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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-07-03 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . . • • 1ens Ill DAILY PILOT Entert a i ners Co 1nplain: . * * * 10' * * * Ghost Gets Int o the A ct MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 3, )972 VOL. U. NO. 11J. I l t:CTtoNS. If ,A.IS ... -• • I • • • • • • • • • • • • Schmitz Eyes Third Party Chan ces ..,,J!ACK IN HOSPITAL '\ Harry S Truman Tr uma1i Retur1is To Hosp ital- Dige sti,ve Ills Preeident 'Making .Up' For Absence " President Nixon is using the long holi· day Weekend to make up for his six· month absence in San Clemente -buzz.. Ing around his estate on his go!£ cart, swimming at a secluded beach at Camp Pendleton and dodging out for dinner. The President, who began hi s 16-day working vacation late Saturday afternoon with "orders" to well-wishers to "all go swimming," did that very thing early Sunday with several house guests. The friends, Charles G. HBebe" Rebozo or Florida and Robert Abplanalp of New York, familiar figures at the Western White House, joined the President for dinner Saturday evening, stayed over and on Sunday all three took a short helicopter jaunt to 41Red Beach" in Camp PencUeton for some swimming in water ·which is somewhat chilly for this time of year. Later Jn the afternoon all three took another flight -this one to Chasen's Restaurant in Los Angeles, one of the President's favorites. There, they dined on st~ak. · .. The President, his aides said, ordered a "Hobo" steak irom the menu, a large KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Former huok of New York cut which has gone up President ll a r r y S Truman 88, hos-in price since ~e last bought one. --pit.ilized with a1enewed digestive-ail--A-waiter reminded Nixon that the price ment, spent a qu iet night although he di.d is up a quarter -to $9.25 these days. not sleep soundly. Doctors said today his An hour after the President and his Yon ~re All Under Arrest • This photo was taken on the Fourth of July, 1971 Ol,l Balboa Island in .Newport..J.leach. Fireworks are illegal in Newport .Beach, even on the Fourth of July. And every Y.ear patriotic fervor (or is it pres- DAI LY PILOT PhDID by LH Pnn• sure from the kids) overcomes normally la\v abid· .. i;ig citizens. Tour boats in the harbor even run spe- cial fireworks viewing cruises. Entertainers Complain Aliens Caught; " condition continued to be ":;atisfactory." party left the CQ.tnpound, Pat Nixon new ·A Research Hospita1 spokesman--!IDd in from Chicago where she had received Gh t G -f , f ,4 t Truman was a~ake?ed at y a;m, to a rousing welcome earlier in the day at ~ -0 ~· e (~~ n 0 /jl C 'l'l:J'e~re ··for··rad!ologte' ·examn12hona .. of .. ~-··· .. ···-······<See-·NIXON,~P,ag&.i) ........ ·-.. -·-. ~·--· ___ -· •... -··· ·-. · -· Fo11r Get By Nixon's Home the t' .. Jower intestinal tract. The ex-• ··-··· ·~ ·~--·--· .... ---·-··--• · · ,.~ _ aminations took one hour and the 33rd ,.. . . A dozen illegal immigrants heading chief -executive returned to .his seventh-2 Lo ' L SHANKLIN, Isle of Wight (UP I) -th ings have happened recently that make north WQund up in custody . in San floor room at 9:30 a.m. VerS 8lle Entertainers in a seaside summer show us all feel it must be truE1.'' Mills said. Clemente over the weekend in two Spokesman John P. Drev~ quoted Dr. · say a ghost is interrupting their acts and John Garr, musical director of the separate Incidents -one of the busts \Vallace H. Gr~am as sa~1ng Truman Stahbm' gs Eyed they want it. exorcised. show, thinks he knows the identity or the taking place after four men successfully was "slighUy fatigued by ,tus trip to the 1 ."Everybody Is on edge. The ghost is ho t h t be 1 . 1 cleared the Western While House. •--"·I and Jack of sound sleep." · g · s · w 0 some cas rnem rs c aun ° That incident was the first of the two 1iv;:ip1~ ruining the show," said Dave Mills, 33, a h d d 'be h't h · ed Graham said blood tests were sclledul-A 'E ave see n an . escn as aw 1 e-air and occurred at about 3:30 a.m. -12 ti• ' member of· the Temperance Seven jazz cd .for today and Tuesday. . S XeCU ODS group which is among the cast at man aged about 60. hours before the President arrived for a It Is too~ earl~to-deter.nune-hc?-w-,Iong --Shanklin's Pier Theeter. on: thC-:lsle-of The ghost is also sugposed to wear v.·orking vacation. the former President will be hospitalized, FORTH WORTJ{, Tex. (UPI ) -Delee-Wight off Britain's south coast, mutton: chop whiskers, a high n~cked A residCnt o(The Cyprus Shores coiony Graham sald. '· ti ves think an unidentified young couple ''When we were told thi• tbn2ter· was · · d d' d t· · immediate!·• north of the Presidential "I~ pleased with everything so far;'' .., IR;: gray suit, gray tie an 1amon s 1ckp1n. ' .m . found stabbed and slashed to dealh dur· haunted we all laughed. But certain compound phoned local police to report sakl Graham, Truman's personal physi· ing .the weekend maY have been victims ~The story goes," Garr said, hthat in four "suspicious" men walking upCoast clan since the White House days. . / of a gang e.i:ecution. 1898 an actor died on stage after the end on the. Santa Fe tracks. Oreves said T~man a~e r~~~mb~ed Police were working on a tip that Nader . S*"' •dies of an unsuccessful perfoim.ance . It seems Offi cers intercepted the tour at Calafia eggs, :st and fruit juice 8 te urrung several carloads or "hippie tyJ)e'' tit&i his ghost has haunted the theater ever Beach a little larther north, arrested the f~!Ue·ss u;~8f£·around," he added. youngsters~congregated-at~tbc-death·'9ite--·· · -· · .. · ·--...• ---i··· ·-··--···· ·---· ___ stn<;e. JryJn~. Mi:~ .l9. ~~~e . a. s;_c~essfyJ .•. ~;i;i __ ~~~tE_~ut_ ~Q~I~~~~-~nd ... ~ui:ied the 11 .d based on Truman's condition at 4 a.m. Saturday. Kaiiga rOO . Li'fe comeback. af1ens over lo oorder patrolmen. th es:; rtp0rt would be 8 tll a.m. Tues: The bodies were discovered at 6:30 The Tempe~ancc Seven has writlen a Early this morning yet another group e ne . a.m. by a Dallas schoolteacher, Dan letter to the bishop of Portsmouth asking was arrested after a pursuit fron1 the .. .. ~ight Wing Solon Sees .,,. . Some Hope From \Vire Services BOSTON -U.S. Hep. John G. Schmitz flt·1'ustin) says he Ji1ight make a polit1cal comeback this NOVl'rnbcr either <is a thi rd party or a::; <1 \\'rttc-in can- didate. Defeated in the Ju11c C:Jliforni3 prirnary by Coun!y Assessor i\ndrc\v Jli11shaw, Schn1it r. pron1isCd a c:ro11•d at Su rday's annual Ne\v En"land J{::dJv for God, Family and Country ·here "J'n1 going to come back sfronger thad ever." 'I'he Orange Co unty conservative said 1'l'm not necessarily going to be shackled to a party -to the Republican Party - that feels that it's role as the con-- servative party is simply to run soc!alism more effectively tha!l the op-posite party." During bis remark s in Boston. Schmi t: said he i.s also.Jooki.ng into the possibiUty of runn1ng his wife for his seat in Congress in Noveinber on the American Independent Party ticket. .s~hmitz, who beli eves he may be pro- hibited by Jaw from running again thit year, ·said the S\Yitch lo Gov. George \Vallace's former party n1ay be called for because "there · is no party right OO\lf th:i t's really nailing the enemy." -· "If there ever \Yas a time in America politleal history when we're ripe for.a bold, new move it's now," Schmitz, a 1nember of the John Birch Society, told the meeting of conservatives. !I Sthmitz, who also attended Saturday's opening session of the twcrday rally,.said that _the Red Chinese have "an official program of poppy production" to make· heroin ''to rais~-mQJJE:Y •. a.tld .imbver,t., (See SCHMITZ, Page I) Orange \\'eather Jtfostly sunny skies are on the agenda for the Fourth ol July hol- iday. Those low clouds should lilt hy mid-day on Tuesday, according to the weatherlady, to tempera- tures or 70 at the beach, rising to 85 inland. Lows 55"65. INSmE TODAY . ···-. ··--. . . ...... -· -·' ..... A year ago Lockheed Aircraft Corp. was f'e tling froni h1'gc losses Oil governnient projects I I %vc satd-Truman't-meals after-ad~.-ind bls 1 son. John, \\'.ha_w.ere_ -SYDN&'ly-AuslraUa (-AP)--·U.S-him to apl!!:!l11t a pr:!_est to exorcise the Border Patrol checkpoint to the Paliziadn mfttance Sunday were lioUted to jelio, riding t~ier motorbikes in !:!1e area. consumer advocate Ralph Nader Qlfost - an1Sh It !rom ea er an overpa . e ~ntraicgo-Frccwt'ly .•. broth and tea In preparation for today's The Sil~ just off Stole Highway 360, Is ~rived here todar to .. iludy some . put It to rest. Authorttles said tho carload of eight _Ql...welL a.s....fronl tllC.Jnmkruvtc-u ........ !--~ of Rolls Royce. \Vherc doe$ ft x·rays. , • a favorite ;,lovers' lane" par.king a'ria. species ol kangaroos In danger of The cho11Js girls al!!o claim' the ~host men was halted at about 5:19 a.m. aod He said Truman had been joking with Police said there were no signs or idcn-extinction. . keeps moving clothes around ln their the driver of the ~vehicle bolted rro"ll of. nurses taking care of him and had ei:-tification .on the bodies and no one ha! Nader told reporters the U.S. dressing room. Border Patrol chec kpoint to the Palizad:i pressed a ~lslike for hospital gowns •. The repo~ed.. missing anyone, fitting their, Interior Dcpartmcn~ wanted 10 Singer Rita Grant ~id a door opened lliehwny · patromt>~ fin :11y C.:'!l}IJht the nursts said Truman 11contll'1\let to be description. ~ • have some kangaroo specjes put on snd closed behind her when she le(t the m:.n and returned him to the rest or the ch .. r!UI and happy," DreV<s said. 'I'® body Qtlhe alrl WRS nude from the he nd 11 theater one nigh!. ifOUp. Troman was driven to the hospital walsfdown. Iler brown leotard britcheJ lm~ri !:'tt:.r.!: ;:~c• the "There wan1obody about and no wind. All eight, orficiols said, were returned (S .. TRUMAN, Pace l) (See EXECUTION, Poge l) ll was most weird," s e s!l(d. to the checkpoint. ) -r stand toda11? See story, Page 12. ' a1·t'111 " M DYI .. • c 1. ~..,la ' H ·t11~n Htws .. Cl " "'' O~ ..... CllHll'f • C>m " tp.·r, '' ,, C:•• .. ~i~rc .. Tc':w·111n • D' !'\ t.1rc .. • T~l'lt" • l • IOrWI P •t. • Wt .. lllr • £n1ert11nm1111 • Wlfl'ltll'IMtWI ,,., ... •llWIM• 1 .. 11 • I I • ---- Mond.iy, July J, 1 qj l • Viets Slug It Q~t for • I SAIGON (UPI\ -Communist gunners tired 673 rocket. 111ortar :ind arl1Jlf'ry rounds into llue nnd i!s outer defenses today, "'hile tv.o h1rgc, equally 1\1atchl'<i units sluggl'tl 11 out 1\·1tl1 tllnks and artillery north of 1he old imperial capH al in a South Vietna n1ese allernpt lo recap- ture Quang 1'ri province. " A 20,000-man government force Is driv- ing north fron1 llue to try to take bark Quang Tri -the onl South Vietnamese province captured by thl' Con1n1un1st~ \Yith most of Hue's defenders Sf•nt north to try to recapture Qaung Tri. Communists increased the pressure vn Stable St111idards . t!k' v!d Imperial {·apita l and thrt:!attnecl a Jo11g <'X-pt·etl'd. 1naJor attack on the t·ity. A J.000.man South V I t t n a m e s e p~r~1 tr'OOJ1 LUil!, backed by :1ir J>O"'cr, art1llcry and t:.inks. fought a savage b<1t- tl(' with a North Vietnamese force of the s11rne size only two miles south of Q<.iang Tri City, the provincial capital. \\"hilc the 00t1Je was under way, Com· n1un1st gunn ers slipf'.:d into the l·lue area rro1n the west and l>omba rded the city • ind a half..<Jozcn outposts oo its inland flanks. Fie.Id reports said 31 arlillery round.'! hil liuc and 644 other i:;hells landed at the New Horse Reins Will Be Studied ftorse lovers and stable 011o•ners are ex- pected in the llunlington Beach Cily Council chamber tonight for :i pulilic From Page l TRUMAN ... from his home in nearby Independence, ~10 .. Sunday afternoon. !·le entered in a wheelchair. 11is 0 wife, Bess, 87, accompanied him but returned home Sunday ni ght. She came back to the hospital at 10 a.m. to- day and planned to stay all day. It was the seventh time Truman was hospitalized si nce he left the White !·louse in 1953. His last two illnesses -in 1971 and 1969 -sten1med from stomach disorders. Tru1nan spent less than one hour at Research Jlospi t.al \Vednesday after QOm~ plaining of back pains resulting from a fall at hi s home on Tuesday. lie was released after X-rays. hearing on a new set of equine stable .s tandards. 'fhe standards -proposed by the city planning departmcnl .:.... will establish tighter rules for the construction and operation of stables. 'fhey will· also limit the riding of horses on city streets. Some of those lighte r rules are opposed by horse owners and stable operators because they claim they are repressive and will have the effect. of driving most of the stables out of town. Some or the strongest objections are: -All stable structures mu st be at least 300 feet frqn1 any property used. zoned or master plan11ed for residential use. -If a stable is not built nexl to an c-stab!ishcd riding trail there must be at least one acre of riding area for every 1() horses. -No horses can be stabled. with in 50 feet of the property line in the front or on the sides. · In a lttter lo the City Counci1, Mrs. Lucille Homer charges that the JOO.foot setback requirement · would force what might be a t"·o-acre stable to own J()..12 acres, most of which would be unusable. (IUll)' 1ng baSf'j, Jn tl1c au· \\'<It over North Vietnam. the U.S. command said UJ. jet !lghtcr· bon1ber pilots destroyed a coal trc;itmC'nt bu1!du1 g nt:ar the i.:ountry's major porl t1!y of llaip hong. <lropped a span on a bridge ne:ir V1nh and bombed an oil 1itorage area sou th of the Chinese border. The command in a delayed report said a lJ S. Na\y A7 !ighter·bomber crashed •·from unk1KJ\1n causes" June 18 on a 111ghl mission over North Vietnam about 107 miles nor11l or the Demilitarized i"..-0ne separating 1he t1\·o Vietnams and listed the pilot as missing. A Con1mun1st radio broadcast claimed today l\\O L:.S. Jtls "'ere shot down Sun- day over lhe lfaiphong-l~anoi area . UP I photographer \Ylllie Vicoy said govcrn1nent. paratroopers in t~;1y'R Quang Tri Clty fighting, 32 miles north of 11.ue, \lt'ere hacked by allied jets, helicopters and heavy B52 bombers. The B52s overnight dumped more than ~)()(} tons of e:o.:plre;ive on the approaches lO Quang Tri ('1ty. The city and the prov- ince of the san1e name were captured a rnonth after the Communist offensive began ~1arch 30 in South Vietnam and CITADEL HUE SOUTH VIETNAM I '" ..... .. ' UPI N1w1map HUE BOMBARDED -North Vietnamese artillerymen bombarded the old imperial capital of Hue Sunday. T\velve persons \\'ere re- ported killed and 41 \\'Ounded. Most of the shells exploded around the city's Citadel, an early 19th century fortress in the \Valled, old section of Hue. Truman's most serious illness since Jeaving Washington came in 1954 "\\'hen he underwent. gallbladder surgery. Ile \li'as in critical coqdition for several days following a severe reaction to antibiotics. · fie was hospitalized Jan. 21, 1971, for 12 da ys with colitis, innammation of the large intestine. Fro111 Page 1 EXECUTION ••• were wound around her neck. She had been stabbed several times. including once in the heart. "Within five years none of the com· mercial or nonconunercial !tables within Huntington Beach should be able to meet these standard s unless some real estate contractors wrth money would be able to drop $75 ,000 lo improve them," she '~Tiles . 1\ petition with 76G na1nes ag ainst cer- tain sections of the proposed eques trian ordinanceltas also been submitted to the council. Mrs. Homer, speaking for most of the horse protesters, also oppoBes the sectfon which says "Horses will not be pennitted to be led or ridden off the site of an cstabUshed riding trail.'' 'Reprisals' Threatened : Over Israelis' Airlines The body o! the l,!lan was found about · lB yards away. fie had been stabbed several times and his lhroat was cut. Both .,.·iclims 'were about 20. Police theorized more than one person • w~·nvolved and said clu es indicated the Q!UP had bee.n_ brought to the site and )dffi there. The!\! were nLlmcrous tire tracks in the area. The only clue to the identity of the man v.•as a cigarette lighter with the in- i;cription , "Have a nice day." Medical Examiner Dr. F'eliks Gw ozdz said preliminary examination indicated the girl had not been raped, but withheld a ruling pending further tests. From Pagel SCHMITZ ... particularly to subvert enemy troops.'• Labeling t-.-fainland China as the world 's "primary source of heroin ," Schmitz said he secured much of his information about heroin production during a recent visit to Nationalist China and by talking to a woman 11o·ho ne_d Red China through Yuman Province. "She said she sa'Y the crop poppies being cultivated by Red Chinese troops in Yuman Province. "Schmitz said. DAILY PILOT Tht OrlllGI Cotlt OAll Y PILOT, wl!ll WJ'litft b comDlnc:d Ille NtW1·Pr111, II publlshtd b., 1ht Or•not Co.11 PuDll1l!l'l';I (omP<1ny, Sep.t- ••1"1 ecllrions •rt publl11!t<1, Mol'4•v IJrorougl! Frld1v. for Co•t• Mrs1, N-parl llt•(ll, -tft1m"'9tair1lrwtfl!Poun1•fn V11try, l""W9V"•- !1Nd1, lr¥1nrl51!1altb!(k ft~d Sin Clftntn!tl ''" Ju1n C~pl11r•'"'· A 1i~l1 1rglon1r Miiion 11 publt>lltd $81~rday' •n!I SYn!l~~I. Tiit pri11<lP<1I pt1Dlf1hlno Dl1nt h 11 3» Wrst ll•V Sifre!, Coil• Mnf, C.allforn1•, t 111•. Rob1rl N. W11d Prr~rnr 1na Puoh1Mr J 1ck A. Curl1y Vier Prr1~.,1 l'ld Grntr•I MlfliOC• Tho'"'' Ke1 ,il • EOllOf it.am•• A. Murpliin• M1ne11re Etti/llf' Ch11lt1 H. l ao1 R:ther4 ~. Nill ,_.1,11.•n• M1rl'.lglng Ea.iors Offkn Ca1t1 Mr11· llrl Wt" 11,ty S!rttt Ntwporl 1111<;11 ; 3JlJ /'tt~r! llov1tvlrd L&~ll>nt llMcll: m For10 Av1nue HYttllnQ!Oll 8t1ch ; Ullt llPCI! llOul•~•rd ~n Clementi: :llllJ Norm El Cem!no Rttl Tel•,h•H C714, '42-4121 Cl.ulflff A4lrerth1119 '41-1671 •rtom (tllJll •••• , S1t1tll or L•tvM IMdl 492-4420 rr"" l'l"ffll or~-c_,, C1Mmvnlll11 T40-1JJO Cl!ct¥r~I, 1112, OrtMI (NII P~flll\1111 c""oenr. Ho "'""'' 11Mlft. 1uw1r1t""1, foG'llOrlel '"'""" ..-ld\OOl'll,tmtrllt lltrt ln ,._.,. M r_,Mllcill Wl"*'t Nlt()ll per. ml:lrfoot 91 """'""" """· City planners say the new master plan of recreational trails, which includes 12 mites for horse riding, will solve that problem. The opponents, ho"'· ever, point out that the master planned trails do not run near moot stables.- There are an estimated 35 stables in Huntington Beach, most of which are currently running a narrow profit margin. The stable owners· claim the lii11o·s will boost the eost of a stable so high, most will have to close their gates. \Vhile the basic construction and acreage requirements have bee. n challenged. most of the horse owners and slable operators have not objected to the rule!. on sanitation. some of those regulations detennine the design of water and food troughs and lhe types of corrals and pens to be used. The ordinance ha s been recommended for approva,l by the city planning com· mission, bui the horse lovers claim the commi.s,,ion was agalnst them and hardly listened to their complaints. On June 20 a dozen young riders picketed city hall, on fool, t o demonstrate their comp"!aints. Ne,vport Beac h Summer Concerts ' Begin Tonigl1t The first in a series of free summer concerts begi11s at 9: 15 o'clock tonight at Fashion Island in Ne"-·por t Beach. The concerts by 1-lenry Brandon's Big Brass·Band and' .. 'Pops" orchestra \Viii be presented. in the shopping district's mall theater at the same time every ~1onday night throughout the summer,. Seating for seve ral th<lusand people is available. Brandon. a Corona del ~1Rr resident. Is orchestra director for the Chicago Light Opera house and for th e h-1cCormack Place Convention Center in Chicago. The opening night concert will fealure st>lections from '.'The Music Man," a Dix· it'land c:oncerto "Great Italian Movie Themes,'' and '1El Capitan," the Sousa mRrch. Brandon is popularly known for hi! •·Fashion Island Overture," and he has written musica l jingles for well:knowo comntercials. Brandon's Blg Brass Band nnd "po~'' orchestra are the same exctpt for 11d- dlllona l bra!IS instruments !or the big band sound and an addlUonal s t r i n g section for "pops" concert s. f\1osl.mu.s.lc.lans are from Orange Coun· - ty area. They Include aetompllshed recording artl!!ts , music teachers. con· cert musicians and Disneyland mus!· cians. ,....., c~ .. ""''" MN ., (•I• Mete. c .. lltfft'-. luelrKt"ttllloft ..,. urrlw 11,6J "'°"!Illy/ .., -A SJ.IS ~l~I mlllt.,., .,., .... ,-l'.6$ "*""''" Fashion Jsland Is located on East Pacific Coast ltlRhway between Jam- bortt Road and MacArthur Boulevard In :----'"----.---"~-"twport ll<adl. ·. ' LONDON (UPI) -The International Air Transport Association received an anonymous message today threatening mass reprisals against airports servicing the Israeli airline unJess Israel releases the lone Japanese survivor of the Lod airport massacre within the next 24 hours. An IATA spokesman said the reJeaSe was one or four demands the message said must be rnet to prevent actions against any airport allowing Israel's El From Pagel NIXON. • • folk dance !estival. The relaxing weekend is expected to C<lnlinue for the' President and l\1rs. Nix- on through the Independence Day holi· da y. Press aides plan no formal briefings until Wednesday. when the President's schedule of meetings v:ith advisers will probably pick up. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President plans meetings with Na- tional Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kiss· inp:er during the stay and l\tr. Nixon also plans to continue discussions \.\'ilh oth~r advisers on campaign strategy. Some aides have said Nixon plans a 1'low profile" of activities in San Clemente during this current visit, allow· ing attention to shift to the bitter in- fighting among Democratic contenders !or the nomination. Keeping abreast of th£ part isa n <IC· llv lties Sunday, the President made !l rash of phone calls to the Ea st. s~aking tQ..la.tPl~r.,kampaign C..ha.iunan John J\titcliell as well as 1'1itchell's successor, Clark MacGregor. ~ Mitchell -who resigned last Friday and acceded to the demands of his wife. Martha. that he quit polities -still plans to serve as a "consultant" to the Presi- den t as a cam~ign adviser. Al airlines to use its facilities. The spokesman said the message, "assumed to be accurate," said U.N. Secrelary General Kurt Waldheµit must appear on television· Tuesday agreeing to the demands. "Ir these demands are not met. open war will be waged again.st Jewish in- du stries with El Al, the Jsraeli airline, being a prime target," the message said. The demands were: -Release Kozo Okumoto. -Return the money paid by Japan in compensation to the victims of the massacre : -Pay the United Nations $4 million for aid to underdevelope<.I countries: -Withdraw from occupied Arab ter· r itories. Israeli police arrested Kozo Okamoto arter he and two other members o( Japan's "Red Anny" killed 26 persons and wounded 78 others with grenades and submachineguns on ~tay 30. The other two Japanese were killed in the incident. Engineer's Eye Damaged by Rock FLORENCE r AP) - A rock thrown by a boy hit a train engineer from Anaheim in the race, shattering his glasses and driving broken glass into his left eye, sheriff's deputies say. Ri chard Smith, 54, was in lhe locomotive of a Southern Pacific fre igh t train moving about 30 miles an hour "'hen he was hit Sunday by one O! several rocks throy,•n by two youths, dcf>U~ies .. said.---.-----~ A brakeman, Charles Clark. 2.3, of Downey caught, the two 12-year-old boys \li'ho allegedly hurled the TOCks at the train. They were turned over to juvenile authorities, deputies said. Smith wls hospitalized and was ex- pected to undergo eye surgery. Vegas Re~alled Axles Defective iii 500,000 Cars? • DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors today announced the recall o( some 500,000 Chevrolet Vt?:ga subcompacts -virtually all 197l and 1972 models on the road -to check for a defct!iYe~ renr 1xle sha ~. - Ttw! company said the dC!fcctlve shafts could cause 11: lock ring to dis-engage, setting up a chain r~c­ tlon tb~t ~Id c/!1115e the rear brakes to. fall and ultimately cause the ules lhtmsttves to rau off. Chevrolet said that 59 defective shafts have been reported. Two cases resulted in body damage to thc·vehlclcs but there have been no reported injuries, said t he autorv-aker.J.Jhe nation's Jar,~ires,.,t.i;;;;---1 • COOvrofct saldthat ilupect1on ror the detective shafts wlll l>l~e 1.,. lhan JO minutes and tnstaUation of new shafts, lf needed, about an hour. The work w!U be done free by tile conopany, Chevrolet said. I have been i!l :\urth \ .e!1.J1ri1 1 trer s1nl:e. \ ' 11 I tr1 111 It Vlroy said he i;;a1\r a South \'ii•111:111:+ •· llrmored personnel carrier · ;;u1k hhr .i stone" a~ it 1ricd to tJ"ll:i~ thl' 1"rL 11 J:>huoc IUver to j oin tlH' Qu:ln;.. 1"1: fight ing, dro11•n1ng abou! l' 1 1· 11 paratroopers. Vicoy said the 1clucle. \J\t·rlo<JUN! 1111 paratroopers 1n full hultle .il'<lf, "µ~111:., J downward and seven of the rnco alit:u •I never came up." Today 's shelling of Hue. 1!10 rn 11 • ~ nwth of Saigon, pron1p1ed illhC'd ft. T1vo S11its ",J I ") (~ '' I ,.,, 1111 , " ' I ' " d : l'I' 1·~ ;ir<' " 1 11l r!rn t' to I· ol I 1'111,1\\lll~ ilh S1111tll \'1c·t· • j,110 ,. ,, 1 +ul ::11.1111u rncn ,. ., " ,1 1 t·1hl•'l'd to the 1 t I •1f;111tr " 111 \ 1!'11111 ' :1· T' 'lh\1 .1nl ciJ l\ l' H11 0 i:11t. 1\:hd.i~. ... " ' Conventio] . Ruling Due So on 'VASlllNGTO!ll IUl'l 1 1·\•<lt'r;,! Judg(' Georgr L. ll:trt .Ir. pr·u1111~ ·d 111 rule late today on !110 :-;1111, 11n f\111. heated baltlcs O\"(T !111 • ~i·:il.11;: .. 1 Democratic conveut 1un dt;ll'J.;d!t·:> Jrt"ll California and Chicago. Hart also said the IJ.S. Court ul _\IJ-· peals arranged to hear both C.'.lSt•s 'J'u1 -- day whate ver the outc..'Onte of h1::. decision. He made the announcemen~ after hC'ar· ing argument s from both sidrs in :i 1n11' l' by supporters of Sen. G('(Jri::c s. J\'lcGovcrn to prevt•nt 151 C::i!i1on11;1 delegates from being unseated br the Dcmocr;itic credenl1<1ls co1nn1i.l!e('.' !!'H-v rel ated story, !,age 5f T,hc Chi c:1go .dispult: inrulveil !!it• cl is barmenl of Chicago !lla.v11r HLt'hiird .). 0 ;1ley ;:ind 58 delcg:i ll's 011 l1is s!:1tc. Joseph L. f{auh. arguoi~ I u r :v1c0ovcrn. said the parl y\ rt·furn1 rulr~ pJ;unly allowed for 11 inner-!akr·-all primaries like that \vh1t·h g a , l' J\'lcGovcrn 271 delt.'gates frorn Californi ;1 in the June 6 pri nlat)'. l,11 .i , • t 11 'l1-·i'l"'1 .1 i,., '.• J:.111t 1 1f Tr11 I 't' I 1 1·.<' I ' t .it · + 11 .I •. I ;1,;-,i•d I" I• .,. 1 .. ·' I; h f' I"<' ,,1d··r.1l.!11J 11r ;1 111 ,f 'I ·'! !l""I' f J• 1111' \t\lllJillll , l1•!:r11 1r' 11 J• l.r · 1·1i,;l1l dlll·g,1lcS II ilh I I~ ill I< u11 ' r ' l1'i"llJI! "· • !':1,.,,. ·;·,' 11.,. '< ~ini.: 1110\ion 1·~n1e ~lh·~ \i 1. I 1111rr o/ lliJ:h Puu1 !. \ C I :11 1.t·. 1·' •'.t !ll'd h:1t"kl'rs 111 :O.h·f; n 1 rr1 H1r :.upp1.1rt111g thl11r ' {'h,11'i1·11 ' 'I'll,· ~1-11· 11 ",J 'I· •. r11n11f'1· f.aid the \!··t: \ •1 1. '"(', .. ,l l1t.c·•1 1ns1ru.·11·d. ;is ;1 I•' fll \\ II 1, .. Jd fr11111 tlS lh<'lr 10"1"" Ii .11. 1 ·.\ 11·:11· 111 .. t "liv .•11:1. • 11 I 1,11" It Ill :1 II Id l(il' ! ,I • 1 llo '\ \\ 1!1 :1l1"n.d1· ~11:·:1 rl (111' i:1r:.:•·r ch~Utfl..;l'i;;.'' S u:-;pel' l .. _' 011 p: Ii l l <'or La1nu l ronu1t Iiape in St:111i.o n Joseph A. Calilano Jr .. re1>rc scn!in; lhe Democratle National Conun illt'•' named 1n the ~·lcGO\'Crn suit. argurrl tli;1t 'lh •· h llr<irn.;1· ("1ur:1\_ !-h1·r, t. 11f!u·rr~ l•K!l\' · e courl.:> ave no place 1n !hi:. arl'ua on this kind of issue ." i·r111uu1t·tl a 111.1~1.11 1t r !' :1 r .. p1~t ,.hn He said that 1f the court int erferrs 111 !'t\U.Ll!.v a~ .. ;,;:!:,! ;1 1"1!·•1· .. ~-u:d ~·.int ·ll !he matter. it n1ighl ha\·c on its hand: 11 ·rn:1n at ki .. ltpoJni duru:~ 1ht• 1\t'1 kt'Pt!. n1osl of the other 50 challenges decidrd ll";iuta:~ ~;ud i:u• ~~1,pt'l'' li t•: i·rihed ao; . • • • c.n by the crrdentials cornmitlee. ··\Ve could he here \Yith anyone of !hein ;1h1;u! ~9. f,\l' h·1·1 in i11c;hr::. t:1IJ , '11th ·: if the courts decide to i;ct inlo this arta.·' :--1 1.1~;::~· 1·0\l:1r-!rng1i'I blonde h;u r and he told •!art. \1t:1r1ng fildtU hl;1<·k ::;l;ic!-..s, ~rabb<·d his . Rauh also charged the com1nillee ii· -\"1C"tim \1·hlle she .,.,.,,s usln;: n nearby )egally changed the credentials rul es in stripping l\1cGovern of the 151 C;ilifornia la undrom;1t nbout !'i .30 ,11n. Sat urcf:i.1·. delegates. The vicli1n !old officers tier ass:ul:int "In vi ew of the closeness of the r;icC'. llf·ld a knife ;.it her throat. '1Jrncrl hrr those 151 can dc tennine the outcome of 111:it hC' \1·outd ti'<.' it 1f ~rr ~tn1c:c!cd nr the Convention." he deel arC'd. · i·:t!lt·d for het1> ;1nd 1111111 r.ipP·l '"11·r ;incl ~lcamvh ile the Democratic credc1111al~ ! 1tc('(! h{'r to pJrt1c1p:..itt· 1:1 ;1lt uJ :-t'\U:tl committee voted todav lo st' at tht· ri~-r ~·r\ l'l'S1(•n. member North Carohnii delegation to the 'l'hl' 11omiln \1 as ;dlo1\ltd !·1 ;:11 hnn1e convention de spite complaints that only altl'r trcalment lvr n11oor i:JJu:1cs <il n 7.8 percent of the delegates ,\·ere under 11rarby hospital. -'------'"---c ____ __:_:..._.. ______ ... Mi1•1•o r lulage lfir rtei•s Sandra and Sondra liralt•. 9·year-old twin dau ghters of Mr. and Mrs. Gereld Wotts, 10:98 ba-Be•!"'"••-Ave., Fount~tn Vtlley; walked .ea a\vay \Vith the S\\'Ccpst!'l:e'i in lhP T\v· 1c: Co 1e0t at !he Oran ce Coun· ty Fair. The J?irlc: \\On.the co11tcst O\'Cr compcl1 tors from Orange an<I .. Los Angeles counties. (' . I .I " tog mig you ' and B dres in a care We na, or h disa 0 tativ life, bee wan Sa an can go am 0 H ,, R afte hija wan Th fro mi He July Play phot mag As ~1 ini beoo for s· h-1inl \\'ait ··-11as· • reco E Min. soul in v ' Th fro fro M 16 scar phol • "' . l\rishnas Confront B~ti sts SAN DIEGO (AP) -The small plaza tn downtown San Diego hardly seemed the place for such a -meetint? but it was there that East and \Vest religious sects came face to face . Th~ General Association of Regular Bapt~st Churches is holding its annual nleet1ng here while the spiritual leader of the Hare Krishna movement \Yas in town for a rally Saturday. Followers of each relig ion were in the plaza Friday, seeking converts, and two of them tried their te<>hniques on each , ~· • . • r • • . . s Neiv -Pl1011e Call ~ OA1l Y PILOT .. .. Martha: Captive But 'Rejoic~ing' By llEL.E'.'I Tllt)~tAS \l'ASlll NGTO~ (UPI I Y..11tcht'll rrjoit·rs that her husll<111t! h;1' gotten out of h1l1·1in1c pol111e~ h11t ~11l' sti!l s:1ys she ·is a "polltll''11 1\r1,011t·I' · !\l rs , !\!ltchell n1ad(• illl01her c;dl tu !h1s reporter Sunday and g:11 t~ hl'!' l'l .lvl 1!111 1" the announcc111c.nt or J1 rr hu!'b:tnct .H•llll N. K'l itchrll. Saturdny 1h.11 l1r1\';1' ll';11111: diiy C:Jrly in 1969 v"hC>n she looked out the 111J1lt011· ol her \\l aterga te ·apartment and ~;111· :in11\1:ir dcinonst rators. In a !"11•11s1on 1n1c-r \'H•1\". :ihe said the 1 h·n1n11~tr~1tors looked like "Russian n 111 111>1111.111i::i:· :..iud she quoted her hus· li,111d fll ha, k lip ht•r V\t'\l'S, \ l1'llt· 1ah·r sht• 111ade a 2 n,m 11<t·plJ.,n1· r;1ll iv 1he Ark•u1sas c:azctte to !1 ~ .. 1 ~,11. .I . \VUlian1 i"u lbrig ht , 1 l1.u1111;1n of the Senate F'orrign Jtel :i· his Job as t'h;un n::in of thl· •·01nni1t!\'i: :" 1,. "~ ( · • .inn111ttit' . re-e lect J)residen1 !\'1xon >.;j·,. h,,1-;1n1e a R<'publict1n p;:1r·ty sta1 ' l I . ---~~h~ ... !n_ .. ~~-·. !~~r:~~P.!~1 .. -.t~~--~~~ .. :-. -1•-~ •,;, :~ ul~.~~1~i,ble says there;s .only one way t ,'~~'""" . ·~~ ...... .::Sun:;· .. Jlw.t'~ .~Jl-'!L.I. ~~.JOl•:-: .'-~~.1• , . .i: l .. 1?.i'.1! :l. ! 1.:.U\L\'!1\,M.rf o!!l.1!!',J.~ t!•~'. v.a1~~.;~. , ·-. , ··~··~· _ ! ~ \\'h('n <l.SkC-d hOll ~ht• ~h1• \ !l II L d d,1• j(l!\d !';US!J\g aumerS. to get to heaven." the Baptist said. "You ,~ ·~ ·~ -, ...,Ki.. , might try to find it by . chanting, .but t'# ~c+i? "'-it >1··"-' rn~·~he 0r0:alg~~~ ~~n1~~1m~n~.'~eal peace t .. --*'--<" ._;,'~:~· ~)'it.if'~'tt~ But the l1are Krishna advocate, l• ·~ft:;, ~· ,, , • " ,, .:~7::~">i -" ~' .. dressed in an orange robe and speaking -ij'.{ -__ -w,· :::.~ -.M>--... ·• ~1!Jo.w 't 1,. • ~'-· res1gn:it1011. But she spoke· 111 :i 1011 11•11'1' did 1' 1 ~a~~uplt~;~· and l1t1nt: lljl th· ll'l<'i'~I-,,,. Dtttl" W i1is Prize. .., -''l'Jn still ;i pu\i11c:1l pr1so11l·I' .. ~11~· said. ··1 c;_1n't !;ilk ln11~ I •1n1 l'illl1n~ ~111" rrptit1011:;!y" -.·f V ase cto 111 y in a heavy Indian acceni. said "We don't JI.-.., .-'N *'' "").,:. · ...., care whether I go to hell or to heaven. We don't care about that. \Ve ask Krish· na, 'Pick me up.' It doesn't matter, hell or heaven. We only want to serve.'' UPI Telephe!o MARCHING IN OR MARCHING OUT? vou:rHs UPSET OVER COLORADO RELIGIOUS FESTIVAL 20 Leaving to Every One Arriving Because of Bad Weather, Limited Water Sht ~;11tl Shl' 11 ;1\ ·I' 111·· \\;11 'I".'•' A!i.'.'lrtmcnt s. \\ht·n· 1h1· \\ll!'hrll" 111 llt)\(H.l 1.U (UPI ) F'rnnk Shivers. 2!! tain their \\';ish1ng11111 hu1111• !"lh· 11,'.rr. Liibt'r ol IO·rnonth-old !\\'ill boys, \\Oii · They covered a-wide range or subjects, .. disagreeing on most. dcrcd during 11tl' ,·tn11~1 111 tht' ,~'n· 111"l 11r111· 111 a contest sponsored by Ztrn , , . , •.. ,, ...... , ., , ,, Y!:'.f~:)\J.Ol\,.I' hy _ll!> !!II~' l~,1.t! ..;~$i..,(:t1 • .'! _<11,i1:~-. •w~.'. :1~1 !~~1~~11. :::o.~:h. • llorr ,11Jout ht•r ,11 ~IX!lll s rlt'\1 ~ i·nn• I l't•(•l fine." sa id"Sli'i\·~}~. ·9 ft'-11/'hOun> • On reincarnation, the eastern represen- tative said, "You can become a. dog next life, or I can.become a . .dog. Or you can become a plant. It depends on \Vhat you want when you die ." Said the man fro1n the West: ''There's an eternity up there and the quicker r can get there the better. I .don 't "'ant to go through 10,000 cycles of being an animal.:' Observers ruled it a draw. Hijack 'Hero' -Wa1its to Sta:y 111 Limeliglit? ROME (UPI) -\Vhi:n he left prison after serving an 18--monfh term for aerial hijacking, Raffaele r-.1inichiello said all he wanted was a quiet. anonymous life. The 22·year-old former U.S. Marine from Seattle, \Vash., has changed hi s. mind. · ·· Youth Disgruntled, Split· Poor Co1iditio1is Put Damper 01i Religioiis Festival GRANBY. Colo. (UP I) -Disgruntled youth, up~ver the cold , damp weather, no entertainment and a limited \Yater supply-began leaving the site of a Colorado "religious festival" faster than they were arriving, police asid. Colorado State Patrol Deputy Chief Richard Schippers estimated 20 persons 1•:ere leaving Strawberry Lake. the high mountain peat bog where the festival is being held, to every one arriving. ' Many Retreats Schippers flew over the site and estimated tbat about 8,000 persons were present. Originally, the sponsoring Rain- bow Family of Living L~ht estimated 140,000 'vould attend. "There's a lot of smoke, a lot of fires and a lot of people hassling," said one young \i.'oman who hiked out of the area. ''They are going to wreck the land ." The wind was blowing hard late Sunday and a cold rain bad started to fall. President Stays Home Ab.out 1h of the Time Temperatures in the area felr' below freezing, as they did Saturday night and Sunday morning when a reading or 27 degrees was reported. · Rain~w Family spokesmen said they v•?Uld \\'1nd up the festival with an eight· mile march at midnight tonight to the top of Table Top Mountain where they plan to arrive by sunrise Tuesday. 'Schippers Said he doubted. that many wou)d make the long hike. He said about 200 cars were preparing to move out of the area, and there 1vere 375 others parked nearby. _Officials said there had been few s.erious health pro_blems. despite one con- firmed case of meningitis. Public health officials reported several cases of hepatitis, infected insect bites and some diarrhea thought to be caused by poor drinking water. The 10,000..foot altitude "'as.re poi;:ted to be making rome -persons ill. fe rcnc l' 'J'hursd;11 :dt1·r t•nllet·11ng the pr1ze -a lree vast'c~ fllitl'hrll. tht• lur'1n1•r ;1\lll!'IH'\ /~l·l1cl';d. 1•ll1'\ said \\hen hl· ;11H~11tu11 ( ·d 111" rt"':'.:11;1111111 1 h: ~,~id the sterility operation S<it urd :t~' th:tt hl' ho\h'd 111 ~p1·11rl 1nr1r1• 1!11)1· 111th 11:1~ J«·~s p;iinful than hnving H tuo'h pul · his \V1f1' ;111d thc•1r d:1111;hh·r llt· 111\\ t't'!I 11·,l :ind ll did not in trrh•re 1\111! hi:; diuly tinuc to 11 ort.. ;1s .1 p;1rtlit11•· ;1d\ 1'('r 10 \1 .. 1·h. routine. the P rrs1dL·111·~ t';:u1p:11fi11. h111 lh' "\ly \i•ift'. and I l'lri· ~lrid I had ii." h•' r-.t itcht'l!s ar1· rxp1•1·ft1d 111 tn· 1·,. 1h1'1r s:iid "l'\'e been ii'Jnllng one J ]11ni; residence ba<:k 10 H\'l•, NY.. ;1 tulll' · \Vcstchester County suburb of Ne1v York City. fl-1r s. !\litt'hl'11 ni:idi· public h<'r unh!lp· pinrss \rith her h11~lJ.,11rl'.~ polit11".1I n1!t' 111 a telephone <:all t1) 1·1•1 1111 .Jtu11· ~:! f10111 Ne11•port Bc:1ch. She said Shl' haJ 1~11·i·n ~J 11rhcl\ ;111 •·u1tin1atum " to ~rt O\lt of 1lli!il1t'f., ur s!u' \1•ould leave hin1 During thr l'onv1·rs:111011. slir s:1id •·,oiu just get a\vay," and thl' ('iJ!l 1.,·a~ abruptly broken ofL On June 25. to.J r:;. i\11tchell r;1H1·d l '1'1 again, this t1n1l' 1ron1 thl' \\'rstrhl'strr Country Club ;11 Rye. Sht· sairl sh(' 11 :1s leaving Mitchell "u1111I hl' tll'L'Jdt·s 10 leave" Nixon 's reelct."tton 1·;1111p:11;•n Shi· cemplained about :i security agi•rit. \1h11 she said yanked the tclcphonr nu! of lh1' wall in Californ ia . Shl' descnh<'d h1·r~tlf as a "political pr isoner" A colorful nativ r of 1\rk~1nsas. ?llr~. Shivers was one of 26 men who filled out rntry blanks for the <.'<lntest at local Zl ·r. b1lflths set up in Shopping centers. •) ... L>ve Dancers L(lS i\\C.ELE S !API -A n1an and 11 \\11111;111 l'11nvicted uf lt1~·t1 condu{'t !:;ist .11::11· fur their r11gl1t l'lub · .. Danc e nf Loi~" {;11led to ;1 µp~·:1r lur scntencin~. :111d \1 u111cipal Jud;;c i1·\1':1n :\f E'bron issued 11 :1rr:111ts for their 11rrl'.st 'rh(· 11\·n arc Jo~•'l)h A. r·rrr:iri 29, and Su ;an A. Setters. 22. \\':1rr:1nts were also issue1 for ov.·nt·1 'i 11C thl' Bottoms-Up bnr. Jea 1ne C. Bo111· i11g. :Hi. and Vivian Gail Fortune, 30, 1\ ho \vcrr convicted of aiding in pcrfonnancr?: of' the dance. Bond was set at $251000 ... ,.,. He appears completely nak~ in the July issue of an Italia!') rilagat!ne call~ Playmen . featured in the centerfold in a photograph.ic series on what t h e magazine calls naked heroes. As part or his new, puqlic image, Minichiello told the magazine he wants to become a film star and buy a restaurant for his relatives. Authorities said the young people also had brought in about 2,000 dogs. They ex~ pre:;s~ fears that dog packs might re- main JO the area after the festival en- Mitchell, 53, rapidly became n pubhc- figure when her husband joined Nixon 's cabinet-in 1969. She spoke oul on many issues, and the telephone became her trade mark. each. ----__ _.._. Since leaving prison 14 months ago. Minichiello has worked on and orr as a waiter at a restaurant near Rome but .. -i;as·Said he wa.S-Uiihappy ar-aif.the at· tention he received. Minichiello became kno\vn by hijacking of a Trans \Vorld Airlines jet Nov. 1, 1969, during a domestic flight in the United States and forcing the pilot to Oy to Rome. The 6,702-mile distance coveted during the hijacking was then a distance record for aerial piracy. Even the Vatican sympathized with Minichiello, whose father lived in southern Italy. and said his war service in Yietnam derang~d him. ~ The Playmen article, headlined 11F11r from Vietnam," showed Minichiello nude from front, back and side. Minichiello had his appendix removed 16 months ago \Vhile in prison, and the scar was clearly visible in one photograph. 1 By The Associated Press banker-investor Charles C. "Bebe" Re· 1-Jalf"·ay through this election year, ~~~th men are with Nixon, as is his wife President Nixon now in San Cle mente, has spent about two·lhirds or his time Pat, who arrived· Sunday night from ~aV\,ay from the White House, where his Chica~o. · Y~· lease is u for grahs,. . Iron1call.y, 1'llX0n. has spe.nt the Jea?t . P . ¥-.:·····-····-····· -·-lime.ilt·lll5 ·0Cean&1de-.mans1on .here,.bis _During the first six months of 1972, voting residence in a state important to Nixon spent all or part of 121 days away his bid for a second term. The fro~ Washington. There were 182 days President's cu rrent stay is his fir st since during the half year. --, he was in California for six days in The chief executive , who fl ew to San January, Clemente Saturday for a stay of about Nixon's travel record was further ex- two weeks, has adopted Aspen Lodge at tended, of course, by history-making ttie Camp David, r-.1d., Navy-f\1arine base trips t6 Peking and Moscow -the first as his favorite retreat. Nixon spent aU or made to those capitals by an American part of 53 days there during the six president. A third foreign journey took months. him across the border to Ottawa. Runner-up in presidential favor was Strangely, Nixon has done little elec- Jhe Nixon home at Key Biscayne, Fla. He tion-year touring of the hom e front, criss- spent aU or part of 32 days there or at crossed all year by potential Democratic the Bahamian island of Grand Cay, com· rivals. He went to New York for an an· muting distance away by helicopter. tidrug conference; to Philadelphia for a Grand Cay is owned by New York in-cultural event; and to the Floresville, dustrialist Robert Abplanalp. Nixon's Tex .. home of former Secretary of the closest neighbor at Key Biscayne is Treasury John B. Connally. I I • UPI Ttttonor• Nixon has insisted he will do no politicking until after the Republican convention late next month. There is yet no firm indication of whether he will make an extended autumn campaign or tour. · While Nixon has been playing it cool, his wife and daughters, Julie Eisenhower and Tricia Cox, have been traveling ex- tensively -sometimes to Republican party functions. I sraeli Cameras . Batt'e· Against Street Pickups TEL AVIV (APJ -Outraged Jewish religious students have declared ' war on Israel's most widespread form of pros- titution -the roadside pickup. Their weapons: cameras. Students of Bar·llan Univ er s It y, located near a Tel 1Aviv crossro.ad haunted by hitchhiking prostituteS an· pictures to them after identifying them through licenes plates. Letters will abe attached, asking the drivers to change their ways, Student representatives said t h e crossroad had become a danger spot for girl students waiting for buses, and several had been molested by passing motorists. Prostitution Is illegal in Israel. and police round up dozens of prostitutes monthly on the highways. Connally in Dacca DACCA, Bangladesh (AP ) -John B. Kini11aew lfack.fires Connally arrived in Dacca Coday at tile start 0£ a foor·day tour of the su]). continent. President Nixon's special en· voy told newsmen the Un ited States is "extremely pleased'' that the Ind ia· Pakistan summit was able to take place • COnnally. former Treasury secretary, is scheduled to fly to Now DoJhlpn Tuesday and then Islamabad in klstan on . Vincent . Lopez thought he was blllng a good samarltan when he res- cued tbJS slck fawn from. Wyoming roadside and nursed it back to • t,ealth. Federal and Wyoming icials accu sed Lopez 'of taking ~e dangering livestock and wildl![e. ' She was just another c;1binel \Vire one The four were convicted March 26, 1971. but sentencing was postp:ined pen· 1!i11g appeals. ·-se111i Annual WOMEN'S e VALLEY e PENAUO e LAOY FLORSHEIM e VITALITY e DELISO e Hl~L & DALE e RISQUE SHOE e ENNA JETTICKS e COBBLERS •1190 MEN'S to FLORSHEIMS WINTHROP 1780 to 2780 14so •1990 Values to 36.95 Values to 22 .00 SIZES TO .It-VALUES TO $30. E.T. WRIGHT 29ao • ,, • AAAA TO C Values to 46.00 - WOMEN'S FREDRICKS BY HOWARD FOX $2490 VALUES TO $36.00 WOMEN.'S SANDALS MARTINI. OSVALDO -VITALITY $1090 ' VALUES TO $21,00 Children's OPEN L-AZY,..BDRES TRIDERITE MON. & FRI. ... \IA. ·~1. ow. & ~.-... \UA. SHOE HITE SJ99 _$.99 TILL GIRLS BOYS 9:30 P.M. Values to $17 .00 DISCONTINUED STYLES ~ BROKEN SIZES -ALL SALES FINAL 54 FASHION ISLAND . NEWPORT CE NTER -644-4223 - 11 ' I OAllV PILOf 0£ Sch111itz And Shac l<l es CJ1ess Play - Of Collapse REYKJAVIK, fl"eland (AP) -The 11orld chess ehamp1onsh!1l 1vas threaten· ed \\'ilh collapse today 24 hours before J{OIJby J•'ischer's Oe~dline lo show up or forff'i t his 111.'.ltch 11·ith Boris Spassky of llussia. Fischer. the American chess champion, \\'SS reported sticking to his demand for n1ore 1noney. Ile told the New York Daily l~t•u'S he u·ouldn't yield. 1'he six-man board of the sponsoring It JC K \' 1' I C KY P 0 L 11" I X: Jc·clJndic Chess f'c~erntion was reported . • • • • • .:.: . .. , . ·~~:1r;trl1it~ ,., ;.::E;IT~;l0 • • V11co111p1·ou11s1t1f1 ' I, Mormon Leader Smith, 9 5~ D ies SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -TM m'n called prophet, seer :-111d rC\·eJaio.r IJv members of the Church of Jesus Chr 1~t of Latter-day Saints (r-.lormon1. Pn·:;1· d·ent Joseph Fielding Smith Jr .. has died. Sinith \vas stricken by a heart a1t<1rk Sunday night at the home of a da ughter. Mrs . Bruce R. McConkle. lie \\'Ould ha11! been 96 July 19. _M ·~-M .Cong.r.cssman....WhJL(i •. &c.hmit:u who c~r· una.n1J!1.91ll !Y.. .• onw~~d ,tp pa_yjrig EJKher f~~~·~=;.:::P: :A::j·.:K·•••·••.•~·····.~:.;i'.i;~~;'((;~:k~{8'$1.A i{{:/..(i}~··~ Smith had addressed !he last gencrnl conference of 1he 3-1nillion mem b1·r churc_Q_ jQ_~Qril. lie attend~d a [l.?£_t1ng 111 D is local ward Sunday and g::ire u JI). n1inute speech at ·a church\\'id(• youth conference a week earlier. ' '~ ~. ·. . . ;;:;::··: ~: ::• . .': ·"::::: .. : ..... ;. ·: ::. : · ......... " ........ ""::::. :-;.:. ·::. ~.~ ... . :\'.){ \ • : ?:: ... 9 . ~;·. ;·7~· ''\•//:}.: 6"~{~··~{i~:i:·:::::: ~~! ri es the Ilepublic;;in banner from Tustin , the extra money. u'aS a prin&ipal :;pc::ik(·r Sunday in Bostou One board member called Fischer's . /· ;. : : : '.;:~ :;::;~::: i :: '·.".~:::·. . . : ~.. . . ' .. =:·.:.::·:.::'.'.:/:·.:: ...... · .. '.· ·. •, .......... ,: :·:~: ! • ::-::: during a New Englnnd J~;illy for (;QC!, ga1nbit "a blatant uttempt at extortion." Family and C.Ountry. which covers just The board met until the early hours to- about everything. During his speech, clay with Fischer's la1.1:yer, Andre\V Schmitz was tiuotl'd by UPI as follow~. J)avis. A spokesman said there was no ''I'm not nrcess:1rily going to })(' pro~ress. 'shackled to 3 p.'.u·i y. to the Henubllcan ~ A the deadl ine ap pr oached, the board Party, that feels that its role as the con-was 1 session again to decide whether to servative party ls simply to run pursue negotiations \Vit h Davis, a man socialism more efficiently than the op-l~ey say has no written credentials from FIRST AGREEMENT -Indian Prime Minister Gandh i and Pakistani 'President Bhutto signed a last-minute a,greement early today calling for both India and Pakistan to disengage th eir forces fr om Kashmir and Jammu. pcsite party." Fischer. Th • " . d D . d I''-' Some chess experts who have gathered .......... --.. t of F ......... es ·..-·~~--'"-•..•. , e~ .tU>SOC.i.Ol-e -...i;.!C.SS . £arr.i.e. . pre. v:-~-hm· from msram·pan-.s--of'the-Wbrld' for··~ ·£.·'ffl,1-U'ff ..... "" . much the same quote but headed its .1 1 · d t be th h f th - ___ .,,.,_, ___ , Boston story \Vith the cornment from \i ia promise o .e mate .o e Schmitz that he is looking into thr <:entury expressed a behef that Fischer, possibili!y·of nmtririg his \vifc for his scat H~ the. end, would sabotage the cham- . Co . N b be . f p1onsh1p. 1n ngress 1n ovem er as a mem r o A h . • • th A · 1 d cl . 1 Party mong t e more opt1m1st1c was Larry Gandhi, Bhutto Declare e fl!erican n epen tn . · Evans, a fprmer Ameri'ean champion who . UP_r add ed. t~at Sch~1tz \Vas con· knows Fischer well. He said , ''I'd say s ider.mg .\ write-in campaign IQ seek re· there \Vas a 50-50 chance he will com.e." election in November. One Swedish expert left for home in ALL OF THIS ne\\'S about our con-disgust. India, Pakistan Accord s grcssman coming out of the Eastern Icelanders themselves. though they Seaboard, claflering across the wires. is may not believe Fisc her will come, have SIMLA,.lndia CAP) -Prime Minister of course very excit•n,r;._ made no great rush to return the tickets l ndira Gandhi and PresJdent Zulfikar Ali It is true that Schmitz has fallen on they purchase<;! for the match. Bhutto reached their ,first peace agree- • ('Vil days politicaJly in recent times as an Fischer's 2~-game match with the ment early today and promised future affili.'.ltc of the Republi can Party. He had Ru ssian world's champion was to have negotiations on the other issu es between a noll on he knew pretty \vcl! \\·hat his begun Siwday. and the president of the their two nations, includin·g Kas,ti,wJr Jnd home fo lks were lhinking so he wen t u·orld federation, Dr. Max Euwe, an-the PakistanU POWs in India.-- around the counlry bad-mouth ing Presi-nounced if the American challenger The agreemen t, which came after five dent Nixon. failed t~ show u_p_ by ~n Tuesday he days of talks in this Himalayan resort, He dropped soruc snide remarks aoout ~·ould risk fo,rfe1tmg his chance at the said lndian and Pakistani forces will the President's China trip. He announced lille. . . . . wi thdraw from the territories they seized that he h~d •;severed diplomatic rcla·· · " Euwe s_aid his personal opi~.1on was that last December alonk India 's western tians'' with the \Vh ite ,House." And ~re 'viii ~JlO play at all. border except in Kashmir. There they presumably this incfi'ded the Western ~e1 fui~t~ns. reTuctantly accepted .will maintain the cease-fire 1 in e .\\'hile House at San Clemente. which at Euwe s dec1s1on to delay the . ma~ch. established by the t'~vo-week war in the lime happened lo be in his con· Asked what ~e t~ught or the s1tu~!1on, December. grcssiona1 district. 5P;.ssky replied : 1 came __ !o P.~Y· · -.The.P8ct also contained a P1c'dge to set· Then came the J'une Primary election _ischer and Sp!iss ky h~ve agree.d to ti e all disputes bilaterally and peacefully, h . S hrn't f d I 1 . 1 split a S1 25,000 purse. with the winner d 'd t hould be tak t t '~' ere1n c 1 z ace a as -m1nu c laking five-eighths, and are also to each an sai s eps s en o res ore challenge from Orange County Assessor get 30 percent of the sale of film and and nonni llte relations, w~ich Pak:i~n Andrew J. Hinshaw. television rights. But Fischer is seek ing severed Dec. 6 when India rtC?gn1~d _ l!l~Tf?!~-HAS NOW recorq~d that an additional 30 percent of the gate B8!Jglades h, the former E~st Paiistan. J-linsh<1,w, campaigning as a supporter of retetpts. and hl~l'el>resentattve-s-have--1'.he.agreement...gave. no.Jimelable, but the President, pulled off a stunning upset been nl!gotiat ing this point with sponsors cane~ ~or meas~re~ to resume com- victory, booting Schmitz out of his re-of the -match, the Icelandic Chess murucahons ~nd a.tr IU:UCS, promote travel election bid in November by a margin of Federation. between. their c~un~r~es, reopen trade. and carry out sc1entil1c and cultural ei- 2,352 votes. changes. Through it nil. wrong-thinkers in the past have accused ·Schmitz of beinp, on N R • hf It said Mrs. Candi and Bhutto would the \Vild fringe of Republicanism, a John ewsmen Jg S meet again "at a mutually convenient Birch Society member an d rif{ht-\vinPer time in the futdl'e and that in the lhnl through his pronouncements made M p h d meanwhile, the representatives of the Barry Gold\vaLer appear 10 be standing C8SUre 118 C two sides will meet to discuss further the in left field. normalization of relations, including the Comes 110\V Schmitz' own Boston Tea Af R I' ' questions of repatrialion or prison~rs of, }>arty \Vhcreirr' he tel.ls us that he isn't ·te r ll Ill!! war and civilian internees. a final se t-v tlement or Jammu and Kashm ir and the really \Vedded to· the -R£pub\ican Pzrty resum ption of diplomatic relations:" after all 3nd in fact might do anything lo \VASHL'JGTON (UPI) -Sponsors of a keep his seat in Congress, like running "newsmen 's privjlege" bilJ urged today Excluding Kashmir, India during the his wife for it under another political Decerhber war seized a total of 5,139 brand. . early congressiona l action on the square miles or territory in West measure in the wake of the Supreme Pakistan, while Pakistan took 69 square YOU SUSPECT llE might be la;ing a page from 'the book of Alabama Gov. ,. George Wallace who, forbidden by Ja1v from seeking another ,term. ran his late wi[e Lurleen for the job and made it' stick. Schmitz may T1ot feel he is shackled to I-he Republican Party. but there is so!ne evidence to suggesl lhat he 1vill ret:-;n lhe label if al all possible. He \1•i ll ap- parently grt a recount on his primary defeat at the hands of Hinshav.·. Court's ruling arfccting a reporter's right miles of Indian territory. In Kashmir, to keep his news sources c ·dential. where the troops will rema in in position, Rep. Ogden R. Reid (D-N.Y. . er India ·1:~:8° square miles and Pakistan edi tor and publisher of 'the defunct New . ~ccupi square miles. York Herald-Tribune. urged the House The agreement said the troops J udiclary Committee to act promptly on wit.hdrawqJs . would take place withiQ 3o the measure which he and 50 other ~louse dlys 'afte r ratification by bot b members introduced in January, 1971. governments. ' "c bill would prohibit courts or ·Radio P:akistan announce4 that the. r, ·[ agencies from requiring 3 Pakistani National Assembly would meet nc . • 1n to disclose confidential in· July 10 to ratify the ·agreelnent. Under lorn. 1n or ·the source Or that in· the Indian constitu tion, parliamentary India and Pakistan have accused each other or frequent violations of the cease- fire in Kashmir and along the clemarca- . lion line in the Indian states or Ra· j3sthan , Gujarat atrd Punjab. In many places the troo~re bivouacked within sight of each other: The agreement pledged adhere~ce to the charter or the United Natio ns several times, including a pledge to refrain from the threat or use of force. But the bilateral settlement clause was 'con· sidered a victory for the Indian position that the United Nations has no lega l basis for being in Kashmir as an observer because the December war altered the original 1949 cease-fire line. U.S. Arrests 9 -Apparent-Plo t - To Topple Cuba NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP ) -.A plot that U.S. officials say was-aimed at overthrowing a fore.ign country -ap- parently Communist Cuba-has been revealed in the arrest of nine persons in a $465,QOO munitions S-'!!uggling S"cheme. Allegedly stretching from Ne w York to Louisiana, Texas and Mexico, the plot came to light with the arrests Saturday. Jn addition, nearly seven tons or plasti c explosi~ were seized in a DC4 trans~r plane a~ Shreveport, La ., federal a nts said. U.S. Att~. Gerald Gallingbouse said Sunday federal officials "have no reason -tO believe that the munitions we re destin- ed_ for any country other than Cuba. The complaint charging -two of the men, Murray Kessler of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Adler B. Seal Of Baton Rouge, La., alleged they "knew and believe{! that th is material would be used in an attempted overtJ:irow of a foreign nation." 1 Gallinghouse refused to say precisely· that the overthrow plot involved ' Cuba, but he said the complaint and his ~ate. rnent Sunday were "self-eiplanatory.' i'.tost ot?ds-makers figure the 1n11rgin of 2,352 votes may vary some aJLc.i· the re· C:~~~f!~·-.Jl_ig . tlJ~J .. ~Q~~\ ,.L9~ .. f.~~9.lt, ~'.i.l~ change. rornu: n, \\-'hich tlie Supreme Court said rattification L! not ne<:essary. Inst \\'CC k was not protected by First ,Amen~ment-,free --pr-ess -r~ghl-s1 · · -~ · · -~ " The nine.were charged With coni;pirlng ····--·--···«·-·-·-·· -·····-· .. "·~ .. -~ ... ~.~ .. ~ ... ~ .. ~ .. ---~to-. .smuggle ... the: .. explosives rrom the Un.ited .States to Mexico for · futUre shi~ ment to a third country,. \Veil. don't count your re counts bcJore lhcy 11re countcd .. Schmitz n1ight errierge fr om it 311 the viclor. Then hf 'll be sh~1ckled '"itl1 !he Grand Oki Party one more timl'. • JI E '\'OULO CARRY !hf' Republican. ~tandard into the November Gcncrnl 1'.:Jcction iind presumah!y. then, ,1·ou1rln't let his 111ifc rim against him ;is an AIP eandidntc. 11 the shackles do gPt lied in Nov~mbcr. so1nf' Rcpublic::ins might have :a grovr ques!ion · Just who got sh;ickled "'ith \\t11nn? Rep. Charles \V. \Vhalen Jf. (R-Ohio), a cosponsor; cited the court's majority opinion that said "Congress ha s freedom · to determine \Vhet her a statutory ~e\vsman's. privilege is · necessary and desirable and to fashion standards and ru!es as narrow or as broad as deemed necessary ... " ., Itep. Ed\vard t. Koch (D-N.Y,), another cosponsor. also urged early con- gressional action on the bill and Sl,!id be .• , \\'ould :ilso ask the De mocratic J"talioria l C-Onvcnlion to incl uCfC a statement in the party's plai!'oi'rrt · on n e w s m en 1 i privileges. \ DAILY. PILOT DELIVERY SERViCE Dellvery of the Dally Piiot ' Is guaranteed Mond•v·Frld11y: ti vou do ftOt hew vour I paper by 5:)(1 p.m .. t•ll 111'111 ')1)Ur copy wlfl IH' brov;~t to vou. Clllfl ''' lakt11 t,111111 I 1!30 p.m. • S•lurday •l!lt' Sund•v: II vou &I hOt rtct!Y'I your copy by ' •.m. S&lurday, or I 1.m. Surld•Y• Yll •l'ld • copy Will &II btoU1Jllt to you, C•IJa 1r1 llktri until '111 •·m. Telephones MMt Or•no• 0!11111.,. Art•• .i. ...... .a..m Nortllwnl Hunl!ng!on 811(.b 1nd Wetlll'lln1ttt ..•..... ,,,,,,,. f*lnt I an Clementt, C1ptstr1no B••chl San Ju1n C.Plitrano, ~n• Po nf, Sovtn l•t"'"'• L.as111n1 N!Dutl .... 4'2-M'lt . Tornadoes ·B·uffe't :Mid.we~t Ruin,, Tliu,1i<.lers torms Dampen Mu~ of Nation. I, -- (f.S. S11mn1nr!I ,. Ainong those arrested were Richmond Harper~· a . prominent· South, Texas rancher-banker, and Marion Hegler. a Conner ~inspector with with U.S. Im~ mJgratlon ..,and Naturalization Service. They were taken into custody a t Eagle ffeass, Tex., where they reside, then released on $25,~}>ond each. The federal complaillt alleges dta1· • ings by a ma n known as HCarlos Diaz" t~ purchase as much •as .$1 .2 million if'! .. munitions and weapons, . ranging from submachine _suns to, Ml6s. No guns, however, were a~rd the plane ' raided.I by federal agents at Shreveport-on Satur.' day. Gallingbouse said that Diaz, Identified only as a man claiming to be a Mexican citi7A.!n, . was belpg sought along with another man. \ Wicks Fun eral arrangen1cnts \Vere pending . Smith's likely successor is ll<trold B. Lee, 73. 'vho has--;bcen flrst coun.~clor 10 the president and president of tht' church's Council of The TwC'l\'e, The president of 'fhc ·r11elve -lhe man \Vho has been a member.pf the bodl' the longest -traditionally bl·co11·1t·s church president. Smith's deatjl c;:;lJTlt: t br~~ Jlay,.s, ufll·J the · 142·-y·ear:o1cf churCh announced. ;1 reorganization to /1<1ntile its gro11·rng numbers, Statistics sho1~· H hns gro1111 \14 percent throughout the \vorld in the l;i<:t J2 years. -- Smith's father .. Jose1)h f. S1ni!h, 11;1~ th~ church's sixth presidC'nl . The 10th president 11as a member of The 1\ve!ve, \l'hich l\lormons belie\-e 11> lhe modern inheritor of Jesus Chrlsl's T\velvc Apostles, for 60 years before he \l'as selected President in .January J9i0 upon the death of David 0. ~lcKa)'. Smith traveled to England to address the church's first regional CQnference in his 95th year and \Vas to attend n Sin1ilar conference in r-.1exico City later this Yrar. He '"as considered a direct link to God by Mormons, V.'ho believe their church \\'as started bv Jesus Christ. remo v('d from the earth. fo:r Sflnie I ~800 1'C'ars and restored in the United States. The c·hurl·h refuses to be classified as Protestant. S m i "t h was kTIOWD as an un· compromising defende r of !11ormonism. He 'opposed any watering do\\'n of the religion, "'hich has ignored ecumenisn1 \Vilh any other failh. r-.1ormons ar!! forbidds:-n to .l!Se. cigarcues . ..alcoh()}l(! drink, coffee and tea. Historically they hal'e given al least JO p<'rccnt of their in· W 1111.ted Re.veH!Je tl"I Ttltpll11!11 FATAL HEART ATTACK Joseph Fielding Smith f lllll1' tu 1h1• c·lnu\h ,\ 11.11111ul Js~ue !1• 1n.1uy, J11>cr:il !\lur- n1111i.~ hJ~ bt·1•11 th<' ( hun·/1's l>un ;1gainst i\t•;:r111·~ hold:r1~ it~ l!l'!l·~thuod. \\•hi('!l :.:ill n1:il1·~ of l!~t·r·y o:hL·r l'~ll'P arc cxpcctC'd 111 :111~1.n. Little is s;iiLI <ibout the issut• in \lol'1n011 n1P1•11ng~. ext;l·pt general ~L.l!t•n1tnls on t11·ii r1t:hts for ;11J people. ()11c(' ;iskctl ;1bollt tile !);in, Smith to ld <ill 1111,•r\ 1t•11 ('r "Youni.: n1an, .Joseph Sn1ith did not dC'tit!1• th:it lh e Nrgro sho11ld not hn\'(' th1· j)ri\· ... thw.,)(! Bnghan1 \'j1uni.: did nn! 1!ec;ide 11. l).11·1d O. ~lcl\:iy did not dc<:1dc ii. I did "not decide lt. l;od dl·cided it." A congre~ation of ~ln1·n1on bl:icks \l'<l'l ors<inizcd recently 111 Salt Lake City "'1\h abou t 40 n1c·n1bcrs. Sn11!h 11;.is considt·rtd the chUrch's-. !('{)ding hist orian. th('11lop,1:111 mid l'Xprrt on the S('r1pturcs , \1 h1t:h int!ui!c both !ht• Uib!c and the Book of filorinon. .• --+ Pilot Tells How Viet11ain Hijacl{er Triclie cl, Slait1 SAIGON (AP) -A young Vietname se,. man who tried to hijack a Pan American jwnbo · jet wl th 153 persons aboard 111 Hanoi in revenge for U.S. bombing of North Vietnam was overpowered by the pilot and shot to death by an armed passenger Sunday. The h1jaacker Was tentatively iden- tified today as a speaker ·at anti\~·ar rallies at the UniversitY of \Vashington ln Se-.ttle, where he had studied fishery science on a U.S. government scholarship and graduated with honors last mDnlh. The Young man1 carrying a South Viel· namese passport· in the name Nguyen Thai Binh , met violent death after the pilot tricked Bim and landed at Saigon, the flight 's scheduled-d~stination, in de· (iance of his demand to fly to Nortl1 Viet· nam. u·as hlllding Ill(' h1mb and 1t fle w onto thr floor. I spu 11 hini arnund :ind got iln an:n l~ck ~n hini. 1 Ir \l'.15 flniling \Y\th a knife in , hi~ rither h;ind but all it got was a b11 <Jt 111y l;1u11dr,1 1 h:irl ineredibl1~ strf'ngth. 1 could fet'l his ne('k co!lapsin~ under 111y ;inn. 1\111 p;i~Sl'l1).[ers 1nade !J;.in~ t ackle~ and \\'C .'.ill \11;nt do\vn on !ht• Ot1<ir . ., . Vaughn salcl he m.'ln;iged to move hi!> body a11a.v fro.'!l the Vietnamese while keeping !he :inn lo<k lltl him ;ind shoutc<l tv ;.,ri unah1ntif1cd :irnil'd p:1ssC'nger •·Kill the son 11f ti b1l fh" fo°:l'e shot~ \\'ere fired. li•LJI' hitting r:ulh Ill the ('hes!. 7 Die in Bloody Uls te r Clashe s; Tru ce in Peril The 135 other passengers were safely evacuated by sliding down emergency chutes, used to empty the plqne quickly in case of extilosion. ,Several ·Persons suf· fered minor scratches or bruises and one J><\SSenger, a U.S. Air . Force lieutenant ·colonel, br~ke his leg. ' BELFAST (UPI) -One or tbe .To b11ck up his threats, the hijacker bloodiest \vccken<ls f'lf t 'lster violence . carried a long knife ·and'!-package "'hich pushed 1hc dtath toll loday to 400 for the he said contained a bomb. Vietnamese h PQlice . sources said two home-made .1 ~ee · yeats of Nor1her11 Ireland terror grenades were in the package and there anil th.rc;ttcned to sn11,1s h the \\'eek-old was no ind ication whether they could ccase·fire. have exploded . But the airline described Police said t\\'O bullct-l'iddlcd and hood· tfiem as harmless "egg-shaped obj~ts·• ed bodies "·ere discot'er~d in Belfast 10. wrapped in alurni nwn foil. d b ' · The hijacking attempt began aft er the ay, ringing to st:ven the number of jumbo je~ fl ight 841, left f\t~ni!a on the pe~sons killed in (lunlxtales or ex:ecut1 I last feg ot its San Francisro-to-Sa i~on by militants this w('ckcnrl flight. Binb, who had boarded' in Hono.. The body of a 1nan \\'as round ln a c:-ir lulu, grabbed stj!:wardess May Yuen. 23. ,pnndoned nea!· Bclr~st's Crum.lin 'Ro~d \ • a Hong Kong Chinese, as a hosta ge and Jail before ·dav•n, nnd· ;i passerby on his sent two notes to the control cabin de-\Vay to \\'Ork In the same area round the manding that the plane be divfrted to Twbod.Yk or 1 11 youn.i: man dumped in llanol. ic en inm Street. The hijacker, in the rear passenger Pol" , part t l t lked w'th th p·r t ice said they also "·ere on thr: com men ' a so a i e • o ' -• looko_ut for a man _,vi..~ may be lrtll l. Capt. Gene Vaughn,-5.l, of Scottsdale. Iii . •w nno er execution vict'1m A ., Ariz., over the intercom . "G " -ugus~us "I am doing this for revenge," Vaughn w~sty ,Spence, a 39-year--0ld Protestant said he told· him. "Your l?ombers ai-e.. rha~ been serving a life sentence f9r A (Old ''°"' flitMlino ~,,~, ,~ .. ~·· f l(ll! from Mal,.,. 10 111• ,.,., P"n"'•n· <Tlf ~•0<1\K.cl ltlll'''" trrn"""'"• 1" 111~ M1t!Wt!I al'ld brcv4M •ain and ' fl'!11nGt•llorl'fl1 lo 111r111 '""'~ 01 tl'!t ..,, t •Ol'I l(!(l,y, maiming· and killing our ~ple of the ~ur Crin~ 3 lloman Catholic barten\!er \ Democratic Republic of North Vietnam. ~n 1~· Gunmen kidnapped Spence Sun· You i re goln~ tony me to Hanoi and this r::fm n~g~~~ he ~s returning to /ail Two 11•:ir,ons w•rt kill~ ~nll O'h~r' ._..,. ln1u•9d '"'""n • 1or.,111111 er • POC"'tl OI lt41(1kl4t1fy ho<Jll Wtlldl f! 111rouGll • m11llnJ Oii tht Lek• 011 tie Olfrltl in N'l\10t1rl Ct11,r totri!llotl wrrr ,...,ort..; ,._ lOOtllr:t, IJiln,, 1"'1 L111>boc~. l~ ~tvtrat art&I ol M''!°"'' •·'Id t111tn Ka11la1 f'°POrlt-" ~m. 1111 I r • m ""u1ut1tlV Pllth wlnch tlfl<I ~Ill. "fl!e'llO"mf wtr" mn•i lfMU'"' lrl).'O'I t"f Grtat L•kn 1<1 Tr•111 a11d Gtcrv1•. w.,.,, w~rm •!Id h\lm]d p11:1 ••• Umt I'! COl'lll<' w1111 tooltr •I• 1na1111. Q\ltt tlf'I lnt~ cl r~tit w111 •f/;<'f tfd Jn "Hoblt!, Oki!!., 1na Peru, lfld .. dt.1•!"9 • 111 li'"'~"r!od GfM'ltl•llr 111lr lklu •r.d Orv wt•ll•r• --uv~! "liTl'll'f m111 'M--mtl (Cl)I!• ·~· lilltl'f "'°""'"' it'"""rtlum ta"OH f!'"Ofl\ JI •• ,.... 11 H~nc«k, Ml<:ll, 't L.,..le:loll. Malt.i. alld Rort .Sor""'" WYo.. ti 'f1 11tert:P 111 H..01tt. C41ll. Calif ornia -~·· "'110 ... "*'" llU hi ~-.. ,~ lfGIMO-... ---. ........ r.ill]...0- ~&MIMln"" rt~ . ' ' airplane will be destroyed when we get him to att~nd fu ~arol~ gr,nnled to al O\v there.'' visit his ailing mot'b~.,lcr s wedding and Vaughn kopt up tilt conversation. tell-" Ing the hijacker the jet would have to be Both the IRA and the British a ' refueled and contact made wlth North phasl2ed they consider~ the rmy em· Vietnam in order to cross the demllitar· still in force. despite lhe bu ee.r,se-flre ized 2one. Meanwhile the first offi«r Sunday tn"Ornlng in Bellas~; ~I~ b~~~~ landed the jet at Saigon's Tan Son· area and fresh 'autbunts enr~ tOOn tihut alr;iort ·where i~ was 9nged by betwocn Prole!tMts, Cathou;', .,rJ troops and ambulances. • "00!?' •cross llie Ml supcrhJ • qn Vaughn went to the rear compartment lead1~g to Dublin. 8•1Wi1Y where the hijacker·rold him to .halt and Children playing soccer foqn~· added. "You have dtteived me." · bodies .ot -lwo Protutants Sunda Vauzhn sai~ he asked to come cl '.lser o~ a _cr1ct:ct srountJ lb Bctrast's 01~ ~ t bccs~e the t;nsuage problem ma<!c It d!str1ct, nc:r th e scene Qf an earl fArk dlffi"l!ll to uridC<stand the Vlolnomeo:e. · In~ fl:ht between Protestanta ~:W"" • 1 "1'lt tee.med to di sarm him meiitarty 1 ind Br!lislh troops, Tb~ wer~ k1 ·Cl ·•'and J saw my ctumoe," tilt pilot said. A truckdrlver H!J8h ci.l'>tlt\ ~ _.\__.~umoed him. J aabbe<ltbe ann ltrat busdriver David Fislwr hn1b !IA • r ' I c s s r r c c • • " -• ' l:i-.. E119lisla G1•eetlng Pa~scngers on llughes Alr\vest1s first schedul ed flight into Lake llavasu City. ~r1zona are v.•elcomed by residents of the city dressed in their finest Olde En g- lish ga~b to. match the city's famous London Bridge. Airwest m ad e the first ever filght 1.n \Vhat v.•ill become daily service between Los An geles, Lake 1-favasu City and Las Vegas. .. ~· Chri~tians Prote$t 'Satanic' Bookstore SAN PRANCISCO (AP\ - Satan and all his \1•orks have ~urvived a picketing by 50 Sign-carrying:,Chrislians. but it \'.'as the San Francisco Fire Ikpartmcnt that cooled the dcmo1lst rarion off. "Satan llatcs You!" <ind "Occult Rev ival Is Living Hell." said the sign!! as the half-hundred Christians parad- ed outside the ~tetaphysical Tov.1n Hall Bookshop on ~lason Salty Water No -Tlirecit To Resicle1its MARTINEZ I AP) -East Bay Munici pal Utility District men worked over the v.·eekend on a conduit to move fre sh v.·ater from the Mokelumne River into salty Contra Costa Canal, county water offi.ciaU!: repo~te1 •·f'1._~canal water is salty but perfectly safe and drinkable. except for persons on salt·free diets," said John De vito, manager of Contra Costa Count y water di strict. "They should consult their physicians before drinking the '\'al er.'' Stteet v.•hich sells. among other things, Sat a n i c li!eralure. Mostly young, bearded and lon~haired, the marchers raised the one-finger "one way" Jesus sign and sa ng old standbys like "Onward Ch ris· tian Soldiers" and r o c k favorites like "Let the Sun Shine In ." They were led by Kent Philpott. a 30-y ear · o Id organizer of five local Chris· tian communes who said oc- cultism can lead to "really \\'eird sex'' and drug abuse. "Jesus is a better way," he declared. Scheduled as part or the demonstraiton was the burn- ing of a coup le of dozen books on the occult and Sata,nism. but Philpott sa w rep:irtcrs present and decided a book· burning collld ~ interpreted as anti·intellectual. "The media really likes to make Jesus look funny," he said. -~ ' In the meantime Fire Dept. Battalion Chief Jack Smith ar· rived and told Philpott he had no perm it for an open fire. ''Unless you have a permit. this is against the law," he said. No books were burned, and there were no incidents. The people in the Metaphysical Town H a 11 Bookshop had no comment ex- cept to say they'd been in bu siness 33 years and "we be- lieve ~ GOO too." Sitllivan, Set For State School Joll? BOSTON (AP 1 -State Education Commissioner i\1eil V. Sullivan plans lo resign v.·ithln lhe next \\'eek or two and accept a teaching job at California State College in Long Beach, the · Bo s I o n l·lerald Traveler It e co r cl All]erican reportl'<I in a copyrighted slory today . However, the Boston Globe quoted a Sullivan a i d e; \Villiam J. Crowley. as saying. "Sullivan wit I be Co1n- missioncr of Education in Massachusetts for some ilme to come." Sullivan, v.·ho v.•as ;.ippointed In September 1968. has been embroiled in a continuing bat· lie v.•ith the Boston School Committee over school . in- tcgratjon. Sullivan is a proponent t.if busing and used it lo integrate schools in Berkeley. where he worked befo re coming to Massachusetts. ·T"he Herald TraVeler Record American listed no reason· for Sullvan's rep:irted resignation. Crowley said the com· missioner recently "called together his professional staff and thanked them for their help in ijdvancing his pro· grams. "F'rorn that meeting. some staffers inferred that Sullivan was planning lo leave,'' C,'rowley said. "But 1 knew of no such plan.'' Atfe·r the June 21 levee break in the San Joaquin· Sacramento River delta, !he salt content of water supplies for 70.000 pcrsonS' in seven cities increased abruptly. The sail level was reported at 370 parts per million in the canal Sunday. 'Decent' Alternative Discounting earlier reports, Devito said Sunday that the salty w(ltcr will not kill floWers. lawns or vegetables. But he recommended that residents irrigate by flooding because sprinkling tends to ac- cumulate potentially harmful chloride on plhnt leaves. EBi\iUD v.·orkers are ex- pected today to complete a pipeline designed lo carry 40 million gallons of fresh water daily from the 1'.1okelumne to the canal, Deviot said. • Governor Heads Oi1t ' To Europe To Death Sentence Eyed SACRAMENTO (AP) -As a "decent'' alternative to the gas chamber, Sen. David Roberti say, he will introduce legislation today to ketp murderers who can 'l b e rehabilitated behind bars for • life. ~!is bi ll would be aimed at death row inhabitants such as Charles Manson and Sirhan Sirhan, the Los An ge I es Dernocrat said in an in· terview. Court decisions have remov- ed any chance that present death row inhabitants can get the gas chamber and - theoreticall y at least -they could be'paroled in.as little as seven years, Roberti said. The defense would have to prove to the Superior Court and the Slate Adult Authority that the convicted person could be rehabilitated to pre· vent the life-time pr i son sentence under Robcrti's bill. "It's intended lo provide a decent altern ative lo capital punistlment," he said. Roberti is pessimistic about his bill's chances of winn ing legislative approval lliis year. "I'm putting it in this year pyimarily to bring it to the at- tention of 'I.he public. I don't think it has much chance to make it simply because of the time problein," he said. Lawmakers tentatively plan to recess late this month . returning to the Capitol in November to l.'.lckle reap- portionment 0 r legislative J,OS ANGELES .(AP) -~-------~ districts. Roberti said he worked on . -• . .. ~ ....... -.-- OAJLY PJ LO f !) State· Democrats E.y e Third Party?. _,SACful .. \IENTO !UP I I - One party leader says thl' L'ur1- sequenl'es rarige frorn ·:c.1n1ptc, apathy to insurrectiu11 <:int.I ''1olence if Senator lico1gc J\lt:Covt;rn is dt•111ed I h c prcsidenl1a l no n11 nal111 n bet:ause the Dcn1ocr;Jt ~1·•t·on· vc ntion took S\Yay 153 of lus Californ ia delegates. Another disconnct·te-d ht'r telephone after re ,. e 1 \' i n {; angry calls from tiliLens b1L· tcr at Sen !Jubert Hun1phrf'V and the De1nocrat1c credcn· tials con111111tee for. in effeet. invalidating California· s JU Ill' 6 prunnry Sntne C::iliforniHns <ire h111· t111g at Joining i'.l c<;ov(·rn tJr anot her liberal in !!. thu·d par.ty movcn1ent . '"It II ill be \l'Orsc than 'Ii~,'' s~1ys former :;t~1t e pa r r y chairrnan Chorles \\'<11 r('n. \\·!in 1~ ncutr:.il in the no1111na· lion race. li e expressed the J,.:ro11111g rc:ir or 1nany pro n11 11e111 l)e1ncierat s in the stnle 1\ith th(' b1ggl'St bloc of clrt·tnr;d 'oles -'15, about 17 1>erct•n1 of those ncL•dcd to elect a p:·j•:-1- dent. They see a potcnt i:i l cor· rf'!ation bct11'ff'll 1963. ;1 Democratic disa ster year 111 California. nnd 1972. In 1968, Ca.li fornia dcle!iates rcturne<I fro1n the Clucago convention so cn1b1ttercd at v.·hat they C.'Onsidercd "heavy CALIFO RNIA :111·:irded 111<1111 111 ll!hl'r 1-;111- t!itl.11.t., in pror-1r11nn !Q~\111 .. r· \I'll' ltun11 1!;1'\. I •I !Ill .\ltl:ul't'rn·s 1l•h·1.;,111tll1 ;1·:l·r· \\jfd, ~.ll -: 11 !It, !-'•I II l II J1;1-.c pll'dJ:rd ,\ Ill I II!" 1!111!' {1):,lit 10 O\l·!'llllll I!·•· 1TL'l.h•11· 1i.1!s , 1.111n1 !l11\' 11 1h;1t 1..; -un<;ul·t:l'~:-ilul ;n1d \l\·t:11-cr·1 ~!)11 • C;1l1I• 1111:01i.. ;o11• h"·· rh! ;.f !t o11.J:~ ,1 1·•1rd f·.1/'!1 111011· 11. ···1 ' " . ' h'l<'pho11c f•ff the hook .1fter ··S!t::tllng .t. rlood nf c:illB·Jrefn pt'op:l' ·"ill ill' Tht•I/ ft.'\ !'I' '1r,ul1l 1ot1· for llumphrey. ~mt• !'all"d 1, ·spa1lcd spc>rt' LH'll• It \1:1~ 11ild ' ,, ,, ' > r -A5~ AIJWT DOR - I NJ MCNTHLY 1'.F-\LL~''NfS ~=~~ fl AN-1 --- Gov. Rona ld Reagan say~ he hopes his seven-nation Euro- pean trip al President Nixon's requ est will prod_uce better un - derstanding In Europe of United States policy. Popsicle Devoured his proposed. bill. with Vincent T. Bugliosi, the '\.os Angeles CoWltY prosecutor .iD-.lhc_ _ Manson trial last year. The Republican governor !cit Sunday with his wtfe Nan-BAKERSFIELD (UPI) ·cy and 14·year-old son Skipper -A 31G-pound cherry tn a presidential jct on his sec. popsicle made of 33 ond such trip ~ Ni 1 on • s gallons of water and seven behalf. gallons of syrup was Long Beach Books Bi1r11 Before laking off, he said he devoured by 500 children hoped his di scussions with Suntll!y. LONG BEACH (AP) -. r 0 re I g n I ea d e r s in The children made quick Arson investigators say son1c. Copenhagen, Brussels, Paris, , work of the summer-time ooc ·apparently broke · into Madrid, Rome, London and treat that required· 27 the basement of the Long Dublin would be substanUve. hours to freeze. Beach City "Library a n cl Jfe refused lo disc uss With A refrigerated truck started the fire Sunday thnt newsmen his one-hou r briefing hauled the popsiele-to a d3'iri~]'ea an t~tltnatcd 10.000 the previous day with· 11enry grassy site near th e books and destroyed a nun1ber Kissi nger, Nixon's natlof\11 sponsoring Church or the of rare volume s. 11ccurity affairs adviser, at the Naurcne and kids ·we~ Three o{ the four storlc~ Western White }louse, where turned loose. W l th I n were involved, firemen said. Ni1on ls v1catlonln&. mlnutcs all that remained The fire was rontrollcd tn 30 Reagan, who made a was a giant rtlck1 atibut minutes. but it took several diplomotlc !rip to Aato for the olr let! long, two !eel wide hours 16 fl•ar debris •nd ' !!.~~~~e~.~1tol~~t Oc~to_I>t_r._w_ll_I ~-•-nd_I~ ~-lncll __ .. _.t~hi-·c_k_. --~~~e ''t'J?cring book s lmPERIA L SAVlnGS , 6.000;6 per yc:ir on $5000 Jcposi t:; held fY.'O years or 1norc, ·5.75% rrr yc;i.r tin $1000 1ltp<1~it~ hel<l one to t'\\'o yea.rs. 5 .2 5?0 J"lt'r yc.1r nn y<J.J.iy ccrtifit..'lte.~ 5 .OO~(j r<-r yc::i.r nn iv.•~1boo\ .1l((1u11t~ Lt unpou ndcd daily. Executive Office: 336& Via Lido, Newport Beach; (714) 673,3130 Newport Center Oltlce: 550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644-1461 Other ofnces in Pasadena (main oflicP: 61 South Lake Avenue) East Paondcno. Glendora, Rodlands, Woodland Hills • AWHO Y OWNED SUBS IDIARY O~ 2 C • • Frc,e ! Now 1hriiuch j1.1!r ~1~r lnircr1al S,t\111,~;~ ntftr~ 1·rnl .I h.H' Jy f'OCkCt00l k1", lrlt l;c.;! '"'ucs, unc l•l I l.ln11ir. p\t.'2~, .... ·h1li' ·)1i.rpl1es Wr. ; L l • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Public Is ·the Victim It is sadly ironic that, almost on the eve of lhis nation's 196th anniversary of its declaration of freedom our highest court should rule for a significant diminu- tion in one of the basic freedorn s -the free fl olv or information. The Supreme Court's 5 to 4 rul(ng last Thu,.day that ne,vs1nen have no First Ame ndm ent right to re· fuse to answer questi ons of federal and most state grand juries strikes a serious blo''" not at nC\\'Spapers and other news gatherers, but at the public's right to know. r:ourteen states. including California, have La\VS; giving newsn1en privilege from disclo sing confidential sources to state grand juries. l,egislators in those states recognized that U1e, public interest is best serve d 'vh ~n reporters. serving as the eyes and ears of that public, have the absolule ri ght to keep their informati on sources co nfi dent ial. ln the dissenting opinion. joined in by .Justices ~ii· • tia m J. Brennan, Jr .. and Thurgood Marshall, Justice Potter Stewart summ ed it up well : " ... Not only will this decision impair performance of the press' constitu· tionally proteCted functions. but i t \\'ill ... in the long run, harm rather th.an help th e administration .of jus· ticc." Realism in Marijuana La'v Two American Medical Associaiion groups studied the marijwiana p'roblem for three years before finally recommending that criminal penalties for personal pos· tiession be dropped. Despite their prestige both within and outsi de the AMA. the concl usions of the Council on Mental Health and t-he e ommittee· on Alcoholism· and-Brug Depe-nd· ence were not accfpted by the l\MA's parliament, the House of Delegates. . or marijuana should be considered "at most, a mjsde- rneanor." Si.nee that actlon, a rnarijuana initiative has qualified for the November statewide ballot in California. Jt \llouJd legalize the private use of n1ari juana by persons age 18 an d older, but sales would still _be illeg.al. 1'he effect of this ostensibly 1,vould be to allo\v adul t individuals to grow th eir o\vn 1n arij uana for pri- vate u.se, but auy sale of it 1,vo ul d be a violation of la w. \Vhilc the 1\A'IA established a policy in 1969 declar- in g ITiilrijuana to be "a dange ro us drug." the findings of its O\Vll tn·o iuternal groups and those of others ou t- s ide of nlcdicine appear 1101,v to support 1,vhat yo un g pot s1uokers have been contendin g all along -that mari· juana is not addictive and may be no m9re phys ically harn1ful than the lega l alco hol and tobaceo favored by their ciders. lJnfortunatety. the A ~11\1s total body of informatio n still is Jess than over\vhe!Jning: si nce its 1na rijuana re· searclt is no\vhere near as con1pl r!te nor does it extend over a long tirnl' span, as in the case of alcohol and ta. bacco. AJI, three are, of co urse, crutches if they are abused or used in a dependent \Vay . No 1nentaJly and physically healthy or. unhealthy perso n needs any of them. But th eir use by n1any. if not most, humans goes back into antJquity an d the practice won't be wiped out by preach· n1ents or Ja,vs. as the Prohibiti on fia sco of the Roaring 'J\ventics proved so conclusively. rn marijuana's case, \\'hat has been needed all along is greater realism and fairness in the laws. In many situations, penalties ha ve been and still are out or all proportion to the gravity of the "crime.'' But \vhat al so is needed is a greaL deal more reli- -able..r..ese.arch information on results or habitual use or mai"'ijiiana, the duration of its effects on perception and reflexes -as in operating a motor vehicle -and the long term effects of psychological dependency. • '•' ~, I l1 . ,, t i' . ' . . . i. ·~· 1.: . ·ii · :1; I . '· ;. ' ·.~· ~; • Responding to concern of· educators and others across the nation, the delegates, .representing nearly half or the nation's doctors, ·adopted a lesser recommen· dation. It states that possession of insignificant amounts • Sayi ng that marijuana is less of a phys ical hazard than previously believed still is a Jong \\:ay from win· ning it a clean bill of health or socia l desirability. 1THIS WEfK WE PAI~ THE RENT. ~ Wff K WE EAT.' • qelicate Dialogues Going Oii - Cease-fire by August I? WASHINGTON -Th<!re will be a Viet- nam cease-fire in a matter of weeks - poss ibly by Aug. 1. It depends on the outcome of ex· tremely delicate dialogues between Washington, Peking, Moscow and J.!anoi -which have been underway for about a month.~ These potentially fateful exchanges could j e 11 very quickly into.concrete results. They also could evaporate in fruStrating futilitY - as has happened in the past. This time there is one possibily crucial dilference: Moscow and Peking appear to be desirous of bringing the years-Jong Viet- ~ nam warring to an end. If that is the case, Hanoi will have to go along. Its obstreperous balking has been a fatal stumbling block in the past. IN THE CURRENT parleying, two ma· jor unresolved obstacles ere: (l l President Nixon's adamant in- sistence on the immediate return of all U.S. prisoners of war, held by both the Viet Cong and North Vietnam, following the declaration of a cease-fire. Hanoi wants to delay POW liberation until after the conclusion of a peace settlement. But the President is standing pat on the L'U· mediate release of the POWs. (2) Hanoi's demand for a guarantee or Viet Cong participation in the South Vietnam government that would replace ~OBER1: S.ALLEN) the Thieu regime. President Thieu has expressed willingness to resign to enable the holding of electioris for a new govern· men\. The U.S. maintains th at l'lhelher Communists are a part of that govcm- mcnt is strictly an internal question to be settled by the Vietnamese alone -and does not involve deliberations or a ceasefire. WASHINGTON HAS given categoric assurances that all remaining U.S. troops would be withdrawn from Vietnam within 30 days after a cease-fire .. Powerful factor in tilt momentous four-way dialogue is the devastatingly ef· fective U.S. air offensive against North Vietnam. coupled with the steady decimation of the Communists' ground forces and exhaustion of their supplies. Vitally important in the latter is the mining of Haiphong and other ports. That has proved highly successful. No shipments are going in or out. While the North Vietnamese offensive has been largely aborted, it is still poten- tially dangerous. The Communists still have the capability of striking limited but heavy blows. THEffi CHIEF PURPOSE would be to inflict widespread destruction and lo demoralize the populace. The Reds are making desperate efforts to mount such vengeful deva station-for · devastatiio n's·sake attacks. Behind th eir Hn~. they are laboriously assembling m11nitioos (particularly large-caliber ground-to-ground rockets) and other sup- plies. Whether they will be able-to-use-them is conjectural. They are under intense air bombardment. Also Oirely hampering the Communists <ire fearful manpower losses. Characteristically. they expended the ii' combat forces without stint and as·a con- sequence are now in calamitous man- power . straits. Every major uni t employed in the North Vietnamese ·ag- gression ha s suffered i mm en s e casualties. some as high as a prohibitive 30 percent. SEVERE LACK of combat rnanpov.•er is DO\V a distinct Hanoi deterrent in resUming its dr:ve on a sizeable scale. Red ~larshal Giap simply lacks the bodies to wage more big-sca le war. Also he is under mounting denunciation in inner Communist party quarters over the disastrou s conduct of the offensive. A knov.•lcd geable Eastern Euro pea n diplomat. stationed in llanoj, is credited as the source of a remarkable story regarding that. At a recent Central Committee n1ceting, ~iap reputedl y \Vas subjected to intense hostile questioning, during which he \vas furiously assailed as a "butch· ering murderer'' and ''r cc k I e s s blunderer and incom petent." It is claimed that conduct of the v.•ar is no longer solely in Giap's hand. Ho1Yever. so far as \Vestern authorities are.aware, he is stil l minister of defense. The Democrats and AT&T \VASHJNGTON -It looks as if the Democrats are now as cozy with AT&T as lhe Republicans are with TTI. Tucked a\\•ay in the Democrati(' Na- tional C:Ommiltee's files is evidence of some strange deal· ings over the tele- phone service a~ th~ upcoming M1am1 conventiOJJ. The scenario be· gan last December 11'hen AT&T threat· ened to cut off the phone service -at !he Den1ocratic conven- tion unless the party paid its back debts to the company. Scclng an opportunit y, an Independent phone company affiliated with ITT made a determined bid (or lhe job. The <:Om· pany. General Com munications & Elec· Ironies ot Nashville. Tenn., offered to provide communications for the con· ,·ention for $1.7 nlillion. O"ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. l\'eed, PublUhcr . Thoma&: Ketvil, 1.'ditor Albarc 1\'. Bates Editorial l'aoc Editor Th~ editorilll J>llRe of the nnily J'llot JK'tks to lnrorm :tnd ~Umu· lnll? rc11dcn by pf'('.5('nting this ncv.11papcr'a 01Nnlon. and C()m- mcnt&ry bn toplc:i of fnten.>t l 11nd ~i1T11IOca:n1..'C, by providing • turum foi-the CX'Pl"8fiOn ot '0111" nadent' opinlorui, and by JJr'Hl'nUnii lhe dt .. 1•rsc vlol'W'!)C)inls of lnfonncd nb- io:crv~D •od apokfS!nen on lopica l>l lh• dal'. Monday, July 3, 1 ~2 (JACK ANDERSON J AT&T, J\1EANWHILE , moved to repair their relations with the Denux:rats. The company agreed" to provide phone service. despite the back debts, if the Democrats v.•ould merely keep their 1972 phone bills paid. Then, suddenly, AT&T came up \Vith an astonishing offer to furn ish the com· munications at the Democratic con- vention for about $75.000. .The indepen dent company, which had bllscd its bid on an exhaustive apprai~l, protested that $75.000 couldn't possibly "' cover all the costs. The national commHtct.'s files contain a number or sharply worded letters. "'hich "·ere exchanged between the coin· pnny's lav.·yers and party officials. The Ja1rycrs suggested that AT&T's offer could only be consii:lered an outright gift to the party and. therefore, was forbidden by la"'· WllEN WE STARTED asking QUCS· tions. 1hc Dcmocrals insisted il \vas the independent com(>-Ony. not AT&T. ~·hlch was out of llnc. The difference bet\\'cen $1.7 1nillion and $75.000, however. seems too rar out of line. One suggestion v.·as that the t\\'O com· panics u·cre bidding on different johs. The independent's $1.7 million bid covered the t1n1ire convention t'()m· munlcations system, including service Quotes Wamn Howell, S.F. bookma1 - "Many people lxlleve 11 link with lhe p:ist Important. because, it pul5 things in pro- per persptetive and thlis 1nsptres con· nde:nce in lbe future ... ~r for the various candidates, n e w s services. television net1\'orks ·and securi· ty officials. AT&T, on the other hand, \\'as quoting a price for onl y the share of the system that the Democratic National C:Ommittec would use. IF TH.IS EXPLANATION accoUnts for the vast discrepancy in bids, party of· ficials failed to recogni ze it during \\'eeks of detailed negotiations. Indeed, they pro- fessed to us that both companies 'were bidding on the same speeiOcations. Were the parl y offi~ials si mply stupid? Or did they deliberately promote the con - fusion so they could deal with AT&T? Whatever the answers, AT&T will pro- vide the phone service at bargain rates. Footnole: Convention manager Dick iturphy acknowledged to us that, despite the \vell·publicized threat by AT&T to cut off phone service, his dealings with Southern Bell in Miami continued as usual. Southern Bell officials. he sa.idr never gave any indication they might not do the job. • Dear Gloo111y Gus As seen bl; a conservationist un· in1prcsscd by Ute technological side-benefits from the. moon shot3, lhe American of today B "a man worried · nbout water, standing knee d .. p ln ie)Vllge, and shooting rockets at ti~." -M. B. , .... .,.. ... --. ... , lfl• --Hr·...,. . r Ovi. O•IPr 11'1191, • A TV Hour Spent With Leonardo ( R.0..XCE BRIER ) The other night on television there \Vas an hour of Leonardo da Vinci. 1t was a sort of prelude to a five-part story of the man to be televised in a fe1\' weeks. It was necess_arily cramped for such an im· mense life, but it managed to convey an incredible versa- tility. It is a fair guess m o s t Americans know the Mona Lisa. The mystique of this single portrait hang- ing in the Louvre h a s hardly been matched. Jt is only in the last century that the modem world_has caught the full impact of his g6s, \\'hen his papers were sedulous!y"S.fudied to reveal him as a stunning scientific mind, far ahea~ of his time. Such merging of art and science in one individual is perhaps unprecedented in the human record. ln his primitive day he anticipated many of the technological achievements ·9f ours -flight, rocketry, engineering and mechanical techniques, the use of nat ural energies. He was the first true polymath -one who knows everything, HE WAS THUS, and remains a mystery to us all, yet he is part of a larger mystery. How did the Renaissance arrive as it did. when it did? Nothing even ap. proaches it excepting the Golden Age of Athens, 2000 yearsiearlier. Will we ever have another? Consider the life spans of three Italians : Leonardo, I 4 5 2 • 1 5 I 9. Michelangelo. 1472-1564, Ra-phael. 1483- 1520: What begot such potential in 31 years? Their posterity has expended mil Hons of words trying to explain it, and · the secret is not unraveled. But their period also spawned scores scarcely in· ferior to them in artistic achievement. Raphae l died at 37, and-His "School of Al,hens" in the Vatican has hardly, if at all, been matchet1. What would he have done hiid he lived Leonardo's 67 years, or Michelangelo's 89? BUT LEONARDO WAS unique, the universal mind. He was apparently in-· dolent , ror he seldom finished a painting. He never seriously took ·up sculptur!, as did Michelangelo, striving to _equal the Greek. Phidias. At .Raphael's age Leonardo-had not reached artistic Im- -mortality.But-in science,· well--- One would not pose as more than 1 novice in art, but we ordinary men can ask a question : what is genius? The dic- tionary definition is "one of transcendent ability," but that deals only in the olr vlous. and rloes not touch an insepa·rable question : why is genius? \Vhy ask it, when there is oo' answer, unl~ss 'you see,rch Hollywood, which swarms with geniuses every year? But, sorry! No one can explain Leonardo~ just as no one can explain Shakespeare. Some think the .Poel is the highest expression of the human spirit, and that could be. Yet he may be Mvaled in that absolute by LoonaN!o. The Jailer did not examln• the relaLions of men~ and'women. unless you consider the Mona .Llsa "amife. '' He did glv• regard IA> tbc relatlon or mt'J' and women 10 lhtlr "orld. and it conlinues to our day. But it d ... not get to L<onardo's ~eart. or how he ~! to soar1 while ao mat\J' ol "' are r,...r ealll>bound. • Atomic Fission Is Ultimate Weapon Both Canada and S1ri1zerland have recently passed regulations 1hat prohibit supersonic airplane flights over their ter- ritory -but how far •·up" does a nation's sovereignty go? Ho1v can any counlry be~ said to "control" the atmosphere 40.000 feet and more above its land ? A survey conduct· ed by the Swedish Academy of &icnc- es for the U.N. Con· ference on the Hu- man Environment reported that sul· phur pollution across national boundaries can cause deaths. corrosion , barren land and lifeless lakes -but hO\\' can one nation tell anoth er to restrict Its air JX1llution? AGAIN, AT THE Nobel Symposium on the Changing Chemistry of the Oceans. 40 scientists from 13 coun!rics presented a set of resolutions to the U.N., \ranting that unconlrolled dumping of pollutants in the oceans "ma y rea ch le vels suf- fi cient to dama ge ecosystems ir- reversibly on a v.·orld.wide scale'' ~fore the damage is recognized -but how can any nation stop its neighbQrs froin dlimp- ing pollutants into the seas? These three. questions, and many more like them, poin t up the dan gerous bifurcation of huma n society in tlte late 20th ceptiiry: that as \\'e be come more and more nationalistic in our poli tica l units, the world callS for more and more unity and common effort ecologically, I IIAVEN1T EVEN mentioned the graves{ global danger of all. As Sverkcr SYDNEY J. HARRIS Astron1. forn1cr Sv.•cdish Ambassador to the L'.:-1., tersely put lt: "II is deeply disturbing that such a dramatic warning of the risk of collective suicide as atom ic 11·cRpons·htts not persuaded the nations to adopt :·u1y measures of essential in1- por1ancc to nlinimize the danger of world 'rar." Atoin ic 1\·ar bellvecn nations is as im· possible to "limit" as lhe \Vinds, lhe '''aves. or the tldcs. Enough fallout released nny11·here in the \VOrld threatens everyone in the 11·orld, including the yet unbQrn. i\Jo "nationa l sovereignty," no •·nation~! de~e~se,'' .is capable of ~topping lh.e rad1oacu_y1ty from drifting wbere it 11·111. - ONLY A F'E\\' r.t.EN, even' at th.e hi~he.st levels. are wi!li ng to recognjzc th is · ineluctable fact. The rest are still playing the pre-Einsteinian intCrn<ltional power politics game, as though the ne\v technology did not make a qualitatively c!C:Cisive differer1ce fo modern statecraft, as th"ough · atomic fission were oilly ,''anot her" weapon lnslead of the ultimate ~ne, l\'hich forever changes the whole te rn:is of the game. . llo1\' can the people be expected to " cornpre~end lhe menace hanging over the spaceship Earth when their leaders frib- ble and frabble with the obsolete gambit.t of 19th Century f\1achtpolltik? And when ~heir passions· are aroused over problems insoluble by any military means? She Has Right of Choice ' . To the Editor: rn response to "Choice Offered by llotline," DAILY PILOT June IG: The Right to Life group dcies offer· a choice to a "pregnant y,·oman in distress," and only one choice; to con· ilnue her pregnancy. If a woman has not 'fnade up her mind aild wants .to discuss t~ otber.al~native whi.ch is legal abor- tion, I would suggest she contact a refer- ral agency, a merqber of which will discuss both choices with her freely and without bias. Any responsi91e agency is not in· terested in pushing its own particular bias, and is interested only in the woman's feelings about h¢rseir !n rela· tiOQ to the choicts open to her .. -TlllS IS NOT arr easf"dec1sion_as tliere are pros and cons to each of these alternatives. The important thing is that ''a pregnant woman Jn distress" be al· lowed to niake her own ~ision llC• cordlng IA> her o>!n persodaf need• without any pressure from anyone. In my opinion, telling a woman the ad. vantages or continuing a pregnancy without listing the di~dvantiages~ plus falling lo recognize the advantages and MAILBOX · disad~antages of abortion amounts to moral!zlng and preaching. The referral age~cics ~ant ~ach woman to make the choice 1:'"'h1ch will be tile leai1t damaging ~~ her in terms of ho\v she feel& about •rerseu and her (u_l_')"•· (. WONDER. M$O if their flcornplete resource book of doctors lawyers ~rl~ls, ps~chotogists, clorgym<n and r a , services" contain nny Who ~~ize abor!ion as a valid alternative. n view of this group's rteord whi~h n-eluctco • liberal ... or the '1'.~~er'' and ''ldllin&/' plus their.ja ~ --ses, I doubt ltl l · MRS. HAROLD !.!. 8UCK1Y eom..ior, AJ>C4E By Geor,(e -:_:---~--,It._ 'Dear George : o!j>or inv..Uga~ Is g~ng on. J.11 : • _ rn this moilern day and :is• lllr1IW to feel th11 paranoid! , , everybody gets .so '1investlgated '' I 1 JUMp . ~ lecl like I'm under a magnllying Dear Jumpy: -' Y I glass. Last month a loan c:ompanj Well. in your • .,. Lt 111, bO wu asking ml-·nclghbon about m.. nonnal -J•ve bad a tall an Y ' also an lnstiranct company 1,,.. no wonder you're It oe.rv You. .• • I v._,Ugator. l had lo !ill out a detail-(Stod your Jl1'>blems lo~ 1 td list ot-a..dih'clcnm~ !oi;, a lie noe<Lt old' paper' for go. I rg• account llnd no telling )"NII ~g'ical recycllfla drive.I 111 1 ' - ' . ' ,.._ ' • .1 ' I ' L. M. Boyd Catfish Aren't Cl1oosy on Di et The Dominican Republic is now where tilt 24-hout divorce seJls best of all . QUICK, let's have the pl11r al of "piecemeal.'' It's "Oockm~l." Al\1 TOLD we've never had a president wbo was born In June. That defies aU odds of probability. CAN YOU name the Atlantic's westernmost seaport in this country? correct, Duluth . IT'S SAID that fish which most readly takes the larg- est variety of bails i.s the catfish. l\Ul,.E,AGE is not turned back on all used cars. But it is on many, oh yes many. And among those, the avei:- age turnback is 25.000 miles. Such were the findings of the f\.1assachusetts Attorney General's Division of Con- sumer Protection in a chec~up of 250 vehicles. TO KISS -"How do you know whef.her you should kiss a girl good night ?" inquires a youthful-Pennsylv anian . Can only quote Thomas Carlye. that renowned Scottish kisser, \vho ad· vised : "lf you are ever in doubt as to whether or not ~'OU should ki ss a pretty girl, alwa'ys give her the benei ft or the doubt." STATISTICS sho w half the brides who want babies ~·ill be expectant within six moii.ths. A fourth·, within 30 days. Four-fifths, within a year. Nine-tenths, within a yea r and a hair. Q. "AS an ex-drinker who's now a teetotaler -thafs me, pal -1 sure do feel cheap at a party when somebody proposes a toa st. \Vhat ... ?" A. Toast with water, That's what King Gustav of Swe- den does. He's oot cheap . QUARRELS -Note it started in print that evi dence indicates wives start . approximately 87 out of every 100 family quarrels. That's an extreme estimate. Wives start only about 73 out of eve ry 100 family quarrels, I think. It's also claimed in the same print that these catalytic Y.'ives sec retly want their hus1'ands to have the last \vord. That contention i:!1 probably· right. \VHAT'S a "housewife"'? Funk and \Vagnall ~ditors once'defined her as "one who doesn't work for a li ving." Understand they got a little mail . Besides "homemaker.'' the wordsmen now are labeling said lady as a "domestic economist," "household executive" and "home manager.·• These aren't good. Not enough . Status. "Chairrilan of the Board and Room" migbt do. - Address mail to L. lt!. Boyd, P. O.,Box 1875, New· po rt Beacl1, Calif. 92660. Solar Eclipse Coukl Cause Eye Damage • By Phil lnterlandl "If Y?U .1nust knO\\', 1 didn't like 'September · Song! \VJicn 1t f 1 rst came out, a nd l don 1t li ke it now!" 6 ,000 Get De grees 38 Cot1ntians Gradt1ate From San Jose State Thi rty-eight OrJn~e County residents were n1nong more lhan 6.~ students graduatjn~ . from Ca I i f b r n i a State Universil y, Sa n Jose. at con1· mencemenl exercises held last mon th·. Orange County graduates i11 · elude: An8h~lm -Jim Son!I, ~Ot1JI ~t.JOl{I! .Jnd Oovvln\ Wll!.Ofl, 1>~v 1;,,.1 eovc.a!ion. B•l1>e11 hland -Chnr!es L11wler, rt~!nci!I en11.nterln9. B'•• -B•Yct L11nder, o~ronaullc~. B11efW P11rk -Carl• Rcbln•cn. ~clal science. Corona OPI Mar -D<1•1d Jone1, soc:lal w:1ent•. Co· ta /<It~~ -Grell Pe11r•.r. bu1ine1t •nd Ro~rl Tornllotg, f•llllll(e El To•o -Larrv Halli!, !.PffCl'l·tDm· muniCi1lon1 Fuilrr10il -0 1rry1 Cl>•n. ia•cholo11•. RobPrl G.enapp, 1«ial 1c1rnc•, Jud 111 H111na11el. 1oCIC•OIO(ly """ Ror.in Par~er, l'lll ll!t'f'nl!lt~ G•r~n G•ove -Svo~ev Andrew1, • drama. .,H11ntinoton Beacn -Rarry Bron•Qll, aer01111ur•n ooera1 l on1, O~rnv 0<1v1ds.;n. bv1,re11. Cll<lr\11 Row1ru,., rlcc!rlcal en'l•nl!ftlnv and Laurel llUt\llf, PIYtllOIOllY La Hat1r1 -ltl!rM .Andrrien, ln!rr<~r d•ulon and M•d!ilrl ~avlor, inou~tr.al IK!ino!ovv. Lo~ .A11 ... 1to1 -Jeflrev Br.01111,.,,, adve,1!1/n(I, Nt1<111t1r1 Brach -car! .Anderw", ec· <UP<lllonel lllt•<lPY. C•r11o•v l(~toro, ioolovv. Lawrence ~elrl. PollHc~I • 1c.~n<•. E<1w11r"d RusM'll. ~Pronautlc1 0""1r•i.on1, """ l'iilflt.Y Sl•vb, 1>llr1l~11 ed~Cill•ll<'. • Cran"" -Jolln Mlle~. •IKl•o·TV San Clemente -.Allen BarlrTh, a~ronaU l<{I ~erat,ons, C~~!hll LOV· ' mark._ Enllli!Jl. S11n JUal'! C11Pl1lr•no -Rltt>a'rd Pud· dlcomtit, lndvs1rl11I lectmolovv. S~nt~ Anli -Jame' Andrew!. tn· llU\lrlal allminlstr11tlon, Jllml!S Clar~. F'encll, Judi DPUlll.'tl, ~rt ~il!ory, Crail! Orur!I. an. lt~ren, G°"bel, En~h•l'I. ~nd K<l!/lletn M.Jrquerd, .oc.al WPl!m!n!!~• -l<Mhl!•ine Ea~twaod, gursln~ .J_l'll Judi!h H11~nr1. l;;nglill'I .. Baclliani' s Bill Gets Set Back SACRAro.tENTO -A bill d r a ft e d by Asi:emblyman Robert Badhrun I R-Ne\vpoi-t Bea'ch ) \vbich would ha~e· re· qui red stale permits f Qr airport exparisiofl h:1s been defeated in th e Assembly for a Jack of 16 votes. The v.ote on AB 1122 Thurs· d3y \V3S 25 lo 23 ah'a lhe• b!JI neede<l 41 votes to pa);;s. Dr. Kenneth James, a Hunt· although other parts of the na-A s po k c s n1 a n f 0 r ington Beach optometrist and tion w i I l "'itness a total Assemblyman Badhan1 · i n director or the Optometric eclipse. Ne1vport Beach sa id the bill Vision Care Council, urges Dr. \Villiam J. Kaufmann . lechn ically was not dereatcd Southland viewers lo use cau-director of the G riff i t h -it just didn't get enough tion when watching a July 10 Observatory in Los Angelesl. votes to pas~. solar eclipse. says the eclipse will occur . ..Ihe techrucati ty a 11 o w s · Only five percent of the ... about 12:40 p.m. Ba(llia m lo caJI for another sun's disk will be covered . by He suggests viewers con· vote. the moon to vie\\·ers here, struct a sunscope in watching Jl \vould .requi re the stale New· Look For Stones' Ticket Sales NEW YORK CAP ) -The Rollipg Stones concerts in New York , thre.if of them, at Madison Square Garden. are' using a different tick& sellin~ system. People wanting tickets mail In a po51card , between certain dates. and when the cards are received . a firm of certified public acCountants s ~I e ct s some of them at random . These are put througtr a com· the partial eclipse. departmen t of aeronautics to A sunscope is a large oblong issu'e permits on ex pansions of cardboard box easily made existing airport as it does "'ith with aluminum foil fa stened to TIE'W airport sites. 'a square hole cut out of one Expansion perm its could be gran ted under the bi ll only end of the box. aft er environrncnlal con- · A pinhole is then punched in sidcrations of air an d noise the center of the foil, which polluti on and traffic cir cula- should. be facing the sun's lion had been weighed. i:ays. "Airpo rt ex pansion" in the White paper is then taped to Ne1c CJaief rneasure. whi<;h-would amend the other :end inside (facing );;e<:tions or the public utilities away from the son.) A hole Dr. Everly B. Fl eisrhcr code, \\'as'-d efi ned as incl uding big enough for one's head is 36, of Ne\vport Beach acquisition of clear zones, con- then cut and the OOx is slipped \Viii be the ne\v ·chair· struction of exte nsions of . ov~r the head. • . ma n of the che1n.ist{y runways and additions to gt.her Stapding with one's back to department of UC Ir-physica l facilit.ies. the sun, a viewer does not look vine. I-le succeeds Dr. This is the third . time at the sun directly or through l-larold ]\.'Ioore of Costa Badbam has introduced a the pinhole but instead at !he ]\.1esa. F1eischer is a measure on this subject. .The image projected on the white specialist jg biological have all met assembly• o paper. che1Uistry. posi tion. · Dr. James warns ·th at,-:.::.::.::.::.::.:::..:'..:_ ______ .;.._ ___ ~ ____ _.... t puter, whlch Is supposed to sunglasses .are . not advi sable. since they do not eliminate harmful radi:ition entirely. Denture Invention throw ou~ ones with the Mme 1 handwriting. Tickets will be ~ assigned on a first'lirawn-best ~ seat basis. M J S k ? Official notification. cards ay mo -.e, For.People with ''Uppers'' an~ ''Lowers'' The 11esra;t thing to h;n•ing your own teeth is possible now with a pleslic cream di!W:o1:t ry that ac:tu· ally holds b0ot h •·up11trs" and "lowers" as never ~fore poMible. rorms an cra~tic m~mUr:ine tl1at htlps :il1501b the ~hocks or biting and chewing. • .. will be mailed to the' names SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) - drawn and those persons can . The Communist government \V1th F1xonl':NT many denture wearer1 mayC<it. t1pc;ik, laugh, with litl!e worry of dentures coming loooe. 1r11 a discovery called FlXODF.NT"' for tin ily home use: (U.S. Pat. IJ,OOJ.988) 11nJ 1l bas revo!u- lioniw.l denture wearinf. F1xooe:NT One a pplication may lalt fnr hours. Dentures that fit are esi;cn- tial to htalth. See'ynurdenti!L rt1ularl y. Geteasy·lo-u!C 1:1xoo2NT Denture Adhesive Cream. " pick up their tickets within a of this tobacco exporting coun· time period written on their try makes fActory woi-ke&s get cards. All per~ns notified will permission ~om their fellow be entitled to t>tJy a maximum employes before l i g h t i p g of four tickets. All tickets, cigarettes on"": the ·ob. rega!'dless of location, ·will bel-~jiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiipiiiiiiiiiiiiiir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,--, 16.50. \.., • · I This Is all su~ lo eUminate long waits at t&. box office, riots durin& the long waits and reduce ticket scalp- ing by not allowing blocks of tickets to be bought. _. .. , '"' -WAHR mASlBI ,,~ .... _..c_ 't61LIET TANK 8ALL ..................... n..ddMtW9.._......,.,. 'LI ..._.,_.,....,.-... ........_ 111 AT HAIDWAll ITOllS ' WE . QUOTE PRICES OYER TFIE PHONE •.. ANYTIME -CHICI THUl'SUrr• SALi SPlCIALS-S111111. lt•I. 'Our Reg. "•I<• 10 DRISTAN CAPSULES,J or coldi I h•v f,,,,, ...... Sl.S'1 SI 29 IAN ROLL·ON D1odo11nl, 11/t ot .••••••••••••• ,, • S l.19 98c 100 NATURAL LECITHIN CAPSULES, '' gr•in •••••• .S 7 29 Si.89 0 SENOKOT L1•1tlY" T•Dl1t1, 100'• ••••••.••••••.•• Sl .9S Sl.'49 ' .... "'" 99c 79c $1.39 $2.69 2700 E. Coast Hi~wav. at Fe rnleaf. Corona del Mar Alll'LI PARKIN• IN HAR " __ ,,,..,," - Cl-4 -.,. _. Ho114oto 644-7575 * * * • Monday, July 3, }q72 DAILY PILOT '1 ~-"'--'---'--~~~~~~~~~ ' * * * * /I 1/ I I All ~ MARKE T BAS·KET //),,' STORES Will BE ../ -· .# ---··---* -h· . ' -.; 1.' '// //!"! 'l \ \\ PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 4i 19 72. OFFICIAL U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMP ftDlMPJIO• STOtlf WHOLE OR CUT-UP MIXED PARTS FRYERS HEAD . LETTUC E THERE IS A MARKET BASKET M.8. DISCOUNT FOOD STORE NEAR YOU • M.TAHIA, 117• L ~t '''· • AUlllM,. 1221 S. a..-.....11, •• • ,., ... 2•1 s. hdW • au•-. IOU •• s1 ... c.a.,. It.'- • ll MllAOA, 14t4t A•tUe tt. • lA MllADA, 14014 S. v.11, Vitw • lAt<AStll, 1112 W. ,1,,,_ "J" • llMI01, 1011tMawlher11t11,ct • • LOllC llACM, JOlO I , ltlffl.wtr 11,11 • • llDONOO llACM, 1401lhwtMr11t11,d. • RIVllSIDI, l•l 1 (ltic••• St, • IOlUMC Ml\lS IST,. 117 Sil,t• 51111r 1••4 • IOWlllD MUCNtS, 11400 (•li111• IHtl • SAl ltll&IDllO, 140 W. 40111 Sttttl * * * * * • amSIA, I 110CI I. lllr4 SI. • llLU\OWll, 1•12J S. a.-.w1111, •. • IWIAll. .. J L Ylcltff II••· • CAMllllLO, 120 Ar.tll ltiN • lOIC llA(M, 1210 I. A11ehd111 • lOIC llACM, 1000 Sh1tl1lle•tr ltl. • LOS AMil~S, 4tl0 M ... 1lntlt11 Or, • St.II CllMllTI, 2127 VI• CeuHll• * • SAM CAllltl, •140 N. lt1t1M•tl • SAN •lotO, SO I S••lh ~•lftf ''· • SANlllNl,•IOW.171hS1. • (llCKA•an.•1S1hMir ... Att. • LOS A"lllS, 2SJD Clt!!Ue 11•4 • • CATMlllAL~t,u.t•111tttw., 111 • COMPTOI, ltOO L lt11t 9-li 11-.4, • COSflMISA,2t7SM.-.,ll••· • (0V11A. tJ2 I. lfflh •••. • tOVIMA,t4tW.S.11 ...... r•Ml4. • tUlVll CITY, )t21 <•l'l'fr Ct11ltr • llSICIHIDO, 111 w.c,.114 • JOUltAll VAlllY, l•intff' lt..aihtHtl • JOllTAllVAlllt,tlltC.fltW • JlfllllTOI, t20 W. c--•Mllllt • MAUIU1 2JJSt Peclllt c .. ,1 llwy. • MOITlllT PAil, 1201 S. Atle111k 11,11. • ll¥f POIT llAtM, 11 SO lr'411t a,._, • llWPOIT lll(M, J 100 hlkie llw4. • IOITM MOllYWOOt, 12t1S Ye• Owt11 S1. • IOIWAll, 1&02t S. Plt11ttt 11•4. • ona110, 10401 • ...,_,-'"a, •. • PAUii DlSllT, 7J•OI Mwy. 111 • • PALM JPIHl,S, 2&JS,1.tl~!1·MtC.U11111 • •Alll&lllA, •Jtl W. T~i1tl St, • 'AIMIUOVl, 11'°1 lMll A•t. • 'dMIG10¥1, 12t•I ,...,_,.,"· • 1ac11111•1cwrs,21a1 '· ... ""' 11,•. • '""11MTOlllAtll,77ilJl ..... • •ASADllA, l•Ol l. fMlllN l ktl. • •ASAOllA, 115t I. W•thhtt1 ... 11,'- • P&SADllA, 12'41 I . lekt A•t. • POMOIA, 1•45W.11ttt A•t. • HDl& .. S, 1 t SO lrM~llM '''· • SANT A ANA, l Jl I S.l 1hlf'I S1. • SANTA fl S,lilllCS, 11 SSO l tltt••ph I d, • SAMlA MONICA, 117•• W1hh •t 11,tl. * • Sl!ll MAN OA"S, 14125 Yt11t1111 l!td. • SOUtM CA ti, 111• Ctlil•111ill • SOUTll ,ASAOlllA, t20 f•~ O•lic1 Awe, •STANTON, 10500 M._,111ll•l•t. • STUOIO(lfl, 11 )15Vt11t11t• • TOllAl(l , 1010 s,,111,1411 l lwll • • TUSllll. •lO l1 <•""™'It.I • Vlltl<t.110 Uni•hl 11•4. • WNlnKt, l )24 I (. Whittln ,,, .. • w1t1nn1, 1•011 1. Wllinie111911. • Wlllllll,101, I l' 1. l•-"'' 11,tl. * 1 • 8 DAILY PILOT r • Dissoltitions Of Jflarriage •~Tfll LOCU'TOllV Dll!Ca•t:s E"ltrtd J11,.. 1$ '·'f'°O•l~nll, Je•r..-Lto •nd N••v•llt l'om~"· Garv T •r>llrl J.tn•t 011n1 A•IKt. JG.!" \/ lf•O Jon" w. C ~'llon. L~•fr L •no "•"V S. P•t~•n•, Cned Oe&ne •nil G•'Y Vt1vn• Jl•.-oln. Prvq~ LOiii~ •'WI J 1mrs Sh~ldcn f il•f•ll. """'' w. •P'ld N,llor NI J, p,·.,,o. LKonore Ednl .tl\CI Jt 11le ll~YmOnd tior<!•lrc.n•. K•nne!h A.. ind Oebcr~lo G, COll1!1nT1nt, .J1vn• H. 1nd Jtot11ld o. 1~c•Olt.Hlld• ~nd Robrrt Jt. ~n<1l"~•n, 6rtm:I• i nd B•rrv Unat•wooa. Cyn1111.1 •"II Riclll rd A. ti.iotrm•v••· Ron•lll B . .and Donn• J,,;. Sl•ll~•O, ~u1an Cllrltl!llt and .J•s ' M,cnt tl \Jnt1HwOOC1. M•,i•nnP and C"•rl es Ross •t4rHOn. [vt •r<1 W •nd Florence • O•nltls. Carol•n Sur Ind 0•.,vl AOlltr (OUl!P• c.~·•l<:I 0 '"" 5u1•n £. Pipu, llMl:>l•• Je•n •nd C.1rv 11.ance ll1•hn9 \/onrta V. and Oon•ld F. Fran<O, frl 11101 and Robe'I Abil /'~rTM" /J.ittlrtO C • .,\Cl Rorn"O Jo•eoll ll::e•lv, CGJis!lnte Loulu ar\11 Krnl lt ltll••d Alvot. f dwo•O R . .and Arfene E'. IN>l>•ll~n. N•"{• "· •n<f Albe•! J. Ptndr•• A'1n• (. •nd ICfnnPlll M. PttP•I, ( D•na •nd Ml'lllel B l'l!ino. Anthon• J. •n<! P1mel• Ann ~~11111. ea,D~•• •nd AltrPd ... ,.,,.nOtr. P&t•IC•• JOYCt flld Oavid LtrO• lf.O<Jr• £~w·n Ha,vev •nd Carol Ann How~I/. (l•uOI• Joy •nd J•me~ JtwtU Htl•~tl, Motn•&I l et and Brverlv Alht r<llP Ha "" R01•nna ,......, •••• Ind Oala " .. (;arrt i. 11ollv Rooeanne .and Merk 5!fV Ja,~•on Jr , Lois (ll1rlene .and RoNrl """ OW'\lt r, !ny L Ind R•~mond L. o"'· Snlrl G. """ E<!Wl •ll o. NlckJOl\, (i l·LO<.J •rd Wllll1m E<1w1rd E .,-.. J11n1 ll Jollnwn. \/11!0• Ann encl Oevld !Mii~ P.itt~. Hal M1 tll!!d1 t nd ICtnnf!ll llurdtllt F•t ktJ, 0.n!Jt l!ricl• i nd Robert F:i~~nlddv and IC ntill l . l!k l<e•l ll ll, Mertedt /,\, t nd C.len O. Let. James E, 111<1 J e Sonv.a V'oodflll. Ehf~ J. 1no lln P. Hernander. 11:11111 C.asa 1 •nd M11rco Aurello Pettrs. Je1nn• E. •nd M r.el AUrtd f'>avlM>n Ooo Oee ~nd Jll; L•<1•11 Gltl'ln, Frerence Melvern.a .and Perin Hubert JCH"ffnse11. Bo K. 0 . and Mil ed L lCIPP. P1uta M•rlt an~ J;:<1<1le .,..,.,.,,, l!nnnlf L. en" Pobe~• Hob!», Jenna Lee a nd H1rald S1nc1111, Ev1 end Jost "td•O IHll, Edw1r~ William ind Biiiie N I Clbul1kh. Marlhl Lee 1nd Ce • en l'l~°i.~~I~. S1ndr11 G. 1nd j eims f , C.Odd1rd. Philio H.and C1,.vlt P1Ynt , Su11n Lt• end Thom1s Jostoll suu~n. Ellen 1!'Kl..Mlcll1el co111110111 ..... J1mt\ w. •nd llflVI Sut M1111ows, Wende S. 11'!1 M.ark M. De C.r1w, Cvnlllll L ... and J1c:k Julien A11 ull1r. Jevne ' Ellen 1nd Antllonv Cll•l11poller Sml!h, Ro111mtrlt 1nd flllfOrd L..e S.1nt1trs. Oor111d Paul arod Marl.111 p,~:,111~vlnt L. 1nd M1rlorlt l~ L-r, Jo.ouln nnd IC1tll!een i..eno•n Dotton, IC••fM .M.av Ind O•vld Rvllne l(lrkwood, L[flda Hlrl"n .and Guv Mot -. DorOlllv L1K ll11 Ind J~IUI JIJ9 Gou11h, Oennv l(lm .and Jenle Sue ounne. Tl'loml• Jca1ph .tnd.J1nel Li11 Han•on, Robtrl .and 01,a M!nerv1 d Short' Ct1rlc:1 Allfl 1nd Marmon RI( 1rd r $!ullb1, Moir.a O. Ind Robert P, 1E1111rH J1111t lt Patll1t.0n. Allc:t "· incl Jerrold £. <'.rup NancY 1na Norm111 Qulnlfvan. Ch1rl•1 .tnd MIN Jane Ourns. PllYlll1 ""'" 1/\CI Oav!d GllN rl l owder. Lln08 We1ltv •nil JOll't Akll1rd Str~itb. Luke .and Henrien1 Kav w .. 111neton, 1C.1tllrv11 Ann a"d J1t k M:r~:.•ih.tron Jo and James Robf•I Ma11lnn, Pllllllp J. 1nd M.tr!ti:I L. Hund11, R<>11<'tl' ar.d Marv JI. Aolll, Gev!e 5u~ .and Kt nnelh W1UIOt1, Jr., Par1v Ann and Je ine• Ar~\~"."~t•Ol!'•I F .• Jr, 1nd Eloise /.\, 'Turner, M.t•!•nl!e ar.d S!eVt'1 H. ~ l lrd. Cecelia Anne i nd P1!rit~ Huntington Man Gets Fire Post t.i cdlar, July l , 1'172 . - - Orange Beauties Julie Mylander, Miss Orange, \Vas cro,vned Miss Orange County and reigned as Orange County Fair queen June 16 thrugh June 25. The l 8·year-0ld lovely \Vas chosen from a field of 16 local girls \'.'ho competed at South Coast Plaza. Miss Eileen McCarty, ri~ht, Miss Laguna Beach. was first runnerup and Miss Chris tine \:Vi!Jiams, bliss Cypress, was second runnerup. Swi1111ner Sues Boaters SANTA ANA Two .Newr><>rt Beach men ha ve been sued for $100,000 in damage s by a swimmer who blames them for injuries he suffered in the channel ()ff North Bay Fron!, Balboa Island. UCI Horwrs Employes T went Y UC Ir vin e representative, Uni versity E;x-Toro, lalx>ratQJ)' technician , employe·s have been tension: Lilia T. Adams of School or Biological Sciences; r,ecQgllized for their years ()f service with the university and Santa Ana, senior c I erk, Carole J. Brown, laboratorv ()ther state agencies. Two registrar's ()ffice ; Richard assistant, School _.,Biologic~! ()!hers who have retired also Everman of Santa Ana. senior Sciences; Charles Bradford of were honored at the infonnal systems ana lyst, registrar's Irvine, b uyer, purchasing ceremony co nducted by office; Margaret A. Ross t1f department: C h a r Io t t e Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Corona de! h-1 a r, <id· Zedekar of Huntington Beat;·h. Jr. 1ninistrative a ss i s t a n t , secrelary, university relatiofu Pins for 25 years qr serv ice Uni versity E~t ension: \Vitllam office; Jane Schroeder ()f were presented to Virgini:i H. Kibble of Santa Ana, cust o--Jrvine, senior stenographer. ~tlnon of Anaheim, secretary dian supervi sor. oi nd Mary College· or Medicine; Garvin L. in the psychiatry and human Elizabeth Becker of Ne\vport \Valker o{ Santa Ana, senior behavioc department of the Beach . .administrative assis-personnel analyst. perscnmel College or J\1 e d ic in e ; tant. English and comparative department, and Leon a rd Lawrence Buffington or UJs literature department. Dingm.an ()f Costa Mesa , Angeles,· laboratory assistant, Other recipients ()f lO·year photographer. printing and environmental interactions 1 __ P~irns;;;w;;;er;e;;;J;u;ta;;;K;1~·e;th;e;;;o;r;E;;;I ;;;r;e;;p;rog;;;r;a;;ph;i;c;d;e;;p;a;rt;m;e;n;t;. ,--department, C o 11 e g e of Medicine, and James G. f10N NG Wilson or Corona de! Mar, .· " ' ' G J,/o business manager. l) CUSTOM TAILORS IN ORANGE COUNTY Twenty-year pins \Vere given to Clifton C. Miller of Tustin, Herman L. Ross. oI 9272 campus architect; Richard N. Sunridge Drive, Huntington Baisden of Santa Ana, dean ()f Beach, has receh•ed the pro--University Extension, a n d motion to the rank or Fire Thelma N. MacDonald of Captain by the Los AngeJes Ci· Irvine, administrative analyst, ty Fire Department. academic afrair.s. Mary D. SAVE UP TO 5~ NtN-l1lltft<1 (fll .. MMt 2 SUITIS135 IOUllf PIT on H.ind l.illorff C11110tn M.lde l:,o.,;;,~,.c,",:'.,~u,_,,~,-,,-::,=0,=I ~u111, SP'1rtcwtt, 51t<U, Sllirta. o..br1 K•it .... StS $.ti •WI m ANY SIJ:I Slit Mo~oir •• , •• ti ti • ANY STYU CO"ID Co1~"'"" .... ~ .. '' se S~o•k•~i• ,•••••• 15 .t~ 1 flUI ALTIRATIONl Silk Wo•F ,., • ., 11 11 S~lt11 ......... , 10 •(Alf PAYMINTS Captain Ro.ss is presently Adler ()f Costa Mesa, ad· assigned in the Hollvwood ministrative assistant for area . He has served with the summer sessions, received a ~ !M ,ge:!r • I~A Cl t.y Fire Department for l>year pin. liiiil '""· 10.s "'~· "°""i" a ""'' 1000 llHESf IM~ORTtt WOOlfHS 6 OOUlll IHITJ 13 years and has held the Ten -y e a r pins '"ere •• .a.~i..-"'-•1.i-o211 k r F. d ed ~ I 2112 Dvh1tt Dr. lvl,. 12 N•w~ l••<lt • Barber Sent to Prison I SANTA ANA -Barber Ricky Star, found sane by an Orange County Superior Court facility for the next JO years. star will receive psychiatric ;t treament during his coo-j -· • TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS jury last month. ha s been sent finement. 1 · to state ·prison. The barber was convicted of i Judge J.E.T. "Ned" Rutter sparking a blue Jart Jan. 7 ABC 0 8·00 _ •·Chile: Experi n1cnl in . Red ." )°" . " f th loli lical economic :ind ordered an open term that that burned an Or an g' An exan11nat1on o . ~ I th Jccl ion of f\·1arx· '· could keep the former prize cockta il lounge to t~e grt1und •. social tre nds of ChLle since ~ c 1 0 fighter in the state's Vacaville at a CO$t of $50,000. ist President Salvador 1~11ler~dt e<iFnlatc.'l7 Si)erial. •rhis ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii 1• Kl 'f'J' tEl 8·00 -,O )l'l a ~ profii~ of the · _sin f!cr i~ehtdcs ex c~~l~t~c:f:1~,1 ~~~ April concert u1 \Va ~~11 ng on on AN·NUAL JULY 4th BOWLING 3 MONEY SAVING -DAYS Pay th. r~•lar pric• fer 1 •t I lrd, 5th, m .) t•rM , •• Tht 2nd 14tfi, 6th, etc,) t•• . , . JUST A PENNY!! NO LIMIT Sunday, July. 2, 1972 Monday; July3, 1972 Tuesday, July 4, 1972 9:00 a.m . until 2:00 a.m. eac;h day KONA LANES 2699 Harbor Blvd. 545-1112 100 GAME STAMPS AND OTHE" P80MOTIONAL PROGRAMS NOT VALID DURING le SALE. YBC rRtCES &: HOURS PREVAIL. Hun1an Kindn ess D:t.v. .. VII.I" NB C 0 g:OO _ "'J'he..Six '' 1v cs of l lcnry · 11 Part JV introdu ces An ne of l'h'~'i':', the Gc~n;a n princess \vho becomes l lc11r y's bri de a.-i a po lil1Cal t acco mmodati on. , do r ·~1 · CBS o 10:00 -. "S<1 l1He to a ~ ~r keyc p 1m1..: ,,1 Oscar l-lammerstein II." The lvr1c1sl for, such i:i;i us1· cal hits as •·sou!h Pat"ifir.·· "Okl ahorna ' ~n d The ·~ Sound of ~tusic" is honored in this tune-fi lled spe-•, I ciaj(HJ 0 11 :00 -"The Third IJny." George Pep-r pard. Elizabeth Ashley and Roddy l\1cDo,valJ star in thi s 1965 drama. . .. ~ _ .. "' .. _-'I._ ' --" i~iV DAILY LO$. Li.'!'.i:~.::v. ~.~ -'""" ... ~ -·~ Monday Evening JULY 3 1:«10 mom m Ntw• D @} m M•jor LtlJUI ltHball ()rfoles vs. Ti!iUS 0 The I I( Y1Uey 00 Wild Wild We3t m Tht Flinbtfne& (!)Danit! loont [j) NET P\ayhollSt on tht JCI'• ED NtA Tension ED Hodftpodrt Lod1t 0.1: Mayberry RFD (E l'n:pntt Utitd Alti Jacinto OJ Thrtt Stool• 1:30 0 Movie: (C) (90) "Start 111d Stript1 fortwtr" (mus) '5Z-Clil· ton Webb, Ot.bra P11d. Ci) CIS New1 Walter Cron~il• m The flyl111 Nu• fD HalhtJOll ~Cttt1 Aerts e l'ro1rt• rotici11 (D Yictori1 J111ts Sllow (f) Httdsllop Elliot Mintz 7:00 0 [I)Nm O MOYit: (C) (211r) "Down Amon1 the Slltlttrin1 rarms" (cem) '5l- Willian Lundig!n. Mitzi G~yl'IOr. @ Tnrth tr Con1equtnces Ci) Dr11n1t o wura MJ Line? - ID I L1vt L11C1 ·Q) I Dru11 el Jtannit EtJ rr11 D11bi11e m Co•iri1 Heme to react focu~ on problems hctd by return1n1 Vietn1m \'tltr1ns. €I) Uni r1tpril tn 11 C.111Jn1 OJ 1llm: 111t EafJ W1(' m kn. ltly rla1rrt 7:30 fJ St.Ind Up ind Cllttr Florene' Henderson iuests. I @ T1T1llU.Trirtll I Ci) I P,.111 of J11nni1 0 Million S Movie: "Ador1blr Julit!" (tom) '63-Lill i f'almei. Ch1rles Boyer. m Hopn'1 HtrM1 m m 0r11nt1 OJ) In Ille Spotlithl fl) Clltspirlt• (ID Mi1111llta V1ldu Show CD Sperts Chal11n11 {f) Movlt: IZtn) "lhr Cniwd O f«um lo•inf l i&htwtlrhts Fianklt Crawford aM Rodo11a LO· bito mret in • IO·round taped event. 0 (1) 00 CD AIC Mond17 Movie: IC) (2111) "R1pf!Jrt" (rom) '65 - Mel'/'Yn Ocugl1,, Dean Stockwell, Patrid1 Goui. lht stol') cf 1 be1u!i· lul youn1 firl w~o livts ln • world built upon im1z1n1tion wit/I her llther and th eir m~id, in • horn• on the f1tnch se~coast. isolated lrom c1~ili11ticn. @) Specitl Movit: (C) (2br) ~Rtlll09 . 'nd JMllet~ (spet) '66 -Rudolph 'Nureyev, Muaot fonttyn. Tht 1r11t Prolo:olitv balltt baud on Sh1kU· peart's lmmorttl lc-vt stc17. (!) Or11n1t (jj) To 81 Announud EU Una Vilf1no fD [J!!filD C.tch lht Joy Sllrtina: Jnd duntbuggy1n1 irt the tipen- t ncts filmma kers Gre1 MacGilhvr1r and Jim Freeman invite viewers It shar1 in this KCCT·produud prtililt. €fJ Do-R•MI m Movlt: "LJdil'' Mu lt Obtron. 011 Tiit Ylrlinltn CI:J NowLI ':ZS al Toni Holt In Hb!IJWl)Od 9:30 6 tIJ Doris Oa7 (R) Wemtr Xl1mp. erer 1uests as 1 la~hion·show direct· or whom Ooris 11~ts to p1esenl hsh· ions hy htr own couturler-1 dry• cleanma shopkeeper n~med lou i>. Q(E)New1 (f.j) loot Ital €D Av1nturi . W Racine f1ont HOltJWOOd rark 10:00 8 00 !J,ic1X\ I S.llN .. 1 C«k· ey~ Optimist Cbur H1J1111Mtltti1t 11 The sou nd of music, lht preitnct cf some or !Mt mMt distin1uishtd musiu! and tht1!1iu1 1t111, t n4 !he mu1ic cf Osu1 H1mmersteh• II, bltnd !or an 1~enina: of tn!erttin· men!. OmN1w1 O Council Dtb•l• m S.!1ri lo Advlntv11 (ij) M11lttJ1itct Theltlt fl) tou JUliildl 1 ED Film Odyutr "Two Dauah1•ra" a!) Rincon Ar11nti"o m La leytrldl de l alomtt 10:30 O Prim111 "Nudear Bl1tk M11kti- O T1ll·B1ck ([) Bill toiby Sflow m la Satanic.1 l.1j Mavit: "P"'hovu" m Conci1nd1 Culpable r<in s o 1reman an present to , ... uar es A. Paul ~.o ...... cll' . ..,,p1.-hlllfMl1.ifJ_,.H1,.1 "~""''· En~ineer. ~·~r~~Co~s:ta~~M~e:sa~,_!prog~~r~a~m~~..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..::..:::=~..::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I Cap ta in Ross Jives in Hunt-1• lngton Beach. Ro1r1" (dra) '32-James C12ner. tl:OO f) 0 0 !Ii ii) Q)NM• 1:00fJ1iu111111oli1 "New Ooctor In (I) (j) Nen Deall1 Notices CREATH £ !ntl A. Cr•a!I\ or 3094 Colleoe Ave. 'o••.t Mesa, Date of dealh July '· Jtl1. ~u•viwo llv ll~ll!llller Biiii~ Ff1lle• ot (<>i!~ Mes~ Two b•ollitrs F!ftlPh & Frank !la0<:<r 01 Florldft. One' 11•~ndl0tl Mar~ f isl'ff <>I Cost• Mr••· Service• 1 pm Wed. a! Mau•ol1om of m~ Pacific, P1d llt View Mfll'Od81 P~·~ 01 .. (ted by Pa(lfjc \/01w Mot1uary, "ltwporl B1ac1'1. PE AA SOW VIH!•ell C. Ptat'Qll of :II~ V/alnul, Cotle M~••. Dale ot <1e11n July t, 1rn. Su•· "'"~d by wile GtMvlave Pe11rton of Ille llome. Two 'on1, Gt•~ld t nd Rk tiard Ptn'"'"· One oavgl'llf r P.tldtin Juar11 And 8 q<andthflO•en. Ro•nry, 1 1>m at ·.1· J~ac~•"' Catl'lollc (llurtll. July -1~. "•" 7 ~"' w~11. Jutr .s. ln!er""""' GOO<! ".t-eoa"I Ct<t>••~•v. We1tClllt Mll'tu~rr O•rrClo•!. fJALTZ BERGERON f'UNERAL HOME Coronu del J\1ar '73.9450 Cost.a J\lesa 646-%4.U • BEU, BROADWAY MORTUAllY 110 Broad"·ny. Cost.a fllesa LI 1-;1~1 • McCOR.\OCK LACUNA UEACll .~ORTVARY I i95 Laguna Canyon Rd. l!M-9415 " " • PACJl<~IC VIE\~ MEMOR!AL PARK Ct1netr:ry fltort uary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Ntwport Btach, CalJfornla ~14-1700 PEEK ,MllLY COl.OSIAI. FUNERAL HOME "'IOI Bolsa Aw. \\·r:stmloster 19W$!S s~nms• .afollTUAllY D7 Mlllo SI. nunllnftoolleadt - Celebrate Amert~'s birthday with us th ...... ;:::-· ' ' ' -· .. ·:~:.. . .··: ··• ·~· . -... : .. . .. ~~. Have anAll-An1erlcan day after dark: • "Fantasy in the Sky" fireworks spectacular in a colorful red -white-and-b lue tribute to America. •Electrical Parade at9 p.m. with nea rly a million brilliant lights and a patriotic grand finale. • c \ ·~~·· ........ . .... . . . · .. . -.. • . . • Great American Music Machine present$ Tommy Roe at 10 p.m. and Midnight • Dance to Buddy Rich and his Orchestra from9:30 p,m, until l a.m, •The all-new Bear Country and Country Bear Jamboree .. ·- • Town" (RJ Pat Hinrl• 1ue1\! as Dr. ('./Japman, who !tees tht SUS· 0 Cood Mm Dtmo, Sh1kuit11 picion i nd mistrust ol tht town1-[6) Mtrillat Dillon people whtn ht !ills in !Of the 1b· 0 Movl1: (C) "The Third 0.7'" !Int Doc Ad1ms. (dra) '65 -Georat Ptppard, Uil•· U (J) (!) (E M11'1dty Nipt Spt· be1h A1hlry, Radd1 MtOow1ll. d1I "Chili: Uperiment In Rtd" m Trulli tr Conse11111nu. An 111min1tlon <'I lh1 polilital, (I) Run lor Your Litt tcanomic ,. I :-i•I llendt io m H11d1hop (R) lh1t r . , :..nc~ !ht e!tction o! P,..:~~111 Salvador A!lendt iii Otto· ll:l 5 ~Nen brr 1910. 1$ !hf liflt lreely·tlecltd M1rxlst he1d ol stile in the world.'ll:lD fl (i)CIS Utr Morie: (C) ''t!y (() Elabrlh I "Honible CoMpl1· o! t_he Hunltd" (du) '53 -BlrlJ aclN" Sulhv1n, Pol ly Beraen, Vittoria Gtss· min. The story ol two min wh11 ® m""" stru11t1 111intt I ltriOr·lllltd In• m Mot111,.in·l1• Yi10~1'1\e~t. ' Ql h try M1so11 0 ID Jo~nn1 Ct tlOO Ceor11 C111in tiJ Htt1111110a Cor1/1 il substllu!t hi»t, . fD llJl i lflC!A~ I Robtl'll fi1tk 0 Robtrt ._· Dem11 Show Profile ot Ille slna:e1, lnch1din1 tl· 0 (I) 00 "C£I Ditk C.vttt Sllow cerpts fram her April concert in lony R1nd1ll is 1utsl·host. W1shlniton. O.C., on "Roberta m Te Till t1!t Truth f ltek Humtn Kindness DtJ." G)U M1ldldelt 4• i. llondi 11:45®}Jo11n111 C1110n II'i) blldtt Centnl 12:00 m MOY!t: "TtU It 11 Utt Judp'" l:JO m Mm lirttrlR Show -(com) '4t -Rowlind Rum!!, Rob• .m Laalt ert Cumminp. 1-ID W1rid1r1ust l:OO ~d Cf.~:-~·:,(:~.~::, t~'! 12:30 0 Movlt: (C) "fht W"lldl lt11tllll -wtt11-1"hlf!I ralst·tn·~·of·impm. t~t Sti" (dra) '62 -Johll Siltlofl, lnJ her )ob dt11lc1tlan, a'loundtd Cini Albert . Lucy e111 only concludt 1h1t Ill mull Q) Cauntrr Miiiie TlMt havt IOfnt UlttfiOI' motivt. 1:00 @ 0QCl)11) N CJ n. Sii WMt ,, J:illf KnrJ "" VIII "Anni of Cltvtl" Ptrt IV. The l :JO 8 Movit: tc) "Tht Jntfttt y..- yttr i• 1539 and Ht nrr VU! Is •d· ' (drt) ,'$9 -Ttttsa Wrltht. Joh• vmd lo m11iy I Gtrm1n p1lncm In Saxo11. ardtr th•t ln&l•nd m'1 bt •llltd J:OO -wltlt Gtrtlllfff 111d ttll\Pfoteslafll ' u MOile: "lflhrWp" (Wu) '$1- prlt'ICtS 111lnst rr1ott: •nd t1'1t [m. GllJ Mtdlson, Rl!ond1 rltmin.t ""' ' l:JO 0""" N·early Ev~ryone Listens to Landers I • \ \ 1 First ol ·lflany 'For~y Carats' Mak~s Bow WESTMINSTER SCHOLARSHI P WINNERS Lynn Petrucci (left), Amelia Gordon Two Girls Awarded ' ·Drarria Scholarships The \Vcstminstcr Com- 111unity Theater ha s il\\•ardcd ils annual schohirships to Lynn Petrucci and Amelia (:nrdun, huth !)Cninr draina ~!udcnts at \Vcstrninstc r !11gh :Sr·hool 1·he 19il·72 a1.,~1rcl marks the first t1n1c !here ha\C bc>{'n two \1innrrs. Each \11!1 receive a e,:ranl or SlOO. ~liss Petrucci \Viii attend Sa nta ?-.fonica Clty CoJJ~ge while llitiss Gordon, who com- pleted high 11 c h o o I re· quirements in January. has been taking classes in drama at Cal State Long Beach and has been accepted a t Evergfeen State College in \\'nshington. 'fhe a\11ards ~·ere announced by Dick .Taylor, chairman of l h e \Vestminster theater's scholarsh.ip committee, at the recent banquet of the C-Om- munity theater group. THE REVOLT OF THE APESI The newest and biggest yeti :. U•ll•YOUI M•Tllll •10M t PJll. FliMED IRYINI , COLLEGE • • ., Now you can see . '1he Graduate" again or for the first time. _./'\ il1KE NICHOLS • \ JOSEPH E. LEVINE LA~'JRENCE lURMAN/ · ACADEMY AWARD WINNER .... / "·'-.. \. ~. \ IEST THE " ·GRADUATE 1 .. c.1vs-,,.c ..... o. .... !>l2 •111 (0 HlTl "STlltllE CUCKOO" (ONTl!llOU! MITllllU ftOM U 'Jll r .M. 111,tu1. And CO-HIT! "M E, NATALIE" (PG) ·..... "\ CIJllECTOflt ". • MIKE I ·~NICHOlS (_ 1117 ~ CO·HIT! "HAMMERSMITH IS OUT" fi""1I ....... o;....,, T"'4o' this time, he's not alone! 11-----CHILLING CO·Hl~-----1 1 "TAl~S FHOM THE CRYPT" .. MAf.SAT,.SUll.-TUL MAnllllfODAf UA\ I ..., .. ,.,..,..., -e.,,._ t.c..tY111..,-.1.c-..... ..__.l._ 0 ,,.,_., IOI! l •to.-. .. ,..o..off4 ,_...,,Vtllfll•l»IMO "THli OTHER" By TOM TITUS 0 1 lllt O.Hy P'Htl Sl•tf Watching a play such as "Forty Carats" -which a good many Orange County theatergoers will be doing in at least three different playhouses this season - gives one a deeper ap- preciation of the genuine com· le \Yit of the kingpin , Neil Simon. No, "F0rty Carats'' isn't Simon's work, but it Is being pursued with the tenacity usually reserved for his latest "l'OlTY CARATS" ~A comedv by Jay .l.lltn, dlrKlfd bv Jor.n Wllll1m1, ttdlnlc11 director Bl.ICldY TOt1l1, 1llt111 m1n1fft' Mld!Mi Dhran, Ml o.1l1n bY $1111nn1 Tobit, _,nd 11\d llll~llnt by IC1vln M11rllfly, Pl'9$erll..-l Frld1y1 Ind $1turd1y1 11 1:311 by the Lon<> 8eocll C•mmynl!y Pl1Yno..>t1, j()2) E • .&.na~erm St .. Lar. l r•d'I. RlllfYI · 111;1111 1213) 'JIH1!36. THI! CAST A~n S!1n1tv .•...••.. l1rb1r1 Cronkl r Ptter Lllh1m •• , ..... , Scott WllU1m1 e 111v lloyl~~ ......... R1tph R lc~mond Tr!nt St•nlry ,, ••.. ,,, Oonn1 Grllllth5 M1ucl1 HIYfl , , ,, ••. , •. Gtlberll ClllltY Mr1. M1r11111111 .•.••• ,, .... .1.1w1!1 K1y Mrs. L1m1m ..•.•..•.•. Mlr11r11 Dian Mr. L1m1m ............... J._ Hirt Mri.. .-.d1m1 ..••..•••.• Klllll"" M•lov ,..r ..... " ....... " ..... MldlMI Dl~on releases and this is unwual. for its overall quality laUs a good miny guffaws short. It is, unlike, say, "Plaza Suite," a play which may become quite tedious on the third or fourth viewing. The first of these several versions to be mounted locally is on vit!w at the Long Beach Community Playhowe, and it Js, gene rally speaking, an en· joyable one. But Jay Allen's comic parody on the con· siderable possibilities of May. December romance requires (unlike Simon's scripts) some top notch acting to put it across. The lines do not stand by themselves . Al Long Beacll, "Forty Carats" lacks about 10 carals of being a highly polished jewel. The deficiencies lie in some areas of timing, overall production pace and a few in- dividual characterizations. Compensatin.11: for t h e s e shortcomings, however, is the glittering performance o f Barbara Crooker in the cen- tral role of a fortyish divorcee being pursued with single-min- ded purpose by a weal thy young swain left over from an Aegean affair. While one .portr~yal rarely can carry a show, Miss Crooke r's succeeds as far ns is humanly possible. The story, translated from the French and Americanized, involves virtually every major "DUCK ' ' YOU SUCKER wfttl '"'" Co...,. •"4 Ro4 Stelter SltowtllMI 7f00 eM 11:01 -Aho-- · "Chato's .Land" ... ClmMI ...... Jodi,., ... 9:21 COlttl•Hn S.o. M•. 2:00 NA TIONAl CmERAr THEATRES m?J-o COLOft ~ Oel.>I• ""'" Artiltl o,... hhr - 1 :JO P·•· "llN" ':THE lAIT • PfCTu•• IHOW" c•I ,, I -AND rPGJ !---AND 1----AllD ENTERTAINMENT character (and a few minor ones) ln a quest for a com· panion either two decades younger or older. Even the grandmother, while not a participant, is an interested spectator-in tier grand- daughter's paraphernalia. Matchlj)g the luster of Miss Crooker's skllllul vacillation is the easy, natural per!onnance of Ralph Rich· mond as her most recent ex, a stock actor with an itch to "go straight. 'J When these two are onstage, there is a warm, honest rapport that almost makes one forget he is in a theater. Scott Williams fares less successfully in his role as the determined young I o v e r . Williams relies overmuch on physical presence t o un-- derscore his interpretatjon and neve r comes totally to grips with his character. As ide from an in co mplet e charac· terization, he suffers OC· casionally from problems in though her failings are more technica l than interpretive. Rounding out the Long Beach cast art Harold Can· non, effective enough a~ the last or the big time spenders but a shade questionable as the suitor for a teen-age girl ; Alvetta Kay, a bit shaky in a potentially juicY bit as a real est.ate sal~·oman, a n d Kathleen Maloy, competent in a rather meaningless cameo. Show stealers in· the cameo bracket are James Hart and f\.1argaret Dean as the highfal utin' prospective in· laws (Hart's incessant finger drumming provides just the right tough for his grindstone- oosed character). J o h n Williams' direction tends to sag when the script does -which, during a 13- sce ne production, is quite fre- quently. A shar(>«:r tempo in the area or ensemble playing is required to shore up the long dry spelts b e t w e e n laughs. Five more weekends remain tor this, the vanguard of a THI NIW ADYINTUll "LIVING FREE" AIM Wolt DhMy't. "BEDKNOBS AND BROOMSTICKS" CONTINUOUS DAILY FIOM 2 1972·73 season wave of "Forty Carats." ?erformances are Fridays and Saturdays at 1:30 in the Community PlayhouSe, 5021 E. Anall<lm St., Long Beach. Opry Stars To Perform NASHVILLE (AP) -Coun- try music stars of Nashville's Grand Ole Opry \Yill be featured this summer in Wet!k· ly shows at Opryland U.S.A., the new entertainment C-Om· pl ex just outside the clty. Tex Ritter,~ Roy Acuff, , Ernest Tubb, Bill Anderson and Jan 11oward will be among the Opry Ii I a r s performing in three shows each Wednesday afternoon , Opcyland officiaJs said. The price of admission to the $2B million C-Omplex 'viii also C-Over the Opry stars' show, the officials said. "200 MOTELS" the area of delivery. l~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 'Donn a Grilfiths is perfectly 1: cast as_ the pragmatic 17-year· old daughter who shares her mother's s ymp tom s, in reverse -a delightfully con· vlncing performance. Gilberta Causey encounters some. dif. ficulty as the mod granny, FOREVER" .., S.1n Connery AM . "FIST FULL OF DOLLARS" cn.t fostw"41 Iott. fGJ .... c.i .. ALSO SHORTS CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M. IAMESCOIURN. W1l1 BIDW YOU AMI ROD STEIGER W111 BLOW YOU APAll! ~ID fOlt ATIRACTION :0 in "THE HONKERS" • CJO FOWAR OS ---CtNFOOMF 10 , . .. ~~~ --CtNFODMF l l ' ...... ~:r:...~ ---... SIAOIUM I . .. .--.-~~--~ ---'...•• SIAD/UM l ·. .. ~ ... .:tr "lll:"~ ---:o StnDIUM J .. .' .. ,._. ., ----.. SIAD/UM J ----·"LI ·- Haox CA• 11.•TMA.. c•> Wlttl ••l'lllrl H1r....., '"" "'1MI CONVICTS I A WOMAH" IR) "SHAlfTS 110 sco••" • ~ "GaL CAATaa~ "DUCk1 YOU SUCklA" • "CHATO'S LAND" SllOH MtQ- "JUNIOR IONHl!A" 1 ... 1 lo WI~ M1t111M "kOTCH" (0 ) Mon...rrl. 7-t p.m. H1rltor & Adami Sat. 1~7.f..11 p.m. Co.ta M"..-..546-3102 Sun. 14-S-7.f p.rn. '"BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER" .. " ' . . . '" ' "TIIERE IS ONLY ONE BRANDO. HE IS TIIE &OOFATIIER. THE CENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE T11E 'GONE WITH THE WIND ' Of GANGS'rER MOVIES." -Paul 0, Zimmerman, NewawHk u.o l11E GODFATHER' IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE Of THE FINEST GANGSTER MOVIES EVER MADE. ITS RARE TD COME OUT Of A 3-HDUR MOVIE AND WANT TO , MAKE A U ·TURN AND GO IN AND SEE IT All OV~R _AGAIN.,BUT THATS EXACnY MY FEELING AmR SEEING 'THE GODFATHER'.'' -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "~TRULY EPIC FILM IN THE BEST CLASSIC SENSE Of THE WORD! EVEN MORE ENGROSSING THAN MARIO PUZO'S BOOK, If THATS POSSIBLE!" -ABC-TV --=--"A MARVEUOUS MOYl£rl-TOUGH. BEAUTIFUL MOVIE!" ·~BS-TV "WAIT UNTIL 0Alll'" "I HEVEl SANO"'"°• "TAl.•!)'.ltOM '1.1. ......... m:""'._...,.!.Jb.,.,l~M~Y;..;;'';'~'';'~·~1~1~1 .,.,.\,r., .. .,.'m'm'm"•''•"·" ...... lf_~LJl CINEMt.. VIEJO Mondn, July 3, 1972 • ••• . . ... ... . .. . • COAff HWY. At lllACAftTHUR ll'/0 • NEWPORT BEACH • 644 ·Ci760 DAILY PILOT [)' • Mail~~ ira~~~ 11 ia~i Jam11 ~aan SHOWS DAILY AT: 12:30. 3:30 7:00 I. 10 P.M. PLUS-THI ALL TIME RIAT COMEDY Now you can saa'1be ~" again or for the f'lst Ume. . / '·' tWllU 0111.'I JOS[PH f l(VINt Mlllf NICl'+OI " I/ l.-.WRl NCl lURM-.N ,.' •, L -~ ACADEMY· AWARD WIMlfEft ... , OllUCTOfl ••• Ol'CMOl.I ••• ..... vco1fljt,.l1Y- flus "H AID CONTlACT" with Jo...., Cob111rtt & L" Rlfftlkk HOLIDAY.MATJNllS SAT ,SUN. & T.UIS r .. , .,.., r~o ••• .,.,,.., .. VLt\~ Ir t\M11'1 St\M"' ...... _,, .. _ .. _,,_ ·:~~"4~.~L ~ .. ~ '----'l PG Ki'll'Wolor' ' •. • ••••• •••••• •••••••••••••••••• • • •llllC H •\.VO . .-.T li\.\.la • • •IT. COlllT tlWY. • •Aot DllGO PWY. ••7 ·9909 • HUrtTtNOTON B l!llC~ lftd TOP ATTRACTION RUTH GODRON 8UO CORT IN .. .-............... HAROLD and MAIJUll , ................. . 2ND GREAT COMIDT W-Atr.. "f];~OJl l MONIY AND IUN" • ]0 DAILY PILOT . FINANCE Pollution . Cost Eyed By Firms JJY LEROY POPE UPI 111tlnen Wrll•r NEW Y 0 R K s Environmenuil control likely will compel drastic process changes ror some industries because they cann ot afford ex· pensive waste treatment, a tex· tile research expert reports. .. Wise Businessman W1iy Does He Work? Just for the Halibut SEATTLE. Wash. (UPI) - Peter J. Riksheim, 73, still flshe:s for halibut alt.fiougb be could Ji\le 'high, dry and com· fortable because of prudent In· vestments he began making three decades ago. Riksheim, a n at iv e of Norwa y, is \VOrth about a quarter of a million dollars. Asked during a dock side in-- terview recently why he con- tinued Ul go down to the sea ln· fishboats. the leathery skiMed sailor replied, "011, I SUPPOSE I could do a lot of t~ other things , like visiting Panama again ... But I've been just abou t every place I wa,nt t& go. Besides, fishing is what I like to do. I got it in my blood." \Vaiting on Pier 59 when Ri ksheim came in aboard the halibut boat Sylvia w as Willi am A, Reasoner, chair· man of the bo8rd of Waddell & Reed, Inc., the K11nsas City firm which manages a mutual investment company known as United Funds, Inc. Reasoner, a native of "°" quiam. Wash., .bad returned to the PacificJiiorthwest to honor Rik.sheim 'because the fishennan has b e e n a particit>ating shareholder in United Funds longer than any of the group's other 500,000 members. • Ultl Tt ......... HE'S WORTH A QUARTER OF A MILLION Peter Rik1h1im, 73 l ikes What Ht Does member of an Atomic F..nergy Commission study team at Christmas Island followiqg atomic tests in the South Pacific. didn't they would confiscate her, so I took the $43,000 they offered and put part of the money in the mutual fund because my Seattle friend nnd neighbor, Erling Johansen, was an agent for that outfit." . ' Up, Down- -' They Have 'Ans wers' By JOUN CUNNIFF "" 111.i,.. .. Aflaly.t NEW YORK-Ask a broker wh y the market is up or down at any specific minute and he will give you an answer. The worst crime in the business Is to appear misinformed . You must always have a,It e1- planation. These explanations are not difficult to come by. The big brokerage houses usually sup- ply their people with a likely explanation before the start of business each day, usually tying it to news events. EVEN WITHOtrr such a cue ca rd, any broker can take his choice of a dozen or so ex· planations from the daily newspaper : war politic s~ monetary policy, strikes, cor· porate profits, government regulation, inflation ... You don't have to prove that "'any of these are real factors because it isn't likely that anybody cane ff e c ti v e I y disprove · them. Tip1.e might, but investors seldom look back. The worst explanations are soon forgotten . And if, in the doldrums of the summer when newsmakers are away and events become spaced out and the broker is at his wit's end to explain a slump, he can always say "investors are on the sidelines awaiting positive news." ' . ·Finance Briefs espuddlng . Begins NEW YORK -.Occidental Petrolewn Corp. said It had spudded il3 first e1ploratory well. to begin . drilling opera- tions in the Oriente region ofl Peru's Upper Amazon Basin. Occidental said the well was being drilled about 90 miles from the latest cl three oil discoveries by Peru's state oil company and about 150 miles 1 1 from other discoveries made by a group in the Amazon reg ion or Educator. ' -e Corpo1'atlon NEW \<ORK -May Depart· ment · · Stores Co. a n d Consumers Distributing Co. of Toronto announced an agree- ment in prl\lc:iple to fonn .a new corporation to operate a major chain of catalogue- showroom outlets in l h e United States. The new corporation is to be owned equally by the two members of the joint venture and will open a minimum of 150 outlets a.s rapidly as possible, the companies said. e DefJentu1'es LOS ANGELES -Holde"' of $55 million of debentures to be ofrered by Dart Industries Inc. of Los Angeles will be able to exchange them at auy time for common stock of Minnesota M i n I n g and ~1anufacturing Co., St. Paul, Minn. Would you trade Your best snapshot for M • ' a trip to ex1co. / Dr. J-olin Hill llid · · · Thls snapshot or his daughter laken Jn h.is own back· yard captured the third prize trip to Mexico lor two, plus $250 in last year 's Kodak International Newspaper Snapshot Awards !or Or. John Hill, a research engineer. . A1id Carl Moser sivappe d liis best shot for $500 • .{ames B. Laslev, execut ive vice-president of Spring. Mills, Inc., was talking about his ov"n textile industry but he quoted a prominent consulting en"ineer as saying that any business which has a profit return on capital less than the present interest rates on bor· rowed money, or less than 4 percent on sales, is in the same boat as textile com· paniot. The consulting engineer said bluntly that such businesses will ilot be able-lo generate money to finance waste treatment facilities in- ternally and will f i n d themselves in· a poor position to borrow the funds. THERE ALSO is no chance, said Lasley, that the federal or local governments will Jet such industries continue to use processes that pollute the en· vironment. The rules are tou~h and will get tou_gher. As he handed Riksheim a clock which operates perpetually o n barometric pressure, ReaSQper said the Norwegian's . ac·co mplishment in the field of finance "is one of unflagging hif.th confidence in this nation's economic future as well as a splendid American immigrant ' success story.'' NO'V HE JS merely a member of the Crew or the Sylvia and holds one of nine shares which means he gets one-ninth of the value of, the fish caught and sold. RIKSllETh1, SOMEWHAT Once he owned his own boat, bewildered by all I h e a tuna clipper called the attention, s a.J..dl-.lb:l1--«"'----'&~l;oar,_.~_F. J!ut early in 1941, minded him that he hadn't w en the United 8terwas checked in with immigration moving lo a war footin g, a officials since the Sylvia government representative returned from British Colom· came around and said Uncle bia fishing groun.ds bill he re-Sam needed the Margaret F mained long enough to P.xplain and six other tuna boats then that except for a one-year _based at San Diego. That w a s only a few months after United Funds, Inc., went into business. Riksheim invested $11 ,000 in two plans . He Jet the di vidends and capital gains ride and on Ma y' 2, 1972, h' owned 31 ,386 shares worth $265,429, based on the current market price. Jn addition he purchased 3,750 shares over an eight year period at a cost or $18, 455 which on May 26 were worth ;57.264. An examination of this pro- cess is unusually significant now bec'ause. the personalities , and programs of the presiden· tial candidates have been used as grist. There has been a spillover into another context. The marketing is disap. pointing investors, it is said, because 0£ the likelihood that Sen. George McGovern will be n'.amed the Democratic can· didate for president. The offering of 25-year Dart debentures was approved by .. Dart directors, the company said. Exchange ralios and debt yield were not an- nounced. .. You can't beg, politig. lob- by or cry your way out 0£ them," Lasley warned textile mill operators . "The public won't let you .'' If text,ile mills can't afford cxpensi\le tr ea I men t or po 11 u t e d wa.sles, one alternative is to change proc· esses drastically to curtail pollution at the start. Lasley suggested ..'JCveral concrete wa9!; for accomplishing thi s. Textile producers should carefully study all their proc· eSsing materials, especially chemicals, with a view to drastically redu cing the use of those that cause significant water or air pollution. "In $0ffie cases it \Viii pay to use a ·more expensive chemical if that cuts ·down sharply on waste pollution," he said. "The consume r will have to pay through increased prices, .higher taxes and probab ly by ge tting a sma ller selection of merchandise," Lasley said. Bank Hikes Prime Rate stint as a rigging slinger in the "I didn't want to sell." ex· logging camps of Gray s plained Riksheim, "b'ut if 1 Harbor, Wash., and a lOllr of On the latter· investment he has taken out all capital gains ~ dividends ill cash. THE EXPLANATION sounds reasonable when it is accompanied by highlights of the more anti~stablishment aspects Of the McGovern -pr~ gram. 'Ibe market is establish- ment, and i( doesn't care for· ideas on redistributing we.alth. duty nboard .a lighthouse tender in the Aleutian Islands during \Vorld War ll, be always has been a fisherman. When· he wasn't fi shing with a hard line in the fjords of Norway. or for halibut in the North Pacific end Berinli( Sea, he \vas seeking tuna off the Galapa~os Islands. He even went fi,~hing for radioactive denizens as a professiona l Money's Worth HoW' Woui.1 Mc.Govern Aff eel Businessmen? But nobody in Wall Street , with all its alleged research power, seems able to offer evidence that even suggests that this "e1planation" is based in fact. Though it serves the market, it may disserve the large public. A perceptive analysis· Qf the market, which hasn't fallen By SYLVIA PORTER of 82 perl!Cnl on year~to.year nearly as badly as it has failed Tf Senator George McGovern Jncrease in earnings Or big for the mombenbyt toU:~hls ~ were to become President of companies. heights soug t . I.! made by John Wright. the the U.S. and if he then could • AS A BUSINESS1'1AN Bridgeport, CoM., investment put lnto effect policies which • deepiy interested in building adviser. eExec quits LOS ANGELES -Republic Corp. announced the resigna- tion of Gerald Mansbach, vice president, saying Mansbach had complained he had not ..been fairl,Y CQfllpensated." Mans!~bac~'s brother, Samuel, a.lro resigned as president ot Mansbach Metal Division and vice president of Kentucky Electr1t: Sleel, both Republic subsidiaries, in. sym- pathy with his brother, com- pany officials said. Exec Grabs Earnings, Quits Firm Automaker Seeks 2.5% Price Hike he has publicly favored, what -up your company through Wright calls ~ current in- might it mean to you? You. as mergers, a much stiffer en-terpretations ·'excuses for'' CUPERTINO (AP)_ At the a big businessman? Or a small forcement of the anti-trust rather than "causes of." He age of 42, James F. Riley has b u sines· Jaws to make sure you don't lists them: stepped down from tii.s $75,000- man? Or an .,; interfere with competition. -Renewed doubts about in-a-year job as presJdent of 1 0 ET R 0 1 T (AP) investor? You 'd almost certainly find It flation being brought under semiconductor firm to live the American J\1otors Corp. of-Answer: A much tougher to get af)proval control following a rise In the life.he'd really like. ficials have asked the Price period of dis· for mergers. Wholesale Price lndeX. "My options are un1irnited,'' Commission for permission to quieting . un-• As an executive earning a -1be McGovern candidacy. Riley said. "I could start my hik e prices of their 1973 c e r 1 a tnty fat salary, the abolition of the -A GROWING reaUiation own company~ go back to the models by 2.5 percent , com· abo~t what new tax break given to you by ta r inlegrated circuits industry, pan y offltials announced, even ls in pros· the 1969 tax reform law -the that postelection x re orm do very little and hope for the h h h ·d 1 · """'t for you, 50 percent maxt'mum tax on will add up to higher taxes and I oug t ey sa1 a arger 1n-..,..~ • 1 1 ded cti "regardless best from my investments, or crease is justified. that ~ "0 T " your earned income. This ower u ons, ~onsult for a munber or com· NEW YORK (APJ -First Officials said the increased sure. Hig~r ta xes . on repeal is in the tax refonn bill of who appoints the tax col-panies." National City Bank, which led prices would still be com· your earnings and capital introduced into the Senate lecWhtors.'doe' h II 1c-The l likel altern 1· the nation's banks last week in gains. But, should conversion which McGovern . y s e ca rlC'm ex-mot!! y a ave, raising its prime lendin~ rate· petitive with the o t her r t d t ts co· cuses rather than causes? he said, is to stay clear of to 5" automakers. rom war 0 peac~ un ercu sponsoring. "The sloe'" market not only fulltime involvement in cor· 1' per c ent . said it your business. direct and • , , I\ \\'Ould boost the r;tfe to fr'B The request was made pGSsibly vitally imp 0 rt ant . As an tnv~stor, ~ tighten· always finds an e1cuse to do porate management and to percent starting today. primarily to cover the in· help 1ng-u p on capital gaw treat· what it is going to do anyway, serve as a consultant - The announcement came creased production costs of · ment all along the line. For in-but also creates its own hopefully broademng out from ~hortly aft er the 5 1~1 percent mcelin_g 1973 exhaus-t JN 'TRIS report, 1 need not ·;ance, the Senate bill which psychology in the process." thesc;mi<Onductorindustry. hike spread Friday to J\.1organ en1issions requirements, an repeat In detail my three basic McGovern is co-sponsoring This means "the most un-Riley said he decided to step Guarantv Trust Co. of New improved bumper system and points except to underline the would increase the holding favorable interpretation of the down as president of Interstil York. filth biggest in the coun· economic increases. offici als extent to which the Senato r period for long-term capital most adverse developments Inc. of Q.lpertino after review· try and the last oi the coun· said . • from South Dakota is now gain treatment from . slx always seems to dominate the tng hls life on a plane trip to try'S JO biggest banks to raise ,.. ··our c:;ost increases. . . trying to reassure you that he months to one year. It would news during a decline -and Washington. Jts rate. \vould justify a request for an has no anti-business bias. eliminate the tax break for . vice versa." "It wasn't a two or three First National .Cit y. the se· increa~e well in excess of 2.5 "I understand." says he, capital galns under $5(!,000 in In his view, no matter what month carefully laid out cond biggest bank in the coun· percent:• a spokesman said . "that the strength of the any one year. It would repeal excuses are offered, mere thing," he said. HJ'd thought of try, is one of a small nwmher f1C added. "We believe it is Americ.an economy is gue the tax break involved In the seasonal influences will take it before, but con di t Io n s of banks with an automat ica lly In our best interest to commit mainly to the dynamic growth $100 dividend exclusion. hold. The summer soltice is weren't right. Now they are. adjusted rate Pegged to other to price adjustments not in ex. of the private sector led by • As 8 .,,...L'l1 businessman, only a week aWay, he notes, "I have enough assets, both l·nleresl cha rg•s The formula cess of g ner•l -noma·· 1· nd th "'""' and that usually coincides wilh " · e ... .. .. ., ... • corpora ions a o e r s-1·a1 help You for lnslance liquid and an· an· v-•-ents, to used in wceklv reviews of the guidelines, a n d to seek businesses. It is sound public ~itld be ex~mpt 'from any ex: the traditional summer rally. do pretty much wh;i'j' want_ Citibank rate 'h'as made it one recovery of the excess costs palicy to create the conditions 1. 1 ed (Y Nature, he feels , will take its and to ...... around Ilk• this,'' of the most sensit ive in the th h f lh · · I b ce55 pro its tax mpos · OU ooune, and stocks along with '"'' roug ur er ulCreases in • or usiness to function ef· would be deemed Hsmall" if Riley said, pointing lo his open _co_un_t_r_Y· _________ o_ur_v_ol_u_m~e_.'_' -----fectively.'' you do not now pay the full It. shirt collar. DAYE ROSS PONTIAC'S E'Jt:CLUSIVE NEW CAR 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WaRRan ty Reassuring words Indeed -corporate tax rate.) More IF IN FACT this doe! haJ>-'Mter showing a IOIS of $1 but stripped of the bafOegab, research an d development pen it will be interesting to million for the year ending what might some of his pro-funds would be channeled to review th 0 s e old ln--' Dec. 31, Intersil was profitable gr~ms mean to you? you not only to help you terpretatlons aboUt inflaUon, in this year's first quarter and e As a businessman, a prosper but a I a o because the Democratic candidate and Riley said he eipecls ,the year return of your taxes to the McGovern bellevts you should the likelihood of higher taxes. 11 t whole to be profitable. high levels of 1960, allhough he be encouraged.lo produce your WJll 111.thr~ be dbcarded il He left the coinpany, which insists this does not mean a share of imPQrtant new ideas the market rists? No. You he headed for two years, with rise in the'corporale lax rate and innovations. don't throw away a useful 50,000. shares of ltock which from tod ay's 48 J)'rctnt to . script that quickly. You must was tradlng at •bout $18 at the 1960's 52 percent. Instead, he ti IN McGOVERN'S word!: give lhe appearance of con-time. tJ asking for the elimination of The cyclotron, the Xerox alstency, If only to malntain Riley said he bell et es many "the special loopholes that process, Pol~l~,-~utomatlc pride ln your r t a I O. n I n I other execuUves could do what have been opened slnce'' 1960:-°t r 1 n s m Is~• :ft:-irowm. be't doing. Among the "tax milifmizing &Steelrnaklng, . slee t Should the market rise, you "I know there •re hundreds, devices" _ 8 c c e l er a t e d rolling techniques, titanium, may be sure that It was or thousands, on the Penlnsula depreclat!on>schedules and In-the jet engine, the ht?Jlcopter because Investors w e r e who have better . balance vestf\'lent tax credits. -these are a few of the ma-· "reassured" about tnOation, sheets than J do. But they're , • M 1 buslnessmlln prog-Jor invenUons which have hffn the McGovern program or pj work every day, 80 l have tc) pertng because of pr1ce In-produced in small laboratorl~s Uxe.s. " conclude they want to be crt•"' and wa ge limiisllon.•. In th!$ country .... It makOI there," be uJd. an excess protits tax on the sense for the government to 1 d lhl ~ •lanl """' of ~·r "excessive" come down hard on the side ol Garbage Plan RI •Y ••1 1 he now • ""'• ' -11 to lake .. me spur<>!-the' benefits. Although McGovern lllUI i:r enlcrprbe." ment vacallons wllh his wlf• hH al!O hack Ir a ck e d In llllll1, ll'a ·a mixed bag for MOSCOW (AP) -IA& ml fi'O children 11111 spend somewhat on th!.t proposal, bit busln ... and llMllon -Ills lncrld 1111 opened an .,. men U1D6.wlth them. Jn!Ual r01cton to the Im· and small. II CCt<Jld be good per!IJl<lllal plant that will lum Rlcenlly, he~l an eollre pocJl!on ol prfc .. wa?> conlrols news ' ll could J>o hid. 140,000 tons "'n· . yur afternoon le hll Ii<· "~ call for 1n ucess pro-depend on who and whal Into fertlllzd, Gtlldal Tua 7UN>1c1 ooo 1Jow IWlnc a fits tu at the K01'an war rate yoo att. neWI aceoey . bll Carl E. Moser ol Hickory, North Carolina, took a $500 Honor Award in the 1971 Kodak International Newspaper Snapstiol Awards , competition wilh this compelling por~rait. If you take pictures y ou could ivin part of $55 ,000 .in travel and casli to be awarded in this year's co ntest: FOLLOW THESE SIMPLE .RULES : 1. ,Th• c.onfe 1t i1 1trictf v for tm•t•ur photo9r tphtr~ (A" •m•· f•ur n def1"ed 11 on• who11 hobbv or twoc1lio" ;, pich1re·t••;"9 •"~who_ do•• "ot make eny 111b1i•nfiel p•rt of hi1 li¥i"' throu h te•r"g p1ctur•1l, 9 2. l!•~k·tnd.whlt~ o(r.olor pictur•1 taken •htr July I, 1971 er• •l191bl•, No P•Clur11 111.&y be enf1r1d by •ny i mploye of th1 DAILY PILOT or bv eny ind lvidu•I wh o p1"o"•ll · d . th f I v II '"9•9• u1 • m1nu •cfur•, 1• e, comm1rci 1t lini1llin9 o• P' / · I I h h, o 111 10"1 us• o p otogrep 1c 9ood1. J. St11p1hoh m•v be +tken with '"V m1k1 of c•m• br•"d of fi1m . 0 No •riwor k or t1louching ;1 pe rm·tt .,••, on •ny t • ·t ••o""•9•• l't•I or pri" ' -no compo1il• piclure1 mu!lipl m1rltlplt prinlin9. ' ' •xpo1ur11 Of 4. Any numb1r of pictur11 m•y be '"ler1d Coot I I' d' d h b . II In I n1 111e • r•11 •fl P o"e n1,1m 1r mu1I b1 wr itt•" clo I th b ~ f h ' , '' y on ' •r..-0 1ec p1r.lure. M•tl or d•liv1r pr lnh or tr1n1p1 ·· t DAILY PILOT Sntp1hot Co"le1I Editor P O 8 15"6"0"'c' " M C'9 • •• H • ~. •11, ,... 2626. IEnh1••· c•n, b1 ht"d.d,.liverid to •nv DAILY PILOT offic1, but must be phy1 1c 1lly i" h•"d jn th ff' b "••dll"e ••ch ""••k.l COnt11t officiel1 reiirvt th 0~1h01 icei Y I I ' . f I d • • 119 to r.1rry O¥•t I I •" t1•t or u 9'"9 from °"' ""••k to th I d I d I • d · / h e nix tn to I XC u I rom 111 91n9 • logef 1r •"v '"tri11 r1i:e ivtd I I • h fi"1l w1••· '"· •11nt1 S. No bl•tk·•l'ld·whit• pictures wil1 b1 r1tutntd C t I mu1f b1 ebl• to furni1h +II• orl9h~•I "•getive ·t ' 0" 'd 8b"1 th• Conl•1t Editbr. Tiie DAILY PILOT ,11ume~ ' ••quetti 'b'I·' for n•91tiv11 or prinh, no 111 PO"'' 1 1y 6. Cont11l•nh erl P•rmitted lo submit pie! t I • •• • t• • h w ur,•1 o on v on e n1w1p1p1r p1r.11c1p1 1ng •n I • l\Odek lnt1rritlion I S h Aw1rd1. 1 "'Pl ot ~· To ii. 1l19ibl• for • l_ocel 9r•ncl pri1•, • co"'''''"' 11911 1 1ltl1m1nl that tht pu::lurt, or •"other clo• I • ·1 "'~•f t I th b• I • . t V 111111 It ,,.. urt o • 11m• 1u 11c or 11fu•fton, h11 "ol betn d ·u ii, •nl1r1cl by him in 1ny olht~ confe1f 1"d will '•'•" "1'1 "1 I b1· !' t bl•' , no •o !"' or p11 •C• 1011 o '"" pu 1C-1toon "of r.o"n•cl1d with th• C • I. IMPOITANT: I• 1ur1 you k"ow the n1m1 c1'' dj" •II. of 1ny r1co9ni11blt p1r1 0111 1ppt1ri"9 i" your 1 ,~"t ' y'h'1°~1 L • _, f ' b IC ure. I " ~ce111ry -••u11, '" oru•r or. 11 to • ent1t ecl ·,. ·• · l d . ' b bi h I .,,. "11111"1' _ u 91n9, vou mutt • • • to 1111 I • wrillea ''" t f h p1r1011 Of p1r10"1 I or their l19tl 9u1rdit"i i" 1'.,'" e IUC rninot1l to P•rmit 111• of th• picture fo r th1 ~u,poie 1 fci,i''t ef tio", 1d.,t1thl"t or publictfJ011 111 •"Y mtnntr. 0 ui re. DAILY PILOT Snapshot Contest Enter Every Week -' ]Hly 2 through Aug. 26 . -- fleadline (~nesday Noon • t I I I ' I ' • I • • I • I I ' • r. I ' 1 J I ' I t I • ' • I t • • • • I I ,. I ' -' . • Here's What's in it for You -. . THIS SU EVERY SUNDAY • SUNDAY SPECIAL ' Stoiies by, of and for the Orange Coast as only a DAILY PILOT staff writer can tell them. These page-topping stories set the ' pace for Sunday's in-depth approach to news reporting, DAILY PILOT style, PEOPLE/QUOTES Kings or corrimoners -they're all people. And, sooner or loter, they say something quotable. It makes comments that are ' highly readable .. : just part of the exclusive package of staff-produced features tailored for Sunday DAILY PILOT readers. ORANGE COAST ROUNDUP Coa stwise, no one is more coast wise than the DAILY PILOT. Weekly roundup of significant happenings from Seal Beach to San Clemente helps readers keep up with all the communities of the Orange Coast. -SPORTS Latest deadline for sports news in Southern California assures Sunday readers of the freshest and most complete overnight -. . coverage of local, and global events in the sports world. Still offering the most in-depth coverage of local area sporting events, . the 'new' sports section now offers more scope and depth on Sundays. \_. \. -~ YO U ~ " • • • Focus on .Ye\{ and your friends and neighbors through this lively 'Section 3' every Sunday. Feature article leading off the sec- tion is exclu~vely available in the DAILY PILOT, Oken is staff written . New 'AT YOUR SERVICE' column answers the hard questions, c~~-even help you fight city hall. Other 'YOU' features in section include 'You and Your Health', 'You and the Law', 'Good Deed ~~eople' (your neighbors who have taken on the commitment to help their neighbors). Columnists range from Erma Bomb · , quickest wit in the west; and Count Marco, the man women love to hate; to Rex Reed, the celebrity-turned-col -• . umnist, who lls it lil<e celebrities wish he wouldn't. And the 'YOU' section also offers locally oriented and exclusive enterta in- . PLUS ••• EVERY SUNDAY . • Big, Local Cla11l~ecl Ad Section • TV Week (With Full Week's Logs) ' • Color Comics S.dlon ~ Family Weekly Magazine ' ' .,... • (1 I the .-Big, _.New :.·. SU·NDAY EDITION II in DAILY PILOT • ' ' • • 1 .- • .. ' J 2 DAILY PILOT • ' ' Monday, July 3, 1972 ~~ Locl{heed Finds Business. "low for Tris tar's · . ~ By DONALD ROTHBERG Lockheed Chairman Deniel J . -Haughton appeale•. for govemtnent help, WASHINGTON (AP) - A healthy flow declaring that withou t It the Tristar pro- of Pentagon business, .a huge federal loan gram wouJd be scuttled. guarantee and a helping hand Crom Bri· .. lain so far have failed to IUt Loc kheed U ~hat happens, I know of absolutely Aircraft Corp. above financial ·storm no way t?i keep Lockheed out of clouds that threatened it \\'It b bankruptcy, he said: lt delivered the first three-engine 'IM.stars this spring to Eastern and Trans \Vorld Airlines. But since obtaining the loan backing during the airline. stum11, it • has sold only two more of the 272· passenger planes. The Tristar's main competit ion is the ?\fcDonnell Douglas OClO, an American- Lockheed steadfastly denies. Plane- buying decisions vitally important to the Tristar's future are due, probably this fall, from British European Airways and Japan's AU Nipon Airway!!. "\Ve would have mighty rough going on the basis or jusl.-\vhat the L101t program is today, but we are going to get tnore bankruptcy. The Nixon Administration backed The nation's No. 1 defense contractor, ~aughton's appeal and after a long and • heavily in debt, has pegged its future to bitter fight, Co~gre111 voted to p~~ge its big commercia1 jet, the Tristar LlOl l. ~overnment credit for up lo $250 m1llloo But the ai rline business is in a slump and 10 new bank loans. . crders for the $ill million plane aie below So Lock.h~ kept alive. . expectations. The Br1t1sh government provided t~e A year ago, Lockheed was reeling from mo~ey to enable Rolls ~~ce to stay 1n Tlae T r istar's t11 a b1 co111pe t itio11 b t he MeDon·· tae ll Douglas OC IO, tan An1eriea11-fJ11ilt t hree ettgirae j umbo, a11d a tmi11 -e119i11e E11r"opea11 a irb11s. Ava:/. able earlie r , tl1e DCJO so far h as 011 tso/d the Trlst ar 1 70 to 104. • $434 million in losses on four government bus1ne:is and offered airlines separate projects and from the bankrup tcy of financmg ~or 90 ~rcent of t~ cos.t of ~he • Rolls Royce Ltd., British. builder of the engines with which Rolls stdl ls having engines for the Tristar. problems. • built three engine jumbo. and a twin· engine European airbus. A v a i I a b I e earlier, the OCIO so far has outsold the Tristar 170 to 104. LOCKHEE D O\VED a consortium of 24 banks $400 ·million. Its net wort h, ac- cording to a Pentagon study, was $240 million. The banks wouldn't lend any Where is Lockheed today? more money. Fanally Cire11s IT USED $100 MILLION of the loan guarantee to obtai n extra financing and now owes the banks a total of $500 million. Lockheed says it will start making money once . it sells between 2S5-265 Tristars. A classified Pentagon study puts the figure at 370, an estimate by BU Keane Group Told No Growtli 01ily Ideal SAN DIEGO (AP) -The board chairman of Z er o Population Growt h says th e United States is still at least 18 years away from the time when the number of births and deaths are equaL Willard J ohn son, citing what he said were census figures for the United St ates popula- tion in 1971, took issue with what he called "haJf.backed reports'' that Ame rica had reac hed zero po p ula ti on growth. •How con their shoes w,e111 out so fast when we DRIVE them every place they go?" Johnson told a group of PlaMed Parenthood Volun- teers that "the fi gures are clear. During 1971 there were 3,559,000 bi rths in the USA as against 1,921 ,000 de~ths - or an excess of 1,638,000 births. "Both must be the same to achieve ZPG," he said. "Such a balance is many years in th e future. ZPG hopes that it will be attained by 1990 and will work toward that end." .. Slayer's Strange Obsessio11: He Poisons Friends, Family LONDON (UPI) -Graham Young's school friends spent their time playing with friends and studying. He, it tu rns out, spent his on poison. and wou l d try to p o i s o n someone again at ihe !!lightest opportunity. The judge com- mitted him lo lS years in Broadmoor, a prison for the criminally insane south of Lond9n. Jn February, 1971, after serving only nine yea rs, Young was released on probation after doctors at the prison pronounced him ';completely cured.'' orders,'' }laughton told stockholders in t-.1a~ "THE LIOll JS the key to our future." he declared. That doesn't mean Lockheed has lost interest in the defense business. The company is com~ting for <;on· tracts on several defense projects in- cluding a design competition for a transport plane that could operate from short runways. Its Air Force contract for the \\'orld 's biggest transport plane, the CSA, nearly put Lockheed out of business. Former Defense Secret ary David Packard summed up the C5A issue for a congressional committee: "Obviously, there is a problem when a program on which the original target cost for llS airplanes was $1,768 million ends up in a now projected cost of $3,248 million for 81 airplanes." \\lhcn the CSA contract \vas rewritten, Lockheed was forced to take a $200 million loss and finish the work on a no- additional-loss, no-profit basis. BUT NOT ALL the CS·A \VOrk is done under that no-profit con\ract . Pentagon figures obtained by The Associated Press sho\v that from 1969 through 1972, $109.3 million \Vas spent for CSA modi fications, spares and c,om~ ponenl improventenl. • Lockheed was prime contractor for nearly all thnt \\'Ork. The projrction fo.r _J973·19n.1s for e;ii::penditure of $278,8 1nllhon. Pent agon offici:tls ~aY. that t~ese cost! are part of the contwu1ng maintenance. of any \\'capons systen~ and t~1al only time 1vill tell if they \\'111 be higher fir IO\\'er than usual 11·ilh the CSA. So far, says the Air f orce, the plane \vas performed well 11'ilh lower than normal maintenance. Before the CSA came al('ln!!. Lockheed had produced the 11·orl· ~ Cl30, a highly successful but sn1 r transport plane. The 1nost r~cnt Cl30 co~1!r~c1, announced last spring, drew cr1t1c1s1J1 that the Pentagon \l'aS ordering more planes just to thro1v son1e business to an ailing contractor. REP. LES ASPlN, (0-\Vis .), a member of the I-louse Armc1 Services Committee, accused the Pentagon o.f g!ving Lockheed a $50 n1illion "bailout ' \l'llh a\11ard of a contract for 12 Cl30 transpociilt. The year was 1962 and a strange obsession was taking hold of the bookish 14-year-old boy in the north London suburb or Neasden. He spent hours in thlPu~ 1ibrary poring over books on to~icolog.v, the science of poison, and experimented on mice, caterpillars and frogs, using poisons concocted at Jwme from chemicals he bought with his pocket money. * * * Release Triggers Actio1i Young landed a job as a warehouseman with a camera manufacturing firm. J ohn Hadland. Ltd., not far from h.is boyhood home. He told his employers nothing of his stay in Broadmoor. His workmates kne\V him as a loner who-drank heav ily, ta lked about poisons -and was always eager to make tea for the staff. (Earn $61.80 on each $1,000) Then he turned to human!! - an experimentation that led him first to a ment al in- stitu tion for poisoning his family and then. last week, to life in prison for killing two of his \Vorkmates w11h poison. The boy began lacing food at horne "·ith anti mony, a poison similar to arsenic and used in making alloys. His father. sister and stepmother took sick. The family doctor \vas mystiiied by the vomiting and other sympton1s until Graham's chemistry teacher tOld him the boy v.•as bringing poisons to school. His father and sis t e r recovered. His stepmother died soon after but doctors said poison was not the ~ause. Gfaham confessed all and claimed credit for h'i s 11tepmother's death. Psychiatrists . at his trial said the boy was suffering from a psychopathic-disorder LONDON (AP) -The British government t o d a y began a review of the handling of criminally insane persons pronounce.a, cured after a freed poison'r was convicted or doing it again. ~ Home Secretary Reginald Maudling called for a check on all 33 1 persons released from the Broadmoor Prison Mental Hospi tal in the past 12 years. He ordered that no criminal be discharged from menial hospitals until he had been pronounced cured bv an in- dependent panel, ifistructed that the procedures r 0 r su pervision after release be strengthened and appoi.J)ted two. committees to.-study the laws on the subject. This resu lted from the sentencing T h u r s d a y or Graham Frederick Young. 24. lo life hnprisonment for giving fatal doses to two men he worked with and poisoning others wbo survived. ~ Within l\VO months o f Young's arrival at the firm. Robert Egle. 60. the chief w a reh ouseman, died. Frederick Biggs, 56, another worker, died soon af\er. Other members of the staft came down with the same vomiting and other symptoms that struck the two men. Doctors \\'ere at a loss to ex- plain the illnesses until a pathologist concluded they had been caused by thallium, a poisonous metallic element resembling lead. Police quickly discovered Young's background and ar· rested him. At his home they found a diary detailing how he laced tea at the factory '11ith .the pOison. ~ - Last week. a 12-mcmber jury round Young, now 24. guilty of murdering the two wor kmen and attempting to murder two othe r employes. The judge sentenced Young to life imprisonment You can earn this high interest on $5,000 minimum two year certifi cates. The first year your $5,000 certifi cate will earn $309.15, and more for C<l\h consecutive year that interest is added to the account. You can= $5917 on $1,000 minimun:toneyearcertificates, and as much as $51.26 on a regular passbook savings account of $1,000. More interest than banks ... more certain than stocks . ' Plus &ee se~cts ... safedeposit lioxes,notary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and no te collections, and many more free services are avail· able when you have the required minimum balance in your account at THE BIG M. Plus personal service ... expe rienced and competent savings couns elors in each office to assist you in plann ing your savings program. ~ ~ ' ' ~ ~ You will find a warm, friendly attitude ·on the part of everyone at Mutual Savings. ~THE BIG M • MUTUAL SAVINGS · " IOln atOCilflon • Cotona del Mar: 2.86'7East Coast Highway/ 675-5010 Open Saturday July 8,JOAMto 1PM Ot)tcrofllces in Covina, West Aicadia,Pasadcna,Clendale an.dCanoga M -clt.uwonh ,../· ster0ol03FM ..f thesoundsoftheharbor ~d.~~7 youve never heard ·itsogood ... I • • < • I • ! I , DE writl in G hC is staUo this . respb like can nlon "/( 111ctor: r I L • ~men BEA A.NDERSON, Editor Moncll J, JwlY 1. 1J'2 fl'lt• IJ • ' • " "'": •• .. . - , . - I J •• 'ffoid on to th e e dge, Erica. Bold 1111 .• ' I 1 t' ! . • • • Early Dunking Daily Pilot Photos By Richard Koehler By LAURIE KASPER Of l h• 01lly Pilot Slllf "All children can learn to swim." They can become "pool safe" even i{ • they're only six months old, mentally r etarded or physically handicapped, ac· cording to Kendra Hanauer, who gives swimming lessons to youngsters and is currently teaching her infant daughter, Erica. She believes a cbhd should learn to swim as soon as he or she can crawl. If a child doesn 't have a pool in his O\\'ll backyard, chances are he'll be around one in a neighbor's or friend·s yard. A pool, with its sparkling blue \Valer. i~ very inviting to a child, q:plained Mrs •. Hanauer. 9 • r I .. A child .can drown belore you tum around,0 she warned. 1'It could very well happen to·you and your child." lier aim in teaching young children is lo enable them to swim to the side and either climb out or _hold on to the· edge of a pool if they happen to fall in. How Jong it takes for the child to achieve this depends on the child. For 'Now, kick, Erica; Kick. Kick. K ick.' n1ost children 15 n1onths to 1 ~i years, however, if takes only about l\\'O \\'eeks of hair hour lessons for them to be "pool safe." NE VER FAILS When a mother brings her child to her {or lessons, ';I kno'v they 're going to swi m because I've never had one fail." Mrs. Hanauer's method is "con· ditioning as op~sed to really teaching .'' Since swimming is "simply propelling yourself through waler,'' all her students S\vim instantly. She takes the children all over the pool, even into the deep end ("actually for li t- tle children, the whole pool is deep'' J, on the first day. · MOBt )'OUDI chik4lD·are very eager but even if a chlld is protesting and c:;rylng, she still puts him through the routine. Many older children are ·apprehensive about going under so she makes them go under or maybe even of[ the diving board right away. "There's no need delaying it." said-the former high school English and history teacher. "W hat is known is less frighten~ ing than what is unknown." -.- ' r • • r ·-.. ' '- '. Drowns Fear She grts !ht· i·h1!d 11~1·d !n going u11d1 r \Valer, kickinJ.( ;uid hulth11i.: lus br(':1!h. Mosl rhildrt'll. ~ht· s;i1d kirk ;i11d clo~1· their mouths ll<ltural!.v unc!er \\'<l!l'r Tl1c arn11notious h:l\f' 10 b11 1aught l:11l'r un Children . shf' t·:-.pla1ncd. h:t\f' 10 s\11111 underwater brcat1..1· th(·y ;ire 1101 ~t·t strong enough ro pull th1·1r arn1s Oll l autl ·swi m on top of 1lJ1• \\ •i·r CATCH A lll~EATH Then , she tc:1\'l\l·s 1t11·1n 11\ l-;11r11 ;i breath, go a fe l\' ll'l'1. 1-;1t 1-h .111uth1 ·r breath and go a11oth1•r f1•11 11·1·1 If a child IS slill lou s111:11! tu 1·l 1111 h 0111 she teaches hin1 to \1;1li.. l1:111d 1111 r h:111d to the steps. Elfn six-month-old Erica \1as a1. tempting lo hold on to the edge Uy lier fifth Jesson. Mother was still there help- ing her along but when she started the lessons she wouldn 't t:ven lift her Jrrns toward the edge. A baby her age has lo rest :ind hi· burped quite often beca use of alt the \vater she swallows. Young chilclrcr1. rov, Mrs. J1anauer said , should be taught 111 pools warmed to "90·92 degrees. 1£ the child is under ll\'O, she tenthes !ht' 11111th;•r also. It 1s important that the 11H1lht·r kno\v wh;1l lo do nnd how Joni: 1hl' l'hilrl ca n stay uncter "so she doesn't f'!l~h 1l~i 1nuch or too litt le." ~lr~ l\:1nauer :incl her husbnnd, F:ric, 11 ho is ~1\'inl coal'h ill California St11tri l rll\l'rs1ty at Fullerton. at\crnptrd lo l•·:~i·h thL'ir other d:1ughter, Sandy, to s1·-•n1 \1·hcn sh(' \1:t!I !hr<'l' ~h(' 1>rctcstcd. c·r1ed nnd t'hokcd. ''1 \\;:s h'"lrrificd and though!. n1y c;od , T'm ch'n\1nin~ n1y ch Id · Shr 1~ave up h111 :1 11nn1:in in h£'r h11sb:111d's class said ~h\· l'nuld lrach Ill'!" tu 'i\\'im. 1'hi s sun11111'r . Sandy, llO\I' 7, l1np,·s 10 join the t1ty s.,..•int tc:un. LESSONS FllEE CHILD !\Irs. J-lanauer taught wit h the wonlan for two years. Now she does It on her own jn private pools. Lessons at a young age, she said, make a child "extremely free and ea!y in the 1vatcr.." In addition lo being "pool gafe," 1nosl children enjoy the water and reel 1.:u1nrortable in it. She doesn'l promise her students \\'ill l.K'co1nc great S\1irnr11crs but "they don 't ~ro1v up having the apprehensions and fc;irs that other chi ldren h..1vc1'1 she said. • , 'That~• very, very good.' • Analysis Rev.ea ls . Writin·g Expert'~ Type to th-e-Letter DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been 'writing to a young man who is stationed in Germany. I have never met him but, he is a friend of my cousin who Is also stationed there. According to my cousi n, this rellow is tops. We have been cor· . resp()ndlng ror fi ve months and he sounds like my kind of man . \Ve have exchanged snaPit>Ots, poetry and small girts. ~1f aunt came to visit last week and my '-nom mentioned my "mail~rder romm ." Auntie asked ff she could see a satnple or my friend's handwriting lo<ca~se. according to her, handwriting can 'tell more abou~ a per.90n than mon~s of fac~~{are conver98tion. , "A:'J>erson can loot you by being a good actol; but his bandwrltJnc tells the real • j stoiy," she .announced with a tone of finality that has always made me dislike her. I reluctantly showed Auntie three paragraphs of a recent letter. She bellowed, "Drop hirJl. The way he dots his 'i's' shows he ts fmpaUent. The style of his 'm' indicates he is caustic and sharp-tongued. lie docs not close his o's' at the top, which means he. is talkative, shallow, and probably a bore." I was crestfallen and annoyed. Is there anything to what she says? r am very upset. -NEED TO KNOW IN JACKSONVILLE DEAR JACK: Handwriting anal)'lls Is more .ol .1. parlor ·&•me .(and a b11$1nn1l tban a science. It ii nol . . • t'l•L~ \ ~ .. IM)Alllble to analyze a person'11 personality or character by examining h I ic bandwrlttng. I have made this statement before and the result! have been ln.- crtdlble. TboUJ&ldt..of letters from l• dtgnant b1ndwrtdq 4texperts1" rurtd In -neWly fffr1 Oll"l1JltWrllleD - • DEAi\ ANN .LANDERS : I ... by your new picture that there Is something sl\lny , . ' ."' on your left shoulder thal looks like a hearing .aid receiver. You"ve been frank enough to tell your readers that you can't read without glasses, bul your teelh are your own. Now, how about your hearing? ls that an aid or not? -N\JNUV· • MYBIZZNIZZ--- DEAR NUN: My htaring is still pretty good. So In I CID hear just about •••l')'l_.DC I waDI to. • That "shiny thing " Is a gold pin, the . center or whic h Is the Vlce-Presldt:ntial seal - a glft from Senator llubert II. Jlumphrey oo my 50tb birthday. • DEAR AN N: My husband and J \vork in the same building and have lunch together nea rly every day in the building's cafeteria. For several weeks now a certain secretary mnnages to be right behind my hu sband and she is full o( snlall tnlk. She leans on him. suggests certain dishes , discourages others and has entirely too much to say. ..._ I asked my husband who she Is and he says he dotSf\1l know her name oi where •he works. I heUeve him but she still . ' makes me uneasy. 1 £eel like a hypocrite being pleasant to this mouthy broad. She really spoils n1y appet ite. Should I stop being sweet -and t\\·e>-raced , and tell her off? -IRKED Dt!:AR TRKED : The Ideal solulio11 would be to find another place to cat. I( this I~ not ronverilent mukt up your mind to kee p sn1iling or you might create • problem "'here none exists. ls alcoholism ruining your lire? Know the dang~r signals and ~ to do. Read . the boo!<i•\... "Alcoholism -Hope and · He)p." 111 Am l4nders. Endo!e 35 cents in ooln .111th yoi!P request and a long, llllrulM>iz. ,.... ddressed onvelope to tllt t>AIL.Y ~~T. · • ' .. • I I Fills Th.is In tune are the Denigan children, left, they ere Therese, 3, Terry, 5, Brian, 9V2, Tom, 15, ~ark, 7, Mr1. Oenigan, Cathy, 16, Sheila, 13, Cl1udi1, 12, Anita, 10, and M1r90,__I._ Horoscope: Leo · Checks On Reservations, Tasks TUESDAY JULY 4 By SYDNEY OMARR The only President of the United States who was born on July 4, the country's "birth- day," was Calvin Coolidge. ARIES (March 21 -April 19): LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac- cept special task, assignment. One in position to return favor ~intends to do so. Know it and act accordingly. Relative acts in etcentric manner. Don't take it too seriously. C~ck reservations. 19 ): Restrictions, details are featured. You get opportunity to enhance security. Emphasis is on building, property im~ provcmcnt. Family members rnay argue. Stay out of firing llne . You'll be happier as . result. MRS. DAWSON • • Home With Harmony .. • • ---'· . MRS. C. A. JONES 6.v .f() OLSON or 1n, ll•ll~ Polo! s .. 11 The J)l•nigan fanlil y ('OUld offer lil'allhy c:on11>Cl!lion IQ the 'J'r1111p family u1 the musical 1\'urld. Therr are JO children and eight of them are n1usicians. The other 111·0 v•ill become musicians as soon as they arc old enuugh to sit ;it a piano or hold ;.in instrumenl. Costa :'.les<1ns 'fom and !\1ary Dcnigan rne! at a <:Oil· ference for Chris1ians and Jews 1vhi!e they v.ere juniors in collegr. she at Baral College . .or the Sacred lieart in Lake f'orest. Ill ., and he at Fournier Inst It u t e of Technology. Lemont, JJJ.· • Both \1 ere interested ln con- versations bcl\.\'een people of different races and religions, and she eaught his attention with a story she told of racial prejudice. . --AHer---the conference he wrote her and they began seeing each other and cor- responding, and ':ifter gradua- tion. 1rere rnarried. Eleven nionths later their first child \vas born, and after 17 years of marriage, a!! the players have been assembled for their family philharmonic. NO UPSETS J\1ary. a mere !i foot, took !he birlh of i1er 9-and 10- p:)ltnd habies in stride. "I didn't give five minutes to being upset each tiine I found l was pregnant," she said. "It 'vas kind of given to us to do it -if 'vas our lifestyle. I don't think everyone should MRS. LAWS ho\'r ~ix or 10 childr·en "\\'e both 1\l'fl' produ(•ts of thl· <.h:pre~~ion. l'1 rn3y ha\'c preparr.d 1'om <ind rnt' to be o.ible ~ take on \.\'hat sume cre11n1. 'fht>y're kids after all. They dou't think of 1h('1nsclvt>s as a tug grouJ) of 12 people. ..,.\\'e're norinal people but there arc j lot or us." people judge a hard time. I BEAUTJJ.~UL PASSAGl:: don 't consider taking carC of The rewards <.'OOlC fo r the 10 children a hard time." The llenigans had hired help Dcnig11ns Y•hen :iny one o! the rnu sirians pcrforn1s \Ve 11 . mosl of the tlmf', and ~1ar.v 1 detided to take ad\'ant:ige or •·'!'hrrl' are tin1es ll'C ho!( our hrcatli ," ~lnry said, describing the situation uncl ge t t11'l) fur 1 !ht• a11e a rcr1<1i11 ton t' on the the price of oue. Each he per (T·urn""I nr ,1 b~·:iutifully sht! had spoke Spanish, and 1·~ the children grciv up le arning played pass<lge on thr piano · a second lanf!1tag•. ran brini.:. Music was sort of "decided '' Providing these m~m~nls er ~ for the Denigans when the ir a\ve are Cathy, a Junior at oldest son, Tommy, y,•antt'd lo Corona de! Alar J-ligh School, !J take up the trumpet a11d play \1•ho is 1he concertn:iistressJ~r ~ in his school band. !hf' Denlgan .Ph1Jharmo 1c,;:: They decided musi<' \\'as a • and 1'on1n1y. a freshman at~ 11fine discipline for the mind" Corona df'I ~·lar, first trumpet. and it v1as ··11'onderful for the Also Sheila and Claudia,. children to have another eighth and seventh grade'l-1 course in their lives." students .'It Kaiser School. who ~· TRUE DISClPLIN E are pi~nists; Anita, a pianist :: . and fifth grader at Monte : Private lessons pro,v.ed.Jo..b.e__vrst:a -School~-.. Brian··ii-~fouflih­ the . true discipline that tt~e grader \vho holds f~th on tho ! J:X:nigans sought ..=!gr their soprano sax. and li.1ar;.k, a red·· children, and soon lh7 number hc<1ded first grader whose of students grew to. eight. forte is th~ violin. .A tnusic room with a gr~nd Coming up Jre Terry, 5, ,vho p1an? gre\v o.nto the <1lrcady already is ta~ing trumpet spacious Oen1gan home, and 1 0 . from Tommy and the children thought they ess ns ~, ho ,;know automatically learned music Therese_, ~, 2• '" s in their family. C\'erything. Mrs. Denigan justified the "Peo_ple say 'how ?~ )'~tJP. high cost of so many prlva1e stand it {a.11 the pract1c1~g). lessons by saying, "Each " ~1ary said. "l know 11!!ust family puts priorities on their appear some sort of freak. money. \Ve decided we \\'OUld The ans\1•er is the happiness spend money that way." a family knows v.·hen 1ts mem- Cjtftious lest anyone think bers are . in tune with one life in the Denigan household another. is all sweet music ?i-lary said. And thJt comes with prac• "It isn't all peac~es and ticte". MRS. HOOPS MRS. SEVERY Cycle high and you will receive publicity. Agreements, partnership and otherwise, are subject to quick changes. revisions. The unorthodo"" is f~aturcd. Aquarius, Scorpio and Lei> persons fi gure prom- inently. TAURUS (April 21>-May 2il): VIRGO t Aug. 23-Sept. 221 : - Now is time to finish rather than begin, 'fhis me a n s , among other things. to fini3'h paying and start collecting. Get together with Ar ies to set- tle financi<1l dile1nma. Take special care \vhile in traffic. LIBRA (SCpt. 23-0ct. 221: Forces tend to be scattered. I)on't take nnyone for granted. including partner or mate. You have desire to be on your own. Give this plenty of thought. Avoid nlaking break over nothing. Give logic equal tinie with impulse. AQUARIUS ·\,Jan. 20·Feb. 18): You WaJJt to travel. but fherc is need lot delay. Kno1v it and act accordTijJy. Gemini and Virgo individuals play im· portant role s. Avoid trying to do too much at once. Let dust settle . before making final decision. PISCES 4Fcb, l9-li.1nrch 20 1: Guard valuables. Avoid un- necessary risks. Stick close to home base. Stav with the fan1iliar. One \v!io \Vanis to specul;ite is perfectly v.·iJling lo do so -\Vilh your moner. Know !his and protect yourse lf. Orange Coast Pairs Exchange Vows Areas previously closed or i:cstricted may open. Be ready and artlclllatc. Say what you r'nean -mean what you say. Gemini and Virgo are likely to . be involved. You. will have chance for greater freedom. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Friendships are tested . Unusual activity is featured al home. Keep close watch on finances. Purchase I u x u r y item, but do plenty Of cont· parison shopping. Some hopes, desires are subject lo revision. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Get together with one you respect. including professional superior. Be receptive. Bu t also be discriminating. Some now will make prcimlses. Key is 10 listen and JeaJn without believing everything. Pl!ces is involved. SCORPIO (Oct. 2.'.l·Nov. 21 I: You gain access to con· fident ial inforn1alion. Pkiy knowledge in lo1v key. ''ou gain by being re c e pt i v e . Aquarian could be tiery much in picture. Your secufity is at stake. Know it and respond accordingly. ' SAGIT'fARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): You learn difference bet"'·oen genuine i1tlra~lion and mere flirtation. Plenty of socializing is on agenda. Another Sagittarian co u Id figure pro1ninently. Go places. See and be scrn. En1erge front emotional shell. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. IF TODAY IS Y 0 U R iJIRTllDA Y you are prescient. able to know 1vhat must be done -and y,•here and when. You \vould make f i n e architect: you have na tural sense or design. ·You ap- preciate be.auty. but also arc praclical. You can forego the frills and can find utilitarian uses for objects o t he rs discard. Jn September, you v.•i ll be under a travel cycle. To lind out wrn'!'' lu~kv for vou I~ "1<>neY l!nd IOVt, order Svdnry Donart < bOO~ltl, "Stcret Hint~ for Mrn ~MJ Womtn, .. St!lld to!r!ndalr end '5 cenio t~ Om;lfr A~t•ology Seue!o, !n~ •JAIL Y PILOT. 80~ l2~C. Gram! Central St•· lion, Ntw York, N.Y, 100l7, DAWSON-SLAUGHTER Vickie LyllJl S 1 a ugh t er beca1ne the birde of Donald Ray oa,vson in a ceremony in lhc OHvc I!eig llts \Vcdding Chapel, Orringc, for 11·hich Judge \'.'11l1am !VI o ck of- ficiated. Parents of the brid al courlc are ~1r. and J\Irs. Richard >L Slaughter of Orange and i\lr. and tl·Jrs. Arthur U:nrson of Costa J\lcsa. l\·liss Jane Platt 1vas maid of honor ;:ind J>hilip Dav.•son \l'as best 1n:in. Other attendants 11·erc l'liissrs Jo.\·cc Dn1vson and J)1'!ir:1 \Vilderman and :'Ill's. Sll'I t·n f.it,11'rir,-I. Charles Burn:-.. ,),Pl!•"i \Vil snn. Hon StepJ,,,,,~ :••'rl l\cnnclh and S!cp;1L"n Skn1ghter. The bride is a graduall' nf the Southern Ca l i f o r n 1 a Collcgr of tlh·rl1C'<'ll and Den!al Assist;ini;;. J);J11·~0Jl attends Cal l'oly l'o1niin;;i. They v.•ill n1 akr th(•ir homr in Santa An<1. JONES-HOLLAND '.\e11•port !!arbor Lutheran Chureh 11'as tile setting for the n1<Jrriagc linking Dale Ellen llo!!.'lnd and Christopher Allen .Jones. Tile Rev. James Blaine performed the ceremony for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Dale liolland of Los . Alamitos and the son of li.1r. and ~lrs. Richard Jones of Ne>\'port Beach. Bridal attendants were the ~1isscs Donna l\feyers. Lee and Bonnie llol\and. Leilani and Roberta F l I z g er a Id, Allyson Jones and Daphne Takiguchi. Tracy liol!and and .Jcnnirer Fitzgerald were flov•er girls. Attending as best 1nan was \Vayne Jones, while ushers \Vere David Holland, lvlike Mccance, Joh n Perryman, Joseph Jones, George Ramsey and Bruce Smith. The bride is a graduate of Artesia High School and at· tended Marymount College. Her husband is a Newport Harbor High School graduate and attended Orange Coast College. They will reside in Newport Beach. LAWS-BARTOK Calvano and Scott Walling. Scott Noble served as best man and ushers were Strailiff, Chris Colby, JI.lark Olsen and Robert Laws. 1'i)e bridal couple will make their home in Santa Barbara. The bride is a graduate or Tustin l~igh School and her husband is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and the University of California. Santa Barb a r a \\1here he majored in economics. HOOPS-WILLIAMS Estancia Park was the set- ting for the marriage or Mary Ann \Villiams and Alan L. Hoops. The Rev. Alvin W. Shackleton of the First Church of God , Santa Ana officiated. Her husband is a graduate of ~larina High School and :it. tended Golden \\'est College. They 1\·ill reside in llunt- ington Beach. SEVERY-LEGAN • • Judith Ann . Legan . became.l the bride of Robert lYlichaet"t Severy, h?th of Newport., .. Beach. ~ur1ng ceremonies ill, the Marine Corps Air Statio : Chapel, El Toro. · The bride, who is the public relations direetor for UCl's· College of J\ledicine, is the daughter of i\1r. and Mrs. St~nley Frank Legan 0~t Fairport, N.Y. Her husband i! the son of Robert Severy of Missoula and ~·!rs. Da vid B. \Verner, Santa Ana. Zontas Honor Four Girls-of-the-year James Laws of Laguna B£>ach claimed B a r b a r a Bartok as his bride during nuptial rites performed by the R.ev. John Sammon in St. Cecilia's Catholic Chu r ch, Tustin. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr, and lYtrs. James Wallace Williams of Costa Mesa and Mr. and i1rs. L. L. Hoops of Huntington Beach. Miss Gay Storm was the maid of honor, and bridesmaids were the Misses Cyndy Brown, Robin Clifford and Cathy lioyt. Mrs. Richard C. Duerr \\'a.-; the matron of honor ntld br!desmaids were • ~t r 3 • ~1chael Legan and Mrs. Gregory Pond. Pond served as be_st man. and ushers \\'ere ~f1chael Legan and Dale ~·!organ. 7-.onl<J Girls-<lf-the-ycar have been named for each of 1he Nc1vport-Mesa high schools. The coeds have b e c n selected by the Girls-of-thc- month at each school and v.·il l rccei\'e a $$0 Savings bond. J/onors are hascd o n leadership. c i ti z e n sh i p. scholarship and ~ervi<.•e to school. CORONA D~I, M,\H J\1iss Astrid Store. O:iugl11rr of ~tr. and Jlitr.~. Jul1n S1orc nf Corona del Mar. is a mrn1tK'r nf the Californi<l Scholflr~ht\J Federation 11nd v.·as l1strd u1 ")lertf's \Vho's \Vhq_ Among American Teenagers" in 1971. • She "'as her schn11l 's representati ve to (Jirl's Stahl ~ in 1971 v.1here she w::is cho~P11 ".' 1. Outstanding Citizen an d . selected for Girl's Natio n. li.11ss Storc. v.•ho plans to at- tend Stanf0rd University as a political science or aJl· 1hropology major. \vas majQr or the dr ill team in 1971 and a rnember of AFS and Jlhilha1·mo11ir Junlors. t:STANCIA A three·ycar member or the California Scholarship f"edera· tion ,. Mtss Suzanne Marte Ccc· coni plans to attend UCI and major In biology. The daughter or Mr.· and Mrs. Gregory Cecconl or Coot• Pt1Psa. she c11rned R Gold E p<"r\ ice award during her, . , I CdM-HIGH Astrid Store junior y11a1 nnd \1·as 1l1e Dank _of A1ncrica outs1;inthn.1: stu· tlt•nt In s0<·1al s1ud1cs during h1•r senior .vr:ir. Sh<' w:ls ASD commissionC'r uf public1t.v, councilman rur her cla~s and a 1nembcr of Crescendo, Spanish 11 'n d Speech clubs a,nd GAA. ~11ss Cccconl v.·on 1he Spani~h Club's outstanding Sf)t'akcr award nnd carn<'d a mcm· bership in !he Na ti o n·a J Foren!lc Lengur Nt:WPOHT llA!lll!lll ESTANCIA Suranne tecconi ~!1s! Vicki Clucas, da ughter of l\1r. 11nd l\1r~. Hich:irrl Clucas of Newport Beach. plans to major 10 English a_nd work In the field "of Journalism. She rccclt·cd thl' Prc!iidcnt's Award to Prpp<•rd iTlf t:ollegc the outstanding journalism award and honors nt entrance to Pepperdine. f\.1(ss Clucas, a CSF Seal bearer, w11s Jlcr SC'hool's dclcgal'e to Cirl'S Stale, ·poe1ry l·~tor or thr Utc.rary mngoziric • NH HIGH Vicki Clucas nnd cd itor-in·chiet of the ~ cr1rlx10k. She has been a n1crnber of AF'S, Ski Club, Pep Club. Student Congress, the SC)S Tutor pro,1::r:nn iuul presi· dent of the Spnnish Club. COSTA ~tESA Pln11ning to attend UCt And n1njor in German and minor in ""'rcnch ls fi.!lss Suzanne Smilh, dn.ughtcr ()f Mr. nnd Mrs. Wallcr Smith of Coola ~1csa. J · She i student body """'1y. a member or lh~ Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Steven J. Bartok or Tustin and Mr. and Mrs. J.ames \V. Laws III, Laguoa BeaCh. Attending as maid of honor was Miss Pa1n Scott, and bridesmaids were the Mmes. Steven Straitiff, M i c h a e 1· Barbecue Serving as best i;nan \Vas Eric Files. while ushers were \Vayne Seebold. Charles Spur- rier and James Th om as \Villiams. , The bride is .a graduate of Estancia High School and at- tended Orange Coast College. " Th~ bride is a graduate or Tustin J1igh School, Orange Coast College ,and California Stat~ University, r~ul\erton She is. listed in "\\'hO's Who ·1~ A1~er1c~~ Co 11 e g es and Un1vers1t1es." The bridegroom attended ~f and American J~iver o cge, Sacramento and served 1\•ith the Ai'r F orcc. • KEYS-K URTZ Alane !\1arged Kurtz bee Cooked Up Peering Around. l~c bride of David \V "I~ Keys . du ring nuptial1 ~ cmon1es c 0 0 cl u ct c d· . , Blessed Sacrament. C Jlt11!i --Chui:-c~. \Vt!stmlnster. a Their parents arc l\lr rt.;~ CM HIGH Suzanne Smith li.1orc 1han 200 servicemen are expected to attend the f•'ourth or July barbecue at the c::;:::Zl ..... ~ ~ .... ~ -·. Interfaith Servicemen 's SERVING as a stewardess Center. San Clemente. begin· for Western Airlines following nin,1:: at...noon and continuing graduation is Janine Olson, until 3 p.m. dauglil>!t or Mr.ond-Mrs. B. varsity dcbalc team. Girl's Board members,genior staff League p u b I i c i t Y com4 mcdm~r,.s. juhni~~ ~lolstess:es, BWeeasclehy. SOhl,sonalsoor grNaeduwapotertd mii:sion<'r. president of the an 1n1 1tary os~ w1 ass1s n1CA .Hi·Y Club 8nd a Can-V.'ilh the preparation and serv· from Sunny Hills High School. dyslrl!'l(l r at J-loag ti1emnria l ing. Fullerton and attended Jl ospital, Presbyterian. , According, to Capt. Joseph Fullerton Junior College and Mi!1S Snlilh recerved the .Gould. president of the board Orange Coast Collegt'. Dank . or Amej'Tca a11,•ard Cor of directors, donations are -foreign· lifnguagc. the . E. 1. needed of hot d6gs, bans, pie· . ~tR-AND MRS. Salvatore Moore Outstnnding Se1 1!or Clrl nlc salads. canned goods, Marino or Huntington Beach A\''Ard nnd the ASB award ror snacQ, popcorn and -punch. celebrated their 60th wedding French and Cettnan. Holida y hours wlU be to anniversary recently with a She plans to spend a year in a.m. to 10 p.m., wllh snacks surprise dinner given by their Europe to complete her study served after thL.bJ~ut.JL f9ur sons. Armttod, A I , or languagt'f fin ish ed. ,., ' Anthon! and Albe.rt. ' 1 r I· mond L. Harris or 1, '1: B h · iun tng eac and \·fi1r. and Al!ti:. 1-larold w Al'ti- Westminstcr. -Keys er .Bridal attendants were ~~ Richard Keesee I.he M .• ,,.. Brenda Hudson, Gan sun··•s ~arol Mooney and K:*"· Keys. Nancy Woodward the nower girl. Tim McKeon was the man; ushers were Mark George Kurtz and Robert Daniel Keys. Perry WOOd was the ring bearer. "' The bride is a gradua~ f Marina Hl~h Schoo! and he - husband is an alumnus ~ We!tmiMltr ltigh $ch 0 0 r 1 Both are graduales of Gold.,; •1 West College. and they •ID reside in Garden Gn:>ve. --1 I I • ! ' " OPEN DAILY 10· 10 SUN. 10-7 CHAIGE Ir WIJH A ~ l ·MAlfT t CtfDIT CAIO , WI 1<{H11cl• \ .. ,.. . .lMlllC•tO • !00! ~ ~. IS. iiil!li JS ~~-·~ ~~ ... 4 ' WOMEN'S CASUALS _MENS, · _3 3 Re g . , 2 2 I women'• 1 97 Men'• '-DaY' • l Days l"d . \ white vinyl .s I e Cross.bond viny sando\ with triangle s-lipper wilh open orna ment. 5-10. ~ 'bac.k and r oe . Brow!"· 7 -12. ···-... ,-···· ........... ... ······· SYNTHETIC-FJLL SLEEPING BAG 2oay• 2 1393 . ered together FOR lwo zipp b l 33 x i mak e a dov e. \\. 77". ~ ~ . \ &.--- FOR SAFE BOATING FUN7 I 2 Days 2 Flota ti o n c.ush ion, ski b~l t • ea. or adult \if~ "est. Chorge_1t. '1 lor ,5.00 ••••• ' ' $5.00 ., ' ft •• J < • / wr wtll cLosr AT 6 PM ON THE <4TH Of JULT "''"•A Ion''''"'' ••I •••<lo•lo 01 "'"'""'"" 11., •• , (••• loo'"· •••••• w ............ 1 •••••••• ·~··· ,.,l •• , .... 1 •• ,.,, ...... l o I.A,, (o•-•n. ----------·---· •• •: .• ROLL-UP HATS 2 Days 97.C each Sporty c.otton hots for men in solids or-fan cy patterns. Shope~ holding Pell On 'J lining. Charge it. ALL-SPORT WATCHES 2 Days 996 Men's 17-iewel watches with s tainless steel bock, calendar, Water"" and shock-resistant. July 3-4 ff~~ ;~ ;:i • "NOVEL TY TOPS Reg. 3 .97 . a">. ·~/ . . I l /I ~,{· : './.'. -+·"f-;-.,-·~------I • ' 3~,~ f A variery or pan t lops Hl oil ~he new fashion ~tyle s . Tops '~ novelty prin ts & c olors In ~1zes S-M-t . POLYESTER PANTS Reg. 6 .96 -5~~ Polyester p ants in your-cho" f l"d "0 o so I or nove lry pr1nl !> As.sorted styles in .sizes B-JB Buy Se\'erol ot This lo w price. , ' ~·t- , . .. , \ •:,.. ... ,.., .I GIRLS ' SHORT SETS 200&300 A w1rie selection of 2 pc. , 0 1 •· Ion short set s. A variety ·at styles, c.o lors ond pr in ts to choose from. DENIM SLACKS 2 Days Delig htful print bolter shorts for tod. , 344 dler boy.sand girls. Brigh t colors. Jn 2-Men s c,otr on twill o;focks in lhe flPw 4. ~horge and save a t K morr. ~or1ner s .s ly/ing. Conrr os f p ock ·f 111111111111 r I il'il ii 1111 11 iiiiii'ii.:'""liii:::~ W N CHAIR AND CHAISE ROOMY 7x10' STORAGE SHED' LA 500 2 /.5~~R . .~~:'!~b 4•4•4 web aaoo MONDAY -TUESDAY . t. ol vm~u m f olding furni- Relox outdoor<, in I 11s bb. Chair' or motch- p I copylene we ing. . 1 ture. o YP . h h . lounge. Cbarge 1L Stron g and durable metal s1oroge ~hed . Nylon -Q~ided slid .. ing doors. Rust-re~ist ont. Save. . odiustoble 72-inc c o1se 10'x10' .......•..... _ ........ _ ... : .. _ ..... 149.88 (FREE DELIVERY IN TRADE AREA ONLY) -. -1-_.,, Dl-SGOUNt-~~-- --.~ 1 1' 12 eKpoiu•e 1011 color print film de'<'el-229 (',1:1".'.'• \ 1 t J J ! {. ~ oped ond printed. u'C'f·11p. SoYe now 0 11 quol it)" 12 eKpoiure (Olor film ,..o.N~1' , ~ proces~1ng special. Populor i11e comera film gives ~ dependable f~!>uh~. c .22 pr-oces~ing on[)" . .,.,.,, ~· 20 EXPOSURE COLOR DEVELOPING HEAD & 13-0Z.* • • f 97 - l Days 3-piece se t of vinyl luggagS'"" on wood frame. 26" pullmon, 21" weekender; bec;iuty case. AQUA NET ® SHOULDERS® AM/FM PORTABLE RADIO DENTURE CLEANER 28c 5-8~. Regular, hard-to -hold. In jor or tube. Limit 2 .,.., ... .itM "M-• .. ,.q.1 20 e~po\ure color deYelop1119. Every- day low pnce developed and pnn!ed. C-22 proce\s1ng only. SLIDES OR MOVIES 20 expo,ure !hde, or mo..,ies .. M ovi e~ ·developed Slides de ... eloped and mounted Super ood r@9ulor Srnm film. 369 2 Days Transisto rized tadio runs on botterjes or house current. Built- in cord. 1.4 aa 96!!.c EXTERIOR PAIN 2 /6~Q~ White latex house paint in. big 5-ql. bucket. Applies easily, dries quic.kly. E.o~y clean-up. Chor.~e it. • _ PLASTIC TRASH CAN l Day• 147 20 got. plo$1 ic trash con 8EllFLOWER UEN""A-=P"""A"RK~-.--.B"'U"E"N.,....,A PA COSTA MISA C VINA. FUlllRTON HUNTINGTON BEACH INOUSTRY lt4M l1uu 111 I 1•111 1! ~1lir~ '"' It! tH Ml l•1ttlf 1111 L1~t11 •• LANCASTER LONG BEACH 1111 •11t ho j ~l4 c.,..., •.• Inn l!tt 1111 """' llftl. >111 tuo ~,. MONROVIA 11\ 11' 1111 ... ~, ....... •1111tr 1on1.,r1 •t •1tm 11" ~""' ltrf C1t111 11 C1.+.i IM. 1111 • ''"" W•1U1fr 11-4 I! lfl14ft &ti, "u n omt1 1111 NO. H LL WOOO P!KU1<1 111 .. u l<ril 111' • Plttn:11 111 ORAN E HI w 1tt1l1th lttf 11 h u•ut 1lt11 rl .. tMI f111•1r1 OXNARO !till lh!Hhl 11 ''11!1 f RIALTO "M rOU t! l1'lfl ttii 1•111 IJI S •tt Hh 1 ... • 111111 ,, hit lfttttl 1d Ch • l1L1 .. IMll1!1 1Hlf0111 It'"'" 11U • lo t" 1111 Churl k!1 .. 011 '""'" '' .. I IJMh l 11 ••t•l•u f1r,, ''"1 C_,l!I •tt 11 t,.l·••Ht , .. .,.,11 Ctltl ANA SAN BER AROINO SAN flllNAN 0 ) lt"ll" lllfll •I l n\194 111 IH li•lf .. • u 1t1 \! u1 l1to1 C1°'" •ut , ... r1. " '" ,u, .... ... 11/ll l1•11f ., THOUSAND OAKS 1~• .1.i ..... , U" ' JIS • .. "'" lut h"1 ....... 111 1• 11 ti 1ft tll J1;1111 . VENTURA 11H St11t-lttl1n1 l•I"' It U•'lll lr1,1••! " lull IM f•l'f 11 1111 i.Ut ·1111 nil ' -- l ... ' • ' • • DAILY PILOT 19 Fee·t Near--Seagren; Sev1nour, Earns Ber·th u.-1 T1l•Phtl1t RECORD MAKER-Bob Seagren set a world record in the pole vault Sunday at the Olympic trial s in Eugene, Ore. When he made this tremendous effort on his last try at 18-53/.i. to snap the previous mark hel d jointly by himself and Kjell lsaksson of Swe- den. His effort qualifies hi1n to represent the United States in the Olympic GaJTleS at .Munich. A's Clip Arigels., 3-1 Blue Lashes Out At Halos' Wright ~ Admittedly, Vida Blue is not th<' pitcher he was a year ago. ' But he is more than holding his own ·in !ht debating arena. On Sunday night at Anaheim Stadium. Blue and the Oakland A's bested Clyde \Vright and the Cali fornia Angels, 3-l. And n1omenls la!er Blue, no1v 2·4. scored a clear-cut verbal declsiop over \Vright. 8-4. "I don't think he (\\!right~ 1vas psyched up for the game." Bl!Je said. "he \.\'asn'l as aggressive as I've seen him before.·• Those words were exactly the s;11ne as \Vright echoed eight days .igo ;iftcr he beat Blue and the A's by an identical 3·1 i;core at Oakland . T'hc two teams conclude th<'ir three- 1;ame series tonight <it 8 \.\'i!h California's Rudy !\lay. 2-5, dueliJ1g Oakland's Catfish Hunter, IH. saying: "He complains abOul. eve1:t pitch. That's because he d~sn ·t give cred it to anyon<' else for doing his job. I c~n't get psyched up for the Angels bul can for him . l'\•e never batted right-handed against nnyone except him. "I can't believe the nun1ber of 1vil)S he has 1vith ~he stuff he thro1vs." Blue was asked 11 hy the verbal assaul t Julv J ul• J,,1. J ult Angels Slflte All 0 1me• ·~ KM,.( 1110) ' Af!C!I• YS, Mllwau~•! ~ A~g!I~ YS. Mllw~u~e~ 6 An~tls vs, l~llW~U~~~ 1 A"V~IS Y$, 801ton ~·5S ,.m. l:SS p,m, 1:~5 p.m, J :55 1>.m•. on \\1right and he explained si mply. "I didn't appreciate the remarks he made nboul me last week.'' ' 1 ~, ~ EUGENE, Ore . (APJ -Boll Seagren. the 1968 Olympic gold medalist. cra('ked the world pole vault record Sunday. bul he doesn't think the new.mark of 18 5~.1 inches will last long. "Nlnetet'fl feet is near ,'' the 21)-year-old Seagren said Sunday after the \'ault that gave him the No. I spot on the United Stales track and field tearn for thr 01.vrn· pie Games in 1.1uoich. 1\-leanwhile, fonner Huntington IJc:ich Hig h a;nd Golden West Qlllege st~1r Jirn Seymour qualified for the Olympje tt•an1 \vith a third place finish in the 400-nielcr intermediate hurdles. Seymour, a University of \Vashington graduate. 'was clocked in 49'.3. ~Ralph Mann of the Southern California Striders ~·oo the race in 48.4, break ing the U.S. record while Richard Bruggeman tlf lhP Ohio State Track Club came in setond (48.6). J\1ann's time was four-te11th.s of a set· ond wider the previous mark he shored. ·Seymour, a longshot contender. poured it on in the fi nal straightaway lo grab the third Olymfiic berth. He was just ahead (lf NCAA champion B;ruce Collins of Pennsylvania (49.5), who hit the sixth hurdle. r-.1ann, the world's \argesl hurdler at 6- 4. 180 pounds. has been troubled by in· juries this year. Seagren turned on a cro1vd (l[ \l()()(J al 1-layward Field as he conquered botl1 95· degree heat and nervousness to snap thj• world mark or 18-4~~ he shared \vith Sweden's .J<jeH Jsaksson . - Seagren, representing the Sou thern California Striders. nught have taken a ('rack at the !~foot uulrk except there 11~re 21 \'t1ulters -in ('Ontention at the :iia rt of the fourth day of the U.S. Olyn1· pie Trial s. "I think I could have had a good 1·ha11cc al il today if the competillon hadn't lasted ~o long and Jt h;id been earlier in the day," hl' said. He said th!!' recoi·tl rault, 11·hich c;un(! on his third attempl. 11•a:.n't one Of his hest, but it 11·afi good enough for hin1 to finish ahead of Steve Smith and JH11 Johnson. For the fir st tune in hist ory three /llt'n eleared 18 feet. Smith, fron1 Cal State- Long Beach. and JohnsatL . f r,o.1n 1\Jabama. fi11ished second and third \.\'tth vaults of 1a-oi 1. Dave Robert.s. the 11vo-time NCA1\ 1v1n· ner fro1n Rice. finished fourth at 17-8 1!. ·rhe AAU cl1a n1pion cleared 18 feet earlier this Yt'<ir. 'rhe hometo11•n crowd 1vas on its feet in U1c 3.000-nieter steeplechase as r-.iikc r-.'lanley, a 30.year-old F:ugene school teacher. finished first in 8:29.8 and Steve Savage. his Oregon Track Club tean1· mnte. took third in 8:32. Tennessee 's Doug Br(lll'n. who Jell rar- ly in the ract', fought back to ea rn th(• No. 2 spot 1n 8:31.8. Frank Shorter. born in ~tunich. earnt•d a tri p there as 1\merica·s No. I run'11er 111 the JOJ)OO n1eters although he "ran out of .. Blue further crit icized Wrighl by Deylin Hopes History Will Repeat Itself \\'hen the subject retw-ned to baseball, Blue \Vas asked "'hat could bring him back to his reply. Blue was 16-J al this tirnc last yea:. OLYMPIC QUALIFIERS -Huntington Beach's J im Seymour, left, along with U.S . record breaker Ralph ~1ann , cenler. and Richard Bruggeman 'viii be at J\lunic h to represent the United States in the O!ym- pie Games follo\1.'ing competilion in the 400 meter intermediate hurdles Sunday. Mann sped to a rec· ord 48.4. Seyn1our \Vas third with a 49.3. Blue checked the Angels on seven hit s . and struck out eight. ,But he was frc- qutn!!y in difficulty, 'valking Jive. J-lc.11·cvcr, he deftJ.v pitched out of tight spots and the Angels \\'ound up leaving JI) rnen stranded. six of them on second or lhird base. Dodgers' Worst Effort Blue twice used Lee Stanton as the key CLEVELAND iAPl _ Can history out man. \V ith a run ho.lne, the base5 repeat itself? It often does. and Bruce loaded and t\.\'O out in the third, Blue fed Alston Criticizes Club After 9-3 Setba ck Devlin. the ooe·tinie master plumber Stanton a slo1v t'hangeup and Stanton lrom Australia. hopes it will _in the struck out. ir50.000 Cleveland Open golf tourna1ncnt. In the fifth \l'ilh the bases agai 111 /n 1970 Devliu shot a 66 in the third jan11ncd, R-lue induced Stanton to hit into 1·1~urn1 of the Cleveland Open .• Jn the a rally ending dou ble play. fnurlh rouncl. he burned up the course The A·s staked Blue to a 2-0 lead in the 11ith a 64 and 1von the championship. first i11r1ing 1\•hen Joe Rudi tripled, Re~- SA .. \' FRA:'-l'CISCO (AP) -l11 th ls his 19th :-;eason as manager (lf t h e Dodgers. \Valt Alston has f o u n d so1nething th at stands out in memories of all his tean1s. Dcr!in shot a fiO. five under par on the gic Jrtckson doubled and Mike Epstein fl.905-yard Tanglev.·ood Country Club ;-ind Angel Mangual singled. But it's cornp!ctelr ncg<1tivc . t·uurse. in Sunday's third round of th( Hudi doubled and scored on Epstein's ''This is !he i1·0rst I've ever seen us raln-dclayed Cleveland Open . single· in the third befo,i:_e the Angels play .. , Alston in uttered Sunday 3.fter the II h. t 1 ·1 If · f i;truck for their nnly rw1 in the same in-is ory repe a s 1 se , 1nso ar as resur"ent (;iants. sparked by the retu rn l.1t;vli11 is conc<'rned. he'll have to shoo! a ning. Wright walked and came around on " 6·1 in today's final 18 holes. A 64 in si ngles by Snndy 1\lomar and Andy of \Villie McCovey.. clobbered the it~clf 1von·1 guarantet llyst place and the Kosco. Dodgers 9·3. San Francisco outscored Los l>1g ~·inner's check. Buf lt would. take a 0•11LAM0 CALIFOR"f1.t. Angeles. 25-12. in s11·ecping the threc- 65 b,v the third-round co-le;iders. Lanny c"mpnrl!, s• 1~ ~ ~ r~i Jllomir, 10 1~ '0 ~, rb~ gnrne series. \\'adkins and Larry Hinson. to deny Ruc •. 11 1 1 o eerrv. c• • o o o Losing 8 of their last JI games. the "·· I' h I · I ' R Jat~ on, c! t I 1 KOl{e, U • o 1 t ut:'\' in t e c iamp1ons i1p. e.ord~. 311 11 1 11 11. 011ver. lb , ·o o o ·Dodgers have fnllcn seven gnmes off Cin · Hinson. \l'hQ had the lead or a share or Epsl~in, lb a ) 1 l~tV.vll,n, 13 1 0 0 0 cinnati's 11ace in the National Lea"Ue · f /.l1ng,,...1 ,r1 0 I t S!<1<1lon,r ! • o I o t> II or the"first t-.1•0 round s. shot a 69 Sun-~i~ndr;c~. ,, o o o c.,~."~'· •s J o , 11 \\'est. day and 11'as tied at 200 with \Vadklns. ~~~1~!~·,~ ~ ~ ~ ~ !;;~;;~1~'~' ; ~ ~-: Los Ange.te s spcnl the night here bctor(j 11·ho carded a 67. Cesar Sanudo was next -lllvt. P • o 11 11 'M'7f'ldn,•ch 1 11 o o lak ing the day orr to fl y to Montreal for <1 :ii 67·'4!07. Then came Devlin. ~·ho had a r otii Jj J ' J 10111 J] 1 1 1 three·game series starting Tuesday. one-stroke lead on fello\v Aussie David o.~1•nd xii ooo ooo -J ( c~11101n•• Olli 000 000 _ 1 The Dodgers hayc Jost four in a ro11•. ;raham; Witf Homeniuk, a Dutc,:h-born I h I C d. I dB L wnohi. OF'-o'"'"'' , ,0,_0,,,,., '· ,,,. our short or t e cub record since lhe ana Uln nationa : an ricn All111 " ho .... ~ 10 ia-111:. J•c•non, Rvdr, wr19ht .JB-Roo;, club moved 1vest from Brooklyn . Today·s finish v.·as S('t up after r11in s-c,,r<1tn8•· 1, M 11 !'II •• so "\Ve lost 10 games in 11 row," said l\'1t.11hed out Thursday's first round. e111~ !111, 1.~1 • 1 ' -i s • Al t 11· lh I"'" B kl "Hope I do it again this year:· Devlin wr1oht 1L. ,.,, • t 3 , o , son reca 1ng e pre-~ roo yn ever seen in that regard." The Dodgers have made 14 errors in that last six ga n1es. l\1a nager Charlie Fox of the Giants. 1rho had gotten off to a poor star! bef(lrt' 1rinning 8 of their las! 9 gan1es. said, "It's good to sec some oti:ter clubs foulin!!' up. \Ve·re gett ing good hilting. solid J~!Y J\11¥ JulY )lllY Dodr1er.• Slnte All GllMJ •n KFl 16-10) l Oi>en Oele ' OoOtfrs 11 Mon!r•a1 s OCK:lg"~ at Mon!real ' Oodte•i •t Montre~I ~ " "' •om 5 ~.m, defense and some fine pitching when ii counts." r..1cCovey, returning to the lineup after suffering a broken a.rm1 _~gged his .§Cc~ oOO ... Mme run . (lf the season ' in Saturday·s 8-5 San Francisco trhunph. then clubbed No. 3 "'ith the bases loaded off Don Sutton Sunday. It "·as f\1cCovey's 14th career grand- slii mmcr. tying the NaU.ona l Leagul!" record hel d by the late ar1' Hodges and Allan1a·s Henry Aaron . ''No." he sni d. "! 11asn't thinking abo11t a grand slam. \Vi th 1 \\'O strikes on me. I never think about ho1ners -bu: ;i·s fun - ny ho1v many I do hit 11·i1h two strikes.'' Sutton and th(' Dodgers arc n · t laughing. l05 A.NCE~C5 SAN FllANCISCO V1lentint. t i Auc~ne•. r! W Parktt , lb G1r~,y. lb Crowford, If lel~bvrt. 'Ill Sim<. c Ry1~ll, ~' Su!lon, 11 11.l(~ert, p L~cv. o~ lo!~I ~D t II r~i • I I ! l!ond;, r! l U 4" 1 H0'*'"1111, (I ' 0 I I Spe;er, H 0 I 0 MC(OYfy, lb • O O O l<lngmen, u • o o o Racer, c • 0 I 0 Gilll~ghtt, lb • 1 1 O F11e111~1. ?b 1 0 I O '-"~rlch~I, p 0 0 0 0 MtM~h<ln, D ! 0 1 0 B W<lll!mi.,pr J Joh~son, p l ' J t ) Total ttlrh•bl ' 1 7 ' I 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 l ; 1 ' J 1 I 1 • 0 2 l l o a 1 l I 1 I I 0 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 ! 0 0 l t n D l • t 11 I LO\ Jlnqel•' ii~ frfll,Ul(O 001 010 010 -l • '· O?O-O:llt' ~' -I E-S1,..1, R1>11tl. OP-Sen Franci1co !, LOB-Los An11tlo1 1, Sfl~ Fr~nt•lto '· ;e -R11J1t ll Hll . Mc(OYtY 4•1, l<ing,..~n 111). ~8 -GMrvey, l!lona1_ S-Su!lon, McMahon .SF-G1ll8gher, V•l•nl'nt S~non 1•. •I R;rhrrl Merlch.t l>.lcM1nc11 (W, :1·1! J, Jot:,.1on " ' ,. l ~ l 1 J " ' ., l •l . ' M I! 'El! II ~0 I t I J 1 ; 0 0 0 ' ' 1 l I a a a o l 1 1 0 ~ w;iter. deh}dratcd and cramped up about :;1x laps from the end." . Shorte r hnd a big lead at .the .time .an.~ s:ud he "just started JO~g1ng tn. linishing lirst in 28 minutes, J;i.6 seconds. \Vhile Shorter ·and Jeff c;alkM'ay. his Florida TC tearnmate \Vere ri.nishin~ ooe- two. Jon Ander son poured 11 on 1n the final lap to finish third. Anderson. son of Eugene l\tayor Les And~rson, was t:lockcd in 29:08.2. Gallo\.\'ay 1n 23:48.8. Greg Fredericks. the lanky PC-flll State st:indout 1vho ~·011 the AAU title. tini~hed 11cll back in the pa~·k . 1'he An1er1can record-holder ncnv rnay have to take another crack at ()regon star Steve PrefontaiJ1e and a t:i!cnted li<'ld in the • 5.000 if he is.to make the u .~. team .. In the javelin. Ar1ny's Bill Schmidt t hre~v 270-6 1vith r-.tilt Sonsky of the New \'ork Athletie Club second at 267·11. AAU chan1pion Fred Luke of \Vas~lngton's '. Jl usky Spike Club ~·as next a1 167-9. The first dav of the dee:ithlon \.\'as the onlv t'Vent on "today's sched ule. .i;O:.mt!t• lnl t •m«il1tt h11rdlfl. hnal·, -l , Mtnn, Soutntrn Calltornia S!rtdt1>. l!.• (Amt;·~•n "CC•d. old mar~ II.!. Geoff V•n<lt1~1oc11, 1971. /.lann, lt/0.1 1 BrU<;geman On,o l•tci.. Club, <11.6. l. S•¥m941r, SC slri6tro, ~t.J.' <. Collon$, P~n~ .. <'9 S. ~. C•1l•m~n, MJcl\iga!!. ~tot(, 49 i. 6, no,ld1~"·,~11,~t1cft';~~~'.''i:.~-f; Pol·• v1un. l1n•fl -" tto• ' !World 1tce<d, old m1rk, Stagr.n •110 t•a~upn, 197~/ ,..,,,.,,,a11 ro<o•d old .. 1ar1; II·•., s;ilgre;, j~;,:0~· Sm•'~• (•I S•~!e \~O'lQ 8'3'';i1' e16-11'i,,' s a 11u ' Co•or~ao. !!·D , A, Rootrl•, ,'ji, ·, · Wtdm•,.: Pn.lodelpn.~ f'<1)n~r (h b. · " ' Cotoraoo. 11·¢'•· 1 M,..nitv -J.IJ'OO.mt!ft s1ttolech.nt . 111111(i -n 't tnnusre'. 0,eg~n lr~ck Club. &:7~.S. 1.. rCN ·~/! N•YY I )1 9 J s~vaoo OrfO<ln l(, I 11.t . " • ' l cl1·6: 5', (l~r~ 'Ai• FoHr, J.lil •, ~. Timm, vri.t• 1~ened, a.•I '· 1/0-li ; SOn!ltV Ja••lln, f•n~l~ -\,Schmid!, 1'f,~Y ·~ Ti: •161.f ,' ~=~on;0t;~/c~·,~'.iL1 ·),1'r 1p~~; o.Y:g:n 1(. 1s1.1: .: w~11,., A•mv. 2~S.7. , Shorttr fl«kll TC, 10.0Gl)-mt•rr run, lln811 -• ' • n ,. J!.6. 1, c~110 .... •v, F10 .. d• '~y1,~·~4:,;·0A'S°-tr:,~ • oreoo" l..;. 19:ctl.2. " L~'''· d '~Ifs! ·v'eti~y TC .,,,.1 va.-,y TC 29·)7 .0 .. ',· l(~{c°iin•iilf!d 1o~rt~ .~ J0·'12 !El&cneier. Flori' ' ' 1 ! p) ,~ Ui,r: di,.walll•O'd •o• elbOW•"9 in e~ ' · Gal Spiliers Shine i11 Meet; Asher F ourtl1 CANTON. Ohio -Two Orange Coast area stl\rs in won1cn's track and field competition warmed up for the .Olympic trials this week after t r e d 1 tab I e performances in the national AAU 11·ornen·s meet at Citizens Field. San Cle1nente's Pa\li Johnson. "''~ earlier set a n3lional mark in the 1(1)"" meter hurdles, zi pped to a 27.3 clocking in the 220 meter hurdles for a second p!are behind Ne11' York 's Pal Ha\.\·kin~ ! ~Ii.3). Corona deJ .\1ar's Kim Aitlesey leaped· 19-1 1 ~ i'rl r he long jump for fourth place. The n1C'ct 11·as marked by Josephine Della Vine·s upset of Olga Connolly in the discus. 'fhe laHe r. y,·ho holds a pendin!<? America n n1ark of t8a-3. did only 170.! to 172·0. \Viltye \\'hite recorded her 13th long jurnp tit!e 1vith a leap of 20-61'4. Ne1v records \\'ere turned in by Tena Anex of Sacran1ento 11·ith a 9:42 .6 iJ.OCIQ n1eters) and Jeanne Bocci of Detroit U'ilh 11 6:59.1 il.500 n1cler walkl along \.\'ilh the 800-yard n1edley relay quartet Cl :40.6l of Rose Allv.·ood. Esther Story,. Lecey O'Neal and Alice Annum. ,,. TLCSON -Costa ~1esa's Barry Asher 11·as in fourth place after 1 ~·0 rounds of the $~0.000 Tucson Open bowling tourna. 1ncnt Sunday night. \ The leader is Tve Crilchlo\\' of Los Angeles 11·ith .it piilfaU of 2,757, just j9 pins ahead of Cu rt Schmidt of Ft. Wayne, Tnd . and 49 ahead of Nelson Burto11, Jr. of St. Louis. A.~her, th(> leader after the rirst round, is only t~·o sticks behind Burton. BARR IE, Ont. -l\·loe i"orrnan won tht Barrie lnvitalional golf tournament Sun· d;iy after Ray Carrasco of Fountain Valley. ble11' a six-stroke lead on the last 11ine boles. "I can't bchcve 1t." ~;iid Norman, (If• Guilford. Ont., after his 215 tor the 54-hoJe lot~rney bet:an1e the \\'inni ng score , worth $1.500, \Vhen Carrasco missed a four-foot putt on the fina l hole and finished one stroke behind at 216. Carrasco's ~ame 1venl sour on the pa r rive. 463·yard 12th \rhcre he took an eight. .. I choked artcr that." Carrasco sa id . "! got ra ttled and Just couldn't do anyU1ing right" He finished !ht roufid 1vilh a siX.Ovel-· par 78 over tht Barrie Coun try Club Course compared to Norman's one·undci'· par 11. ST. LOUI S -.John Newcombe wo'n $10.900 ~y c!apturinl( tW.-~1ngles tiUe ~hd ~hared 111 the $1.ll(K} doubles priu in th' $50.000 Holton Classic Sunday. · ar an So ·A fo te T lhe of pla p Am eac las T lhe are ner F com icap " .Of ''Mu dee, tuall T gplt chri net) hole iii es So ''Cir only in tio ac la se co po Ca Me an lhe In Th' lac an tio pio An da !he u. lhe for WO enl qr rec wi 1.97 To Ge Sw Ch cb yo SU ha I lhe Ev !he inc La hol Cla Ka set 1---.-'.1 -'-hi·--•a~-f---vict· orv-. _____ , Dodgers, ''but \Ve didn't ive them a\va ', nrui· ~"ll ..... ~~ v• .~~,--•• -,, .... wn;lll~IHenOrltf:!.PB li:UIMY!r-T=7:1r.-kick them away, This is the \VOrst I've His 6$ was helped by a p\1tter Riven l\.lcCovey . hammered an 0.2 fastball over t e Cf· 1e screen. • 23.'85. OhOJM(l] • WP-J Jot1n50l'I T-a :~~"'::.. Newcombe, a 28.yeAr.rild Australtan·, dcfr<rted Yug"oslnVif'01kki P1hc s:J""--'g;'--1---Ccm l . 1iway to good cuslo1ners of a Cle11eland plumbtng firn1 . "It looks bloody a\1•fu1.·· ~rinned Devlin, "but I'm hil11ng the center or the cups 11•ilh it .. Devlin represents th(' plumbinJi \Ql1· c er·n, 1"110 •Qvod l••C••\ •{0''• <'I l~no Open 0011 1011•~'"'''" ll""Y WM:t~ ;,., Ll"Y 11 rni.nn Cestr ~fnV<I!> eruct" Ofv+1n O.vld G•al!8"' Wiii Hot>Wn11 I lrltn A.rllf, G~ K"l'dlOn 'lOl'tl W'••li.OCI TOl!I $f\~w Dovt $tlldtr1 M!lltr l1rj:ltr Ci11tr J041ts Rori Ctrruoe Pl\11 ROC191r1 Gt0r" .t.rCMf l(flof!'l(I ''"'' Hubtrl Gr~ 4'r111:, Cr1rr1'*"' "',_ llloll !ll•w f M•t • $1H1"'1 Evert, Goolagong to Meet . . \\'l~lBLEDON . England. (AP) -Teen- .iger Chris Even ol Fort Lauderdale. Fla. beat, Patti J!ogan of La Jolla, 6-2. 4- 6, 6.J today and moved into a women'$ se mifinal Wimbledon match with defen· ding champion Evonne Coolagong. f\.11ss Goolagong. tOO top seed, ad· vanced to the semis. beating Francolst Durr. of France M, 1·5. Llttlt Rosemary Casals of San Fran· clsco also aclvanCed to the semifinal!\ Wednesday, upsetting Nanay Gu nter of S.n Angolo. 1'~x .. H. !-4. 6~. Shr witt play lht "'injlr of lhr m.:llch bctw('Cn se<.:ond·seedOO BUile Jean Kln(l. 11 three-time \\l imbledon winnt':r rrom Long Beach and Virginia Wade of Britain. For a time it look ed as U the first _match ever between,~tiss Evert, making her -Wimbledon debut, a!ld Mlss Goola- IJ'llli W001<1 not come about . MJss Evert had no trouble In winning the Cirst set., but thf'n Miss Hogan , the only unseeded player to reach the quarterfinals, came back to take the ser cond . ~fis~ Evert wa!I shaky at the start or the third srl but .fol her game 1oacthcr i to u·in. The men's quarterfinals lVJ!I be held Tu esday, "'ith the United' States being n:'presentcd by top-s~ed Stan Smith or Pasadena and untecded Jimmy' Connors ol Betleville, JU, _ __i ~ "I am rcruly looking forward to PIPYlng Chris," MiSI qoolag(lnl fa)d. "U will be Important for both Of us to rind out who's the OOst. • . ' "Sheil be laugh, all rlghl. Bill. •he's someone new-to mt. an<f that means l'tt be able fo try out my f!XperimenL No. 1 v.•on't s~y what It is." .... ' • Ill Semis r-.uss r.oolagong's game has been er· ratic in her progress lo today·s quarterfinals. 'She dropped the first stt and was ln danger or IO!ing to Russia's Olga A.forozova in the fourth round. "'Evonne is not playing as well as sht did la.JI year,1' said ~frs. Morozova . "It is much more difficult for her lo defend the title than tt "'AS to win It." Wtl!'ltll'I 111111 .. Ou1rltrfl11t111 •osetn•rv Cft11l1, San Fr•l'IC+ltO, llett Mll'ICY G11n!ff, $1n .t.119.io, t•i., ).,, '''• .. 0 f1t•11~11r GOOl~<;o~~ ""'It 11, bef! '1•11tOi1• Dll"'· F••Ml ... "4, 1·~ Newcombe and Tony Roche. prob~bly l the best doubles combination in the world today. "'on their final match from fellow Australians Phil Dent and John Alex· f 11nder 7-fi. fi·2. ,,. ~fAr-.1ARONECK . N.Y. -Susie Max· well Berning caplured lhe 20th U.S. Open l(Olf championship fo r women Sunday • \vith a final-round 11 as leader P11n1 Harne tt soared to a 77 over the Winged Foot golf club ean course. ., CLERMONT-FERRAND, Franc. World champion Jackie Stewart of Scotland, sidelined for seven weeka._with an ulcer, returned to racing Sunday and \Von the French Grand Prix in a 'l)rrtl· Ford and moved Into second l)l1ce In thl1 J.r!ar's dHVrrs race. · ' . . ...... ' W omen~s Golf Tourneys-HB Youth Melting Pot ·of Folk Culture Outruns Bolh. lbe J acks ond Jllls of nursery fame The dLstaflers have also kept up llle tradi· Them AJI are ahve and sunlann~d as they go up hil l tion o1 old-fashioned bartering with the Bar- and do\\'n dale ;ifter little while balls on gain Day tourney. But the golfers always get Southern California golf courses. the best of the deal-two free pars on each But . it ls Ule J ills, not the Jacks who keep side. ·American tradition alive in Southern Cali· To uphold the United States' tn.ie tradition fomla -and add to il bits and pieces of con· as a melting pol , the goiters have recognized temporary culture.. the influence or certain countries on the U.S. They, the bronzed. sun-glassed \VOn1en of the Southland. have established a•melling pol of folk cu lture in the very tournaments they play each \Veek. Perhaps one of the oldest vestiges ol .... --------- Law·ic Beckhmd American history is relived by the golfers eac h Thanksg iving, \Vhen they have an old· fa shioned Turkey Shoot, The only difference, which clearly sho\.\'S the influence of the SPCA. is lhat the turkeys are frozen and ready to be ea ten by the win- ners. From the very heart of nursery rhymedom comes a tou mamcnt \Vhich allows high hand· icappe rs to eliminate their three worst holes -''Three Blind i\iice'' it is called. ,Of somev.·hat more recent vintage is the ''~1utt and Jeff'' C(lmpetition drawn from the · decades-ago comic strip by Al Smith. Ac- tually, il "s par threes and fives net toumey. Among them are a token rererence to France and the a1arquis de Sade with a "Beat the Pro" competition, an acknowledge-· ment or the ball-among-the-group contest called Scotch Ball. Contemporary trends in fashion , politics and technology also invade the realm of women 's golf . Tournament chairmen often sponsor the latest in mini and ma~i guest day events. They also have conceived a "Scratch and Scramble" contest, which actually averages the net score or a twosome , but sounds like \\'hat happens to a Teflon pan when the golfer ls preparing hP.r breakfast \trilh a metal ~pataj_a_, __ _ _ (Combine that one with another foumey called TJ Scramble and you might even get huevos rancheros). The tournament chairmen schedule a traditional A11-American June ·flag day • wherein the golfer pl8nts her nag in the ground where her ball lies when her score is net 72. Each club sponsors an annual President's Cup tournament, but wisely Ignores ii.~ coun- try's national herita~e here by also holding several consolation flight comoetilions, so as not to ofrend or ane:er the losers. Yes, just as the United States is a land of opportunity, so women's golf offers some toornameot for every player. Bv TERRY COVILLE "ot 1111 0•11¥ P'llOt Si.ff Nine-year-0ld Tracy ~!anion doesn't have to WOIT)' much abou1 catching a boyCriend. She can probably outrun all the boys in her class at LeBard School. Jl untine:ton Beach. She can c:ertain!y outrun all th(' glrls. "They al"·ays chaJJeng e me to races." she says, v.•ith a sly \\"ink. "But no ooe ever beats n1e." ' She is, apparently, the fastest nine--year--0ld girl in the nation in the 100--yard dash . Tracy proved her s k i l I recently when she won the 100 at the National Age Group Invitational at UC lrvine. Her lime was 13 seconds flat '-• tops for nine~year-Old girls. "That's not my best time, though.'' she boasts. with a small. degree of shyness. "I ran 12.7 in Phoenix." The ·nalional record is 12.6 secon ds for her age bracket. Tracy's mother says she has been clocked in 12.4. but it was not recognized officially as a national record. At UCI, Tracy ran against a dozen of the fastest girls from all parts of the coun try and beat the!n easily. She also took second in the 220-Y.ard dash, at 30.7 seconds. Tracy 's track career began at the age of seven, when she entered some races in the ! I HUNTINGTON BEACH 'S TRACY HANLON. • ' I ' Mond.ay, July 3, 1972 DAILY PILOT· J7 l11credible Tale Gal High Jumper.· Oaims Record By LAURIE BECKLUND 01 tM Ollll' l"lltl Stiff In an era of e;,trefull y·kept rtcord books, 11tandardi zed training pros rt1nls ;tnd com· pulerizcd st udies (If athletic techriiqu~. Nadyn D3vidson's !ilory is al.lnoist incrt'<l ible. A!J thE' gray-eyed , long· haired Jsrnfli -American girl tells it, she has bell <'red the Olynlpic high jump rl'COrd work inf? out by herself at Loara liigh School 's b'fl<'k. The sto ry is even more ran- tastlc because Nadya, a J une grnct uate of the Anaheim school. n1eai111res only one inch O\'t'r ri ve feet. /\nd she savs she ha$ ju1npl'<I-n1ore th:11l Six (eC'I ln p1·nrlice. Bui th rre ~hnply i~ no feasible '"'ay to C'Oflfir1n he1· :H·h1evrrnrnt. She belongs to no trnck club. ha.s entered 110 AAlJ or othrr meets in the Unu ed Stat<'s. and bas Yf111 l'Oac-h . "It was n\y big secret." Nndya told the DAILY PI LOT. ''I \\'anted to get to be really Jlrr.11 :ind thrn ~ u r p r i ~ e t·\ eryl>od} . '" The storv cn1ne to the at· lrntion of 0 lhr l)AI L'' PILO'I' ihrou~h an acc1uain1nnce of n chise fr iend of ~adv:i's NADYA DAVIDSON fl'"' times la:;t i\lnr<•h. "\\o'hat I do tlOI\' is scissor ur to about rive lt•t't and th~n start to roll fron1 thert> ... I'm sure I don't do the roll pertectb' though bccn usc t never really ~·a!$ co acht><:I on 11. My average is about ~·7 " ··A few people who \vnt ehed me jump su1d llK:~' llunk I J;~) so high bt'cnuse I hn\'e a lot of spring in lht' b:-ill:-: of 111~· reel <1 nd in nly (':ll\'rs ... The days of the Old \\lest did not go for· g1;1tten when the golf contests were being christened. either. Names llke Ace Day (low net) and a Poker toumey (net plus five best holes) v.·ere included on the roster of fa vor· Hies. For sulky players, there's a Crier's tourna- ment. For those wOO feel there isn't a ~reat enough variety of events, there is an eclectic tournament. And for those who don't want to be re- minded of their scores in anv kind of com- petition, there is a "Throw Out toumRment." city's recreation and pa'rks----------------------- sponsored meet. In N<ld}1a's \.\'Ords. this is how she ca me so . cl ose lo making the '72 U.S. Olympic !cam -and then lost the OJ>- 1>0rtunll .v Ja:-;t 1nonth. "Last month l ftn nlly se nt to the AAU for forms lo cornpele in an Olympic qualifyin~ n1eel and then I was injured. "It was a very stupid action. So was that dude ranch-style event called 11Circle Nine," which allows players to count only their best nine holes. What more could any American golfer ask for? Teani Cycle Racing Set to Begin Friday Speedway motorcycle racing in the United St ates. tradi- tiona lly competi tion '"·ith the accent on individualism. '"'iU take on a bold new look in seasons a head as the team C(lnce pt is introduced to the popular sport. Speedway promoters at four California race tracks -Costa Mesa, Irwindale, Bakersfield and Ventura -hammered out the final details recently for Swimfest Set for LA Thursday . the team speedway schedule. racing The new development will help put the United States on an equal footing v.•ilh the ma- jor speedway racing countries of the world: England , Sweden, Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, Czechoslovakia, Poland and tbe-USSR- England ·WM dmen as a model for !be U.S. team con· cept. More than 40 speedway teams are scatter e d throughout the British Isles representing major cities and regions the way American pro foo tball and baseball teams do. The .switch to t e a m motorcycle competition. first major change in American professional motorcycle sport in more than a decade, "ill The world"s best swimmen also pave the way for tearn In the world's fastest pool. competition wjth other forign This combination of talent and countries. facilities should make the 14th An American 5 Peed w a y team toured Australia and an nu al Los Angeles lnvita-New Zealand ln January and Deep Sea Report SANTA MONICA -110 1nvle~: !10 rock cod. :16 Nnd ctn, t h1U1>ul. 81•~ -ICI 1nt lrr1;· «IQ m1tkerel. lO wind t..11, .!I rocll: cod. -... IMP'l!lllAL aEACH -•1 -141rs ; :lO blrrKUd1 , t4 lioftllo, '' kf lP t..11, '6 y1t~11ll, M '1>Clt <Od, • 111111 coo. SAM P'EOJIO Utllll SI. L1nC1119l - 190 1nvi.tt1; 7 whir• n1b11s. 1' O.•· rac11111, t h1 Ubvt, 1,ll) calico b111, .t bonl!O, )1 "1Kktrlt. (Spor!llV!lnt) - 1n 1nv1tn1 • b.!irr.c!Jd•, io bonllo, 71>1 c1tko bfl1s. '°' roc:k cod. MJ m1d<~•l!'l 1t•DOMOO -m 1n11ersi 1 wti111 1e1bl11, 912 t1llco W>t1, 17 ••Jld b1i1, t,m roca:: •· "'''' -...... ,..,.,., 16<1 m1ditn1, •.211 rock Cod, SAN 011GO 1Munlcl11t P'!\'l -U1 1119ler1; 1.ia \'tllowt1it :161 1tl>ec:or1. OANA WHAll" -17J 1n1l1r1 ; 914 c1111co b1111, uo Hnd bin. 710 k1!0 t..11, ICI rock COCI, t.t llno cod, II h11llb<lt. SANTA ........ A -no 1no11rs; ,, c.allco b111. 7• llncl b111. lolO kllP b111, tn 11"111 cod, t h1t11>Ut. HUNTINGTON l l!ACM -7tl enviers! • h11lo11t, 350 uncl ble, 1t1 rock cod. VEMTUll.A -tl 1noler1; ln c1Uco b111, 1' 1and bin. 1 hlllbul. 6 llnv cod. LONG IEACH 1a.im1t1I l"lefl -107 1mil~s; S u llco b111, 1,o:U rodt cod. e1r1t -H 1n1111n; 1S c111<0 b111, 1' m1cktr11, I h1llbvt C'lel"POlnt Lin· •Intl -ls.l 1n11tr11 MO c1tk:o blu, la? rock cod. 1 n1Ublll. NEWl"OllT (Art's lllllfii'lt l -1%4 1ntlH1: • 1lhlcort. '' 11nd ban. (DIW'lr'I Lkk•rl -,,, ll'ltllerJ; 165 c.1t1co ban. SEAL a£ACH -135 1n1ltr11 1,7al rock cod, 1' m•di1r11, !05 c1Uco b.111, l llellbul. e1riw -n s 1nv11rs ; 10 ••ncl ba1s, I whl1e 1e1 b~u1. s h•llbvl. MAlllNA DEL llEY -:II 1no11r1 ; ' Cllit(I lllll, 2 h1llbul, •20 rotk Cod. OCEAHSIDI' -m 1111111rsr ll bar· r1eud1. l ll borllto. 17' 11nlf b111. 5 1111/but, 21 11b1cort. W m1cktr1f. When asked why r;he wanted to run, Tracy gets a devilsh gleam in her eye and replies: "I wanted to be better than my brother." That's ll·year-0ld Mitch. "I can beat him in some races now," she lau(.rhs. Her mother, however , disagN!eS, and Mitch wasn't around.to derend hims.If. ~Tracy hves in Hun· tington Beach at 10052 Beverly Drive, she competes for the Long Beach Comets, a well- known girls' track club. · The Comets' coach invited her to join the team last year after watching her run in the recreation department.meet. "f like it. I like all sports," she says. She also plays pony- tail softball, another recrea· tion department program. In track she has competed in all types of events, in- cluding sprints at a n y di stance, Jong jump, high jump and the baseball throw. She f~ second in a re-cent tri-athalon, winning the 100..meter race and baseball throw, but barely losing on points to the girl who took the high jump. Her mother worries about the pressure placed on Tracy -"When they expect you to always win, secorxf place is a letdown. It might be too much for a nine-year-0ld." -but Tracy refuses to gi ve it up. Her goal, for now, is to shoot for the 1980 Olympics. She thinks she'll make it. tional s w i mm I n g cham-February and pro\'ed that the pionships. held at the Los coocept is sound by racing Ange les Swim Stadium . Thurs-against m 0 r e seasoned day through Saturday, one of Australian teams with great the greateS'I. ever. :success. The meet. just prior to the The first team racing match Los Alamitos Entries U.S. Olympic trials. indicates is set for Friday at Costa the competition will be ready Mesa's Orange c OU n I y LOS ALAMITOS l!HTlllll for an all out assault on Fairgrounds race facility, The "011 MottOAY world 's records. home Costa Mesa team, the 1111•sT •Acl -~oo y•rc1 .. , v••• ff oldi. Cl1lmln1, Purn l:IDOD. Cl1lmlnt A partial rundown of men's Comets, will square o .,,1,, 53000_ entries includes Garden against the visiting Ventura 11rtc1Y Go cwi1sonl 120 Grove's Gary Hall ; world Chargers. Dandr'• Jet (Prrnt•l 111 record holder Frank lleckl; Team racing will then go lo M11kld e1 rtc111 c·n1rd > i:io winner or six gold medals in the Ventur a County ~:?J~L1~~~~wc !7,r=1 :g l971 Pan American Games, Fairgrounds track·on Tuesday Mact•Y"• c11blltr 1Lll'h•m! 120 · g J I JI followed by Rockv lloy.iq1141it !Smith) 117 Tom McG reen ; Brian Job; everun • u Y Go Truly Go 1Ma1slld1J 111 Germany's flans Fassnacht ; team matches •at Bakersfield Ml""' 11:ebe1 tW•ltM! 11 1 0 Wed -• J. uJy J2 •nd •t Sllvfr N' S1rtc1 fKnlohtJ 117 Id• ll.11n !H1rtl C1•nr lfocket (Ad11I•) Saorannah'I Bor {W1rC1) SIXTH llACE -llO Ylrds. Old$, AllOWllMI , c11;1-br..,. .,,,. Lrnn Cet (Per..erl knltht Aff1lr Cll.lth11rd1J Ch1r9l11t1 Tln" CH1rll Mlctl\'I Ch1rter (Llph11m ) SPGl!f'd Bir Bun fM.als11dal Cl'lkl Do Mortan !Alli$0n) l1 C1ntc1 flr1asur1) lfHle'U9dl Rocke! CAd1lr\ e.,,.1....,111 (SmHlll \lol1r1 tW;usonl '" "' "' 3 ye1r P11r11 "' "' '" "' IN '" "' '" "' "' Sweden's Gunnar Larsson; n ne-""ay, .. " At11 l!Hil1i1t ... , .. 1111;1111 ~ 1. r. ""-II nd NCAA Irwindale Race W a Y on Gotd s11ri1111 1wn'°" 117 JUI Meld 1K1nl1l 111 \,,.uar Je ...... mt'"'" B Thursday evening, July 13. IClnt lf111u1 tAll$0nl 117 SEVENTH llACI -350 "11ds. l "r1r chaThmpion Malrk Slpilg.7.. 'th the The cycle then returns to :::t~!'',ro1~"(~~~.1 ::! ~m!1 ':irf:..~::. ,.,,,,., iJOOO. Thi ese grea s a on wi Costa M-a 1•-lollow1'ng r t · ded ..., ll"l: SSCONO llACI! -J!O v1rd1. J l't•r Mr. ROiln Mlft fKnlOh l) 111 young crop o upse min evening, July 14_ 01d1 a. Mo. c11!mlnt. ""''" 11100, Rovc:111r 1w1rdl 11• super rookies _could melt !he Team racing will not com· ~~~1~!;'i: W.;c11 114 ~~k c~~: :X~~r.~", ~~~ bands off lhe clock. 1 t 1 II lhe · ting APK:~ P••111m (e-1 11• Yw Nev'' 1C110w (LlP1111ml 11 1 "'omen's entries read like Pe e Y 8 er exis 11:avrnon11 Bftr BO\' tP111) nt J11's La11v L11ck tAlll1on1 nt " speedway programs at each Oyn1mo P11rol IW•lehlJ llt •••leo Roc:k1t (Smllh ) 119 the who's w. ho ".f swimming. track. A full slate of handicap Skldo Pol11 1Ljllh1ml 11• Mr. Armsmtar t B•n~sl 11,l ffn J t JI be g Flatit>.r IK.nl11hll 117 EIGHTH llACE·-llll y1rdt. l vear Every ~IS Wfl amon .events and second and third MT. "•rr11 (B•llk•J 1 1;~ okb.& up, &o•tt:SJ590. t11@~1&n0~r'f!lt' the worlds 25 astesty.romen -divislon •aces for' individual -c111c10 B•Y e1r 1entE110) 11 1s.co11c1 01v111oro), ood f ' THl•D •ACE l>O o J ~Ill 81r !Llpt,•m l 11 1 l'nclud1'ng Susie Atw 0 r1'ders wi'll be reta1'ned. -v•r •· "~"' old1 ' a. ~. Cl1lmlf!g, PUrM »000. 1bbr'S Bel' IAotolnlClll I)? Lakewood; \Vorld_'s record Fin.al detail.'J are still being c111m1119 prlc• •2000. ~!':!', "t.::1~~~~~~:: ~:! holder-Lynn Vl~alr of Santa worked out concerning purses, ~~:1•~i' !:·,~~f!~111"''1 11' R.ci Ch111~r air 1w.1sonl 111 Cl A S nd 'd I 112 OVNto Gff t.t.c1al•l n2 ara; M UfimoTIS B nnWl.ffS and fndjVJ Ua team Cllifokff Duncin !B•~tl 117 S1v11nn1h'1 P:tw1rd (Sml111) 117 M r Sa I Cl ho I""'./" Mr. PtrMH11llt\' (P•rntrl 11 7 Karen oe o n a ara w makeup. Each promoter is Th• w~ !Adtlrl 1!7 unc111 w" <wa•dl 111 set a world record in the same currently lryiM ~o u t s1111r 011 1v1utn11l 11s AIM e:111l"• ---~ -~ GYll it" !Wrltht) 1'11 G1blrlno IBOM) 117 rm!e1. ahd pool last year. together a team in Trllh'• a1rn11 IP•ael ,,, NINTH •A~ -J~ Y•rdt. J ''"' Teams from B r a i 11 • strength. Some trading and AIM •11t111)t olds • uP. c111m1n1. Pu•s. 11'°°. Venezuela, ~ustralia, Korea building ·as well as drafting of :::'.!'t.'!c.")T',:~:uionJ :1 ; ~l:!o;i1;:::1~;:i 111 11nd Canada round out the new riders is expected prior to p:ou•TM 1t.a.c• _ ~ ,,1rc1t. 1 Yt•r R11n 0111 '"'"""1 111 r 1'IHlll' -.,._,.J_..!.J'.!~ ... -M ... -'-""1----·o·,~~~~·.·.!::'M $1100. Lil LI Codun• IW!bolol llt ' 'Meet the Man Behind the Safeco Smile. e AUTO ' e HOME e YACHT rf'fU<\J"""_""""_ uet.IU """" ""..,'( _,r~=~-,~1'11 ll•1M1; ,Hee~·{Wr .... I 11 C L.C1111110A CCr•bVI 111 11LM1 J1t IMllrl 111 .; .. l-~ldooil:l9 !O•tYtrl 119 "Mktltl9tit Spted 1•11'1111) 1• '"" F1}''1 JOI' (Hll'f) Ill ~. Pell l1r llC1nill lll ltl'Mr1 Llmtt1 IK"lthlJ 1U ._ Clle nc. At tKntlhtl 111 Miss OMICI" c11111 (Ptrlltl'I 117 Ntor1 Sl1n IAfllrJ 117 lOp'I Gil (lmltll) 11• Kk1911 ht IWtbon) lit Trltll't "'-' DrCIP fAl1lM11) 111 Al• llltitlt Trklil Trvdl,_ lCrotb\'I 111 Trudl1ltro {Hilrtl ,,,.,. Molly (Wiiton! 111 l"IOclOdl: Jll'CIN fAllllOlll Ill '" AIM IHtn.. "jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Go Otl'ld'r 01•1 tK11lt11t1 111 Iii': l'rlllClll l«1l1 (Hirt) 11 7 0.. Bold ero.o tWflll'lll 111 Trv!Y Trltd O.lllh1ml 120 PIP:TH a.a.ca -110 r1rdt. a V•Ar tld1 a. ""'· Pur" s1a. TM El!Ck;r1n<t ll'lr1t Dlvllloftl. MARINE HOLDING TANKS NIW IYSTIMS OR UIS EXISTING HEAD e INDUSTRIAL e COMMERCIAL e BONDS Tltl\t s-r• (l1nk1) Did: tMoolt!lo !Smf'lllJ ,lundtr !Wrltl'lll "' "' "' '" '" THI HOLDING COMPANY IZ7·• ""· •dl. •tw : .... ~ '·· ' , 8AFBCQ INBURA.NC8 ••••ilMlllC. 474 E. 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 642-6500 -546°3205 llttlt LlllV llo.1r (Llphom) NH<lflo 1a-1 WI MOVED TO 111 'AIR DIUVI AcfMI ,,_ C.M. '9tkt Slt!M r.1,.NVM• o.H ••• ~l'fCtttl M ..... I •• St lllCllT o• IAW Ho W!Mo .W Offer .,.. Ulltll ... ..,,, i KIDS LOVE UNCU: LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT Kona Bowling Tourney ~c~~ a~~~~~tll~ ~~~yt F~~1~. 1972 West Coast Match Game formalion contac};~~h lmne eliminations Is at a standstill tonight due to a bye in schedule. rec:-~tion dep.ar1 ment at 833· 384-0. • "I start ed ju1npin)! when I \\':1s ;1bou1 10 . , • nty f:i!hrr ;:ind rny grandfather \\'t•1'l' trnCk saris 111 the l\ta<'C:lbi:t h Games ! th<' .IC'\\'ish l'Quivall·nt of the Ol ympi('sl and they C'll· c·ouraj\C'd me to l:tke up tut::h jumping ~ I \va:im't very athletic in anylhing. but tr:irk. "I was livinrr 111 lsrnel thl'n .,.. ' . A cut to 60 will be establish-and my g,ym t e a c h e r 1n ed a week hence when activity NORWALK _ p \.() _n c er t•l1~n1entary sc hool madt' me resumes. High's Ruben Elizalde pro. ))'"ilclice high ju1np1n~ \Vhc n Currently residing in first . th . . nit the ot her kids wC're pl:iying v1des e North with a slight IJa<;ketbal\ :uid baseball." place is Long Beach"s Qoug ed Johnson, \\'ith a total pinfall Qf ke in Friday ni ght's fifth a n-''I hnd fantaslt r t rni ner~ S,011. That's 13 pins better nual \Vhittier Ki~·anis "60~" '"""1hl·rc .~. l 1un1p<'d 4-11 ht !he. than sec6nd place (George All·star football garne here at :0-.lnccnhiah ti:incs \Vht:'n 1 v.'ilS Shore of Pico Rivera). Cerritos College. IL It \\'<I S <l record for iny age Costa Mesa's top bowler f.O.. 11ii"~"Pioneer flash is ex-then an~ .a frl~ in llrael date is Fred Dougheny, who pected to make a serious bid tells me it is stllll-. is in ninth with 4,881 pins. .to erase Rick Pope's total The current: listed U.S. V' passing mark of 255 yards record for the 10-11 age group Swim and stay fit is the theme of the City of Irvine rec reation department Red Cross swimming program at UC 1rvine's pool every Mon- day and Wednesday evening from 7 to 8: 15. The swim and stay fit pro- gram is a planned activity to encourage lrlljividuals to swim regu larly and frequently until 50 or more miles is reached . The program will have n~x­ ibiJity to gear itselr to the ph ys i c a I condiLioning re- quiremen ts of each individual. Spec ial emphasis will be placed on water safety. stroke impr9vcment, diet and weight control. Those participating \-\'iii be encouraged to join the master's !!Wim ming program. ;tn officia l AAU co mpetition for men and women over 25. The cost of the swim and stay fit program is $15 for eight weeks beginni n g I! when play gets under way at js 4-1 0 ~~- 8. "Then _ u·hen I was 13 a Tick1!tS ror the clash are on nerve in my knee went watery sale at Mutual Tic ket Agen-and I qui t ju mping. We moved cies and at the Cerritos here to the United States College Student C e nter (where Nad ya was born of an BW!ding. American m o t h e r and A football clinic featuring tlle San Diego Chargers wlll be spo nsored by the UC Irvine physical education department July 12-15. The clinic. designed for high school and college coaches and players, will include four lee· ture sessions presented by the Chargers' coaching st a r f , Sessions will be held on cam- pus from 7-10 p.m. the first three days and at 9 a.m. the fi na l day when drills will be conducted . Fee for the clinic is $.l for each lectu1·e or $10 for the series of four . Parking will be prov ided in lot No. 9. naturalized American fatherl and I just never got ba ck into hlgh jumping until last fall. "A friend who is an AAU swimmer C(lnvinced me I should take ii. up again and I did. l would work out maybe three or four times a week - whenever I had the time. And I would jump over everything, every place I went ... bushes, fences." "I just watched the boys and one of them taught me the western roll. l was so elated when I hit five feet and I was still using the scisso rs jump. But I didn't get really serious about jumping and the Olym- pics until I cleared six feet a This boy tried to pick me up to prove his strength and agility <1nd we fell. 1-li s fist ran1med into my chest and pu lled some muscles. "Then the doctor told me T couldn't jun1p for th ree to six months. wh ich is a disaster without training ..• It "'as a very, \'rry blg <l isnppo1ntment , speciall y to my parents." Nadya is now in l~rael for the sum1ner. r('Sling instead or trainin~ for lhe Olym pics. Ou t with lul'.k and t"'O SC'holarship~ fr9m UCLA. shE! pl:i ns to hegin serious traini ng for the '76 Ol ympics al school in the 1<'111 Fluent in llebrew, French and English, and a student of German and Japanese, Nadya looks ahead to being an in· terpreter. An honor student at Loara, she already tuton language and teaches classical guitar in the tradition of Carlos Montoya. An incredible tale? Not the way Nadya tells il Car Ouh Will Meet The Orange Coast chapter of the na tional J>orsche Clu b of America will hold its annual • membership meeting i n '. Newport Beach Friday when plans for the upcoming year will be discussed. : The club, which has 6,200 ;. members nallon ·wlde, sponsors rallies. ;i :xro.sses, •. swap meets and other events. :: Anyone interested in joining •• Js in vited to attend th e meeting which begins at 7 p.m. in !he spa or the Park Newport Apartments. Baseball Standings DEAN LEWIS NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L Pittsburgh 42 25 New York 42 27 Chicago 37 31 -Sl. Louis 37 33 i\1 innesota 36 3t Ph iladelphia 24 45 \Ve!it Oivl!ilon Cincinnati .. --0 27 l~ouston 43 28 Dod~ers 36 34 Atlanta 31 3B S11n Fra ncisco 30 46 San Diego 24 46 · Slll'ICllY't Jltt111t1 sr LOUii 1, Plll11Mlohi11 J M ont.NI •• New Yctk J PU1Sbur1h 1, c"rc""° • Hou'tc" -'· Allan!t 4 Clnclnn1ll 11. ~1n OlffO 1 S•n Fr•nclsco •. Oodttn J Tild•Y't Glmts Pct. .627 .609 .544 .529 .537 .348 .614 .606 .514 .4~9 .395 .34? GB I 51\ 6\1 7\; 19 '" 7 11 11 16 19 Ntw YO!'lc 15.t.-v,r l~t irtd (llDll l·2 or Sit- de<~I 1 Ol 111 Mnntr~•I (N,cAn1tlv 1,IQ enlf NV:/'T• JDR..JJJ ---San itr1nclsce (C1rfilllfn ).fl 11 Phlla0tlphl1 !C•rlton ,,., Chlt11'10 (HOOIOll Hl 1t '°illsburg~ !1111111 ,_,} St Loul• (Wltor a.n •1 Clncinn1t! IG11ll'tl 2·JJ Al!11n11 1~1on1 1 61 11 HOU•tOl'I \Atu11 J.71 Only '"ml't ,clllldu\l'd T11••••1'• O•mn C>Mttf\ "' Ment•e11 Sin 011'911 11 N..,.. Yott Siii Fr1nc1sco " P"'ll•dtltoh!I f;lllC.tOO '' At111111~. '· 1w!-nl9h1 SI lOUI• 11 Cln<lnntU ,.llhi:>u•O"' II UOUllCWI AMERICAN LEAGUE .. ~; East Division w L Pd. GB Detroit Baltimore New York Boston Cleveland h1ilwaukce 0 .!1.k:land Chicago Minn eosj.i Kansas Cit y Angels Texas 37 29 .561 35 36 .545 1 31 34 .4n 51\ 3() 34 .469 6 27 39 .409 10 26 4-0 .394 11 \Ve5t Division 44 '24 -.641' -- 41 28 .594 31\ 36 31 .537 7\1 33 34 .493 10\1 32 38 .457 13 28 4-0 -412 16 S1111111,,•1 llH11ll1. &o!lon lf-J. MllWftUkfl .. ,. 'ltd •• ,,.. II !Ml,.... Nno 'fOl'lt 6-5, Cl1"ttl1nd J.l Btlrlmo•" 1, Orlrolt 2 Mln11110l1 6-1, Chic ... ._, Tn11' J J, IC11n111 Cit\' S-t, 111 t•m. 10 ll'll'llnts O.~llnlf ~. A""ll I "" rild1w•1 o_.. T1•11 fP1ut l·J or ShlU1nbildl 1-J\ 11 Klftloll (lf"t..iP''~ 6-1) MTMH011!l lYliv111 1-tf "if IMliif""!Slitiiif"l..fl 81111..-, (Ptlmtr 10-..l 11 Detroit (Tlmmtrn"" ... Olkl1nd IHunttr t••I 11 Allftll (M.l'f 24) Onl" ••~ schedutf'd. Ntw Yortl 11 D11•l111d Ml1wu1t1.4't 11 •••I• O,,...cu t i K1nf1, Cllv 81nlmart 11 Cnlc1oe Ttlll 11 Clev1l1nd Mlnllf.sot• 11 1011en DEAN ·LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA Service tnd Parf1 for All Imported Cart Modern Body Shop lor. All C•n 646-9303 ""' Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Deal~ OVERSEAS DlLIVllY SPECIALISTS 'S> 1972 TOYOTA CARINA BIG ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!! '72 JQYOTA_ COROLlA $1966 $264 $48.86 FULL PltlCI OR DOWN PH MONTH hfenecl IMIY'Nllt ptia S2ut.H ,... cllt6et tn, lie. • ..,.,,... hr 41 1111Ptltl. AllR.t ~ ..... 1J.649n. •IUOCIJfJ741 '72 VOLVO ' 2 DOOi SID.t.H fULL PltlCI OR $3550 $295 DOWN $92.86 M~~~H -..... _ ,....1471l.21. , .. clucll.. tu ar lie. I l....,..t hr 41 -ttttt.. ..... t pnc...... ,.... 12.66%. #l424J442SIJIJ ATIENTIDN VOLVO OWNERS Annlvtrsary Spocl1ll All CONOltlONI~• $425 POI ONlT INSTALLED.II I 18 DAIL V PILOT Mond~y. July 3, 1912 ., ~ .. " Oly111pic Trials San Diego Pilot Leisiarely Boatitig Wii1s iI1 SAN FRANCISCO JAP) - Earl Elms of Mis:sion Bay Yacht Club in San Diego \\'On by 39 seconds in the third Sol· ing Class race of tht!. U.S. Olympic team 1rials Sunday on San Francisco Bay. The 32-year-old fonner Snipe world champion bested a fleet ot 34 yach ts over the J J.mile Olympic course in an 18-knot breeze. Bud ~1elges or Zenda. \Vis., whose boat n'as dismasted in Saturday's high Winds, took second in a see.saw battle with John Dane of NeW Orleans. Wanvick Tompkins of Mill Valley, Calif., and Bruce T~e r;aniic p3cc ?f 1no~ern lire i~ he.lie~!. by ~hcl'Cf'JX'l!ct'"group on--thrrdeck .. of· ·~-e~~d::~ed~h~~~f~~~~h !1~d thJ~ Coro~ado-41 in an island rove. Cruising 1s 1Je:con11ng almost as. pop~lar as fifth, respectively.· r~c1ng with the de~elopmeni of roorr1y motorsa1lors such as this Tripp-de-The fleet started the race signed center cockpit sloop. with all 34 boat$ exactly on the President To Stud y • Safety Bill WASHINGTON IAP) Gray)Jeard Holds T al1iti Race Lead LOS ANGEi.ES (AP\ starting line, and the race was relatively easier for lhe Olym- pic hopefuls than Saturday's gear-buster. Attempts to raise ?iotaurice J:tattray's yacht, which sank Saturday. failed Sunday but a second tra: will be made Mon.- day to get the Se at t I e yachtsman's capsized craft from the bay bottom. Congress has sent President Nixon a compromise bill on port and waterY.•ay safety in a ney,• effort to protect navigable \1•a ters from cnvironme!ltal harm from ships. Graybeard held thl' lcali as light winds slowed it and six other yachts in the Los Ange lC's to Tahiti "race to par:idi~e. ·· Gravbcard, out of V'1n- couve f.. B.C .. \Vas \Vithin 475 miles of Piipeeteon U1e 3,57 1- mile run Sunday and led the µa i:k by 165 miles over Min &:!tc. ~lowe ver, she remained in fift h p!aee on corrected Elms. \vho has Rand y dic:ip leader although in third fl.lc-baren and George Twist or overall trailing Grn ybeard by San Diego as crewmen. moved 322 miles. into second place in the stan- ln fleet standings Aries \YJS ding~. Goldsmith, \vho won ~he fourth. 360 miles behind the opening race and was third leader. v.·ilh Concerto fifth 361 1 Sat~rday. leads overal_I. a~d n1ilcs h:1ck fol10 11·ed by Siete L~well North or San Diego IS and lnisfail. 1~11~d on two .secon~·place I-fapdicap standings had J\1 in f1n1~hes and an eighth 1n Sun-s I" t t e Sl'<.'Ond follo\11ed by days r~ce. By voice vote last ~'eek. lhe House agreed to !he Se n ate-passed compro11'lisc providing for establishment of comprehensive m i n i n1 u m standards for building and operating vessels which carry bulk cargoes that1may pose haza rds to marine 11fe. The llouse voted J a s t October . to give the Coast. Guard added authority to han· die serious problems o f marine safety and water pollution, and to give statutory basfS for the Coast Guard's post-safety program. The Senate passed a revised .-\'ersion to protect the marine environmental through im- proved traffic controls, better \'essel design and operational upgradin g. The Senate pressed for government standards f o r buiJding and operating vessels carrying bulk cargoes. These \\IOu\d include broad controls over des ign, propu ls1on machinery, equipment ;1nd operation. Effective dates for applying the standards to vessels in foreign trade would be delayed to allow for developing possi· hie interhalional agreen1ents. The latest date \\'OU!d be Jan. 1, 1976, and the earliest, Jau. l, 1974. Senate • J1ouse conferees accepted a revised version of the Senate pro\'ision. The compromise applies to ships engaged in bulk move- ment of inflammable or· com- bustible liquids. oil in any form. or hazardous polluting liquids including gases in liq- uid forn1. Dry cargo designated as hazardous polluting substances \rould be covered by the federal water pollut!Qn control li:n1•. The compromise de"iignatl""i n top civil penalty or Hl,OUrl .and criminal punishment of lines beh11een $5.000 and SW.000. five y1•ars in pri son. or both fine and jn!I term. Sl\im, Slim Classes ScheduJe<l A fled Cross S\virn and st:iv fit prog ram will be pa1·t uf 1)11' Jr vinf' su tnrncr recreation f1f· ferings for adults. The suim, sllm -rtasstis "·ii! be held from 7 to 8; 15 p n1. t-.·londays and \Vedncsduys i11 Un1vers1ty High School pol)!. for eight \l'Ct'ks beginning July 5. Th e progran1 sets 3 J:Oal or ~11·imming 50 miles and \~'ill be tailored lo the fitnl"S!I needs of participants . Spt'c1al attention t1·ill bf' pa id In "" s t er safety. stroke im prov<'ment, d1Pt. and "'eight rontrol f'urthcr. ~ntry in the oir tional. AAU ~-tasters SY,.irn- mlng co mpetitive nro;t,r:-.., for lhose over 25. will be :1vaf11blc h1 those" who are interested. Regi!trallon for this self'· supporting recreation program is $15 ptr person. f'or in- / ronnation, Call Brian Qar•a·t Cll) Hall. 8.13-llHO. 1 time. 1'he Duick F'rcnch entry. III, c1Jntinued as A.ries. Conc_ert~. Graybeard, 111frl:nr~1;;.s arter Sunday's Siete and lnisfatl. 1 B . G Id ·th w· \" d Ill !IS d 1 . ruce o sm1. 1n-. Till s e o un ay, sow-netka, Ill. 1·3-5, 15.7 points. ing the yac hts. Grayb_e~rd 2. Earl Elms San Diego 3-6- reportcd s11_e ex~cted to f1n1sh l , 17.4. ' ' Tuc:;day IYJth tiI1n Selle a day .l Loi\'ell Nortli, San Diego. later. 2·2·8, 20. ' Atlantic Stor111s ·Lash 4. John Dane, New Orleans. 6-4-3. 25.4. 5. )Varwick Tompkin!!, Mill Valley, Calif., 4-f>-4. 26. Racing Lo11e Mariners 6. Robert Johnstone , \Vilmetle. 111.. 11-1·7. 30 . 7. San Merri.ck, Washing1on , D.C. 8-3-9. 43 ... 8. Bud Melges. Zenda, Wis., 5-9nf-2, 56. LONOON (AP -Gales an{! rain lashed the 48 lone mariners still left in Jhe Transatlantic sfnglehandrd yacht race and the fo ul \\'Cather forced one of the leaders to give up, officials said Sunday. A spokesman for the London observer newspaper, sponsor of the race, said bad "·ea ther had hit both the 2.810-mile northern route, \\•hich passe~ near iccbeq;s drifling dO\\'n from Greenland, and the 3,530- mi!e usually mildl"r southe rn passage. f"ifty-elght boats sa iled frO!n Plyrnoul11, Engla nd, f o r NC1\'port. R.l. 16 days ago. About one-third or those left Jiave not been heard fron1 or sigh1cd. "\Ve are nor unduly 11·or· ricd. ·• the spokesman :mid. ''.Some of these boats h<ivt 110 radio. Others may not be u~­ ing lhC'irs, itnd still 1norr 1n~1y be l1.11·ing te chnical troubl e." t)1u• 11r the 1nissing bo:it s \\'as rend<'rcdi 13, a 128·foot French srhooner \11eighing 35 ton :ind the biggest boat in thf' rna r:-it.hon . Al~o unsighted •\11as ~111 American enlry the 46-foot trin1aran Three Cheers. sailed by '!'om Follett of ?-.1iami, Fla. l)utchman Gerard Dijkstra, _sailing the 71-foot ketch Second Life. had his ma st snappt.'d off in a hov;·!ing force g-all' 1rind Saturday. Dijks1 ra. one of the ral'C fa vorites. \\":ls 650 n1i!cs east of St. Joh n's , Nev•foundland, v.·hcn disaster overtook hin1. He \\'<IS reported in touch v.•ith J/alifax: for a tow. The 7{).foot trim.'.lran, Pen Duick IV. sailed by Ala in Colas of France, was reported 300 miles f!earer the fini sh than any other entry whose Pair Notch Tempest, Fi11n Wins tiIARION. ti.1ass. (AP) - Loui s Nady of Berkeley and Andy Kos tanecki of Darien. Conn.. won their respective races in the opening round of the final U.S. Olympic s tryouts for the Finn and Tempest sailboat classes on Buzzards Bay: i\lady was first in the Finn class over a nine-mile course. position 111as kno\rn. Second was Ed Bennett of San lie \\'as challenged by the Francisco and third was Dr. British contender. Br if is h ·rony J~ermann of Racine. \Vi s. Stceel. a 59..foot ket ch sailed Kostanecki was first in the by Brian Cooke. Te1npest class over a 12-mile r D · k' · · F ·d course. Second was John en uic s position r1• ay l\·icNamara of Swampscott, a \11ns south of the l'E'1"'-!ormer bronze meda l winner foundland <:rand Banks ice in the Olympics ln the 5.5 Jrea. class. Bace officials sa\tl if she Third was the defending conllnued her present speed U.S. and \11orld champion in she could cross the fini sh line lhe Tempest class, G I e n next Sund:iy. 22 days aftrr set-f'oster of NC\\I York City, Ong out and four days in ad-This 'vas the first of seven vnnce of tiu' I' x is t i n g races to be hefd at a rate of Tr.ansatlantic speed record. one a da.v. The competition is scheduled to end Saturday. .,A, •A . ... ,, Snres Fie1•ce Pt•i1le Chichester Returns LO\'bO\' (AP ) -Sir Fran· c·1~ ,C'ilicl1e::;!er. B r1 ta I/\' s r.allnnt old se a do~. w;i ~ llt:atcn in 1he Tr:ins11t!antit.: i:111glch:1ndrd yacht r:i<'e by a J)a1n-kllling drug that gave h1nl h:1lluclna1ions and lett h1n1 11'c--J k and exh<iusted. 1_:ut h1• l1ns s;ived his fiert(' priilt:. Ifi" 01cf1Civcrsary. tflc <Sl'J, 11id uui drfc;1l h1n1. A~ hr ~ailed home lo Pl~ 1nou1h 1n hi s cr1pp1«1 ~:i1·ht, f:1p!i~ :\loth V, ~und<1y ;1fti.'r an fltlan11t· rl'-.CU(\ opl'r.1 - tion, the 7U..vcar-<1ld royn.i;er 1i11id the: drug "put me out 11!tngcther . ·• <.:JHcli .. ~tf'r. \\'ho \1·as missing for <~ight da~'!i in the storm· "·hipped ocean. reported he gnve up lhe .i;rucl111g race six days ago. Ile lay ~Hiked bv 1cv spray. e;<h:iustcd b~ fight1n~ hi!' "'8Y 1hrough stonn)' sens: only half-l'1'Jnsc1ol1s :ind ill arter Jnsccting h1m11c1r with · 1he fl rug that ironl«nlly \Vas supposed to krrp him p:oin~. Hi~ radio had Oeen out of ac· tion for e4tht davg, evu ~ince ht• K't sail ( r o ni Plymoulh June 17 for Neu1port, R T. thicheste r, 11•a.s given the pain killer by his d<x:tnrs lo combat a severe clebilit[lt ing illness h1~ h11 s: sutfcred fron1 :;evernl JTionth!i Uclore \.he race. He defit'<i d oc tor s 1 odn:ds to try ;ind repeat his triurnph in !ht' _lj. rs I Tran."i-atlanfic ract~ Jn 1960. But. th<' mA~l!!r mariner said 111 a rt!J>Ort to th<' Sunda y Tune!; ne\\·spapf'r. he \l'!l S jinxed by bad luck from 1he start. First, the radio in )us 57-foot thret-maslcd k<'t ch \\'ent. "I rould hear br'°ndc-asts-saying pt>ople v.·ere getting worritd bctausc I had not made· my scheduled csllll. but there 11.'as nothing I could do about ii." Next, a \\'inch broke. Then 1 hf! began to Teel sick and took the pnin·killing drug. That knocked hlrn out. lte recorded in his log June 24, soon ~fter Jnjecting hi mself: ' "A ~hastty night. Awoke groaning and calling on God to ..tielp n1t unt\I fi a.m. 1h1s •JnfJrninG. F'ell asl~p \\'hi!e entering up this Jog. Feel sick. ill , exhausted. ~lardly able to stand up 9r drag one foot for1,·ard after the other. Tried lO be sick several times, but h:>ve 1101 eaten anything all day." Il e turned back, reluctantly. The ~ d:tj\ Cbic.hester said he v.·rote: "Am just about at I.he end or my tether , . . one of the things that reaHy made nle dec ide to turn back wa!I a priin-killing injection I took . . if certainly killed the pain all rlght. but It just put me out ph,vsically.'' 1-te sald tht drug also made hi1n hallucinate. He collnpsed in his bunk in the late af· ternoon and "pAssed into deep unconsciousness.'• \\!hen he awoke, he thought it \\'lls dawn nnd staggered to the cockpit of his one-man yaeht. "The sky got d::rker and d11rker." be wrote. "At first J thought ii \(•as rog. but po~~Jly I <OUld S« plt<eJ of sun I 'hinln~ lhro11gh th f t 0 • BOATING Boat Stock Agreement Announced Pair Yachting Electrocuted Safe l.BGAL NOTICE ' LEGAL NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSl~ESS NAME STATEMENT lo!lowlng ptrl<Jn is do•no buoin•s' LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE .. AFRO AD S. P O. Bo• 31 6~. Dr1nQ" (.t!J!9t~•,l_; -~-0_!:. P.s'!~.-(-~~!_I.:._ ~~-· "''~" '"p;,1r.s<1<J, ('iilrf~rn1a. GM• Vll"l!cn l••t>1rr+.. ll107 r11•0 (or11tz,, Sn·• Ju~" C •Pl,1r .s no. C.oli!Orn·~ 11,,\ ov,•<~>I I~ tot•no eond1Kltd llV '" 11101111011.sl G~·v W 70•b.&t!~ Jn" '1\1""'""' 111•11 w !h •h• Counl~ (I,.,' 0/ (;,,,,,~(· (n<1n!• Cf• )V"' 7l. l~l? bv Bt\lf flV J, MUl<MO. f>epv1Y Covn!y (lor~. f'lH11 Publi>he<I Or.&n9f Co.a<! D~ilv Pile!~ .Junt ;~. ar.d .Jurv l. 10, )I, 191? 1611,12" LEGAL NOTICE t i: HYL.t.NO l ... 80RATDRIES 00"10' CENTER , l~ Hyl•nll A•tnut. (05!. Mf,f, (•hlornoa. HVltn~ Ltb.lrMno'' O•••l ~n T•~111n~! l ~t.oralo"tl. Inc. j))O Hyl1~d "''nut, <0•11 "'"''' C•llt~r n•1. Thi\ bu1infS' rs t>tlng condvc•e<I bv • Corl)Oratl~n ic1•11nr·n•~· Hy l~r.d labor•fC/>t \ O;•ll.Ofl Trayenol L&tle•alo"f~. I~( v.cicr ~nn1,or• ~~;'1, Sccr~!atv lo•: !.~mutl T. Par~tt. Pre .. \!tnl Tl\i~ !loli!!fm"n! !olffl ''"'~ !n, (¢1<!"'" . F 1~~ .. r.1.,~ cf Oran~ (1"'MY C'· Jun" "/l, If/I' Publl1bffl 0 1anot (NII 01.tv P•lc!, bY Bfv .. ly J: llad~c~. OtPVIV (l)Unty .Jun• 70, 11, &nd July J. 10. 197l \60~-12 Cit•~. 'I I 1 I 1. -I DICK TRACY A FULL- F' "'DGED lJ.~OER­ COVER MAN? TUMBLEWEEDS YOVR. REC.EIV!NCi A UOlO IS TURMED OFF, aur NOT YOUR 'SEN01NG AUOIO. By Chester Gould IF VOIJ GET A S lDE VIEW OF TI-IEM Wln.IOUT TuElR SEEING 'IOJ, RAISE YOUR SMIRT. By Tom K. Ryan l'LL WAGER MY !'RAVES HAVE: 'NJ AFFfCTIONATE NICKNAME 111eY CALL ME ~EH /NP MY !'ACK! FESS UP, LOlSA LUCK! J'M . VYING 1() KNOW ,-=--n l'P 1'A1HfR \00 f\fAR rr fROM 50Mf0Nf. f.L.Sf. I MeNP SLOWLY. · WHAfJ//S l ~,(llttll•I r ~;r. f<!ttl!I ,,_ 5'.t~11+1-'i L ~: I,' :.j ,. l I MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS ,., NANCY WELL, Ii=' IT ISN'T NANCY HELLO, MRS. BROWN I DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by~. A. PQW[R I ACROSS 11.!ilitary student f;, Brealhl' in ~hort g~sp$ 11) Toronto'>. -Lomd 14 Adm;,,, ,\rr !li!C!1:'111 15 Orit11l~I ourse Iii Elt>tltie.11 ir~•t~: Abbr. 17G111~~ 13 E.1,t l11d1J11 I VIP l' Bl1d feat11te 20 Yield 2l 1.!odNale in I musical lem~o 24 Mine • entrances 26 Grouped I to9et11er 27 Bnt1sl1 I Columb•~ tdP1t~I 30 Malt be~rra9e Jl Fiber source 3Z G1tally 1t· ductd modtl 37 flussiill1 righter plan t )9 The !~ndsc"llt 40 Diminish 111 ~lr1!11flll1 •l Tr~vrl c:loc:umtl'I\~ 43 lmmunizinlJ ~9enls 44 Rowing 1mplem~t 4) Ovtrshadowtd 48 PIJnet 51 Actress -- Jergt.is 52 Small orr.J.mffi! S-4 Chri>tmd~ t.l1111k'!. 53 Peruse sq Horse c~lor bl --Slime: k" hockey gre~l bl RJoson d' -< J llS! i f1 C at,0<1 for exi\lP11ce l;,j --r.ie~\eren~~= tlFL sl~r b4 P.1•1s' w.iterfronl b) C;u ry 011 one'~ rersoo Hi Rat1co b 1 Co'Tlpany cl people OOV.'N l Mone/ l Rectangula• pier 3 Relative o! ~'' ,,. 4 Lill up ') Sl1ipwcm1 b TeniporJry worker 7 Chalice II Pr.1'11 pusher q Baldin11 P~rson'~ roncern : Z word5 10 PIJCt cf tnlertaimn~nl 11 Aller 12 Sudden ~ulpouring 13 l11q1111ed 21 ·-Ant!ior 1 Edrn 23 Defer ZS Holy 27 Shoe parl 18 Pelvic bo11ts zq Gr.v teeth Jj Ahsence or ~·rnwledgr 34 Expend'> JS 5~ec 1JI 3b M1 Id o.ilh JS l:1sp11Jl •01i l"I Al h~y ~Z Eclio ----: Dtplh·mt~~ur­ in\j device 43 One wl10 squanders rrio~ev 46 Kind cl putl in goll ~7 T ~~" in tood ~ii Sp1i11kl~ 4q R.l'l9t'er~ so Kind or lltilddre\•, ~3 ~pani'ili tiu:I ~5 H~h('{!: hal1J11 ~b llJloaq llo~·~ name 57 Ootl' liO Feel 1).1111 1 • Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers ' t , • • ,, f{11"f4!.I '·lllll't'LL I) ' ~' ~ -. -.,. 7., By Dale Hale I KNO.V TillS 90llND5 SILLY lDSAYINT!iF AUDDl.E OF lllE '' S<.11\MER ... OOT I 1\llNK HE HAS FRo5T BITE 'JI .. by Ernie Bushmiller YOU 'RE TWO HOURS LATE FOR SUPPER-- WHERE HAVE I MET ,MRS. BROWN · . AND I ASKED HER HOW SHE \VAS FE ELIN~ YOU BEEN? P.EANUTS , WELL. HOW 00 '(OU LIKE HAVIN6 'A NEiil BAa'I 6ROTHER? OH,"RER!IN' 15 ALL RIGHT. I 6UE55-ACTllALL'(, l'D /.J.WA'fG HOPED iJ ef Al:i ONL'f CHILD, tl<IT tT5100 LATE RlK1llAT l'l?W- JUDGE PARKER .A s LEE DRIVES 6£VERL'Y FOR HER SUP POSED APPOI NT~ h;:-::-;- MENT WITH THE PRODUCER, HE PULL S OFF THE MAIN RO.AD ! •l""r'' d ,.. ' /"'' ..... ~ ' I ,-• 'f-::, ' ' ' MISS PEACH ME'1'1 LfSTER'1 '/Ot.fVE C.~ A FACE ONl.Y A 11\0THElt _ GAN t.OVE !! ... • i ' J l • \\ t ''· 4'ERKINS ....... _ • • • • ...... -.~~·-· .. ·.- ' * ' ~* {! "' " ~ ~;, \ " \ -.· .,., * •• '- • SALLY BANANA S MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~ • _('\'·'t t•.t ...... , I (' FOJKT,., : L' .. A.i-; ,\jJ!' :\Pl i'~h'-1 } WY!\M;i../5eM'l" 'L • t s.; ~a.e rJ~ Th '~· ~ ~~;R(.\1 , c~"r·E.rlfT· ''' i r-------1 ' .• ,,- ' ' \ - , ... __ , I , ·~ ., ,. ' I : , O•ll Y Pl\uT i!J By Dick Moores -By Gus-Arrio1a -- 11 -E::::.E -.'OI) ,:-1 V ..;_,!::E THEA I .-1\('1 <"EllSA l- !5E:t::: t~S: ~\ECV i"A'if . . I ·r/.:;,. I .J,o.JC' .. AAJO '"''-"'1.V' ,,.'>IVEE-1 ,:~1PC 4.KE1 •r'.:. ... 1rvos f ' -~ ~ Bv Ferd Johnson I • • .,_..,, __ , ,, -~·.-·-- By Roger Bollen THE. ~fwa=.K 15 TH l~KI N6 -ABOOr TAKtlliO MQ FAvO~rre TAl.K SHOW OFF THE />JR! THE SHOW HAS VERc.> HIGH l?ATl/J65 Al/IOIV0 WrEilECTVAlS1 S!VDEIJTS /llJD E.COCATED PWPl.E ··· Ti'<Eiol IT DOes~•r . HAUE. A ~AlJEIC: ! By Charles M. Sc.hulz MA'f8E 1TLL BE DIFFERENT W~EN 'IOU AU. 6RO!il UP .• MAl/8E 'IOO'LL 8ECOME -;, ~ KEAL CL06E ... l'V<..V ...J MARC.IA, Wl-IA"T DID you 'THINK <" THE l.INE J: -;:, ., ~'·· JUST PUl.l.ED ON l.6$TE'i!:? ·';t .... :'· r .JOE FAMIL'<! --I -By ·Mell Bt:AUflFUL.. rr WAS ONC-OF' n<OSE ~A~E LINE$ TH•T cm 9€ 1°0PPED FJY "OM,YEM." ---~ By John Miles ·-· I Ht:Z " •11·s rn:.itlt• 1•r i.:olrl i aid "'ilh diamonds and Is valued at $165.0oo· -I <:('rlainly hope this ends yo ur romplainin;: ahoul "·hut J spend on bats." DENNIS THE MENACE 'TALK AOOUT TAAVE Ll/N' .. ~INA CAME AU 1HE WAY fliOM ITALY 6EFC!<f SHEW~ EVEN 801/N.1• G • '' l i f • , • \ .. 211 DAILY PILOT Monday, Jul1 :l, l <'J72 Everyone Has Something 1hat Someone Else W.ants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell .It, Find If, Trade It With a Want Ad I l The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ..J -::·..;:;· ~~~-1 ~--"_'_"_s,_1•__,//ie /[ Houmt"s''' ][ieJ [ ~1"5•• !lie] :;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~; ~'";e;n;e;r;•l;;;;;;;:;;~<>~c~n~e!ra!il~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiii~ I General ttoian for Sale GC'1era l General General ..:..:neral General G ... nt!ral ""' --------- IRVINE TERRACE ·.JUST LISTED ~~ 1noi::t attr. l1ome in a prestige location. 2 Sp:1t•101is HH .. 2 ba's., lge. livin g r1n . \v /<ittr. 'frp!r. ('nn1 plc tc ki lclt blt-in s. Sep. 2 car gar PLl lS .unpJc !"Oal'e for rYlf1bil ho1ne or bo<it U:ailt..:r......_\u..J.lnLbuy at $50.500. A BIT OF HEAVEN •• .. 1rilh you O'O\\'tl 1)r11·. stairs .. , to one of the finest be;iches in lhc arc;:i. You have a spec· t.:icu lar vic11 from any part of thi~ Jovlev 3 bdrn). & fa111ily rn1. horne. You O\l"n the land ~nol lea::.cho19). As]{ing $165 ,000. C(ln\·('nh·nt J~'lrkloi:; -rasy rn IJe a "Ji::tll'-1'.\"' ut Huy & Bl·ach ncnlty ,. General IF PR:OE OF OWNERSHIP is your desire " ·t a !r 1..1:ly ('01n1uu nily is you r obj ective' ~ ·1 \'erdc is N. Chil dren can pedal lo s~.i·:;:.1 s fron1 kinde r~;e rt c n through Jr. Col· !"~.:'. 'fhere's 50 ac r es of gr assy open space, c:1~1 r:·h~s . shopping. a library and the fine st ncif;h horhoods _ in Orange Coun ty. If this s you. phone the peopte \Vho agree. PHONE UNl9UE HOMES, MESA VERDE 54&.5990 REALTOR,. MULTIPL E LISTING SERVICE. * TRIPLEX * > ,-, r' """ ~-\.n< ~ Ptune OC'<'t1.nfront: Two 3·13R, ~~· 11 .:"O'j)-'> 2 Bn.: oni• unit 2 RR., l ~J J . ·" I3;t. $tGO,OClO · Sub)n1t. ' · .;,;;11 * TRIPLEX * I.. ' ·' BAYFRONT HOME H.ustic design, hlghhghts th is fr•bulow; home 011 1Ja'rbo1· Island Rd. Large <'nough Jor a * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * * Bayfront Condo :1 Br '! l\U, J)()l)l, piCl' & slip .• [)1·li~t11 tuJ $79,500 EMERALD BAY Calboa Bl\'d. 2 \'rs. n<'1\'. • .. j'.:rtllVini:: family ' 1nui1;1rula!t' ;~ l~r + fan1 rm. ()\'t';tll ~lde of ]1\1·y. Vie\v. Brautifully furn. T110 4-BR., 2 P~t.: Ont' :1-BH, 2 hath. f'ric~<l at s12:1,000. Call: Gi::-:1r1G:1 1;j;;.{i610:S F.ve:ii. Peninsula Point 3 Bit.. 2 bnlli home. Cnn1 11l•·t1·ly rcd<'l'Or. Priced at S!i2.~l()(J. C11ll G7::-361J~ 54g.(j715 Evl'i;, Oceanfront Home 0fl 1•\tr;1 lgl'. !nl . 4 Bl:, 1 l,;!111~. Call for :if1p"t 10 :-.e<'. Cal! 1;1::-:~G:! 642·2'1~:: Eves. . aSsociated BAOKEA5-REALJ'ORS. 2025 W Balboa & J.J,,3 · 2400 SQ. FT. n1spt'1's1on systc•n1. Gara;:->' <loor 1ip1·nr1', t'lec. kiteh. and - inure fol' • · $45,500. Newport •• Fairview 646-8811 1anytime) BUY OF THE WEEK Spo1·rnus 4 hr hnnie 11?sunk1·n fan,ily t·oonl. Calhl"rlraJ l'eil· 111.i:: & se1111 h1l'n1<.i l dining n.)0111. Largt' kit1•h1·n w/ bre;,k!as! h;ir. C:.rpe1 & <lrps. Clos~· Ill srhools. parks & hr>111·h. /\ :\Jusl Ser At SXl.~JUO. Scy1nour 11,i!l Jake: your pri:sr·nt honk• in 1rad{'. CALL S!'.:Y!i10UR REALTY s11.1221. LOW DOWN * WHIZZ!! BANG * VIEW ANO POOL Cameo llighlands. Architect designed-New carpels & drapes. 4 Bedrooms, convertible den. 3 bat hs, cathedral ceilings and 2 used brick fireplaces. fami l.v room, bui lt-in kitc:h- e n & B-B·Q, PLUS MANY XT RAS. Entertain around your O\Yn POOL , . . $76 .500. *POW!! POW * VACANT ... READY AND \Vl~ .. ITING for vou 1s tllls MONTEGO model on r'EE LAND . 4 Berl· roo n1s, 2 baths, formal dining roon1 \vith f"Al\.1ILY ROOJ\1 adjacent to the built-in island kitchen. See this HARBOR VIE W HO ME and buy. "' 854,950. * FREEDOM YOU'LL GET * YOU BET! Enchanting TWO STORY 5 be droo1n 3 baLh , 2 fireplaces, F.!\.~l lL \' ROOi\1. for111al din- ing room. NE \V carpets and dra 1Jes. island kitchen . SOJ\fEJ{SE'r model on FEE land in HARBOR VIEW HOMES . . . . . . . S72.500. \\'ilh 5 b('Uroon1s. 4 1 ~ b:J.lhs t..~ large, forn1:d di111n~ rni. F un1ily 1'00tH ~1 ·p;1r1111· 1ro1n mt11n house. \vi!h 1\'t"t hnt• ,t, fil'('pl:1c~·. "/)ad·.~ lX-n '' \Vilh hooi-:i<hcl\·c.s. fi1"<'plucc, \l'CI IJ:"H' & \'il'I\' o( bay /\n cxvt'!l!ionnl hornc in ;:111 1'X("lusive lora!JOll "·i!h pier ,f.(. sllp rnr larg<' ~al'hL :'1~25,iOO CHERRY LAKE AREA -$72.500 A great hon1e for teenagers -lhc~··t1 lu\'l' this one! \'ie\v of Che rry Lake. Spli1·!l'\'l'I 5 bedrm. home \V 1den (could be 6th hd1'n1.1, lJI\. & ru1npus roon1. Extru large living: r111. -spacious thruout ! Cood Yalue. I3y appi. ''Our 27th Year" , ;\ll"I ~1'(' $14!!,00J Ted Hubert & Assoc. ,;171 \">'I L!dil ~ijj.1\.)1)() , -*-EASTSI OE *- WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., r.e"ltcrs 2111 San Joaqu in Hills Road -:---NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-491 0 i Jl 1'1·,:·:-; ,, ban:.111 11 for son1e- ur11'. i\I<"•' '.l BH., l ·'i ba'.s.: "n J•H1bl/(' lul. \\'tilk lo ~· J:onb. /\t'll" 1·:1rp. in liv. nil .. ~· hnll. Cuppt•I' p!un1h• lilt.:. Q11 kk pu~S('SS. & only ~:.'i.:::r.1. MORGAN REAL TY flEAtTORS SINCE 194-l 673-4400 MES A DEL MAR FiXER UPPER I Ge~era l , BUDGET PRICED 4 BEDRQOM EtlJll) tile cart'ftec llfl' 111 IGenerii~-- l'n 1\t'l'~11y Park 'rilh pool•. 1 · 1 ' ~ brdr1•111l'. p" 1 ' 11• ( I pt11} ;-ards and lot 1.J[ )Lil'diio<~I ,\ ~li.i;.: 1 ;1qwl. I NEAR UPPER NEWPORT BAY • . US,250 673-6642 675-6459 -* -:~ J IOliSES •111 lot * r::1\1~H1<· c.:\·J. l'<i1npC"r<'ct 2 1:1: SJ:Jj.(100. Owner n1ovi11g, 11111 fu1,11ln'. gi'r('nht•ll ;1rr>n. C;H1s1der 11 I 'I ilr1t1hl1' ;.;;11.1~•·. hu~;L' pl Ill I fl "fl "6'152 n>0m.\· 4 Bf{, 21~ Ji .\ 1~~1 \\'t :.tl·h , 1, ""' -;i . • (.'l!L'f'!~ CAHOT!IF.RS REAL ESTATE TREASURES !"\\ !'l'llJ·• •h.10 ;,. ! I'(' r ' Tu11nilou~t..' \1 1th poo! .~11.t'd A•·unic tltt· \'\ 1•):111 11 nd VACAN T -ASSUME yard. Thl' prop<.>rty ls '~\· ~1.·17 11,,1. 1110n1h p (i,\ .,J) .. r· no 6V2o/a loan 4 Bi.•droon~. 2 bt41 hs. dinin!: I 1•an1. till' [1nan('in:;: i.~ (!.·\· I n~ ,[.,1'.n 1•1111'\1 V.\ lu::1n. F1r.,1 I B!:. :! t\.\, ('t)tlfU. D\-au1 . l'tJorn. !"{1Vt i·~·d )JJJ1io. h!ock H~l.· nntl 1he pritt' is lo\1' <ii I k 1 I d:1~ 1in !ht• 11lat'ke1. I 1•11.1 tuut 0\'1'r r~i 1ng po, \1 :11! ll'nf'"ini:;-BLiT .~ou ran only $."ll ,.'IGO. Call 673-Si"i:J. Lq:;. t'nt IJ(il!n, rth l. gar. 011· n1<1k<" :\JO~EY on nus buy. J. [:elf/m1U]!'1 Jy :i~klng $26,500. Bkr. Out-0f-lo11·n 0\1·ncr ju s 1 __ , _ _u 5;,i .... n:;o. 11 :1nts to Sl'.:Ll.. Just listrd -I I f{e:ilturs :O lj...01('1 ------- Full pl"IC(' s::1.:1GO -Sl.j7j. Op.•11 !·,\"(•<; (Balboa Island ""'" coATs r NEW LISTING 1--s-so DAILY 1 TLN'T tocirioN' .. JC'-. WAL~ACE ll Ocr>an sirle nf lh1)' .. Corono 'Jil l~ ~~1~)(~.1C1~~a~~10111,. \~1'1\~~1\1,\~:~'.'.'.rl~\~1/;~:.,~.~:.: I ~REAL TORS dt•l 1\-l:ir. Beauhftllly fu rn.. •.lal'\f·d al S t.'.~:ll 11 ha~ :: ll'1' .\1.iny 1111111ul' fratur('s, _54µ141_ plus <·arpt~ .. ;l t' (·or a 10 r hr·di·uonls, :; lm!li,, ilvn. & Qoal11r 1~1nsrrue11on. Palio, . (O E . ) I lll'apt•s: It;": fn1111l,v rin., lJl'f'a:.;r.i~l nooli, '"~'L"li•ikini: :'Luldk, lrg :! c<tr .car, ]~I * FIRECRACKER * pen venings I \\'ork~V<"I' k11eh . Huge c·o\~l. 1 11 di·lighUul t;,1.,.11.1,,. p:iiio J'uhli(• nff\·r 111~ nf 1his hon11'. ATTRACT ER pallo. Cus1?n1 lhruou1 : \\";ilk 1 \\e ha\"e !.ll'i'n t!•l~'n ~i~·t·inl J:y (J11ncr . Si:l.500. 67:l-82<1 L I.el us shO\V you this enchantin!! hon1e in DOVER SHORES• up lhe '.iri'.·k 11 ~lk 1'~ lhts I :n1thori1y I') till' .. 11111·r 1'1 . Balboa Peninsula Irvi ne Terrace. Atrjun1 entry. spatious livin~ $107 000 hcauty. ').Ou 11 nci rr \\,int 10 ri•rl111·•' ii 11111 11 /!•• ~''.1" room \Vith fireplace. 3 l.arge bedroon,s. 2 • JcavC"~ Ah!il'ntr·(' 01111L·r .i.<i~~ STOP STOP sr11p t.ill 1 .. r , . . . , , baths. LOVELY DINING ROO "I _, 1·00". I lo -Ovrr ::'.!oo sq. ri. of roui!or t. .sell nt Sij_OOO. 1ort:.1v·~ J11'1<·1·. !ilfi-ili l OCJ::..\.\'.t ROXI'. ;. BR.,,..5 Ba. 1~ " luxu ry, nnrl pt't!Slil!'.c in n CftDBIN ·· /,1111 irn .• 11 r! h:u , 11(•,.,ant 2 store you:lr~l~;:T~~~ROT * ~G2 500 iE~;,~::::::~.s:;;·~ ";.~;:~ ! MUA{llRT IN-II ~m-: ~~':;c"~~:Af~;R· ~MP:'l;N67G:;.6S!l:l. TO THE WATERFRONT ~parious bC'r!raoms, 1 hath~. I r~ POOL. PIER and SI.LP available too. New '"''° family o·oom '""'I REAL TORS 644-7662 EASY LIVING 1 SPANISH STYLE carpets and drapes, 2 Beclrooms.~2> :.> b<:th~. !•'01!'.\IAL DJNJ:'\(; ROO.\I. _ \.VET BAR, marble fireplace. Overlook T l·JE Sho\1n 11~ a11poin111it·llt only. t ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.-;;o;,_;;;~ J•rr~!ily pa 1n!•·d ~ Bn h'ln11' r1.•1!0111u1.dt•s 1h1~,ughou1 thi ... \\'1\'rER fro 1n yo ur patio and enjoy SSfi.QOO. I ! OPEN DAILY t w/111· .. r t:fl\ d1;1~ & .slv1;; h11111•· •ln• ,, you r n t er l~ily Pilot Classified Ads · fo r Actio n .•. Call 642-5678 Al\!) ,\SSU'.\IE V~ LOAN . Nie(' 3 bt.>clroon1 J·:1t~1siclt IHHllf' 1vilh 8riek fiJ'epJace. J !UGC ya r f! . cul-dr-sac lol'tl!ion. ~-DC'ln1·he<l double garage 1\·ith allf•y enlt•ance. JlricEd only $26,000. CalL llO\\' !or furTher dC'lails. -~ AA'tlASSOCl,1.l(S I lols or J1«t'~·l111" lill' 1l11t1l,)1• l\l'l1U6hl iron 235 SHERWOOD PL. $22 950 """ '" 11.,. '"" n Smid I Re:iltors fi IG-iill llltii•1 <·ul-dt•-s"'' ;: t re et • I ' • i·,111r1.1 ~nl, arnJ lhf•n throui:h ,, ~ <'.• .. _ ' :m 1:1 E~1·d i ff Dri ve ll ~ .., Eastsidt• 4 Bl·drw1n . 2 tn•' 111;1••11·,· 1!(111b!(' fron1 f)pt•n '111 9 P'.\l I ~=~~~~~~= B::i 1h: ho.•autlful l ·~IOl'y Newport 1:••1r•, _1•i11 ll know you l1a\'r I SUBU:RBJA PARK hnn1r: sparkling r I e 11 n. h•tJnd 11w hon1f' fo1· you~ Thr Clos(' to schools. Shakr roof. at four bi:1lroo1n ;\·ing is n1os\ General ~eneral THE "BLUFFS" IN NEWPORT P opular, up graded "Bonita" model. 3 Il R .. 2 b::i . end unit , on l-le\1el. Large patio. On de!iplltful greenbe lt. $51,500. l\1a ry Lou J\larion. OCEAN VIE W -$86,500 ('hnrm ~alori> in Old ·corona. on 93· lot: 3 131{ .. 2 ha .. den, far1n-s tyle kitch. 1 l1ouse off 0 \:c<ln Hl l'ci . Jn11nac. cond., n1ove right in. 'f riona l!trgin. SHORECLIFF~ \\'hilc \V:l ler \'ie\r. :\oprrix. 1 :.! .t\cre lot. Ap- proved p!::in s :-t\·ail. for 5 BR .. rm. rm., ac- ll vily rn1 . s{ din. rn1 .. or desh!n your 0\\'11. Priv. steps to l.Je<1ch. SlS0.000 . Kathryn Roul ston, JU ~T LISTED ('h;:1rn1in r! 4 B l~. J~u sk home on corner lot. \\ith ('nrn11'"tc privacv. Good open fe el ing '\ 1 i('1•. of surround inf! hills. Gracious _grounds. Si1l,~OO. 1-larrielt Davies. HA RBOR VIEW HILLS 4 n I? .. ~1 ~ hnlh SF111dpipf'r model. \Vet bar. ~ i 'nr gor:i!{c. C'ot1r1vnr fi . \Valk to beach, schonls. :>hopnin ~. Hrnnd ne11' \vith land- sc<J p1ng <illo\\fllll'C. ~79.:iOO . LH\'erne Bu rns. SPECIAL WATERFRONTS l.ido 1 ~11' 4 l'lt. nh1 s lnrge FR . Snac~ for 'iO' hn:1t. :-:..>1~~1 01lO 1.1nd:1 !:-le. fl('\\' ;; BR . oh.ls J<'I?. on 1:1~no1i. Exqui~i te 1 $.100.000 . Eileen • li udson-. · ,,.., LU SK SAN DPIPER MODEL E xtra l nr~t· In t . mi 1111 clc ~Jc st .. -\1·ith pool. 111 11:-'l rb,i r \ 1"11 1 fill~. 4 J{drn1s .. 3 baths. .$79 .500. Ed 1r c 11~·1111 . SA YFRONT Beaut. l!arf1r1 1 ,.,ndv hr11th . \l'ood panC'lcd den \V /frpl., 11 l1l U:..11·: book:-hcl\'l'S. 8165 .000. t"nrol Tatum-;- PR IVATE BEACHFRONT Vacant Jot on l.iO ft _ or \\'hite !in n<lv beach . Oulstandin~ vit'll ri f hav & bonts !\0,1· is the ti1nc to build that ho1nc! $49 .V·.50. fvl. r Buie EXECUTIVE HOME -LI.DO ISLE J ,nv<'lv <'~late on G5 ft . corner lot. SpHcious 4 1-;J{.·. din. rn1.: Sll!"H'r privll1c mstr , RR ' "i1. ·1·111. con1bo. l)r 1n ~ offer' 5129.500. J·:ui;:cnc. Vreeland. 833-0700 ~ 644·243 0 Coldwell, Banker S50 NEWPORT c e NTER OR., N.B. ~ 16·58S-O (Opt>n rves.) ~HERITAGE REALTORS REALTORS 644-7270 4 B.R. + POOL Prof. Jndsepd. Only SJ.1.500. Fairview 11r.1<1uc. ;11111 the bf'aueiful $46, 900 CALL A1'1YTIME \r1,KI t·«il1nrs arc 011tsta1I· 646-3928 or Eve. 545-3483 646·8811 ' din~. Call 67a..72'lJ. \anytime)' 4 Bedrooms· View & New! See Catalina Custon1 built 4 bedrooms, 21~ ~;wo:~~~: II you're parlieular ubout loca1ion and nc ighborhood and \van! ;1 bl"Ruliful s"·1n1- n1in~ pool herC''s your fl{'Xt Lathenmye , _ Realtor • ,,... ho111r>J FC'atun•c; I am i ~ v 1 ·COlUJELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS . roon1. forn1al di111n~ r00~, . LAST OF THE f 2', h"h<. aml •.18x08pool , DIAMOND IN I CHEAPIES -*--SPECIAL * \\!1h Jaru z11 . Cn•at THE ROUGH . . . I nc1,1o;hborhood ror ra.m ilit•s l A Li1tlC' Pollsh 011 thi~ Grm )3 Bcdroon1 2 barl_1, buil11n~. JUST LISTED! I h:i1h. 11ft ge fan1 ily l'oom.[!!1••!11111•••••• .. •11!1••••••• fo!'n1al dining roon1,' large General Gene ral lo! \\ilh an1ple room fo1·1.:;;:;:;;;::;;:;:;;;::;;:;:;;;::;;:;::;::;;:;:;;;::;;:;:;;;::;; pool. ean1rx·r or b oat storage. Grr>af vie\V or th{' 1v:'\l('J' fron1 upstairs. Builtin stcl'tn. :;elf.cleaning oven. :ind :ill th1· finest flnishlng touc'hl's a euston1 hoine has. Buyer has choice of colo.r of rarpt.•!ing nO\\' also. All thix for 559,000. To see call 646-7171. ~HERITAGE REALTORS LIKE HENS TEETH \1rry hard lo find: A supt>r J ;;hurp 3 lx.'droom home in I J\lr:-11 Verdi' featur ing ft1.n1i· I)' roon,, 2 baths. ne\\' Corn· ing 11J0k·top lurge secludrd I ,vurd, all in dcluxC' inovr-in enndition. run price only s:J2.500. !W)..1151 OJ>C!l .Eve!. ~sf» HERITAGE ·•· REALTORS 1.....--............-- l*OWNER M OVEO*- or:sPEHATE! 3 BR. 2 ba. Ls.ti\ n1n1pu~ rrn .. hltn, BBq. l n1nHH'. On n-2 IOI, close to f•\('rythlnit $32,:>00. BALBOA BAY PROP. 1_*_642-7491 *- PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 11 Linda Isle Drive Con1pletely fur!J . 5 Bdrm., 41h bath hon1e. Lge. \Vaterfront li ving rm. \Vith fl oor to ceil. n1arble frplc. Forma l dining rm .. family rm ., maid's rm., Pier & slip . . . . . . . . . . . $195,000. MACNAB IRVINE ~~~~~~~~ ... ~~~~~~~~ Fl NER HOMES ENTERTAINMENT CONSCIOUS? That son1ething special you have been looking for. Lovely walled pool w/loun- lains. 3 BR's .• • LIDO NORD BAYFRONT 45' lot. 1\ttractive. exciting & unusual 3 BR. 2'h bath home. 2 dens . DR -great kitchen • sancfy beach. ASking $275 ,000. . . .. . . THE COMPLETE FALLI Be prepared to fall complefel yin love wt ·this 4 BR., FR home on beautiful Sommer• sel Lane. Lois Mill~r 642-8235. LINOAISLE 50' Boal slip. 5 BR., 411.i baths. 3 lireplaces • gas BBQ on bayside deck. Luxurious car- pets, drapes. M'o vc in now ! See • 16 Linda Isle-Open Mon . I· 5 P.M. Irvine and children vriv closr 10 .11 b . J 1 1 douhle g-aragC' \\·11h stora,c Gll\1 18 H·2 rorncr lo l · · " \11 ring you s r11·l' on . ·. . '·' elC'tnt'ntary school. park. Bal'gain. Pre.sent 2 Bedroom I and _Patio. Cunrln, a~kuii: I \'./h1·11t1t1ful. spar>lous tennis "?~rts a_ n d bc~ch. I-Ionic located on L;trgc $20.9:i(.h Vacnnt-n10\ c 1n hdn11. ho1JI.' rluJo; 2 lxlrrn. For adr!1t1onal 1nformat1on. Parcel and will possibly ac-, qui ck. n'nl:d. A b:1rgai11 f or please phone 546-2313. commodatc !i J\1orc Unil ~. I Call 54!}.1151 <Oprn Evesl. S~.g~GAN REAL TY $27,500. Call 646--0555, Even-673-6642 675-6459 COMMODORE BAYCREST Ov<"r 2000 ~· rt. or luxury In a 3 bcdroon1, 2i~ bath, fami- ly and dining area. Bonus of a sp..'"lrkling pool a nd lo\v niaintenance 75'x110' yard. All the usual Bayrrcst features. 1'Ull price SG<l,950 and an assumahle loan of approxin1ately $50.000. Jus t listed · hurry. Call 540-1151 (Open Ev<'s.) ~,-.HERITAGE REALTORS ME-SA ¥ERD.E $33,999 Sharp 3 OO:!room, 2 balh plus dining room. Fr cs h I y painted in:<il:lc and out. NC\\' shai":" carpels, cu s Io n1 drapes, \\'tW ~~ultcrs and lots of 1vnllpapc'!'. Brigh1 '""' .,.,_,oo>. 1 EXCEPTIONAL COLUJ£tl PROPERTIES, INC. _ ' HOME! REALTORS . * 5 Bedroon1s * 3 Ila1hi: * Formal Dining * A1riun1 * 2 1~at ios * 3 Car Garage * Only $·16,j()() * Pl'rfcct horh<' fur large ran1ily I * Call 847-6010.,Today! 3 FPVGCMV • ••. n1rans : :: Bft. fr1111 r!'ll. pool. vif"\1·, golf (11Uf~t:. ~lr\a Verd(' Cnunll"y Clul:i. !-'IX· ' ER UPPEH !rrriuirl's s•1n1" paint nnd land~cap1ng 11ork1. i\ dellghtl11J hu111f· on ;\!\" r.ou Cours1> Olfrrr<l ::it I S6'2.!i00. S0t;TI I COAST H.EALTOP.S :;.1;:..R·l~I 10fH.•n ""·) I TREES, TREES, I TREES Sharp 3 l11,;li~>0n1~ l\~l\in,. RENTERS DELIGHT S25,i50, 1\ln111M r1111v -N\:,~· Loads o[ Living Arca in this f carpel, '''l)' 1·lran hon11-. 3 Bdrrn l~~ Bath llon1e. ~1any fr(l1•s, r·ovrr"d p111111 , Large B!}tk Yard for Relax-·block \vall lt•nrr.. Bit: ;1.~suni ing and Ch ildrens Play. ahle loon, Close to Shopping nnri 1 Call 540-1151 fOpcn Evc~.t Banks. May Assume the FllA ·F inancing. $24,!)50. Call~: Evening ! ... ~ttERITAGE Thi~ ll<'.1u r1ru1 thIT'C bedroom n1nr\(•] offt•1·~ lhe finest of 111talt1~. u \"C'IJ' attractivl' "V" .~hriped floor plan lil'flu nrl a [(l\"l"ly patio. n1n\(n1f1t'1'nl ca1hrdral ceil- ini::~. :ind a lJCnutiJullv rlr·sigllPrl and e q u i pp e ;i ki!c•!u'n. ;\I! !his, fet.-land and 1·rnM'lnublr price: QUI 6i'."r 122:1. ·COLUJ Ell PROPERTIES, INC . ·REALTORS ONEOF A KIND TRl-PLEX '.\°t':1r !).•nth! !...1rger Joi. Jargr>r 11niTs. T1vo·t11·os, one· thrt•t• 11 1th a vie\\'. l'nu.~ual at $S7,500 University Realty •· '.XM:ll E. C~I. lh1)'. 67~0 i ·kitchen has b u 11 t -ins, dishmasler and disp<.JAA.I. 644-7003. ;-,-' REALTORS , C.\:llEO HlciHLANDs:-JY ., OWNER. n;,ro;T(J FTN!rs . BR, 31 ~ B,\ home w/tf I Large yard \\·ith patio. Pleasr call 546-2:'.13 for a VA No --rn1, ~t:'c Lhru fpl. Ne ' DOWN P"'""'' & '''"'""rl . + on this rare' vnlur. 2 ot<'an VIC\\', 01>f'n ho COLUJELL PROPERTIES, INC . I shQ\ving. $19,950 i.s I.he lo''" low prlcC for Htls ~ b<.'Clroom. 2 bath no- 1nalnlcnance home. AJM k•alure;i built-in kitchen. dhsh\\"ashcr & double car garag1~. Br>H<'l' eheck this Ql'lf' TODAY. bcdroon1s <'llch uni1. Ont' drul.v l -~J. $6!1,9~1{1. 673-16: , unlt l'oO\V varnnt and l't'ady 1 li,\RP.Qj{ VIE\V I-II -LO~V~E~L~Y-4~Bd~o-·n-,,-. ~,~"',.,-b-•17h-s. for lmm<'dlate O<:cuponcy, I Cr:irin11~ lamilv living n Close tu ~hools & iJhoppins. Each •un it i•rnts _for S\6~1. $flll<'l'l11~ q;un.ltfy -.., BR;:t"'.l Estancia Iligh School an>n. Keep as. home or,.rcntnl. On-HA, f:1n1 nn .,.,p~tklll, etc! Jn Cov'd patiQ. O\vner a liixious. ly $32•950· .1r YoU have ~n 111.JIC\, p1·1vatt' garden •1· GOOD Ea.~t!!ide Cost~~J\1l'll.'"I in the servlce, call us. lint:; Xlnl schno.la, fee I~ :;·ptu!~i·n~.7~ ~:sia~~ r-i\j!il31;1~1111 1 ii~~T1:~~~86·0UPL Jx home? • ~ 545-().16,j 3 Hr., 2 ha houee ll'/9.. brlhJ ClJSTOi\1 built duplex. So. vf Open Eves nu 2 br gar, npl. Ftfnl Il11'y. In Corona del ~1ar. A BARGAIN h?11S(I "Onlpl rrdecor. •tr: Spnc. 3 BR. 2 ba .. plus 2 fcntureg :i fonn. dln & trJI:. BR. rental. 3 ""' gar. Sep. AT $45,000 Coll &14-l!O:w '''" 5 pm. f ' laundry rn1. Exra bo. 1.n 4 8 3 ••• 1 1 di · SBl\AiWN~·nD';;;::::.'e::~~"-1 REALTORS C wAu<ER & u£ g" 1 r., .,..., onna n1nJ::. 2 h<'\\·. under j Hcallprs Gffl...i7ll M.ORGAN REAL TY ii.tory. 1 m "1 (' d Int c OC· I ·~~ictk-in. b<'aut c11in1, ~13 \\'<'slc:liU Drive . 1673..6642 675--6459 I cu.~1cy. Corona c:lcl J\tnr . aTyJe home, wuth ol Open 'till g PM 1 _ _ H1gll ScllOOI. h11.y, •I Br .. 2" Im ~(/; pow , • S llOUSES on lot • 400"' 17" F"" ALL rm. C.U fo, IOJforma By Owoer, reduct.'<!, $55,900 E:a$tslde C.1\1'. Pampered 2 _t . 1 . Ul~ADril' !4·~ aUrr 5 pm. ' *BUILD INCOME* N'111 Ue!!.l'h, 50xl00 R-2 Joi, room to build, 2 DR. home, 2 car gar., rcnlf'd at SZJO month. Only Sai.900. CAYWOOD REAL TY llarborVicw Homcs,CnrmeJ.' OR """000 n. ,._,,,.~ ... · CM -Lu~--~~S-_...., ... ~, ..... ,\Iner m~ .. .,,~.. . • • • '. • J .~ ~ >Jn on Park 4 bd IOI DovtrDrtv. lt2·1235 3 BR, FTl, Iv;.'( crptg, prem. 1vlll hnonc('. I \ . · ~~:, -CtUln"• ....... ·ht-tut~ 11-44 M1cArthur t.4(·1200 1 ' 1 .,.,... · # '"4 ... ,,.. r..----.u·------·-*··54~1290 *-' l Joi, tpkni,,.Jndscpd, princ . CflUCI\ CAROTHERS ___ • :~--i;i·n.·,··111·~· tc• SM,. • on y. vl •;J;lllt\ anyllrn<'. REA L ESTATE /Any<l&yl!!theBFSI'DAYto Tili'P[f;x: J :...__:_''''"' N•wport l••eh,C.lllornlt t211S ' Nttd a "Pad''1 Place An ad~ _ TREASURES run :m n(I! 0on·1 di.!la)'-. , · 1 Pf)lil. 1'i ( ) 2 Rr. Sturl !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!~~ C.aJJ 6-12~78. Ut,'!l \''1c!IU. NB , 64&-5152 crJJ· ti,). 6f.2~, 0\\'Tler op ~II.. ~ $79,JIO , . , I ' " Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You· Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT·-AD Will Sell Fast!- 1. Stove 29. Bicycle 57. Electric Train r 2. Guitar 30. Typewriter 58. Kitten J 3. Biby Crib 31. Bar Stools S9. Classic Auto 4. Electric Saw 32. Encyclopedia 60. Coffee Table 5. c~mera 33. Vacuum 'cleaner 61 . Motorcycle 6. Washer 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion 7. 0 •1tboard Motor 35. Hot Rod E('l uipm't 63. Skis 8. Stereo Set 36. File Cabinet 64. TV Set 9. Courh 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbench In. Clari"et 38. Sterling Silver 66. Diamond Witch 11. Refricierator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart 12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68. Ironer '3. Sewing Machine 41. Sl ide Projector 69. Camping Trailer 14. Surfbo.,d 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique Furniture '5. Machine Tools 43. Pool Table 71. Tape Reco' 16. Dishwasher 44. Tires 72. Sailboat 17. Puapy 45. Piano 73. Sports Car T 8. Cabin Cruiser 46. Fur Coat 74. Mattress Box Spgs 19. Goll Cart 47. Drapes 75. Inboard Spoedbo1t 20. Barometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun 21. Stamp C,.llectir 49. Horse 77. Saddle 22. Dinette Set 50. Airplane 78. Dart Game 23. Play Pen 51. Organ 79. Punching 819 24. Bowlin9 Ball S2. Exercycle 80. Biby Carriagt 25 . Water Skis 53. Rare Books 81. Drums 26. Freeter 54. Ski Boots 82. Rifle 27. Suitcase 55. High Chair 83. Desk 28. Clock 56. Coins 84. SCUBA Goar These or any other extra thin9s arounil . the house ... · can be· turned into cash with a DAILY 'PILOT WANT-AD " so ' • .. Don't Just Sit There! • DIAL DIRECT" 642-5678 . . ' ' " • I Buy a -·-Borde-r .. '. to j ··aargain 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 • • • Huntington Beaeh Fom1tain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeb. Laguna Beach Irvine Saddlebaek San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A C ossified Ad Phone 642-5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO Ii • Monday, July ·'' 1972 OAILY PILOT 21 Costa Mesa Huntington Beach ·--------~~~~~~~==~~1--i 2 br, 1 1~ bo conOOn11niun1. FABULOUS SJJag cPt:-<Jjji,, '"" .,. EDR'OOM- FOUR Looki ng fo1· a 1'!1'1111, nl'at, spacious 4 Bdm1 10 a beauti- ful area? Call on lhis one! 11~1io. 2 car gu1·, 2 .s!(U'y lo,1·11hou.sc QI\ t."Ol'nrr IOI. $38, 950. 1-'vt ttn~'nfi~. $1.00l O'IOVN OPEN J-IOUSE SUNDAY 110 ~Jn. Jo'.P. $21,f,OQ:Alt 6:30 ;, P~l : 20792 Spindrift pni. :Af7-2.i.J7. 1 Br o okhurJ.t & Jn. Th is gra<"ious honie has i-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio ditanapul1~). Lovely 2 story, 2:..'00 sq. h. of CLEAN $21 , 950 11t•11rly :l,000 l'I(!, U. of llvin~ art•a. Tip· Top c-ondilion in every \\':iy . 1nclud1ng 1nain· lrured l:t11·ns. Off1'rt'd ut Ollly $34.500. Ph: 979-1050, Fl!,\ P.I-:PO:-i.1.iE!=\!UON or-HOUSE 1l'ir h xl-ra lrg kitch f<'rl•d f{lr l'ltl«. J H1•r!roor11s, ,r.r, t.un rn1. Also has a 11J!......_h;11h, drl1~h1 ful 1·on-101·111:1! di n rn1 & l BR 1 BA t11mm. l\l!l<:t :l<'l Qu!rkty. d1>1vns1nirs. Cct crpts II .SOL!1'11 COA~i' HE1\LTOH~. 1lrp.~. Pat111 1~ of rrd brick & - ----....,..----.!.- --i\1r::-A ,.EHnr::-! 4 111', hui.:•· !ai11 t111, f,u·m <lln rn1, lto:\1t1l lnd"•'!lll. ('qi d•· I :-;;11', Sl:i.:~MI. ]11\rJ !~1 !1devl' CH-Sht1\1 11 !1y :1 p l' t . POOL TABLE ~, "·~•" i----\\'ill lit \1 il h 1'tX1n1 10 l!J><ll't" ('11l.LI-.c:E !'.irk, l L~1 .: h;1 in lf>' X :10· clcn, :l Bl'clnn '..'' f.11\1 111\-\\11111 !111 1l II•'' ~a!h, f1 rrplae1·, h!lius. :\\nt I ~:~1.~1 . ..i 1. l'1 11!<·1pil-"til~. ,; . .,; In & OU(. Pr'!H" IH!I Dr 1 ,. I~\,\ $32,950 ,-.-, 11.1.' ,,,,,_, .. ,,, • - inl'l'i; n S.B·Q pit. }(ome 11111 ~1·11 11'l1 h Cl or conv. f1n;1111·1ng. ll ilfage Re;il EstJte 531·5800 ( ::::1 531·5800 FIXER UPPER GI NO CASH NEEDED ,\lol't' l'l~:!rt 1nt11 thls cute ·: hdrllL J{t1neh1•1·. Louds n1 I "h;11p ~ 1;i,·:i11! ;; ~· I 1:1: Roy McCardle Realtol' 1:.·1~"· 111 111·,.,1 \\ 1 Ji, 548-7729 1:,•.1l'1 -lS\0 l\'t"11 Jll•l'I Lill d .. C \! I I :1 :. : ! : \ ~' ·• 1l '" 11 value . 1100 ~· fl. In 1111.. 11 /\\' trrL~ k drp~. <·ov'•d ·p;rt10. -'(-!,!:r,~ill(t.~-Ff"-. P:rmt"' --- ~l!l.~ 1111•1 • "!l. MESA VE RDE PRIDE OF OWNE R Largf' ;: txh·111 . '.:! h:1lh, [;11111 ly rn1., hl111.;, ~ I• pl1·..;, Beau1iful :i:IO •q f1 111.1-.t• r l'iU lll' lll!'I. ~<'p:1r.ilt' 1~!"1 [)('!\I\(' (\ll'/1'.'l\11' ,\· :'lf•·\H':o ll tile fl0(1I'>, J,T lllll\' pflt't'('/I, NO DOWN TO VETS 3 Bit., 2 ba, Qu irt 4o'OrnC-r. Boat spncf'. Nra1· frf't'1v11y & shopping. $29,:ilO. l lurr~'! --GEM1-- II /I I 111" , ' . 11 .I' OY OWNER . ll.I' (hltll'I'. 5 liR. N1•:11· l'rhls & s.iu1h CuasT 1'l.11a, s:r1,000 ~"I0· 14U'.J. llilO \\'.Coast lh\'y,, N.fl. RE1\LTORS &l:l-•1623 E __ a_s_t _B_l_ul_f_· ---- FRIENDLY, WARM . & COZY By 0 11·11rr. u1 th" lll11ff'>. l:rt'f'n (>1111 .~ B:1y '11111, '.':Oft, 2 1 ~ Hi\. f.1 1--01'..'7 El Toro Ser this clcli~h1fu l :'. hr. 2 l1:i ( charn\i;>!'~ Loc11lo ti 1 • . .,hnrl :\ TIH .. 2 flA., 1'p1,.., 1lrri~. l~i' blo<:ks to l'ht1pp11u.: 111 )1, ,,. j J>.'llkl, lg(', Pl'.l"\.:;11.c Int utifu\ Mesa v~·r.i ... ,\ r:ih I t'IHcl•h(',I h,1' hlut k \\all. ulous buy at only s:~.;-.oo. clust• 111 xlnt st: h o o I E, Don't miss o11s: Call !Jill 1o:,o I n1 ·1rk.f't~. rl1''1' 11\ n l t . l~t·:1 \nt1.1t1I<'. ~ ~; -\ 7 5 3 . 0nru~21 ·~~~~\t:j~\1:~~.·~ llk·<'IX\S. ~ O\\'Nl·:lt 11111::.1 st•ll. Large ~ I I ro(lrn~. 4 J~,Jn1Cln1!'>, xtrn SEE IT·YOU'LL LIKE IT EAST SIDE BY OWNER 3 Br., 1 Ba. w/din & drt1 Nr. All schools. Big yard. $34,950. 10% DOWN 64.2-1447 or 64G-136S OPENSAT/S UN/TUE BY Owner. Spacious family home, -4 large bedrn1 s, king sized n1astcr '.l balhs. Huge liv rm. 1v/frplC', fan1 dinin,g S<'P laundry. Lo cln. 5"1Q-ll376 2333 Rutgers, Collf'g<' Pk . baths , 111agnif i ce 11 t firei>lace, new d r a p es , \vallpaper accents, natur1d 'vood p11nellng, bkr. $29,950. ~·12-fi691. Q\\'r-.l:::lt !f'UVlllJ,:. \'ou Call 11·alk lo thf' /Wa<'h. Newly 1!1THr:11('d, •1 h " ti r o o nt s, IJ11tl!·1n t'il!l".•'. "'ve n , ths!11va sher. hu,1;1• 111·i·place. yard 11,llh (i rnature fruit trees , colorful sctti11g, brk, $Jt 000. 842-2~'61. OV.'NE:R a11 ;..1uu·-.,, T1·1 1nsfrr· red, 1·irf'ular dl'l\'(•wny goes to this homl', 4 l..:·1lrooms, rlCn, built-Ins, d1shwR!lhM', newly cll'c:Ora!NI, P<•t'k like yard, brk, $'.lO.!l~.O. '.lli:l-5.5G6. illage Real Estate $23,SOO. -LOO K AT THIS!! I I' 111.ige ReJI Est:l te '62-4411 '::::.1546-1101 -OWN-ERS-ANXIOUS- Va c11n1 J hr. 2 ba f1unily honu•. Forcl'd t1 ir hl'at, built· in ft ,t,_ (), l'r•JI i:izrd ynrrl ''' p:111u & t1s h pond . .Clos(' to !l•'hools & shopping. Early n1n\'r·in 10 qunliftrd buycri;. /Ill lrr111s, $27,000. CALL S F: \' ~l 0 \) R REALT'\' S1i 1221. $23,500 CJ nr Fllt\lQ:ll:\lS. ~ B"f! r111. f1•n1·r1I )nrt1, o\la('hl'rl g;n .1ge, Clean In and uul Grs no dcl\vn. * 817·8.'i.11 * the Reel Estate Mart DELUXE 4 BEDROOM RED TILE ROOF Hr1~ i:o: a delight.fut homf'. Th<' red tile roof adds to it'l" chnrm, A large f~ to ri~ step-down front room and formal dining room. Xlrn hi):(' kitc:h '"'/lots of ''in· rfo,1·s. The mas ter Jxod1w111 i~ SIJJ}(_l'-big and the ba th hi1s a sunk1•)1 rilr tub, and n i•l;i~ olrium. \\rtiat a place! l'r11'" is $29.~. and a IY illage Real [stJ te 531·5800 ( ::::1 531·5800 CHOICE ;11"Ca , tl1a~nfllia & ~ ------- \Varnrr. S750 l)ri. Ta ke over ! YEEUUK!!I knv 7',; GI Loan. Beautiful ! tJ11111cnt ionnbly dirty 4 bf'{!· cornet·, II'~ 1re1•s, :l Br, 2 Ba. rnotn 2 bath, family roon1, Nr schools. PrinC'iples only. on l1tl'ge Jot. Divorce prcs- Call 642-2312. :£17-7713. sure. sacrifice,-Located in $21,000 Con<lomln1um, oelo"· pride-of-ownership neighbor· .Fil.·\. 3 RR, l '? BA. r.rplc. hood. Near new shag carpet-* 71'1: '194-2X.l!I * ing, builtins, xtra Jarge QUICK CASH O\VNER selling 2,600 sq, ft., !') Br .. 2 slot)' ho me. Fam. rm .. 21 ~ ba., 2va car gar. Very convenient Joe, Walk to sch!. for appt. 968-8202. pa1 io \l'ith 1vaterfall anti !iprinklers loo. Tl)' GI "No, no," ~lakr an off Pr, larwin reaJty "\. 968-4405 (24 hr.~. l 5!!2-3211 THROUGH A Huntington Beach GEORGTA COLONIAL 4 niammoth bc-droon1s, heavy, heavy i;;hake root \Vith a ll \\'OO<I sidings, latti<:f'd hay 'vindO\VS, landscaped witli pine 1rees. Privalc ·dining roon1, 1<>rrazzo foyf'f and all hr\ck fireplact". Executive neighborhood, '"a I k in g LIVE ALONE? DAILY PILOT \Vell, LOVE ii! Try on lhi~ 2 IX'flroon1 2 ba1 h sUpt_•r sharp Tiburon townhouse. Just reduced to $26.500. $5,000. cl9\1'n. Payments of SZOS. includt' la'l:cs. • larwin realty e 96M40S WANT AD 642-5678 dis tance to 'ocean. BKR. '"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~I Any day is the BEST DAY to . run an ad ! Don't delay , • , 962-5511. Vacancies co~t money! Rent your house, apt.. store hlrlg .. e!c. thru a Daily Pilot Clas.~ified Ari. 642-5678. Fast results are ju,,t a pbollC' call a way. 6.fl-5678. call toda,y 642-5678. 5 linei;, 5 days for 5 books. -S©~4llA-L&r-trs· rhe Puule with the Built-In Chuckle O R•orrong• ltitt•tt of 1h• four .scrambled words be- low to· for m four slmpl• words . ~-r ,~rH,F·r1 -"1-- I ·FE T B I I ·i _ I I I I' : I f. I 'B Y R E L I ?· From o fortune cookie: ''11 1 J J j J tokes just two 1hin gs to moke _ _ _ _ _ _ a girl happy. A roof over her r---------head end a man under "her I L U B H E M 1-:· 1-3 I 1 • I I I I e Complete •h• ChU(ltle quoted _ _ _ by lllling In th• mining word you d•velop from slep No. 3 O•low. & PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN I t s lHESE SQUARES t) UNSCRAMSlE ABOVE lfHERS TO GET ANSWE R I I I I I I • SCRAM ~~ETS ANSWERS IN C"!\5~!F!CATION 700 \ • " ' --- Hunt inaton Bffeh / 1----------Mission Vi•i• Cemetery Income Property 305 Apts. F u rn. 360 Apts. Furn. ·REPOSSESSIONS F'HA REPOS-5ESSION. • Loll/Crypts IS' ---TR-IP_L_EX___ L•guno BHch B•lbN Ponlnaul• YL' fnr trrtonnation and Jocatlon ur.onoo:i.r. Nr.\V PAIN1' & •3-,-0-,-,-1.,-,-"'-,",-,,-,.-1-,,-,-.-,-,.-111 f!(VEsro S. · Cost• Mes• \l/F:£hLY ur n1•Jnthly. Z RR Newport B•ach o! lhtM" }'llA & VA h<irnt'S, \\'ALL 1'0 \\'ALL CARPF.T. i\1 i'looriJ. ST.~ ~a ~ h . V 'l R a~um• ._ ~'' $1000 • $1 0,000 Up S210. I Blk bench.:! llr., 11.~ Pt;NlN Pt, Jrg 1 ~r. w/Y.' fully iuru. 7 Jiou~ri> h't•ni 1..'l)nlact -~:XCF.l.Ll-~NT rONDJ'fJON. 6'e-7W6. .A Oal'l.,.I.orome ot $440 LOW MONTHL y FREE! I Ba. B\1n.~. NICf' \'If"\\', ~rpt '. P\1 ?"110. \ .rly ]~. hl'al'h. r.7:· ... ~~1i'.!~ l'.!1··1\:<( SL. KASAllAN l)Z\'L\' S21JOO 00\\'N. TOTAL pr.r mont 1· P<iynienl.o; ol PAYMENTS Landlord1·0wn1r1 $2)() • :! Hr. ~ Ha. Drlu:..:r U!il 1ncld, Nn 1."'t.~. s1 r.1.1i:!~o1r Nl'iiporl Br;u·h _ PRICE '°'2 250 i·AT£LLA Co mme rcl•I Sll-4 includf' !/\Xe~. Only LQ,\NS on A.'IY llOi\iE, \\';will N>ftr tcnanlS to )'Oii \'irw /\Ji!. JIU! JlOOI, All t'pl oniy. Sl9.>. /\\'ll.11 ,/ · YiUY ,, l'l'--;;1 ,,. !: u;i"r. 1 Real Estate 147-9604 TO\\'NJJllUSt: l 11 bath, :: bedroon11>, bJ111s. r r p I 1· , i;h:i;:. pvt f:<ir:q.:t'. ~ rll'°I~. rh1l1hou~r. CIO\'I• rn IX't1<•l1 $'23.@ . \\'ell l a~·· :'1111 :i.36-i.1.>::! -01\'!\'ER t rtin.~. A..,~ u 111 1· Rf .• 1 "rv' ".,3, ~,00' P rope rty 151 S'1!.I.~. l'"ID f'OR •r NOT }~R EE of r:harv .•• Many '"''''r"• Jj()() r.uramar, B a I boa · • -' " Q ., ·,,,.·,,.,,,, '" • • "' -""' · G al P" J ''4'" "41~ " "' I 1 11 1 ' · l>o blk o<'PJ.11. 111~ "' r 1au1 • :'I !y u ..,.._ COi\1Pi\B~ OUR C 0 S T S • i·~ i·a l '" cnanl! on our $l7J • 2 Hr hOU"(' r \l'C11t1nn· ivn~tairs un11. I\ f •·1·:; 1110 Newport Be•ch EX~USIVF: C·I i:i acr". -JliJN ITS .LAG.UNA i1:u1 lw:: list. . . . , -l'pll· oo pi·!~. t. ~' . ··------..,-----Ji-vtl, 12'17 Brookhurst. :!!hOfr l'IRST! al ''it>11·. dt-1:k. ;\1:a1! 001r. • S45 \VK & UP . On Or1·an ti7S--4!!~1!. 2 . CHANN ELFRONT 111ng rt>nter, An fl hr i m , S:!:-.0,000 !J.~.-: ;;1'<•~11.. r1r:~:s1 ot LOA..'l ALA Ren t•ls e 645-3900 NU-VIEW RENT.ALS L11·l'ly Bach. I Ur .• T:oon1~ --. -. --1-,;;-011 J•u'r & slip. 3 lilt, J ba., 3 545...\:;.~9. GU,\ll.ANTEE: e Hl·;ATS CA.\tPIN(:! _ 673-4030 or 494.:;:,i<t.'\ ~laid Servicr . );\IOI · Ulll Jld, EXTHA l~ '! tir, -.1" . ~· J3 · -If you t.'ttn i.ct lhe SA~I~: e Call ti7'".i-R'i40 e Oceanh'l'lnl, •·10:1• 1~' \OP·~' vr:t 11<>1v. (•1ut1 c.·1·1t., 01't'I'· L•gun• Bt•ch :\f'l:lC.:H~ui; b1u:~1 .. near llhol>$. L•guna H ills iii•'r swo 11 K. G• .... 1.'1il. _ Jouk<; l\''pt. Isl. P11rk. Sii7.!"J>I)() ~~' X l'" C·2 Z"'"J-; S4S.713 1 l.OA'.'J f1vn1 any OTIILP. ul!l:-. lnC"I. SK•. Corona del M•r --11·-I I l' '" N _......, :.vi• ~_;,.:.. ___ l.F.NOF:I? in California :1! , YF\l'LY' ·i~, '" " MEO ITT. DUPLEX One.of las! Jo1vu!u11,n parcels -* 'hi-pl-ex-By O"n•ncr, 2 Br, It ATES LES.' TllAN \\'I:: A LA Ren tals e 64S.3900 1 .~ BD1R;:.d. ! BA 1 h. bhn~. ~li!1 , .. .'~~1~ ·~2j1 11,0, frplc. !i~.r-; lo:uo, \">l.JYH\(rl!.~ 11·~.• ()11 N'pl l ~I. :: & 2 Hit .. 1ut·r· fur devclopm('nt. '~, ~ , . ~ • , ~ crp "' ~ l'\IOut. rvv FUHN 6.'l<·llclor ~int.: J ~ "''" ' .~., "·~ then r1•111.~b«lrooi)l1',~U·u, &l(\tp.i\texican itlc pubu& J.irJ.!•· yard~. ~a ra g eii . f )f.~l·.lt r e turn lhf' • Nf..EDS 1.1)\F. -2 Br .. raeil. ~Iaint. incl. Arlulls. · ' in·!d·' :.;:'ll'lll-:""'·'--·~1 - :\tra r:ih111cts 11nr1 ~helv~ll 1n 11 nlkway. 3.,\'ey 'M'&tcr vii'.' iv. ~~~~-~-~-JO·W','-•ln S45.;,()0/offf·r. MOXEY \V1 thir1 i :1 do.y~. o.11d i fl•nrc~J yard. encl. gar. teen ok. $26.i mo. Call col· ntrt~r .• no _£Ct:i,;3ill IO l "' --;-\v1~T~:rt HENTi\l .. " all niodcrn kllrhrn, h11ilt· $~.500. Agent E. 17th St., Co sta M•sa i~~~~:ut~rn: Di·, C.~J. )'Oi l~, LOAN ,,·ith US is •I J..'.1d.</.P<'ls. ~JjO. I lect, (213) 831-1'162. utihtJr:o:. 6'5--6 1 • l. 1. ::, '1 Bit ttr~er1~ .N~1:' In~. e:<J)('n~i \'C' ,v11Up111X'r. 6~"197,_ 67 ~ All~,:: AAA Tenant. $115.000 Dn. FP.F.1' P. C ''"ERNER · ALA Rentals e 645 3900 C I M ,,,. Rl'\l T\ Gil-s.:;o ,.,. ~-w ~ • ' .. •· ' • NE\V 3 br beattl vie1\'. OS • es• ADA , ·' · -~, 11111.ny 1·1.11!t<11n ff' ;it u rt•~. Ca~h l'Pend:ible return LA!-:GI'.: '! BR DUPLEX PrC'sldrnt ' : · <'O\'l'red patio 111th n:1111ral NEWPORT HTS. Realoooml('.i;, Bkr. 6&6700 J;l'O.'l" rl'nt ~'.l'J::. prr. ino. FIRESIDE •SPACIOUS-213r., fl!n cl'd Rent, lse. Cent. ti.fr cond. Apt. Unfurn. "" k ,. I b '· y a r <t • c p ! s . d r pg . l-'rplc. Elec k1tch, $280. Casa del Oro 365 !v.!_!('ooo ~/~'~.,.111'<', '" •• J!URR\· to i;{'r !hi~ rest,·fully BY Ch\·ncr -N11·p1 B1·h. (Ju!~hu1<l1n~~ 1111'<':..lrncnt a! TJe r ift Kuls/PC"ts. ~IGO . 962-3833. "''· · ,·lfMXiO·I. -·-_ dcMralNI Z BH. 1l<'n, 2 1):1., O«an vu. 6-unil hl1lr.. !t )T~. _ s:: .. '.00_._0~X'r~h'l--Ol 'l'R .cc.::_::::._::c______ ALL UTILITIES PAIO Gen•ral 11._.1.1 & I 1 1 g " 1 1 I 1 :!.~?8 llar!JorBI., C.i\f. G·1;l.1000,A LA Rentals e 645-3900 .. 'ewporl •·•ell C"•l>p"<'" ... 1,, .. ,.0 .. r•nt . ..,..__-..--·°'""'-ti .~ "t niusl n10\'I". 1lcn · 111, pan !)' · n 1r.~ o nl<I. c•(Hllfl . re 11rh .•ht'<l. C 1 Loi ·;or. Cr nl "-! 1' n .. '"' U9 " " ~ •><: '-" -• EACH I I I II II 1-· 7· 000 . ' -• • a ... ' .. 819 N. 11ain, :-).A. 547-00.~ r , c"."''''' ,, .. ..,, .. ,-1, ,,,,,,.,-,_,.~ ON THE B . !<:>nu y roorn HN:'.f' rr~•u"h sl nra~"· 11 • 1 :'I t'V, llC<'('.~1'. Jnoom,. S 1.1 nio. S .:i, • ...11..3· ,..,, .. " L • n ,.. e OOl 1·r· E .... ~,, ,,. ~· fur " lull siz<'d ~I t:tbk-." '1 s 1 1.~iOO. lj';~.j629. :r·~;~ll"li~· ii;· . TOI\'~· ODr.·: 1st TD Loans \I/POOL.' f/.'llC~d ~ard, ('n~i $180 • UTIL. fl([. 2 Br apt .• S~rir·iou.s k1.U;hen 1~·ith in· f"M•in s11.f.'il h1•d1·ooms, xtra 1 l .A.LI. 0.. ..,.1,1, Condominiums Bcvel'ly J-lills, 00211. i;ar. $!~. Bllns, crpts, drps, gar, pool. direct li~ht.1n.i: J BR, Fun1. & U11fu~. ing roon1. built·in~. prime ·~ _1_0_r_s_a_l_e_____ Ind ustrial Property 161 sml rnl for office. Hal. • llo!11e.Jlkr ~!orag(' OCEAN QL1t:E:"'l' baths. & vnl r11,,pl:ir•·. •lin· ~~-' 160 63A% lNTEREST A LA Renta ls e fJ5-3900 $200 -trrlL Pd. Lrg 2 Br. e Sep.vatc din:; arra F ROM ONLY $1 l~ hom(' ~area, hrk. S.11.&Xl. RtALTY f -1 BR. oppr .. ~Z·l,OC(). Sell 2n.d~ILLoans e COUNTRY S'f\'LE -~ Penn. ---·-e_P~~atc.p~t1os -... ,, lSlQ}';. Oci·~..IJ~'.!· . .,- .!'l62...U7 ... ~-·--·*--!'••r N•""'•~_!_l___P••~tr $2::.or11. f'.1'.L., F.11 ./\. LOT Slrx30ff \VITI! 1-1or.1E Br .. stove, rcfrl~ .. <"pi s, $.17j . 4. fan1 rn1. 21 ~ ba • ':losNJ'Jllf'al;!e \\fR'!or:i,.r Long Bench 1 ~1~) 4:;:..a.~4.1 ()\\'NfR 11t•,;f1('r a11., :s1v1n1 REDUCTION #2 pym\,;, $J j.~. .~ ~lain!. AND GAftACF.. Lo1\'f<:.I ratr!! Orangt-Co. hq~r f1>nccd yanl. $7'1:i. studio Tif. frplc, pool, 2 e J. ull length n1arh!r. pull· J\ln:;'d by \\'\llirini \\°;)lter.~ Co. ~I .. :; bc-dn; .. _nrl.~. 21; h:it11s, 1 Tiiars r ight, thi8 rus-rom \\'.,hi', clry1•r, <'p l,;, drp~.1 $J4 SOO "WE BU Y TO'S" ALA Renta ls • 64S-3900 patios, ehild/ix-t. Ba '.'! k n1an . 1 bu11!·1ns, d, s h \1' n ~her · 1 built 4 l~·tlrorin1 hon1e hn..~ !'(!(I( use. Src. 1:i9j9 llocl>} • • Sattler Mtg. Co. • CllEAPIE TEr:PEE. Spa· Bay. ~ • l..'.ing·s:t Bdrn1 ~ B1lboa P en1nsu I \\'DIJpaper IJ.('Cf'n~s. ·mirrored ju~I hcen reduced for lh<' Crt. r.v. ~.:i7-31.~2. Roy McCardle Realtor 642 2171 54S-0611 ('ioui> fu rn ba.1•h1-lor, A!l 11ti]i; S~iOO -Harbor v ll1ns . Lr;: 4 I P ool • Barbcqtl('~ • $Ur· .;"'·BR !1 b.:·-;,·1110 b~lf1lTI\' 'M'all. ne_,v thi ck s h a~ I . * NAPLES BA Yi',ROl\'T * 548·7729 • . . in<"t SR;;. Br.. 21:.!. Ba.... fl'Jilc, )!J.r, t~un'.led \vi th plush lar1tl· • :n.·, f.. Ba\''. '$22:). n;on;hly ~,; <'arpetlng, ct'11lra l r I o or ;;<;~ & t1:;:1~. N01v (ln:y Luxury Condo p1°\· boot i 'i!!1'!!10!!!!!N!!"!!"""!!!!lrt!!B!!l!!v!!d.!!. !!l!!!!!C!!.!!!!Jl,t. Serving J.larbor area 21 yrs. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 y1·d., put io. chi < r<'n/pets. scap111g "l\' !('·1~~ lnq11ir<' <It Apt. plan, brk, $24.9".iO. 962-SAAa. · • Ill owner \VWl g · · \VE make lo:ins on propi:rty. NU-VIEW RENTALS Ad11Jt living at its_.lx>st ~c1_ ;,1_, ·1.:,,1· •r "l"17'•1 . -t•l JUOVC ? ihu; NC'M'[Xlrt d11ck, :.i>ac, approx 2:J6()' per r-• " ..... -" "<>- Gov'T OWNED [ · ,1 · J Lots for S•le 170 Also buy TD's, McClure, • S\VINGLES! . Nier l Br. 673-4030 or 49·1·32·18 Large 1 BR .$l1J ___ . • Reach hotne includes a fam-unit.. .. ax. :;ecur11y. u.~t 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;, Bkt'. 492·83~2 or 492-0·tl4. neal' stores. All ut ils in rl. . 2 Bit Slol;J 2 BH, <lrn, 2 BA, private Rcpossessf'd home~. Low ily room, 9ining-room. & ;1. ron1pleted. Only 2 avail. ---------2 BR. !louse. Hnrbor High •. J.ILITIES '!'EE , l('n [raH" $·ii:, mo I '"' 000 0 21~ 414-25:-JO Mo tga s12•), Sci I o · t . I L ·cl u·· . 1' " J g<ir< . • . . " . • down. Government nnyi; s11arkling heated & lillercd "''• . l\'nc1· .,: . . ATTENTION r ges, ALA R I e 645 3900 loo is ric .. r:;., ya~ . 36. \V \\'ii. n 612-19-1 * Call 673-oo62 * ,~ 1 J I Tr t Oted 260 : enta s • Illa-..:. 2 childr('!l. Scrk in~ ,l • so '. ~--'-;--;-..-:c::----closing costci. Ca ll 968·4'14J. poo, p us.many n1orc Jea-ADUL'f Condo. 2 story, 2BP.. BUILDERS ___ u_• ____ • ____ , 177 50 8 ... 1 C a del Mar I C'•'I 6'"7111 • tenants 'M'hO 1\·ill improve . acne or apt. :\Ian oron * Crest Realty ui·i.:s. ,,... . ..,.. . ., Large r"OOms. Extra clo.~ct • NEED MONEY? Or clo you . • coo, L 1,r! • 2 BrPOO, fncLd property. call G co r g e, only. 132 \V. \\'Uson. •c.:-.1.l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim[ & stora;.:,. spacl'. Garage. have a TD to sell? CALL YS!a;~. rn<' ):l'arag<', . I ~7071. &J?lj?,0~ !• \'oung Fam-\Vhy pay ren1·! $21.900. 2400 F. I <I en, C rit. 1. VA C /\NT · C 0 M-U d Bkr 1 ,1,2111 '"' - Redec., 3 BR, 2 Ba., Bltns 963-1187 a.ft 4Pr.·t. Jl.IERCIAL. j 12' x 192', oy ' ·a "' -· ALA Rentals e 645-3900 l{AP..BOR Vie1v Hon1es, 5 * $30 WEEK-&-UP* $ai,950 w/w cpts, drps CONDO for Sale. 3 BR. t!Z \Varner at Bolsa Chica, BR, Somerset, S.J2.>. • Studio & l BR Apts Irvine 846·5&18 NEWPORT Ba .. 2 car garag<'. w/pool llunt. Bch .......... $49,500.l -------i~j e COUNTRY LIVIN' -:: Br. * 644-4917 * e TV & l\1a.id Service. Avail privl. Near Hoag J.Iosp. 2. • 2 LOTS.R-4. Canyon&. . Koul•forRent~i ~'fu.fncd. yard. Kid~. pets. e VACATION y EA He Phone Service-Jltd Pool HEIGHTS 673-9l8.~. Banning, For unils·S20,000 & ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;~ 1 ALA R ROUND • Spacious 2 Br. e Children & Pet i;ecUon ON TE~ A1 CRE~ 2200 SQUARE FEET Of great Jiving in this lovely "Marquette" model. 32 Ft. Jong mstr. bdrm. \11/Jrple.; 32 tt. long kitchen. family rm. w/lrplc & 11,·et bar. 3 Hdnns., 2~~ baths; on qnc of the major grt•cnbelt.~. Of· fered at just $42,500. r-1 1 I 'J 1 1111 l'ild . ---"ll1•11 llu r "SmCE 1Jl46" ]rt \Vesle.rn Bank Bldg. UniY<:!'si!y Park, Jl"\lille Days 552°7000 Nights 5 BEDROOMS 1 10.000. I entals e 645.3900 "'/frplc., frnccd yard, encl. 237G Ne\\'port Blvd, C:"ll Apts. furn.J un urn. cas~ I Duplexes/Units ::. · VIE\V LOT • 72'x110' on .H F • h·• 300 BRAND NEW HOME. gar. !\ids / Pets / Singles 54S-9755 or 64>3967 Fircpla.crs .1 pril',. patios. $58 000 I 1,2 !{in".s Road. New pt OUHS ,ur nis -P I f Conlntl Bk!st ' sa t 3329 Alabama Circle ' 0 K $230 This Ad \\'orth .$:> on Rrnt Cl!> s cnnis . Tr·1 I ho t I Bch ................. St7.500. BiJlboa Island 11 3B 2d1 b AL·A· R .t I e64•3900 F ? !JOOS..'al.an(',Cdr.l 644·76ll 1· eve me, wea or Cos ta Mesa Duplex 4. • NINE ACRES·LAGUNA uge r. x a, sunken en a s ;ro 1 BR. .urn..__:. ~rg .. c!~~ts, Jl,fucArthur nr Coast Jh\'y) entertaining, il'et bar, large E/Sidc. 2 BR & l Bit. Sep. BEACH. Vi<'W & canyon WATERF'RONT, largr 3 BR, tub, \valls of glass, <'alhedral e LIDO LOVELY • 2 Br., 2 queen i>izc ~u, pr1v w.:SS· 1"111111!!!!1!!!1!l•l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!lj s un deck, very large lot, d llrd d fl ~ er "'"" -1110 000 1 11 . , B . 1 1 s· 1 ,... ceil.. shag cpts, !oloclrrn. cl ii1g rm'. xtra lrg rooms, f'ncl t• -~_, ,,1 _, 1 . yr s. \\' . rs. v,vn . .,1 ~" • ••• , • u price. ·' n., \1;1n er case .. IC e Jo;;. Ba Jrpl• cpl' ,\-· eo 1 " L. '" , 1 Ad I'" rear y.uu "'ecu <:Tt tennis V3.cant. S.150/mo. Carpet ·• · ..... • "t'."• · gar \\'/Storage. Adults only, 2 Bl. Cvro 11,.,. ,.p · u ...,, ,_ 1 Prine. only. S34,500. 642-5531 325 E. Bayfront, Bal. Isl. (V~roo• 12·,-. 1 ,~, E P . 1 court "" poo. Many tree~. C'Ve, \vkends. 1 PETE BARRETT $750/mo. 673-fi2·l9. layer 1rill sho\\'. 956·T;;i00, A•'L" A .... R .. 1°·1 e 64•3,._ no pr.ts. $1.~01n10. poo, oo pet;:. •oN • ....vas Rear access for boat or en a S ~ 7""' 2035 Full•rton, C.M. lbl'y. 546-4!121. il Call ""'7171 Income Property 166 E Balboa Peninsul• 3 BEDROO:\t 2 i:; ATH ---~~ tra er. ll'fV" • -R AL TOR-..-1-IO~tE 1\'i1h bui ltin.~ and llARBOR ~iel\'.' Car~e\3 2Bli furn. $22i Adults, ·.no ~c.;RF:A'J'.Vlt.:\\1-? En.• 642·5200 BALBOA Pc11in. Channel-'double garagt'. Available hcaut. carpt d & draped, · pt>ls. Lrg yard, pvt patio. t rplt·. blln~ .. ~uudeek~:. JJ?O' 'o ·THEREAL 1."'-ESTATERS ~ '-' I • ' ' 4 Piel Summt<r or yr!y. Baylront ~ J uly 6th to family onJ~-. BR., 2 ba. Panf'!.M fam~ pool, gar. •&3ur 11 r 11· $210 Up. li-l l-C34·l. tii..>-l:i.35 Choice.arf'a, pritle of ov;ner· Ne1vport Lot, Irvine Ave, BR. 4 Ba, lge floo.t & pitt, · $23.l. per month. Call age.nt rm., frpL; v~Jley vie11,·. }12:> \Vestbay 21 APTS. )jJ l\o. '.? BJ~. apt . .,..·/loft. Dani11h ship, large units, 3 tv.io bed· Satrifice. $15,750. Phil crpt'd. 1st.class. 673-2039. $-16-4141. Mo.: lease .. No pet~. ~ 21st St. 646-SOOi. frpk', cllx: kit, \vasher/dryer. Country Atmosphere roo1n, I bath, 1100 sq ft. 1 Sullivan, Rltr. 548-6761 Cost• Mes• ~IM~h~!E=o-. ~Oc-cu-p-.• -bo-au-l-Con. Corbin-Martin Rltrs 644-1662 * Sll:i * $275. 834·36.\j; 67S-2324, Back Bay among estate three bedroom, 2 baths: 1400 Mountain, DMert, ---------~I do. E-side, lg. 2 BR., pool, BLUFFS Studio Ap\!{.1 1 Br. $U). 2 BR, I BA Garage Apt. homes, 3 br, tam rm, 3 ('ar sq fl l\'ith fireplace and huge Resort 174 Roomy 1 br cot tag~ in court, etc. $210. Doyle Co ~ ''SHERWOOD Older ultt. No fl('\! Laundry hookup. s:m mo. garage, lush gardens. Per· master suite, \Vaterfall & 1,,_,,...________ Parti.'lll)' furn, $145. Adults. :)tS-1168: eve:;: ~:Mt FOREST'' ·' , i\1~. Apt. 6. i\Q ix·ti:. h'iUi2J.l feet tor Jormal &. family en-stone barbecue & bt'autllully 2 Lots, secluded :$2,450 642·5583. Q~AL 1 1 , d . ,1 'd b' u . 101nc on cor. ot. .• GREENBELT pts, drps, bl!ns, Costa Mesa lcrtrtining. As~um<' loan. landscaped yar. Patt0s, uoonr1 ge ca u1 S1.J.7JO Huntington Beach BR ? BA fl'PI I I O CC I l ,. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil d k & I .... •,,,,,·do C"b•·n !°'. ·,ooo '• ~ • c., am rm., J DP.., 2~2 Ba.. split-lcv<' . nf'ar . M u ts on y, no 141,900. An.""'''' owoer, sun ec s c O:><.. .... garage~. .._.., .. ·"" 1~·1 .,. L . d • 10 G IFTY THR IFTY .. · · C II S66 '"'! '""·1 mo. ""'1 l a r • lclyllic surroundings. Int· pets . .,1 . as &: "'ater pd. N ' ~1csa Drive. 54:1-3405 or All huiltlns inclu rhng •li~h· a ..,,,., or "'rile; F URN. bachelor cotlage'. 979--7·112. I t V t s ·~.., 5-10-97?" Th. rttl f~ is 01/ !11 I 1·asher 10'' down Toln.l Spencrr Real Estale, P. o . ma.cu a e~ acan • ''°"'per -:c_:_:c"":._ _____ _ HARBOR GREENS 18 1 c cu ·1 · 1 Y '1 5'1S.1.'M6. J 1 • "' • ,..,..,.. \\raJ k to beach. Jk[. req. Lge 2 Br •t35, gar vac. l{ids/ month S~\!ALL l B D I f 1 years old. 3 &lrms., 2 b8 ., ---------price $62,200. Ro.\'. """''""• Big Bear Lake, 536-1617 att . .W pm. ""'>. ~ · ' r up ex, ill c, air-con d l I ioning 11.nd BACK BAY VIEW 16 Units Bread & Butter Calif. ·--Pets. . Beam ceiling, pat io. I :ulult, sprinklers. All for only Plus view of Fashion Island 12~0 spendable. good rental rusr .LlSTED _ Large Jake Llgul'la Bea~~ ~ Rent·A~House 979-1304 & ~,:.1' .. ,.. no pets. 0 !>('n House 336 E. F urnish•d & Unfurni1ht d $31 ,500. & Eastb!uf!. J ust as beauti· area. $155,000. submit trades. front home. Needs T.L.C. LARGE 2 br, \\'/1v cpts, ulil r.-l'f 2· :~.';· 11 t .. If" 20th St. &l'.>-l 31 7· --· i fuf at night as in the day. 833-1264. S39.000. VICl'ORIA BEACJ-f -Older rm, dbl gar, fenei'd yd. $200 '1"1 ~ ! ~/· VERY Nice 1 Br. <lplx. .-. ·.·.· .·. red h1·11 A b<-autiful home with : INVESTi\fENT w Tax shclter charn1ing 1 Br., fh'f'place, mo. 646-8226. ,.. I Quiel. Sep. by garagt-s. F rom $1 20 to $215 mo spacious bedrooms & a -Triplc:'C fp!u s) on ,.,.0u clN"k. Ocean Vi<'\\', Small -"-'--'------; ·~ rca ty Adulls over 30, no pe\$. • 1 0 c· s-Ut'I 'd 2 BR. Nice yrd., garage. ,,. ·c 0 LUJ-E Ll Bachelors e l Bdr ms 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrm1 1 V2 or 2 Full Bath s channing family room for course -Near ski slope pc ...... .ruv. 1 s pai · 1 1 ;',() ... 5-18-1021. I '"500 C $'9,500. Aval]<>h!(' .vearl)·. Older cp c:., oo chid. $1 . 111.j Vista dcl Ol'O l e~~-~-----' REALTY on Y s.,.., • all G46-TI71. .. " ~•a lllOl 1110 & · 1 I 1 & 2 Nu VIEW RENTALS ;,...,.....,. · i\e1rport Beach up , ni('(' y urn · PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS Univ. Park Center. Irvine Call Anyin1e, 83?..-0820 Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM Laguna Be•ch PANORAMIC VIEW Beaut. maintained home HILLTOP 2 Bed•'OOm' & large family rm. Pool. $64.500. :Z Bdrms., plu!I convertibll' George W illi1mson den; 2 baths, 2 lir'C'placcs & Realtor 2 tar garage. Bcau1ifully 541-4570 645-1564 j landi;c.apcd 50x100 lo! \~·ith -~ city & O<X"an vir11·i;. $13.!:riO. 'Newport Heights .A-Olan REAL ESTATE 0 \\1NER, must S('!I. 4 BR + flen, 2 BA. hnh\·d llrs bc;iut secluded yard. Rcdu~cd JO S.39,900. 541:-4011. lo1ANY CABINS fron1 S8100. • & up. Gi::-4030 or '1[i.t-3248 Fountain Valley 644-11.13 ANYTI:\·lF. hr trailers. AdultE. :r-;o pct.~. \VESTCLif'f', Ex cc u ti v' 13~ • \\'. \\'ilson. C · i'>l · :"1!~\er size l><;dyooms \V/ Alpine Realty, Box 1796. Big Newport Be•ch 3 BR., den, ram rm .. cpt, home. 4 BR. l Ba. Beaut. 615-4::i30. l!1~h beam ceilings, large Bear LakC', Calir. (114) I·---------drps, bl1ins, prefEr cpl or 1 . y 1 C·'J· LARGE furn bachelor S13.l 1Jv1ng roon1 \\'/~'llS or 2041 Business Center Dr. Irvine 48 Units 866-7j!J. 1 il .~, 962 ""~"" a rium. ear Y· tu · • • · ,vood b11r•;n,. fircplac• .it7j · Bal. Island • Lrg 1 Br. am Y· ~ mo. -J.JQ:i. \VINTON Realtor 67~3331 + Dep., Ne,ir shOps & lrn')'. . , "' "' ·· Deluxe units. Air conditioned, LOT in fanio us Lake llavasu, all electrie, 24 tv.io ~lroon1, ~~<fonor ~~id~~~ld ~~: 2 haths, some split levl'I. lG 1 1 II 3 hcc:lroon1s, 2 baths, 8 four c ose 0 a schools & c.ity. $9000 or will tmde for Cos ta bedrooms, 2 baths, 3 pools, Mesa or Newpon Bf'ach in- sundeck~ & patios, firt· come prop. S44-4687. places. Exceptional rental ~~~~~~~~~ <•rra l·losr to 11ro n13.jor ~ f1'CC\\'ays & shoppintt. Va-J~ <':;ncy less thttn 4~0. Flexible f inancial • /1nanl'1ng. Sn!c>s pr i cc L ------- .W90.000. \\Iii! 1·onsider 0,.,, gar Pr· a & Cl rm• 3 BR 2 b f 1 1 .i-• 1: .• .-11.:::1 go< Et C · Convenient laundry area . iv cy 111 • , a, rp c, cp, ULJ's. 2 B Uc _,_""""""' , :;}; amino rr ki t h F cl 00 $18:"l -1 hr, \Vati!rJ:ront in Jndscpd. Avail J uly 1. Lease Sngls or cpls. Va.c r. wa Apt No 1 C ,, · 0 1. 2c en: ~11• os pal ' to \l·ater ){leis · • ' ., · Jos. s11·unmi11g poo s, dplx .. lrg. patlo. $240 mo. 531-~ Rent-A-Hou~~ 979""4lO LIKE ne\I' garden <lpt. Largf' s~una, r('~rcation facili- $250. 2 Br, frplc. 1 blk OC('an, H t ' t B h 1 Br., pool. rec roonl, ties. S<'CUl'ity guard. Fried. ynrd, gar. Child O.K. un rng on eac Newport Heights 645-0030. 110 \V. 18th St. NU-VIEW RENTALS I Models Open 'Iii 9 pm. G73-403ll or 494.3248 1 *'VE have a large selection 3 Br. guard, pvt bch, tennis, * NICE 11:. 2 Dr. Trlr~ S80 ? • . of 3 and 4 bedroom homes cpl/Urps, frpt, rJO pct~. $400. & up. Mature adults. Child 2700 Peterson Wa y, CM S9:.50 ~hi P_d., C.i\T. that can ~be fflJ\'ed into Jse. '196-4247. ok. No pets. 6-12-126:1. nr Herbor Blvd & $8.> Unit, Util pd., N.B. · almost immediately on our ·s"•:Cn-ta"'"A_n_a_H_e~i-g7h_ll__ Huntington Beach Ad•ms S90,\lalk tobc:h . .'H.B. Rent-Option plan. 6 Call for ricl"'l', Agl ., Sl!ERIVOOD REALTY, * J_BR .• I ba.lge back_yd. L QUINTA HERMOSA 54 ·5025 1100 G!rnneyre St. CUSTOM 4 BR. 2 BA. trades. 811-1264. 494-9473 :i l9--0316 Spanish Contl'n1p. Access 3 BR. & De n $36,950 13oa!/1rlr. Quiet s Ir,.!" t . Business OpPorlunity 979-8430 S40-l55S $225 mo. I ncl ga.rd<'n1ng. • Houses Unfurn. 305 5."il-2400 aft 6 pm. s.panisb Cou~try Estate LiV··'Jl!lll!"!ll!"!~~"'.ll!'~~ll!"!ll!'[ lOO ---------1 Ii\f'MAC. J + 2 + Fam. nn. ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-r Unique, 11,hi!(' hriek cxtrr. 1 :-i.1,950. By 0..1·11er. 616--9169. gated entry. 2 R.1., blt-ini;, J San Cle m•nte COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS 2041 Business Center DI', Irvine lrple., 1·arp. Yarrl fl('f'ds ! ----------work. but a real buy for lh(' * J BR, bllns, [rplc:, pan<'l· handyman. C;i.l!; , 111~ p:i1 io. fncf'd y1I. Assun1c J\1 1SSION RE.'\LT'\' 49·1-07::i '.i.2'(. GI !Qan, .$27,Sj!J. H ARD-TO-FINO-. * ' Bl!, tW•». ,""al, '"''· OPEN HOUSE C1ose·in, r~n1odel<'tl:: hdrn1. 2 1 «f·~n 1·11 • ainuni. he3n1 I Sat. & Sun. 12 to 5 p.m . bath l"Oltagr on IJ::C'. H-2 Lot. I rr/1111i::~. din l'rn, insulate<!, ·rRIPLEXES. !olode!s at 17th Roo1n 10 a1!1l 11n1!s, S·r>,000. 54~.~R. R ~ ,..,, ., . St'. in l luntington·. Beacll, • ·1~·2:)()(1 • * 4 ' · " '"1• ·' ) rs 11il, 1\·alk to Leach. Call 968-33n . OCEANF.RONT- spt·c·h11·ul:ir vu. Hf'.~t c1u.11. hc;1ut1!ully lndscpct (· o \' p~1tln, ca1hcdrn1 l'C'iling, lurn1:i l di n rn1, Si•l.:llO. 1'ho111~f·11 P.1"<1lt) 1[12.9.\:J() U niversity P•rk £::WALKER & IH e NO'V SELLING e SUPERB \'IE\\'! 011'' ---·-----I INCOME HOMES }'OUR-0\\'N 2 BR, :.! H1\ Op<'n llou~I'. :i br. fi.NF:\V DUPLEXES $48,9;;o f'XCC. apt.. furn., 1..ugu111~ li9jl B<l~<'l•m ~I. $.';!l,00), 4·:-IE\V T llIPLEXES $67,950 General Cov. patio. Cpls. drps, cul· Condomin iums ~ raced pool: sunken gas A TINKLING de-.:>a<'. Nr. ~IDAC. $250. Unfurn. 320 BBQ. Unbelievable Living -FOUNTAIN AVAILABLE NOW LANDLORDS! \Ve Specialize in Ne1vport L.11·,gC' Corporation desires • Beach • Corona de! Mar • reponsib!c p e r s 0 n to & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· <l ist1'ihutl' Tr: NC O fa vice is FREE to You! Try Division or C()('a·Colal COF· Nu-View! F EE PRODUCTS. NU,VIEW RENTALS 673-40:0 01' 494-3248 REl\'TlNG-LEASING llon1cs only. :i yr·~ c~. Ai;cnt 2·1 hrs. 956-2.JOO. 89-1-:>&.17 aft :; or (213) Only 31&-~IW-Huntington Beach 1 BR . FURN. $175 FOR Lease, .'.l Br., 2 Ba .. refrig. 1vasher & range. .$22.)/mo. 536 -7661 or 968-1388. Sngls or families, nr bch, 2 Br $13.'J. Kids/pets. Rent·A-HOuse 979.1430 ALL UTILITIES PAID your.~ lo 1'flmr hon1~ to: 2 BR Co~lo. Adults only, JI Pre's adt1lt garden-Jiving Incl. refr1g, 1\'l\Shcl', dryer. . at its hes1 · Years leaS<! $200 mo. Adnm.• (4 blh S. ot San Die;;o F'n\'Y S ·. &· Brookhun:t. Call Joan on Beach, l b!k \V, on ltoll *, · n1all, .11 r!I tnanag,.d ht':· Kersten. 644-5996. to 16211 Parkside Lane.) ury units in a ''011\'f'nie nt, (714) 847-5-1•11 <'stahl1.~hcd nri·:i. Duplexes IJnfurn. 350 * Big. tn·<'s. i:tt'·'il /1114)1, op- $145 -$165 Po~1tc ;1 golf conr~". c __ o_st_a_M_e_•_•-----I Ba~lor & 1 BR, patios,*° Tht'f'f' hcrlroo1n11. J12 h11th1"I, 3 BR. 2 BA, duplex. $2'10. 2 BR1 1'1arried cpl. mn. }>('t fJlll c's, priv. C: a ra ges. Jl"l'.<ional pa1in, l.111tlfh;·· Can stari full or pan linlf' t;>.JO hrs. per \l'k.) Com· pany cstrihlishes bui:.iness for 1listributors. 17522 Geraldinl" Ln., Apt. B. ok, sm yard •• ,.,,.1 Jul·.._.0 • Divided bnih & lots of \l'Ork shop, spaeious living ~1 BR. 2 BA, fam rn1, $275 per 494-4391 to see. " J· 0 · 1 r mo.905Llard.9i9-7412or(l) $125&ft6pm, 642-0857. clo!tt'U. ~c hall pool !:. l'OOni 1''111 irt>placr. NO SELLTNC! Co ltshing or ~pend rnore rime \\'lt h yt1ur favorite hob- by ;111d le t the machine auc ' e.trn you n1onf'y. CASll RE· QUIRED $2498. Secured. ~3586. [ $23iJ.-3 Br., 2 Ba .• 2 gar, pool tables.' sau~a bath~. cpl/drp., AE;l\, nu paint, ;N.;;•;;w::.po~rt,;....:;8;.e;;ac;;h,;.... ___ 1 S<'e for yourSC'lf! 17301 _ oven. 5292 'Sissf'n 8'16-5838. BR 2 BA / d....., Keclson Ln. {l blk \V. of 3 , , \\' \V, •1=• Huntington H•r bour bltins dsh11,~hr., frplc. 210 Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). Fern 1$200. Yrly. 642-$520. 8'12-78-IS EXCLUSIVE 4 BR & DEN. Apts: Furn. 360 LARGE Buehl. \\'alk !() Ap_artments P.S. Thr prlrr \\'Ill Fairway vma 2 D p I h in & J Apr. Cos P ar p Nr M 1m :"llgr. N IC c:rp t ehil roo 1. 54 SPA Pool ok. Hl96 1 DEL Stud hlt11. Chit BF.1\ Cpts air "" NICE ~:II'. 49:> t 131' Adul tors C.:0.I. t.ru * • Cont Par $170. SPAC apt. Cent SJ'I.;, EXT . ba .. O os per FRP BR. pat.i 613-: ~E\V Shag 1lepo fl'f'<'I * Sltns, CMS 3 BR 2515 LRG. Chil shop SPA drps ly, (' E/Sir IO\\•t ${6j, 2 BA 381 2 BR g8r DEL Jtoyal(', ~f'«Ur1!y, potJI, "'"· Oirnf'r. 11.13-~:.2:!. Bi>atit. IlCIV 2 & 3 BR unit~. \'f.ttor. r.·Jus1St•1•1h1s bi:~1ulv' 1 ~~~~~!!~~~ 151 E:. ~y· SL, Costa Mtiftl. S~l7.JO. llkr ~1!1.:":Qnj. ' l -· JIJlll•J Com plCtion Aug. t. ~lMITED 0,PPOR:rUNITY \\1'rillt no1v for informaU6n, Include phone nuntbcr. · ~ lc>nS(o'! · Call a·ft · 1. e shopii. Sgl adUlt only. Ref&' 20122 &i.nia Ana llVf'., f>4(1.s215 I 84G-50ll/or :>44-SllG. ~enlrll Cleaning depo~it. $100 plul> quir 433W.1tthCOSTA MfSA I I util. 892-S089. DELUX E Hou1e1 * Apt1. *· f45 ·0llt * kit. L'"do l•le Mobile Horntt I BY 011•ncr. d up f' >: , ~jiijiijjiiiiii!iiiiii;;:;ii;i CapisU"aOO • .Bcacli. s::AJ.000 or SALESMAN r'Moblie Homes trade fl'.lr Joi. l \'r old. \\'r have an op.•nl11~ for u For Saf• 125 ii"'6--0iiii!l4!i6i!. i!ii!!i[i!!i!i!i!!iiiii l1igh caHbt·•-. erc;11 hr s<il.'-'S· 1972 l,,\NC!'.'.P.. 21 , r,1 Nit<' '·HOUSES r11·rso11, cap;1hlr of dcnlini:.; I adiil! p;irk, 2 .RI~. 2 13;\, 11!(' 111 h1:;hrr pnrcd propertic~. fnin r ni, , !o1'C!I 111 IJ{lt'l:li 1'11F.SE ARI--; .. Ii .)1 I FlXERtJPPETtS "----~ loweon JIL 1 )( .. , n1 ·w ~t11·1, 1r1.ui -od 1 1 . & ~HU [1"[ Jl> UCC X " H••->1\C ' • -tc~ _tri>r~, SJC 1:13-(/ji:iti. " -" ~v ""'"' .,,.. 1ax slK•ltcr. 5-2 BR & 2·1 RR :·116 \'I.a !,.!do 1:7:1 .. r·,r;2 s·,,;;· ~lob!lt' hon1f' 11/lO'.x20' hoincs on a uoublf! lot. $87j. --. PIER-&-SL-IP--1 c .• hnn:i. tar,W'tl'd. skir11ns:. r11011th1y mco1n('. $10.000 lido Nord Bayfront 4 HI{. I l3nrlls. SZ:JJ.OCiQ LIOO REAL TY .;:177 \'i11 Lido, /\.B. * 673.7300 * Mesa Verd• I .t.:. ~ora~r ~hctl. Sl SOO. Alter 1lo1vn. Asking S79,j(J(), Ph: -,, :-.1~\UJ2. !i·l2·17n. I 10.,:JjT e·-r-_-.-,.-"-"-,-,'"'-, J•-..·:i1t rl jn N.B, ~:1.500, Ou! I or ''"~n o~'licr an-:ious. f,i&-~1"6, llliltl:l,C('f l:f1E,\1' 1.1.lw!J 2 Br J-:\- 1 p;1n1lo, lnds('p<J, ri ~tar atilt /;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;. . 11k. sho11, S6.500. :tr....oom. DANA POINT INCQ ,\IE l·IO~I ES tNF.\Vl ~·Pit.'' ..... , . • . . ... . • S66.9j(l Dy.pie:< ··-·••_,...,. ••• ...$S2,500 UNUSUAL f'u//y cui1ton1 bull ! 3,(XXl ~· f!, l'IS?hl on ll'K-151b fAil'\\'lY or "J\lr1Ut Verde Country t'luh. Lo.1rlt'fl "'I Ul t'."Xtnu. r.6,:1.N) • 10';, dn. SOU111 COAm' f{EALTO.R S . ~ .. r,..stu COpcn Eve"') 9Ul<;K. CASH T"IROOGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 4.r1~ .............. sn ,s~ 8 Units ••••••••••••• Sl32.500 Alcazar and at La Crelita WEBB IOltr.) 6'2·<'llll have ,, RF.OJwBRE\V CORPORATION 1001 1-IO\\'nrd Avenue San r.1111ro, Ca. 94-101 1r.tPORT COJ\1PANY---;m; r -:cJusiv,. Cift\\'l'IN", Sta· ll'lnecy ,-Gree-I ing line11-ttttks af'li\'I" investor 'vith Na.- l1onn.I Salt's t'."xper. 27812 F...,rbti Rd (al Crown Valley Pkwy) Luuna N\gu<'I. Tel. fnr appt. with Mr. Nolan or to.T r. Orel, 831·1050. Ll91JOR STORES S t o Chose from HOLLANO 645-4170 1716 O range· Avt., C.M .1 NF.F.n -11mbltiouit couple a.:11 b!L'l'ine~ associates. No In. vest nwnt JN'CC'i!S{U)'. Call hl\\'ll j ~ 7 PM, 496-4;,J.1. CAT.ERIN co. Cllablisbed 1• yrs. La t::anada. Sell or tradtt jn ~a.c\ a re a • 2U/700-63« Mn. J1oh1n. 2 WEEK CO\IJ'R on order It tmportln:. s K'>--!l6i8 tor 1ntcimw 1oo. '' Coron• del M•r rv ne 1 BR, patio, pool, dsb\\•s hr, APARTM~NTS . 3 BB. ... A disp, util pcl. Adult~. $16.i. Air. Conti • Frple s • 3 S1v1m· O.C. ** DUPLEX BJt A ND Ava.II 7/15, 17676 Camuon, niing. Pool:ii -I-lea.1th Spa• 2873 NEW. Iluge dlx 01vner's 4 BR., 2 ~~ ba. • •• · · • $365/375 Bold New Concept MUI92 Tcnni.'I Courts • Ctunc and DEL .1 l BR • h A 3 BR., 2~; baths , ,, ••••• $350 • Billlartl Room. C ~1;~placc. b\li~~. 1~ S:. fl 2 BR., 2 bath!! •••••••••• $275 FURNITURE RENTAL L19una 8e1ch l BEDROOJ\f 7&1 + J dccko; 1v/vir.w of bay, •BR., 2.halh:\ ••••••·•·• $llO * 1 BR. close to beach & I-'ROi\t $I&:;. ~ oc••o & hWs. Walk to ~11 l BR .. 2 bath s .......... $340 hop' "o ,,_, Oc< MEQLT.ERRA!llEAN •~--11-"l:F'=:o:=u &: ;t;;pping. I yr. 1st.$;;. -, .... ' d h•11 -:-~~~~puon -~icw~Call~4~;=7o'79:--"n VILLAGE ·r Refs. required. 5P..-m. . ; re I * \Vid: Selection-Newport Beach 2400 11-nrbor Blvd., c.r.1 • SUNNY. priv1\le patio, All . Style..coJor. 1714) 557·S020 . Jlf"\V 2 Br. dbl oven, rdrig, * 24 llou:r Delivery BAYFRONT RENTAL RF.NTAL QITICE " cpts, drp!. A ghorf u•nlk to REALTY • 301 'f,dgewater kt Coron11do. OPEN io Ari1 to 6 PM , _ beach. 7tl7~ft llellotrope, Univ. Park Cent<'r, Irvine, ~ ~ Yearly le~ only $325, 3 Qp('n \\'tckt ncls or , cell Call Anytimt 8.u-0820 W ~ BR .. 2 bAthll. gangt. Priv. Nt w V ill.Ptdro 1~33-()009 11·ttkcloys. Office hour~ 8 A.r.1 to 8 PM W beach. Available "°'''• 1'"an1i\lc' WclL1lme ~ ,, Bil, .~ OA, RA & Ref. MR. ROBINSON 2 Br., 2 full Ba, shag crpt/ Acldlt!!, m pel!i. $3J5. 4:z,1 SfS44S1 OAVLI) REALT\' 642-7000 drp~. JM.tio, beam l'C!I, aa.r- l~ln:\Ctlin f'i75-.1Zl8; ~!rs. $17-0314 QUICK CASH as:ccs. ·From $1~. S1nilb 545-!'!669 2332 Elden Ave., C.~t. Walk to heh, 2 Br '"mew/ TIME FOR THROUG" ff A M.'1-8221 11.tioolulely eVt'f'Ylhlnn:. * ;;a---,-,"I Rent-A-House 9794430 9UICK CASH DAfLV PILOT l B't1v. B!,1~wty 011~ 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, THROUGH .A _I_ Blllna, ccptltlrps, •n<l J><UIJ. tireplatt $223. Ni: Sehl• A ahop'g, ChlJdfi..n * 6<~2 * ""'"CE 1.,... DAILY PILOT WANT AD ok, oo fll!IS, 880 Cenltt SJ:, 2 B r houM . $225 =• ~ CM. 64Ul40 or ~2';82. 428 Goldenrod, CdM .Isl IV""'" llAnk Bldg, WANT AD 642 5678 Like lo 11'J&1 <>.tr Tnd<r'• Unlvt1:rslty P.1u•k, J'r'Vlnr Of ·A good w•1'1 •d II• ...,i In. D•y1 552-70GO Nigh t s 642°5678 • Panodbo q>lumn 1' !or >OUI \'CJtment * S Unes.. 5 day1 for :i bodra,; . ' .... 0 2 BR 2 UR , • '-'ond.ty, July ), 11972 [ .... _.,.,_,,,.I~[~"'~'"'-'"' 1~1 [ '""1' ]~ c· ~"'Mo -=-~ r : ... I: 1 ~1 [ ,, ...... ,_ ]~ ~[ .._.~ .... ~ ..... ~l ~~-, -... -J ~i [ t~--j[fi] 1~~1i!'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~;;;;,;;,;;,;;,;;.;;;; II 400 Travel 540 L 01 t 555 . [ ',.~0 ,iiil piiiWiiii•iiin ,iii"iii"iiiiiM!iiijl.~Fil!liijj Q Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apr. Unfurn. 36S Rooms Bu si ness Rental 445 1 _.....:..._~ _ Gardening Plu.r:nbing ' !-:,-..-..,....------.:....---;_--~ j . SHIPMATES WANTED t.0~"1' ·"niall 11 tu1~ 11Qi:. BOYS Gener•I General l/o'l!ll\l.Slll::D r oom In 500 ~ .. lt .. :l"K'ip, ?fc _An,pl~ \\1nrlJ11111111~1·.&>t~lhi'rtl·tl 1\.~I \h·"~ \'rn!,. An..<riitrii tr> f\J• lla11auan Card<'llf'r P1·:i1 n.~ un.·lo~f'1I -Si "..O Agt 10·1\ to de.IJ\"\T pa.p-n HACIENDA HARBOR From $1$0 i iiiiiiiii . . ho I I 11.urkinh .• 140 N c" Po r' I Share \l'ork & t'':""nses i'.Ptl•:1 He1\il n t 97~1617. I . ~.· ,,.,. f1-to 100'. Sf ·. ''' 1•-Dan• Poln• •--~-pri1.111 mr 11111 o r Bl ·l C \I GIG .,. I I .,.. ~101 {'I. Lr ~! \' I (11111plf't.· !i:t1rdt'r11ni: ,rn.1r1• '" • ,... ., '"" .. __.,..,_.. 11 11h,1u1 k1ti·he11 privilei.:rs. 11 . : ~ · • · • • ;, ' ' :?13 3711· 12311 1 ·~ _;i )_"_ 1 • • ''.!._4'~' ~ h.11n,d 11n1, &lf.-<ltii~ ~~--*-"'-"'-'-"-'-' _•___ tncnrr •Lres~. II '· :i ig..~.,l3. -·''·'''·•··.s.·1.· .. ,,.,,,,,,,. ,.,, •• ,1 ' DAILY PILOT UELUXf: I & 2 BEDHOOMS Furnished & Unfurnished J-l~ated 1'ool -Gar;1ges -Sh:ig C11 rel't111 <1 D1sh\vashcr -1\ll L1lll itics l'airl . ~ « Adults Only . No Pets v1·,.1ntt 1~1 .!~ pa·f1·1Tl'd.1--· . ""'" ~:.'\J'l.l:T J<l!1<1.nl·~i· C:ur<lt:;;; Roofin; \·li~.,.;.Jn \'il'Jl.l ;1 r i·<1. Industrial Rental 450 1 ~' Junf' !I )...;1~\1n,1 !l\!J.'1.l<'L ,,, ~ Gl:rli!lli • 492.-4420 :,ss_.~·q~ lo•I ,,d F··~ ) ~;,I t l'•,1u·,,. \\'1·~r Xtnr / ·---------· -'R=-----~· ! COSTA MESA """" l•nvf' •Uiti-:,~r1:: C\I or Nn .:in·.i e r . t:u~· J:oof111t" J.H<al •UMPE ,\JC'L roo111. 111a1:nil1t''11t 11111 ,t ~W Sq !1. r ~ ----('O:>ll'Ll·:TE L .1 11 n & nu\·~·1. I 11;, n1~ t11111 \\Ol'k. POLISHERS 1 v:r11 l 'l'I. balc1.1 11; & bt1!h (',·ll>'l''''f •r•L . ..,,,,. ! :r:."\\Af{l) SltXl 1 l.()S'l' t1.1n1'v "' ""''"' <.>-I • 1 · • f ;urd,.n1n:::: ~"l"'\'U,.. Hnul\n.. .:r~,,_,. .. ·111{..fljl~ I !~blkOVl'fl!l$1.i 11k Al~> L'("E'R'"\SS F d (f d 550 ,..,,,~·1·d llUPJJ:'>' \l l'I Jl\ty . .., u .,.--.<'IJ., ·• NO FEES ,. w "'"" I oun ree a s) ff bo 1 .~ rl1·-i11-t1p. J 1111 ~11<:-(IUi;, ruo111 ~;:o 111-... ~:i00 :il'tl\ 11•11 , Nr. r-;11111 fnl'y & S.O. Fr.\} .:ir 1· 11 :O:.·hrul. :,11>.Q71)'). ----_ Sew ing/ Altera11on' 646·1294 Cl \I ,,.. .,.. ,.. ¥ ,!!\I,.; f.•niC'l'UllO:. {'(\ll1Pl4'fl ~ ~-To Ralf' 241 A vocado St., Cotta Mes.a VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. ' 2-J::t C1·al"f' 1..n. · • ; 'R\l~.sr:. 1·:11 111 1~.;1n>: rron1 f Reiiuirc.s Pl't'Vl(IU.S cxper. in Gr 1 ,-, . 1 ,. [I 1,, . fl f f 11111 $: )11rJ l"r.1·1>, cll".tnu~ S"'\\'l''' • DE 'lG\f\", ·;,\.!"..\It::'\, 1na~1rr Hr '~•nfHal<£'r,F..otfoa1rvu•1v ~Ek:\ \'1r \l 1·•t Cn~ :-;1 , ·· ,1n11 · ~n1a <'m •l .... :":li6Jnft:ipn1. r.. v -' ..,, a111ornot1vPht1m nr.r 11/11111 bch . fri;. TV \'H· ·~ :'lltl R1·pr('Sl'!ll:lll\'C there c.~I. T11\J lkJ,1.l •, I ~11\)\\ll •• 1•!1111. 1!).; hrov.n 4:1&-til.• -~ ----\l 1• fl .\\'ou11•ri 1:,·n~lllliHll(' /)Oh ~llln~ \\(' \\Ill be open , l;1•h k Paf' C!il llw;. :1 ;1n,.J:.! noon 11 \\!Ull.: \\ "lq; slut Id " Jn,h &•llt•L 111 \oie t.lc·~11.Jly , \f .JoJlt'S l..ai,·n Sl't"'\'I~ rah':!. Ten illillru· uu1unru111. /\lon. July ::rd ! ;)36...8518. 17! II ~fi~ 11)1 or Si9··1il I around 111·1·t. (hurt). f~Ull• ·"' 1;, 11 ,11 ,1~ C.dl tj-M,j.4R.'I..~ ''11 t •ICf', 'iil'U\1111. ='111 tit , J-:,!Jlll:tff'.•. l'.1 I 'hi-; t (!. p p S I HOO~IS $1:11\k un 1v/k1t. ~~>O uni:; ,to ll"it.in.i:: 11"1 ~-_1·11 ~'· rlf',•~lp._~)..:.~q:-;_ -Alte"rations -642-58.CS-• • • Furnish•d & U nfurnished . A,dult L iving D1shlvasher co lor coordinated appl ianc es · Plush shag carpet • 1nirrored lvardrobe door s- indirect li ghting in kit c·hen · breakfast bar • huge private fenced 1>atio • plush landscap- ing · brick Bar·be-Ques · large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioninJ!. ' -· t 1 I P•ciflc v.k Up A1ils, 2::iG Nev.por' COSTA MESA liLACh & \\hllr' Jc•111;1ll' iong · \\\';"\ \l,un!·.\klnth ~ ="'1' 7\f','\l ;u'1·ur:i11· :.'fl ~t'.O" <''(!' [ )~ s ~ \I I r I Personnel Service' Blvd, (\I :11:'t-9T1~1. K.O '>(I ft :-!Ort• Jr<int $11~ haul;'rl t,11, 1r r,\ r h 1 n. 1,,1_.01,00 ~ • · · ~v. r (\inup. IN' t'~ is·,9,,, , T I Summer Rentals V,,1,,,1, ·• _'111-0_ i·t· _ __ 11. '.\.l. O\l't'r 4"0 I n10 12:10 ..,., !!, pvl oft:. 10' 111. • f' 11r1 .r11 t: o :1 d _ ·-'----------" ..., t '111011 B;1nk Sq11('1'C _-.,---------111t.2'.lft lll)\l,.('r·$167. nm.\. n ll\';ll' ."i.1 u f).1·~0 t II'. \'AHO CLEAl"·l!J' r1 :-.1r~ . [1 JI ,,. .. ..... I BEACJJ~ l~OA'T. Nt'\\'Jlllrt !\.\TIHC:SS, C.,\I 6-12· l<l(J. >l~:!IG I Sch'ools & T1\'<' l\:n1n,·;:!I. prunin~. l,11• 11 • · 1 5'•4·;11 7".'6· 4ca4h6f. StlnlrllC'r ':"l·ntal. 3 Ur. X!nt -------1·arr. AIM>, lav.r1<; f1-r!1\i ·r 1• ( 1 • '"' ,,_.,,, 1 ~ ' t•ot:xo PUJIJl.I 1••'lll'#'rn inst ructions SIS ' r s r· --VIC\\ .A1tr11c:r. urn roll lt'.JSf' Ii~ 01\llt>l', Jn· I }'-all'j;'l1.l!lrlf'i<; .~ 11C(', Co•l,1 11Jj1 drcl'~. ni.lll, .. 1•1 i:r. ,, Tile ,\,h 1111 H.1 ,·l1 "J \l.t.V I ~>IS-l7.>7 : 833-83:/J. duslri;,il bldg. 10.000 !<.fl· ]JI.) :'\fe<;a 011ner 1dl'n1 i r y. J)rl\'e\\'!IY!i ~l"alc..I S~l(I. I~ C.afeteri•·Exp•r 3101 So. Bri.tol St., Santa Aoa 557·8200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 1 2 UH. ;1p!. ru 1·n1 <;h r d. l'.li1 ,i1:ird, nr l::d1ni::t·i· ,i;. 5 1()..39~1 r.t-i-4l9I _ i;ir ... :(.~it 5l !\\lli.. 1., ,,1 ,r.. ,1ti·d111 lil4-l'Y.11 l~!!!!!!!!!!!'!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!f!'"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!lf!ll•ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!fl!~ Cin1·1·an11(' ''Li''''· :: hlk~ II) ~111!!._ ~dn~,\na~l2-~~12. YNU. Fenlul•'. Ir·:-~ 1111,11 )T Interested In AL'S GARDE;o..J/\G I n ·111,,,1, r.i , r · i :~.11.dl _______ .,..,..__I MANAGING AGENT Apt. lJnfurn. 365 1 Apt. Unfurn. 36S Cd:'IJ main bf':l.Ch. s~ per 576 6 000 s F I I k I n 1f A R I E ror i::ardf'n1n:; ,\'.: I 1!111. I ll .i-•I• .. ,1 , 1, ... 1:1• .. ~ ... ·:1;·.; ----------\\'k. )flt'IUdl'S ul1I, tj7j.GQ2 1. to ' q f ' p;u·I Ill~ .I CO)(·\'ll' t ii ~! & ea state JandSl'31Jlll~ SCl"Vit !'. 1·idJ . , , . --HunfingtOn Beii:h-I -. . --'4001 U1rch, N.B. -:14!•5re2-.... 1•11.1rvtt'\\'"•H:l.lt'l'l"t'st . career'? 5-10-5198 ('\'t'.~. Sf'r\•ln::;l(l:l..\'llt Iii•', h 1T1'li111'.1 Costa Mesa l;RI·:E~VAJ.!.:i·'.Y !.AKr::-~E\\' DELUXE :'ll-l t;nit~. :; ~119-1:1~~ Nc\\•porL Cd\!. C'!)''.i '"" ;i, 1 .. 1ir1~ . J 1111·\ • c 1.1 '.' ,, 1111 I ' ·1 ltuu,Spri.:~. Big Bcal'a1'ril. 1111 po11cr. li~3 .\'lonro11a FOJJ:'\D 8a~!<l'I lh1u11d 11;:. Do1'cr Fhcort!\, \\'f',11·1 f 11"11· I,,. ... ~.i"11 ,,.,., -............. .......,._._ __,,,.,,.. O.'\/ th1· U1·uch. '.?Br, '2 Ba. No Cahin. \\'kly nnly . .l-\f)'-<11:~~ ... ., .. 1 ~ . . '•'11 ut· 1-.-.p.i·1l•11,·("I ~lffllllffllllffllllffllllfflll~lfflll~lll• t_•luld/po'\' s~i-.. JO HlO ' I ' • -.l].,-.. \1.J. ~3&-9i98 ('\I')>, I :-itati:r r~ius. :'l!nrket nn l!l!h Fult ···r P:H'I 'l J!' ,. J')ROt'l·:ssr1 1:\,\I. II ,, \\Hd ,-1 • STAT CLERK P •rk·Lik• !turroun' 1.19 f f' 1 ·r· ,. * NOi~ 1,1 Sl'pl \..>. Unr. 2 , R f W I d 60 Si C \f ,:-: ~,. \I' f81f• SI [ J QUI ET·DELUX~ '"1~1· .• {l(J. t•11111:-;, • .,,1u1ta & BR· 1 Cil'I .-1•. JI . 1 enta s ane 4 ..... .AJ • • l,11t•ns1n,,: r1·l·p i'ur pr11ri 1ng.11 1 111.•1111 '..! Emo'·y-I u•'••li, e TYPIST1CLERK .. ,,., f • ,--os'i "~f 6 p I ap. .1 • • 1.1 mo. os C .. \I. ilfler j pni. 1 1 1 ~ ..... :J 2 & :: BR /\I'TS _: .:_! 1 • :..._•-~:_''' .. _· -~ i~·frig SI bltns. w7-8-IOO. I .. , . , . . -----sprnytn~. s ! r 111 , 0 • 1' Also Fln·n. Baehi'lor WALK to Beach . \\1\i'iTl'.:O !o rent 01· !rasc, J·Ot;:'\D .! sln1nk~. \'l('U11fy e r:. E. ::;l}iH &. l;kJ·:-Lu rul~1·;,pu1i: • I • ·1 11H 11 1 ;ilCkl ,,kill · 111,, .. h·d. Lill' i1r·. P -·. pa,,.,,~ flt" l'oofs 1 , 11 . . 1. f .... 1 .1 I f:!t n.:11!)' drcoru!f'd ari1. rK1 la\('1· than &•Jll. \s1. 'l ta·.1 H;1l(:on1· Dri\1'. Costa ;\lt'\.;1. e :-;;i 11,.., :-.., .. ,.,,,..~~ .. ,, .. ,,,,,,,. r.roi1:'•' f>IG.-.'i~'l~ •w ... u -l., !ps, Clj'r.'i, uSll\Slf r IJ r .. I' \\'lk •. . 5.1 -' ",. .. ~., ~ f l<l('nl ,\. ht>.ilth 1n<;1tl"lln··1 N 1 . Ad 1 0 r 1.,. ".,,, 1611 ,4.~,.1 u Y tun, int: 1nens. .. ... u~c 111 • uveraclo . .\!od-.>l.>-!.1:1.1, 1 e l'Lu·1•11•1'1\I A,,..,, fo•· ~''''''· \L',-f • .. 1 ---.,. Job Wanted M e le 700 f 1 • 1 r l' !I lOP g * u I~ n 'Y •. 1 "' "':-. 1. " /·.,:JJ t . 2\i:.! v I &t k 'r'ra ~ J .~ .;11,.."'i1Jllll!' I• r ' Pl't e1'I'<'•. 11l11 II" ''"·~en1 1.i M • • A . --~---? JHl'I ll' Ul'l<t ... n I J('~ ·a. 'bU(.'(l an·a. Call , rOt:NIJ \\~Jncsd:1\, h-21 .• Ua) ,\,: l·:\r Cla~•t'< r'l'lllll\'Ot y +rd 11'"11•~!!'1111r I art1n1que pts. '! L>JL du1>lr:. dO\\llt(J\\11, Cll'!lll'll[I', \\lkly or IC'TIT)~. all 6 pn1-5:-J8-'l773 ('\t '..'07 If HI k i fl • Tu.t1on P.eu11h Pli111 I T•.·,,1, ''·"'''''"·. !111 '1, .111'''" SCRAM-LETS Im "--1·rp1s/clrp-., stn'" $140/mo A,·11 fl{/11. B 1 -, · • ~-1 ai· rupp~. 111:1.•·. un-• " . 1:\11!:\·Jt\\(\i, .><U1taAnah\·e,C:'.1. · ' · '1 )' oii·orr, "'1 lUl'>P<~!~l' Cn\f'OUtll <A:"r 't1111;l•Jt1l~t~tl'h,:k'.G-3l.l!l. 1 H<1'p;i11·~1•i111\.l•'1 -f j 11t;, [ ~Inn. \lr"l·~119·12 :n ri n1 I :'ltgr. Apt. 113 61G :i~>'l2 . 5.1li-'.l~7 '1!.!::.':'l:":.~. ~1J)('rator -· For 11"1"1'4''1na514.ng".1 lll9~hurt: ') Gene;-., Services ANSWER s i i i'; .~ICE E-:.nll' ., UP., ~ Blc ;,pi. Clo'ird garage. 1 Hr., bl·l\111 B;iy .r,, Beat·h, :l HR !Is<'. or lrK. ,'\Ill unlurn FOU:\'n frnitot" nra n~f' &· .1. 1 I l l·, 11~ cn ·1: crpt/drps, encl yard, ~al', Crpt.~. drp~ Child !· small ~e\\·porl, ~lps :J, Sl.:.O 11•k, , fnr rrnt-Clt>~n. Until J nn. blnck clog b~ .\lt>~u Bnii·hn~ ~ .. ~. i' 1···~· Gt~l·~1 Lcr111rr. ! TOTAL SI 1:\'IC! .; cO. 1 '.\l \\ lit l\ll;'\'1 ; child ok. Sl6.i. Op1tonal Jlf1 ()J\ Sl·fifn10. ~7-2940. call ~1S2l a~k for P:u. ) 197::. S-1 2:i pt>r 1110. 111 Cri'.'11 or Allf'~ C.'O"l;i :'lles:i. fi.\6-I';.\~. ,,2 1 Old i\o. ;-.;1'11·ror1 BL i\B ) Plun1bi:: 10,1.dl •. c .11 11,.1111.,. l \111111. -u .. 111 -U1·r~I -• room fnr $1$ '\'Ira a\•;iil Aug. 311.l'h. unit n1'i1r h•·at"h, util1· 3 Rfl .. 1 ha .. upsr..iirs. Prj;, Ne1 ... por1 B<"h. 64 t·:~ Kl2. -"ET uf hE'}/.. V ie. r\c" port Edmond F . Jackson F.lr~· rri>..i 1r,. rr11,rn1 11,1rk. jllu111 1•lr -Tlll1\1B PAC IF IC MUTUAL l. 5'1$-.1511, 49:; E. Hi!h St. lies palfl. $90. rno. ~~w,.:rl\7. su11cl1•ck: W<'.:01 oct>an vu•il'. 1 \'OU i\G 'Tlian flC'~H'es roon1 111 · ~t"h .• !;itr. uf'l(' ll'ft'k ago. r: I:: Edur•ll~in ~111!'{' J!lf.I blli-1800 + 1 J·ro 1111 :• fu1·1unr •'O(\k 1r 11 ~',\'llH l~ 1:-L,\;\'f) L.gun. Be'.ch Jtt!)' ],.,l to J ul.v l:l!h. Also,:; C.:'11. arC'a. l\r trnnsp. No .i lh-li •. i. I H ~1 · 1 d ,., lt l•I 111 '1 lluni:-. h• •11<i k•' ICorn"1· :-::int.'\ l'ru1 X.· SP,'\C 2 & 3 Br <it>I S140 UfJ. A d dU 1ng I I A r RH. .. '2 b<i 101\'('r, July ll't lo I '-n1u k1·. ~186-5210 art 6 pn1. S'lALL n1ale strir>ed killrn, I ca emy •1 l.:11 1·1PP). r\~•1 1""1' HI' l\1•11111i1· C1•1111'1' f)1111'1 Pool, C'plltlrp. l.Jltns, kids I ' t t k * NE\\' :l BR. b!k to ht'al.'h July 22nd, Au1.:. '}.l)th 10 Sept. -~ !}oh tail. St\'1Jlr 1i.in1"~·) Real Esta te ·rnEE & lrg. plant renioval. iu •a( nnt 11 rnan unrll'r hC'r 1~ ~f 1 ~ 1 .11 ~Rll Spcc!ucular \1<'v.. S260 up. 1::tJ1. 112 :111h SL, N.H. 1 1 .\l.V. R3(}..8239. Contracting & Yard .t· tra~h f'lcnn-up. Tll U~IB.' __ ·'CC'--:~=-• rllEI:: daily b u s 1r11n~portarion !or work 1n Los A11i.:f'I"' unt il mo1·r ln ~'.!00 ~~;~~;e\.?~. ;J ·. · .. ~l~:7~l~ ·l~J\-;:3s;; or 4!\.1-2::::9. lil:~~l!Y.) or ti7~ ... 7860 (avail I Person.ils I I~,,, l rOU:'\I> 1.il'2:.i. \'I('. Tii~ttn s,_ lnsui:ance Schools Ro10 Ull111•1•. 11111\ 1n". 'J. tn1C'ki'r HFIEN'f Hn1·,,.nrd !\JR.A. G · --· Mesa Verde 11·1111ri i. '~--. c • 11 (' '' 11·1 ~" lf;f apprrivf'd, 1\1/C. BoA\ + j tun! Jt •hi.1111 ' 1111~. ', ! 1.,,,,,.,,1, "; Int\ :'llk1 $.: DELUXE 'J. ,, 1--I aul'I n, .• • u1c, sin ...... I • .;r.. J ~ bu. BA\" VJl:;\V 2 l)(•tll'oooi. 1101::. &llJ...W:;ij. ..,,... ________ l Ill'. ('nil ;\! ,i; '1' Cl1 1111 :, \I ~11\I i '.Ill'(. l'•·k1nl' 1•1~1· NC\1·por1, :'C'p1. "i:.!. Siucl io, crpt/drps, po o I , UELUXt: 2 & ·; Br. '! l~a. s:lt'(•p<> ·I completrly furni~h· ·r~;:'\'NJS LESSO:\'!' I ShiJ-.LOADl~l ;,\-;111 ;;-11, 111; k 1·1111 111111 l<>c;d r 1 r 111 . 1,.. ... __ .,.. ____ ..,.,. bltns '"' pa!ios Sm I t 11·· " 1 f P e r•onals 530 S:'ll/\LL i;;r:i.v & '1h11<' ki1t<'n. p · 1 • · CREW MANAGER • ·. · • <'tl{' g:ir. .~, up. ,,en a ed. A\'::t.il June to Sept. $7:,0 1.,,. ll,'•ke•· , ,.-.,·-.,·,,, .. 1 r1va1e /Sen1i-Pri,·ntr \\Ot'k. Conci••I+• s.. 1,vl1;1l1 I 1 • 11•"' , Child ok. no pels. 61!;...01~. Of1·. '~09:i J\lare Av C'. "' "• y R 11 R 1 ~"'" ? • -----\\' I ·1 JS th I ~--pr 1nonth. ~Adults <1nly Selling or Buying !lu'-'' (",il't l.ilZ·.1101 easona i e a f's .,...,...,!J!-!_ ~111\111 ~ ,(· Ii 1, .i 1, _11 \::. JOb W ant ed, female 102 c ne•·r • 1~11 n (l1rr 11 IJEAUTIFL'L :-.;,,.,... 2 Br. AJ1l. r...lli-I0'.:1. agent. 6T~9 ... 0. C 1 ------I ___.._ 81(;-;110. ..,,. ______ l'll n h:uullr .1 ~11111 11 group of Cpts, drps. d sh 1v sh r . i'B!i'Un1ur11 apt. :-Olcsu \'•'rd<' . . . , .,'>. a . ar · I l'.\"lJ l-\·n111l1• •'<•1!11· V!(· · l • ~1~ -----.. -.-.. -i , • • GOOD TYPIST hoys ~··111111: 111•111 ··us1omer11 . r p J I . d hi \\ATl-.flF'TlO:o\T. i;idC' {,{' "·11 Before seeing .. dealer f11unla1n VuHry. T;dbcirl ,\: . . LOCAL J\Tnl •., f,,p I 1111 ~' w ·11 d ' ror ;-;i;1u1!11•r11 ()l'f\lll;'t' l'o11n· a1r-ront. 00 enc Jh'l.!JO, RN'a. C'l'P'"· r~pcs, tins. F.. Bil)·front. Balllna lsl und. Call 645_63 l l I ;i,oc•-f,,·, ~. 02111 Sl!f'Vtets •nd Re~rs s!udrnt. I n • tnio·li l!o•a-;, I 0 y our t.y p1n. g a t , •ar""C !>4~ Jl((P Sf'll ~·1 9.'19-1 c.:.., ,,.,.,._ -" h h W II ty':'i f:1,••r1lr-nr>11.;1)1'PC'r. ~lcn -· · · ·•. · nio. ;JU • • • L'l.~•' ~Br .. :: B'\ .Tuh $\;() j W h . t -_:._. ----I 533·'9·16 rolh•11 e r ome, I pickup N I B h k & •· s·.M k e a ve p r1va e CFB.\tAN StK>phrrd lourxl --and d I' I I H B ean 1•111·11 S200.00 lo $·100.00 NICE E·sidr 1 hr, l'rpl/drp111. I ewpor eac · "··: Au~. o')l·pt. .,.,... 11 · B & 5 II ~ · ~ . 1 L..abv•'itt'ing YA!tU. "31'1 ·r lt>·1n11p... e iver oca · ., t '!:'Ir. Aui;:-1st $1JO .>lb-t.111. · ·· I . , , . 1 •. 11 . Blvd & p· f ·C f -R1•11lO\,. 11'<4''· •l u r. \\y.J · ·• .• , • c per pg. bcr iii l11.l)s _>•)ll 1·en C'any. . , . I 67~21q uyers e ert rw;1r !'ilop :.i.nd lio :'lbirkt•l , " • 1 ' · · F V W t 75 per 1\r1·t. 1h·~nc UlJ:: on num· •195 F.. 16th SI PARK NEWPORT 0 CI-: AK F H. 0 NT t:nnl\'I' I SI NG~S 28-tO. CO·EIJ C;in1· , .a lO~ 2 --,1c1 ic Oils It T·~ S P 0 N S I B I. !'.'. rxP"'r. Dr1ve11ay~. i..:1 ,1111111: ~Ii 2Gf~ I or wdl work by hour nu~ i~ i dP!ntti···I "nrrrr TMENTS riuJJle>.. l pr. 4 13r .. 2 Ba. 1unl'.! GrouJI r or mJ n ~. _ 1111 '1 -.ii.ill. I babysil\l'r. your OOmr Jen-. . . --ca11 847-3095 . l Br. laJ'A'.1• S l~JO. spool. APAR I \1r 2 Br I P.·1 -11111 I \\'cC'kend Can1p1ug. \\ r it r BEAUT. Cah•'Q c·aL ;1 hlit1l 2 n1frr 6i:H!l.l2. ',\P.I> & G11r,1~•· ( 11•,111111' :\11 I I --~--con1111nntl1ng h1~h ,1,1r r.; Nn Adull.!ionly, ideal forB;iellf'· on the bay I Seashor(' D;·, 1'.i~.' 21:?· Classified Ad /\1). 1:.11; t>aily "' '.! nros. old. Vlt' :'11~1.11c Carpet Service .-F1·rr 1·~1. I ~It:\) ... {'.~II ·, I tr1 ;'ii 11;·11~' \\'r exp•rirnr r , .. llf'l 'C'!"lt\ li11! lors :>48·963::, 1~3 Churc/1 SL I t t J' . G!l:-4'i012 714 · 64G-90i9 l'1Jnr . Bux l::.60. Co~tJ :'l!rsa, ~I. l..:1::01i.:t IJi 'IJch. Call ~ny1 1nir, 548-50 .• t 11i''' k\1dr ~ <~ '\\111" e m.1~1 I h• .il;lr !;1 ~· t ·;ltin~ C.:'.L .uxury apar m('n 1vu1i:: O\'-· · .. · Ca 92()2'j l!l-1 _,116 JOHN'S C 1 & L hof 1 Housecleanlng nuM· 'Ill''< omp.i111u11<; • 1\•11 KJy~. l in r1·r~1''• an1 Larg 2 Bll, erpts, dl'af)l•s Sl30 n10. 54~· 7211.l C'l'!OOklll,!: 1hr \\'ater. Enioy AUGUST ff'!l!al '.! hdrn1 . . , . . · _,,, '· ' 1 arpe • P ~tery ' I!" "•· 111 ;4 k r 1 ~ -l'p•nhn 1't1n s1<il'l l'lfl\\', 1·1111 ~r•i 1110 ·S7~i0.:x>Ohcnlth~pa,7S\\inl· I B B i\ ~1:\1)\0URSELt Fi\U.Q:>rn1an:)hephrnipUJl, Cll'an c r s. F.x!ra J , . 1,1• • I ft \l\I t11 2P \1 'n.'''" pool•, 7 f•'."hl ed t•n· 1C1USC' eacon av, ' P\\'Jlfll'I I:'\ SO~I EONE 1-:1.Sl·:. appro-. 2'~ 1110s. !('111. 0 C. Dri·Shainpoo fr('" ~co!Ch· \![,...,.\ Clcan1n~ ( <IJ'I"'' ---~~11 . ' ·' . un .. ., ~ !..:eac'h. 1\rc'"~~ to pvl llf'ac·h ISCO ~iard 1 ~11 l{•tl' r t 1 \\lrllio\\·s. f \1J 111 , •t. .l .\l'\\l-: . .-1: \.uiy 1'"1ili! like COCKT AIL &: F«"I n1 ... courts, plus n1ilc~ or on ho1v. 60:>-ll. 781 nr G-l-1·"210 0 VER Fair~'l·nils. Sun. 893-2822. I c rfan !< f' f/ ·1 .. 7 ,. • • " " I D SCO Dcgreasr"t's & Jl 1 ,est( l'Om · ·' ·' -• ., ... . 111 h1 11t~·· 1·ir<111 \\'a i tr ro 1 5 rs-Apply 111 b1ryC'lr trails. pull ing .. shuf· Rent.;TS t;-Share-430 . _ .. ,. ·'· • VE. R.Y _. f{l!OOJ::~IA:'l R1di,:1· Back 1' • • ' C() or ·.1~·1111 968-0~3 p e r ,'! on , 11 an1 ·.l pn1, f.lf'board. rroqucl. .Junior l's I ·14/SJ;i.i;t;i;a 2l .. /3S 1-.U93 <IOJ.!'. 011"ncr <·all 7 I 4 : brr::;h1t'nl'1·s & 10 n1inulc ·__ . fmn1 Sl71.50 monThly: ;Llso 1 491-.~!9-I ;ind i1ll'nrirv.. hlcach for \\'hitc 'carp<>ls. lll'Ju<;1•kl'1·1)('r . Exp'rl 11· rrf. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Jlcnry's, 2122 Bristol S.E. Sl l\f'E • B t ll R S.1\'Cyourmonl'ybysuvln'' \\ill11•01"kX hrs.l <!ny a 11k.... &lntnAnn. and 2.Jx•droo1n 11lans and 1 • • ·• l' Xll11'', · · 1 · ' --------:!·stoi·y 1011 n !iou•es. f.:lcc· E, ·,., r y t h i n J.: lt1<·1. 3j I II iijl4) CAT, ;1-oung fcn1alr, J'('ddish I me extra trips. \ViU clC'an \Jt·s. il lar!dcn. 64:.!· ?:till I \• 1 . .,11111 in~ r·1,,11, ,11 Coak SPAC. r\ev.·Jy df'.corall'd 2 BH Announcements h1'011n & 11hitf'. Thalia &:. Jivin" ,.,,, ,,,.,,,·ng & f' · ed · f t • r' bo . ''"' kil ch»llS, pri\•all~ P"l io• yrs/ovn ·. ~>lG-0-187 alt ~I pin <> .. I'm . ' BAY & lkach Jarutori;il. l•'rr r · •. rl ~Xper1('nC conva e1cen "' apt, near ar I' ShQppuic " . \\'1!.o<0n, La~ Bch. 497-IO'JL h;ill 11.:. Any n 17 "" I 'd tlal f 'fff ' Center. Older child ok • or balconies. l'arpcting, Ura· all day 1vknds. · ·. 11· ·""· Crp!s/11•indows/lloor.~ f'!c. A1r·•11111111•: c:.·11 \ ~.() l'ell en care 1c1 irs. *' •BEAlITIF'l.JL 1 & 2 BR. Contemporary Giirdf'll Apt.;. Patios, frplc., pool. $15j. $170. Ca.II 5!G-j163. S135. &IG-2627/646-, 20:;9: perit'S. Suhtl'rranean park· i!ousi:: to !'hare. hlk from 8 \\'I' Puppy, vie. Rocht>!<ler couch $l0. Chair S5. 15 :.·r~. · Re~1d/Con1m'I. li4C.l•IOL A/J' ('It rl. , ,i;oo &12·3505 · th l t O ti I Personals S30 S.· Santl:I .Ann, C.i\1. Identity exp. ls 'vhat count~ rl'>t J --· • He<·rp11011 ,.~1 '"1" CUST. Sl~R\' EXTRA LARGE: 2 ht .. 11 ~ 1ng 11 1 e f'Va ors. P ona bf'h. L.•gun1'. Q11·n brlrn1.. 10 cloim Gl)...l082 :i.ft 6 nlctOOd. f do ii·ork n;)~el r. I Dedicated Cleaning \•"1 ba.,.ne\\·ly painted. C'\r!)Ol1. maid service. Just north of ~gt. nr cpl. ~!}4...8467. -~-· ' ' 1 Good ref. 5Jl--Ol01. * \\'E DO EVERYTIHNG * ~:-.(·(·. Sl:·i·rrl,or) SUMM ER JOBS ace F'ashton Island at Jamboree HAPPY BIRTHDAY fni/ -111alf' very snll. dog. ' . f.f'f~. Free est. &16·28.19 Applu·nnt !';1,1· F t'<' nr ·No f'C'~:,1:....t9-li. and s..1n J oaquin Jl ills Road. Garages for Rent 435 PoOOIC'·terrlt'r Vu·. tilesa Srt::/\..\I Carpet Clruncrs. 1 -• • ~l'l'lnry \ff.G .\Jl'.:N ;m & L'r CEAL"T. FUP .. \'. :.Z Hl~ .st:. ·rcltflhone (714) 64<1·1900 \'erdt·. ;,.1s.in~l. pro!. at lo.,..·est priC'es. 300 txr·C'llC'nt ~u!lf'clr.inin:;:: Typ1~t 111 ,-,.c'.·11 Pl•y during the day .. t:p incl. U1 i1. Hid . 1"1 for 1·rnlal infonnal1on (.;AR1\GF. for car or storas:<'. * [ARNI[ * · SQ. ft. $29.95. 962--0672 h) flay. v"·n tran:<, ,\$,r. Bkkrr '" l;f ,O ma ke $ after dinner I • i\clulls, n" pels. l.J~-.1 J ,-918 p r S I FOUN D ne1v 10 speed h1k(· . * 836-0)48 * P~kk ~ PART TIME • j BDJ''f APT * ~·· per mo. a 111 .1. 0 -ftQ-O r f call Carpenter "'V Cf'fJC'r 1'' ~7'"' *Sl1ARP! unrurn t Br Tn .En~;bi~H. $\~:J. H.R .. ~36-41i711, 5.16-'1979. OH HAPPY DAY ! .. 1 ~~ ~it5 . .1 and e~~~~.~ 1 P rof. Carpet Cleaning PBX RC'l'f.'J'll 1rt ~100 $q8 $I 28 WK Qosr lo occ f: UC!. SI 1(1 Office Re ntal 440 I \.I)\'(' j .c I ' LARGE OR SMALL 1 i\l!I() l\'lndov•i'i & floor C'Flrt>. (;, Ofc. <Parl IUJ'l!) r: l1r. • • - per mo. ~i-776.~ 175·5050 0 ___ 11\a!'en. H1~·hard. Ra1nlk)\1·. Sn1I. ~ellC'r -fcn1ale. V1r. 1\Jl ·r.vpl'i; \Vork: Cut door~. ('.111 Dulrh 5.17·150fl, 24 hnt. Other Ff'f' & free Pflc !ltl'lll!<. ~>17-09\:l FRPLC, sunken liv rnl. 2 UDa'•'••&•iOlftl!'"' DIC.. OF'C'. Studio spaeC' All or 1'111p~. Tr1p11rr. Boogu•. V<tJ· Yil·lCA -Bai·k Bay 646-078.1. panl'I. r rm{l(ff'l , f 1 n 1 :;; h, 1 JAP,\NESF: \ally v.·ould-likf. RUTH RYAN AGENCY ---------- BR. 2 Ba. v.·/i\·. hlln~. -·--··--part of 1.2'!16 ~ri. fl S.-nd re-f'11t11u·. :'lling. ColJir . rnall' . vu._ Bayside rrr1nl•'. r r p 11 i rs 1•r,· housr11oi·k. I Jl!l:: Ne11 port. C;\J fiMi-48l.t COST · f I I .· ---I , ", r-t. 111urrmC'n!" & N'tt'm,1C'f's lo I PROBLE:\1 Prf<onancy. Con-Or & .larnho!Y'r. fii:;·H:i'.l5. !162·1961 . ~9-1029 7J9::l lkarh, HB Rl7-%17 paliO, enc i;:-ar . 1 ,), l)ELL'X~: '.! P.r · u., ,,, PO &:. !Sli NC'\\J>Orl " -~. ACCOUNllNG 6i3-Jli29 in A'.'11 . Ill'\\' ··;irp. & p;unl. En(I. Ri-a~h. r'ahr. ~2GOO. Attn: I f'idc111, ~~mp11thet1c fll_'i"gan-Los t 555 Ct:~·ro,,1 _ 1\oorl\\'Ol'k µant·I-llOU8F:\\'OHK, ~hall!rd hy ALERT SHORT HAIR l\'F.\\'LY rftlrroratcd 1 RR. 1 g;ir . 1\c!ul1~ 0\'1'r :10· rw:• 0 \\'ri"'ht 1y counseling. A.b°"'11on & 1ng. Cab1nf'ts. 1.rn't rrr1;11rs. rh1· jol> or 1.1 .:iO hr .'1'18-2lj l, CLERK Shag crpL util ixl. SJ3:.i & i·hihlrrn 'JI' rw1o;.:, $190. _ : , , "' · Adopt111n rPf. APl:ARE. I SILVER grC') male fl'X\Cil(". l)h Duke IJ a 0 u r k a """s af! 6 Pl\! ./ Occasion11J \Vork deposiL i\r shop~ ,~ , ~1~~1.4,14:~. ' Dl:::SI" spaC'e ~v.uJabJe S50 G·l2 ... 1·13(;. V1c1n11y S un 11o1v " r & I r.~fr!J98. ' ./ Iii pny, shorl hrs i\1n111tain & analyzr inventory CO..'lt accounling &. gener al a_ c <' ct'U n t I n g reoon::l!I. Manufncturing. 1 mo Will provide Jum lture T·trcJ'f' 1 I Fa1r1 1e1\'. SlOO Rf'1\·nrd. J47R , . Masonry ./ \\lindo1v/\l'all washing rree\v11ys. /\dulls rl'lfi--0-ljl. J DO J ·J 1u n13!lU't' I It ' . , .. • , J<; 011 Y <1 n t· · R f"f n l\'lfNOR hon1c repairs. Plum-1 ·--...;c ______ _ I · -~ r ::11 tl s, at S5 mo. Answenng service ''\\'ri •ht'" 1, . .,Y 10 ,, ·t 1 ~1 n n .11.: , 1r.. Costa i\trsa b' . • BRICK BLOCK ./ Varied <lur1es *DELUXE 1 &: 2 BR.* l l>rl rni, tge ll\:1n;; rm, availabJe. 222 Forest Ave, ~ , . . .... i.: . a ~~l:i-t'\.l:l!I. ing -carpentry -painting . ~ , , . & :\lust <lrlvr, Appl~' 11·1 Bltns, c1.~h1\·shr, ~<1r .. nr so. r:u1gC', ihspl. rrfr11;. erpts, Laguna Beach. 494-9466 ~.as~age. Tr; 11. ~01111 hke -;--. -roofing. Call 540-55fi0. sroN F~ \\ORI\ '.'"10·tY.l21 RENTAL READIER Coa!<l Plaza ..a 5'15-2321. _i.:arag,e. Lsr, $180. 671-:-1148 it. 8 .• :1·2100. Sll.VFJ{ grry rn.1l" poodlr. ,. 'I' Pa"nting & 569 9 -I 4 OF'rICE srat'<'s, air rond., Social Clubs ,535 1 V11.'illlty s un r ! ow " r & -e• 1ng1 1 • . . \\'. I. th SI., c.~I. 3 BR, 2 Ba apt. Cp!!i, drp~. LTD() ISLJ-:-~BR. 2 RA Tll u!il (Ni, 01·prhrar! .~prnklr!<. F~1lrvic11 . SlOO Re\\ rt.rd ".478 . Paperhanging APARTME!\'1' :'11,\;\'A(;ERS "15 n.-n,.r. s1:;i·,. /\du IHI, Li'llSP. 714 : ;;i3-0719 indu,,tl'l"l IOJ<· .• !.ll. to so,' :i. Nr R f f c · C ' " I /\cous1Lr11J Ceilings blown ..., v•" ,., " ,.,.. FULL 1n1mb('rsh1p..NC'11·1)1'lrt , _n -~fie 1r. osta :'i fcsn niachinl'! applied. FN>c cs-QUALfT\' INTJ-:RIOT-! Adult Con1ple"(. 21 Units 613-00G:: I ;\ppr. 111 ~C'r. 1 IX'r nlo. 2991 GrnC'e Ln. T" 11 n 1 ~ ,. l u h . ~I <1\'· ~.1--0.1l9. 1 1imares. c;uar. 641•7u13 PAINTl:'\'C,.; 63%120 STACO, INC. 1139 Baker St • Costa Mesa 17141 549-3041 LRG. 3 BR, 2 Ba. no pl'ls. I l'l:'llACt:LATJ-.: :! BR. 2 Ra. 1 Cos1a :'lles;i, :HS-j;i1l 8 to -t 1nl:-\l1111'd' .\111-! sr t J, LOST <lni.:: &a~lr n:iniecl I · \.'ery ft(':l.!'onuhlr:' ,.,11('~ A UTO:'llOT=rv"E~-1-1-.,-,.-,-,-1, Children OK. r\1· . .;c:hl~. &1 rid. hl!n'. rrx· ;.;at·, pat1U pm. 4:>-l-600.i. J\-11\( Tri·c:olor.t'<I \r i c, Ce ment, Concrete \ • &16-iO:i l_•_ _ f'la ln1s Bonkkee'per & typist. sllop'A. SllO/n10. ~~l~>--5!)!)1. I ~~:0~c~l~._6;,-;.:?3~ DESK space available S50 Tra vel 540 :ie~J .\('~Ir. SC'h(}IJ~ 01;1_. I CUS1'0:'11 _1'0ncrete, rr_ec PSI., r *' PAINTING . PA~EH l.\1 ; &-lntarl Chevrolrt Co. 1800 r:qual UprlOr t.nlfl]i'lyr-r SPAC z Br.. 2 b<L crpt;, R,\ \' f'HUNT a pl 3 13r , 2 B<l. mo. Will provide furniture ~n. _fag l'\11 S .1 4 I • . prillos. sirlev.·alk, ilr!V<'ll'tl)', I l ll!<·rior i.:\trl'J•Jr E. Cl"1pn1an, 0 r 11 n :=" drps, all bl!ns. ~larriNls 011• ~hp a\':1.11. 2'N-20th.:. 1;r1 B. at S'.> mo. Ani:weNlg service COUPLF: and son, Hi. l\'ish ~7 planlcrs Jor llr P..otl)'. l~i<.". lnsui-r-d i ;unr;inir ed t;;:3-;,,j21/;').JJ-8•132 ask for DATA RECORDER ly, child nk. SliO. jlb-(}lG!J. sriO ~r ~un1n1rr. 613·~7~. ava1!~ble. 17815 Beach Blvd. 1 nc•ut rouplc ror p;1rlnl'rsh1p J:J-:\\'ARD. lcmatr inc<li••ni 5?.6-7:178 or 5?.(i-:r.?'16. f':i.ll Jlarri:-. ti lz...tJ:i8 :\1rs. 1111.mllton. OPERATOR ----- ---Hunt1ni:=ton Beach 642-4371 111 boa\ and sail in~ cn.r1!5f' or 1 -------Part lln1C' t10\1, frill 11me E/Side-2BR. 11~ B:i .. ndull. 2 BR. 1lpl:\ N1re. spae. \\'alk · Sou!h Par if i e. Ap-i.11<· 1Jui:: 11 /short hjllr & JOllN'S Patio, pool clrc'ks &. No \\as1tnl! AVON INV ITES YOU to latC'r. SuhnJtl i'J lllllification!I to"•nhou~r. F.nrl. pa 1 j n. 10 bay. ~l·an. shops, oo 1 2 ADJOl:'\I~(; 0 f f 1 C' e:;; /l r 0 -= i mat f.' 1 v S:20,00J JX'rfPr1 .collie n1~rk1ni::.; ,i;. bloek. F'N'C' f'!il. s:~?.--0291 for * WALLPAPER * slnl't earning txtra. ca.sh to: R UTH J\IC'CLUHE $16i j !.~-:1986 ilfl f; _roi~. Adult!!. 6T.r4\72. I avai_lablr .• 2 diHert>nt !()(·a-available, Rudy Ciltlehaus. i"Ql•>r. Lim ps on .'.·~ght lrg. If 1.!ppt . day:i or aft .. 1. I Wben )'OU caU "t.1ac·· sclli.ngf obur rxc1ting cos-P.O. Uox 1.f\10 2 Br. Adults. no JM'!~. BE:1\Q{ :11'(>3 <1partmenls 1.1~5'.;-if,0Sl3ll, R: SIOO./nln. 2'./18 Golden AM'O\\, 1.a.~ found "1111 847-:i6'.0 . I FLOOR 11ork &· parl'l~. 548-1444 61G-171J inelic as ions tor summer, Ne\1•porl lk11eh, 92663 BAY J\'IEADO\\IS APTS. rron1 S17j J'M!r month Yrly. ~-'· . Vl·l{a$, Nrvad<i. R9109 Don't givr .. ,, 1~ '"'P'· · 11r·1,_·1 •11 ;1~.; ,t· ~11lf'11"&!k~.1 Pl'!Orl:SSIONAL f'ain!rr. '72~ Fl'lr ;t personal appt. 01-~NTAL - "S7 \V Bay St Ol 646-0073 /\(;T, 673·856.l l\tr J..1u•son OFFICE . for ~ccrclnrial 10"lf lh· nf" . 1 · " ·~ 1 1 11 d/Bnndl'd s.i-...OS2r. ·c all 540-71}11, ·• 8 5 5 i i 1 ;i 11 t · " · · · -; ... -bookkecpini.: service. Reas. JI,' •· u ~tu I. Buy lh<' "L1~f " it Ln f'ias..~1 !.lcd, Ship _ · · · _. '·-llonc~t 1\ork, reai:. Lirl ln~. ·-Cha1rsld••. 2 )'l'!L l"'\'fl. Salary 2 BR, 2 B1\, hltns. clrnnrs. NEAi{ Ocroan, yC'arly, Lrg 2 ... , r· h Sf Sf C ,1 fl('\V i'ttuff. ' tn Shorr R.l'sul!.~! fi.IZ-~78. I>,\TIOS. 11alks, 1lr1vc, 111sl;1ll Int/Ext. Frr:'e r~I. Hrfs. B/\J:JYSJTTIN(i • ~ty OOml', open. Rl0-37'.'.0. El Toro _ B . 0_,,, ·"""' I ,~1 . 11 . ipg. .J. . ,,.,, $1'· 120 u1''''' • gtiragC'. adul t :. r. -1u.r ~~w. -r<-'ll' ' 1 ~ 111•11· la1vns. ~:111', brenk:, :>-IS.-275!1. " · "'" · ... l .11iz-, lfillll nrl'O . fi7;,...2967 ...:.., ' '' · I Bak<'r & rauv1ew. ~~i-39,'1.'1. '.i'.ii·J-1.i!l 1 · )..Qt'FICE 3GO nionth. crpld, * * _ * * * * ' ivnlnv;• S.l.i-8fiG~ for est~ I ;;xi:. pa i1iJ.i1ig, J:'r#!c.. ~t, DENTAL l<ectp1ion1st, Of· DELUXE ~ Br. 2 Ba. lo,•cl!y Apts., '• ,.... 1 l'f f · ho "' e CUSTOtil CE:'l1EN·r \\'ORI\ Rrn~1 l.ic'd Cuur '·ou pu·k Ht:;AUTY Oper::itor. A~~ts. ficr ~ta na"rr, tx""r. Sal .. ..., U I 370 um, u 1 pl . 1_n '. pp1ng tun! & shnmpon. girl ! lr " ··-"'"J kit , xlrn lrg J)Atio. Vt'I')' Furn. or n urn. 1 3,.3 ! 1 11 Sl • I Drrves, l\alks, pat ~. 1·ohlr • ,..,r·11 do r"~'-· • · o""n. Som e" rvr! & Sa,., I •·<'11 1•r • ..... ~· 1 1 / on!)'. ~~u!l/p\. H:in· \\'r.s1, '" IJUiet AUult!< S:lli5 546-4016. C.i,l. 1;7:1,0140_ pool decks. Don. 642-8514 6·12·8320. "l" ·ft ""· &16-9612. ·cotta Mesa I --" ~ ~ ==·~-------1 :1 BH., 1 Btl . !<hug cpls. Nc111· O~'FICE Sp;it·r, 4~·1 Olcl Contr•ctor Pr\.Tr-.ill~G .t• PAPJ.:Rlr\G, DE1''T1\L &S!lllStanl, "XJIE'T., o.c.c. $1.W/mo. Up"'"" Summer Rentals I \owpoH Blvd .. J hi"-' ,Q, of Trader's Parad1"se 19 )''5'" llarboo a.roa. Lfr k Hkkpe/S.ey. •o $100. So. LRguna offi«. Mo,,.F'Ti. 2873 :'lli'r\Clr1za. Ap\. C ) PALM' MESA APTS Ill\)' I. :IOO ~-f! . .$971/nlo , J" CK T" u 1, 11 nf'.flrpair bo1wled. Rr f'~ furn . &12-23.i6.1Stty.Con!<l r 10 SOOO X·l':l.~~. !-ic?nd resu~ or call 1"1•11100 .. a1Jr!11 , :ZO )Ni. r~p ~--;-~ . . , , •199-1'.:.'i l DELUXE 2 Br . 11w ~~· r-tllNlITE..o;; TO NPT. BCJ-i. ;!'IR-."'~'IJ)) 1 Lir'cL i\ly \Vav Co 04i.003li. P1\l:\TINC • l lollf'st, l'lt>al\, I a} roll Clrrk rn si;.·i0 7 ,..-,--._..,..,-- Cpts, drps. D/\V. gar. $1.i.i. Ft.rfu'l, OR UNFURN BA y VIE w OFF I c Es 11· n es . . I ~arnntrrd wur k. Licensed ~C<'Y/Rl'C<'P! In Si.'iO 5F. N T A L /\ ~ " I ~ I II n ,-. i66 \\'. \\'ilson. 1).18-6731 I Unl1('hcv;d1ly !urge apts.. [)('JU\t', 811'-C'Onrllllonl?ll Driveways & 11\.\Ur.fil 6'ij...5iiKJ. ~Gl'ner:il Ofl lrf' s:120 Orltl\JllOl}ll(' ('X~rle llCf' on. fountain V•lley hij~•· pool, Jacuzzi elect Redecoratrd. Lido area • • 1 1 QUA LITY seal r 0 ~ 1 i n g 1 /'HO~::-PtW'i!lng, al~mof,, ~~kpr/Sc>cy.I..1.g\lna lo SiOO ly. Cnll 'AM only. 342·7775. • -1nr,-S1L,rc . ., .... ,;~r-· I R:ea1u11Uf!J1("~. Hkr, t)r.J'O'fWj r \\'rnttrer;-~ •111 l'l'SlSl:\111. flf'!'f?IN. ,...., lfltff IA(f • ill 'I s ' ,j(K]t-"",,.. "-'A...,IER-&-BVSBOY I bl-~ -.im.c+ ~~ -. .....1 -mes ~ . I , ~,.,.,,,,., = "'M' o • .i BR. 2t~ Ba. encl gan1ge, 11a11na f'lc. Adi.61ts, no pet~. 8 • R t 1 44S Rtn. y~ _black. H a w I e y 's l.1r/ln··>. Frf't' r-~1 61:>-j\91 1 111 uNr<E"w''"p'oRT s :'llus1 bf' ~I an & neet. Appl7 pool & r~t'atiOn. No pets, 2 SINGLF:S ••• , .. , , .From $135 1 usiness en a c.r ·19 Jo ' nl S I • d 11 ,, ~» .1i Th<' ltnng1nnn. t 'p fl) 1, off p I A 1n · .pe,..il ~~I y. ur « childre.n. si:io. 5:;7.lQ.14. 1 BEDR~f. ' .... " .From.$140 C-2. lfm sq. ft. lca.qo, 0 ars Electrical Labor if bt1Y tllnl C.'l.11 I ersonne gency Sl l'ljLti,. ~1• Coost Hwy, u nt'ington "each 2 BEORM ........ rro.m $160 JJ9 Cnbrillo. cos111 ~1eu , l\f h 1 t ~.; .. ~...... 833 Dover Dr., N.B. N~! B~Ach . .,u .., You're riitht, lhf')' l'f' un. * 64>2331 * 1 0 1 <' ~ore. ""1-........u 642 3870 -~ -=-=c=---1 rle,...pelt'l'd Hit"'" De. --· ELV.CTRICAL \\'ORK. Art WALLPAPER HUNG • tin'-! .ATOR (~1 l)lk, fi'Oin Ncwpoi1 Blvd.) OFF'ICF.;, .~lor~ llf'il r N'pl. TR1'1Jf'~ M·l lol w/-t hou~··, '72 Chevrult't 4 \1hr1•I dri\·r knvl~_ Big or ~nlall'>L\c'd & 1 Carl ltt>bko 646·24<t!l --NO FEES ON BEACH! 2 BR1 2 BA U11f. Fr $251 2 BR. Fnn1 ~·r. s:lllX ADULTS ONLY Furn\lul"C Ava.llublc C a r p tls-dmpes-dllh1vasbtt heated pool-aa.unu-tcnnla ·r IJC room.ocean v\ews potfo&-amplc par\lfn& Security Guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC . Poll! of" • Grt"'-'"~·,-l • '"' I N 1" 1 B In~. tr('c r~I .. ~l(>-0.ll . . ---BUMPER r.46-9860 · · 411 ·''"'1'" • · .. r n or" ,.(In~ (•h Bln1rr. Full powrr 11 1111 · ------t Pl t p th It I · -~-~--··~--0 f'pol , 5'.17 fl. $1~i0: n6 fo't . l 1or h11. v11t"11111 or w/1..'0irtn1 nH1l-, ·rr.irt<' for r<';.:ular 'llr ~: L 1~c.·rn1 CIA~ h~n."f'd, iti tr, a c , t'la r STRAIGHTENERS 1·'lu.il ln:l\r -.«?Vl 'l'al. yrs. l'!'C• Huntington B'eac:h sn:; :'11-0nlh A)l'~llt &JG....241"1._ I l1ldi.: rJI' ~~ t•nr info r:1i'1 uf f111Hl1 vr1lur O!' ~~? 1 l·1ndrrl :-in~a1.1 . lfl~l\, 1na1nt • P1'TCl l PLASTJ-:RJNC: IN'!' prrfcrr11bly in • d)'(" OFFtrr. sp,rlCf' or l'Ort\ni·1 locnl, :1 1:1-'.:S57, , 1. l"f' I.· 1111uu-,; j.-1[.: J2Q,, Aft 1 ,. 11 S.~.j() llr • ca~l111:; i·nv1111nn1rn1 2 BR FROM $139 "~ "· --'""'' "'' " "'"" NO FEES 11" "" """" \Ion. i.lOTV Jl\<lt!l. AllPl'QlC. ~ gq. Nf'.:\V2 ht• n1ohll1• ho'''' "' SUl-, " r -----Ga ·den inn C111l :~1n-t.R2.i II 111 July MOVE IN TODAY !, • ~~ · ·viv t.led lo1 111'111• J.;1kr • •,•'i•••f l>P ln ,·, , ..... 1.,,,,11,,. • l ~I d rt. 174Q.I ~neh Olvd .. ll.B. \\Id••. At i\ieAdowi'i, l4.q51 \ 1 Pl b ' · --" , ., .. , , .. "' K11l11 1.-1~111 01\. Pool, /\JI Call ll17·~jJ ) (\RI. .fell-; R<f, J-·•-l\an"h. · 1"''11 & Colorr1tln llivrr. l<)l\:'iSf):'o:-.:· 1 'AP.OF~l~G 1 um ing , ''"lJ(ll". '" 11; u t nm 0 t 1 v r . ' ,,. •Y '"' .. ll'A(lt• fo r <'n r TD '5 01· "" • · • '' ' • .. , ' ~~i::n ;i i!~.s1:s_~:2~~, f~XC loc:il!on. !-; 171h St .. Trruif ff.l',Pt'OJ>:ertY a.I btnch Privati· Part ·. · ', 1nl :'.ln.intC'nan('r , J'lt1n1u1~ s,,,.r on hon1t rt'tla1r~ .1J11111rw:-r shop \\'r \\Ill hi.' P.P .S. C.:'11. 720 sq ft. f ine bld.c. It: or t <>rnert 21S: llA, M009. Dilvf' ~ 7641 1 l l1·nnup... 962-20L I Frl'c e~t. plumbtlll:. pn1nl. op<>n ~Ion July 3rd. 847-3669. nrklnfl:, F.\•t' ~ ll .. "~ ..,,., """""'-·-..... . . -* LANDSCAPING_*_ Installations &m.-0.172 , p .P .5. n.'f'i;. N .,...,....~ ......,. 7 Unll• + fnm d\\'C'll lsd, ---Newport &e•ch * orrlC£..(i()() 1q It i.vl ctbln. want ~.n... tii" ..... , ~l~OOll ln ' f\r11 lav.ns, Spnnkl<'r~. df'1·k!1. PLlil>IBtN'G REPAIR Pacific _, .-. 1 w. come, occ11.n tmnl r '" , 11 ... ,.,, .. ,.,,,! "' job 1 all nn.,..., 8:K> Sq. Ft. l N-piano, ul1Quot, $.wtlry. i;tr. t..q, Sch. Sl!l~.ooo. ~u~:2' " ,. " a.-•MJ· "~ 6(2,;~m * Personnel Services Pacific Personnel Service• 11 2 Ko. TO\\f:r Vn!(ln BMk SQua.n! Ot>.Hltli'. ... Calif. 220-i W. Octanfront, lg l BR. OUSTRTAL SllOP av! Aut. what have you !!'! Consider trade • Ol)tn PROFUSJO:-;AL 112 No. Tov.·C'r m ~N ~~H.B. ~ummer &. 11.1n1er rental~ • .c...•1;::G-.c2c.ll:::...fl . ----'---64$-1•96 • • itou.se or Stuart. (94.1211. Jnp:-tn1 ~{' G11.rdenini ~rvltt COLE PLUMBING L'n1nn Bank Squan bft Opl'TI JO am-6 1)m Dalt, I "''ntl Jul)' 1, 644-a.l17. , Thr ffL1;tC",('t <f;aw m fhe \Vest. rr'f'r I \I. • (,.U;.()1;19 ~I hr, 11rrviec. 645-1161 OranJ:e, Calif 547-6446 WlLUA~f \\1ALT£RS en Sell the old •stuff ~ •. ·" IM li.'' f>i.1.'11 ~1hf'l1 * * * * * * 11., )-,.,1 .. 1,, ~-:-,,1-h;:i1( \ ~ Y."Rnl ad Ii; a rood 1n. 547-6446 """'""""""".-·----'"'-!Wt\\ :;turf 1 \,J r 1'.:' • _ _. •••ll!!•••••••!fll""•••••••m t-. •it' ).t:-1n~ _ 1 ~om.-n1 1 .\1;\r !or R.scMI ~1.~ I ' - . • --- 21 DAILY PJLD,' r~cnd,·~. July 3, Jq7.:! ~~~~~~~~~ lllllllllllllllllllll~lll~\~~~~~~~~:~11 MtWnd~• J~J ~'"""' ![Il]1~[ ~._,~ ..... ~, ~,[Il]~il I I W,,_. J[ll]1 1,__[ _. __ ,,,_---,tiffi) 1 t~'-' ![fl] I ~~" j[ll] ':::::=[ -~ iiiii0 ---j[§J ~v. R:dio, HiFi, Jllt I • I --112 Stereo --------· • F 710 M & F 710 flelp Wanted, M & F 710 Gar•ge Sale Help w11nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 I Help Waoted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, Mo Help Wanted, . 1 ~1 l' r r .1 rd 136 Help Wanted, M & F 710 S j FA\llL'!.° i.:arJJ:•' ~, "· .STf'.ll~J) 1'1•~ ''1 ' --~ --1 • • t'.\Pll. u11hu!~t rrt"'1. 1"' ;EC°L!··11t1'\l:•>r '' ·1. 1~~1k· Si".Cl{t1',\l~Y, C'l.')Mtn.Jttlon WOODWORKER hrir~<\ins ~:ill'ln-, S..~t • \Inn, 1•110111111'!1 \\1th 11111 " 1' 11 Jl!~~ .. ,,,,. '" 11,,,111 11" INSPECTOR ~., i•·r • 1 1.,~ , •I•\ 11k I l"•ffi. ('.ul ht1\l'Pen 9 .~ 4:30 NO FEES o.'>l>·I pn>. 1GG \rf'stn1u1t11'•r ft·,~lluta l rt1,1n•:1·1 A 'Y~ ~' " \l!flll!.I. ,,_•/" ·1 .. i.•:,11 '" ... ,,., " \ 11 1l1r ESCROW OFFICE R lf,-.1•;,1.; :,1.;1~1;1 1'0S:111r I fur ,1111 _n, .. 1Jd J.i·J, "' • 1~1·:1rhl1.it1. 1>:-'~111 1•1\!.~~-::-t..;.,,::5-ID-1~. Ai·i.,St•\\flortl'.i':"lrh. ~ttr1,.1 r•·4·1·1 11·r.1;·:11/ 1 ' 11 M: I I I''! NO FEES , 1 .• 1 1 •" •. 11•· 1· r· t. •'·• R ocopt•"oni"s t -'42S ~l-.J'\"ICE sr:1ilnn Allendant, 1 1 -.10~1-, J .. 1 ,~; ~hi\11111 ~lltPt'Us1un "P1·•1 ' · • 1 ,, 1:1 \LJ~.\J.()(IH •' ! 11 i 11 r ·• • 1 Our chrnts ut'l!t•nty nr f>t \\ ..• 1 · "· • • 1 k •lt•i'k ,ft lif':\d 1'110111• p111:·1 l-:\JM f It\ SJ!o• ~ ... 4'10\\~ flp [~ .r. f11r 1111\ r1n1·(·n11 111 \h1 I [1111~1· l •.-nflf!l~. F"r ,,J,,,! phtin" i\lrs. L..1unt. i O~:. ;;1 .• n ::.::f>ti \"1~1 l.1rJ(1. '\U l-:Qu:1I 1)111••1 !.1IH•IH\I r 1•d for hu,1 :'\ 1;. ~•·tt f•I ;~i· tl••· To.r c.~H"l .. 11kr.1l,•n i;: 1c•n \l;oh lh1~. 1l\;1IUl''t' l.- 1hd11\' tu n .-Pl p11l•hr ~1...-.ui1I Ix' fJ rn.lhr 11 rh a1 .. ~ 1 n~·u~ac1•m,·n'. IJl"l!l,.,;,,.11 :t(V'l'IUUlln~· ii I ~ 1 • 01 , 111 ;'!lll':\Urc & h.1nl.1n;.: pro• , 1·duT"!" c•t•. S.1l;1r~ 01~ i. (i\l;..}1;-.1 fur 1nll'l'I w11". 1'r) .s:: .. "G P1•r 111'. •/t' •11• ·11•111 f o t , r < • .,,., ! \J,,1.il1· r •!"•' ,,,,rk l , , . ''''.,I l!,1 rt ,\ l/t1n11" 1·1·es & I I 1 ~"" \rnrnens 11 r I . ! " · " •· • .\l1n, GJ!l••·~ 111~1 .. ct1"n "' ' .~ ·' •' 11•1~11 fJU>'llH!f'<I 3~!1P1niy 111'11.11 · i;11n~r:1y "~''· · .,. , 1 ~ l'i"itKI nr1\ 1n ''"' •· 1, .. 111.,,~. 'J',,11C ()()....,11urll1.1nd. l 4,~::·:>i"1·, 1 •. ,,11 1,,,1,, ,. 1d,1td" L'nu111 ~lntlou, 164.:l 1 1 1.,1 f_)l"OI" 1,011,·h $ •. 1. t.tt•t .. '· I> ., ns...,1·1u ily C'\1:w·1· J';i,t ~:I""· C 1 11 0fk~rs. If you. 1nve actory 1 11 ._ ·k • ·k ; 10 \\'r't :-;iut SIG. i:uarantrc•d. Orli.:1n;1 .v l't 1 - Y.11·1:1 uff1ci'" vn U;iy ~ Int! n•. Xl111 ••ri1~·1· ror ·,ti :sport Ca r M e cha nic-\\ l .~"!'CLl~'I-Ad:un ... ·' 1Vl'tt' ii•tJ01h1"ork1ng f"Xl>t"l' n ,1c Jl"t " • ell rt\ s27!).:j:,_ 1!11l:11\r1· ~111 1,i•..-11· ... 1. 11111c·c•1111·•11. \\1• \\Loi I"· •IJ"'ll ,, q .1 !l\1n !1,04J~ I •:• 11} I'• r •JIUh ! .\ ,,., '1 .,I· l:VH'r; )lt,1\1on: Grt111eycl 1;11y Jrvi·l coll f?1'1l\1Eo. ~port gt1mf'.'I 51 & 4~~ "~~:~; c:\sh 1,1. ~1n;1 U p:111111'll\' -GIRL FRIDA Y-:'11on. 7/3, ... p1,.1 1'.11:.171111.1 :·111\\,.~t l'!.fl 1>1 .'fl. ..1111!. f/r ~n1e. :\lust be ex-IATELY. \\'e 11.111 be open !1t1sc:. 1·Joth~n.,-:. 1 : r.nv ·n ii ny 11 ,. p , 1.11 .~ J1n1p•·r1;. 1nan:i;.:crr1rnt p p S "·' 1 '.I 1,11 . -11,..,. -, -,-.-a1-.. _ 645.2770 I" r. l'H f<'I' <'OlleJ::e student. l\loii 71::. P1·u't', C.l\I. ;pll\.-\O ~ _ 7111~~r o.",(Jl · · · · .,. --1.\1"" 1~!!1 & !\'e11·1X1rt, C)I. 116 · . .-. · , ,,, .\J1~\1lr ph11ru -s, t1·p·n.:, P acific ·1 ·•11,,,,, IJ11•·rnaul ,,1,.·r1 SALES REP P.P.S. Machinery J 1:1o·!)llN S·11.;1/i(·1 .... •ir11 1 l1n:'. Ah1l!l,v to l"<11111_.o..,c S . , , , , ., ~1,.1 r: l'.-.r"" opti • :-:!:x~l.E needle Opernto1·!'. CAr.r•·r F"OR S.\LF: "',,.,,,. ,,.1.,1, i:r· \\,~1f<'I', .1_" 1,.1i. r'-. ~!l4orth:1n1I p11·/1•r· P ersonnel erv4ces 1 un dn>sscs & 558-8444 c. 1 ll:l :--; ... ·1 .. • 1' 1 •I •·\i1<r. 111 f :1rpct Ln)<T. C~ll fllulr.in.:1· ;;" T 111 '' r t . l\'fl. S;1l:ory ro s~~JIJ •lt•[>i.'ll-,, .i_ ul:t•Tlllt 1H f 1t in I Spl·lll>\IC'tll'. 6-JG--OJOS. 1230 E. E•lingC'r, S.A. nNt."' ihni: on "'f"'r. Suhniit l.ruo.11 B:,nk -...111 •11 • -·'·"'' · .11 • 11 '' ,,., r, IJ+ e ,• .•ii:il in fh(' ~:i.!r~ •lrflt, 1 _ 1 e J.IG-'.>i·lj SIOO. :-:l6•;itr.•.•. 1·p,un1r !n I'. (). Jl.n-.; 1~10. (J1·11•'~1·. ( ,1 r ;) "I' i '-, .11 '•Id <1r~:11111;1i1,.11 """ :'l:'\t.LI-: .\c.-•<ll<' operutnrs . •:;.IO-~ - \l'11 pr1rl f!<-:11·h :.1266.1. 54 7 -6446 l.•11 'l•i )•;::ii , , lri••r:ur.1111·~ tor h1•:i1 1 111 "r1"1 k, .. peC'ial. EXp••I' I I[ l'ri... J ClllLl)S playhouse. <10 1'fl fl . ~-------,[; ~ '"r 1: 11·1\1·1 \l,,v "'' ,\,I.I'.\' I r·Nil"1:" ''" \··~ II !.ht :':\I irir-,. I to!\[~. Ti'•plpayJ -s1;4~c1;4 .. ~,l l. Mtrthlndis• ., v Crptd & prt.nc>led. r-.1ust sre r ~ s GRINDER I I "" ,. '" • ,, .• ,.,, ·~ <>·n'! t•·.p•T in ••·r ::.::._•· .\ .. ).. or an. ·"' ':._ .::·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii~ 111 RPPl'ft'. $125. 89'1·0.12' . f ree 10 Yo".__J MACHINIST JR.VINE PERSONNEL ·:o '·" 1 '>C """ ' • ' •. '" 1" & " '"''" '"" SHEET MET AL "Appltances 802 M;scellanoous 118 3 L "ines, .,-r .;mes, $1.00 r•. tJ, 111 r 111.I 1' \,1 ' w.· •!" ~· f[:1ry + Ith· 1 :d SrmncES "''Arr. rv 1>. \ ( I " I ,,, ';,~ I p ·y' I ' ''' ' ···.11 ',,,,.,,.l' To $-l.2:l Ill'. u~1 uo-. ~"'-' . '' , '· ,, ' NO FEES 0;..!F. ll"'-'C'r, run.~ goo<l."look!'l i NEEDED I ~·1 rrn ''"'' l \.' l 1•1, ''f'"I & p1·r••,n:1I tn!r·t· •J ZOL"~IJS! Krf'epu1::, kr::iv;-''1·,·1• & f•·•· r·o·''"'1n~ · .. o·.··,, ,..,, '-'1 ~ ,, ;,t, ,,. I ·II Ct•"'•" I 1 i OK. m'.'<'i.ls hi'at1n~ el<'n1rnt. RESPONSIBLE k 11 ~ ' ··•. ~· _ w 111 \\":tn Fit·Uf) <'XJ)('r. l1gl1t 1 · 1 111g-kith·nll, 7 11 ·, n you 11 • ·, ~ l"'-. c>..;1w·r. in LO . Immedia te Opt!nings '.17· .... ,., , ! " "' 5 11111, ,\,r. 1!,•v1 r~ I 11 ,.1~hr iiif'tal. \\"c 1,.111 l)(l> nnr~:iin 10• 1 ie rig 11 pl'rson WORKING COUPLE r;in .. ai-r~. 11,rri. }'.i'C'~ 11r 11hl .lld :\hilt ()p< 11111~ fl D. t·I' !)u•r;vl ~r101hni:. Acctng/Secretarial :>\J.::o.; 4 i •ri(, 1, ni;d<'. l~il"·~r IJJK'll \!on. J uly::. $7. :~·17-f.9"1.i. NF.ED one or t\\·o bedroon'I bl!'. lrnd. lil \·7"~01. .\llpn,11ir•!l"~1i1lr1J11b0\('1'('·1 Clerical/G en. Ofc . NOT E TELL.€R PPS l\IA'i r.\G N'pni1·n1an ha!> house 1vith large rrn("('r! ----~!,-,~,~;~11r-,-,.·I I flUll"(' (\\\ti 1\'IC)l~. l~S E. l'illi 1;11 11111\1'1 ("\I 1•1"11 .\: p:qxi· ~OOd\" ~1111~· • • • ll'it~h<'rS $35. lo $100. Can ·, ,r t 0 VERY \\'1'-LL FH J·:E h'l]l!JY hi',\ iy .. l':•·\'''U , .. ,. <; ,-.,.11 n .. p ·1· ynr1 or w ·•1,0 ' 1 11.1,.1n1•11 & rr:unPd. Jlhnnr EXPERIENCED · .642·1470 E (pttr i~n\.~d 1 , i.ir. •\rplv in ac1 1c deli\"er 11·/I }r. ~arn. TflAlNED dogs) s ..., n10~. .' .. NO FEES Lih· \i iiv!it 11 11.t:!I :1~.~1·1t1l11~ \\1 • 1\ill Iii' c·lo~<'i;t \Inn. Jllly , .. 1. 1 ~·!!.11.11•1 P•ll· SOI P ersonnel Services l'i3S--177S. \lie: bE t\\·een 1901 ,ft, Vic· _J.lli«l!ol.i. 1 ;1\r !. 1'1!-1 t'hl11J n. ,.::1'd .t· ·ruc·i;, Jut.\ l!li. I .J.C. /'1-::'\r\I<\' 1·r·. 1~ . ~-' · r-0 1 , f •• 1 . ,. \!. f'l!r. ll:iqll•r. 11~ :-:o. T(•IH't:· OVElt 200 11·ash<'rs, dryrrs, tol'i:\ _ {near \V. Briy SL) S11 •'<'l J)1~1JV~itli )lll:'.< ni. \\'1· 11 1!1 lw U[}l'I\ \lon. J11\_; ::. h<nl\!' 1lt•H•1";1trw 1·· "t~"ll.l' t I c" ~l,uf-~·~ .. ~-B ,;,.~k --·-l"niun BnnkcSquan~ rerri.i::rrators front $39.9:J. COSTA 1'.tESA. 5'1S-7SSl/aft. ('O!'lt-ri-1•'10: . lnl'~S "'~~:'01·1,1,1 :· P.P.S. Pl•"1'"'A/)!•ly \\'i'<t. 'l'J j f1,r this:,,,., •1,,! 1, l v ·1,r.1-:\\(1 \J,\'\'.•''P·~lre~""~ Oran~e. a11f. ~•1.'Hli80. Gp.nl. Shri1.~:1nrll.11'•'il'l'.:n•.·• ·•· Pacific i·a n'<·r '11·JVJ1'111 '11 'l'.i'i .•. 1Ho1 ::1\ 1: .1 ·'· •it•rl-i\<·ar. 111'1"1· ~.:i. 547-6446 -Rent Washers/Dryers -~·n·1• h:tppy lli·:i!lhy ki\tl'TlS. ROYAL INDUSTRIES h:ii'•' !ro·i 111 :.•1 ·•:--·!! ! t. '-I• ·11'. /1;.1t 11n1r . ~~1..r.2~2. * AU.CTION * I Personnel Services E D Rd ~ ·• 1•1"1 I ' 1u ----A~k ror T'.:ichcl .\lay $2. \\'k. l'ull n1a\nt. Bu\ 1r;111H·• 2040 . yer . pi·n•'Hc·,. n • ·:"' ~ r· • 1 I · 1~ ~615 112 !'fo. To11t'r Santa Ana ,11 •rll'i • ,. ,. 1 • , '· : ,. S.·1 1r•1;1ry -SHIPPING * 639-1202 * F'ine Furniture .i • ·-~~-- L'n\on Bank S<iuarr [f!U:t! ()ppol'. En1plor1'r •1•1111.1 c•>-ll• "' ,; •-1 1'1fi 1.!7: WORK AT Run {'t11i1'C operation fo1· a HI:COND. 11·ashl'l"S. (ll"yl'r~. & App\iancC'S GUINEA PIGS Ortt~e. Ciili/ 1 .,1~11,1-. •'1~. t •1 l t • FASHION ISLAND J.":l'Ollin~ 11·holcsal1•r. £W.Ue Ow's froin~.G-uar.,delvrd Aurlkins Friday, 7;30 PJll. • 5'16·4iX~ • 547 6446 ·I n1 ""· J'rn11h1>" 1•.1·,11111f1•l ·•I" ur a Jar;.:(' c'O. c 1 2 '" ·s~ W d • A t' 8 rn -.. I l!OL'St_:l\t~1'.!'t:R 1 !l4•n111t~. A1•1•i' u1 :""""" \J.. i,-,i. · ~tupping exp. f'I_"<'!. tTa by r'pimn.:;.lfi-5 lS, -4 £u. in y s uc ion a I l) j.,,._,11'd 111•;,r !hi~ 1'\t1 t1n~ r h t t 11'.<':-iut. Cd'.\111on1i'. 2 tlllul1 i-:, I J 'o·r~•u 11H' :i.-11111°11 1·• _ . 11.,·,,,,,,,,._,hot> spot nr I e ccan C'U man Cameras & 20751:, Neii·porl, C;\f 646·S6S6 [ I~ A!-k for P.nchr·I .'.t:i~· ~ dny \•k. Good plain rook. A~.1 ·1 r~I \f •1. 11.11 P:• ,\1·1::-:1 S .\i.1.--.-\1•1•!} 11: '!J•'f!Jllll•~ .1rC';l 11ho 11·ants to gel into • "L,; [\1ui-:t havt' car-Good salary. J.c·. ]''-"'" ., (",. ;;-:"1 I",'''"· T'.J :.; L.,d,, <"•1111 ;11 r·•~nl. Gn•at ll!·ne!!ls. Start inriuagcm('nl. Start ~li'-0. Equipme.nt 108 Behi nd Tony's B'.d~ t\lnl'I ~· Pet1 and SuppliH ~ 6·14-270CI. I \·,J111gC'l' /\-.~·. Hu11hn;.:t1111 ll "" 1•;.-, !'>UJ•l'"t.t•I' i\1,·, S1"JIJ, C•• P:11~ r1't', 01hl'r Cal: Don J :il'kson, j J(}...6()..jj. KOBENA 4Zl Su1M·r S rnovif> STER!'.:0: Unrl:umt'd 1912t-=====iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiij -. r~·111·l 1 /l•i f:r1u.1I ()11·, \I: I 1 .... Jnt1~. (';ill ~!llll'Y \l:ty, Cna~litl ,\c;cnc)·. 1790 "d Garrard System. Auto 1~p ~G I 850 J/OUSEKF:EPER. Li\r• 111. I 1. 1 11 ,1• 1 _ , !') r,n·-('il:l'-lal AJ:rnl'y, d cam:ra. l ns!ant cartri gP 11 air susp1.•nsion ets, enera 50 C t :\I IJ1Jrlun11v .m;·~iy .. r :.__:_ .'\ii.Cl"-,\1d4.,t,-OnJ1·rJt .. I ;J' ·:rv 1·'· ]!arbor Ilh·d., at 1\ fl ms, loochn" l'oii-.i· IC'll'photo turnta )f', ~.~~~'ffi-Af~;ra6. '~-~;· r -K-EYP-UNCH I f·.•llO'l';•li!!'d,_r·:_:.1~ 2:-:~1 l!arbnr l~t al Adan1s, \:\!. \\Ull' .,~n<>le ·lens. Almost i-rw::akC'rs \\"/C'r o~sol\~;; "A: "Sllf'rry's", Croom111:: 10 l."'."~.11.L>'R, g·or •I-one ! WEEKENDS !. 1 ,: .... J''·-. -1-'-· I I 11·" k II sy!'tr m Al\l/F l\I/ . ·r~ u1 ·1!1 hN'{'ll~. lfl'l'I' 01"''"•"''"''·"", .t·.cm ,\. 1 ... 1• f . !'l[(l\F "'l.(ll•w !1•111, \\ud, SECRETARY I 111•1,·sii:>.pl'rS to C'attirrs anti J.J2-li3"1 e\'f'S & \\"t'C'ki'nds. rrirlio & !apt' l~rec~\rl !or p1ekt1p" l':n:ir<l'.nc;, J100l c TIME FOR DAILY PILOT "''' .. Sundav' only. De 1\'CL)' o I 111•11 .. " or rn:l r o l'r. : . l k :;iill ~ · ' ll " v -' " ~ • . 1. . R brand new & :::1 • · • "UllJll('C ·1 1f~2~411. .~\.~11"111~. i-:xrxL r~t2--3 190. I J11•r1li•I. {!ll':Jln ·~ -tnrt1n:z I ::· 111 :< ;11 !" ''\\ '• lr,.111 ~··u· T' SGOO \lo. i'll~l''l:i!On or cle_ l\'l'l'.!t'S .. ~-PETRI F'T ca1nera. &-ldo~ ~-~9~1.s.J. Pay off ba\. 11! ,. ' . • • · . lu1-: 11•'•kt«td 1.-r k(·y1111nrh 1.,1n•· ~ d . .i\ !: 1·0111.n .. ,!' O FEES q11_1rr'.'I_ 1·aJul Cahrorn1n t~r_i\; usrd. c. c. auru. 1:1.S f·i> 119-._.17 0,. take O\'rr small Cats 852 ·r··, •• 1·~s1 .. st draw 111 lht• \\11'.<\ · 1 • -• -· -· '-1 -' t rl " 1----------:-"' ,. · 111;rr:11111-; 1 :-.1· !••' r1>111°· 1, pi•1 .il.f--.• ~.... l">li r1·s hccn~·· anu J<W n~er l n1n1. No. ::QGG6/i. \\'1th Oa.~h ")'lllt.~ of S~l.00 mo. U.S.A PF".RSl,\N ,,.11.,,, __ ularks, a Da1lv Pilot Clnss1f1t"d 1 ,. . 1 · ---11 1 11111 1 vr ....,, I nl .1 van or ~ta.lLOn 1 'JOO k ,. • CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION. 642-5678 ·Ad 642_~16.:~ ( '11 P•t'' l'\%Z.\ J',\Hl.(JI~ HELP. 1 1 1 1:>\I' r · . · rPiu·r ;1 1 ,<1 • 1 ·t fllf:tc1mrn!. ,, or mar Strrro Equip \\'nr<'hOU~f' O'A l'f'J.!., SIOO. Alw P•'l"SLilil · · i.. ~.LS TEMPORARY •J\t~·:.>!.Jv\tl·lf,.~lti:.:-tlll:.'lf !'1i1"1<'1! ''I"''·,\::. 1•11 1oy 11'a~on. r;isl' .. ''?11 nr I offer. f.12-1731 el'C'S & l'i'!lE.l'ilhSt.,Cos!a~ll'sa 1 f 11 , 0 , •••••••••••••••• ! .. lL'l !-:0. ':A. ~1 ~-· J;EFOHE:; ii=''.._ I ~~::t·;~\~7 ,:\ii IJ(' ol"'n \h1n. C1r<·11~1~\~~ Dl'p;n1~H'nt \\'C'ekC'nd:<. &l~r2-ltl2. -hlai:-k i-:n1nkr proven studs. •••• ('I ~ 1 I t.'t· p11hl 1<'. i·a ll B r \\1llH1n1~ I s1uc SC'l'\"1ce ron1 w u ~· . ! .<:.nlll:1 Aro-t ,Jl o ' 11 f, ,,n:;T.~·H~ .• r ... \\,lfllt'\1.1 ,lul; :·1t1. DAILY PILOT Furniture 810 TV.\!)" J{C,\ s;i. Goll Clubs S!}2.2!170 --~==:::=""-~""""==="-"';!"> -LVN n. 11\(•r !fl 11\ ll •• r. :•. p p s :::w \V, Bay St., Costa !\f('sa I QUEEN $0.ra he<! s _s_ ._. b .. 1.g k c•~_:,,i_.~,·,. S1:n1e.~e ~iOir-11~"~"-"-,,-,_--* :.1'.1:;:Y.! • Jluu~"1\h 1·~pr•·f.~;:iJ--Olfl~' • • • ,.,...,., I ~7'""---I ,·11·, "Ul'l "P.VlSOH :<t'lf ~tarli n", L/roon1 s .. t <black \ 1 n~l Sl:J eaC'h . 6 11'l'l'ks o d. :'Il l\:\ \\"1nte•l-1n-l•'•r1 :.t.1·f --l·J ~r ·;.·i<~.:illl:'\AJ-.--Pac " '• ~ · "-'--·t h • I , \\''' ·er 1"C<'I ~~rs "I" 2:>311 I S · 1 O""'""tl' tJroduct~Jn t)(l.1! ' rofa ..... .._, c ron1e <>:: ~ass ...,\ .~ 11101\ • • :r,,... 'T t·vr.t"ry hu~H1'''-"· ''••r111:'.!n<·;1; f;.F')T.\t'.l',\'T .t 1Hl1'~J. P ersonne ervices 0 ,~,,. . . 11 • nd 1 bl t sr~ lrl Coorl rnnd. S90; r l•·<'l =--------o,c, I T r ' E rr1C'nC'I' r I' q ii co ce ' (' a cs • .J<I. o . . . Dtvos 854 juh. ;\Jui;! hi• nrlll •If'" E"!l'L(J\'i.t!O::\'r \l;l·.\{'"1' I !\1 '\.i. '111' ,. 1 11;l. l!'~;?achts m \\'.17th Jl:tlian df'sk $17i ll/roon1 eili:('r, hkr-nt'I\', S I a., __ -.;;...•--------N"•~rint•. J;·virl' Oft11•1• Su;r I '· ~:!1·;1 •,,.,., , .... "-1LP". I lnl'n 1 . I 111on Bank Nl11,1rr ~ 11n1 ' · · t 00 ( b I •t? ""' ,.1-1.0 ,. ho ,,. 1,0 ··~ ,. St, C.:'11. ~C'I, inc. n1tt< s a no :-< -.-.J'I.. ;• . _ " tnl', m ~. 1•l1!'!':, Jl\07 Nc1'.1.~·1t f;l>'•f .. I :.11 t «pr.-•t". 1•·J1r:. ~'ll'1'· !lr:int:t' C:i.hl d ing) $22:>. P(!(an coffee & FOR Sale _ r.ie\ll'Ol1 &:1t:h Sl'l<'pherd. s.:;ood \\"1th kids, Ca<IJ ?,1('~a. \" 1\Jtt•-,;l·r-; ..... 'i.-~I llll'-547-6446 TELEPHO~'E Sales. Top end tabll'S $2!lj Red1\'rod . cl b mt'mbership. TIN'<l~ l'OOIU 10 run. $J. ------~nil \011 .. .: •••• , ••••••• ~2:1 sh,!! I 1 , r ., cc.mmissions and bonus Ap.. 1 ' 1 .. : · .,,__ 1 tennL':; u ... or r .. Jll'hrl :'11ay . . . · pat.o furn. .... . ..,.,_-..,ra or &l-l--07j l. SIZ.f~t~l. \ltu:hini<1 [ '~t'O•lrr \t.1 n . -· •..• •·· l )pcn ----ply in person beh1een 9.00 1 kitchen set $135. Colonial . ---, -,-~=~·=roo=~,-NUMERICAL I '•i :111r··s•-.·s 01rr :!l -· SECRETARY I nntl 12:00 noon a1 8381 Balsa end table S19. 'Snulll bkcase l\lOVJT\G ! \Vash<'r. d~er, r>~!·'.-~:'llG ~OCKA 10 i:A. r/JOlt .~ Cock1.1t1 .... $11 'hr. A enue 1\fidv;1ay City. V . h . 112 Cube rcfrl"tra!or, rlouhh• heel & 9 \\J-.t .h.S OLJ CONTROL Ne wport Beach v '1 SIO. anity <'air . · " -o: I« t11in bed, 642--4.81~ OR ~1:14-:'..% l!'l'1''""• <''il)l'r ,,,,,,S! . .'~l hr. I _.,,,,.,. ''' 1l:r n"" TR.\!NEt:: ,_ounµ: n1a n asl !;1blf's $2 eflch. !\Ilse gan!en niRhl _tan(., -----=-----,--MACHINIST 11.,_~!r'"."•.·•C,·1,,·1,·,rr ....• ~!~.-,In·. lin.n• d1:o1•• npi ,. • ho!~trrs d1nt'lle (et lamp!', SCJ INAUzrr. pops ;:;11111 '' T_,.1,-m•n. ''" ,,1,,1,.,.,, Tr eh n 1 1· i an tools, ln11·n mo11·cr $G.:;. -• .. • _ ·, 1 -~· • ' • •11 -• \• ·11~·1! 1h-rt. ,-"' '" ~ ,1 1 •• 1,.111 b,,., stool~. tl ra f t 1 n ~ ~ .• ,--·,1 .•. groom1n'".. ll'nn!'I, l'.t1~\x)i.~ ............ ~ '"1 ''r. ,. fi.n :-;.11 ~fl \I •i.ni J:ral , f{1•iiairn1 a11. P.rqu11Tr!: .o.r-£u l nl~C'. IOU.,.. it~m s. . -r~os7 _,,' • ! :1n!Sh1HQp,·n111;: .\::·r .Frn!O~l• .. llul-'l ·~.:l. ·1·•·,1··i l<>lpf•.1I. I '·''"'' l\ithout ,..l.i!<se-. -1 ':hl7-::UI aHcr 6 or n1aC'hine,n11sr .. •· . ~t'.!-S.366. l~t'qllil"f'<; 111ir1. :\ .11·~. •'"</Jf'f J;Jjlt•r1<lt'I' •......... ~~(; ,;,,rr 1:~ ... :1:1<"k .. , • 1 1:1 .. -, inll'Jli_t:('l1{'~ \IC'ch' \V('l'kC11d$. ut.:A,\1 BAG COUCll • Ex-Pu--"tt~.~,-B-,-,~E~l7l-~1.i7.,-,,.-,,-,.--:,I 1 un ;;z:?O LA · r:!nnd t,1114' ru111 -Fl-.I -·•·i· L·'· • ' I ,11 ·'.' '·"''"IHill"I fl, •\. ~i...111 tc "-P_ti l{lciL·-Pa•1('1l('('. r::~;,\N·r J\t'i\· BH ~uiti'; e1·!Jf'nl ("()1KJt ion. "'!'.' nrii. l'hC'phC'ril pllps. \\'(•.111C'rl. :.i I l,i lh··· l:OY.\L ~r.1:\'Jtr: ,\1~1·:...cy ., I ' bl " tl k r.1 ,-,,r Appn1x 1 •2· 1· t DE VLIEG OR .. •!'ll 1'.1n11111<> !Jr11 • ,·,11•. ·,r.., 'r• hul not n1aniJ:.1ory. \\ri1E' ''"'''''· m1"1·-•·. a1·moire, 6'xj'. S.)(). Cash on ly . $20. 817-6·121. I r;~o.-.:.111)f,11 C1r l>·. ).!;iC'h~:1~~hopl'Xp.cle .. 1r~.e hc<t hrd., :l niti· s1ands, ar .11c u. • 11·ksold ;\lal'.i~a. f'm:tC' 1 Su 1r1· ll!I, f\1•1\11)rl l~1-:1•h · " '" " 'v ""2 7689 ~==='7"'--;,.--:-;-c=-:;:-1 ('/' )('l"I"' 1\\:\1. P.O. Box lfJOJ, Costa l\lesa, S290. Bureau $2i 3 T\1·in "" -.. hl!NIATUJtl:; Darh.~liunrl~. I LUCAS GIG BORE .1..l·L'\00 I l·.c111 .• 1"1 \11'·1:,·,:_ ,_,·,,·I,,,',,., I I •""?' EREOS .. • Cn 1 · ~~ ... ·.. htc!~ SS en. King bed $99, ~ST AKC male~ r l'd All shot~. MACHINIST PERSONNEL 1 Sl ~C'l!l·.T,\r!\': \\"ouilil-~ l SONIC desk chair SS. 642·~7.'(9. 1972 Garrnrd, systemizeil. s:n.%66 nft 05 pn.1. A Y · ULTRA fully auton111tic changer, -• i\lin. 5 yrs. rxprr. \\"Ill SECRET R l1k1· 1•) 11 rrrl( \1 1th a ~roup ol DJ;\ll"G & king hcdroom 1;t. A1''1/Fl\l./l\1PX radio. !Sf'al-*Black Lab Puppies* f)('rform C'lo~C' tol1·ral'I('{' in To S(i.'l(1 11 wni!ly P''0PI«~ Thi" J:l"l'>tl INSPECTOR end & colftc !ables, lnmfl!', ed air suspension ~peakcr~ Pu1Tbr1:t!. $21. 54S.J03.:t proto-ty1)1' pro11ur1ion 11 ork. NO FEES f1rn1 1" 11·:i1111u.: !O l:.ki~ you l'lc. ~1i-!J.li7. plus tape dec'k. Still brand Horses "···' h"f> n1n" :1l1•;1r•! To ~,uo fr{' r ;1td. I . l I . h ' • r v · 1· t 2 11 & t d \I' I f! 156 ""'"-' s 1 •1f'l' ~· 1 1,._ r .·,ll 0._.,,,,., SI-(> kin". ind1v1c ua 11·11 rl'-_ I a c. 1r!uc <in S(' • go r ne11• guar an ee . a.~ e /\rrcl n1;L1ur1•. Jl'll'I" .\ Al~o F1•1• .In , '' t ti · GRINDER " MACHINST : I :\1in. ~~ )I'•. •"(fM•r. in 1.0., o.D. or thrr;1d i:.;r1nd1n~. TOOL & CUTTER GRINDER / .\!111. :-; ~rs. rxrM'r. 'lu~I hi· :1hl1• lfJ i:r11~! 1·10..,,,. f'otl t•r:1111·1• rnrn1 lot)!.~ ,r,, 1, p r r .i ! ~ '1nnosl'1, C"111 C 11 t l r r .·,· •. 1• ,, ', .. 1 •• ·11 1-rnt I' x per 1 en C'" 1n Iii·. chnir:o;, All very g01 unclain1ed. Origina Y pr1C'-O S * ~r:11·1n11.~ f>t.'1"'111 111~0 '311 ;\l.1~. _,Jll-&l "' " -d 2 t'l •~ N st~ * APPAl 0 A • 1 I 11.,,,l<r Bl al L'l!r,1o;on1r in !'lpc>ct_1 "n . con .!)(i -7 . .,, ed at O\'er ...,.,..., O\V uJ. llPl'k 11£'11 ll/J){"t'P•" 1.-J\:.:•nr1. 27'(1 J I • J Quallru;a1ion.s a s a S~T·TC· BENTWOOD "'"h. or sn1all payments. 3 year old gelding, '".JI /:H; 0111·11 \Juu u) .,r . Ad.,.11s. C:\1 , 1 ~., t ~pt 714/-0 ~~1 d L\ Ll';VEL :.. CHAI RS "-''""-'' ...,. · .,..........,., · regislere . $475. P P S s· ll\"ll'C Station· (~rr1 \·C'yd I d • ' • · ~.·,·,,11. ,,·;,;11" Ncctl at lt'ast rour fin. or un-~· GOL~ ':°uch & ch~ .• ryr~ CALL ANYTIME P acific i~·r. l't<'fi·r ~1~'.~:.' ~::i.~~~: Tlul' is a sllOM tcm1 ll'm· !in Ben!li·ood chnirl> Ap-$10. piC'nic tble. misc. 421• 540. 3803 P ersonne l Services i\ri·n. l!1rh & t\rii ix.n1, C'.ll. porary pos111on. I pc~·ancc not imporla~t. but Calle Abril. San Clemente. _ 112 i\o. r .. 11° r BOARDING !-.IABl.F.S k I T'.,,. 10 $600 11.1. 11--,11 •• "iO<. cd \lond.'.lv_ , 1n11st be 1n ;.:oriel eond. No Miscellaneous ....,. . L1111 .. n P.;111 -.l;',q11.111· S.·· ·y "\•1~1·1· ' '"" .__ anl iqucs. Frc<' , or reas. Wanted 120 Beaut. 1lt'\\'. ~·~i i Acncia IJr;irl~l'. f'a!'f 11\"o ~h. f\ry :<pol fnr adl'ancl"-.July 3rd & Tur;;day July ·';;;ru;:;;:i{Cjfjj~P.;;'.l ~Sajjo~tia~A~rujj'~'~"~'j;· >~;jj;-1!-~ljjHj..iiiiJ 547-6446 1111 Tl! JI\ d}llUl!lH' 1:r~111·1nr:: 4!h, Plt·a~t· apply \\'edt1CS· r rk c. l\l ik(', 1197-7791 .air. 5 i':ADDERBACI{ c HA I P. s. lr11~11• ~11·ea t'l•···!ronie,o; lu'nl. I day, July ::ith, to EXECUTIVE ~loving-. \Viii Nc<:tl at !east four matchinr:: A;;k rur P..:;1'Ju·l .\l.1y I 'I r-------~ \\Ill 1r:11n 111 t111y ~·11! 1l1•n1.\. sacrifi('f' all fu1'!1ishing-!I. hig-h, Ja<ldcrback chairs. Bollsand ~>e -REALESTATE I !'.{';1u!1!t1l fqlll!"l'. Top hl'rlf'· Apply t~xamph· -s· d('l'p tuttrd Fin, or unfin. 1\IU~\ be M1riME~ipment "' PROFESSION.AL I f11~. ,\ln;.:;111 i\IJlio! Po •rsonnr! ! hlk. nau~h sofa & loveseat. shirdy. No antique~. free or f ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~I "~'''11"\. :!::o \r \\"nrner. 1 ROYA L iNDUSTR1ES $12."1. 6' t.ocktaiJ thl &.· 2 enrl !'e11ronablt' price. P h. r.likel' 1 ~,1lr~n1•'n .':: brokt·1·s~ 1'!w ' S11ii<' :!fl:). S.i\. :).Yi r,122. rommocles. 9' \Th'l'l sofa & nt 897-77~1 afl j. General All pn~i1 111n" -.1:1t1·rt ;ilJn\"f' rr .. i upr1ort1111i1y is J1t'1't" You :u·i' :-:i-:c1:~:TAJ:Y-r 1c:r-l'rrs. nf L(J.10 E OyC'r P.d lo1·esc11t. $200. EI' g a n t -BENTWOOD I C·-.-E-.-,-,A-ck~'-'_A_c_k_e_r_m_a-n, 111111.,. 1.,1" 1 .,,,1~. tlt'• d·•d 1nunerl1al1·ly for our ~.1.,.,11111!!' ,11. 111 the il}n~i niif· 1 .'·i•<la Ana Thomasvi,!lc king sz Bn set. CHAI RS .. I I I' I .. > ' ~09 9 l\l'\\'f!Ofh•r l\{'f("h builder & 900 • " -----------,N•cd •t l<'ast four fin. or un-'''"'"""' ,·, "°'" -l>rok•c 1•ap11 ly ••xp:1nt tnJ.! •I.' ;i 1 ,,,,1,,,-, .. _. !•"ill. Di: ,1 u t i 1 L: I I 13--~ 33 . I I I \I J I J·:sl;<i<' d111.~1011. rn·-it1vr op-I tr " I> > r•n ' "" ' " y " ' \\'f' 1,11 lit:' c (ll'>f'( nn. 11 ~ 111f\t 1•1·11 11 1''' 1' ic ''. 1 Equal opportunity cn1ployer LADDE.llBACK C II A I RS. Jin, IlC'nl\\'ood chain;. Ap· \\"llh Dav1r1 L, Fr11.sf'r. His • I , ·r J <<ly •>II l"lllllllll,v f•li' <vlv:~lll't'llll'nl. e ,,,0><11' ;'llnl'1Sjlhert~. ~l;,J(J., . .• t·1 ,, tu·~. ., . r l'\eed at lta!il four n1atchLng pearancp not important, hut yf'Rrs or ho:it huildin~ & l'hon('. C.1l1 1h·lcn l [n\t"!', J lfl -lilJ."ii high, lnddcrback chair~. must hi' in good <'Ond. r\o :<urvcyin<> exn.'ri1·nl'r 1\•tll ~ f'f'1\ l1•n111t111!· kn1 \ I 9406 , Pl A I fff/m,, {$m In· ·1· I A!!C';l<'I'. 2 7 9 0 . I t . '! t L A • . ,. , .. · · 1 1 ·-· ease PP Y ~ •1 ~ •1 \VAITRF:SS. E'Xp£>r1encl'(. oo Fin. or unfin. "us ....-anliques. Frer Qr l'C'llS. nlQ!>l vnluohle to the pro-~n1·11·1 ):tl·kcl 01' \";\{_';l 1•111, -h l cYil """ ,nnn.h II I ,., I \I ' C\f tJ":ll"t'I ! SIZES 34.46 Wed. July St ~ ~ ., , ,r.;f 7 .ir "'"' ' ;i .!__' ar~. ~ _:_ under 21. Part time. Closed srurdy. No antiques. f'l't'~ or price>. f\lik(', '197·779 1 11.lt. :J. spectivr bu)rr. llr look" 1~.-,1 V}(_ial hu tltrll~ 111 1hi~1 ,,., 1{f. 1{f. I S EC r. ET A I~ Y-1',rin1ili:ir Sun. & hohday!'I. Kramer·s rcasonn.blr: price. Ph. ~like p· 0 JO gans 826 roi'\1ai'tl lo assisting you and ,_. ,,_,,..: ROYAL INDUSTRIES w wo1)..1n1.t 1v/rlas.,.ifJl'd Colonial Kitrlien. 19th & a t897-T191nltr r 5. tan S r ~in' h i!' many fl"irnrl!i 1Jl':.ut.ru! j.1ckcl 111<11 i:'"'' -.l'.tt ""''"'"' 1 .., 1.\.1.11 \111,·n•' 1111111,111.., !-I t.-111 10-10 E. D~rr Bd., S 1\. I Real-E stateCdreer 111.111·ri:il. T.1ki' 1J11"1a11on. rn llar ho r. C.1\L BEAN BAG COUCJ-1. E.x-ALLEN-CONN·\VURLITZER ;1ga1n. Off11'r at· ~'12'1 • i!' 1 .~..,\ !rt 1111•11101·11;. l\ntf' I.nu;.: ;111•1 lf't•I rr~·~h. JU"<'11) \ 1::11u:il Oppor. Einph>~1'r N .. 1v or r;-.p1·ricnccd, jotn tht' 11<11k p/l1tll". ff';:, hr~ \\'A ITRESS N!llcnt rondit!on, Llkr oov. Organs, Pianos, llarpsichortls Ororto, Npt. Bch. 714: •,_ ___ .., _______ I t t •· t \\ 111 1'l1n~idt•r af1rr f d NE\'' USEnRENrfALS 6i~ ,.,.,., :,,1 _1 f'd·_•111.t'· J';1!11 ·rn i!.'Z h>11n ~11111· nuu·nuit: r ur "' Con1p.iny \hat's J:ro11·int:. If ,,.,,_ Exfl'l .~· a llr;icl oo Dark Blue Fur. Approx. .~· _...,.. 1 • •• -;,~J •. ~1z•·" 1~1~ l1H l111t1·.t. 1 olh'I· ·111 yuu ,,;1y ~IA'Mlnigh1. -MASTER MECHANIC you •lo not h:l\'t' a l11"ense, ~'' _lll':l_ ll~l-~~1-'· 11;J1trrss. Call Yvonl'I(', 13ob 6'x4'. $:Al. C11..sh o n I y . GOULD MUSIC CO.· r~11~·0""'1~,c. ~,~O~N7A'"'"1~-r.~.-,-.a-,10C-,-i-:, ~,.:\·,.:~T\'.t l\'1-. C't:'i''f..; .Ju,t I 111.1.u p.u·t, -11J11r up ehcC'k 011 011r :~ECl:L"L\fl ) 1ltc·t.1phonc.. Burns Restaurant, fi.l·l-2030. 962-iG.119. Our Glst year 1iv 11irin~ .~· ncc outlel~, for '"u·h pr1ll<'Jt\ • .11!11 :!• .... ·1 1·r:d ~kunm•·r~ in pnnts, JAGUAR S49 j\'o "hl'1hr1'! T.1rl<' iO l\'Ptn. \\'ANTED lir•en;;cd opern.loi· ri.tAGNIFICENT 7, Bull1:t & 2015 N. ~1ain, S.A. lllQlnr aft, baUC'ry f\vd. c<'111'< 1 .. r <'arh J1u11rin f.,r so!,'" H1'l'l'p1111n, '':1 r1f'ty. S:.00 mQ. for hair stylist assistant. lli·Fi cab. 8' round nren 547.00Sl 673--01~1'.:. Au· 1\l:11l ;1nrl !'111·1 1.11 I l.111 I !'nntl'd f'al!('rn !l!OC: ~t:\\' I S.I:. C:i,JI Ell~. 10 to 12 tim. 642-6857. , nii::, aquarian $ h•a d ts. WE BUY J>JANOS-ORGANS 7t~Nc-,.-.,-00-,-1 -Sck-;1-,_-9-,-,-1-<P dl111i:: n!l wn11~1··1 h11d i·la-s \\'o )lll•t\', ·"'•'!'.:ti. ::.n. '.',.!\, 10, W e need J uquarl . Rea~ E s tate i;1:1.1i;::1. . -£44-6913. PENNY O\\ISLEY-S\anton Joi<<>'."•. ,, .• ,, M .. ,· •. s~<. -l1cens1ng Course --1 \\'Ol\IEN, nt>at enel'get1c ·""' ~ ,.., ... ,, ,,,., cit•li \1•r\ 1\111 !.+I;(' 1111•1•1· ·11. 11. !il. -.:1lt' ."Al i hu~t ·Kh · f SECURITY GUARDS 11~:2 Be h Blvcl 892 3314 r 1· = · 7 · mdst. mechun1c. o r our 1 1;-ul! .~a.t('I' trnu1in,i.:• jll\1•;:-rarn L<•.~una Beach re~ort. n.Ef'RIGERATOR, c I e a n, '!' ac · -. ·" •-.-nitl.1/r\••·~ 6 :Hsos. '''.,k, •r ''l'JJ 1•. ~··nd I•• i.1k1'< ."·, ,,.,,.,,_, .i·~1n1·h. I "1' I 1•1· t .. rt 5 11 Dn1"ly 1"9 o•IS"n 'Ill" •• I 1 1111._ t1•r1u t1~~1gn1 1 \'ll ~1 " ,•t•l·I 1,--•orl>~. No au!o, dt•frosr,. yrs. o c. ,,. ""' ·.. u '''AY.._. _ 1-,· 1,,1,1,0 0 t~. 2 -Alf(,, Hi'O<lk". 1h,. 11,,11.Y !"t;\·t:~i'\-.1.-1 ,'T: c:t:N'J'~ S · D 1 Th -no ro~t. l\ an11i::c1nent (lJ!· "" ,-"" J ""' • .,... J, .. I r ervrc e ep · C man j'ICJl'!IJnitrrs, i\~k rnr J.frs, 111· 11:11 I 111'1('. So, Or<ing<' h'flning. Also ncc<l par! * !!93-!)(]6(1 * JIA1\f~10ND ·Piper A u Io man \\/,fl1!. S::iXI lnvcs,cd. 1'lLOT. HI\ \1'1•d •·•·1·;1 1 hw ~·a!·h paltrrn • ttdd 2:i t!N l FOR :\I S " • 11 (" 1 we are lookinn for mu st ! .Jnn<'s ror information nl C11-:iri·;'l. · ' · ·r1n1r maid. 49-1-1196 flEf'ltlGEflATOR. v e r)' Cl10t"f.I. 1 )Told, $!XXI or bt'st &-11 rllr :1~. :;11--0i5-1. l.><·1)1., /{(,, lh,, () • .t11· "'•t """1~ hir l'ach p:incrn for '1 ? ~ Fl'l~~JSl!ED. 1'~ for over· 21 s1atio11. ~1·11. ,·,irk. ,\ Y ,\ 1 :'11:111 nnd ~pccial ll:1ndl-be top• 'in hi"• li"ef d. B•<t 1 81-5.-~ 1. 1 1 \\"0:'11E N. Earn xtra nlOney. clean, inside & out. $60. 7130 ofr. 586-2& · · Boats/Marine ~ ~ ""' T b JI R I 111111", \,h' f>;Ly, 10nu~ p nn. II' I A W ~ 10011. 1'1'1nt '.\il!Hl', 1\d,lro•,,, Ill\.'.. olhcl"l\\SC 1t111'd-C'!ass d I ar e ea tors ",-J>hnrll' Ylllt'ltlng from your C'~m ns!cr Vt'. c .... m. Glt1\ND P iano; Ebony Equ'1p. 904 k. ·1· t FtT•• i.:rnL•p hfC' Ill.'!. l .~ 1'5 z 111. 1•1u11·rn :\111111 .. ·r. ,i,.1,1('1> 11,11 t.1k". thrC'e 1wor 1ng con 1 ions, op horn«'. 2 hrs pcr(!\o-es. Sa.lnry Garage Salo Ill finish: F ine condition: $:100.1.::::-"=.-'""'-------I ----•ll uh!"r Rtt~ 1 6 2·· T .,..1·:El)i_..~:C l'.A~·r ·;~· Cm-111«•k" or rnorc. &-nd lo pa All Co benefi ~~ R eception•:c.t Apply & connn. 545-iuw a I pn1. 1199-lGli. .i Mjnn 1·.,bin c:ruii;icr ln'I· (h•I. knH. {'Ir·, Vrr 1 d•r1·1 ~[.,1·1.111 ;\lnr11n. 1111• DAILY Y· · ' Telephone Operator \J)"r-~h·rlinJ.! \\'ORl\ll"G f\lanagcr-Couple. GARAGE & furniture sale, SML. 1-lardman Spincl S300. m1u11ltllt' f<ind llinn. Teak 11 .. 11~. ~· 1'11.AYr. 11!, 1':1\lcrn Orpt.. Seo Art Vaught, ,l'ulv l)pli.11~. Ila• .. rn.1.1,if:ic· S•<·iir1ty ~rvici' 52 Unils . C.l\f. Profit shar-July 1-2·3. Solid maple ~ cond. 1ll·rk111~. Valuf' SSJOO 11ill B.1-.. JC', Jilnry l\oo1.~. pd.:;-.~.\\• 1 .1:-.ih Sl , ~t'I\ BAUER BUICK 1111't'rs _or-...._ f:isc1n:1!1n_•1~Zf;S 111110n~1..Anahrinl tni: &. salary t apt. COl:'ktail tbl .. GE freezt'r , 979-447~ IJkt' $6000. t\tust ~C"J l . 1 11~1:1111 'lurrarur "'"'L, \1•r11. ~·'· ll'Wl!l, T'r1ni I. 1 t ) 1 -&14·6622. • \\·hlte f\\·in bed set, 10fas. "";;;';;;1 _61~21 ~ N-4, A~ for Jl'rry. k j 1 1 1 111 11 1 1 r 1 £ 1 ~. -.SECURITY-GUARDS tam,,.. m;,.,, ite-TM. 10132 Se_w_in .. u_.. ... hin•• -Gal -1----'~ lilllcy ·not~. J1'"1 • !<i \'lt. • .\llD.liL \I th ....... O-t;-y-..o-P-'f'-f('\l,.I\''. ( r XL~T ()ppnr.~ COncern ._..uu. X'OR\\~0' f1hCrgln!'ls lflrn"-l l •~1. 7 11'. Sl7.t; :ind f\l"\'Lt: 292 5 H arbor Blvd. h11 :tt"d 1n lr1 1nr livtu111r1fll j UlnA' trrin a~.~ignnicnl or l~as openings for route Cynthia Dr., Huntington SINGER Gol1Je n Touch & d1nJChy, 31~ hp motor. 08l'll, t:a-..v ,\rl .. r 11111r11lo c ro J\I 11111;1:. C••r·~!'!r'I: ha~ :in l!\Ull"•linie j full or parf '1 n1I'. So. Orange salesmen in C~i. 9f32.-0.tlG. Bch., So. o( Acla~ll, East of Sew port. Sf'l'l'i'ng machine, l'lc. AIJ()OI 2j hr! on all. rhrl . nit•r ~ llP'>ll:!l" 1•1 ~r r: )fQRE Sr r In J: Phone 979·2500 1,.q 11 ,1~·rnf'nl for 3 Ht..,.rp-Cll. a1·,·:1. t i NI F 0 R ~I S Brookhurst, 962-5Ji9. rarrying ca..'if', nllachment~. S\2.i, S'.I0-~21. k •100 ' I••<> 1>rl c'-·c 01• !1JRNISllEO. 11, for -0vcr· Sal o-lt " -:-:c::-;.-------,=f 111:• " -> • • r .i• s :J '~"1·' "' MILLING 1111n1<t ·r,•h·phottf' OJ)l'l'.1!nr. . • : 9UALITY GIANT GfU'age e -.,... ing like new, be1t -0fter m.·cr Bo.ti, Power l11,l:1nl ('TtN"lw>I Rno1k -I P 11'1·1 11 fl"C'" fn1m IK'\\ ThP pt·r~!'ln 11.i•li·i•!fld ror H~e IJ~1e. F rt'f'. J..'l'Ollp life Ins. evcrylhing, piano, Wll!!hln~ $100. 549-2612. 906 LA ·arn hy P1t·tu1"P~~ P.l't· Spi n:'.·~umiru•r Cal;do;:, All MACHINIST rn•lf11u1 11111 )1;1nrJI,., a bu.;~ Slt'rhni: Secur ity Scrvi<'c ASSURANCE m 11. c h i n l', d r Y tr, G '72 I<:ntrrpr~. rm JIP Volvo, 11 n1~. 'ii <11 ·1 Fl7••' nnlv :ilc. !~'f'l'J111Pllisl cit.;.k 11!th hl':t\'Y 1326 S'...l..1·1'11011 St., An<1h<'itn refrigl'rator. camper !iihell , Sporting oods 130 6 r yl. Chry. Ouldrivr. 40 f 1M11i•h·t1· 111 .. 1n11t <:iu H"llk l ~ST.\\'f Sf..'\\llr\G r-001,; I Top Pay• No Fee 11 ,1,11;,1111" rPi<ponsi bililil'I!. I ~El'.VTCE s 1111ion S11lf'~n1Pn ENGINEER r adhd arm Sf!\\'. '61 Corvair SCUBA Ctar, compl. oolfit ~JPll, g,.111" 12. (Ml Jlay ,t. -n1nl"(' !hin !~){) J:•tr' -1 ~1 ·1' lotlt1~'. l\l'l.lr toniom'.lii-. :'llit\I J1avr 6 rM'• rxptr 0" t\p1n~ :-;kills niu~t f)(' I''« 11\ f /t11nf' flay ,J!: '1\'i' plck·up, lots of misc . 72 tank, rti::·Scnvltw hk . Ocv-nn hri:i!. lr"idt'I with ~\.!•1 ~1 Br111i:1·riorl :'1111llng :-Olnchiiw• 1.1 lli·in .. il'-0 11 J:oorl u11. shl fl ~. :\!in 2 yr:c. f/l1r11r f'X· S••rkin~ person with l't'CCnl 64.")..3738. pk. v,·('t suit t'IC. SI.JO. rriu1r1. $4;J()'), A ny 11 m", c ·,.11,1,11,11· A111:hn11 H·~•k -z:-:sr,\NT F' A S 11 t 0 N \\(' 11 UI hf' open ~lon. J ul:r I (]c·r~LtrHhni.: ol grn«'rtif or-prr. n ·!f•I. l)~:n1-e rop 1ru11lity assurance f'.!nginter-N•ighborhood Sile ~5.ni. 6/""Z79. ~].(~I. 000!\ J[u)idrcUs ()f J, I '•t'e :ind husinc·ss pr::iclito.'$. s:ill'llrllt\ll. I.Ill• !l\l'rh:i.n. Ill~ b1u·ki:1nunrl ttml hns .. . ~I I A r ·~;-;-,,;--c,..-~-,..--1 lffJll l.•· ''"' lloflok, -~iii. fMhi11n farts. $1. p,p,S, N' 1 I r 1 11-1 'th ·rt ..., rurn1tur1', on(o, n iqut<1, TV Radio, HIFI, . ~· ~·il'IC'!"LIO.'fll hutTlcnnc kno'>'h·dwc. i i"l n appelt. · ;un l.llrl Y wi mi 1 "·J s k mlsc Silt lhN ' 36 inbonrd-nuthcl, 15:i l!P, V6. "'"1k "' 12 l'rlr;r A l1tlin11~. QUICK CACH Af'fll.\" AT ApillY 111orntn~11. 2590 ~prciflc11tione A lmowlMite \ lert'O · 8 Stereo · · I ,_,.,_ ~ Pacific · . ht-·" Ji T~s. 3196 FoxtWI Dr .. H. • t:Abln, hra1I, n.11 In xlnt '""'·· Personnel Service's POLY OPTICS, I NC. f'•·"·pnrl Ill., C.'.\t. 01 Pt'l'C1.'l10n m:i.c 111-"1 part : Surfside Condo. cor LEAR Jet slc:rt0 S portable 11hapt>. S.1.IXXI. 6 4 2-7 g 6 5: f}ull l Bl'k1k I -IG 11u111·rn~. THROUGH A 11J No. To\\·rr JSJJ F,. CATL\'IECF: ;\VE. Plrniw !Rlbmll rstUmt In I BcachJAUanta bchlnd VON! tape-plnytr, 80\id state. $7-76.'IO. r•• DAIL y PILOT \;n~n n .. k """'"' ""TA ANA • TIME FOR cl""1"' ""l'Y requlr<n!Cnl M rl< I Model PS19. Plog lntof;;;.:;;-. r:::=-:-:c...,--,::-~·U'll"Unl Quill 8{Pl1k t -to Cla!<.~1fled aci no. 437 c/o I\ ie • lta tt l\fth 6 0 21 x8 Cru1.0n-l!Oft lop, Chrys Sl)i-. WANT AD Orni¥tt". Calif. 11•5 4 hTTf'l('.,. ~('u ~'Qur • DAILY PILOT On.Uy Pilot. P .O. Box 1560, ANTIQUES, .'~i:'iturt, net1.• ~:1t1;:it':. 11~rryo~=11PaHJ crown 6. fllarlln-chr. ball QuUI" f11r Tnday'!f IJ ,·Jni -642•5678 547-6446 Cos!:. Mrsa. Calil. 92626. candle11, Al1il1cial tlO\\'fl'S. Sl5 _ &el1 S20 S42--I7J.i ~\'l'll lftttk, pump 1>tt'. $1500. or W l.M•autUul l"IDUttnA. 50c. A~k for ~chf:ol ~lay l!rn>s •i th .._.,., u.or.c O:llly CLA SSIFIED ADS EquRI Oppor. Empl-0)'t'r hundred~ of misc Item.. Sat ~ kend-!t • lndr fnr tfw:11p car+ ca.sh. •••••••••••••••••••• Like to trade~ Our Tra~r·-I Paradise column I~ tor yoo! :. hn•..,1. :iAny11 for :; ln1rk•.!- only, 102-11 JIAlawa Dr, 11.B. "'tt • 67J..7:(W). CALL 642-56 78 St'll Idle itenayznow! Call ('\'orktown " Brookhurstl. l\ttd a ''Pad'(T rfact a.n •d! WhiiCEltph.\\111 Dlmt-A·Untt &el-$i3 now! ~-1260. Oill 6G.!1117!. 1 ' . ________ 1 ' 8 9' d; "' 17' "' • 13' m &1 B 0 \1 P. 64 B 17'' tc Sc Ir ca cc "' SH 16' "" co f\1 Dsl co Pr SAi Fi ,. ~ co (;. Xl K " sx II' la 83.; BA av Ll co W/ oil 5 12' Oa '38 K sa· 67 Bo 1 ' SLI or NE "" Ca 3/4 Ao 0, db w/ d i! Ha " ''" • or '62 M al 83 ~o JS 12 * • • \ ·• DAILY PILOT 25 ..... -_ ... _t:-.._ ... _._,J~ I T.......,.wJoo . l!iJ [ I~ I I§] ==' _.":_. ,,. .. _,. ;;m;.;l ~~~ I I .,.,, ... .-:] ~ ' 1--:,. .. '" "'' J E j 1'.__A>rtco_ .. _ ... _,J §] I.__ .. _ ...... _ .... _,]§] m- -... s. Autoo W,anted Boats, Power Cycl11, Blktt, Scooteri · Traller1, Travel 925 945 Autci•, lmported 970 Autos, lmportld. 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UMd ---------990 CONTINENTAL. 18' 1-'JSHING BOAT. 40 !IP mtr, trlr. $800 oi-best offer. 5otS-f.685. '70 Skipjack 21, like nev.•, pr1\'al1• party. Xtras. 963-l(}lj, 52:MJ2.62 9' """'"" """'" type dinghy, $295. ~ HP EvinrurJe nev.', $~5. 645-0004 eve!. 17' Deep V, Clas:ii boat. 1 lj hp Evinrudt>. Still under \\'arr. s1r:i0. !i-1~731. ·n Ossa Pioneer 250 <:c JCXX) ML Cd. cood. S6i5. 548-6417 alt 4 pn1. ~7-Trlumph 650- Exti'ndt•d f11lnt ('nd. New bat· tt•ry, Urt·s. Exrellent cond. $900. 642-0433 after 7 pm & W('(!kends. e ARISTOCRATS e NE\\'PORTS e AUT0-:'111\TES Also, ~Vl!rnl llsc>d $39:i &. up WORSHA1t TRAILER S.\LES 2709 \V. 17th f'lrr('t Santa Ana iT141 fi31·2595 '69 ?\1li\1HOD Cap1•1, i.!t·l•ps I. 3 bur11r1· but11nc :-toil' \\'/sink. used on c L' ! 545-56m. Auto Service. Parts 949 \\1U. Buy your cor paid for or not. C:ill P..llph Gordon 6'rJ..0900 -4-15 E. Coast Jh'1'· N(•WJ)Ort Beach. .~~.,,-\\ E l'.\ \' TOP DQU..AR t'OJ~ TOP tiSED CARS If :,.our cur i¥ eAU'a clc;,in, .st·c us f1r~t. B,\UEB. BUICK 21J2:> l-la.rbor Blvd. (Qs!a l\h'Sa 979·2:i00 DATSUN '71 DATSUN PICKUP W/Gem Top Camper ·I ~pd. H.1d1n. 11. .. 1:.-r. !,11\\ LOI\ ~lll1•a)t•·. C'.:~JCl'l!/, $2095 MERCEDES BENZ Orange Co.unty's Largest Selection New & Used Mercedes Benz Jim Slemons .Imps. Warner & Main St. I Sa fa An . S 6-4114 · 1 TOYOTA " '72 l OYOT A COROLLA $1966 1 I T ,I,; I $39.30 MO. VOLKSWAGEN (\is!Oll\ \'\\', \l'ty e!C'an ninny l'-.:tras '66 Cont inental Cpe. ~ 63:>-1125 * ln1n1<H"o!utt-, Loaded. 1>1ust ---;c;-:;::-;-;-;~---·I :-;:1·11. tllr. S97-02'.!I. VOLVO • ·~1 <«•nt1n1•11ta 1. 4 or. full 1972 VOLVO r"T. "" "'"'· xlot '"""'· S!J~. 6-14-874R. Lease Today at Best Rates ~~--DODGE Fl '1.1. I .l•il j•I' rs~ r•~. 11, $88.74 Per Mo. '66 WAGON 13' OUTI30ARO v.•/lJ horse n1oto1· & lrniler. Complctl'. &lj....17111 nftt't 6 pm. 9Ck't•, T'VIN ~J. Suzuki 5- fipcl. dual carb, Uke new !X)(I miles 70+ mph. $300. Call &~.~·1996 Altt>r 5 pn1, 'it Suzuki TS-185 & Good helrner. $·175. \\!arr still .l:'OOCI. Real gd 1.J l k c ! 6-1:>-l:is.s. TIRE CI TY TirPS·\\ /lC'C'ls·Tirrs· \\'ht llq 4th .July Supt<r D<'n!~. Guvd- )'l'l\r l'olyglus.~ & I 'ii!) ~t('rl Blctns. Jl1 Jacker~ S:JI JI.I pr., Sprint type m&J:-" 14\7 $19.SO, 11x5111 $15.80, i:i,111~ S2S.RO, 15x10 S34.~0. F'6th:1:i . $2s.sn. ,\f.iOxl~. S':!1 ~11. 111'" 14 Polysh•l'I -$:!.! \0, J.:7n.l-'7U· G70-1170 15" or 11" 1~r S~·I :-O'I New car takf' 011". l'M d Radial~ 235xl5 S2::.'.l(I. Clo~•·d Sun., .~Ion .. Tu1• J.\l1.>Ql!'l'S .,\\'ANTED Orange Coll.tl ties TOP ; BUYER BILL i\11\.\'.E Y TO'fOTA 188.31 Beach Blvd. COAST IMPORTS 11t>.1 \I\: !\HPCF l'. I '' I ~ 1 1 illd•!I f I\ ,\. I' l \'' I 1 1 , 1 11..,, I ~ ·.11 n , 0 A.C •• 'c\l ·r ;\l .• \.1111. trans .. 1hs.: hr:i.k1''· :-:r. r"i.1 ,J.,ilur·· \ I >I It 1,,f IH•"tlf1J\ For Leaiing or buying [l.wh.:t .\[l)naco. 9 JJllYCl'U[t'r, \1ih1n111!11". hh·lory air condl· !J.,H•Ltlh, !l(Jlll'r Slef'l'tng, Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 0\VENS cabin c r u 1;;;: Roomy & clean. Sleeps 6. Radk'l, live bait ta n k , 642--081JO!. ·-------Boats, Sail 909 11' FI B .I:.: H. G LA SS ccn- terboarrl 5lonp \11/British St>a Gull O/ll ·11101ur & trailer. SidnC'y Loa 17, .!ltnalJ <.'8bin !llt•C'p:s 2 udults. Xlnt cone!. J{cady to 1511.il. $1600. !JCi2-7f>l4 clay or CVC'. Pvt. pty, SJIEAlt\Vi\'rEJl i·atanwran- 16'-2 fr l' I Ion~. 7'6" l.ier11n, 235 sq fl sail, in J.:ood cond. Incl. trailt'r. $::il0. l\1ust sL1~ bought lal'ger boat. S.IS-13.jG. MARINER3-r- Dsl. Ketch. 10 n1o's old, nc11• rond. Loaded. $2'1,000 J1rm. Prine, only. 642-8002. SAILBOAT 12' IFIN'ly Cluss) }o'iberglass over 110()(1. New sail. Imn1ac. 1·oncr. $190.00. 636-2388. COLUl\1B l1\ 22. Spinnaker. Genny, Jih, E\ inruc!e 6 h.p. Xlnl ronrf. 011 nrr &U--069-1. KITE -Good condilion, nc11.• sail, dolly & full covers. $530. 673-4 33.i. 11' l\lonlj,>omcry D in g h y, lnpstrakc hull, $3:0. Call 838-1-118. lt' (3t. 17U sq rt sail. Sl.i:il. * 673-36().1 * LIDO 1'1 \VITI I TRAIL.ER & cover. $850. * 673-6826 * ----CORONAOO 1a-r-:n. y.1/trailrr, J:O!XI rond, offE'r. 644-260::. LIDO 14, :, 4 7 ' best 5 ,.E,\HS ULI), r,-;:,.;,502 l:!' Sloop. l;!:1.~s •J\'Pr v.ood. I Dacron sails. S3E. incl trlr. 33S L St, Balboa Penn. KITF. No. 3..1!l, hull, rigging & sail in good cond. Call 675--0159. 19n YA.\fAllA 125 ~DC ~\v miles and ready to racl'. Clean $500. A.;;k fnr John, 642-1742 VE.f..OCETTB Thruxton, 1967 vintage, beller lhnn new in· side and out, S1095, Rudi Niedzielski, !iJ6....IY!J. l9i0 ~londa ".l:JO" strcf't bike. \\'ill lrt1de for dirt bike or dune hugt,'Y o! eqllal \'aluc 5'14-3'117. 2 l\tini Uikes, needs minor rcp:iirs \\Ill trade both for 2 good 10 Sf)C'('d l.rir•y, ·lt·s or sell fot· SJ 10. ~li6--0!l%. i96S r ord-r .100. 300-c-u-.-;,-, -. G r:,.l., sliek shift $1250. 8!12--0524. -·.==~~--BU ~!PER RACKS for l\·lotorry<'le $10 Ask for John, S.12-1742 LEATJ·IERS Moto X \\1ru~t $2.11, i€'tl~th 28. $45. A~k.for John, f.42-1742. JIEL~ET &II SuJ)('r Magnum S30 Ask for John, ~2-li-12 "iO SUZUKJ 90ce. 4,000 mi. Xlnt oond. $250. 536-9606 alt '· Almost new l:londa 750, 5500 mi., all the ('Xlras. Consider C'ar on tradl'. 549-170.I. 930 1 i\lan Golf t·art, 2 bags. Unused. Comp \~·-charger. $350. 644-1141 Mobile Home1 935 FOR Sale, 1 BR 8x35, corner lot, Sp rent S46.15. 327 \\'. \Vilson, No. 29. CM. Motor Homes 940 ~--------~ "DI LL \\"lllTLIDCES" SUNSET MOTORS. OR;\NGF. COUNTY LOCATION ELDORADO i'.llni MOTOR HOME $6448 Boats, Slips/Docks 910 FULLY SELF CONTATNED 17' Schi:i.d.i. SI\ \1•lth 110 &: IT'S IlllAND NE\V! Mere OB. Cnnvnl'i C'O\'<.'r, Ser. #213207 Sharp! sn50. !162-JS~l I Phone 645-66n "' 1970 Harbor Blvd. SLIP Avail:1hlc for u,.c sailboat to 3.i'. Bob 5:.i7-9-l!).I or 673--526$. LIDO 14 l'-00. ZZ17 \Vith. lrlr and CO\"M'. Good rondition G-\G.97:.0 NEED pla<'f' to moor or ~ach small 1:1' ~kiH in Ne .. ;-.ort Harbor. :'ii7-l."~t ~'_' ___ .. _; .. ~ll•l Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 3/4 Ttangcr pick-up "'/air- Auto. :t spcf'tl trans. 11•/~' overhrild t·anlJX'I' "'/hoat- dbl. sink. :: burner stove, \\'/see 1hru oven. Good con- dition 646-4'.129 11 ftl'r 4 pm. I -'-='-~-~---For Import Trucks 1-la\'aSU ,!\: K1ng-O-The·Rood rabovers. Ne\\' & Used aluminum & fiberglass shells. ~lesa Can1pcr Sale.It 2036 Harbor, C~1 646-4002 ·54 r·ono -P.U. v.·ith overhead camper & icebox. Good runnins: condition. Best off!'r. Call Jim 642-9186 or 64;1-70i7. '62 Chev 1 Ton Step Van. hfotor h o 1n e conv~on almost finished. $ 1 2 5 0, 831H3?i6. '70 V\V POP-UP CAMPER, 15,000 mi, f•xcc>llent cond .. S'2.R50. '1~2217. Costa Mesa O~N ROAD 110 R l!OMES 8081 G n Grove Blvd. Garden Grove 894-4479 '71 UTELINER J\IOTOR- 1101\1E , •• 28', i;!reps 8, Dual roof, air condition· ini::-. 5000 1v aft power plant. , .. roon1 divider ... .\Oo'atcr purifirr. , •. roof rack and ladder .... LQ,\I).. ED. ALL BXTRAS! 11·11F.1Cl REDUCED!! BEACH CITY DODGE 65.10 Beach Boull'vard Huntington Beach (TI4l 51(}...2fiti0 *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 14U S. Village Way, S.A. 1970 Explorer 25' slccys ti. 2 Motor Hom• Rentals Available for daily, weekly or monthly basls."21', 23', ILnd 25' self contained r.Io- 101• l·lomcs, all e<JUi Pt \vilh 1950 Nr\1•110r! 1111·1!, ('.:\!. li45-3fl54. 12:;.;5 l·:. Cnr¥Jn, ll awallnn Garden s 213-BG0-0.1•15. NEW 327 Ch<'V) 1•111-:. bo1·rrl ~· 1 slrokrd to ::SS", HL·~t «quip, O\'f'I' $1fl()O, lll\'l'S1, :O.tll'. $11~). &J&-4~).f\ l'\'I'. V\\' c11:: rl•hl t. 1·\rh. lJIS1., .i. ~ar. Sri:-. up V iner Au1omo!lv" 1:16(j •·f\" Log-a11, C.:\t. 54i)..()177. Autos !Of 5.111 l§l Trucks 962 * NE\\' G~IC Jimn1y, ·1 \\·hi. drivf'. 12,000 n1i. $4,500 519-3612: 536-95'12. '66 GMC TRUCK Radio, hcat('r, l #V~l:!~JJ. $775. dlr. 836·653J. '70 Dodge l/4 Ton V-8. Auto Tr;ins, \\'1\h S('rvire Body, Mllst S!'ll, dlt· ~!Ji-0'..l:?·I '63 Chevy l/4 Ton In1n1acu!all', i:'.lu!>I Srll, filr 897-0224. II. Beach. P~. S-17·8555 I Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO _.......,,._-·-·-·· ---- '6 9 ALFA ROMEO ('po•. ;\\I ~11~. 1750 GTV ·' ·"'!~!. Lo I/• nulr<t)'.;r. F\1 R;;iclio, ,-.;1•1\ Rai.J1. \l.~\'1~7), MAKE OFFER COAST IMPORTS 1000·1:!1)'! \\'. Paeific Cs!. lh11•. !\'1•111101"t Bf'nc h 17141 6'12·0-106 5-16-4529 'li~ ~r•ydt·r. rue! 1nj. 5 Sf)l.l. u1n/[1n, s.:d i.:und. ~6.01.10 1ni'". P\ t pl)". Sl~'!l.l. !Ja~ ~ ~Ji-:1170, rxt 3'.?,, \\ knds & J·:vt·s, 4fl l-77G:1. I -Alfa Romeo '72~ 2000 NOW IN STOCK For Immediate Delivery Instant Credit BANK FINANCING COAST 1000-1200 \\'.Pa, 1flt· Cs! lh1,\, t'c11·port l.l1'U.t•l1 17111 W:!-0400 ~Hti. l"i:l'! .,68 DATS UN PICKUP_ I MG A '.)'.!\!GA C"n1111 The ~d\Pr hulli '\-$100 tli."l-1:.'4 OPEL '.\tod"> .1 l1!ll1 fl\•'n·, !!!11 -------"'.".:-:-- nHIC" '"" I""''''' '"" "" '70 OPEL 1900 h:u11tyn1:1n (2! lf;:.ic·1. $>:!!:1. Barwick Datsun RALL YE KADETTE !¥IS :'11. (.'1).ls1 !111), l.:1i.:un.1 B1•;1<'h • '.>I!). \11,il 1'11 •17;1 .\li'«h;,1111, IJi l,~hi -11 r Pal 11 .... ''\·!"' llj\pl,. !'~;; 1~.1 f,t1 11 \\'.1;..:u11. S".:!."i. ('all .. is-,\lifl Hfil•L 7 J' \1, I '71 DATSUN 240Z 4 Srx1. Air r on1I. :\1.1 ~~, s1111 r \\1!h l:ll:it·k 1nlt·rinr·. J:\,OIM! actual mil('s, l't rft« I in l'\'CI':-' 11::1;-,o 1<l'illn%X1. $44 95 Or Bes t Offer • COAST IMPORTS I lflOO·l~ \V. Pacifir· (,t. Jl\\'V. I !\1•1\rx.rt jlr:t1 ·l1 1714) tH 2·0400 r~11;.4~1:Z!l I 'fi7 IJalsun 1li00_. l l.irtl & ~ofl Jup. .\1111.:i-. lt:id1als. X!11t l·1.Jni!. $.~00. Ii ·1 2 -fi 0 I '.!. \11·1 li<IJ.1!!1. •:Z l'.J1 :..!1~-:.'i:i:.> \1 knd~. 11.R . rl";id1·nn'. ---- •1 ~pd, ]::1,11,1, 111 ·ir, !, ~'-(111 I Lllill·~, j;1:••l1 \1 '11! \' 1111• 1n1rr111r 1 .11:1:•1 1 ', $1695 COAST IMPORTS Htnll l".!ll(l \I'. 1'.1,·1fo,· 1·-i 11 1\ \,1•11po1·t B···" :, 17111 i;1.:o:··· 1,; 1,'.!'.I -~--\Jl)\'[~l;, n~U~I .~l·ll 'f'i It•• I Ml hp f!pt•l ill-I>: t'flt.', 1-·~·I l'Ulld Sli:il fi1 '' 1''11 .-. --'(),>: Opel l\ad\'11 ~1ar1un \\,1g. Xln1 C'Olxill\1•11, $ 9 0 0. lii3--0133. J{olilt. PEUGEOT . * PEUGEOT * As lo\v as $2,299. (;.i('I. 5:)45) F'RIT": \\'An.RE~'S Sport Car Cen~er e ORAXGE COUNTY'::i LARGEST '70 t'OHD Jtanclu•n1 :JOI. Like nc1v -ninny cxtt'a!!i. I IMPORTS 'il IJAl'SUN 1:!00 f~thk. l'l!\d, r,u!i", \ 111,\ ! 1~1,r , 710 F.. l~t !"!., S.A. :.-17--0761 '· ----$2600. 4~1-fi301 '69 FORD EMno Van. li 1) I, 170 C.l. 3 ~pd. P:1rl1al p..'\nll. Sl.300. fJ36-'J606 :ilt :i. '61 Chevy truck, 11 ~ 11111. Stake bo<ly, 12' slrel lH.·d. ~8-10:.l ;>.lr :'\t•ufirld '57 Ford 112 Ton . Pick11p lmmaculatt'. l\lu!!it Si·ll. tlJ1· 897-0224. 1962 r~ono dump 1n1t·k. 1375., slill lo!s or USC' lrft. Also 1952 J)o<!~1· cltunp truck, $4j{). See I h 1· ~ 1• trucks, niakf' offer. lll'.!-:,1i;;.:, 19':it C.111-:VY P icku11 $250. Good ronrt Call ('\'t"s G lfi-:!':.l(i2 I 1000·1200 \V. Pacific Cst. lil\-y. I :-!C'1\JX1rl ~ach (il I) &!2·0~06 Alfa Romeo ~ ~ ~ \ I '¢t<ANO~ NO\V ON DISPLAY Sales Service 1·I'arts Body Shop I COAST IMPORTS I 1000·1200 \V. Coast I ii\')'. ?\'('\\'f!Ort Beach 00·0406 BMW V-1s1t our n{'11/ home! ' r11nld1ni.:. IHt'h, I I('. 11.000 1- Ill\ 111'1' nl!!!'~ i\l1nt (~)lid, S Hi.!~1. .i~G-!l'.:i'(. --------'69 DATSUN SIO STATION \\'AGON l1n1nat·ul:1t r, \'Pl ';;7~. $1295 SANTA ANA TOYOTA I !'><'I'\ I(•(' Dr Ill OPI n 7 .:II arn I 11 'I j111l .\!•JU-Fri. .">IO-r1?12 ~17 \\'. \\'arncr. ~la 'Ana FERRARI '66 FERRARI I 330GT COUP.E ' ::; $pd, ,\lag-\\'ht•t·ls. ~h(l\\. room .fl'f'Sh. ::u.uoo <1elur1I I nulcs, 1 SA vo::~ '· MAKE OFFER PORSCHE • 14!il \111 l"•t-..:hi· . U> tlll. ::-..1111 ' or•· I. I '1"1 Olfl·l'. 1;7:~--1i.'i:l\i, t.~ >-~ . .:. I ' ·----.. -.1 '· l'ur ... , ... '•\1. \\1/V\\ ~tt>n"J, t11 .1 0•1I ~:l:i~~. ii hhtt• s 11llO. 4!11--1)1(., . RENAULT Renault Demo Sale Semi Annual Demonstra tor Clearance Sale This Weekend Unbeatable Prices ALL 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL I 'COAST BANK FINANCING Auto Leasing 964 ROY CARVER, Inc. co ST ILEASING] Costa '~'~'E. nu. si5,.~"''' IMPORTS A . ~~ _1:~rae;1:;~ s!~~ --i~rL~~~~TYE 10C1J.1200 \\'. Pnc1fic Cs1. 11\\·y.1 IMPORTS vice, 0 i'\cwport Bcuch (714) 642-0 lOG 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cst. lhi·y. 'i~2L~~~;~~ ~~~£~~ .• " ~Fl·A4529T. N('\vpo rt B('.:ich t714 J t.i42-041JG TNE RATES. trr.... fl Renault Sales & Service Call ilTaJcolm Reid tor ~--· --····-·-for o\'cr a 1!ccadc in Orange '"""" ,,.,;,,, SEE us AfJUUT '71 FIAT 124 co,,oly THEODORE Overseas Delivery ~f't'\'. rkpt. 01w.·n ti! 8 p.111. ROBINS FORD CREVIER MOTORS Mooday 2060 !!arbor Blvd. 2•J8 \\I. 1"t St .. ~anta Ana ROADSTER I .f lrn SIC'ntons RC'n(lu!t Costa r.tesa 612-0010 I 835-3171 220l So. r.rain. Santa Ana W "';i 968 • · I I I II I 1 !Jlk. north of \~':i.rnC'r Autos anfe"I CAPRI J 1-'!'M. !;u 10. i·.1t··1·. ...i-11., S<>rvicc Department ~16-411<1 •------------l.n11 ~.ld<·:1r•t·, !2'-~ChZI. 1----------Sales [)('partmPnt 5:17-52 12 REWARD I '71 CAPRI $2545 •\ !'\11'!, i\,r ('u11dilwm1ng, COAST SAAB BRANo-c:N=Ew,........ WILL PAY OVER Kelley Blue Book For late model, clean, low mileage domes· tics, Imports, trucks or campers. C11.U nntl n~k f<)r 13oyer DAYE ROSS PONTIAC J{acho, ~l.1:..::-. 1.:•quv1,. $ 2150 I IMPORTS COAST ,Jfl00.J200\\.Pnrd l!'r '~( lh\'V. t Nt·v. port H1•.1c-h ( 7111 Gl2·0 llXl IMPORTS '46,,..,,,, I 'fi'.I Fiat Kil Coupt' I" tnilc. rh'I\ l lrl'~. H/11 f't r·, JIH111.12on \\'. P:ie1fil' r~t lh1y. 1 1,n/r11y. ~j(j~l:).QJI ufl ~, .. :-J1·wpor1 Bi•a1'li (7141 612·(}1(.(j 5-IG-'152!1 CITROEN MAZDA 1972 SAAB 99E $99. over Dealers ·Cost * '66 V\\' Con1per. Itcbui!t engine. 67!Hi9i0 or 4!).1--4818 After 6. 1tener..1tor, root air, :ind 2480 H•rbor Blvd. Citroen Sports Maserati Or:lllhC County headquarters for loca.l & European fl rli\"l"ry. ROTARY'S 1970 r·onD ~~ ton Camper SpeciA I 1ruck w / 11 ' can1per. 1;leeps 8. &1&-8608. YE Ohle school bu~/pnrtlal ramprr. Best o If c r . Cycles, Bikes, Scooters · 925 '·n Jlarley Davld1on 'Sfxlrtsltr. I.n.v ml. Must ¥11. $1700. 548-8009 nit. 5. 3)5 Honda Scrambler $299 or 1wnp for car. ~ccJ cond. 64M370 19'il HONDA ~ SL, mu11t sacrllice. Call ailer 6 pm. 11i:>-8.13'2. '11J' llondn SL !50. Call Sun- il/ty betv;een 6 &: 8 pm. ~1on. <fay !)(il"'l't!n 9 z.. 11 s.m. &1:>-0l;I. Pr1nl(I :\tolOl'cycl~ RePl'lr Srptt1allc!s on Engllsh It Jap11.nt!!C MC01. Competition work \\Clcomrd. Mof)o-Fr\, 6-1fr3.10.I. 488 Newpart Blvd., • N. B. PRIMO IVERKS. _, rnlllly olhcr extras. All Costa Mesa 546-8017 Coaches are 1972 models. \Ve ha\'e the all strcl Amigo al!O, Please rail 839·9560. \\'E buy nll makes of clran used sports can. )XI.id for or not. l'leasc dri\'C in for free 11.ppraiu.J. e NEW 23' & :is· luxury 1.f. }(.Air, loaded! Best rates pos-slble» Pvt pty~39"f;-- '72 WINNEBAGO 27', !!leeps J im Slemons mports 2201 ~. t.1:iin, Sant:i Ana !')j7$ll Open Sun. 6, air/cond. Delux. Reser.>e now. 833-8070. nir cond. 5 k\V gen, cxccl coOO, ne\\' tires. bralu.'M & ci>ls, exlra fuel k water Janlcs. $8,950. mt1 S. E. Bristol (PaJisodcs Rd. l S.A. 673-560!) or 515-0433. Rent A Motor Home for your V1c11tion * 839-4301 * Trall1r1. Travel TEN'l' TRAILER Sl11p1 7 Kitchen &: CAblll'la r~rame reblt to carry 3 motorcyclC'r $100 540.3894 \ 945 NEWPORT ,.~ IMPORTS ... 3100 W. Coo.st I h\'Y., NC9.'J)011 Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used cars • ll'Uckt, just can u, f~ frte t1t1m1ues. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask lot Salfa ~ht.nl!l.&tt l 1:1r11 T1ir1 .t; ~r1 Tori. 1 Spd. Ha(l1n, llr11r1·r. 41 ,!XKI ac\un.I n1ilcs, (\VTY584J $1395 nr l)l•fit offtr COAST IMPORTS SO USED MERC EDES ON DISPLAY NOW 1 Lease New Merced•~ $118.71 Monthly HOUSE OF IMPORT~ 1!211 Beach Blvd. JOCM).1200 \\'.Pacific C.1!'1. llwy, &'i62 i\fanchrstcr , J;urn.1 I ltuntineton Beaett t\l'"'porl B<oaC°h (TI4 J 11\2-0400 I m i250 011 Sant:t Ana ~ J 147-6087 KJ !l-3331 !,46-Gl!t Any day Is tf'l4" t\E~i U \ \ Scll lht old Brull Buy t~n<' .... ' Sdl k\U, 1tf'n1s no...., I Call,. run an ad! Don't drlay. 11tuff, I 64!-"fiiX ?\"'°'' call today 6~. BRAND NEW LA ND CRUISERS 111 Sl<wk. l.·11"•' ~· 1t•t·110n Immediate Delivery \ ,; •11 1.-. I • I !; . ,, 11 .. , r • . " ' . II > ,, 1 . " /11',llr·r. <RUCl.17J_ I " 11\\L l • '! , I 1\ ,\ I 01 •', I IOI~' plq, l1,1lh1o. U I~•) 1111·11{ nf ~,,_, ·r,11.11 1l\·r,·r··d 11.11· 1.,,., s:.::.;:, tolt. ,, P 1:. 11 1111 1\nft w l eLJti4 J '.1'"~' -illr .~:1r. fi:"~t_··---· t - WI' I "' l\:lr!j.;t' \ .111. llf'\\ flllltll, VOLVO ! ,,::;./JI'\\ I l'I''< $1 ~,9:,, • 1;1.; s ,,!l • p11· -;1rr.ini.;.-'1 •· i, il 1 l. 007, .. ; I r. 11 !l'llo.l(', c \I r v 'JI, ' • • l'°'I.;·· I 'h,1r;:1-,-,-.... -I \\ ·1 , uhtj(ul SI~.,. •11' lr:ul1• f(lr ' ' 111 · 1•1111i·11blc i.1n11il l' a r . • •I LD:.JO -~-....,., 990 1•t l]J(;L 1J:1t'I l'lti 7, ~Wt l ewi! • TO YOTA Aulos, u .. d I, \ .. ' 1•1;G !Lul•'I".~ \l BUIC K 11 I.\'\ J.;111..; !' I'' ~.T, lid H!lla!I\ jl .... ph, j.;'t"IOll l(Jn- t .. Jll, $7 ~1. .•. :.;..1ru.1 ---FIREBIRD SAT .. SUN .. SPECIAL '69 TOYOTA CORONA \\ IL, [,) 1 \:' I .' 1 ·d 1----------- \Jn t ,,'] ":.,'• l'r1't.I. 1'0:"\ll\\' 1:1;: 11 •" .• 11, I 11·1· I . l\1·All1\1, 1.1. .. k FllU·'.Bl/l O \ 10,1 l IP!}, 1 llM' d•'l"k, ,,, I Zhf. --• I i!\\l/F'\!1,1• ~ ' ' ~ '" lio'\\ t!t'<''. ;: -'I• $1099 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ~ I • 1 CADILLAC --:-::-:-c:--:c-~--Y OUR ONLY F\l"f01.)' 1'17'1 111;1~ \I l \11. h l 11 1 l'I'~. Sl'l.Al llr·n. f.7" : _\7;' ---FORD r.,., ••><h 81.,, AUTHORI ZE D '71 Ford Wagon Huntrnqton Beach 847-4!;~~ CADILLAC I \111<1111:11:., ' •11 . '' :: dtl\!1111!1 • I ' ' I •.t I !.J1; mQ1'. 11 u·s ••'-'I.I'" i,w ... "" '... · "\ \ 1_11.,·,~1 s1•!,•rt11>!1 ut \'.ld 1l· _-,-, --11 .. ~ l'I l l1,H1 '" (",!I\\\' ,1f<QH ll1.11 \\Ii.on. lo;Ld· motors -1!1»-l '··~111 • 1. .. ,,,. J,11·'. .. ,. ··d \l'/~11 I'. 1 • \\ lot1 'i .~ r.dl !•·• ·1· .u! .. •'\• l \' \\'o d 1Jr.1k1 ·~. ~ :1~l. 4.\1 0.!.~· Toyota & J aguar Dc:tll'r & Friday for our specials. ---- -A111horiz('d Sales & Scr\1iCI'.! , 'iO LTIJ. J~rou,1;hn111, ·:i dr., 900 s . Const lligh\\':ty ii:.,"-q__ Nabers !IT. fuel n lr. p/s, p/li. Jrn· L.-i g-una £C':t<'h • :.~n ".1111) ~..:r 111:1L· • lo 1nl. nt•\v tires. · ~J Cadillac l'1:?-n1sr TRIUMPH :!\,\\•\ 11,\l:l:l•f: 1\1., ('ti:;r,\ ~:l·.S,\ * TRIUMPH S * ""1n .!f1u11_ r11·•11 s11111!1.~· '71 CLOSEOUT ·1,1 I I It·. 'i'" •I• \ .11. :;iPJTl'l!~ESi\St.n \\ ,\-;'t'' ,1 _ ,\II \11,, l tlll'I' GT·6 SAVE $500 '1 ~1 _ _ __ ,,, ·:1 f fl ITZ \\',\l:!:t , ~ :·M .'I f';u 1,,\ 1• I ,,r, dr· \ ""' Sport Car Center l>·i!lwr "' '1'· "1' 1''' .iit ' 11'.t , l•t\\ 111.'o·;H·.•· S.11 nl1• •· ORA::-;CF. COl':., ry·~ \flp 1 1·ll .. 1.;(t-;~.-I L.\Rl;t:sr --- nor. 1~r. s "· CA MARO ·------'f)(,i 'l'ltl.\ ]]{..\ i'.',\• '•--,.,...e:-:-'.'-c:-----: (l\'e>rrlr1\r, 11/111· 1 • (',\l\l:ll ·i ' 1· .'.Ii \, " \' I l"i' '!-1 ll>I Sh.1rp. llnl~ Sll:tl/•1 I· '.>li--07()\. l'I I I l ,. ,7·~ ·---CHEVR OL£T 1-·. ----~-- ----1:'.,! ~'<!1'11 \',,11 J ;,, \'\.1·11! t•'I!<.\ .-.17 :-:11 .. '7:Z L1'l1 1:r1:11111 \1,11T. full )1\\r, 111111 .. ,,' ·rr 111~fr1l 11H1st M'll, h1••1 .. rf/ r r.11;..-:i.n.1. JEEPS '12 \V1l h, J,., p 4 11 hi. llrl\'C. f{<1l1 I .11 ~t ·11 • .i111 ;1~ !nri. '1'0111 1. •• r. ,\,i.+11i.: $.~~''· --IMPERIAL '70 Imperial Le Baron VOLKSWAG EN ! '70 NOVA SS 1!111na1·ulll1t' Con<lilkln, Sa('r1 --.-6-B_V_W __ B_U_G __ Cou~· ... 350 VS •. vinyl top, l1 c{', Mu11t Sell, dlr. s kl' 1 1 & 1 1 bro,1·n \v/b£'lge vinyl buckPt MA Y:ERICK ·par ini::: iv 11 " rf':'it Y 0 'srats. Automatic (floor shifl)l ---·--------~o. Radio, hea!t'r, 4 !<.twr·d. I ,, 1970 MAVERICK R • J·f $%1-<H11:-nh1, ar!nrv t:11ng1•s, • "' • · · ·1· 1w•11c·r rli"<' Lrk·~. 1•-:11·1·1or clean, lo n1ilos. Good tires. Barwick Datsun , 1irn1111'. ToJ> s 1r.\PF: ~1!l;, $1JSO. 536-7725. :JtJ)! Sr1. ('QIJ,<;1 Iii\)-'. Jl, 1"11' H•M1k \!11~! S•·ll~ \\ill l.:11:1111;1 Bc·n<'ll ,.::" q11l,·k <':ol! !'o'!l T21>:. MUSTANG ~'46-¥fit_14_94_.,_177 1 __ -'67 Chevell-e-Spt~ Cp-e-. '65 MUSTANG '65 VW BUG l~.ul11•. llt . .t••·. •111IPTJ1:1li., a tmmucul:il1\ S.11·t·11l1·1·, l\lo.i;I Sunr(lof. radio, h..-n!!'I', 4 s!lf'l'd. ~1111t"·r clean ~ (PCT - rr<d hcau!y. ::~JH:i;-Af'U. tllr, 897-021•1. OLDSMOBILE $1099 !.(111• Do11·n I J1\\' Trrrns ~\-,1 S:i95. Barwick Datsun !!!)>; So. Co:ist Ill\')', J~,:::un;i 13t·n1 h :,.ii;.10·11 /94!1·!li71 PllONF. li l~)-~>i!l'I -J9-10_T_O_l_l0_,-A-D0--<-:1_'._E_,,(;I 1'11RArLr. i\!i\ZllA l'Orul, full Jl\I ,. •~[lHp, \ l/J}·l 2145 llarbnr ni\·d. top. h ll' 1~uuJ, i\ \l/J.'\I Cflfo;ta r.1e,;1 !o!l{'rJ'O \' /l'l/Jt" 1l1•rk ~:l.49:>. ---.--~---l~1il Vf:(;A llalrhh;u·k -l·:x. Oil).~. ,",IO-~J.<,'.!'.!· •'\'f'"', ·~o V\V Sunroof, /\ \1/V::'l'f l't I Ct.lnfl. 4 spd. CU,\I. inti 642-:.20:? :-l•'11'n, Chronic \Vhf' f' J s, ''"'· nrafti-d , l\tu.~I ,,1•ll. H:uhali-. D<1al rr rt·lll! 1i1l'.. p.,.,~I offer. fi.1•l-277S. PLYMOUTH Take o/pymts. 'l'rad.-. for 1 Iran~ car. Eves. 6t{i-:,~~~1 . I 68 Impala '66 l'LY~lOUTll. 1 dr \t·rla n, --r I I ,. 'f' •1 1 nuto 1r;1n~. P ·"· It II , ra•1v ·1~; V\\' f'~uarcback \\':i:..-1111, mmu.t·u a r .. ..,11cr1 Jcl', " LLS "' .. 11 di ~i 0"" llr<'s & brakes. Vf'1y l'lcan. 1: (1 o rl co n d i r 1 n 11. ~1• r . .-.:i • _,.1. "'<i<il~~-.;:;;:;;[(;;;;;m;;~l .~ssoo~·~·c.:'."'~1~G~P~"~'~·~''~""'"°::'."·~'~·-'"u11u-11l':1h•r. 1'.;00<t 1ir!'s SS2:1 l!lGX Bel Air. f::xccl lJ':U1sr11Jt- 01. hi·~! ,,rft·r. !)li2·.1:-l'.!:l. tntino. 1971 Plymou1h Duster 6 cyl. 3 --'f,,J V\V 'l'ran:-.roru·r 1\/<1lun1 . !11!1-~20'l 1 ·:in1r~·r. ::-..1n1 Co11d. $7:11.1 ---.~7~0,-C'AP Rl-C~E~-- Sharp ·l dr. loa\lcr.I, S2Ei!1J. 71 I/\~ 1· a rn JI f' r p,,Jl... :i1G·7R!Jj !<1r1-J:-:1·l't <;ont.l. s:1l-'l~r1, or ~i l'i-l'tl~. ·i;s V\V 1.l11g l.n n1ilf'~ .. s1rrco 1-1i1·akt·rs. ~rir1 1; u~; 111. ·~11 \'\\, Sunr ~'>f, air t·orul .. r/h. 11·/\\', Sl:',00. 61t>--ll'217, •·:11! hf'!\\ 1 ,f., i l'\I ·~~.-, /1npala Corn;, Bill, 11/S. 1'011rr l••Jl, 11/11;111-. vi1od f'l)nd1t on S I~,,. 6l-l-1i00, E''· .-);iii, a•k r"r r<>llke or Cal. -.66 iiw:x1n·1 cond '66 Nova Wagon l;fi.",O _ _ till l~ii Ii 1'yli11dl'r. autn1nat11', radio. '1;:1 V\V l'.1tn[ll•r Pop Tnp-h!':11f•r. t'('f1non1v var.111an Xlnt l'fllld . fully M1u111flC'ti. -~fJCctal {X~VI l!i/ SS~(, ith·. • li1 \..)l 124 * !i'.\G-6:Jl5. ,\ 1 .• !I,. J'lh, :..Int 11111 nor Si:'f!. nr hl'.,t 11ffl·r ,\hn 'LI llut•. \Ir• 1 i;•·d f1·,,n1 1 11.t. no •·n~111f'. t."'l!Jrl tran<> t ;nr1d l•ir h11'..~1~\' $i:1 fi l" '.i".~'1 * ·,; \'\\ Bl -:"\~.\\' 1'.\r:\ r. '1 l'f\t. I of"1 l\1; ! f;() 'J IJ,1-' ,f., l:ltl\:S. ·l~'lll. ·1., \'\\ /", 1 \,.~«\ cnri!l.11111. 1 • ~. \llr. S ~1 nO I S!lf!, ,\ \1 F \I H.1d111, F.>.tl':'l Cll'.ln. •YliL';;;'i.\1 MAKE OFFER COAST IMPORTS ~J'l<'f'd. floor. :\hr•! S<-11. ·ru k1· nv1•r p :i y 111 ,. 11 t 1 . S.l\l-1 .'!6 ! ~J~() \J)/:I J:>::-.1-:~::-:.:::- 1966 l;;ont1.,1· \ •·n tur:1. 4 J)r , V·'S, ,\'J'. !•,..;, l'I:. 1\1r c·nnd., Lo1v l1.J\V 111 11··~. ('ii .111 1n><idr & 0111, :i.1 u,r :"at rtf1cc. 84l:'.()<J:i. .-~-'fi<j l.!'~111 ns '! Dr I ltl!p. PIS, l'/B, 1\11'-l..,111rt. V111~I ri:•)C, N~11· l11'1's. :\l,IKJO act11;1I 1111. $21~1.'1 ~Jo-1!1-\Sll:\ -----'fji l'QNTJAC GTO. I t;JltN.'11. l 1uo·kr1~. Vln)J rl'IO[ SliOO, 9G2-~>l«l. '71 VEGA PANEL I S1"l. ,\1r Cpn1t111011111$:', :\Iii!: \\hi•1 I~. l..uj:J?tlJ!f' 1:ack , :lll.Oflfl 1n1!1·~ .. ci";."l&U t_ $2095 COAST IMPORTS \!'1\ l~'W \\'. Pa<'ih<· C~t. llwy. >.c\\ltQrt lk'n1•h ITI~~ 6-U-0-\00 ~· \j2Q 'ii1' • -~ --\11;oo1200\\' PatlMt·<;:,t.Jf\.\y 1r, ~ hn.'<'te •. ~11 )wr f•in t ,,. 1111 lh•· :r.hiri• Nl'"llQl'I H~a<'h~f7\\I &O·O Kl'i 11 ~ a t•r•"'l" ....... ·n )"l\Jr .~t&-4:'i2'.l l1Prn.o; with easr, u!ll" Daily .h~no; Y.1lh rtt'-<', u .. • l>.11h \Fa~! fT'~Ul!!I r1no JU'I a llh"l1f' J'ilo1 Cl:!.!-llJed. &l~i&. I' 1~.t l' .f1f'(\. 11-•11 _ f'n\I t"\\ftY 61~~ _ .. ., • • • .. DAILY PILOT Monday, July 3, 1972 Agony of W a1· Young refugee boy with bad wound \Vails for eva c· uation at Phong Dien, Vietnam. He wa s displa ced in South Vietnamese drive to retake Quang 'fri. Temporary Rules Set for Forests SACRAMENTO (AP) -On- ly hours after Gov. Ronald Reagan signed specia l legisla- tion, the State Board of Forestry acted unanimously to end a nine-month hiatus dur- ing which California had no regulations governing logging on private lands. The board adopted tem- parary regulations near l y identical to those nullified l21st September by a state appeals court. Th~ temporary mining Padres National Fores t ha s won Assembly cndorse1nen t on a 68-0 vote. , The resolution, authored by Assemblyman Ken l\1ac0onald (0-0jai), goes to the Senate. Ma cDonald said the resolu- tion is' necessary because the federal government is con - sidering letting a company strip mine· for s od i u m phosphates in ;the area. f.rom th e L.o s Angeles-V.entura County line north to San Luis Obispo. I ECOLOGY j •Han Loses · ~----------'. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A regulations will be effective for only 180 days, while waiting for the Legislature to adopt new permanent pro- cedures. Three biUs are before the Legislature to provide OC\V permanent rules. e Links Due bill barring the state from granting more oil leases in a 42,000-acre swatch -or sub- merged tidelands in the Santa Barbara Channel has been killed by the S e nate Governmental Organiza tion Con1m ittee. The com mittee -con- sidered by conservationists to be a graveya rd for en- vironmental legislation LOS ANGE LES (AP) -A voted 5-3 to scuttle the Japanese religious group that measure.by Assembly Speaker believes golf is an aid to Bob Moretti (0 -Van l\'uys J. health and happiness ha s won The measure would have af- the right to build a golf course fected submerged lands in high in the Santa Monica Santa Barbara and Ventura Mountai ns between Malibu counties lying between Point and the Ventura Freeway. Mugu and Point Conception. despite protest s by con- servationists. e P est Noterl County supervisors ap- proved a zoning change for 622 acres to permit building of the course and 622 homes. The sect is known as the Church of Perfec t Liberty. e Mit1it1g Nixed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A measure urging the federal government to ban strip SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The Callrornia Department o f 1 Agriculture says a new growth I of the range and cropl and pest called skel etonv.-·ced has been 1 found near Da vis. 1 An announce ment said that in Australia. skeleton-weed has spread ove r 75 million acres in 50 ye<irs. often reduc- ing gra in yields to one half. Camping Limited Along f(ern River PORTERVILLE I API -1 .,.. ~ncreasing \\•at('r pallution has '-" prompted Sequoia Nationa l Forest rangers to prohibit. overnight camping withi n 100 feet of the south fork of the Kern River, l:ikcshore at Lake Tahoe protr- tt bly \\'ill be rel eased \Vithin two wee ks, Richard Heikka • The stream is unfit for drinking due to the high fecal content from hu1nans :.ind cat- ' executive officer of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, said. " · Crtti cism had been leveied by Sen. John TuMy ([).CaJil.) · in a ·Jett.e r to Sen·. Ala n Bible (0.Ne\'. I, chairman of the Senate approprii1tions interior subcommiltee. Tu nney said the report had not .been released despite promises !ha t· congressmen tJe_. hydrologist J ack Troyer \\'Ould receive it by Sept. 26 said. . 1971. ' [ OUTDOOR S 1 · Ranger Don Hansen said , large amounts of trash such as e E.Tltibit E11e1l cans, bot.l.les and metal tabs • clutter tbe banks and river L~S . ANGELES (AP ) bottom. P1_-e~1m1nary plans ror . a $1 The restricted area extends millio~ m a r i n e museum, from th e Inyo:.8equoia Na-dcpl~tmg various phases of the llonal Forest bound ary south marme environment , ha ve through Monache Meadow. ~ approvec: by the Recrea • • Report Due ... on and· Parks Cosnmission. The co1nmission said the Cabrll111 Beach museum's ex- Backyard Genuine American Standard" STAINLESS STEEL SINK 6 LEG GYM & SLIDE ''Years of fun for The Kids!'' _• Gle..arning nickel bearing ~tee.I sink is 33'' x 22". • 2 i'1ch dia. steel .frame • 7 ft . slide. ______ ! 2_pgsseng_er._10wn swi_rig. • Satin fini shed-self rimming. • 6 legs make it really sturdy. • 9 ft. 6" overall length . • Sound dampener undercoat-easy to install. ' Hurry! Subject To Stock On Hand! TUES. & WID. ON LY! REG. $29.99 SAVE $10.00! foucet & Stroiner Not lnduded TUES. & WED. ONLY! WOW! --------.-!'I" SAVE! New Bernz-0-Matic' FOAM 24" Aluminum FIRE EXTINGUISHER KETTLE . ·GRILL "The Finesl All Weather ·· Cooking Grllll" ''Play It Sale-Buy Several/11 • Heavy gouge aluminum with top & •Many uses: toke it booting or comping, buy one for the kitchen & garage. bottom draft controls. • Removable ash pan. • Push buttOn operation-foam smothers fires in seconds. • Heavy duty chrome-plated grid. • Aluminum legs with 5 1/2 ''wheels. REG. $2.49 REG. $39.99 TUES. & WED. ONLY! TUES. & WED. ONLY! Single Control Hand Crafted LADDERBACK . BATHROOM FAUCET -CHAIR · • All hardwood with slot seat. • Buy several for the dining room, des~ ~hoi~, eidro sea ling anywhere-you'll be si lting in style. • Sanded &. ready to point, stain or antique . REG. $12.99 SAVE $4.00! TUES. & WED. ONLY! • ''Modernize Your Sathrooml'' • Jewel like acrylic handle-long wearing chrome finish . • Finest quolity- eosy to install. REG. $19.99 SAVI $6.001 $13 99 TUES. & WfD'O ONLY! I Gallon FUCHSIAS • E~ergre~n shrubs with showy flowers lo brighten your garden. • • Easy to grow in this areo- they like shady spots & lots of moisture. • Healthy one gollon plants are ready to· bloom. REG. 99c _TUlS. & WID, ONLYI • Famous Flint® 1 QT. SAUCE PAN ''The Homemakers favorite Stainless Steel Cookware!" • Handy one quart size for sauces, vegetables. •Triple wall construction, easy to clean, self basting covers-guaranteed. REG. $4.99 $ )49 TUlS. &. WED. ONlYI Silver Flipper" LAWN SPRINKLER ''See·'' on Display In Our Garden Oepf.I'' • Flips a full or port circle spray out on the lown- adjustable to water yovr yard up to .5000 sq. ft. •Quick set control for 20 to 80 ft. die. R.EG, $6.99 TUlS. & WED. ONLY! SAVf $3.201 SOUTH L~ TAJ!OE (AP1 ..;. A coniroversiiil Bure'3u of Outdoor Recreation report on creation of a national • hibiB: will be arranged in the order encountered by a vlsilor descending rrom the bluffs to •••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; the ocean fl Oor. l • I • • ' • l I '7 I . -. I •• San f;lemenie Ca isirano EDITION '7 , VO[ 65, NO. ·185, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES Cle111ente Case I Technician Held On Perjury Rap A technician at a San t1emente medical laboratory has been arrested. on live counts of perjury stemming from a drunken driving case in which he alleged- ly agreed to lie in exchange for sexual fnvors from the defendant. San Clemente police announced th is -Police Seize Eight Aliens In Clemente A d<lzen illegal immigrants heading north woUnd up in custody in San Clemente over the weekend in l\VO separate incidents -one of the busts taking place after four men successfully cleared the Western White House. That incident "'"as the first of the t\\.'O and occurred at about 3:30 a.m. -12 hours before the President arrived for a working vacation. A resident of the Cyprus Shores colony Immediately north of the Presidential compound phoned local po\,iee to report four "suspicious" men walking upcoast on the Santa Fe tracks. Officers intercepted the four at Calafia Beach a little farther north, arrested the men without incident and turned the aliens over to border patrolmen. Early this morning yet another group \Vas arrested after a pursuit from the Border Patrol checkpoint to the Paliziada overpass of the San Diego Freev;ay. Authorities said the carload of eight men was halted at about 5: 19 a.m. and the driver of the vehicle bolted from of- Border Patrol checkpaint to the Palizada Highway patromen finally caught the man and returned him to the-rest of the group. All eight , officials said, were returned to the checkpoint. Rip Tides, Nice Wea ther Keep Lifeg uards Busy Strong rip tides and \Varm weekend ~ather combined to give San Clemente lifeguards their share of trouble over the v,.·eekend. .Capt. Phil Stubbs said his men made sdme 30 rescues on Sunday from the boil· ing surf and he forecast no improvement in the dangerous condition before JOOependenceDay. ''Y.'e advise that all swinuners use ex- treme caution," Stubbs said . "The surf is dropping, but it is not going to let up completely." None of the persons rescued requirP"I hospital treatment. However, Stubbs sa ~ hi$ department and county sheriff's deputies are rontinuing t he i r in· vestigation today into the disappearance of a Los Angeles youth from a South Laguna beach party Friday night. morning t h a t they arrested Lo u i s Anthony Evangelisto, 44, of Vista only seconds after he left the witness stand F'riday in South Orange County Municipal Court. Evangelisto was booked and ordered held in lieu of $10,000 bail. He posted bond a few hours later. The arrest ended several weeks of in- vestigation in which the woman defen- dant cooperated fully with investigators, police Chief Clifford Murray said today. It is alleged that the technician lied un- der oath five separate times in t~ trial. Murray said the asserted perjury in· volved statements relating to the physical condition of the woman at the time of her arrest by local officers. The technician had been summoned to police headquarters to draw a sample of the 42-year-old San Clemente woman's blood. The sample, according to standard procedure, wilS' then sent to the Orange County Crime Laboratory for analysis of alcohol content "Evangelisto gave testimony which was contrary to the facts abQut the woman's physical appearance and behavior apparently in an attempt to show she was not intoxicated," Murray said. The chie! said that hll ·depar!menl l• investigating the possibility that other such' Incidents have occurred in recent montlu!:. Evangelisto will be arraigned on the charges on July 11 in tbe same court where he was arrested. Fede ral Bo ard To Receive ,Pay Hike Bid Although the San Clemente City Coun- cil has voted a 7.5 percent pay hike for public safety employes, they won 't be getting all of their raise until it is ap- proved by the Federal Pay Board, of· ficials said today. "It Is ofricially in effect," city Finance Director Gerry Teachout said. "but I am not putting it in the paychecks. l am only going to put a five percent raise in the paychecks subject to the Pay Board ap- proval." He estimated that such approval could take three months in coming, but ex- pressed confidence that it w o u I d ultimately be approved. The council faced a deadline Friday night in granting the raises in pay to the employes, one or the largest in recent years. Teachout noted that under the Phase II economic conLrol&,only increases of up to 5.5 percent are authorized. However, a "catch.up" period, under which ad- ditional raises could be given. expired (Set PAY lilKE, Page I) I . Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt iden· lilied the youth as. Soolt-Allen Schlenz, 11, and said he had come t.o the Camel Point area of South Laguna with a group or friends, who reported Schlenz missing at~aboot JO p.m. FrKlay. His automobile rni,d been left parked ,,.ar the poiJ!t and Brood belt said no sign hes yet been found U.S. Won't Say If It Altered Vietnam W eatl1er or lhe youth. • He added that Investigators had un- covered no signs of foul play: in con- nection with Schleni' disappearance. Stubbs · reported that some 65,000 pm:sons came to San Clemente area beacbts over the weekend. The water temperature incnased to 68 degrees on SUnday, but fell "'8rply overnight •nd was only 60 degrees this morning. He ,.Id II ®id remain that cool through 'l'u<sday. ' Strike Talks Resume MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP!) -A federal mediator announced Sunday night that Northwest Airlines • olficiar.. and representatives ol the slriltlng Airline Pilots Association agreed to go back to the bargaining table (oday. WASHINGTON (AP) -The.Pentagon refused again ·today to say if the United States has tampered with the weather in Indochina in an effort to hamper North ,¥ie\pamese Jnililary o:perations, Pentagon spokesman Jerry W . Friedheim said the U.S. has never tried to cause rain over North Vietnam. But asked if rainmaking activitie!: have been attempted in South Vietnam, Laos or cambodla, he replied: "I can't enlarge on that.11 For the past year, there have been reports of the rainmaking. The latest appeared today in !he New .York Times, which quoted unnamed government sources as saying the Air Force has seeded clouds to Increase and control rainfall throughout Southeast Asia. The purpose, the Times said, was ,to hinder !he movement ct. North Vi<!· namese troops and supplies, spoil enemy attacks wtlh heavy rains, and to alter the rain patterns over Laos and North Vitt· (See WEA l'IIER, Page ll • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 3, 1972 • I • • DAILY PILOT Photo b't Let P1vn• ¥ ou're A ll Vnder Arrest This phpto was taken on the Fourth of July, 1971 on Balboa Island in Newport Beach. Fireworks are illega l in Newport Beach, even on the Fourth of July. And every year patriotic fervor (or is it pres- sure from the kids) overcon1es norn1ally la\v abid - ing citizens. Tour boats in the ha rbor even run spe- cial fireworks viewing cruises. Nixon Relaxes .at Clem·ente , Makin g Up for Absence by Swimmi1ig, Dining Oµt President Nixon is using the long holi- day weekend to make up for his six- month absence in San Clemente -buzz. ing around his estate on his golf cart, swin:iming at a secluded beach at Camp Pendleton and dodging out for dinner. The President, who began his ls.day working vacation late Saturday afternoon with "orders'' to well·wishers to "all go swimming," did that very thing early Sunday with several house guests. The friends, Charles G. "Bebe" Rebo20 of Florida and Robert Atiplanalp of New York, familiar figures at the Western In San Cleniente White House, joined the President for dinner Saturday evening, stayed over and on Sunday all three took a short helicopter jaunt to "Red Beach" in Camp Pendleton for some swimming in water which is somewhat chilly for this time of year. Later in the afternoon all three took another flight -this one to Chasen'.s Restaurant in Los Angeles, one of the President's favorites. There, they dined on steak. The President, his aides said, ordered a "Hobo" steak from the meou, a large Independence Day Event To Begin, End With Bang An Independence Day Celebration heralded as the biggest in Sa n Clemente's history will start and end with a bang Tuesday. 4he project,. jointly spOnsored-by tfie Veteran's Fireworks Committee, the San Clemente Elks Lodge and San Clemente Lions Club will begin with ceremonies christening a refurbished public skeet and tfap range at Vista Bahia Stadium at 11 a.rn. In the · afternoon hours, a patriotic program will be held, a turkey shoot, the Lions Club chicken barbecue and a firing demonstration by members of the San Clemente police department. The firearms demonstration will start at 1 p.m. The program wjll begin at 2 p.m., including a band concert, and the barbecue will be held all afternoOn. After the activities end at Vista Bahia Stadium, activities ~will shift to local beaches where fireworks committee chairman Walt Liebig v.ill oversee the transpartation and preparation of a ma· jor fireworks shaw at the end of the city pier. But before the blockbusters soar skyward from the pier, an estimated 60,000 visitor• will set off their own pyrotechnics at the city beach. At about the same time as the last sparkler in the box fizzles out, Jhe pros will take over. .... Liebig promised a "SO.percent increase in quality" in this year's show. The selection of major pyrotechnics pieces ls much greater this year, he aaid Last year's edition drew acclaim, but problems tbat year at the manufacturing plant meant that the best fireworks could not be delivered to San Clemente. The pier show wUI start at dusk and (S<e FIREWORKS, Pag. 11_ Vegas Reealled • Axles Defective in 500,000 Cars? DETROIT (UPI) -General Motors today announced the recall of some 500,000 Chevrolet Vega subcompacts -virtuaUy all 1971 and 1972 models on the road -to check for a defective rear axle shaft. The company said the defective shafts could ca ... a lock ring to disengage, setting up a chain reac- tion that could cause the rear brakes to !all and ultimately cause the axles themselves to !all off. • Chevrolet said lhll 59 defective shafts have' been reported. Two cases resulted in body damage to the vehicles but there have been no reported injuries, said the automaker, the nation 's largest. Chevrolet said that Inspection for the derecuve shafts wilt take Je.~ than 10 mtnutes and lnstallaUon of new shafts, il needed, about an hour.' The work will be done free by the company, Chevrolet said. hunk of New York cut which has gone up in price since he last bought one. A waiter reminded Nixon that the pri<;c is up a quarter -to $9.ZS these days. An hour after the Preside nt and his party Jeft the compound, Pat Nixon flew in from Chicago where she had received a rousing welcome earlier in the day at a folk dance festival. The relaxing weekend is expected to continue for the President and Mrs. Nix· on through the Independence Day holi~ day. Press aides plan no formal briefings until Wednesday, when the President's schedule of meetings with advisers will probably plck up. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President plans meetings with Na· tional Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kiss- inger during the stay and Mr. Nixon also plans t.o continue discussions with other advisers on campaign strategy. Some aides have said Nixon plaiis a ••1ow profile" or activities in San Clemente during this current· visit, allow. lng attention to shift to the bitter in· fighting among Democratic contenders for the nomination. Keeping abreast 0£ the partisan ac· tivilies Sunday., -the President made a rash of phone calls to the East, speaking to former Campaign Chairman John Mitchell as well as Mitchell's successor, Clark MacGregor. Mitchell -who resigned last Friday and acceded to the demands of his wife, Martha, that he quit politics -still plans to serve as a ''consultant" to the Presi- dent as a campaign adviser. Trustee Of fic~rs To Be Chosen Officers for the Saddleback Communit.y College District will be chosen at a special trustee meeting at 8 p.m. Thurs· day in the college board room, 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. The special session is in lieu of the regularly ocl)eduled Monday n i g h t meeting cancelled due to the holiday. Also on the agenda ts a request for bids for the $4.5 Million mathematics and science building and prlc il\& or associated student body cards for 1972-73 school year. Masterpieces Taken PARIS (UPI) -A wood sculpture and an earthenware vase by art1$t Paul Gauguin valu~ at $99 ,000 have been stolen from a Paris house, poiice said tcr day. They said the bu rglar appareritfy used duplicatt keys lo enter the house, owned by Mrs. Edith Pourcin, 66, the widow or a book•eller. t -Tod~y's Final N.Y. Stooks • TEN CENTS • a 1n. TJ1ird Pai·ty Effort Eyed By Bh·cl1er From \Vire Scn•icts BOSTON -U.S. Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tusti\11 says hi" might make a politic:il comeback thi s November either ilS a third party or as a \\'rite-in can· dtd :ll('. l:>i1f1•:Hl'd in the .June Cali(omia pr tn1:iry by County ASSl'SSor Andre\v H inshnu., Schmitz pron1iscr1 fl crO\\'d nt Sunday's annual New England ilal\y for God, r~amily and Country hert', "I'm going to coi:ne back stronger than ever." 'Qie Orange County conservative said, "1'1n not necessarily going to be shackled lo a pnrty -to the Republican Party - that feel s that it's role as the con· Sl'rvalive party 1s sin1ply to run socialism mor e effectively than the op- 1>os1te party." l)uring his rC'nlarks in Boston. Schmitt said he is also looking into the possibility <if running his. \vlfc for his seat ln Congress in November on the American lndL'J>endent Party ticket. Schmitz, who lx'lie\'es he may be pro. hilJitcd by law from running again this year, said the switch to Gov. George Wallace's fonner party may be called ror because 11there is no party right now that's really nalllng the enemy." "ff there ever Ml a tUne in America political history when we're ripe for a bold, new move It's now,'' Schmitz, a member of the John Blreh Society, told the meeting of conservatives. &hmitz, who also attended Saturday's opening session of the two-day rally, said ,..Jha t the Red Chinese have"an official · program of poppy production'' to make heroin "to raise money and subvert, particularly to subvert enemy troops.'' Labeling Malnlan d L'hina as the world's "primary source of heroin," Schmitz said he secured much of his informatio n about he roin production during a recent visit to Nationalist China and by tal king to a "-'Oman who fl ed Red China through Yuman Province. "Sht said she sa\v the crop poppies being cultivated by Jled Chi nese troops in Yuman Ptovince, "Schn1itz said . Holway Tr affic Fatalities Soar By Unfted Press lntcmatlonal The count of traffic deaths during tht: four-day Jul y r~outh holiday climbed steadily today toward a Nationa l Safety CouncU estimate of between 800 and 900 for the period . A United Press Jnlemational tabulation at 10 a.m. (EDT) sho.wed 409 persons killed in auto accidents. IJro\vnings also took a steady toll of lives. A breakdown: Traffic 409 Drownings 7l Planes I Others 3l Total 4'17 California reparted the g r e a t e a t number Of traffic dea ths with 40. Texas had 33 and New York 23. Mostly sunny skies are on the agenda for the Fourth of July hol· iday. Those low clouds should lift by mid-day on Tuesch1y, al:cording to the wcatherlady, to tempera· tures of 70 at the beach, rising to 85 inland. Lo"•s 55-65. INSmE TODAY A 11eor ago Lockheed Aircraf t Corp. wa.s. reeling from huge lo sses on goverr11ne1tt project.t as well as fron& the ba1ikruptcy of Rolls Royce. \Vhere does lt stand today? See story, Page 12. I Mtlnt lt MO'l'!e. f C lil•"'I• 1 N•llenll Ntw1 4--l Cl!M!llet JO ,. or~n•• tftntr • Com'c' lt S11tn' 1 .. U · c-. .. !"11 tt T•lc:'l'\11• • Dtt111 Nll!cn • Tll ... ''" ' .fl .. 11•1 ... ,. ' w., .. ., ' • t."11rltl'llll'ltllt t W•l'Nfl't MIWI U-14 ,IMft(I 1 .. 11 • 'I ' I ·; , -··- •. 2 OAiLV PILOT MO<ldO), Ju~ J, 1972 ',Judge ~ t o Rule on Dei;nocrat Convention Seats ' He also atk~. "•low far art the dlurh; IVASRINGTON !UPll Fedtral Judie Goorre L. Han Jr. promi>«I to rule late today On l\'l'O SU/IS Jfl\'Oh 111,I! heated tiatth:~s V\'Cr thl" sr:Jling .,, Ot .. mocratic convention delC!-l<ltcs fron1 Californi:i and Chicago Hart also said the U.S. ('nurt (1( Af)- peals arranged to hear both ca~..:s ·1ue~· day whatever U1c outcome vf !us clcci~ion. lie 11t:1de the announccmt•nt afh·r hl•ar· in~ ;irgun1ents fron1 both s1d<·'i in 1i 1nu1 e liy supix>rtet·s or Se11. f;L~)r~c· s ~lcGovern lo prevent 151 Cahlorni;1 delegates from bti~ umcattd by the Cou11ty , State Plan Route Tall{s Representatives or the Orange County Board or Superviso rs and the slate 1-lighv.•ay Commission plan to meet next ~1onday in a secret session in a.n effort to hammer out kinks that have developed jn the Pacific Coast and •l untington Beach Frteways. Firth District Supervisor Ron a 1 d Caspers of Newport Beach And Second District Supervisor Da vid Ba k er or Garden Grove are expected Lo represent the county at the rare, closed-door meeting. •Ugh~·ay e<1mmission representatives expected to attend are Chairman Winston Fuller ot San Marino, Fred Jennings el Riverside and possibly Joseph Sinnott of San Diego. Principal discuss ion wlll center on the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and !he coritinulng disagreement over the route or the Hun· tington Beach Freeway, according lo Ted 111cConville, Orange County road com· missioner. He said the comm issioners plan to Ur(le the aupervlsor~ to assume a more prom. lnent role ln 1 o I v Ing· the various traosportalion corridor problems · in the county. - McConville will also sit in ·on the ,,,. sesslon. his office said today. A bill by A!serntilyinan Robert W. O.mocrotlc credentlai4 commltitt. (See related story, Page ~J The Chlca.10 dispute Involved lhe disba~nt ot Chicago t-.1010r Rtdlard J. Daley and 58 dele~ales on his slate. Jo.,c·ph L. lt..1uh :1r_:.:u1ng for \l<·Co>crn, said thr part}~ rcforn1 rul{·S plaint) :11Jowrd for 1v\11ncr-takc .. all prin1arics ·l1ko th;it which gave ,\l<;(;ovcrn 2;1 de]pg;1lt•s lronl C:illfonu.i in the Ju nt• ti pruni1r~. Joseph A. (;1l!111no .Jr rrpr(:'!'.1·nlin~ tJ1e i)cmo1·rat1 t ;\at1on:1I t'nmrnil\Cc 11amt'<I 111 the ~l((;O>l'rn .-.u1t. ar~ucd that "the courts h•n·c 110 place In this arena on thl1-klnd ot issue." Ile said that U the court ln terfem ln lhe matter, ll mifht have on Ill handl mGSt of the olhtt !Ill rhallengea decided on by the ctr.edentlals commlttee. "\\11• l'oul<l be h('re with anyone of them if thr court.s decide to g<'t u1to thi s area,'' he told llart. llauh olso churg{>d the <.'Ornmlttee il- lc·j.!ttHy chnnged the crc•nt1als rules i11 :-.tripping .\lcGuvcrn of the ISi Callfornia delegates. .. In \'1ew of the closeness of the race. l!n;e 151 can dttcrmiile the outcome o( 1hc Convtntion." he declared. Badham (R-Ne~each) fo delete the Newport Bea Ion of the PacU!c COast Freeway . its adopt~ 'allgn-" COMMERCIAL FIREWORKS IN SAN CLEMENTE FOR JULY 4 Pyrotechnics Scheduled For lndepencf~ce Day Celebration . ment Is now on the floor of the stale StnateL.but no action ii expected earJJer th.an Wednesday, a representA•~ve of &dham's offi ce 11ald ioday. The bill urged by Newport Beach representatives has already passed the state Assembly. McConville 's chief as slltant, Murray Storm, said the Newpo rt Freeway secllon from Palisades Road-Bristol Avenue to Pacific Coast lilghway will also be discussed as wiU all transportation cor· rid or problems In the county. Storm said no repreaentatlves or thr various Orange County cities concerned wit h freeway all~nmcnt have been in- vited to •ltend the Monday se!Sl on. "If we Invite one we would have to in- vite them fll and that could destroy the infonnal shirtsleeve atmosphere of the meeting," he said . Fo1·stc r friucipal Art Unit President Edd Kinca id, principal of Marco Forste r J unior lllgh School In San Juan Ca pistrano, has been elected 1972·73 president of the counly Art EduCators' Aa..ocl atlon . KJncald taught ort and hum anitle! at San Clemente lliRh School prior to being elevated lo the post or prlnclpal In !he Capistrano Unified School Dist rict. The associat.ron conducts workshops and helps coordinate actlvllles of county art teachers. Ol"ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT The Ofll!M CHJI DAILY PILO.T, ..,;tr. w!'l+c!'I II ntmblr.H ,,.. Nl"'1·P•111, l• pu&hatuill ll"t' Int O<lfl91 (01,t P1111111111n, Comptr.y. Sep1. rt!e f'dlfll)lll l tt P11b1l1h11C1, MOMl'f l!'llOufll f rid1y, tor C1111 Me••. l'UWPOtf lttt!'I, H11ntln9lot1 ltKI> Fovn•11n Vtllly, t.•ount Bee~, lrYlt>tl,td<lleb~tk 1"'6 5.<tn (ltmtnte/ Sen J111n Clll••"•no A 11ng11 rtQ>Dntl H IHOI\ ;, l!Vblhhtd l>!•Y•Ol"t'I •"11 l vn1i.r1. Tl>t pr!nclpll Dub!l1!'l•n9 11l1nt •I •t l.ll W•1! Bey Stre11, (~111 Mt.,, Ctl•lorn•I tl•l•. r lf lO(ltM lf'll Pyllhl~tr ..,, J1di: It C11d1y V•C t ,.,tl~ffll •lld Otnt11I /'4n~9er l~ ...... 1(,, .. 1 Eo.ior Tllo"''' A, M yroliine M1n10 "'I a:a ,•or Ch1de1 H . Looi R,tli1rcf '· Nt •I AJ1l111n1 Mtn.e.n_o [0,IO•I SH Cl1,,..11t.-Offlt • lOS ~lortll El Ci mino R11 I, ,1671 Orher Off.Jen , (0111 M111. JIO Wt11 lhy 5t•M'1 Nt WJIOr1 llHcf'I• l lll HrwPO•! IOyl••ltlt Hv,.Hno!OO'\ Bt1cn. 111'1 1e11!'1 110,,.,,,,,d 1.etll"I 1111(1'1: 21J l'Mll! A""'Vt 1 ... ,. ... (714 1 l42-4)J1 Cl•••lflff A"'9ttltl8f 642 ·5671 s.11 ct1M••re All o.,,,.••n: T1l••h•11• 4,J .. 4Jt, No Deatlis, Few Accidents Mark Coul'ity H oltclay ' Death has taken a holi day on Orange County roadv.·ays so far during the long Fourth of July "'eekend, the county cor- 011er's office said today. No highway or free\\'ay deaths and ft\I' serious traffic accidents have marred the holiday-~enc in the county. This con· lrasts with lhree traffi c fatah tl es during the 1971 holiday weekend. However. spokesmen for the California l~ighway Patrol in 01·ange County cnu· tloned that the "'orsl pa rt of th e holiday \Veekend, 1vhen 1notorists arc homeward bound, Is yet to come. Nationwide. 402 persons had died In traffic accidents since the long hollda.v period began ut 6 p.ni. F'rld11y. Th e total wa~ as of 9 o'cloc k this morning <PDT \. California led the nation with J8 fa lalities. During lost year·s three-cloy , .. ourth or July weekend. 6.15 traffic deaths were reported nallonwldc. ,Schmitz Recount Sl1ows Hii1 sha \V Gai11 in Votes .... The recount of votes dc1nandf)d !)y lrnnr duck Congressrnan .John SchmHz .1flC'r l1i.~ losing 1.·lfort in rhc 39th CongrC'ssi?na! 0 1:-.tnct r:_icc has nol ~ona ~ ·\1'C'll for hun so fur. 'The lt1test officit\I tallv or the votes (';J~t in the Jur1c H pri1nary elcl·Uon shO\\'C'd thnt Schn1il1. has losl an Jddl· t1011al tuur votes 11nd (;OP nominee An· dr~1\" lli nsha11. currently Orange C.:Oun\y assessor, ha! g:uncd 10, About 160 of the 695 prcclnc!c;: in the d1strlc-t hll\'f' bctn re1..'0un tcd to dAtr . said H. J , "Red" :'-.luilhor. deputy reJi{tstrar of \n!rrs 1\'ho 1!1 ~uptr111si!ij( !he ntw t'Ount. Schrn1h: 11as Qr!t;ilnally dcfcolcd b\· !Un.shav.· lly .in or!lci.al co un t or 2.601 \Olrs out of the 93.427 cast. This wn~ 11 i;iiun of 249 vot{"S over the unofficial figures released lhc day nftcr !he elec· lion . "iailhot ~aid nbouL 40 to 50 prctincts arl' bcin~ r1!CQtu1tecl per day by hand. lie predirtC'd tl1C' pror(':;s \\OUld C'Onl1nuc "·ell in!o ncxl 1vt•rk un~s~ the ~<·hmitz forces t::ill a halt by conceding ll inshaYi's YIC· tury, ., From Pagel .• FIREWORKS. •• '"Ill last nearly an hour. Liebig and ot h e r volunteers w h o sponsor the annuoJ even t reminded residents thnt the kitty is still skimpy !Ind donations, used lo offset !he nearly SS,000 in costs for the sho"·· are still \relcomed. Donations or any denomination can be sent lo the committee in care o( P.O. Boie: 299, San Clemente. The veterans groups in the citY eacll year are confronted \Vith a deficit in donations -a loss made up from pro- Cl'Cds gained from the sale Of home fire,,·o rks. The remainder of !he fircv>'orks funds go toward fina ncing local youth projects sponsored by the vets. From Pal{e 1 WEATHER ... nam to aid U.S. bombing strikes. The Times storv followed .an article in the June l!sue of Science magazi ne which said the rumors and speculation growing over ' the alleged effo rts lo alter the \Vea lher in-Indochina alarmed civilian scientists and \Veather experts trying to promote international weather research. Sen. Clairborne Pell (l).RJ.J, .aid last 'month he believes the mllltary has been involved in seed ing operatlon11 11lnce 1966 to ~\ear targets In North Vietnam. The senator also said the United States has used che mica ls to produce rains that washf'd out part of the HQ Chi Minh trail. impeding infiltration and causing floods tesulting in thousands of deaths. In an April appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secrejary or Dcfe11se Melvin R. Laird sa1a the Air Force ha s used rain-making lcchn iques in droughl·stricken areas of the Phlllprines and Texas. but asked 1£ the!<e activities were being used for n1ilit<:1ry purposes in Southea st Asia, he \vould not comment . · The only direct .evidence that 'venth er modification techniques have betn used 1n Indochina comes from 'the Pentagon Papers. the Defense Department's once· classified history of the Vietnam war. According to the documents, the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1967 recommended "'"eather modirication as one of seven op-- lions open to the United States. The p<:1pers dcscrl~ a we:ither progr•m over La os. codenamed Operation Pop- Eye. as 11n attempt ''to reduce traf. ncablllty along intlltratlon routes.'' ... I Mtanwllll• the llolno<nllc -.11 commlttte voled today to ... t the 14- member Nor111 ~a delegation to the conv .. 11on dt1ptte ccmplalllts that only 7 .e percent of the delegates "'ere under lhc age of 30. A 1notion by George Banett of Ten· nessee to seat the delegation waa p111fd by a voice vote, blocking consideration of a mOtion sponsored by the-you thful chitllengers to replace eight delegates \\'Ith eight younger alternates. Passage of the seating motion came after MJss Susan Conner of High Polnt. N.C. harshly crlUclzed backefl o! McGowm f.X. not auppofllng their cll.allqe. The 24-year-dd ~flss Conner said the ircCovem forces Hhaa been instn1ctt<i. as a bloc, to wlthhold frorn us their \'Oles" because the y fett r that "by ~up­ porting us in a minor case they 1v1ll allcnate support for larger challenges.·· ··!'-;ow suddenly what was clear is to bf> cha nged," Rauh argued at today's lwar- 1ng. "All of a sudden. after it \\'as ovrr. 11 challenge \vas filed .·• llowever, llart commented during tht change the rules, it may t-ven be dirty pool, but is It unconstitutional~" gotn.1 to att into v\0J1Uons of ~rt~· rules"" ?\f(·\,o\'t'tll 11n1~ht'd fir~ in lht .:lune 6 prunar) The c·on1n1111re d~·tis1011 l'llUld b\Ol:k 11 .. ;\Jt(:11\'rr11 !lr'-1 b;illut norntni'ltlon at 1h1· convention. "'hlch ~1lll'IS 1n io.ll~uni Ueach a 11·1•(•k fro1n tod:iy.- S1er1hen R1•lnhardt. J..>emocrntl~ 1111· tionnl cornrnittcc111an lron1 Cal1fo~111:\ 11nd ~ cochaln11a11 of tht• .stair deleMal1on, said ~lcGovern approved lhr lt·gal. rnu\'t', ··tie I.old us he thinks \\ot· an· doing the r1gh1 thing,·· Rtlnhardt Saki. Red ·Shells Blast Hue Tank Forces Slug It put lll • Heavy Battle ' SAIGON (UPI ) -Communist guMers fired 675 rocket, mortar and .artlllery rounds into H~e and its outer defenses today, while two large, equally·matched units slugged Jt out with tankJ and artillery north of the old imperLal capital In a South Vie tnamese attempt to recap· tur.e Quang Tri province. A 20,()()0..man government torce is drJv. lng north from Hue to try to take back Quang Tri -the onl South Vietnamese province captured by the Communists. With most of Hue's defenders sent nort h to try to recaptlU'e Qaung Tri, Communists increased the pressure m the old imperial capil!ai and threatened a long-erpe"cted; major attack on the city. A 1,000.man South Vietnamese paratroop unit, backed by air power, artillery and tanks, fought a savage bat. tle with a ·North Vletnem.,. f.,... of the same size only two miles 1outh of Quang Tri City, the provincial capital. While the battle was under way, Com· munlst gunners slip~ into the Hue area from the ''•est and bombarded the city and a half-dozen ootposts on its inland flanks. Field reports said 31 artillery rounds hit Hue and 644 other she"lls landed at the outlying bases. In the air war over North Vietnam. the U.S. e<1mmand said U.S. jet fighter· bomber pilots destroyed a coal treatment buildin g near the country's major port city of Haiehong, dropped a span on a bridge near Vinh and bombed an oil !1.orage area IOUth of the Chinese border. The command 1n a delayed report said a U.S. Navy A7 fig hter-bom ber crashed ''from unknown causes" June 18 on a night mission over North Vietnam about 107 miles north of the De"rnllltarlted Zone separating the two Vletnams and llsted the pilot as lnissing. A C.Ommunlst radio broadcast claimed today two U.S. jets were shot down Sun- day over lhe Haiphong-Hanoi area. UPI pholographtr Willie Vicoy aald government paratrooper& in today's Quang Tri City fighting, :!2 ml!ts north or Hue, were backed hy allied Jell, helicopters and heavy B52 bombers. The B52s overnight dumped more than 500 tons of explosive on the approacbea to Quang Tr1 City. The city and the prov- i~ of the same name were captured a month after the Communist offenslve began March 30 in South Vietnam and have been in North Vietnamese hands ever since. Vlco_y said he saw a South Vietnamese armored personnel carrier "sink like a :stone " as it trled to cross the Truong Phuoc Rlve r •·to join the Quang Tri fighting, drowning about s e v en paratroopers. Vi coy said the vehicle, overloaded ~'ith paratroopers In full battle gear, "plunged downward and seven of the men aboard ~ver came up." Today 's sheUing of Hue, 400 mi I e s north of Saigon, prompted a!Ued fears lhat the North Vietnamese wvuld try to overrun the city while its de!enaes are stripped by lhe governmenl drive to retake Quang Tri Province. Sunday's rocket and artillery barrage or Ill shtlls that killed 12 pel'80<U and wounded H marked tht first such attack on 11uc since the st.trt of the of!eNJlve. Allied commanders noted following Sund•y'a shelling that the South Viet- namese force of about 30,000 men guard I~ the city was reduced ·to the 10,000 troop• of the l•t Infantry Dlvl•lon last week for the: northward drive lnto Quang Tri , now In Ill olxlh doy. From Page l PAY HIKE ... June 30. The city council beat that dendlin(; by about an hour. In addition to the 7.6 percent raise for workers in the publ)c safety department. the council aullioriied: an average of s.s percent in pey hikes for other groups o( employea -a tot.al of 63 percent of the city workers. Negotlatlon.s are continuing "1'ith olhe.r employe associations t.o grant raises to the remaining workers. CITADEL HUE SOUTH VIETNAM '" -·· ui-1 N1wtift111 HUE BOMBARDED -North Vietnamese artillerymen bombarded lhe old Imperial capital of Hu e Sunday. Twelve persons were · re- ported killed and 41 wounded . Most of thR shells exploded around the city's Citadel, an early 19th century fo rtress in the wa lled, old section of Hue. • Jf ntertainers Complain • -Ghost Gets Into Act SHANKLIN, h ie of Wight (UPI) - Entertainera in a seaside summer 1hcl\Y say a ghost Is interrupting their acts and they want it exorcised. ''Everybody Is on edge. The 1holt Is ruining the show," said Dave Mills, 33, a member of the Temperance Seven jazz 1roup which ls among the cast at Sh1nklln's Pier Theater, on the Isle of \V lght off Britain'• south coast. "When we were told Ibis theater was haunted we all laughed . But certain· things have happened recently that make w: all feel it mu.st be true," Mills said. John Garr, muslcaJ director of the show, thinks he knows the identity of the ghost, who some cast members clalm to have aeen and deacribe as a white-haired man aged about 60. The ghost is al!o 1upposed to wear mutton chop whiskers, a high necked gray suit, gray tic and diamond 1tic kpin. "The story 1oe1," Garr aald, "that Jn 1898 an actor died on ataae alter the end of an unsucce1aful performance. It seems his ghost has haunted the theater ever since trYing hard to make a success!ul comeback." Marine Arrested In Bar Theft • A Camp Pendleton J\.farlne who 1llegedly railed a recent lle-<\etector test in connection with a several weeks-old rlOlng or a tavern sate bu been arrested and char1od wllh lhefl. Police today uld they hav• hooked Jack Leon warrord, 24. of ~mp Pendleton In connection wllh the th•rt which occurred May 18 at the El C&mlno Room . The bar, located 1t 210 S. El Camino R,.I, w .. hit ilurlng Ibo dark houn hy aomeon1 who knew the combin1Uon of the safe, police aald, Of!lcm at that Ume reported no evlcknct al a bretlrln. Watford wao hooked on dlo,.,.a of crand theft, The Tempcranct Stvtn have written a letter to the bl1hop ol Portsmouth asking him to appoint a priesl to exorcise the ghost -banish It from the theater and put it lo rest. The chorus Rirls also claim the ghost keeps moving clothes around in their dressin1 room. Singer Rita Gran t said 111 door opened :ind closed behind her ,,·hen she left the theater one nigh t. "There was nobody about and no wind. It v.·as most weird,'' she said. . 2 Lovers' Lane Stabbings Eyed -As 'Executions' FORTH WORTH, Tet. !UPI) -O.ltc- tlves think an unidentified young couple found atabbed and slashed to death dur· ing the weekend may ha ve been victim! of a jang execution. Police were working a,n a tip thet several carloads or "hippie type'' youn·aster11 congregated at !he deaUl site at 4 a.m. Saturday. The bodies wert discovered at e :~O a.m. by a Dallas schoolteac he r Dfn England , and his son, John, ,,ho• were riding thler motorbikes In the area . The site, just off Sl8t• Hlghw•y lllO 1! a favorite 1'lovers' lane" pa"lng are~. Polle• said there were no signs of Iden- tification on the bodlco and no one has reported ml11lng •nyone !lttt111 !heir description. The body of the girl .w11 nude from \1Jc ..vallt down. Iler brown leotard brltcJts were wound around her neck. She h!d betn stabbed oeveral tlmet, lncludlllg once in the hurt. The body of the man WIS found abour 10 yanla away, Ha hod betn atabbtd sev1raJ timea and hl1 throat was cut Both vlcllm1 w•re about 20. ' Coorrli"'· ,,,,, Or•ntt• (e11t P1111•1~"1"' Ce"'pfnf, Ho ""'"' llO•I•\ 11111,t•lhOnt flll!Oflll m.tltr or •dv,rlo\.m...U ~••t"i ""'"f 1111 f"PodY(fd W>!h°"t 11"'(11! IPtf• ''"''lei! .. (ff"t'•lt~t ·-··· ·rhr eount on Earl C:•rra"''ay, another contcs!ant In the ~nmc race for lh1• Hl'publicnn nom111qU011, ~hoW('d no 1•hange. Mnilhot said, while Larry Denna, t~ fourth contestant los t ont' vote. Ani.J ual Tamer Dies Tl>lchoul 90Jd he had not yel detennln- ed what lhe pey rallt1 would cool the cl· ly Over I period of A year, but llid he agreed with Clly Manarer Kenneth C.rr that ii will probobly mean ahrut e 25 cent Increase In the city tax rate. "I would be very ourprlsed If It Is "'nything le&1," TuchOul aald. Food Prices Stt1died Pclllce tbeorl&ed more than one pertc1a was lnv<llved and said clues Indicated tht couple bad been brought to the site a,r:id killed there. There were numeroua iitt tracka In the are1. The only clue lo tho Identity o( the mon wo s a clgmll• li1hter With lhe •~ 1crlpUon, "Have a nlct day.'' ...,-Stcond <let• t1Ct1!10• ·••Of If Cetll M••• (t lltorllll. a11Ktfl,!1Qn bY Cl rfi.t" tt f\ l"IOll!tllt1 IW mt11 \J 11 "'Ollllll'; Mlhlt•~ 9ttlll'ltlfll\I U 11 "'°"'Jilt A! of frldnv. !hr recount stand!' to rosl Schmitt suP1lorter, upwardJ.()f $2.400 i1 thr. contenUon of hli1 supporters proves incorrect a.nd the primary vole i1 upheld. ' . MIAMI. Fl" (AP) -Roman Proske, ·• rf'tired animal tame r. died early today at 73. A native or Austria, Proeke was knov.11 for his refusal to use a whip or chair in hi5 circu s act. ' l • Public safely emplor," conducted an unprecedtnle<I campe rn for tho pey hi~•· oven ralhtrtllll 1.300 11,..1uree on p0tltlon1 !run tarpeyen who 11ld thoy w<Mild support 1 tax lncrtase lo give the ra ist:,s. IVASHING'l'ON (AP J -White HouS, economic 1dvlmt. conctrned over rising food prl<ea, are prep.arlng IOI' another rwnd of mctllnl• with foocl·•lora u - ecutives •nd fan:n leaders. • Med ica l Examiner Qr. Fellk1 Owozcb 9ald preliminary 1i1m.lnatlon lnctleated ,tht 1lrl had not been raped. but withheld 1 ruling pcndlng !urlhtr let\I. I . I :\ 'I • l I • t i • I I I • .J 0 DAILY PILOT SC FINANCE Pollution Cost Eyed By Firms BY LEROY POPE \IPI lu~lllt$J Wrlftr NEW Y 0 R K E.nvironrnental control likeJY \VIII compel drastic process changes for some industries _because they cannot afford ex- pensive ~'aste trealmeg,t a tex- tile research expert re~rts. James B. Lasley, executive vice-president or Spring Mills, Inc., was talking about his own textile industry but he quoted a prori\inent consulting engineer as saying that any busin~ss whlch has a profit return on capital less than the present interest rates on bor· rowed money. or Jess than 4 percent on sales, is in the same boat as textile com· panies. The cons u It in g engineer·said bluntly that such bu sinesses wil! not be able to generate money to finance waste treatment facilities in· tefnally and will f j n d themselves in a poor position to borrow the funds. THERE ALSO is no chance, said Lasley, that the fed eral or local governments will let such industries continue to use processes"that pollute the en· vlro•1ment. The rules are tcr 11 and will get tougher. "You can't beg, politic, lob- by or cry your W;'ly out or them," Lasley warned textile mill operators. "The public won't let you." If textile mills can't afford e1pet1sive .treatment of polluted wastes, one alternative is to change prQC· • esses drastically to curtail pollution at the start. Lasley suggested several concrete ways for accomplishing this. Textile producers should carefully study all their proc· essing materials, especially chemicals, with a vie w to drastically reducing the use af those that cause significant water or air pollution. "In some cases it will Pay to use a more expensive chemical if that cuts down sharply on wa ste pollution," he said. "The consumer will 'have to pay through increased prices, higher taxes and p~bably by getting a smaller selection of merchandise," Lasley said. Bank Hikes Prime Rate NEW YORK (AP) -First National City Bank, which led the nation's banks last week in raising its prime lending rate to 51/4 percent , said it would boost the rate to 5% percent starting today. The announcement came shortly after the 51/4 percent hike spread Friday to Morgan Guarant,v Trust <;o. or New York;-fifth biggest-in-the coun· try and the last of the coun· try's 10 biggest banks to raise its rate. . First National City, the se· cond biggest bank in the coun· try, is one of a small number of banks with an automatically adjusted rate pegged to other interest charges. The formula used in weekly reviews or the Citibank rate has made It one of the most sensitive In the country. Wise Business.man COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST l"'ltft Oft ,,,. NtW 'f'orll: $Jock E.adwlng1 llMh.j Mltll Ltw ClitM Cht. \Mi.I Mi911 l.IW CllM Cflt, ,..._, "1tll L.lwC""90.. Wliy1 Does He W-ork? Just for ·tlie Hal·ibut lllEW VOtlC !VP_!}--fol!Ooflf\O ,,. '''" Hetl 11... flllt~ -- S.1e1IMh ) Ml(lll l ow l11t (Ilg. C11e10h l''id .. •~ a;i. 4'11-'1+ ~ ltmlfll .JO ~ lo1l• l)l'i 11~ \\ tnc1111, 4 ", "" +.a- • Criw>d 1.ce -tO IQ\.o 1"'"' --... '"I"''" .c I "3 ,,,,.. ff" ~· " _, .... .t: -A A-~Ill Mllw Co •121~ lir-. 1~\1 F • E Coeit 11 lS\O ~\ i , ~ofl 4 '• il.l)bOl!l 1.10 ,. 1n. 171, 771'--1' lllMll(p Ill ,. ?i\\ ,,.. )1 t-\o Fl•G•\ J ,, lt\o '• ,,a•U":i111 ACFINI 1.0 !O ~ .fl\1 .Q\i+ \\ 11 Pneum 2 SJ ,,~, 4 ,7 l<w11"w I, 4 10 ,.11 "'° ti\+"' .rr · SEATTLE, Wash. (Ul'I) -- Peter J . Riksheim. 73, still fishes for halibut although he could live high, dry and com· fortable because of prudent in· vestments he began making • · three decades ago. Ac""'(.'lv .to z.s ,~. 1~ 1•·~~ \'I i111!11 Cl UP 2 lJ~. 19•. 1t\.\-\. Fl• ,,..., .. \! )tt'.' ?.!!~ ?J~·· , .. !:1. ~~ g~·~·'t" ~r •----::------.... r-::=:----;:---1"~™11 fl llli<. JOl?--n~1 ~!Utt NYL-----1 20.-ro 20 F c,. .~ ;iWi ~ ~ • •.o-1 , re 'I.. lf?i •t-PCio.F 10e -''" rr, 1\\f "ij° IVY ~·-r;-'° ~ ui.i. i/ \ ~ : m~ l •1 .n"' ~ ! -d Mt 11 .20 ,,> ,.,•, ~ t'4+ /ln1 <.'•Ill )t 7\• 1 1 • FMC C '1.s 11! 2S'\ \tr. 11*'-" nt11 .l1 1100 m,:.• . )) ++ ', AOrnff'll Cp ..,.. ltl\ )~~Cllrt Cr 6111 1 16 161 II 1'1 F r n: lCI :1•• li::lt\4 ~if.+\.') ~t.e:M Aul ' Jl't ti=:''' Aaortt1 ,.., ,, ,ii. '1"' '2 + '• c11r1 er ""' 1t 111-. 11\, 11 f'" ·~i ;. \.\ Vt l't-" I 11 _.. ... 14o Riksheim , a n at J ve of Norway, is worth about a quarter of a million dollars. Asked during a dockside Ur ierview recently \Vhy he con· tinued to go down to the sea in fishboals, the leathery skinned sailor replied, "OH, I SUPPOSE I could do a lot of those other things, like visiting Panama again. But I've been just about every place l want to go. Besides, fishing is what -1 like-to do. I got it in my blood ." Wajting on Pier 59 when Riksheim came in abo'ard the halibut boat Sylvia was William A. Reasoner, chair· man of the board or Waddell & Reed , Inc., \1he· Kansas City firm which manages a mutual investment company known as United Funds, Inc. Reasoner', a native 0£ Ho. quiam, Wash., had returned to the Pacific Northwest to honor Riksheim b e c a u s e the fisherman . has b e e n a participating shareholder in United Funds longer than any or the group's other 500,000 members. As he handed Riksheim a clock which operates perpetually o n barometric pressure, Reaso'"ner said the Norwegian's accomplishment in the field of finance "is one of unflagging hii:i;h confidence in this nation's economic future as well as a splendid American immigrant success story ." RIKSHEThl, SOMEWHAT bewildered by all the attention, said that re- minded him that he hadn't checked in with iminigration officials since the Svlvia returned from British cOlum· bia fishing grounds but qe re. mained long enough tO ~xplain tha t except for a onc·year stint as a rigging slinger in the Jogging camps of G r a y s Harbor, Wash., and a tour of duty aboar.d a lighthouse tender iii the Aleutian Islands during -World War· JI , be always bas been a fisherman. When he wasn't fishing with a hard line in the fjords of Norway, or for halibu t in the North Pacific and Bering Sea, he was seeking tuna of£ the Galapagos Islands. He even went fishing for radioactive denizens as a professional Automaker Seeks 2.5% Price Hike DETROIT (AP) American Motors Corp .. of· ficials have asked the Price Commission for permission to hike prices of their 1973 models by 2.5 percent. eom· pany officials announced, even though they said a larger in· crease is justified. Officials said the increased prices would still be com· petitive with the other automakers. The request was made primarily to cover the in· creased production costs o( meeting 1973 e x h a u s t emissions requirements, an improved bumper system and eco119mic increases_, officials said. , "Our cost increases. \Vould justify a request (or an increase well in excess of 2.5 percent.'' a spokesman said. He added , "We believe it ls ln our best interest to commit to price adjustments not in ex· cess of general economic guidelines, a n d to seek recovery or the excess cost! through furlher increases in our volume." ""'"-'LI 1.61 5• ~.A .. )lt1o ~ (llrOftll ·"" I• t"' 1 .... 1'41o '" FCIOI ca . flO • I V'I 1 , .... ,,,N ·r.:d ' • ' \.\ A!l..n l11C11 6l ..-. 1011 1~_.. ''CllN11tr I )It )l »""-30-\-\'IF~ .. l.irt 4 '• \.. \ii+\~ oelltl • 'l "' ~ 'i' ::r,•,•d ,l'OQ .? n11'' ',', n, , ..... •,11 ChrY•ltr WI tl 1J\t ll l~ ...... 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I°"" l(ll~ I~., Am(y~n H, 1j li•, ~~ ~~'4t·:~~~w~': 1:g 11! ~,'; n:: n:~-;~:G~V~~rl:g li~ ~t,,~•it\o ~~•,f'.~t:.~'1l:t! r: ~re ~j~•llliSJ~:~ :g'15~f~111.1,cJ ''~~ 11t~ 2~I ~• ComEd or 2 13 1~\o ,,..., 26'• r ~. g.,n 11 .. 1,.ict 16 , , 1 .. LomM . .iOd 11 me ::19~~ + 1• AOuar .l&d 65 561' S.S .sJ.1•-~CwEdpl l.~2 ) 22'• 12• .. '''•-t•ott1Sjtl 6? ""$61 , SJ'• S6'4' '•London Mii '11~ 11'• ~-•• AOul pf .Sia : 1;:• 1;~• 1h• ... CwEd pl l.~O ·U Z.1-\t 1J'• 2!\"o GtnS1 pt' 11l)\•le)',llS\'•l'•LooeSlnd Jt 1P• f~• +-'• AmEle<-t.1• 2J$ 211: 1&'~ zn.:+ •• CwEd 7lwt1 l ' 11 10'• 11 g' "/fl Ind )I 1'• t'1 7t, ~Lon SIG l.3' ls 7911 1'',• Ill-~ Am EkPOtl 8T 1 J.. l' •• ComEcl 8wl .:! 111\ 10'• ll'o+ '• T 1.Jl 311 ll'• 16'1 171.• •• L""llll 1.'2 lit 11 ~. t + \o Am f•Pf' pf ll!O 14 1, lo' · Comw 011 ti IO 1011. 10'> I0•1 . TE pl ''1 ' l'~• JI'" ll.U-'•1 LOnfltO. .4 I) II 1J\t W.---~. A FlnSy 1.10 6 17\io 1r lTl'l+'ii 1!!!?!,',, ·,",, lOf ~. }!'Jo SY'•-'• Gen Hrt fl •:it 610 IN Jll• 'O LQt•I Cor• 11f f'~ JI~ lof l'o A Fin pf 1\'> >lfll 19'''-l O" ,,, .. ,.u ~ t !o 0''1 ''' . C.n llrt pf 1»:! 15 JS -·~ L1L111d!' .. 1 17 .U•i 4J -t 10 AG~e 1.07d ,. • lt'•-\~ Cttlp~I Solt ., 17'o 11•1 11~·•'•Gen•K 1,10 '° 1l!\ 21"'1 ,, +\.'J touGtl l.J4 u nv. ~ 12"9'• A G11 pt 1.80 .,..,, \lo-·• COllracC 6CI I ll '!. )l'o 311 ._ \o G•nulnP .•.S 11 Mio 1111 u~•t t\ LTV Cor• )t IJ lj"' ~ L, UPI T•lttilooft HE'S WORTH A QUARTER OF A MILLION Peter Riksheim, 73 Likes Whet He Does A Gn lnJ .J2 "f, j'tl'I '11,.,~~ 1fl-',0"1 ·,, Cn~MI l.lSd J7 Z. ,6 16 (lnsl•r ,JOd I h '• ll•o 1.f\'0-\1 lowtNI ,fQ 2' 11'• 31''1 l'~!" AmHo!1 .40 1' ffl: lOI;, ,,,._t;,ConEcl 1.IO 13:1 ll "l'l"o 2' f\'G1Pa<: .109 ''' '9'• Jt'h 1".t \"LYV C••f S 1 J1\.\ 3 '.li if.l' <, A Homt 1.17 ' ~ 11'• l?lt-'ii CcniEd pf S l '-i .,µ, W~ '·• G•Pwpl 1.n 1160 lOJ 107'~ IOJ t ·~ lubrlJol .Cl 1st »l,. JO -l'• AmHoso .77 ~S I06~ \O.~'t, 10ol -"lConEpf l "5 JSO '42'~ •?'.• •1\< I Gfrber 1.U ti Wt 3110 lS'I• 411 L\OCkYS ."'9 '5 11'• lt \\• ''* Am lnw .l Sd ll .ia~• .il"i lll"'i+ \lo Cons Fsj i ~o 37 :Ml • Je :M + '' (l erty l.11d 1 1•'• H~o 11'1. 1• Ludlow 1.01 • 1ll'1 :t.Jt\ 2ji._ ''I A Me<:!icl .I? :i: lO'IO J0•.11 lO'"' ConFctPI .f\.1 11 91 '61 ~ 96V.-~. Genypf 1.M • 191/o 19\o 19~+ 1\ lUkll'IS Ud l l tt 2Q.\1' 2 +r . A M~iCQr1> If\'> IJ,'o (i\'>+ ~-Con Frtljhl ,_ 15 '""' 'lS GlantPt .60<1 ) IJ'l !J1o ll'l+ \\ L VO Coro -li lf:' !" t''-l• AM~!C• LIO HID !93~ 17'< lt +,.Coo leis n1 51 9''l 90i 911-\\ Gll>rtlFln " ,, 2) ... 1) 'l3•~+ \~ LYk• Ytl" 2~1 1 ~ .. I 11 1 ~1· .. AM«: pf !••, JO 30 m'I 1'91,'I-\.II ConsNG l.9S 11'1 8'111 :I'll lf'·• Gldd Ltwil ll 1) J11t 1) LYI< .. YI J>f 11 il~ ll" l o member of an At omic ~nergy Commission study ·team at Christmas Island following atomic tests in .the South Pacific. NO\V llE JS merely a member of the crew of the Sylvia and holds one of nine shares which means he gets one-ninth of the value of the fish caught and sold. · Once he owned his own boat, a tuna clipper called the ~1argaret F. But early in 1941, when the United States Vi'ai moving to a war footing, a government representative came around and said Uncle Sam needed the Margai;et F and six other tuna boats~then ba:Sed at San Diego. "I didn't want to plained Riksheim, sell." ex- " but if 1 Am~r Mclor 2 1 9' '4 9' '·· Consm Pw 1 11 'ltl\, ?I 'll'o+ '\ GiffHl!I .'lid 1 21 71 'll -••· LYflC';,.$y .40 I \lo l v. ....,.,. \• ArnNOs 'l.30 ~ ~ 3~.4 lj~+_l'oC011P ot 4,14 tlO ~~ !5'1 Wo+"'•Gllbert Flt• 11 ~~\ tJ', ~~t-'• -M,,_. Am Stat 7? 'l '' > ' ··• Ccn P Pf fl'J 1270 '1'4 60'• Ml'•-~. Oll~ltf 1.•0 •s ot •o .. 1, .... .. Mt(.I\" .OSll ~ ... "'• t•O-\.• didn't they 'vould confiscate ArnSlil1> .~09 11• 2P.• · Con Pol 7 o 10 " •a 9e + ~ Glmbei er 1 ll7~ ,~,,. ,,., 1)1..t-\\ MtocDor!ld t t•;, ''• ,,,,. AS I 4 ll''t 3' lo! -'~ConH Alr i..n 2)9 2? 11•·,·11 Glnos l'KOI' lit 791, ?t1~ 'lel't-\!J Mt<ktC .:SO 1 l f 1)1,0 11 t '• her,soltookthe$43,000they AmSmA~t~'.: ,,, 10'1 19'• 19•,,+(if11 con 1•0 s.o M'I 19 ~·.~'oG1enA1 .lOd u 101. f (• 10 -\•M•crRH 1 30 1''4 J" !"'+'• A S! 11 S.n'ot 5''4 ~+1 on C1111iifr IS )'o ~'• I'•+ '• Gk>O•I Mar 321 2llo 11'• 7J +I"° Mt<! Fd .Xld 11 \''!• '"11.~ ''~+ '• offered and put part of the: A::::sra:l '~ 63 1"1 11 l\\-'4 on11 CorP 2 .)() 1?'• .fl'. •? • g'Ol>tU~ «t i 11\1 31 1, Jl'1-1. Mtct ,,111.,, 11 Mo 3u, ·Jltlt-'• · th t I f d AmSI 11 $2 3 .W'i ~ 59'4 + "CnllCP Pf'l~) S 41''1 ii'; 18\'•-'t old W11 ftl 21 lt~• 16'1 io•~ . Miotl<Ch ... , .... .. ..,lo ,. money in e mu ua un AmrlT 2:60 7~ ~r,~ !t•: ~·•+ ~ t~r1~11e1 ~;J .7~ ~r~ ~ .. ~t.1.,j:'\~ G::l;~c" .~ R 1~. zs~. 1si. . Matntw 110 1~ n i. ,,1,. l1"t-'• be~auseJl!l:'_~~ttlefri~_~d_a_nd~\rr_~'wj ,, 57'• 5~ 3Alt ~-•.:. oniJn~11·21 9 111• 11~. 1 ,~, .. Go•donJ .;1 ~ ~ ~~ ~~-1 ~.v..llorv Co 10 llli 32 Jl•r.+14 hbo EI J h A Wat .llll ••. .w._ ·•14 -£!•-·-ltl···IOd -tt-llJ'' -111r 11•r·~ Goulll'Tnt·-~, .... ~ l'l'O ll'• lJh -1.ol ~!~1 .. H •• :JO,._ •,• ~ ••. ','•~ >J,L!" •·• ne1g r, r1ng 0 ansen,Aroa1a~ i~ 1J lli•: ir.: lli.!+·~~~JIJlP~l\'12 121 16'• ,.\, '2a''2+\0Gr eceW '"" •I 15'1 l~ ls,•,.•~14 M°:;;'Pow .,., 10 ;;\._ lJ~ 1Ji:+·~· was anagentforthatoutfit." Aw1:IP' 1 ·~ 1:io 1a~ 1a"" 1•~-v.E~·,,_, ... _ 1 ltY. 311\:. ..... ,,.. Gr•nttv ·'° , t9''h 1\-'l .!f!.'l'I,-M•""" 1:56 m, ..,."'" n'i~ 31,,,.+•• AW1rp 1.•, ,.,. •-• "'""' .,,,,, .. ~~ .-'.ll 1• l)'lo I' + \lo Grtnd U .IO lO l..., 14..,. I • That W a S Only a Jew A v-~v.• ..V.:.-4" onl Ttt ti 9t 21 .. mt 11 G•Onllvllo > t 19' .. 19" \t, MAPCO 10.f .ff\.lo !!,'t:_ ~,. "N!ron .4S-" -)! J:,, J:,1. j~ + % !ontrl Dita J5l 76'/J n lh 741't+il't Grin! w 1~ n lOf.: «>'" -·~Mir 011 1'.to 1'5 )O\.'Ji ..... -·-" months after United Funds, ~~'f1~,;~ 13s ,1,4 61..,: 621,.+··~ on""" 1.90 1 30"1 XIV. JOl'I+.,.. G••v o 1.20 10 :t:S\lo )N. ~ '° Mtt<or .eo 110A 24,,. H\.'l 21\.'I+ ~ L l t • b . Amite: .to ?J 3l~r. 33'11 lJl.lo ook Un .!O JO. 16Vi lt'Ao 1414-14 &AMt l.U:I .U 3o 1"\l 30 + \.'o llMmir "' 2 2tl ... 41 ""' ... ne., wen into us1ness. AMP 1n( .M 16 98•4. ,, ,, _, .• !~,,',"'• ,·~ 1 ,, ll\:. i. +1 rt A&P ,IO 2it 14v. 1414 1•v.+ v. M1ttmon1 u 1111o1i lf"' 31.._" R.k h · · ed $ · AmocoP 36 1 ii .... ~ 71 33'4 J?-1... J310+ ~·, tlkOr 1.20 13 31\4 31\~ 31"h , MKMld l.1't ~I l't \lo Jl'MI+ "9 J S elm invest Jl,OOCJ lR 1'm1>e~ .(p 77 .,,;: r;: ?~+ ~ ooprT ·2td 11 16!4 l6h 16~• G1N1>lrc11 lb S Ht\9 10'Ji I j +. \'i Nllf'IOtll, .71 IS ~\\ -&iU ....... + \;,_ t I H I t h d. 'd ds AmreP c-0 10 n•• 2' .,,_ ., OQPlpf 1,. 1 lt lf lt . GIN Nrk 1.60 "' 51'/r SI Sl~+ 1,~ Mlrltft .l«I 111 SO SJ•• 37,,.._'"'" \VOpans. e et e !VI CO Ammr 1:10 )•• ... ~+vt Pl>elnd .MJ 8 f<R• .l6 1<1~+H1GtWFin .I.set 110 2t ~HI ?1'1t-il M1rQil Ctm 1 111.11 11; 111Jo ."" and capital gains ri·de and on AAms~',}·6,s ~3 •sl. 1.530"1 4ri',.._,, !'"~..,,•1 00111• '' lt;:' ,1•1>\Vot9•1.1-•11 Gr!Wtd un 21 1ov, '""'\~10.,,+ v. Marri.it c. 11 3' Ill" :v + ,..-·-.. ' ,,,., "'• >>•'+'\• ',',,"'G _,!00 If urt l\lo lllo-1• GWUPI .llh '10 1)1~ 1)\~ IJ'/1-\.ji Mtt'U!F 110 11 ll" \ ffii > M 2 1972 h d 31 386 Amtel I• 20 2 ' ..,,., '" ....,, '9 2»·~• 2lS 2'.li t "" Grl ~Ill In S !J1t ~ ~lo ' '"' . • ay e Owne ·• · o ' •·•I 1 ••• >• >>'• >> lO''-• 1 · •· M1rll""l ,tO t 11~ ll"" 21'1 ... ' ' ' Anaconde ~1 1$ 1~ .il\li...:_14 o;,1e~ (;;; J ,. l Vl ~.grew 1,Clf JU 11\'o 111-1 11"-~-~ Ma;r!Mr 110 ttS 70 19'1 ttla+ \• shar.es worth $265,429, based:~°'" Ho..,1 11 n-i.o :n11, ~·.,+ '4 cox erd :JO 22 ~~'(: A~t !~,.._ ,., G~:Ti:~ .~ ii 1f,~ 11"' 1i1~+:\ Md C11p :.so I 31\~ !Iv' .Jl~+ ~• on the current market price.Anc1Cf 1:20q ~ .~~ 4~!: .~it,~;:=.,1.nt~ 1:: 131 3~· J111t J1"+'-Gruml\ 2Sh '' i1v.. 1314 111'1-'~~~~: ·~; ~r :;i''" ,,~ :~~:! I dd•t· h h sed AoteheC .32 ~I .16'1! l•V• 16'.li:): \/0 Credi! fl ·16 19 1 4 19 lf"'I+ \i GuAlll s:Old 2! 3$ 37'/1 Jt + ''o Mll:tl l':er S 1'4'1 !''~ I•~ n a I ion e pure a AIKO 011 'I JI ,,, ,, •• ,,.. .. c . I ?~ 1'~~ 'l6'• G..,~ LI! l'kl .. ~14 $) ~+ ~· ... ' -· •. ,,,,~ .....:.L -·L···; 3 7" h -. ht Apeco .llcl -... •• .... •• rocker LM ll lJl'I 311/• J3•,, .. ~ 1~ GullM t.'IGI 2 ti ff • ,... .... -• _.... _,. ,. .,,,, s ares over an e1g , • c '' 11 1~ 10\'• . . Cromp K .ao 6 1• ,, 10 + • 01 •• , ··-,,,. •,,,, ·· · M.lt~ue .2... 31.J ,,.. ,.~. 7•1.ii-v. ' ""l orp 10 Zl'lo 21'/o 2:27/t-'hCrouseY .52 1,10 14''• >• ?• ••Gull 1 1'• ~ ._.. ... "' Metttl 1~ in '1'• J1''t 13'< Ycarperiodatacosto[$18,455AA"•""s·· ,•.,o ''~ ,..., '"'. Croweuc •l 61 ~i~ 11 1" 11''-"•ouitR" C1> 1 •1• •'•'-'•'·•+1'M•YDS ,.'° 31 "''' •s..,., "'"+·~ II • a 10 173"1 113 113 -V. Crown Cork 1.$ 7)' 23' ?~" , GIUI pt 32'1 I IQ l~ 10. 'MIY•rf l'.IO • »'4 150, "'4 \'lhich on May 26 '''ere worthArcot.iN .1• 11 is 11~~ '' +•ucrwnZI 1.10 '10 lt~ 2f•1: 2&•:=•:c'<1rs1u •.o.o J> 11 1J.t 111.i ,, M1vtro1 6f '' •l '2\'I+ ;, to:. ArchtrOnl I 10 l1\>\ 36.\1o 36l'o+ 'I> CTS CP .« lj )!'v. 31~~ 31•• GvllWV .608 )~~ ::-,1'~ ~11~ ~>~I 'iL ~y1JW ,50 1,Jlt>; 14'h I~+ V. '1"'7,264 . Arctic Entp 9 11'·' 'll''• 21V.+ \'t Culligan .?I '~ 1S'i• 11'~ lS''l-·~ Gvl!&W~ W! > >•"• ,,,;,,• >>•'" ,"" Mtyllt \,20 101 Jtl'• lll\• llVt-., . • A,llz PS LOI 29 ll 11'4 11\14-V. Cummln .&8 11 ~, • .S9 sq -1 GllW1 Pl Ho • ...,_ MC A I .. Onthelatter1nvestmentheArJa~o s1 11 '"• 4:0:. ,,,.._,,\Cunn oru9 1,1 ,0,,. 91,_ 10..,,1 i,G11w1P1 3'• , H\>r 1.1., 1tv.+"'I n · • 21\" 21 21 "-\':1-h \ k II · 1 · Arlen Rl!O~ 7tO 17'h l6VJ \7~ 14 Curllts wrt 1'06 55\'i 5l Mlnf.lli Gvllon IO'ld1l 'JO 11'0 10'• 10!\-1\ MCCord CP '' 'l'9 ?l\'o Hh · as a en out a capita gains Armco s11 1 :zai 10,,., 10,,_ ~ \> cur1115wr A 3 Ml-• M aa1n-t~•·, -H H-~Crcrt 1.20 l n~. n t• nl'I+ r• d d Mm o> 2 JO l -1 \' C '' H JM -H ''' J... \ ''°' ,,,., J2"->\•, ,....Dt,IT'IOI I ..:! 51~o ~1'·1 SI +. \., an ' ·v1'dendS '" cash. A•m···~· ,·,,. •~ • 'l'9 • ?9~~+ V. V tr · ~ •A• (1'4 111'•-•• I r · ·• .,.,_ ,.,....._.Id Co ''' s• I' .. , · v .. t.SOO 6.'.I 6.'.I 63 CY<I001 .50d I \tir. 19 It•,..+ •o Halllbln LO~ It 100 •-', ,i. -~~ f:ko;'i) .., It '" 4114+ '" Arms k .80 ~O 3Mil 34 36~+ ~ CYllruJ Mi 1 la Jl'h Jll.-i 311.<a ... H1rnP01> .SO llt~ 16'io lS'1 11'"'-Vt McGr e ·1., I~ ~:.! 3fo•,, ll\l.+111' A<~CIR 1.60 l 31'h 31•.\ 37\.'J+ \.II .. .,.......Q,0,..-'1•md C • .O )lo lCl\1 ·10 10'" t ... M(Or HI ."60 llm 11,0 ~'' "1,,;>-+ )• An:> orp .fO 6 211,<o 71~ Jl~ \lo ... 1rn0f! (p l t 61\o ~9''1t .e~o ., Hlndltm .U U 2S%1 'l•.1'4 2tV.-IV. MGHIOI ..... > n•· ' • P,rvln Ind I l l JOV. 50V• so·.~ Oanlllvtr M ,, 9\lo 9 ' • H•ndY H .11 • Hit \II ti'• .... ..,. ~·lo 2tV>-\It A,., 01> >" '' 2 ··· 0• -• I -'' )t C .,,. MCGrttr 0 9 s•,, O>• '''+ •·, " . 7 6 25V. u + Vi n.,..p ·-381/i 3'9 + {o HIMS ... so :J) ,,~, la'l~ ,, -"MclntYtt p ._. .., ,.. " Anoe Brew 5 n l. 7!'1 n•+ 'II O&rt In .:IDo 2S .Sl\< 5J\1 ~---~\ Hanne 1,;» 5 l6\• l6\4 ~-\:. Mcl(Ma. '" ' >I i ·· Ai OryG 1'4 12 ''2 S1 VJ s1112-V. O&rtlnd Pi 2 l S4-l9 5l 51~\+ \'I Herc<>urt8 I ll 11\i .f0~1 'I + 1,1, Mcl .. n W :D Ji; 16,'o 11 + '~ Money's Worth As~oc Trtn$ 10. #'• 6\9 '~+ \.\ O•YCO 1.1.f .. 10 H .... 1•"· l8'1.-If) H••nl1J9r I 21 20 n~-I~~· ... Mc/;!'1-,·,, • ll..l! ""• .. + •• Alllone .20d 8 13'/• lJ ll _ IJ, OIYllll 1 .2f •1 11'" 11~~ 11 + ·~ Harr l1!111P I I St V. Sf\li SO',• •" .... •"' ,. • iri'" ,·-•• M G AtlcMt 1.1.fd •l '71 20U· ?0¥• OtYlonH .~ 9~ ll-\1, l l"t 31~J.--I'• Har1to CP 1 "2 171• 11 ,, + ; ..,.. • '4 ~+' IJ AltClyE 1,.j(l 94 21?:0 ?1 7p, .... :ih OtvPLI 1.66 . 28 2' .... n>r. M:i.9+ \t H•rt5Mx .IO • '0 Vlf 'I MHd C. '° •S 17~ .hi 7h+ 'Jo C Overn,•,•.,R!(,','",.~ 11J """ Sf;~ s.:v.-.. Ot1111 w .10d Xll ni-. 1214 ZW.-\'\ H•w•tl l... ~ ~'IO ~~! ~,, .. _'·v. MM.hf' , .... ,. I .QI 0 ., +"' " -,.. 1100 5' 54 S4 +1 Ottre &Co 2 ,," .. ,,,~ • •• ~ So" •• ~ ••• Ma~11 AtlJ I 1 t~ It" It"+ •~ ~ • "4tl ~+ \:. Allie Pl 1.ao " •n.. ~,,. ..... "· OttP&L 1.1 " •• .. H ,,, ,.,.. .. ,. .. Me'vllt '"°' ,' .. • !l ""' --,!! Ho-wWould Alllldl prt J 1 97i? tt'V. 1J'1;""+1" De/ Mn! 1.10 1J :llO\.lo 20 " tlt nt ,s ,'!-t"'i••· 110,,, +.~. ~. x . '4 W""i ,,.._...,... Alie• Ccrp l l 2'4 2i'o 2\.\-\ ... ge la Ar .SO 39 50 4Mlo ~V.:f: ~ HfiA lnduil JJ SST ,.,•, ••"+ ii .... re: I J • .f) I IJ1Vlo 1~1 ATO Inc .12 23 11'4 12 12'"" ellte lnlrt :M 10 ~ 10 HI h T~ .Old '" 'l'I Mlf<ll I 11 fOJ nu Im n•• " Autom Oat11 IS 89\lz 99 19l;+'11r Ofl!one Cp lo l'l'A 3o'll 32'V.+i~ Ht<ltMn 2L 11 IA IS'to 1~ . M.,...llh :10 2 tM 1 ... 1,;j: li. Automt lnd9 n 7~ 711, 1'h-V. O.nn!1n .61 13 al'~ l)>O; 3''4+ ~ Htlru H l,o.t 21 fl\~ •l~ 41"'--\, ..... rrlll.y S2 222 :m )14t 'lltl+ >; Avco Ccrp :10J 1514 1,11 l>''i .._ Otnnvi~ .O• 10 15\'I 1.s · 1.51>\ Ht!eMR ·'• S 3.S 3l :u + \.ro M ~ Jl:I. 0 ,.,. + Avco Co wls 89 I'll fl'I .~ :!. Dell!M>IY ! 11 f'R\ "'" *'-"% Hfle~ Curt 14 IV• 7\'o I'~ _ HI • ~ + ,. Affect Businessmen? By SYLVIA PORTER If Senator George McGovern were to become President of the U.S. ·and if he then could put into effect policies which he has publicly favored, what might it mean to you? You, as a big businessman? Or a small busines - man? Or an investor'! Answer: A period Of dis· quieting un- certainty about what is in pros· peel for you, that seems sure. Higher t a x e !i on your earnin,gs and capital ~ains. But, should conversion from war to peace undercut your bu siness, direct and possibly vitally i m p o r t a n t help. IN THIS report, T need not repeat in detail my three basic Points except to underline the exlent to_ w]liffi_J~natqr from South Dakota is now trying lo reassure you that he has no anti-business bias. "I understand." says he. "that the strength of the American economy is due mainly to the dynamic growth or the private sector led by corporations and o t h e r businesses. It is sound public policy to create the conditions for btisiness to function ef· feclivety." Rea_ssuring words indeed - but stripped of the bafnegab, what might some of his pro· grams mean to you_? Avco 0, 3.?0 2'l ,31._ 4l'llt ,,,,~ .. oert<o Pl A 7 ,) 65 a.s +I H•l!•rln1 .IO 2.s 2tU 29\li 791._ "'Mttfbl • 11•, 'm •"'•·· /"'•··+ l! Averwf'd .21 69 36;4 3~.._ 3tS •+·, .. OeSp!Qln .40 2S 11 !~~ 11 + ~ Htllr Pl •.OI I 12• 126 11.6 ..... ,"'~I .Uh .. VJ -r 82 t t A"'1tt lSd f? 11,, li ... >>""-,. OelEdlS 1.ll) Si 20 )~ 1f1,\+loli Mtlmt .409 1! l•!\ U•: 14l'o-+ ~ M M Irie l) t 1114 1'11 ... o percen on year· a-year AvollPd i.Js 118 114,., 112I:-113 .. _.,1, &::~ :i ~·:l i50 "'·• '*'4 .~ Ht1 .. Ynt .JO 21o l-1"1 JJ~. 3'.1o+ ""~i'l •~ ·'3 1~ W :1~ !ftt.;2"" increase in earnings of big Aitt< 011 a1 11 »19 zo11i 2011>-~• 0.1 e Pl ~11> 120 101 JGl 101 + ·" H..,.,i~ ''P' I J,;~ 3,1", ',',·'. ". ·. M"",,,G•• • 1 a ,, 1~ 1• + 14 -• a-o,.rr 'f 14 2 n n n Hem' " .JOd '" foll T~ 1 J lM 1m 11~ companies. Bcll&Wil .SS 67 211'1.i 11\ 'll' _'.lo Oj• ,., ,·., 6 ~ ~'.lo 25*+ .i,.I Htrcult ,,ld 21 4J "'.\<; 4.fl;,-i!11 M'!-, 20d l> n·· -·· -... ··• • '._ i-11 " . ?I ~· 3°• 3S!•+ •· Hrrv., I 10 '' .,,. ,.,, ''"i _.._ """" · -"'' "'~• ··· "" ·"" 12~17'il21',..01ms1vn1 -~·• ... · ,.. .. ,.,. •• ..,.MlclC Tlt? ,,.,,,~1•"'-ll•ktr In .16 71 ]93io ?'I :19~, 8"!"~ .. ' '' 1&\9 1 .. 4 1~ Heublflfl ... 71 611,'1 tO'I.\ II\.\ » . . . • ....... '" • AS A •BUSINESSMAN B•k•rOH .70 • , .. ,, .. , .... ,, ._ .... l "'' i·~ 11~+'" i!llP .20 31 .. ~ .• 61~ ~ MldloU 1.0.S 1J ?Cl\.\ 10 '°""' .,. • ''"' .,. ,.,_ " "" 16l4 O" ,,.. H hVo'> E• '' >> >O•.'o '' +'" Mlctltot• .to " 1$ 1#-0 1•"-'r'I d I . t sled . b ild" lll!Ges J.S9 7R 271'1 l 1'IO 11'1'1+ \t. ~'''°'"' Co 1S ti-'. ,S\ m+·u. H Of! 1111 y 10 "°'~ )t)ij )t-\:o-~ Mllttlb l .20 '' ~ JT\lo .. + ~-eep y 1n ere 1n u 1ng e1101 f' 4\/J z20 •3'h 63Vr '3~ Vi •bOld .«l<r 26 36 """ 36 + '"' HMw 1nau1 1 41, , •\.lo+ "'MJllOfltr .36 tJ .&?• "'""' ar.-"' Up YOU th h RtnCI 1.1' l 1f'.'I 2( 24 -'h 0 Gloroo .60 SO l':it. 14 J( · HODtrt J 20 10 6''~ at~ ~-'Ao Minn M&M t7 11\.ro 76'h 1•~+ .. r company fOUg B1noor Pn 24 16 15~1 1& -l't Ololl•I foot •10 711,.; 1S'h ?!~-'\' Hotr1>tr :t1 2 lS'4 l5'• lS'Ai-'4 Mll\nPl J .~ 1 »'i 'lOl'lo :II*+._ mergers, a Jl\l.ICh stiffer en• =~~'of PH~ i la ~~ ~~~ r"..,;:'.: :.Z 81U~~IA-1 t ~~ lil~'h 1r+ \.lo ~or. EIKtn ' 211~-. 211, 1roo Mtnnf:G .XI 19 l9 JlfV. ,, + °'6 I t r th t. I t Bn~'Tr 2k ..., .S3'·• !'.!~\ "'' . "ol',JM~of8 2 I ~-•• j!'L ··· o nns .11 I., 5J 51'1'1 .S7':1 +"~'Mlu Jt1v .IO 17 1"" 1);'1 U\o\ ... orcemen o e an I· rus aarwou ·,1 9 ,,.. ''" ,,,.._Vo .to.. 35 •• "+·• Ho!!~Su .fOd n 111.1o 11 "'"'*" 14 MPCtm 111'1 1 2t 1' 2t .. I to k d A ... -. ... m~ "" i'l 'U Homn!l!. 40 101 :H~• 79 29Vi+ ~ ~ ,,v .toq ,, l}"e 11~'1 1Ni1 " aws ma e sure you on't ardCR. .11 1t, 3~• Jn< 37'tlo ,. I"'°" ·111( 3 ill 1M•411Jm+1, .. Honvw1 1:30 11 151~ 150._.. l}l i 'UMobllOI 2.611 261 lffi ""' SN l · t l · h · I Btslc In .-40 I • • tl>S ,. ~ J~ .., Moovtf' 120 a 21'\'I "'• l>t" Mill'ltto 1.10 12 »Vs »1.1o lt\'J '" m er ere -wit compet1t on. B•slc Pf 21; z:io ::io 30 :ao -·u .• !' · ' ttv. ~v.+ 1t H 1 ,. • , "t ., 8afHM lOd 5 1~ 13,._ llVi+>> .vrrsld In 41 3~ 3~ ti+ \lo orion 1> .fl lS\'o 34\io lli'tt +~MDl'llwk Ot t• ?0\11 1 \141419 You 'd almost certainly find it e11KM Pt 1 c u v. ,11 .. 17,,..._ It g1vM10 2.°" 1112 2~ lS\o\ 2 ~-.., H~1>11•• Aff 1s "'"' n 711• +'* M9flwll fib , 1 11 Wtt 21 '' h t h t I 8alh Ind .10 7S ::19 :M'h 311~+ 1/J r Pair ,41) .. •• 41\to ' t \.1 H~r1111 C11 2t 21 36 '/0 31 +I Mol'l"b Corp 10 11\lo 112 11~.,. muc oug er o get approva Biu•cllL ,A2 19s ... ,, ,,,. ••··+s ... Dome.Mn .ro 25 11v• 71\.11 ,, Ho. Intl .J6 • 391/i ::II' ,.,,.. +\.\-Mot\lrch . ..o 1 11\fl 11'/J ,,.,.. ... • ........ .......... .--.-DomFd S7il:t 9 '19 ''" -·«HOlldtlle .~ 11Ill•1)09 13"\i-V..MOnoar•m 21 1414 U\Q 13'1'.-... for mergers ex!tr l .l!' 1z.s 411'. •P;) 47;<+\.'i OOnluJ '.oSd a 111" 11v. 1Vi+lii :r.::-"F"'i ·so'° s 211,1, 2l lJ~ •. Gt.A .G 11 •1'.'a "°"" ll'h+\~ · lltvu~c, .50 i l~>i. 131~ 13•1, ... Oot!ntUY . .u 121 j6 ~ 26 • w • .-S3'Ao }2* 5314t+ "'Mof\1111 Lto 12r S7 J1 \4 !1~.,. • As an executive earning a~::;'~! 1:~I .J ~ .w' ~+·~ g:~c8uv~ ff llZ ~~ ~!li:t:'ii H:!:J:J l~ l~ ~"' rri! ~~·__+~=tt '~ ~ f,:! ~~ ~~i :1 fat salary, the abolition or the::~~ P.'2.sJ 1 n w. n3•..-11l'l•t l'-g:rtvC ·~ 11 'f'• ,, 1t -111 H<>uullf 4 . ..o "1~9"' 151 um+1:i. n Pr '" • 314 ffi• 21,...., '"' t b k . t b BtctonO -,!~ ~!II ~!"• 511\f ~ ~ .. ,~ ' -,', ~ ~·;. $-"'·"' HHMNCGP 1.:16 ltj '3~ "314 -™•+ "MOHY ~ 70 1~ 12v, ,,., ..... new ax rea given o you y ., • ., ... ... 4-'v. 4'1• " .... rv.... "' + 14 ou ·"' 11 l5lto 41 's -~ MorD~" 1 '" .,. .,,,.. '21.i ~ • , BtotChA .60o , 21"'-'ll'llo 21'Ao-.V. PF lllCO 2l 6'<" ' 4 'II HowJ111n .24 ~1 S6 '"'·• 'S'>llt ~MlltlSh 15 2t 11"> lWJ 1~+ ,. Ute 1969 tax reform law-the Re1coP11 .~ 2' 1~" 1~v. 1~Vi+ \.Ii r•woC 1.•~ ' 30'9 :io 30V.+ v• Howmtt .10 xn 15!4 u 15"'" V.MirrA. 1 ~ :ic~ ,,,,,. j1\t, 21 + •• . Briden l .?O I 211• 211r. 27V. fl!s•r l 'O ll 111/i 11 31 , . Hubt>cl I.lid ll !'"' 1tV. ,,... V. M IN • 14 lll 2l'tt. jt 2' -~-50 percent maximum tax on B•laoH ,JOq ' 19!.7 1tv, 19•4-;.; rtt ot 2 '° ,oi;. fO.li fl1411 + i'I HuvcitCp .14 t """ 3l\il !'~-411 °" ~r •60 .s.s 11a· "'" 11a +l\t ed . Th. 6111 .. HU .«t 3' ,,,,. 61'1to ''"'+Ii Oreswr, ·,• ' ,• li~ lS~ 3~.~ .. Hrdrmt .(lfd 11 1.f l~ ~ MOfO!'OI 1· ' ...... L ..... '2111+ \to your earn income. 1s n,m1sco· ·'° 11 21 10,, 10,,._ ,, Ortt.r ·'*' n .. n~ tt'iJ 11 ···Mi'""' ·'° ....... -·· tftir repeal is in the tax reform bill C:~tl(p t~g ~~ !~~ :t~ ::r~ ¥: ~l:1:;c\.~ ll ~'~ lf ,,, ~'),?; ~ l~~fe~. "~ iT f~:! li,,. fltt"+ t: $~~ ·1~ fl *It lm ?m_+\ introduced into the Senate ::~~::~ ~:~ l:IO ll\'1 3l\lo 33\'lt v. Du~P or 6'4 l2{0 ~lt..,., H~~ !11\t:},? l:l:'\9fo ~ 1 19V. 1t14 1914-"" M~"'"' t:u 2 ~ .. 30'h 3"r .. which McGovern is c 0. BrnC pf .f,JO ~ ~~ n:,,., ~.,.,_ t ~:,:: 1t: Ii {! 11t ~~ ~ uic!n1:V l.~~ u n" 11~ if14! ~ ~;e"'': :;: 1! 11'~ n:: ~ ~ A~n(p~f l'h 1100 SS SI SI • Pont :IV.cl 16 16-(1(,, 162'1> 16!1/J--l'll 11'1',c,~ !'f 2>20Vr ' $$ Sd.111 -"\.i Mu 01 60 l .c:l\O 43~ .Q\'\-V.. sponsoring. ~!r'i:!':' P~~ 1r~ ,m. _,;"' J~t ~ 0u~~:; ;~ ~ i7i:Z ~ L~~ ~ im"'":f,1 (p "~ ~ ~~ 11m:·~ =:,~~ ~5.'10 l ''~ 1~'!9 1~~21.,, • As •n 1·nvestor a t1'ghten l!leth su 110 2s1 :11•,.. 211'1 28v.+ , .. Duoflt'L 1.6' " l'4 ,,.,.. ?lv.+ v. IN,t,, c '·-'' •\.\ "6 ........ -M' . '' ,, •. ., 1tt'I 1•"7+ v. • • Alir) 1"<1 :52 ..... .,~ ,, ,, _It g::ot ot /~ >1"" ~ • .,. !l ''''l''' j11Com1 Ceo 42 ""''· ..... . 1 -" " [! -"""' .. Cl .... ., ,.,.,, .~ •'\4-. !1 M.,.,.•L .«Id .! •"'-" ,.VJ 29\'»-,. 1ng-uponcapita gainstreat.eiackOkr 1 u101 1oov.101 .• ~·"',•,2 1llo 21v, ...., 21y, 1 ,~,~, ,. ,. v..--. ~.. _,. . . '11elr Jn .48 'l9 10 19'~ 1~ Vi ?. ii 1100 ?9\11 29'h 1'v. Vi .... M .to llt 79~ 11 V'\\+I ~obi•~ IJO 16 51'1> 51'.~ 5114--,~ ment all along the line. For tn· a11s,L1111n 1 1• 1t'4i ltV• 1,.._ '" olot l.tO 1100 ,, t7 97 .. , lnctM 01 '·!f 1100 """ "'It "VI •k:o " n 14 srv. 56>1< sr + ., 'lance, the Senate bi!J. which :i~~I~ :;6 211i ~~~ ~~ ~'ll+tl~ Y~l~ncl~~ -1 .~tt-! '~ 2:.~t.:u.11~1.~, ~~SJ zn n fit n ·.~ =~~:l :!: l Ml,'I ~~ ~,.....· .... McGovern ,·, ~·sponsor1·ng ,e~bl:>,~•, ,et1e.! 10• 12 ll'iJ 11~ .., Eeolt Pl '·' 2 """'" '''' ,.,.. nllrl' Rn 2.08 i,1, ~.·~,. "" ~ '/ Alrl!M1 12' <1'1. •1'.4 '4 ... V" """ .-.. 12• 11~~ 2m1o n v.+1 E•,coC 50ll 16 ;~. 19 Ji.; ... ,noR Pl l lS 'l'" w~ • 1'v .S1d 1• 2ll'I ,,,..,, "l'l'h+ '4 WOUid increase the holding=~ C~ .1S 19' ll 11'i 11•·•-... Et$lrrn .Air 13' 28'/.i 27~~ •·· 1111"<1 Sr( 2 rl li~,« 1h't r1t~--Hf'c~·=I j~ ~~ ~1\o\ ~} ~} + ·~ ·oc1 r I Indus 9 fV. 9 9'AI+ \'t Etll G•s lie: )1 u 2M J'M>... '\.ii ~!l'lont Co l' • I'~ I'"-n NltCt•h ·'° ~4 l2 31"9 !I? + \>\ ~ or ong.term ca{'i!al :oo1cMo i:vi 1 29:14 ""' n>1o • E111 uu '"" 10 ~ ~ 11m+ v. n•Hco c .?O " i' ,t. 1"" 4~·,+ H~h«n ,11 13 14,,1. 1, '"''-\lo . -1--£--,.... arcltll 1.20_ .1' 2'!tL2't\...U!,'1...._)4EalCocLJ.OA.1 __ 25LlJL_~l3A'Ao+-1§1r. lnslk;yaf l\lo ,., ~ 1nt. ~ + NI llvL to ,u )lG ?114 711itt Vo gain trea ment rom six aor1 wr 1v. Jl "'-n~ 311•+ •-. Ea1on c 1.t11 23 •m .uv. · .uv,+ v. 1nso-c-2 -1,,.2 -lt -.,u~-mta-N 1;,u-:90"' -311-__,.,,_ 18%--~ ~ months to one year. It "'OU/d :g~,,~' 1.~ 16 6'1• ·~· 'Vi-~-EcllUllM .32 '3 •Ulo """' 41\.'l+l\o\ 1nltrco 1.1.f ff • I "' N 1,1 r "A 110 l'O 10 10 v. ... e I 41 ).IV. 3• 3'1ft+ Vi Eckd Jk .14 311 Ut;. J3'l.lo 3' -~ nWl•kt 1.90 ,,•,'I " _ .. ,. 'll'll "' MllFut 1.1• Jl 1•'-7f'"i ,....,_ ,. eliminate the tax break for B~~f,~ ri :i~~ ::;: 11t'.; Jtt::t_~g1'r1G ':~: ,r ~\ 1~ ~rot r,> I~~ lo~ 6t s\4 "'1m• 1' 1· 1•flG"' ·10 73 23'1 7:t\o ?~:. · 't J . d $" 000 , Griggs 1.:IC,.. 7S .f6 4$1\ '4 + ~. Elttl Ass~ I• •-• •o•• ,_, i! lnfl•vor ·'! •j ~~ I '1 Gyp 1_M 94 11 1.,.,,. 11'. ~" cap1 a gams un er ....,, 1n Aris MY 1.10 '° 4j~ 11,,. ~' '•-•1, ,, •• ,, ,,-, , ,-, •• " ,-, +>l: 1n1H1rv t.• tc ~ v. ... llH"om~J6ct 11.1 11o;; U·U 1~+ u 1 Br11Pet .~d l'1 I Vi )ill 13\11 , El """' ""' "" lnttm1t Ind •S 19 ~~ .. I ll I I 21 .r. '40 ~·+ '~ any one yea r. It won d· repeal Rroct H~I .Jo 8 :w1o1. J•\~ 3~•'1 · tel M1mo ~ ,.,. s ,v,+ \~ 1111 h'IClvt 11, 1 1~v. 1, 14 + '" JI 111111 ·~ 1 14\.11 ''""' 1~+ '• the tax break J•volved 1.n the 'r'voc~00,1 , .. n11 l'O ''VJ ·'~ 26.,..+·\l. f-1 Memo pt ' 417 4°""' ''" ... lnMlllCll .lf 14 1111r 17 ri "" rn 110a 1 )1'11 )H'I 31 \11-\• ,1 1J. " •5 21 ?ll.4 :nE+ 1' Et11ln Nall 17 6 '"' $!lo-~~ lntM .. C Of • l JO SO + Vo II .. rv M :U 3014 '9\• 30 -.,.. '100 d' ·d nd J · Bre>W11 Com 13 11 -•ot; 1.;4_ "ii flPtlONG I " 11 1411 1 + Vo Intl Mln!l"ID 21 ~ j"' ~ ~ I !ltnd 1\75 J ~ ..,..._ ~+ ~. "' !VJ e exc us1on. BrGrouo 11'1 1 HJA. :tl'lf 3314-'"' El!r1Cp 1.'1:(1 lJ 34'1o :M . " -~ lntMulU l \I• 2 .)% ·~i••r » ~ .fAl4 !r~ -l , • As a small businessman. g~~lr~j: :Z: ~l :J~ ~~ ... ~!~~t,~ ~~r,1:~ 1:~ ~ r,v. ~'· g = ~ l~l' ~~~-··.~ "'t' J"' ~ ~:;tr '. .s , 4 \2"J.!'11"v. •fl;~ .. . l hel V lo , erun1wk .1, 21 51'11 s1y, 111\to EmrvAlr .$2 lJ .-.1. ** "' -Vi In! ,,.,, ol ' !" ~ .ci tun I l 1 20\li '°''" ,. spec1a p. ou, r instance, Bucy e 1.10 2 2t '8fli 29 ••• E1o.rrv1n .» " 1s1.4 1sv. 1m+ \Iii nt Rtc1111•r "u' ~ E H::,r,::: · '?: ~ 1 4'1 ffl'.:!:1~! wouldbeexemptfromanyex·g~l=e,', 11~ lt .,m J~ 1t:z-+;~i~~r[,1:: 1; S4-'\4 "~~ 3m ::: ntlf~,~·1: 11 1 1~1 NwPw 1. lS lS4t ~ '"'+" r•t . ed 8ulow1W .60 2 14~ 1-(IA 416-\4 EmoOS 1.• :: ,....,, ~ »•11+" JT&T.1111 '"' a H'A Newbtr I ,, n 22 cess pro is tax 1mpas . (You BQnk R•mo n j' 1i,~ ~ ... EmOolA .n t.loo •VI •Vi 4v, ,., r1or ofJ ' 11 R1v. : ,U "'l"!!J'! • 110 = ~ ,!,~f' would be deemed "smalP' if =~~1111:'· 11.~ ~l ~ !~~ !m:: U Emp Fini si '1 i.-.. 13111 1'"* 1'I I l~~~•K2v.' lf v. Dv. -~ 91;t~ I ff am ~ ::: you do not now pay the full :~~INNg. ~~ ': 'J\6 'Jt 'J~+" ~::11';:. G~ ~ Jf'" ~ lr't: jJ: J,nf<\.J J, ~ .. ~~ +'Vi H~v''"''' ~~·~ ~1 p"" ~~M, - t t t I M eurndyC .tO 12.4 )dllo ~ ~iz ·v. En1111eus F •S 9\4 ,,,... .,.,,.._'II "'~ UIU 1 l ~ + ~ = ~ 16 161.6 "' corpora e ax ra e. ore eurrohs " 11114-. iu 1!3""-E11ctm .ltd • 21.\lo 211111 21" •.. nll•Het Y ' .q 11v. · ~ research a n d development eush Uni,,,. -! ~'lilt lOYJ 0..,., :;: ~:f1:! ?Jl J ~~ ~.,.. ~~ ~ I~~'* l ' 114-it Nit 11 · 0 ,,,,/'~~~a ..- funds would be channeJed to l:t~~: .~ 11 mt ff~ 1m± a~~~ r~ ·i.t • ~ ~? g~+1:Z :~~r:~ ~:U 1s l ~ .. i1tt I: HI:! ~ ~ ''r c 'n4•+11 you not only to help you E:ITT'?rn:V4 :: · ~ ~~ ~ "tt ~:::,~~' 1:Y ~. !:~ !£: !.~·" 1~:~1:1: V~ u m t: :tt ~ ~~1111·", 12;1 rl .. ff: t;"+•,. OSper but .1, 0 •~-a-u"x eettarin Min 26 11 10~ ,., -+ Em pf 2.k $2\~ Sj~ sm •.• l~w• flffl SI 'J ~ a *41 +\lo ~~~ .lOd J 'U\ ,,..,. 41\4-Ui pr • IX."\; ~ Camll:lk .l.S 31 lll'r 41i'Z l1ti+ % E11er1 n .net ..s il1 t\11+ '• •ow;o "'' /·""' !tt '~' '" '™ Wt & 11t. 11\.to "*-"'-~1cGovern believes you should ~~~P6J. .. '· .• ", 17 n~ 211,1o ~A\~-'Ii E111v1 c11 .•• 30 2P< '~' '~ ~ IDW•!IG .-:.-'is 19 lt. It + ti Hor• .JOcl :io 2~i ~ '' -'ii ....... ... ' "" 7''o I~ Etllytpl '·'° 2$1 ,1,, ., '° -1h IDW•Pl 1,'° $ """ :nl\ :m•+ ... Norri, I.Of 1 5' m.:_ •· encouraged to produce your ~•nPac .'6d 2.s '' 1s1.t 1a + ·•h Ev•mP .Xia 1u n '" 1Jl1 731•+ \It t0\'/8P5 1.1.. , .! "',, .;. ~,,.. -..,, •• _ :~ N.•, M'~, 1,.:!0~ ',, 'i:",',, 1 , 'll 'i' ut: llntl R 1.10 10 11<-;. '''It II\\+ ... E~Ctll 0 ,I(:! l l !flit 11'• 1t1.o+ ''• tne, 0 HM11S11 ,.. .. --"" ...... ,.~ DAV( flO~S P0,..1 1AC S flClU\IVf ~E\\I CA~ • As a businessman. a return of you r taxes lo the hljjh levels ol 1960, although he insists this does · not mean a rlsc In the corporate tax rate from today 's 48 percent to 1960's 52 pertent. lnstcad. he Is asking for the elimination or "the special loophole< th at have been opened since" 1960. Among the "tax minimizing devices" -a cc e I er a ted depredation sohedules and in· vestment tax credits. shareofim portantnewidcas ,~,•,cr~.,•,!d 21260 St 6C --\lo E•tr111c.11e 21 n 21v.'1 "\-\,1F.1""" 60 ~Jt\l~3t11i NA"'""11J 'v...,. ~ ... 1, C H..., ·~; IT i6'"° '~ lS~ . -~ f:-llllt Corr>rln TU til~ "'"' H V.+2 !'jOA ~k l, "5 ll\l 311 ... llt.t+ ·~ and in novations. c!~~0 '., f r: rtt ~::t ~ ~!mJ'' .a'I ~t lfJ ~~ ~nt-~ J•mn " ·1! !~ t\r :M'" 37v.+ v, ~~ &'. ~j1 11} f~ f!t: i'.'~ 1f IN J\1ctOVERN'S words· i=~1~:r1 .u '1! it ,i~ j>: + ~ f•11"1" <•,m v,•, "',;" ~ 1;,•,+1:~ 1:~~t,;'r,n SlJ ,~·ti l;I~ n ~·· ~~:1.c. \'R ·A, 1 1-'1 13 ,,u, ••• 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE \\laQQ.anty • As a businessman p~ pering because of price m. creases and wage limitations. an ·excess profits lax on the · nt part. of your "excessive" ents. Although McGovern also backtrack e d some.what on th.ls proposa1, 1lis initial reacton to the im- pogltlon or price-wage controls was a call (or an exces.1 pro- fit11 tax at the Korean war rate t "Th It th X · •rf'L l:l!"' 12 ?6lio '~' 6l-'o+~F!1~~F ·.: 3J1 :llO'"" 1;/.'20 +,i;Jeflfl ot ~.'1 ts !lj1A .ntii ~ +14 No1Gt · Jr..iti ... c eye o ron, e erox •,',','',,", n "" ~ .,,,,, ... ,.,1i18, .iOd , .,,.. •~• •'•+ i• J cn,or t.:14 inno 11 '4 t ll~ 11Jlfo+1._ N11n :Fi 1.1: 1~2··'1 ~ ,_ ·iii: P I 'd l I re · 221 ~ 4'.._ 'Ii FirnOyF '° • ~11.11 11'-• 11i.-1,-1i Jtwll C 1.l' •• Sl\.'J .,\\ Sl\\+llili HoMOt 21to 2 '-' , .. process, o aro1 , au omat c :,7,~k ~ ,l''?~ ? ~ f~ ~ "•·""'"' ·1n tJ if''" ,,.,. 13'4-v. J,i::J!npf' 1 1'1 t~ ~1~1Ail;ti_.·v. U:ti.!' !;H·'~' J "!i~ C~ "llSt1" transm lss ·ions,oxygenc•~•rTr 1 . ., 19'1 .ci~,,, '° +1 ~r"''' l"tn ~ l m f:£ttt ···J1mw~ lf: 1 11 ,.~ ,...._ \o\NosiTw . ~ i1~ 14 •• steelmaking, modern steel hot ~·t I cfoorr.p 'f 1~ 1~ 11~ ·-~=~~1 :~ :7 ~ [ 1 1111+·~ 1~~~w ~.~ JJ ~ i tm_t ~! "'°'"'" 11 "' 4N +• Ill techn• t'ta · CK* Cp 4 1 ,,._ 19\lr m V. F«lrlCo 1·20 lit ~ -<.:.Joh" J11 ..-115 l'D\11 l I.I; 1~ 1' .ro ng 1ques, 1 ruum, c:,1.11,,..., · r 101 .sv. •M 4 .,. ,,. tc1 MJ 1,f lJ 1m ~ · · Jotm S\IC' ·!! 1t 1514 s1• ,,.._.,.. S L •- the jet engine, the helicopter~~ ~ J ~'M ~ tf._. ~ ~~~ttk.2' 11m ¥ ~t '.II ~n ,;;/ 11° 1U,. I . 1,~ tt UlftUOU -these are a few of the ma.C.iite• Corp lJ 2i1l4 '6'l 2A "'f..,'s11111 :.a ~ l!::+·~Jonl'ILPt" 5 -.1t"s1\l !IE~·+~ c.toHl.ld 1.S2 >c12 71 21'\4 22 \'I fitcttr/la IM 1 ,,._ .-.. joreftl l.~ t• '4'1o \.\ ~!h-"' All NIM 11'1 f\\lnorwft.lot) ""'"" P. jor inventions which have been Ctn 111L 1l' 5' n »~ '3\Af ' .. Ftcto •t 1.0~ 21s ... .,.. fl fJ'-* O"I'-• ... 21 """ . + \6 c:1111 !or 1t1ott 0..1111•1• ui w111oi "' Ctn Ill pt YI 1'9 a2 t2' 4 -"' F.rro Co .10 11 )t + OVMff '·"' 131 MIYI '""' 50'll+ " ffl(lfd In .10 Wr. ,. _. (tm.cl ,,. produced in small laboratories cnu Pt 1.:10 ,,. 14~ '''i 1•~-~ FJDrebld .10 12 12'-' • -• 1 •• -« •--~01v1t1&:HOS: •'! •"""'" lrfllt'• in this country ..• .tt makes ~~~,;.; 1:~ xii~,... r,'· ~~+lt"ii!,~~J i:•n 'l p"" ~¥\ J.~+·\t l(:,1::c; jg : ~ ?m "1·~"~1d~:r~:11\~~~~':'::~ sense for' the government to ~:~:f~ov!.llf g g~· ;i~ ;1~ ~· )'~'t)°"'-, :il ~~~~:Ji;:' .J:t 11' 1ii ~ _:~. ~ ~~"t11f.1v~~:.0(~~~~11r1r,1:.: come down hard on the side or cem r11 ·'' " im n~ i1~·ti '"ion ·• ~ VI 'm=: .. ~"Cf.L' i.tt ' ~ ~·-. "'=•toct.1 c11 .-.i ''" llM •tot• -. C9tro .'ncl " .. ' ,··~· ll'"' \ •,·.~.+ ~ ::~~c'' i.t ':1 u,_ ••• ~ u i ~ ~~"(/, .. J.nrt . .: ' 4 ~ ,,!, ,,,.._.,... dtY nd1 (I'll o•lcl !I'll• YMT-lltnl dlv-sm-'ler enterpr> .... " ~111.,.1 .~ ., 1 ., ll E ~ ji;; .• ~ .i" m," ",,,•, "",,.± ~ ldl om1tt1111 111 "' ''"' 1~ "•\• ·~ a.I ""'' .,,.,,,, .tO \ s• s .-\1Mll ~ ., llh "b 1 C'J l~t4 1'\\-·~fl«"'' J ti k ,.. "'' l.l • nu. -"' ,,•--t \> ~siN§8Gt 14 1 1n,ll 1:4J ~ UV. 'l•\t \'I bir " oc ~ii , .. ,, ~ ln SUtn. It's a mixed bag for_ f.!"o'J':.~ l~ n r1 1"' 3°\; ,, 1IN I L ~1·1 " '• \~ 1(11'( lf!dv<t 11 1U4 111.'o 111•;;-"' 1nlln.iJ>!(x•t«l1Vff" • ., r-ltftlfl I business and friveStOrS -bia C;t;.,.,plnl .t• l!t n·~ 71~ V~ I, itNt I ·2 O ~ \'I (! -~• Kety: DI l.# ,.,• >at• ~ '"'++ v.1~11 '=~ _1~~1111»!1 (~\ ~i,,;,~ ""Cblt1 "' 1.20 2t ;, 2m ,JI'~+ "' ,.:~NJ~•n1.a l l,, ~ • -v.::t ~ ~:::1t:r 1~ , m ,... ,. , "' ,~CllGNl: " ,,..,,,., .. '°' ""' ana small. It could be good Cllrn$pf '·'' » .r.~ ''" '".i " fsl'Mt 1,cli -1 ,.,.. ~'· f4\, .. \' .:1wr\ :oo 1~ 111·~ 1~! '~:\ = ~ ~3J1~'C 1~ tr= ll1 ri• ~· news and It could be bad.~~~~:~ I if I!!'~ C"':tt~~·1~~~~ ,;,j 1• lr~~ u.: ~t+~~mr;, ;;& ! , ..,. I' ..... • .. •!!", .. ,.!!•utt 1•••"'',,."'•' _,, d d. h d h t Ch\Mo JIOd " ........ ~ ~+ F ~tl'llM llO 1 m, Vt+ 'Ao R.tt11t Coiit 1 ii +"' -flWA." ,,..,, l!J>CO tng On W 0 an W a Clltl'N .• 21 j l'\• I~.' l~ \ CIW F .1~ J !!~ ff!+ \& lt911~ ln ,)5 "' + 14 !f'd.t':I• .. ._. .. nt\ltl ta: fflClltft you are. '~rn~~" 1·.: ,go ~\, !:t ~ j p\~'l~' :1; ~ ~ -~ ~ ~~~e'·* fr 1 ~t ~!·'-'----------- ' • I 0 • ! •• • ' • .. First of Many 'Forty Carats' Makes -Bow WESTMINSTER SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS Lynn Petrucci (left), Amell• Gordon Two Girls Awarded Dra rria Scholarships T. b e \Yestminster Com· mun.ity Theater has awarded its annual scholarshi ps to LyM Petrucci and Amelia Gordon, both senior drama students at Westminster High School. The 1971·72 award marks the first time there have been two winners. Each will receive a grant of $11111. Miss Petrucci will attend Santa Monica City College . while Miss Gordon , who com.· pleted high 1 c h o o I re. qulrements ln January, ha!: been taking classes in drama at Cal State Long Beach and has been accepted· a t Evergreen State Colleg e in Washington. The award! were aMQunced by Dick Taylor, chairman of the Westminster theater's scholarship committee, at the recent banquet of the com· munity theater group. ~J'HE REVOLT OF THE APESI ' irfle .newUf:and:biggest yeti ,~ urn••••• ••11111 NIMl P& • FILMED #. IRYINI \ COLLIGI ,,. Now you can see '1he Graduate" again or for the first time. ~SEPH E. LEVTNE • /""...._ MIKE NICHOl.S '·' . \ ~ENCE TURM .. /~~/ \ ACi~~~x WINNER ' THE1 -GRADUATE CO.Mlfl "ITlllLI CUClOOH (OllfltllOllJMATlllln •IOM1ti» •A "'''" .. Allll CO-Hill "ME, NATALIE" (PG) · \. lllT '•.,. '\ Dll'llCTOR • MIKI L \ NICHOi.i ~' ,,., _......_ ... " ... ._ e-to .... •MWIOI CO·Hl.TI "HAMMERSMITH ISOUT" w.f .... ff ....... ,.,.. ... . ... In Color ''"Q·-<+••'"'' . _ ............ . tlll1 time, he's not alonel 11 ~-~--cCHILLINO CO•Hll1'-----1 ''TALES FROM THE CRYPT" ''THI OTHll" By TOM TITUS Of f111 D1Ut l'Utt Iliff Watching a play such as "Forty carats" -which a good many Orange County theatergoers will be doing In at least three different playhouses this season - gives one a deeper ap- preciation of the genuine com· fc y,·it or the kingpin, Nell Simon. No, "Fony Carats'' isn't Simon's work, but it is being pursued with the tenacity usually reserved for. his latest "'OllTY C:AllATS" A comedv bV Jtv Allen. dlrt,lt'd bV J~n Wlllltm,, t1cllfll,t l 111r~0t fludllv T011!1, 1tt11 m1n1"r MlcllttT Dl•OI'. wt dn1tn bV S111111,.. Tobit, 10\lnd •lld llg]lflr>I DY Ktvln M11rp1>v, prtten!td f rldtyt ttld S1111rd1ys t i 1:30 bY tlw lon11 fle1ch Crmm1111lfy Pl1vnou1t. »21 E. AMl\elm St .• loM fle&C!I. Rn•rVt• tlon1 !11J) AJl.C53d. . THR C"!T A1111 Sltnlev ....•.••. Btrbtrt Crocktr Ptltr Lfll'ltm •.••.•••.. So:ott Wllll1m1 flllly f10Yle11 .:-:;-:-:-;-:7"R~"ll'1lll"M"Oi;"d Tri.,.. Sl1nlty ••••. ·••· Don~• Grllll!ll' Mtlldt HIYH ........ Cillbsrlo C111HY Mr1. M1reoll11 ......... Alvtl!t KIY Mrt, lemtm •. , •••••.. Mart1rtT Deen Mr. L1mtm ............ J1mt1 H1r1 Mrl. A111m1 ••••••••••• KolhlHn Meloy Pit ..................... Mlcllael D!•on rel eases and this is unusual, for its overall quality falls a good many guffaws short. It ls, unlike, say, "Plaza Suite," a play which ma y become quite tedious on the third or fourth viewing. The first of these several versions to obe mounted locally . is -On view at the Long Beach Community Playhouse , and it is, generally speaking, an en· joyable one. But Jay Allen 's comic parody on the corr- siderable possibilities of May· December romance requires (unlike Simon's scripts) some top notch acting to put it . across. The lines do not stand by themselves. At Long Beach, "Forty Carats" Jacks about 10 carats of being a highly polished jewel. The deficiencies lie in some areas of timing, overall production pace and a few in· dividual charac terizations. Compensatin.~ for these ghortcomings , ho\\·ever, is the glittering performance o f Barbara Crooker in the cen-- tral role of a fortyish divorcee being pursued with single-min· ded purpose by a wealthy young swain left over from an Aegean affair. While one portrayal rarely can caFry a thaw, Miss Crooker's succeeds as far as is humanly possible. The story, translated from the French and Americanized, involves virtually every major "DUCK ' .. YOU SUCKER wltfl J.,.... Coben •H l-4 Stslger Showtl"'" 7:00 •1HI 11 :05 -Ah- "Chato's Land" wllh Cheri.. lroMOw J.U Polonce 9:25 CoRtl•Nn S•1t. M ... 2:00 NA TIONAl GfNTiru THEATRES o,_ Dolty -1 :JO P'·'"· ~ "llH" ,,., 1.t--••• .,., "WAIT UNnL DAH" ..,HI L.t.sr ,ICTUltl IHOW" flt) .,__,, __ AND .. l JllVllt SAHi llOll MT 'ATMllt" 1111 1---AllD ""TALll ,.OM THI Ctt'1,T" I ' ENTERTAINMENT though hfr failings are more technical than interpretive. Rounding out the Long Beach cas t are Harold Can· non , effective enough as the last of thti big time spenders but a shade questionable as the suitor for a teen-age girl; tm·73 season wave of "Forty Carats." Performances are Fridays and 8aturdays at 8: 30 In the C.ommunlty Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. Opry Stars To Perform Alvetta Kay. a bit shak-y in a potentially juicy bit as a real estate sales"·oman, and Kath leen t.1aloy. competent in a rather meaningless cameo. Show stealers in the Cameo bracket are James Hart and NASHVILLE (AP) -Coun· Margaret Dean as the try music stars of Nashville's highfalutin' prospective in· Grand Ole Opry will be 1a'¥1'S (1-lart's incessant finger featured this summer in week· drumming provides just the ly shows at Opryland U.S.A., right tough 'for his grindstone· the new entertainment com· character (and a few minor nosed character). plex just outside the city. ones) in a quest for a com· Joh n Williams' direction Tex Ritter, Roy Acuff, paoion either '"'O decades tends ·to sag when the script Ernest Tubb, Bill Anderson younger or older. Even the does -which, during a lJ. and Jan Howard will be grandmother. wh il.e not a scene production, is quite fre4 among the Opry 1 ta· rs parlic.iJmDl,__kJJLlnkfW,ed_ quently . A sharper tempo in perfomii.ng_jn-threB----1hows spectator in li er grand· 1fie area or ensemble playing each Wednesday afternoon, daughter 's paraphernalia. is required to shore up the Opryland officials said. Matching the luster of Miss long dry spells between The price of admission to Crooker's skilUul vacillation laughs. the $28 million complex will is the easy, n at u r a I Five more weekends remain al.so cover the Opry stars' performance of Ralph Rich· for this, the vanguard of a show, the of£icial5 said. mond as her most recent ex, a -------'----...:.:....;.:. __ stock actor with an itc b to "go straight." When these two are onstage, there is a warm, honest rapport that almost ma kes one forget he is in a theater. Scott Williams fares Jess succeesful!y in his role as the determined young I o v e r . \Villiams relies overmuch on physica l presence t o un· derscore his interpretation and neve r comes totally to grips with his character. Aside Crom an inco mpl e te charac- terization, he suffers OC· casionally fr om problems in THE NEW ADYENTUll "L IV ING FREE" Also Walt Dl11ey'1 "BEDKNOBS AND BRO~MSTICKS" CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 the area of delivery. !~~~~~~~~ Donn a Crilfiths is perfectly 1: cast as the pragmatic 17-ycar· old daugh ter v.·ho shares her mother's symptoms .. , in reverse -a delightfully con· vincing performance. Gilberta CallS('y encounters some dif· ficulty as the mod grann~, "DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER" Sean Connery A" "FIST FULL OF DOLLARS" ALSO SHORTS CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 2 P.M; IAMES COBURN Will BLOW YOU APART! · ROD STEIGER Will BLOW YOU APART! i:s;o t1n111• AM1111 2ND TOP ATTRACTION ~=-In "THE HONKERS" IN MISSION V!l!JO EDWARDS CINE MA VIEJO , ~. ' '· . ' --' -:.i.:iir~ SFADIUM 4 ,, .. .-.:.i..~=~ Harbor & Ad1m1 Costa M1A-546-S102 "'L.1.1.f. SUIT!" E•clUllYI Or•nt• CtUlll'I' llfl1rvl'll S111 E1111v1m1nl Nomlnlllld tor I Ac1111111y Aw1.,.11 "1'1DDLEll DN THE 1100,_" "IOX CAil BERTHA" lR) wUll l 1rb1r1 Hrnll1y PJUI "1000 CONVICTS & A WOMAN" flt) "SHAFTS lllG SCOlll" • "CET CARTER" "DUCK, YOU SUCKlll" • Mon.-Frl. 7.., p.m. Sat. 1..J..S.7-9-11 p.m. Sun. 1-3-5-7..f p.m. "THERE IS ONL'( ONE BRANDO. HE IS THE GODFATHER. THE c·ENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE 'GONE WITH THE WIND' OF GANGSTER MOVIES." -Paul 0. Zimmerman, Newsweek "'THE GODFATHER' IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE DF THE FINESrGANGSTEW- MOVIES EYER MADE. IT'S RARE TO COME OUT OF A 3-HOUR MOVIE AND WANT TO MAKE A U-TURN AND GO IN AND SEE IT ALL OVER AGAIN. BUT THATS EXACnY MY FEELING AITTR SEEING 'THE GODFATHER'." -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "A TRULY E 0 PIC FILM IN THE BEST "CLASSIC SENSE OF THE WORD! EVEN MORE ENGROSSING THAN MARIO PUZO'S BOOK, IF THATS POSSIBLE!" -ABC-TV "A MARVEl.1.QU$.Jf'IOVI{! A TOjJqH, BEAUTIFUL MOYIE!" It• OfflctOf"' At t 10th GREAT WEEK ,\ ' Monday, J11ly '· 1972 DAILY PILOT () M11I~~ i11~fo ~I i~~i~~ ~1mii t11~ 15th RECORD WEEK SHOWS DAILY AT: 12130. 3:30 7:00 & 10 P.M. Plu1 "HARD CONTJ,ACT'~ with Ja111n d"~ & IM lemlcl'» HOllDAT MATINEES . SAT.·SUN. & TUii HELD OYER ,., ......... , ... ,,. ............ 6TH ••IJLA..,-IT A«7Al/'il SAM" GREAT ll'V«Jr Mlf/'11 WEEK ••ttM!tc.o,t••·--C-••tr _,,,'-_ .. ___ . ....... _ ....... -.... ·~- J>G T.clineolor" 2ftd TOP ATTRACTION RUTH GODRON •>e-euo_CORJ IN -·F·-'"''"' ........ HARQlD and MA 2NDGREATCOMIDY ~W•MJ AIS. ''TAKI THI MONIY 'AND lllVH" • .,. .. ' .,, I < I • J J ' ' • ' " " " " " " " ' • " " 0 0 0 0 0 0 g 0 0 0 0 0 g g 0 g 0 g 0 0 0 p p p p p p P. r.. ' p " • • p " • " p • p • p • • " " p ' " ,, p " " ' " " • p p • ' p ' p p ' ' p ' ' " ' ,, ' " p " " ' ' " " " p p p p p ' p ' ' p • p p " ' " • • ' " ' "' ,, ' p 0 0 Q, 0 • • ' ' ' i ' ' • ' " • ' ' ' p ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' p • p • ' • p " 0 ' " ' ' • ' • l ' l ( ' • I I· I \ l IJ 11 '-1ond1y, July 3, 1972 SC DAILY PILOT I Monday's Closing Prices-.,.Complete New York Stock Excha11«e List Mai~ket Stilled By Liglit Trading NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market inched ahead tollliy after a mixed start. but the pare of tradJng '11as tp.e lightest m many. rnonths. So many investors \Vere spending a four·day holiday ,\vcekend that there \vas little spending on the tradmg floor. Bl ikk trades were comparatively slow. lndlcat· Ing sluggish activity on tbe J>nrt of the institutions. Oa-111<$ 11 Occ.iPt IV. Occ•rtPT 111 ' OtcPlpf l n occf'lpf O;dthCP 6 (")Q<Jn pl 1 ~ OITI~ Ed 1 Oh E 111 l Ol'IE r>f ''' 0'1 r: pl 7~ 0~""'" • (ll'l""'i ' I Okl~G '# 01<1"'4 I l 01 rC'QtP O,.,..rrk 1n ' Oneld11L 1 O~I kit M Or '1ckf 1 2!J O!• El Co 1 Ou1Qo;or1 M C'u1 111 'I O•trlrn Ii Cl e~C F .11 0Nt~lll 1 40 (l ~11~1 ''!. O•!<Ollld 60 ,,,,, Ntl thds I H!tfl l ow Ctott (h9 ' 1JJ,, .... ow.l•.I 111,11 \.•w c.1o1• (flt. Fina·11ce Briefs e Corporation NEW YORK -May Depart· n1l'nt Stores CO an d (\1n~umrrs D1str1butlng Co. or Toronto flfl nounced an agree. t111•11t 111 pi incl ple to fonn a 111•11 1urpo1.111on to operate & n1<1JOr chn1n or catalogue-. "ho111 •><1111 OUtit'IS if\ I he L nitcd :-it.tit•:. The nt'11 \'nrpoi at1011 is to be 11\\nt'<i t•q uaHy bv lh{' t\l'O 111embc1s or thC' Jillnt \('l\lur e ind 1\111 np<'n ,1 n11n1n1um of 1$0 OU!lt !S .1:-; r:q11rllv fl~ pos ... 1hlt lht ! 1\!llJhlllll'S s:'litl. COmplete Closing -Prices-America11 Stoel\. Extl1a11ge List S1tlt i "~I 11111.1 Hlll'I Leif Ci.it CIT~ •I I I w Pt'\'1•1! u111 <'o(p s:n d Jt had s~1Jdd1d 1ls flJ~l "XtJl\l rntory \\l'll 10 l11·i!1ii dr1ll1ng >0per11- llun· 111 lht• lJ1 11·nl1.: rf'g1on 11f PC111 s liVµtt ;\rn:1io11 U<1s1n. OC'cklental said the well w;i~ bcirg dri lled about 90 mllcs rrom 1he Jat('St O[ thrt•c oil discoveries by Peru's state oil com~ny,at;d about 150 mlles from otf1er discoverle! made by a group ln the Am azon region of Educat.or. e Exec Quits LOS ANCELF.S -Republic C<l r p, ,1nnounccd the reslgna· t1on of Gcrilld Ailttn.!ibach, vlce prcsidf'nt, saying frlan.,bllch had complaint'd he had not "hcen fairly compcruattd.'' Mullsbach's brother. Sn1n11cJ, also resigned a1 prr•sidcn t of Mansbach Metal D1vls1on and vlcP. president of Kentucky Electric St .. I, both llcpubhc subsidiaries, in sym- pathy with hls brother, com· pany officials aald. I • -· - • -.;· -• \ •• .---• I •• J:t DAIL V PILOT "low for · Tri·stars' • Locl(heed Finds~· Business By DONALD R0111BERG IVASlllNGTON (AP) -A healthy now of Pentagon business, a huge federal Joan guarantee and a helping hand from Brl· taln so far have falled to lift Lockheed Aircraft Corp. above financial storm cloudJ: that threatened it• w Ith bankruptcy. Lockheed Chairman llanl•t J . Haughton appeale.i for government help; declaring that without it the Trlstar pro- gram would be scuttled. "II that hapJ>!llS, J know of absolutely no way to keep Lockheed out of bankruptcy," he said. It delivered lbe fir.,1 thrce-engihc TriSlars this spring to Eastern and Trans World Airlines. But since obtaining the loan backing durini the airline slump, It has sold only two more of the 21). passenger planes. The Tristar's main competllion Is the McDonnell Douglas DCIO, an American- Lockhe<d steadfastly denies. Plan.- buying declsJ0111 vitaUY Important tO tbe . Tristar's future are due, probably this fall, from British European Airways and Japan's All Nipon Airways. "We would have mighty rough going on the basis of just what the L1011 program is today, but we are going to get more The natiOO:s No. 1 defense contractor, heavily in debt, has pegged its future to il.5 big commercl&J jet, the Trlstar LlOll. But the airline business Is in a slump and crders for the $18 million plane are below expectations. A year ago, L«kheed was reeling from $484 million in losses on four government projects and from the bankruptcy of Rolls Royce Ud., British 'builder cf the engines for the Tristar. The Nixon Admlnlslrallon backed Haughton'& appeal and after it long and bitter nght, Congress voted to pledge government credit for up to $250 mlllion in new bank loans. So Lockheed kept alive. The British government provided the money to enable Rolls Royce to stay in business and offered airlines separate financing for 90 percent or the cost of the engines with which Rolls still is having problems. The Trlrtar'• 111ah1 co111petitlon b the JlfeDon• Hell Do119fas DCJO, an Americma-b11il_~ three engine j111t1bo, and a t11>h1·engi11e European air bu•. Ava( l· able earlier, the DClO so far Jaus 011tsold the Trlstar 1711 to 1114. LOCKHEED OWED a consortium of 24 banks $400 million. Its net ~'Orth, ac· cording lo a Pentagon study, \\'SS $240 million. The banks wouldn't lend any more money. WhenMs Lockheed today? built three engine jumbo, and a twin- engine European airbus. A v a i I a b I e earlier, the DCIO so far has outsold the Tristar 170 to 104. Fa1nlly Circ11s IT USE D 1100 MILLION of the loan guarantee to obtain extra financing and now ewes the banks a tota l of $500 million . Lockheed says it will start making money once it sells between 255-265 Trista.rs:. A classified Pentagon study puts the figure e1t 370, an estimate by Bil Kea11e Group Told No Growt1i Only Ideal SAN DIEGO (AP) -The bciard chainnan of Z e r o Population ·Growth says the United States is still at least 18 years away from the time when the number of births and deaths are equal. Willard J ohnson. citing what he said were census figures for the United Slates popula- tion in 1971, took issue \vith what he called ~'half-backed reports" that America had reached zero population growth. · "How can their shoes weer out so Fast when we DRIVE them every place they go?" Johnson told a group of Planned Parenthood Volun- teers that "the figures are clear. During 1971 there were 3.559,000 births in ihe USA as against t ,921.000 deaths -<lr an excess of 1,638 ,000 births. "Bo'th must be the same to achieve ZPG." he said. "Such a balance is many years in the future. ZPG hopes lhat it \Yill be attained by 1990 and will work toward that end." ' ~[! Slaye~'s Strange Obsession: He f ois one. Friends, Family LONDON (UPI) -Graham .Young's school friends spent their time playing with friends and studying. He, it turns out, spent his on poison. and would try to p oiso n someone again at the slightest opportunity. The judge com- mitted him to 15 years in Broadffioor, a prison for the criminally insane south of U:indon. Jn February, 1971, after serving only nine years, Young was released on probation after doctors at the prison pronounced him "completely cu red.'' orders," Hau ton told stockholders in ~lay. "TllE uo11 IS the key to our future.'' he declared. Th.at doesn't mean Lockheed has lost interest in the defense business. competing tracts on several derense project:i: in- cluding a design competition for a transport plane that could operate from short run~·ays. lta Air Force contract for the \VOrld's biggest transport plane, the ~A. nearly put Lock.Qeed out of business. Former Defense Secretary David Packard summed up the C5A issue for a congressional committee: "Obviously, there is a problem when a program on \Vhich the original target cost for 115 airplanes was $1,768 million ends up in a now projected cost of $3,248 million for 81 airplanes." \Vhen the CSA contract "'as re\\Titten, Lockheed was forced to take a $200 million Jogs and finish the work on a no- additional·IOM, no-profit basis. BUT NOT ALL the CSA y,·ork is done under that no-profit contract. Pentagon figures obtained by The Associated Press show that from 1969 through 1972, $100.S million was spent for CSA modifications, spares · and com- -ponent improvement Lockheed ,,·as prime contractor for nearl y nil . thDt "·ork. The proj'cct!.on for 1973-1977 !S, for expenditure of $278.8 million. Pentagon offic:nls say thnt t~se costs are part of the continuing maintenance of any weapons systc~ and l~at only time \vill tell if they will be higher or lower than usual with the CSA. So far, says the Air Force, the plane was performCd well with lower .1han normal maintenance. Before the C51\ can1c al(lfll!, Lockheed had produced the work ' e Cl30, a highly successful but sin • ·r transport plane. The most recent CIJO contract, announced last spring, drew criticisn1 that the Pentagon was ordering more planes just to throw some business to an ailing contractor. REP. LES ASPIN, (D-Wis.), a member of the House Anne1 Services Committee, accused the Pentagon <lf giving Lockheed a $50 million "bailout" with award or a contract for 12 Cl30 transports. The year was 1962 and a strange obsession was taking hold of the booklsh 14-yeat-old boy in the " ngrth. London subw'b of-NeaSdt!tl. .. He spent hours In the public library poring over books on toxicology, the science of poisoo, and experimented on mice, caterpillars and frogs, using poisons concocted at home from chemicals· he bought with his pocket money, * * * Release Triggers Action Young landed a job as a warehouseman with a camera manufacturing firm. J o h n lladland, Ltd., not far from his boyhood home. He told his employers nothing of his stay in Broadmoor. His workffiates knew him as a loner who drank heavily , talked about poisons -and was always eager to make tea for the staff. (Ear n $61.80 on each $1,000) · Then he turned to humans - an experimentation that led him first to a m e ntal in- stitution for poisoning his fam ily and then. last week, to life in prison for killing two of his workmates with poison. The boy began lacing food at home with antimony, a poison similar to arsenic and used in making alloys. llis father, sister and stepmother took sick. The family doctor v.·as mystified by the vomiting and other symptoms until Graham's chemistry teacher told him the boy was bringing poiSons fo SCbool. His frther and sis t e r recovered. His stepmother died _soon after but doctors said poison was not the cause. Graham confessed all and claimed credit for h Is stepmother's death. Psychiatrists at his trial said the boy was suffering fr om a psychopathic disorder LONOON (AP) -The British government t o d a y began a review of the handling of criminally insane persons pronounced cured after a freed poisoner was convicted or doing it again. Home Secretary Reginald Maudling called for a cheek on all 331 persons released from the Broadmoor Prison Mental Hospital in the past 12 years. He ordered that no criminal be discharged from mental hospitals until he had been pronounced cured by an in- dependent panel, instructed that the procedurn f o_r supervision after release be strengthened and appointed two committees to study the laws on the subject. This resulted from the sentencing T h u r s d a y of Graham Fredericf Young, 24, to life imprisonment for giving fatal doses to two men he worked with and poisoning others who survived . \Vithin two months of Young·s arrival at the firm , Robert t:gle, 60, the chief w arehouseman, died. Frederick Biggs, 56, anot her worker, died soon after. Other members of th e staff came down with the same vomiting and other symptoms that struck the two men.· Doctors were at a loss to ex· plain the illnesses until a pathologist concluded they had been caused by thallium, a poisonous metallic element resembling lead. Police quickly discovered Young's background and ar- rested him. At -his home they found a diary detailing how he laced tea at the factory with the poison. Last ~eek, a l2·member Jury lo d ng, now 24, guilty o murdering the two M>rkmen and attempting to murder two other employes. Ttie judge sentenced 'Young to life imprisonment You can earn this high intere5t on $5,000 minimum two year certificates. The first year your $5,000 certificate will earn $309.15, and more for each consecutive year ihat interest is added to the account. You can earn $59.17 on $1,000minimum one year certificates, and as much as $5126 ona regular passbook savings account of $1,000. More interest than banks ... more cemin than stocks Plus free services ... safedeposit boxes,notary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail· able when you have the required minimum · balance in your account at THE BIG M. Plus personal service ... experienced and competent savings counselors m each office to assist you in planning your savings program. • You will find a warm, friendly attitude on _ the jl_art of evecyone_at Mutua1-Savings. ~ r , ' ~ ~ ii THE BI G M MUTUAL SAVINGS ---CoronadelMU:2.867EutCout~-y/67s·sam Opc:a. Saturday July 8,lOAM to lPM Oth.,·offices In cariu, West Arcadla, Puadent, GltD.r.le md Cmop l'Wc-Chatsworth • .,./ --f • stereo 163FM " the sounds of the harbor . . .. . _r . . ~dS5E-~youve ~ever heard it so good . ' " I I I \ I I 0 r r I , ' --- Lag aBeaeh Teday's F lnal N.Y.-Stoeks VOL 65, NO. '185, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,· CALIFORN IA MONDAY, JULY I, 1972 TEN CENTS Trustees Win Delay to File· Recall Re sponses By BARBARA KREmICH ot 11141 Oall'I" Plltt lllff An opinion handed down Friday by the office of the County Counsel will give Laguna Beach !i:Chool trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke an additional \Yeek jn which to file their responses to recall charges. The legal move will oblige recall pro- pooents to re-print their recall petitioos and delay their circulation, which was scheduJe to have .started Saturday. Thomas , Cassidy, president of Con- cerned Citizens for Schools, which is spearheading the recall drive, said today his group questions the validity of the County Counsel 's opinion, but added, "Rather than go through a tlme-ron- sunting and expensive court case, we will accept this questionable opnion and wait out the resulting delay." · The recall group. Cassidy said, will proceed with a scheduled public meeting on the campaign Thursday at 8 p.m. at House to Move? Laguna Landmark May Get Tenants Laguna Beach1.1 Captain's Hou s ~ caug'ht in the complexities of Upland Jndustries' -development or choice coastal property near Legion Street, may be headed for 'a new home. . It was confirmed by Upland officials this morning tbat they have offered the house to Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Cushman, 1045 Gaviota Drive. The offer Is contingent on no alternate plan for the Jocalion of the house by the Laguna Beach HistoricaJ Society, which U.S. Won't Sa y ' ' If It Altered Vietnam Weather WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon refused again today to say if the United States has tampered with the weather in Indochina In an effort to hamper North Vietnamese military operations. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W • FMedhei m said the U.S. llas never tried to cause rain over North Vietnam. But asked' if rainmaking activities ha ve been attempted in South Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia, he replied: "I can't enlarge on that." For the past year, there have been reports of the rainmaking. The latest appeared today in the New York Times, which quoted unnamed government sources as saying the Air Force has seeded clouds to Increase and control rainfall throughout Southeast Asia. The purpose, the Times said, was to hinder the mO\'ement ol North Viet- namese troops and supplies, spoil enemy attacks with heavy rains, and to alter the rain patterns over Laos and North Viet- nam to aid U.S. bombing strikes. The Times story followed an article in the June issue o( Science magazine which siid the rumors and speculation gn;iwing over the alleged erforts to alter the weather in Indochina alarmed civilian ~andJv<athtt experts.Jrying .to promote international weather research. Sen. CWrtorne P<ll (0-R.l.), said last month be believes the military has .been involved in seedlng operations since 1966 to clear targets In North Vietnam. The senator also said the United States has used chemicals to produce rains that wuhed out part of the Ho Chi Minh trail, impeding infUtralion and causing Qoods resulting in thousands of deaths. )n an April appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said the Air Force has used rain-making ... techniques In drought...strlcken areas of thO. Pblllppines and Te1u, but ask.ed JI t,bese activities. were belng used for mllJtary purposes In Southeast Asia, he would not comment. Trustee Officers To Be Chosen ' Oincers lor the Sad41leback Community College District will be chosen at a _.,..,1s1 trustee meeting at a p.m. T.)lur .. 4&1 in the college board room, 28000 !ilargu<rlte ParkWay, Mlsslon Viejo. TJ!e IJ)eCla~ ...,ion Is In lieu ol !he regularly ocheduled Monday n I c h I meeting cancelled due to the holiday. Also on the agenda iJ • request !or bida lor the $4-5 million m1thtm1Ucs and science bulldini and pricing ol asaoclattd ltudent body cards for 1172-73 IChool year. , ha s first priorlty on the Art Colony landmark. Cushman, a retired airlines executive, said today that he and his wife would like to move the house I<> property at the cor- ner of Arroyo <llic::> and Catlina jleet. The propeny, now owned by ~ Opal Paapof PaJm Springs, has been on the real estate market for $2.5,000 and ap- pears headed for purchase by the CU.Ir mans. "We h;lve a plan .;.... a well thought out one -fur the location of. the Oaptain's House," sajd Cushman. Details, he said, · could not he divulged . "Having the house as a residence has been the dream. of the two ol us/' CUsbman added. , Leonard Bourke, director Of Real Estate Development for the Union Pacific Railroad subsidiary, in a letter dated June 20, offered lhe house to the CUShmans providing thejlistorical socie- ty takes no action by Sept. 4. That is the date when a 90-day moratorium protecting the Captain's House for demolition ends. "We are willing to donate the house to Mr.· CUshman and offer him a pro rata share of the cost to us if we bad to demolish it," Bourke said. Historical socitey president Harry .Jef- frey said his group would reserve com- ment on tbe offer until the goal s statf"' meat of the Coastal Development Liaison Committee were considered by Upland. The committee, l'Oillposed of a number o{ city officials, has just completed fcrmulating goals for the property -in- tended for development by Upland. Jeffrey noted one of the goals asked that the Captain's House be preserved at its pr:esent location. "Aii y movement to another location would be considered secondary 1" Jeffrey said. Laguna Woman Seized By Man Near Theater A 21-year-old Laguna Beach woman was the victim of an assault and at- tempted rape by a man who fo11owed her several blocks in his car from a downtown movie theater early Sunday. The woman was thrown to the floor of a parking staff. in an apartment complex In the 500 block of Glenneyre Street, Laguna Beach. The assailant had follow- ed her aitempting to get her to ride In the vehicle with him Po1ice said. The woman told officers the man was 20 to 21 years of age and Was wearing blue je6ns and a yellow pin-striped shirt. The woman did not require hoopi!allza- tion '!be usailant left when the victim began crying, police said. The attack was report<d by the vlcUm. No reports of the crime were called In by neighbon. ' Free Poets Sch edule -- July 4th P r ogram The Lacuna Bffch Free Poet• will hold a special Founb or July "Pegasus" pro- gram at "the Laguna Beach Women's Club, 2118 St. Ann'• Drive, from I to II p.m .. Poeis Mardi Medovich and P<ter carr will r"d their -k•. Music will be pro- vided by Alicia Cory and the trio of Phil, Tim and Broou. The lbree-bour prof!l'am wti! begin with an °0ratage" -works of several poets r"d together. A fl donation Is requested. l -. I 1 the \Voman 's Club, 286 St. Ann 's Drive. The recall mixup apparently resulted from an ambiguity in lti,: state Education C.ode with rtgard to whether the notice or intent to circulate recall petitions should be filed with the office of the County Clerk or the county Registrar of Voters. The Laguna recall notice, which was served on the 1'!o trustees at a school board . meeting June 20, Wi'!S filed the following day with the County Clerk and • published three da ys later in a local paper. In an opinion handed down late Friday, at the request of South Lagunan Norman Anderson, acting in behalf of the trustees whose recall is sought, the County Counsel ruled that the notice should have been filed with the county Registrar of Voters. Attorney Richard Lemon, representing the recall proponents, said he found out about the legal maneuver in time to re- You're All lJnder Arrest file the notice \vlth the registrar late Fri· day. Under the code, the ofhCt'rs \1·hose recall is sought, ha \'e seven da' s afti·r the filing to submit their responsc.-s to the recall charges. These responses. if filed by the deadline, must be printed on the recall petitions. along wit h the t'harr,e. When Mrs. Gillelte and Linkt• fa1!rd to file responses in the pr('scribcd seven· day period, Lemon sili'l he tried unsuc· cessfully to contact t.lu:rn und , aft~r :i ' OAIL Y ,II.Of PMfto fW Ltt '''"'' This photo was taken on the Fourth of July, 1971 on Balboa Island-in Newport Beach. Fireworks are illegal in Newport Beach , even on the Fourth of July. And every year patriotic fervor (or is it pres- sure from the kids) overcomes normally law abid- ing citizens. ·Tour boats in the .harbor even run spe- cial fireworks viewing cruises. Nixon Relaxes at Clemente Making Up for Absence by Swimming, Dining Out. President Nixon is usirf&.. the long holi· day weekend to make u~ for his six- month absence in San Clemente -buzz- ing around his estate on his golf cart, swimming at a secluded beach at Camp Pendleton and dodging out for dinner. in price since he last bought one. A waiter reminded Nixon that the price is up a quarter -to $9.25 these days. An hou r after the President and his party left the compound, Pat Nixon flew in from Chicago where she had received a rousing weleome earlier in the day at a folk dance festival . / The relaxing weekend ls expected to contin ue !or the President and.Mrs. Nix~ On through the Independence Day holi- day. . Press aides plan no forma l briefings until Wednesday, when the President's schedule or meetings with advisers will probably pick up. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President plans meetings with Na- tional Security Adviser Dr. Hemy Kiss- (S.e NIXON, Page !) · The President , who began his 16-day working vacation late Saturday afternoon with "orders" to well-wishers to "all go swimming," did that very thing early Sunday with several house guests. The fr iends, Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo or Flor-kla-and-Robert-Abplanalp of New York, familiar figures at the Western White House, joined the President for dinner Saturday evening, stayed over and on SUnday all three took a short helicopter.jaunt to "Red Beach" in Camp Pendleton !or some swimming in water which is somewhat chilly !or this time of year. Study S-ession Slnted On South Laguna Pinn Later in the afternoon all three took l\nother flight -·this one to Chasen's Restaurant in Los Angeles, one of the President's fa vorites. There, they dined on steak. The President, his aides said, ordered a "Hobo" steak from the menu, a large hunk of New York cut which has gone up ' ~ • ~· A• • -.. ; A special study session on the South Laguna Gen~ral Plan has beep called by the 'Orange County Planning Corflrilission . for July 17 at 3 p.m. at its hearing room, 400, Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana: Commissioners will discuss reports from v.arious county departments which relate to the general plan drafted by a • • Veg~s · lle~alled Axles Defective in 500 ,00Q, ~ws~ DETROIT (UPI) · -General Motors toda7 announced the recall of some 500t0t» Chevrolet Vega subcompacts -virtually all 1971 and 1 972 models·on .the road-.. to check for a defective rear aile •ball. The company said the defective zhafts could cause a lock ring to disengage, setting up a chaln reac- tion lhat could cause the rear brakeJ to !ail and ultimately cause the axl<J themselves to fall off. - Chevrolet said that 59 defective shafts have been reported. Two cases resulted Jn body damage to the vehicles but there have been no repott.ed Injuries, said the automaker, the nation's largest. Chevrolet said that inspection for the defective shafts wil! take Jess than 10 minutes ·and Installation of new shafts, i! needed, aboUt an hour. The work will be done free by the company, Chevrolet aaid. - citizens committee, headed by architect Fred Lang. Because of the infonnal nature ·of the study session, no official act.ion may be taken by the commission. Lang's plan calls for slow controlled growlh °' the zmall community, with mQSt or the 700"-acres o! virgin hillside land as open space. • • An alternaUve plan, produced by owners of the hillside land. calls for greater development of the community, with roughly halr..or the slopes as open space. · • A spokesman (or the landowners. .Rodger floWell; saJd a.,.reprfSentativt: of -'111s· groop will alt~ U1e meeting and possibly supply new information relating to soil stability nd environmental con- cerns. 11To the extent that the information is available, irw\11 be provided/' HoweU1 a Santa Ana at.torney, said. One member ot Lang's committee, Al Wlehle, noted toot one report made by lh• county Building and Safety Depart· mcnt confinns lb.at terious seismic prob- lems e1lst ln some areas of S o u t h Lai!\lna. Wtehle eneouraged residents to eilher write letters to the commission ngarding the plan or attend lhe bearing. ~· t11 fl-Oay delay , tht peti tions were printed .Frida~, 11·lthout responses. "\\'c u·~nlcd to be fair and Include th{'i r ans1~{'r," s.i !d Lemon toda y. "We bcnl ovrr backwards to coniply with the u1tC'11t1011 of the C'ode. All !his does Is tll•plt'll' our resourres. The printing CO!Jt about $!55, which represented about 75 pt'rC'C'T\t or our recall money. and no1v 1vc·ll have to print a!-'(ain, U they get thejr tSee RECALL, P•g< Z) Tl1ird Party Effort Eyed By Bircher ,, ' From \\'Ire Services BOSTON -U.S. R£p. John G. Schmitz (R·Tusth1) says he might make a pol itical comeba ck this November either as a thi rd party or as a write-in can- didate. Dffeated in the June California primary by Coun1y Assl'ssor Andrew llinshaw, Schm itz 11rom ised a crowd at Surday's annua l New Enrland llally for God, Family and Country here, · "r rn going to come bac'K. stronger than ever." The Orange Coun'tr-eonservative said, ''I'm not necessarily .going to be shackled. to a party -to the Republlciln Party - that feels that 1!'1 role as the con- aervative party Is 1lmply to run sociaUsm more effectively than the op. posite party.'' O During his remark.! In Boston, Schmitz :i;aid he is also looking into the possibility or ruMing his wife for his seat in Congress in November on the American lndependent Party ticket Sehm ltz, who believes he may be prt> hibited by Jaw from running again this year, said the switch to Gov. George \Vall ace'.s former party may be called !or because "there is no party right now that's really nail ing the enemy." ''IC there ever was a time in America political history when we're ripe for a bold, new move. it's-now," Sclunitz,. a member ol the John ·Birch Society, told the meeting o( conservatives. Schmitz, who also attended Saturday's opening session o( the two-day rally, said that the" Red Chinese have ''an ol!lcial program of poppy production° to make heroin "to raise money and subvert, particularly to subvert enemy troops.'' Labeling Mainland China as the world's "primary source or heroin," Schmitz said he secured much of hi s information about heroin production during a recent visit lo Nationalist China and by talking to a woman who fled Red China through Yuman Province. "She said she saw the crop poppies being cultivated by Red Chinese troops in Yumaa Provinct, "Schmitz: aald. Strike Talks Resume MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI) -A rederal mediator announced Sunday night that Northwest Airlines ofrlclai.S' and representatives of the striking Airline Pilots Association agreed t.. go back, 14 the bargaining table today. Orange A-tostly sumy ak.lea are on the agenda for lhe Fourth or July bo~ iday, Those low cloud! should lift by mlcklay on Tlleeday, •C<:Ordiac to lhe '·wealherlsdy, to lemJ>trl- tures of 70 at the beach, rliiiiji 14 85 lnlaNI. LoWJ ~ . ' INSIDE TODA l:' A uear ago Lockhttd Aircraft Corp. was reeling from huge losses on govemmenc project! •{ well as from the bankroplct/ Jof Roll.t Ro11ce. Where doc1 iC slan<I today? S•• story, Page 12. ••·tlllf 11 c •llftr!lla 1 Cl!\lllJM 21-U Ce'".c' lt Crt"•worf 1t O~lfl NtUCM • I •d'.i.t1l l ,,.... • •11tertrm-t t ,IMMt 1•n Mnlft t Ntl!Mtl N... +I o,..,.. CW!lty I SJitrts 1+11 T.itYhltll I ,,..""' ' .... ..., . W.rl'IM't ...... i>•4 ) I ·-.. 2,000 s . • Viets Slug It Out for Quang Tri SAIGO!I (UPI) -Communltt gunnert fil'!d 175 rocket, mortar and artillery rounds ·Into •rue-:1.nd Its outtr defenses loday, \\'hilc tv .. o large, cqually·matched unils slugged JI out \\•lth tanks nn'1 artillery north of-the old imperial capital Jn a south Vietnamese attempt to reca p-. ture Quang Tri province. A 20,000-man government force is driv- tng north from Hue to try to take back Qu ang Tri -the on! South VielilameSc 1>rovince caplurL'<i by the C<>mrnunists. \Vl1h most of l~ue~ defenders sent north to try to recapture Qaung Tri. Comm\l.nist~ increased the pressure on Two S11its the old Imperial <•Pita! and lhr<lltened a -hit Hu• and S4l other abelta landtd ii the long-upected, m1Jor attack on the city. <1uUytna bases. A l 000.man South v I '-' 0 8 m , 1 e In the •Ir war over North 'Vietnam, the • • U.S. <'Ommand Mid U.S. Jet llghler· paratroo~ UJU;t. backed by alr power, bomber pilots destroyed 1 coaJ treatment ~rtlllery and tanks, fought a savage bat· building near the country's major port tic ""'iU1 a North Vietnsmese fore~()( !he City of Haiphong, dropped a span on a ~amc size only two miles south or Quan g br.idge near Vinh ond bombed an oiJ 'fri City, the provinc ial capital. storage.area south of the Chinese border. \Vhi!e th(' battle '!\-·as under way, Com· The command in a delayed report sriid n1un1st gunners slipp.:d into the ll ue are:1 a L'.S, Navy A7 fighter0bo1nber crashed from the west and bombarded the ci ty "rrom unkno1ovn causes'' June 18 on a <1nd a halt-dozen outposts on its inland night mission over North Vietnam about flanks. 107 miles north of the Demilitarized Zo·h• Field reports said 31 arlillery rounds separating the t\vo Vlctnams and listed -. Convention Seat Police Seize Eight Aliens In Clemente the pilot .•• mJsdn&. .A Communl!t radio broldcul clalmtd loday two U.S. jeta wer' shot down Sun- day ever 'the HaJphong·J!anoi area. UPJ photographer \Villie Vicoy said governnu:!nt paratroopers in today's Quang ·rri City lighting , 32 miles north or Hue, wtte. hacked by-allied jets, h~licopters and heilvy B52 bombers. The B)2s.011ernight durnped more than SOO lons of explosive on the approaches to Quang Tri City. The city and the prov· i.nc-e of the sume name were captured a month. after the Comnfunlst of!wive bt&an March 30 In South Vietnam and ha!• been Jn North Vtetnam... lwlds· e\•er since. Vi coy said he saw. a South Vie tnamese ar1nored personnel carrier .. sink like a stone'' ns it 1ried to cross the Truong J>huoc Uiver 10 join the Qunng l•rri fighting. dro\\'lllnc about se ven parnlrooptrs. ~. Vicoy said the vehicle. overloaded \\'1th paratroopers in full batlle gear, "plunged downward and seven ol the men aboard never came up." Today's shelling of ilyt, 400 mi I e . .i north of Saigon, prompted allied fears tbat the North Vietname.se would lry to ovttTUn I.he city while it:J de!~' are stripped by the gov!"nrnent dr1ve to retake Quang Tri Province. Sundciy's rocktt and artillery bnrragt' of 80 ~hells that killed 12 persons ancl \\'OUnded 41 in:1rkcd the first sucf1 .attar!\ on Hue sinct the start or the offensive., All ied commanderS noted !ollo~1r.~ SUnday's shelling that the SouU1 \·le~; namese force of aboul 30.000 n1e uuarding the city \V.:IS reduced !O. !ht lo.OOO troops of tht<J st Infantry ?1v1~1on la~t Wefk for the nor~~ward drive tnl-0 -- Quang Tri, now in Its !li11i day. • 0 j County, State Plan , Ruling Due Soon A doien illegal immigrants heading north "'ound up in custody in San Clemente over the \VCckend in two separate inc idents :-one of the busts l<:t king place after four men successfully cleared the \Vestern \Vhite House. CITADEL Route Tall{s \VASHINGTON <UPJ) Federal Judge GOOrge L. 11an Jr. promised to rule late today on two s.uits invoJving heated battles over the seating of Democratic convention delegates from California and Chicago. Hart also sald the U.S. Court of Air peals arranged to hear both cases Tues· day whatever the outcome of his decision. He made the announcement after hear- ing arguments from both !iide! in-a move by suppocters of Sen. George S. 1'.1cGovern to prevent 151 California delegates from being unseated by the Democratic credentials committee: (See related story, Page 5) The Chicago dispute involved the disbarment of Chicago r.ta yor Richard J. Daley and 58 delegates on his slate. Joseph !... Rauh, arguing tor i1cGovern, said the party's reform rules plainly allo"·ed for \vinner-take-all primaries like that \Vh.ich g av e McGovcru 271 delegates from California in the Junt! 6 primary. Joseph A. Califano Jr .• representing the Democratic National Committee named in the .\.1 cGovern suit, argued that ''the courts have no place in this arena on this kind of issue ." He said that if the court interferes in the .matter, it might have on its hands inost of the other 50 challenges decided on by the credentials committee. "We could be here with anyone of them if the courts decide to get into this area," he told Hart. Rauh also charg~ the committee il- legally changed the credentials rules in stripping Mr.Govern of the 151 California delegates. "In view of the closeness of the race. - those 151 can determine the outcome of lhe Convention," he declared. That incident was the first of the l\VO and occurred at about 3:30 a.m. -12 hours before the President arrived for a \\'Orking vacation. A' resident of the 'Cyprus Shores colony immedi ately north of the Presidential compound phoned local 1}(Jlice to report four '·suspicious" men \Valking upcoast vn the Santa Fe tracks. Officers intercepted the four at Calafia Beach a little farther north, arrested the men without incident and turned the aliens over to border patrolmen. Early this morning yet another grOup v:as arrested after a pursuit from the Border Patrol checkpoint to the Paliziada overpass of the San Diego Freeway. ,. Authorities said the carload of eight men wa~alted at abr.Att 5:19 a.m. and the driver·of the vehicle bolted from of- Bon:ler Patrol checkpoini to ~ Palizada Highway patromen firial1¥---eaught the man and returned him to the rest of the group. HUE SOUTH VIETNAM I <D .....,... O lfl -·· T eclinician Held ~ On Perjury Rap Over Blood Test rtfeanwhile the Democratic credentials commjttee voted today to seat the 64- member North Carolina delegation to the conyention despite complaints that only 7.8 percent of the delegates were under the age of 30. A motion by Gtofge Bamtt of T<n- nessee to seat the delegation was passed by a voice vote, blocking consideration of a motion sponsored by the youthful All eight. officials $aid, "'ere returned to the chec kpoint. Fl'omPageJ Ul'I Ht••om•, HUE BOMBARDED -North Viel namese artillerymen bombarded the old imperial capital of Hue Sunday. Twelve persons were re· ported kille.d and 41 wounded. Most of the shells exploded around the city's Citadel, an early 19th century fortress in the walled, old section of Hue. -. ,.. challengers to replace eight delegates . ·' ,NIXON .. ~ A ~chnician at a San Clemente medIC81 laboratory has been arrested on five ccunts of perjury stemming from a drunken driving case in which he alleged· ly aireed to lie in exchange for sexual , faVors fr'Oilf111e defendant. 1 Vo'.ith 'eight younger alternates. . ~: ' Passa~e of the seating motion canfe·· -Inger durfug the stay and Mr. Nixon also after Miss Susan Conner of High Point, ·· .plans to ·continue ·discussions with other N.C. harshly criticized Packers o("'" Sdiiisers on campaign strategy. Schmitz Loses More Votes San Clemente police. announced this morning t h a t they arrested L o u i s Anthony Evangelisto, 44, of Vista only seconds alter he left the witness Stand Frtday1n South Orange County Municipal Court. . Evaflgellsto was booked and ordered held in lieu of $10,000 bail. He posted bond a few hours later .. The arrest ended several weeks of in· vestigati6n in which the woman defen- dant cooperated fully with investigators, police Chief Clifford Murray said today. ~ It is alleged that the technician lied un· der oath five separate times in the trial. Murray said the asserted perjury in- volved statements relating to the physical condition of the woman at the time of ber arrest by local officers. The technician had been summoned to police headqllarters to draw a sample of the 42-year-old San Clemente woman's blood . The sample, according to standard procedure, was then sent to the Orange County Crime Laboratory for analysis of alcohol content. '4Evangelisto gave testimony which was contrary to the facts about the woman's physical appearance and behavior apparently in a11 attempt to show she was not intoxicated,'' Murray said. The chief sai~ that his department is Investigating the possibility that othe r such incidents have occurred in recent months. Evangelista will be arraigned on the charges on Ju ly 11 in the same court where he was arrested . OltANH Cj!.A}T LI • DAILY PILOT TJle Ort,_. COi.St O~ILY PILOT, W!lh Wfllcf'I .. Con'!bllltd l!lt Ntwf<PrHI, b pUblllhtd lly 1t11 Ont• Co.st 1'11bl11hl119 ~-Ptn'(. StN· r.1t1 ..:llllon1 lrt p~bl1$htd, Mor;.,,., ll'lro1,1g/ri Ftld•~· lor Ctn11 Mn•, Ne'wp,,rt 8e1tl'I, H....,t!noton 8tl,l'l/Fl)IJ11i.in V•llff, LlfUlll ll•Kll, lr...mr/S1dcll111:1.tc11; •'1d S111 Clem~!•! Jl!t Jlltn C~1>1'tr1no. A aint lt reol.,.,11 .inion I• Jll,ll>li11lrd Sa!urt11~ 1rid S!Jfld1\"a, Tht prl11clp,\I r>1.1bt11llln11 pl1n• h ii! lJQ w'°'t Dty S1rttt, ~11 Mn1, C1lil0<ni1, f1f16, Ro b1rt N, Wi ed Praklt'flf 1nd P~1;>111ntr _.}1tf R. Cur!1y Vlt t PTe11(1tnl •lld Gt'l'l('l"tl M""Otfr l ho11111 K11vil Editor Thori111 A. M urph;~, M1n101no Edl!<'ll' Ch•rl11 H. Lo oi Ricl11rd I , Nill A11 l11«!f M•na11111g Edl!Ors U,•M IHcli Offlte 2%,2 for11t Av1tt~1 M111i111 Add1111: r.o. lo~ 66,, 92•s1 'CttNr OHie" Coll• Mts11 2X' w.tt l•r sr~~ Hrwport ll'ltldl: )») NfWJIOl"I ISOVle-Yl'i' "1ut1l l119IOft 8N('fl: lfl7j ll'IHtJI 11!\/tt"V•td San Cftmtnt1: JC!j Norll'I fl C.mlno ll:t•I TeltpkM 17141 442-4J2f ci...1ffe4I A4RrtlsJ,.. 642.•1'7• &..t•• .._. "" o.,.....,Jt: 1.1., ...• , •. , .. ,, ~!9'11, 1t1J, Ol'lllOt CNU l'llblltMl'lf COi"l'\Nnr. No _, 1ror1n, ll11111r111ons, flhterlll m111.., or •lfYflH!~b ntr11t1 ll'ef be rfPt'fllwtd w!ln111.11 1,.c:/11 Pit'• Mlilbl Of <OftYTltl'lf 0"'"'1", . • McGovern for not supporting their Some a10es have said Nixon plans a challenge. ."'low ~profile" of activities in San The 24-year-0Jd Miss Conner said the Cie~nte during this current visit, allow. McGovern forces ''had been instructed, ing 3tte0tion to shift to the bitter ·in- as a bloc, to withhold from w:· their flgb'ting ··among Democratic contenders votes" because they fear that 11by sup-tor the nomination. To Hinshaw in Recounting porting us in a ' minor case they will Keeping abreast of the partisan ac· alienate support tbr larger challenges." • .tjvitieS Sunday, the President made a ''Now suddenly what was clear is to be rash of phone calls to the East, spea king changed,'' Rauh argued at today's hear· to !armer Camp:iign Chairman John ing. "All or a sudden, after it was over, a i1itchell as weJI as Mitchell's successor, challenge v._:as filed ." Clark MacGregor. . However, Hart commented during the Mitchell _ who resigned last Friday · change the rules, it · may even be dirty an d acceded to the demands of his wife, pool, but is it unconstitutional?" Martha, that he quit politics.:... still plans He also asked, "How far are the courts to serve as a "consultant " to the Presi· going to get into violations of party dent as a campaign adviser. rul es?" - McGovern finished first. in the June 6 primary. . The committee decision could block a McGovern first ballot nomination at the convention, which starts in A-liamj Beach a week from today. From Pagel RECALL ... an swers in by next Friday." The recount of votes demanded by Jame duck Congressman Jobp Schmitz after .his losing effort in the 39th Congressional Di strict race has not gone \\'ell for him so far. The latest official tallv of the votes cast in the June 6 piimary election showed that Schmitz has lost an addi- tional four votes and GOP nominee An- drew Hinshaw, currently Orange County assessor, has gained 10. About 160 of the 695 precincts in the district have been recounted to date, said R. J . "Red" Mailhot, deputy registrar of voters ,,..ho is supervising the new count. Schmitz was originally defeated by Hinshaw by an official count of 2.601 votes out of the 93,427 cast. This ,\·as a gain of 249 'votes over the unofficial figures released the day after the elec- tion. Mailhot said about 40 to 50 precincts are being recounted per day by hand. He predicted the process would continue well into next ·week unless the Schmitz forces call a halt by conceding Hinshaw's vic- tory. The count on Earl Garraway, another contestant in the same r~e for the Republican oom.ination, showed n o change, Mailhot said, while Larry Denna, the fourth contestant lost one vote. As or Friday, the recoont stands to cost Schmitz supporters upwards of $2,400 if the contention of his supporters proves incorrect and the primary vote is upheld. Stephen Reinhardt, Democratic na- tional committeeman from California and a cochainn an ()f the state delegation, said l\.fcGovern approved the legal move. "He told us he thinks we are doing the right thing," Reinhardt said. School board president W i 11 i a m Thomas said t<x!ay he felt trus1ees Gil- lette and Linke had been given unfair treatmnnt and had never been officially notified of the filing of the notice with the County Clerk. Despite numerous phone calls to county offices, they had been unable to determine when the seven-day response period bega11 and e n d e d • Thomas said . Truman-Has Quiet Night; Redrafting Set For Ordinance On Construction An ordinance that would establish design reviewrMJUirements for-all ntw construcUon and remodel jobs in Laguna lleach, except in residential zones, has been remanded to the Planning Com- in ission for redrafting. The proposed legislation was criticized as lacking clarity and simplicity, being diffi cult to read and interpret and allow- ing too much subjective design ·power to th e proposed Design Review Board. Aft.er a series of meetings with merners or thC Chamber or Commerce, Boord of Realt.ors &1d Board of Zoning Adjustment, \Vith councilman Peter Ostrander representing the City Council, plnnnlng director \Vayne Moody. who authored the ocdinancc, recommended that it be redrafted in more explicit fonn and tl;le City CouncU ha~ approved the recommendation. Harlech Assists Lennon • Ill U.S . LONDON lAP) -1.-0rd llarlcchf' former British am bass a do r in \Vashington. has co1ne: to the assistance or John Lennon in his legal wrangle with the U.S. lmmi~r11tion Strvlce for permission to live 1n America. Facing New Tests Today Filing of the notice, along with the deadline date, was confirmed to the press by the clerk's office and published Jn stories on the recall. Attorney Lemon said the recall group was advised infor1naUy by the County Counsel's Qffice r.egard ing the recall pro- cedures and follO\Yed what It thought was the letter of the law. At the County Counsel's office today, deputy Clayton Parker said it was the opinion of his office that, where a county has a Registrar of Voters. his office '1· should perform all duties \Vith regard to school district elections. Parker said the Ootice filed by the recall proponents prnbablY should hp ve been transmitted from the County Clerk's office to the Registrar of Voters, but t'his was not done. Consequently, in· quiries on Ufe pa;t of the trustees as to whether the notice had to be filed wlUt the registrar received a negative reply. ''It was a mix·Up," he concluded. • ... Bl.aze.. Damage.s . Sequoia Forest KERNVlLLE (AP) -More than 1,200 acres have been blackened In the Sequoia National Forest fire that rangers say was started Friday by a campfire. KANSAS CITV, Mo. (UPIJ -Former President H a r r y S Truman 88, hos- pitalized with a renewed digestive ail- ment, spent a quiet night although he did not sleep soundly. Doctors said today his -condition-continued to be i•:;atisfactory." A Research Hospital spokesman said Truman was awakened at 7 a.m. to prepare for radiologic examinations of the lower intestinal tract.. The ex- aminations took one Hour and the 33rd chief executive returned to his seventh- floor room .et 9:30 a.m. Spokesman John P. Dreves quoted Dr. Wallace H. Graham as saying Truman was "slightly fatigued by his trip to the hospita l and Jack of sound sleep.'' Graham said blood tells were sclJedul· ed for today and Tuesday. It is too early· to determine how Jong the former President will be hospitalized, Graham sald. "t'm pleased with everything so Jar.'' said Graham, Truman's P'rsonal physi· cian since the White House days. Dreves SJid 'lrbman ate scrambled eggs, toast and· fruit juice after returning Crom his x-ray.,, "lle's u1) and around," he added. tie said, based on Truman's condition. the next report would be .a tll a.rn. Tues· day. Drtves s.eid Truman's meals arter ad- mittance Sunday were limJttd to jeUo. broth and tea In preparation for today's x·rays. . About 480 !ireflghters were batUlng !he blaze. but ranger Don J!ansen said, "We're still a long way Crom controlling it. " Invest igators reported Sunday "the fire beyond a doubt was caused by man.'' The firemen contained parts of the fire He said Truman had betn joking with nurses taking care ol him and had ex· pressed a dislike for hosplti>I gowns. The nurses sald .Hruman "continues to be cheerful and happy," Dreves said. His wife, Bess, 87, accompanied him but returned home Sunday Nght. She came back to the hospital at IO a.m. to- day and planned to stay all day. It "'as the . seventh time Truman was hospitalized since he left the-White House in 1953. His last l\\'O illnesses -in 1971 and 1969 stemmed from stomach disorders. •• Stctrli' cl111 "'''°' ltl]cl II Cotll Mtll. ~Ill""''· SlllK:l'l,.tlon bv ctfl5'r U,t.1 '"9JlllllYJ by i.i111 Jl,U, ll'IOtlll'll,; Pllllirtr'I' . ""'""tle;ttt u.u l'l'IOl'>\Nr. .. .,. l!arlech said he has written to U.S. authorities defending Lennon, the !ormer Bealle. The immlgration 11crvitt has op. posed 1..enoon's a pp 11 cat I on for \j,erman .... residence In' the United States Oh-the· grounds of n drug conviction in Loncfbo·ijl 1968. ·-Sunday. One hundred degree weather,' steep blulfs and canyon areas frustrated their e!rort! to control II. Two firemen suffered minor Injuries in taus. Truman was driven to lhe hospital from his home In nearby Independence. Mo:, Sunday afternoon. He enttrtd in a wheelchair • UPt f 11"""i. BACK IN ·HOSPITAL Harry 5 Truman • •' ... ' ' I Representatives of the orange County Board of Supervisors and the sUtl•' Highway Commission plan to meet next. ti.ionday in a secret session in an effort to hammer out kinks that have developed in the Pacific Coast and Huntington Beach Freeways. Fifth District Supervisor Ron a 1 d Caspers of Newport Beach and Second District Supervisor David Bake r of Garden Grove are expected to represent the county at the rare, closed-door meeting. . High"'ay commission representatives expected to attend are Chairman Winston Fuller of San Marino, 1-~red Jennings of • Riverside and possibly Joseph Sinnott of ' ' San Diego. Principal discussion will center on the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway t~o~g6 \ Newport Beach and the continuing disagreement over the route or the Hun-, Ungton Beach Freeway, according to Te4 , - McConville, Orange County road com- missioner. He said the commissioners plan to urge the supervisors to assume a more prom- inent role in so I vi n g the various transportation corridor problems in the county. ~fcConville will also sit in on the session. his office said today. A bill by Assemblyman Robert \~. Badham (R-Newport Beach) to delete the Newport Beach section or the Pacific Coast Freeway from its adopted aligri- ment is now on the ·noor of the stat~ Senate, but no action is expected earlier than Wednesday , a representative or - Badham 's office said today. 'The bill urged by Newport Beach representativei has already passed the state Assembly. McConvUle's chief assistant, Murray Stonn. said the Newport Freeway section from Palisades Road·Bristol Avenue to P3cific Coast Highway will also be discussed as will .all transportation cor- ridor problems In the county. Storm said no representatives of the various Orange County cities conterned with freeway alignment have been in- vited to attend the Monday session. "If we invite one we \\'Ould have to Ln- vite them all and that could destroy tht lnfOnnal shirtsleeve atmosphete of the meeting," he said. Holiday's Tides Predicted Lower Five-foot breakers and strong riptides which plagued the Laguna Beach coastline Saturoay and Sundal should be all but gone during tomorrow s Fourth of July holiday. Laguna Beach Lifeguard Bruce Baird predkltd the surf "lit! drop to three feet and that menacing rlps will taper off to-day. The strong riptides kept lifeguards busy with 82 rescues over the weekend. An estimated 32,000 persons hit the beach Saturday with a heavy c~owd of 45,000 on Sunday. 01 Capt. Baird said 22 lifeguard slatlorn! will be manned Tuesday. Plenty of sun1 • i 7(H:legree air tempera~ and a 65 water ternperatilre art on l'8p ,for the holiday; Baird oredlcltd. . . S. Lag~a Zoning .,. Protest Okayed .. .A resolution protesting a 2one chaftie on, .a vala:uble piece ol. oceanfront prop. erly by the Sou1!i Laguna Civic Assocla- wt<k by the South Laguna Civic AssocJa. lion. . The land owned hy Leon G. ChauliA!o presently zoned R·l (single f~rnWY\. Chaulet wants to chanae the wne t~ (noaltlple units) oo that he may cons\il a 37-unlt apartment compttx. The resolution notes that an im! building 111<ln!torlum exists in So u Laguna pending adoption of the Laguna General Plan by the Oranec County planning commwlon . The 1.8 acre parcel Is localed olf Sec· olld Slrtet on the ocwi side of Pactf1< Coast Hlgbway. , I Food Prices Studied WASWNGTON (AP) -Whit. JN econom,lc odvlser1, concern~ over rlsllg' food prices, are preparlnil for anqll)er rwnd of meetings wilb food·slort ti· ecutlves and farm leaders. 4 \ • Saddlehaek • Today's ~l•al N1oY. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 185, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE·CO \:JNTY, CALlfORNIA MOND AY, JULY 3,-'1972 TEN CENTS •. :---Schmitz • Race? ' ' 7 DAILY PILO'i ...... W Lff ,.,_ You're A ll Vtider Arrest This photo was taken on the Fourth of July, 1971 on Balbba Island in Newport Beach. Fireworks are illegal in Newport Beach, even on the Fourth of J uly. An d ·every year patriotic fervor (or is it pr es- sure from the kids) overcomes normally law ab id· ing ci tizens. Tour boats in the harbor even run spe- cial fireworks viewing cruises. El Toro Distt•ict , Sewage Bonds Authorized By P1\TRICK BO \'LE ot TM O•llr P'llll Sl•ff Directors of the El Toro Water District have voted to authorize tbe issuance of $10 million in bonds -to finance the con- 1truction of sewage treatment facilities with other area agencies. The district, which serves El Tord and Laguna Hills, will use the bond money io COQperation with other members of the Aliso Water f\.fanagement Agency. They include the Irvine Ranch, Los AJisos and Moulton-Niguel \Vater Districts, the city of Laguna Beach and the South Laguna Sanitation District . The agency is planning to constn1ct an ocean outfall and to upgrade or expand existing facilities to provide. se"'age trratment on a regional basis. El Toro district directors took the ac· tion on the bond issue at a meeting Thursday. Wate r districts, unlike school and city governing agencies, need not "take a vote or the residents to authorize the sale of bonds, according to district attorney Fritz Stradling. Bonds can be sold at the direction or _the district board unless half of the district property owners protest the acti on. witb the joint sewage effort in the Sad- dlebac k Valley. · He estimat~ that between $2 million and $4. million of the bond money would be needed, and noted that the entire proj· ect will be 80 perc<nt fin;mced through federal and stale grants. · The joint agency is now doing eng ineer· Ing studies to determine the best site for a sewage outfall along the South c.oast of tbe county. Under the plan.. individual sewage treatment plants would all use this outfall. Jn addition, ·much of the e!Duent possing lhrough the plants woold l'te reclaimed and ·put to.Yarious uses·ia· the south cc:xmty. ~ ... ~ ~f • · , J Mall Theater! Setting First Free Band Concert Slated at Fashion Island The !irst in a series or free summer concerts begins at 9: 15 o'clock tonight at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. The concerts by Henry Brandon's Big Brass Band and "pops" orchestra will be presented in the shopping district's mall theater at the same time every Monday night throughout the summer. Seating for several thousand people is available. band sound and an. additional 1 t r I n g section for Hpops" concerts. Most musicians are from Orange cOun- ty area. They include accomplished recording artists, music teachers, con- cert musicians and Disneyland musi- cians. Fashion Island is located on East Pacific Coast Hig hway between Jam· boree Road and MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach. Ill Lame Duck Solon Eyes T·hird Party From Wire Strvtcu B05TON -U.S. Rep. John G. Sclunilz (R-Tustin) says he might make a · political comeback this November either N a third party or as a write-in c~ didate. De~ealed In the June California primary by County A!:sessor Andrew Hinshaw, SchmltJ promised a Crowd at Sunday's annual New En'!Jand Rally for God, Family and Country here, ''I'm going to come back stronger than ever." The Orange County conservative said, ••1•m not necessarily going to be shackled to a party -to the Republican Party - that feels that lts role as the coo- servaUve party is simply to nm socialism more effectively than the op- posite party." During his remarks in Boston, Sc!unltz said be is also loolr:ing into the possibility ol running bis wife for bis seat in ~ress in November on the American Independent Party ticket. .}Schmitz, who believes be may be pro- hibited by law from running again this year, said the switch io Gov •. George Wallace's fonner party may be called for because "there is m party right now that's really nailing the enemy." ''If there ever wu a time in America political history when we're ripe for a bold; new move it's now," Scbmltz, a member of tile John Birch Society, told the meeting of comervatives. · · Schmitz, who also attended Saturday's opening session of lilt two-day rally, laid No Deaths, Few • Accidents Mark ' ' Counij !Holiday Death bas taken a holiday on Oranf• County roadWays IO far dltr!nf the long Fourth of July weekend, t!Je cwnly CU'· oner's office llid today. No highway or freeway deaths and fe w serious·traffJC acclderts have marred the holiday scene ln the county. This ~ trasts with three traffic fatalities during the 1971 holiday weekend. However, spokesmen for the califomia Highway Patrol in Orange C6unty cau- tioned that the wol'll part of the holiday weekend, when mptorlsts are homewafil bound, is yet to come. · Nationwide, 40Z persons had died In trafftc accidents since the long holiday period began at 6 p.m. Friday. 1be total w .. as of 9 o'clock this morning (Pl7r). CalUornia led the nation with 38 fafalities. During last yeat'1 three-day Fourth of July weekend, 635 traffic deaths were reported nationwide. that the Red Chinese ha\'t' "an official heroln prod uction during a recent visit to program or poppy production" to make Nati-0nn1Lst China and by talking to a heroin "lo raise money and subvert, \\'Ornan who fled Jied China through particularly to 1ubvert enen1y troops." Yuman Province . Labeling l\fainland China as the world's "She said sht• saw the crop poppies "primary source of heroin." Schmitz said being cultivated by Hed Chi nese troops in he secured much of his informa11on . .alxuJ.t__)'..wu:in P-r-0vlnce, ''Schiniti said. Scl1mitz Lo ses More Votes To Hin shaw in Recounting The recount or votes demanded by Jame duck Congressman John Schmitz after his losing effort in the 39th Congressional District race has not gone well for him so far. JJ.S. W 011't Say If It Al ter ed Vietnam W earh e1· WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon refused again today to say If the United states has tampered with the weather in Indochina in an effort to hamper North Vietnamese military operation!I. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W • ~ F riedheim said the U.S. ti~ never tried to cause rain over North Vietnam . Bu~~kedif rainmakin~ activities have -· attepled iJI South Vietnam, Laol qr Combodia, be r<ptled : "I c,µ'I enlarge on that." ·- For ~the past year, there , haVt been reports of the ·rainniaklng. The latest appeared today in the New YorJr Times, ,whlch quoted unnamed gOvemment sourcts as saying the Air Force bas seeded clouds to increase and control raln!all throughout Southeast Asla. The purpose, the Times said, was to hinder the movement ci North Viet· namese troops and 1Upplies, spoil enemy attacks with heavy raim, and to alter the rain patterns over Laos and North Viet· nam to ald U.S. bombing strikes. '!'he Times Story foliowta an artlcle in the June Issue of Science magdlne wh ich said the nunors and speculiUon growing over the alleged efforts to alter the weather in Indochina alarmed civilian scientists and weather experts trying to promote international weather research. Sen. Clalrborne P,ll (l).R:I:), said Jast month he believes the military hai been involved In seeding operations since 1968 to clear targets in North Vietnam. The latest ornciaJ tally of the votes cast in the June 6 primary election showed that Schmitz has Jos t an •ddl· tional four votes and GOP nominee An- drew Hinshaw, currently Orange County assessor, has gained 10. About 160 of the 695 precinct3 In the di strict have been recounted to date, said R. J . "Red" Mailhot. deputy regis trar o( voters who Is supervising the new count. Schmitz was originally defeated by fl ins haw by an official count of 2,601 votes out of lhe 93,427 cast. 'This was a gain of 249 \'Oles over the unofficia l figures released the day after the tlec. tion. ?o.tailhol said about 40 to 50 precinct. are being recounted per day by hand. He pred icted the process v.·ould continue well inlo next week unless the Schmitz forcet call a halt by conceding Hlnshaw's vic- tory. 111e count on Earl Carraway, another contestant in the same r&<:"e for tbe Republican nomlnaUon., showed n o change, Mailhot said, while I.my Denno, tbe fou rth contestaot lost one vote. As 6! ~diy, the recount stam!J to coot Sdu\iitz I Upporlers upwards of $2,400 If !h~ contention ol. hi s rupportlrs provea incorrect and the Jrlntary vote i1 upbeJd. 2 Die i11 Street After Gunha ttle 1 CHICAGO (AP) -Three persons have died and two others were: hospitalized tn what police investigators say they blleve was the execution of a street gang leader. Police said two of the victims and one of the wOiinded men were -believed to have been members of the Main 21 , the - ruling body of the Black P Stone NaUon a federation of street gangs. ' The gang leader killed Sunday wu William Troop, about 25, who was ac- quitted almost a year ago Jn the mfper slaying ot a Chicago policeman. Stradling also noted that property tax- es to pay off the bonds are levied only on land, not on improvements. The owner o( a $30,000 home probably has an $8,000 piece of property, Stradling noted as an example. At the present district ·tax rate of $1.25, that homeowner is paying about $25 each year toward financing the district's operation. The attorney said that all $10 million of the bonds w'lll not be sold in conjunctioa Brandon, a Corona del Mar resident , is orchestra director for the Chicago Light Opera house and for the McCormack Place Convention Center in Chicago. The opening night concert will feature selections from "The Music Man ," a Dix· ieland concerto "Great ItaJian Movie Themes," and "El Capitan," the Sousa march. Nixon Relaxes at Clemente Trustee Officers To Be Chosen Making . Vp for Absence by Swimming, Dining Out Officers for the Saddleback Community T ec h1iicia n Held On Perjury Rap Over Blood T es t Brandon . is popularly known for his t•Fashion Island Overture ," and he has written musical jingles for v.·ell-known commercials. Presi<!_ent Nixon is using the long holi· day Weekend to make\Jp for his sb:- month absence in San Clemente -buzz- ing around bis estate on his golf cart, swimming at a secluded beach at Camp Pendleton and dodging out for d!Mer. Press aides plan no formal briefings until Wednesday,~ lfie'Pi'tsiCleiit's sclledule ol meetJ"8s with advisers will probably pick up. Jng attention to shift to the bitter in· CoU~ge District wi!I be chosen at a fighttng-arnong-Demor:ratic--contenders~ 11pecial trustee meetl.l}g at a p.m. Th~ur:,:•~--1 for the no mination. Ciiy ~Uie college board room, 28000 A technician at a San Clemente medical laboratory has been arrested on fi ve counts of perjury stemming from a drunken driving case in which he alleged· ty agrct!d to lie In exchange for sexual favors from the defendant. San Cle mente Police announced this morning t h a t they arrested Lo u is Anthony Evangelisto, 44, of Vista only seconds after be left the witness stand Friday in South Orange County Municipal Court. Evangelisto was booked and ordered held in lieu of $10,000 bail. He posted bond a few hours later. The arrest ended several weeks of in· vestigatlon in which the woman defen· dant cooperated fully with investigators, polk:e Chief Clllrord Murray said today. It ts alleged that the ttchnlclan lied un- der oatll five ,.parale Umes in the trial. Murray .said the asserted perjury in- volved 1talements relating 10 the physical condition ol the woman at the · Ume of her arrest by local officen. Thejechnlclan had be<n summoned to p01lce lieadquartcrs to draw a sample of the 42-year-old San Clemente woman's blood. The sample, according to standard procedure, was then sent to the! Orange County Crime Laboratory for analysis or alcohol content. HEvangellsto gave tesUinony which was contnry le the facta aboUt the woman's pbyslcal appearance \n d behavior app>rently in an •tt<mpf to (Ste PERJURY, Page Z) • • Brandon's Big Brass Band and "pops'' orchestra are the same exce pt for ad- ditional brass instruments for the big Coast Luncheon Friday Canceled . The Orange County Coast Association has canceled its legislators lunctieon which was scheduled for Friday a( the naiboa nay Club in Newporf Beach. The meeting will be rescheduled at a fut ure date. Association members had planned to join local state legislators for lunch, but the meeting had to be postponed because the state Legislature bas been qilled back into session for the next two weeks, according to program chairman Carl Kymla. • Wben •Ihey do meet, Coa!I AS90Clatton members will be:ar reports from tho legislators on state measures affecting the coastline. Victim's Baby Dies SAN DIEGO (AP) -A girl born 17 minutes alttr her mother was kilted In a traffic accident died at • hospital here 12 llollrs lattr, 'authorities 11y. Doctors deli""" the baby by caesarean section S4turday after the mother, Joanne Hare, 20, of Chula Vista was fatally injured wtien her car smashed into a telephone pole-in O!ula Visla1 authorities said. The President, who began his 16-day working vacation late Saturday afternoon with "orders" to well-wishers to "all go swimming," djd that very thing early Sunday with several house guests. The friends, Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo of Florida and Robert Abplanalp of ~ow York, familiar figures at the Western White House, joined the President for dinner Saturday evening, stayed over and on Sunday all three toot a short helicopter jaunt to '••Rect Beach" in Camp Pendleton for some swimming tn water which Ls aomewhat chilly for this time of year. La ter in the afternoon all three toot another flight -this one to Cliasen'1 Restauraot In Los Angeles, one of the President's·faYOrltes. ~1 ·they dlned on steak. The P~sident, his aides said, ordered a "Hobo'' steak from the menu, a large hunk of New York cut which h .. cone up in price since !ie'lut boUght ont. -- A waller rtmlnded NiJ:on that the price Is up a quarter-to $9.25 these days. An hour alter the President and hi• party Jett the com(!OUllCI, Pat Nlxoo Dew In from Chleago'where she had received 1 rousing wekome earlier in the day al a folk dance fesUval. The relaxing weekend ts upected to t<lntinue for the President and Mr1. NiJ. ori lltrougb the !ndependeoce Da}t.boll· day. Press Secretary· Ronald Ziegler said the President plans meetings with Na- tional Security Adviser Dr. Heory Kiss· Inger cluring the stay and Mr. NiJ:on also plans to conUnue discussions with other advlsen on campaign atrategy. Some aides have aaid Nixon plans a "low profile" of acUvitiea lo San Cle'!'ente during tbla current viii~ allow· Keeping abreast of the partisan ao-Marguerite Parkwa.y, Mi:.si<111 .Viejo. tivlties Sunday the President made • The special session ls in lieu or the rash of phone c~lls to the Ea!I, speaking regufarly scheduled Monday n I g h I to former Campaign Chalrman John meet mg cancelled due to the holiday .. Mitchell as well as Mitchell'• successor, Also 00 the ag~n~a is a requ est .for b1da Clark MacGregor for the $4.5 million mathematics and Mitchell -wi.; resigned last Friday sc ience building and pricing of associated and acceded to the demands of his •ife, student body· cards f<1r lfn.'13 acbool Martha, that he quit poUtics -still plans year. to serve as a .. consultant11 to the Presi· r-------------. .dent as a campaign adviser. c.1a Authorities Nab 12 Aliens Weatller In Two Clemente Busts A dozen llltgal lmmigranll heading north wound up in custody In Sfn Clemente over the weetend In two ,.parate lncldenll -..,. of the busta taklng,place alter four llltll>wcceAflilly cleared the Western Wbl.te' HOUie. That incident w~ the nrat et, the two and oett1rred at ~~t 3:.30 1.m. -U hoUrs. befer~ the J:t urlved for a worldn( neatlon. A re1kl<nt of the s Sbort1 colooy immediately north of the PresldonUal compound phoned local police to report !our "suspicious" men walking, upcoast on the Santa F~!,~· 001~ inter""i t1tt four-at Calalla Beacb a little !Mtber north, arrested the men without incident and turned the aliens over to border patrolmen. Early this rooming yet another group was· 1rrestcd after a ~ult. from Ibo Border Patrol checkpoint to the Palliiada ovtrplia of the San Dlt:go Frffwl y, . AutboriUes said the cirlt>8d cil eighf , men wu balled at aboiil $: 19 a.ID. and the driver ol the velllcle bolted frvm of. Border Patrol cbectpoint to the Paliada Highw1y patromen finally Clllihl the . man and rellJmed him to the rest ol the &TIM'P: All eliht, otnclals said, W!l'e returned to the checkpoint Mostly sunny 1kin are on the agenda for the Fourth of July hol- iday. Those low clouds lbould li!l by mlcf-day oo Tuesday, ICCOl'\llnl to the weatherlady, to tcm~ lures of 70 at the beach, rislnf to 8$ inland. Lows ~. • INSm E TODAY A y•ar ago Lockheed Aircrafl ~orp. was ,.,ling from huge losses on govtrnment projects clJ totll OS fr<>m, tht bo'nkl'Mplct/ of Rolls Royce. Where don II stand tdday7' Ste sto'1/, Pogc a. ...... " -· • Clllt9"111 ' M•ll•NIM ... .. C~Hlfltll ..... Orlll•CWll'r I C'""'' " ...... lt-1f I C(M'W ... " Tlk'rl .... I 0(-•fl'I MlflcM I --I I •fl-rt.I •at• • ... _ • '"*'*"*" • -·-\)14 ·-,.,, ' • ! DAil V PllDl IS · Coµnty, State Plan ' Ro ute Talks Representat ives or Ulc Orange C.:01mty Boo.rd ot Supervisors and the state High~·ay Commlsslon plan to meet next ~Ionday in a secret session in an effort to hammer out kinks th.at have developed in the Pacific Coaa:t and Jiunllngton Beach rree"·ays. Filth District Supervisor Ron a I d Caspers of Ne.,..·port Beach :ind Second District Supen·l.sor David' n a k er of Garden CrO\'e are ex~ted to represent the county at the rare , closed-door meeting. • • ----• • • • Vegas· Reealled . Axles Defective in, 500,000 ~ai:s? DETROIT (UPI) -Gtntnl Motors. today IMOUOCed tho .... n of aome 500,000 Chtvrolet Vega subcompacts -vlrtuoUy all 197l and 1972 models on lhe road -lo check Ior a defective rear axle sh.1ft. The. company said the derectlve shafts could cause a lock ring to disengage. setting up a chain reao- tiOn that could cause lhe rear brakes to rail and ultimately cause the axles themselves to fall off. Cbevroltt aald tllat It dtltctl .. llhllll hive beal ~ed. Two ._,.. resulted In body damage to the vehicles but there have been no reported in juries. · said the automaker, the nation's largfst. Chel·rolel said 1hat inspection for the ,derecllve shafts \Vil! tnke less than IO minutes and installation of new shafts, if , needed, about an hour. · Tht work wiU be dOn< free by the company, Chevrolet said. S tudy Session Slated On South Lag.una Pinn irighway commission representatives expected to attend are Chairman Winston Fuller of San Mar ino, Fred Jennings of Riverside ancl possibly Joseph Sinnott or San Diego. • A special study session on the South Reds Porn~ {loc}cet Fh·e Into Hue ' SAIGON (UPI) -Communist gunner! fired 875 rocket, mortar and artilJery rounds Into llue and lls outer defenses todny, while two large, equally-matched units alugged ll out with tanka and artillery north of the old Imperial capital' In a South Vietnamese, attempt to recap- ture Quang Tri province. A 20,000.man government !oree 1s drl\•- lng north from Hue to try to take back Quang Tri -the oal S..,lh ·vietna...., province captured by the Coaununlsts. With most of Hue's dtfendera aent north to try to recaptwe Qaung Tri, Communists increased the pressure on the old lmpe<ial capital and threatened 1 Jong-expected, major attack on°the city. T w o Suits Convention Seat Ruling Due Soon WASHINGTON (UPI! -Fedtral Judge George L. llart Jr. promised to rule late today on two suits involving he~ted battles over the seating of Democratic convention delegates from Callfomia and Chicago. Hart also said the U.S. Court of Ap- peels arranged to hear both cases T\Je~ day whatever the outcome of his decision. He made lhe announcement after hear· 1ng arguments from both sides in a move by supporters of Sen. George S. McGovern "'to prevent ISL California delegates from being unseated by the Democratic credentials committee. (See related story, Page 5) . The Chicago dispute involved tht disbarment of Chicago May()r Richard J. Daley and 58 delegates on his i!!late. Joseph L. Rauh, arguing Co r ~·llh eight younger alternate;), Passage of the sealing motion canie after 1'1lss Susan C.Onncr or lligh f'uint, N.C. harshl}t <:rillcized backers or ~tcCovfrn for not supporting theJt challenge. The 24-ye:i.r-old 1'tiss Conner said the :P.1cGovern forces "had been instructed, " a bloc, to withhold from us their ,·oles" because they fe ar that ''by sup- porting us ln a minor case they will alienate support for larger challenges .'' "Now suddenly what .... ·as clear is to be changed," Rauh argued at today 's hear· ing. "All or a sudden. after it was over, a challenge \Yas filed ." llovtevcr, Hart commented during the change the rules, it may even be dirty pool, but is it unconstitutional ?" Principal discussion will center ()n the Laguna General Plan has been called by ~--proposed-Pacific C.Oast..Ereeway through -.tbe,.Orange_c.oimty_Planning .COmmiss.ion_ Newport ,Beach and the continuing for iuly 17 at 3 p.m. at its hearing room,. 11To the extent that the in!ormallon Is available, it will be provided," ff()wtll, a Santa Ana attorney. said. -On-e··mrmber-or-tang"s"· committee, :A.'1 Wiehle, noted that one report made by the county Building and Safety Depart· ment confirms that serious seismic proiJ.. lems exist in some areas of. S o u t h Laguna. A 1,000.man ·Sooth Vietnames e paratroop unit, backed by air power, artillery and tanks, fought a savage bat· tie with a North Vietnamese force of the same size only-two .. milersouth of-Quang Tri City, the provincial capital. ~icGovern. said the party's refonn rules plainly allowed ·f o r winner.take-all primaries like that which ~ a v e 1'-1cGovern 271 delegates from California in the June 6 primary. He also asked. "llow far are the courts going to ge~ into violntions of party rules?" McGovern finished flrst in the June G primary. I d.isagreement over the route o~ the Hun· 400 Civic Center Drive \Vest, Santa Ana. hngton Beach Freeway, according to Ted Commissioners will discuss reports M~~nvllle, Orange County road com-from various county departmenta which m1ss1on~r. . . relate to the general plan drafted by a He said t~e comm1ss1oners plan to urge citizens committee, headed by architect the superv1~rs to assu.me a more pr~m-Fred Lang. lnent role 1n so I v 1 n g the various Because of the informal nature of the transportation corridor problems in the study session, no official actlon may be county. taken by the commission M~~lle will ~!so sit in on the Lang's plan calls for 0 siow controlled sess10~. his office said today. gro.,..1h of the small community, with A bill by Assemblyman Robert W. most of the 700 acres of virgin hillside Badham CR-Newport Beach) to delete land as open space. the Newport Beach section of the Pacific An alternative plan, produced by C.oast Freeway from its adopted align-owners of the hlllslde land, calls for men! is now on the floor of the state greater deveJopment of the community, illtnale, but no action is expected earlier with roughly half of the slopes as open lhan Wednesday, a representative ()f space. Dadham's office said today. The bill A spokesman for the landowners, urged by Newport Beach representatives Rodger Howell, said a representative of has already passed the state Assembly. his group will attend the meeting and McConville 's chief assistant. Murray possibly supply new information relating Stonn, said the Newport Freeway ,section to soil stability and environmental con. from Palisades Road-Bristol .\,venue to cerns. Pacific Coast Highway will also be • discussed as will all transportation cor- ridor problems in the county. Storm said no representatives of the various Orange County cities concerned with freeway alignment have been in· vited to attend the &looday session. Driver Permits Now Ca i:ryirig Color Pictures caJHomia driver's licenses are being issued with color photos a1 Department ol Motor Vehicles offices beginning to- day. "Most motorists will find their new col- or photos far more flattering than the black..ahd-whi.te likenesses they carry in their wallets now," says OMV Director Robert Cozens. "They Will find the im- provement easily worth the 25-eent ad· ditional, cost." The new licenses, printed in blue and gold and laminateiJ in plastic for durability, now cosr $3.25. The former charge was $3. Fees for a duplicate license jumped from $1 to $1 .25' and the charge for a oon- driver's identification card (also in color and plastic.coated) is $3.25 rather than $3. CoZens said newphtograph.ic equip. TQent has been iru:talJed in all DMV of- fices in keeping with legislation enacted last year. The front or the new license is chemically coated, making it more durable and Immediately showing up any attempt at alteralion or counterfeiting, accordjng to Cozens. Four years "'iii elapse before all 12 million California drivers licenses will have been renewed in color. During that time 1.5 million new drivers will have betn licensed. It 1''ill take approximately three weeks to receive a new color license , the same as for the former black·and-white licen~e. OU.NG-I COAtT " DAILY PILOT Keep Pets Clear Of Fireworks, Doctors Advise "!be Orange County Veterinary Medical Association lllday warned Orange Co&llt resi~nts to confine their pets in a quiet part ()f_ the house or yard while using fireworks .. According · to county veterinarians, Foorth of July commotion causes pets to panic. . Many dogs and cat. are Injured, kUled or lost trying to escape the noise. Eating habit. are altered and ga.trol.testlnal upsei.s occur for days attenvardJ, the vets said. And severe injuries can occur when small caged pets, such as mice, hamsters and birds thrash themselves in their cages. The association said some animals are saftt in a kennel during the holiday cele- brations. Comedian Hope Lauds America OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -Cooledian Bob Hope turned serious here, asking 12.000 -persons to think of America with 196 candles on Its birthday cake. "And those 196 candles are the light or the world., pointing out to people everywhere that this country stands for freedom," Hope said Sunday nlght. "Other nations which have many more candles ()n their birthday cakes can bask in the glow given off by America's light and her many accomplishments." flope headlined the fourth annual Star! and Stripes Show, reatW'lng a host of stars of -the entertainment and sports v.'Of'\ds. It will be shown on netw()rk television Tuesday. Food Prices Studied WASHINGTON (AP) -Whil< House economic advisers, concerned over rising food prices, are preparing for another round of meetings with food-store ex- ecutives and fann leaders. Wiehle encouraged residents to either write letters to the commission regarding the plan or attend the hearing. Trumari Returns To Hospital- Digestive Ills KANSAS CITY. Mo. (UPI) -Former President H a r r y S Truman 88, hos· pltallzed with a renewed digestive ail· ment, spent a quiet night although he did not sleep soundly. Doctors said today his condition continued to be "Satisfactory." A Research Hospital spokesman said Truman waS awakened at 7 a.m. to prepare for radiologic examinatio~ of the lower intestinal tract. Tbt ex· aminatlons took one hour and the S3rd chier executive returned to his seventh- floor room at 9:30 a.m. Spokesman John P. Dr eves quoted Dr. Wallace ll Graham as saying Truman was "sllghUy fatigued by his trip to tho hospital and lack pf sowxl s1eep.'' Graham said blood tests were schedul· ed .for Jlxiay and Tuesday. It ii too early to determine bow long the..Jorrner President will be hospitalized, Griham said. "I'm pleased with everything so far,'' said Graha·m, Truman's personal physi· clan since the White House days. Dreves said Truman ate scrambled eggs, toast and fruit juice after returning from his 1-rays. "He's up and around," he added. He said,1based on Truman's condition, the nut report would be a tll a.m. Tues. day. Dreves said Truman's meal! after ad· mittance Sunday were limited to jello, broth and tea in preparation for today's x-rays. He said Truman had been joking vdth nurses taking care of him and bad ex- pressed a dislike for hospital gowns. The nurses said Truman "c()ntinues to be cheerful and happy," Dreves said. Truman was driven to the hospital rrom his home in nearby Independence, Afo., Sunday afterooon. He entered in a wheelchair, His wife, Bess, 87, accompanied him but returned home Sunday night. She came back to the hospital at 10 a.m. to- day and planned to stay all day. It was the seventh time Truman was hospitalized since he left the White House in 1953. His last two illnesses -In 1971 and 1969 -stemmed from -itomach dinders. Truman spent less than oot hour at Research Hospital Wednesda y after com- plaining of back paim resulting from a fall at bis home on Tuesday. He was released after X-rays . Truman's-most serious -ntness· since leaving Washington came in ISM when he underwtnt gallbladder surgery. He wu: in critical condition for severcil days following a severe reaction to antibiotics. He was hospitalized Jan. 21, 1971, for 12 days with colitis, innammatlon of the large intestine. • While the battle was under way, Com- munist gunnen 111ipptd into the Hue area from the west and bombarded the city and a halI.<fozen outpoot& on its inland flanks. Field reports said 31 8rtiltery rounds hit Hue and 644 other shells landed at the outlyiag bases. In the air war over North Vittnam, the U.S. command said U,S. jet fighter- bomber pilots destroyed a coal treatment building ... near the country's major part city ol Haiphong, dropped a span on a bridge near Vinh and bombed an oil storage area south of the Chinese border.· The command in a delayed report said a U.S. Navy A7 fighter-bomber crashed "from unknown causes" June 18 on a night mission over North Vietnam about 107 miles north of tbe Demilitarized Zone separating the t"'O Vietnams and listed the pilot as missing. A Communist radio broadcast claimed today two U.S. jets were shot down Sun- day over the Haiphong-Hanoi area. UPI photographer Willie Vicoy said government paratroopers in today 's Quang Tri City fighting, 32 miles north or Hu~..__,vere backed by allied jets, helicopters and heavy B52 bombers. The BS2s overnight dumped more than 500 tons of explOiSive ()D the approaches to Quang\Tri City. The city and the prov- in<:e of the same name were captured - month after the Communist offensive began March 30 in South Vietnam and have been in North Vietnamese hands ever since. -Vicoy said he saw a South Vietnamese annored personnel carrier "sink like a stone" as it tried to cross the Truong ~huoc River to join the Quang Tri fighting, drowning about seven paratroo~rs. Vicoy said the vehicle. overloaded with paratroopers in full battle gear, "plunged downv.·ard and seven of the men aboard never came up." Today's s~elling of Hue, 400 mi I es north of Saigon, prompted allied fears that the North Vietnamese would try to overrun the city while its defenses are stripped by the government drive to retake ~ang Tri Province. Sunday's rocket and artillery barrage of 80 sbells that killed Il persons and wounded 41 marked the first such attack on Hue since the start of the offensive. Allied commanders noted following Sunday's shelling that the South Viet· namese force of about 30 000 men guarding the city was reduc~ to the 10,000 troops of the 1st Infantry Division last week for the northward drive into Quang Tri , now in its sixth day. Indians Attack Pow Wow , Sev en in Arizoria AFF. Ariz. (AP) -Sponsors annual Southwest Indian Pow \Vow could proceed without further dlsruptJon today&fter the arrest or seven young Indians for interlering with cttemonial dances. .The disturbance late Sunday began with an assault on the announcing booth and the announcer by about 20 Indians. The action was accompanied by a shrill cries of "lnd1ans are starving." Joseph A. Caillano Jr., representing lhe Democratic National Committee named in the McGovern.suit. argued that "the courts have no place in this arena on this klnd of issue." He said that if the court interferes in the matter, it might have on' Its hands most of the other SO challenges decided en by the credentials committee. "\Ve could be here with anyone of them if the courts decide to get into this area," he told Hart. Rauh also charged the committee. il- legally changed the credentials rules in stripping McGovern of the 151 Gali!omia delegates. "In vlew of the closeness of the race, those 151 can determine the outcome of the Convention," he declared. ~1eanwhile the Democratic credentials committee voted today to seat the 64· member North Carolina delegation to the convention despite complaints that ()nly 7.8 percent of the delegates were under Ulc age or 30. . A motion by George Barrett of Ten- nessee tO seat the delegation was passed by a voice vote, blocking consideration of a motion sponsored by the youthful challengers to replace eight delegates Summer Program Activities Set In El Toro Area Yo-Yo , Frisbee and toe-decorating con- tests. tumbling, leathercraft, guitar lessons and a teen center are all included in a special ~ecreat.\on rummer program for the El Toro area. The program1 Y•hich runs through 'Aug. 18, is sponsored by the Aliso Valley Homeowners Association, lhe~n Joa- quin School . District a'nd the Orange· County Board of Supervisors. ' ' The board of supervisors autNlrUed $11,202 in county service area funds to fio4nce the program designed primarily for children in the fll'st through 12th grade, Russ Hazelett, recreation direc· t()r, said. The money is granted from fees paid by residents for services requested by the homeowners. Olivewood and Gates Elementary Schools are being used weekdays from l to 5 p.m. for the program, ~·hich is staffed by 13 people. The program is free to area residents because their tax monies already support it, said Hazelett, also a teacher at University Park School In Irvine. About 800 children are enrolled In the program which began W e d n e s d a y ~ Hazelett said any El Toro area resident is still welcome to join crafts classes, games and athletic activities. Area teens can play pool, chess, checkers and other games in the teen center at OllveYo'ood School. The program also includes swimming classes in the mornings in a pool at the Holiday-House School on El Toro Road. These were all filled on the first sign-up day In mid-June. Trips to the beach, a skating arena. a duck pond and Irvine Park are also being arranged, Hazelett said. Residents can contact the two schools for more Wormation. The comm ittee decision could block a ?ttcGov ern first ballot nomination at the c..'Oflvention , "'hich starts in ~1iamJ Beach a "'eek from today. Stephen Reinhardt, Democr3tic na· ti()nal committeeman from California. and a cochainnan of the state delegation , said McGovern approved the legal move •• "He told us he thinks we are doing the right thing," Reinhardt said. Hearings Slated On Auto Repai1· , SACRAMENTO -flotembers or lht' state Commiss ion on Auto Repair wil l • meet here Friday in a finn l rules sessio01 before opening hearings on auto repair' practices. Newport Beach resident 0 . \V. "Qick'~ Richard is one of five public member$ appointed to the nine-man board by Gov. Ronald Reagan. The rem aining four members are representatives of the auto--; repair industry . , A spokesman for the Auto Repair Bureau said the meeting Ydll probably be tt:e last session at which the ne"' com· , mission's rules and re~ulations will be. • discussed. Comrriissioncrs are expected to start their public hearings at their · next session in August, he said. .Holiday Traffic F ataliti~s Soar . . By Uolte'a Press •lntemaOonal ''.' The count or traffic deaths during the' ·. four~ay July Fouth holiday climbet steadily4oday toward a Nat;:tar SafftY' Council estimate of betv.·een '100 and ~ for the period. A United Press International tabulaticil at IO a.m. (EDT) sh<lwed 409 persons killed in auto accidents. DrO\\'tlings also took a steady toll of lives. A breakdO\\'n: Traffic 409 Drownings 11 Planes 'e Others · 31 Total -417 Ca1ifornia reported the gr ca le 5 'C number of traffic deaths with 40. • ,. Texas had 33 and New York 23. ,. • --. ...... 1'11 Orll'IOI COlll DAIL'I' PILOT, with ~kh h CDfl'llll!IM !tit Npw1-Pr1t11, Is DVblllllcd by tht Or11191 Coe1t Pvb!l1hlng Comp.t1ny, Slip.a. r•I• edlllan1 are P11b1!1hed, Mond•V lhr0V9h Frld1y, tor Co1!1 Me11, NtWPOrl ee1tll, H"""lll'IOtM Bl'1t h/Fo1m111n V1!1ey, Laguna BHch, lrvlnl'/S1ddlttwlck Mid Stn Cltlnfn!cl Stn J\ltlt C111i1lrlnG. A 1lngl1 rt'Qlotlll tdUlon ;, 011bh1htd s .. tvri:11~~ •rd 51H11t1y,. tlll' pr\M.lptl JXJbllthlng p11n1 ,, II UO' W~ll l l 't $trMI, Co.II Mat, C~lllornl.I. ,261•. Entertainers Complain Protesters were all reported to be members of the American Indian Move-- ment. · Flagstaff Insurance man Andy Wolr, the announcer, said he was "grabbed from behind" by a young Indtan who Suspect Sought -11.oierf N. W11d ,1t11dt11t Ind Pvt>U'11CI" J1c.k R. Cu rltv Vk~ Pt111dtn• end ~~r••I fAlr\19tl T~Oll'lll Kt1wil E1111or fioii.11 A. Murpl.;n• Mll\t01"9 l!OITOI' -Ch1rl11 H. Loos Ri<li1rrJ '· Nill l At1ti r.n1 ""~"" Ed119n orfkn (oi!r MISI: lXI Weil l'l~y :\l'rftl Ntwfl'Jfl l!lli(I\; mJ NtwPO•I lloultv•rG Ll9111'1• e11(h: m "'''~' ._.._ +<u"'inQICM lttth; 1111! Dtttll eo..1e .. ttd ),In Cltfl'ltf'lll! lQJ North El Cemlt\o. ll:Nl Tel.,t..Ao (7141 •4JAJ21 ' Chruln.4 Ad,l'rthl"' 642·Sl71 kt cs. ....... Al D.p•rt1M11ts: Toltpll•H 492:-4420 ~'· 1m, 0..11111" con• P'Utln\hlf'l9 .. ,,,.,..'· Ht llftl1 1lllflt1, l!h111r-•~. .,..,,,.... ., ldvt•llSl'll'ltTlt. '°""""' ""' .. f~ """'*" ~1111 pt!'• lftlMIM If toVtl'IOM ._,. =-<lllt 11"'1• Nld ti (.,ti M"11. .. ~ri.lltft ti., Un~ Jlf>S - -, ... _. "" !Mii II.II mo~fl'llrt mlUlirt I'll 11.u ~Mr. . •tarted shouting 1n1o the mi~phooe. For Latln.lromat rn the arena, a group of mdlans, Y mostly Navajos. formed a half-circle around the startled Indian dancers and Rape m' Stanton ~Ghost Gets Into Act SHANKUN, Isle of Wight (UPI) - Enlertalners In a seaside ~ummer show say a ghost Is Interrupting their acts and they "'ant it exorcised. "Everybody Is on edge. The ghost Is ruining the show." said Dave Mlifs, 33, a member of the Temperance Seven jan group which is among the cast •t Shanklin 's Pier Theater, on the Isle of Wight ofr. Britain's south coast. l. _" \Vhen we were told this theater was naunled we all lo ughed. But certain thlhgs have happened recenUy that make us all feel It must be true," MJUs said. John 'Garr, musical director of the show, thinks knows the ldentlly"Of the - \ ghost, who aom ast memlws claim to have seen and be u a white.haired man aged about IO. The &host Is abo s""1iose<! to ww • yelled, "Don't d1J1Ce.,.d.on '.t sell out." _ • . . "' .,. ho The seven arrested were described as -• • mutton c p \vhisl«!rs, a high necked leaders of the protest. LeRoy Keams, a Orange County Sheriff's· offlceraTloday gray suit, gray tie and diamond stickpin. leader of the yN•-rebels. sald the conilnued • manhunt for I rapist who "The story goes,' Garr said, "that In ·-.. 1898 &n actor died on stage after the end demonstraUon was aimed against "ex· scxuaU7 ,asnult!d a 51-yea,..-41d Stanton .. of an unsuccessful performance. It seems =::~" of Indlans by Pow Wow woman at knlfepolnt during the weekend. his ghost has haunted the theater ever •. Depillies aald tl1e suspec~ described as since lrylng hard to make a auceessful about 19, flve-leet 10 Inches tall, with comeback." F p h Ind •-•-nd rom .,. J ····gy collar·l•ngt b 0 • ...;. a The Temperance Seven have written • ~ ,,.. f I k I ·•· bbed bl letttr lo the bishop of Portsmouth asking ERJURY wearing nded b ac '•~. gra • , him to appoint a priest to exorcise the P I • • victim while she was using a nearby ghost -banlah It from !he tbfater.•nd laund"""'ll about S::tO a.m. Saturday. put lt to rtst. show atie was not Intoxicated," ~1urray The victim told officers her assailant The chorus girls also claim the ghost said. held 1 knife at her throat, )!lamed her keeps moviog clothes on>Und In their The chief said that biJ department· I• that he would "" II U she struggled or dreulng room. lnv..Ugatlng the possibility that other called for help and then raped her and Singer Rl t1 Grant said a door opened such tncldtnu have occurred In ....,.n1 forced her to partlclpol< In acts of sexual and clooed behind bor ·wbtn she left tbe months. pervorslon. tbtJler one night. Evaogellsto ,.m be arraigned on tl1e The womon was allowed lo go home "There was nobody about and oo wind. cllarfea on July II In the ..... court aftor trtatmenl for minor ln)urlt.'1 at • It wu_ lllOll weird," 1be uld. when be wu arrest'!L nearby hospital. • •II ~ .<.. St o1111>ook Cake Tina Alcala, 7, of 2817 Drai'I St., Costa Mesa, won top hon- ors in the Junior Decorated Cake division ol lhe Or![l• County Fair with her gin ~· bread house. She won prlie from a licld of 20 Cjln, testanl.!. '111 un~ I 1 I ! \ I A 0 • d t u s g ! I I Huntington Beaeh . Foonjain Valley VOL ~s. NO. ·1 ss. 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY;-CA:EIFORNIA • MONDAY, JULY 3, ·1972 " Today's Final N.\'. Stoeks TEN CENTS 1904 Pora.de •A ProJnotional Thing!) 'Mlen Huntington Beach held its first ~ual ,Fourth of July parade in 1904, the c~Y was just a tiny hamlet containing a half dozen buildings and a few curbs and •il!ewalks. But there were 56 real estate salesmen !n the crowd for that first parade, and they had a busy day. The coming of the Pacific Electric Railroad -making Los ~geles just 56 minutes and 25 cents •Way -meant that the young beach C0ast Bill Gets 7-6 Approval From Wire Servlct1 SACRAMENTO - A coastline pro- tection bill authored by Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) today won a one-vote approval from the Senate Fi'1ance C'"1111ittee. It was the second time around for C3rpenter's coasUine bill. This time it was approved 7 to 6. . The Carpenter mWure has been heavily attacked by the Sierra Club and other conservationists , who f a v o r Assemblyman Alan Sieroty's measure which puts more stringent requirements on any future coastline development in Ci.lifornia. town had a future as a resort com· munity. The' first Fourth of July parade was held to introduce wealthy Angelenos to this possibility. "There were big tours all day, and the parade itself wasn't large at all," says City historian BudJH.lggins. "The whole thing was just a promotion to sell proJr erty." . The parade has changed greatl y "over the years, however, and tomorrow's celebration -the 68tb for the ~lty -wl~ bear little resemblance to efforts of the~ ea!'ly years. Parade organizers· expect ·I00,000 spec- tators to see 4,000 participants in the Jargsst Fourth of July paracle to date. But in some ways, Tue5day's celebra- tion will be smaller than in years past. "It used to be thnt events lasted all day lorlg, '' Higgins recalls. '"The Fourth started with a swim around the pier and patriotic 1peeclles before the parade, and then after the parade there were boxing matches, beauty pageants, and lots to -eat.-'' -.._ ·• · That was in the day of William "El Generallsaimo" Galllenne, who took over tht!: parade management in 1930 and Is ciedilal IYltb building the event into what it is today, "He really knew that be was dOing," Jilggins says. "He stayed with it unt il he died in 1966, too." And still today, Gallienne's daughter, Mn. Joyce Musgrave acts as year·round secretary to the parade. "She's inv a!Uable to us,'' says Tom Livengood, last year's parade mana_ger. "She watches newspapers year-round to find out which are the best perfor1nance groups. And then "'hen parade lin'e · comes around. she ~s after them. jlWithout her and the· contacts she has , ,~·e'd be lost," The Hun1ington Beach Jaycets have mJnnged the parade since 1966. This scar's parade rout<' ruru Uke th.ls: 1'~rom 11 a.n1. at 11th and Main Strtet.s. the p.:irade \vill proceed doy,'n ~lain Slrttl to Fifth Strttl, \\'est on Filth Street to Walnut Avenue, east on Walnu t Avenue back to J\f::iin Street. north on J\1 ain Street to Pt'Ca11 Avenue, east on Jll'Can :\venue to Lake Street. and down Lake S/ret-t to the Park at 111h Street. Horse Reins Eyed Packed Hearing Expected Tonight Horse lovers and ~ble owners are ex· peded in Ille Hwitlngtoo Beach City Council cllamber tonight for a public bearing on a new set of equine stable standards. · The standarda -proposed by the city planning department -will .. tabllsh tighter rules for the ~struction and operation of stables. 'Ibey will also limit the riding of horses Oil city streets. Some of those tighter rules are opposed b~ horse owners and stable operators 'Wrongdoing' Nixed by DA beca~e they claim they are repressive and will have the effect of driving most of the stables out of town. Some of tbe strongest objections are: -All stable structures must be at least 300 feet from any'proi>erty used, zqned or marter planned for residential use. -If a stable is not built r\ext to an established riding trail there must be at least one acre of riding area for every 10 horses. -No horses can be stabled within 50 25 Square Miles feet of the property line in the front or on . the sides. · ln a lttter to the City Council, Mrs. Lucille Horner charges that the 300-foot setback requirement would force what might be a two-acre stable .to own 1().J.J acres, most of wlllch would be .unusablJe. ''\V ithin five years none of the com- mercial or noncommercial stables within }luntington Beach should be able to meet lhcse· stan""r:·" !'"'~~., S"r'" rf'al estate (See HORSES, Page %) Ocean Pollution Check , ~ ru~~=~:! .. (--·~~ystemFunding Sought , • ~v~ #:~Pllltl... ~ On June 26, Carpenter's measure struck a setback before the same Senate Finance Committee when It waa rejected bf a vote of 7 to 6. carpenter, however, won reconsideration and one vote revefS" ed. '!be bill oow goes to the Seiate floor • .Jolin Zlerold, lobbyist for the Sierra Club, told reporlm after tile vote aa~·· bill was .. cliltRaw.1 ' But Carpenter 1al4 .ft' wu "the only _ •~ble •ebicle" for .-tllne·protectioo lell in U.Jqislature, . A ~ coaslllne protecllou bill · au!Mr<d bf Seti. Donald Grunsky Y~ Watsonville), was killed by the Senate NatlD"al Reoources and Wildlife Com· mlttee. , ~~~~:;,-·~~~= lioll nil' mes-ol .whqdllJng by City .olf!clall .'1'0 ilffllfC fetlmit'......, , ;;.lrntier Fountallt Velley -llleyor Ecf Jiiii ,_ The two proposals are li1 addition to a $20,000 1tudy ot the offshore ecoaystem llroody mder't"'Y 1111de1'the direction ot Moorboll30. The major costs of tbel pro. gram are also met by federal grams, Carpenter said bis bill would. have 1 better chance of winning Gov. Reagan 's 1lgnature than the Grunsky bill or a &lmilar measure by AsSemblyman Siero- ty (J>.Bevttly Hills). 'The Coastal Alliaoce, a coalition of Con- w.vationist groups, has qualified an in- ltlative for the November ballot· which would lay down tough controls over development alOng Calllornla's 1,087·mll• coastline. a Carpenter's bill Is SB 860. Isle of Wight 'Ghost' R11ining Summer Concert •SHANKLIN, Isle of Wight (UPI) - Entertainers in a seaside summer show gay a ghost is interrupting their acts and they want it exorcised. • "Everybody ts on edge. The ghost is. ruining the show," said Dave Milli!, 33, a member of the Temperance Seven jazz lfOUP which IJ among the cast at Shanklin'• Pier Theater, on the Isle or "Wlgtit-off"Brltaln'rsoutlrcoa.t. "When we were told this theater was haunled. we all laughed. But certain things have happened ncently that make us all feel it must be true," Mills said. · John Garr, musical director of the show, tlllnka be knows the identity of the ghost, who 80IDe cast members claim to have seen and describe u a wbite·haired man aged about 60. The ghost is also supposed to wear • mutton chop whiskers, a high necked 1faY suil, gray lie and diamond ttickpin. . 1 "The story goes," Garr aaid, .. that in J 1198 an actor died cxr ttage after the end of an UMUCCeSatUI performaoce. 1t ...,.. hlJ' ghOlt barhaunted the theater ever · l!lnce;rytnf-)?rd lo mUe a·IUCC<SS!ul comeback." - Nader SttµIies Kqngciroo Life SYDNEY, AuatrAlla (AP) -U.S. eonsuroer advocate Raljih Nad<r arrived here today to ttndy aome specl .. of kangaroos in danger of e1tinction. Nader told reporters the U.S. Interior Departmeot wanted to have "°"'" kangaroo speclel put on the endangerod U8l to nstrlct the Import of hllproo PrOducla. Mirror Image Winners ~ Sandra and Sondra W·atts, 9-year·old twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Watts, 10398 La Despensa Ave., Fountain Valley, walked away ·with the sweepstakes in !he Twins Contest at the Orange Coun· ty Fair. The girls won the contest over competitors from Orange and Los Ange1es Counties. Police Fail to Uncover · ·ih "Oonneclioo with the fiootide ballot and tor two ~ provams 1'> m o.n I t o r , ' ::=.end that no adion" be, tak~, poilution .levels 1ir the 25 square' miles of ·~"I 't ....&.-6 ,,.1J.,, •.. L. •t<i..... o:cean waters off Huntington Beach. , to us by Mr. Lindegren abows that Mr. e ~ proposa -a ....,..., pro-" can see w•~~ an, • .,. ~nu''°" .. ! f t I '''" 000 JI/st did anything wrong,'' ·safd MrS;. '~~~ ·fir mapping off:shore currents - Stotler. . will re. presented.i'lo ~11 councilmen George Lind~, chairman. of tht" tonight 'Jf they approve it,. a formal re· Fountain Valley Cituens.. COmmittee for qufst will be made lo· the federal Office Ptre Water, charged la9week that Just f. Se O · . . had a con!lid of inlerest in the fluoride o a rants. f .. issue. Lindegrent 80Ugbt an· injunction The second pnipo;a1;·~." ,un i n against fluoridati09l. of the city's water. preliininary stages ··of .E~r.:z-ation, calls ' Mrs.-·Stotter said ihe Will pass her for detailed chemical-Ma ibJ.Crobfological recommendation to J;>isWct Attorney studies. The cost bu . not ; Yet been C«II Hicks on .Wednesday. . " · determined, but the prolfam is much "This JJ not a case regulrlng any<> broader in SC<ll'6 than the first, ae<ording criminal.action,"·said Mn: St«ler. "The to Vincent,G. Moorhouse, director of the only aclion left Open to Mr. Lindegren is city depar!ment of harbors and beaches. to file a t.µpayer's suit against the city's "The coastline ls an invaluable expenditure in fluoridating the water. resource for thia: city," said Moorhouse. He'jl have to foot the bill for that one.·: "These proposals, if funded, will provide Llndegren charged that a conflict of tn-us with the basic knowledge necessary to terest occurred when Just voted to put preJerve it." the issue on tbe ballot while he was in the employ of Dr. Roy Ricllarda, one of the proponents of the fluoride issue. Just has said the onJy connection he has had with Richards was to do his financial books once a month. Fluoridation was approved by Fountain Valley voters June 6 by a vote of 6,295 to Coast Luncheon Friday Canceled L d o s o A k 5,333. The issue had been placed on the ea S Ill nlper ttac S ballot after an initiative campai!ll' by Lindegren resulted in a specW election The Orange County Coast Association has canceled its legislators luncheon which was scheduled for Friday at the Balboa Bay Club in Newporl Beach. The meeting will be rescheduled at a future date. ) June 8, 1971. The June electlon nullified a n Huntington Beach police have been tile shooting lncidents. ordinance by the City Oounci1 wlllch had unable to Wlcover any new leads in the Mrs. Hansgen Is still recovering at ordered the water supply to be fluoli(l'a. trio.or ml[ier at!iffi wlilChoc:oomd last Orange Couii!YMeaJcal~ceiiter··from--ted.-11-thmo.~the issue to bo..decided Thursday night.and Friday morning. burns she sufrered over 15 percent or her ~a~ voters in the June S election this Police are also still checking Into the body lllcluding.her n,eck and upper back. case of Mrs. Ollie Hansgen, who was allegedly set afire Thursday night by Police have been unable to find any three men in their early 30s . suspects in her <me. Neighbors who With the aid of metal detectors, 10 rolled Mrs. Hansgen ia wet shrubbery to police officers and 30 police explorer put out the flames have reported they ""°"""' Friday afternoon com~ the did not see any men a(l!>l'08ch the Hans. bluffs area of Bolsa Chica State Beach in gen home before she ran afire into the hopes of finding shell castings from the street, weapon which fired on two cars traveling Pacliic· Coast Highway Thursday night and Frlday·momlng. High Officials Animal Tamer Dies MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -Roman Proske, a retired animal tamer, died early today at 73. A natiYe of Austria, Proske was known f<>: his refusal to, use a Whip or chair in his circus act. Aasociatlon members had planned to jOiiflocarlllliteJeg!Blitors !OT!wi<lr,but the meeting had to be postponed because the state Legislature has been called back Into session for the next two weeks. according to program chairman cart Kymla. When they do meet, Coast Association members will hear reports from the legislaton on state measures affecting the coastline. Pollce also searched tile.car o! Michael Min ... whose left front window was shat· tered by one of the bullets. No projectile s t WU found, according.. to police,,.,_ _ .._ . ecre A .2Z callllet_slug.was recoteml at lhe· • • · _ · · home . o! Rod Roesoh, the third wihurt victim o! a sniper at.tack Police , have been wiable to n\ake any coMeClion ~ s~eway Meet Set "lf"i ~ ~ - Drinking at 19 Passed in Idaho BOISE, Idabo (UPll-"Okay," aald the bartender when Jackie 'Messer,19, flash«! her newly Issued liquor ldentif· ·~ton card. , "Il felt good," said Mlss Messer, who along the res! of Idaho's 19-yeaM>lds now can drlnlc\legally. · They were given the right. to purchase and drink liquor beglnnlllf Saturday under a bill pwed by the legisl ature. \ -Repre9entalives or the Orange Co Board of Supervisors and the state Highway Commlsiton plan to meet neit Monday in a secret session In an eUort. to hammer out klnb that have developed In the Padfic Coast and Hwitinglon Beach F~ay1. . Firth District Sul"""'lsor R o n a I d Casper,. ol Newport Beach and Second DIJtrlct Saperv1aor David B a k • r of Garden Grove are tJpected to represent the county at tbe ure, clooed-door meeting. • · llighway commlsalon repr.,,entallv., eapected to attend are Cbalnnan Winston Fuller of San Marino, Fl'td Jenninp·ol Riverside and possibly Joseph $innott of San Diego, I " ' ,. diJcn8klll will center on the p Pactflc Cout Freeway through Newport Beach and the contlnulnc dliapment over the route of the Run- ling\On sea.~ Freeway, according to Ted MCConvllle, Orange County road com- missioner. ke said the commissionen plan to urge U.. supervisors to all\Dlle a more prom- inent role In 1 o I v i n g the various transportation corridor problems In the county. \ McConvtlle will also sit in on tht ,.,!ion. his ornco said today. A. b111 by Assemblyman Robert W. Badham CR-Newport Beach) to delete the Newp<rl Beach ltCtlOll of the Pacmc , Coast Freeway from ill adopted align. mcnt is now ,on Iba Door of tbe slate Senate, but no action IJ eapected earlier thln Wednc .. ~;ij', a represcmto•·re of ·Ba'dham'a 'omce said today. The bill urged by Newport Beach repttsentauv .. has almcly r.......i the state Assembly, McConvllle • chief aMlstant , Murray Storm, aald tho Newport Freeway section from Pallsad .. Road-Bristol Avenue to Pacific Coast HlghWl,Y w!Il alao be discllss<d u will all ·transportation cor- ridor probltms In the coW>ly. Stonn said no repmentatlvu of tho various Orange County cttles concerned with freeway alignment have been in- vtted to attend lhe Monday ...,Jon. - "Taken together, these proposals will give WJ fairly exact Information on the state things in 1972," sajd Moorhouse. ------. "The situation may ~et better or worse in the future, but we'll always have these studies as a·baseline point or re!erence." The two new proposals ca ll for cooperation bet\veen the city of Hun· li ngttm' Beach and McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company. Cal State Long Beach, <.:olden West ColJege, Uc Irvine, and a iJivate firm. Ocean Science and Engineering, Inc., of Long Beach. If both proposals are funded, studies ranging over 15 months would include: -A ·COJl)plete survey of offshore cu..., rents, lncluding seasonal variations. The dlstribution of effluents from the county sewage outfall, Standard and Signal oil companies, and the Edision electric plant would be charted, A separale analyslo would be made of the flu shing pattern of J1untington Harbour. -A computer model of offshore waters pollutants, naturally occurring life forms. and microscopic life form s. The Life and Environmental Systems branch o f McDonnell Douglas would be prime con· tractor for this area . -A computre model of offshore waters would be constructed, showing the ultimate destination of all pol lut ants, and where possible detail ing their interaction with undersea life forms. The currents study, due for con- slderaUon by city council tonight, would be-valuable -ln-predicting---the---results in , proposed changes to existing outfall operations, Moorhouse noted . It would also be especially valu able in monitoring the under set outfall ol the county sanitation district, which depends (See GRANTS, Page %) Weatlter Mostly sunny skies are OQ the agenda for Ille Fourth of July ho!· iday. Those low clouds should lift by mid-day on Tu""day, according to the weatbttlady, to tempera. tures of 70 at the beach, rising to 85 Inland. Lowa - INS.IDE TODAY A year ago Lockhetd Alrcrofl Corp. was reeling. J-rom ~uo~ losses on government projectr ... well .. [1'om th• bankn(plty of Rori. Roye<. Whtre dofs it stand today? Sc• rtory, Pag• 12. ···11111 11 • MO'fl .. • C~11t1mMI ' • .. -.1 .... .. CIJ.,!tllll ,. .. 0~1111 (ltllllfY • Cem:t• 11 ...... ""' (l"M~-.N .. Telt'rl-• Dfflfl Mt llt" • ........ • ••"'1•1 ''" • w .. -• ·~""'"'"*'' • --.. .. l'IMMe "'" \ ' I H Schmitz May T1-y Comebacl\: From U'lre. services BOSTON -U.S. Hop. John G. Scllmilz fR-Tuslin) says he might make a political comeback this November either :is a third party or as a write-lo can- didate. Deft>:ilcd In the June Ca\ifomia primnry by County AS!essor Andre\Y Jl in.e:ha\1'. Schmitz promised a crO~'d ,Jl :Sunday's annual New En~1aod Rally for c;oc1, Family and Country here, ··rm going kl ccme back stronger than ever.;. The Orange County conservative said, "I'm not necessarily going to be shackled to a party -to the ,Republican Party - that ftels that its role as the con. :;ervatlve party is simply to run socialism more effectively than the op- posite party." · During his remarks in Boston, Schmitz 1ald he is also looking into the possibility of ruoolng hia wife for hls seat in Congress in November on the American Jndependent Party ticket. Schmitz, who believes he may be pro- hibited by law from running again this year, said the switch to Gov. George Wallace 's fonner party may be called for because "there is no party right now that's really nailing the enemy." "II there ever was a time in America political history when we're ripe for a bold, new move it's now," Schmitz, a member oC tbe John Birch Society, told the meeting of conservatives. Schmitz, who also attended Saturday's opening session of the two-day rally, said that the Red Chinese have "an official p-ograrn of poppy production" to make heroin "to raise money and subvert, particularly to subvert enemy troops." Labeling Main.land China as the world's "'primary source of heroin," Schmltz said he secured much or bis information about heroin production during a recent visit to Nationalist China and by talking to a woman who fled Red China through Yuman Province. "She said she saw the crop poppi~ being cultivated by Red Chinese troops in Yum!n Province, ''Schmitz said. * * * Schmitz Recotmt Shows Hinshaw Gain in Votes Tho recount oi" volos demanded by lame .duclc <:mgres1man John .Schmitz after his ' losing effort in fhe 39th Ccylgressional District race has not gone wen for him so rar. · Tot Cut Down By~_Gun B~. HAWAIIAN GARDENS (AP) - A 4-)'W'<ld flrl WU kllled by a shotgun bLut lrom a paul111 auto u ahe played near her boma Ill thls Los Angtle.s 1ubl1J'b1 ahertfl'• depuu~ say. The slaying was described as 1 possible "joy killlng" by offlcen. T~ victim. Joyce AM Huff, was playing in a neighbor's front yard Sunday night when lhe sholsun blut was fired, depuUu aaid. U.S. Won't Say If It Altered Vietnam Weather WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Pentagon refused again today to say If the Unlt.td St.ates has tam~red with the weather in lndochina in an e!rort to hamPer North Vietnamese..._m.Uitary_ QP:era1ions_ Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. J-"riedhcim said the U.S. has never tried to cause rain over North Vietnam. But asked if rainmaking activities have been 4ttempted in South Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia, be repliOO : "I can't en large on that." For the past year, there have been reports of the ·rainmaking. The latest appeared today in the 1''ew :Vork Times, which quoted unnamed government sources as saying the Air Force has seeded clouds to increase and control raillfall throughout Southeast Asia. The purpose, the Times said, was to hinder the movement of. North Vh!t- namese troops and supplies, spoil enemy attacks with heavy ra~. and to alter the rain patterns over Laoa and North Viet- nam to aid U.S. bombing strikes. The Times story followed an article in the June issue of Science magazine which said the rumors and specula tion growing over the alleged efforts to alter the weather in lndochina alarmed civilian scientist!: and weather experts trying to promote international weather research. Sen. Clairborne Pell (0.R.l.), said last month he believes the military has been involved in seeding operatiom since 1968 to clear targets in North Vietnam. The senator also said the United States ha.!f used chemicals to produce rains ihat washed out part of the Ho Chi Minh trail, impeding infillraUon and causing Ooods resulting in thou.sands of deaths. ln an April appearance berore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said the Air Force has used rain-making techniques in droughl-itricken areas ot the Philippines and Te11s, but a1ked if these acUvJtles were being tJSed, for military purposes in Southwit Asia , he would not comment. ' The latest official tally of the votes cast in the June· 6 primary election shpwed that Schmitz has lost an addi-Valley· Council tional lour voles and GOP oomlnoo All· ~\. Hinshaw, CWTently un\y · assessor, has gained 10. :~.To Study YES About 160 ol the §95 Pl'. > ~. • district have been' IQ d ' id'. 'Um"t m' C1'ty R.'"J. "Red" Mallhol, deputy uglstrat of voters who is supervialng the new couDt. Sctnnltz was originally deloated by Hinshaw by an official C01D1t of 2,601 votes out of the 93,427 cast. This was a ga)n of 249 votes over the unofficial figures released the day after the ele<:- tion. ~1ailhot said about 40 to 50 prec;inct.s are being recounted per day by hand. He predicted the process would continue well into next week unless the Schmitz forces call a halt by conceding Hlnshaw's vic- tory. The count on Earl Carraway, another contestant in the same race for the Republican nomination , showed no change, ~1aiihot said. while Larry Denna, the fourth contestant lost one vote. M of Friday, the recount stands to r:ost Schmitz supporters upwac_ds of $2,400 if the contention of his supporters proves incorrect and the pr imary vote is u'>held. HI DAILY PILOT '1111 Ortl!Oe CO.It DAI LY lllLOT wlif. "'1kh k nmblnN thll ..,....,.Prns, ti, publllhcd i.y • ,,.. Or•!'IO• C~lt PubHll'llf19 ComNny, StPlo r•t~ edit~ •r• publhPlrd, Mond.l'f triro~" F ricl•v. IOI' COii• tAm, ~twporl llitlth, ltV11ll"9IOll 8t1ct!/Favnt1ln V111ty, L•tvfit Bntl'I, fr'tln•/Sld"ltblck 1nd S•n CIUMl'lll/ Sin J 11•<1 C~pl11r1no. A sl~lt rtgl0111I d lllofl .. PVbll1t!td ~t11rll1y1 41rld $\lftCI•~'· ·1111 prhtcJD1I pubU1fllng pllnl Is •t JJl Wt~I 81'f l trfff, Cini• Mtll, Ctlltornl•, 92126. Roa•rf N. w •• d r rn1ct1n1 •nd ,.ubllilltr J1tlc R. C11rl1y Viet·,f'IMOtnl Mid Gtnt-r1 1 M11111g1r 1\om•• IC11vil .EllllW 1\om•• A. Mu,,hino ~l41tw dit,IH H. Loot RitJ.114 P. N1U Al.lllltnl MIMOlnt h lton T•rry Covill• Wt1I Dnlltt COl#ll'f fdltot ,...,..,. • .._. Offtq 11t1S l•t tlri l o11l1.,.1rd .Mtilln1 A4drt111 P'.O. l•ir: 790, t2•41 OfW :c>fll<K • .lttlll'lt 8Mcll' tt1 f ll"lll AYlllUt Cati• M1111 lJt Wnl ••'f' Str"t N""'Pltl •Mell: ~ "'""'°'' 8o\1!1w11111 a..11 Cltmlnl1: JU Notti! ti C1m1ne 11111 , .. .,.... f114l '42-4Jn Cl•1JfW A4'NttltJ.t ••2·1171 ffM! Ntrtll On ..... c-ty C"""""'lllfl 140.lJ:H Ctf'ltrlf'\I, ltl'J.. OrlNt (Mil ~lillliflt ""'i Hnr. Ht • .,,. 111r1tt. 111vttr•tloM, ., '-111 '°"'""' et ..,."'11tffnl!ln llf•t lrt fMY ... t~ Wlll'IOlill .,_Ill ...,.. ..... ., tlln!'ftllt -· lotCM)ll Cil.h *1t0t Miii 91 C0111 M• .. , e:..~ ..._,'-'ltft .., JM?itr u..i ........,, w -M u .1• """'"'"' ""lltWY ...-,,~ IUI l'f*!INf. Approval of I joint agreement to sup- port a youth employment service will be before Fount.a.in Valley city councilmen when they meet at 8 p.m. W<dnesday iJ1 the community services building. The agreement will establish fmanclal support of the Yootl! Employment .:>er"vices by the cities or Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach, \Vcstminster and Gardoo Grove. Fountain Valley's share of the support l\"ill be $2,645, according to Howard Stephens. city financial director. The Youth Employment Services, which has been open in the J-luntington Center mall since 1day 1971, fOWld employment for l ,m yrungsters i as t year. ~fore than 390 of them were rrom Fountain Valley, according to Stephens. The Youth Employment Services is presenUy lunded by Huntington Beach and tbrough donations by other civic organizations. _ .. u the council passes the agreement, Fountain Yalley wlll be picking up Us share ol the cost," said Stephens. l1idians Atm~k Poiv Wow, Sev~n Held iu, Arizo1ia ' FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP J -Sponsors ht>ped the annual Southwest Indian Pow \\low could proceed without further di sruption today after the arrest d seven young Jodlans for inlerltrI,.-with ceremonial danct"!!, -~ The disturba!l<e Joie Sunday began "1th an assault on the announcing booth anJ the announcer by about 20 lndJllls. The action w11 accomponied by a llhrlll cries of "lndiam are 51.arving." Prottsttrs were all roported to be members of the American Indian ~tovt­ ment. Flagslall lnsurMce man Andy Woir, the announcer, said he was "grabbed from lx>hlnd" by a young Indian who s"'ried shouting into the microphone. In the arena. a group of Indians, mostly Navajos, formed a hall-circle 11rowxi the '!t.drtlcd Indi an dancers and yelJtd, "Don't dance, don't sell out." The seve.n arrested were ~scrl~ as leaders of the protest. LeRoy Keams.' a leader of lhe young rebels , said the demonstraUon was a1mfld iaalnst "es- ploltaUon of Indians b)' -Pow Wow SJ)'lnsor1." Swlms, Dines Nixon._Makes Up I , • For His Absence President Nison is using the long holl· a rousing welcome earlier in the day at a day weekend to 1nake up for hls six· lulk dance festival. month abstnce in San Clemente -buz.i. The relaxing weekend is apeeted to conUnue for the President and Mrs. Nlx-lng around his e3late on h.ls golf tart, on through the Independ ence Day holl- swlmming at a secluded beach At Camp day. Pendleton and dodging out £or dinner. Press aides plan no formal briefings The President . ·who began his IS.day unti l \Vednesday, when the President's work ing vacation late Saturday afternoon sch edule of meetings \\'ilh ad visers "'·Ill \4-'lth "orders" to well-wis hers to "aU go prQbably pick up. swimming,'' did th.tt very thing early Press Secretary Ronald Uegler said Sunday with seve ral house guests. the President plans meetings wilh Na· The friends. Charles G. "Bebe" Rebozo tional Security Adviser Dr. Henry Kiss· or Florida and Robert Abplanalp or New inger during the stay and ~tr. Nixon also York, ramiliar figures at the western plans to continue discussions with other \Vhite House, joined the President for advise rs on campaign strategy. diMer Saturday evening, stayed over and Some aides have said Nix.on plans a on Sunday all three took a short ''low profile" of activities in San helicopter jaunt to "Red Beach" in Camp Clemente during this current vis.ii , allow- Pe~dl_e!~~-!o!~~e s~imming. in _wat~r ___ i~g attention to shift to ~he bitter in- wh1Cli is somewH afChdly ror this lime of hgl>lTng among Democratic contenders year. for the nomination. Later in the afternoon all three took Keeping abreast or the partisan ac· another flight -this one to Chasen's tivilies Sunday, the President made a .Rl!.staurant In Los Angeles, one or the rash of phone calls to the East, speaking President's favor ites. There, they dined to former Campaign Chairman John on steak. Jl.!itche11 as well as Jl.1itchell's successor, The President, "h is aides said, ordered Clark MacGregor. a "Hobo" steak from the menu, a large Jl.1itchell -who resigned last Friday hunk of New York cut 'A'hich has gone up and acceded lo the demands of his wile, in price since he last bought one. Jl,·lartha, that he quit politics ....:. sWI plans A waiter reminded Nixon that the price lo serve as a "consultant" to the Presi- ls up a quarter -to $9.25 these days . dent as a campaign adviser. An hour after the Pre.,ident and his party left the compound, Pat Nixon flew in from Chicago where she had received • From Pagel HORSES ... contractors with money would be able to drop $75,000 to improve them," she "Tiles. A petition with 766 names against cer· tain sections or the proposed equestrian ordinance has also been submitted to the council: Mrs. Homer, speaking ror most or the horse protesters, also opposes the section which says "Horses will not be permitted to be Jed .or ridden off the site ol an established riding trail." City planners say the new master plan or recreational trails, which includes 12 miles ror horse riding, will solve that problem. The oppOnents, OOwever, point out that the master planned trails do not run near . rno&t stables. There are an estimated 35 stables in Huitbogton Beach. moot of wblcb ._e t:urnDtly running a narrow profit margin. The ltable owners claim the Jaws will boost the cost of a stable so high, most wilJ have to c!OSe their gates. While the basic construction and acreage requirements have b e e n ch;i!Jenged, lllO!I of tlie horse owners and stable operators ha\'e not objected to the rule:. orr sanitation. Some· of those regulations detennine the design of water and food troughs and the types or corrals and pens to be used. The ordiJlftnce has been recommended for approval by the city plarutillg corn- misoion. but the ho<'se lovers claim the commission was against them and hardly listened to their complaints. On Jime ~ a dozen young rider1· picketed city hall, on foot, t o demonstrate their l'Olllplaint.5. Huntington High District Slates School Signups Registration dates for students en- tering the Huntington Beach Union lligh School District in September will be as rolloin·sf -Huntington Beach High School - registration is now under way through July 28 from 8 e.m. to noon daily. lt will resume on August 14 on an appointment basis. -Edison High School -will lollow the same schedule as Huntington Beach High School, -Fountain Valley High School -ill hold registration flu'oughout the summer lrom 9 a.m. to I f.m. -Marina High School -Registration will be 8 a.m. to noon August 15 by ap- pointment. -Westmi9ster Hlgh School -registra- tion is now being held through July 28 from 8 a.m. to 12 :30 daily. It will resume on August 24 fro m 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. 'S how' Retires Ed .Sullivan As Romry Chief lluntinglon Beach had Its own "Ed Sullivan Show" Friday evening. Not the long·running TV show of the same name but a one-year run aS presi- dent of the HWltington Beach Rotary Club or Ed Sullivan, manager of the local office of the Southern C a I i f o r n J a Automobile Club. Rotarians gathered at the Huntingtoo Harbour-Beach etub -for their ahnuaI Demotion Dinner, a "kicking out of of!lce \Yith indignity" of the retiring president and induction of the new. For weeks, more than a doun members and their 'Rotary Anns worked to prepare scrlpta embodying elaborate insult.5 to Sullivan. ending in bis f<irced dunking In the club swimming pool. Veteran City Clerk Paul-Jones; just out ot the hospital recovered lrom -m- nes~. was inducted into the sresidency of 1972-73 as the lively evening's finale. Contributing to Friday e v e n in g ' s · hiltarity were a local p h y sit l an , pharmacist, Jawyefl, optometrist mcr'ti· cian, realtor, dentist, dental tec1hnJ'cian. utility manager,"' educator, 'retailer and, <is chairman, a glass merchant who rererees footbaJI in season. When the good natured castigations or Sullivan were finished and bt had dried out from his impromptu swim, he was seriously honored for his year's service . His father of the same name was a beaming spectator. Soouts Collect Old Newspapers Explorer Post 225 of Huntington Beach \Yill be collecting old newspapers on July 8 and 9 to raise funds ror the purchase of camping tents. Post members u·ill station themse lves at the comer or Indianapolis Avenue and .l\1agnolia Street ror donations. Residents \\'bo v.'ou ld like stacks or old papers picked up may also phone Kathy Preciado at 962-9680 or Ken Sommerfield at 962·7878. The explorers plan to hold a similar paper dri ve every three months to raise: camping money. From Page I GRANTS ..• for its effectiveness on the stability or certain patterns in ocean currents . The prime contractor for the currents study would be Ocean Science and Engineering, Inc. Under tenns or the federal grant proposa l. Huntington Beach "·ould be required to provide abqut $60,000, mostly in the forrn of services. Authorities Nab 12 Aliens • . --In Two Clen1ente· Arrests A dozen Illegal Immterant.s beading north wound up in custody in San Clemente over the weekend in two sepnrate incidents -one of the busts taking place alter lour men successfully cleared th< Western Whit• Hou ... That Incident was tho lirsl or lll<! two and occurred at about 3:30 a.m. -u hours before the President arrived for a \\"orking vacation. A rc!i d•nt or tbe cyprui Shores colony Im mediately north or the Pl't!ldtl\tl•I compound phoned local police Io reJlorl four "suspicious" men walt.iJll upcoast on the Santa Fe trat:ks. Ofllcors Intercepted lhe lour al Callfia I Beach a Utlle farther north. arrested lh• men without incident and turned the allens over to border patrolmen. Early this rooming yet another group was arrested ufte.r a pursuit from the Border Patrol checkpoint to tho Paliziada overpass of the San Diego Freeway. Authorttlos said the carload or eljhl men was halted at about 5:19 a.m. and th• driver ol the vehicle bolted from of· Bonier Patrol checkpoint to the Pallzada Hl&bway patromen fin>lly caught tll<! man and returned him to the rest or Jhe .... p . All eight, omctals said , w~ returned lo the chec kpoin t. CONOUCTS COAST CONCERTS f•shion Island's Brandon Newp ort Beach S1rmmer Concel'ts Begin Tonight The first In a series or free summer concerts begins a1 9: 15 o'clock tonight at fo'ashion Island in Newport Beac~. The cont:erts by Henry Brandon's Big Brass Band and •·paps" orchestra v.•ill be prfsented in the shopping district's mall theater at the same time every r.-tOnday night throughout the summer. Seating for several thousand people is available. Brandon, a Corona del Mar resident, is orchestra director for the Chicago t;.ight Opera hQuse and for the l\-1cCormack Place Convention Center in Chicago. The opening nlght coocert will realure selections fJVm "The Music Man," a Dix- ieland concerto ''Great Jtalian Movie Themes," and "El Capitan," the Sousa march. ' Brandon is popularly lrnown for his "Fashion Island 'Overture," lind he has written mu sical jii:lgles for well-known commercials. Brandon's Big Brass Band and 11pops" orchestra are the same except for ad· dltional brass instruments for the big band SOlDld and an additJonal st r t n g section ror 11pops" concerts. Most musicians are rrom Orange Coun- ty area. They include accomplished recording artists, music teachers, con- cert musicians and Disneyland musi· clans. Fashion Island ls located on East Pacific coast Highway• betwetrl' ·Jam- boree Road and MacArthur Boulevard in Newport Beach. ' Last Huntington Employes' Group Approves Terms The last of five Huntington beach employe associations has agreed to sign a three-year salary contract calling for five percent pay rai~ each year. ac- cording to City Administrator David Rowlands. Spokesmen for ttre 4 O 1 · m e m b e r Municipal Employes Association (MEA) eame to terms this morning, Rowlands said. The administrator uld the MEA.'s delay was caused primarily by the wording of the wage contract~, rather than disagreement with the concept of a three-year pact. Such agreem<'nts, offered for the first time in Hun tington Beach. \\'ere already signed and approved by the City Council for associations representing policemen, firemen, Hrcguards and department heads. Personnel Director Ed Thompson said the three-year cootracts cover all of the city's 730 full-time employees. Total cost or the pay raises for fiscal 1972·73 \Viii be $534,000, according to Frank Arguello, city finance director: That cost also covers all Increased fringe benefits. Arguello sald lho '53l,OOO Is already tn the budget, either under tl'le contingency fund, or Jn special budget lterru:. The City Council Is e1pected to ap- prove . the itEA contract at ~ionday's 7 p.m. meeting. No Deatlis, F eiv Accidents Mark County Holiday D<ath has laktlfTbollil~ CfOllj!O- . C'A>unty roadways oo far d" the Jong Fourth of July weekend, the coonty e<r· one:r's, office said today. • No highway or freeway deaths and few seMous traffic accidents have marred the holiday scon• tn the county. Tbi.s con- trast• with three tralfic fatallUos during the 1971 holiday w .. kend. ft owe ver. spokesmen for the cali!ornia llighWay Patrol In Orange County CIU· tloned that tht! worst part of the holiday weekt:nd, when motorists are homeward bound, Is )'ti to come. Natlonwide, 402 person! had died in traffic accidents since the Jong holiday J><rlod began, al 6 p.m. Friday. Tbe total was as of 9 o'clock thll mernlng (PDT) . caJllomia led the nation with 18 lataIIUes. During lasl )'far"s tbroo-day Fourth·or July, w~kend, 635 tralflc denlhs wen reported nationwide. J 1 Res t1~ictio11 Of Sl{yjacl{ - Fro111 \\'irf' Si'TVll"'~ The 11cws m('dla shoulc! voh1nt11ri)y im·. pose <1 black'Out on succcsi;lul airhr1cr hr+ tttngr,-acrordtnr-to-Doruttd le8i61.,·-· --+--- president or the Air l.lnr Piiots As~oci a· 11an. 1\tc03in caUt·d f11r !hl· res1r11·tlon 111 sl..yjacking 11('1~·s dur111g u h1·aring or th'"' stale Senate Sutx.:01nm1ttee u11 l'.1\ 11 l>1sortlers, chaired by Senalor 11er11u\ l'arpenlt:r I R-Ne\\·porl Bench). , "If the pres~ w~rt' to pl:ly down sky· jacking! "'hil'h ;!rt' sut·C"es.~rul and only play up thuse which .are unsuCcessful, l'Yentually the deprived n1ind that undertakes these things would g<'t th~ idea that no one gets away \Yilh it," said 1\1cBain, a flight captain ror United Air Lines. • Tn his leslin1ony on S<1lurclSY, ?ltcBain s:iid he was worried abou t thC t11gh rate of successful hijacking :itten1pls, and ad· cltd, "there are still 117 hijackers roani· 1ng rfee in varjous parts or the e~fl:h." r..toBain told the he<irln g that a1rhne~ no longer can maintain the .rcSponsibiLit~ r1>r air securil.Y and t11at if the hijacking~ are to be stopped, they must be halted o~ the ground. . ··• 1\lcBain said rur ther that lht' pilot~. may boycott airports 1\·ith lJrlJccc ptablr. proleclion systen1s to dt'lect hijacker s and that security guards should certify a night as safe from the threal of skyi, jack'fng bef<re it is etlowed lo rake off. • About 450 lives have been lost in the past decade because of bombs and hi· jackings, according to htcBain. a Senator Carpenter's office in Newport' Beach said today that information from the hearing would be compiled for ;J report. No release date was-given. f Driver Permits Now Carrying Color Pictures ' ' California driver's licemes are bei11g' issued with color photos at Departrnenti of ~iotor Vehicles offices beginning lt>-' day. ··r.fost motorists \\'ill find their new col·'.· or photos far more nattering than th• b\ack·and·while likenesses they carry In' thetr wallets now," says DMV 'D\rector . RO!i<if Cozen._ "They wm lli;B.. the lnY provement easily worth the ~t ado-' djtional COBt .' I j • The.new licenses, prjnled. 'tu blue and gold-8Dd lamlna1ed In prastic for 'durabIUty; now cost $3.25. Tho rorme r chru;ge was $3. ~ Fees for a duplicate li~ jumped rrom $1 to $1.2.5 and the clw _ or a non· driver's identification card (a so in· color and plastic-coated) is $3.25 rather than !3 Coze11s said newphtographlc equip- menl has been ipstal)'!I jl1 all DMV of· fices in keeping wil.h legislation enacted last year. 'Modified Days' Slated Next Year studenta al Westmont SchoOGVill have a new schedul6 next fall lhat releases them from ~ l;ln hour early each Fri- day to allow teachers ·more time for educational planning. The 11A-1odilied Teaching Day" prop:>fial was approved Thursday night by trustees of the Ocean View School District. To make up the time they gain on Fri· day. students will lose 10 minutes from lheir lunch period and remai n in school five minutes beyond their fonner release lime on the other four days of the 'veek. Teachers Will use the extra time for developing new reading and math pr1> grams, planning daily lessons, and reviewing progress on the sll-year school calendar whiCh st.am at Westmont July 10. '. DAILY rH.OT lllrf"""' /Vem PrlNelpet Don H en d r I < k s hu ·been named prinolpaJ of Roblnwood School In Huntington Beaeb. He form~rly served ts prin- cipal of Nlblas &bool in Foun· · lllll Vall<y. • ,, . ., . ' , .. ' . '. ' . I ''(_ ' • I • I I l ' • i ·• ~ Monday, J1117 3. 1972 CAIL Y PILOT 3 Judge :to Rule on Democrat Convention Seats WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal Judge George L. Hart Jr. promJsed to rule late today on two suits lnvolvlpg healed batllts OYt'T the aeaUng ol DemocraUc convention delegates from calllomla and aucago. Hart alao .. 1') the U.S. Court of Ap- peals arranged to hear both cases Tues- day whatever the outcome ol his cle<:lston. Democnllic CftClellt!als committee. (See related story, Page 5) The aucago dispote Involved t~ disbarment ol Chlcago Mayor Ricbard J. r Daley and 51 de.legates on hb ~alate. on this kind of issue." He said that if the court interferts in the matter, it might have on Its• hands most of tbe other 50 cballeng'5 ded ded on by the credentials committee. "We could be here wilh anyone of them it the-courts aecidt to get into this area ," he told Hart. 1--~ulfmalte1M-announcement-atterhear­it'i i.rguments from both sides in a mo,ve by su_.itrs of Sen. George S. McGovern to prevent 151 C.lilomla dtlegatea !run being umealed by th• Joseph L. Raub, arguing f o r -McGovern, said the patty's refonn rules-- plainly allowed for wlnne!'take-all primaries like th!I Which· g a V e McGovern m delegates from C.llfomla in1he-;June~'JX'imary:--. - ·Joseph A. califano Jr., representlng the Democratic National Committee named in the McGovern suit, argued that ''the cowtl have no place in th.la arena Rauh also charged the conunittee il- legallt£banged tbe cregel\lial.l rules In stfiPPmg McGovern of the 151 Ciffiomia delegates. "ln view ol the closeness or the race. those 151 caa detennine the outcome <I the Convention," he declared. C'letnen~ C'ase Technician Held -{)n Perjury -nap A techni<:lan at a San Clemente medJcal laboratory baa: been amsled on five counll of perjury stemming from a drunken driving case Jn which be alleged· ly agreed to lie in e1change for 1exual r.vors from the defendant. San Clemente police announced this Keep Pets Clear Of Fireworks, Doctors Advise The Orange County Veterinary Medical -.,. lllc!ay -Orange Coast tesldmts to confine their pets In a quiet , .RJ,rt.of the house or yard while using fire'ltorks. . I , morning t h a t they arrested L o u 1 s Anthony Evangelisto, 44, of Vi!ta only secoods after he Ier.t the witness stand Friday in South Orafige. County Municipal Court. Evangelisto was booked and ordered held in lieu of $10,000 bail. He posted bond a few hours later. The arrest ended several weeks of in· vestigation in which the woman defen· dant cooperated fully with investigators, police Chief ClUford Murray said today. · It is 8lleged that the technician lied ~ der <*I! live aepara~ time.s in the trial. Murray said the asserted perjury in- volved atalements relating to the physical condition of the woman at the time of her arrest by local officers. U'l Tt ........ 1• llACK IN HOSPITAL Harry S Truman "~AcCo..dlng to county veterinarians, .,. , ~<ilrth of July commotioo. causes pets to The technician had been summoned to police headquarters to draw a sample of the C-year~d San Clemente woman's blond. The sample, according to standard procedure, was then sent to the Orange County Crime Laboratory for analysis of alcohol content. "Evangelisto gave testimony which waa contrary to the factS about the womar[_sl' physical appearance a n d behavior apparently in u attempt to show she was not intoxicated," Murray said. Truman Returns To Hospital- Digestive Ills >• ,··11 -panic. . " · Many clop and cal! are injured, killed • 'Ill' i<\1t tzying to escape the noise. Eating habjf:!. are altered and gutrobltestinal ulisel$'.. occur for days afterwards, the ..... uld. ,. ,.,~l(ve":tni!9ios .can occur when .. an ~,..i :~t'P.' au.ch u truce, 1 . ~·-~ .bltdt )brash thern!etves m . , lf:tejr cages. · , . The'" ..aauon aild~ animals art The chief said that his department is investigating the possibility that other such incidents have occurred in recent months. Evangellsto will be arraigned on the charges on July II in the oame court where be wu arrested. KANSAS CITV, Mo. (UPI) -Fonner President H a r r y S Truman 88, hos- pitalized with a renewed digestive ail. ment, spent a quiet night although he did . not sleep soundly. Doctors said today his condition continued to be "satisfactory." A Research Hospital spokesman said Truman was awakened it 7 a.m. to prepare for radiologic· examinations of the lower intestinal tract. The ex· amlnations took one hour and Ille 33rd chief executive returned to his seventlJ. .floor room at 9:30 a.m. , ·,~ < =~kennel ~~bo!iday cete-.. • • Mahy .B~!~ts • ~resident Stnys Home A~ut Third of Time Spokesman John P.. Dreves quoted Dr. Wallace H. Graham as saying Truman was "slightly fatigued by his trip to the hospital and lack of soW'ld sleep." _ Graham said blood tests were schedul- ed for today and Tuesday< It is too early to determine how Jong the fonner President will be hospitalized, Graham said. "I'm pleased with everything so far," said Graham, Truman's personal physi· B ~ A •• J-•~ Pr Pat, who arrived SUnday night from cian since the White House days. Y 1 -1-.:ui-esi Dreves said Truman ate scrambled Halfway through this election year, Chicago. eggs, toast and fruit jtiice after returning President Nixon now tn San CJe.mente, Ironically, Ni.son has SJ)ent the least Crom his x·rays. bu spent about two-thirds of his time time at hl3 oceanside mansion here, his "He's up and around," he added. aw1y from the :wrote House, where his voting residence in 8 state important to He said, based on Truman's condition, lease la up fOr grabs. hia bid for • second term. The the next report wouJd be a tll a.m. Tues· ~ · President'• current stay Is his firS! since cl Dlirlng the lint slk months ol It'l2, · f Ix ay · he was ln Calilomla or • days in ~ 'd Truman'• mea'-f•-d Nixon ·spent aJI or part of Ul days a~ay vi-eves sai UJ a i.cr a - from Washington. There were· 181 day1 January. .._ mittance Sunday were limited to jello, during the half year. Nixon's travel record was further ex· broth and tea in preparation for today's ho n ,_ Sa tended, of course, by history-making z:-rays. The .chief executive, w ew w n trips to Peking and Moscow -the first He said Truman had been joking with Clemente Saturday for a stay of about made to those capitals by an American nurses taking care of him and had ex· two weeks, has adopted Aspen Lodge at president. A third foreign journey took pressed a dislike for hospital gowns. nie the Camp David, Md., Navy-Marine base him across the border to Ottawa. nurses said Truman "continues to be as his favorite retreat. Nixon spent all or cheerful and happy ," Dreves said, da h d · th · Strangely, Nixon has done little elec-part of 53 ys t ere ur1ng e SlX f ho f • Truman was driven to the hospital lion-year touring o the me ront, cr1ss-months. crossed all year by potential Democratic from his home in nearby Independence, -... Runner-up in presidential favor was rivals. He went to New York for an an. Mo., Sunday afternoon. He entered in a the Nixon home at Key Biscayne, Fla. He tidrug conference; to Philadelphia for a wheelchair. 1pent all or part of 32 day1 there or at cultural event: and to the Floresville, His wife, Bess, 87, accompanied him the Bahamian island of Grand Cay, com· Tex., home of former Secretary of the b.Jt returned home &May night. She muting distance away by hellcopter. Treasury John B. Connally. came beck to tbe hospilal at 10 a.m. to- Grancl C.y IJ awned by New York In-Truman open! less than one hour at day and planned kl stay all day .. dustrlallst Robert Abplanalp. Nlxon'1 It was the seventh time Truman was closest neighbor at Key Biscayne Ii Research Hoopltal Wedneoclay after com-hospiialized since he left the White House banker-investor Charles G. "Bebe" Jle. plainlns ol bock pains resulting Imm 1 In 1953. His last two illnesses -in 1971 bow. fall al bis home on Tuesday. He waa and 1969 -tlemDiW from stomacb Botll men an wltll Nixon, u la his wil{ releoaed after X-rays. disorders. ·• • \ Martha: Happy Captive • John Quit Job )Jut1 'I'm Still Prisoner,' She Says ' • By HELEN moMAll WASHINGTON {UPI) -MIU1ha Mitchell rejoices _that her b111band bas 1otttn o o lull-WUUl!cs, lilin1!ie atill aays ahe la a "polltlcJI prlaoner." Mn. Mitchell made another call to tllls rtpor,ter Sunday and gave ).er reicllon to · the announcement el her luband, Jolm N: MJtcboll, Saturday tbel be waa leaving his Job 11 cbllrmon el the commlttet to re'e!ect Pr<Sldent N-. "SUre, lbal'a what I wanted," ollo sald wblll asked bow •be •he vlewtil the realptlon. But ahe spoke In • tow voice, did not talk loog, and bung up the telephone abruptly. "I'm still a polltleal pr!-" ahe aald. "I un'I t•lk Joni. I am can.;, inir· reptltfOUlly." Sbe aald lhe -at the Watersate Apartment>, where the Mltcbetll main· tafn their Wublngton bome. Sbt won- dend durlng the --el tllo con-vmatlon why no ..,. bad ulttd a q11ea- I tion about her at Nixon's news: con· · ference Thursday. Mitchell, the former attorney general, .aalcLwht1Lbe_announced_~ resignation. that be ·hQped to spend lllOre time witll his wife and their daughter. lie will con· tlnue to wcwk u a parttime adviser to the ~dent'• campal111, but the Mltchelll are expected to move their mldtnce back to Rye, .. N.Y.; a W..tcbesler County suburb of New York City. Mra. Mitchell made public her unhap- pinesa with her h111band'1 political role in a telephone call to UPI on June 22 from Newport Beach. . She said she bad given Mllehell an ''u1timatum" lo get out of politics or she would leave him. , •During the eo11versallon. she oaid ·"you Juat get away," and the call wu abM1ptly brokt;n off. On June 25, Mn. Mitchell called UPI ~. tlll• limo from lhe W..tcbester Country Club at Rye. She .a;a she WU leavine Mitchell "until he dtclcles to lesve" Nikon'• teelec:tlon camP11111. She )' complained about a security agent , who she said yanked the telephone out of the wall In C.lifornia. She described herself as l'rpctliticaI Pi1'soner :-ir A colorful native of Arkansas, ~rs. Mitchell, 53, rapidly became a public figure when her husband joined.Nikon'• cabinet in 1969. She spoke out ori many lasues, and the telephone became her trade mark. She wu just another cabinet wife one day early In 1918 when she looke<I out tbe window of htr Watergate apartment and saw antiwar demonitrators. ln a television Interview, 1he sa1d the demonstrAton looted like 11RUS5ian revolutionaries," and she quoted her bus· band to back up her views . A little later she made a 2 a.m. telepbOne call to the Arkansas Gazette lo blast Sen. J. William Fulbright, chairman of lbe Senate Foreign Rel•· tiOM Committee. She became a Republican party tl•r and a f<quent pttlormer al the party'• fund raising d!Mera. I Meanwhile the I>emocraUc eteclenUalJ committee voted today to seal the 64· 1nember North Cllrolina delegation to the uoqv,enUon despite complaints that only 7.8 percent of the delegates were under Utt i!;ge Qf 30. ~ A mollon by George Barrett of Ten- nessee to seat the delegation was passed by a voice vote, blocking consideration or a motion sponsored by the youthful cOMrengers to replace eight deleg atts with eight younger alternates. Passage of the seating motion came after f.1iss Susan Conner of High Point. N.C. harshly criticized backers of McGovern for not supporting their challeogt. The 24-year-old ~11ss c.onner said the ?-.1cGovem forces "had ~n instructed, as a bloc. t9 withhold from us their ''oles" beca use they fear lha.t-"by 1up. porting us in a minor case Ulty will alienate support for larger challenges.'' "N<1w suddenly what Wll!I clear is to be chan~,'' Rauh argued at today's hear· ing. "All of a sudden. after it was over. a challenge was flied ." Ho~·e\·tr, Hart commented dl'fting the change the rules , it may even be dirty pool, but is it unconstitutional~" He also ask~ "How far are the eourh going to get lnlo violations of party rules?" ?-.fcGove.rn finished first in the Jwie 6 primary. The committee decisi,osi_ could block a McGovern fU'st ballot nomination at the con~ention , which Starts Jn Miamj Beach a wetk from '4Xfay. Stephen Reinhard!, Democratic na- tional Cornmitteem&n from caUfornia ancl a cochainnan of the state delegation, s:tid f\lcGovem approved the legal move. "He told us he thinks we are doing the right thing," Reinhardt said. Red Shells Blast Hue Tank Forces Slug It Out in Heavy Battle SAIGON {UP\) -Communist gunners fired 675 rocket, mortar and artillery rounds into Hue and its outer defenses today, while two large, equally-matched units slugged it out .with tanks and artillery north of the old imperial capital in a South Vietnamese attempt to recap- ture Quang Tri province. A 20,()()().man government force is driv- ing north from Hue to try to take back Quang Tri -the onl South Vietnamese province captured by the Communists. With most of Hue's defenders sent north to try to recapture Qaung Tri , Communists increased the pressure on the old imperial capitat and threatened a long-expected, major attack on the city. A 1,000.man South V i e t n a m e s e paratroop unit, backed by air power, artillery and tanks, fought a savage bat- tle with a North Vietnamese force of the ~ !!lame size only two miles south of Quang Tri City, the provincial capital. While the battle was under way, Com- munist gunners slipp.!d into the Hue area from the west and bombarded the city and a half-<lbzen outposts en its inland flanks. 107 miles north of the Oemilitr-1rized Zont have been in North Vietna1nese hands separating the two Vietnams t1nd listed the pilot as missing. A Communist radio broadcast clai med today two U.S. jets Y•ere shot down Sun· day over the llaiphong-Hanoi area. UPI photographer \VilJie Vicoy sa'1d gov ernment paratroopers in today's Quang Tri City fighting, 32 miles north of Hue, were backed by allied jet!l, heii'copters and heavy B52 bombers. The 852s overnight dumped more. than SOO tons of explosive on the approaches to Quang Tri City, The city and the prov- ince of the same name were captured a month after the Communist offensive began March 30 in South Vietnam and eve r since. Vicoy sald he saw 1' South Vietnamese arn1ored personnel carrier "sink Uke 1 stone" a~ it tried to cro~'i the Truong Phuoc Ri ver to join the Quang Tri f1ghtu1g, drowning about 'e v en parntroo]J('rs. Vicoy said the vehicle. O\'erloaded with paratrOOpers ln full battle gear , "plunged downward and seven of the men aboard never can1e up." Today's shelling of JfU<'. 400 n1ile1 north of Saigon, prompted allied fears that the North Vietnamese would try to overrun the city while its defenses are stripped by the government drive lo retake Quang Tri Province. Vegas Re~a~,led ·,-c· ,,. . Axles Defective in, 500,000 't:ars~" ' • I>! • ., ·~ ,/ ~ .. ) • Field reports said 31 artillery rounds DETROIT (UPI ) -General hit Hue and 644 other shells landed at the Motors today announced the recall -. ,,.~ ~· · Chevrolet Said. that 59 defe<:tive_. _ .. ·; t> •• , shafts have ·· been.~reported. ·Tw~ ... · outlyijlg bases. of some 500.000 Che\•rolet Vega In the air war over North Vietnam, the subcompacts -virtually all 1971 U.S. command said U.S. jet fighter· and 1972 models on the road ...,. ta bomber pilots destroyed a coal treatment check for a defective rear ax lf· buildi~g near the country's· major port shaft. city of Jlaipbong, dropped a span on a . T~ CQll)pany said the defc~tive · bridge ·Tiear ,\')nh and bombed an oil shaft! could cause a Jock ring tG . storage area south of the Chinese border. diSengage, setting up a chain reac- The command in a delayed report saJd lion that could cause the 'rear a U.S. Navy -A7 fighter-bomber f!"uhed brakes to fail and ulllmat.ly cauae "from unknown causes"' Jun~ 18 J'Jl ·4 µie axles t~il'es to fall off . /night mission over-North Vietnam ibout ~=======~== cases resulted in body damage to lhe vehicles.. but there have been no reported _ inju(iet)" silid ~ t.Jl •· auloivakir, the nation's..)argest., ~ Chevrolet said that ins~ctjon. tor the dJ;fcctive sl)llfts wil! take .less than ·io minutes and installat ion of ne\V shafts, . if needed,. about an hour . . The work will be done Ire. by Ibo • c~any, Chevrolet said. ·seini WOMEN'S e VALLEY e PENA LIO e LADY FLORSHEIM • Annual .SHOE" e VITALITY e DELISO e• HILL & DALE e RISQUE e ENNA JiTTICKS e COBBLERS ' •1190 to 518'0 SIZES TO 11-VALUH TO $30. • AJ..AA TO C . . ' FREDRICKS llY HOWARD FOX $2490 VALUES TO $36.00 MEN'S---- FLORSHEIMS WINTHROP 1780 to 2780 1490 Valu11 to 36.95 Valu11 lo 22.00 E.T. WRIGHT 2980 Values to 46.00 WOMEN'S ' WOMEN'S SANDALS MARTINI OSVALDO-VITALITY . $fQ90 VALUES TO v21,00 .. Chllclren'• OPEN -1:1rzr~1DRD ::m1DE-g ... ~ • _MOH._&_fRL • . ~ .• :·s·799 -BOY~ sj99 \ MITE • TILL 9:30 P.M. Values to $1'7 .00 DISCONTINUED STYLES-BROKEN SIZES. ALL SALES FINA~ 54 FASHION ISLAND " NEWPORT CENTER -644·4223 . -.. •" • .I l ------ <J DAILY PILOT wiih Tom arphine • '•::'1 •• Of Schmitz And Shackles RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Congressman Jotm G. Schmitz, who car· ries the Republican ba.Mer from Tustin, ~·as a principal speaker Sunday in Boston during a New England Rally for God , Family and Country, which covers jU5t about ev•rything. During hl.s speech, Schmitz was guoted by UPf as follows : 11J'm not necessarily going to be ghackled to a party, to the Republican Party, that feels that Its role as the con-- aervaUve party is simply to run socialism more efficiently tMn the op- posite party." The Associated Press carried pretty much the same quott but headed its Boston story with the comment from Schmitz that he is looking into the possibility of running bis wife for his seat in Congress in November as a member of tbe American Independent Party. UPI 1ddtd that Schmitz was con· aidering a WJ'ite.ln campaign to seek re- ele<tton in November. AlJ. OF THIS neM about our con· gressman' com1ng out of the Eastern Seaboard, clatim-fug across the wires, ls of course very exciting. It is true that Schmitz has fal len on evil days politically in recent times as an affiliate of the Republican Party. He had a notion he knew pretty well what· his home folks were thinking so he went around the co\Ultry bad-mouthing Presi· dent NiJ:on. He dropped some snide remarks about the President's China trip. He announced that be had "severed diplomatic rela· lions" with the White Holl5e." And preswnably this Included the Western White House at San Clemente, which at the time happened to be in his con· gressional district. Then came the June Primary election wherein Schmit% faced a last.minute challense from orange County A>sessor Andrew J. Hinshaw. llJST()l\Y HAS NOW r<e0nled that Hinshaw. campaigning a.s a·11upporter of the President; pulled off a stunning upset vict0ry, lloollng Schmitz out of his re· election bid ill November by a margin·of · 2,362 voles. Through it all, wrong.tJiinke'rs ip. the past have -accused Schmitz of being on the wild fringe or Republicanism, a John Blrcb Society member and right-winger that through his pronoun~ment.s made Barry Goldwater appear to be standing ill leil field. Comes now Schmitz' own Boston Tea Party wherein he tells us that be i.sD't. really wedded to the. &publican Party -after all and in fact might do anything to keep his aeat In Congress, lilte running his wile for . ii under lllOlher political brand. YOU ·susPECT HE "mlgbt he laking a page from the book of Alabama Gov. G<orge Wallace who, forbidden by law from seeking aMthu term, ran hi! late wtfe Lurleen !or the Job and made ii rtick. Schmitz may not feel he is shackled to the Republican Party, but there is some eviden~ to suggest that he will retain the label if at all possible. He will ap- parently get a recount on his primary defeat at the hands of Hinshaw. Most odds-makers figure the margin of 2,352 votes may vary some after the re· count. But they doubt the result wtll change. Well, don't count your recounts before they are counted. ScbmiU might emerge from it all the victor. Then he'll be shackled with the Grand Old Pany one more time. HE WOULD CARRY th< llopoblican standard into the November General Election and presumably, then. wouldn 't Jet hi11 wife run against him as an AIP candidate. If the shackles do get tied in November, some Republicans might have a grave question~ 1 Just wbo got shackled ~·ith whom? /,:QlldaJ, J11IJ .), • Chess Play On BrinJ{ Of Collapse REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) -The world ch'ss championship was threaten· ed with C<1llapse todny 24 hours bf:fore Bobby Fisc her's deadline to 11\ow up or forfeit bis match with Boris Spassky of Itu.\Sia. Fischtr. the American chess champion, \•;as report~ slicking lo his demand for mor' money. He told !he New York Daily News be wouldn't yit ld. The six·man board of the spansorlng Icelandic Chess Federation was rtp0rted unanimously opposed to paying Fischer the extra money. One board member called Fischer 's gambit "a blatant attempt at extortion .'' The board met until the early hours to- day with Fischer's lawyer, An(j.rew Davis. A spokesman said there was no progress, As the deadline approached, the beard was tn ae!sion agsin to decide whether to pursue negotiations with Davis, a man they say bas no written credentials from Fischer. Some chess eiperts who have gathered here from distant part! of the world for what promised to be the match of the century expreSsed a belier that Fischer, in the end, wouJd aabotage the cham· pionship. Among the more optimistic was Larry Evans, a former American champion who knows Fischer well. He said, "I'd say there wu a SO.SO chance he will come.'' One Swedish expert left for home in dlsgu!I. Icelanders themselves , though they may not believe Fischer will come, have made no great rush to return the tickets they purchased for the match. Fischer's 24-game match' with the Russian worJd's champion wu to have begun Stmday, and the president of the world federation, 'Dr. Max.' Euwe, an· nounced if the American challenger failed to show up by noon Tuesday h• would risk· forfeiting his chance at the Uue. Euwe said bis personat opinion was that ••there will be no play at all." The Russians reluctantly accepted Euwe's decision to delay the match. Asked what be thought of the situation, Spas.sky replied: "1 came to play." Fischer and Spassky have agreed to split a $125,000 purse, with the winner laking five-eighths, and are also to each get 30 percent W: the sale of film and television rights. But Fischer is seeking an additional 30 percent of the gale receipts, and bls representatives have been negotiating this point with apoJ!.'Ors of the match, the Iceland~ dies> Federation. · Newsmen Rights Measure P11shed After R1!l~g W ASlllNGTON (UPI) -Spoosors ol a ''newsmen's ·privilege" bill urged today early congressional &ction on the measure tn the \\'ake of the Supreme Court's nlling affeding a ~·· right to keep his news sources confidential. Rep. Ogden R. Reid (D-N.Y.), former editor and pubUsher of the defunct New York Herald-Tribune, urged the House Judiciary Committee to act promptly on the measure which he and 50 other House members introduced In January, 1971. -rhe bill would prohibit courts or · fc '\) agencies from requiring a Re\, "lfl to disclose confidential in· fonn. ·,n or the source of that in· forma~ · 'Jfl, which tbe Supreme Court said last week was not protected by First Amendni.ent free press rights. Rep . Charles W. Whalen Jr. (R-Ohio), a cospansor, cned the court's majority opinlon that said "Coogress has freedom to determine whether a statutory newsman's privilege Is neces5ary and desirable and to fashion standards and rules as narrow or as broad a.s deemed necessary . • . " ,Rep. Edward I. Koch (D-N.Y.), another cosponsor. al'° urged early con· gresslonal action on the bill and said he would also ask the Democratic National Convention to include a .statement In the party's platfom1 on newsmen ' s privileges. '\ • I • FIRST AGREEMENT -Indian Prime Minister Gandhi and Pakistani President Bhutto signed a last-minute agreement early today calling for both India and Pakistan to disengage their forces from Kashmir and Jammu. · ' Pulloot of Forces - Gandhi, Bhutto Declare India, Pakistan Accords SIMLA, India (AP) -Prime Minister India and Pakistan have accused each Indira Gandhi and President Zulfik(IJ' All other of frequent violations of the cease- Bbutto reached their first peace agree-fire In K&shmlr and along the demarca· ment early today and promised future tion line in the Indian stales of Ra· negotiations on the other issues between jasthan, Gujarat and Punjab. In many their two nations, -including-Kashmir·and """-places the troops are bivouacked within the Pakistanti POWs In India. sight of each other. The agreement, which came after rive The agreement pledged adherence to days of talk! in this Himalayan resort, the charter of the United Nations several said Indian and Pakistani fofiaes will times, including a pledge to refrain from withdraw from the territories they seized the threat or use of force. But the last December along India's western bilateral settlement clause was con- border except in Kashmir. There they sidered a v;ctory ror th~ Indian position will maintain the cease.fire 1 in e that the United Nations has no legal established by the tv;~wetk war in ba!=is for being in Kashmir as an December. obsenrer because the December war The pact also. contained a pledge to set· altered the original 1949 cease-fire lioe. tie all disputes bilaterally and peacefu1ly. and said ·steps should be taken to restore and normalize relations, which Pakistan severed Dec. & when Jndia recognized Bangladesh, the.fonner East P~tan. Tbe agreement gave no timetabfe, but called for measures to resume com· . mtmlcatiolll and air. links, promote travel between their countries, reopen trade, and carry out scientific and cultural ex· changes. lt said blrs. Gandi and Bhutto would meet again nat a mutually convenient time in the future and that in the meanwhile, the representatives of the two sides will meet lo discuss further the normalizatiOn of relations , including the qUestions or re patriation of prisoners of war and civilian internees. a final set· tlement of Jammu and Kashmir and the te:sumptlon of diplomatic nlations." Excluding Kashmir, India during the December war seized a total of 5,139 square miles of territory in West Pakistan, while Pakistan took 69 square miles of Jndian territory. In Kashmir, where the troops will remain in position, India took 480 squa~ mile5 and Pajistan occupied S3 square miles. The agreement said the troops withdrawals would take place lVilhin 30 days after ratification by b o t b governments. Radio Pakistan announced that the Pakistani National Assembly would meet July JO to ratify the agreement. Under the Indian constitution, parliamentary rattification is not necessary. DAILY PILOT _DE_LIVERY SERVIC E Dellwry of the Oally Piiot ls guaranteed MOlld.IY•Frld.av: II 'f'Oil do llOt ......... your Pt~ l)y 1:)0 p.m., cal! and yulll' cOQy w!ll bt toroupl'lr to VOii. Cell.I •"11 ttktn unlit 1:» "'"" $11tJrd1y 11'1d SUfld1y: It yov do not rteltw your C'OJIY llY t a.m. s.runta~, or I •.rn. $!,ltld1y, CIH 1fld a copy will lit t1111119hl to you, tlll• ''' ltktn un!ll 10 •,m. Trl~phontt Motl Or•• COV"'Y ,..,,,, ~-·· .. t.tMrn NOrtl'lwr1! H1111tlrf911!1 Btacl\ •nd Wtitmliutrr ..... , .••.•. "" .. ,.....1:12t San C1-nvr1ll, Caplsrrano B11cll, S•n Ju.1111 C•PIS!ral'!O, ~n• Point, $0Ulll USIUM, Lao11111 '°'IQutl •.•• fft>4nt U.S. Arrests 9 -Apparent Plot To Topple ·Cuba ; NEW ORLEANS, La. (AP) -A plot that U.S. orflclals say was ·.jmed at overthrowing a foreign country -ap. parentiy Communist CUba-has been revealed in the arrest of nine persons in a $46S,OOO munitions smuggling ~heme. Allegedly stretching from New York to Louisiana, Texas and Atexico, the plot came to light with the arrests saturday. Jn addition, nearly seven tons of p!Wic explosives were seized in a DC4 transport plane at Shreveport, La ., federal agent! said. U.S. Atty. Gerald Gallioghouse said Sunday federal officials "have no reason to believe that the munitions were destin· ed for any country other than CUba. .. The complaint charging two of the men, Murray Kessler of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Adler B. Seal of Baton Rouge, La., alleged they "knew and believed that this material would be used in an attempted ovt1rthrow of a f<P.';E!ign nation ." ·""" Gallinghouse refused to say precisely that the overthrow plot involved Cuba, but he said the complaint and his state- ment Sunday were "sell-explanatory." 'The nine were charged with conspiring t<> smuggle the uplosives from the United States to Mexico for future ship- ment to a third country. Among those arrested were Richmond Harper, a prominent South Texas rancher.banker, and Marion Hegler, a former inspector with with U.S. Im· migration and Naturalization Service. They were taken into custody at Eagle Pass, Tex., where they reside, then released on $25,000 bond each. Tornadoes · Buff et Midwest The federal complaint alleges deal· lngs by a man known as "Carlos Diaz" lo purchase as much as $1.2 million In munitions and weapc1ns, ranging from submachine guns to M16s. No guns, however, were alx>ard the plane raided by federal agents at Shreveport on Satur· day. Gallingbouse said that Diaz, Identified only as a man claiming lo be a Mexican citizen, wu being oought along with another man. Rain , Tliunderstorms Dampen Mucli ·of_ Nation V.S. Sttna~ar11 A wld frOfll nHlll,,. tcrOH "" n• Kon '""" Mlllllt to tM l•••• ......... ~ dlt oreductd •t•ttltl"ld turnldoft In ltw Mklwtt1 M)CI lnllltlt r•ln •Nt tf!Undff'rtOl''"I to lar'* l"lr1t of tllt n ... tlon tod.aY, T""IJ ii.rMM -· kllltd Ind 011\tll -• lnlurtd whf'!I • fvrlltdO OI' 1 ••;;~--.J~_j ,.:k.t of ,..,,ltl\ly l'llglt wlndl rlP!*I ~ • '"•rlN on tllt Latif on Wit Ottr~1 lri Mluovr1 ' Other tor,.,.don wtrt r-r'9d MIT TOJltll•• IC1n., 11111 Lul>tloc~. 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'----1--------_. . llncmnpromising Mormon Leader Smith, 9·5, Dies SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -'Ibo man called prophet, ~ and revelator by members of the Chureb of Jeaµs Christ of Latter-<iay 5alnll (Monnon), Presi· dent Joseph Fielding Smllb Jr., has died. Smith was stricken by a heart atfack Sunday night at the home o! a daughter, Atrs. Bruce R. lt1cConkie. He would have been 96 July 19. Smith had addressed the last general conference of the S.million member church in April. He &ttended a meeting in his local ward Sunday and gave a IQ.. minute speech at a churchwide youth conference a week earlier. ' Funeral arrangements were pending. Smith's likely successor is Harold B. Lee, 73, \\'ho has been first counselor to the president and president of the church'! Council of The Twelve. The president of The Twelve -the man who has been a member of the body the longest -traditionally becomes church president. Smith's death came three days after the 142-year-old church &Mounced a reorganization to handle its growing numbers. Statistics show it has grown 94 percent throughout the world in the last J2 years. Smith's father. J~eph F. Smith, was th' church's sixth president. The 10th president was a member of The Twelve, which lt1ormons believe is the modem inheritor of Jesus Ouist's Twelve Apostles, for 60 years before he was selected president in January 1970 upon the death of David 0. McKay. Smith traveled to England lo address tbe church's first reglonaJ conference in his 95th year and was to attend a similar c9nrerence 1n Mexico City later this year. He was considered a direct link to God by Mormons, wbo believe their church was started by Jesus Christ, removed from the earth for some 1,800 years and restored in the United States. The 'church refuses to be classified as Protestant. S m i th was known as an un- compromising defender or M<rmonism. He oppased any watering down of the religion, which has ignored ecumenism with any-othlr faith. Mormons are forbidden to use cigarettes, alcoholic drink, coffee and tea. Historically they have given at least 10 percent of their in-- Wanted Revenge U'l T1 ...... • FATAL HEART ATTACK Joseph Fielding Smith come to the church. A painful issue to many llberal Mor- mons has been the church's ban aplnst Negroes holding its priesthood, which all males of every other race are expected to attain. Llttle is said about the mue in h-formon meetings, except general 5btements on civit rights for an people. Once asked about the ban, Smith told an interviewer : r "Young man, Joseph Smith did not decide that the Negro should not have tbe priesthood. Brigham Young did not decide it. David 0. A1cKay did not decide it. I did not decide it . God decided it." A congregation of ~tonnon blacks was organized recently in Salt Lake City with about 40 members . Smith was considered the church's leading historian, theologian and expert on the scriptures, which include both the Bible and the Book of lttormon. ' Pilot Tells How Vietnam Hijacker Tricked, Slain SAIGON (AP) -A young Vietnamese man who tried to hijack a Pan American jumbo jet with 153 persons &board to Hanoi in re\•enge far U.S. bombing of North Vietnam was overpowered by the pilot and shot to death by an armed passenger Sunday. The hijaacker was tentatively iden-- tilied today as a speaker at antiwar rallies at the University of Washington in Se!oltle, Where he had studied fl.shery science on a U.S. government scholarship and graduated with honors last month. The young man, carrying a South Viet· namese passport in the name Nguyen 'Iba! Blnh, met violent death after the pilot tricked him and landed at Saigon, the flight's scheduled destination, in de- fiance of his demand to fly to North Viet- nam. 'I1Ie 135 other paMengers were safeJy evacuated by sliding down emergency chutes, used to empty the plane quickly in case of explosion. Several persons suf .. fered minor scratches or bruises d one was holding the bomb and it flew onto the floor. I spun him around ~ got an arm lock on him. He was flailing with a knife in his other hand but all it got was a bit of my laundry. I had incredible strength. l could feel his neck col.lapsing under my arm . Two passengers made flying tackles alHI we all went down on the floor.'' Vaughn said he managed to move hi• body away from the Vietnamese while keeping the ann lock on him and shouted tv &n unideritified anned passefiier "Kill...., the son of a bitch." Five shots were fired , four bitting Blnh in the chest. 7 Die ·in Bloody mster Clashes; Truce iri Peril passenger, a U.S. Air Force ll t colonel, broke his leg. BELFAST (UPI) -One of tht To back up bls threats, the · acker bloodiest weekenW: of Ul.ster violence carried a long knife and a package wbicb pushed the death toll today to 400 for the be said aint.ained a bomb. Vie e e three years of Northern Ireland terror • police sources said two hom made and threatened to smash the week-old grenades were In the package and e cease--fire. we no indication whether they have exploded. But the airline descri Police said two bullct·rlddled and hood· them as harmless "egg-shaped objects" eel bodies were discovered In Belfast to. wrapped in aluminwn foil. day, bringing to seven the number of The hijacking attempt began after the persons killed in gunbatUes or executed jumbo Jet, flight Ml, left Manila on the last leg ol Its San Francisco-to-Saigon by militants lhls weelflnd. night. Binh, who had boarded In Hono. The body of a man was found ln a car lulu , grabbed stew8rdess May Yuen, 23, abandoned near Belfast's Crumlin Road a Hong Kong Chinese, as a host&ge and jail before dawn. and a passr:rby on his sent two notes to the control cabin de· way to work In the same area found the mandlng that the plane be diverted to body of a young man dumped· in HanoL Twickenham Street. Tho hijacker, in the rear passenger Police said they also were oo the comportment, olso ta!lced with the pilot, lookout for a man who may he still C.pl. Gene VaUllhn, 13, ol Scottsdale, another execution victim -· AlljlUStus ArlJ., over the illt.rcom. "!lusty" Spence, a 39-yeaJ'Old Prol .. tanl "I am doln& iJiJj for revengt," Vau•glm• ...... ~wtiOliia liffn servli\gTJ!le sentonce for aald be told him. "Your bomben are murderln& 1 Roman Catholic bartender tniiming anil kill\n& .,... people of the in 1966. Gunmen kidnapped Spence Sun- DemocraUc Republic of North Vietnam. day night u he wu relurnln1 to Jail You are going to Cy me to Hanoi and this from a two-day parole IJ"llltecl to ollow airplane will be destroyed wben wt get him to attend bJa daughter'• wedding and UJere." 'visit hla alllng mother. Vaughn kept up the conversation, !<I~ ~ he '"" the hijacker the Jet would have·to be Both the IRA t Brit!Jh army em-... ~ h Vorth pbuJud they considered the .,.. ... fire refueled and contact made w•t " sill! ill force deapltj the he•VJ IWl batUe Vietnam In order lo cross the dtmilllar· Sunday morning in Belfesl's Old Park lzed zone. Meanwhile the first olflcer area and freah outbuFSIS early today Janded Y,e Jct at Saigon's Tan 5on Nhul alrpcrl where Ir was ringed by belween Prote1lants, Cltholica and lroops and ambulances'. troops across the Ml superhighway ValJChn went to the rear compartment leading to Dublln. \.. w11ere the hijacker told him to hall and Children playing ""'cer found I~ ~ added, "You ha\le deceived me." bod.Jes of two Prole1tants SUnday night Voughn sold he asked to come cloeer on a cricket ground ill Belfasl'• Old Park because Ille language prObiem made ii district, near the t1tene or an eorly mom- dllficuil to uncienland 1he Vletuamese. illl flghl between Prolt.!tanls, Clthollal ''l'hll ~ to disarm run mentally and Brltlsb troops. 'Ibey...,.. ldentllled , and J -my dlat>ct," tho pilot aaid. as truckdrlver Hugh CLt"""' Olltl '1 ~him. I grabbed"-'" arm ~t ~Ver David Fi.sher, both 30. ~- " I I l 7 v d m ing SW Pt WO wJ "' g;- a , Fi I Ca wa be ot As w on c. st Fi by w ed Cl vi t. au IV N m si al ly ' II 0 r • 0 • T oday's Final N.Y,. Stocks ' VOL. 65, NO. '185, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' -MONDA\', JULY 3, ·1972 NC TEN CENTS • Nixon Making Up for Long Clemente Ahsellce President Nilon b using the long holi- day weekend to make up for his six- month absence in San Clemente -buzz.. ing around · his estate on his goll cart, swimming at a secluded beach at camp Pendleton and dodging out for dinner. The President, who began his 16-day \VOrklng vacation late Saturday afternoon wjth "orders" to well-wlshers to "all go 11Mmming/' did .that very lhlng early Supday with several house guests. The friends, Charin G. "Bebe" Rebor.o of Florida and Robert Abplanalp of Now York, familiar figutt• al tilt W•storn White House, joined the Prtsldent for dinner Saturday evening, stayed over and on Sunday all three took a short helicopter jaunt to 11Red lltach" in Camp Pendleton for some swidUiilng in water which is somewhat chilly for this time of year. Later in the afternoon all three took another flight -this one to Chaatn'1 Restaurant in Los Angeles, one of the President's favorites. There, they dined on steak. The President, his: aides said, ordered a "Hobo" 1teaJt from the menu, a large hunk of New York cut which has gone up in price since he last bought one. , A waltor reminded Nixon thal tilt price is up a quarter·-to $9.25Jheso days. · An hour after the Pre!tdent and his party left th• compound, Pal Nixon D•w in from Chicago where sbe bad received a rousing welcome earlier in the day at a folk dance f"llval. The rellllllng w .. koncl I.! upoeted to continue for lhe Prestdenl and Mrs. Nix· on through the lndopondooce Day holi· day. Press aides plan no formal briefings until Wednesday, when the .PN!sident's schedule of meetings wilh advi.aers will probably pick up. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President plans meetings with N~· tional Security Adviser Dr. llenry Kiss- inger dur ing the stay and Mr. Nixon also plans to continue discussions with other advisers on campaig n strategy . Some aides have said Nixon plans a ''low profile" of acti vities io San Clemente during this current visit, allQV.'· ing attention to shift to the bitter 'ln-· fighting among Democratic contenders Schmitz • Ill for the nomination. Keeping abreast of the partisan ac. tivities Sunday, the President made a rash of phone calls to the East, Speaking to forinrr Ca mpaii;n Chairman John i\titchell ns well as ~Jitchell 's successo r, Cla rk ~1arGregor. ~1itrhell -who rtsigned last Friday and acceded to the demands o( his wife . I\lartha. that he quit politics -still plans lo serve as a "consultant" to the Presi- dt•nt as a ca mpa ign adviser. R ace? Lame Duck Solon Eyes T·hird Pa rty DAii, Y PILOT P1ltfl W Lee. Pant You're All IJnder Arrest -' This'photo waa taken on tha Fourth ~f.Jul:J>.,1971 on ·BaJQ<>a lsl:fnd Newport Beach. Fireworkir are illegal in Newport Beach, even on th• Fourth of July. And .every y atrlotlc fervor (or iJ It pres- 1ur1 .from·the tidal ~ n~~7 law •l!id· ing citizens. Tour boats 111 tbe harbor •Y•'I run spe- s:W'flteworu viewing cruises. • ,. ,, .J " Coaitline Bill .. By Carp el}tet Passe s Pa1ie l From Wire Services SACRAMENTO - A coaslline pro- tection bill authored by Sen. Dennis E. cirpenter (R·Newport Beach) today won a, one-vote approval from the Senate Finance Committee. It was the second time around for Cirpenter's coastline bill . This time jt was approved 1 to 6. The Carpenter measure ha s been heavily attacked by the Sierra Club and other conservationists who favor Assemblyman Alan Sieroty's measure which puts more strjngent requirements on any future coastline development In Cbllfomia. On JUne 26, Carpenter's measure struck a setback before the game Senate Fi1ance Comm1ttee when lt was rejected by a vcte of 7 to 8. Carpenter, however, won recon siderat1:1n and one vote revers- ed . The b!ll now goes to lhe Senate floor. ·J,,hn Zierold, lobbyist for the Sierra Club, told reporters after the vote carpenter's bill W8S "distsfrouS. II But Carpenter said it was "the only viable vehicle" for coastline proteetion left in the legislature. A tougher coastline protection bill authored by Sen. Donald Grunsky (R· \Vat sonville ), was killed by the Senate Natural -Resources and Wildlife Com· mittee. Carpenter said his bill would have a. better chance or winning Gov. Reagan's signature than the Grunsky bill OT a similar measure by Assemblyman Siero- ty (!J.Beverly Hills ). 175,000 Visit Beaches; .... . No Big Traffic Scrapes " Newport . Beach lileguarm were bpi bUsy W. w .. kend 11 more than 175,000 beachgoors opened !heir Indepondence Day holidays at tilt beach. Despite lhe heavy turnout of 1U11 worshippen -80,000 on Satunlay and 95,000 on Sunday ' -p:>Ute reported no major traffic problems. "We haven't had any serious collisions and as far es I know ~ are no real tieups," said :U. William Blue, head of Cle Newport Beach tndfic division. A spokesman for the Oriinge County Ha.rixr .Department said tbe· weekend's turnout of boaters was the heaviest for the swnmer so far but no major mishaps Quorum Lacking For Mesa Meet Lack of a quorum la expected to force cancellation of a Costa Mesa City O>uncil m .. Ung scheduled tooight, according lo City Clork Eileen Phinney. Mrs. Phinney said only lwo of lhe five <0W1Cil members will be able lo altend the session, Councll!11en A1vin Pinkley and Robert M. Wilson. Three are needed for a quorum. Bolh Mayor Jack Himrnelt and Coun· cilman Dom RaclU are out of town today to attend to Ulqeues hi their families. Councilman Willard Jordan is still on vacation. Mrs. Plfinnty oald she will olficially adjourn tonl&bl's metling· to S:30 p.m. July 17, the , nexl schoduled council session. were reported. Lifeguards logged 92 rescues Saturday and 2.8 on Sunday. A spoke!Dl811 for the Marine Saf•ty Depertmeot aaid the rescues were up on Saturday '*'!Ute ol heavy llllrf and r1p- Udes. On Sunday, the sud was lighter and more incoosistent a'i<l ~the water was colder, so there 'Wef'e ft'We!'~ recues spokesmen said. SUrf conditions are expected to remain mild through the holiday, with water temperatures averaging a chill 80 degrees and temperatures on the sand expected to maintain a 72-degree average. Lifeguards aro planning for the largest crowd ot the long weekend on Tuesday. The guard spokesman noted that no ma· jor trouble is anticipated if the water re- mains cold and surf coodiUons mild. C.Ourt Upholds Democratic U~t WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. Dl!lrlct Court Judge George Judg• L .. Hart Jr. refused today to interfere with the action , of the Democratic Credentials Com.mitt· tee in stripping Sen. George McGovern or more than half the delegates be cap- tured in Calilorni&'s winner-tate-atl pri- mary .. (See earlier story, page 3} The Judge said that the qu..Uon of whethtr·the winner·lak .. aJl .primary was fair and equitable was a matter for the Democr~lic .Nation!'ll Convention, to de- termine, not the .coon. · From Win Serv!CH BOSTON -U.S. !lop. John G. Schmitz (IVI'uslln) Hyl he might make a p>liUcal comeback this November either u a third party or as a write-in cmr didalo. Defeated in the June California primary by County As"""°r Andrew Hin.shaw, Schmitz promised a crowd at Sunday's annual New Engtand Rally for God, Family and Co\Ultry here, Closed Door Meeting -~et O~ .. Fr~ways .... " ' . lleprftentativti " tho Onnp County, Board "' ~ 'lad Ibo . •lite 1 ComnilalQll plan to meet nm !II a --In ID dforl to out klnb tbal havo developed tn the Pacific Cout and Huntington B.ach Freeways. Fifth DiJtrlct 6wporvtaor R o n a 1 d Caspera of N•w'pol't Beach and Second Dl!trlct Supervixor David B a k • r of Ganlen Grove aro ezpected to reprosenl • the county 1t the rare, closed-door m .. ting. Highway commiulon representatives e:.pocted to attend ara Chairman Wlnlton Fuller of San Marino, Fred Jennlnp ol Rt..,..lde and poulbly Jooeph Sinnott of San Dl•iO. PrinclpaJ discussion will center on the propoeed Paclllc Coast Freeway through Newport Beach and lhe conllnulng dlaagfftment over the route of the Hun· ll tington Beach Freeway, according•to Ted McConville, Orange C.ounty road com- missioner. He said the commissioners plan to urge the supervisors to usume a more prom- inent role in 1 o 1 v I n g the various transportation corridor problems in the _ county. McConville will also 1it In on lhe ses:i:ion, bis office said today. A bill by Alsomblymao Robert W. Badh•m (R-Newpor1 Beach) to delete lhe Newport Bead! ltclion of tilt Paclftc Cout Freeway from llJ adopted align. ment ls now oft the Ooor of the !!ltate Senato, but no actioo ls ezpected earlier than Wednesday, a representative of Badham'• office said lo<lay. The bill urgod ~Y Newport Beach ropmentaUve1 has already paa1ed tilt otale Assombly. McConville'• chief assistant, Murray Stonn, u id the Newport Freeway section from Pali.sades Road-Bristol Avenue to Pacific Coast Highway will also be dl.scuaed as will all trinsportation cor .. ridor problems In lhe county. 11J'm going to rome back stronger than ever." The Orange County conservative said, ••1•m not necessarily goioo to be shackled to a party -to the Republican Party - that fee ls-U1at its role as the con- servative party is si n1ply to run socialism more effecth·l'ly than the op- posite ~arty." During his remarks in Boston. Schmilr. said he is also looking into the pos sibility of running his wi fe for his seat in DAIL V PILOT ltltff l'Mt. Storybook Cake Tina Alcala, 7, of 2817 Drake St.1 Costa Mesa, won top hon· ors in the Junior Decorated Cake division of the Orange County Falt with her ginger- bread house. She won first ' prize from a field of 20 con· testants. Aliens Cai1ght; Four Get By • Nixon's Home Stonn said no representatives of the various Orange County cltl .. "°"""1led with freeway allpment have been in- vited to attend the Mooday asslon. A dot<n illegal Immigrants heading , north wound up ln custody ln San 'Sex Sale' Trial Delayed 2 Days R Clemente over the weekend tn two ~OllE:!4-9-, n= IDl·· .... _ . .t-Sho ... .,. ~-__. .. .,,..parate lncldentJ -oo• o! 1he bwtla .. .. ~a --e ,,.,,. taking place after four men 1ucemfully A two-day deloy waa ordertd today In Ille <>range County &1perlor Court .. ,.. for llllle" trW of Newport Bead! builder Henry W.,. Sprague. · Sprague, 51, of M Beacm! Bay, ap- pOaied before Judge Kenneth Williams this morning on charl!os slemming from allegations that he provldod prostlllltu ·for a number ol cliontJ who used his Ex· ecuUve Escott Service. Spragu• egree<I to bee a !lCll>Jury lrlal otarting Wednesday. H• Is free until then on hi.! promise to •Pl'"'· Tho buildor and tight ,...... w.... ar- re•ted Feb. 27, 1971. Two of those women have been lined and glvon smpended joil terms on reduc- ed chorg... Alleg ations aplnsl the oth•rs ""' dismissed. •. I I cleared the Western White House.· lsl.e of ,Wight Apparition lnt.errupt.s Music Arts an~~::n~t:~ 3~~1 :.rm~-t7z hours before the President arrived for a SHANKLIN, Isle of Wight (UPI) -John Garr, musical director of the Enl<rtalnen In a seaside oummer 1bnw ahow, thlnltlJ he knoWI lhe ldontlty of the say a gho6t Is lnterruptins tlltlr acta ind ghost, who some cast Plfmbers claim lo they want ii exorcised. ' have seen and describe u a white-balred "Everybody ls on edge. Tht gho6t la man ~ about IO. ruining the show," 11111 Davo Mills, 33, a The gho6t ls abo 111ppooed to ... ar member of the Temperance Seven jaa mutton ' chop wltlsktrs, a high necked group which I.! arno11g the cast al 1ray lull, gray Ue and diamond lllckpln. Shan1tlln1s Pier nitatu, on the l1Je of 'urbe story goa," Garr said ... that in Wight olf Brltaln'11IOU!b cout. 11191 an actor dlod on stage alter the one! "Wben we were told this theater wu of on llDlllCoellful per!ormanco. It ....,. haunted we all laoghod. Bui certain his gboli bu haunled lhe theatu e.,.., things have happened recontiy !hat make lince trytnr bani to make a 1UCCwful WI all feel it must be I.rue," Mills sald. ----comeback." • '"1e 'l'emporance Seven have wr1Uon a lettor to !he bishop ol Por1mnouth uklng him to appoint a pries! to exorcise th• ghost -banish llt lhe theatu and pul II to rest. , The chorus flds claim lhe ghost k"pa moving clothel around In their dreulnr room. Singer Rita Gl'lllll aald a door oponod and cl<loed behind her when abe ldl !he lheator die night. "There was nolJndy about and 110 wind. lt WU most Welrd,11 abe II.id. • • • • working vacation. A resident of the Cyprus Shores colony Immediately north of the Presidential compound phoned local police to rtport four "suspicious" men walking upcoast on the Santa Fe tracks. Officers intercepted the four at Calaria Beach a little farther north, arrested lhe men wtlhoul Inciden t and turned the aliens over to border patrolmen. Early this morning y•l another arouP was srrnted afte.r a pursuit (rom the Bonier P1trol checkpoint to the Paliziada ovcrpps of the San Diego Fr ...... y. , Congress in November on the American Independent Party tic ket. Schmitz, who believ es he may be pro- hibited by law from runnlnt! a&aln this ye ar, said the switch to Gov. Georg• Wallace's fonner party may be called for ~a"'c "there is no parly r1ghl now that's' really nailinr, the enemy." ·~ "If there ever was a time in America poliUr:il history when we're ripe .for a bold, ne\v move it's now," Schmitz, a (Ste SClfl\1JTZ, Page ! ~ * * * Schmi tz Slip s F arthe1· Back In Recounting Th• rtcoW1t ol voleS demanded by lame 'duck Qlngr""'""' John SCbmtll -his losing effort In tile -O>ngresolonal District race bu nol ...,. well for h1m so far. _ The latest olficlal t..lly of the volts cast In the June 8 primary election showed that Schmitz has lost an addi· tiona l four votes and GOP nomlnee An· drew Hinshaw, currently Orange County assessor, has gained 10. About 160 of the 695 precincts in the dis trict have been recounted to date, aald R. J . "Red" MaJlt\Ot, deputy registrar of voters who Is supervi.slng the new count. Schmitz was originally defeated by Hinshaw by an offi<:ial count of 2,601 votes out of the 93,427 cast. This was a ga in -of 249 votes over the unofficlal figures released the day after the elec- tion. Mailhot &aid about 40 to 50 preclnctl are being recounted per day by hand. He predicted the process would continue wtll into next week unless the Schmitz foroes call a hall by conceding Hinshaw's vic- tor y. The count on Earl Carraway, another Contest.ant 1n the same race for the RePubUcan nomination, showed no change, Mailhot said. while La rry Denna, the fourth contes tant lost one vote. As of Friday, the recount stands to cost Scbmiti supporters upwards of $2,400 if the contention of his supporters proves incorrect and the primary vote is upheld. Birchers Firebombed HOUSTON (AP) -A fir<bomb was thrown Ulrough the win~ow of the John Birch Society headquarters early Sunday, arson investigatoni said. Firemen quickly put out the blaze, the lnvestigator1 said. Portions of a gasoline-filled glass botUe were fou~d Inside the building. • We•tller P.Jostly sunny lkles are on the agenda for the Fourlh ol July hol· lday: Those low cloads lbould .1111 by mid-day on Tuesday, accontiriir to tbe woa!htrlady, to lompm.· tur., of 70 al th• beach, dsinl to 85 inland. Lows ~. INSIDE TODAY A year ago Lockhe<d Aircraft Corp. WM rtelinQ from huge losses on oovernment project.I as well llJI from the ballkruplcy of Rolls Royce. Where does It stand toda~? Sei storv. Page 12. ... 11111 11 Callf«lli. 1 ci. •• 111..i •ts co111rn It ("'"""' ,. DM"' Ntlktt I 1111'9rlll 1'... • l llttrtllll-' ' "lr\lM't ,..n • • I (l D~ll V PILOT N t Monday, J11l1 3, l 9i l. J11ly Fourth Parade Pri1Qed \\'hen Huntington B~ch held its fir st rin11ual fourth of July par•de in 1904 , the city was just a llny hamlet cont.ainJng .a hall dozen buildings and a few curbs and 1id~alks. But there "·ere 56 real est.ate salesmen hl Lhe croY"d f<lr that first paradt, an'1 • they had a busy day. 1"hc coming of the Co1n1nand Says It Exceeded Troop Order SAIGON lUPJ) -The U.S. command said today it exceeded President Nixon's order to reduce the number or American servicemen in South Vietnam to 39,000 by July 1. The command said in its \li'eekly report &n troop strength \hat. 6,000 Americans were withdrawn from the country last week, leaving 48,000 here as of Thursday. The figu re Is the lowest since April 1965. Of the 6,000 troops pulled out of Viet- na1n last \Veelr,·l.300 were moved to air bases in neighbor.ing Thailand. All going to Thailand were Air Force and Mar ine " Corps person nel. fo.1ost of those withdrawn last ~eek were Army troops. In a breakdown of the movem ents, the command said 4,000 Army persoMel were pu11ed out of Vietnam, reducing Anny strength here to 31,200. The Air Force was reduced by 1,400, wi~h 1,000 being transferred to Thailand and 13,100 still based in South Vietnam. Both Marine Corps and Navy strength dropped by1 300, all 300 of the Marines being transferred to . Thailand. The Marine Corps has 2,200 men in Sou{h Vietnam : The Navy also has 2,200 men in the country, but there are approximately 12,000 more serving offshore with ships of the 7th Fleet. The Air Force has approximately 55,000 men based in Tbailand and Guam, which are rriajor bases for the air war over both North and South Vietnam. The reducUon of U.S. troop strength in South Vietnam last week concluded Nix· on's latest phase of withdrawals. He announced another phase last week. however, whereby the number of A~~cans in Vietnam will be reduced to 19;., men by Sept. I. 3 Timber Groins To Be Imtalled On Balboa Isle -, Newport Beach will build three new limber groins on Balboa Island during July using $3,000 in Orange County funds and another $.1,000 from I.he city treasury. The erosion protectors will be built along East Bay Front between Park A venue and tfte Grand Canal. "The groins on Balboa Island are primarily made of high-quality timber and project out from the seawall," said Joseph Devlin, Newport Beach public works director. .. "They keep the beach sand from drif· ling laterally and then out to the bay," he said. 1'The three new tim ber groins are going to replace three old ones that have Pacific Ell'<'trlc Railroad -making Loi Angeles · just M minutes and 25 cents away -meant that the YOW!( beach town had a future as • re.sort ~com· munity. The fint Foorth of July parade WH held to introduce w..ithy Anaelenol to this possibility. CONDUCTS COAST CONCERTS Fashion Island"-$ Brandon Ne,vport Bcdch Summer Concerts Begin Tonight The first in a series of free summer concerts begins at 9: 15 o'clock tonight at Fashion Island in Newport Beach. The concerts by Henry Brandon's Big Brass Band and "pops" orchestra will be presented in the shopping distrfct's mall theater at the same time every Monday night throughou t the summer. Seating for several thousand people is avsilable. Brandon, a Corona de) Mar resident, is orchestra director !or the Chicago Light Opera house and !or the McCormack Place Convention Center in Chicago. The opening night concert will feature selections from "The Music Man," a Dix· ieland cOncerto "Great ltalian Movie Themes/' and "El Capitan," the Sousa march. • Brandon is popularly, known for his "FaShion lsland Overtur.e," and he has written musical jingles for well-known commercials. Brandon's Big Brass Band and "pops'' orchestra are the same except for, a~· ditional brass instruments for the big band .souftd and 8f! additio nal s t r I n g section for "pops" concerts. . Most musicians are from Orange Coun· ty area. Thef include accomplished recording artists, music teachers, con- cert musicians and Disneyland musi· cia ns. Fashion Island is located on East Pacific coast Highway between Jam· boree Road and MacArthur Bou1evard in Newport Beach. Driver Permits Now Carrying Color Pictures deteriorated ,'' said Kenneth Sampson , California driver 's licenses are being Orange County harbors, beaches and issued with color photos at Department parks director. of Motor Vehicles offices beginning t<r Devlin said sev eral concrete groins were installed in the past on the island, day. but the cost proved prohibilive. ''i\fost molorists will find their new col· "We decided that"these good quality or photos far more flattering than ,the wood groins will last up to 20 years or so black-and-white likenesses they carry in and cost a lot less to put in." he sa id . their1Vallets now," says OMV Director ... Robert~· . '"fhey will find the irn· OU.Nfi COAST ST proVem y worth the 2$-cent ad· DAILY PILOT 'flit Orltl09 C~t DAIL V PILOT, WU" wflldt It <Orrlbll'lld tile Ntw..Prtu. Is PUblbtlcd bY th• Or•l'IOt Co.st Pvbll~lrig comP1ny, ,..,.. r1lr «llliorul •r• PllblW!td, Mtndt'f lllt0\1'11" F1id1y, for Cos!• Mtll, NtwMrl ae1dt, Huntlnglofl th1thlP'ovn111n v11t1y, l1g11111 &Md!, lrvlnelS16i:ll1baCk •!'Id Sin Clr'""'1!1I hll Jiran C1pl1!r1no. A 1inOI• 11oional tdltion 11 P\lbl<ihtd S1111rd~y1 tM S....cl1y1. fllt ptlnC!N I Plllllhhlno P'*"' b ,, 3l0 Weil Robert N. W11d Prnidtnl tncl P111111t111r Jatk R:. Ct1rl-v Viet f'rtJldtnl and ~11tr11 M1nt'1('r lhom•• Ktt Til Ecll'11r Th:om•• A. Murphine -Mtntlllnl ~dl!or -Ch1rl11 H. Loot Ri(h•r4 P. N•n Auflllnt MIMlltlo IE41"4'1 OfflceS Costl Mm: 1)0 Wttl IB°av Slrttt fftwPOl"I 8tKl'I : ml H1'411101'1 I0\11 ...... l'f uo11111 l 11c11: m Forni °'VIII.,. Hwnlln;too\ IMdll 1711S aM(I! tovltvtnt :!>tn Ci.rMnlt: lOJ Nor111 IEI Gtm1110 1te11 Tel.,._• (714) 141-4)21 Ch1t1lfle4 Al•mhlitt •41·1•71 ,,.,.. CN••I .V.11 Swl!rt ., Lftllfll •tfodt 49% ... 420 ,,.,.. ""'"' Or•-Ct•flly C•1ttmvn\lltl 140·12Jt COorriolll, tf11, Or•ntt ~11 P\4h'111"t c-Pitny, Mo new• 11.,lfl, lllu\!r111011i, H ltori.I l'l\lltl•r ff H vttl1i"""'!1 IM1'1!'1 -If lie """ooill>(M Willlolll 10«111 ,..... ml1"'" ti <OJJYrlthl. Owntr. s.r'll'ld (llU "'''" llt l<f tt CO.It Mt11, G1llflllrni.. ~111110"' ov um.r ''·" "'°"'Ill'' "' """ t.),1J mon•lllYt mlllt.,., IJlllNlllM RA$ ritOfl!lllY. d.H ' cost." The new ·licenses, printed in blue and gold and laminated in plastic for durability, now cost $3.25. The former charge was $3. Fees for a duplicate llceMe jumped from $1 to $1.25 and the charge for a non- dri ver 's identificatio n card (also in color and plastic<Qillled l is $3.25 rather tha n 13. Cozens said nev;phtographic equip· 111ent has been installed in all Dl\1V of· fices in ke<'ping u·ith legislation enacted last year. .. Engineer's Eye Damaged by Rock FLORENCE (AP) -A rock thrown by a boy hlt a train enginetr frdm Anaheim in the face, sh.'lttering his gl1'sat~ and drJ,1ing broken glas:i; Into hi" left eye, Sheriff's deputies say. Richard Smith, 54, was in the locomotive-of a Southern Pacific freight tra in movlna 'about 30 miles an hour ·"·hen he ~~ hit Sunday by one Of se\'eral rocks thrown by t1'0 youths, deput ies s11id . ~ A brakeman. Charles Clark, 23. of Do\\•ney caught the t~·o 12·year~ld boys who allegedly hurled the rock! at tbe train. They "''ere turned over to Juvenile authorities, deputies snid. Smit'h was ho~pitalized and was ex· pected to-undergo eye surgery. '· "Thtrc .. ,... bll tours all day, and the parade itaell wun't tar1e at au ." says CKy blll<lrlan Bud HJgjns. ''The whole thlni WIJ Just"i promcition lo . ..U prop- ~ pill1ldo bu ~Id srutly over the )'Hl'I, however, and iomorrow.'1 <'tiebratlou -the 68th for the city -will All· Transport Unit Warned Of Repri sals LONDON (UPI) -7he International Air Tra nsport Association rtteived an anonymous messa ge today threatening mass repr isals against airports servicing the Israeli airline unless Israel releases the lone Japanese surv ivor of the Lod airport massacre ~ithin the next 24 hours. An IATA spokeman said the release was one of four demand! the message said must be met to prWent actiops against any airport allowing Israel's El Al airlines to use its racilities. The spokesman said the message, ''assumed to be accurate ," said U.N. Secretary General Kurt \Valdheim must appear on televi sion Tuesday agreeing to lhe demands. .. "If these demarids are not met . open war wi/1 be waged against Jewish in· dustries with El Al, the Israeli airline, being a prime target," the messa ge said. 11te demands were : -Release Kozo Okumoto. -Return the money paid by Japan in Compensation to the victims of the massacre: -Pay the United Nations $4 million for aid to underdeveloped countries: -Withdraw from occupied Arab tcr· ritories. Israeli polic'e arrested Koz.o Okamoto after he and two other members of Japan's "Red Army'' killed 26 persons and wounded 78 others with grenades and submachlneguns on May 30. The ot~r two Japanese were killed in the incident. Inmate Critical After Arizona Prison Stabbing • "FLORENCE, Ari2. (AP) -A young prisoner, charged in the fatal atab'Ding 0£ a fellow ,inmate Jut yearr, remained in cr1tkal c&dftlon li>day aft<r being stabbed J'!POiiled!y Wring an bour·loog diSl1j!1Jance at the Arnooa ~le Prisoo. Three guards were held ·hostage briefly dtJring the disorder Saturday night. The wounded inmate, Melvin Eugene Jackson, 28, :was moved to a Pboenix hospital where he underwent surgery Sunday for stab wounds in the chest and abdomen. "Nobody's been arrested yet.'' Asst. \Varden Dale Brandfas sald, "but everybody is locked in their cells in that whole section of the building -about 80 men altogether." · He said the trouble began In the ad· justment center, a high-security area designed to house prisoners who have trouble living with others, and tboae who need protection from ol!ler inmat... Brandfas said one of the three host.age1 \Vas release<' after a few minutes and the other two were released after Brandfas talked to the prisoners and convinced them to return to their cells. About 40 deputies and highway patrolmen were ca1Jed to the prison when the trouble started. Brandfas said he told the inmates that if "they didn't release the men and return to their cells we 'vould have to organize and come in." I 1idians Attnck Pow Wow, Seven H'eld in Arizona FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) -Sponsors hoped the annual Southwest Indian Pow W<Ni coold procted wit.hoot further di srupt.ion today after the arrest or seven young Indians for in terfering with ceremonial dances. • The disturbance late Sunday began with an assault on the announcing bootb. anJ the announcer by about 20 Indians. The action was accompanied by a shrill cries of "Indians are starving ." • Protesters were all reported to be members of the American Indian Move· ment. Flagstaff lnsurance mnn Andy \\'ol r. """the announcer, said he was 0 Jnlbbed from behind" by a )'Ollllg Indian who ·starltd •houtlng Into !he microphone. tn the artna, a group of lndlans, mo stly Navajos, formed . a hall-circle Around the IWlled Indian dancera and yelled , "Don't dance, don't sell out." The seven arrested "'ere describtd as leaders of the protest. .LeRoy Keams, a leader of the young rebels, sald t~ demonstration was aimed against "ex- p\oltatlon of Indians by Pow Wow sponson." Food Prices Studied WASHINGTON (AP) -White Rouso economic advisers, concerned over rising food prices. are J)rtJN!riDg for another nAllld or m .. llnga will> lood .. lore tx· ecutives and farm leaders. bear littJe resemblance t.o efforts of the ..,.1y yem. Parade organlun expect 250,000 ljiee- taton lo .... 4,000 participants · 1n tho largssl Fourth ol July parode to date. But in eome w1y1, 1\Jesday's celebra. tlon will .be small<!-tban in years pasL "It used to be that evellts lasted all day tong.'' -HIUinLL«'alls~ "The Follrtn started with a. swim around the pier and patriotic speeches before the parade, and then after the parade there were boxing matches, beauty pageants, and lots to eat ." That was in the day of William "El Generalissimo" Galllenne, who took over the parade management in 1930 and is Cl'edited with building t.he event into what 1t Is today . "He really knev; U1at he u·as doing," lliggins&ays. "He stayed u•jth ·it until he died in 1966, too.'' And still today, Gallienne's daughter, l\1rs. Joyce 1.fusgrave acts as year-round secretary .to the parade. "She's invaluable to us ," says Tom Livengood, last year's parade manager. "She watchu newspapers year-round to find out which are tlle best performance groups, And then when parade time comes around, she goes after them. "Without her and the contacts she has, we'd be Jost" The Hun tington Beach Jaycees have managed the parade since 1966. This year's parade route runs like this: From 11 a.m. at 11th and Ma in Stretts, the parade will proceed down M.ain Street to Fifth Street. west on Fifth Strttt to \Valnut Avenue, east on Walnut A venue back to Main Stre·et, north on Main Street to Peean Avenue, east on Pecan Avenue to Lake Street, and dou·n Lake Street to the Park at 11th Street. No Deaths, Few Accidents Mark County Holiday . Death has taken a holiday on Orange County roadways so far during the long Fourth of July weekend, the county cor· oner's office said today. No highway or freeway dealhs and fe'v serious trafflc accidents have marred the holiday scene in the county. This con· trasts with three traffic fatalities during the 1971 holiday weekend. However, spokesmen for the California Highway Patrol in Orange County cau· tioned that the worst part of t.he holiday weekend, when motorists are homeward bound, is yet t9 come. Nationwide. 409 persons had died in traffic accidenUl since the long holiday ·period began at 6 p.m. Friday. The total ' was as of 9 o'clock this m<rning (PDT). California )ed the nation ,.with 38 fatalities . During las! year's three,day · Fourlb of July week"~nd, 635 traffic deaths were reported nationwide. 1:r 1:r * Holiday Traffic Fatalities Soar " .. By United Pre11 International The count of traffic deatlis during the four.day July Fouth holiday climbed steadily today toward a National Safety fumcil estimate of between 800 and 900 f0< the period. · A United Press Internati9oal tab\llation at 10 a.m. (EDT) showe<I 409 persons killed in auto accidenbi. Drownings also took a steady toll of lives. · A breakdown: Traffic 409 Drownings 71 Planes 6 Others 31 Total 417 California reported Ule g r e a t e s t number of traffic deaths with ~O. Texas had 33 and New York 23. From Pagel SCHMITZ ••. member ol the Jobft Birch Society, told the meeting of conservatives. Schmitz. who also att<nded Saturday's OJ)ening session of tbe two-day rally, said that the Red Chinese have "an official program of poppy production" to make heroin °to raise money and subvert, particularly to subvert enemy troops." Labeling Mainland auna as the world's ''primary source of heroin," Schmitz said he secured much of his infohnation about heroin production during a recent visit to Nationalist China and by talking to "'a \voman who fled Red China through Yuman Province. "She said she saw the crop poppies being cultlvaled by Red t)ilnese b;oops in Yuma11 Pro vince, "SchmJti said. ·Mirror Image Winners Sandra and Sondra Walts, 9-year-0ld twin daughters of Mr. and > Mrs. Gerald Walls, 10398 La Despensa Ave., Fountain Valley, walked ~ away with the sweepstakes !n the Twins Contest at the Orange Coun· .,. ty Fair. The girls won the contest over competitors from Orange and Los Angeles Clfunties. " ~~~-"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· Pilot Association Leader Seeks Hijacl{ News Ban • • •• From Wire Services The, news media should voluntarily im· pose a blackout on successful airliner hi·"" jackings. accOCding to Donald McBain, president of the Air Line Pilots Associa· · ti on. McBain called for the restriction of skyjacking ne\l.•s during a hearing of the state Senate Subcommittee on Civil Disqrderg, chaired by Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach). "If the press were to play do\vn sky· jackings which are successful and only play up those which are unsucc~~!u1, eventually t.he depraved mind that µndertakes these things would gei the idea that no one gets away with it," said McBain, a fllght captain for United Air Lines. In his testimony on Saturday, McBain said he was worried about the high rate of successful hijacking attempts, Ind 'ad. ded, "there are stlJJ 117 hijackers rpam. i11g rfee in various parts of the earth.'' Coast Luncheon Friday Canceled The Orange County Coast Association has canceled its legislators luncheon ~hich w~ .scheduled for Friday aJ the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beacb. The meeting will be rescheduled at a future date. Association members had ·planned to join local state legislators for lunch, but the meeting had to be postponed because.i the state Legisleture bas ·been called back into session /Or the nm two \\·ee\cJ, according to program chairman earl Kymla. . \Vhen they do meet, Coast AssoclatiOn members \Vill hear reports Jrom the legislators on st&te measures affecting the coastlihe. McBain told the hearing that airline! no lo~ger can maint.ain the rfsQOns.ibilit}' for ali security and that if the hijacldnO are to be stopped, they must be halted on lhe ground. r.IcBain said further that the pilots may boycott airports \\'ilh unacceptabl t protection systems to detect hijacker• and that security guards should certify a fligh t as sate from the threat of sky • jacking before it is allowed to take off, About 450 Jives have been losi in the past decade becaw;e ~f ,bombs and ru: jack.ingS, accord ing to McBain. Senator Carpenter's oflice in N!:wport Beach said today that infonnatlon from tile hearing \\'OU!d be compiled for a report. No release date was given. Garbage '-Pickup For July 4t1i Told on. Coast Trash collection in some cities along the Orange Coast will be sUghlly altered over the ;Fourth of July holiday. Here are collection schedules for e:rea cities: . In Costa Mesa, Irvine and Fotmtain Valley, !here will be no trash collection on Tuesday. ·Residents whose regular traSh C91!eclion is on Tuesday will have their trash collected one day I•te an Wednesday. Residents whose trash col· lectionis on. Wednesday will have their trash collection on Thur$iay, and so on, so all regular pickups are moved back ' one day. . In Newport !each, Laguna Beach, San Clemente tind San Juan Capistrano, thefe u•ill be no change in trash collection. ln HWltingt.on Beach, no trash pickups will be made on Tuesday. All persons whose regu1ar pick-up dates are On Tues· day will jnstead have their trash picked up on Fr iday. All other ·pickup days will follow regular schedules. Slain. ·cQJIP-le ·· ~xee~1(ed? -... .'!' ,_ Texas Police Probe tang Leads in Stnb Deaths FORTH WORT!!, Tex. (UPI) -Delee· lives think an unldentllled young couple found stabbed and slHbed to de•th dur- ing the weekend may have been victims of a gang execution. Police were working on a Up that sevetal carloads of "hippie type '1 youngsters congregated at the death site at 4 a.m. Saturday. The bodits were discovered at 6~30 1.m. by a Dallas achoolteach<r, Dan England, end his son. John, wbo we.re riding thler motorbikes In tile area. -. . The sile, just off Slate Highway 360, Is a favorite hJovers' lane" l'arkJ,ng area. Poli ce said there were no signs of klen- tification on the bodies and no one has reported ml!Slilg anyone filling !heir description. The body of the &lrl was nude from the waist dowtt. Her brown leotard britches "'ere wound around f'\er neck. She bad bten a:tabbed several times, including once in tht heart. ' The body of the man was found about 10 yard.• away. He h.ad been stabbed I several times ·anct his throat was cul Both victims were about 20. Pollce theorized niore than one person was lnvoJyed and said clues lndlC!'led tho couple had been brough! to lhe site and killed there. There wu e numerous ttre tracks in the area. The only clue to the Identity of the man was a cigarctle lighter with the in- scription, "•lave a nice day." Medical E>amlner Dr, Felll<a Gwow said prellminary examlnailon ' lndicaled t)1e girl bad not been raped, but wllhbtld a ruling pending further teits. "' ; ii I I . 7 r t t I I ] f d f f s h • • ' I p s f c p d J