeks after the Watergate, that "people on your staff are trying to mortally wound you by using the CIA and the FBI." But Gray said he didn't know himself the full details about efforts by persons on .lhe White House staff to draw the Central Intelligence Agency and the FBI irlto a coveru~scheme. Bo1nhing Cut 'Abandoning' Friend-Nixon BULLETIN WASHINGTON (A P) -The United Stalel will continue unarmed reconnaf· ssuce nights over Laos and' Cambodia aft.er a congressionally impo1ed bait lo American bombing on Aug. IS, the de- fense Department said this aftemoon. WASHINGTON fAP) -President Nix· on accused Congress today of "aban· donment o( a fr iend" by cutting orr runru for U.S .• bombing in Cambod ia by· Aug. 15. (Related story, Page 4) In a letter to Congress, the President said he wants Cambodia to know "v"e will cootinue to provide all possible suppJrt permitted under the law. "North Vietnam would be making a very dangerous error if it mistook the cessation or bombing in Cambodia for an invitation to fresh aggression or further violations of the Jan. 27 (Vietnam cease- fire) Paris agreements," Nixon's letter saiil. "The American people would respond to such aggression with approprfate ac· lion," it said. The Aug. IS bombing halt was reported to the House last month -as it prepared to vote on cutting off funds -as a com- promise that President Nixon '"°'ould ac· cept. House Republican Leader Gerald R. Ford told the House then that the Presi- dent would sign a bill cutting off funds for the bombing as of that date but wou1d veto any earlier cutoff. The President also pledged then, Ford told the House, to halt the bombing Aug. JS unless he asked and Congress approved a bombing extension. But the President's letter to Congress todlly put the bombing hall squarely on the legislators. • The former acting FBI director said Nixon replied, "Pat, you just continue to conduct your aggressive and thorough in- PANEL SUBPOENAS REBOZO BANK l!ECOROS-Story, Pogo 4 vesligation." Gray Said he had no trouble after that. Gray 's account differed in many details from that of Army Lt. Gen. Vernon A. Wailers, deputy director of the ClA. Walters testified to the -Senate \Vatergate committee during the morn- ing, and Gray r!?ad a prepared statement at his afternoon appearance. Walters said he felt White House counsel John W. Dean III was acting im- properly by asking him if the CIA could furnish bail money and salaries for the Watergate burglars. Gray said he hadn't known about th8.t incident and other aspects of the cove~p. but was confused Divor~e at 100 Husba11d , 103, 'Chases Women' STOCKTON (APJ -Johnnie Lee Fegion is suing Solomon, her hus band of 28 years. for divorce, because he ·~spends all his money on other women." She is 100 years....old and he is 103, according to records in San Joaquin County Superior Court. "I wanted to stay with him, but he wouldn't stop chasing after women." ?ttrs. Fegion said in an interview Thursday. "He likes to go to the show -that's where he meets them." Mrs. Fegion said she filed for divorce two mon.ths ago and since that time "he's been so mean to me, always wants to figbt. He doesn't want to give me nothin' to eat." . She and her husband have separated, each Jiving in one of the two homes the couple own here, situated "only about 10 steps apart,'' Mrs. Fegion said. 50% of Cou11ty Butchers, Meatcutters Face Chop By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fl'MI 0.llY Pollet Siii! Job layo[fs in the Orange County meat industry due lo the current critical beef shortage are beginning and up to 50 per· cent of the butchers and meatcutters could be out of work by next Wednesday. Representatives of Butchers Union Local S51 in Artesia, which covers Orange County meat industry workers, 8 STATE PACKING FIRMS PLAN TO CLOSE-Story, Pege 12 were qnavailable for unemployment predictions today. expect more layoffs next Friday," said J. J. Rodriguez. Rough estimates for Orange County's meat workers appeared to coincide with the trend set statewide. Thousands are jobless. Telephones went unanswered a t several county meatpacking or brokerage houses today, while a couple were answered with recordings saying Ibey were no longer in service. Gaylord Smith, vice president of Tustin h1eat Brokerage, how~ver, said the layoffs have not hit retailers too hard yet, but many employes will get the axe next week. "By Wednesday there'll be so percent laid off," Smith predicted today. by conflicting information he was receiv- ing from several sides. Walters said he, Gray and fonner CIA Director Richard Helms resisted \Vhite House efforts to draw their agencies into the cover-up. Gray said he maintained consistently .that the FBI's investigation couldn't be deflected without riews of the coverup leaking out. Generally, Walters confirmed testimony given the previous day by his former . (See GRAY, Page%) Richardson Orders Probe Of Kent Stcite \VASHlNGTON lAP J -Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson today ordered a new Justice Department investigation or the deaths of four Kent State University students shot by National Guardsmen in 1970. Richardson said his decision was based on "the need to exhaust every potential for acquiring facts related to this tragedy." He gave no indication whether a federal grand jury would be convened to assist. -Richardson ordered J. Stanley Pot~ tinger, ass istant attorney general in charge of the department's Civil Rights Division, "to pursue the additional in- quiry by such mean s as he feels are ap- propriate so that we will both be com- pletely sati sfied that the department knows as much as can possibly be learned concerning possible violations of federal law." Richardson reopened the investigation after studying the findings of Potlinger's preliminary revie\v of existing files. Richardson initiated the preliminary review en the heels of a White House s~tement la st May which reaffirmed the August 1971 decision by form er Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell to drop the case without a federal grand jury probe. Four students were killed and nine others wounded when a National Guard contingent opened fire on students demonstraling against the U.S. invasion of Cambodia. The slain students were Allison Krause, 19, of Pittsburgh, Pa., Jeffrey Miller, 20, of Plainview, N.Y .• Sandy~ Scheurer , 20, of Youngstown, Ohio and William Schroeder, 19, of Lorrain, Ohio. ~llY , ..... ,.,. .... "I THINK GOO HELPED ME IMMENSELY IN MY DECISION" Mrs. Lind• Re• Look11t Picture of Her Only Child Deci-sion for Doctors Revives Age-old Clash The gravity or a physician's decision to literally tum off the switch and allow a patient to cease existing is a clash between "neurology and theology," a prominent Orange County m e di ca I educato r said IQday. Dr. Stanley Van Den Noort, dean of the UC Irvine Medical School and himself 3 neurologist, said the current medical practice is to rely upon results or brain wave .tests before a group of physicians makes the decision to allow death to come. "In this area the practice has been to run electroencephalogram (EEG) tests and if there is no hlgh-Jeve) reflex ac· tivity and !he brain wave scans show a "flat chart," then the decision is made," he explained . ... But , although he often is brought in on such cases, Dr. Van Den Noort indicated that he is far from comfortable about the present system. "It is totally reliant on a machine and a Jechnician aod although the margin !or error is very slight, it still is a posslblli· ty I U be said. An added factor of tension in the decision over sustaining bodily functions versus shutting off machines is the urgency in transplant cases. . "You . have one le3m champing at the bit to implant new organs in patients near death and you have another team which has lo decide if the donor has no chance at all to recover. ".'I'm an expert on neurology. I have told people, but I'm not such 'Jtl expert on theology," Or. Van Den Noort said. "Often people wilt call me in and ask me to say that the patient on the machine is dead and they get angry with me when I won't do it," he said. "I'm a conservative in such cases and if I sense a chance for recovery at all , I will stick to my decision ." he added . In Denver today, the decision is being reached in Jason's Case. "I know full well what those people there are. going through right now," the local neurolog_ist said. "I can only hope that the north Viel· namese will not draw the erroneous con- ·clmion from this congressional actloo," it said, "that they are free to launch a _ military Qffensive in other areas of Indochina." A spokesman for Los Angeles Butchers Union Local 563 in Huntington Park said he could not comment on Orange COUn· ty's prospects but 650 of his members bave altl!ady been laid off. "That's almost 50 percent or our members engaged in slaughtering and we "And by the following week the figure could be considerably higher," be said, adding that most workers arc now engaged in sc>called cleanup work with mea t supplies still stocked. Unless Back Bay Dredged, Coast Narcotics Stolen From ' BU11lars cut a hole in the roof of a ferent types of so-called "downers," in· Costa Mesa pharmacy Wednesday night eluding sodium-amytal, Seconal, seco- and .. fisbed out a cache of narcotics con--barbital, Nembutal, TUlnol and Darvon. In their search for the drugs the si.Uing of 14,580 barbiturates as wetl as burglars tripped the pharmacy's silent 200 disposable-syringes and needles, alann three limes but police who chcck- poliee said today. ed th<! exterior or the building reported Jt 1be cache of depressants was heisted a.s secure. lrooi Vlsta-1l!:!!M, 82L.l'l..,19tl:.st.~altcr ~,,._cheddng-with nc!ghbol"ll _ ollicen· the liiifglars used a cutting toot to rip a learned that two men in dark clothing, hole into the ceUing above the drug one of them With fUZ2}' hair, were seen storage room. near the pharmacy Wednesday nlgbt. .Vista Drugs reported the 1.., al 1130 One penon reported that he heard bllt the figure represents the wholesale several loud bangs coming from the price. On the streets the drugs have a direction of the pharmacy. resale vaJue. of at least JO tlme1 that Two other Items taken du.ring the much, according to a pharmaceutical ex-burglary did not consl•t of narcoUcs: an pert. eight ounce bottle of an antl·blotlc and a •Takcnlrom the phannacy wore •Ix dlr· package of birth control pills. - The three Los Angeles companies that .say they will close this week are Highland Meat Packing Co., involving a Marsl1la11d May Occur layoff of 100 workers; Serv-U Meat Pack-Hy JOII N ZALLER ing, with 75 employes; and Newport 01 th• D•ur 1"1101 s••ff ~1eat Co., 11 employes. A sclenlist studying Upper Newport Officials say ottier companies also may Bay said Thursday that dredging out its shut down. ) mudfl~t may ~ necessary for Ute bay's rn~'Sin l'rancr'sCo 45 meit "Wrap is -ecolog1ca.JJiUI');,vaJ.__. .. , : ~-(• .. ' pe "If man doesn't t:to something to con· were dropped Crom the payroll of trol the process of siltation, the bay will Safeway Stores. fill with mud and become a marsh," said At the same time, state food and Jack Elder, a staff biologist with Water agriculture Director c. B. Christensen Resources Engineering, Inc. (WRE), said his office has filed nn affadavit sup-which is workin g und er a consulting .con-tract from the Santa Ana Regional porting a suit again! the gove~t Wat rshed Planning Agency. which demands an end to the beef pnce Ulllmately, he said, silt carried into freeu, fhC mudfrats, mostl y from San Diego The suit was Oiied by ~be Pacil~c Coast Cree k, would dry up the bay cntlrely. ?.1cat Job~s Association. Christen.W:n But Elder said thot a careful dredging sald the price freeze was only postponing could make "time stand still, biologically the time-when consumers would have to speaking," or even reverse time by tak- pay more for beef. Ing the bay back to an earlier biological As the boelsteok supply dwindled at stage. the Ralph's supermarket chain Wed· ~Ider strcssOO, however, that siltation nesday, buffalo steak was advertised. was only one of many critical problems Price: 99 cents per six-ounce lrozen faced by the bay, pack. "f don't know wht thcr you consider ' I this a pristine area or not.'' Elder said, "But I have studied estuaries all over the country and this -one stands out for the small numbet or species it has." He cited a high level o( nitrat~~~ DOT and fertiUier-in the bay;<sayffi:g uiey are creating a "stress situation,'' Elder noted lhat the oxygen level in the water is low, po31lbly betause the PaciUc Coast Highwll)' bridge retards flushing action of t• Ude!. And he cited a direct threat from human activity In the bay. "1bere ls heavy use from motorboats." he said, "and many or them come so C!OSe to shore ~ ChMrJL.Y.p_ !he mOO. t m that's not helping anything. "I ven saw people letting !heir dogs run 1 c. Jn the salt grass In the bay. Natura ly, e dogs chased lhe birds oot tt1ere, ;hi h ls hardly n deslreable thing in an a a where endnngered species arc trying to tch thei r young," Elder m e his rc1narks to about 40 persons I e little theater at Coronn dcl ~1ar tllgh ool. The mt.oetlng was called tS.. illlEOOING, Page !) 1 Weather Night and early morning IO\V clouds '':ill again be visible along the Orang(. Coast. Aftemoons will be sunn y, ,,·ith temperatures at the beach near 70, w:ith the low near 60, ~ _.. . . UVSIDE TODAY Conte mporary art i$ the theme of this week's cover 1torit.t in th.e \Veekendtr wit4 jcaturts on James B11ue1, the ntw di rector of Nt WPort Harbor Art Mu.te um, a1ld on tl1e All-California Art Exhibit bting µresented in the _l4g11 11a...Beach: t.l1iiiU1uOf Art.- Af Y-hrfl(• J l,,M. I n• 1t• 1 .. n.,. t1 C•Yfwlll• S Cl.UlllM lt ... C•!l'lltl Jt c,....wont 2f PNlh Ntllc•s 1 liOllOf'l•I ..... • l"llllfl« 11•\J .... , lh• --· • HOf"QC-'' AfUt l.•IMl•t1 16 Mlll .. 1 t Mo\'ln 17•21 M11tv•I ,MMll 11 N•llMll Mew. 4, t Ot•Jtt• Ctwiht I ltt•flt1t•t11h If.ti ...... ,. 1 .. 11 llOtk Mart.th ll·lt Ttlt\'ltl•t11 V Tl'lt•""' tJ.JI WMfflff • WtmW'I HIWI 1,.11 WW .. Ntwi t,t WHlfllllW tNt • • ' \ • -% OAJLV PILOT c Friday, A1t1Jt1\t J, 197] T Skylab Sight Space Statio1·t Visibl.e Saturday Early rilers Satw-day wiU be able to view the Skylab space station offlciaJ1 al TRW Inc., Redondo Beach, said today, . The glaf!l spate station, orbiting 275 miles above the earth appear' as the br1ghk!st object In the sky and moves rapidly, a spokesman said. At 5:28 am Saturday the Skylab will appear In the west and move to lhe northeast. It may be seen from Orange Coast locations for a 101111 of five min- utes and 50 seconds and wlll be 22 degrees above the horizon at n1axirnum ele· vatlon. (Related st~ry, diagrams, Page 3) The following 1s a timetable for times the space station will bf visible on subsequent days: Sunday: 4:47 a.m. moving west to northeast for six 111inutes and 27 seconds at a maxirnwn elevation of 30 degrees above horizon . Monday : 5:04 a.m. beginning in the northu·est and moving to the north, will be seen for three minutes and seven seconds at a n1a:<imwn ele vation of 12 degrees above the horizon. Tuesday: 4 :23 a.m. moving northwest to north for four minutes ~nd 25 seconds at 15 degrees above horizon. 3 Students At OCC Held In -Hash Sale Three Orange COast C.Ollege students are in Costa Mesa jail today on charg~s of participating in the sale of half a quart of purported hashish oil valued at $5,000 to an undercover narcotics of ricer. Awaiting arraignment on charges of cmspiring to sell 420 rnililiters of the hJ&bly potent marijuana derivative are Rlchanl Lee Smith, 26, of 1700 16th St, Newport Beach; Talbot Perry Simmons, 25, also known as Talbot Perry somovich, 2229 Alexander Ave., Laguna Beach, and Samuel Hers)lel Clauder, 779 Sballmar Drive, CostarMesa. All three men were taken into custody at the Shalimar Drive Oat · at 1:30 p.m. Thursday after the officer allegedly con· eluded two days of. negotiations for the sale ol the oil, Officers claim Smith and Simmons ar· rived at the residence carrying a sack contalning the vaJuable liquid while Claube r and the undercover man talked business inside. Smith later stationed bimself inside a parked car and acted as a lookout, duck· inf! his head inside the vehicle when of· ricers arrived, according to police allega- tions. The raid oo the Costa Mesa apartment involved five narcotics detectives, in· eluding agents from San Clemente, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach. Laguna Beach Police Sgt. Neil Purcell said the first contact for the oil was made in Laguna Beach by one ol bis detectives, John Saporito. Purcell said Saporito subsequently had several cooversations with Claude!' and arranged payment of $4,100 for the oil. The oil has a street value of $5,000 but the dealer's wholesale price is $4 ,100. ac- cording lo Purcell, Fire Hits Mesa Sliopping Center A f1te erupted shortly before 1 p.m. to- diy in a Costa Mesa shopping center, sending smoke into the sky over the downtown area. The blaze was reported to be behind the old To~Valu Market on the south side of West 19tb Street at Harbor Boulevard. A Costa Mesa Fire Department spokesrt!_811 said be was told via radio the blaze inv""blved a small shed at the rear of the closed market building. The blaze was apparently similar to one that destroyed a storage shed behind a Market Basket store Wednesday at Harbor Boulevard and Baker Street. BART To Reswnc TONIGHT OCC SUMMER MUSICAL -"Follies" OCC Auditorium, through Sat. 8:30 p.m. Adn1. $2. CONCERT$ IN THE PARK -Ansel Hill Big Band1 Costa Mesa Park. 8 p.m. "ANNIE GET YOUR GUN" - Newport-~1esa middle school summer musical. Lincoln Middle School, 8 p.m. Adults. $1.50, students $1. MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds, 8: 15 p.m. SATURDAY, AUG. 4 LIBRARY STORV HOUR -Big Magic Show, ''Magic for Everyone," 11 a.m. SUNDAY, AUG, 5 "WES"I: SIDE STORY" -C.Osta 1'.1esa High Lyceum Theater, 8 p.m. Also Aug. 6, 8, 10 and 11 al 8:30 p.m. Frotn Page l DREDGI NG. •• by the planning agency to discuss a series of alternatives developed by WRE to curb pollution in the bay. The major thrust of WRE 's .report in· volved the problems of chemical pollution in waters flowing into the bay from San Diego Creek. Three alternatives were presented: -Construction of a tertiary water treatment plant at the mouth of San Diego Creek. Estimated cost of $1.1 to $2.8 million. -Construction or a diversion pipeline to channel San Diego Creek directly into the ocean. The proposed pipeline would run along l\1acArthur B o u I e v a r ll . Estimated cost was $1.7 to $3.5 million. -Use of a pump to bring five to 50 million gallons a day of ocean waler into the back bay to flush the chemical pollu· lion out. Estimated cost was $960,000 to $3.6 million. Members of the audience suggesled that, if the bay were dredged, lhe ad- ditional nushin g action o: the tides might make the other, more artificial alternatives unnecessary. The s~ientists replied that it will take more study to answer that question. \\'R E must make recommendations to the aSnta Ana Watershed Planning Agen- cy by the end of August. The agency will. in tum. report to the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board in October. The studies are a prelude to drafting a "'ater quality control plan for lhe entire Santa Ana River watershed area. F rom Pagel GRA Y ... OAKLAND (AP) -Bay Area Rapid Transit officials said Thursday full service will be resumed at 6 a.m. Mon· day because test runs on the system have gone so smoothly. A month-long strike ended Tuesday when unions and manage- ment agreed on a three-year contract that will increase wages and benefits 43 percent boss, Helms. He said presidential chief of staff H.R. Haldeman ordered him Jun e 23. 1972, six day s after the break-in, to tell Gray that the FBl's Watergate in- vestigation in Mexico might wtcover some CIA assets. He said presidential domestic adviser John Ehrlichman sat in on that meeting. but said little. Walter, like Helms, said he knew of no Cl.<\ secrets that cou1d be uncovered in 1'.1ex.ico, but thought 11aldeman might know someihing they didn't. Actually, no CIA secrets were in danger, he said. ' , OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT 'Th• 0r.,.,.. C:0.11 OAILY l'/LOT, wltll """icll II cDmblMd t1'lf ,.._,.r"'• 11 Pllblt.,, .. WI' ,,.. Or•noe co." 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"' """' J!::n~· 111111•••"•'•· ....... !Nn.r ., 11...-.. '"""'" ,,..., IN· r~.. wlltlovt "lllClll ,... ""'*'"" ., cwtf"ltlll -· ...,,. $h •111111!' MN M Cot!• MIM, c.ill .......... ~-.... Un'.., D.&I ~ w Miii u.n """"'"' mltit.rt p,a l'llllilfl'llr, \Vhat the r~BI was investigating in l\1exico were Nixon campaign checks that linked the 1Yiretnppers financially to the Presidenrs re-election campaign. They passed through a ~lexican bank on their v.'r1y to the i\'liami bank account of one burglar . On the same day .• June 28. Gray said Dean and Ehrlichnu1n gnve h i 111 documents from the safe or r;. Howard 11unt, a \Vatergate conspirator. •le said he wasn't ordered ~in so many words to destroy them. but "there is no doubt in my mind that destruction was intended ." ~ M'OitthsJlitq,pound Fl!f!•lrn!l'time at his Stonington, C.Onrl .. home, C'r.iiy sald he burned the papers with some household trash. He read one of lhe papers, a forged State Department cable implicating President John F'. Kennedy in the 1963 Diem assassination In South Vietnam. Gray said he thought the cable w11s the real Uting, and he was shaken. Police Seek RiJler SPECULATOR, N.Y, IUP!J -An estimated 200 stale police focused search efforts for the accused killer of z te· euaged camper on a heavily Wooded Adirondack mo.unta.Jnsidc todoy where the trooPers round a lcun·fo apparently made by the suspect. l~1wmen carrying shotguns and rifles concentrated their search for Robert F'. Garrow Sr., 37, or Syracruse on Counly·l~lne Mountain. EPA PJ ans Received U1i£avorahly ProPoS.:1ls by I h c Environmental l'rotection Agency to force Io c a I guvernn1ents 10 reduce public parking lots and install bus lanes oo major streets received unfavorable comment in Costa Mesa today. •·I have heard of a Jot of harebrained 1tlet1s before, but this is the very "'·orst one." fumed Citv Counciln1an Alvin Pinkley. "This is So bad that they must have run it through the oomputer backwards." His oomments were fired against pro- posed EPA regulations \Vhi ch would rorce cities 10 reduce publicly-owned parking lots by 20 percent before Oct. 31, 1975. and establish bus or car pool Janes on streets and highways having three or more lanes in one direction. In Costa Mesa the EPA plans would af- fect two downtown parking districts with approximately 300 spaces. Bus lanes "''ou.ld have to be installed on Newporl Boulevard. tlarbor Boulevard , 17th Street, 19th Streel, parts of Victoria Street. Baker Street. Bristol Street, and Adams Avenue. "I just don't see what they're trying to get at." said Assistant City Manager Robert K. Duggan u·ho added that he was personally W1aware that the EPA "'ill conduct a public hearing on the propo5als in Los Angeles Aug. 9. Jn Duggan's opinion nothing "''ould be gained by reducing parking spaces since both districts are located behind com- mercial areas in the downtown section along Newport Boulevard. He added that he could see the ra- tiona1e behind eliminating parking on through streets and red-ining curbs to provide an extra lane for buses, although he doesn't necessarily agree with it. "But I just can't Wlderstnd what would be actomplished by reducing the parking on lots that aren't in anybody's way," Duggan said. Pinkley suggested that if lanes were blocked off on Newport Boulevard to prcr vide bus and car pool lanes "nothing \vould move." .. We'd have the la rgest parking lot in the world if ·we did that," he said. Buying right-of-way to create another lane for Uuses on major streets would be so ex- pensive as to be unaffordable, Pinkley n1aintains. · F ronaPqel DECISION. • • were nit . "It really wasn't a hard decision. It \vas just knowing lhat Jason could make someone else live. I had already ac· cepted the fact that Jason was leaving me. Then I just started to think of ot hers," said 1'.lrs. Rea. "l think it's about the greatest thing that could ever be performed." But Mrs. Rea's decision did not have to be made quickly. After doctors at Hunt- ington Intercommunity Hospital revived a hearbeat from the apparently lifeless boy following his fall into a friend 's S\1'imming pool, Jason managed lo stay ali ve for more than two weeks desplle numerous complications. Doctors performed braln scans and electroencephalogram (EEG) tests to determine the extent of the massive brain damage. Stomach surgery was pe rformed to stop internal bleeding, and the boy suffered many seizures. ''He was more or less telling us. 'I'm not going to makt: it,' "said his mother. Then, last Tuesday, Jason stopped breathing. "I had to make my decision then," Jvtrs. Rea recounted. · The doctors then put the blond·haired boy on a respirator to keep his blood circulating so th.c\t the organs would re- main undamaged. They also arranged for a privat.: jet to take the child to the" Denver hospital. and produced the necessary legal papers for itrs. Rea to sign. "I didn't think I'd be able to do this. I think God helped me immensely in my decision. l prayed a lot, and He answered my prayers. The doctors helped, but \\'ithout God, I couldn't have made the decision." she said. "But just knowing that Jason could live on in someooe else," kno"ing that Jason could make someone else live, that's the whole reason for this. "I know if Jason were alive and he need ed a kidney, I \vould hape someone else .,.,·ou\d do the same.·• "But lo kno\~' that Jason can lielp some- one else ... '' she trailed off. ..Of course. all this is with the help of God -not .only for Jason, but also for the olhcr three people they're going to help save. "It's just 1J miracle through God that this is happening anyway -all of this," she said. It is that faith \Vhich will have to buoy Mts.. Rea nex~ wep.~. A funeral }\as been.. planned for next \Vednesday. But she is not sure she has realized the full impact of the tragedy. "I don't think it has really hit me yet. Jason and l were very close and l miss hlrn dearly," she said. "But Ufe has to keep on going, and ll w\11 In t.hree other people because of Jason . 'And lhal,--wilh God's help, b wh•t really Is keeping me going." Bargain~g Hesu 111es SALINAS (AP) -Bargaining resumed Thursday between striking teamsters produce truck drlvers and Salinas Valley vegetable grower11 after o growcn delegation sought a Taft.Jtartley in- junction In Washington. ' " J ~"""'"""..lili<IL~:ilfJ Old Ti11iers, New Ti11ie1· • • ' Listening to Assistant City Manager Bog Duggan joist, will be the featured entertainer at the third · " brushing up on his ba11jo style are new·timer Wil-annual Old Timer Picnic sponsored by the Costa l.iam Hu1nphreys. 10. (left) and old-timer Mrs. Lucy Aiesa Historical Society. The potluck affair is sched- PTnkley tcenterJ. Duggan. a for111er pizza parlor ban· uled for 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Aug. 19 at Estancia Park. ~~~~~~~~~C~~~~---'~---'~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~"'-~~"-~~---'---':.:::::..:::_:::.,::__.., 14 School Candidates Orino Ai rport Reportedly Not State Proposal Interviewed Privately '!fl From W'tre Serfl:ces !1:·1 The st.ate isn't recommending that an airport be built in the Chino Hills area of northeastern Orange C.ounty, the deputy director of the stale Department or Transportation said Thursday. Joseph R. Crotti, appearing at a Los Angeles press conference. said "The state doesn 't recommend sites for airports. That is the proper function or local .and regional planning agencies, he explained. "However." Ci;otti added. "the state's planning process will indicate future air travel needs and point out general areas requiring additional aviation facilities .'' Orange County School trustee Donald Jordan Thursday again tried-and failed -to make the appointment of a Fifth District board member a more public process. Private interviews or the first of lot candidates for the post vacated by the resignaMon of Roger C. Anderson began this morning. A second round or intenriews, also closed to the public, have been set for I~ a.m. Aug. 13. Anderson, Connerly of Huntington Beach, resigntlt July to move to Richland, \Vash ., with less than a year left in his four-year term. Peterson contended private sessions \\•e re necessary because some questione: might be "personal" and that interviews were comparable to executive sessions on perSOMel matters. "[ don't recall asking anything last time (a trustee was appointed) that anyone hesitated to answer," Jordan said. He pointed out that appointing a board member isn't like hiring an employe and that "these (candidates) arc people who would have had to have been up for elec~ tiOft, .. Jordan rouldn 't get any support for his argument!, Favoring secret session& "'·ere Trustees David Brandt, Doris Arau-- jo and A. E. "Pal" Arnold. ,1 Crotti and Haig Ayanian. district direc- tor of transportation for Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties, called the conrerence to correct what they said \\. e r e ?.'idespread misunderstandings about a state consulting firm report made public last month. That timing allows the county school board to appoint a replacement rather than call an election. Two "'eeks ago Jordan, of Garden Grove. argued for an election and was defea ted. "I assumed these would be open meetings," be said '1'hursday of the interviews. ·~ Third Man Held · Airports. Crotti said Thursday, \\'ill be included in the state's Master Plan or Aviation only if first approved by responsible local agencies. The firm or Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendenhall was commissioned in 1969 to ~valuate the existing aviation system detennine future demands and prepare ~ comprehensive statewide plan r 0 r ha.Jane~ air transportation. Other than the Orange C.ounty site, Crotti said, the misunderstanding con- cerned the firm's fmdings that 59 million air passengers a year will use the Los Angeles International Airport by tbe year 2000, The Los Angeles Department of Airport s estimated the airport's capacity at 40 million passengers a year. Crotti said effort s would be made to reconcile lhe tv.·o figures. "Representatives of the preu and any interested residents of the FI f t h Supervisorial District could bear the can· dldates," he added. ""- Jordan began his new effort by asking simply if ''there broom for the press" in the office where interviews would take place. "I have a feeling these are sup- posed to be public," be added. County School Superintendent Robert Peterson objected that "this would be en· tircly different from previous (years)." l\'liriuteman Launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP ) -A Minuteman II missile was launched from here Thursday by a Strategic Air Command crew. In Tavern Fire A third man has been arrested in tM alleged arson explosion and fire which destroyed the Shangra La bar in Garden Grove June 28. ' David B. Lerner, 25, of 2175. Mallul Drive, Anaheim, was arrested in the burn ward or San Bernardino County Hospital where he has been recovering from severe burns. • Wednesday, Raymond C. Rohm. 2t, and his assistant manager, Victor' Bomberg, 31, were arrested by Garden · Grove police In connection with the fire. · Hospital officials in San Bernardino said Lerner had been admitted under ari . assumed name the same day as the fire.· . Rohm also owns the Fire House bar in C.osta Mesa . LAST WEEK OF STORE -WIDE SALE and Henredon to <· Terrific Selection of Top Quality Sal e Merchand ise Ready fo r l!"medi- ate Deli very. Don't Delay. Fin al Ch a nce to Select From Our La rge In- ventory at Reduce d Prices, DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARAS'1AN ' INTERIORS WR KDAYS a SATURDAYS 9100 lo 511D PRIDA Y 'TIL 9:00 NE'&ORl II.EACH e 1727 WESTCLIFJ-DR. 642.2050 - IOp1n S11ncl1y 12·5:JO! LAGUNA BEACH e J45 NOllTM COAST MWY !Open Sundey 12-liJOI -494.6551 TORRANCE e 21649 HAWTHORNE BLVD. 371 ·1219 ' ' • '• I • t • ' • • • • ' -• • • • . • . . • . . l ·: . .. '• • '• .. " <: .. !• I• •. :· . ••. .. :1 •• :: l· • • • • • . . . • • . .. • • • • ! • . .. ·- ! • ~ •• .. '· !• •: . ' " .. ·-• • .· •• • • • • ;. • . • •• .- ~· ~: • • • •• •• • • •• .. 6 . DAU,y PILOT .EDITORIAL PAGE An Uninformed Vote A rtAl "enerey crisis" Is looming Ior nearly 600 CoAta Mesa area household& later this year because one of the least publlcjsed elections in hl8tory went down to defeat by a 20-vole margin. Thia was the election in Orange County Street Llghttng Main~ance District 12 which would have raised the tu rate of the district from 16 cents lo 25 cents per '100 of assessed valuation. Tbe proposal was rejected by a 34-14 vote . What this means ts that District 12 will eventually run out of money to keep some 135 street lights burn- ing ln seven different areas of Costa Mesa, each one of tbein a so-called 11county pocket," or unincorporated area. Affected by the shortage will be an area near Santa Ana Avenue and Tustin Avenue, another north of University Drive, two to the west of Orange County Afr. port, all of Orchard Drive, the area near Gardeh Lane and Tustin Avenue, and a county island near Bayview Drive and Mesa Drive. No pno knows yet precisely bow this will affect street lighting but even if ent;ire blackouts sre not like- ly, reduced lighting hours or temporary blackouts are certain. All of this will happen because 20 voters either were uninformed about what they were actually voting on or because they quite literally preferred to go back to the dark ages. Ana to cast their liallots, this probably contri buting significantly lo the n1iserable turnout of 48 voters out 6f 536 registered . If and when the county decides to schedule another special election on the issue, voters should be clearly inlonned about the consequen~es of defeat and an extra effort should be made to provide them with polling pl.aces that are closer to home. Fine Arts Center Whenever Harbor Area residents tout their locale to visitors from other parts of the country, "climate," "beach" and the easy lifestyle usually rank at the top. Culture? Whatever that may be, they haven't put it on the picture postcards summer visitors send to Teaneck, New Jersey. There hasn't been much "culture" to talk about, at least not in popular tenns of outstand· ing music, drama and vi sual arts. With the establishment of the Newport Mesa. Orange Coast Fine Arts Center this summer, the elusive goal of making a mark on 1he cultural world should have been given a big boost. The center utilizes the creativity of 300 high school and college students from all over the county, all cul- minating in two stage productions. "The Fantasticks" and "West Side Story," both of which are on stage alter- nately, Saturday through Aug. 11 at Costa Mesa Hi gh School. From all appearances these two classics are being staged with a high degree of professionalism and skill. They are certain to be worthy of the "culture" label. • · . Streetlights are hardly considered a luxury today and their effectiveness in reducing crime and improving lhe safety of motorists and pedestrians is not even ar- gued. This, plus the failure of four other special district elections in otbe,r parts of the county leads to the con- clusiori that the vo ters were uninformed not only about the consequences, but about the election ;tself. Further, those District 12 residents who wanted to vote in that election had to drive all the way to Santa Annual attractions such as these under the Fine Arts Center aegis may in time make Newport Beach and Costa li'Iesa more noted for more than the climate and the beach. 'Well, I see we're doing our part to speed up the meat 1shortage.' c I The C·alley Tapes: ' Preeedetats for Nixon's Stand A Bewildered Man Dear Gloo1ny Presidents and the Courts \YASH INCTON -While the nation a"•ails the Supreme Court showdown over the White House ta,es, we have listened to some secret tapes which may present President Nixon with another ex· cruciating dilemma. These tapes contain Lt. William Calley's lengthy, ag- oniZing psychiatric interviews after be was accused of mass murder at Airy Lal. Some psychiatrists h a v e concluded rrom the interv le\vs that he probebly was "legally i n s a n e" when he led his com· pany on the shooting spree. Other psychiatrists, while agreeing he had personality problems, round "no evidence of mehtal disease, defect or derange. ment." Plµ!&DENT NIXON has .proml!ed personally to review the Calley ·case. His final decision will have tremendous em~ tional lmpact. People around the ~·orld believe Cadey was a monster who should . be severely punished. But others feel he \V88 a madman wliose irratiooaJ behavior should not forever stain America's fighting men . C.Uey looked UPoll blmself as quite normal, e1cept for one "lrraUonal behavior happening." As he recounted the Incident to psychiatrists, "I bad all the troops in a truck, and there was no warm feeJ.ina; tor the Vietnamese people among the troops and me. I had nothing but disgust. I had just. I won't say highly hostile feelings, to the point where I wanted to wantonJy shoot anybody Or beat anybody up or anything like that. But I had no respect for them ••. "THE TRUCK ume up to the village, at which time I went into the store to get some candles. And there was a bottle of Seagram's Seven there, which I picked up and walked out -just wanton th.ft. Of which Mama San ran out -well not the Mama San, ahe was a young glrl - ran out ... I told th. guard, the truck driver to go on. "I just thought that was an e1tmnety Irrational behavior. It seems to me t dld pay for the candles ... I came back and I gave the booze to my troops. And I said, 'Joe, check it .out ror glass.' I don't think I'd persooally drink it. I had no desire in drinking the booze because I was afraid of it because jt was oo the market. . "THEY DIDN'T drink it (either) ... The MPs and I .gave it back to the girl. It was a matter of why I actually did that, for which I had no excuse." Calley went on to describe his fru stra- tion over the dilliculty of identifying the enemy in Vietnam. He confessed grier over the loss of men, anger at the war and constant fear. He tried to explain his feelings: "I think the moral issues or the war -the question of when is a war right, when is a war good, when is killing right, when is it wrong and actually when is. what are we fighting -we shouldn't he there. "ARE WE fighting the Reds, or a tribe of people, or a bunch of human beings because they're in that situation? Or are we fighting an Ideological philosophy that bas been conjured In the minds of tiumao beings:?" "What is your feeling about why are we fighting in Vietnam?" Calley was asked . "Well," he replied, "everybody knows we're there lo stop communism. What is communism? Today, actually com- munism is not an animate object. It's a philosophy in the minds of men. So how can you go into an armed conflict and say we're going to save these people from (communism). You've got armed combat t r o o p s in there to do a job, troops that were designed to tight a hostile enemy ... We're not going to change your way of lhlnking. We're going to take your posiUon and then endanger your way of life." AT MY LAI , Calley felt he was merely carrying out orders to sOOot everyone re- ma.inlng in the area, because they had been Identified as the enemy. He was Gns Why is it :.lJn ~ta Mesa is try . ing to est:b'lh a strong sign <lr- dinance that two huge billboards are erected at the FairgrolU'lds? P.R. Gloom., Gus c~llb •re 11.11MT1lltffl a., rffdtn •ncl do IHI! -rll'Ji' 1'9flect tfl• 11i.w. ctf Ill• IHIW'IN...... S.1111 .,...,, "' -·· to Gloom., Gva, D•ll., Pii.t. "hyper" or "psyched up,'' but he felt he was in full contr<ll of bis £acuities. Afterward, he "'as stunned over the murder charges brought against him. "I 'vas pulled into the Adjutant, no, I mean the Attorney General's offi<:i!," said Calley. "And he said we've got a, we're conducting an investigation about the My Lai problem. "And I said great. And I was happy. Not because it had entered my mirid that I had ·done anything wrong. I thought somebody finally was going to come and ask me my advice-on the war. And I had built up so much stuff inside me .. , ''BUT THEN in the next breath, he told me 'at whi ch time you will probably be charged with murder. Do you want an at- torney?' And I said , 'Gee, I thought you wanted to know something about a com- bat operation. What do you mean you're going to charge me with murder?' He said, 'Well, we're carrying on an in- vestigation . . . There was something wrong there.' " "What is it," a psychiatrist asked Calley, "that you have actually been cha rged with as far as you know today?" "One hundred and two c a s e s of premeditated murder," he replied. "And against whom?" "Oriental people of mixed ages and races." THE ACCUSATION, he said, ;'su ddenly presented me at this stage <lf my life with a cross few men have to bear in life. Now, people don't talk about the My Lai ma ssacre, they call it the Calley massacr~. All of a sudden, 1 have now become the personification o( evil and horror, and everywhere I go, I must fa ce these attitudes of people . . . It is dif- ficult and hard to tmderstand why it should have happened to me, and I sin-gled oul." To the Editor: Should President Nixon ignore a court order to obey the subpoena of the Senate's Select Investigative Committee, he will act in accordance with v:ell established precedents. The courts have no powe·r to enrorce their decisions. The Executive branch or our government alone has this duty, The doctrine of separation or powers rests on the Constitutional provisioo that establishes the legislat ive, judicial and executive branches or our government co-equal. Each is independent of the others. Each branch is sole judge or its own affa~ THE SYSTE~f of checks and balances was adopted because the members or the Constitutional Convention opposed a strong centralized government. The plan was for Congress to legislote, the judiciary to interpret, and the executive to enforce the laws and legal decisions. The system has worked smoothl y with complacent presidents. Strong presidents have acted much as they pleased. The.re has l>een only one direct con- fron tation with Congress by any presi- dent; until President Nixon's refusal to surren der certain tapes and document s to the Senatorial committee. That oc- ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welconie. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to conde1ue letters to fit space or eliminate Libel is reserved. Alt letters must include signature and maili11g address, but names may be withheld on request if sutficietlt reason is appare11t. PoetTJI will not be published. The Hou11in11 Crisis To the Editor: We read with interest your stoi-y on·the long-awaited housing element which is to be incorporated into Costa Mesa's Genera l Plan. While your story quoted almost entirely rrom census figures com- piled by Marshall Linn and Associates and gave no recommendations, several points were rather illuminating. curred when Andrew Jolmson deliberate-YOUR ARTICLE states that 9.3 per- ly and openly violated the Tenure of Of· cent of our population had incomes below fice law, which had been passed over his the poverty level. That means that '1tKXl veto. To act contrary to a statute is a of our citizens have lea! than $4,500-a crime. He was impeached, and escaped year to live on. Us ing the economist's conviction by one vote; but that victory rule that you shou ld spend no more than sustained Johnson's right to act contrary 25 percent of your income on housing, t.o law. Other confrootatioos have been that means that these 7000 people should compromised before they reached the spend around $94 a mooth rent. However, direct confrontation stage. your article also states that the median THE RECORD of presidents ignoring rent is $146 a month (a figure we think the orders of the courts, even ol the many who have scoured ~ta Mesa for Supreme Court is different. Thomas Jef· a decent apartment or how;e would ferson, as president, refused to surrender dispute as being the minimum rather certain docwnents to the judiciary when than the median). ordered to do so by Chier Justice Our organization, Share Our Selves Marshall. Marshall had even a worse af· (SOSJ , has for the last three years been front when Jackson, then president said, working hard to fight the causes of "John Marshall has made bis decision ; poverty in our commWllty. We service . now let him enforce it." During the Civil between 5().80 families a month with food, War Lincoln suspended the writ of and another 26-30 with funds for utility ha~as corpus, and made arbritary ar-bills, rent deposits, food stamp money, rests. The Supreme Court, under Chief etc. We have come lo the absolute con- Justice Taney ordered the release of viction that the lack of low cost hou.sing those arrested. Lincoln did not argue; he contributes immeasurably to the cycle or ignored lhe decisions. AU the judges pove rty so many find themselves in. could do was fuss and fume. As presi· Instead of paying $100-120 for rent, they dent, Lincoln had command or the anned have to pay $180-200 and so hav~t forces anti the law enrorcement branch enough left to buy their food stamps or of e;ovemment. pay their utility bills. And if you have Should the occasion arise that the more than three children, you might Planes Rob Travel of Its My_~tique Judicial system would <lrder President atll'.l08t forget about It. one couple with Nixon to comply with the Select Com-four children, faced with an eviction mittee's subpoena, he would act, should Tiolice, hunted for days for a three he refuse, in accordance with the best bedroom apartment and were told precedents, set by both Republican and reJ?Caledly, you have one too many The only good thing you can sar about a airplane Is lhal tt's fasC That Is, 11 Ii Is orf on Ume nnd lands on time. nme Is only thins that air traval Is abOut. ut travel, properly considered, ought t be abOut more than tiJM. We are tread~ bemoaning 'lM··IOll·ol troJrls•ID the U.S. Now II looks as Jf ships are 10- lng to,go the way of trains. And that would be another Ir· reparable loss In travel experience. A good friend ol mine went on 11 two- -week.C&rthbean cruise lhlul!dru!J1.was her first Ume on a large ahfp;-Md • e •aid It was the be!l trip •he hid ever bad In ·her Ille. No douJ>l part of this was because she went without her husband, but ahlJ>'llle ltaell mun take a lol o! the credit. f THERE IS 11 wonderful my1Uq1.1~ aboul 1 ship that ls unrlvale<!, by any other form of lran portaUon. It Ii a setf-«>n· lalned unit ln a very special way, and II • ' . Democralc presidents_, _ _ children. They finally ln-~peration-too take a plane.-there and un\tind oq_a $b.ip_.. .•• , • _ •• ROBEM·-O'BRIAN ---an ·apartment for $220 ft mcitlth -$55 coming back. But most people begrudge more than they were paying . the time, and pretty soon there won 't be \t'l k THE STATE law requires that th n ship to take back. 'trhich is not only a c 8 housing element sh<luld "make adequat! pity ftom the point.of view of relaxing, ji provisions for the housing needs of all offers a regression from rcoJlty that can but also because it's one o1 the biggest e<:onomic segments of 4he ~uni~ " · be h .. U!'C to ~ bntised -i. ,\-..oturyr--ba<pl°'. you can find an}'Whero.1'1')"Uv: · .,~. •• ··t_·~~~·'· ' ' " .,. ·--'!t'ls obvl1nur .. Cosfa Mua· ls-not cl01rig ~ ago,~oa se8 trlp" was often the best ing .In a good hotel for five days on what !hat. \Ve would hope that Marshall Linn medication a doctor could offer to some It costs for the same service on a shlp. end Associates tccommends In the hous· of his pallenta. WE .I.RE already sorry that we have Ing element presented lO th. plBMlng But It's going fast. Trnns-AUantlc let our failroad system go to heU. Some commission for adoption that Costa crossings get scarctr every year; more of the routes they served simply will not ~tesa s e r i o u s 1 y consldecs ils re-- and more of the big, glorious ships i re be replaced by airlines, and m 1 0 y spon.slhlllty in this reg&rd. Twice in the being taken off the long runs. They are American communities nre more cut orr recent past SOS has appealed to the city desperately trying 1:(1 make money on today than they were 50 years ago. We council to consider the advisability of our short enlists, but a tara:e ship ls In. will be just as sorry i[ we abandon the cooperatlng w1th the County I-lousing credibly ~xpenslve to maintain and run sea-lines, not only for the pleasure we . • . . • wlU-have-fost-, bu b e c a u s e--ll111- tT WOULD BE a tragedr, lf we came ecooom.ically wrong to g1ve any <lne form to rely excl1.&.1ive)f on a. r travel for of transportation a stranglehold. transportaUon. The train had its own Americans are staves to thelr cars, mysUQ.ue -traveling to New York on the because public transit has b een "20th Century'' was a delight no airplane shamefull y neglected. We will soon be can rival. The big new p1&.Des. with all slaves to our airplanes, when the last their gloss, are Just skyborne bUSflS, with grtiat ship retires from the seas. I Ciln't about as much personality 11 a steam believe that any rorm of slavery Is shovel. bcnefic:Jal.i no matter how much time The Ideal way lo go to Europe Is to may be saved. " I ,. 'You need exercise. Why not go to }11(( for 11 month?' • Quotes · Norman J. ii.t1rman, director. L.A •. scho0I for gifted chJldrt n -"Bright children need ground rules a n d limitations, Just as other children do. Self-discipline and creativity are not an- lltheUcnl ; lhey co1nplemen1 each other when tempered with a great denl of love." Authority and both times the issue was turned down. We tried to give our inputs concerning our firs t hand experie nce with peoples' housing needs to the con- sulting fion but were repeatedly thwarted in our attempt. I suppose we comfortable residents or Costa Mesa could tell our less fortunate brothers there's no room here for you - only those wl)o can afford a certain level for housing should live here. However, scores of these people have lived here for years; some have owned their own homes but ·lost them through a series of misrortunes ; illness, .divorce have im· poverished many ; others on fixed in- comes can no longer afford the raises in rents. We could become a closed com- munity of uncaring people, but we have confidence the citizens of Costa Mesa don't really want that. FRANK and JEAN FORBATH, Housing Chairmen,· St. John 's SOS Bicycle Hazard To the Editor: Regarding your editorial on cars and bikes, if something isn 't done to make bicycle riders stop at stop sp there will be lots more accidents. Most of them don't pretend to stop: they just shoot right through in front or you. HARRY HAMMOND Ele1JGted Freema11'! To tbe Edltor: I have been following the news o{ all the trouble our powers that be have been having over the Coast Freeway, No ooe seems to be satisfied with any of the ideas. I BELIEVE that th is can be settled by building an elevated freeway. There is room along the beach or at the edge or the bluffs and across the land inland or at the edge or the Coast Highway~ 1 This way a lot of valuable land and • many beautiful and valu able homes could be saved. WITH ALL the money that has bee.n wasted on surveys and the purchase or land along the coast, I am sure that tho cost of an elevated freeway would be ~ s.ible. The Coast Highway could be left intact and all the busln~ ~'OUld be able to stay in business. t am sure the people would be more than willing to pay for the expenses to save their towns and get relief from lhe traffic on Coast Highway. With all our abilities to do so many great things, lhie-shj>uld-he v_ery e"'l'.i. _ . ·-. IVILLJAM H. COOPER OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, flwwher Thoma.! Ktcvjl, Edi tor BoTbara ICrciblch .Editorial Page Editor ' .. The editorial .page of the< Daily Pilot seeks lo lnlonn and 1Umu111.te readers by ptftlm.tirw on tht. Jiili• diverse 0commentary' on topics of \n. tttfst by syndlc"ttd columnists and carlOOnitbl, by Pf'OYkfina a forum ror teade:ra' views and by Pf"MtlDJ ttlla -newapaptt'I oplntons a11d kttll't-un- (Ul'l'ent lop\Ca. The eodltori&l opinklna or tho Dally Pilot a~ar only tn tho editorial column at the top ot ~ pqe. Oplnklns txprtUl'd hy the col· umnlsta and anOontm.t and leuer writers att thetr own And no ti>donle- mcnt ot 1htlr vlew. by th~ OailY PUot shou)d be lnfured. Friday, August S, 1973 Videotape Evidelace? ' Accused Slayer's Defense to Open SANTA CRUZ (AP) -The defense W8! to open Its cue today in Herbt.>rt W. Mullln's mass murder trial, after the jlldgo took uruler advisement a defense plea to introduce n videotaped "talk between the defendant and his lawyer. Public detender J a m e s Jackson made . the request Tbunday, as the prosecuUon concluded its three-day sresentation. Jackson said the Jiour.Ioog tape, made when be first talked with Mullin, woold 1how that "he's crazy. be keeos slipping in and out of reality." SANTA CRUZ County Superior Court Judge Charles , Franich withheld a ruling on ~.. the request, whidl was ex~ •• peeled to be cballenged by the prosecution. Jackson's first wibless was ID be SWionl paycho)ogist '•.' Dr. Donald Lunde, whom he • sald woold testily that Mullin was mentally 1U1stable. Jackson said in his opening statement Monday that Mullin is guilty ol the 10 stayings he is charged with committing during a three-week period in the Santa Qi.iz area. He also said Mullln bad killed three other persons before that. · On 11lursday, prosecutor Arthur Danner linked Mullin ·and the .22 caliber pistol that killed James Gianera, 24, and hi.9 wife Joan, 21. Danner said the gun was foUnd in Mullin 's car when he was arrested sh<rtly alter .the mw-der of Fled Perez on Feb. 13. CR I MI NOLOGISI' Paul Weinberger 'Pressured To Compete' SACRAMENTO (AP) Welfare Secretary Casper W. Weinberger acknowledged to- day that he is wxler in- creasing pressure to run for governor in his home state of CaHlomla nest year. Weinberger, a Republican, wd be ,. .. honored and na~ [ __ B_RI_EF_S _) tered but had not Yet taken time to think seriously about \he prospect. Dougherty testified that a bullet from the same gun was lodged In the will! ol a cabin wb.,.. lour lee!Hge ~ were lound shot to death Feb. 17. Jackson says Mullin ls 11a paychoUc schizophrtolc" wbo kllled 13 persons as "bunvm sacrlflces needed to save cantomla from earthquakes." He abo bas 81'lted that Mull In claimed to be under his family's telephatic c o n t r o I when be killed his lirsl three victims. The prosecution has said it will show during the trial's sanity phase Mullin was sane at the time of the murders. Gas Ousts LA Suburb Residents LOS ANGELES (AP) Residents of a six-block area of the San Fernando Valley commwiity of Arl eta were volwitarily evacuated from their homes early today when fumes from an insecticide sprayed on a nearby fi eld brought complaints of eye ir- ritation and nausea, police said, Three residents and 22 Foothill Division palictmen who went into the area were treated at Holy C r o s s Hospital, mostly as a precau- tionary measure, o f f J c 1 a 1 s •ald. No serious injuries were rePorted and no one was hospitalized. OFFICERS AND firemen alerted about 160 home owners in the area to the problem, pollct said. adding that evacuation was voluntary, A fire department spokesman said at least 20 homes were evacuated while firemen used fans to blow the fumes - described as similar to tear gas -from the houses. Berkeley Barb Shuns Sexual Ads · • Couple Succumb In Desert BAKER (AP) -The bodies of a young South Gate couple have been found in the desolate Devil's Playground area of the Mojave Desert, ap- parently victims of scorching desert heat. Virgil T. Dawson Jr., 26, and his 21-year-old wife Becky were ldenllfJed Thursday by the San Bernardino County Coroner's office. The couple left their home last 11nrrsday in a borrowed camper truck. Nothing was heard from them until a Union Pacific Railroad work crew found the husband's body about 41i'i: miles from the abandoned camper, which v.·as bogged down ln sand. • MRS. DAWSON'S body was about 800 yards farther along the road, beside an empty water can. Officials said the couple were ill-equipped for a trip In- to the isolated part or the desert, where d a y t i m e temperatures hovered around 110 degrees. It appeared the couple at- tempted to walk 20 miles to the small community o f Ludlow after they remained with their inoperable truck £or about a day. Prostitut.e Sues Judge For Ledger SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A prostitute who says she's earning money so she can go (o college and become an ac- countant sued a city judge Thursday to get back her ap- pointment book . The Superior Court suit filed by El aine Carlson, 23, also re- quested return of a container of contraceptive foam se iJed when she was arre9fed on a pro!rtitution charge May 7. Miss Carlson said t h e charges were dismissed July 4 but Mun'i.cipal Judge Eugene F . Lynch refused to return the book am container. "Unless the book is returned In the very near future, I will suffer the full damage of the Joss !ince appointments will have already been missed and so forth," Miss Carlson said in the suit. Frld•y, Auguit 3, 1973 OAILY PILOT 5 Chavez Asks Picket Ban Defiance ' FRESNO (AP) -C..ar Chavez wants his followers all over America to "stand with, us and be arrested" here where droves already have been jailed !or challenging court bans on mass picketing. , Almost 3.oOO United Fann Workers Union members and su pporters have been arrested in the San Joaquin Valley dur- ing two weeks of massive civil dlsobcdienct picketing at frui t ranches where growers had obtained court restrictions on lhe number of pickets. Almost 2,000 of the arrests have been * * * Compromise Meany Goal WASHINGTON (AP) AFL-CIO Preaident George Meany met today w i t h ~Teamsters Union officials in an attempt to settle a bitter jurisdictional disp~te between the Teamsters and Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers Union. Meany, asked on his arrival If he thought the session would be productive, replied, "I haven't the slightest idea." It was not certain whether Teamsters President Frank E. Fittsimmons attended t h e meeting held on n e u t r a I gromid in downtown Washington. In Fresno County, rePoriedly the nation'• richest crop pro- du cing couoty in dolJar value. Chavez, vlslllng some m still In jall h~re, blasted the arrests Thursday as ' ' a disgraceful misuse ol Justice .. , truly a blot on America." "I reel the only reason ~ junctJorui were issued wa1 to appease the growers end destroy the union," Chavez charged. 0 1 Al\.f CALLING on fr iends across the Unitd States to witness the outrage of jaillngs and hardships brought on our union people. I am asking that they come from all over to Fresno Cowity to stand with us and be arrested." In Sacramento, S t a t e Agriculture Director C . B . Ch r i stensen says the California National Guard has been alerted for ~Ible duty because of continuing clashes on picket lines in the San Joa. quin Valley. Christiansen told the state board of agriculture Thursday that tho Guard was alerted Tuesday ni ght following a day of cla shes between pickets and Kern County Sheriffs deputies in the Arvin area. The dispute involves court- ordered limits or one picket to every 100 feet and restrictions on use of bullhorns at 50 fruit ranches \Vhere growers have refused to renew UFW con- tracts. Most of these growers have UNITED FARM WORKERS PICKETS TALK Cesar Chave1 Attend1 Rally in Community of Parlier to date remained independent had Chavez contracts. The of the rival Teamsters Union, teamsters are also negotiating which has signed 51 other with 29 Delano table grape Calilomia farmers who once growers whose pacts with Cbavez explred Sunday. Chavez conter.ds the picketing re1trictlons violate consUUtulonal rights of free a.uembly and speech, but of- llclals here have O-led to avoid a court teat of the ci vii Jn. Jwictioos on thooe grounds by charging the plck ota with refusal ID disperse. THE TACJ1C 0 F en- C01D'aging mau arreats "Is not going to quit until we arouse public opinion and polS!bly jail 10,000 or more and public opinion· makes them county officials look in- ward and realize they've made a grave and unjust error," W d Clavez, who bas been ar- rested himself in ~past labor dlsputeo. More of hls supporters heed- ed the call Tbunday as 143 ' were an-ested here, seven in Kern County and five in Tulare. The bookings here in- cluded 20 OUM, upping the total of nuns and priests ar- rested after coming here to picket this week to 60. The llWlS and priests already jailed began· a fast Wednesday to emphasize their solidarity "'Ith C h a v e z • Fasting has been a chief tactic in the past for the UFW leader, but he has not begun one in his current struggles against Team s t e r en- croachments that ha ve whi t- tled UF'W working mem- bership from a high or 40,000 down to 6,500. RECREATION IN ACTION SHOW .. YAMAHA MINI-BIKE Dnwing Sun. Aug. S, 3 p.m. South Coast ?Iua AUG. 2nd th..U 5th Registor for prim In Cirone! C-' 32 HOURlY PRlm $10.00 Glh Certificates Starting at 1 pm Dally SCHEDULE OF DAILY EVENTS TOYOTA SAILBOAT Dnwing Sun. A8g. S. 3 p.a. -=-- 'llMSDAY, AU&UST :tM ·ttw. Silt. Dolr-TOl'Otall'--& Troll ,,....,, ~ IOd. Children's Art. Bicycle Grand Prix, Svrfbo.td Chlmpionships, Children'' T.,.,.,,UMt- fllDAY, AUGUST 3 Huntirtgton Btaeh Slnk>r OtinM HGoodtime $if'l9tt'I" 6,J0.7115, 7115-etOO Music Man Band-SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 11:00-11 130 ~rtn's Dlnce, 11 ,30.12.00 Tumbling,. 1 2:~12:30 K•ratt, 12,30.12:45 Tumbling. l r~l1 IS BabV 8111•'· J,QO.J ,45 Community Theatre (Peter P•n}-SUNDAY, AUGUST 5 1100.1:15 Trim fl) Rhythm, 1:30-1 :.45 GyrnniS1ics, 2:00-2: 15 Round O.nct, 2,3()..2145 Baton •Twirling P.n••'*' ~ •'"""-.,.,...,....,, •' c.m ...., ,....,, .. v.n.,, ... ,,.. .. , ... leech 1 ......._ .. Weinberger said in a In- terview that he would consider lhe idea "at some point." - BERKELEY (AP) -The publisher of the underground newspaper Berkeley B a r b says future issues will not con- tain ad vertisements of a sex- ual nature. Lynch explained his adion by saying "often times we refuse to return property in certain types of crime because the items are sometimes used in the crimes themselves. An obvious example would be a gun." 1----- • Clash Foreseen : SACRAMENTO (AP) Cov. Ronald Reagan and hlrembly Speaker Bob Morel-l i headed today t o w a r d 8nother potentially bitter clash over the one-cent saJes tax in- crease, whlch some say fs: un- needed and unwanted. The Republican governor proposed Thursday a balf-<ent cut in the sales tu for one fear. '111.at would use up $320 tnillion of the ~tate's $826 million treasury surplus. • Reagan P11sh ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -It Could set a national precedent if California were to throw out the legal rule that evidence gathered illegally may not be allowed in court, says Gov. Ronald Reagan. ~fax Scherr announced Thursday that the tabloid wlll cease to print "slimy" ad- vertising that "exploits" other human beings. Schur, who denied he was yielding ID light w I n g censorship,~ said the Idea ol. purging the Barb, entering Its ninth year of publication, was his own. The bearded publisher ad· mitted that as much as 00 per- cent of his advertising revenue may be Jost. "Yeah. it will probably wreck our advertising. We'll just plug aJoog. We started with oothing, we'll probably end up with nothing," be said. "We will no longer accept advertising which makes persons into objects," he said . "\Ye will no longer allow slim y style ads whether they offer commodity s e x , encounter groups, stereos or airline tickets." LA Judges Censured SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Two Los Angeles judges have been censured for "willful misconduct in office" by the state Supreme Court. Superior Court J u d g e Leopoldo Sanchez d r e w "severe censure" Thursday, and Municipal Court Judge Antonio E. Chavez wa s "censured." Both orders came on the recommendation or the state C.Ommi$ion on Judicial Qualifications. The commission said during a three-year period Sanchez gave a bail bondsman orders for release of prisoners wbldi were blank except for the judge's signature. • _. That rule "has permitted crlminals to walk free," sald Reagan in a news conference 'Jbunday. If Calif_ornia ili!cards it, he added, the U.S. Supreme Court might to ,------------------ill likewise for the whole country. e Containment EUREKA (AP ) Firefighters today were ex· j>ected to contain the Klamath Natio11al Forest's big & est Tunney Order Se1iator Wmits Children, ..... _ --~ .-.c,imberJire in six years-'-8 blaze that has ravaged 14 Square miles of timberland at RIVERSIDE (AP ) -Sen. John V. Tunney's \vifc ha s tLl1 estimated cost o( $13 been ordered to retu rn from Holland 'vith the couple's million. three children and appear in court Monday to resolve a Den.se smoke that had tM .. disa t:pered firemen's efforts by cus .~ greement. "'"" rid •nd =k Attorney Horace Co;:Ie said Tb,urs,_clJly ,that ~·· Tunney ' " canyoo~ ~ /r~lieiraii 11 ~09k 1he childreD -'feddy, 12, Mark, 8, and Ariann, 5 -to week ago was cleared Thurs-her nati ve country contrary to an agreement that Tunney day by breezes lrom a Pt1Clllc w!'"ld have CU!tody ol them during August. 1X>ld Iron!, U.S. Forest Service Tunney (D-Oillf.) learned ol the departure Monday in t1P01<esman Ernest Weinberg ialcL a note from Mrs. Tunney who left for Europe with the children over the weekend, Coyle said. :e Suspect Hehl Mrs. TuMey filed !or divorce in May, 1972. but Coyle ' SANTA ROSA (AP ) -A tnan being held in 9 Canadian said the !._year marriage has not beea dissolved. The j,ail was to be queslloned today TuMey!I !ired together in their GcorgcfO\\'n home last June, h Sonoma COUnty authorities _,!he ljl.\vyrr sakl._adding that it was nol an effort .at DOWM WITH YOUR .AMTEMMA UPWITH TELEPROMPTER! 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Thur1day the man, Albert C I he ...... -..... .. glcbard Voor.hee3, 27, hM oy e sald l order for Mrs. Tunney to appear would D' AL 641 3160 r=J n 1.1n r::l r::;-;:;'V7 already been charted with the be served on Lawrence Stocker, her 11ttorney 111 Snn Fran· In • ~ J~ LJ \J June kllllng ol a Sonoma manl_cl:""~0·~::~~~~='..'.:~~=~~---Jll~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~~~~~~~~J in ·the coastal town ol'Jenner Tunney's legal residence: Is In Riverside. near here. • • ' I ij !